The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Moment 10 - Jake Humphrey On The Building Blocks Of Success
Episode Date: June 17, 2021In these ‘Moment’ episodes of my podcast, I’ll be selecting my favourite moments from previous episodes of The Diary Of A CEO. In this clip, Jake Humphrey explains that understanding the ‘bui...lding blocks’ to success is what truly made him successful. He claims the ‘trick’ is to take absolute responsibility for everything in your life. Jake then tells us that now that he has his success, it feels somewhat underwhelming and anticlimactic as he reveals that he doesn’t yet ‘feel’ successful. Episode 50 - https://g2ul0.app.link/UiRJCV4k8gb Jake: https://www.instagram.com/jakehumphrey/ https://twitter.com/mrjakehumphrey
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Quick one, just wanted to say a big thank you to three people very quickly.
First people I want to say thank you to is all of you that listen to the show.
Never in my wildest dreams is all I can say.
Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd start a podcast in my kitchen
and that it would expand all over the world as it has done.
And we've now opened our first studio in America,
thanks to my very helpful team led by Jack on the production side of things.
So thank you to Jack and the team for building out the new American studio.
And thirdly to Amazon Music who, when they heard that we were expanding to the united states and
i'd be recording a lot more over in the states they put a massive billboard in time square um
for the show so thank you so much amazon music um thank you to our team and thank you to all
of you that listen to this show let's continue what's the what are the biggest misconceptions about you
that i'm just sort of lucky to be where i am like i don't really i believe in fate and i think i was
really fortunate to get that first opportunity to go to rapture tv and start my broadcasting career
but i don't think that luck has really played a part in getting me to this point now you know I
think I've sort of worked out the building blocks to success and I think that anyone can do it I
think anyone listening to this podcast and who and obviously they are the kind of people that are
minded towards success anyway because they listen to this and this is what this for me anyway this
is what your podcast is all about I listen to it it all the time. I think it's about success.
No matter what you talk about.
For me, it's about success.
And I think that I honestly believe that anyone, anyone can get their hands on success.
Why is it that some people don't become successful?
Some normal people like you that when, you know, were crap in school.
Why is it that those people that therefore don't become successful and why jake humphries who also was a very normal kid in school when tom to become
successful that's really the point i'm trying to get to is is what's the the is it a mindset
difference is it i think we have to be really careful right when we talk about this because
i think we both have been successful but that doesn't mean that just because it's happened to us,
then,
then,
um,
it's something that's really simple and,
and it can be achieved by anybody.
It's almost like just because I'm just,
we think it's the same rule for everybody else.
I don't think that,
I don't think that success comes from expecting it to arrive.
I think that you can be successful if you know the the trick to being
successful does that make sense sure and i think the trick personally i think the trick to being
successful is an absolute rock solid responsibility for every single minuscule part of your life and
i sometimes really struggle to explain this point to people.
And I mean,
total responsibility,
total 100% responsibility for absolutely everything.
Even things that are not your responsibility, because I don't see any benefit with putting the blame for any part of your
life onto anybody else,
because it's not other people's job to sort that life out,
right?
It's only yours.
So there might be, let's take you as a prime example, right?
Maybe it kind of was your fault,
but let's say when you left university, right?
It wasn't your fault, yeah?
It's still your responsibility to deal with that.
Of course.
What about all the times when you were trying to get success
and you were in your late teens, early twenties,
and you didn't manage it teens early 20s and you you
didn't manage it right yeah not necessarily your fault but still your responsibility to keep going
to the next thing um and then when things do start going well it might not be your fault that they've
gone well it might just be that the time was right but then again it's your responsibility
to take control of that and i just think if people can get into a mindset where
absolutely everything
is totally on them and on nobody else it's almost like a door was open and i thought oh my goodness
that's that's the thing i have to take responsibility for everything and as soon as i do that
then it leaves no excuses and how you're raised it plays a huge huge role because i now you've said
that i was in my head i was thinking about how much i was raised with that almost accidentally the fact that when I'd wake up in the morning my parents weren't there and
when I went to sleep at night they still were at work yeah every day for about seven eight years
from the age of 10 to 18 and I was explaining on a podcast yesterday that um made this connection
in my mind that if I was going to have anything it was me that was going to do it even my pack
lunch in the morning and so I went off into the world with this mindset that because my parents created this massive void that everything i was going to get was on me i
wasn't going to get christmas or birthdays i wasn't going to get two pounds in the morning for lunch
it was your responsibility it was my responsibility to feed myself and and actually for me that was
really liberating because it made it made the whole world attainable to me in a weird way when
you believe that you know santa
claus is going to show up and present things over the christmas tree when did that moment come though
when did you when did 14 years old i think i really say i remember i went off to london to
do the junior apprentice for the bbc and my parents didn't know i'd left the house and i was there for
a day and a half and i was 14 see this is where you were so different to me though because at 14
years of age i was still watching cartoons
that were probably good for eight-year-olds.
You know, I was not a smart, worldly wise kid at 14
who would have taken myself to London
to go on The Apprentice and try and be on there.
I was a really super late developer,
but I think what I had, similar to you,
was not just a genuine sort of work ethic for my parents
but genuine rock solid foundations to start my life from and it's hard to even say exactly what
they are but we talk about in my family about giving your kids roots and wings and it's about
getting that balance right with giving your kids roots so they know that whenever there is a problem i mean i often say to my kids whatever and they're only little
they're four and seven but one of the phrases i like to sort of instill in them is listen i'll
always leave a light on in other words wherever you go whatever life does for you however far
away you are from home there's a light on here and you you'll get back here if you look for that
and you and you come and find it and i had that from my parents at a really young age that feeling that i've got my roots here and
i think once you've got that then then it's possible to extend your wings and to go right i
reckon i'm brave enough because it's quite tentative little steps when you're in your
teens right i'm brave enough to go to london and do an apprentice audition because i can go i know
i can come home i know i've got my roots there i know there's a light on for me sure and that's I think that's absolutely vital do you feel
successful no not really um I don't feel successful and this is something that I try and explain to a
lot of people you know when you say what do people think of you and I say I think they probably think
I'm smug or whatever I think that people assume that if you've done the things that I've done or
the things that you've done that it feels different right i feel like the same kid that grew up in stoke holy cross a little
village on the outskirts of norwich i feel no different i haven't had a buzz as exciting as when
in 19 2001 i bought an mgf sports car. I paid £9,750 for it,
and I bought it from an old man in Colchester.
And I remember him still to this day
turning on the light switch in his garage
and the light going, flicking on.
And there's this green MG car.
I was on Children's BBC at the time,
and it was the first thing I'd ever really bought for myself.
Despite everything that's happened since,
I've never had that feeling
of wow that is a real sense of achievement and it's almost like the longer it goes on it almost
goes the other way have you have you ever seen hamilton in the west end uh three times i've seen
it twice it's the greatest musical ever and you know the song there's a million things i haven't
done yeah it's almost like the more i do and the more i see the more i realize what i haven't achieved
so i was watching miss americana the other day on netflix and i think my wife was watching
thinking oh this is great this is nice and i'm watching it thinking shit man how have i not
been as successful as that i need how do i get there what do i do and that's i suppose why i
love my job i love conversations like this because i think that you know everyone can can give you that little bit of information about
what they've done in their life and that's why i like sitting with you know high achieving sports
people because all i care about is that that high achieving mindset that they've had has it ever
been somewhat anticlimactic things you've achieved because because they didn't you expected them to
feel like euphoria and and like a finish line or a mountaintop but they they didn't quite feel that
way so it felt somewhat anticlimactic yeah yeah i think you're absolutely right i what i would say
is i get a real buzz out of doing my job but i really love being a tv presenter i really like the the
mental challenge of hearing seven or eight voices in my ear while i'm at a big sports event with 60
or 70 000 people and i'm trying to navigate through and get us out the other side and get
the best out of the pundits and come off air to the exact second i love the challenge of that
and i really enjoy the journey but i don't think that i've ever
i think part of the problem is i don't feel like i've got to where i'm going yet
and so therefore i've never had that moment of euphoria where i think oh my goodness i've done
it this is amazing this is me doesn't that concern you to some degree because you it sounds like
that's a place you will never arrive at possibly but i am still enjoying the journey on the way
i don't feel i've had my moment yet and i don't feel i've had that moment where i go yes that was
wonderful but i absolutely live with the mantra of savor it every single minute of every day
um i try and make the most of it you know.