The Oprah Podcast - What Is Your Full Potential — with Adam Grant and Oprah
Episode Date: January 6, 2026Oprah sits down with renowned organizational psychologist and professor Adam Grant to talk about lessons from his latest #1 New York Times bestselling book "Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving ...Greater Things.” Known for his research on human potential, Grant shares how anyone can achieve greatness and unlock potential by cultivating character traits like resilience, curiosity, perseverance and embracing discomfort. He shares personal stories of overcoming his own limitations and insights from people who’ve accomplished the extraordinary. Joining the conversation is the first Black Chess Grandmaster Maurice Ashley and people from around the country via Zoom who desire to harness the power of hidden potential. BUY THE BOOK! 'Hidden Potential: The Science of Achieving Greater Things' by Adam Grant:https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/719611/hidden-potential-by-adam-grant/ Adam Grant 2026 Day-to-Day Calendar: Something to Think About: Daily Insight from the Psychologist and Author https://www.amazon.com/Adam-Grant-2026-Day-Calendar/dp/152489933X Adam Grant: https://adamgrant.net/about/biography/ 00:00:00 - Welcome Adam Grant, author of Hidden Potential 00:04:13 - How character and personality differ 00:06:10 - Action and confidence 00:09:00 - Critics as coaches 00:11:50 - Standing in your values 00:14:15 - What makes a good leader 00:17:18 - First Black Chess Grandmaster Maurice Ashley 00:22:45 - How potential gets overlooked 00:24:10 - How ‘Hidden Potential’ helps educators 00:27:30 - Three priorities for a school to thrive 00:30:25 - Tap into your hidden potential 00:33:28 - Confidence in your ability to learn 00:34:50 - Managing perfectionism 00:38:00 - Appreciate your progress 00:39:30 - What keeps Oprah motivated 'Move by Move: Life Lessons on and Off the Chessboard' by Maurice Ashley:https://mauriceashley.com/move-by-move/ Follow Oprah Winfrey on Social: https://www.instagram.com/oprahpodcast/ https://www.facebook.com/oprahwinfrey/ Listen to the full podcast: https://open.spotify.com/show/0tEVrfNp92a7lbjDe6GMLI https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-oprah-podcast/id1782960381 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
So, Adam, I am graduating in May of 2026.
I really, really resonated when you were discussing imposter syndrome.
I recently did an internship, and I felt like I had imposter syndrome every day.
What advice can you give me graduating?
Like, what do I do?
Where do I start?
Like, how do I not feel like the most anxious person in the room at all times?
Hi, everyone.
I'm so delighted to be with you here on the Oprah podcast,
where one of my goals is to bring you ideas that can allow you to grow and imagine a new vision for your life.
I've always had the deepest belief in the power of our human potential.
And I'm always searching for ways to do better and be better and live more fully to open myself to possibility.
And my guest today is one of the foremost leaders on finding meaning and,
motivation and personal growth. He's a New York Times best-selling author of six books that
have sold millions of copies and been translated into 45 different languages. His most recent book
is called Hidden Potential, The Science of Achieving Greater Things. It resonated so with me because
I believe now more than ever that we all have to find a way to prioritize
our character.
And he talks a lot about character in the book.
Character is not your personality.
We're going to talk about that and so much more.
Welcome to the Tea House, Adam Grant.
Thank you, Oprah.
I'm so honored to be here,
and I think it's safe to say that your potential is not hidden.
Thank you, but it made me think about what is my hidden potential.
Yes, it did.
It made me think about that.
Maybe there are things that I have not acknowledged or absorbed
or been open to certainly did open me up yes it did all right i can't wait to see where that goes
i can't wait to see where it goes now you wrote in the book for everyone you said in this book that
for everyone who has ever felt underrated or overlooked um but it's not just for underdogs you said long
shots and late bloomers it's all about how we can make sure that we get a chance in schools and
teams and workplaces. And so what was going on with you that you knew that this is the book
that the culture needed in this moment? I think I just saw a lot of people underestimate others
and also underestimate themselves. And I think there's nothing sadder than watching motivation
and talent get wasted and squandered. And I think we still live in a world where people judge themselves
and other people by how good they are at something when they start. And so you pick up a skill and you say,
well, I didn't master that right away.
I guess it's not for me, and I think that's a huge mistake.
I saw this demonstrated so powerfully when you were, I saw you speaking, and you had used
the example of diving.
Yes, you want to share that story?
I was so bad at diving, Oprah.
I don't know if you could see it in the video, but...
You were in the beginning.
You were not so good.
I was horrible.
Yeah.
I walked like Frankenstein.
I could hardly jump.
Yeah.
I couldn't touch my toes without pinning my knees.
and I probably should have quit based on my early failures.
I was the worst diver in my whole school,
but I'd already been cut from basketball and soccer,
and I was running out of options.
And I was so lucky to have a coach, Eric Best,
who saw more potential in me than I saw in myself.
And Eric said, I will never cut a diver who wants to be here.
Wow, isn't that powerful?
So powerful.
And he told me on my very first, it was the first day of practice.
I thought it was a tryout.
And he said, I will put as much effort
into this as you do. And I believe that if you pour yourself into this, you could be a state
finalist by the time you graduate from high school. Wow. And? And made it junior year early
and ended up on the All-American list and making the Junior Olympic Nationals twice. Wow. And you
also write, the growth requires much more than a mindset. It begins with character skills. You say
character is often confused with personality, but they're not the same. Please explain. They are
not the same. They're not the same. Not at all. So personality is your default instinct. It's your
tendency for how you naturally would think, feel, or act in a situation. Character is a set of
skills that you develop for overriding those personality traits. So I'm a shy introvert from a
personality perspective, but I love sharing knowledge. I really enjoy teaching. I've even
come to like public speaking. And it's a bunch of character skills that allowed me to transcend the
limitations of my traits and say, I've got to get comfortable on a stage.
I have to push myself to be in a moment that I would prefer to avoid in order to live my values.
Yeah, but that doesn't happen unless you actually do it.
True.
Yeah.
So the way you get to be a better diver is that you dive every day.
The way you get to be a better speaker is you actually step into it and do it.
So whatever the thing is that makes you uncomfortable.
And that is the character that allows you to do that, not just your personality.
It is.
And I think for so long I was frozen by my personality.
so afraid of public speaking
I was also afraid of heights
so diving was not a good choice
and I remember
I remember standing on the diving board
one day
I would usually just stand there shaking
for five or ten minutes
and one day I was supposed to do
a particularly hard dive
with multiple flips and twists
and I just
I couldn't imagine doing it
I thought I was gonna cartwheel
and break an eardrum
or just end up in a terrible
belly flop or back smack
and I stood frozen on the board for 45 minutes
And then finally Eric said to me, Adam, are you going to do this dive?
And I remember thinking, ever?
Yes, one day I would love to try this dive.
And I told Eric, and he said, great, then what are you waiting for?
And Oprah, I realized in that moment that I had the relationship between action and confidence backward.
I thought I had to build my confidence to take the leap, but the only way to gain confidence was by taking the leap.
and oh that was that's such a key key key key key element for everybody you think i know because the only
way to gain confidence is he actually doing it and you're thinking that you're waiting just like
the and and and you're using this as a beautiful story and metaphor but the waiting and the waiting and
the waiting you were waiting because you're thinking you're going to get the confidence to take the leap
but the only way to get the confidence is actually taking the leap i just think that is in
valuable well it's it's certainly been powerful for me and i i think it tracks with a lot of the
research in psychology which says that for most of us um confidence is the result of making progress
and achieving growth it's not something that you have to marshal before yeah yeah this is what
i want to know adam i mean i was just talking to my producer you know earlier about you and i was
saying i remember that you know adam's first books they were really good and
people really liked them and responded. And now you're considered literally one of the great
thought leaders of our time. So I was thinking, oh, you had hidden potential then that we didn't
see or recognize and perhaps you didn't see or recognize in yourself. How do you think it's come to
be now that, you know, every organization, the Fortune 500 companies, the Olympic teams, that
Everybody wants to consult with you, Adam Grant, as this, you know, brilliant and wise researcher and, you know, literally a man for our times.
The irony of you asking me that question is not lost on me. I don't know. I have a-
You must think about how did this happen? I definitely wonder that often. I think, I mean, this is a great, this is a great way to activate my inner-
posture syndrome, right, of saying, what am I doing here? Do I belong in this room? And I think
it's something I feel a responsibility to try to earn every day. A door opened and I felt like,
okay, I should walk through it and then try to open it for other people. And I think of all the
things that... In the beginning when that door opened, you were like nervous speaking in front of
people. Extremely. Yeah. Yeah. And the, yeah, and the feedback made it clear that everyone could
see my anxiety and they were absorbing it from me. Yes, that's what happens. Yeah.
And I just, I think like you were alluding to earlier, I just kept running little experiments
and saying, okay, that didn't work. What if I try this? And very often, what helped me the
most was taking the people who didn't like what I was doing, who didn't love a chapter of a book
or didn't resonate with a talk that I gave, and asking them for more. Only instead of asking them
for more criticism, I would ask for advice.
Well, how can I do this better?
Yeah. What can I change?
And I figure, you know what?
These critics have already crucified me.
Why don't I enlist them as my coaches?
That's so brilliant, really.
That is...
Some of them were really helpful.
Really?
I found that, too, when I was, you know, first starting out, you know,
that some of the criticism that I received was actually...
I was thinking, oh, yeah, he's right.
I do talk too much.
Oh, he's right.
I'm not listening enough.
Always right.
So I would learn from criticism that was not just mean-spirited, you know?
How did you decide which critiques to listen to and which ones to discard?
Because some critics were just out to, as people would say today, get clickbait or make a headline or to say, oh, you know, everybody thinks she's so popular.
I'm going to take her down.
You could feel the energy of that.
You could also feel the energy of somebody who was literally just telling you what they saw and what they experienced.
And so I learned from it.
You know, when somebody is speaking the truth and you hear the truth, it resonates.
Like, I'm sure the same thing happened for you, correct?
It did.
The reason why it's so hard to get people to tell the truth now is because there's so few people who are acting out of character and not just acting out of their personality.
and their ego.
So it's really hard
when you don't have grounded principles
of your character,
where you're just operating on personality,
which you talk a lot about in this book,
and you say that the true test of character
is whether you manage to stand by your values
when the deck is stacked against you.
If personality is how you respond on a typical day,
character is how you show up on a hard day.
I just love that.
How do, you know, I know how I've learned to do it.
I mean, I always try to do the right thing, especially when nobody else is looking,
especially when nobody else is looking, because I want to be able to live with myself.
And also because, you know, from my own spiritual principles, I believe that what is always happening is what you're putting out is coming back.
And so for me, if I do something and I know that it lacks integrity or doesn't stand to hold up to my, the values,
that I hold for my own character, I know that thing's coming back.
It's going to slap me, and I'm going to get slapped in direct proportion to whatever it was.
So what has it been like for you to stand in your own values?
I think for me, I've found it really helpful to think about who am I representing
and who do I want to be proud of me?
I think most people answer that question by thinking about their parents or their grandparents
or, you know, some group of people who paved the way for them.
And I think that can be motivating,
but I also think that it's sometimes constraining.
That people feel a lot of pressure from their parents
to live up to their expectations and their ideals.
So I never had that.
You never felt that?
No, I didn't feel like, no, because I came from a very different background.
But no, but as you were asking the question,
I'm thinking, well, who would that be for myself?
I don't know.
Well, I think I've found it really powerful to shift the lens.
say, you know, it's really not, it's not that important to think about being a good
descendant. It's important to be a good ancestor. And so I'm not that worried about making my parents
proud. I want to make my kids proud. And I want to be, you know, instead of being a custodian of the
past, I want to be a good steward of the future. And to do that, I have to stand by my principles
when they're tested, when the battle is uphill. And for those who don't have children, the question is,
okay, who are the mentees, who are the people younger than you,
that you want to set an example for.
And so that has been your guiding principle of what would my kids say,
what would my kids think, how would I, am I doing this for my kids?
But before you had kids, you had values and you had character.
So what were you doing it for then?
I think the first time I remember thinking about it was,
I want to represent my students well.
I don't want to embarrass them and have them say,
wait a minute, I took a class from that guy.
Do you ever ask, I want to represent myself well?
Do you ever do it for yourself?
Yeah, sometimes, but it feels a little self-centered to think about it that way.
Really?
And I don't attach the same meaning to it that I do when it's for somebody else.
You?
I get that.
I get that.
But I'm now I'm going to live with that.
Who am I doing it for?
What am I doing it for?
I've always thought I was doing it for myself, but maybe I'm thinking about something else.
Maybe I'm thinking about what other people would think if I didn't, you know?
So you write, when writing about leaders, you say, we mistake confidence for competence,
certainty for credibility, and quantity for quality.
Too often the people with the poorest pro-social skills of the biggest egos end up assuming the mantle
at a great cost to teams and organizations.
It's called the Babel effect.
Explain that.
The Babel effect is the bane of my existence as an organizational psychologist.
It's where the person who talks the most in a me,
meeting is the most likely to get elevated to a leadership role because people look to that
person and they say, wow, they had a lot to say and they had a lot of confidence and therefore
they must be reliable. And in fact, it's often the person not who talks the most, but rather
listens best, that's best equipped to lead the room. Absolutely. And you learned that for yourself,
how? Oh, I think I learned that by watching a lot of leaders get promoted.
to their own level of incompetence.
I'm sure you know it as the Peter Principle.
Yes, Lord.
It's so frustrating to watch.
You're good at a job.
You get promoted.
You're good at the next job.
You get promoted.
And at some point, you're not good at it anymore.
And you get stuck there.
And I do not think that organizations ought to run that way, but too many of them do.
Yeah.
And also, most people don't have the courage to say and are not going to say, well, you know what?
I was really, really good here.
And now I'm out of my league.
This is not the right place for me.
This is not the right place for me.
We need to take a quick break.
Adam writes about the remarkable man
who changed the face of chess
while inspiring young men along the way.
We'll meet him next.
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The Cancer Guard test may be HSA FSA eligible. A warm welcome back to the Oprah podcast. I'm with
organizational psychologist and bestselling author Adam Grant. We're talking about
his latest book, Hidden Potential.
So you share a story in the prologue that you call,
he calls Growing Roses from Croncrete.
I love that.
And it's about the raging rooks chess team from Harlem.
And I know you love this story.
Tell us why.
Why?
It's an extraordinary story on so many levels.
So you have a group of poor racial minorities from Harlem.
Yeah.
Who are going to play chess.
And they don't have any of the advantages of the elite private schools that they're competing against.
Right.
They don't have the world-class teachers.
They don't have the assessment when they're kindergartners and first graders trying to identify the most talented players and then put them in special chess training at the chess equivalent of Olympic training center.
They don't have any of it.
And yet, as middle schoolers, they end up making it to the finals at nationals and winning a national championship.
And it's a great underdog story, Oprah, but that's not the part that resonated most for me.
The part that resonated most for me was their secret weapon.
Their coach was a young immigrant named Maurice Ashley, who would go on to become a chess grandmaster,
but at the time was just an avid chess player.
Yeah.
And he taught them completely upside down.
He broke all the rules of how you build a great chess team,
and I think it tells us something very powerful about how we all love.
learn. And he wrote a book called Move by Move. Yes. Great book about decision making. Yeah, on and off the chess board.
So joining us from his home in Florida, Maurice Ashley, coach of the raging rooks and the first
black grandmaster in chess history. What a pleasure to meet you. I read, you fell in love with chess
when you were, what, 14 after you moved from Jamaica to Brooklyn? What was it about the game that
hooked you
well first of all
it's an honor to be
with two of my
most inspiring
people in the world
Adam is such an amazing person
and Adam your book is fantastic
and Oprah I've been waiting
26 years for this interview
so
you should call me
for goodness sakes
Maurice
it's a big moment for me
oh my gosh
what did you tell me
Maurice you should have told him
he would have listened
this would have happened much sooner
I didn't know he had
have that kind of pull.
Are you kidding?
I've even emulated your hairstyle.
Come on, Maurice.
Yeah, you didn't know he had all that hidden potential.
That's the thing.
Yes.
Well, it really is a pleasure.
To answer your question, chest is magical.
It really just is.
It's been around for 1,500 years.
There's nothing I had to do to be attracted to it
because it is that.
The pieces themselves are epic.
They're mythical, if you will.
People fall in love with chess because of
those first of all the way the pieces look you've got come on kings queens bishops right knights
rooks and pawns it's a it's a example of the world a world long gone and so it has that historic
nature and this mythical quality and then the complexity of it it's a puzzle inside of an enigma
that you try to solve and you never do so for me as someone who is as always after puzzles and
and trying to solve crossword puzzles or Sudoku or you name it,
chess just became that thing that I could never solve.
And I became enraptured by it.
I read that, Maurice, that you had to learn the concept of to become B.
What does that mean to you?
Well, that was a big lesson I learned later in my journey
when a grandmaster, his name is Alexander Shabalov,
had witnessed me losing a big game as I was trying to get the title of Grandmaster.
And he said that to me.
He said, after watching me really fumble and be nervous in a critical moment,
he said, in order to become a grandmaster, you have to first be a grandmaster.
Wow.
And, you know, that sounds like Yoda talking to you at first.
Yes, yes, yes.
But then for some reason, it just dawned on me that this makes so much sense.
What I had been doing is pursuing the goal of trying to get those points that give you the grandmaster title.
You have to win X number of games.
get this number of rating points.
But the truth is that the journey is what gives value to the destination.
And it's the process that really matters.
And if you keep thinking that it's about where I'm going,
then you miss the whole character building that takes place all along the way.
So when you finally get to that Grandmaster moment,
which happened for me in a big game in New York back in 1999,
You're already a grandmaster.
You just have to make the moves
because you build those qualities already.
Wow, I just love that.
So what do you want people to know, Maurice, about your book,
move by move, the life lessons on and off the chess board,
about what chess has taught you?
What do you think is the fundamental greatest lesson you've learned
that is a metaphor for all of us to take?
There's so many.
lessons from chess. I mean, it is a game of metaphors. It's not just about checkmating other people,
but it is about growth. It is about, as I mentioned, respecting the journey. Yes.
Respecting the character building qualities that you get along the way. And big lessons
like listening to your opponent. Your opponent is your greatest teacher. When they're whipping you
on the chess board, you're getting lessons in real time. And it's what you take from those
lessons, the mistakes you make, the games you lose, that makes you bro and gives you that
resiliency as you face adversity. And being able to offer it to children who wouldn't ordinarily
be exposed to it, that's got to be one of the great joys of your life. It's kind of curious
because I stumbled on that in life. It wasn't something that I had decided I wanted to do.
It was actually someone who came to me and said, you know, I think you'll make a great teacher.
And I wasn't true on that, but the pay was good. So I decided to
to do it. And then I found myself completely wrapped up in their growth and what I could
offer them. Kids are like sponges. If you show them that respect, they're ready to learn,
they want to be great. And it just became one of the things that I did as long the journey
of trying to become better myself. As Adam mentioned, it just became so satisfying to help others
as well. And there's nothing like helping kids grow. You see when the light goes off in their
eyes, and you know that you are a part of contributing to the magic of them becoming better people.
Yeah, yeah. Thank you so much, Maurice. We finally met. It happened. It happened because of Adam.
And this was the right time. It's a pleasure. Thank you so much. Thank you so much.
You argue in the book that potential is often misjudged or overlooked. What do you think is fundamentally
broken about how society evaluates potential today, Adam? I think the basic challenge that most
people run into is they judge potential based on ability instead of motivation.
So they look at your starting skill level and they think, okay, that's the main driver of where
you're going to go. But we know from extensive evidence that's not true. I love this study
that Benjamin Bloom did, looking at world class scientists, mathematicians, artists, musicians,
athletes, and trying to reverse engineer what was different about their childhoods
from everybody else's. Yes.
And I was so surprised when I first read this
that they didn't stand out from an ability perspective
even in their own school, their own neighborhood, or their own family.
They weren't even the most talented kid typically in their household.
But when they did stand out, it was not because of unusual ability,
it was because of unusual motivation.
They had a passion early on for music or for art or for science,
and they were really lucky to have an early teacher who nurtured that
and helped them ultimately exceed what they thought their potential.
was. And I think that what we see there is that people who achieve great things travel great
distances. And the question is not where you start. It's how far you travel. I just love that.
Talking about teachers, we have Molly, who's joining us on Zoom from Mount Vernon School in Atlanta.
Molly is the head of kindergarten to fifth grade. I just, oh my gosh, when the minds are so right,
who, woo, woo, I hear every teacher in your school system just read Hidden Potential. Is that correct?
That is correct.
Thank you so much for having me.
And I'm thrilled to speak on the impact that Hidden Potential has had on me as an educator, but also as a mom of three.
The impact of the book started at the end of last year where our pet of school, Christy Lundstrom, asked all 278 faculty and staff at Mount Vernon to read Hidden Potential as a part of our summer plus learning.
Did you know this is going on?
I had no idea.
Yeah.
And after all the teachers read the book over the summer, we reflected how we can truly unlock potential using Adams' work.
And we found themes that really helps support what we believe about teaching and learning, but also help amplify some of those ideas, too, as we are a school of inquiry, innovation, and impact.
We loved reading about developing pro-social behaviors like Adams' research on kindergarten by starting with questions.
And as a formal kindergarten teacher myself, I loved your prologue.
Yep.
And we loved that idea of creating a culture of feedback.
And we really believe that culture of feedback can lead to a culture of innovation.
And as a school, we really lean into trying to elicit feedback from teachers, from families, and even from our kiddos.
And for our youngest learners, our teachers had so many takeaways.
We love the idea of getting kids comfortable with being uncomfortable.
and it really reminded me of public speaking.
Talk about being uncomfortable, especially with young students.
And we also really love the idea of embracing and perfection
and moving away from the idea of searching for perfection.
These are all things Adam is talking about in Hidden Potential.
I just wanted to share with those who haven't read it yet.
Molly knows this book better than I do.
I know. You're laying it out for us.
Do you have a question for Adam?
You have them right here?
Yes.
Well, Adam, we also, because our teachers love the book so much, I also received a question over the summer from a rising first grade parent about your book. She actually quoted your book to me. And I told her, oh, my goodness, we're actually doing an all school read on this book. And we normally do a parent book club. And we said, and I asked her, what do you think about having a lower school parent book up on your book? And she said, see you there. So we actually had parents reading your book too alongside us in that one part that you
wrote about character is how you show up on a hard day really helped align parents and educators
alike on what we want for our kiddos to unlock the potential with ourselves and the kids in our
care. I think my burning question for you, Adam, is if you were to design a school where children
and teachers would thrive, what would be your top three priorities of your design? That's a great question.
Well, first of all, let me just say it's a huge honor that you've applied so many principles
from the book. And I feel like I need to rewrite part of it based on what I've heard just
now. So I look forward to learning more about what you've been up to. I think, to answer your
question, I think if I had to pick a top three, I would say, number one, there's a practice in Denmark
in schools that I love called Cake Time, where every week a different kid brings in a pastry for
the class and has to present a challenger problem to the room. And then they all try to help
each other problem solve. And I think it's a great way to nurture empathy.
and those prosocial skills that we were talking about,
but also get students in the habit of asking for help
and normalizing that kind of vulnerability
so that they can better support each other.
So that would be number one.
I think number two,
I'd become a pretty big fan of looping as a practice
where kids get to take a teacher with them
from one grade to another.
I think the research is clear across multiple countries
that that allows teachers to not just specialize in their subjects,
but actually specialize in their students.
and there's a real relationship benefit of that.
And I don't think it's for every class or every teacher,
but I think it's something we ought to do more of.
Has it allowed you all as the teachers and administrators
to think differently or redefine what it means to be gifted or high potential?
Has the book allowed you to see differently?
I think we aligned with his work so much
because we always believe that all kiddos have potential.
And I think we always believe that it's our job to find that potential within kiddos, but it's also...
I love you call them kiddos.
All the kiddos do.
All the kiddos.
It's also our job as a school to create systems where that can happen.
I'm thinking of...
We're a school of design thinking, so we like for kids to be able to solve real-world problems by interviewing
each other, building prototypes, getting feedback on their prototypes.
So going back to Adam's idea of improving upon improving
and that we're all on this journey together
and it's not the end goal we're really after.
We're really after that process
and leaning into the fact
that we're not aiming for that perfection
that we're all trying to get better at the same time
in our past may be a little loopy and different
and that is exactly what we want.
That speaks to one other thing
I would love to see happen in more schools,
which is knowledge is not static, it's dynamic.
And I've seen a couple of teachers,
challenges challenge their students to go and rewrite a chapter of the textbook and try to figure out
what needs to be updated. And I think that's a great way to get students into the habit of saying,
you know what, I'm just not going to just accept everything that's fed to me. I'm going to go
and question it and try to evolve my own knowledge. Wow. Molly, thank you for sharing that.
I think it brightened Adam's Day to know that there's a whole school there, but everybody's
using your work throughout the world. But to hear that the kiddos are doing it.
it in this manner really inspiring. Thank you so much, Molly. Thank you both. Thanks, Molly. Quite an
honor. Time for a quick break. If you're learning as much as I am during this conversation,
I invite you to share it with a friend or a loved one. It may shift their mindset about what it means
to reach their full potential. We're coming right back. Hi, everybody. Welcome back to my conversation
with one of the foremost thought leaders on finding meaning, motivation, and personal growth.
the New York Times bestselling author of Hidden Potential, Adam Grant.
We've got one more person joining us on Zoom, Frankie zooming in from her dorm room in Illinois.
Hello.
Such a clean dorm room, it looks like, senior graduating.
Oh, you cleaned.
I know you cleaned up for us.
You cleaned up for us.
I can see that, Frankie.
I had to.
I mean, if I'm just going to be on a podcast with Oprah, I had to.
have a clean room, are you getting me? Oh, well, yeah, okay, okay. It's shining through. So what's your
question for Adam? Okay, so Adam, I am graduating in May of 2026. I currently go to Lewis University
with a, I have a focus in PR and advertising, and I just want to start off by saying I really,
really resonated with what you were talking about when you were discussing imposter syndrome.
I actually recently did an internship with a place called Zeno Group, and I was on the marketing team,
I felt like I had imposter syndrome every day.
Like I, you know, I really love this area of work and I, and I do love PR and there's
just so many branches that I feel like I either don't understand or I don't belong or I don't
fit, even though I love all of them.
It just makes me so anxious that I, I feel like I'm going to pick the wrong place.
And I was just having this conversation with my dad the other day where I was like, you know,
I'm so extroverted.
I'm so social.
I feel like I'm, I'm choosing the right.
area or the right major, but it gives me so much stress to think that there is so many branches
and there is so much that I can do with it. And I don't want to have imposter syndrome 10 years down
the line and feel like I picked the wrong job or the wrong branch of my job. So I guess my
question for you is honestly just what advice can you give me graduating? Like what do I do? Where do I
start? Like how do I not feel like that? How do I not feel like the most anxious person in the room?
How do you tap into this hidden potential and, you know, make it a reality for yourself is also the big question.
So you know what he says about imposter syndrome is that it's an indication that you have the hidden potential.
The fact that you're there and you're amongst all of these people means you're supposed to be there and you just haven't tapped into it.
It means you don't realize you're hidden.
Look, he wrote the book.
I'll let him tell you.
No, I think that's a great start.
I think so often when people feel like impostors, they believe their own self-doubt instead of
the belief in them that other people have.
And I think that's such a paradox because you're saying on the one hand, I don't know what I'm
doing.
I don't believe in myself.
And yet on the other hand, but I definitely know that I don't know what I'm doing.
No, you don't.
If you doubt yourself, you should also doubt your judgment of yourself.
And I think when multiple people believe in you, it's time to believe that.
because there's a reason, like Oprah was saying,
there's a reason that they put you in that internship.
They think you're either capable today
or capable of getting better tomorrow.
And I just want to underscore that point.
I remember the first time I met Sarah Blakely.
Yeah, Sarah.
Who founded Spanx.
She had gone from selling fax machines door to door
to becoming an entrepreneur
and starting her own company.
And I asked her, how did you have the confidence to do that?
And she said, well, I didn't have confidence
in my knowledge and sky.
skill. I had confidence in my ability to learn.
Good. I thought that was such a great way to think differently about confidence that you don't
have to believe in yourself today. You just have to believe in your ability to grow tomorrow.
And do you have that, Frankie?
I do. I like to think I'm a very confident person. I think it's just sometimes difficult for me
to tap into that. I try to speak it into existence. I'm big in manifesting. So I, I, I, I, I
do believe that about myself. Yes. Okay. Well, I think you need to go for it, girl.
Well, I mean, if Oprah's telling me to go for it, I think I'm going to go for it. You need to go for it.
You need to go for it. You need to go for it and tap into that hidden potential. Okay.
Yeah. Thank you. Well, thank you guys so much. Oh, thank you. And thanks for presenting such a
clean room. Of course. Of course. Only for you. Okay. Thanks again for John.
joining the Oprah podcast. Do you struggle with perfectionism? I hear that something impacting a lot of
women these days. Stay with us. Hey there, welcome back. I hope y'all will pick up a copy of Adam's book
Hidden Potential. It will help you see the potential within yourself. And if you know someone who
needs to unlock their own hidden potential, send them the link to this episode. You say, Adam,
we need to foster the will to accept the right imperfections. This is a biggie because so
So many women, as you know, in particular, struggle with perfectionism.
What is your advice for managing the need to be perfect?
Well, I feel like as a recovering perfectionist, I'm still struggling with this one.
But if I say it enough times, maybe I'll start to listen.
I think the challenge that most people face with perfectionism is you're always looking
in the mirror.
And if you do that, the flaws are going to be magnified.
And I think what we need to get better at is saying, okay, flawlessness never exists.
That's an impossible standard.
What we should be clear on is what's an aspirational goal that I'm aiming for?
And what's an acceptable result that if I got it, I would be satisfied.
And I guess, Oprah, from my diving days, I think about most things on a zero to ten scale.
There's no such thing as a perfect 10.
You don't actually even have to be perfect to get a 10.
A 10 is for excellence in diving.
And I think about this all the time.
I think about when I'm writing a book,
I'm aiming for each chapter to get a nine
from the different judges I've asked to read it.
And I know that if I get nines, it's good enough.
Yeah, there's still ways it could have been better.
But I'm not going to lose sleep over the fact
that I missed out on that 9.5.
I think when I write a social media post,
my bar is a little lower.
It's just above, I want to make sure I don't get canceled.
So I'm aiming for a six and a half.
And I don't think we spend enough time thinking about,
okay, how important is the task that I'm doing right now
or the goal that I'm working toward?
And what is the bar that I need to hit
in order to be satisfied?
And does that change depending on where you are?
Very much so.
I think, actually, maybe this takes us back
to something you asked about earlier.
I think when I wrote my first two books,
I was really aiming for sevens and eights.
I couldn't believe that anyone would read anything I wrote.
That's right.
And then people read, and I felt like I needed to raise the bar.
And the great thing about raising that bar is my work got better, and I learned a lot.
The sad thing was I was more and more dissatisfied with my work, because I felt like with everything I achieved, the expectations would rise.
And the expectations actually rose faster than the achievements.
And so there was a bigger and bigger gap between what I accomplished and what I wanted.
to accomplish. And that was kind of a recipe for misery, and that's what perfectionists live.
And when I sat down and said, okay, let me rewind the clock and not judge myself by my standards
today, but my standards of three and five years ago, I started to feel differently.
My younger self would be blown away by the progress that I've made in the distance that I've
traveled. And maybe, I guess you were on to something when you said you thought about making
yourself proud. Yes. I want to make my younger self proud.
yeah i i feel i feel like there's not enough attention paid and you do talk about it a lot in hidden
potential but there's not uh enough attention paid to the distance we've traveled uh and i think
so many people are focused on where you need to go where you need to go but if you just stop and look
i mean i do this for myself i find it as a metaphor for climbing you know when i'm hiking
You're like, oh, my God, I got to get to the top.
I got to get to the top.
And if you just stop in the middle, turn around and look at how far you've come,
that actually gives you the strength to go farther, you know?
Because where you've come from is like, I can't believe I walk that far already.
And it's the same thing in our lives, too.
I say that to my girls all the time, who are always, like, anxious about what the future is going to be.
So you've graduated from college in the United States, and you have your own job.
And okay, you're 30 and you thought this was going to be happening.
But look at how far you've come.
Come.
Yeah.
Yes.
Yeah.
Appreciating that progress is such an important skill.
Oprah, how do you do this in your own life?
Do you think about what your younger self would think of where you are now?
Oh, I think about it all the time.
I literally have gone from Mississippi, rural Mississippi, to Montecito.
So I, you know, I look in my own backyard every day, and I am in awe, in amazement,
in what I've been able to achieve.
what I've been able to accomplish, the blessings I've received,
the steps that I had to take to get there.
So, yeah, I do.
I think about it a lot.
It's hard not to think about it, you know.
And what then keeps you motivated to say,
okay, but there is another mountain I want to climb?
What keeps me motivated is because, okay, so now you're interviewing me.
So what keeps me motivated, of course you are.
What keeps me motivated is understanding that as long as there is breath,
as long as you are here,
there's opportunity for growth
that that's what we as human beings do
and that for me
a part of the calling
and also obviously for you
because that is what you've done with your life
is you take what you know,
you take what you've learned
and then you offer that to the rest of the world
and that actually makes you grow more.
I mean every time you do a seminar
every time you teach,
every time you write a book
you become more expanded
by the offering that you're giving
to the rest of us in the world.
That's what works for me.
I know that's what does work for you.
And I'm sure it also works for a lot of other people.
That's beautifully put.
I think the, yeah, the best way to learn is to teach.
Yes.
You've always been a teacher.
Yeah, I've always been a teacher in the soul of myself.
And all of those years every day on the show,
what I really was doing was that was a classroom for everybody.
How do you want us to think differently about what potential could mean for all of us,
not just what we see in other people, but what we see in ourselves.
The writing of this book, you ended it and, you know, sent it off to your publisher
and knew that you were putting something in the world that would get us all thinking about it
differently. What was the ultimate goal for you there?
I didn't know. I hoped. I hoped. I think the ultimate goal was to get people to stop
counting themselves out and to stop counting other people out. And I think if even one person reads
this book and says, you know what, I'm actually capable of more than I thought. And I'm going to
go pursue a goal that I said, nah, I could never do that. Or I'm going to take on a challenge
that I thought was beyond my reach, then it's well worth the time that I invested in trying to
write the book. Well done, I'd say. We're going to stop there because we can
talk all day about hidden potential, about rising to our potential. Thank you, Adam Grant. Thank you for
being who you are. Thank you for continuing to write these books that stimulate the way we think about
and the way we see ourselves and the potential for living a better, higher life. Thank you so much.
The book is Hidden Potential. And 2026, something to think about, calendar, daily inspiration,
to help you question assumptions, rethinking habits, and lead with purpose are both available
wherever you buy your books. So thank you. Also to Maurice Ashley. Maurice, it happened today.
His book is called Move by Move. And Molly, good luck with your book club. And Frankie, best of luck to you
on landing that first job. It's going to happen out of college. To our listeners, thank you so much.
We'll meet up here next week. Go well. You can subscribe to the Oprah podcast on YouTube and follow us on
Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen. I'll see you next week. Thanks, everybody.
Thank you.
