[00:00:00.000] - Chris
Wow. How many of you have listened to the Head, Heart, and Boots podcast? I can't tell you that reaction, how much that means to us.
[00:00:07.520] - Chris
Welcome back to the Head, Heart, and Boots podcast.
[00:00:10.480] - Chris
I'm Chris.
[00:00:11.200] - Brandon
And I'm Brandon. Join us as we wrestle with what it takes to transform ourselves and the businesses we lead. This new camera angle makes my arms look smaller than yours.
[00:00:20.930] - Chris
I'm noticing that and I really appreciate it. I thought you did that on purpose.
[00:00:24.020] - Brandon
No, I don't. I didn't, and I am not happy with it. Wow, what a week. Bro, What a week. Damn. A couple of weeks, my friend.
[00:00:34.500] - Chris
It's been wild.
[00:00:35.660] - Brandon
I literally texted my wife today. I was like, Babe, I'm so damn emotionally tired. I just found I hit a wall today. I was like, God, I'm tired.
[00:00:46.000] - Chris
It's for another show, but there's a Marcus Aurelius quote where he talks about anxiety and stress and just how really it's a function of our thoughts. It's internal. It's not external. We We can't control external things, but we can't control the internal thought life that we cultivate. Oh, yeah. It was just a reminder. I'm like, God, I've really been... Yeah, it's been stressful, anxiety-producing. But on the positive side of things, yesterday, we flew in from Toronto. Yeah. From that workshop I did.
[00:01:17.860] - Brandon
Dude, that thing of the falls that you shared.
[00:01:20.770] - Chris
Part of that's the freaking awesome camera that are on the new iPhone. Oh my gosh. Whoa.
[00:01:24.960] - Brandon
That was unbelievable.
[00:01:26.240] - Chris
Yeah, but the Niagara Falls is great. I hadn't been there since I think it was three or four. Wow. I've never seen it. It's gorgeous. Incredible. Wow. It's worth it. Anyway, beautiful in Toronto while we were there. We were outside a bunch and no rain.
[00:01:42.240] - Brandon
Virtually. The carer went, right? Yeah.
[00:01:43.770] - Chris
That was cool. That was awesome. Virtually no rain. Then the beauty, you and I have had several of these, but not every time, when we flew into Eugene, Oregon. I mean, it's October.
[00:01:53.140] - Brandon
It was beautiful yesterday. Yeah, it was.
[00:01:56.100] - Chris
I was counting my blessings just thinking, how many times have you and I come home and it's pouring, it's gray, and we've come from Texas or Florida or San Diego or whatever. It's like we go from beautiful weather to back home to the worst part of Oregon. But oh my gosh, here, tail end of October, and we were greeted by wonderful weather. That just lifted my spirits, to be honest.
[00:02:22.870] - Brandon
Dude, right now. I mean, it's jamming here still. Late October, we're really lucky right now.
[00:02:28.940] - Chris
Thank you, Global I mean, please keep it up. Just keep it moderate. Moderation is the key.
[00:02:35.060] - Brandon
Let's not melt the ice caps.
[00:02:36.830] - Chris
No. Keep it real. A little more average daily temp, though. We're cool with that.
[00:02:39.920] - Brandon
That's right.
[00:02:41.320] - Chris
Well, all right.
[00:02:42.860] - Brandon
I got a direction I want to go. Some of you guys know we just got done with the One Tom annual conference a few weeks back. Three weeks ago, yeah. A few weeks back. As usual, those events are always a really good time because we just get to see our friends from the industry. Most of us have virtual lives. Anyways, there was a great lineup. One Tom was a really damn good time. But one of the talks that was done was done by Alex Duda over at Albie. That guy, look, I just really respect Alex a lot. My experience with Alex so far has just been very gracious, super sharing, transparent, open, great communicator. I just really enjoy him and his team. Anyways, he did a great Great talk. I'm not going to steal his thunder. I'm sure they're pumping out social about it. But the point is, is that he keyed in on three fundamental requirements for a highly scalable restoration company. Basically, the majority of his talk came from the book about Netflix, No Rules, Rules. Since that talk, I was like, I got to go through that book. I have been listening to it back and forth as I go to the office.
[00:03:57.980] - Brandon
There's some really interesting things happening in there. Long story short, one of these pillars is essentially, I'm going to use slightly different language, but it's this idea of radical candor inside the business. It's both up and down the org chart. I actually just got done processing through a portion of that in the actual book about Netflix. They really go to great lengths to describe the level of adoption that radical candor was taken inside Netflix and how it fundamentally was a major superpower for the success and rapid growth of that company, and also how they were able to keep their shit together as they exploded. For those of you that don't know much about the Netflix story, by the way, this is a great book, so no rules, rules. They just talk about some of the big pivots that they had to make in the beginning. I think, so really quick, side note, is that just blew me away, and it was a great affirmation, because I think sometimes as business owners, We feel like the first version of the plan has to be the best plan ever. The reality of it is that Netflix's first time out of the gate publicly in front of all for us to see, they were a mail you a video program.
[00:05:15.640] - Chris
I was a customer.
[00:05:17.440] - Brandon
I did it. They're not anything like they are today. There were several big iterations in that business in the early stages before it became what all of us understand and see now. It's absolutely one of the top predators in its industry, right? In any way, it was a good reminder just going through that stage of the book of as entrepreneurs, as leaders, guys, we're iterating. Yeah, V1 is messy. Our lives, our business This is our work in process. But if we're afraid to take action because it has to be the very best thing before it's deployed, we're going to miss out on such great opportunities. The reality of it is, is you got to measure it while it's being deployed. Otherwise, you don't know what the best version is. It's all assumptive. Yeah, for sure. Anyways, side note, but it was motivating for me. Okay, so this idea that's happening inside Netflix, and they use several stories, like examples where key leaders, we're talking CEO down, where these key leaders are expecting radical candor up and down the chain of command. So not only are they able to provide it, and there's rules to this in terms of how do you do this healthy versus it just being people spewing out their opinion all over people.
[00:06:31.880] - Brandon
But then this radical commitment of up, and one of the examples they gave just stage set, really high-end person that was, I would say these are probably folks in the VP layers of business. So not the executive suite, but definitely people running regions and things like that. Sure. This person got hired, opportunity of a lifetime. They've already been a successful VP-level operator in another type of industry or a business where the politics is how you get there. And in most businesses, if we're honest, there is some form of politics that helps someone when they understand it, they're going to leverage that from inside the system. Sure. So this individual comes to Netflix and starts getting exposed to the inner circle for the first time, and they're trying to navigate the politics and figure out what do they need to do, right?
[00:07:23.700] - Chris
Probably super destabilizing for them, right?
[00:07:26.100] - Brandon
Bro, and the very first thing this person does is sits down in a company meeting with one of the highest level executives, not the CEO, and one of the individuals in the audience is pressing hard against this leader of, I think you're wrong. I think what you're trying to tell us in this particular scenario is off, and here's why I think you're off. Here's these things I don't believe you're recognizing. Then there is somewhat of a heated, and I would say heated probably with the caveat of maybe from an outsider that's not used to that environment, it It feels aggressive because it's just conflict.
[00:08:02.430] - Chris
It feels angry because most conflict that people encounter is anger. It's angry.
[00:08:08.080] - Brandon
Or it's not being reciprocated or respected. Sure. Long story short, for several minutes, This back and forth happens, and the whole time this person is taking stock and they're going, Hell, I'm glad I'm not that person. I can't believe they're doing this. Then when the meeting is over, this executive walks up to the individual that was pressing back, puts their hand on their shoulder and thanks them, and recognizes them for an awesome conversation as part of the meeting. The impact on this individual that was a new team member, their mind got split open. Not only at first were they going, holy hell, this is scary and this seems totally stupid and almost like a certain death for this person's career. Then this leader walks up in front of the entire organization and thanks that individual for contributing to that conversation in a meaningful I think that that is somewhat felt as an extreme example, but I think it really clearly defines the importance and the value of radical candor in the system. The only one other thing I would add before we just go back and forth on this a little bit, is Netflix and their leadership understood that we're going after some of the best people in the industry.
[00:09:26.140] - Brandon
We have a mission that's not small, and its complexity and its scope and what they're trying to accomplish and achieve. If we bring these brilliant people into our company, we're doing ourselves and them a disservice to ignore their feedback. What they found, like many of us, is that people are afraid. They had to implement systems and intentionality to get that conversation beginning to happen inside the company at mass. Then it eventually became almost a performance evaluator, where when people are and non-committal, and they're not contributing and pushing back, it's a sign that they're probably not a good fit for the company. This is not a get-out-of-jail free card to be an asshole, to just talk, speak your opinion, and barf all over people, disagree in public to disagree. There has to be an intentionality behind it and a value that's coming from the exchange. There's this key focus on the radical candor is meant to improve people's capability and performance and the service delivery and the relationship with the client.
[00:10:38.100] - Chris
Yeah, what I hear is, and I've heard, was it Reid Hastings, who was the founder? Yeah. I've heard him interviewed and just like, I'm recalling some of this stuff as you bring it up from podcast interviews, I've heard of him. It was really a function of trying to get the most out of the talent of people. That's right. That's so much of People's intelligence and so much of their experience goes unsaid and uncontributed to the team because people are afraid of the politics. That's right. People are afraid of being seen or interpreted a certain way, and so they just don't say anything at all. Just how much intelligence is lost by the company because of that.
[00:11:18.670] - Brandon
Oh, yeah. Or true evaluation of the current performance. Yeah. How many times are people hiding or skirting a problem, a discrepancy, because they're afraid of how it will be received versus being radically committed to being awesome, for the company to be awesome. There's just so much room here. It's interesting that you mentioned Reid. One of the stories in this radical candor, again, scenario where you have a newer team member. I believe this had something to do with the marketing side of the business. Anyways, long story short, Reid was in an environment with lots of key leaders inside the company, and he responded to one of those key leaders speaking up in the meeting in a way that was demeaning and really created an unsafe experience. Basically, this was Reid, essentially founder CEO. Lost his shit. Being out of alignment and responded to somebody in a way that basically shut him down. This person, this employee that witnessed it, ends up sending an email to read and basically saying, Look, I was told to do this, so I'm going to do it. They were very afraid of what it would mean, but they felt like this is what I was expected to be in alignment with.
[00:12:31.720] - Brandon
She does a great job of just highlighting for the CEO and founder of Netflix, Here's what you've said, here's what I witnessed. Dude, without skipping a beat, this guy writes back and says, I really appreciate this. Long story short, as soon as I walked out of that meeting, I felt like, shit, I knew I had done the wrong thing. Bro, that is like... These are the best of the best companies. These are companies that are worth tons and tons of money.
[00:12:58.680] - Chris
This guy's a titan. A titan. In the industry in the world. Yeah. Yeah.
[00:13:02.180] - Brandon
I mean, this guy's operating at a level that a fraction of a % of the population can even comprehend. The radical obsession with this and his commitment to follow it, look what it's done. Their company, who are they competing with? Legitimately, right? Anyways, I think it's one of these things that as leaders, we just wrestle with this idea that being honest and transparent with our people is somehow a negative. Well, you know how this goes? Things come in threes, it feels like. I'm listening to another podcast this morning. I'm a Greg, I think his last name is, you pronounce it, Gorschel. Yeah. He's a pastor guy. Yeah. Leads a ridiculously huge church and all the things. Anyways, he was talking about this.
[00:13:49.420] - Chris
He's jacked, too, if I remember.
[00:13:50.760] - Brandon
Massively jacked. He's older than you and I. He's just solid. He was talking about, he's done a short series. He does 20-minute podcast, so really short and punchy, but he's been doing a series on blind spots for leaders. One of them he brought up this morning on my way in was this same idea, is that when leaders are afraid to tell their personnel what's really happening. Again, it was just this affirmation, here's another gentleman that leads a massive organization with several layers of competency and leadership, locations all over the nation, thousands and thousands and thousands of clients. He's hammering on the importance of this is a blind spot that if you're not careful, it will tear down the business and prevent you from creating what is possible. He was just basically saying, it's withholding love. It's a reality that if I'm not honest with you in your performance inside my organization, I'm failing you. It is my responsibility to be honest, controlled. Think about have self-awareness, like what you're communicating. But like, dude, we owe our people to be honest about where they stand in their performance against the standard. That's not a bad thing.
[00:15:14.880] - Brandon
It's the thing that's best for them and for us as an organization.
[00:15:19.520] - Chris
Bro, this is such a growing edge for me, man. We've talked about this before on the podcast, like the family culture, the file folders that I pull. There's My default wiring is intense hyper index on what other people think and concern about how other people are going to react. If I say this thing, what are they going to think of me? This came from my dad, largely, and all the things. This hits home for me. We've talked, I think, a couple of weeks ago on a podcast, this idea of congruence. I've been thinking a lot about it. It's the same thing. It's the congruence being alignment between what we think we say and view, be an ultimate expression of congruence. I think that's part of what they're touching on here is that so often in organizations, because people are afraid of what the impact will be or the consequence to them will be, they're often perpetually thinking certain things, expressing another, and maybe doing another yet still. I think one of the things I've observed in my own life, just because of this maybe default way that I can do things, is it saps a lot of energy.
[00:16:34.060] - Chris
It has its own stress and anxiety attached to it. It just is this steady drum beat of anxiety because you're always considering how is this thing that I'm thinking, feeling, going to land. They're talking about it in the context of a giant mega corporation. Of course, it wasn't always a mega corporation, but they're talking about a venture-backed technology startup, yada, yada. But I think it's the same everywhere. It doesn't matter if it's a five-person team or a marriage or a business partnership or anything.
[00:17:06.340] - Brandon
I think you're spot on. I think this is fundamental to relationship. It's fundamental to relationship.
[00:17:14.200] - Chris
Are you a business that's under 5 million in sales, and you're just now getting ready to try and scale your company up and hit some of those targets you've always wanted to hit. But now you've got to build a sales team, or maybe you just hired your first sales rep, but you don't really know how to manage them. How do you manage, lead, train, develop a sales rep? Floodlight has a solution for you now. So we can actually assign your sales rep a turnkey VP of sales that will help them create a sales blueprint, their own personal sales plan for your market. They'll have weekly one on ones with that sales rep to coach, mentor them, hold them accountable to the plan. And they'll also have a monthly owners meeting where they'll meet with you or your general manager and review the progress of that sales rep, their plan to actual results, what performance improvement they're working on with them. Also let them know, Hey, You might, they're doing really well. Maybe we should think of hiring a second sales rep. They're going to have that one-to-one advice for you as an owner or senior leader on the team as well.
[00:18:07.950] - Chris
How great would that be to have a bolt-on sales manager for your one sales rep, and it's only 2,500 bucks a month? If you're interested in talking more about that, reach out. Let's grab some time and let's talk shop.
[00:18:20.060] - Chris
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[00:18:40.260] - Brandon
It's interesting, though. For some of you listening, you guys are aware that we also have a restoration company, and our partnership inside that organization has required us to really evaluate some of these things. I'm going to highlight Steve. Think about it. You're an owner of a business, and this thing has been in your hands for 14 years. You've pulled nothing from nothing out of the dirt and started to shape this organization. Like all of us, we're figuring it out as we go, and sometimes those decisions are great and sometimes they're not. Sometimes we fully understand the impact of our decision in that moment, and a lot of times we just don't. This guy who I just respect and love the hell out of is building this monster, making his way forward. It's a work in process. He's had all sorts of successes. He's had challenges just like the rest of us. Then he brings in three very strong personalities and has to begin hearing their opinion about his company. I'm not sure if anybody, when they hear that, can relate to the fact of how hard that must be. Sure. But it's freaking hard. I wrestle having a downline team member sometimes give me their opinion when I don't agree with it.
[00:19:58.860] - Chris
Well, but I would say, too, I would say, too, though, it hasn't necessarily been easy for these three new partners to share that perspective either. I'm probably one of the ones who hasn't necessarily had any of those come to Jesus moments yet. But no, I mean, it's both ways.
[00:20:15.020] - Brandon
Oh, for sure. It's just like with us coming in, he's had to help set some new anchors. He has to communicate back to us like, Hey, I know you guys have these certain ideas. Let's talk about it. Let's slow down and consider those, because we We don't have it all figured out either. The point is there's this huge, robust conversation that has to go back and forth between the four of us in order for this thing to really be successful. It requires two things. One, radical candor. We have First, you have to be honest in the moment what is going on and how it's affecting the business from our perspective. Two, you better be ready to receive that information with some sense of humility because otherwise, you're going to clearly identify you are not a good fit for taking this operation it needs to go. I think even in just that scenario, let alone what we're about to start talking about with our people downline, we have a very interesting event coming up in November that we're going to be meeting with some personnel and putting out some messaging and Part of this is going to be in it.
[00:21:16.700] - Brandon
Of like, in order for us to go where we need to go, we all have to get really good at finding a way to professionally speak from our perspective in the organization, and you better be damn good at taking that response back. You know what I mean?
[00:21:31.130] - Chris
Well, and that was actually going to be my next question was, how do you cultivate this across a team? It seems as though it's easier to start with that principle and that perspective, but I think most don't. Yeah. Most don't. In fact, I think it almost goes directly against a common business culture of, yeah, the downline doesn't need to know about that. Yeah. On the one hand is the ivory tower has all the information, knowledge, and talent, and the high-level talent to be able to discern what the downline needs to know about and needs to understand. We gatekeep information. I feel like that's part of it in this radical candor thing. But then there's also often an unspoken culture of stay in your lane. Yeah, for sure. I think that can get in the way of radical candor, too. That example you gave of the dude in the theater for the big company meeting, and he's spouting off from the cheap seats, so to speak, with SVP guy in the front. And it's like, that is a radical... I mean, radical candor, but that is a radical shift from how most businesses are even what we think is the best practice.
[00:22:49.760] - Chris
It's like hierarchy of authority. Hey, watch what you say to the boss. Just because you think you know something doesn't mean you have the right to say it. That's a lot of what most of us have experienced in business culture. It seems like the first thing you have to somehow establish is safety. Did they talk about that in the book?
[00:23:11.080] - Brandon
No, they do. They absolutely do. You're right. If you insert that candor and then you destroy the messenger, that's going to happen one time. Then the message is going to get circulated really quickly because a lot of times when we destroy the messenger, we happen to do it where there's an audience. And so then what we've done is we've planted this very clear action that's in direct conflict with what we're saying. And then people are going to act on what we act on, not what we say. And so then it just becomes this thing that you're spouting from the front of the room and no one cares because they know that they're not going to live that out. There's no chance in hell because the last time they tried it, they got destroyed. And dude, that's been me. You and I just had a We had a keynote together at one time, and part of what comes up in that keynote is you and I describing, I've had, and I still have, some behaviors that at time would be an absolute conflict with what I'm talking about right now. Even though, principally, I love it and I agree, and I know it's best for the business, by default, it's hard to live out.
[00:24:20.140] - Chris
We have different problems with it.
[00:24:21.590] - Brandon
We have different problems with it. That's a really great way to put that.
[00:24:27.040] - Chris
Yeah, we have different problems with it. But it's... Yeah, Well, I guess they call it radical for a reason.
[00:24:32.080] - Brandon
It's... Yeah.
[00:24:33.240] - Chris
There's obviously something incredibly attractive to it because we've been in conversation about this for a while. It's this idea that all of us are so desperate for a real true, like truth, honesty, because there's such a short supply of it. Or there's so much fakeness and there's so much politicking and so much of people trying to cajole one another to think a certain way or interpret a situation in a certain way. It's like all of us are so, gosh damn, tired of that. I can imagine that today this Netflix culture of operating is almost like more like this is the time that we need that even more than 20 years ago when Netflix started, right?
[00:25:15.500] - Brandon
More than ever we need more. More than ever. I think people are more hungry for it. But I like where you were going there. Let's get back in this pocket. You said, what do we got to do first? We need to create some sense of safety. I think concretely, when I think about that, I'm hearing some of the stories and the examples from Netflix. I'm even thinking about on the time horizon, companies we've been partnered with from a consulting perspective or what's happening inside FP. I think that that safety, there's a few different things that happen with that. One, it's a standard that has to be adopted by the top first. They have to show that when that candor starts to get sent upstream, How they behave and react is going to set the tone for the entire organization, period, end of story. If they're not prepared to understand the value to the business in living that out, and they're not prepared to ask for forgiveness when they fail and call out the fact because we're a work in process. Just because you want this to be the case doesn't mean tomorrow you're not going to make a mistake.
[00:26:23.820] - Brandon
That's totally unrealistic. But if you call yourself out and say, Hey, I did this. This was out of with what I'm asking all of us to be committed to, I sincerely apologize, and I hope that this does not prevent you from bringing this to my attention in the future. That's a great way to start. I think, two, you have to consider who you're hiring. If this isn't part of what you're trying to pull out in your open-ended interviewing questions, the culture fit that we're looking for when we're interviewing new team members, this would be one of those pillars that we're trying to identify. Because if someone can take feedback and provide feedback, the chance of them iterating on skills and competency to meet the demand of the business are exponentially higher, if not, right?
[00:27:08.440] - Chris
Yeah. I just keep coming back to, I can see it in my own life and my own career where at times my inability to communicate the full truth and full candor, it's limited. It's suppressed the full value of my engagement in that team or that situation. Absolutely. I think it doesn't mean everything I have to say is really smart and really useful, obviously. But I think a lot of times I leave useful and important things unsaid because of how it might land with somebody in the room or how they may feel about me after the fact, et cetera. I think you extend that across an entire company of people. It's easy to see why Netflix, the delta in performance between Netflix and say Amazon Prime, which last time I heard, I mean, there's just It's a significant delta in market share and viewer share. Netflix is just so widely. Can you attribute it all to that? I don't know, but maybe a big portion of it. Oh, yeah. Because if you're engineers, you're salespeople, you're marketing people, when they think a thing, they feel safe to communicate it without having to package it in a particular way.
[00:28:20.840] - Chris
It's like the speed at which and the quality of the engagements you get.
[00:28:25.680] - Brandon
That's right.
[00:28:26.200] - Chris
I would imagine you're just radically different.
[00:28:28.290] - Brandon
A hundred %. What in a restoration business or a trade service business where an employee, frontline tech, doing the grind, they're a good employee, man. They show up every day, they give a shit, they want to do great by themselves, they want to do great for the company and the client, and they're out in the field beating their head against a wall in one piece of the process. Just every day, they're doing this thing that we thought is the right way, and they're afraid to tell us. Then the next thing you know it, every other tech out in the field is fine except for that one piece of the puzzle. They all have this shared conflict with it, and they all know it's broken and that there could be a better way to address it. They're afraid to tell us because we haven't created an environment where they are motivated to give us feedback. Think about that. How many employees do we lose? How much margin are we losing in that moment? Are we not getting a referral because of something that's broken in the process that someone won't tell us about? There are all these things that we miss when we create an environment where people are afraid to experiment and communicate.
[00:29:41.900] - Brandon
I think about a lot of these development companies where R&D is critically important to the future of the business. Well, imagine if you had an environment where everyone's afraid to experiment, try new things, and then tell you how it's going. It's counterintuitive when you think about it this way. Okay, so safety, big deal. I think we also need to create some separation between behavior and personality. Oh, that's good. I'm thinking about this like, okay, where are the times I'm the most afraid to say something about someone's performance or what gives me mental friction and a lack of conviction to go to the individual and tell them how I think about how things are going? Nine times out of 10, it's because I'm trying to approach somebody about an opinion or emotional or a feeling instead of data that we can agree to the definition of. If I come to you and I'm going to talk to you about some personality issue, It's a little eye of the beholder. Now, I'm not saying there's never a place for this, but it's more eye of the beholder than if you and I agree, Hey, in your position, here's how you win.
[00:30:55.360] - Brandon
When you're operating at these levels and these are the performance metric that you're winning at, it's clear. Then when you're not, I can come to you and I can say, Hey, it looks like this metric now has been missed three weeks in a row. Let's talk about what additional support you need to create a fix here, because this is out of alignment with standard. You and I both know it. What do we need to do to help you get back into alignment on the standard? That's a lot better place to start in a conversation than, Hey, my experience with you is you're missing the mark. It's I don't know.
[00:31:30.750] - Chris
Well, I think part of it, too, in my experience, is we have cultures where it isn't really permissible, to be totally honest all the time. Most of us don't have cultures of radical candor, and so people sit on things. People will noodle on stuff like, Well, is this worth me bringing up? There's a lot of anxiety around what should be said, what shouldn't be said. Then the emotions behind that experience with that person or the team or the decision that's being made or whatever, just fester and grow to where people get afraid or angry or both. Then when they feel like they have no choice but to bring this thing up, it's become an emotional ordeal versus a At some point, somebody shares something, it's like, whoa, I don't think I agree with that, or I think that's dangerous or not the right move, or will be slower than this other path or whatever. Then you can wrestle with those ideas without the personalities. But when you let things sit for a while, then you start to form judgments about the other person or the other team about how dumb or reckless or whatever our judgment is.
[00:32:42.320] - Chris
Whatever the motivations were. Yeah, why they said that, why they're approaching it that way. Then it becomes a personal thing versus a battle of ideas. Then it becomes us versus them, me versus that other person, and we start to protect ourselves and all the things.
[00:33:00.800] - Brandon
For sure. Yeah, it's huge. I think, too, fundamentally, there's got to be a stage setting that happens at the beginning, too, where people are introduced to this idea and this concept the moment that they onboard into the organization. That's like those Netflix stories. Basically, the reason there was a story is that someone got told in their onboarding, Hey, we're a company that leverages radical candor. We're expecting smart to say things in the room to make sure that we get the best outcome. Well, then they tiptoe into an environment and they get faced with it right out of the gate. That's the whole reason there was context for the story in the first place. I think, again, it's creating that safety, but then stage setting and saying, Okay, this is going to happen here. You know what I mean? Get ready for it.
[00:33:50.720] - Chris
Do you think... Because obviously, we're intending to deploy this and live this out with an FP, do you think there's maybe a connection to Jim Dethmer's feedback feedback-rich environment and what he recommends? Because you probably remember this, but he made a comment in that knowledge project interview that we've referenced a whole bunch of times, where he said, If necessary, make something up. When he's working with boards or leadership teams and he's talking about this, he has them do an exercise of, Hey, we're going to give feedback. I want feedback on me. If you can't think of anything real, just make something up for practice. I wonder I wonder if there's even a way to introduce this to your leadership team and just say, Hey, we're just going to practice. I want you just to say something that is real for you, and we drill on this. I can imagine it being very hard for some people at first because that first volley of shares feels very risky.
[00:34:51.660] - Brandon
Oh, for sure.
[00:34:52.560] - Chris
But I wonder, and I think this is something that you, me, Wayne, and Steve can do, where we just really lean into that. It seems to me it is one of those things that requires practice to get past the fear, concern, anxiety- You're spot on. Of what's going to come after me saying this. Yeah. Right?
[00:35:15.040] - Brandon
Yeah, you're spot on. Another thing that I remember, because as you're saying that, that stuck out to me is they actually talk about how in their one-on-one agenda is they actually build an agenda item, and they tend to close the meeting with it, where the leader specifically is asking for feedback during that one-on-one before they even close up shop and let the meeting end. To affirm what you're saying is for a lot of people, if this is newer environment, newer behavior, they're not going to live this out just because we talked about it or we promote it. Again, as part of the container, that would be a perfect example of there's a fixed agenda item that says, feedback for leader, that actually this is part of our meeting cadence that we establish this formal opportunity for you to provide me feedback. Then I think going back to what you're saying is, you're going to probably have to coach that. Yeah. Get them to talk about what's going on.
[00:36:14.400] - Chris
I think it's Probably also going to be especially awkward. What this is stirring up for me is my marriage. I think if anything, people that listen to show regularly, they've heard me bring this up many times, but my wife and I, it'll be 24 years in March. Without question, the last five years for our marriage have been better than the previous 15 combined. There's been so much movement, and it's remarkable to me. I can only attribute that. I could probably sum up all of the success we've had in bringing our marriage to this point is radical candor. It's been this willingness for us to dig into conversations that are very candid, very awkward, and a lot of times, very painful, too. Like her sharing stuff with me Meisha sharing stuff with her, whatever. Sure, yeah. Even after years of that, like over the weekend, we had a moment, Kara was traveling with me and we just got into a bind. I was feeling like, I can't say what I need to say because I've already said it before. In the past, she's responded a certain way, and she was feeling exactly the same thing. There was these unsaid things between us.
[00:37:24.960] - Chris
This is after, well, 24 years of some form of practice, but really intentional Five years plus. Yes, over the last five years or so. It's so funny how tuned, I guess, we are to packaging the information we're delivering, concerning ourselves with, overconcerning ourselves with how the other person might react or feel, and then pushing down that thing that probably in a lot of cases, really desperately, it is the answer. Saying this thing is the answer to what's happening. And yet, even after all this work together, both of us, and we laughed about it after the fact, we always do. Whenever we get bound up and then ultimately the salvation is in the honesty, and we get to the other side of it, and we're all lovey-dovey and connected again, and we both just sit back and like, why do we do this?
[00:38:15.250] - Brandon
Yeah, again. Why do we do this again? Yeah.
[00:38:18.360] - Chris
It's like we know what we know, and yet, obviously, it doesn't just happen. I mean, if it happens in marriage, it happens in everything. Oh, yeah. It happens with our kids. But that's why I think of that practice thing is, and now that I think about it, it's like, God, what would it look like for us to have a more routine of just having a moment set aside? Like on Sunday afternoon or something.
[00:38:38.940] - Brandon
Do a little bit of a reset.
[00:38:40.540] - Chris
To be like, Hey, let's just have a get real moment. Let's practice. Just being totally honest.
[00:38:47.680] - Brandon
It's a journey. I think at the end of the day, just like with anything, whether it be with interactions with team members, business partners, relationships, it's a two-way street. One person can't do this in a silo. But and. The person that understands the connection to this in terms of how much more successful a relationship or a business can be, how much better of a leader we can be if we do live this out, then it puts the onus on us to continue to develop the relationships that can live this way. It's going to require some patience, it's going to require some consistency. It's going to require us taking action first to invite that individual, that team member, whatever, to participate in this communication. But I think all things point towards a clear path of a higher chance of success if you're willing to lean in and commit to radical candor. Again, whether it be in personal relationship or at work and with your business partners and leaders, this is meaningful, dude. It adds Ws in the win column. It really does.
[00:39:53.780] - Chris
I think there's virtue in being the first mover. It takes courage.
[00:39:58.970] - Brandon
Yeah, for sure.
[00:40:00.680] - Chris
I think that's just something important to keep in mind is at some point, it does take two to really get the full benefit of Cander, but at the same time, somebody has to offer it first. That's right.
[00:40:13.500] - Brandon
Yeah, I agree. Fun. Okay, guys. Until next time. All right, everybody. Hey, thanks for joining us for another episode of Head, Heart, and Boots.
[00:40:24.960] - Chris
If you're enjoying the show, if you love this episode, please hit follow, formerly known as subscribe, write us a review, or share this episode with a friend. Share it on LinkedIn, share it via text, whatever.
[00:40:36.770] - Chris
It all helps.
[00:40:37.710] - Chris
Thanks for listening.