Well I checked last Sat eve and didn’t see the show- looks like it posted Sunday, I figured it’d been cancelled. Anyways, that was a great show. It was a “shorter” podcast, but you really packed the material in there well. Kept me on my toes, probably took me twice as long w/pausing and rewinding.
The material is obviously applicable to survival, but has strong parallels to business, as some of the words you used indicated.
A few of your one liner’s I liked:
-Moments choose you, but you choose how you’re going to respond in those moments.
-Acting while your opponent is still deciding you can gain a strategic advantage (could be making the first move in a new business opportunity before anyone else jumps into the market).
-The real reason most people make bad decisions is because they fail to put the information we have in its proper context (applicable to so many things).
-Your decision does not have to be perfect! It simply has to be more swift and decisive than your opponent. (Take action! Totally entrepreneur relevant. The reality is that a perfectionist won’t make it out of a life threatening situation if they think everything they do has to be perfect. They’ll never finish their action, or re-assess the situation during their action to determine a new action).
-If the enemy doesn’t have time to react, you’re effectively in his head, inside his loop, ahead of him in his decision making process.
-Action needs to become reflexive for you.
-When an adversary doesn't expect our action… we’ve forced them back into our game plan.
The material is obviously applicable to survival, but has strong parallels to business, as some of the words you used indicated.
A few of your one liner’s I liked:
-Moments choose you, but you choose how you’re going to respond in those moments.
-Acting while your opponent is still deciding you can gain a strategic advantage (could be making the first move in a new business opportunity before anyone else jumps into the market).
-The real reason most people make bad decisions is because they fail to put the information we have in its proper context (applicable to so many things).
-Your decision does not have to be perfect! It simply has to be more swift and decisive than your opponent. (Take action! Totally entrepreneur relevant. The reality is that a perfectionist won’t make it out of a life threatening situation if they think everything they do has to be perfect. They’ll never finish their action, or re-assess the situation during their action to determine a new action).
-If the enemy doesn’t have time to react, you’re effectively in his head, inside his loop, ahead of him in his decision making process.
-Action needs to become reflexive for you.
-When an adversary doesn't expect our action… we’ve forced them back into our game plan.
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