cover of episode Become a better communicator: Specific frameworks to improve your clarity, influence, and impact | Wes Kao (coach, entrepreneur, advisor)

Become a better communicator: Specific frameworks to improve your clarity, influence, and impact | Wes Kao (coach, entrepreneur, advisor)

2025/4/6
logo of podcast Lenny's Podcast: Product | Growth | Career

Lenny's Podcast: Product | Growth | Career

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L
Lenny Rachitsky
曾任Airbnb产品领袖,Localmind联合创始人和CEO,著名产品管理博客和播客作者。
W
Wes Kao
Topics
Wes Kao: 我经常看到运营人员表达不佳,然后对人们的困惑、怀疑或冷漠感到震惊和恐惧。我非常赞成问问自己,如果我没有得到我想要的结果,我该如何贡献?我该如何更清晰地解释这一点?我该如何更有说服力?我该如何预料他们可能提出的任何问题? 我经常看到运营人员解释事情的方式很糟糕,然后当人们感到困惑或出现怀疑、冷漠时,他们会感到震惊和恐惧。我非常赞成问问自己,如果我没有得到我想要的结果,我该如何贡献?我该如何更清晰地解释这一点?我该如何更有说服力?我该如何预料他们可能提出的任何问题? 我教的另一个重要内容是像比赛日一样练习,像比赛日一样比赛。我看到很多运营人员只把他们最好的行为留给高管。他们想在向高级领导层展示时大放异彩。但对其他人来说,他们只是敷衍了事。我认为,如果你只和高管一起做,你就无法获得足够的经验来真正掌握高管沟通技巧。因为我们很多人一个月只向高管汇报一次,或者一个季度几次。这只是很少的机会去练习。所以,真的要像对待重要人物一样对待每一个利益相关者,因为他们很重要。 我还认为沟通更像是一种手段,而不是目的本身。虽然我教的是沟通课程,但沟通的最终目的是为了达到你想要的结果,无论是获得认同、团队做出好的决定,还是进入下一步,沟通都是为了这个最终目标服务的。 我经常看到运营人员解释事情的方式很糟糕,然后当人们感到困惑或出现怀疑、冷漠时,他们会感到震惊和恐惧。我非常赞成问问自己,如果我没有得到我想要的结果,我该如何贡献?我该如何更清晰地解释这一点?我该如何更有说服力?我该如何预料他们可能提出的任何问题? 我教的另一个重要内容是像比赛日一样练习,像比赛日一样比赛。我看到很多运营人员只把他们最好的行为留给高管。他们想在向高级领导层展示时大放异彩。但对其他人来说,他们只是敷衍了事。我认为,如果你只和高管一起做,你就无法获得足够的经验来真正掌握高管沟通技巧。因为我们很多人一个月只向高管汇报一次,或者一个季度几次。这只是很少的机会去练习。所以,真的要像对待重要人物一样对待每一个利益相关者,因为他们很重要。 我还认为沟通更像是一种手段,而不是目的本身。虽然我教的是沟通课程,但沟通的最终目的是为了达到你想要的结果,无论是获得认同、团队做出好的决定,还是进入下一步,沟通都是为了这个最终目标服务的。 销售优先,然后才是细节。一个常见的错误是高估了听众对你观点的认同程度。这意味着直接跳到讨论细节、流程的“怎么做”,而实际上,你的听众还没有决定是否要做这件事。然后,我看到运营人员做的回应是更深入地讨论细节和“怎么做”,认为如果我解释得更多,那个人就会想做这件事,而实际上,销售说明和细节说明是不同的。销售说明是为了让人们对你想让他们做的事情感到兴奋,并同意去做。只有在他们认同之后,才有意义去分享细节。这里有一个操作顺序。如果你改变了操作顺序,你可能会得到缓慢的回应,或者根本没有回应。我们都曾在频道中发送过Slack消息,然后得到蟋蟀和滚动的杂草。所以,真的要从销售开始,确保他们知道我们为什么要这样做,为什么这对公司很重要,为什么现在要这样做?然后分享细节往往更有效。 简洁的沟通不是指字数少,而是指信息密度高。很多关于简洁的建议都忽略了一个重要的点,那就是你是否真正知道你的核心观点是什么。你无法直奔主题,除非你知道主题是什么。你无法把重点挖出来,除非你知道重点是什么。我发现,简洁的底层逻辑实际上是清晰地知道你在想什么。正是因为不清楚自己在想什么,才会导致冗长。你可以测试这个理论,因为我们大多数人都有一个自己说过很多次的常用故事,对吧?你确切地知道人们会在什么时候笑,会在什么时候吃惊或屏住呼吸,对吧?为什么你这么擅长讲故事?为什么你讲故事这么简洁?因为你讲过很多次了,你知道所有的节奏。但在工作会议中,我们很少多次谈论同一件事。它总是新的东西。它也是我们可能正在处理的事情,在我们以快速周转时间告诉别人这件事、告诉我们的团队这件事的过程中,我们也在处理它。所以,你基本上是在要求你的大脑进行许多不同的过程,尤其是在实时对话中。你在听对方说话,吸收信息,理解信息,处理信息,弄清楚你的想法以及你将如何回应,然后试图说一些有凝聚力的话。这有道理,对吧?然后试图简洁地表达它。所以,这只是许多不同的过程。所以我发现,持续简洁的唯一方法是准备。这不是一个非常有魅力的解决方案。但是,我越清楚地进入会议、对话、推销,我就越擅长简洁,并且能够将对话带回到最重要的点上,能够保持灵活,但也坚定。 路标是指在写作中使用特定的词语、短语、格式和整体结构来引导读者,并提示接下来会讲什么内容。这对于长篇备忘录尤其有用。它为我们前进的方向和某些章节、段落的内容增加了结构。我最喜欢的路标词语包括:例如(表明你将要举一个例子)、因为(表明你将要分享你对某事的逻辑和理由)、下一步(这是一个很好的词语,人们的眼睛会自动跳到“下一步”上)、首先、其次、第三(用这些词语开头一个段落,你就不需要依赖于粗体、斜体、下划线等富文本格式)。如果你用路标词开头句子,你通常可以表明,这就是我将在这个段落中讨论的内容。 在写作和口头表达中都可以使用路标。如果你正在进行产品演示,你可能会说:“最重要的事情是……”或者“我们最惊讶的部分是……”或者“客户……”等等。所以,你是在表明,接下来要说的事情是你可能需要注意的事情。所以,这不仅是一种增加结构的好方法,而且也是一种在读者注意力分散时重新吸引他们注意力的好方法。 在自信方面,人们往往倾向于过度自信或缺乏自信。过度自信的人可能会把假设当成事实来陈述。如果说“这是X”或“这将是X”,这与说“这可能是X”或“这可能是X”或“这将增加X的可能性”是不同的。我非常赞成准确地说话。如果你准确地谈论你的信念程度和你拥有的证据数量,那就没问题了。某些东西可以是一个初步的直觉。说这是一个初步的直觉。不要表现得好像你非常确定这件事,因为你已经证明了,你知道,这是绝对的,你知道,就是这样,因为你的团队其他成员会照单全收,而不是你们可能会花费真正的员工和资金来追求你以一种你有点夸大了你的信心水平的方式所倡导的事情。 对于那些缺乏自信的人来说,情况同样是一个问题。我有一些客户,他们的CEO要求他们与另一个团队分享一些建议,因为他们之前做过类似的事情。所以他们分享了所有这些惊人的信息。最后,他们说:“哦,但是你可以忽略我刚才说的所有内容。很明显,自己做决定,做你认为最好的事情。如果你想忽略所有内容,那也完全没问题。”就像,你根本不必这么说,你可以说,自己做决定,把所有这些都考虑进去,但是,你不需要贬低到那种程度。所以,再次强调,准确地说话非常非常重要。如果你有充分的理由向跨职能团队推荐某事,那么表现得好像你不太确定,这几乎是不负责任的。这就像一个随机的想法。嘿,如果你想尝试,就试试吧。你知道,如果我们不采纳这个想法,我们可能会损失很多资金和时间。所以,再次强调,准确地说话非常非常重要。 MOO(最明显异议)框架能够帮助人们预判并有效应对沟通中可能遇到的阻力。很多时候,我们对收到的问题感到惊讶,尤其是在会议中,我们感到措手不及,这真是出乎意料。然后我们就处于被动状态。但实际上,如果你花两分钟时间考虑一下,当我分享这个内容时,我可能会遇到哪些明显的异议,你通常会立即想到其中的一些内容。你会能够预料到每一个异议吗?不会。但是你能预料到明显的异议吗?当然可以。这就是为什么深入了解你自己的论点,包括反驳论点,变得如此重要。所以,了解你的反驳论点以及你对做这件事的论点一样重要。当你这样做时,当你以这种方式做好准备时,你就不太可能感到措手不及。 在高压沟通场景下,保持冷静的关键在于不要给自己过大的压力,并尝试理解对方提问背后的深层含义。我认为,让很多人不知所措的一件事是,他们给自己施加了很大的压力,要求自己给出完全正确的答案。所以,如果他们被问到一个问题,而他们不知道答案,很多人就会开始慌张。在我职业生涯的早期,我被教导说,如果你不知道答案,你应该说:“让我查一下。我会回复你。”这是一个很好的方法。这肯定比编造东西好,对吧?所以绝对不要编造东西。但是,如果你更有经验,并且对你的主题领域有一定的信心,那么你只是说“我会回复你”有时是一个错失的机会。你可以要求更多信息,以便能够在那一刻继续对话。所以,假设你的主管说:“上个月有多少百分比的用户来自移动端?”而你没有记住这个数字。A说:“我会回复你。让我查一下,再回复你。”B可能会说:“我没有记住这个数字。但在上个季度,这个数字是60%到70%。而且在过去一年里一直在增长。所以,移动端现在是我们业务中更大的一部分,等等。你是否想知道我们是否正在适当地投资移动端?或者这个问题是从哪里来的?”所以,能够回答一个类似的问题,朝着你认为对方正在问的方向回答,然后验证他们为什么问这个问题,这让你能够在那一刻继续对话。 有效授权的关键在于确保被授权者充分理解任务、保持热情、规避风险、保持一致并建立快速的反馈循环(CEDAF框架)。我有一个叫做CEDAF的框架。C代表理解。我已经给了我授权给的这个人他们需要理解我想要他们做什么的一切了吗?这包括更简单的事情,比如登录他们需要查找的所有正确的软件工具,以及理解最终结果应该是什么样子。所以,这都在C代表理解的范围之内。E代表兴奋。我是否以一种尽可能令人兴奋的方式解释了这一点?有很多任务本身并不那么令人兴奋,但是通过解释我们为什么要这样做,或者为什么这对我们正在做的项目很重要,这会让人们更有可能理解并对这如何融入一切感到兴奋。所以,E代表兴奋。D代表降低风险。我是否降低了授权此项任务的任何明显风险?所以,通常当我问客户这个问题时,他们会立即想到一些东西。他们会说:“哦,是的,我不希望我的直接下属花费大量时间朝着错误的方向前进,填写电子表格的100行,如果实际上花费的时间比我们预期的要长的话。”好的,如果这是一个风险,那么也许你可以让他们做10行,看看需要多长时间,看看我们是否需要他们实际收集的所有信息,然后重新组合。那么,明显的风险是什么?另一个可能是,我可以看出这个人误解了,认为我在寻找这个,而实际上我想要的是那个。好的,很好。只要告诉他们,你知道,当我解释这个的时候,你可能会认为我的意思是这个,但实际上,我并不想那样。我实际上想要的是这个。所以,只要说出来就行了。A代表一致。那么,我是否给了另一个人一个机会来表达意见,并确保我们实际上是一致的,他们是否理解了我所说的内容?因为你可能会解释很多东西,但是他们实际上吸收了多少呢?如果你结束了你的小演讲,然后说:“好的,去吧,做完后再来找我”,你永远不会知道。所以,给人们一个机会来提问,看看哪些部分引起了共鸣,哪些部分他们可能有点困惑。通常当我这样做的时候,这太棒了,因为我的团队成员会说:“你的意思是这部分吗?”或者“这部分是如何融入其中的?”我说:“哦,我的上帝,我完全忘记提到这件事了。”或者“哦,是的,我甚至没有很好地解释这一点。”好的,让我解释一下,对吧?然后是F代表反馈。那么,你如何才能拥有尽可能短的反馈循环呢?我非常喜欢尽可能缩短反馈循环,然后再次缩短它。所以在最初的授权对话中,与其等待一周,不如我们等待一天,然后检查一下这个人前进的最初方向?让我们做得更多。如果在我解释完之后,我们在同一对话中集思广益了一些这个人想做的事情呢?所以在这次授权对话中,我已经开始了解了,你知道,你想在这方面做什么?一旦你开始,你是否看到了任何瓶颈?所以,真的要保持这个反馈循环非常紧密。我发现,当我运行CEDAF首字母缩略词时,通常有一个字母我可以稍微加强一点。就像,“哦,我没有真正考虑过让这件事对这个人来说更令人兴奋。我该如何将它与他们的职业目标或本季度公司的优先事项或其他事情联系起来?”所以,这是一个很好的心理清单。 “素材库”是指收集并保存有价值的沟通素材,例如优秀的表达方式、有用的信息等,以便日后参考和借鉴。素材库对于营销人员来说非常常见。我认为其他职能部门还没有那么普及,但我认为它非常非常有用。基本上,素材库是收集你可以稍后参考的灵感。所以,你知道,一些营销人员会收集文案、登录页面、广告等的例子。对我来说,我有一个叫做“聪明人说过的话”的Apple Notes文件。在那里,我基本上会粘贴短语、词语,你知道,人们说过的一些我认为表达得很好、听起来非常聪明或听起来很有策略的话。我实际上并不经常回顾我的素材库。我认为其他人会这样做。但对我来说,即使是将它添加到我的素材库的行为,我已经从中获得了价值,因为它正在训练我更加警觉,注意到什么时候事情运作良好。我认为我们周围一直都在发生着很多事情,你的同事说了一些聪明的话,就像,“哦,那很好。”然后你就继续前进,对吧?但是当你停下来思考,“哦,那真的很有效。让我把它添加到我的文件中。还要考虑一下为什么它有效?这是我可以借鉴的东西吗?”在我的课程中,我鼓励大家创建一个工作日志,在那里他们可以记下这些观察结果、这些短语,并基本上鼓励自己更加警觉地注意你可以从周围的人那里借鉴的东西。 AI可以帮助改进沟通,例如撰写邮件回复、提供写作思路等。我喜欢Claude。有些日子我会和Claude聊天三四个小时,把它当作一个思考伙伴来提示。是的,我认为AI对沟通非常有帮助。一个东西的初步草稿可以用来反弹。有时我会粘贴一封我不太确定如何回复的电子邮件,并要求Claude帮我起草一个回复。我通常会给它一些方向。所以我发现,分享我的观点会使输出更好。如果我只是给它一些东西,然后说:“你会怎么说?”那就没那么好了。如果我说:“我不确定如何告诉这个人不,因为,你知道,我之前说过是的。所以我有点觉得有义务。但是,你知道,情况已经改变了。所以,有没有一种很好的方法,我可以非常尊重我们之间的关系,并且让他们感到被看到和被听到,但同时拒绝?”所以,如果我解释说这就是我正在处理的问题,以及我理想情况下想做的事情,Claude就会给出一些相当好的东西。然后从那里,我会把它编辑成我的声音,因为它通常听起来太正式了。所以我做了一些编辑,然后我会把它分享给Claude,然后说:“你觉得这个版本怎么样?你会做任何改进吗?”然后我们就从那里来回讨论。

Deep Dive

Chapters
This chapter explores the importance of clear communication and how to improve it. Wes Kao emphasizes taking ownership of communication issues and practicing consistently, not just with senior leaders. The concept of treating every stakeholder with importance is also highlighted.
  • Poor communication leads to confusion and apathy.
  • Focus on explaining things clearly and compellingly.
  • Practice communication skills consistently with all stakeholders, not just senior leaders.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

I often see operators who explain things poorly and then are shocked and horrified when people are confused or there's skepticism, there's apathy. I'm a big proponent of asking myself, if I'm not getting the reaction that I'm looking for, how might I be contributing? How could I explain this more clearly? How can I be more compelling?

How can I anticipate any questions that they might have? You are one of the best teachers of communication I've ever come across. I made a list of people's favorite tactics and frameworks and approaches that you teach in writing. Any tactics you can share for someone to be a little more concise.

I think the blast radius of a poorly written memo is way bigger than most people think. If you're just shooting off a message in a Slack channel with 15 other people and it's confusing, you didn't include information you should have included, there's going to be a bunch of back and forth. Whereas if you just take another look,

at it, those 15 people would be off to the races. You have an awesome framework called MOO. MOO stands for most obvious objection. A lot of times we're surprised by the questions that we get, especially in meetings. We feel blindsided when really, if you thought for even two minutes about what are obvious objections that I'm likely to get, you often immediately come up with what some of those things are. Are you going to be able to anticipate every single objection? No. But can you anticipate the obvious ones? Absolutely.

Today, my guest is Wes Kao. Wes co-created the Alt-MBA program with Seth Godin. She co-founded a company called Maven, which I often collaborate with, which makes it easy for people to host live cohort-based courses. She recently left Maven to launch her own course on executive communication and influence.

There's a quote that came to mind after I stopped recording this conversation with Wes by George Bernard Shaw. The single biggest problem in communication is the illusion that it has taken place. By the end of this podcast, if you listen to what Wes suggests, you will be a lot closer to becoming a world-class communicator.

If you enjoy this podcast, don't forget to subscribe and follow it in your favorite podcasting app or YouTube. Also, if you become a yearly subscriber of my newsletter, you get a year free of Perplexity Pro, Superhuman, Notion, Linear, and Granola. Check it out at lenny'snewsletter.com. With that, I bring you Wes K.O.

Thank you.

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Wes, thank you so much for being here and welcome back to the podcast. Thanks, Lenny. I'm very honored to be a second time guest. Very rare honor. No pressure, but I think this is going to be one of the highest leverage episodes I've done. And let me tell you why I think that's the case. In the newsletter and on the podcast, I often talk about just how important and how leveraged the skill of communication is to product leaders, to

to leaders, just like people in general. There's this quote that Boz, the CTO of Meta, he's been on the podcast, he wrote this famous blog post, communication is the job. And I think that's true for product people, but it's true for basically any sort of leadership role, anyone trying to get ahead.

And you are one of the best communicators I've ever met. You are one of the best teachers of communication I've ever come across. You have one of the most popular courses on Maven on executive communication. So I'm really excited to have you here and to help people become better communicators, better at influence and all these things. So thank you again for being here. Absolutely.

Okay, so something that I often do with guests on the podcast, not even often, always, I ping people that the guests have worked with and ask them, what should I ask Wes? What should I know about Wes? So let me read a few quotes about you in regards to your communication skills from folks that have worked with you. These are three different people.

Okay, so first, Wes single-handedly raised the quality of the entire company's writing by like 2x across the board. I always say the best writing course I ever took was working with Wes for a year. Wow. Okay, that's one. Wes never just throws things out there. She's precise with her use of language, meticulous about examining her own ideas before bringing them in front of others, and knows how to make her points in a way that people will understand them and buy into them. Okay. Okay.

And third, Wes includes her reasoning with every proposal and the context behind all of her recommendations so that everyone around her learns in order of magnitude faster. This also makes her an exceptional teacher because she can clearly define what excellence is and why something is the goal and then break down the steps and principles involved. Okay, reactions? Those are really nice things.

That's amazing. Yeah, thank you so much. And these are people across different companies. So, okay, so that was just to highlight how good you are at this stuff. And what we're going to be doing with our chat is going through a bunch of your tactics that you teach and that have helped people become better communicators, executive communicators, better at influence. Before we get into the specific tactics, is there anything that you think is important for people to understand just broadly around the skill of becoming a better communicator?

I often see operators who explain things poorly and then are shocked and horrified when people are confused or there's skepticism, there's apathy, there's a lot of avoidable questions. And I'm a big proponent of asking myself, if I'm not getting the reaction that I'm looking for, how might I be contributing to that?

So, you know, instead of blaming other people for not understanding me, I think about how could I explain this more clearly?

How can I be more compelling? How can I anticipate any questions that they might have? So I'm a big proponent of agency and realizing that we can only control our own behavior. And so the best place to start if you're not getting the reaction you're looking for is reflecting on how can I get better at the skill of communicating? And it absolutely is a skill. So I'm hearing is like if you're having a hard time, people buy into what you're trying to convince them to do or you're finding people are doing things

not what you ask them to do, it's likely a issue with your ability to communicate. It's probably not their fault. Yeah, I would say so. You know, you can't solve everything with improving your communication. But you can increase the likelihood of getting what you want.

Cool. Okay. Anything else along these lines of just things that are important to understand just broadly around communication, executive communication? I think another big one that I teach in my course and really kick off with is practicing like it's game day, playing like it's game day. So I see a lot of operators who save their best behavior for executives only.

So, you know, they want to shine when they're presenting to senior leadership. But with everyone else, they're kind of calling it in. And I just don't think that you're going to be able to get enough reps to actually get good at executive communication if you are only doing it with executives. Because many of us only present to execs once a month, right, or a couple times a quarter. And that's just not a lot of chances to practice. So really treating every single stakeholder as if they are important because they are

And you shouldn't be, you know, if you don't want to waste your CEO's time, you also shouldn't waste your cross-functional team members time or your manager's time or your direct reports time. So that's something else that I ask folks to keep in mind. And maybe a last question before we get into the tactics. When people think communication, they think email, they think meeting presentations like that. What's like a how do you think about when you talk about executive communication and communication in general? What's kind of the umbrella of things that includes communication?

Yeah, I would say broadly, the two mediums are verbal communication and written. So verbal being meetings, conversations, presentations, and written being emails, strategy docs, notion docs, Slack messages, text messages, those two categories broadly. And I also think about communication as more of a means to an end.

Which might be interesting for some people because I teach a course on communication. So you would think that's like, you know, the end in and of itself. But I really see it as a means to an end where the end is getting the ideal outcome you're looking for. So whether that is buy-in or making a good decision as a team or, you know, moving to the next step, whatever that might be, communication is really in service of that end goal. Awesome. Okay, so I made a list of

people's favorite tactics and frameworks and approaches that you teach in talking to folks that you've taught and folks that you've worked with. So I'm just going to go through a bunch and let's just help people get better at these things. All right, let's do it. Okay. So the first is something you call sales, then logistics. What is that about? Yes. So a common mistake that I see is

overestimating the amount of buy-in that you have from your audience. So that looks like jumping straight into talking about the logistics, the details of the how to do something, of the process, when in reality, your audience has not yet decided if they even want to do the thing. So what I see operators do in response then is go even deeper into the logistics and the how, thinking that, oh, if I just explain this more than that person will want to do it,

When really a sales note is different than a logistics note. A sales note is meant to get people excited to do the thing you want them to do.

and to agree to do it. And only then, after they have bought in, does it make sense to share the logistics. So there's an order of operations here. If you switch the order of operations, you will likely get a slow response or just no response, right? We've all put a Slack message in a channel and got crickets and tumbleweed. So really starting off with selling the person and making sure that they know why we're doing this, why this matters to the company, a

Why now? And then sharing logistics tends to be a lot more effective. Is there an example of that that might help illustrate that point or that approach? Yeah. So one of my clients is a head of operations and she was trying to get the rest of her executive team, which she was a part of.

to fill in some wins for the week so that they could share this out with the whole company. And this was going to be motivating. It was going to shine a light on folks. And she led with the logistics of

which document to send, you know, to put the details in, what time to put it in by, the format that you should put these wins, and didn't really get much of a response from the leadership team, which makes sense, right? Because this totally sounds like one of those things that's another item to check off on your list.

When you already have so many other things to do. And here's this other process that like we're all supposed to do now. Like, yay. Right. And so she she wasn't really getting response. And that's because she dove straight into logistics. Whereas what she could have done is start by selling folks, selling the other executives on why are we doing this? Well, we're doing this because this is a chance to shine a light on your team members who are doing amazing work for them to feel motivated, motivated.

And to feel like the rest of the company really sees them and understands what they're doing. And this is all something that that is going to motivate your team. Right. So sharing why this is helpful and useful and how this is in service of you and your team versus like, oh, this is a favor that you're doing for me to fill out this form and fill it out this way and by this date, etc., etc.,

I know that execs often want the opposite, where they're just like, okay, I know, like, just tell me what you want to do. Just like, okay, just get to the point. I don't want time for all this context and background. Any advice on when to spend any time on the sales? Like, what are signs that, okay, maybe you don't have them sold yet? Or what are maybe contexts where you should probably still try to sell them first? Yeah, so I actually think that you should always do a little bit of selling, even for situations where people have generally bought in.

because most of us have a lot going on and we're not actively thinking about whatever you're talking about. So even though I agreed to something two weeks ago, by the time you're telling me about it again, like I thought about a billion other things since then, right? So reminding me of why are we talking about this? Why does this matter? And then getting into it and framing that conversation up front is way more likely for us to not get stuck in a cold start and not kind of

go two steps back, one step forward. The other thing is you can frame a conversation and sell a bit at the beginning very concisely. So I'm not talking about spending 15 minutes out of a 30-minute meeting selling. I'm talking about one to two minutes.

Even a couple sentences and then transitioning into the main thing you want to talk about. So I'm a huge proponent of doing that and basically reminding people, why are we doing this? Why are we here today? Why does this matter? And then getting into the meat.

I love that. So basically, it's you can do this really briefly. It doesn't have to be a whole pitch for half an hour. It's just a reminder. Here's here's why we think this is important. And I think that's such a good point, because a lot of times it's like like a leader's looking at this thing you're asking them to do. And you're like, they're like, why are we even why am I spending time on this?

And just a reminder of like, okay, I see. I forgot this was going to be, this is a part of our strategy. This is a big, this has this much impact potential and, or here's how it could help our team be more efficient. So yeah. And you can really do that in like 30 seconds. Is there, is there like a, I don't know, structure to this? Is it just like, why? Like, is there a kind of a template that you like or some way you recommend of selling first? Is it like, here's why we're doing this, like starting like that, anything along those lines? Yeah.

Yeah, I think explaining why we're doing this, why this benefits the business, what problem this is solving. Again, you can do a lot of this in a couple sentences.

And then I also like asking or stating what I need from the other person up front. So saying, you know, hey, we're here today because two weeks ago we were reviewing the product flow and realized that there were a couple parts that were kind of confusing. So I took a stab at fixing those areas, rewriting the microcopy, and I want to present them to you today. See if you agree with these changes and then we're going to roll them out. What I'm looking for from you is feedback on the changes and if you agree.

So like that was like 15 seconds, right? Like super fast. And then now we're all on the same page about why we're here. And you can listen more intently knowing that I'm looking for a certain kind of feedback. I would love to hear it that way. I think I think there's like an implication here that maybe is worth sharing of just and this is a lot of this is about we're communicating effectively to execs, which will make you communicate better to most people. But especially with folks up the ladder, they don't have a lot of time. They have a million things in their head.

Maybe just share why this is so important, what the state of mind of a leader is that you need to kind of break through. Yeah, so I call it the yes, yes, yes, next, next, next mindset, where if I'm listening to direct reports present something to me, very often I find myself thinking, got it, all right, yes, let's keep going, right?

And, you know, on the other side of that, I've often presented to executives where I had a 15 slide deck.

And execs would do that. And I'd be like, whoa, whoa, whoa. Like I have a whole sequence. I have a whole order, you know, and sometimes they would they would give me by or make the decision by slide four, you know, and I'd be like, OK, well, you know, slide 13. I want to show you this this great graph I put together. Right. And, you know, what was really helpful for me was realizing that I should take the win. OK, if my exec has already agreed, take the win and and keep it moving. Move on.

Yeah. What's that quote? Like if you've sold them, stop talking. Right. Yes. Yeah. You might talk them out of agreeing. Yeah. Okay. You mentioned being concise. Let's talk about that. You have some really good advice on just how to effectively be concise and not too concise. What's your advice there? Yes. One of my pet peeves is when people are too concise and they equate being concise with brief, being brief. And being concise is not about

absolute word count. It's about economy of words. It's about the density of the insight that you're sharing. And so you can have a 300-word memo that's meandering and long-winded and a thousand-word memo that is tight and concise. And so not equating concision with briefness, I think, is a really big one to understand. The second thing is a lot of advice about being concise, I think, misses an important point. So

You know, we've all heard don't bury the lead, cut to the chase, main point, you know, put the main point at the top, bottom line, not front. Right. And all of these pithy aphorisms assume that you actually know what your core point is. So you can't cut to the chase unless you know what the chase is. You know, you can't unbury the lead unless you know what the lead is.

And so that, I found, is the bottom leg to being concise. It's actually not really being clear of what you were thinking. That's what's leading to being long-winded. And you can kind of test this theory because...

most of us have a go-to story that we've told a bunch of times, right? We're like, you know exactly when people are going to laugh, you know, when they're going to gasp or hold their breath, right? And why are you so good at telling that story? And why are you so concise about it? Because you've told it a bunch of times, you know, you know, all of the beats. So in meetings, though, at work, we are very rarely talking about the same thing that many times. It's always something new. It's something that we are also probably likely processing ourselves and are

in the midst of processing as we are in a quick turnaround time telling someone else about it, telling our team about it. And so you are basically asking your brain to do a lot of different processes, especially in a real-time conversation. You're listening to the other person, absorbing, making sense of it, processing it, figuring out what you think and how you would react, and then trying to say something

cohesive. That makes sense. Right. And then trying to be concise about it. So it's just a lot of different processes. And so the only solution I found consistently to being concise is preparation. It's not a very glamorous solution by any means.

But the clearer I am going into a meeting, going into a conversation, going into a pitch, the better I am at being concise and being able to bring the conversation back to the most important points, at being able to stay flexible but also firm.

Yeah. And preparation, I don't mean spending hours and hours preparing for a weekly meeting. Even a couple minutes really makes a huge difference. Most of us are so back to back in meetings that we're doing zero preparation. It's like the meeting has started 30 seconds in and you're still unwinding from the last Zoom call that you were on. Right. So most of us are in that mental state. So if you even take 30 seconds to one minute to ground yourself on preparation,

Why am I in this meeting? What do I want to share and make sure I get across in the time that we have? You're going to go in there so much more focused and so much more able to be concise. So the advice there, so this is for meetings, and I want to talk about writing also, but for meetings, the advice here is before you get into a meeting, like actually think about why am I in this meeting? What do I want to get out of it?

Instead of in the meeting, like figuring out a lot as you go, which to your point, you're just going to ramble and be like, OK, here's what I actually want to say. Yeah. And what might I want to share in the meeting, too? You know, especially for more introverted folks, sometimes you need to decide beforehand that you want to speak and you want to make sure you get a certain point across. So even deciding that beforehand makes a huge difference.

Yeah, I found this extremely powerful, just like five minutes before you get into a meeting. And it could happen earlier in the day, right? It doesn't have to happen right before the meeting or worst case. It's right before the meeting. Just OK, what I want to get out of this. What am I here? What do I want to say? And just like giving your brain a little bit of time to prepare. Super powerful in writing. Any is there like any tactics you can share for someone to be a little more concise? Yeah.

I think the main tactic is to remind yourself to be concise. And usually when I do that, I end up trimming 20%, at least, of what I wrote, tightening up some sentences. I also ask myself...

how might I be adding cognitive load to whatever it is that I'm saying? So, you know, is there a tighter, clearer, cleaner way that I can ask what I'm asking or present the information I'm presenting or the, you know, make the recommendation that I'm making? And usually if you even ask yourself that, your brain automatically comes up with stuff. You just see whatever you wrote differently and you're like, oh shit, I should trim this entire paragraph because like,

that's secondary, you know, and maybe you have your primary message in Slack and then within the thread, add, you know, some of the secondary stuff, right? So

I find that most of us, it's reminding yourself to be concise. And once you think of it, your brain naturally will see places where you can trip. There's a layer of advice under this that you're not saying that I'm going to say, which is actually look at the thing you wrote at least once before you share it. Because I used to be really bad at this. I just like, okay, I don't have time. I wrote this doc, send it. Get feedback. All right, let's send this email. I don't have time to like read this email. And I find just forcing yourself to look at it

solves so much of this. Oh, yes. Yes, definitely. I was assuming before doing that, but you're right. Some people might not be. And yes, definitely reading your own message first is huge. And...

Yeah, I find that even doing that, you can often spot a lot of low-hanging fruit. Right, like you'll find the typos and grammar issues and you'll be like, oh, I don't need this word. Along those lines, let me share two books. People always ask me, how did you learn to write? I'm like, I'm not a writer. I don't know what I'm doing, but two books really helped me write more effectively. And one is specifically to help you write more concisely called On Writing Well. And I don't know if you've read that. Yeah. Yeah.

Okay. And it's basically like chapter after chapter of here's what you can cut and you can cut more and look what more you can cut and cut this stuff. And he has like images of like screenshots of essays that students have written in this class. And he's like, look at all those words you cut and nothing is changed. It's exactly the same message and even is better with like 40% of the words cut. Is this by Sol Stein or another author?

I don't have it. It's somewhere in my bookshelf, so we'll look it up. Yeah. There's a writing book by Sol Stein that I absolutely love. And I feel like it might be called On Writing Well. But I could see there being multiple books called On Writing Well. There's also Writing Well, I think, by Stephen King. That's like another one that people love. But On Writing Well is the one I really love because it's very tactical. Going back to something that you were saying earlier with rereading what you wrote, I

I think the blast radius of a poorly written memo is way bigger than most people think. So if you're just shooting off a message in a Slack channel with 15 other people,

and it's confusing, and you didn't include information you should have included, there's going to be a bunch of back and forth. All 15 of these people are reading this being like, okay, what do I do with this? Whereas if you just take another look at it, those 15 people would be off to the races. They would have read your message and then known exactly what to do next or what their part was or what you were looking for from them. So I think about that a lot too. It's not just

you know, me writing this and sending it off. It's who are all the, who are all the people who are going to come in contact with this message? Who are going to refer to it and use it? And if I just take 30 more seconds to make sure that it's clean, how much can I unblock from their work? That's such a good point. I like that. I love that term blast radius. It's such a good point. Just like there's so much negative leverage in writing inefficiently and concisely. If you spend like in concisely, I don't know the word is there, but, uh,

If you just spend like three minutes spending a little more time making it more clear, just like the impact and leverage that has. That's such a good point. I looked up the books. It's so funny. OK, so there's On Writing Well by William Zistner. There's Stein on Writing by Sol Stein, which is what you said you were talking about. And then Stephen King has a book called On Writing. Yeah. Yeah.

Not ideal for SEO, but On Writing Well is the one that I love by William Zisner. There's also one called A Series of Short Sentences, if you haven't seen that one. It's a really good read too. It's just like how to write short sentences and just the power of just keeping sentences short, which I struggle with. Yeah, I like that. Okay, back to our agenda. There's another framework slash tactic that I've heard you recommend. It's called signposting. What is signposting? Signposting is...

using certain words, phrases, formatting, and an overall structure in your writing that helps guide your reader and signals what is coming in the rest of the post. So this is especially helpful if you have a long memo. It adds structure to where we're going and what certain sections of paragraphs are about. So some of my favorite signposting words are, for example, shows that you're about to show an example,

Because shows that you're about to share your logic and rationale behind something. As a next step is a great one. People's eyes kind of automatically zoom to as a next step. Even first, second, third, kicking off a paragraph with that. You're not needing to rely on rich text formatting with bolding, italics, underlines, and all that craziness.

If you kick off sentences with signposting words, you can often signal, here's what I'm about to talk about in this paragraph. These are like power words for clarity. Like there's this whole concept of power words, like free. Yeah, a gift. Yeah, for like copywriting. And these are basically power words for helping your brain see the structure and get to the thing you want to pay attention to. So I'll read back the words you just used. For example...

Because, as a next step, and then first, second, third. Yeah. Yeah, you can use signposting in writing and verbally, too. So if you're doing a product demo, you might say something like...

the most important part to pay attention to is blank. Or the part that we were most surprised by is blank. Or the, you know, the part that customers are, et cetera, right? So it's, you're signaling that whatever comes after this thing is something that you may want to pay attention to. So it's a great way, not only to add structure, but to also grab people's attention back if it has strayed sometime as they were either listening to you or reading.

Along those lines, I find formatting really helpful here, just like bold and bullets. I know you have a pet peeve with too much formatting. How much is too much formatting? I really hate excessive formatting. So, you know, I've seen memos where 30% of the note was bolded.

And that just negates the entire point of folding because if everything is folded, then nothing is being highlighted, right? So I think using formatting in general more sparingly than you think you have to is probably a good rule of thumb. I also dislike when people overuse bullets and sentence fragments, phrases in bullets, when they should use complete sentences that actually show the connective tissue between ideas, that show the logical flow of what it is that you're saying,

And, you know, it's it's it feels faster and more concise to put bullets and fragments. But a lot of times your reader on the other end of that is needing to decipher and interpret and guess what you actually meant. So it net net takes longer.

And I also think that it can be a little bit of a crutch. It can be a little bit lazy because you are telling yourself that you're being concise when really, if you had to turn your sentence fragment into a full sentence, a lot of times, like, it actually is harder than you think.

Because you realize that you actually didn't really know exactly what you meant. So as you're trying to turn it into a full sentence, you're actually needing to use brainpower. So that's like a great litmus test of like, was that idea fully thought out? Because if it was, you should be able to really quickly turn it into a complete sentence. And many times you actually aren't. So I see people like basically think, oh, I want to make this easier to read, more skimmable. I'm just going to throw a bunch of formatting in.

and bullets and, you know, turn everything into bullets. And it's not quite that easy of a solution. This is very much along the lines of the whole Amazon six-page memo where Jeff Bezos just kind of realized if you can't write it out as a long memo...

And explain yourself in prose. You don't actually know what you're saying. And it's a really good filter for helping people actually crystallize and know themselves. Okay, I see. I don't actually know what I'm doing here. And I love this like a microcosm of that. Can you just like make a bullet point a real sentence versus a fragment of a sentence? Yeah.

I'm thinking about as a listener being like, okay, how do I actually get better at this? So maybe let's take a tangent. I know that you teach a whole course, you do all this stuff hands-on with people to help them actually build these skills. For someone that hasn't taken the course or isn't taking it, what's a good way to start practicing these skills and know if what you're writing is getting better, is good? Is it like find a mentor, find someone that you think is a great writer and have them review stuff? Any tips there?

Yeah. So I have a pretty first principles driven approach for this, which is to think about how long does it take me right now to get to the reaction I'm looking for from my recipient? If it takes a bunch of back and forth and a bunch of friction, then that's kind of my baseline. And once you start practicing some of these communication skills, how does that speed up?

If you would have had seven different touch points of back and forth, does that shrink to two to three?

Not every point of friction is going to be avoidable, but a lot of it is if you get better at communicating. So I like watching for the reaction and how quickly and how enthusiastically I'm able to get that reaction. And for the things that are working, do more of that. For things that are not working, adjust your execution because it might not be that the tactic doesn't work. It might be your execution of it wasn't great. And keep trying, basically.

So the advice here is just see how well your writing slash meeting slash suggestion goes, how well it does. And if it's not like there's like the ideal immediately. Yes, let's do it. And then there's the I don't really understand. There's like the spectrum of response. And what I'm hearing is just pay attention to if the speed to getting what you want is increasing in general. Yeah.

Yeah, I don't think that there's any single shortcut on how to get better besides that. I do think that

Being fascinated by a topic and being excited about it makes it more likely that you're going to find it fun to try all these different things and try different ways to get through to people. So I would approach it with a hypothesis-driven experimental mindset and almost like a game. Like when I do this, how does that other person react? You know, if I frame it this way, do I get a different reaction? When I try this, am I able to cut through the noise more?

So yeah, so I really think it's about practicing. And I will say that the way not to do it

is to try to incorporate 30 different tactics at the same time and then beat yourself up when you don't remember to do them. You know, it's really easy when you are learning a new field or function to get overwhelmed when you're learning a new skill. And the way to build a habit is usually not changing so many different things at once. It's picking one thing that you want to try and keeping that top of mind

trying it in a bunch of different settings in different ways. And then, and then getting better at that thing before moving on to the next thing. So that's like a really common thing I see in my course is people feeling overwhelmed. And I always remind folks that you are building a new habit here and, you know, take it, be patient with yourself, take it step by step. There's a lot of stuff we're talking about here that a lot of people might be like, this is so minor. Like what I just bullet point sentences, uh,

Like be a little like tell them the why at the beginning. And I just want to share in my experience, the biggest jump I made in my career was actually getting better at these very specific skills. And this manager, Vlad, who's been on the podcast and I talk about him regularly, who was such a stickler about this.

communicating well and being very clear and concise and thinking and just spending more time on documents and emails on strategy docs, just like, no, this isn't ready. Spend more time. Here's something that's not clear. And just doing that was such an accelerant for me.

And it's all these little things. That's what's interesting about it. It's like everything seems really minor, but it all adds up to a lot of impact. Because to your point, people see it. Okay, cool. I get it. Let's go. Versus like, I don't like this idea. And then it's like, it all falls apart. So I guess any reactions to that? Yeah. All these little things compound and make a big difference. I...

Often hear people think, well, you know, this individual instance, this individual email, the Slack message is not worth spending a couple more minutes on. It's just an email or it's just a Slack message. The problem with that line of thinking is that no one instance of something is ever going to feel important enough to spend a little bit more time on that.

But when you zoom out, that's like, well, that's all your work then. This is like literally everything you've touched. This is all your work output then. Because every, you know, any piece of that process you thought wasn't, you know, wasn't worth spending time on. And now this is just the quality of your work. And it's not as good as it could be. So, yes, like these might seem minor, but A, it compounds. And also B, it's not.

All the quote-unquote big things, everyone else is already doing. So there's not a lot of alpha in that. Whereas if you are paying attention to skills that people think are boring or too basic and realizing that there is, that's a lever that you can pull, that, you know,

Someone else thought, oh, we're hitting diminishing returns on that. I'm not going to spend more time on that. But you realize that there's actually more juice left to squeeze there. And you decide to squeeze that juice. Well, now you have extra juice, right, that the other person doesn't have. So, yeah, in my experience, I find that people...

claim the point of diminishing returns way too early. And this isn't just for communication. This is for strategies, tactics, etc. They'll try something once, a mediocre attempt, and be like, this channel doesn't work. This tactic doesn't work. It's like, really? Because it's working for a lot of other people who are getting really creative with it. I'm not saying that everything has to work for you, but for you to claim this thing just doesn't work

feels a little bit intellectually dishonest. Like it's more likely that your skill level, your creativity, your execution ability was not good enough. And that's fine. Like let's admit that to ourselves because if we admit that, then we can do the hard work of getting better at those things. It feels like if you really boil this down, the advice kind of comes down to just spend a little more time on all these things you're putting out. I like thinking about it as a little bit more

upfront investment. And it is an investment. It's not just time. It's an investment because, yes, it takes a little bit longer to make a Slack message a little bit better. But net-net, if you save a bunch of questions and back and forth and people asking you things that you don't think they should be asking, then by investing a little bit of upfront effort, you've prevented all that from happening. So yeah, it is a little bit more time in the moment, but reaps a lot of benefits down the line.

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You mentioned Slack. I have a great quote also about you that I didn't read that I'm just going to read right now from someone that worked with you. She said she searched the Slack channel at the company you worked at for old posts from Wes for inspiration for what to ask you. And she said, you had zero half-baked thoughts, 100% complete sentences, perfect punctuation, clear takeaways at the top of every message. It's the kind of thing you don't notice in isolation, but once you see everyone else's messages in a remote-first company, it's a stark contrast.

Hmm. Yeah, thank you. I will also say that, you know, as someone who tries to walk the talk, I feel like I get a pretty good response rate pretty quickly for the things that I ask for, for the recommendations I'm making. It's not, you know, it's not instant. It's not 100%. But yeah.

Over time, I've realized that improving my communication has led to people receiving my ideas better. You know, ideas that used to be locked in my head that I would get frustrated that no one else understood, people were now understanding. And that feels really good. That's very, very exciting. And it made me want to do it more, you know, and pay more attention to that. So that's kind of going back to what I said earlier about watching for what's working. You know, there's momentum is really encouraging.

And I totally feel that if it starts, like if you start getting the things you want, that feels great. Yeah. Okay, cool. Let's do more of that. Yeah. And again, it's like very minor things. Like it's, you know, it's like a couple more minutes on the Slack message, a couple more minutes of email. Very doable. Like, yeah. Which everyone can do. There's no like magic here. It's just spend a little more time and use some of these tactics that we're talking about. Speaking of that, let me talk about another tactic.

You have apparently you have some really good advice on finding the right level level of confidence in what you're saying. There's always this like question of I come to leader. How like confident should I be about this is the answer versus like here's a bunch of ideas. What do you think? What's your advice there? I find that people tend to naturally be on the spectrum a little bit too confident as a baseline or not confident enough.

So people who are too confident might state hypotheses as if they are fact. So that really bothers me. That's another one of my pet peeves, where, you know, if you say this is X or this will X, that is different than saying this could X or this might X or this will increase the likelihood of X. So I'm a big proponent of speaking accurately. You can avoid a lot of problems

If you speak accurately about your level of conviction and about the actual amount of evidence that you have for something, it's okay for something to be an initial hunch. Say it's an initial hunch. Don't act like this is something that you are super sure about. You've proven out, you know, that this is absolutely, you know, this way because the rest of your team is listening to you at face value and not

y'all might spend real headcount and dollars pursuing something that you have advocated for in a way where you kind of overreached with your level of confidence. So that's for people who are overconfident. It's equally a problem if you're underconfident. So I have some clients who, you know, their CEO asked them to share some recommendations with another team because, you know, they've run something before. And so they share all this amazing information. And at the end, they're like,

oh, but you can ignore everything I just said. You know, obviously make your own decision, do what you think is best. And like, if you want to just ignore everything, that's totally cool too. You know? And it's like, you just didn't have to say that, you know, you could say, make your own decision, like take all this into account, you know, but like, you don't have to diminish to that degree. And so again, speaking accurately, like if you have really strong reasons to recommend something to, you know, to the cross-functional team,

It's almost irresponsible to act like you are not really sure. And it's just this like random idea. Hey, try it if you want to try it. You know, like we might lose a lot of money and time if we don't take this idea. Right. So, again, speaking accurately is so, so important. It's a simple way to think about then kind of the right balances. Have a point of view. Have a recommendation. Present accurately.

accurate facts and be clear when you are not. It's not actually 100% true, but here's a hunch I have or here's a theory we have. Yeah, I think sharing a point of view, sharing a recommendation, and then backing it up with evidence, with logic, with first principles, with examples, with data, if you have it. Not every situation you're going to have data for, especially if you're building something new. So this is where first principles comes in.

Like even explaining how you got to where you got to and why you think this is going to work, that all gives your team, your manager, something to push back on, to poke holes on, or to align on and say, yeah, I agree here, but I disagree on this part. So you can talk about ideas with a lot more specificity when you share your thought process. And you can frame it all kicking off saying, my initial thinking is, or based on what we know,

My hunch is blank. Right. So speaking accurately and then still bringing up those facts so that we can all make as informed of a decision as we can make, given what we know. Advice I got that really helped here for me was to try to not be super try not to be biased with how you frame everything. You have your suggestion for how to do something. It's easy to just bias all of the data to point in that direction.

And I think it's, and if people notice that they're like, oh, okay, well, I can't really trust this because I see you're just like, you clearly have an agenda. So it's a little bit like having an agenda and a POV, but be clear about what is actually true, be accurate.

Yeah, I think any time people have to discount what you're saying because you are biased in this way is not great. Is there an example by any chance that highlights what you're describing here? Yeah. So in my course, I talk about not being a single minded martyr.

So single-minded martyr is someone who very much has an agenda, who wants their recommendation to go through and is presenting a bunch of evidence supporting that direction. And then gets really frustrated when other people are not seeing it or are skeptical. And so one of my clients was a single-minded martyr in a recommendation she was making. So she was on the growth acquisition side of her company and she

was having trouble with cross-functional team members lending headcount to her project. And so everyone would say like, oh, yes, we believe in this. This is important, but wouldn't want to actually give her, you know, half of their engineer for two weeks. And we were talking about it. And as we were talking, she revealed that the CEO had at the beginning of the year said that the company-wide goal is retention that year, that their biggest goal

challenges and areas of opportunity were in retention, not necessarily in growth. And once

she zoomed out and realized this, she was able to put her recommendation in context and realize that, you know, it's not just, you know, I'm the only one who cares about this company. Everyone is a hypocrite. They say they believe this, but like don't actually want to work on it. You know, before that was that was kind of her narrative. But once she zoomed out and realized she was being a single-minded martyr, she could better fit her proposal in the context of what else was happening in the organization. Right.

I think actually this is a really big difference between more junior people versus more senior people. More junior people are like, I need a win. Like, I need to get a yes for this proposal and I'm going to keep advocating for it until I get a yes. Whereas really, sometimes the best decision for the company is not right now. Like, this doesn't actually fit our priorities right now. Right? Or,

Maybe yes, but let's right size the level of investment. So it might look like half whatever the proposal, you know, the size of what that recommendation actually was. And having the maturity to realize that, to put your idea into context is huge. Like that took me a really long time to learn. And I think that goes under the umbrella of always do what's best for the company. Not necessarily what's best for me, my career, my team, my wins. You know, if you prioritize what's best for the company,

That helps you have a more right-sized way of still advocating for your ideas, but doing it with a bit more equanimity. And also just connecting to what the company is, just this idea of,

If the thing you're pitching is not aligned with what is important to the company right now, it's unlikely to be prioritized. It makes sense. This is why leaders choose. Here's what matters most. We got to do the things that are going to help us drive this thing right now, like retention or revenue. And so that's just, I think, a sub goal, sub tactic. There is just whenever you're pitching something, connect that to the goal of the person you're pitching to so that they're like, oh, I see how this is going to help me. That's great. Let's do it.

Great advice. And I think this is something a lot of people run into. It's just, why are they listening to me? Why don't they want? That's such a good idea. They hate me. It's something. Oh, I bet they hate me. They don't trust me. When it's just like, okay, this isn't a priority right now. Let's come back to it another time. Okay. I'm going to get to a couple more tactics and then I'm going to shift directions to talk about managers and being a manager.

You have an awesome framework called MOO. What does MOO, what does it stand for and what is it all about? MOO stands for Most Obvious Objection, M-O-O. And the thought there is that a lot of times we're surprised by the questions that we get, especially in meetings where, you know, we feel blindsided, that was unexpected. And then we're on our back foot. When really, if you thought for even two minutes about what are obvious objections that I'm likely to get when I share this,

you often immediately come up with what some of those things are. So are you going to be able to anticipate every single objection? No. But can you anticipate the obvious ones? Absolutely. And this is where knowing your own argument in and out, including counter arguments, becomes so important. So knowing your counter arguments as well as you know the arguments for doing the thing.

When you do that, when you when you have prepared in that way, you're less likely to to feel caught off guard. When you hear you talk about this, it's like, obviously, I should do this. But nobody like very few people actually do this, like actually spend a couple of minutes. OK, here's what I'm going to pitch. Even a couple of seconds. Really? Like, really? Like even a couple of seconds, your brain will will think of something. Is there is there a story or an example that you share that highlights this idea of the power of moo? I use moo often.

multiple times a day, every day, every single day. Like literally whatever I'm about to say, I think, how might someone disagree with this? Or what might an objection be? So whatever it is I'm writing, saying, it's a really good mental filter because it encourages you to think a couple steps ahead in kind of a structured way, right? Like if I'm about to say this, the person may then say this to me. Well, if I take that into account, I can volunteer to

that you know that information up front or i can frame it in a way where they're less likely to think that that's an issue and so it's it's it's muscle memory for me at this point but you know this might be something we we include at the end is something to start with but putting moo on a post-it most obvious objection you know what what is someone likely to object about

And then just keeping that top of mind. It's a great way to train yourself to be to empathize with your audience and with your recipient. We all say that and we all know we should do it. But for me, this is a really tactical, concrete way to do it. I think what's great about a lot of the tactics you're sharing is not only is it going to help you communicate it better, but it helps you actually communicate.

think and crystallize it better for yourself because you may realize, oh, that's a really good objection. Like, oh, oh, the objection is probably going to be this will drive enough impact for the business. Oh, that's a great point. Maybe I should not pitch this right now. Yeah, it definitely helps shape your own thinking. I think communication and thinking are so much more interrelated than we think. You know, I think people think

There's the thinking as phase one and then communicating the thinking. And the reality is a lot more intertwined. And I love your example there that

Thinking ahead to what might be the most obvious objection actually then prompts you to realize that maybe there was a gap in what you were planning to present. And then you now have an opportunity to strengthen that pitch before you say it out loud. There's a quote I've highlighted on this podcast a number of times that I love that is exactly along these lines by Joan Didion. I don't know what I think until I write it down. I know exactly that feeling. Yeah.

Okay, so there's a couple more things that people have shared that you are amazing at helping them get better at. One is just keeping your cool and staying calm during very high stakes real-time conversations when things maybe aren't going your way or you disagree with someone. Any advice on that? It feels like you're really good at this. I think one thing that tends to throw people off is putting a lot of pressure on themselves to get the exact right answer. So if they are asked a question,

and they don't know the answer, you know, a lot of people then kind of freak out. And I was taught early in my career that if you don't know the answer, you should say, let me look into it. I'll get back to you. So that's a fine approach. It's definitely better than making something up, right? So definitely don't make something up. But if you are more experienced and have some confidence in your subject matter area, you

Just saying, I'll get back to you is sometimes a missed opportunity. You can ask for a bit more information to be able to continue the conversation in that moment. So, you know, let's say that your exec says, you know, what percentage of users came from mobile last month?

And you don't have that number off the top of your head. So person A says, I'll get back to you. Let me look and talk back to you. Person B might say, I don't have that number off the top of my head. But in the last quarter, the number has been 60 to 70%. And it's grown in the past year. So mobile is now a bigger part of our business, etc. Are you wondering if we are investing in mobile appropriately? Or where's that question coming from, basically? Yeah.

And so being able to answer a similar question in the direction you think the person is asking about and then validating why they're asking that question allows you to still continue that conversation in the moment.

And so I call it the question behind the question. Sometimes you get a question, but underneath there's a deeper underlying concern. And many times people don't even know that it's there, right? Subconscious. So it's not nefarious. They're not withholding anything from you. But when you...

are explaining something and you're kind of getting multiple questions on the same thing, it's a good sign that there might be a deeper question behind the question. And it's our responsibility to figure out what might that be. And so probing, asking for a bit more information, answering in that general direction, and then validating, these are all techniques you can use when you are in the moment without feeling like, oh, I must have every single thing prepared. And the moment that I'm caught off guard, everything goes to shit.

Another tactic along these lines that's very similar to what you're describing, but I'll share that I learned that was really helpful is just if you're not sure what to say, basically just reflecting back their question and just being like, let me just make sure I understand what you're thinking, what you're looking for. You want to understand monthly retention for and then maybe clarify things.

And that one gives you time to think about it as you're talking to it helps the person recognize, oh, he hears me. Great. Okay, this is good. He's thinking about this. And then at the end of that, you can be like, okay, I don't actually have that specific number. Let me think about, oh, or I have the quarterly number. Okay, that's what I know. So there's like, there's like an interim step almost that I'll add into your piece of advice of just reflect back their question, just like better understand what they're looking for. Awesome. Okay, let's come back to what I said we do is let's pick one.

tactic that you think people should try first, maybe one or two. So let me read the ones we've gone through and then see what you think would be a good first step. So one is starting with sales before getting to logistics and giving people the why. Signposting, using specific words to help people guide the doc and not get overwhelmed. Finding the right level of confidence, having a POV, that sort of thing. Getting better at being concise. Moo.

not overusing formatting, something else you shared. And then this idea of when you don't know the answer, not saying I'll get back to you as the default, maybe giving them a different answer, maybe asking them more questions. Okay, across those, which do you think someone should try to like, okay, let me start here. I would start with most obvious objection and also framing your conversation up front. And that kind of relates to using signposting words if needed to help you frame that conversation.

Sweet. That's such an easy one to remember. Just move. Okay, so stick a post-it somewhere. When you're about to share something in Slack and ask someone for something, present in a meeting, send a strategy, just think about for a few seconds, what might be the most obvious objection to what I'm trying to ask them to do?

Great. Okay, so let's talk about management. And there's kind of two sides to it. Being a manager and being a person reporting to a manager, you have a bunch of really good advice here. One is around managing up. One of my most popular posts in the early days was advice for managing up and just how important it is. What advice do you have for someone to get better at managing up? Why is that even so important? Why do you think people maybe underappreciate how important it is to manage up, manage your manager, let's say?

One of the most common myths about managing up that I definitely felt early on in my career was that I would have to manage up if I were more junior, but eventually I would outgrow it, that I would get senior enough that I would no longer have to do it. And it was a rude awakening that no matter how senior I got, managing up, I not only had to manage up, it actually became more important. So I think managing up is one of those skills that

If you invest in learning it, it serves you now and for the rest of your career. And I realized that many senior people are actually the best at managing up. That's partially how they got to be so senior in the first place. But also, you know, the more senior you get, the less likely that your manager is going to give you really well-defined tasks and problems on a silver platter and ask you to solve them. You're going to be dealing with more ambiguity and you're going to be dealing with sometimes

a mandate, like make this number go up or like create this division, right? Where you need to manage up and make sure that your leader, your manager is in the loop about what you are about to try and what you're about to do and make sure that they're aligned. And so for me, realizing that managing up is something that is ongoing and that it shifts and evolves and looks different as you go in your career. That was a big unlock for me.

Just that even as you, like if you become even a VP, if you become a director and still something you want to invest in, any specific tactic or advice for how to manage up well? The biggest one is to share your point of view. So this, you know, some people are surprised by because they think I'm going to say, do a weekly recap of the tasks that you worked on or like, you know, what you contributed. And that is a good idea. You know, if you want to do it, you can do it. But again,

I think the more highly leveraged way to contribute and manage up is by being more vocal about sharing your point of view. When you just ask your manager, hey, manager, what should we do? You're putting a lot of cognitive load on your manager to need to think about the problem, think about potential solutions, craft the solution, and then tell you what to do. Whereas if you instead said, hey, manager, here's what I think we should do. How does that sound?

Where do you see gaps? Am I thinking in the right direction? You give them something to build off of. And that reduces the amount of mental lift that they have to put forth. And so sharing your point of view more readily, backing it up with evidence, that's a wonderful way of making your manager's life easier. And also showing that you are an active resource.

rigorous thinker who is thinking strategically about the business. You're not just waiting to be told what to do. You're not expecting them to figure things out and then tell you. You are actively looking around the corner, trying to solve problems, forming hypotheses in your mind, observing and noticing things. And again, sharing your point of view doesn't mean that you have the perfect answer. You can share that, hey, I've noticed this problem popping up in a

Here's what I think might be happening, you know, or when you share a report, don't only share the report and expect your manager to come up with insights and takeaways. You should look at the report, too, and point out insights and takeaways. So it's really changing that posture from more reactive and more.

waiting to be told what to do or kind of staying in this narrow box to being willing to share your recommendation, your point of view, share what you're noticing. And this is something that even junior people can do. I was going to say exactly that. I think not only is it something junior people can do, this is a really good way to get promoted and to take on more leadership opportunities. You

coming to your manager with, here's something I think we should do. Here's a perspective I have. Here's an opportunity. Because that's what, like, if you were in charge, you're like, how awesome would it be for people to come to me with amazing ideas and have clear recommendations that sound great? Like, that's exactly, everyone wants that. So if you can do that, amazing. Who wouldn't want that? But then it's interesting is, similar to how writing helps you crystallize your thinking, you coming in with a recommendation forces you to really think deeply about it because that's putting your reputation online. Yeah.

So there's like a second order effect of it makes you actually spend more time on the thing and be clear about why you think this is a good idea and do more research. So a lot of wins here. There are a lot of situations where you might have the most visibility into a problem. You might have the most proximity into an issue. And so if you're not speaking up about it and sharing what you're observing, sharing what you're noticing, then

your manager doesn't necessarily have visibility into that. And so I've heard so many managers say that they want their junior people to speak up more because their junior people have often close contact with customers, with support tickets, with, you know, cleaning data, with, you know, a bunch of things where the manager would love to hear insights from that.

And if you're finding not six, if you're not having success with this, if you're if you're like hearing this and be like, but it never worked because my manager doesn't listen to me. Listen to the rest of this podcast. We just did, which is basically advice on how to effectively convince someone of a thing. It's like, tell them why this is a problem. Be really concise about it. Signpost words, all these things. That's exactly what this whole conversation has been about. Okay.

Let's see. We have a couple more really cool tactics that people have suggested we talk about. One is how to give feedback well, how to do better, how to be more effective at giving feedback. What's your advice there? I have a framework called strategy, not self-expression. And so the idea here is that

Most of the time, by the time we are giving feedback to someone, we have been frustrated for a while. You know, I used to be very conflict-averse, so I would wait and try to convince myself that I wasn't bothered by something until I really couldn't hold it in anymore. Then I would schedule a one-on-one with a coworker to, you know, to tell them the feedback. And it would inevitably turn into a venting session where I was, in the name of sharing the impact of what they did, uh,

would share all of my frustrations and all the ways that they have basically harmed me and made my life difficult. And this would be very counterproductive because the person would either feel like shit and feel really demoralized or they'd get really defensive and they'd want to argue with me about how what they did actually was like not that bad or it was partially my fault too or whatever. And so I realized that a better way of getting feedback is thinking about motivating the person's behavior change.

The goal is behavior change. So if that's the goal, trim everything else that you were about to say that does not actually contribute to that goal and only keep the part that will make the person want to change, help them understand the benefit to them as well as to the people around them. And so usually for me, that's trimming 90% of the initial stuff that I want to say and really keeping only that 10%.

And that's made a really big difference. Whenever I am giving constructive feedback of any kind, I always keep that in mind. And when I don't do it, I almost always regret it. Someone close to me in my life is working on the skill, which is like, there's just like, I want people to know how they messed up. Justice, I need this to be fair. And there's like, what I always recommend is just think about what you want to get out of this conversation.

Like, what do you want from them? And then, okay, what's the best way to get that versus just making sure they hear you and making sure they understand how screwed up this was. And that's basically what you're saying, right? Is like, focus on the outcome you want to achieve, not like

something that's useful, like some something that will make you just feel better. Yeah, I definitely think that having a space to vent and to share those frustrations is important. So you want to get that out before you go into the conversation with your counterpart. So whether it's talking to your therapist or your partner or friend, you want to basically get all that energy out because otherwise you bring it into the conversation and it doesn't take much to set you off. Like,

Like you might have a whole script, you're, you know, you're controlled, you're calm. And then you start talking and the other person raises an eyebrow and it's like, you know, acting a little incredulous at what you're saying. And that's all it takes for you to snap and be like, you're surprised, you're incredulous. Why are you incredulous? Like, right. Like, and then, and then you're off. Right. So yeah, getting that, getting that energy out, I would say step one so that you can go into the conversation, you

clear, grounded, setting that emotional tone that is more positive and that allows you to stay focused on only the part that will get them to behave in the way you want them to behave. Such good advice. And I think we come back to, are you getting the outcomes you want?

If you're not, this is another reason it might be the case is you're just like, you just need them to hear your mind. I just need you to know. And I think a lesson here is that may not be what the best path to getting what you want, but it may feel good. Maybe you're like, oh, but I really want them to know this. There's that great Einstein quote about insanity being repeating things that you're doing, expecting a different outcome and regretting.

I feel like that applies so much to the workplace and to communication. You know, like most of us have certain patterns that we're used to and certain ways of responding. And if that's if you if you believe that there is untapped upside, that like whatever you are at is kind of a local maximum and that there's more there's better out there, then that's where switching things up could be useful. And just not not just doing everything that you've been doing and getting the same result that you might be getting.

This resonates with Toby Lutke when he's on the podcast talked about how he had this quote that I love that just no human in history has come anywhere near their potential. And everyone is way, way, way, way better than they think they are. And these are really cool tactics and really effective ways to actually get closer to your potential. Okay, two more things I want to talk about real quick.

One is your advice on delegating, but also continuing to have high standards. That's something I spent a lot of time on because a lot of people don't delegate because they're afraid it's not going to be as great. They want to just

I just want this to be really good. I don't trust that it's going to go as well. If I did it my way, it would be great. So just advice on how to delegate effectively while maintaining high standards. Yeah, I have a framework called CEDAF. C-E-D-A-F. I love all these acronyms. It's kind of like CEDAR, but with an F at the end. I need acronyms for myself. Like all of these are really reminders for myself because I need a short way to remind myself. So CEDAF stands for, the C is comprehension. So CEDAF

Have I given this person that I'm delegating to everything that they need to understand what it is that I want them to do? That includes...

more simple things like logins to all the right software tools that they need to look up, whatever you need to look up, and understanding what the end result should look like. So that's all under C for comprehension. E is excitement. Am I explaining this in a way that is making this as exciting as it could be? There are a lot of tasks that aren't inherently that exciting, but by explaining the why behind why we're doing this or why it's important to the project we're working on, that

makes people more likely to understand and be excited about how this fits into everything. So E is for excitement. D is for de-risk. Am I de-risking any obvious risks from delegating this? So usually when I ask clients this, they immediately think of something. They're like, oh yeah, I wouldn't want my direct report

to spend a ton of time going in the wrong direction, filling out 100 rows of the spreadsheet if actually it took longer than we expected. Okay, great. If that's a risk, then maybe you have them do 10 rows, see how long it takes, see if we need all the information that they're actually gathering, and then regroup. So what's an obvious risk? Another might be, I can see this person misunderstanding and thinking I'm looking for this, where I'm really looking for that. Okay, perfect.

Just tell them, you know, when I explain this, you might think I mean this, but really, I don't want that. I actually want this. Right. So just vocalize it.

The A is for align. So am I giving the other person a chance to speak up and make sure we are actually aligned, that they are picking up what I'm putting down, right? Because you might be explaining a bunch of stuff, but how much are they actually absorbing? You won't ever know if you wrap up your little spiel and then say like, okay, go off, like come back to me when you're done, right? So give people a chance to ask questions to see what parts are resonating, what parts they might be a little bit confused on.

Usually when I do this, it's amazing because my team member will say, you know, what did you mean by this part? Or like, how does this part fit in? I'm like, oh my God, I totally forgot to like mention this thing. Or, oh yeah, I didn't even really explain that well. Okay, so let me, let's go into that, right? And then F is feedback. So how can you have the shortest feedback loop possible? I am a huge fan of,

Shorting the feedback loop as much as possible and then shortening it again. So even within that initial conversation where I'm delegating something, instead of waiting a week, what if we waited a day and checked in on the initial direction that person was going? And let's do it even more. What if after I finish explaining at the end of that conversation, we brainstormed a couple of things that that person wants to do?

So within this same conversation I'm delegating, I'm already getting a sense of, you know, where do you want to go with this? Once you start, like, do you see any bottlenecks, you know? And so just really keeping that feedback loop super tight. I found that when I run through

the CDEF acronym, there's usually one letter that I could amp up a little bit more. Like, oh, like, I didn't really put much thought into making this exciting for the person. How can I connect this to their career goals or to the company's priorities this quarter or to something else, right? So it's a nice mental checklist. So much of your advice comes back to this idea that we've touched on a couple of times. We just spend a little bit more time up front. Is that how you described it? A little more time up front? Yeah, a little bit more time, a little bit more of an investment.

upfront to save you tons of time later. Okay. Okay. So as you describe this, I don't know if you're realizing this, but you're basically just helping people work better with AI and agents. Like this framework is exactly, I think what people need to effectively delegate to this future world of this agent world of society of agents doing work for us. So it's like exactly what you, like, it's basically, you're going to be delegating to these agents in the future.

And this framework is a really cool way to frame it. So think about it. Am I communicating this well? Comprehension. So CDAF. Comprehension. Is comprehension, again, just like, can I make this clear? Is that the way to think about that? Yeah. Can I make this clear? Does this person have everything they need to be able to accomplish what I am asking them to do? And then it's communicate why you're excited about this. Basically the why. And it's interesting. There's this funny prompt technique I've learned. Prompting.

engineering technique of just telling the AI, this is very important to my job. Just using that sentence, it does it better. It takes it more seriously. That's so weird, right? It's like, I have a post about this and that's one of the pieces of advice, just to tell it why this is important. Okay. I think people take it to the extreme as like, someone will die if you don't get this right. Like the people, that actually works. That is extreme. It's wild. Okay. So ZDEF, comprehension, excited,

De-risk. Think about ways that you can de-risk, which is moo, basically. It's like a similar concept. Just think ahead to what might go wrong. Make sure you're aligned, which is quite important in the AI space. Make sure you're aligned. And feedback. Get a quick feedback cycle. And it's interesting with deep research on some of these AI tools now. It's like, I'm off for half an hour. See ya. And I imagine more and more of them will

check in with you as it's going and ask you questions. I used deep research recently, and it's really good at just like, okay, I have five questions for you before I go off and do this work, just to clarify what you want. Yeah, I found that AI will often shorten the feedback loop and align with you as well. Like when you prompt it, when it comes back,

it will not do the entire task for me. Sometimes it'll say like, you know, I've done the first part of this. Does this sound right? You know, is this what you're looking for? If so, I will complete the next section. And then sometimes I'm like, do the whole thing. Just stop trying to conserve energy and just do, I want you to do the whole thing, you know? But that's what it's doing. It's breaking it into smaller chunks to de-risk that, you know, it's going to use all this bandwidth to process this thing. And I'm going to say, oh, that's not what I was looking for.

I want to come back to AI real quick. But before I do that, I have one more question for you. But let me just say, I feel like we've discovered an AI version of your course now. Basically how to delegate well to AI agents that I think people are going to find really valuable. Planting a seed. Okay. Before we get back to AI, you have this other concept that I love that actually learned from you years ago when I was working on my course called the swipe file. Swipe file. What is a swipe file? What is that about? What can help you with? Why should people be doing this?

Yeah, so swipe files are really common for marketers. And I think other functions haven't caught on as much, but I think is really, really useful. And basically, a swipe file is collecting inspiration that you can refer back to later on. So, you know, some marketers will collect examples of copy, landing pages, ads, etc. For me, I have a file, an Apple Notes file called Smart Things People Have Said.

where I will basically paste in phrases, words, you know, things people have said that I thought were well articulated or sounded really intelligent or sounded strategic. And I don't actually go back and look through my swipe file very often. I think other people do. But for me, even the act of adding it to my swipe file, I've already gotten value from it because it's training me to be more alert about

to noticing when something is working well. I think there's so much happening around us all the time that, you know, your coworker says something smart and like, oh, that was nice. And then you keep moving on, right? But when you stop and pause and think, oh, that was really effective. Like, let me add it to my file. And also think about why was that effective? And is that something I can borrow? So in my course, I encourage folks to create a work journal

where they can jot down some of these observations, some of these phrases, and basically encourage yourself to be more alert to things you can borrow from other people all around you.

Something else about the swipe file, like you use quotes, it could be screenshots of cool designs. It could be strategy docs you found to be really effective. It could be conversion flows that are really cool, right? It could be just like whatever you're interested in. Yeah. And the great thing about that is you can then go back and analyze it and break down the structure, break down the argument, break down why was this so effective? Whereas if you're not capturing it,

it's easy to just move on to the next thing. Yeah, cool. And I did this for a while. I stopped, to be honest, but I really want to be doing this. So this is maybe some horror for someone because I know a lot of people stick with it is just start like a folder or a notes, notes, note, whatever you're taking and just start throwing stuff in there. And it's like, it could be messy, right? It's just like throwing it in there. It could be super messy. I was going to say my backend system is super messy and it's fine. I am not, you know,

It's not a problem I need to be solving. It works. I find things I need to find. So I like having as simple of a process as possible. So Apple Notes, like I open it. It's just, you know, on my home screen, I just add something. I'm not tagging anything. I'm not putting it in certain rows and filling information out. I'm just including the file. And if I want to go back and look at it, it serves its purpose. Awesome. OK, so last question. Yeah, I would just come back to this briefly. We have a segment on the podcast called A.I. Kortner.

And we touched on this already, but I'm just curious how you have found AI to be useful in your work or your life, whether it's helped you become a better communicator. Is there anything you can share that might be helpful to folks? Yeah, I love Claude. There are days when I talk to Claude for like three or four hours, prompting as a thought partner. So yeah, I think that AI is really helpful for communication.

an initial draft of something to bounce off of. Sometimes I'll paste in an email that I am not quite sure how to respond to and ask Claude to help me draft a reply. And I'll usually give it some direction. So I found that sharing my point of view makes the output way better. If I just give it something and say, like, what would you say? It's just not as good. Whereas if I say, you know, I am not sure about...

how to tell this person no, because, you know, I previously kind of said yes. And so I kind of feel on the hook. But, you know, the street has changed. And so like, is there a nice way where I can be really respectful of our relationship and also make them feel seen and heard, but but like decline?

So if I explain like that's the problem I'm dealing with and like here's what I would ideally like to be able to do, Claude comes back with something that's like pretty good. And then from there, I'll edit it to my voice because usually it's a little bit too formal sounding. And so I'll make some edits and then I'll share it back to Claude and say, what do you think of this version? Would you make any improvements? And then we kind of go back and forth from there. Wes, this is the most useful thing I've ever heard.

I need this immediately. Just like nice ways to say no to stuff. This needs to be like an extension that I can have in my browser. Just like help me say no to this, please. Wow. Such a great idea. Okay. Good one. Okay. Great.

Wes, is there anything else that we've gone through a lot? I imagine the answer is no. But before we get to our very exciting lightning round, is there anything else that you wanted to share or leave listeners with? No, I feel like we covered a bunch of great frameworks principles. So lots for folks to get started. All the things. And I think I love that so much of this will apply to being more effective with AI tools. And I

And I feel like people can go through this again and just through that lens of how will this help me get more out of Claude and ChatGPT. I bet so much of this will actually apply. And I feel like there's an interesting course there. With that, Wes, we've reached our very exciting lightning round. All right. Are you ready? Let's do it. Okay. First question. What are a couple of books that you recommend most to other people? One is High Output Management by Andy Grove, which is a classic.

Another one is Your Brain at Work by Dr. David Rock. And that one is all about better understanding your own brain and attention span so that you can allocate your mental resources appropriately. So that one's great. Ever since reading that, I hide my phone from view because there have been studies that show that even seeing your phone in the corner of your eye kind of changes. It's distracting.

And I do the hardest things earlier in the day when you have more cognitive resources available. So that one's really good. Yeah, those two. These are great. I completely get that phone thing. I'm just looking at my phone. I'm like, Dan, get out of here. Just like go away. I will like stick it under my pillow, like on the couch or like hide it under a notebook. It's huge. I'm always hiding my phone. So it's not in my line of sight.

I think Ariana Huffington has a product you can buy that's like a little bed for your phone that you put to bed before you go to bed in a different room and it has a charger attached. Oh, that's cute. So cute. So cute. I don't know if I need a separate bed for my phone, but you know, yeah. But it's like a ritual, I guess, you know, and there's some theory behind it. Okay, next question. Favorite recent movie or TV show you've really enjoyed? I love anything by Harlan Coben.

on Netflix. Basically, I don't even remember any specific movies or TV series. But anything he puts out, he's an author, and then they, you know, they've turned a lot of his books into mystery thriller TV series. And anything he puts out becomes number one on Netflix. And I appreciate that he gives the people what they want, that he knows his craft, he knows his genre, and

And, yeah, he just has so many bangers. And, like, I don't remember any specific one, but if it's a Harlan Coben show, I know it's going to be good. I'm looking at a list now. I just Googled real quick. So it's all, like, scary stuff, right? Yeah, they're, like, mystery thrillers. And I think he does a good job playing with time and revealing information over time. And, like, it's usually something about someone's past.

that is like now coming to haunt them and so he'll go he'll skip between present day to the past and then like slowly reveal stuff and there's always a twist at the end there's a page the hurling cobin collection on netflix that will link to that has all this stuff i've never heard of this so this is great next question do you have a favorite product you recently discovered that you really love i recently started using an electric toothbrush and it's been kind of life-changing

So my husband got one and then a couple weeks later, he gifted me one. And I was like, wow, this is actually really nice. Are you a Sonicare person, Oral-B person or something else? It's Oral-B, but I've not tried any other brand. That was one that our dentist gifted my husband this.

electric toothbrush because he did Invisalign. And I'm sure Invisalign is like every dentist's dream, right? Margins. I feel like every time I get a cleaning, the dentist is like, so have you thought about, are you interested in Invisalign? And we're like, no. And so when they get a yes, I'm sure they're really excited. And then they lock you in with, or the brand locks you in with these replacement toothbrush heads that are way more expensive than they should be. So it's a whole razor and blades thing.

ink cartridge and printer model here. So I was kind of horrified by how expensive these replacement heads were. But you got a free toothbrush.

I think the Oral-B is what I use, but I think that's what the Wirecutter recommended, but it's so loud. I don't know if, like one of them is just really loud. I think it's the Oral-B, but it's better apparently. I went with Wirecutter, but it's like, ah, it's so loud. I feel like there needs to be a Wirecutter for like good design and experience versus just the optimal efficient version. Anyway, let's keep going.

Do you have a life motto that you often find useful and work during life that you repeat yourself, share with folks? Yes, I actually have many, but I'll share two. One is everything takes longer than you think. So this applies whether you are calling customer support for something or running an errand or building your career, building skills, whatever.

I find it's useful to add buffers for yourself. This applies for launches too, right? Everything, just assume it will take longer than you think and you'll be less stressed. That connects everything we've been talking about. Just spend a little more time up front to make it

And maybe, maybe if you spend more time front, it'll take less time than you think. The other one is a riff on Always Be Closing by Glenn Gary Ross. It's always be selling. So this does not mean pawning your wares, but rather putting forth effort into convincing the other person of whatever your recommendation is.

Love them. Okay. Final question. So you've been a long time. I hate this word operator, but I guess that's the way people describe this, where you just been working at companies, building companies, and you recently left that to become creative person, started a course on Maven. You do executive coaching, things like that. Any just lessons or a lesson from that jump that might be helpful to folks that are maybe thinking about that? I think when you are an in-house operator,

There's a lot about your role that you have a little bit less control over, basically. There's just certain things you have to do because it comes with the territory. Whereas when you are a solo operator, running your own business, doing your own thing, you

you have a lot of freedom to craft your work around only your strengths, only the part that you are really good at that adds a lot of value for other people where there's market demand. And so for me, there was a bit of a shift where when I realized that I could craft something

my business, my work around only the part that I'm best at. And that can be a narrow ass slice. Like that's actually really, really freeing. And so I would encourage folks to think about what is the thing that you are extremely good at that people find super valuable, the part that you love doing most, if you could not do all the other stuff you don't want to do. And how can you think about doubling down on that?

That's such an important point. And the claw tip you shared of how to say no well is such an important ingredient into that because so many things come at you and change.

are interesting and enticing that it's hard to decline that you realize what the hell am i doing this i can actually control where i spend time and why did i say yes to this i actually um credit you with helping me come to this realization i mentioned you on a podcast the other day um about this because do you remember when maven was uh

launching an important feature, I think it was like our marketplace or something. And I'd asked you if you wanted to go on Clubhouse to be part of our launch. I don't remember that, but I'm sure I said no. Okay, yeah. You said no. You said no. And I was like, wow, you know, out of curiosity, what's the thought behind it? And you said, I'm going to bastardize this, but you know, you could correct me, but

You essentially said, I don't really like doing live public speaking type things. And I've been fortunate enough to build a career where I can write, you know, do my podcast and kind of work only on the part that I love doing. And so I'm okay saying no to these other, you know, really interesting opportunities. And I remember at that time thinking it was so groundbreaking that like,

You could say no to something that was legitimately a cool opportunity and be really confident about it because it wasn't your core competency. It wasn't like the thing you are best at. And I've really kept that in mind when opportunities come my way of like, am I excited about this? Is this what I'm really good at? Can I shine in this setting? Because when you are solo, like you get to choose the settings that you want to be in.

That's such a cool story. I don't exactly remember that, but I'm zero surprise that what I said and I what I what the way I put it now when I folks invited me this stuff like this is just I just find the ROI on my time is so not worth doing a talk, doing a fireside thing, doing another podcast. It's just just like if I can spend more time on this newsletter and the podcast.

the leverage is so much higher than just doing a talk because that takes so much time and so so i just have this like template now that basically says what i sent you that is that helps and that's but it's tough it's so hard to say no it's like sometimes these opportunities are so interesting and the person is like wait what because i don't think the people asking you for stuff know that i'm getting like 10 of them a day and they're like oh he said none of my talk he doesn't want to be on my podcast what a jerk that's what i think i don't know if that's a big thing

But anyway, okay, that's great. Yes. And I think I just had a post about reaching a million subscribers, a newsletter, and I actually have this image of the Ikigai concept, which is exactly what you just described, which is you want to try to find the thing that you love doing, that people value, and that you can make money doing. That's like the dream. And that's exactly what you have done as well. So...

Thank you for being here, Wes. I actually think we delivered on what I thought we would. I think this is going to be one of the most highest leverage conversations we've had. So two final questions. Where can folks find your course? I know you also do executive coaching. So where can folks learn more? And final question is just how can folks be useful to you, Wes? You can find out more at wesko.com. I linked my course to my coaching from my main page. I also post on LinkedIn as well. So you can follow me there.

And I'm always looking to meet fellow operators who nerd out about communication. So if you put any of these principles into practice, I'd love to hear about it. Awesome. And then we'll do that in the comments. They can DM you. I don't know. What's the best way to reach you on the website or Twitter? Yeah. A bunch of platforms. Website, email, LinkedIn, DM me. Yeah. There we go. There we go. Wes, thank you so much for being here. Yeah. Thank you so much, Lenny. This was fun.

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