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Search Results for: Five Reasons Personal Development is a Challenge on the Road

Five Reasons Why Personal Development Is A Challenge on the Road

Kevin is always reading. When he’s not working on emails, he’s got his phone out, absorbing content.
The problem is, nothing Kevin is reading is really sharpening his mind. It’s more of an escape. There’s nothing wrong with that except Kevin has become an escape artist. He’s consuming content, but it is not the right content that will actually help him develop.
He wonders why he’s stuck in his career. Imagine that. He has simply stopped developing in a way that sets him apart. Kevin is missing a huge element, which is the fifth energy habit: develop. I’m amazed at how little most business travelers actually read. What? Doesn’t scrolling social media count as reading? C’mon, man. I’m talking about a good old-fashioned book. I’ll even count an educational article or blog post.
The key here is to LEARN.
I can already hear the pushback. When do I have time to read, especially on the road? Let me remind you of the quote from the Elite Road Warrior book:
If you want to do something, you’ll find a way. If you don’t, you’ll find an excuse.
You make time for things that are important to you. I sit by guys on the plane every single flight who waste hours and miss opportunities to develop, even small amounts of time like 30 minutes. Dude, you can get back to binge- watching Game of Thrones or Ballers or ladies, back to This Is Us or Love It or List It.

Five Reasons Why Personal Development is a Challenge

  1. Desire

Most people I’ve found simply don’t see the value. They’ve learned what they’ve learned and are okay with where they’re at in their life. If they don’t care, personal development is simply not going to happen.

  2. Time

This is usually the number one reason I hear. “When could I possibly fit this luxury into my life?” I argue if you desire personal development and value it, you will MAKE the time. If our attitude is “when I find the time” it will never happen. By the way, I’ve never ever “found time.”

  3. Inconsistency

If we have the desire to personally develop and find the time, being inconsistent can be a huge challenge. We start and stop then start again and never gain momentum because we’re just not consistent enough.

  4. Random

 I have found this one is ultimately the downfall to someone who values personal development. We have SO many interests so we bounce around from one thing to another. Nothing gets completed and although we’re developing personally and growing, it’s limited because we don’t have a plan.
If you leave your growth to randomness you’ll always live in the land of mediocrity – Brendon Burchard

  5. All-Consuming

 Someone who is “too much” into personal development which can consume all of your time and overwhelm everyone else. Instead of encouraging it becomes over-dominating.
If learning is a priority for you, then you will make, not find, the time. (Seriously, when has anyone FOUND time and if they did, can you let me know where?) Most people don’t like to read because they were scarred in school being forced to read content they did NOT want to read and didn’t see the relevancy. I’ll give you that, but they’ve kept that mindset decades later.

Two Keys to Sharpen the Mind by Reading

1. FIND SOMETHING YOU ENJOY
This is entry-level reading. This could be absolutely anything. It could be an autobiography. It could be a book that’s been made into a movie.
Let me give you an example. I’m a Chicago sports fanatic, so when the Cubs won the World Series in 2016, this city became absolutely unglued. The celebration parade in downtown Chicago was the fifth- largest recorded gathering of mankind in history. So, I wanted to know more about the back-story of the complete rebuild of the team. I found a book called The Plan by David Kaplan, and I was absolutely lost in the book. It was a blast to read because I enjoyed the subject.
If you’re just starting out, find something you enjoy to get you INTO the habit of reading. Even when you become an avid reader, finding a book like I found on sports is a good escape, especially before bed. But don’t stop there. There’s a ton of money left on the table if you don’t do the second key…
2. FIND SOMETHING YOU WANT TO LEARN
This is next level, kiddos. It could be for your job/career or to develop a new skill. The topics are endless, and this is where most business professionals wonder why they’re still stuck in their job, like Kevin. Most only read what is required of them instead of reading to get ahead.
Here’s the Key: They Learn for Survival Not Success.
If and when you change your mindset to reading for success, everything changes. You’re automatically ahead of almost everyone since almost no one reads. So, find a subject you want to learn and crack open that book!
How do you pull this off while on the road? You need to answer these four questions:
1. WHAT DO YOU WANT TO READ?
You need a plan. Find what you enjoy and what you want to learn, as mentioned above, and then dive into the book. Consider it part of your road thing.
2. WHERE CAN YOU FIND WHAT TO READ?
I love this question! There are a few ways to acquire this intel:
Online Research – go to Amazon, Barnes and Noble site or iBooks. Find a genre and start doing some simple research. With the Amazon tracking intelligence, in a matter of moments, you’ll be fed “You May Also Like” recommendations. Due to the vastness of the online market, you can find a number of book possibilities without having to go anywhere.
Traditional Bookstore – Go old school. I absolutely enjoy going to an actual Barnes and Noble on the road as a downtime activity in the evening. I’ll take an hour, find my genre favorites (business/psychology/health/nutrition/sports), buy a hot tea (de-caffeinated), find a chair, and flip through the pages. I could easily lose an hour and it creates SO much energy for me. Another low- hanging fruit option is an airport bookstore. The selection is limited but you’d be surprised how many new books will catch your interest. I’ll often go into these stores for 5-10 minutes during my walk time before a flight or on my way to the gate. It’s another way to find additional book options. Don’t limit yourself.
3. IS THERE ANYTHING I CAN LISTEN TO AUDIBLY?
I’m a HUGE fan of audio, mostly because of the convenience. I’m usually on the move more than I am sitting down, so why not make the movement an advantage for me?
As a result, I’ll find whatever book version I can and listen to the audiobook. Often, I’ll get both the book and the audio. Sounds redundantly redundant, but hang with me. If I’m traveling, I can often crank through a ton of audio, but I’ll want to go back and grab key concepts. This is where the printed version comes into the picture. I can go back and do a quick review of what I’ve listened to because it’s fresh in my mind, and I can easily find the key concepts I want to record for my notes. Make sense? As the saying goes, “Don’t knock it till you try it!”
There are also some great podcasts that can serve as a learning platform. They work great because of the shorter length, and you can find specific topics that interest you so you can dive right in and learn. If you’re not listening to the Elite Road Warrior Podcast, this is a great place to start! Episodes average around 30 minutes so you can get in and out.
PRO TIP:
Audible (owned by Amazon) is an audiobook library that is absolutely amazing. For a monthly subscription, you can get credits and choose books. They’ll send you a free credit for an audiobook from time to time and they will offer discounts for 3 credits if you’re an Amazon Prime member. This is definitely worth the investment to develop both personally AND professionally on the road.
In fact, the Elite Road Warrior book is available on Audible and has been the #1 way business travelers are reading the book due to the convenience.
4. WHEN CAN YOU MAKE TIME TO READ?
Did you catch that? MAKE time to read.  Create time blocks to schedule your day so you can tackle reading.
Let me give you an example. I have at least two reading times each day: first thing in the morning during my energy hour; then, if I’m flying that day, I use the flight time, usually the first 30 minutes, as my second reading time. If it’s not a flight day, I’ll carve a second reading time block in my day where I know I need to conserve energy and a reading block will be a good break for me to develop.
Another reading time was referenced in the last point with audiobooks. As road warriors, usually, our schedules are rather predictable. Let me give you my predictable audio times to develop:
  • In my car driving to the airport.
  • Walking to security and to my gate.
  • Walking around before I board since I prefer NOT to sit down but to a MOVE action item.
  • If I rent a car, I’ll choose something audio to learn rather than getting lost in sports or talk radio, which is SO easy for me to do.
  • Many road warriors have a territory and do a ton of driving. They often drive between to cities (I often fly into Cincinnati, then drive to Columbus, then to Cleveland). This is a perfect time to knock out an entire audiobook. This type of road warrior can seriously leverage their windshield time with a mobile classroom.
  • Standing in line is a short but great opportunity to catch a few paragraphs. I’ve knocked out chapters of a book just waiting. I have the Kindle app and sometimes will choose certain books JUST for such times. I can quickly pull up the book on an app and be reading in seconds. Note: this also dramatically helps my impatience during these times when I sadly analyze the inefficiency that is causing the wait!
James Clear has a perfect article called “Seven Ways to Retain More of Every Book You Read,” which I highly suggest checking.
BABY STEP TO SHARPEN THE MIND
I realize you’re more likely to go to bed early or eat brussel sprouts than you are to pick up a book. So, if that’s the case, simply find something you like to read and start there. The fact that you are reading this article is huge, so you’re on your way. Now, keep the momentum going and create a plan.
THREE-POINTERS
1. Find something to read that you enjoy and want to learn.
2. Determine when you will make time to read and what you can listen to audibly.
3. Download the free Personal Development Plan (PDP) when you request it.

Written by Bryan Buckley · Categorized: DEVELOP, Embrace Better · Tagged: ERW Podcast, podcast

Five Reasons Why Personal Development Is A Challenge on the Road

Kevin is always reading. When he’s not working on emails, he’s got his phone out, absorbing content.

The problem is, nothing Kevin is reading is really sharpening his mind. It’s more of an escape.

There’s nothing wrong with that except Kevin has become an escape artist. He’s consuming content, but it is not the right content that will actually help him develop.

He wonders why he’s stuck in his career. Imagine that. He has simply stopped developing in a way that sets him apart. Kevin is missing a huge element, which is the fifth energy habit: develop.

 

 

I’m amazed at how little most business travelers actually read. What? Doesn’t scrolling social media count as reading? C’mon, man. I’m talking about a good old-fashioned book. I’ll even count an educational article or blog post.

The key here is to LEARN.

I can already hear the pushback. When do I have time to read, ESPECIALLY on the road? Let me remind you of the quote from the Elite Road Warrior book:

IF YOU WANT TO DO SOMETHING, YOU’LL FIND A WAY. IF YOU DON’T, YOU’LL FIND AN EXCUSE.

You make time for things that are important to you. I sit by guys on the plane every single flight who waste hours and miss opportunities to develop even for just 30 minutes. Dude, you can get back to binge-watching Game of Thrones or Ballers or ladies, back to This Is Us or Love It or List It.

Five Reasons Why Personal Development is a Challenge

1. Desire

Most people I’ve found simply don’t see the value. They’ve learned what they’ve learned and okay with where they’re at in their life. If they don’t care, personal development is simply not going to happen.

2. Time

This is usually the number one reason I hear is “when could I possibly fit this luxury into my life?” I argue is if you desire to personally develop and value it, you will MAKE the time. If our attitude is “when I find the time”, it will never happen. By the way, I’ve never ever “found time.”

3. Inconsistency

If we have the desire to personally develop and find the time, being inconsistent can be a huge challenge. We start and stop then start again and never gain momentum because we’re just not consistent enough.

4. Random

I have found this one is ultimately the downfall to someone who values personal development. We have SO many interests so we bounce around from one thing to another. Nothing gets completed and although we’re developing personally and growing, it’s limited because we don’t have a plan.

5. All-Consuming

Someone who is “too much” into personal development which can consume all of your time and overwhelm everyone else. Instead of encouraging it becomes over-dominating.

If learning is a priority for you, then you will make, not find, the time. (Seriously, when has anyone FOUND time and if they did, can you let me know where?) Most people don’t like to read because they were scarred in school being forced to read the content they did NOT want to read and didn’t see the relevancy. I’ll give you that, but they’ve kept that mindset decades later.

If you leave your growth to randomness you’ll always live in the land of mediocrity – Brandon Burchard

TWO KEYS TO SHARPEN THE MIND BY READING

1. FIND SOMETHING YOU ENJOY

This is entry-level reading. This could be absolutely anything. It could be an autobiography. It could be a book that also has a movie.

Let me give you an example. I’m a Chicago sports fanatic, so when the Cubs won the World Series in 2016, this city became absolutely unglued. The celebration parade in downtown Chicago was the fifth- largest recorded gathering of mankind in history.

So, I wanted to know more about the back-story of the complete rebuild of the team. I found a book called The Plan by Dave Kaplan, and I was absolutely lost in the book. It was a blast to read because I enjoyed the subject.

If you’re just starting out, find something you enjoy to get you INTO the habit of reading. Even when you become an avid reader, finding a book as I found on sports is a good escape, especially before bed. But don’t stop there. There’s a ton of money left on the table if you don’t do the second key…

2. FIND SOMETHING YOU WANT TO LEARN

This is next level, kiddos. It could be for your job/career or to develop a new skill. The topics are endless, and this is where most business professionals wonder why they’re still stuck in their job, like Kevin. Most only read what is required of them instead of reading to get ahead.

Here’s the Key: They Learn for Survival Not Success.

If and when you change your mindset to reading for success, everything changes. You’re automatically ahead of almost everyone since almost no one reads. So, find a subject you want to learn and crack open that book!

HOW DO YOU PULL THIS OFF WHILE ON THE ROAD?

You need to answer these four questions:

1. WHAT DO YOU WANT TO READ?

You need a plan. Find what you enjoy and what you want to learn, as mentioned above, and then dive into the book. Consider it part of your road thing we talked about in downtime back in the rest energy habit.

2. WHERE CAN YOU FIND WHAT TO READ?

I love this question! There are a few ways to acquire this intel:

  • Online Research – go to Amazon or iBooks. Find a genre and start doing some simple research. With the Amazon tracking intelligence, in a matter of moments, you’ll be fed “You May Also Like” recommendations. Due to the vastness of the online market, you can find a number of book possibilities without having to go anywhere.
  • Traditional Bookstore – Go old school. I absolutely enjoy going to Barnes and Noble on the road as a downtime activity in the evening. I’ll take an hour, find my genre favorites (business/psychology/health/nutrition/sports), buy a hot tea (decaffeinated), find a chair, and flip through the pages. I could easily lose an hour and it creates SO much energy for me. Another low- hanging fruit option is an airport bookstore. The selection is limited but you’d be surprised how many new books will catch your interest. I’ll often go into these stores for 5-10 minutes during my walk time before a flight or on my way to the gate. It’s another way to find additional book options. Don’t limit yourself.

3. IS THERE ANYTHING I CAN LISTEN TO AUDIBLY?

I’m a HUGE fan of audio, mostly because of the convenience. I’m usually on the move more than I am sitting down, so why not make the movement advantageous for me?

As a result, I’ll find whatever book version I can and listen to the audiobook. Often, I’ll get both the book and the audio. Sounds redundantly redundant, but hang with me.

If I’m traveling, I can often crank through a ton of audio, but I’ll want to go back and grab key concepts. This is where the printed version comes into the picture. I can go back and do a quick review of what I’ve listened to because it’s fresh in my mind, and I can easily find the key concepts I want to record for my notes. Make sense? As the saying goes, “Don’t knock it till you try it!”

There are also some great podcasts that can serve as a learning platform. They work great because of the shorter length, and you can find specific topics that interest you so you can dive right in and learn. If you’re not listening to the Elite Road Warrior Podcast, this is a great place to start! Episodes average around 30 minutes so you can get in and out.

PRO TIP:
Audible (owned by Amazon) is an audiobook library that is absolutely amazing. For a monthly subscription, you can get credits and choose books. They’ll send you a free credit for an audiobook from time to time and they will offer discounts for 3 credits if you’re an Amazon Prime member. This is definitely worth the investment to develop both personally AND professionally on the road.

In fact, the Elite Road Warrior book is available on Audible and has been the #1 way business travelers are reading the book due to the convenience.

4. WHEN CAN YOU MAKE TIME TO READ?

Did you catch that? MAKE time to read. We discussed the strategy of Block and Tackle in the PERFORM action. If you remember, we create time blocks to schedule our day so we can tackle that specific action.

Let me give you an example. I have at least two reading times each day: first thing in the morning during my energy hour; then, if I’m flying that day, I use the flight time, usually the first 30 minutes, as my second reading time. If it’s not a flight day, I’ll carve a second reading time block in my day where I know I need to conserve energy and a reading block will be a good break for me to develop.

Another reading time was referenced in the last point with audiobooks. As road warriors, usually, our schedules are rather predictable. Let me give you my predictable audio times to develop:

  • In my car driving to the airport.
  • Walking to security and to my gate.
  • Walking around before I board since I prefer NOT to sit down but to a MOVE action item.
  • If I rent a car, I’ll choose something audio to learn rather than getting lost in sports or talk radio, which is SO easy for me to do.

Many road warriors have a territory and do a ton of driving. They often drive between to cities (I often fly into Cincinnati, then drive to Columbus, then to Cleveland). This is a perfect time to knock out an entire audiobook. This type of road warrior can seriously leverage their windshield time with a mobile classroom.

Standing in line is a short but great opportunity to catch a few paragraphs. I’ve knocked out chapters of a book just waiting. I have the Kindle app and sometimes will choose certain books JUST for such times. I can quickly pull up the book on an app and be reading in seconds. Note: this also dramatically helps my impatience during these times when I sadly analyze the inefficiency that is causing the wait!

James Clear has a perfect article called “Seven Ways to Retain More of Every Book You Read,” which I highly suggest checking out HERE.

BABY STEP TO SHARPEN THE MIND

I realize you’re more likely to go to bed early or eat Brussels sprouts than you are to pick up a book. So, if that’s the case, simply find something you like to read and start there. The fact that you are reading this book is huge, so you’re at least on your way. Now, keep the momentum going and create a plan.

Speaking of a plan, I have a bonus for you that’s yours for free! It’s called the Personal Development Plan (PDP for short) and you can download it for free by going to www.EliteRoadWarrior.com/Book.

THREE-POINTERS

1. Find something to read that you enjoy and want to learn.
2. Determine when you will make time to read and what you can listen to audibly.
3. Download the free Personal Development Plan (PDP) at www. EliteRoadWarrior.com/Book and complete it.

Written by Bryan Buckley · Categorized: DEVELOP, PERFORM, Planning, Sharpen the Mind

084 – Networking on the Road with Jake Kelfer

Podcast Player

Transcription

Bryan Paul Buckley 0:01
Episode 84 of the Elite Road Warrior podcast. Welcome to the Elite Road Warrior podcast where we believe you can leverage the road to transform your work, health, and home life while on business travel to ultimately master the business travel life. If you’re a road warrior, and a great chance you’re on the road right now then this podcast is for you.

Bryan Paul Buckley 0:31
Welcome to the Elite Road Warrior podcast. I’m your host Bryan Paul Buckley, fellow Road Warrior husband of one father of five, and love me some podcast interviews. But as always committed each and every business trip to becoming and remaining an elite road warrior and as always, I’d love nothing more than for you to join my master evil plan on this road trip.

Bryan Paul Buckley 0:54
Well, you’re gonna enjoy today’s conversation, because this guy was someone rare who reached out to me and in a way that caught my attention immediately, and ultimately led to this podcast interview. So let’s meet Jake Kelfer. Jake is a lifestyle entrepreneur, life elevator, and coach to ambitious entrepreneurs and freedom seekers helping people create incredibly impactful and profitable businesses. He’s the best selling author of two books elevate beyond and elevate your network. And that second book we’re gonna unpack a lot today, but he’s also a high energy motivational speaker and the founder of the professional basketball combine, which helps NBA Draft prospects turn their dreams of playing pro basketball into their reality. He and his work had been featured on Forbes, Sports Illustrated, ESPN, and many other major media outlets.

Bryan Paul Buckley 1:46
But in a moment, I’ll be asking Jake the following questions. Why is connecting with people on the road so vitally important? What are some key principles of connecting with people on the road that we should apply immediately? How do you elevate your elevator pitch? How do you get drinks the right way? How do we make networking part of our routine without feeling overwhelmed or wasting time? And so much more.

Bryan Paul Buckley 2:28
I am live right now with Jake Kelfer, where are you and how are you, my man?

Jake Kelfer 2:33
Bryan, what’s going on man, calling in doing this podcast from Santa Monica, California and I am I pumped. Let me tell you it to be chatting with you today.

Bryan Paul Buckley 2:42
Man, right there. I don’t know how you top that. So the only other question I’ve got to ask on that. Lakers or Clippers?

Jake Kelfer 2:49
Lakers 100%

Bryan Paul Buckley 2:51
All right. All right. See and I’m struggling Bulls fan on there. And I mean obviously brought that up because you have this professional basketball combine background so before we jump in and let’s do a little opening banter here. Tell us more about that. What is that? What’s that look like? You know and unpack that a little bit?

Jake Kelfer 3:08
Yes. So before I dive into like the professional basketball combine and I know the listeners can’t see but I got my shirt on today I’m representing, but us Lakers clippers like I grew up a diehard Lakers fan basketball is one of my biggest passions and loves of my life. And my first job when I graduated college, was working for the Lakers during Kobe Bryant’s final NBA season, I had experience with Jerry West that changed the way I viewed life like wow, these things led to this point of trying to get basketball back into my life. And once I had left the Lakers, I had written my first book, started speaking, but I wanted to be back in sports. And so I came up with this idea to create a secondary NBA Draft combine, which we call the professional basketball combine.

Jake Kelfer 3:51
And basically what we did was we put together a secondary event that would allow prospects who weren’t invited by the NBA, The top 60 to 70 prospects, we actually got to invite those players to our event, put them through three on three scrimmages got to put them through workout drills, all the testing that all the other players did so we can compare them. And we got to put on this incredible event with the hope of bringing 24 players to one location bring teams out. And it has been an incredible blessing that’s putting out 70 guys on rosters in 31 countries across the globe.

Bryan Paul Buckley 4:24
That’s amazing. Man, what a cool legacy on that, and that loves the entrepreneurial side. love doing one of your passion things so thanks for unpacking that just for a minute. And you’ve got two books that are out right now. Elevate beyond and elevate networking Can you just give us as a listen and we’re gonna dive into elevate networking a lot more. Just kind of a little bit perspective on those two books.

Jake Kelfer 4:44
So elevate beyond was the first book I ever wrote. Now I had a dream that one day after I had a successful career, then I would write my books and speak and travel the world. But what I found was that I had the idea of success backward and it was about enjoying it making a difference, and then doing all the work stuff, right? And creating, creating all that or why couldn’t the fun stuff be the work stuff as well. And so when I was working for the Lakers, I would drive and get there every morning, about two hours before I get into the office. And I’d write my first book, which became elevate beyond, which is all about how to stand out in the job market, discover your passion. And basically what it really is, is it’s my experiences of going through college and getting a job going to networking events, going to resume workshops, interview, mock interviews, and all that stuff. And then combining it with incredible people who have tons of work experience so that as a 23-year-old, it added to my credibility. And when you combine those two, it became this incredible guide that helped people land their dream job. So that was the first book.

Jake Kelfer 5:46
And then my second book, which we’re going to talk a lot about today is called elevate your network. And that book, The premise of why I wrote that book was because I believe that we’re all in the business of people. There is nothing that happens if we don’t have customers in business. There’s nothing that happens in our growth, if we don’t have mentors, nothing we can do in our life that’s going to bring us the success and the fulfillment we’re looking for will happen without other human beings, you can look in every aspect of your life, and people are the driving force behind our success. And so I wrote down, I took the best keys at that, and I call them kelf keys based on my last night and have a little bit of fun. And I kind of put the best 25 that I had that had gotten me to where I was in my career at that point, and put them in a book form and was able to share that which became my second best-selling book that has been read all over the world.

Bryan Paul Buckley 6:35
That’s awesome, man. I love it. In fact, you referenced you know, a mock interview. I thought that meant making fun of it initially, but I learned that’s not the case in your book. So thank you for clearing that up. Just kidding on that. So when we talked Originally, we clicked big time on that one specific topic or value of connecting with people. And I love that and that’s your passion. And that’s why I couldn’t wait to have you on this on this podcast. So first question out of the gate here and I don’t mean airplane gate. Why is connecting with people on the road specifically, so vitally important, Jake?

Jake Kelfer 7:06
Well, there’s I mean, there’s so much to unpack here, right? But I think, you know, look, when you’re on the road, we oftentimes change our routines, from when we’re doing our normal thing that we get on the road, all of the routines, all the things that we practice our habits, they change, because our schedules change, and we have to adjust. So one of the biggest reasons that I personally love connecting on the road outside of doing business deals outside of, you know, executing on high level projects. One of the reasons I love connecting with people is because it’s an opportunity to catch up with old friends, it’s an opportunity to meet new people. And it’s also an opportunity to feel connected, when traveling can become so isolated. And I think that that’s something that’s really

Bryan Paul Buckley 7:44
let’s hit on that. I’ll say that once. One more time. That’s really good.

Jake Kelfer 7:47
So I think it’s really powerful because traveling can be isolating. Exactly and connecting with people will bring you together and fill the gaps in some of that travel. Now, I think it’s also really important because one thing that I talked about a lot is is about the most important relationship is the one with ourselves. And I think that that relationship is also something that we can nurture and connect with on the road. Because we have time where our phones are on Do Not Disturb. We’re on airplane mode, we’re in the gate with nobody, sometimes nobody to talk to because there’s no one there. And other times it’s packed. And so it’s been a really great like when you travel on the road, it’s such a great way to practice new connecting techniques to reflect on your own thoughts, as well as to build new and incredible relationships. And it also makes traveling more fun when you’re really connecting. And I go through life trying to have a good time. I want to look back on all my days when it’s all said and done and say I made the most of this life. I won the game and traveling on the road and connecting on the road. It’s just part of the game. So I play to win. And that comes with connecting.

Bryan Paul Buckley 8:45
Great response. So what are some key principles then Jake of connecting with people on the road that whether they may be something we already know, we just need to be reminded of or maybe give us an aha moments? What are a few that you would recommend?

Jake Kelfer 8:58
Yeah, I mean, I think on the road you know, you always got to have that feeler out first, right? Because you have people on the road especially new people that you don’t know that are like, do I really want to talk to this person? Do they really want to talk to me and you got that awkward kind of feeling which normally stops people, it stops people enough to where they never make that first introduction.

Bryan Paul Buckley 9:17
Well, you know, Jake is the universal sign on a plane is the headphones, you know, you put the pitcher universal Do Not Disturb on and you’re right, there’s a level of awkwardness that’s there or whatever. So how do you handle that? What do you how do you overcome those things?

Jake Kelfer 9:32
We got to respect the headphones, right? You don’t want to be that guy, right? You don’t want to be that person that just they just ruin somebody’s day because then nobody’s getting the W. But what you got to do is you got to make that first interaction. Let’s talk about a plane right? When someone comes in and I call it the hustle and bustle, right? Because you’re in a plane you’re hustling and bustling. And what it is, is just that first time you sit down, right that first time you sit down, make that quick introduction. Make that quick introduction. here’s the key that differentiates people from Like a super quick combo to know Convo, and that’s asking the right question. It’s asking the right question and getting that conversation started immediately. Because you don’t have time, especially on a plane when you’re traveling to try to build up into the conversation.

Bryan Paul Buckley 10:14
So then give me a couple examples of what the right question would be.

Jake Kelfer 10:18
So the right question, right, the right question relates to something that you can put the dots together right away. So when I see somebody coming in, if they have a book that they’re pulling out of their backpack, I inquire about their book, people always want to talk about that, right? If they’re wearing any type of sporting outfit, I’m talking about that their team, you’re dressed up in a certain way I’m inquiring about that. You want to ask about something that you probably can assume they’re excited about passionate about, or it’s an expression of who they are as a person. You can even go to the most generic thing, right? And if they have a cool backpack, or go suitcase, hey, that’s a really cool carry on what kind is it? Everybody loves to be complimented. And when you frame a compliment in the form of a question, it’ll immediately make that person feel more comfortable.

Bryan Paul Buckley 10:59
That’s really good. framing the compliment in a form of a question. Now that’s money right there that that’s a counteroffer right there, we need to make sure we catch on that. So that’s perfect on that. the right questions. Um, give me another one or two.

Jake Kelfer 11:12
Another one is when you ask these questions, you got to make sure you’re listening.

Bryan Paul Buckley 11:15
I’m sorry, I wasn’t paying attention. Would you say again?

Jake Kelfer 11:18
I love that.

Bryan Paul Buckley 11:18
I do not do that. Dude, I do that. No, you’re exactly right. Sometimes we ask the question, and then we act like we’re in it, we could care less so right?

Jake Kelfer 11:26
We asked the question, and then we’re already getting back into our seat and putting our headphones on, or getting on a phone looking at a text, right? We’re trying to build connection. So in order to build that connection, once you ask the question, listen to the response, because you never know who you’re talking to until you know who you’re talking to

Bryan Paul Buckley 11:42
Say that again.

Jake Kelfer 11:43
You don’t know who you’re talking to until you know who you’re talking to. Right. And you only will find out that information by listening to their responses and then diving deeper into that otherwise the conversation will end and it’s okay, sometimes this will happen sometimes there won’t be synergy there and that’s okay. But never missed out on an opportunity just because you weren’t paying attention or weren’t listening with the prospect with the intention to understand

Bryan Paul Buckley 12:08
or you stopped asking good questions, right questions, and then the conversation just does a painful death. So let’s, we referenced earlier this book, your book, The elevate your network, which I consumed, it was a great read a quick read a lot of practicalness out of there. And again, you reference the 25 keys. Love that great idea on that, you know, to build a stronger relationships in life and in business. So I’d like to hit on a few of these, and these are ones that stood out to me, especially with being a road warrior. Unpack for us what it means to elevate your elevator pitch.

Jake Kelfer 12:43
Yeah, of course. So I mean, the elevator pitch is a term that people use all the time, right. And I used it because it was elevate your elevator pitch kind of had that play on right there. But we’re looking at the end of the day, and this has evolved even since the book but at the end of the day, when somebody asks you what you do, or asks you who you are You have to have a good answer. The most successful businesses in today’s world and people that run businesses, especially people that are on the road, are able to get that answer out in one to two sentences. Being very, very clear on exactly who you are, what you’re done, what result you provide. And when you can really focus on that, it one, eliminates you having to try to explain everything else that you do. But it also allows that person to be very clear on what you do and connect dots quicker. So the clearer you are on what you say you do and your elevator pitch, the easier it is for someone to actually help you or to refer you or to dive deeper, developing that one on one relationship. Okay, so that’s good.

Bryan Paul Buckley 13:42
How does somebody do it? So they go, that’s a great idea. I need to be better at that. Or I could be better at that. How do you start to develop that?

Jake Kelfer 13:50
Why look as a guy who works in basketball, and there’s a guy who’s always about this belief that practice makes progress is this is a simple case of you just got to put in the work right. You got to evaluate “what exactly do you do?” And look, somebody might say, Well, I do a ton of things. I do a ton of things. Okay, pick one that you want to talk about right now. Right? Like if you’re involved in two different businesses, pick one business and roll with that. Now see what one people respond to better see what leads into it, play the room, look at your demographics of your audiences on social media, and then respond based off who the person is that you’re talking to. Right? You can be very methodical about your approach to a very simple question, right? And then the second thing that I would say is like, and I do this all the time, I’m like, Okay, what do I do? Who do I serve? What is the result I provide for people? Think about it, think about it, think about, and I kind of go over it, and I test it and I evaluate and I readjust. And I’m constantly doing this so that the more specific I get, it becomes automatic. And that’s what we’re trying to do is create an automatic response that is easy to understand.

Bryan Paul Buckley 14:54
That’s great. And oftentimes you can find if it’s not flying because there’s no follow up question. Or dude just goes back to his phone or fakes a hammy, you know, pulling a hammer or whatever. So you can you’re right about the feedback, you know, practice makes progress. love that quote, another one you’ve got, and I really liked this one was LinkedIn is the goat of business networking, unpack that one.

Jake Kelfer 15:18
So at the time of the book, LinkedIn, it still is, is one of the best platforms for you to be able to get your message out and be able to connect with people. It’s also the least invasive when it comes to traveling on the road and being in business. So LinkedIn is obviously we all know LinkedIn, right a professional networking platform, but when you’re talking about leveraging your experiences on the road to connect on LinkedIn follow up always reaffirms what it is that you just said in your elevator pitch, right? Because if you go on social media, and that person doesn’t use Instagram for business, which is likely going to be your second platform that you may check or Facebook, they’re likely not going to have their mission statement or what they do, but if you go on LinkedIn, it’s going to be easier to connect the dots again, because you’ll remember that person, you’ll see their location, you’ll see all of these things that remind you of who that person was. So in the scope of traveling LinkedIn is an incredibly powerful tool. But also, it’s what you call content deficient platform. There’s more people consuming content than there are people producing content. Therefore it’s a great platform for you to get more eyeballs, grow your followings quicker and ultimately create more leads for your business.

Bryan Paul Buckley 16:26
And for those of you that don’t know, goat is greatest of all time. And for those that don’t know, before we got on to this, we talked about the last dance, obviously being a Chicago Bulls fan and the greatest of all time and Michael Jordan on there. So really powerful. And I see your point, Jake, it does feed in I mean, you go for and that’s I methodically you know, from elevate your elevator pitch to moving into and taking that offline into well still online, but taking off the initial conversation moving into LinkedIn, and then also leveraging where it’s a lot of content is consumed that a lot of Put out there. So love it. That’s great. Now let’s have drinks because you brought up one that I loved and was very intriguing was to get drinks the right way, which is one of your health keys. So tell us about that.

Jake Kelfer 17:12
So I think there’s an art to getting drinks with colleagues and with coworkers or especially, you know, we’re just gonna play the theme on the road, right? That’s what this is all about. So we’re going to focus purely on that, like, I’m personally I’ve had, I’ve tried to have a lot of experience with this because I don’t like a lot of different drinks. And so one of the things that is super, super important when you’re getting drinks, the right way is to own your identity. Now, for a lot of people, some people when they get drinks, it leads four or five drinks, right? Well, if you know that that’s gonna happen. You got to understand what your tolerance is. You got to understand what does it take for you to get to a point where different words are to come out of your mouth, right? And depending on the industry, and depending on if you work for yourself or someone else, there’s a whole deeper process that we can dive into, of course, the most simply put is when you. You’re on the road, get the drink that’s going to make you feel the best in terms of bringing out the most confidence in yourself, the one that’s going to go down the easiest one that’s going to be easiest to communicate with. Right?

Jake Kelfer 18:11
So if you know you only have 30 minutes, it might be smart to grab one beer, right versus getting a drink that’s smaller like a cocktail that will be quicker to drink than maybe being that awkward like, do I get another one? Do I not, you don’t want to have the drink take you away from the meeting and the present moment. So I always like to I typically will get my favorite beer, which is Coors Light. I typically get a Coors Light when I’m ever having drinks because that’s me. It’s always a conversation starter. And it always is a simple way I know how that can last me anywhere from 15 minutes to 30 minutes if I need to and allows me to continue on. So when you’re getting drinks the right way. Don’t just do what the other person is doing. Don’t just like, be confident in your approach is essentially what the key method is of getting drinks the right way. And if you want to be adventurous Be it adventurous, but do it in a way where it’s still your choice, you’re not doing it because somebody else is expecting you to do it. Right. And that’s how you can really, really assert yourself from a drink standpoint.

Bryan Paul Buckley 19:11
And I love the psychology behind this Jake because oftentimes, it’s just what we do. We’re just we’re gonna get drinks with somebody or whatever, we don’t really think about the end result of that, and how much I have or what I have, will that take away or enhance the whole purpose of this conversation? Now, if it’s just coworkers, just chilling out, watching a ballgame or something like a different context, but most of the time, that’s not what we’re talking about here, right? We’re talking about a business transaction or a customer or whatever, that could lead to hopefully further business or furthering the relationship to your point in the network. I’ve got another one here. Well, do your research was another one of your kelf keys?

Jake Kelfer 19:51
Yeah, I love how we’re going through the Kelf keys. Now, this is great, because look, all these words designed to be practical to be put into use immediately and that’s what this podcast is going to give Everyone that’s listening. Like you can walk away here with a bunch of different things, but doing your research, okay? This, this is something that’s super, super important when it comes to networking. The easiest way to get in touch with somebody or to create empathy and compassion between a relationship is to establish a commonality. Okay. When I reached out to you for our first ever point of contact, what did I mention in that in that in that outreach, and I know you’re gonna remember this?

Bryan Paul Buckley 20:25
Yeah, the Energizer Bunny.

Jake Kelfer 20:27
The Energizer Bunny. And I also mentioned one other thing, which was that you traveled to every ballpark.

Bryan Paul Buckley 20:31
Oh, that’s right. That’s right. That was in the email the Energizer Bunny was in the subject.

Jake Kelfer 20:36
Yes. And so when you’re talking about doing your research, it’s about understanding who is the person that you are meeting, right. So let’s say you’re just meeting somebody for the first time trying to see if there’s potential for collaboration. Do your research, look, go to LinkedIn, that’s where you get your business research. Check out their Instagram profile, because Instagram is gonna allow you to get inside their personal life. So they’re not private, you can actually find something, then what you do and I call this the fun fact frenzy is you find 1-3 Fun Facts About that other person. And you bring those up early on in your initial outreach, or you bring it up when you’re actually talking to them because it forms that bond. Because people naturally gravitate to people that have something in common with them. Doing your research on the person is super important. If you’re trying to close a deal or close a sale, doing your research on that company is super important, right? Understanding previous transactions, understanding some of the previous buyer’s understanding, who are some of the other vendors that they’ve used if you’re trying to get a deal on a contract out of it, right? And being able to really understand the key talking points. Now, if you want to take it even one step further. Right. And let’s say you’re trying to get a deal. You’re a consultant, you’re a coach, you’re trying to get a deal with a company, you’re trying to get a contract. And you know, some of the other people that they’ve done, well, sometimes taking it to the next level as you call the other company. And you act as if you’re somebody you know, you pick up the phone, you’re like, Hey, I’m calling. I know you work with them, how was your experience with them? Right, and you try to get in and try to get the secret sauce. The further you go down the research rabbit hole, the easier it’s going to be to know what to say and how to say. So I love doing my research because I’m a big preparer big planner, big understanding that I’d rather save the time and invest the time now I can have more success on the back end.

Bryan Paul Buckley 22:13
And it allows you to go deep so quick. Yeah, it’s amazing when you notice somebody is a Michigan fan. And then I’ll bring up you know, the Buckeyes meaning Ohio State, I don’t have a dog in the race man, I’m from Chicago sound like I got a college sport, I can really really push you know, I’m saying you bring up little things like that. And you get somebody revved up pretty quick, or in a good way, you know, make a comment with their you know, about somebody from Cleveland. I’m like, Yes. You know, being from Chicago, you know, sorry about that, you know, and they’ll come on now, is there some level of that personal side, and it truly does change the chemistry of the conversation or even the business meeting, but you get your you talked about asking the right questions. Obviously, that’s when you don’t you’ve met somebody for the very first time you’ve not been able to do the research. But if I do know that I’m going to meet Jeff Johnson, and I do know from his LinkedIn profile, you know, he went to this school was a rival School of mine, or he was in sports or whatever to your points or the family from Instagram. It’s amazing, the brownie points that somebody, you know, notices that I do that you did that most people don’t. I noticed that you did that right away. And you got a really quick response from me. We just, I mean, sometimes it happens. I mean, I always respond, but I wanted to respond. Because I’m like, wow, this guy. This guy’s got some skills.

Jake Kelfer 23:31
Yeah. And here’s the crazy thing about this, right? One of the biggest reasons why people don’t do this don’t do their research or don’t go out of their way is because they think it takes a lot of time. People think sometimes that networking, it takes too much time and so much energy will look, the best networkers are the ones that have the best businesses, right? You look at some of the most successful in the world, they’re the most connected people in the world, and they’ve been able to bring the right people together, right? That’s huge. But look at this. Whenever you’re reaching out to someone if you’re trying to get a new client, let’s just focus on that for this process. perspective, you’re on the road, right? And you have five minutes before your next meeting, and you want to try to get something out for somebody new or a follow up. Literally, this will take you this process three to five minutes at most per outreach. And the more you do it, the quicker you get. So I can bust out 10 different pitches in 10 different pitches in an email. And I can do that in 25 minutes. And that’s 10 new contacts I’m probably gonna make and my response rates go through the roof, whether it’s on Instagram or email, and that just starts the downward spiral because then once you meet them, and you do a good job there, they’re gonna want to introduce you to somebody else. And then it starts spiraling all in a positive direction for you as the initial outreach because you took three minutes to invest.

Bryan Paul Buckley 24:41
And we have three minutes. Yeah, because I’m sitting next to the guy who doesn’t have three minutes who is on Instagram, Twitter, scrolling, so I know he’s got that it’s we’re really kind of when we get to come on, man. I mean, really, it’s a matter is it a priority, because you can’t give him give me an excuse. You don’t have the time. We’ll be back for the remainder of this interview after this short break?

Buckley Kiddos 25:09
This is flat Kaitlyn. This is flat Kaleb. And we’re the Buckley flat kiddos. Our dad takes us everywhere on the road. We see nice hotels, we drive cool rental cars. We meet people my dad meets on the road and we get to see the sights from the places my dad visits and we even get in a little bit of trouble on the road. Well, at least you do all because we’re flat kiddos. And you could do the same for your kids. Just go to EliteRoadWarrior.com/store to purchase your own flat kiddos today. You can choose an elementary boy or girl. You can even choose a toddler boy or girl just go to EliteRoadWarrior.com/store to purchase your own flat kiddos today, your kids will love us.

Break Promo 26:12
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Bryan Paul Buckley 27:24
So speaking of that, let’s kind of go in a different direction. How do we make connecting and networking part of our routine that’s your point where it doesn’t feel like it’s a lot of time, doesn’t feel maybe overwhelming or possibly even a waste of time? How do we put that into our bones, the context of the road? How do we get that into our road routine, Jake?

Jake Kelfer 27:47
So you know, I was thinking about this before we jumped on here because this is something that that I’ve tried to practice and implement because I’m guilty as anybody of like, I am my routine I get, I get ready to go on the plane and that routine, just disappears, right? Netflix time increases, the music, the iTunes, the podcast, everything just increases. And then I skip out on some of the things that I consistently do on a regular basis. So one of the things that I’ve really focused on and I’ve read a bunch of books on the habits and really studied how can I put this psychology together. And one of the big things that we have to think about when we understand how habits are built in the first place, is we have to understand that some of them stemmed from our motivation, the more motivated we are, the more likely we are to do it for a single duration. Second thing is, is our ability. The best habits are the ones that are the easiest to do, right. If you put your clothes out in the morning, you’re more likely to put those clothes on and run. Right. So when you’re on the road and you’re getting ready to travel, there are certain things that I like to do called habit stacking, where I stack on the actions I want to take with things I’m already going to be doing. But that makes it easy while I’m getting on the road.

Jake Kelfer 28:49
So for example here, for example, let’s say you go you know, you’re going to go through security and you’re going to check in, okay, typically, what’s the first thing that you do after security is you go get a seat You sit down and wait till you’re bored. As soon as your computer opens up, use that as the trigger to send one outreach use that as a trigger to send one piece of networking communication, or one follows up or whatever it is, right, that’s gonna get you in the habit. Then when you’re doing it, you may already keep rolling, right? Here’s another thing. Let’s say you don’t want to do that. But let’s say you’re gonna check your email. As soon as you check your email, I call it the Gmail redirect. Okay? The Gmail redirect says that as soon as you pull out your email before you shut down your email, you send something out. What we’re doing when we’re on the road is just adding it to what we’re already doing. So that it’s easy for us to execute. Let’s say you want to meet somebody new? Well, the best way to meet somebody new is go sit closer to somebody, right? The best thing to do is that when you’re going to check in, focus on asking the right question, look for somebody that has something that you want to talk about, and go sit near them and ask them those questions right. Now. Again, don’t overdo it, and don’t be that annoying person in the airport. But very commonly, people, it’s proven that people actually become happier when other people initiate the convo. Even if both people don’t think initially they want to talk to each other. You can look at the study, but it was done on a train where people were talking to random strangers. And at the end of them, they both reported elevated happiness and fulfillment, even though initially, neither one of them would have ever said they weren’t talked to that other person. So that’s what it really is all about is like finding things you’re already doing. Figure out what you really want to do, that you’re not doing. Add that to what you’re already doing, and make it as easy as possible. And if you can do that, you’ll be able to execute big habits and networking along the road.

Bryan Paul Buckley 30:38
And those are great examples. I mean, you think about you know, it’s being strategic, you know, you’re walking into a room like a network, who do I want to connect with the same thing when you get to a gate or you walk into a bar at the airport, for example, or, you know, if I’m at an Embassy Suites, you know, and there’s a large area right there, that common area right in there, you’re looking around and seeing Who’s that person you can connect with you feel like there may be some synergy Is there. So those are great, great examples of that. So let’s talk a little bit more about you in these next couple of questions. Jake. You’re going moving into kind of this group coaching program. So why was it started? And can you tell us a little bit about that?

Jake Kelfer 31:15
Yeah. So, we’ve been developing and we have a bunch of people going through the program right now. It’s called elite elevation. And basically, what we what we’ve done and the reason why we did is because when I started the speaking business and the book writing business that kind of took off, we figured out how to do it, I figured out that system and it was all come back to relationships, right? When I started the combine, the only reason we had success was because of the relationship that we built. Now, here’s the thing people like, well, you probably had all the relationships, no, no, everything started from scratch, everything built. And I established and grew these networks in multiple different industries. And it led to very successful businesses. Also, it allowed me to travel and have freedom and enjoy the journey in the pursuit of greatness and it’s been able to catapult the success, right? So what we did was we boiled it all down. We’re like, what are the key things that are really bringing people to the top in their line of work, and how do we help people really start and grow their businesses. And that’s what elite elevation is. So elite elevation is our group coaching program that basically puts our core framework into video modules with handouts, activities, exercises, you get access to all of our templates and scripts and all these incredible things that like, let you see what are the pitches that I’m sending out that are getting 70 plus percent open rates and huge response rates, the same script I’m using to book 50 podcasts in a month, or whatever it is, right? We do Q and A’s weekly training sessions, mentor sessions, and it’s all part of this program. Um, and so we’re just I’m just super excited about it. And it’s been a joy because now we get to answer everyone’s questions of how did you do this? This is how we do it. And this is how you can do it and do it quickly.

Bryan Paul Buckley 32:44
Love it, man. And I’ll make sure that we’ve got a link in the show notes if anybody wants more information on that. So before I asked you how we find out more about you, any closing thoughts you want to leave with us today?

Jake Kelfer 32:55
I think no matter what it is that you’re doing, whether it’s on the road, whether it’s in person, whether you’re struggling to do something, whether you want to do more of something, right, because you’re on the road, you’re probably performing, right, you’re on the road you’re performing. And there are going to be times where we hesitate to start. And I’ll just leave you with this, it’s a quote from my dad. And I’ll give you a quote from my mom because I love them both very much. My dad will always say that we’re always looking for shortcuts. The only real shortcut is to start now. And so all you got to do is no matter where we’re going through and matter what you’re doing when you’re on the road is just start. It might not be easy to connect with someone on the airport that first time. Start. It might not be the best Instagram story of you filming yourself while you’re in the airport. Start. Okay. And then my other piece that I love to share with people because this piece of advice has helped me like stay calm, even when I’m on the road, is to always remember this comes from my mom to live in the moment and enjoy the journey. Think about how blessed we are to get on an airplane and travel. Think about how amazing is that we have a job that we get to go pursue our dreams right? Think about how incredible it is that you may be getting off airplane, you may find the love of your life, right? Think about how incredible that is, or who you might meet on a plane. I have a friend he met John Legend on a plane, I have another friend who met his favorite musician, I have another friend. I mean, the stories go on and on and on, right? And really what it comes down to is, are you doing what you love? Are you making an impact, and I’ve been able to be profitable off of that, that thing. And if you can do that, you’re gonna be crushing it as an elite Road Warrior.

Bryan Paul Buckley 34:28
Well, I really appreciate the quotes from your parents. That’s awesome. My dad’s quote was “just because I feed you, doesn’t mean I like you.” So maybe I need to get a little bit higher quotes for my dad. I’m kidding. He’s a quote machine as well. So I really do appreciate that great way to sum everything up. How do we find out more about you? Obviously, we’ll put links in the show notes but just in general, to follow you learn more from you.

Jake Kelfer 34:54
I’m on all social media, LinkedIn, obviously, I’m on LinkedIn. You guys connect to me. They’re just my name. I’m on Instagram @JakeKelfer, that’s probably the platform that I’m on most related to social websites. JakeKelfer.com. And for all your listeners if you guys enjoyed hearing me talk a little bit about elevate your network, we’ll hook you up with the free copy. All you got to do is just pay a small shipping fee, but we’ll take care of all you guys. We’ll get you guys free copies and that link is in my Instagram bio or on my website,

Bryan Paul Buckley 35:22
perfect. We’ll link you up and I don’t mean well LinkedIn you up but also link as well. Well, Jake, man, I love this conversation. These are one of the rare ones where you just keep going and going and going. I highly, highly recommend the book, elevate your network, personal read on my own. So obviously I want to make sure that I’m recommending things that are of value. And obviously man, there are just a number of good ones. And we only hit on 4 of the 25 there as far as specifics. So there’s a lot of practicality to this there. So Jake, thanks for spending time with us for blessing us with a number of really really good tips and making this better to become and remain an elite road warrior.

Jake Kelfer 35:57
Yeah, thank you for having me.

Bryan Paul Buckley 36:13
I’d like to thank Jake Kelfer man, for his energy for his ideas, his challenges, and his insights to help us become and remain elite road warriors. You can find the transcript and everything referenced in this interview in the show notes at eliteroadwarrior.com/084 along with a free resource 10 business travel hacks guide in the show notes. Learn the years and years of hacks that I’ve learned that you can learn in mere moments. And guess what? It’s absolutely free. As always, wherever you are, do something, anything, just not nothing to master the business travel life. leverage what you learn today from Jake Kelfer to become an elite Road Warrior. You got this!

Bryan Paul Buckley 37:07
Love that guy’s energy!

Written by Bryan Buckley · Categorized: CONNECT, Creatively, Embrace Better, Intentionally, Thoughtfully · Tagged: ERW Podcast, podcast

082 – The Best Version of Yourself (On the Road) with Nick Davies

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Transcription

Bryan Paul Buckley 0:00 Episode 82 of the Elite Road Warrior Podcast. Welcome to the Elite Road Warrior podcast where we believe you can leverage the road to transform your work, health, and home life while on business travel to ultimately master the business travel life. If you’re a road warrior, and a great chance you’re on the road right now then this podcast is for you.

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 0:31 Welcome to the Elite Road Warrior Podcast. I’m your host Brian Paul Buckley, fellow Road Warrior husband, one father of five. And then I really enjoy meeting certain people that I click with then I’m like man, they would make a great interview on the Elite Road Warrior Podcast and I’ve got one of those for you today. And as always, I would love for you to join my road trip in my master evil plans becoming and remaining an elite Road Warrior. But when I met our guest, as I mentioned, I just clicked with his energy, his passion, his desire to improve his life and the life of others. So I’m really honored to interview him today. And I think you’re really gonna enjoy the conversation. He is a quote like one-liner bomb King. So there were just so many that I was just like, oh, say that again. Say that again. And we’ll make sure those are in the show notes as well.

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 1:19 So, let’s meet our guest today. Nick Davies is a business and career coach with 20 years of background in financial services. He’s originally from London, England. And Nick has also worked in the Philippines, Florida, New York, and now calls Charlotte, North Carolina, his home and you’re gonna love his North Carolinian, British accent. Well, over the past four years, Nick has shifted big time is focusing on creating his purpose and now allows people in businesses through coaching. He’s trained through Tony Robbins coaching which is absolutely amazing and is also a certified health coach. And in just a moment, we’re gonna be working through these following questions with Nick. How is your perspective enhanced by traveling as a business traveler, why is it so important to understand our own behaviors? And why we do the things that we do when we’re on the road? How much of a difference do our habits and our road routines, these patterns these road life road routines make on the road? How can we create more focus while we’re traveling on business? How do we leverage the power of connecting with other people as a business traveler? And we went deep on that question, and as a coach, what difference does he see with those who prioritize personal development and maybe those that don’t, and there’s always so much more. It’s go time!

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 3:02 Well, I’m live right now with the Nick Davies. How are you and where are you, man?

 

Nick Davies 3:08 I am outstanding, middle of the week ready to go cranking it out. Coming to you, Charlotte, North Carolina, a beautiful Sunday morning

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 3:17 And I can tell right now for those listeners who are on the go that your North Carolinian accent is just a little bit behind right now with theirs so how long you been there and man Why aren’t you in North Carolina

 

Nick Davies 3:31 Isn’t it authentic? Come on. Come on.

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 3:35 Come on. We’re gonna start the interview that way.

 

Nick Davies 3:37 I’ve been here for three whole years Come on, can I not belong here?

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 3:40  In a row. Well, I mean, I still pick up that I still think that the Texas accent and the New York accent I mean, those are coming through pretty strong.

 

Nick Davies 3:48 yeah, I mean, it’s all about traveling. I believe in that a lot. And it’s part of why we’re here today of course but yeah, I’m originally from London, England and lived in the states for seven years. North Carolina is absolutely where I call home now. My wife and my daughter and this is where we’re putting down some roots and it’s a beautiful place beautiful state. And I love it.

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 4:06 And a heck of a swim to get back to the Motherland, isn’t it? A good thing since you’re in shape? Well, hey, you know, I joked around I used to say it worked for an Australian based companies you could tell me my Chicago Australian accent you know, and I had to hit that the Chicago part hard otherwise that Aussie would come out and you know, you know, as those Aussies are, so anyway, so you’re a business and career coach how what’s that look like on a daily basis?

 

Nick Davies 4:35 That looks like me living my best life. Really, Brian. I know that sounds corny and kind of cliche to say but you know that this is why I do this. It’s, it’s a second career for me and it’s a really purposeful and intentional about what do I want to have in my life and that looks like for me, set my day up in the morning making sure that I start my day, but the things that into my mind I need to be doing, put the things into my body that I need to be having to be able to come and crank it to the highest level peak performance sharp for my clients in the best possible way, shot for people that I’m working with working around. So colleagues of mine people that I’m looking to do business with, so prospects to serving people at the highest level and doing things like this and, and having conversations with people like you that really fill me up, and I think it’s pretty important. So that’s why it looks like for me, it’s a balance of all of those things.

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 5:23 Well, and it’s obvious you do well what you do, because of our first five minutes of the phone call, just kind of get to know each other a little bit. We’re like, man, we’re on literally the same page, same paragraph, same sentence, and, and that’s great. And so we’re gonna pack quite a bit of that within this interview. So, Nick, how is your perspective enhanced by traveling? I mean, obviously, you’ve been a world traveler, and you know, being a coach, but then also traveling yourself. What does that mean to have your perspective enhanced on the road?

 

Nick Davies 5:53 If I boil it down, Bryan, I think the biggest indicator of change is environment. And what’s the most impactful way that you can change your environment is to change your physical environment. And there’s a lot of things that we can do to, to move around the environment that we’re in. But the quickest way, impactful way of doing that is just, is just change it and change it from a different, different location, different state, but more importantly, different country, different people around you. And you’re forced to be in that experience. Now, if you want to go and learn a language you want to learn Italian, what do you do? What’s the best way? To go to Italy – you learn that language, submerge yourself. I think that’s true across everything. So I think it’s so important to get those different perspectives, those different areas and just have a view of what other people do. It’s so easy to be able to just to see how this is the way that life is, the way things are. If you’re always been in the same place, nothing wrong with that, by the way, but the easiest way to change your perspective and to grow and see different things is to just be in an environment that you’re not used to and you can’t help us see things.

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 6:56 So let’s drill down there for just a second because obviously by the road, we are forced to that unless you are it consultants, but even then, I mean, I’ve traveled consultants, I deal with consultants and they may be in one spot for three months. So that’s the same for three months. But eventually, they’re moving to another city. And so they’re always meeting new people, people. So we actually had the ability of enhancing that perspective, if we allow it to correct. So how do we allow that? I mean, what, what does that mean? So all of a sudden, I’m not doing it, but now I want to do that. What does that look like?

 

Nick Davies 7:26 Yeah, yeah, change is automatic growth is not. It’s a choice.

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 7:31 Say that again, say that again

 

Nick Davies 7:33 Change is automatic, growth is not. That intention is the difference, that choice because you can go get dragged kicking and screaming to something that changes in your life. You have to want to take that opportunity and make that something that by to be more of that, you know, it’s I think that that’s the biggest thing is making that decision and say, Okay, what, what’s new in my environment, and what can I take from this. And get curious, have some fun! What can I take from here? What’s different here? Wow, what can I learn?

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 8:05 That’s great awareness.

 

Nick Davies 8:07  Yeah. Awareness. I mean that that word will come back to so often that and intention is so true, but just bringing out every part, I think it’s so important.

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 8:14 Well, I think intention kind of leads into that next question. So why is it so important to understand our own behavior and why we do the things that we do in business travel? I know that’s a big area in your practice with people as far as to understand the behavior and the reasons they do what they do, but how in the context of business travel how does that relate?

 

Nick Davies 8:33 Yeah, it relates massively because we do things based on patterns. And so if your role your business, your job, evolved into business travel, maybe there was like one bit of travel you did every year then that was then it started to be two a year, three a year and it was every month and it was every week. You probably didn’t take the time just start and go, Okay, how do I want to do this thing? How do I want to lay this out to be most successful, delivering for my clients, so different from me, and having the best possible experience probably didn’t happen. And so there’s a great time to just hit the reset button if you like and say, Okay, well, where I am on where am I now? What do I, what do I like about what am I doing in the patterns that I’ve, I’ve ingrained because we all build these patterns. It’s part of who we are. And it’s really important, really powerful. Because if we didn’t build patterns, make things automatic. I’m gonna have to relearn everything all the time. And but we need to be clear about what the patterns are, which patterns do we want to build? And so I think it’s a great, always a great time, especially now, maybe that travel wasn’t quite as much. And we’re still moving around. We’re still doing travel in different ways. But just to think about like, what do I want to get out? What type of person do I want to be here? How can I take this free this thing to the next level? What is it about my patterns that I’m doing? What do I like when I’m just doing inventory? And just be honest with yourself.

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 9:56 And it’s hard to your points when you’re just going, going if all of a sudden you go from, you know that one tradeshow a year to traveling a few times a year. It’s all of a sudden, you’re the busy traveler or guy just interviewed recently, Justin Pugh in Episode 78, where he went from a sedentary lifestyle, eight to five every single day to all of a sudden he’s traveling every single week for six months. You know, we talk about hitting the gas pedal there, but having that opportunity to be able to go, is this what I want in my life? Is this what I’m getting out of business travel of what I hoped it would be. And obviously, that’s where somebody like you as a business coach can kind of work and pull those types of things out or maybe reflect a little bit more on those questions. Is that correct?

 

Nick Davies 10:38 Absolutely. Something I always start with, and I always go back to is a real simple question of what do you want? Because I’m sure you’ve experienced this as well that generally speaking, when you ask people what they want, they will just tell you what they don’t want. And it’s a simple question, but it’s not one we often ask ourselves that are really deep. But I think that that’s what we’ve always got to point back to, is if you get if you find yourself getting stuck in the monotony of something is, and just getting frustrated with something to pull it back and say, hang on, let me distance myself a little bit. Let me create a little bit of space. So I can ask the deep questions, again, the real questions, why am I doing this? What do I really want? What does this serve me? How does it serve me? Who am I trying to serve?

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 11:23 So Nick, to go back to what you just said, where people answer with what they don’t want. Do you find at least in your coaching, that sometimes finding what you don’t want ultimately leads somebody to finding out what they do want? I mean, by like, some process of elimination, where it kind of uncovers like, Oh, I have an aha moment by doing the antithesis of answering that question.

 

Nick Davies 11:42 Yeah, no, absolutely. And there’s definitely value in saying what you don’t want. And, and, and for sure, and I’m not making people wrong for that. It’s a better process. And so if you’re going from your answer, the question of what you want is what you don’t want, you can just show yourself where you are in that process. Because you know, here’s the thing back To the patterns, if you’re not asking yourself questions, those types of questions on a regular basis, it’s not likely that you’re gonna have good answers. And that’s not that’s good. That’s not to say you can’t, it’s just you haven’t until you haven’t built that muscle.

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 12:12 That’s great. It’s not saying that you can’t, but that you just haven’t. That’s awesome. That’s a great phrase on that, and especially to someone who may be saying, Well, I don’t want to travel as much or I don’t want to be overweight, or I don’t want to be so disconnected with my family. Obviously, the opposite of that ultimately becomes what you want which kind of leads into this next question of how much of a difference does your road habits in your road routines make on the road? Like you’re talking about getting into the patterns into the grooves of that so how much of a difference does that really make?

 

Nick Davies 12:43 All the difference. All the difference. I was working with a client this morning. So he has a couple of different companies but he has a job as well. And, and the difference between one week to the next was absolutely monumental. About how he felt about it.

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 13:00 Interesting how so?

 

Nick Davies 13:01 And he so he the distinction he made was that he shared with me that I’m, I tend to be a night person. Think about that. But that’s just a belief he shared. I tend to be a night person. And you know, what is a belief? Belief is nothing but something that we’re really certain about. And because he’s believed by himself was that I tend to be a night person. His behavior supports that belief. And that led to him getting up later and later, staying up later and later, not being where he needs to be delivering. And so the commitment he made based on that distinction, now awareness was I’m going to start to get up at this time, no matter what. And the result of that was that he got exponentially more done in the week, but forget the result. He felt fantastic. When you feel great, you do great things. And I think that’s so important, especially going out on the road because the environments continuously changing around you. So you want to create as much structure as you can to enable yourself To be as successful, even with the flexibility of that how that environment might change. So you can control.

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 14:09 And that’s good, Nick. So going back to the question of what do I really want? By getting that question answered can help us to potentially from what I’m hearing from you, yep, maybe redesign our habits or our road routines, or our patterns to be able to fit exactly what we ultimately want to become. Can you unpack that a little bit more?

 

Nick Davies 14:30 Absolutely. So if you’re, and part of my career, and the traveling that I did, was joyful for me because it wasn’t so much it was like, Okay, I get an opportunity to go to a different country. Wow, I get to visit the people that I talk to on a regular basis. I get to see different cultures a little bit of that, what’s gonna pay for it, this is gonna be great. And so it was more like an adventure for me. So my outcome, my goal, what I want was just to enjoy the experience. Okay, I’m going to take away can I’m going to I’m gonna, probably not, I’m going to get away from my regular patterns and just enjoy it.

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 15:06  because you because you’re the attitude and the mindset of adventure.

 

Nick Davies 15:09 Yes, yes, exactly. Whereas, whereas if my goal was my outcome was what I want was that this is an integral part of me being successful in my business or my career. And I’ve got to be much more precise about the way that I do that. I can’t just be adventurous by doing it, I’ve got to create the parameters of something I’m doing on a regular basis. So my behavior is going to be much more different than on the venture side, I’m going to, I’m going to stay out and have that late dinner, maybe I would have a couple of drinks. Now maybe I’m going to miss a workout in the morning. So I’m there for the adventure takeaway comes. But if my overall goal is to maximize myself, from my business for the company I’m working for now I want to make sure I’m getting very precise about that. I need to know how I can show up in my best. I’m going to be doing the big meeting, and I’m going and I’m going to be doing the social part of it but a time I’m gonna be straight back to my room so I can prep, I can sleep. So I can go work out and make sure that I’m in the right possible for the best possible frame for the next day so that that part is so important.

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 16:10 So this is actually really good because I think you’re, you’re leveraging in you know, the desire for adventure, but also not at the cost of what is the ultimate goal of the business trip. So for example, somebody could choose to have an adventure as part of the trip or adventure is to say, Hey, I’m going to try you know, this food in New Orleans or I’m going to try whatever or I’m going to visit, you know, this sightseeing place right in here, which is adventurous, but not at the ultimate cost of whatever my overall goal is, of the business trip. So it kind of leads into one question to ask you is, well, how do you create focus while traveling for business? Because if obviously, you’ve got a lot of things that are going on, sometimes focus becomes the hardest area because of all these other variables. You know, travel friction, if you will, that’s kind of biting you on a given business trip. How does focus come into play?

 

Nick Davies 16:59 There’s a Really cool duality here right it’s the one that jumps right out for me Brian is precision, the more precise you can be around the things that you know that serve you the best. For instance, I need to soon as I get off the plane get to my hotel, the first thing I do is always have a workout. For instance, I always need to make sure that I get up by a certain time I set my clock straightaway and have the workout every morning whatever that is, you getting really precise on it, because the more precision you can have on those but the scaffolding if you like, the template of what your traveling looks like, the more freedom that you can actually have in expressing your artistry of maximizing your not only the adventure of it but also the business side of it as well. So there’s that duality that the irony of, Okay, one side I need to get really structured and precise. That’s going to actually allow me to have more fun and create more and be more business-wise and fun wise. So that find that balance for what you need. Play around with it, and be curious about it, what works for me? and be honest, because we all really know, we’re being honest. We already know what those things are for us.

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 18:10 Well, I love man, there’s just so much there and precision around the areas that produce your best results. I mean, I think that’s just what’s really, really powerful. And to your point to Nick, I think sometimes we just we’re not aware, we’re not thinking about it, we’re not intentional, we just go out and do our road life. We just do the deal. And we don’t always realize how it’s affecting us how it’s benefiting us, but also how it affects other people. And one area that I really resonated with you and we had our conversation was really kind of on that power of connecting with other people and the energy of this there and how are we presenting our best self and what are they receiving out of that? So how, how do you leverage the power of connection as a business traveler with meeting new people or coming in for a window of time and then leaving so can you drill down on that a little?

 

Nick Davies 19:01 Yeah, I mean, first of all, wow, what a gift it is to be a business traveler. What a gift. You get to go to all of these different places you get to decide to bring your best self to it to build relationships change lives in the moment. How cool is it when someone comes in sweeps into your business sweeps into your life, they come with this massive energy. And they come with a perspective, which is it, which is what we don’t see so often something that just takes things to the next level, you get to go in and be that person, impact people and then go to the next one and do the same thing. Again. I want to underscore that point. Because it’s so important that we have to think of it as a gift. It’s a great thing of what we’re doing right now. Right? That’s the start point. And that’s the mindset. And then it’s thinking about all those things as relationships because ultimately business is relationships, business is relationships, and so that thinking it from that point, okay, it’s a gift. And everything here is about relationships. How do you take all of the patterns that you see there’s that word again, the patterns that you. See from all of the people that you’re privileged to work with and interact with, and bring those to the next person? The best parts of that, that conversation, the best parts of that relationship, put it into that next relationship, and so on and so forth and kind of continue to play that around and just be there for people, especially in the environment right now. Like, if you’re in a car, right now, this thing, if you’re at the airport, getting on it, get on an airplane, if you’re thinking okay, cool. I’ve got that big meeting coming up for me, but just think about the people side of it. But like, how can you in the next interaction you have, give what that person needs, I can just get a deeper connection. And if that’s all you ever focus on just getting that little bit deeper connection. That alone is gonna stand you in fantastic stead been super successful of whatever your chosen field is.

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 20:51 So let’s drill down and I think you’ve kind of hit a nerve here. I think the easiest thing is that we’re just not aware of the impression we’ve left on others. So I think when we do raise that awareness You’re really talking about how can I get a deeper connection? So let’s just ask the obvious question on that, especially even somebody introverted or they just kind of do their deal, and then they just go on to the next their next meeting or next appointment. Why is that deeper connection important? So we’re going to quantify that, like, what’re the results of that? If I have to make the effort to have that deeper connection?

 

Nick Davies 21:23 Yeah, absolutely. I mean, we always want to be coming back to the results for sure. Because you know that otherwise, it’s just a nice conversation, we’ve got to pull those things together. We want to see the results. We always want tangible results for sure. And let’s do it in a way that we enjoy it right? Because ultimately, everything happens under the banner of rapport. And the more that rapport that you can build with someone, the more relationship relational currency you have with someone. So really think about like a bank account that you have with someone, the more that you can pull yourself into that relationship and create more currency, the more opportunity that things are going to pop up. As I was saying, The harder I work the luckier I get. Obviously, the harder that is, it’s I love it. All right, you too, the more that you put into something, the more you’re going to get out. And the thing that we often don’t see, or tend to disregard, is that we want this or expect some sort of instant feedback, instant gratification if I do this for you right now what do I get. And of course, that’s not really the way that the world works, but it’s giving value for value sake, how can I make things better for you? And often, in fact, I’d go too far and say, all the time, that will come back to you. the way it comes back to you, you don’t know. But again, having that acute awareness of knowing that if I pour into this relationship, if I give the most I can to give bringing value to this person, somewhere along the line, it’s gonna come back to me a couple of years down the line, they’re gonna say, hey, look, I can, I’ve got a fantastic favorite introduction with you. And they’re gonna introduce you to where the leverage is that that currency. So I would say it’s everything. And it’s, it’s, we want to make sure we’re always tying it back to the results as you talk about Brian. But make sure that you can see that for yourself. I’m willing to bet that and if you look at your business results over the last six months, think about where that came from. Think about and I’m willing to bet that come from your strongest relationships that you have in your business. I bet you could tie those relationships back the one instruction you got before that, and the one before that as well. And it’s all going to come down to the relationship.

 

Bryan Paul Buckley 23:31 We’ll be back for the remainder of this interview after this short break.

Bryan Paul Buckley 23:43 Overseeing a business travel team is a challenge, especially when you just want consistent results. Is that too much to ask? There is a grind of business travel that has two levels of costs if you consider the first is obviously the business traveler. Secondly is the company When your business travelers only a short flight away from burnout due to the stress of the road, they’re costing you money and results in the entire world. According to the Kingston study, 45% of the 200 frequent business travelers surveyed reported higher stress levels than normal while on work trips, and 31% said they’ve experienced emotional exhaustion, which is one of the major risk factors of burnout, and this is on a weekly basis. Another study showed 80% of those who have experienced mental health problems, aka stress on the road, have never told their employer and you need to know. You may not even realize burnout could cost you up to 200% of their salary. And this doesn’t even factor in the loss of productivity of that person, going from busy to beat down to burnout. These stats are staggering. Yet most companies continue to do business as usual or in this case, business travel as usual, why? Too many companies who have business travelers and especially those that lead the road where teams are just simply unaware of any signs of burnout. And as a result, Elite Road Warrior Group has done the heavy lifting for you. We’ve created a resource called seven early warning signs for companies to avoid business travel burnout. And you can find this absolutely free PDF resource at eliteroadwarrior.com Get your copy of the seven early warning signs for companies to avoid business travel burnout at eliteroadwarrior.com

Bryan Paul Buckley 25:43 There are some guys in Southern California that I’ve known for a decade and I’ve represented different companies mostly on contract work kind of coming in as a brand specialist, corporate trainer, and every time that I come back to them with a different company, they’re automatically thrilled to hear from me. Hey, what’s the update What’s going on? You know, at that point, hey, what do you need, you know, hey, you need to get back in here, y’all for another training into here. And it was super cool. Because really just even a couple of years ago, and one of the guys had mentioned before he got any gun use that as a moment. He’s the head guy. It’s all these sales guys, not 50 sales guys. And he says to them, he says, Hey, Bryan’s here right now because of the power of connection. And he said, I’ve known him for 10 years, and whatever it comes in whatever he’s promoting, or selling or, you know, endorsing, I’m gonna go with because I like and I trust Bryan. But Frank and I have been out a number of times just talking or you know, working to take care of his customers taking them out to eat. And there’s that you to your point, that rapport, that relationship, that deeper connection. Now, obviously, to your point earlier, you don’t always know when that’s going to come back to when, or benefits from the result, but it has over and over and over and over. Sometimes it’s a year later. Sometimes it’s three years later, sometimes it’s six months later depends on the contract that has come out to be true. So, man, that is a really, really good point on there, Nick. So what are some ways that we can improve in the area of connection with people on the road?

Nick Davies 27:07 Yeah, and I just before I answer that, if I may, Bryan, just come back to your point because people tend to dismiss that. They’ll see in other people, oh, why did that guy get that deal? Oh, it’s just because he’s got a good relationship, just because they like each other, meaning that it’s something that they can’t do anything about, which of course, is not the case, right? And so you can actively work on those relationships and two answers that will lead to your question, right? So just be aware of those like, you tend to dismiss it all. But that’s what they’re just that’s just how the relationship that this guy has. That’s just who he is. You get to choose who you want to be.

Bryan Paul Buckley 27:47 That’s good.

Nick Davies 27:48 And so what are the practical applications? How can you do this? Again, back to that what a precision part should be part of your on the road program. Who are the people that I’m going to see on this trip, or this part of this trip that are the most important, and what do I know about them? And what is it? How can I? How can I strengthen the depth of relationship? How can I really listen? It’s going to start from that. If you can go and say I’ve met this guy, there are so many people that I’ve talked to met over the years and clients I see oftentimes from a, from an individual point of view, a business point of view. Well, they have relationships with people they’ve had for 10 years. But those relationships are still surface. And so it’s going to come back to well, listening, and really understanding about people and I think one of the biggest things, why coaching is so powerful is because we’re not playing on the surface. We’re getting to learn stuff about the people, if you’ve got five people in the next three days that you know, they’re going to be impactful to your business. You like to get on with and you respect. Ask some questions. What else is going on in your life? At least I don’t know about you. Learn. Get curious to make some notes put that down part of your precision.

Bryan Paul Buckley 29:03 Oh, what did you say? Take notes. Why?

Nick Davies 29:07 Absolutely. Yeah. Hey, if it’s not written down doesn’t exist. It’s my belief.

Bryan Paul Buckley 29:12 And so then especially when you’re on other cities, you know, and you think you’re gonna remember, you know, it reminds me, Nick of a quote, my dad used to say, hated as a kid. He said, You know, you talk about, he said, If you ask people questions, they’ll talk to you for hours. If you talk about yourself, they’ll listen to you for minutes. And so true, right. And one of the things that a mentor of mine taught me was just the power of using LinkedIn. So I can get on to somebody’s profile, I’m going to visit you know, Jeff Johnson, for example. And I realized, Oh, you know, well, he went to, you know, he went to Ohio State University, and I could teach him like, I’m from the University of Michigan and get the IRA all riled up. I’m saying, or my case, being a Cubs fan, you know, and being Cardinals or whatever, you know, you find that that level of connection on there to your point, get personal, to remember that, you know, they’ve got kids or they’re a big sports fan of this, or they like this for that, and that level of resonance that can be able to create from that. So any additional thoughts or ideas on the power of connection on the road?

Nick Davies 30:12 Absolutely. And, you know, I’m making notes, I’m always making notes. I’m always writing things down, right? Just to that point, you’ve got to do that. Because you can’t do that, we have 12,000 to 60,000 thoughts every day. 85% of those are the same. They’re the ones that aren’t, we’re not going to remember we’ve got to write stuff down as an important thing to think about. So let us extend that right. Because to your point, everyone’s favorite subject is themselves and doesn’t come from an ego perspective. It just is right because they’ve always got stuff to talk about. I’d extend think about private as a coach, we, we create something which we call wow system, which is basically just creating those moments where you have people that are important to you great relationships that you can make and go Wow. What does that look like? I’m picking up okay, well, Bryan’s a Cubs fan. Right, good. Well, out but now No, no, no, let’s be specific. Okay, well, as we’re going through a relationship and I see something that is, is related to the Cubs, hey, I’m gonna get that I’m gonna give that to Bryan. Thinking of you. How cool is this? There you go. And so it doesn’t have to be stuff you buy people can be moments. Hey, thinking of you dropping your text today because I know it’s your anniversary. Congratulations. Do you want to be today? I offer you that challenge. Be the best. How do you want to be the best version of yourself? So it’s having that sensory acuity to listen to people to understand where they are, what’s important to them, and just offer that on a sincere, authentic level. And people appreciate that.

Bryan Paul Buckley 31:39 But Nick is so good, man. Man, it’s so good especially on the listening and picking up on the details. Yeah, my wife and I joke around our favorite parts of a segment of a movie was Dumb and Dumber when the two guys are sitting in them in the bathtub and I think it was Lloyd says you know to say why does Freida wanna break up with you anyway, it’s as well as she said I was in a Very good listener. Well, what else did she say? I don’t know, I really wasn’t paying attention. You know, it’s first of all, great writing, man. I mean, like, into little, you know, a little back and forth there. That’s awesome writing. But it’s very, very true that if people are willing to ask a question, being willing to listen to the answer, especially too if you’re looking as an opportunity to build rapport and build a connection with there, so I mean, Nick, I mean, we could spend hours on this, I mean, this would be a really good thing to come back on another episode and unpack a little bit more there because I think you’ve got a lot of gold in that area. So but let’s go talk about as a coach, what differences do you see in those who prioritize personal development? And those that don’t because energy habit number five is “develop personally and professionally”. So how do you see the differences for those who take that seriously in their lives? And what are the results what are their changes if you can unpack that?

Nick Davies 32:54 I love this question so much. Thank you. It’s everything because the default in life is the erosion of the quality of our life. Things don’t say that I get better. That’s a great quote, the default in life is the erosion of the quality of our life. Things do not get better by themselves. If you leave something alone, it gets worse. And we have to be very intentional about that. And what was the thing that we all have is our biggest asset. It’s us, we are our biggest asset. And so think about it. If you don’t invest in you, you’re moving towards something that can’t be sustained. And even if you’re happy with where you are, which I would challenge most people one because there’s always more progress equals happiness. Even if we got everything Hey, why do people that have everything quote, unquote, get bored and fed up? Because they’re not moving forward. They’re not growing. And so there’s always something that doesn’t matter where you are different part of your life, it’s so important to really invest in you. And that’s why I think it’s the most important thing, hey, look, what are you worth? How much are you investing in you? Because you that’s the only way you’re gonna get a payback from that. There’s no limit there. And so I would think about that, like, how actively are you using your resources to invest back into you? Maybe that’s money. Maybe that’s time. There are two main things we’re talking about here. Maybe it’s both together. How do you know that you’re getting the right return that you need? Are you really asking yourself honest questions? Are you willing to do the work? Are you willing to put yourself out there and be vulnerable about it? And look, ultimately, if you want to have a different level of life and play this game, a more fulfilling level, you’ve got to become that person. You’ve got to become that person first. You can’t get, you can’t make a billion dollars and then say, Okay, now I’m going to work on being the person I need to be there has a billion dollars, you become that person first. And then it appears That’s why people that win the lotto win $10 million in the lottery, lose it all because they’re not a person that has that type of money

Bryan Paul Buckley 35:08 Impressively quick, impressive. Right? So Nick, do you find that the reason people don’t develop or dive into personal development or push back on personal development on the two reasons that you gave because of money and time? Do you find that those are legitimate reasons/excuses when What’s your impression of that? I mean, obviously, when you’re talking about people are coming to you or exploring potentially coaching with you? What are their push backs of that and how valid are they?

Nick Davies 35:37 Yeah, it’s funny to me I love the excuses is what we tend to think about. I like to think about it also stories, you know, we’re always telling ourselves a story, but we’ve got this continual narrative of why we do justify the why are we doing things that we’re doing good or bad, you know, and so if your story is that, you know, “I just haven’t got enough money to invest in me right now.” “I don’t think that right now I’m in the right place.” And my favorite is, “I’m not ready.” Because if you unpack that, like, what does that really mean? You’re not ready to start? It’s the chicken and the egg scenario. Yeah, seriously, you know, so so it’s either just ask yourself that real question. I know that there are some realities of life and, and not everyone is always in the right place for coaching. And maybe that’s not the right situation, I get that. That’s absolutely fine. You know, ask yourself, what, what, where are you letting yourself off the hook right now? Are you in a place where you really have everything? Just comes back down to that, that honesty again, the questions that we don’t generally ask ourselves, and if you were the best place to start is at the beginning. We just get scared. Our mind is there not make us happy or we will have this 2 million-year-old mind we’ve heard about the other reptilian mind, monkey mind, whatever you want to call it. It’s there for survival. So we don’t die. So we don’t get attacked by saber-toothed tigers, we run up trees look after ourselves. That’s what, that’s what it’s there for it does a great job.

Bryan Paul Buckley 37:08 And I try to see other cities right now now that I’ve advanced, just so you know, not running up trees. Well, it’s just part of my adventure for the trip. But no, you’re exactly right. So what are some questions then Nick, that we could begin to unpack? So let’s say we’re, you know, just from the one we hear all the time, at least that I hear all the time has to do with time is I don’t have enough time I’m on the road, I barely have enough time to get my work done, let alone sleep or let alone eat healthier, let alone You know, personally develop which is usually the last of the energy habits for somebody to really really drill down into, which obviously could sometimes be their biggest benefit by doing that personal professional development. So what are some questions that maybe somebody who’s on the road listening to this has already gone man, I’m so busy right now, and start to think through that maybe some of these you’ve already unpacked already.

Nick Davies 37:56 Yeah, I love it. I mean, this I mean, I’ll challenge your own story. If you hear yourself saying haven’t got enough time and enough time? That’s the story. Is it really true? Do you want it to be true? If no, are you willing to change something? That’s the question you’ve got to ask yourself, are you willing to change? Because if you can honestly ask, just answer that and say no. Then you are where you are. You have to be willing to change. Because now you could, you could apply some specific actions towards that. And a great way to think about it would be okay, well, I just need to see what’s really true and track my day. Where am I actually spending my time? when I’m traveling? How much time on the plane? Am I just sitting there staring into space? When I actually use him? Am I actually watching movies? If you’re watching Netflix, any time of the day ever, you’ve got time.

Bryan Paul Buckley 38:47 That’s honesty. That’s true.

Nick Davies 38:50 That’s brutal honesty. And so so to do something like a tracker to show yourself where you’re spending your time, you won’t do that unless you’ve decided for yourself to answer the question. Whether you’re willing to investigate whether you’re willing to do something different, give yourself permission. That’s the first thing. But the tools. Gosh, they’re there. I’ve got as many tools as there is my, my arm is long. It’s just Are you willing to use them or not? Because oftentimes, it’s like, well, how do I do this? How do I do it? How do I do it? What’s the best thing to do here? What’s the best tool? And also release the best one is the one that you will actually use on the downswing.

Bryan Paul Buckley 39:28 And a tool that’s actually getting you back to the original point. Where do you want to go? who you want to be? And are you willing to stop and ask those questions? And sometimes the road really can be that I mean, think about it, Nick. We do have you referenced the airplane, you know, if I’m flying from Chicago to San Diego, for example, or Seattle, I got four-plus hours, man, I got time to do about all those things. I got time to be able to read I got time to ride. I got time to check the email. I’ve got time to watch a 30-minute show. I got a chance to what have you got a lot of time that’s there. Just a matter of how do we leverage those windows of time early morning. I’m not getting kids out of school, my wife to school, on a business travel day when I’m not traveling for business. So you’re right, there are windows of times. And to use your analogy, if you have time to watch Netflix, you have time. So I think that’s a great, great analogy. So let’s put a bow on this here. Any closing thoughts you’ve got from the kind of the journey we’ve had on this conversation.

 

Resources

Nick Davies

Written by Bryan Buckley · Categorized: Embrace Better, ERW Podcast · Tagged: ERW Podcast, podcast

Top Five Excuses I Heard From Business Travelers This Past Year

 

I had this coming and more.

People talk to me for two crazy reasons:

  • I ask questions
  • I listen to their response

My Dad used to say all the time:

Son, ask people questions and they’ll talk to you for hours. Talk about yourself and they’ll listen to you for seconds at the most.

And oh how business travelers can talk.

Talk when they’re bored and want to engage with someone who gets them.

Talk when they’re asked a question by someone who seems to listen.

But what they don’t know is WHY I ask many of my questions on the road.

One word: RESEARCH

I want to hear from every single business traveler I can to hear how they feel about Road Life.

Unfiltered.

This past year I wanted to hear what were the barriers to becoming an elite road warrior.

And did I get an earful and my research-validated?

Here are the Top Five Excuses I Heard From Business Travelers This Past Year

Excuse 1 – It’s Hard to Eat Healthy on the Road

Translation: I’m not taking any responsibility for the non-forced food I put in my mouth.

I love this one. I’ve had SO many meals with road warriors who give me this excuse.

But then I watch their food choices meal after meal, restaurant after restaurant, bad choice after bad choice.

It starts with the appetizer then the main course with all the trimmings.

There’s the Freshman 15.
Then the Travel 20.
And if you’re an overachiever like me, you earn the Entitled 40.

How? Saying “It’s hard to eat healthy on the road.”

The reality is many of us have two advantages:

  • We’re not paying for the meal
  • We can choose the restaurant most of the time

These two realities can allow us to eat in healthier places and give you healthier options.

The truth is food is fuel and fuel is energy.

And I want energy to be at my best on the road.

Energy Habit Focus: FUEL

Resource: Five Decisions You Must Make at Every Restaurant on the Road

 

Excuse 2 – I Can’t Get in a Good Workout So What’s the Point

Translation: I’m not as busy as I think and could make time for a short, effective workout.

So many choices:

  • Morning or Late Afternoon?
  • Treadmill or Elliptical?
  • Outside Walk or Run?
  • Dumbbells or Resistance Bands?

The answer? YES!

And I’ve found when I take even just 20 minutes, I often have a better workout because I’m time-sensitive and really get after it.

Whether I’m in the hotel fitness center or stay in my hotel room, taking just a few minutes does so much for me especially when I make it happen before the business travel day begins.

Remember, something, anything, just not nothing when it comes to exercise on the road.

Movement Creates Energy.

Energy Habit Focus: MOVE

Resource: How to Workout in a Hotel Room – Podcast Interview with Jeff McMahon

 

Excuse 3 – I Don’t Have Time to Read When Traveling

Translation: I’m not looking at all the marginal time that affords me reading time on the road.

This was me until I really started looking at my business travel days for margin.

Consider these times to get your “read on”:

  • Drive to the airport to listen to an audiobook or a podcast
  • On the long-term parking bus and going through security
  • After you board the plane and until you hear “we’ve reached 10,000 feet blah blah blah”
  • On the flight descent when you’re told to put your tray table up and prepare for landing
  • In your rental car or RideShare
  • 1st hour of your morning when you’re in your hotel

Just sayin, there is more than enough time to get your “read on” while traveling for business.

Energy Habit Focus: DEVELOP

Resource: Five Reasons Personal Development is a Challenge on the Road

 

Excuse 4 – I Just Can’t Get a Good Night Sleep on the Road

Translation: I’m really good at hijacking my sleep when I travel.

I sucked at sleep on the road for a long, long time and here’s how:

  • I was on a screen (sometimes many) way too late
  • I would fall asleep with the TV on
  • I drank too much which my bladder and cottonmouth woke me up in the middle of the night
  • My brain was too active and I would just endlessly lay in my bed
  • My room was too warm and not dark enough

But once I realized that I first and foremost needed to IMPROVE my sleep before I needed to INCREASE my sleep.

Game changer, road warriors!

Now, I’m highly focused on having the best quality of sleep first then focus on the quantity no matter what.

Energy Habit Focus: REST

Resource: Why You Need a Sleep Kit on the Road and What Should Go In It

 

Excuse 5 – My Family is Just Fine with My Level of Check-In While Traveling 

Translation: I’ve never done it any other way to see if it made a difference.

The road is challenging to stay connected with those back home and it may go something like this:

  • I’ll call when I can
  • I’ll send a check-in text here and there
  • I’ll video chat but yet still be checking email and not really paying attention

I know because that was me for way too long and still the case for most business travelers.

This is what I call a “Check-in Guy or Check-in Girl”. We do the bare minimum and it’s usually only when it’s convenient for us.

But what if we leveraged the road to stay connected with the family in thoughtful and creative ways that actually strengthen our relationships?

There are many creative ideas from Connect Cards to Flat Kiddos to the Not Forgotten Journal that can change the depth of your relationships back home in amazing ways and so worth this small investment of time.

Energy Habit Focus: CONNECT

Resource: Three Mindset Shifts to Stay Connected With Those Back Home 

 

Let’s Land This Plane

In my book, Elite Road Warrior: Six Energy Habits to Master the Business Travel Life, I had a theme quote:

If you want to do something, you’ll find a way.
If you don’t, you’ll find an excuse. – Jim Rohn

And business travelers are king of excuses hence this article!

Excuses are opportunities that can be easily turned around.

What excuses are you using right now that you can leverage the road to turn around to help you become an elite road warrior?

I challenge you to check out the five resource links offered in this article. Take action and find a way, not an excuse.

Written by Bryan Buckley · Categorized: CONNECT, DEVELOP, FUEL, MOVE, REST

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