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Today's episode is mind bending and eye opening. I hope you've had your coffee! My guest is John K. Coyle, #TheTimeGuy. John is a world leading expert in innovation and Design Thinking, and best-selling author of Design For Strengths: Applying Design Thinking to Individual and Team Strengths (2018) and The Art of Really Living Manifesto (2016). A graduate of Stanford University’s Product Design Program, John is an NBC sports analyst, two-time TEDx presenter, and sought-after keynote speaker. He earned an Olympic silver medal for speedskating. In this episode we talk about how to "design for your strengths" and also expand time through choosing experiences that have depth and breadth. John also explains: what he means by “innovate the human experience” the differences between chronological time and experiential time why time speeds up as we age what crying has to do with slowing down time what “event horizon moments” are and why are they important what "flow state" means and how you know you're in it the difference between being afraid of something and being bad at something what public speaking has to do with all of this ------ Learn more: John's website John's books John's TEDx talks This episode is sponsored by Speaking School for Women, an online course for women who want to become professional speakers. Learn about branding, marketing, pitching, pricing, speechcraft, and more. Build your entire speaking business in a month. Go to https://speakersisterhood.thinkific.com to learn more. This episode is also sponsored by Told Video: Original, thoughtful storytelling for your brand. Here to help you with your next step in marketing: a meaningful video. Let your story out into the world - get it Told. Contact Told through June 1st to receive a pack of four 15-second social media videos along with your full video. Reach out for a free phone consultation and quote, and to find out more. Learn more at Toldvideo.com. Leave a review on iTunes to share the love! Your review may be read in an upcoming episode and result in a free gift for you. Have a guest idea? Email us! Angela@speakersisterhood.com
John Janzen uses storytelling to get students to think about issues related to homelessness and poverty. John Janzen is the author of fringe play Blink's Garden, it's produced by Siloam Mission as an illustrated CD Book for kids. CONNECT with John HERE LISTEN to John's TEDx talk HERE BeTheTalk is a 7 day a week podcast where Nathan Eckel chats with talkers from TEDx & branded events. Tips tools and techniques that can help you give the talk to change the world at BeTheTalk.com !
John Doran speaks to management bodies, education trust, teachers, parents and students on the topics of resilience, Wellbeing, stress management and maximizing performance both nationally and internationally. John Doran is on the board of Make A Wish Foundation. CONNECT with John HERE LISTEN to John's TEDx talk HERE BeTheTalk is a 7 day a week podcast where Nathan Eckel chats with talkers from TEDx & branded events. Tips tools and techniques that can help you give the talk to change the world at BeTheTalk.com !
John Quinn, a presentologist by profession successfully uses all kinds of power point presentation techniques and integrates them into an effective elaborate and interactive learning experience. His idea lies in delivering the messages across and creating an enriching atmosphere for learners. CONNECT with John HERE LISTEN to John's TEDx talk HERE BeTheTalk is a 7 day a week podcast where Nathan Eckel chats with talkers from TEDx & branded events. Tips tools and techniques that can help you give the talk to change the world at BeTheTalk.com !
John spent the last 7½ years leading teams across diverse industries, including telecommunications and mortgage finance. It took him 5 of those years to discover the center of his own passion: personal and professional growth and improvement. Once he did, he wanted to help others discover theirs as well. CONNECT with John HERE LISTEN to John's TEDx talk HERE BeTheTalk is a 7 day a week podcast where Nathan Eckel chats with talkers from TEDx & branded events. Tips tools and techniques that can help you give the talk to change the world at BeTheTalk.com !
John Fleischauer is a professional speaker and a senior member of Halogen Software talent acquisition team. As the worlds only Recruitment and Talent Magician, he is an expert at using LinkedIn as a professional resource, and an evangelist of social tools and talent branding as a way of achieving tangible and positive outcomes. CONNECT with John HERE LISTEN to John's TEDx talk HERE BeTheTalk is a 7 day a week podcast where Nathan Eckel chats with talkers from TEDx & branded events. Tips tools and techniques that can help you give the talk to change the world at BeTheTalk.com !
John Torrens, an entrepreneurship professor at Syracuse University, as well as a founder and president, analyzes recent research and his own personal experiences to highlight how ADHD can quite possibly be a "entrepreneur's superpower." John Torrens is a Professor of Entrepreneurial Practice at Syracuse University’s Martin J. Whitman School of Management and has attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). CONNECT with John HERE LISTEN to John's TEDx talk HERE BeTheTalk is a 7 day a week podcast where Nathan Eckel chats with talkers from TEDx & branded events. Tips tools and techniques that can help you give the talk to change the world at BeTheTalk.com !
John McLean is Stevenson Professor of Chemistry and Director of the Center for Innovative Technology at Vanderbilt University. His group conceptualizes, designs, and constructs new innovative technologies at the forefront of translational medical research. CONNECT with John HERE - LISTEN to John's TEDx talk HERE - BeTheTalk is a 7 day a week podcast where Nathan Eckel chats with talkers from TEDx & branded events. Tips tools and techniques that can help you give the talk to change the world at BeTheTalk.com !
John O’Sulivan is the Founder and CEO of the Changing the Game Project and Author of the #1 best selling youth sports book on Amazon, Changing The Game. His book is a parents guide to raising happy, high performing athletes and giving youth sports back to our kids. John played college soccer at Fordham University and then played professionally before becoming a division-one soccer coach at the University of Vermont. John has also broken a total of 24 bones in his body so he obviously had some great advice for the injured athletes in this episode! (Taken from Changing the Game Project's website) The mission of the Changing the Game Project is to ensure that we return youth sports to our children, and put the ‘play’ back in ‘play ball.’ They want to provide the most influential adults in our children’s lives – their parents and coaches – with the information and resources they need to make sports a healthy, positive, and rewarding experience for their children, and their whole family. Parenting and coaching young athletes is an art, not a science, and the information you find on their website can help you navigate the maze of youth sports, and put a smile on your young athlete’s face, whether he or she is 6 or 16 years old. Their website is your one stop shopping for the latest and greatest information, research, and best practices regarding high performance, motivation, long term athletic development, fitness, nutrition, college recruiting, and more. There you will find resources, training, videos, and books that can help you become the best parent or coach a kid could ever ask for. It will help ensure that you do your part to make youth sports a wonderfully positive part of your child’s physical, social, and cognitive education. Below you will find John's TEDx talk on Changing the game in youth sports. John is an expert on the environment in youth sports and offers great insight into how we can fix it in this episode. This is a must-listen for parents, coaches and adminstrators of young athletes. Notes on Episode 83: Trigger moments that made John want to change the game: As an organizational director, while looking for resources to educate and help parents and coaches, information was lacking on how to communicate, motivate and inspire kids. Watching his six-year-old daughter play soccer, on the next field over there was a ten-year-old game and it was chaos with the parents yelling at the 13 year old referee. Saw the need for and intervention from someone with athletic, coaching and educational experiences. When does playing sports stop being about enjoyment? We lose 70% of kids to organized sports by the age of 13, often before they ever have a trained coach. No place for kids to just play for fun (pick up games/free play). Lacking environments where kids have no fear of making mistakes. Why do people think that if its not organized, it's not productive? Usually pro athletes retire when the joy of playing no longer outweighs the injuries or the work needed to play at that level. We live in a world now where we compare how we feel inside to how everyone else looks on the outside. Parents fear their kid is getting left behind. Very hard to think of the long-run. Finding value in failure: Adversity and setbacks leads you to where you are today. Seek out adversity and protect against danger. The difference between a bad coach vs. dangerous coach. Great coaches coach the person, not the sport. Customized coaching. The importance of coaches embracing a growth mindset when they expect their kids to be openminded learners. Making personal time for kids. Being a better listener and communicator. Making eye contact. Being more consistent. All can be learned. John's Tib-Fib fracture when he was 17: Coaches response to him sitting out in his first practice because of leg pain was,"What's wrong with you? You don't have the guts to make it" John's approach to injured athletes when he was a coach: Hurt vs. injured Role of coach is to take an athlete to a place they never could on his or her own. Is this the time to push it? John Wooden taking notes at National Basketball Coaches Association's Convention at 91 years old. Embracing the growth mindset. Moments of misalignment from John's current train of thought throughout his coaching career: Didn’t realize the impact of his words. Rule of 1, one athlete, one comment, one time can change everything. You don’t get to pick and choose what the athlete remembers and forgets, so you better be intentional about what you say. Shared personal story. What did I want as a player? Am I acting that way now? Sports Specialization. For some kids it can be the right thing If that’s what they want and they are not forced into it. Still need well rounded strength and conditioning training and take time off. Prior to the age of 12 research shows that's not a good idea. Transferability to other sports. More likely to burnout. Overuse injuries. An Athlete's whole identity being wrapped up in the one sport. John’s injuries: 24 broken bones. soccer, skiing and mountain biking. Yoga has helped him a lot to keep his movement and strength. Tib-fib was the leg fracture. Initially feeling sorry for himself. Killed him to see healthy people who didn’t care. John saw people in PT with catastrophic injuries at 17, realized he didn’t have it that bad, he is going to get over this. Season ending injury advice: For those losing interest or discouraged in returning, get back to where you were and then decide if you want to quit. Career ending injury advice: Is their life full with out the sport? If empty, bring in professional help, like sports psychologists for example. We know some great one's (MIND OF THE ATHLETE). Transition to life after soccer: Assistant coach at The University of Vermont. Harder when he left coaching to work on Changing the Game. Advice for parents coaching their own kids: When practice is over you have to take your coach hat off, or else practice never ends. Touching base with your kid to ensure they still want you to coach year after year. Conscious of their friend dynamics. Culture of safety pillars: Every decision is made based on the welfare of the athlete, not the outcome of the game. Those of us in charge of sports, educate yourself and err on the side of caution. At the professional level they need to do better, because they are the model. Toughness is having the courage to chase after what you believe in, even when its hard. WHERE CAN YOU FIND MORE ON CHANGING THE GAME PROJECT? WEBSITE | FACEBOOK | TWITTER | YOUTUBE | PODCAST Where can you get a copy of Changing the game? Changing the Game: The Parent's Guide to Raising Happy, High Performing Athletes, and Giving Youth Sports Back to our Kids By John O'Sullivan WHERE CAN YOU FOLLOW JOHN O'SULLIVAN? TWITTER | LINKEDIN | john@changingthegameproject.com Download Episode 83 : iTunes | Stitcher | SoundCloud Permalink