Thursday, March 1, 2018

Radio Show Transcript - Applying Improvisation - Kupe Kupersmith - Recorded February 23, 2018

Applying Improvisation - Kupe Kupersmith - Recorded February 23, 2018


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FULL TRANSCRIPT (with timecode)

00:00:21;25 - 00:03:52;20
Rick A. Morris: Welcome to another Friday edition of the work life balance. I am going to apologize way in advance but my voice is wrecked. I just got back last night from Orlando. The International Maxwell certification event. Me and twenty five hundred of my closest friends joined John Maxwell in four days of very intense training and workshops and things of that sort. I think this is my ninth time participating in that event. It gets it gets better every time. As a matter of fact. Met a young lady that I'm dying to get on the show. And if I do it now go ahead and tell you how to time it if I do get this young lady on the show. Any excuse you've ever made in your life for any reason of not doing something she's going to talk you right out of that as she had now holds 8 Guinness Book World Records for achieving activities solely to fulfill a promise to some orphans in Bangladesh to make sure that they got their education. This lady is one of the most powerful ladies that I've ever had a chance to spend some time with so we're looking forward to bringing her on the show shortly. So again coming back out of Orlando you know got to spend some great time with people that have been on the show in the past and lined up some incredible speakers to be on the show in the coming weeks and next week I'm going to detox from the show. I'm going to just do what I normally do share and pour into you guys and let you know what I heard and learned as John. You know it was on fire. I mean he was in such a great mood on fire. And we were we were looking at all of our different sessions and realized that John actually taught 16 hours out of three and a half days which is incredible when you when you think about how much he's got going on so I will pour into you guys next week and share with that but this week I was super excited. A friend of mine John Stenbeck had had let me know about a few speakers that really out there and coming up and you know rising up the trails. And he found out about some Webinar series and things like that and sent me a list of the most downloaded people in project management right now. And this gentleman was right at the top of the list. And so I had to have had to have him down here and when I really started to dive into what he does I even more had to have him. So I reached out to him immediately and he agreed to be on the show and I'm so excited. It's unbelievable that he is where he is now from where he started so I can't wait to dive into that because he started as an accountant which you know as I do. Aren't those just extremely funny people. So from accountants to improv comedian to a consultant and back to an improv comedian there's gentleman's goal in life is to make you more awesome. How cool is that. He credits his improv comedy experience to much of his business success onstage onsite and online. He's been helping people apply improv skills to be better listeners collaborators influencers and sought after Team members say yes and learn how to imply improved skills every day. So let's bring them on here right now. Kupe Kupersmith how are you buddy.

00:03:52;21 - 00:04:04;20
Kupe Kupersmith: I'm doing great. Thank you for having me on the show and I just want to tell everybody that I did read a Guinness Book of World Record books that night did I get close.

00:04:04;29 - 00:04:24;15
Rick A. Morris: No. That's right. That's right. I'll give you a prelude. Just just just to throw you off for a second. When I say eliminate any excuses this young lady was trying to raise a million dollars. So she was googling how to do that. One of the things it said she could do was swim the English Channel. There was a big problem.

00:04:24;15 - 00:04:33;13
Kupe Kupersmith: I'll go ahead and give you a guess what you think that problem may be that she didn't know how to swim.

00:04:33;25 - 00:05:01;21
Rick A. Morris: Exactly. So she hired somebody taught herself how to swim and then swam the English Channel. I'm telling you and then when I'm saying are gone my outlook won't send an e-mail around with like sucks. You start to gain a whole different perspective. So you're sitting in the audience and I'm such a small person I'm such a small person but it's coming back when you do my Fitbit is in charge.

00:05:01;21 - 00:05:09;07
Kupe Kupersmith: And I want to go do my page read battery. Everything you do.

00:05:09;19 - 00:05:40;29
Rick A. Morris: She taught herself to swim swam the English Channel to give the money away to kids and get an education right. Yeah yeah. It wasn't it wasn't for her fame and fortune. Yes. But yes that's why I mean people were just in tears. That's a whole nother story but it's getting back to you. Talk to me because again the lead and I took a stab at you just because I can and just because one of my best friends in the world is John Steinbeck who not only was an accountant but was on the low side of being McCan a forensic accountant because those guys are super exciting to hang out with. How did you get to improv.

00:05:42;09 - 00:08:14;13
Kupe Kupersmith: Well for me I know the story how I became an accountant was my. I didn't know what I wanted to do when I went to university. So my father said hey you're really good at math. Why don't you become an accountant. Everybody needs an account and you'll have a good job. Good benefit. I was like OK well you know I'll go for it. Went through college kind of board but didn't know what else to do. So I kept going got my degree and then realized you know what I wasn't bad. I did about being an accountant but I should use my degree got a job was working as an account for a little while then what do all good accountants at least in the US do. We try to get our CPA paid the CPA. I studied for the exam and I think I'm on record for being the best failure of the CPA exam. Nobody has failed that as I did in that and that was kind of my wake up moment like okay maybe that's the sign I finally it hit me over the head I don't need to be doing this stuff but I didn't know what else I wanted to do. So but I had this like creative itch. So my first thing was the way it happened I actually saw Jimmy JJ Walker remember him from good time. Oh absolutely. Yeah this was in the early 90s. Standup comedy was real prevalent across the U.S. and there was a standup comedy club on every corner and I thought you know Jimmy JJ Walker was coming out paid me and my girlfriend paid at the time. Now she's my wife paid twenty five dollars per ticket. And I saw him and it was not I was not he wasn't a riveting comedy show. And I turned to my girlfriend Janine that I can do this. And she said well then go do it. So I got up and started doing open mike night. And I did as well and stand up probably as I did on that CPA that I have learned later in life that I have some form of dyslexia on the spectrum somewhere and one of the things that dyslexia is you don't have a good. Some people have short term memory in that that's my problem. So you can imagine trying to remember lines that I wrote in column that you know jokes that I was writing and I get up on stage and I can't remember them so that didn't go so well. But I I didn't give up and I said you know what I am going to still want to do this comedy thing how can I do it and I started auditioning for some improv troupe and got elected and kind of performed in the Atlanta area for about 10 years.

00:08:16;19 - 00:08:35;16
Rick A. Morris: That's amazing and let's dive into improv for just a second because you know I want to get into how you apply it and you and I were sharing during pre show for a second one of my one of my great friends and not to name drop but that one of my great friends growing up was was was Wayne Brady

00:08:35;20 - 00:08:42;25
Kupe Kupersmith: I just want to let the listeners know I'm not the Wayne Brady level I don't think anybody is really when it comes to improv.

00:08:43;15 - 00:09:15;16
Rick A. Morris: I would appreciate that he's. What I've always loved about Wayne is how humble he truly is and how hard he works at his craft and that's that's the point I'm coming to. You know people come up to him all the time and they think he's just naturally funny and of course he is naturally funny. But improv really isn't truly all made up at the same time. It's accessing a catalog of ideas and memories and things and comebacks and stuff. It is a craft but describe that a little bit.

00:09:16;08 - 00:10:12;03
Kupe Kupersmith: Yeah. It's interesting you ask that question at this point in the show because when I when I teach improv they do my keynote talks on improv or have workshops around improv it's something that comes up later because people are always wanting to they always think people that perform improv are and we are quick witted you have to be quick witted to stand point but at the same time you it comes down to preparation and practice. And to your point it is a craft. It's an art form. So you have to work on it. My troupe weaves and people get shocked about this. We rehearse three times a week to perform once maybe twice a week. And they're like What are you talking about. You practiced improv there. I get to winging it right. It's just making stuff up on the fly into some point it is right because you're getting you don't know what the audience is going to give you on any given night.

00:10:12;06 - 00:10:55;04
Kupe Kupersmith: You are me and you don't know actually there are no scripts you don't know exactly what the other actors are doing. But to your point about this catalog we would work our butt off on putting ourselves in every different situation so we would create characters and that's when we create characters you know Wayne Brady's known for music that I was never the best. Like on the fly rapper like he is but that's when you practice that stuff in rhyming and coming up with words so that you can recall it really quick when you're on stage. But it's about practice and knowing knowing your strengths and knowing the strength of other actors is one of the things in improv that a lot of people don't know is that nobody really wants to be the winner.

00:10:55;04 - 00:11:35;08
Kupe Kupersmith: Right. Nobody wants to be the grandstand or it's all about how can you make other people on your stage more awesome. And the way you know that is by working with them over and over and you know what they're really good at and you're always trying to get them up. You never want to get the punchline you want to set up somebody else. They get the punchline. The only way to do that is knowing the people so well that you know exactly what their strengths are and you can constantly feed them information that will hopefully give them the punchline and it just you know that that trust that you have onstage with the other actors kind of comes across to the audience. And then eventually the punchlines just start coming from everywhere and everybody happy time.

00:11:35;18 - 00:12:33;10
Rick A. Morris: And I love that point you just made because to every phenomenal improv comedian there's always the right hand and they generally don't get the name or fame or fortune that that the you know. So you have Wayne Brady. Most people don't know about Jonathan Mangum and Jonathan obviously has done very well in his own right. But then also Wayne is being loyal as he is. There's never been a big show or big opportunity that Wayne has taken where he hasn't brought Jonathan along. And those two met at an improv troupe in Orlando. You know back in the very early 90s but even on you know let's make a deal Jonathon's The cohost and royal when they're doing. Whose Line Is It Anyway. Jonathon's they are. But it's the same thing right. Like Steve Higgins to me I think is brilliant on how he sets up Jimmy Fallon to be funny. That's the things I look at. Those guys are the best in the world. They have that right hand person that's team you up so you can be the funny guy right now.

00:12:33;11 - 00:12:44;27
Kupe Kupersmith: You know I don't know. It's funny you bring those guys up. I don't know if they were improvising or not but my all time favorite comedians were Abbott and Costello or are Abbott and Costello.

00:12:44;28 - 00:13:05;12
Kupe Kupersmith: They're no longer with us but just the combination of those two and how one set up the other was just amazing and either one of them wouldn't be as entertaining without the other. And that absolutely I put improv is all about I mean it's how the whole team kind of support each other.

00:13:06;02 - 00:13:18;12
Rick A. Morris: So we're going to dive into that and the team concept or we've got to stop here and take our first break let our sponsors spend some money and pay our bills. We'll be right back with Coopersmith listening to Rick Morris on the work life balance.


00:16:13;26 - 00:16:43;19
Rick A. Morris: And we're back to the work life balance as a matter of fact. You know I want to do a little task to make sure we're hitting the airwaves loud and clear. So if you're out there you're listening to us live just send a little tweet at Rick Morris that's @rickamorris Let me know you're out there let me know that you guys are having fun with Kupe Kupersmith today. So cool. You know we were talking previously so you were an accountant you went to an improv comedian but then you decided to leave that and become an I.T. consultant and then back to an improv comedian. So tell me a little bit about that journey.

00:16:44;29 - 00:16:58;12
Kupe Kupersmith: Yeah. Before I get to that I just forgot to mention earlier about that music I love that I don't know what instrument they're playing or some technical thing that I want to I can get that for my like voicemail or something.

00:16:58;25 - 00:17:06;15
Rick A. Morris: Yes I actually own the rights to that song and it only cost me a quarter of a million dollars. I can tell you that story later this hour.

00:17:06;21 - 00:17:12;02
Kupe Kupersmith: Well well maybe I don't need it for my voice but I say that I love it.

00:17:12;08 - 00:18:05;15
Kupe Kupersmith: Got it it's very catchy. So yeah. So I was kind of the improv and I side kind of went almost in parallel actually. So the while I was trying to figure out what I wanted to do when I was when I grew up I started doing the improv but then I also got into the I.T. world because that was a subject matter expert in financial applications and I was working with the I.T. teams at the time the early 90s working on upgrading to PeopleSoft and the big ERP packages and I would work with the teams closely and I was that power user subject matter experts who when I enjoyed that so much I was like well maybe that's kind of my angle let me give it a try and I became a business analyst and the later project manager and kind of settled in and kind of the business analysis space technical team.

00:18:05;22 - 00:19:29;11
Kupe Kupersmith: So now I was running those two lives in parallel and then my wife and I. So Janine who I talked about earlier that kind of pushed me to to try to stand up. We ended up getting married and then we were going to have a family. And you know I said we practiced three times a week. We were performing every weekend and I had a full time job now. And you know she said hey we're going to have a family. Got to give one of the two things. Right. Can't be performing all the time and doing your I.T. job. So sat back and thought and at the time improv. I think a decent salary in the I.T. career was improv who was paying you about fifty dollars a week so you could imagine maybe what I decided to do instead of going full head on into the improv. I decided to kind of let that go and stick with the courier so that's how I got into business and now you know back to the Improv side where I do most of my performing is for corporate America right and helping people use improv skills and in my bio you read like that is where I credit everything to my success to back to my improv skills and how I can connect with people how I collaborate with people and you know I always thought Why do I love being on teams. What was it about being on teams. Why did people want me on their team. And it came.

00:19:29;11 - 00:19:48;27
Kupe Kupersmith: It comes down to you're 100 percent down to my improv training that I've had and experience so I want to make a clarifying comment in the flow of his story there because you said you know my wife and I were trying to have children and you know we were practicing three times a week. Your breaks in.

00:19:49;06 - 00:20:01;24
Rick A. Morris: I just want to make sure that we're being very clear you said my wife and I were trying to have children and we were practicing three times a week.

00:20:01;29 - 00:20:04;17
Kupe Kupersmith: We were practicing more than that.

00:20:04;18 - 00:20:29;02
Rick A. Morris: But you know anyway back to improv it's Friday we're silly let's say so you know. So you talked about how you got into improv. But you know what's good in practicing improv skills you don't need to practice improv skills just to be a comedian. I mean how can people practically use improv just in everyday situations.

00:20:29;06 - 00:22:26;11
Kupe Kupersmith: Right. It's one of the key things that people ask all the time I go you're teaching improv. Trying to turn me into a comedian then the answer is no actually you know the history of improv goes back to you know it was it was a way for actors that were on stage theater actors to warm up and get ready and be prepared. And then it forgot exactly what year but then it started to become kind of its own art form and became improv comedy. But the improv itself the court to improv and the lessons in improv can be used every day. I mean think about think about what's happening right now. Rick you plan to somewhat for the show. Right. I mean we had we talked a little while before the show we had Ymay Elle's back and forth to we did some preparation but we don't have a script of exactly what we're going to say. You don't have a list of questions that you're going to ask me and I don't have like a script that answers those word by word. If you bump into someone in the hallway at work you have a script when you have that conversation if you're going to talk to a stakeholder about need you have a script if somebody calls you on the phone do you have a script. If your daughter comes down and ask you a question about something you have a script no. So in life we don't have a script. Just like on stage with improv we don't have scripts so every waking moment where improvising. So if you think about it in those terms then now you can be like okay I have to get better at that improv thing and not being a comedian. I do think in the workplace we could probably be having more fun but that doesn't mean you have to be a standup comedian or cracking jokes all the time. It's just I think we need to relax a little. You know this whole show is the work life balance. I like to almost say there needs to be a work life blend and that's one of the things like you don't just have fun outside work you can have fun at work as well. But you don't have to be a comedian.

00:22:27;26 - 00:23:23;24
Rick A. Morris: No. And humor is always been a natural mechanism for me. And what I've mastered over time is to be able to use that to relieve tension of tense moments in meetings you know somebody just said something and you know you can feel the tension and be unable to make that witty comment to move it on. But I've taught my kids you know and you know Maxwell wrote a book you know everybody communicates few connect. I think it's a beautiful book. If nobody's ever read that but I teach my kids I tell them that every interaction is a transaction and somebody is buying and it's based on relationship capital. So you can either leave them feeling good or leave them feeling bad in it. You know a debit or credit in that relationship bank. So humor is such a beautiful. Not only that but there's medical reasons to laugh. There's laughter produces all kinds of wonderfully beautiful feelings. So why not be known for the person that can always make you laugh.

00:23:25;03 - 00:23:33;22
Kupe Kupersmith: Absolutely. So an example of this is how I use improv or comedy or you know fun like that in the workplace.

00:23:33;23 - 00:24:08;29
Kupe Kupersmith: Perfect example I have is I was on a conference call with me and three other people and we were we were talking about we were trying to figure out how you know we were all speakers and we were trying to figure out how can we collaborate and maybe kind of work together and do this. And early on in the conversation somebody said you know I can be in Vancouver. Joe can be in Sydney Australia. Tim can be over in London and it's going to be in Topeka Kansas. And I said wait a minute why why am I in Topeka.

00:24:08;29 - 00:24:14;04
Rick A. Morris: You know that seems like the worst place out of the family and everybody everybody on the line.

00:24:14;07 - 00:26:24;20
Kupe Kupersmith: Right. So I like that's where I kept that moment in my head. I'm like All right. When we get to a tense point in this conversation because I knew it would. You know there's egos involved. So I knew at some point it would get a little tense and I just held onto that noticing. So this is the listening part of improv that helps is like listen to what made everybody laugh and then of course there was a tense moment in the conversation and two people were debating about something and it felt like it was getting a little too tense not not good healthy tension. So do I just say hey guys wait a minute at least you guys aren't in Topeka Kansas. You know and at that moment it broke that tension and we were able to get back to the things that I mean that is one way to use improv and that to me that is about listening and paying attention to what's happening in conversation not just being part of a conversation but really focusing on what's happening because in improv you know think about there's no script you got an audience in front of you and you're trying to to make them laugh. I mean that's the big idea. You're trying to make them laugh so you have to focus so much on what the other actors are doing and listen for offers like listen to thing because you've got to respond really quickly on stage. So you got to listen for things and figure out what did they say and what can I think of in a split second to react to what they're saying though. And that level of focus that you have to have as an improviser we need to have that level of focus. As in all of our conversations just like that the level of focus I have right now there's no I am not checking my email although I have my computer up and things are around. I'm not checking my e-mail. I'm just focusing solely on not thinking about anything else except this conversation. I think especially in corporate America you get into these conference rooms people are slouch back there checking their e-mails. They're on their phone on their computer doing 200 things at the same time. Things are not as efficient. And to your point relationships are being fractured because of how other people are interacting with each other.

00:26:25;02 - 00:27:27;27
Rick A. Morris: I'm sorry I wasn't listening to this point because I was checking my e-mail. But the point being no one in the crowd right. Sorry that was me. Hopefully what she said was important but what I don't know what it says is you know even even this the side job. Can I take out what I like about improv and practicing is you know comparisons and drawing comparisons. You know there's a great game that you do that with and things come into your brain and you get older and have a fantastic filter. But even in boring topics like side and exact a roomful of executives you are talking about resource management. It was getting tough and they were like You know I love the we don't have time to do resource management in my comeback was that it's like saying you're too fat to diet. And that but but that disarmed them and all of a sudden they just all broke out lavender and that's when I know I have a room that's when I know I'm and I'm ready to teach and ready to make an impressionable point because I've got them relaxed because it makes sense.

00:27:27;28 - 00:27:36;19
Kupe Kupersmith: Yeah absolutely. And one of the hives. So this is another key thing and I want to get back at some point to listening because it is a great game that we play to help with that focus.

00:27:36;21 - 00:29:20;08
Kupe Kupersmith: But you just brought up another awesome point about improv like you could have said that and at the end sometime and maybe you've been doing this long enough x a year you kind of know at what point to kind of throw that stuff in there where you think the either the class you're in or in the conference room that you're in the people you're dealing with. But one of the things in improv what helped me a lot is get comfortable with risk taking trying things and if they don't work adapting and trying something else and I think that's so important in the workplace because too often decisions don't get made. People don't try stuff because they're afraid of failure. And in improv you know there's some troops but better called you know tight roping without a wire or a net or whatever it is because it's really risky you try something somebody says something onstage you have to react right away. And again our goal with improv comedy is make people laugh. So you would try something and it would fall flat. It would make sense it wasn't good but that it's OK because another actor again is going to have your back and give you something else to play off of. So with that risk taking piece that it made me comfortable. Now in the workplace if I'm not sure what to do or you have this tense moment you know what I'm going to try to throw out the analogy about being too fat to diet. And let's see what happens. Sometimes it falls flat but you can't just fall apart because that one liner didn't work. You got to keep going and not be persistent.

Rick A. Morris: And that's a great point so when we come back we're going to talk about how listening affects improv and we'll be right back with Kupe Kupersmith you're listening into the work life balance which requires.


00:32:18;25 - 00:32:32;14
Rick A. Morris: And we're back to the work life balance with Kupe Kupersmith. We've been talking about improv and applying improv and right before the break we tease that we were talking about listening in improv.

00:32:32;14 - 00:32:49;14
Kupe Kupersmith: So why is listening and improv so important is that we talked about that a little the key is there are no no scripts. I see you don't know what the other actors you or the other players that you're up there with are going to do or say.

00:32:49;14 - 00:34:57;05
Kupe Kupersmith: So the level of focus you have to have is intense and you have to respond at a speed that works with the other actors so that they can respond. You know I said earlier like the never wanted to be the one getting all the punchlines. We would always try to serve stuff up to the other players and make them more awesome. So if you think about now and in the workplace or even personal relationships and we all know those people that communicate at a speed so fast and talk at a level. And I've been in those conference rooms with these really smart people articulate people that nobody can keep up with them right. They can't can't focus. So I play this game when when I'm training the on that I play this game called The Mirror game and the two people get up and they stand up there looking face the face. They have their hands up kind of you know like a field goal position and then I tell them to start they're now a mirror so start to mirror each other and move your hands move your body move your face do whatever but you have to act like you're a mirror and the first time people do this. Everybody is trying to beat the other person and there's always one like Fast Eddie out there that's going so fast that there's no way the other person can keep up. So listening is not just with your ears it's it's with your eyes and watching the people that you're communicating with. So you have to go at one go at a speed that other people can keep up with the communication. So listening to people always think listening is the other person's job. But I really think communication in general is if you're trying to communicate something it's your job to figure out how you need to communicate and go at a speed that the other person can consume it. And there's so much information flying at us every day that you have to really keep an eye out and quote unquote listen to what the audience is doing and are they keeping up with your topic in the thing you're talking about again it's not about making yourself look good it's about making the other people look good.

00:34:58;26 - 00:35:54;09
Rick A. Morris: Absolutely. Absolutely. You know it's funny. I watched a guy while I was at Maxwell this week I shared a story about listening. And there was a gentleman and he's you know he's got a million people in his downline at Amway. Actually this was Dr. Robert Rohm was sharing the stories that a million million people in his down line. And I was going to an event landed in a private jet and told the guy you know make sure you get everything out of my bags or everything on the plane to get to this event when he gets to the event he said where's the small bag. And the guy said I'm sorry I know it started because while it was inside the plane and it's got my blood pressure medicine and it's very important I have to take it. And he says I apologize that I didn't confirm he listened to me properly that's completely my fault. So I'm happy to go back and get it. And what a beautiful moment right. Well said.

00:35:55;12 - 00:36:16;17
Kupe Kupersmith: Yeah. So here's another story we brought. So before I started doing comedy. I was approached to do Amway and if I knew I could add a million people in my down behind them you know going flying private jets maybe I would have chosen Amway over over and for no doubt no doubt.

00:36:19;02 - 00:36:24;21
Rick A. Morris: So you mentioned the mirror game. What's another one of your favorite games that you like to play in improv.

00:36:25;28 - 00:36:37;12
Kupe Kupersmith: So when it comes down to it the favorite game for me and I think the mother the reason why I love this game and it's called Yes and I think it's becoming more and more popular.

00:36:37;27 - 00:37:11;07
Kupe Kupersmith: We were just talking you know on the break that you used it in an agile class that you teach. I see it a lot in the Agile community as well. Yes. And and the reason that the game is all about the mother of all improv rules and no denying that he never did on stage the reason for that is you put all the pressure back on the other actors. So think about it if you and I were doing a performance and you came on and said hey to let let's play baseball and I'm like I am not in the mood how would that go over onstage.

00:37:11;16 - 00:37:12;29
Rick A. Morris: Exactly.

00:37:12;29 - 00:40:27;05
Kupe Kupersmith: It would fall flat and then it puts all the pressure back on you to come up with something else. So doesn't work on stage. So you have to the whole concept is you take an idea you take somebody said use that idea to build upon it and grow. So. So when you know for business professionals what I do. One of the we play this game and I have people pair up and they play. Yes. And in the way it works is if you want to play at home with your family you basically somebody says something take a topic any topic somebody starts off with a sign the other person says yes and and then adds to the conversation and then it goes back to the first person and they say yes and then they continue to add on to the conversation. So I often have people because it's still not happening yet. I have people build vacation homes on the moon. So you can imagine like how that conversation goes you know like oh let's have a pool. Yes. And our dog will swim in the pool. Yes. And we'll bring all our friends and it just keeps growing right. Do they have these elaborate vacation homes on the moon. And then we talk about so how that feel would that mean to you guys happen use that in the workplace. And one of the things that typically happens is everyone feels it was very affirming right. I mean it felt good. Back to your point about this is all about connection and building relationships so if you're listening to people well if you're using this yes then mindset and being real positive and affirming your building connections and trust with your co-workers. So so people feel really good and then I ask you know so who said but like who said yeah but. And there's always one or two in the crowd that said it or I wanted to say right so somebody had a crazy idea and they were like Yeah but you know we can't really have a pool on the moon right. So they denied that person and yeah but is a big big time denial. And. You and I live in the south of the south east US and I'm originally from New York and there's other ways that you have denial in the workplace. It's not just yeah but then we definitely have those managers. Let me start with this first leg. We have those managers that even they claim like I have an open door policy. I want you to come in and talk to me give ideas we have to innovate. We have to change we have to get better. So you have ideas come in my office tell me open door policy and you come rushing in there and you're like hey boss I got an idea I think we should do X Y and Z. They're like yeah but we don't have the money for that or yeah but we try that last year and it didn't work. Yeah but we don't have the time to do that. And those yeah but. And you can imagine. I mean I've been in that position right where I kept getting yeah but happening to me to many but get thrown at me. And what do you do. You just stop. You say well forget it. I don't want to do it anymore. Tell me what you want me to do. So that's why you got to remove the bumps from your language right. That's the key here. But there are other ways that you say but. And here in the south Rick you know this one. Bless your heart.

00:40:27;12 - 00:40:30;15
Rick A. Morris: Oh yes. I was hoping you'd say that for sure.

00:40:30;24 - 00:40:38;04
Kupe Kupersmith: That is the biggest denial. You know I know it's funny when I first moved to Atlanta from New York. Everybody was like Oh. Bless your heart.

00:40:40;02 - 00:43:38;20
Kupe Kupersmith: And I'm like This is amazing like I'm coming from New York where people have given me the finger flipping me off right. And I come down here and every day I'm getting blessed by people. But quickly quickly you learn that bless your heart is is more of a state. And like you know your mom dropped you on your head a few many times. You're not that smart. Here's how are we going to do things. So there's a lot of that passive aggressive but that go on out there. We have to remove that from our language. The challenge is you know in playing this game with building a vacation home on the moon you can do whatever you want. There's no constraints it's like we're just having fun and you can go as wide as possible so it was really good and we can think about this in terms of when we were brainstorming with a team. It's a really good technique. But in a lot of other conversations we have constraints there in real life there are budget constraints there are time constraints there are resource constraints so how can we not say yeah but we have to talk about that stuff. So there's just a different is a switch in your language as you can use to make sure that you kind of don't say. But at the same time you don't have to agree 100 percent. So what I like to is the mindset shift is you have to have. Is that the idea that somebody says and this is the yes part of yes. Then something that whatever somebody says to them is reality or whatever idea they have whatever thing they're bringing up they think it's a great idea by you saying yes. But it's like you heard them at the same time you think they're crazy or that idea's not going to work. So you have to switch your mentality to think that put it back on you like the the doctor you talked about with Amway they put the listening back on him. You have to put the fact of this idea you have to put back on yourself that you don't know what it means yet you don't completely understand. So the person is not crazy. They have an idea. They think it's a legit idea. So don't point to them. Put them on the defense thing their idea is crazy it put it back on you that you don't understand completely yet. So just asking a question help me understand how we're going to do that. I don't see that you know we have a limited budget. How are we going to do this. Tell me give me more information. Right. And maybe that they're going to be able to say oh well actually we don't need a lot of money at all. We already have this license and we can do this. And all we need is 100 bucks and it can be done like oh wow I didn't even know we have that we can do it. So just by flipping that switch to put it back on you and not put it on the person that had the idea is a way you can use Yes and without saying yes and and always agreeing with something.

00:43:38;21 - 00:43:41;21
Kupe Kupersmith: The other component to the other.

00:43:42;02 - 00:43:53;11
Rick A. Morris: Now let's we'll step into that other component we were up against a break here. But I do I do love that it is something that we used quite a bit in design as well and we've actually designed some really big ideas.

00:43:53;11 - 00:44:12;29
Rick A. Morris: By not saying well there's no way we can get that done and just exploring that in an hour session in a very real context but we're going to be right back with Kupe Kupersmith in our final segment of the work life balance on this Friday afternoon. You're listening to Rick Morris.


00:47:04;19 - 00:47:20;26
Rick A. Morris: And we're back for our final segment of the work life balance with Kupe Kupersmith and Kupe right before we went to break we were talking about the Yes and game and how important that is to remove the buts out of your conversation. But there was another component and I had to cut you out for break and I apologize. So what was the other component you were trying to come to.

00:47:22;02 - 00:47:57;10
Kupe Kupersmith: That is just another language thing or words that you can use is essentially in brainstorming sessions. So instead of denying it a lot of times people don't deny those but sometimes they do or they don't fully grasp what somebody is saying. So they might they might use the word for that or is also their real close to denial like so think about it. You know I was like Hey Rick let's go to a dinner tonight. Let's grab some Chinese New Year like or we can go for Italian.

00:47:57;21 - 00:48:02;29
Kupe Kupersmith: That to me is like so I was like bless your heart and took on a leading lady.

00:48:03;11 - 00:49:36;05
Kupe Kupersmith: If he said something like you know Feste yuan or Japanese maybe you know some other Asian culture maybe that would work. But he totally went a different angle. To me that would feel like a dinner if he got to be careful with or. But when you can use the word what I like about that is right. Ooh what I liked about that is that a lot of Chinese restaurants they have they have like family style dinners another type of places that we have family style is Italian. Right. So you're saying what I like about that is that you're recognizing that there's something that the person said that you can latch onto and I think you know in the workplace it's really you know we know there's people that we don't completely see eye to eye with. And sometimes you get in meetings and it doesn't feel good. And everything they say my turkey will little though I think you have to be the bigger person and kind of go with the. Yes and kind of attitude to really connect with people on this. You know it's all about collaboration these days. There's not. I mean my kids have young kids and they're in school they're working on projects all the time. I mean I don't know anybody in the workplace now that just sits in their office and they close their door and people push paper under the door you do something with it and you put it back under the door you're always working with somebody in some fashion so you don't get better at collaboration and communication like this and this connectedness then it's just going to hinder you in life in general.

00:49:36;13 - 00:50:32;09
Rick A. Morris: It's mindshare right. The one word is the mind shift. So it's not I have to go to this meeting it's I get to go to this meeting right. One word changes an attitude and an approach that that opens doors and possibilities. That's what yes and so when we do design sessions we say what's the really big idea we're going to save a million dollars in the next six months. In just throw it out there. And the first and I go great because I know your first reaction is this is impossible. So the way we're going to do this is yes we will. And here's how we're going to do it. Let's start small and here we go. But nobody can say no nobody can say but nobody can say it's impossible. Everything is yes. And how are we going to do this. And we're not leaving here until we have our path. So let's get to work. And it's very powerful the ideas that you can generate by having that positive mindset. So speaking of positive mindsets what some of the best advice you've ever received.

00:50:33;05 - 00:52:25;02
Kupe Kupersmith: Yeah it's funny because I think you said it in in one way or another just in that last follow up there. I think for me the greatest advice was around keeping your eyes open to opportunity and it actually goes with the yes mindset. Like never always think you know when something approaches you and if you look at my career and the things that I've done and like I didn't have the like well laid out plan that OK I'm going to go to college and I'm 17 I'm going to graduate I'm going to do this and then to do that. And you know now I'm in my late 40s and everything is worked out exactly like Atlanta. That's just not how life go. So with it being open opportunities. Like someone told me like just look for opportunities be open to those opportunities and then go for some of them say yes. Right. And that's you know as a consultant that's what I do a lot. If I if I said no to everything then I wouldn't make a lot of money. So you have to have somebody says hey you want to do this. Yes let's do it. Let's go for it and see what happens. I do this in life in general. I do this with networking. My goal in life is to meet everybody in the world. And I have that goal because I never know when a connection when somebody I connect with is either going to help them or they're going to help me. So I just have a goal to meet everybody and that I'm not limited who I talk to and who I meet. If I go to a party and see 50 people I want to meet everybody in that room regardless of their title who they are their status whatever it is. So when someone comes up to me and says hello. I accept that hello and have a conversation and connect with them. So always keep your eyes open to opportunity.

00:52:25;07 - 00:52:48;12
Rick A. Morris: I think that's fantastic. I heard something really profound this week. I've got eight pages of quotes so I'm not trying to overhear videos about but that every opportunity is surrounded by problems so expect it. But look for the opportunity within the problem which I thought was just one of the most brilliant things I've ever heard. Great. To me it's like nobody nobody ever got successful perfectly.

00:52:48;14 - 00:52:56;06
Rick A. Morris: Nobody ever opened up a business and it was such a perfect run through it. Nothing ever not happened and all of a sudden I had a million dollars.

00:52:56;07 - 00:52:58;14
Kupe Kupersmith: And I'm like Hey. Right.

00:52:58;15 - 00:53:08;17
Rick A. Morris: I mean it was a wonderfully. Way to state that. But I want to make sure that we were running out of time here and want to make sure that everybody knows how to get in touch with you. How did they get in touch with you.

00:53:09;02 - 00:53:38;02
Kupe Kupersmith: So the best way you can hit me up on Twitter I'm just at Kupe. You can shoot me an email Kupe@talks.com. See what I'm up to and what I have to offer made it his way we can connect in and work together. I'd love to. You know I want to make other people awesome and I do that through this improv advantage so there's any way I can help help you let me know.

00:53:39;08 - 00:53:50;23
Rick A. Morris: Outstanding Well we certainly appreciate your time and spending time with us and we were talking on the break we have to have you back. So I'm going to put you on the spot in front of the audience and ask you back so hopefully we can continue this conversation soon.

00:53:51;27 - 00:53:54;05
Kupe Kupersmith: What if I say no I don't want to come back Rick.

00:53:54;23 - 00:54:01;26
Rick A. Morris: I get it out of your test. Yes it was yes and you already knew the answer before I asked you. It's been a pleasure.

00:54:01;26 - 00:54:29;04
Rick A. Morris: So next week we're going to detox the the John Maxwell experience and I'm going to share with you guys the things that I learned from this past event which is going to be incredible. And then we'll have Johanna Rothman on the show right after that. We've got lots of great things coming on the Voice America Network and on the work life balance we hope that you'll continue to join us as you have on every Friday right here on the work life balance sheet. Been listening to Rick Morris we'll see you next Friday.


Wednesday, February 28, 2018

Radio Show Transcript - Stories from Webb - Todd Nesloney - Recorded February 9, 2018

Stories from Webb - Todd Nesloney - Recorded February 9, 2018



To get to the web page of the radio show, click here.

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Please remember this is a transcript of a radio show that airs live every Friday and is also podcasted.  Spelling and punctuation may be affected.

FULL TRANSCRIPT (with timecode)

00:00:26;22 - 00:00:37;12
M12: And welcome to another Friday edition of the Work Life Balance couldn't be more excited to speak with everybody again this Friday afternoon. I'm coming to you live from Memphis Tennessee.

00:00:37;13 - 00:01:59;02
Rick A. Morris: We've been here in Memphis working with clients over the past week. And next week of course we're getting prepared for the International Maxwell certification. So we'll be in Orlando doing the show live from Orlando at the Maxwell certification as we take that next Friday and be in Orlando through the following Thursday. So all of my IMC fans in Maxwellites and John Maxwell team members I look forward to seeing you guys in Orlando. But today I just want to jump right into the show and as a matter of fact I was just looking at show numbers and this is the second highest rated show this person generated. But we only did the show in September. So describe how the numbers work. Obviously, there's a cumulative download effect. So we've been doing the show a little over two years and we started the show December of 2015. So as people download the show and subscribe to the podcast and you know catch on to the show obviously older shows have the opportunity to have better numbers. Right. Just depends on when we drop the show. This gentleman appeared in September of 2017 with so just a few months ago and it's already racked up to the second most listened to show that we've ever done on the Work Life Balance. We had to have him back. It couldn't be more excited to have him back just to reintroduce him to the audience.

00:01:59;02 - 00:03:09;13
Rick A. Morris: He's the principal and lead learner at Webb Elementery school in Texas and he is an award winning author who's worked in coauthoring Kids Deserve It and Flipping 2.0 which is practical strategies for flipping your class. And then he now has a brand-new release which he teased her on that last episode called Stories from Webb. He's also published a children's book called Spruce and Lucy. He's been recognized by the National School Board Association as one of the 20 to watch in education. He's also recognized by the Center for Digital Education is one of their top 40 innovators in education by the Bambis as the national Elementary Principal of the Year International Elementary Teacher of the year. And by the Texas Computer Education Association as their Texas elementary teacher of the year. And finally by the White House as a connected educator and Champion of Change and I've I've talked to in reference to show many many times and I think the quote that I left with the last time that we talked in September is if we had more educators like this gentleman that we would just be fine our kids would absolutely be fine. So let me welcome back Todd Nesloney need to the show Todd how are you doing sir.

00:03:09;15 - 00:03:14;29
Todd Nesloney: I'm doing good. Enter I hope. Thanks for having me back. We had such a blast last night. I was super pumped to be asked back again

00:03:14;29 - 00:03:51;12
Rick A. Morris: We were we're blessed to have you. I mean you're blown up Tedx stages everywhere. You know we've got a little podcast we're doing so we're the ones that are honored to have you. And you feel free to take that recording of that lead in and you do just have it.. So listen let's dive right in. Stories from Webbb, you were teasing us with that a little bit but now it's really I see you know all the reviews coming in on Amazon are just stellar. Hopefully sales have been just as stellar for you. Talk to us a little bit of how the book's doing.

00:03:52;17 - 00:04:23;07
Todd Nesloney: Well you know the book has been such an exciting thing and it was fun putting it together. So for those who don't know stories the web is my second book officially and it is a book that I wrote completely with my staff over at web elementary at Navasota Texas. And when I finish Kids Deserve It I said I would never write again. Ended up getting the idea from Stories from Webb talking to teachers at my school one day and just hearing how brilliant they were and then that phrase came to my mind that I remember someone telling me and that was when you're given a platform.

00:04:23;07 - 00:07:09;14
Todd Nesloney: It's important that you amplify the voices of others more than you amplify your own. And so that's always been the back of my mind when I thought about the next book I thought why don't I write a book with my staff. Do you know when you work at a school. The joke always is oh we should write a book about all the stuff that happened that all the things that go on. And when I thought of the idea I was like but nobody ever has. And so I brought the idea to my team. They loved it and I was like OK well at least I'll have some teachers and staff members who will be willing to write and 51 52 stories later from the first secretary to the music teacher to the instructional aide the classroom teachers. It was such a special book a true labor of love and the whole process I got involved my staff and none of them have been published before. And just to bring them in and the funny thing about the books for me though was that I didn't let anybody on the staff read the entire book until it came out. I only let their chapter as their chapter was being edited because I wanted it to be a special surprise for them too. And so I hired a professional photographer who came out and took professional head shots of all of them for the book. It took a really nice photo of all of us to the back cover of the book. And I made all these little special infographics and beams of all the teachers with their a quote from their story and I've been sharing those out as promo material. But we got our books about a week or so before the public did and it was a really powerful moment. Watching those teachers hold that in their hands for the first time makes me emotionally about talking about it just to see that you know so many educators are working tirelessly in their classrooms with no recognition at all. And for one book one piece of literature just to get to let them tell a piece of their story and know the world is going to read it. It was it was powerful and you know one thing I didn't expect from the book release was just how much it would bring my team together because after they started reading the book they came to me and they were like oh my gosh I didn't know so-and-so had to do with this. I didn't know so-and-so dealt with this in my life because the Stories from Webb book is more than just an education book. Yeah about 50 percent of it deals with kids and instructional ideas. But the other half is just life stuff like we have a chapter called. It's OK to grieve. That just deals with. How do you work through pain in your life. How do you deal with that sorrow and and know that you can move forward in life. And we have a chapter about faith the role that faith plays in our lives just all over the place kind of thing. And one of my favorite stories after the book was given to my staff was one of my teachers in the book she shared a story about suffering several miscarriages and how it was just really difficult on her.

00:07:09;14 - 00:07:50;03
Todd Nesloney: Better question a lot of things that led to her having two daughters today. And when I was talking to her after the book after the staff had it for a day or two she said tight the most amazing thing happened. And I said what she said one of the staff members came up to me and she said and we just cried together because she looked to me and she said I just want to come by and tell you thank you for telling that story because you made me feel like I'm not alone and I'm not the only one that went through that. And to know that moments like that are coming out of these stories I'm just I'm so excited to get this in the hands of others outside of our school family just to see the power that these stories will hopefully have it affecting other people's lives as well.

00:07:51;20 - 00:08:13;19
Rick A. Morris: And what are to it. You know I just published a book with with 11 other authors. So to get 12 people to collaborate on a book I know one had 12 people to collaborate on a business book to get 52 people. The amount of work that you have to put in I applaud the effort for sure.

00:08:13;26 - 00:09:29;22
Todd Nesloney: See they finally. Yeah it was interesting. Putting all that together because you know I wrote every single chapter in the book but every single chapter has little inserts from the staff. And so people like to ask me like how do you get them to know what to write. Where to go. The first thing I did was I just told you that if you have a story that you want to tell send it to me I will find a way to fit it in or I'll write a chapter around that story. And then after I got those then I went and I said Here are some chapters that I've written that I don't have a story for yet. If you think you can come up with some of that to fit in here send that to me and then the third are people I went to. If I had to go to some of the staff and go you were in this story about this because you know teachers are the worst at doubting themselves and feeling like they don't have a voice and they don't. And that what they think is as good as what other people are doing because especially since the rise of social media you see so many amazing educators works online or on Pinterest and you feel like your stuff is crap in comparison. And so when we got to work with a lot of my team two of empowering them and saying No you've got something great to tell. And that's the whole point of the book. That's what we want people to take away from this book is when they finish the book. We want them to feel like their story matters too.

00:09:29;28 - 00:11:02;12
Rick A. Morris: And now they could go out there and tell their and I mean the whole your story matters. I'm bringing back that. If the audience has not gone onto YouTube and seen your tax talk they have and you need to go to YouTube. You need to search. Todd Nesloney  in his Tedx talk in. I'll tell you you probably don't know this is even coming and I haven't even had a chance to talk as a show for this one. The way that you challenge men to be involved in schools at that time I was coaching you know youth league football and I would volunteer for day every once in a while. For junior achievement whom I have taken that to heart personally and become an uber volunteer at the high school level now that you nodding off and your achievement. One of the things that you know I've been blessed to be able to do is teach DISC profiles of personality profiles in on Wednesday lead 53 high school seniors through learning about themselves and how to communicate with each other and what this means and all those types of things as well as being on the board of several different of the academies now at the high school. And I don't I honestly don't think I would be that involved if the connection that you and I made in September didn't happen. I want to thank you for that challenge because when I saw your Ted x talk it it became a call to action for me.

00:11:02;14 - 00:11:15;19
Todd Nesloney: Wow. I don't know what does it feel to be because of the work already done is going to be changed get live TV and that's what it's all about for a and I couldn't thank you more.

00:11:17;07 - 00:11:40;07
Rick A. Morris: Amazingly it's given me insight more to what the educators go through which I don't like. I don't think anybody will have a full appreciation for unless they see it for themselves. And I completely agree on that day going through a classroom trying to teach the same thing to the same kids. You just absolutely have no understanding about these incredible educators go through. Right.

00:11:42;05 - 00:11:56;07
Rick A. Morris: And we're going to take our first break right here and we're going to come back and I love to hear some of your favorite stories stories from what. So we're going to take a break. Let the commercials play let them pay as from our sponsors. We'll be right back here with Todd Nessel any on the Work Life Balance. Listen to Rick Ross.


00:14:51;29 - 00:14:58;16
Rick A. Morris: Now back to the Work Life Balance and welcome back to the Work Life Balance on this Friday afternoon.

00:14:58;19 - 00:15:13;14
Rick A. Morris: Visiting with Todd Neslonley he is a multi time author an incredible educator and now a multi time guest of the show here on the Work Life Balance. And as we were going to great job. We were talking about your latest book stories from when you have a I don't I hesitate to say favorite quote so I'm going to say it's a favorite quote because you'll read the whole book to us and we get that I understand but what is one of those quotes that kind of comes to the top of your mind

00:15:14;10 - 00:16:03;02
Todd Nesloney: You know that there's a quote in the book and I say this one often when I present to you and it's about educators and it's the fact that I believe in educators job is 50 percent academic and 50 percent emotional. And the moment you put your efforts into more than one or the other I don't think you're doing your job anymore. And the whole point of that is to tell teachers that the content is extremely important. That's why you were hired to do that job. But the heart of that child is equally as important because it goes back to that phrase that people say all the time you can't reach their heads until you reach their heart. And so just that 50 50 kind of idea is one of my one of my favorite quotes from the book for sure.

00:16:04;19 - 00:17:05;07
Rick A. Morris: Yeah. What was interesting and a great finding that happened this past Wednesday I had a couple of teachers in the room as I was leading the seniors through and the recognition of the four different communication styles you could see the realization from a couple of the educators of why they weren't reaching certain students it was and they had started to be like well that's just not a good kid or I can't reach him or whatever versus recognizing that there was just a communication gap that they could so that they could just learn differently than the way that they were presenting but to see the impact of that to them. Because I can see the emotional connection that that really can form and create as an educator. Exactly. And so you know one of the biggest things that touched me in what you did and I took the topic here for a second but talked to to me a little bit about your what you talk in your Tedx in the community project that you do the cookout.

00:17:05;29 - 00:18:30;12
Todd Nesloney: Yeah. You know I've always thought as an educator like all we do is schools is these events at our school and then we invite people to come into them that you hear educators all the time that there are not many parents showed up or are we don't know what to do to get them involved. And I've always pictured education like mission work. And when you think of missionaries for a church they don't sit in church and beg you to come in. They go out serve you. So as educators if we really want to reach our kids and our families we have to go out and serve them and do it in a way where we don't even have a hit budget. And so I thought you know we've got an apartment complex in our community that a large chunk of my kids come from. And I thought why don't we go there and serve those families hotdogs just show up one day grilled for them and pass it out for FREE. We're not going to pass out pamphlets we're not going to tell them to make sure they're doing their homework. We're not going to check it. We're just going to go out and connect and have fun and you know we partner with our local businesses here who helped fund it all for us. But we went once a semester minimum and we just roll a girl out there we partnered with the junior high. They come out to and we set up and each time we were hotdogs for about 350 people. And it's a powerful moment. And you know I've done it for four years now and every single time that we do it somebody comes the line it says Why are you doing this again. And I loved to look at them and say because we love you and have that really be the only reason we're there is because we want these families to see that we care about their child more than a butt in the chair or a number on the page

00:18:30;13 - 00:19:13;17
Rick A. Morris: Every time you see that I get chillbumps to know that you know I see a lot of people that talk that talk right but to see an organization leader like you truly being the servant leader. It's amazing to see you walk the walk. No doubt that's why the success has come your way because I believe you're leading with your heart more than anything else. And the success becomes ancillary. It's it's it's a byproduct because of what you are achieving in the first place. And not only that but I think you create so much content. I mean you've got a blog as well where you've got podcasts like Kids Deserve It and Sparks in the Dark. I mean talk a little bit about those things.

00:19:13;17 - 00:20:25;15
Todd Nesloney: Yeah. I don't have much of a life. I really do need to step outside of education and the educational world. But yeah I do have a blog that I try to keep updates on under them as I'm in the middle of writing a book. The blog kind of takes the back seat a little bit but I do have two podcasts. I do a podcast called kids with my co-author Adam welcome. And we just interviewed different educators and people who aren't educated to just get to share a little glimpse of their stories and that I have a newer podcast that I started with my buddy Travis Crowder. He has been an incredible English teacher in North Carolina. One of the most brilliant man I've ever met in my life. And we do a podcast called Spark from the dark and it deals with reading and writing books all that kind of stuff. We love advertising stuff that we're reading because we're both voracious readers and we've done a couple episodes. It's been kind of dormant for a few months as we finished our book but we are bringing it back this week so we're going to do a show with some new book recommendations that a show with a lady named Jennifer Lugard who is another brilliant amazing hilarious educator.

00:20:25;18 - 00:20:30;00
Rick A. Morris: You just threw something out there. You said you just finished the book. So there's another book coming.

00:20:30;28 - 00:22:31;20
Todd Nesloney: Yeah. You know I guess I guess I was on a roll and couldn't stop. That's amazing. Seven years I was in the classroom and I was a math teacher before I became an administrator. And over the last couple of years as an administrator I have fallen in love with reading and writing and reading and writing instruction and I've really been getting educate myself about it. At that time that Travis was through social media we actually got the book deal and started writing the book before we even met in person. We both have really passionate views on the power that lies and finding that book that will change your life because both of us believe that there is no such thing as somebody who doesn't like reading. It's just somebody who hasn't found the right book. And so when we were just sharing ideas and sharing resources we thought you know I think we've got a book idea here where we can really share some great reading and writing instructional practices. But from an elementary perspective from a secondary perspective as a whole campus outside of reading and writing teachers likely really will they cover everybody. And so we spent about eight months together writing that book we've met up a couple of times in person to do some writing to then it comes on June and I am so proud of that book. It's different than my other two would but I can't wait for the world to check that one out because it's got a lot of research in it too. And you know Travis is one of the most lyrical and visual writers that I've ever read. And so the opportunity to write with him was just such an honor on my behalf that he agreed to want to write with me because he's been a writer that I have truly respected his work for a while. And so it's kind of like you're getting to write with one of your education heroes. It's kind of like with Stories from Webb my education hero camp Bearden's wrote the foreword and it was kind of one of those dream people that I never thought would write the foreword for a book. And she agreed to it. It's what social media does it tears on those walls and gives you some great opportunities to connect with people I would have never thought I could have.

00:22:31;23 - 00:22:45;21
Rick A. Morris: I couldn't agree more. As a matter of fact March 23 on this on this radio show I get to interview the author of the book that changed my professional career. So obviously I had a love for reading way back when as well.  And by the way the book portrays my life as a kid was Where the Red Fern Grows, it is not the Animorphs series but it's pretty good to me

00:22:46;08 - 00:23:55;18
Todd Nesloney: I don't know if you ever get it to Animorphs or me because I did such a special place in my childhood and the fact that I got to meet the author of that book this summer in November I crave that I felt like an idiot really you know. Yes she was at a conference that I was that and I knew she was going to be there because I tweeted or if she'd actually respond. I was already banned Gerling because she responded but I brought my original number one Animorphs book in hopes that I would get to meet her and have her sign it. And I ended up getting to meet her and the best part was as soon as I told her I wish she was like oh my gosh we've been tweeting and I thought I don't say why. You know that's what got me started it really made me believe that I could be a reader. It was my escape from difficult moments. All those and more books and just getting to have that moment where you meet somebody who plays such a big role in your childhood without ever realizing they did it was so overwhelming for me.

00:23:55;21 - 00:26:19;16
Rick A. Morris: But it was such a great experience. Absolutely. So yes so my book was where the Redfern grows and then in my professional career I was actually struggling at one point being a project manager. I started it not like the job and that you know things just weren't going out. I had a newborn baby that I wasn't getting to spend time with. And you know I just I went into a Barnes and Noble and I was looking in the business section and looking at job titles thinking of you know what career could I switch to. There is a book on the shelf called Radical Project Management by Rob Thomsett. And I just picked it up and flipped through it ended up reading the book cover to cover that night. And the insight that he provided changed my entire career and how I managed projects and really became much more successful. But just like you reached out he ended up writing the forward in my second book. We've never met and we had a phone conversation and I get the opportunity to interview him on this show March 23. So same thing. Right. I can promise you that this is going to fall all over the guy. That's what I'm good. It's essentially what is doing. Brad tell us tell everybody why you're so great. Anyway so I know that's an amazing story that animal story I was just doing that to tease you. But that's a fantastic story that you got to be there. Yeah it was it was a really cool and so you've got sparks in the dark now you've got the pod. So spartan ducks coming out June Stories from Webb. When did that release sorries from web released January 24. January 24th. So it's still I mean hot off the presses. Oh I don't know baby that's the reviews that I'm reading on it on Amazon are fantastic and by the way you can find all these books and everything you want to know about Todd find him at ToddNesloney.com. You can find them at Tech ninja Todd on Twitter. But also all of his social media is sitting right there on his Web site. You can find us. You need to buy his books. Read his books and understand why we think he's one of the greatest educators we've ever met right here on the show.

00:26:19;16 - 00:26:36;20
Rick A. Morris: So we're going to take a break right here we'll be right back with Todd Nesloney on the Work Life Balance your listening to Rick Morris


00:29:29;04 - 00:29:45;15
Rick A. Morris: Now back to the Work Life Balance and we're back to this Friday edition of the Work Life Balance. We're visiting with Todd Nesloney the author of Stories for web also his service in an upcoming book Sparks in the Dark going to be releasing in June.

00:29:45;15 - 00:29:53;18
Rick A. Morris: So what do you have any upcoming speaking engagements anything that you're going to be promoting soon.

00:29:53;18 - 00:30:29;11
Todd Nesloney: Yeah you know I travel and speak once a month. I've been you know as a full time principal so I can't be gone from my school too much. I love being at school. I hate being away. I travel about once a month. I just got back from Nashville Tennessee on Wednesday so I was near you I guess doing the largest keynote I've ever done. One of the scariest moments of my entire life seeing a room that size. But then I've got my second head ex coming up at the end of this month. I have no idea why I agreed to do a kydex again. The first time was so terrifying experience for me but I'm excited to get do a second one.

00:30:29;17 - 00:30:38;06
Rick A. Morris: A terrifying experience but is it terrifying and just the sense that you're nervous going on and then once you get into your flow you're feeling better. Talk to me a little bit about that

00:30:38;07 - 00:31:34;18
Todd Nesloney:. You know I get nervous before every presentation and it's so funny because people will tell me like oh well you're such a good presenter or you're so natural or good that's so easy for you. And I'm like No it's really not because I feel like I want to throw up before every single presentation whether I'm doing a session keynote at X it doesn't matter. I feel like I'm just going to throw up everywhere. Did I get together. And you know once I get started I'm ok then I can I can get into my groove I can start because I'm a storyteller. So I don't have to memorize facts or this other I just go and tell a story. So once I get it by giving get started started fine but my natural personality is an introvert and so I'm actually an extrovert introvert by definition and so I can turn it on and I can't make it look like this amazing outgoing person that I look like that on stage at the ball presentation bovver I'm like find me a chair on the back of the room give me a bottle of water and let me disappear.

00:31:35;07 - 00:32:03;19
Todd Nesloney: Like you've got a hug Yeah yeah it's I'm like No I'm not really a crazy as I see on stage other things because that's why I bring out. And you know as a principal I've got to do the same thing I've got to be this personable outgoing person because of who I deal with and I go home and it's like OK I just want to turn on Netflix. Get on my couch and just chill I don't want to be Mr. personable. So the great thing about social media is I could turn it all off as I need to.

00:32:04;28 - 00:33:35;20
Rick A. Morris: I think what's funny about that. So I've been speaking for many many years now and I'll tell you the nerves don't ever go away. Yeah but it's actually a good thing because there have been a couple of times where I wasn't nervous but those were my worst presentations that fire that drive was great but who what you just didn't keep me on their toes. I'm like nothing after the presentation, like I'm done. It's over. Yeah. So it just made me laugh. I'll tell you though watching your first Tedx and talking about that watching you talking about your grandmother and in the battle there. But we almost say it word for word because I lost my father to lung cancer at 19 and that became the drive for my book. No day but today a lot of the things that I speak about watching you say the strongest person in your life battle this horrific disease. I say that almost word for word from stage as well. Right. In describing that and I just you know that that touches me when I watch you go through that in here about what an incredible woman she was.

00:33:37;09 - 00:34:17;26
Todd Nesloney: Well you know and I went back and forth about telling that story too because I include in the book and when I wrote the book it was such a cathartic experience for me. But I said I will never be able to tell this story out loud and get through it and I'm not a like with my presentations. I'm not a practice or like I'll go through once or twice but I just kind of play it on in my head. I don't stand in front of a bear of practice practice practice because in my brain overthink everything and then I'm all over the place because my A.D.H.D just goes wild and so I knew I was going to include her story and I was just going through my head like OK I got to tell this and I can tell it without crying because it's going to be live streamed and record.

00:34:18;10 - 00:35:56;03
Todd Nesloney: So I told this story I barely got through it and I did it because I knew my grandma would want me to tell her story. And you know when I did the text last year I said that's it I'm never going to tell this story again publicly. I just I can't. It's too emotional. It's too personal. And you know out of everything I hear from kids deserve it. Number one the most conversation starter that I have with people is the story about my grandma. And it just reminds me you know even going to stories are. The importance of not keeping our stories within ourselves no matter how hard they are to tell. And so I've been kind of going through my head and been contemplating you know including the story itself like I look at I keep it up there yet. I want to tell it but I'm not there yet. So it's one of those goals of quietus at some point this year to be able to physically tell that story to people face to face just a show. And the reason I want to share the stories first just talk about my grandma but to just to show that you know when you are somebody that shows that you care about the child it makes a world of difference and everybody needs that cheerleader in their life who is going to support them and cheer them on so many of our kids don't have that. And that's where educators fill that role so often for the kids. And I just think it's so important people to remember that you can change your life just by showing someone you care.

00:35:56;09 - 00:37:23;19
Rick A. Morris: When I think what's special about the story and how you tell it. First of all you know it takes great humility on the stage. First of all to do. Second of all it. It is what people remembers. That's what they will connect to them. The message that you're hoping they'll take home right in the act that the kids need to be needed cheerleader and have that impact. But I think I think when you're when you're going through and telling it it's happy forever to be honest. To my father the way I speak onstage now with him. And just like the nerves it doesn't get easier with time. You know the story flows better but it doesn't get easier to tell it exactly but you know the people that have that same connection to you. There is a moment in which I think in the social media world right everybody kind of puts out their best face. And when you're doing that from stage and saying this is life but this is how it can be good even though we share you know stuff that's hard to bring that humility that comes through you on stage when you do that you're just you're a different storyteller when you're talking about your grandma well that means a lot.

00:37:23;21 - 00:37:36;14
Todd Nesloney: Let me tell you why I didn't think I was going to be able to make it through that. And you were talking about how they did it and it's so funny because it's been so many years ago you like you say you know the story flows better but it never gets easier to tell.

00:37:36;14 - 00:37:59;12
Rick A. Morris: No. What a beautiful tribute to her. And you know I would encourage you to continue to tell this story because it's a way to keep how special he really is in the hearts and minds of everybody else because right you know as I think of you I think of her as well. Right. And I think that the greatest tribute you can give to her as well.

00:37:59;20 - 00:38:16;12
Todd Nesloney: Well that's the goal. So thanks for saying that. Absolutely. Absolutely. So it's livened it up a little bit since I took you. That was a joke or somebody would let out you know social media.

00:38:16;12 - 00:39:01;13
Rick A. Morris: And you know you and I got on the subject of millennials are preparing the kids and that kind of stuff in our lives time that we were together. One of the things that you know people contract me all the time to talk about you know how do you motivate millennials and all that stuff. You know my answer always you don't motivator generation you motivate people you motivate individuals but at the same time I think this whole social media thing we're robbing your generation of an opportunity to be awkward. Does it make sense like going up and asking somebody for a date and getting turned down going up. And you know I have a hard time seeing shoes that don't go well. Right. Right. Right. Talk to me about your feelings around them.

00:39:01;13 - 00:40:33;01
Todd Nesloney: You know I'm kind of toward on that because I see what you're saying and I understand how that changes things. But I mean I think if that's going to be part of the conversation that I also have to think about myself and go OK but let's look at the progression in our generation period because that's just like before the invention of the telephone and being able to have those conversations openly face to face. You had to travel hours to go see somebody. But then with the invention of the telephone you were able to reach people from far away through your voice. And then you know I think it's different for sure. And I think you know in some ways we might be robbing them. But like you said the opportunity to make some of those awkward moments in life. But I think this has created a few awkward moments because one thing that I think social media has done is it's given a voice to people who have never had a voice before. And I think it's allowed kids to connect in ways that are connected and to find people who understand and value them when they may be in communities that don't. And I also think that it's provided new ways to screw up and to learn from your mistakes. And yet now with the advent of all the technology is there are so few mistakes are very public and they're very hard to erase. But it's a new era that we're living in and figuring out the new ways to live in that era.

00:40:33;05 - 00:40:41;12
Rick A. Morris: I do. The greatest insightful thing that that I've not yet make the connection to I love that telephone comment.

00:40:41;22 - 00:41:08;02
Rick A. Morris: I absolutely love the telephone comment in contrast to you know that's just you're right. People also used to take people I'm not sure who the tweeting is I'm not speaking to hope but so that you know it used to take weeks to go from New York to California. It would be a different family that would arrivee. People would operate through family members would be born to be like a whole different group of people that would get there.

00:41:08;29 - 00:42:05;18
Todd Nesloney: And I in my Yeah I was talking about that my keynote of you know when I was in the classroom trying to do innovative things. I get so much pushback from parents who would say things like you know chalkboard works good enough for me. Why is it good for you. Look I didn't love to learn it that way and I turned out just fine. And my calling has always been yeah you turned out just fine. But you turned out just fine. The different generations were living it now. And that's just like saying What would you a growing up dial up was just fine you had no problem with it. But now I dare you to go back to dial up and try to do something. It'll drive you insane. And so we can't use that experience. Well for me this is how I turned out. I turned out great. My kids need all they need do is the same thing. I want to live in the same world. So it's not a fair comparison to say that the other sample I use is air conditioning. Before air conditioning nobody would sit around and go. I wish there was air conditioning. But now that we have it we don't want to go back and have it taken away.

00:42:05;23 - 00:42:17;11
Rick A. Morris: We were especially in the south that we're going to have is that we're going to take our final break here we'll be right back with Einasleigh. You're listening to Rick Archer Work Life Balance.


00:45:18;16 - 00:45:28;18
Rick A. Morris: And we're back on the final segment of the Work Life Balance for at 20 and you know Todd I'm sitting here hearing your stories and you know I can only imagine what you have to go through sometimes.

00:45:28;19 - 00:45:57;06
Rick A. Morris: Is that educator. Well it's weird for me as you know as a parent as I go to my children's classroom almost have to give them permission to do their jobs not right. I go through a whole list. It's ok to tell my you know get on to my kids misbehave and it's OK to send them to the principal's office. And please let me know when they're not doing their homework and I can you can kind of see them visibly relax you know because it doesn't it seems like that's not the norm like you have to have permission to do your job.

00:45:57;06 - 00:46:17;10
Todd Nesloney: Now you know and that's something that has changed especially in the last couple of years. I've watched the shift myself because I think what's happened is you know we've got a good sized group of parents that are just like you who will say you know let me know what they need when you need help let me know what they're struggling with and what they're not behaving and I'll deal with it.

00:46:17;12 - 00:46:50;21
Todd Nesloney: We've also got another group of parents that have risen up where it's always the child is the victim or the child didn't do anything it was somebody else it couldn't have been my baby. And it's been difficult for educators with that kind of thing happen because then you say well what leverage do I have because in those kind of situations oftentimes the parent is telling the teacher that in front of the child. So this child goes oh great mom does think I did it. So I definitely will get troubled. And so it's learning new ways to kind of still work with kids to deal with that even when sometimes a parent isn't as supportive as you wish they would be.

00:46:52;02 - 00:47:08;11
Rick A. Morris: Yeah. And you watch some of those parents that just deny deny deny deny that that's just that that's hurting my child. Opportunity for success in the future always at some point you're going to recognize. You know there are things you do and do. It's your fault. Exactly.

00:47:08;29 - 00:47:12;23
Todd Nesloney: You're an idiot only second to struggle later when they don't think anything is their fault.

00:47:14;06 - 00:47:20;23
Rick A. Morris: Yeah for sure. So you know we always love to ask this question of all of our guys. So what's some of the greatest advice you've ever been given.

00:47:22;29 - 00:47:39;11
Todd Nesloney: You know I talked about the top of the show what somebody once told me which led to the creation story through and that is if you were ever given a platform and people are listening to you make sure that you amplify the voices of others louder that you amplify your out.

00:47:39;14 - 00:49:29;17
Todd Nesloney: And as I've done so much research over the last couple of years about the power of diverse characters of literature and building empathy and others and amplifying the voices of others I'm just consistently reminded and of just that simple idea of if you have a voice and people are listening to it don't just be the only one talking. Use that platform to let somebody else talk whether it's those marginalized groups or those people who don't believe in themselves or don't feel like their story is important. Use your platform to make sure that they realize that they have a voice and their voice matters too. And by doing that not only do you empower that person you also have power others who are watching who are going wow OK let me let me maybe I could say something tuque if he's calling on these people to speak and we will even know who they are because the whole idea of it like fame or whatever. Even in the education world people say oh Todd you're such a big deal or you have this many followers on Twitter. I'm like I don't know how that happened because I'm no better than any other educator out there and I screw up a lot. Like every day if not every hour. I'm not the perfect principal. I make a lot of mistakes. My school is not the perfect school with a lot of things we still want to fix on but what I do do is I constantly learning constantly admitting that I know I'm not perfect and I want to be better and I'm just showing that real side of me and not just using that site that is fluffy let me show all the shiny stuff that show how amazing I am. You can go through my blog and see there's many blogs where I talk about the amount of doubt that I deal with with just my own skill set. What I meant to do it just the struggles that I face internally. And so I think that it's just a constant reminder of don't just share your story but encourage others to share theirs and give them your platform when you have one.

00:49:30;28 - 00:50:14;18
Rick A. Morris: Well I think you just said thank you for that. That was beautifully said and you bring up a great point as a speaker. The humility side of it as we were referring to in the last segment as well as the strongest side. You know when I get going I was telling stories of project success and looked like a complete egomaniac from stage fright and it wasn't until I started saying here is everywhere I failed in how you can stop you know the same mistake that the career actually started going somewhere and it was such a valuable lesson that people want to hear more about your failures and reduce your success.

00:50:15;00 - 00:51:16;12
Todd Nesloney: And it's not because people want to hear that you feel it's that they want to know their normal and just like you as well when you know and I think that's a perfect point of when I feel like I relate to the audience because I share myself personally and those failures. And you know I've heard some speakers who share some great information. I take good note. I take back ideas but I don't have a connection with them at all. And so I never think of their name again. But I may use their idea and I always hope that when I speak no matter where I speak that I leave that more than just the ideas. But that connection that I am just like anybody else I know better just because I'm getting an interview or I've written a book or it doesn't make me better than anybody else and that's constantly something I'm having to tell people because they always want to put you on a pedestal. And I have never thought that I was better than anybody else in my field because every educator out there is doing such hard work and deserves to be celebrated and so often they don't get to be celebrated.

00:51:18;06 - 00:51:49;02
Rick A. Morris: Well I certainly appreciate your perspective. I know I've said that you're one of the greatest educators I've had. You're saying that there are no better. I can just say I wish more people had your heart in humility when they dealt with the children in their lives and for me that so I'm not going to say that's what makes you better but I am going to say that I been a great thank you. So anything else you'd like to share with the audience for reclose.

00:51:49;10 - 00:52:05;27
Todd Nesloney: Honestly you know I just I just keep thinking about the book that came out stories for Wahhab. And you know I'm so passionate about what that book can do for people's lives and just opening things up and you know that's been the best feedback we've gotten.

00:52:06;02 - 00:52:16;24
Todd Nesloney: It's so funny because as people read the book they've gone to our Web site like looked up some of the teachers e-mails. E-mail them at such people as a teacher to come up to me and go I got the e-mail this weekend.

00:52:16;26 - 00:53:44;08
Todd Nesloney: But this teacher in Nebraska who launched Dorian's said it meant this this and this and I'm like Is he your words you're impacting others. And you know and one of my favorite things from the book is you know I talked about dreaming big and I couldn't believe Kim beard and wrote the foreword. One of the endorsers of the book is award winning music artist and singer songwriter Nicole. And the last chapter in the book I wrote completely based after a song I heard of hers and I've loved her since I was a teenager. Followed her entire career had every song ever. All her albums of better concert twice I've tweeted or god like one or two responses randomly every ballot. And I thought I wrote a chapter all about a song. I'm going to reach out to her see if she'll write the endorsement. Don't lie she responded back and said I'm going to Diệm you and let's talk about it. So I said are the book. She loved it and she said I am writing an endorsement today and she wrote one and it's in the book. And every time I read it I cried several times. Just like with a book like this artist that I put on a pedestal that there are music and lyrics have played such a big part in my life because music is so forth to me that to it is just that concert binder reach out to anybody don't ever be afraid to reach out and connect with someone and see what they're all about. Because the worst thing you're going to hear is either no absolutely nothing at all. I should never stop you from reaching out anybody.

00:53:44;12 - 00:53:51;12
Rick A. Morris: That's what's great advice. That's fantastic advice. And Todd listen we've certainly appreciated having you back a second time.

00:53:51;13 - 00:53:56;03
Todd Nesloney: I can't wait to have you back because I would love to.

00:53:56;28 - 00:54:24;09
Rick A. Morris: All right well let's certainly keep in touch. We're going to keep watching that certainly when the when sparks in the dark drops in June. We've got to have you back Richard. Keep in touch with us let us know otherwise for the rest of the audience. I will be right back here same time same channel next Friday. Live from the John Maxwell sort of a case in Orlando Florida. Until then we'll talk to you next Friday. Been listening to the Work Life Balance with Rick Morris.

00:54:24;12 - 00:54:42;08
Rick A. Morris: Thank you for joining us this week. The Work Life Balance with Rick Morris can be heard live every Friday at 2:00 p.m. Pacific Time 5:00 p.m. Eastern time on the Voice of America business channel. Now that the weekend is here it's time to rethink your priorities and enjoy it. We'll see you on our next shell.