
In this episode, Scott Becker shares six key takeaways from his recent talk at the Young Health Leaders Summit.
Full Episode
This is Scott Becker with the Becker Private Equity and Business Podcast. Thank you for joining us. Today, we're going to go through six thoughts from a speech today. So here's the background. We're invited to give a talk to the Advancement League, the Young Health Leaders Summit. I had a wonderful moderator interviewer, Kayla Epps, Provided to be a bunch of questions.
And so I'm going to go through some of the notes in that talk. Hopefully some of these resonate with people that are listening to this. And a lot of this deals with career development, growth, building businesses, and a lot more. So the first concept is focus first on your core role. The concept being do your core job great and keep your eyes open. Connect dots and keep your eyes open.
But start things with doing your job great. We like to say spend 89% of your energy on excelling at your core job. And this concept comes out of so many people looking all over the place all the time. And we see most people really excel when they do great at what they're doing. And when they see great opportunities, then they want to double and triple down on those.
But you sort of start with what is your core job and doing great at that and keeping your eyes open and connected eyes. Second concept is great leaders have high internal drive. So some of the best leaders I've watched over the years have high motors and they're great team builders. And they may not look like the traditional, what people thought of as a traditional leader.
Like back in the day, people thought of as this tall white patrician people, and I'm not tall or patrician, as sort of those were the leaders. And often those people were no better or no worse than anybody else, but not particularly good. But there was a bias. They looked like leaders. So many people that I see that are hyper successful, you might not notice their drive or their motor immediately.
But you might find over time, they're tremendous, tremendous leaders. People like Judy Faulkner of Epic, John Langell, Dr. Langell of Northeast Ohio Medical School, Dr. Chrisman. at Northwestern Medicine. There's just so many people.
It might not originally take as overflowing a room in such a leader, but of this tremendously high motor and are great team builders and could see the future and deal with things. Gene Woods is another example of this. So people that have great internal drive that you might not see when it hits you, you might not see it immediately, but it's there and it's very powerful.
Another question I was asked is, do you ever want to give up on an effort? Maybe, but I find that the key is to change and re-energize over the years. That all of us have peaks and valleys that you go up, you go down. I sort of view the world through three simple prisms. Not busy, depressing and boring. Busy, better than not busy.
And busy with purpose and intention brings one closer to self-actualizing. Over time... Once in a great while, something is going to hit you where you're just excited about it and you're compelled by it. And my advice to people is to lean into that when it happens. It doesn't always happen. But when it happens, lean into it and go with it.
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