“…everybody has inherently great qualities.” –Stephan Thieringer
In this episode, Jay talks with Stephan Thieringer, the founder of Human Innovation Garage in Boston. Stephan is a brilliant strategist who understands that the inner-game of business is where the battle is lost or won. Jay and Stephan discuss: business empathy, learning how to fail, fitting in mindset versus contributing mindset, entrepreneurial agility/finesse/grace and diversifying your sources of advisors.
Episode Highlights:
02:32 The Human Innovation Garage Cores
05:07 Open Dialogue, Vulnerability and Empathy in Business
12:07 Leadership Laid Out
23:57 Do Not Underestimate Millennials
28:26 Perfectionism- the Destroyer of Culture and Teams
32:58 Agility in Human Innovation
41:03 Burst Coaching
45:19 Shift Your Perspective
Resources:
- Fascinate: How to Make Your Brand Impossible to Resist by Sally Hogshead
- The 5AM Club: Own Your Morning. Elevate Your Life by Robin Sharma
- Burst Coaching by Stephan Thieringer
@JayRooke and @stephant discuss: business empathy, learning how to fail, fitting in mindset versus contributing mindset, entrepreneurial agility/finesse/grace, diversifying your sources of advisors and so much more at… Click To Tweet
Connect with Stephan:
Website
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Instagram
Inspirational Quotes:
- “We are a reflection of the people around us and we are projecting what we bring to the table to the people around us and vice versa.” –Stephan Thieringer
- “If you don’t know it, you shouldn’t talk about it. And if you haven’t experienced it, you really shouldn’t talk about it.” –Stephan Thieringer
- “…everybody has inherently great qualities.” –Stephan Thieringer
- “When you’re going out there trying to protect failure every way possible, it often leads to disaster.” -Jay Rooke
- “It’s not about being perfect. It’s about getting it done.” –Stephan Thieringer
- “If your gut tells you to put it out there, put it out there.” –Stephan Thieringer
- “It’s not going to come from more thinking; it’s going to come from shifting the container that you’re doing your thinking in.” –Jay Rooke