Jay Samit

Future Proofing You


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I highly suggest you do before launching your new business. If this was a college course, Disrupt You! would be the prerequisite for enrolling in Future Proofing You.) Beating the competition is but one path to financial success.

      In my Ted talk It's Time to Disrupt You!, I pose this question to the audience, “Ever ask yourself where virtually reality experts or Internet of Things Experts or Bitcoin experts come from?” In reality they are people who started with no more expertise than the rest of us. They are all just self‐proclaimed experts who then worked hard to grow and defend the turf they so wisely staked out. They race to where the puck is going to be and then figure out how to skate. I live by the adage, “be the best at what you do or the only one doing it.” For if you are the only one doing it, by definition, you are the best. To succeed you need to embrace a growth mindset.

      In her 2006 book, Mindset: The New Psychology of Success, Stanford Professor Carol Dweck coined the term growth mindset. Dweck spent decades researching students' attitudes about success and failure. She wanted to understand why some children could easily bounce back from major failure while others were completely devastated by the most minor of setbacks. The differences among children had less to do with the external circumstances of the specific task at hand and more to do with their preconceived notions of their own abilities. Some students, those with fixed mindsets, believed they were stupid and there was nothing they could do about it. I'm not bright enough to learn algebra. For them, intelligence was innate and failure was predestined. Why try when the outcome will always be disappointing? Remember the elephant with the fixed mindset at the beginning of this chapter?

      On the other hand, students with a growth mindset saw the world completely differently. These students believe that with work and effort, they can improve and grow smarter. If I make flashcards, I'll ace the Spanish test. The more you believe that you can improve, the more effort you will put toward your goals. Over time, students with a growth mindset attain higher achievement and a more positive outlook on life. Positive thinking expands creativity, increases energy, raises intelligence, and even closes more sales. Success doesn't make you happy; being happy creates success. As long as you are in control of your happiness, you are future proof.

      The first truth you must accept for Future Proofing You is that nothing can be achieved without a growth mindset. Developing and maintaining a growth mindset is the foundation upon which all other great accomplishments can be achieved.

      People with a fixed mindset see having to work hard at something as proof that they are not smart enough or good enough to achieve anything. I'll never become a real estate agent because I could never pass the exam. Every aspect of their lives is viewed through a lens of seeing their hard effort as needing to compensate for a lack of talent. A person with a fixed mindset thinks, for example, that they could never play basketball like Michael Jordan because he has natural talent. When in fact, a growth mindset is the real reason Michael Jordan became the greatest basketball player of all time.

      Remember, your future is mutable. My eldest son wanted to be a Hollywood screenwriter. It is an incredibly difficult industry to break into. Out of the thousands of screenplays written each year, only a couple dozen are produced into movies by the film studios. Many writers give up because, suffering from a fixed mindset and facing constant rejection, they are fearful of people asking the question: Have I seen any of your movies? And having to answer, no. To them, not having sold a script or having a film produced is an acknowledgment of their personal failure. They think of themselves as not good enough because no studio has made their movie. But my son has a growth mindset. For years, when people would ask Benji or his writing partner Dan Hernandez: Have I seen any of your movies? He would always answer, “Not yet.” Not yet implies it can and will happen. Today, after a decade of writing, when people ask the question, he can reply, “Did you see Pokémon Detective Pikachu? (And his proud father can add, “The second highest grossing film in the world in 2019!”)

      As with screenwriting or basketball, developing a growth mindset takes practice and effort.

      1 Stop failing and start learning. Every time something doesn't work out the way you would have liked, stop thinking of it in terms of winning or losing. You didn't fail, you just figured out a path that doesn't work. With that one approach out of the way, what is a different