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Despite rising IQ scores, people aren’t any happier, and entrepreneurs know that being smart alone doesn’t guarantee a great life. In this conversation, Dan Sullivan and Jeffrey Madoff explore why IQ tests only measure a narrow slice of intelligence, why entrepreneurs thrive on poorly defined problems, and how happiness comes from agency, progress, and meaningful relationships.
Show Notes:
IQ scores have climbed steadily over the past few decades, yet, by almost every measure, people today are no happier than earlier generations.
IQ tests only measure your ability to solve well‑defined problems with clear rules and right answers, which is a very narrow slice of real‑world intelligence.
Entrepreneurs win by spotting patterns, connecting ideas, and being comfortable thinking in abstractions, not by memorizing information for standardized tests.
Happiness is much more closely linked to a strong sense of personal agency than to any score you could get on an exam.
Entrepreneurial foresight—the ability to see what people will want next and act on it—is a unique advantage that can’t be measured by IQ tests.
Most of life and business operates in gray areas with no agreed‑upon solutions, making comfort with ambiguity a core entrepreneurial capability.
The education system largely trains people to “win the test,” not to think creatively, make bets, or handle uncertainty the way entrepreneurs must.
Revenue milestones and big wins won’t automatically make you happier if you’re still chasing an ever‑moving ideal in your head.
Measuring your progress backward from where you started, instead of against an unreachable ideal, creates daily happiness and sustainable motivation.
Resources:
Casting Not Hiring by Dan Sullivan and Jeffrey Madoff
The Gap And The Gain by Dan Sullivan with Dr. Benjamin Hardy
Learn more about Jeffrey Madoff
Dan Sullivan and Strategic Coach®
By Dan Sullivan and Jeffrey Madoff4.6
1111 ratings
Despite rising IQ scores, people aren’t any happier, and entrepreneurs know that being smart alone doesn’t guarantee a great life. In this conversation, Dan Sullivan and Jeffrey Madoff explore why IQ tests only measure a narrow slice of intelligence, why entrepreneurs thrive on poorly defined problems, and how happiness comes from agency, progress, and meaningful relationships.
Show Notes:
IQ scores have climbed steadily over the past few decades, yet, by almost every measure, people today are no happier than earlier generations.
IQ tests only measure your ability to solve well‑defined problems with clear rules and right answers, which is a very narrow slice of real‑world intelligence.
Entrepreneurs win by spotting patterns, connecting ideas, and being comfortable thinking in abstractions, not by memorizing information for standardized tests.
Happiness is much more closely linked to a strong sense of personal agency than to any score you could get on an exam.
Entrepreneurial foresight—the ability to see what people will want next and act on it—is a unique advantage that can’t be measured by IQ tests.
Most of life and business operates in gray areas with no agreed‑upon solutions, making comfort with ambiguity a core entrepreneurial capability.
The education system largely trains people to “win the test,” not to think creatively, make bets, or handle uncertainty the way entrepreneurs must.
Revenue milestones and big wins won’t automatically make you happier if you’re still chasing an ever‑moving ideal in your head.
Measuring your progress backward from where you started, instead of against an unreachable ideal, creates daily happiness and sustainable motivation.
Resources:
Casting Not Hiring by Dan Sullivan and Jeffrey Madoff
The Gap And The Gain by Dan Sullivan with Dr. Benjamin Hardy
Learn more about Jeffrey Madoff
Dan Sullivan and Strategic Coach®

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