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If you've spent any time in entrepreneurial or startup culture circles, the concept of "adopting an owner's mentality" is likely not new to you. Plenty of founders and C-suite folks in those spaces often will talk to their employees about the importance of approaching their work with an owner's mindset.
⚡ Go Deeper: What Does It Mean to Truly Forgive Ourselves?
In some cases, it's a good thing, as it can help employees contextualize their actions in a way that helps everyone move forward, instead of thinking of themselves as autonomous contributors. In other cases, it's a more toxic way to set the conditions for folks to overwork themselves, in the name of "thinking like an owner."
What's interesting, however, is that this idea of "owner's mindset" is completely absent from discussions about our personal lives. Sure, there's plenty of conversation around avoiding a "victim mentality," but what does it mean to adopt an owner's mentality — the proactive, positive flip side of that coin — in one's own life?
And, in doing so, what opportunities, resources, and possibilities can suddenly become available to us? This is exactly what George and I explore in this episode. Because living a life beyond your own current default state only becomes possible when you are willing to take the steering wheel of your own life.
Questions We Discuss
By beyondyourdefault.comIf you've spent any time in entrepreneurial or startup culture circles, the concept of "adopting an owner's mentality" is likely not new to you. Plenty of founders and C-suite folks in those spaces often will talk to their employees about the importance of approaching their work with an owner's mindset.
⚡ Go Deeper: What Does It Mean to Truly Forgive Ourselves?
In some cases, it's a good thing, as it can help employees contextualize their actions in a way that helps everyone move forward, instead of thinking of themselves as autonomous contributors. In other cases, it's a more toxic way to set the conditions for folks to overwork themselves, in the name of "thinking like an owner."
What's interesting, however, is that this idea of "owner's mindset" is completely absent from discussions about our personal lives. Sure, there's plenty of conversation around avoiding a "victim mentality," but what does it mean to adopt an owner's mentality — the proactive, positive flip side of that coin — in one's own life?
And, in doing so, what opportunities, resources, and possibilities can suddenly become available to us? This is exactly what George and I explore in this episode. Because living a life beyond your own current default state only becomes possible when you are willing to take the steering wheel of your own life.
Questions We Discuss