
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Our guest for this week is Jon Yeo, Speaker, Executive Coach and the Co-Founder of TEDx Melbourne.
About Jon
Jon is an executive coach who helps leaders share strategic messages in meaningful ways. Heâs well-known for his ability to articulate the complex simply and he works with CEOs and senior leadership teams to build trust, empathy, and engagement in an increasingly distracted world.
He works with many famous national and international brands such as SAP, Princess Cruises, Auspost, MYOB, Deakin University, DHHS and DET. Jon is currently developing his training into the core curriculum for University MBA programs.
Â
Jon is the past President of Professional Speakers Australia and is the current Licensee of TEDxMelbourne. He selects and preps all speakers personally for each conference in order to create a true spectacle of sharing and inspiration.
Â
If Jon has any "spare" time, he works with Youth, Youth at Risk and Diversity and Inclusion programs of major international organizations.
Connect with Jon:
In This Episode We Canvas:
TEDx is a place for people who are doing some remarkable things in their area of expertise and are looking to share their ideas and visions with the rest of the world. Jon shares some insights regarding the vibes and the addictive quality of the support and the energy you get from exchanging ideas in a setting thatâs proven to be highly stimulating.
âThere is a genuine interest in helping each other! And so this is really⊠a strong sense of community - how do we support each other through these grand visions that we all holdâ - Jon Yeo
Jon is a huge believer in the fact that you can make a big difference in the world by doing accumulating small gestures you volunteer every day over an extended period of time. It is a belief that he acquired through his upbringing and thereâs an entire TEDx talk that he made a while back centered around this idea.
âSmall things can make a big difference.â - Jon Yeo
In our introduction, weâve mentioned that Jon is well-known for being able to articulate complex things simply. But heâs often encountered a mindset that people feel there needs to be something more to the story. Like we somehow expect that complexity itself adds value. He reflects on the universal and effective nature of first principles and how we can use them to build momentum.
âIf you think about first principles, none of those are complex. Yet theyâre all universally and infinitely effective. I think people donât want to think about first principles. Mostly because it takes a lot of time, it takes a lot of effort and sometimes itâs confronting⊠And itâs that⊠resistance... that causes that momentum to be lost because we spend all our effort trying to break our inertia, rather than all our effort optimizing around that momentum.â - Jon Yeo
This was a unique experience for us to get valuable insight into what makes a strong TEDx Talk and Jon was very generous and honest in his response.
âIs that talk, first of all, something that everyoneâs talking about, no oneâs talking about, or someone is talking about it but in a unique way⊠Itâs that third one Iâm looking for.â - Jon Yeo
In order to get your story out there, you obviously need to have a strong position. But Jon also recognizes the necessity of creating attention and how you also need to invest your time and resources in an effort to develop a disproportionate amount of it.
âIf you have a great idea itâs not of any help to anyone if it doesnât create attention. And a disproportionate amount of attention. If you think of great brands that always do that sort of thing, youâve got⊠Elon Musk and his tweets, Richard Branson and his PR stunts⊠Once you know that you need to do that,... the other two factors are momentum and timing.â - Jon Yeo
Jon believes that each and every one of us needs to draw strength from and own a tendency to be the best person they can be. The consequences for not doing so can be dire for our growth and progress which he wonderfully explores in the relationship between three very important factors - Potential, Opportunities, and Momentum.
âWeâre undermining our potential. And if weâre undermining our potential, weâre undermining opportunities. And if weâre undermining our opportunities weâre undermining our momentum.â - Jon Yeo
During the talk, Jon mentioned that we have a moral obligation to do our best, but he also recognizes that doing our best needs to encompass a notion of giving and sharing with others. We must not allow ourselves to be consumed by self-serving values.
âI donât think that our value to the community and the way that we will get rewarded is by self-serving attitudes and values. The only way humanity and community and culture and business and everything else we believe is important to us can really grow and amplify is if weâre constantly investing in that bigger picture.â - Jon Yeo
Jonâs Message of Inspired Evolution
Oh, how I loved talking to Jon and what a blessing this conversation has been! His analytical mind combined with a tendency to strive towards the simple provided me with a ton of inspiration and I hope they will inspire you as well. This has been a wonderful conversation about momentum and finding a unique voice that will help you tell your story in a way that affects the world for the better.
âStay the path. Believe that when you see something and that it lights you up - that is the right way. Be willing to that in order to have something new you have to give something up as well.â - Jon Yeo
Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/inspiredevolution.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4.7
4242 ratings
Our guest for this week is Jon Yeo, Speaker, Executive Coach and the Co-Founder of TEDx Melbourne.
About Jon
Jon is an executive coach who helps leaders share strategic messages in meaningful ways. Heâs well-known for his ability to articulate the complex simply and he works with CEOs and senior leadership teams to build trust, empathy, and engagement in an increasingly distracted world.
He works with many famous national and international brands such as SAP, Princess Cruises, Auspost, MYOB, Deakin University, DHHS and DET. Jon is currently developing his training into the core curriculum for University MBA programs.
Â
Jon is the past President of Professional Speakers Australia and is the current Licensee of TEDxMelbourne. He selects and preps all speakers personally for each conference in order to create a true spectacle of sharing and inspiration.
Â
If Jon has any "spare" time, he works with Youth, Youth at Risk and Diversity and Inclusion programs of major international organizations.
Connect with Jon:
In This Episode We Canvas:
TEDx is a place for people who are doing some remarkable things in their area of expertise and are looking to share their ideas and visions with the rest of the world. Jon shares some insights regarding the vibes and the addictive quality of the support and the energy you get from exchanging ideas in a setting thatâs proven to be highly stimulating.
âThere is a genuine interest in helping each other! And so this is really⊠a strong sense of community - how do we support each other through these grand visions that we all holdâ - Jon Yeo
Jon is a huge believer in the fact that you can make a big difference in the world by doing accumulating small gestures you volunteer every day over an extended period of time. It is a belief that he acquired through his upbringing and thereâs an entire TEDx talk that he made a while back centered around this idea.
âSmall things can make a big difference.â - Jon Yeo
In our introduction, weâve mentioned that Jon is well-known for being able to articulate complex things simply. But heâs often encountered a mindset that people feel there needs to be something more to the story. Like we somehow expect that complexity itself adds value. He reflects on the universal and effective nature of first principles and how we can use them to build momentum.
âIf you think about first principles, none of those are complex. Yet theyâre all universally and infinitely effective. I think people donât want to think about first principles. Mostly because it takes a lot of time, it takes a lot of effort and sometimes itâs confronting⊠And itâs that⊠resistance... that causes that momentum to be lost because we spend all our effort trying to break our inertia, rather than all our effort optimizing around that momentum.â - Jon Yeo
This was a unique experience for us to get valuable insight into what makes a strong TEDx Talk and Jon was very generous and honest in his response.
âIs that talk, first of all, something that everyoneâs talking about, no oneâs talking about, or someone is talking about it but in a unique way⊠Itâs that third one Iâm looking for.â - Jon Yeo
In order to get your story out there, you obviously need to have a strong position. But Jon also recognizes the necessity of creating attention and how you also need to invest your time and resources in an effort to develop a disproportionate amount of it.
âIf you have a great idea itâs not of any help to anyone if it doesnât create attention. And a disproportionate amount of attention. If you think of great brands that always do that sort of thing, youâve got⊠Elon Musk and his tweets, Richard Branson and his PR stunts⊠Once you know that you need to do that,... the other two factors are momentum and timing.â - Jon Yeo
Jon believes that each and every one of us needs to draw strength from and own a tendency to be the best person they can be. The consequences for not doing so can be dire for our growth and progress which he wonderfully explores in the relationship between three very important factors - Potential, Opportunities, and Momentum.
âWeâre undermining our potential. And if weâre undermining our potential, weâre undermining opportunities. And if weâre undermining our opportunities weâre undermining our momentum.â - Jon Yeo
During the talk, Jon mentioned that we have a moral obligation to do our best, but he also recognizes that doing our best needs to encompass a notion of giving and sharing with others. We must not allow ourselves to be consumed by self-serving values.
âI donât think that our value to the community and the way that we will get rewarded is by self-serving attitudes and values. The only way humanity and community and culture and business and everything else we believe is important to us can really grow and amplify is if weâre constantly investing in that bigger picture.â - Jon Yeo
Jonâs Message of Inspired Evolution
Oh, how I loved talking to Jon and what a blessing this conversation has been! His analytical mind combined with a tendency to strive towards the simple provided me with a ton of inspiration and I hope they will inspire you as well. This has been a wonderful conversation about momentum and finding a unique voice that will help you tell your story in a way that affects the world for the better.
âStay the path. Believe that when you see something and that it lights you up - that is the right way. Be willing to that in order to have something new you have to give something up as well.â - Jon Yeo
Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/inspiredevolution.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
917 Listeners
54 Listeners
1,923 Listeners
256 Listeners
459 Listeners
696 Listeners
865 Listeners
394 Listeners
115 Listeners
280 Listeners
569 Listeners
146 Listeners
468 Listeners
31 Listeners
59 Listeners