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Most entrepreneurs were trained to win through competition, not collaboration. In this episode, Dan Sullivan and Shannon Waller show how the rules of improv—no one in charge, “yes, and,” and always supporting your partner—create transformative business partnerships, helping you think on your feet, combine unique strengths, and co‑create new value that competitors simply can’t copy.
Here’s some of what you’ll learn in this episode:
Show Notes:
Strategic Coach® has always taken a theatrical approach to business, with a clear structure for entrepreneurs to bring their own content and breakthroughs.
Thinking about your thinking lets you compare experiences, spot patterns, and create better solutions than you’ve had before.
When you combine past experiences in new ways, you generate fresh ideas and opportunities that didn’t exist on their own.
At Coach, the workshop tools may stay the same, but what each entrepreneur focuses on and transforms is totally unpredictable.
Great coaching means being comfortable with anything participants say or ask and using it as raw material for progress.
Your work life and personal life work best when they collaborate instead of compete, supporting the same future.
Most entrepreneurs grow up in a world of pure competition and have to consciously shift into collaboration.
At the highest level, successful companies collaborate with other successful companies to create a “third thing” for shared clients.
This “third thing” is a new value creation that competitors can’t copy because they don’t know how it was created.
In improv and in collaboration, no one is the boss; each partner brings different strengths and has equal status.
The first rule of improv is to say yes to any new idea your partner brings instead of debating or analyzing it to death.
The second rule of improv is to actively support your partner’s progress by adding value to what they’ve started.
Powerful collaborators stay alert, curious, responsive, and resourceful so they can build on what’s happening in real time.
Collaboration dies when your partner doesn’t respond, fails to comment, opposes your idea, or refuses to contribute to it.
The best collaborative days often come from letting go of rigid plans and following the energy of the group’s best ideas.
Being a great collaborator means arriving prepared with a “quiver” of experiences and examples you can draw on in the moment.
You can strengthen your improv muscle by asking unpredictable, high‑value questions rather than trying to have all the answers.
Resources:
Casting Not Hiring by Dan Sullivan and Jeffrey Madoff
Thinking About Your Thinking by Dan Sullivan
Unique Ability®
Yes, And by Kelly Leonard and Tom Yorton
By Dan Sullivan and Shannon Waller4.6
127127 ratings
Most entrepreneurs were trained to win through competition, not collaboration. In this episode, Dan Sullivan and Shannon Waller show how the rules of improv—no one in charge, “yes, and,” and always supporting your partner—create transformative business partnerships, helping you think on your feet, combine unique strengths, and co‑create new value that competitors simply can’t copy.
Here’s some of what you’ll learn in this episode:
Show Notes:
Strategic Coach® has always taken a theatrical approach to business, with a clear structure for entrepreneurs to bring their own content and breakthroughs.
Thinking about your thinking lets you compare experiences, spot patterns, and create better solutions than you’ve had before.
When you combine past experiences in new ways, you generate fresh ideas and opportunities that didn’t exist on their own.
At Coach, the workshop tools may stay the same, but what each entrepreneur focuses on and transforms is totally unpredictable.
Great coaching means being comfortable with anything participants say or ask and using it as raw material for progress.
Your work life and personal life work best when they collaborate instead of compete, supporting the same future.
Most entrepreneurs grow up in a world of pure competition and have to consciously shift into collaboration.
At the highest level, successful companies collaborate with other successful companies to create a “third thing” for shared clients.
This “third thing” is a new value creation that competitors can’t copy because they don’t know how it was created.
In improv and in collaboration, no one is the boss; each partner brings different strengths and has equal status.
The first rule of improv is to say yes to any new idea your partner brings instead of debating or analyzing it to death.
The second rule of improv is to actively support your partner’s progress by adding value to what they’ve started.
Powerful collaborators stay alert, curious, responsive, and resourceful so they can build on what’s happening in real time.
Collaboration dies when your partner doesn’t respond, fails to comment, opposes your idea, or refuses to contribute to it.
The best collaborative days often come from letting go of rigid plans and following the energy of the group’s best ideas.
Being a great collaborator means arriving prepared with a “quiver” of experiences and examples you can draw on in the moment.
You can strengthen your improv muscle by asking unpredictable, high‑value questions rather than trying to have all the answers.
Resources:
Casting Not Hiring by Dan Sullivan and Jeffrey Madoff
Thinking About Your Thinking by Dan Sullivan
Unique Ability®
Yes, And by Kelly Leonard and Tom Yorton

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