Fuse Chamber에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 Fuse Chamber 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.
The TechSurge: Deep Tech VC Podcast explores the frontiers of emerging tech, venture capital, and business. For entrepreneurs, investors, tech professionals, or anyone interested in where technology is headed next. Presented by Celesta Capital, and hosted by Celesta Founding Partners Nic Brathwaite, Michael Marks, and Sriram Viswanathan. Join us as we examine the next major tech cycle, uncover emerging global tech hubs, and analyze where VC investment dollars are headed. Tune in to hear directly from Silicon Valley leaders, daring new founders, and visionary thinkers. Past guests on the podcast and TechSurge Live summits include Kara Swisher, Vinod Khosla, former PepsiCo CEO Indra Nooyi, Micron CEO Sanjay Mehrotra, and others. Each discussion delves into the intersection of technology advancement, market dynamics, and the founder journey, offering insights into the vast opportunities and complex challenges ahead. Episode topics include AI, data center transformation, blockchain, cyber security, healthcare innovation, VC investment trends, tips for first-time founders, and more. New episodes release every two weeks. Visit techsurgepodcast.com for more details and to sign up for our newsletter and other content!
Fuse Chamber에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 Fuse Chamber 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.
There’s one thing that we’re not teaching our young people any more - in school or beyond - and that’s how to persist when things get difficult. If there’s a trophy for every participant, if there are no consequences to missing the mark, no negative feedback or criticism…how can you prepare a career in the most competitive segments of human endeavour? What is the single most important quality for any person to possess if they want to get to the very top of their game? Grit.
When asked what people were more likely to make it through the special operations candidate process ‘grit’ was found to be the deciding factor
yes it is important to find work that you love, work that you are passionate about, and it is even more important to know who you serve and why; but there still will be very rough patches.
There will be parts of your work that you hate doing. There will be rejection, criticism, bad press, tough breaks
And then there will be personal setbacks that threaten to throw you off course. Make you want to give up. Give you excuses
There will always be a fight. The secret is to get good at fighting
There’s a saying - don’t wish it were easier, wish you were better
Distinguish between the parts that are in your control, and the parts that are not. If you can’t afford an accountant right now, you are your own bookkeeper. If you have a cold, you can’t sing for 2 weeks. If you broke your thumb, you can’t paint. You can control how you react to these situations. What could you do instead? How could you work around it? What new skill could you learn from this adversity? How could you use your time differently to attack all the things you keep saying you don’t have time for?
Learn to love the fight. If you get good at struggle, and it’s true that ‘the fight is the thing’, notice how you seem better equipped to handle ALL of life’s challenges!
Break big things into smaller things. The minute you hit adversity, set a stretch goal that inspires you. Something that really gets you motivated. Why is it important to do this? And then break that goal into manageable tasks that you can handle each and every day. You don’t have to know how to plan the whole way to your goal either. Just start with tomorrow. What’s the biggest thing you could accomplish in one day that would move you closer to your goal?
Get disciplined. Take massive pride in accomplishing those small goals each day. It is exactly this skill that can get you anything you want in life.
Never let the pressure off. Don’t finish your tasks without making some new ones.
Don’t forget to take a look at where you are at the end of each day
No adversity in your life right now? Find some. Walk to work. Volunteer for hard things. Take a cold shower. Go without screens or internet for 2 days. Fast for 18-24 hours. Add 10% to your workout. Take 10% of your pay check and put it where you can’t get at it.
And then next time, do a little more.
You will have failures. Part of fighting is losing. There will be setbacks and disappointments even as you’re fighting adversity. This is part of the fight.
This is why its so important to make time - every day - to stop, see where you are, what you’ve learned, how you could do better, and what the landscape looks like now. Does your initial plan still make sense? If not, create a new plan for tomorrow. The plan is ever changing.
Fuse Chamber에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 Fuse Chamber 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.
There’s one thing that we’re not teaching our young people any more - in school or beyond - and that’s how to persist when things get difficult. If there’s a trophy for every participant, if there are no consequences to missing the mark, no negative feedback or criticism…how can you prepare a career in the most competitive segments of human endeavour? What is the single most important quality for any person to possess if they want to get to the very top of their game? Grit.
When asked what people were more likely to make it through the special operations candidate process ‘grit’ was found to be the deciding factor
yes it is important to find work that you love, work that you are passionate about, and it is even more important to know who you serve and why; but there still will be very rough patches.
There will be parts of your work that you hate doing. There will be rejection, criticism, bad press, tough breaks
And then there will be personal setbacks that threaten to throw you off course. Make you want to give up. Give you excuses
There will always be a fight. The secret is to get good at fighting
There’s a saying - don’t wish it were easier, wish you were better
Distinguish between the parts that are in your control, and the parts that are not. If you can’t afford an accountant right now, you are your own bookkeeper. If you have a cold, you can’t sing for 2 weeks. If you broke your thumb, you can’t paint. You can control how you react to these situations. What could you do instead? How could you work around it? What new skill could you learn from this adversity? How could you use your time differently to attack all the things you keep saying you don’t have time for?
Learn to love the fight. If you get good at struggle, and it’s true that ‘the fight is the thing’, notice how you seem better equipped to handle ALL of life’s challenges!
Break big things into smaller things. The minute you hit adversity, set a stretch goal that inspires you. Something that really gets you motivated. Why is it important to do this? And then break that goal into manageable tasks that you can handle each and every day. You don’t have to know how to plan the whole way to your goal either. Just start with tomorrow. What’s the biggest thing you could accomplish in one day that would move you closer to your goal?
Get disciplined. Take massive pride in accomplishing those small goals each day. It is exactly this skill that can get you anything you want in life.
Never let the pressure off. Don’t finish your tasks without making some new ones.
Don’t forget to take a look at where you are at the end of each day
No adversity in your life right now? Find some. Walk to work. Volunteer for hard things. Take a cold shower. Go without screens or internet for 2 days. Fast for 18-24 hours. Add 10% to your workout. Take 10% of your pay check and put it where you can’t get at it.
And then next time, do a little more.
You will have failures. Part of fighting is losing. There will be setbacks and disappointments even as you’re fighting adversity. This is part of the fight.
This is why its so important to make time - every day - to stop, see where you are, what you’ve learned, how you could do better, and what the landscape looks like now. Does your initial plan still make sense? If not, create a new plan for tomorrow. The plan is ever changing.
As an icebreaker, I frequently ask people - what would you do if you won the lottery? People give answers that reflect what they would do if there were no constraints or demands put on their time, location or finances This is where people describe their visionary work, OR the downtime things they would do to feel free, relaxed. My question is - ok so why not do it anyway? We assume we have constraints, and that money or some other windfall is an obstacle to getting started. You can get started with 10 dollars and 10 minutes - probably even less I’ve noticed that when you approach the world with a service mindset, things like money and time tend to get sorted out at exactly the right moment You need to trust in the importance of your dreams, and how working on your dream goals attracts the right help and opportunity into your life - simply because your passion will be infectious…
Despite your most disciplined attempts to show up every single day, inviting the muse, yet not leaving things to dumb luck, you sit down for your daily ritual, and nothing comes. This is made all the worse by a looming deadline, or being behind in production. So what do you do when you doing everything right, and nothing comes? Let it Happen. Reduce the stress and stigma around having a block. It’s natural Immerse yourself in unrestricted thought Talk with friends, fantasize, argue, debate, discuss Stay immersed in your topic - read, research Don’t resume writing until the ‘spark’ appears…
So you’ve worked it all out - you have a master plan for launching your product….but what if you build it and nobody comes? This happens more than you think It’s important not to measure success against big league players that you’re trying to model. This takes a while, and there’s no such thing as overnight success The best thing you can do is change your approach - experiment with new techniques. The worst thing you can do is change your style, your vision, your unique offering. Find small successes along the way to validate and inspire you. You have to be comfortable with hustle.…
Although we’d like to believe that we have what it takes, sometimes we worry that we’re going to be seen as ‘arrogant’, over-confident or full of ourselves. This alone can keep us from starting. What’s the difference between confidence and arrogance and how can you build the former without seeming like the latter? Limiting Beliefs - concepts of what we are capable of are limited by our fears, which talk to us in sentences that start with ‘you can’t’. Believing in the information to the contrary Arrogance - belief in your abilities and entitlements in ignorance of external information to the contrary Confidence - belief in your abilities and entitlements even in light of external information to the contrary Both limiting beliefs and arrogance can only be destroyed one way - through experience and reflection. The initial spark of belief that surrounds arrogance is important for overcoming limiting beliefs though.…
There are two kinds of habits: good ones and bad ones. So often, we focus on the bad ones that we need to break, but how often do we take the time to focus on the good habits that we have integrated or need to integrate to continuously move us forward? You have to have a habit of having habits :-) Create a prioritized list of of habits you want to have (come on, you know what they are). They could be mindset habits or actual practices Take on no more than 2 or 3 at a time - it could take a few months to habitualize them Make sure your habits roll up to achieving a larger goal, like increasing your audience or revenue.…
The Public Demands more content, more frequently. This seems foreign to many of us as we grew up with a new book, music or movie release from our favourite artists maybe once per year or less. You need to change your mindset to reflect the new virtues and values in the marketplace.
People who achieve everything they set out to do in life are masters of protecting their time. How do they do it? Time is the only thing you can’t reclaim once its been spent Protecting your time is your right and your duty. You must actively and continuously monitor and protect it as you would any priceless resource The biggest challenge is changing your mindset about time. You own your time, no matter where you work or who you have in your life. Only you can dictate how it is spent. Commit to tweaking or leveraging resources to minimize time spent on non valuable things, or find things to cut out altogether.…
Could we flip the script on our thinking about experimentation? Rather than seeing experiments as risky, or as a synonym for failure, we should be embracing experimentation as the fastest way to learn about what works, and what doesn’t.
If you’re making time for creativity, but you find yourself unfocused and unable to stay with it…there are some things that can help. I’m going to keep hammering this one - you have to set aside time To avoid intimidation, set a short timer Set an intention. What is the most important thing to finish in this time slice? Make sure it is in support of the Most Valuable Thing - what will get your product ready to market? What will get you an audition? What will establish you as a professional? What will increase your audience? Don’t worry about right-sizing the timer for the intention. If 10 minutes is too much or too little, fix it later. Adjust the timer or the scope of your intention. Keep your mind focused. If you notice yourself taking on sub tasks or side tasks. Stop. Make a note of them and prioritize and do them LATER Stay vigilant. Meditation can help you notice when you’re going off the rails.…
We all know about the paralysis caused by waiting for the right moment in the right conditions. So why do we continue to do it, and how can we stop? It’s normal, from an evolutionary/survival perspective, to want safety and certainty The need for certainty and safety, however, prevents us taking risks and moving forward boldly - two essential behaviours for artists and entrepreneurs We associate lack of safety - in all its forms - with danger, and that fear paralyzes us; making it extremely difficult to break this pattern. Breaking the patter requires a mindset shift - realize how expensive these desires and fears are. Then take small but meaningful steps to provide yourself with proof that nothing bad will happen if you move forward without absolute certainty and safety.…
By now, we know that inspiration is as much about showing up every day, as part of a routine, and doing the work of writing - even if it is for the wastebasket. But there are times when inspiration just hits. Are there things you can do that create fertile ground for inspiration? There are….and they exist in the everyday. You have to make time and clear space in your head. You have to be ready to receive Then, you have to put yourself in situations and conditions where inspiring things are likely to be or to happen Get into nature, listen to conversations, imagine yourself in someone else’s life, especially the watershed moments. Immerse yourself in novel experiences. Invite new discussions and hear other people’s stories.…
Today's episode is an impromptu musing on the state of coaching, for those of you who feel like you might benefit from it, or are yourselves in the coaching business. in many ways, its a bit like being a therapist. People should find a good coach that is a balance of engaged and removed, that specializes in or can tailor an action plan to your particular learning style, and that they trust and like. Once you've found that, I love to see clients eat up the learning. So often, I take for granted what I've learned, how far I've come personally, and how hard I've worked for the success I have. I forget what it's like to be new; to have your eyes opened to a world of limitless potential. But sometimes, it just doesn't happen that way. What continues to surprise me is how often people dive in, seem committed, seem ready to make a serious mark in the world...and then just fade away from the teaching. It makes me think that perhaps coaching is a nonsense profession...but then I remember that we have always had elders, mentors, jedi masters...people who pass down the wisdom accumulated from a life of disciplined practice. This is meaningful work for me, and its hard to accept that sometimes, people just aren't ready. They are not yet willing to commit to the time and effort it takes to transform. I'll never forget my public school teacher, Gerald Smialek, who taught us kids the phrase "you can lead a horse to water, but you can't make it drink". That continues to reveal layers of meaning to me, even to this day. Enjoy the episode. I hope you're learning lots and enjoying the journey!…
As i work with many leaders in development, there is one thing that trips up more people than any other factor - and with each passing year, I see more and more of it. I call it FABJ - Fear, Anger, Bitterness, and Jealousy - but these things are all byproducts of one thing. Feeling not good enough. We all suffer from these feelings, but if you are a leader....you have to learn how to handle or manage them.…
Most deeply creative people know that you simply have to show up ever day - inspiration will never just come and pay a visit. So how do you show up every day? You schedule. it. In this episode, I discuss my daily routine for capturing creative thoughts and then filtering them and refining them into finished product. Lots of tips and tricks in this one - hope you find it valuable!…
As someone with a creative offering, I’d like to wait until my product is perfect before I unleash it on the world. Is that really so bad? There are two big problems with waiting. One is that it fosters fear, and uncertainty, and the other is that it lets other people slip in the gap and beat you to market No matter what happens, you have to focus on go. Leap. Innovation requires that you are constantly shipping product to the market. Finished is better than perfect.…
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