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Jeremie Kubicek

Episode: 89

Today on the Servant Leadership Podcast, we welcome Jeremie Kubicek, co-founder of GiANT Worldwide and one of the most recognized thought leaders in the leadership development space. Jeremie is a Wall Street Journal bestselling author whose work has shaped how executives, teams, and organizations around the world think about influence, communication, and self-awareness. His books, including 5 Voices, 5 Gears, and The 100X Leader, have given leaders practical, visual frameworks to become more effective at home and at work. His newest book, The Voice-Driven Leader, takes everything he’s learned about developing people and distills it into a modern playbook for leaders who want to bring out the best in the voices around them. In this episode, Jeremie unpacks how the Peace Index can transform the way you lead yourself before leading others, and what a modern, balanced approach to servant leadership actually looks like in practice. Join us as Jeremie shares why great leaders learn to both challenge and support the people around them and how great cultures are built by making sure every voice is heard.

Prev Episode

No Whining Rule

0:00
In my world, I don't allow general

0:01
whining. If anyone generally whines, I'm

0:04
like, "Nope." But if you're specifically

0:07
frustrated, I'm okay with it.

0:09
Just don't generally whine. So, the

0:11
Peace Index gives you an opportunity to

0:13
go, where are you off?

Introduction to Jeremie Kubicek

0:20
Today on the Servant Leadership Podcast,

0:22
we welcome Jeremy Kubichek, co-founder

0:24
of Giant Worldwide and one of the most

0:26
recognized thought leaders in the

0:28
leadership development space. Jeremy is

0:30
a Wall Street Journal best-selling

0:31
author whose work has shaped how

0:33
executives, teams, and organizations

0:35
around the world think about influence,

0:38
communication, and self-awareness. His

0:40
books, including Five Voices, Five

0:43
Gears, and The 100X Leader, have given

0:45
leaders practical visual frameworks to

0:48
become more effective at home and at

0:50
work. His newest book, The Voicedriven

0:52
Leader, takes everything he's learned

0:54
about developing people and distills it

0:56
into a modern playbook for leaders who

0:58
want to bring out the best in the voices

0:01:00
around them. In this episode, Jeremy

0:01:03
unpacks how the Peace Index can

0:01:04
transform the way you lead yourself

0:01:06
before leading others, and what a

0:01:08
modern, balanced approach to servant

0:01:10
leadership actually looks like in

0:01:12
practice. Join us as Jeremy shares why

0:01:15
great leaders learn to both challenge

0:01:17
and support the people around them and

0:01:18
how great cultures are built by making

0:01:20
sure every voice is heard.

Chris Welcomes Jeremie

0:01:23
Chris, how you doing? Good to be here.

0:01:25
I am so excited. You've become a thought

0:01:27
leader in the leadership space, which is

0:01:29
a hard thing to become, but people look

0:01:31
to you for a lot of leadership advice.

Becoming a Thought Leader

0:01:34
Uh, how does somebody become a thought

0:01:36
leader in this space like yourself where

0:01:38
tons of people are looking to you for

0:01:40
that kind of advice?

0:01:42
I think that's a funny comment, the

0:01:44
thought leader. It's kind of silly in my

0:01:46
mind because it's like uh I think the

0:01:49
reality is there's there's manufactured

0:01:51
thought leadership.

Authentic vs. Manufactured Leadership

0:01:53
Uh and I was in that world forever. I

0:01:55
used to own John Maxwell's companies. I

0:01:57
worked with Leadercast. I built Catalyst

0:01:59
conferences. I was around thought

0:02:01
thought leaders all the time. And and it

0:02:04
was like, okay, you've got a stick and

0:02:07
you've got you've done a really good job

0:02:09
of marketing. That's what the

0:02:11
manufactured thought leader is. Okay. Uh

0:02:14
authentic thought leadership is passion.

0:02:17
It's interest. It's like and that's what

0:02:20
I am. I'm more in the authentic. My my

0:02:22
point is is that I truly want to

0:02:25
transform people.

Transforming People

0:02:26
I truly want to help people. So, um I

0:02:29
just kept finding and seeing uh people

0:02:32
talking about all these concepts, but

0:02:34
they were just missing it. They weren't

0:02:36
understanding it. And so, I like to make

0:02:38
things super simple. simple enough for a

0:02:40
13-year-old to understand

0:02:41
so that it but powerful enough to change

0:02:44
people. And that's what I've done. I've

0:02:46
just been creating content and ways to

0:02:49
take complex things and make them

0:02:50
simple. And so for that, you get called

0:02:53
a thought leader or you get called, you

0:02:55
know, whatever.

New Book: The Voice Driven Leader

0:02:56
I love that. One of the things that's

0:02:58
interesting and it's convenient having

0:03:00
you on here, uh I think your newest book

0:03:02
talks a little bit about how to develop

0:03:05
uh leaders and how to develop people

0:03:07
into being great servant leaders. talk

0:03:09
about the new book that you have that

0:03:11
just came out.

0:03:12
Yeah. Yeah. So, it's the idea is called

0:03:14
the voice driven leader. So, I used to

0:03:16
live in Russia. I've lived in in a lot

0:03:18
of places around the world. And so, I

0:03:19
lived in Moscow and I learned the

0:03:21
language. So,

Speaking the Right Language

0:03:25
I'm joking. So, if you don't speak

0:03:27
Russian, but if you did speak Russian

0:03:29
and that was your first language, you

0:03:32
would respond differently. So, when when

0:03:33
you speak someone's first language, they

0:03:35
lean in like, "Oh, you get me. you

0:03:38
understand me? And they become more

0:03:40
comfortable. Well, the same is true with

0:03:42
leadership. Uh most of the leadership

0:03:45
that historical leadership is, hey, I do

0:03:48
it my way, you my way of the highway.

0:03:51
Figure it out. If you're on my team, get

0:03:53
used to my voice. Get used to my style.

0:03:55
Well, that's not voice driven

0:03:57
leadership. That's just like power

0:03:59
leadership. It's domination ultimately

0:04:02
versus I care so much that I'm gonna

0:04:05
learn what your personality is, Chris.

0:04:07
And when I if I if I know you are a like

0:04:11
in the five voices language that we

0:04:13
created, if I know that you're a

0:04:14
creative

Servant Leadership Approach

0:04:15
or if I know that you're a guardian,

0:04:18
then I'm going to speak your language.

0:04:19
I'm not going to force you to speak

0:04:21
connector, my language.

0:04:24
So by yielding servant leadership is

0:04:27
like I'm I'm going to fight for your

0:04:28
highest possible good. That means I'm

0:04:30
going to learn how you learn. I'm going

0:04:33
to know who you are so I can develop you

0:04:37
effectively.

Growth and Engagement

0:04:38
And that is a key component to to

0:04:42
growth. It's that most people stop

0:04:45
growing their organizations because

0:04:47
they're capped with their people because

0:04:49
most of their people are compliant.

0:04:51
They're not engaged

0:04:52
and they're not engaged because you're

0:04:54
not speaking their language first.

0:04:56
You're forcing them to speak yours.

Learning Others' Voices

0:04:58
So, how what are some basic steps to

0:05:00
help learn other people's voices?

0:05:04
So, the first is you have to start with

0:05:06
your own. You have to learn your own.

0:05:07
So, you can go to the five number

0:05:09
fivevoices.com. So, fivevoices.com gives

0:05:12
you you can go and find your voice. What

0:05:15
what's your personality truly? What's

0:05:16
your wiring? and it's a simpler version

0:05:18
of MyersBriggs or the Big Five. It's so

0:05:22
much easier language to understand.

0:05:24
Well, once you know, oh my gosh, I'm a

0:05:27
connector, huh? Yeah, that's actually

0:05:29
me. Then you get to know yourself, then

0:05:32
you get curious about, I wonder what

0:05:33
Chris is. I wonder what my wife is. I

0:05:36
wonder what my kids are. Oh my gosh. And

0:05:39
then you start seeing how you've been

0:05:41
missing people

Curiosity and Self-Awareness

0:05:43
only because you've been speaking the

0:05:45
wrong language. even speaking your

0:05:46
language, not theirs. And so it starts

0:05:49
with curiosity

0:05:51
and it starts with deep learning and

0:05:52
self-awareness. And then when you become

0:05:55
so self-aware, if you know yourself to

0:05:57
lead yourself, you'll start knowing

0:05:58
other people to lead them as well.

Five Voices Test

0:06:00
Wow. Okay. So, we'll make sure even for

0:06:04
those listening to throw in some

0:06:05
descriptions so that people can uh can

0:06:08
go take that. It's a test. Just like a

0:06:09
basic test.

0:06:10
It's a it's a it's a it's free.

0:06:12
Cool.

0:06:12
Fivevoices.com.

Five Gears Concept

0:06:13
I love that. Uh, one of the things and

0:06:16
it kind of leads into a topic that I

0:06:18
read of yours that absolutely rocked my

0:06:20
world and it was in the five gears

0:06:22
concept uh or book and it was about

0:06:24
being present and productive and how

0:06:27
some leaders are overproductive and

0:06:29
underpresent and it kind of just went

0:06:30
into all of that. Talk about how like

0:06:34
the five gear stuff helped lead you to

0:06:35
what you're doing now with the voices.

Practical Metaphors

0:06:39
Well, so every all of my books have some

0:06:42
hook or some metaphor that is simple

0:06:45
enough that you can use and practical

0:06:47
enough. And what we kept finding was um

0:06:49
we would have uh conversations with

0:06:51
people and they were too they were

0:06:53
intense at the wrong time or they're

0:06:56
disconnected at the wrong time. So I

0:06:57
started breaking down huh what's a

0:07:00
natural rhythm to our everyday life?

0:07:02
Like uh we all woke up this morning, we

0:07:05
all drove somewhere. we all are meeting

0:07:08
with people. So what I did is I just

0:07:11
broke down a typical calendar of day to

0:07:14
go and and then started to break down

0:07:16
that well there's actual natural

0:07:17
rhythms. So then I put it in the

0:07:19
metaphor of a stick shift, a manual

0:07:21
stick shift driving a car because people

0:07:23
know there's a manual and there's a

0:07:26
automatic and and if you sh you you

0:07:29
ultimately want to be automatic in

0:07:31
shifting gears. So there's a time for

0:07:34
everything. There's a fifth gear, which

0:07:35
is focus mode when you're in the zone.

0:07:37
There's a fourth gear when you're doing

0:07:39
multitask

0:07:41
emails and phone calls and

0:07:43
conversations, you know, task list.

0:07:46
There's a third gear. There's a natural

0:07:48
time for social of just shooting the

0:07:51
breeze. Hey, how's it going, Chris? How

0:07:53
you doing, man? How's your weekend? It

0:07:55
And then there's a time for second gear,

0:07:57
going deep and connecting

0:07:58
connect mode. And then there's a time

0:08:00
for recharge where you just need to

0:08:03
recharge. unplug, go on a walk, read a

0:08:06
book, whatever it is that your recharge

0:08:08
is. So, there's a natural order, but

0:08:12
most people are miss it and they just

0:08:14
don't understand how to actually put it

0:08:16
all together. So, what and then then

0:08:19
they nag we nag each other and we say

0:08:21
things like, "Chris, you're always on

0:08:23
your phone, man. Man, why can't you get

0:08:25
off your phone?" Well, that's nagging

0:08:28
and it's subjective language. So what

0:08:30
I've been mastering is objectivity.

0:08:33
Objective language actually mitigates

0:08:36
drama and it mitigates pride which

0:08:40
causes drama. So for instance, if if you

0:08:43
um if if I come to you and you walk in

0:08:46
my office and my doors close and I give

0:08:48
you the evil stare of like, "What are

0:08:50
you doing here? I'm busy. Can't you

0:08:53
see?" And you're like, "Oh, I'm so

0:08:54
sorry. I'm so sorry." your door's always

0:08:56
shut and it's hard for me to know when I

0:08:58
need because I need things from you. But

0:09:00
if I instead if I go, "Hey, Chris, I'm

0:09:03
in fifth. Can you give me maybe 20

0:09:06
minutes?" You're like, "Dude, yeah,

0:09:08
great. Hook hook up with me in 20

0:09:11
minutes and let's connect." But you

0:09:13
know, I'm into fifth gear and I've just

0:09:15
used a sign language to do it. Um, if

0:09:19
we're all uh hanging out somewhere at a

0:09:22
restaurant and we're all in third gear

0:09:25
social and you walk in with some Killjoy

0:09:30
uh uh conversation like, "Hey, did you

0:09:32
guys get that email from Mark? What was

0:09:34
he trying to say? I don't get it. Are we

0:09:36
supposed to do?" And you're like, "Dude,

0:09:38
I I'm in third gear. You're in fourth.

0:09:41
You're in the wrong gear at the wrong

0:09:42
time." And so that's the idea of this

0:09:45
like how do you stay in the right gear

0:09:46
at the right time? And most people lose

0:09:49
influence because they don't understand

0:09:51
they're in the wrong gear at the wrong

0:09:52
time. So we just basically put a system

0:09:56
in a sign language for people to be able

0:09:58
to implement with their families or

0:09:59
their team.

Personal Experience with Five Gears

0:10:00
I love that. I think out of all your

0:10:03
content, uh that's the one that I

0:10:06
personally have struggled with and

0:10:07
learned from the most. Um because I can

0:10:10
even think through circumstances where

0:10:12
we've been walking to lunch and people

0:10:13
are talking socially and I'll bring up

0:10:15
work and then in the joke is now that

0:10:18
I'm not allowed to bring up work on the

0:10:20
walks to lunch, right? And it's exactly

0:10:22
it's exactly the the description you

0:10:24
explained.

Objective Language

0:10:26
Yeah. Yeah. So they just instead they

0:10:28
just need to go, "Hey Chris, dude,

0:10:30
chill."

0:10:30
Yeah.

0:10:31
We're in three.

0:10:32
Yeah.

Self-Health of a Leader

0:10:33
So something that that I think your

0:10:35
content has been really helpful for just

0:10:37
in general and it's not just one thing,

0:10:39
it's lots of things is like the

0:10:40
self-health of a leader, right? And you

0:10:43
kind of talk about this from a bunch of

0:10:45
different stuff, uh, a bunch of

0:10:46
different angles. I see over your

0:10:48
shoulder the peace index. Talk about for

0:10:50
our audience the peace index and how

0:10:52
like the the different um I forget what

0:10:55
you call them, but like levels of peace

0:10:57
or types of peace in your life like

0:10:58
actually affect the leader.

Understanding Peace Index

0:11:01
So let me frame it like this first. If

0:11:03
you're if you want to be a person a

0:11:05
servant leader should be a person worth

0:11:08
following,

0:11:09
not have to follow.

0:11:11
Okay. Now that's a really important and

0:11:13
I and I do want to bring up and talk to

0:11:15
you about a massive framework on servant

0:11:17
leadership after we get through peace.

0:11:19
Love it.

0:11:19
But if you u if you want to be someone

0:11:22
that people want to follow, then you you

0:11:25
can't give what you don't possess. You

0:11:26
have to be alive. So, every person has a

0:11:31
peace number over their head and that

0:11:33
number changes every single day and it's

0:11:35
your peace index. And so, today I'm

0:11:39
probably, if I had to guess, I'm

0:11:40
probably about a 92. So, my level of

0:11:43
peace is really high right now.

0:11:45
Partially because I'm going on vacation

0:11:46
next week and I'm super stoked for it.

0:11:49
But 92 is pretty high. But your peace is

0:11:52
basically broken down into five

0:11:54
components. There's um purpose, your

0:11:57
level of purpose, uh your your level of

0:12:00
uh people, peace with your people in

0:12:02
your life, your top 10 people you work

0:12:03
with uh or live with. Uh your place has

0:12:07
a major component to your peace level.

0:12:10
Your provision, what's your earnings,

0:12:12
your income, and then your um personal

0:12:14
health is your indicator. It will tell

0:12:16
you it it's like the dashboard of your

0:12:19
peace. it will tell you and that me and

0:12:21
that's like uh spiritual mental uh

0:12:24
physical kind of your total health. So

0:12:27
the idea is if you have to you need to

0:12:30
know where you're off and most people

0:12:33
like I don't in my world I don't allow

0:12:35
general whining. If anyone generally

0:12:37
whines I'm like nope. But if you're

0:12:40
specifically frustrated I'm okay with

0:12:42
it.

Specific Frustration

0:12:43
Just don't generally whine. So the peace

0:12:45
index gives you an opportunity to go

0:12:47
where are you off? Are you off with

0:12:49
purpose? Are you off of people? Man, I'm

0:12:52
just so frustrated. I'm so mad. Okay,

0:12:54
what is it? Well, my my business is not

0:12:58
going where I wanted it to go. Okay, so

0:13:01
you missed your expectations. Okay, tell

0:13:04
me more. Yeah, and I just don't feel

0:13:06
like I can get it on track and so ah so

0:13:08
that's an existential threat.

Analyzing Peace Components

0:13:11
Is that is that also affecting your

0:13:13
provision? Is your provision low? So

0:13:14
then what I'll do is I'll go through and

0:13:16
analyze one through 100, how's your

0:13:19
purpose? I'm at a 65 today. One through

0:13:23
100, how's your provision? Maybe a 70.

0:13:26
One through 100, how's your uh place,

0:13:29
your spaces and your places you live and

0:13:31
work? Uh 90. Um people, uh 80. Personal

0:13:37
health, I'm feeling a little stress.

Quantifying Peace Index

0:13:41
Okay. So your peace index is being so

0:13:43
all of a sudden you can start to hone in

0:13:45
what's off and now we're using language

0:13:48
that doesn't need a therapist.

0:13:50
You don't have to go to a counsel for

0:13:52
it's just literally going and so now how

0:13:55
do I how do I help you with your

0:13:57
purpose? Is there anything I can do to

0:13:58
help you with purpose? And maybe maybe

0:14:00
not. You know maybe there's other

0:14:02
solutions. But what's great about it is

0:14:04
it helps you quantify and then there's

0:14:07
strategies um to it. And then what I've

0:14:10
done is I've now taken it to a deeper

0:14:12
level. I'm working on this right now of

0:14:14
stress behavior and chronic stress and

0:14:17
where chronic stress stays on. And uh

0:14:20
what I found is cortisol or stress will

0:14:24
show up in any of those areas, but it'll

0:14:27
show up a little differently like

0:14:29
people's stress will will will have a

0:14:32
different effect than existential

0:14:35
purpose stress. And so you have to

0:14:38
understand where you could get taken out

0:14:40
by the the stress and how do you reset

0:14:43
your nervous system is really important

0:14:46
to be again a great leader long term.

Stress and Leadership

0:14:49
Yeah. I mean even thinking about it from

0:14:51
the stress side I I already am excited

0:14:53
to to read about that and hear about

0:14:55
that whenever you come out with it. I

0:14:56
think it's so easy. One of the things I

0:14:58
like about the peace index is that a lot

0:15:00
of people are thinking about things like

0:15:02
faith, family, fun, finances, friends,

0:15:05
and like they're measuring how they're

0:15:06
doing in those areas, right? Just like

0:15:08
anecdotally, but I think the cool part

0:15:09
is how you bring it together and put it

0:15:12
under like this a score, right? And in

0:15:15
the just the way you've done it. I

0:15:18
really really like that and would

0:15:19
encourage people who are listening to

0:15:20
this to even think about their score

0:15:22
every day, you know, almost like a wood

0:15:24
score. people. The people love the piece

0:15:28
and I mean and that's what I that's the

0:15:30
fun part. I just write

0:15:32
I write really simple pathy con concepts

0:15:35
but put it in some sort of a useful

0:15:38
assessment or metaphor. That's the

0:15:41
entire goal. So that that people

0:15:42
remember the hook versus a bunch of

0:15:45
jargon. Right.

Servant Leadership Framework

0:15:46
Yeah. All right. So I have to ask you

0:15:48
said you have uh a modern framework on

0:15:51
servant leadership or re like some extra

0:15:53
thoughts. give us give us those thoughts

0:15:55
sometimes. Okay, I'm let me give you the

0:15:56
framework first and I'm going to tell

0:15:58
you what the dilemma with servant

0:15:59
leadership is and where it usually gets

0:16:02
um it gets pigeon holed. Um so uh

0:16:07
there's two there's a matrix what we

0:16:09
built called the support challenge

0:16:10
matrix and it's the we think it's the

0:16:12
best matrix for servant leadership

0:16:14
and we've been told that a lot but we we

0:16:17
feel it. Uh so there's two axes x and y

0:16:20
axis. So the the first is there's high

0:16:22
support and there's low support and then

0:16:25
there's high challenge and low

0:16:27
challenge. So if you play that game the

0:16:30
best leaders in the world bring high

0:16:32
support and high challenge. They become

0:16:35
liberators. They become a that's

0:16:37
liberation. So their focus is on

0:16:40
fighting for the highest possible good

0:16:43
to bring high high support but high high

0:16:46
challenge.

High Support and Challenge

0:16:47
And the challenge is important there

0:16:49
because if you bring high support with a

0:16:53
low challenge, you kind of hint a lot

0:16:56
and there's a lot of kumbaya and it

0:16:58
sounds like this. Like, hey Chris, how's

0:17:00
it going, man? Good weekend? Yeah, good.

0:17:03
Hey, just checking in. Where are we at

0:17:06
on our, you know, our big event here at

0:17:08
end of April? We all set?

0:17:11
And you're like, yeah, good, good.

0:17:13
That's weird. And then a couple days

0:17:15
later, hey man, I'm just circling back.

0:17:17
I'm just, you know, I got a couple of

0:17:19
questions in there, but I'm just

0:17:21
checking in. Like, I'm afraid to

0:17:23
challenge.

0:17:24
So, I hint

0:17:26
because I'm highly supportive.

0:17:28
So, sometimes

0:17:30
servant leadership can show up and we

0:17:32
call this protection. It's enabling. So,

0:17:36
protectors bring high support and low

0:17:38
challenge.

True Servant Leadership

0:17:40
True servant leadership is I am so for

0:17:43
you, but I'm going to fight for your

0:17:45
highest possible good so that I hold you

0:17:48
accountable to the things we all agree

0:17:49
upon.

0:17:50
That's liberation. That's really servant

0:17:53
leadership.

0:17:54
But oftentimes what will happen is if

0:17:56
you bring support with low challenge,

0:17:59
then it's like helicopter parenting or

0:18:02
enabling or so you create this culture

0:18:04
of mistrust because uh you kumbaya and

0:18:08
hint And then when the pressure comes

0:18:11
on, you you bring challenge with low

0:18:13
support.

0:18:14
And that's called domination.

0:18:16
Domination is all challenge, no support.

0:18:19
I lived in the former Soviet Union and I

0:18:22
know what that feels like. High high

0:18:23
high challenge, low support. It's like

0:18:26
fear and manipulation to motivate you to

0:18:30
get you to do things. So I was a Dr.

0:18:33
Jackekal Mr. Hyde. I've been a servant

0:18:35
leader for a long time, but I was a Dr.

0:18:37
Jackekal Mr. hide because I would go

0:18:39
high support uh low challenge and all of

0:18:42
a sudden when I wasn't getting it I'd go

0:18:44
down to high challenge low support and

0:18:47
they were like dude what happened to you

0:18:48
and that caused everyone to have like a

0:18:50
caution sign around me for a big part of

0:18:53
my career

Elevating Challenge

0:18:54
and then what I did is I finally learned

0:18:56
how to elevate challenge so now I'm not

0:18:59
afraid to talk about hard things with

0:19:02
people I'm not afraid to talk about um

0:19:05
our goals or or what we agree Dude, and

0:19:07
then I'm not afraid to even talk. Hey,

0:19:09
Chris, can we have a conversation? Dude,

0:19:11
you know I'm for you, right? And because

0:19:14
that's that's the symbol. I'm for you.

0:19:16
I'm about to bring challenge.

0:19:18
But because you know I'm fighting for

0:19:20
your highest possible good, you'll run

0:19:22
through a brick wall for me and with me.

0:19:24
Yeah.

0:19:24
Because I'm not trying to just do it for

0:19:26
myself. I'm fighting for your highest

0:19:28
possible good and our highest possible

0:19:30
good. So, does that make sense?

Practical Steps for Leaders

0:19:33
Yeah, it makes sense. practically, let's

0:19:35
say you're leading a team of five, 10,

0:19:37
20 people, whatever. How do you do that?

0:19:39
Because I I do feel like you've got

0:19:41
these dominating leaders who it's like

0:19:43
my way or the highway. And then you've

0:19:45
got this like

0:19:47
passive leadership, which is like we're

0:19:49
all heading in the right direction,

0:19:51
right? Like like you talked about, but

0:19:55
it's like how what are some steps you

0:19:57
encourage people to take to actually

0:19:58
like raise that challenge when they're

0:20:00
when they're low on the challenge side?

Voice Driven Leadership

0:20:04
So, uh, all right. It's a great

0:20:07
question. The best way to do it is back

0:20:08
to the voice driven leader.

0:20:10
Know who they are.

0:20:12
They're just they're living out of their

0:20:14
voice. So, a pioneer or a guardian, a

0:20:17
pioneers are 7% of the population.

0:20:19
Guardians are 30%. They're thinkers.

0:20:23
So, they're they're thinking rational,

0:20:24
logical. Well, a guardian is going to

0:20:27
want a detail oriented. And a pioneer is

0:20:29
just they're a general. They just bark

0:20:32
orders. Okay. So if you know that about

0:20:35
the the person then you know do they

0:20:37
need challenge right now or support or

0:20:39
what does support look like for a

0:20:41
pioneer is totally different than

0:20:44
support for a nurturer.

Understanding Individual Needs

0:20:46
Nurturer makes up 43% of the population.

0:20:48
They're the quietest voice. 70% are

0:20:51
female. They're teachers usually or

0:20:54
they're nurses or they stay at home

0:20:56
moms. Well, they need support. It's like

0:21:00
differently. So another way to think of

0:21:02
it would be think of it like uh if you

0:21:05
had plants five different types of plant

0:21:08
a pioneer is like a cactus they don't

0:21:10
need much water. Just position them well

0:21:14
and just let them go. So support and

0:21:17
challenge is going to look a little

0:21:18
different. Uh a nurturer is like a

0:21:20
ficus. Uh they need a lot of water and

0:21:22
they need a right level of sunlight. But

0:21:24
when you position them there they they

0:21:27
are beautiful. They're amazing. they

0:21:29
bring a lot of oxygen to the room. So

0:21:32
that's the way that you're doing. You're

0:21:34
like, who do you need more water? Do you

0:21:36
need more sunlight? Do you need more

0:21:38
interaction? What is it that you need to

0:21:41
be blooming correctly? And and what

0:21:43
happens with most leaders is they take a

0:21:45
plant. I'm acting like this is a plant.

0:21:48
And like, um, all right, I got a we got

0:21:50
a new plant. We got them off of Indeed.

0:21:52
Um, great. We got them. All right, good.

0:21:54
Got them. We put them underneath. And

0:21:56
then they throw the card. The card tells

0:21:58
you exactly how to water and take care

0:22:00
of that plant. Most people take that

0:22:02
card and they just throw it away.

0:22:04
And so then a leader will take a plant,

0:22:06
put it underneath a desk, doesn't do

0:22:08
anything. And then they pull it out six

0:22:10
months later and they're like, "Golly,

0:22:12
plants these days, you can't find a good

0:22:14
plant,

0:22:15
and they go back to Indeed and try to

0:22:17
get find another good plant." Like, no,

0:22:19
you have to develop them. And the card

0:22:21
tells you exactly what kind of water

0:22:24
they need. So the five voices is your

0:22:27
plant card

0:22:28
to learn do they need more support or

0:22:30
more challenge and a servant leader is

0:22:33
focused on them to develop them based on

0:22:36
who they are not just forcing them to do

0:22:39
who I am. That in our view is the best

0:22:43
way to do servant leadership.

Impact of AI on Leadership

0:22:44
I love that. And I I know the answer to

0:22:47
this next question might be that it

0:22:49
comes back to the voices but I'm

0:22:51
curious, right? you've got all these

0:22:53
people who are going to be affected by

0:22:56
AI, right? And sometimes that

0:22:59
challenging might come across where

0:23:01
people are maybe changing how they would

0:23:04
normally respond because they're uh

0:23:06
defensive and worried and it goes back

0:23:09
to the stress and maybe the anxiety that

0:23:10
they're feeling, right, related to their

0:23:12
work. H how do you think leaders can

0:23:15
best help build up that trust that being

0:23:18
a great servant leader does build

0:23:20
knowing that they also want to challenge

0:23:22
people to move into the future for their

0:23:24
good and for the company's good while

0:23:26
not making them think that they're going

0:23:28
away?

Hyperpersonalization with AI

0:23:30
Well, I actually have a solution to

0:23:31
this. It's funny. We have we built five

0:23:33
voices AI. We basically if you take the

0:23:37
if you if everyone on your team has

0:23:39
taken the voices then you can basically

0:23:42
add five voices AI it knows so it

0:23:45
already knows Chris and so when Chris

0:23:47
shows up and I go hey how do I connect

0:23:50
with Chris better or can you read this

0:23:53
email that I got from Chris and tell me

0:23:55
well remember Chris is a guardian here's

0:23:57
what he's looking for

0:23:59
and I go oh can you write a response to

0:24:01
him based on who he is it writes it for

0:24:04
you. Now, I'm using hyperpersonalization

0:24:08
to be more effective to team leadership.

0:24:10
Or if I want to do a performance review

0:24:12
to a nurturer and I've got some

0:24:13
challenging things to say, how do I tell

0:24:16
Susan that about here's the performance

0:24:18
review I want? Can you tailor it to her?

0:24:21
All of a sudden, it crafts and it

0:24:23
personalizes, customizes. And I think

0:24:26
this is the direction we're heading is

0:24:28
like because of AI, we can

0:24:30
hyperpersonalize. There's there's not an

0:24:32
excuse for us to miss it.

0:24:34
relationally.

0:24:35
Yeah,

0:24:36
it's like good night. It gives us all

0:24:38
the clues.

Using AI in Leadership

24:40
We just have to execute on

24:41
it.

24:43
And so that's how that's how I'm using

24:44
that's that's partially a way we're

24:45
using AI.

Visuals in Leadership Style

24:47
I like that. One one of the things that

24:50
I think is unique about your leadership

24:52
style from the outside. And you may

24:54
decide this isn't true, but what I've

24:57
noticed is you use a lot of uh awesome

25:00
hooks, but also a lot of visuals. Um,

25:03
I've seen you create tons of visuals

25:04
versus like trying to write it down in

25:07
like your step five-step process. That

25:09
doesn't seem to be so much how you've

25:10
taught and how people are learning from

25:13
you. So, talk about how you developed

25:16
that skill set and that style because it

25:19
it's been impactful on me.

21st Century Learning

25:19
Yeah. So, it's it's truly um interesting

25:21
that the 21st century learning um is

25:25
different with everything is visual. I

25:27
mean, these little devices, uh, these

25:29
phones, uh, it's like it's it's short,

25:33
sweet, to the point, but what we found

25:35
is you have to create, um, a visual that

25:38
people can remember because they're not

25:40
going to read anymore

25:41
because people just don't read anymore

25:43
truly. I mean, the the you can the

25:45
statistics show it. So therefore, if

25:48
you're still doing bullet points and

25:50
outlines and the traditional, no one's

25:53
going to remember it. So we have to take

25:55
one big idea and put it into a visual

25:59
that I can anchor it to and then train

26:01
you on. So if I go back to the gears and

26:02
go, "Hey Chris, fifth gear's focus,

26:05
fourth this task, third is social,

26:07
second's connect, first is recharge, you

26:10
can get it. Now you can call plays. Now

26:12
you can look at people and go, hey,

26:15
so that's a visual example." Or if I use

26:19
a visual tool like the peace index, I've

26:21
given you numbers. I've given you

26:23
symbols. I've given you one visual and

26:24
you can get that pretty quickly and

26:26
you'll remember it. Well, if you teach

26:28
it, you learn. That's the the key. If

26:31
you can teach it to someone else, you

26:34
learn yourself.

Teaching for Scalability

26:35
And then if you teach it, it scales.

26:38
So then if it's teachable, then it's

26:41
scalable and then it's sustainable. And

26:44
that's the key that we we bring to to

26:47
the world. And it's just amazing how

26:49
many people you think would not who

26:51
would get it and pick it up. So we work

26:53
inside the large companies and small

26:55
companies but Google's to the you know

26:58
biogens down to small companies. Um and

27:01
we have consultants that coach and use

27:04
all of our tools inside um thousands of

27:07
businesses every day. Well that's all

27:10
being done through a 21st century modern

27:13
style of learning.

Toolkit for Effective Learning

27:15
And so we've just found um that if you

27:17
have a toolkit then this toolkit in fact

27:20
I'll show you ours real fast.

27:22
I know we're getting low on time, but

27:24
here we go. Ours, this is like a This is

27:27
an old school. We have it obviously in

27:28
an app as well or we have an online

27:31
platform. This is our toolkit, 100x

27:33
leader toolkit. And it's all designed to

27:36
be really really simple so you can

27:38
understand like how to relate to people.

27:41
This entire tool is how to have impact

27:44
with people in the in your office or

27:46
your workplace. So all of the tools are

27:49
designed these are the the dynamics

27:52
between these are the nemesis voices of

27:54
all the voices to know who and why

27:56
people drive you nuts. So um we have

27:59
them on this is how to eliminate gossip.

28:02
If you want to eliminate gossip this

28:03
entire this one tool literally

28:07
takes gossip away from your company your

28:09
organization. So, we have about 80

28:12
tools, 75 tools or so in here, and all

28:14
of them are designed to um change the

28:18
way that you solve problems and and help

28:21
people uh learn how to be more

28:23
effective.

Creating Memorable Concepts

28:23
So, if somebody has their own processes

28:25
or thoughts, how do they even start

28:27
thinking about creating such catchy and

28:30
memorable things like you've been able

28:32
to create?

28:34
It it uh it goes down to the the most

28:37
common basic. What's the one big idea?

28:40
Can I say it in a metaphor? Can I create

28:42
it in an axiom? Can I create it in a

28:44
visual tool? Um, and so we take and

28:48
frame it, get it all the way down to the

28:51
common something that's scalable and

28:53
memorable.

Influence in Leadership

28:55
One thing you talked about as you were

28:56
flipping through pages is some of the

28:58
nemesises of leaders. I've heard you

29:00
talk about uh influence being one of the

29:04
I don't know if it was the nemesis of

29:06
leader but just how influence can be

29:08
really dangerous for a leader and by

29:10
default a lot of leaders have influence.

29:13
Talk about how you see influence show up

29:15
positively or negative in leaders.

Intent and Influence

29:18
Um okay so um basically if you think

29:22
about um uh leadership is influence and

29:26
influence is power.

29:28
So, it's your intent. What are you doing

29:30
with the power? Are you are you using

29:32
the power to overpower people or empower

29:35
people?

29:36
That's that's how it boils down. What's

29:38
your intent for a person? I'm so I'm so

29:41
frustrated. I want them to know who's

29:43
boss. Ah, so your intent is to overpower

29:46
them because you want them to so that

29:49
what's it going to look like? It's going

29:50
to look like fear or manipulation. So,

29:53
it's going to it's going to be blood in

29:55
the water. and they're like, "So, they

29:57
know who's boss. Great." They don't want

30:00
to work with you, and they lead another

30:02
team that's not going to be very open to

30:05
you. And so, now you've got a silo

30:08
that's

30:09
uh that that's not your friend. How's

30:12
that working for you? So, the idea of

30:15
influence is really to go, look, when

30:17
I'm with someone, if if Chris, if I know

30:20
you're a thinker, I'm a feeler, okay?

30:22
And I know that you're a thinker. If

30:24
that was the case that you're a thinker

30:25
and I'm a feeler, then thinkers for

30:29
influence to to have influence in

30:30
someone's life, it means that they they

30:33
trust you. Well, to have that trust,

30:35
then you have to have competency and

30:37
then credibility.

Building Trust and Influence

30:39
Uh what I want as a feeler, I want to

30:42
start with character and chemistry.

30:44
Are you a good person? And do I like

30:46
you?

30:47
Thinkers start with competency and

30:50
credibility and then then they go to

30:52
character and chemistry.

30:54
So if I'm speaking to um a thinker and I

30:57
see you um and and we meet for the first

31:00
time, hey, hey Chris, how's it going

31:02
man? Tell me about yourself. Tell me

31:04
about your family. The thinker's like,

31:06
oh gosh, really? Okay. Tell me about you

31:09
have a cat. You have a dog. Tell what's

31:12
your grandma's name? I meant I'm joking

31:14
here being facicious but like

31:16
if a feeler they're trying to connect

31:18
around chemistry and character to figure

31:20
someone out

31:21
the the thinker is like I just don't

31:23
have time for that.

31:24
U so if I know that I'm talking to a

31:27
thinker a pioneer or guardian I'm going

31:29
to start with competency and

31:32
credibility. Even if I'm a feeler, I'm

31:34
speaking your language.

31:36
Hey Chris, good to meet you man. I'm so

31:38
excited to talk about X and Y. Um, yeah,

31:40
I'd love to know your questions that you

31:42
have on it. Get right to the point. And

31:44
they're like, "Oh, that was so good.

31:46
This guy's amazing." Then your chemistry

31:48
is going to be great because I'm

31:50
speaking the way that you'd want.

31:51
Yeah.

31:52
Then they're going to go at the very

31:53
end, you're going to go, "Yeah, hey, so

31:55
by the way, Jeremy, tell me about your

31:57
family. Where are you from?"

31:59
So they backend to it. And so this is

32:02
the game. It's like to understand

32:04
influence. What's your intent? Who's the

32:06
other person? How do I empower them? not

32:09
overpower them. How do I bring support

32:11
and challenge? You start learning this

32:14
system and you become a people

32:15
whisperer.

Adapting Communication Styles

32:17
And it's it's just and people are always

32:19
amazed. I get this all the time. Like,

32:21,
dude, you know everyone like you're

32:23
always people always like you. It's not

32:26
manipulation. It's just that I learn who

32:28
they are and then I speak their

32:30
language.

32:31
Yeah.

32:32
So, I'm a connector. So, if I'm with a

32:35
heavy pioneer, I just get in pioneer

32:37
pioneer mode with them.

32:39
Wow.

32:39
And then they back in to chemistry and

32:42
character.

32:43
I love that. Um, and it's so funny. My

32:46
my wife and I were literally talking

32:47
about the thinker versus feeler

32:48
yesterday. Um, so this is it's just so

32:51
funny because I'm definitely the thinker

32:53
and she's definitely the feeler. Just

32:54
how we things are very different. So,

32:57
how do you decide if you need to be uh

33:00
and it's kind of a leading question, but

33:02
how do you decide if you need to be the

33:03
one who's adjusting

33:05
the conversation to fit their voice or

33:08
is it more about letting them adjust to

33:11
my voice?

Servant Leadership Approach

33:13
So, you you started us off with a

33:16
servant leader. So, I've been talking to

33:18
the leader.

33:19
Leaders define culture.

33:21
If you're a servant leader, that doesn't

33:23
mean you just are a doormat and

33:24
capitulate to everybody. The servant

33:27
leaders, they set the tone. They create

33:30
the atmosphere. High support, high

33:32
challenge. I'm going to learn your

33:34
voice. I'm going to show you the culture

33:36
we're going to build.

33:37
I'm going to servant leader. I'm going

33:38
to learn about you and help develop you,

33:41
but I'm going to hold you accountable.

33:43
Very different than if you're the

33:46
employee to a boss. And there's only you

33:49
can control what you can control. Do you

33:52
lead any people? No. Okay. You're just

33:54
on the team. Well, then you have

33:55
teammates. Well, learn their voice.

33:59
Learn and understand who they are. Learn

34:01
who you are. Right? So, you can have

34:03
influence underneath and inside a team

34:05
even if you're not the team leader.

34:07
But ultimately, what we're trying to do

34:08
is set the tone for leaders. Uh leaders

34:12
define culture. Sub leaders define

34:14
subculture.

Defining Culture in Teams

34:16
So the subculture, every company is made

34:18
up of about a hundred subcultures

34:21
and every team leader leads those

34:24
subcultures.

34:26
So um I don't know if I answered your

34:28
question, but that's I'm pretty adamant

34:30
about um man learn the voice, be curious

34:33
about other people and your influence

34:35
will go up dramatically. How did teams

34:37
first approach like learning the five

34:40
voices and then actually implementing it

34:43
across the teams and across departments?

34:45
Because e even hearing this and I've

34:47
read a lot of your content um it's like

34:49
I love it and then it's okay how do you

34:51
actually see it happen?

Implementing the Five Voices

34:53
Do it. All right. So uh you first you go

34:56
to the five voices take the assessment

34:58
you get a free report. There is a payw

35:01
wall that goes hey if you want to add

35:02
this to your team it's like $10 a month.

35:05
It's not very expensive. Um, and you

35:08
basically then go and u it it it has

35:12
everyone on your team. It shows all the

35:14
members on your team and then you can

35:16
literally see who everyone is and talk

35:18
about it. Then they watch their own

35:21
videos about themselves. They get access

35:24
to five voices AI and they start playing

35:26
with like, "Oh my gosh, Chris, it's not

35:30
it's not just AI like chat. It's like

35:32
it's we've built our own LLM. So we have

35:35
our own uh fully built out personality

35:38
traits. So we have like 1.4 million

35:41
different iterations of personality all

35:44
in AI mixed with AI. So now you can uh

35:48
you can now uh assign uh things to each

35:52
other. You can actually start learning

35:54
about the voices and you can sign work

35:57
and homework that like videos to watch.

35:59
Then you get into the team performance

36:01
assessment and you start taking the

36:03
assessment and it basically shows how's

36:06
our communication, how's our strategy,

36:08
how's our alignment, how's our

36:09
execution. Then it has five voices AI

36:13
baked into it. So it just goes deeper

36:15
and deeper. So but you jump into

36:18
fivevoices.com take the assessment start

36:21
going on the journey as a team and it

36:23
will it will give you like step by step

36:26
what needs to happen. A lot of people

36:28
go, "You know what? We still want an

36:31
implement." So, we have consultants that

36:33
implement the five voices that you can

36:36
reach out, you can ask for, and we have

36:38
access to depending on where you're at.

36:41
Uh you can do retreats, you can do

36:43
trainings, you can have coaching,

36:45
there's all types of different levels or

36:48
you can get trained on it in your

36:49
yourself. It's called a catalyst. If you

36:51
have a person internally and you want to

36:53
do it yourself and get certified, you

36:55
get certified on it and then you can run

36:57
the system inside.

Building a Better Culture

36:59
A lot of this is about building a better

37:01
culture right within your team and and

37:04
being able to speak to each other. Well,

37:05
one of the things that I'm curious uh

37:08
about is how you see and I know you work

37:10
with massive teams, smaller teams, you

37:12
work with a lot of different types of

37:13
teams. How do the best teams implement a

37:16
great culture building environment

37:19
without making their full-time business

37:21
culture building? Or does it just end up

37:24
being your full-time business within the

37:25
business?

Implementing Culture Tools

37:27
No, it's it's it's actually

37:29
understanding 10 tools.

37:32
Take 10 tools, add them into your world.

37:35
Uh the support challenge matrix is the

37:37
power tool. It's the number one tool of

37:39
any of our tools. Uh the the the voices

37:42
are like lenses. They're like glasses.

37:44
They go, "Oh, you're a guardian. Okay."

37:47
And the tools are like mirrors.

37:49
Uh they when you see a mirror, when you

37:52
look at the sport challenge matrix, you

37:53
can very very quickly see what's it like

37:55
to be on the other side of you.

37:57
So that's the support challenge matrix.

38:00
And so when you look at it and go, "Oh

38:01
my gosh, I want to be a liberator or I'm

38:04
a I'm dominating at home and I'm

38:08
abdicating at work." Huh. It gives you

38:11
this opportunity to self-reflect. But

38:13
what you're really doing is you're

38:15
giving enough tools to start the process

38:18
of self-awareness. And if people can

38:20
become self-aware, they start correcting

38:22
themselves. I always I have this adage I

38:25
like to say is like, could you manage

38:27
your, you know, could you work to manage

38:29
your emotions so other people don't have

38:31
to manage your emotions? Like you should

38:33
be responsible for managing your own

38:35
emotions.

Self-Awareness and Emotions

38:36
You should be responsible for managing

38:38
it, becoming self-aware.

38:40
It shouldn't take 20 people to tell you

38:42
the same thing for you to get it right.

38:44
Well, that's what we're doing. We're

38:45
building a system using tools so you get

38:48
better as we're doing the work.

38:51
Yeah.

38:51
So, that's kind of the process that that

38:53
we've put in implemented.

Rapid Fire Questions

38:55
Wow. I love that. All right, Jeremy, I

38:58
want to finish with 10 rapid fire

38:59
questions where you just answer the

39:01
first thing that comes to mind.

39:03
Who's the first person you think of when

39:06
I say servant leadership?

Servant Leadership Example

39:09
Well, I'm gonna go with Jesus because he

39:11
was the he was the ultimate liberator.

39:13
Um, but it's different than I think most

39:15
people think of.

39:17
He was a lamb. He is a lamb and a lion.

39:20
A lot of it you see lion.

39:23
Um, more than even lamb. But

39:25
wow. Yeah,

39:26
that's good. That's got to be episode

39:28
two when we have you back sometime

39:30
talking just through that. Um, five

39:32
words to most describe you.

Describing Jeremie Kubicek

39:35
Five words. Yeah. Um, uh, yeah. Uh, that

39:39
sounds funny. Funny. I love to laugh. I

39:42
love to to joke around. Uh, funny.

39:44
Wisdom, freedom, uh, peace,

39:48
and agility.

39:51
Favorite author or book?

Favorite Book

39:54
You know, my favorite book is actually

39:56
one. It's on on the leadership book. I

39:58
really like Heroic Leadership by Chris

40:00
Lowey. It's It's like It's a little one

40:04
of those like some people have heard of

40:06
it, a lot of people haven't, but it's so

40:08
rich. It's like the It's It really

40:11
really shaped what I'm doing right now.

40:13
Wow. I got to check that out. I love to

40:14
read and I haven't heard it.

40:16
Yeah.

40:16
Uh favorite food?

Favorite Food

40:19
Uh I'm German. I'm Czechlovakian, but I

40:21
love German food.

40:22
All right.

40:23
Strangely not.

40:24
Favorite thing to do in your free time?

Free Time Activity

40:26
Uh my wife and I love to go uh find a

40:29
restaurant. I love ambiance and I love

40:32
to find new places and uh so we just go

40:35
take some friends and just go out to

40:38
dinner.

40:38
Love that surprising fact about you.

Surprising Fact

40:42
Um I was in a blues band in Moscow,

40:45
Russia. Um and I play harmonica and

40:48
acoustic guitar and then I've won gone

40:51
on to uh built off Broadway musicals and

40:55
I've produced a lot of albums.

40:56
Wow. All right. favorite place you've

40:58
been, and I know you've been a lot of

40:59
places.

Favorite Place

41:02
Gosh, yeah. I mean, my favorite place,

41:04
honestly, is uh the Alps. I love to ski

41:07
in the Alps. I love Switzerland.

41:09
Austria. I really like Austria. The

41:11
culture of Austria, I think, is even

41:13
better than Switzerland's culture, but I

41:15
love just the mountains and I love the

41:16
Alps.

41:17
Is there anywhere you want to go that

41:18
you have not been to yet?

Future Travel Destination

41:22
You know, I have been uh I want to go

41:25
back to New Zealand. I would probably

41:27
say I've been to New Zealand. I haven't

41:28
been to Australia. I would probably say

41:30
Australia.

41:31
Wow. All right. What's the best advice

41:33
you have ever received?

Best Advice Received

41:36
Um, the best advice that shaped me early

41:39
was if you're in the 20s or early 30s.

41:42
It's not what you do, it's who you work

41:44
with or for.

41:46
It's not what, but who at that age

41:49
specifically because they'll shape you

41:50
and they'll train you and develop you in

41:52
ways. Um, that was probably the best

41:55
advice that I received at that time.

41:57
I love that. All right. Finally, this is

41:59
a podcast on servant leadership. Why

42:01
does it matter that people listening

42:04
care about servant leadership and become

42:06
better servant leaders?

Importance of Servant Leadership

42:09
Um, we know what it's like when people

42:13
aren't servant leaders. I'd call them

42:14
dominating leaders. And dominating

42:17
leadership produces fear and

42:18
manipulation. And it produces

42:21
compliance. And again living in Russia I

42:24
watch what happens with 70 years of fear

42:27
produced abdication.

42:29
So why it matters is that if a servant

42:32
leader can be a liberator not a

42:33
protector but truly liberating other

42:35
people fighting for their highest

42:37
possible good it builds really really

42:40
strong cultures and strong people.

42:41
Wow.

42:42
And we need more we need we need better

42:44
leaders

42:44
100%. Well thank you so much for sharing

42:47
some of your wisdom. Uh I'm curious just

42:50
to close us out. There's so much content

42:53
that you have made that people should be

42:54
connecting with. What's the best way for

42:56
them to connect with all the stuff

42:58
you've done?

Connecting with Jeremie Kubicek

42:59
Yeah. So, Amazon is the easiest. If you

43:01
want books, they're all there. Jeremy

43:03
Kubachuk, just look up look up the piece

43:05
index on all of my rest of my books

43:07
would be there. Um or Jeremy

43:09
Kubachuk.com. Chris, you might have to

43:11
put that in the show notes because it's

43:12
hard to spell. I have a weird spelling

43:14
my name. Uh but that's if you want to

43:16
know who I am from a a speaking uh side

43:19
and or uh connecting. And then um yeah,

43:23
take the five voices assessment. Just go

43:25
take five voices. Go have fun. Uh have

43:28
your wife take it. Uh have your

43:29
co-workers take it. It's super

43:31
interesting.

43:32
Yeah. Awesome. Well, thank you so much

43:34
for sharing your wisdom and being with

43:36
us today. And I'm excited for people to

43:38
learn from you like I have been.

Podcast Closing

43:41
Awesome. Thank you, Chris. Thank you for

43:43
listening to this episode of the Servant

43:46
Leadership Podcast. If you enjoyed what

43:48
you heard, please give it a thumbs up

43:50
and leave a comment below. Don't forget

43:52
to subscribe and hit the notification

43:56
bell to never miss an update. Be sure to

43:58
check out the servantleershippodcast.org

44:00
for more updates and additional bonus

44:02
content.

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