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Dr. James Hewitt

Episode: 92

Today on the Servant Leadership Podcast we welcome Dr. James Hewitt — a human performance scientist who has spent the last two decades helping the world’s most demanding performers do their best work without burning out in the process. His work has taken him across nineteen Formula 1 world championships, into the offices of Fortune 500s, and onto stages all around the world. He’s the author of Regenerative Performance, a book born out of his own cancer diagnosis and the realization that the “more effort, more optimization” approach he had built his career on wasn’t actually how the world’s true long-term performers operated. Join us as we talk about peak performance, burnout, and better understand why most leaders are dangerously bad judges of their own capacity.

Episode Transcript

Human Impairment Awareness

0:00
Humans are really bad judges of how

0:02
impaired they are. And you know, for

0:04
most of human history, that was probably

0:05
adaptive because we just needed to carry

0:06
on. But the way it shows up now is that

0:09
um you’re in the meeting feeling like

0:11
you’re super sharp and you’re absolutely

0:13
on it. And everyone’s looking at you

0:14
thinking, “What is this guy talking

0:15
about?”

Introducing Dr. James Hewitt

0:23
Today on the servant leadership podcast,

0:24
we welcome Dr. James Hwitt, a human

0:27
performance scientist who has spent the

0:29
last two decades helping [music] the

0:30
world’s most demanding performers do

0:32
their best work without burning out in

0:34
the process. His work has taken him

0:36
across 19 Formula 1 world championships

0:39
into the offices of Fortune 500s and

0:00:41
onto stages all around the world. He’s

0:44
the author of Regenerative Performance,

0:46
a book [music] born out of his own

0:48
cancer diagnosis and the realization

0:50
that the more effort, more optimization

0:52
approach he had built his career on

0:54
wasn’t actually how the world’s true

0:56
long-term performers operated. Join us

0:58
as we talk about peak performance,

1:00
burnout, [music] and better understand

1:02
why most leaders are dangerously bad

1:04
judges of their own capacity.

Welcome Dr. James Hewitt

1:06
James, thank you for being on the

1:07
servant leadership podcast.

1:09
Oh, you’re welcome. It’s great to be

1:11
here.

Defining Human Performance Scientist

1:12
I I am so excited. Uh for people who

1:15
hear an awesome intro about you and then

1:17
we dive into the podcast, they’re

1:18
probably like, “What is a human

1:20
performance scientist, can you explain

1:22
what that even means to people and then

1:25
maybe the journey that got you there?”

Origin of the Title

1:28
Yeah, absolutely. So, a human

1:30
performance scientist originally was a

1:32
title that I just invented for myself

1:34
and it seems to become quite popular

1:35
now. There’s all kinds of human

1:36
performance scientists on LinkedIn, but

1:38
at the time I was working for a company

1:40
um in uh in Switzerland actually. It was

1:43
um a human performance company and we

1:44
were providing services to um elite

1:47
athletes, business people um uh across

1:50
19 Formula 1 world championships and um

1:53
and I had to try and figure out how do I

1:55
kind of position position myself in this

1:57
company and also um brand myself for the

2:00
clients and the customers that we work

2:01
with. And so I was really responsible

2:03
for generating the ideas, validating the

2:06
ideas, working with the team to come up

2:08
with approaches that would support

2:10
sustained high performance for these

2:13
elite performers that we worked with.

Fascination with Performance

2:15
And so I was really fascinated with this

2:17
question. you know, what separates the

2:19
people who perform their best under the

2:21
most intense pressure from the people

2:23
who really struggle and fall apart and

2:26
how can we help people be in that uh

2:28
that former group, you know, the group

2:29
who who perform well under pressure. And

2:32
so, as I was thinking about this and it

2:34
was all focused around human performance

2:36
and I was taking this scientific

2:37
approach and I was doing a PhD looking

2:40
at human performance, I said, you know,

2:42
I’m just going to call myself a human

2:43
performance scientist. It sounds pretty

2:44
cool and it kind of does what it says on

2:46
the tin. Uh but if you really wanted to

2:48
distill it down and say what is a human

2:50
performance scientist, what do they do?

Role of a Performance Scientist

2:52
Um for me it’s someone who describes

2:56
what someone is trying to achieve that

2:57
performance, the demands that they’re

2:59
going to face, understands where that

3:01
person is right now, figures out the gap

3:04
between the current state and the state

3:06
that they need to be in, and then builds

3:07
a plan to bridge that gap. And the

3:09
scientific approach is that it

3:11
recognizes that you probably won’t

3:13
figure out exactly what you need to do

3:14
straight away. You’re going to have to

3:16
come up with a hypothesis. You’re going

3:17
to have to test it. You’re going to have

3:18
to measure it. You’re going to have to

3:19
adjust. And you repeat and you repeat

3:21
and you repeat. And in an ideal world,

3:23
you bridge that gap from where they are,

3:24
where they need to be, and they’ve

3:26
achieved their goals, whether they’re a

3:28
Formula 1 driver or a Fortune 500

3:30
executive.

Early Career and Cycling

3:31
Wow. Yeah. I mean, like, this is just

3:34
such an interesting topic in industry

3:37
compared to other things I’ve talked

3:39
about because a lot of times when people

3:40
hear it, they might initially be like,

3:42
“Well, that sounds made up. Now, it’s

3:44
confirmed that the title’s made up, but

3:44
but the results are real. Talk about I

3:48
know you go into big companies and we’re

3:49
going to get into that in the consulting

3:51
you do, but also talk about like how you

3:53
saw this in the early days from your

3:56
cycling career from the F1 days of like

3:58
how you saw performance actually make a

4:01
difference.

Pursuing Cycling Dreams

4:03
So when uh this journey started for me

4:05
in my own athletic career as you alluded

4:08
to um so back in the early 2000s um I uh

4:12
really my dream was to become a

4:14
professional cyclist and at that time I

4:16
was living in the UK um but there

4:18
weren’t the the pathways that are

4:20
available now for young athletes. So

4:22
there’s some really wellestablished

4:24
development pathways now um which can

4:27
provide uh young athletes, young racing

4:29
cyclist, I was a road cyclist with a

4:31
route to understand how they can uh make

4:33
their way up this ladder to a

4:35
professional career in the sport. At

4:37
that time it was really chaotic.

4:38
Basically you had to kind of win a few

4:40
races, someone had to notice you. Maybe

4:43
you were lucky enough to get the

4:44
opportunity to get a ride with a a team

4:47
on the continent on the European

4:49
continent. uh maybe in France or Spain

4:50
or somewhere and you basically just

4:52
packed your bags, moved out there and

4:54
see whether you can win some races there

4:56
as well. And so at the age of 19, that’s

4:59
what I did. I got this opportunity to do

5:01
this trial with this um at this really

5:04
small regional French team in this tiny

5:05
little town called Limu in the south of

5:07
France, which is next to a city called

5:09
Kakasong, which some people might have

5:10
heard of. Um and so 19 years old, I

5:13
packed my bags and I uh moved to the

5:15
south of France to pursue this this

5:17
dream. But I’d always had quite a

5:19
scientific background and I also

5:21
realized that I wasn’t the most talented

5:23
athlete. So um I realized I needed to

5:26
really apply science and technology to

5:28
try to maximize my potential. So I was a

5:32
very early adopter. Uh you know heart

5:33
rate monitors, things that measure the

5:35
intensity of your physical effort with

5:36
your heart rate were already used by a

5:38
lot of people. But I was one of the

5:39
first people to get something called a

5:40
power meter which is a device that

5:42
measures the mechanical work you do on

5:44
the bike. the actual the physical power

5:46
output and started to try and understand

5:48
how we fit these different aspects

5:50
together. But the guiding philosophy

5:52
during this time was this belief that if

5:55
you just put in enough effort and you

5:57
combine it with this scientific and

5:59
technological optimization that you will

6:01
achieve the results that you’re hoping

6:03
for and and so that was my real dominant

6:06
philosophy, the drive behind what I did.

Transition to Business World

6:09
And for a while it worked quite well.

6:11
you know, I just put in more and more

6:12
effort and I was optimizing and

6:14
optimizing. Um, now in the end,

6:16
unfortunately, I kind of realized that

6:18
my cycling career wasn’t going to reach

6:19
the heights that I hoped for. So, I

6:22
decided that I was going to go back to

6:23
university in the UK, study sport

6:26
science, uh, and that I was going to go

6:27
and work with professional athletes and

6:30
professional cyclists. Um but there was

6:32
a there was a wrinkle in that plan and

6:35
the wrinkle was related to the fact that

6:37
um professional cyclists didn’t have any

6:39
money to pay me as a coach and I should

6:41
have known that really because I was a

6:43
full-time racing cyclist. I raced

6:44
full-time for a few seasons in the south

6:46
of France. You know, I won a few races.

6:48
I was never that great, but I raced

6:50
full-time and I couldn’t afford to pay a

6:52
coach. The person who coached me coached

6:53
me did it for free. I like ah this is

6:56
this is problematic. Um, so I kept

6:58
working with a few pros, but I realized

7:00
that the people who I could make some

7:02
money from, uh, were these guys, mainly

7:04
guys, living in London, where we were

7:06
based at the time, who wanted to be

7:08
Lance Armstrong at the weekend. You

7:10
know, this is like pre Lance Armstrong,

7:13
Oprah admission of using

7:15
performance-enhancing drugs. This was

7:17
mid 2000s. Lance is still doing great.

7:21
And uh all these guys worked 80 hours a

7:24
week in the city as management

7:26
consultants, finance professionals,

7:27
technology workers and wanted to go and

7:29
you ride 180 miles every weekend. And so

7:32
I started to work with these people and

7:35
um and try and optimize their physical

7:38
performance. But I realized in working

7:40
with these people that unless I could

7:42
account for the load associated with

7:44
their working life, couldn’t plan their

7:46
physical training effectively. If they

7:48
had an epic week at work, it was a

7:50
finance professional who was reaching

7:53
the end of a difficult transaction, then

7:56
it was going to be impossible for them

7:57
to um sustain the same load physically.

7:58
And I saw this because week to week I

8:03
could prescribe the same training and

8:05
one week they would finish the session

8:07
perfectly and the next week they’d

8:09
really struggle. And when I spoke to

8:10
them, it actually turns out that the

8:12
difference wasn’t something going on in

8:13
their body. It was the stress

8:15
psychologically. it was the load of

8:17
their work. And so I began to build this

8:19
model of trying to understand how to

8:21
combine psychological and physical

8:24
effort really with the aim of trying to

8:26
improve their cycling performance. But

8:28
that led to this fascination with the

8:30
workplace. And you that was really the

8:33
genesis of this transition into trying

8:35
to understand cognitive work and

8:38
thinking about cognitive work, the type

8:41
of work that an executive does for

8:43
example as a cognitive endurance

8:45
activity and actually use principles to

8:48
model that type of work taken from

8:50
endurance sport which is obviously a

8:52
physical endurance activity. And so that

8:55
was really the the kind of the

8:56
transition into the business world which

8:58
has continued. But I think one of the

8:59
biggest shifts that I’ve seen is, you

9:01
know, that idea was radical when I first

9:04
started to share it. This idea that we

9:07
think about cognitive work as an

9:08
endurance activity and uh understand how

9:11
to optimize workplace performance um and

9:14
and that our physical health might have

9:16
an impact on our psychological health

9:17
and our cognitive performance. No one

9:20
was really talking about that, but now

9:22
just go on LinkedIn, there’s a million

9:24
people talking about it. So I’m not

9:25
saying I invented it, but I was

9:27
definitely I’d say I was an early

9:28
adopter in that space.

Data-Driven Approach

9:30
Well, one of the things I love about how

9:32
you talk about it compared to other

9:35
people is your stuff is backed by data

9:38
and science. A lot of people who are

9:40
entering this space just talk about it

9:41
as theory and theoretical. Uh, I’ve even

9:44
seen you uh give a talk where you had

9:48
like I don’t even know what you call it,

9:49
but like an EEG contraption where like

9:52
you showed brain waves and stuff like of

9:54
what it actually looks like for

9:55
somebody’s brain to be performing. Talk

9:57
about like some of the data behind this,

10:00
not numbers, but just how even you look

10:02
at this because it really is data

10:04
driven.

Measuring Human Performance

10:06
Yeah. So, I’m I’m a complete data nerd

10:09
and um I think I wonder whether

10:11
sometimes that’s because um you know I I

10:15
don’t find it particularly intuitive to

10:17
understand humans. There’s probably some

10:20
diagnosis in there that I haven’t

10:21
received yet, you know, and so I’ve

10:23
always felt a little bit like I’m an

10:25
outsider looking in trying to figure out

10:26
what’s going on. And so I always kind of

10:28
watch people and try and you from a

10:30
young age I was like so how are these

10:32
people interacting with each other and

10:33
you what should I do in this situation

10:35
based on what they do? And so I’ve

10:36
always had this quite analytical

10:38
approach to uh trying to understand the

10:40
world and human interactions and

10:41
relationships and how everything fits

10:43
together. And so measuring that was just

10:45
a natural extension of a predisposition.

10:49
Um but when I started to work with

10:52
business people particularly um I

10:54
realized that just measuring their um

10:58
their working hours wasn’t going to be

11:00
sufficient. For example, I needed to

11:02
also understand what was going on in

11:04
their mind. psychology and then there

11:07
was also this implication of their

11:09
physiology um what was going on in their

11:11
body and different ways that we could we

11:13
could measure that. So I actually

11:15
adopted a a method um which was

11:17
originally pioneered in a clinical

11:19
context called digital phenotyping. And

11:22
that’s just the technical definition of

11:24
digital phenotyping is that um you use

11:27
often wearable devices, smart devices um

11:30
to measure the observable

11:32
characteristics of humans. And so those

11:35
observable characteristics I group them

11:38
generally as psychology, the mind,

11:39
physiology, the body and the brain as

11:42
part of that which is it’s all one. Um

11:44
and then also behavior, what we actually

11:46
do in the world. And so the data that I

11:48
gather um uses different methods to um

11:51
to capture data related to those three

11:53
categories, mash them together and try

11:56
and build up a picture of what’s going

11:57
on. So to give you a practical example

11:59
of that um psychologically I might use

12:02
some survey measures to get a sense of

12:04
how people are feeling and I might try

12:06
and understand using some validated

12:08
survey measures um how do they feel

12:11
about the the cognitive energy that

12:12
they’ve got and by that I mean um you

12:15
know when you’re sitting at your laptop

12:18
and you read the first line of the email

12:21
and you say

12:23
that hasn’t gone in I’ve got to read it

12:24
again and you got to read it again

12:26
that’s a sign your cognitive energy is

12:28
And there’s survey measures you can use

12:29
to capture that in a way that you can

12:31
put a number on. Um the other aspect of

12:33
it is how people feel about their

12:34
emotional energy. So to give you an

12:36
example of that um imagine you’re uh

12:39
sitting at your desk and you’re working

12:40
and a colleague comes by and they say

12:42
you Chris can can I just ask you

12:44
something for a minute and you

12:46
internally you’re like oh gosh I haven’t

12:49
got time for this and you care. you like

12:52
this person, you know it’s important to

12:53
them, but your emotional energy is low.

12:55
And again, we can use survey measures to

12:56
ask questions and put numbers on that.

12:59
And then finally, we might think about

13:00
your physical energy and how you feel

13:02
about your physical energy. And so an

13:04
example of that might be, you know, you

13:06
wake up in the morning, you get out of

13:07
bed, and you’re just like, oh my gosh,

13:09
it’s another day. You know, it’s like,

13:11
I’m tired. That kind of drained feeling.

13:14
So that measures like that help us to

13:16
measure what’s going on in your mind,

13:18
how you feel, and then put numbers to

13:20
it, which can help us then track that

13:22
person over time, but also compare

13:24
groups because they’re validated. So

13:26
that’s the psychology. The the the

13:28
behavior might be things like how long

13:31
are you sleeping for?

13:32
How physically active are you? I use

13:36
something called um a single lead ECG um

13:40
that measures a physiology some

13:41
physiological var variables I’ll talk

13:43
about in a moment but it also captures

13:45
things like how many steps did you um

13:47
did you take um what what different

13:49
types of physical activity might you

13:51
have done all passively um then we look

13:54
at physiology and you know physiology is

13:56
what’s going on kind of in your body in

13:58
your brain and with that I might capture

14:01
something like heart rate variability so

14:03
I’m sure that some of you listeners have

14:04
you use wearable devices and many of

14:07
those capture heart rate variability.

14:09
And heart rate variability is just the

14:11
difference in time between each

14:12
heartbeat. And it’s actually controlled

14:14
by something called your autonomic

14:16
nervous system. That’s the part of your

14:17
nervous system that just runs on

14:18
autopilot in the background. Now, when

14:21
there are really consistent gaps between

14:24
each heartbeat, you might think that’s a

14:26
good thing, but that’s actually an

14:28
indicator that your nervous system isn’t

14:31
that sensitively controlling what’s

14:32
going on. It’s like a driver behind the

14:35
wheel who’s just braking metronomically

14:37
rather than braking in the perfect place

14:40
at the perfect time with just the right

14:41
amount of pressure on the pedal. What

14:43
you actually want to see is greater

14:45
variability which means that autopilot

14:47
in the background, that autonomic

14:48
nervous system is actually controlling

14:50
your heartbeat perfectly because it’s

14:52
very adaptable and flexible. So I might

14:54
use a measure like that to understand

14:57
whether your nervous system is in in a

14:59
state to be able to adapt to the stress

15:00
that you might face. I also use that

15:03
what you mentioned sometimes an EG

15:05
headset that’s measuring brain activity

15:07
brain states your ability to sustain

15:10
attention for example um the level of

15:12
stress you’re feeling uh

15:14
neurohysiologically in your brain well

15:16
then I put all those data points

15:18
together the psychology the behavior the

15:20
physiology and that helps me to answer

15:23
that question um which I described

15:25
earlier in relation to human performance

15:27
which is what is your current state then

15:31
we try and figure about what you’re

15:32
trying to achieve. Maybe it’s I want

15:35
some more energy. I want to feel more

15:37
emotional energy so that when that

15:38
person arrives at my desk, I’m like,

15:40
“Yeah, I’ve got five minutes for you.”

15:42
And I can be fully present in that five

15:43
minutes. That cognitive energy, when I

15:45
sit down to write the email or read the

15:47
email, I don’t need to read it three

15:48
times. It goes straight in. Um, and that

15:50
physical energy, I hop out of bed in the

15:52
morning feeling like, “Yes, I can take

15:53
on the day.” Um, and then, but that’s

15:56
fed by that physiology, by that

15:58
behavior. So we establish where you are,

16:00
where you want to be and then we come up

16:01
with a plan to to bridge that gap. And

16:04
those measures, the physiology, the

16:07
behavior, the psychology provide that

16:09
feedback loop to help us understand are

16:12
we helping that person or that team

16:14
bridge that gap? Are we actually seeing

16:15
the changes that we hope to to help them

16:17
get where they want to be? So that’s

16:19
kind of how I’d approach it. And I’ve

16:20
been able to gather you thousands, tens

16:23
of thousands, millions of data points

16:25
from thousands of people over plus 10

16:28
plus years now in a workplace setting um

16:31
to understand how those three things mix

16:34
together and how we can help to bridge

16:35
that gap for people.

Achieving Performance Goals

16:37
How often is it that that human

16:39
performance level of like they’re here

16:40
and they want to get there? uh like

16:42
taking two of the examples that you have

16:45
like the cycling you talked about how um

16:49
at one point you’re like hey I want to

16:50
be like this elite elite cyclist and it

16:54
was going to be a long journey to get

16:55
there and you realize like hey I’m not

16:57
I’m not cut out for that but I am cut

16:59
out for this and then in the F1 world uh

17:01
like your team saw 19 world

17:03
championships like unbelievable stats

17:06
now you’ve taken this into the corporate

17:08
world you’re doing this you’re speaking

17:09
on it you’re consulting with these

17:10
massive companies How often is the here

17:12
to there not possible, you know, and and

17:15
how often is it that it’s like, hey,

17:17
actually, you want to get there, you’re

17:19
not going to get there. Let’s readjust

17:20
that thinking. Or is it back to like

17:22
maybe what you thought in your early

17:24
career of like work harder, work harder,

17:25
work harder, and you’re going to get

17:26
there.

Possibility of Achieving Goals

17:28
So, I mean, the reality is that

17:30
sometimes it isn’t possible. Um, and and

17:32
I guess it some of this is about your

17:35
philosophy about goals really. Um and

17:38
and also the type of goals that you set

17:40
because sometimes you might establish a

17:42
goal which is absolutely specific and

17:45
you know it’s a smart goal specific,

17:46
measurable, achievable, realistic,

17:48
timebound and you it might be that

17:49
you’ve got to hit a particular budget

17:51
for example or there is a particular

17:52
revenue target you’ve got to hit to be

17:54
able to unlock the next level of

17:55
investment that your company needs or or

17:57
even you’ve just got to hit that

17:58
profitability so you can you can pay the

18:00
bills or doever whatever you need to do.

18:03
Um when it comes to humans sometimes

18:05
though it can be more difficult to be

18:07
that specific. You know the nice thing

18:09
about cycling was that um if you are

18:12
trying to describe for example what’s

18:14
required to win a stage of the tour to

18:16
France you can actually break down you

18:19
know the a profile of how much power you

18:22
need to be able to produce for how long

18:24
um uh uh over various different

18:26
dimensions and then know that if they

18:29
can achieve that they’re probably going

18:30
to be in with a good chance of winning

18:32
that particular stage. Um with humans in

18:35
a business context it’s a bit more

18:37
vague. doesn’t mean you shouldn’t have

18:38
goals, but the goals provide slightly

18:41
different per serve a slightly different

18:42
purpose. You the goals aren’t

18:44
necessarily because you want to kind of

18:46
win that particular stage metaphorically

18:48
speaking. Um it’s more about providing

18:50
that direction that you’d work towards.

18:52
Now, there’s some level of specificity

18:54
in it, but the actual outcome is often a

18:56
bit more vague. What what leads up to

18:57
it? The process goals are more specific.

19:00
So you know the outcome might be

19:03
something like I want more energy and I

19:05
want to maybe and you could be specific

19:07
it might say I want to increase the

19:08
emotional energy I’ve got on this

19:09
particular validated scale by 20%. Um

19:13
but the more important thing is that we

19:14
then deconstruct that and say what

19:17
particular behaviors what changes do we

19:20
need to see that are going to support

19:21
that that outcome

19:22
and that might be for example we say um

19:25
so at the moment someone’s sleeping six

19:27
hours per night we want to try and nudge

19:29
that to six and a half perfect if we can

19:31
get an average of seven um it might be

19:33
that they’re not physically active at

19:35
all it might be that actually their

19:36
workday is completely chaotic and

19:38
they’re interrupted every 3 minutes they

19:40
check their email continually um they’re

19:42
in uh too many meetings that could have

19:44
been emails and actually they’re the one

19:46
who’s responsible for setting most of

19:48
them. Um and so we’d look at those

19:49
dimensions and we’d say what do we need

19:51
to change to support that outcome of

19:52
having more energy and I would say that

19:55
often most of the time we do achieve

19:58
that aim of that improved energy. Um uh

20:02
we might have to adjust a few dimensions

20:03
on the way but generally speaking in

20:06
terms of the directionality I see a very

20:08
very high success rate. M sometimes

20:11
though that the outcome changes. They

20:13
think they want more energy. What they

20:14
find at the end is beneath it all what

20:16
they really cared about was something

20:18
they didn’t want to talk about really

20:19
which might be I really wanted that

20:21
promotion. I just didn’t want to tell

20:22
James. Um and because it sounded too

20:24
ambitious or something or I was scared

20:26
that I might not get it. And it actually

20:27
turns out that all these behaviors end

20:29
up supporting that goal that they were

20:31
working towards. But for me, the

20:32
important thing is that it’s there’s a

20:34
direction because I think with any

20:36
performer that you’re working with, it’s

20:38
a lot easier to to course correct once

20:42
there’s momentum and there’s energy and

20:43
there’s change. So, in some ways, I

20:46
don’t really care. I just want them to

20:48
establish something that they can work

20:49
towards to get them started and we can

20:51
adjust and figure out along the way. And

20:53
that’s the benefit of creating those

20:54
feedback loops and the measurements is

20:56
that you’ve got something that you can

20:59
um learn from so that you can adjust

21:02
course if you need to depending on where

21:03
they want to go. But I would say that

21:05
you know it’s very rare that I haven’t

21:08
seen any positive change.

Positive Change and Customization

21:11
Most of the time we’ll see we’ll see a

21:13
positive change. Um uh even if where

21:16
they’re going is different to maybe

21:17
where they thought they’d go at the

21:19
beginning of the process. How often is

21:21
the starting point different for people?

21:23
Like you talk about as long as you’re

21:24
seeing movement, like that’s positive

21:26
because you can kind of shape that to

21:27
where it needs to go. Uh is it always

21:30
like here’s the one two three or is it

21:31
like hey every circumstance is so

21:33
different. It really is like customized

21:35
to their goal.

Need for Customization

21:37
Yeah, I think it is important to be

21:38
customized. I think I mean the

21:40
interesting thing is is that um there

21:42
are 100% differences but very often it’s

21:45
the

Executive Program Insights

21:47
same fundamentals that will make the

21:50
biggest difference in the end to whether

21:51
they achieve what they want to or not

21:52
particularly if you think about in an

21:55
executive context. So you know the the

21:56
outcomes that someone might work towards

21:59
could be really varied. So for example

22:01
I’ve run a program now for uh a

22:02
variation of a program for nearly 10

22:04
years now with one global company uh

22:06
with their very senior leaders different

22:08
cohorts of their of their leadership

22:11
team. um or leadership group um at two

22:14
levels and you’ll see all kinds of

22:16
different objectives in that program. So

22:18
you’ve got some people who you really

22:20
want to p progress to the next level

22:22
professionally. You’ve got other people

22:24
who say you know I’ve probably got 10

22:25
years left. I want to make sure that

22:27
when I retire I don’t drop dead on the

22:30
day after which comes up more often than

22:32
you think. So the people who say I’ve

22:33
got a young family and I just want to

22:36
have energy for them. Um now the

22:38
starting point for everyone is similar

22:41
in the sense we we’d look at the same um

22:44
uh kind of array of of measures and

22:46
because and all of those are important

22:48
the individual difference will be you

22:50
which one do we maybe need to prioritize

22:54
first so and what I’d often look for is

22:58
you what point represents um the the

23:00
greatest point of leverage. So to give

23:02
you a very practical example of that,

23:03
say you’ve got a senior executive who

23:06
comes into this program and uh and what

23:08
they’re talking about is, you know, I uh

23:10
I really want to make sure that um I’ve

23:12
got the energy and the focus and the

23:13
drive I need to be able to sustain this

23:16
level so that I’m in the position to

23:17
progress to this next level in my

23:19
career. And we kind of take a step back

23:21
and we look at them. We say, “Okay, so

23:23
so what is going on? Have you are you

23:25
are you following the behaviors that we

23:27
know you need you need to do to be able

23:28
to put yourself in a position for that

23:31
advancement for that promotion? Um some

23:32
of those behaviors might be

23:33
professional. Some of it’s about the

23:35
presence with the people that you’re

23:37
with. But then we might look at so what

23:39
do you need to be able to show up with

23:41
that presence that sustained attention,

23:44
those sharp ideas, uh the creativity,

23:45
the innovation that’s going to make you

23:47
stand out from your peers. Well, we

23:49
might say actually again some of it

23:51
might be about sleep. Some of it might

23:53
be let’s look at your schedule. You’re

23:54
trying to progress. You’re working

23:55
harder than ever, but you’re in

23:57
backto-back meetings. Have you ever

23:59
thought about taking a break between the

24:00
meetings? You know, there’s a really

24:02
some really interesting research. It

24:05
shows that um you’ve probably noticed

24:07
this. Our best ideas often come to mind

24:09
when we least expect them. And um they

24:13
most often emerge during a time when we

24:15
pause. See, when we pause, we activate

24:17
something in our brain called the

24:19
default mode network. And uh you can

24:21
think of it as this kind of unconscious

24:23
reservoir of creativity.

Importance of Taking Breaks

24:25
So I often say to these people if you

24:28
need a breakthrough to bring those super

24:30
creative ideas that are going to

24:31
differentiate you from your peers in

24:33
this professional process. If you need a

24:36
breakthrough, take a break. Start to

24:38
create five or 10 minute breaks between

24:40
these meetings. When often you’ll see

24:42
people who say they want to progress and

24:43
they’re working really hard and they’ve

24:45
got big professional ambition. They

24:46
almost think that kind of the blocked

24:49
calendar of backto-back meetings. They

24:51
kind wrongly think that that’s a sign

24:54
that they’re doing really well. Everyone

24:55
wants me because I’m important. Everyone

24:57
needs me. When actually the thing that

24:59
might make the difference is taking a

25:01
step back from that and actually being

25:03
in a few in fewer meetings or maybe even

25:04
more efficient shorter meetings which is

25:07
another another story. So, so the bottom

25:08
line is in relation to your question

25:10
that the starting point might still

25:11
always look at the same number of

25:13
variables, the same group of variables,

25:15
but identify which ones are most

25:16
important, which ones represent the

25:18
highest point of leverage so that we can

25:20
design a process which will have the

25:21
greatest impact for them for the goal

25:24
that they’re they’re trying to achieve.

Book on Regenerative Performance

25:26
I would make the assumption that anyone

25:28
listening to this podcast is trying to

25:30
get better at some level because

25:31
otherwise why in the world would they be

25:34
listening to a podcast? uh thinking

25:36
through like you wrote a book on

25:38
regenerative performance.

25:40
I know some of the stuff you’re talking

25:42
about is in that, but talk about how the

25:43
book came to be and when you wrote it,

25:45
what you were hoping people would get

25:47
out of it.

25:49
So the book is a consolidation of a lot

25:51
of thinking that I’ve done over the last

25:54
few years. Um and my hope was that

25:57
people would get out of it um and

26:00
experience a revelation that I had. Uh

26:02
so I mentioned that I came from this

26:06
background in racing cycling and uh then

26:08
became a coach to these top performers

26:10
and along the way you know the the

26:12
driving philosophy continued to be

26:15
effort plus optimization equals peak

26:16
performance

26:19
if I had to describe it as a algorithm.

26:21
Um and that is my natural tendency is to

26:24
operate like that. Effort more effort

26:26
more more optimization. You can probably

26:27
hear it coming through with the things

26:29
I’ve said already. And that worked

26:33
really well until it didn’t. And um it

26:36
didn’t when one morning started like any

26:39
other morning and uh but this time when

26:42
I was in the shower, found a lump and I

26:43
went on to receive this diagnosis that

26:45
changed everything.

Personal Health Revelation

26:48
Um and um you know I was sitting in I

26:50
went to get it investigated sitting in

26:54
that hospital um uh uh room with the

26:55
consultant and they said you know James

26:58
is it’s cancer. And you know, hearing

27:01
that you metaphorically felt like

27:02
someone had taken a stick and put it

27:03
through the front wheel of my racing

27:05
bike. And suddenly I was just pitched

27:07
into the air. But this time I didn’t

27:10
land on the tarmac. I found myself just

27:13
sitting in this brightly lit uh room

27:17
with a with a an oncologist. And um that

27:20
really started this this huge

27:22
transformational process in many ways

27:24
because frankly for the first time in my

27:27
life I really confronted my mortality.

27:28
Um you might think I would have

27:30
confronted it you know racing down

27:33
mountains in the French Pyrenees without

27:35
helmet at the age of 19 at 100 km an

27:37
hour which is what we did in the early

27:39
2000s but you know when your prefrontal

27:40
cortex isn’t fully developed you don’t

27:42
really think about that kind of thing.

27:43
You know it’s like of course I’m not

27:45
going to crash I’m amazing aren’t I? But

27:46
but no, but this time, you know, sitting

27:49
in that uh in that room in that

27:50
hospital, I really did confront my

27:53
mortality. And I also was forced to

27:55
confront some of the ways I’ve been

27:56
living and working because the reality

27:58
was I’d just been living at a million

28:01
miles an hour. You know, always on, more

28:03
effort, more optimization. Many of the

28:05
people that I worked with were doing the

28:07
same thing. And I was just confronted

28:09
with this reality that I couldn’t carry

28:13
on like that. Um uh but at the same time

28:14
I was never going to be one of these

28:16
people who experiences cancer or a

28:19
health event and decides they’re going

28:21
to quit everything and you know go and

28:24
open a cafe on the beach. You know it

28:26
just was never going to be me. Uh it’s

28:29
just not how I’m wired. So I needed to

28:31
find this way to avoid these extremes of

28:32
this what I call hyperoptimization at

28:34
one end of the spectrum which I saw in

28:36
my own life and many of the lives of the

28:39
people that I worked with or this kind

28:41
of resignation or what you might call

28:43
quiet quitting at the other. And I also

28:45
saw as I was reflecting on this that

28:48
these these approaches were becoming

28:50
increasingly dominant in social media

28:53
and perhaps more broadly that you’ve got

28:55
these people who kind of suggest that

28:56
you either need to be this guy who wakes

28:59
up at 5 a.m. in the morning, jumps in a

29:01
ice bath, drinks a kale shake, writes

29:03
their journal, lifts, does some

29:05
deadlifting and before anyone else has

29:08
woken up. or you got to be the person

29:11
who protects their peace and you know uh

29:12
doesn’t take on anything that’s going to

29:14
stretch them because you know I need to

29:17
look after myself and I felt like these

29:19
these don’t relate to I can’t live

29:21
either of these ways I I need to

29:24
redesign the way I live and work um

29:25
because I’ve had this massive like

29:28
health scare thankfully I went on to

29:30
make a full recovery but you know as I

29:33
was getting back to 100% health again I

29:35
did have more time to reflect you know

29:37
in many ways It was probably the first

29:40
time that I’d stopped in like 20 years

29:42
um uh that process of diagnosis, of

29:45
surgery, of chemotherapy, of recovery. I

29:46
had a lot of time to sit around and

29:48
think in a way that I hadn’t before when

29:50
I’ve just been always on at mill an

29:52
hour. And I realized that, you know, the

29:54
the solution, what I came to describe as

29:56
this third way, had been staring me in

29:58
the face the whole time. Because when I

30:00
reflected on the true top performers

30:02
that I worked with and by that I mean

30:04
athletes who’ able who were able to

30:06
sustain their career long term, you

30:08
know, the the few professional cyclists

30:10
who manage managed to sustain careers

30:12
into their late 30s and even into their

30:13
early 40s,

30:15
the business people who were able to

30:18
sustain long careers with real positive

30:20
impact um and didn’t blow up their

30:22
families along the way. You know, the

30:24
people who were able to really run the

30:27
race well. Um, the people who sustained

30:30
that high performance long term weren’t

30:33
mastering effort and optimization as I

30:35
had been trying to, they were really

30:37
effective at integrating effort and

30:39
recovery. They worked really really

30:41
hard, but they knew how to regenerate.

30:44
They knew how to recharge. And sometimes

30:46
that meant making some difficult

30:47
decisions. You know, they they made

30:50
sacrifices to do that. But somehow they

30:52
were able to not strive for this perfect

30:55
equilibrium which we know is just a

30:57
complete myth. They were really

30:58
deliberate about when you need to go

31:01
allin and redline because sometimes you

31:03
do if you want to achieve big things but

31:05
also they’re really clear about how you

31:07
switch off and recharge and invest in

31:08
things that are going to sustain you

31:12
long term. and that revelation and this

31:14
realization that I hadn’t been living

31:16
like that and I needed to live like

31:19
that. And this uh revisiting of a lot of

31:21
concepts that I talked about before and

31:23
research that I’d done and uh research

31:26
that I’d read led me to conceptualize

31:28
what I describe as this third way um

31:31
which I named regenerative performance

31:33
that recognizes that true sustained high

31:34
performance doesn’t emerge from this

31:37
process of constant optimization but

31:39
rather by creating these conditions

31:40
where your well-being and your

31:43
performance complement rather than

31:45
conflict with each other. And so that

31:46
was the genesis of this book,

31:47
Regenerative Performance, and just

31:49
trying to take this science-based,

31:51
datadriven, but practical look at what

31:53
we need to do from when we wake up in

31:54
the morning to when we go to bed at

31:56
night and with our work day and

31:58
nutrition and exercise in between. Um,

32:00
and make that accessible and provide

32:02
people with a tool to hopefully help

32:04
them to uh put into practice some of the

32:07
ideas that emerged for me as I was going

32:08
through that that process of of

32:10
transformation.

Book’s Impact and Servant Leadership

32:13
Wow. We’re I I love that book first of

32:17
all. Uh I got to read it maybe almost a

32:20
year ago now. Um for the first time and

32:23
I loved it just even just reshaping some

32:25
perspectives that I think all of us have

32:28
been told since we were kids. Uh it it

32:30
helped reshape some of that and really

32:33
help me rethink through how do I need to

32:37
like regenerate myself. Um, one of the

32:39
things I’m curious about, we talk a ton

32:40
about servant leadership on this

32:42
podcast. How do you think better

32:45
performance and elite performance and

32:48
servant leadership cross over, if at

32:49
all?

32:52
So, I think one of the um the biggest

32:54
crossovers is in how the capacity that

32:57
we have influence our ability to show up

32:58
for others.

32:59
And you one of the most practical

33:01
examples of that I can give uh relates

33:03
back to some of those dimensions I

33:05
described earlier. So your your

33:07
cognitive energy, your emotional energy,

33:08
your physical energy and that scenario

33:10
that I described where you’re sitting at

33:12
your desk and the person comes to talk

33:13
to you and you think I haven’t got the

33:17
energy. So we say the human performance

33:19
angle on this is about the capacity that

33:20
we have to be able to show up for that

33:23
person in that moment. And it relates to

33:26
those practices that we might put into

33:27
place to be able to support showing up

33:29
in the way that we want to as a servant

33:32
leader. Um and that might start with

33:34
adequate sleep. And when we know for

33:36
example that um when leaders don’t sleep

33:39
enough they create less psychologically

33:41
safe team environments and it seems to

33:43
relate that our social emotional

33:44
processing and our emotional

33:46
intelligence is impaired. It might also

33:48
be about your physical fitness as well

33:50
though because we know there’s a link

33:52
between being physically fit

33:54
physiologically and then the energy that

33:57
we have um cognitively and being able to

33:59
sustain attention. So when that person’s

34:01
talking to you in the afternoon, you’re

34:03
able to stay present and engaged, you’re

34:05
not getting tired and kind of drifting

34:07
off and and distracted. So for me, you

34:09
know, human performance provides us with

34:11
that capacity to be able to show up for

34:12
others. And ultimately, I think that’s

34:15
the highest purpose of that capacity. Um

34:16
because I think the other risk sometimes

34:18
with this effort and optimization

34:19
approach is that it can just become

34:22
completely self-obsessed. Um what’s the

34:24
point in that? So I think there’s a

34:26
really strong connection between human

34:28
performance building the capacity uh

34:30
that we need and being able to use that

34:33
capacity in the service of of others. Um

34:35
and so for me you know that is a real

34:38
driver behind this not just kind of you

34:40
know naval gazing and thinking about how

34:42
we can improve ourselves for the sake of

34:44
it actually looking at what can we do

34:46
with this energy psychologically

34:48
physiologically emotionally uh to be

34:49
able to go and have a real positive

34:52
impact uh for the people that we lead.

Sleep and Leadership

34:54
Yeah. One of the things that I find so

34:55
interesting and you talk about the sleep

34:58
side of it. Uh I know you speak on some

34:59
of the biggest stages in the world. You

35:01
also speak to a lot of companies. One of

35:05
the things I heard you say and it hit me

35:06
different and I know you talk about this

35:07
in the book too but it hit me different

35:09
when you talked about it. Sometimes

35:13
people think uh that they are fully

35:16
present and fully there and use the

35:17
sleep for example like they think that

35:20
their energy levels are high but some of

35:22
the stuff that you actually measure are

35:24
maybe somebody sleeps for I forget what

35:25
it is like six hours a night or

35:26
something consistently for a couple

35:30
weeks and they don’t even realize how uh

35:33
declined their cognitive decline is.

35:35
talk about like I’m I know I’m phrasing

35:37
that terrible, but that was one of the

35:38
key things that I’ve heard you talk

35:40
about and I was like, “Wow, we are so

35:43
unaware of how all of the things you’ve

35:44
talked about actually affect our

35:46
performance.”

35:49
Yeah, humans are really bad judges of

35:52
how impaired they are. And you know, for

35:53
most of human history, that was probably

35:55
adaptive because we just needed to carry

35:56
on. But the way it shows up now is that

35:59
um you’re in the meeting feeling like

36:01
you’re super sharp and you’re absolutely

36:02
on it and everyone’s looking at you

36:04
thinking, “What is this guy talking

36:05
about?” Um and the great a great example

36:07
of this was a study you alluded to where

36:09
they restricted people’s sleep for six

36:11
hours per night for two weeks. And after

36:14
that two week period, their sustained

36:15
attention based on something called a

36:17
PVT test was as bad as going an entire

36:19
night without sleep. But the people

36:22
didn’t realize they were impaired. They

36:24
kind of thought they were fine. We also

36:26
see that when people don’t sleep enough

36:28
um their problem solving ability

36:30
decreases. They’re also rated as less

36:32
inspirational by team members. So

36:34
leaders specifically guy called

36:35
Christopher Barnes did some research on

36:36
this uh where leaders don’t uh leader

36:38
sleep is restricted to 5 hours versus

36:40
seven. Their teams rate them as less

36:42
inspirational because leaders end up

36:44
engaging in something called surface

36:46
acting. And that’s just a technical way

36:48
of saying that you show up less

36:49
authentically. And you might not think

36:51
you do but your team can tell. And you

36:53
know what it’s like? You you’re tired

36:54
and you turn up and you say, “Okay,

36:56
team, you know, I’ve got we’ve got a big

36:58
target. I really need you to get around

36:59
this.” And together we can do it. Now,

37:02
there’s a way you can say that which is

37:03
really believable and authentic. And

37:05
there’s a way that’s like, “Yeah,

37:06
everyone’s looking at you, they’re like,

37:08
“This guy doesn’t believe what you’re

37:09
saying.” And uh even if they don’t

37:11
articulate it, we we feel it. It’s very

37:13
subtle. Again, sleep’s providing that

37:16
capacity which is going to determine how

37:17
we show up as a leader. And

37:19
unfortunately, we’re just not aware of

37:21
that gap often between and how we think

37:23
we are and how we are actually are. You

37:25
see it in decision- making too. You

37:27
don’t sleep enough, you make worse

37:28
decisions. Ironically, you become more

37:31
confident in those bad decisions.

Importance of Sleep

37:34
So, um, so I I say to leaders

37:36
consistently and their teams that sleep

37:40
is not a waste of time. It’s a strategic

37:42
investment in everything that you care

37:44
about being awake for. And uh, and I

37:48
think uh, more and more leads are

37:49
getting on board with that, which is

37:50
great. But some of us have still got a

37:53
bit of a way to go.

37:55
Yeah, I’m one of those that still has a

37:57
ways to go. But at the same time, I

37:58
started looking into it after I heard

38:00
you say it and realized that it’s not

38:02
just a sports thing that people need a

38:05
lot more sleep. Some of the most high

38:06
performing work people uh they might

38:09
have weird sleep schedules and how they

38:11
do it, but but they are getting a lot of

38:13
rest and really trying to regenerate

38:16
their brain. uh this kind of combats

38:19
with it and I know I’ve kind of asked

38:20
this but in the sports world you hear a

38:23
lot about like push to the point of

38:25
exhaustion right push to the point of

38:27
exhaustion in in the work world like in

38:31
just corporate America uh people don’t

38:33
use that language but it is work to the

38:35
point of exhaustion right work to the

38:37
point of like you’ve got to be the best

38:40
to achieve all these things you talk a

38:42
lot about burnout as well talk about how

38:45
you see burnout playing into all of

38:46
this.

Myth of High Performance

38:48
So I think I mean there is a myth at the

38:50
heart of what people think is high

38:53
performance um that you’re not going to

38:56
reach your potential unless you are

38:58
pushing yourself to the point of burnout

39:00
and maybe beyond. Um but the reality is

39:02
is that if you look in sport or in

39:04
business again the people who sustain

39:06
that high performance long term are

39:08
actually real masters of understanding

39:10
where that limit is and often not

39:12
pushing up to it even kind of backing

39:14
off slightly recovering and then pushing

39:16
again. So, you know, the wisdom is

39:18
really knowing when to go all in and

39:21
when to back off. And a lot of what you

39:24
see with these people who are talking

39:25
about, you know, like crush it, push it

39:26
to the limit, over the limit, red line.

39:28
It’s it’s more what I’d call high

39:30
performance theater than it is real high

39:33
performance. And um it’s the illusion of

39:36
high performance. It’s the kind of the

39:37
Hollywood version of high performance.

39:39
And you see this funny enough when you

39:42
ask leaders how much they work in terms

39:45
of working hours and you actually

39:46
measure it there’s often quite a big gap

39:49
between that reality. So people say a

39:51
CEO will say I work 80 hours a week. I

39:54
expect the same from my team. Well you

39:56
break down what that 80 hours looks like

39:58
and for the most part for many of them

40:01
it’s like well you know there was the

40:03
plane and they were at the front of it

40:06
and they had half an hour. We had some

40:08
okay food, maybe even a sneaked in half

40:11
an episode or something. And there was

40:13
the lunch, the the work meeting, really

40:16
important deal, but it was a nice lunch

40:18
in a pretty good restaurant. And there

40:20
was the time when, you know, there there

40:21
was a some executive time, which

40:24
basically meant maybe they went for a

40:25
walk and a coffee and the really

40:27
important meeting with the person they

40:28
really like, who they’ve got

40:30
professional relationship with, but it

40:31
wasn’t super intense. And then you’ve

40:33
got, you know, at the other part the the

40:35
other side of the company, you know, the

40:36
sales team who genuinely are working 60

40:38
hours smashing those calls every day in

40:41
those Zoom meetings and and you wonder

40:43
why they burn out and the leader

40:44
doesn’t. But often there’s this this

40:46
detachment between the reality and what

40:48
they say. And so I’m very cautious about

40:51
these ideas of just like crushing it and

40:53
redlinining every day because it’s just

40:55
not the reality of how you support

40:56
sustained high performance. And

40:58
generally what you see um when people

41:00
are burning out is that depletion again

41:03
in those three dimensions emotional

41:06
energy, cognitive energy, physical

41:07
energy. And so often what I’m trying to

41:10
encourage leaders and their teams to do

41:11
is to just become more conscious um and

41:14
almost develop a bit of an internal

41:16
dashboard. Sometimes we actually

41:18
actually come up with a real dashboard

41:19
to measure this stuff. And really if you

41:21
listen only going to take away three

41:23
things. I would say, you know, imagine

41:26
your personal dashboard on those three

41:28
dimensions. Your emotional energy, your

41:30
cognitive energy, your physical energy.

41:33
How are you doing right now? Because if

41:35
you’re starting to feel that depleted

41:37
cognitive energy, reading the email

41:38
three times, that lower emotional

41:40
energy, not having the capacity of the

41:42
person who comes to talk to you in the

41:43
afternoon, and the lower physical

41:45
energy, like, man, I need to take the,

41:47
you know, the um the lift, the elevator

41:49
because the stairs are too too fatiguing

41:52
for me today. That’s a warning sign that

41:54
maybe you need to prioritize that rest

41:56
and start to reframe rest not as a

42:00
reward that you get to at the end of the

42:02
red line, but rest as what makes great

42:05
work possible. Um, and particularly in

42:08
this new phase that we’re entering where

42:11
these really powerful AI tools are going

42:13
to start to be already are taking on a

42:16
lot of human work. The work that’s left

42:18
for humans, the creativity, the

42:20
collaboration, the complex problem

42:22
solving, that only emerges from focused,

42:25
well-rested brains, [snorts]

42:27
not leaders and teams who are believing

42:31
in this high performance theater and

42:33
crushing it and pushing it and redlining

42:35
it every day because uh yeah, that way

42:38
of work I think is

42:40
is going to be left behind. Well, I I

42:43
know you have spoken a lot like publicly

42:46
again with a lot of companies, big

42:48
stages on leadership and well-being. One

42:50
of the things that I’m really curious

42:52
about, I know you’re talking a ton about

42:54
peak performance and the future of work

42:56
as you’re going around the world, tons

42:58
of different contexts like big stages,

43:00
all these companies. What do people come

43:02
up to you and tell you after? like you

43:04
you’ve given a talk on peak performance

43:06
or future wellbeing a work like what do

43:09
they tell you and what do you see are

43:10
the benefits that help you learn as well

43:13
like hey this is really striking a chord

43:15
and this is what we need to be thinking

43:17
about in the next few years.

Concerns About AI and Work

43:19
So, one of the the things that people

43:20
keep on talking about at the moment is

43:22
that um they’re concerned that some of

43:24
these new technologies, these AI tools

43:27
might actually just end up making us

43:29
even busier and increasing the intensity

43:31
of work rather than resulting in

43:34
meaningful shifts that help humans do

43:35
what they’re really good at. Because I

43:37
think that the some of the content and

43:38
the ideas that resonate most

43:39
consistently are where I articulate I um

43:42
I describe the problem. And the big

43:44
problem that many of us are facing is

43:46
that we’re always on.

43:48
79% of us check our smartphone within

43:52
five minutes of waking up in the

43:53
morning. You know,

Digital Overload Discussion

0:43:55
we’re interrupted every three minutes. 42% of people admit

0:43:58
to checking their phone in the bathroom.

0:44:00
Sure, none of your listeners would do

0:44:01
that, of course. Um, but we spend our

0:44:04
day kind of toggling between emails and

0:44:06
meetings and chat messages and, you

0:44:09
know, we’re just overloaded. And then we

0:44:10
get to the end of the day after this day

0:44:12
and we really need to switch off, but we

0:44:14
can’t. We’re stuck in this recovery

0:44:15
paradox where it’s hardest to switch off

0:44:17
when we most need to switch off. And

0:44:20
people are now saying, “Okay, well,

0:44:21
people told me AI was going to help me.”

0:44:23
And you’ve identified this problem, but

0:44:25
the issue I’ve got now is that I used to

0:44:27
get a lot of emails. I’ve still got a

0:44:28
lot of emails. And now everyone is an

0:44:30
essay. And it’s [clears throat] weird

0:44:32
because, you know, my colleagues who

0:44:34
used to write these brief emails with

0:44:35
spelling mistakes now send me three

0:44:37
paragraphs of perfect pros. It’s got

0:44:39
loads of em dashes. I don’t know why.

0:44:42
And you it seems like my whole team now,

0:44:44
everyone’s got a ghostriter and it’s the

0:44:46
same ghost. And AI is just

0:44:48
proliferating. Harvard Business Review

0:44:50
did an article about this. They call it

0:44:51
work slop. And so the the the one of the

0:44:54
themes that really is connecting with

0:44:56
people is this challenge of being always

0:44:57
on, of being consistently distracted, um

0:45:00
of feeling like we hoped we’d be more

0:45:01
efficient but and effective but we’re

0:45:03
not. And the the solutions that I share

0:45:06
and the practical plans to be able to

0:45:08
overcome some of this that really

0:45:09
connect with people seem to really

0:45:10
focused around three core ideas. The

0:45:13
first is how can we tackle some of this

0:45:15
always on work this overload this over

0:45:19
these overflowing calendars and improve

0:45:21
our efficiency and effectiveness at work

0:45:22
truly um and get the best out of some of

0:45:25
these AI tools for example. How can we

0:45:27
be more decisive and focused so we’re

0:45:29
not interrupted every 3 minutes? we’ve

0:45:30
got some real time to lock in, apply

0:45:32
that sustained attention. The evidence

0:45:35
indicates when we do that, we’re able to

0:45:37
work about 30% faster and with less

0:45:39
stress. And finally, because people are

0:45:41
always on in backto-back meetings with

0:45:43
longer work days than ever, and they

0:45:44
can’t switch off, how can we actually

0:45:46
find ways to regenerate to enjoy some of

0:45:49
that downtime where we can re-energize,

0:45:52
where we can rest, to build that

0:45:54
capacity to invest both in our

0:45:56
professional lives, but also in the

0:45:57
other things we care about too. So

0:45:59
identifying that problem and describing

0:46:01
it in a way that people relate to that

0:46:04
feeling of being always on of constantly

0:46:06
distracted difficulty in switching off

0:46:08
and then really articulating a solution

0:46:11
and the way that I do that is share some

0:46:12
very practical experiments that leaders

0:46:14
and their teams can do and provide a

0:46:16
roadmap for implementing these ideas

0:46:18
that really connects with people whether

0:46:21
I’m talking to someone in Asia, the US

0:46:24
where I spend about 40% of my time now

0:46:26
or or Europe. um people in the workplace

0:46:29
are struggling with similar things and

0:46:31
they’re all looking for solutions.

Rapidfire Questions

0:46:33
Wow. Well, [snorts] for those that are

0:46:35
listening, we’re going to throw the book

0:46:37
and your website where people can

0:46:38
actually like book you and get in touch

0:46:40
with you uh in the show notes so people

0:46:42
can actually I recommend buying your

0:46:44
book. Your book was awesome. Um

0:46:46
thanks Chris.

0:46:47
Uh I want to finish with 10 rapidfire

0:46:50
questions. Um just so we really burn out

0:46:53
at the end, you know, like just back to

0:46:54
back to back constant.

0:46:55
Let’s just push it. This is this is the

0:46:57
time to go all in, Chris. I’m up for it.

0:46:59
I’ve got the capacity.

Servant Leadership Inspiration

0:47:01
Who’s the first person you think of when

0:47:03
I say servant leadership?

0:47:06
It’s got to be Jesus. Jesus Christ. He

0:47:09
was the ultimate servant servant leader

0:47:10
in my view.

Personal Insights

0:47:12
Love it. Five words that most describe

0:47:14
you.

0:47:16
Passionate, driven,

0:47:19
uh, distracted,

0:47:21
energetic, and often equally fatigued.

0:47:25
[laughter] a contradiction.

0:47:27
Who’s your [clears throat] favorite book

0:47:28
or author?

0:47:31
Oh, good question. I find it so

0:47:33
difficult to just drill it down into

0:47:35
into one because I I always have about

0:47:37
five different books on the go. Um but

0:47:40
um I recently um read a book um by a guy

0:47:44
called Ian McGillchrist called The

0:47:45
Master in His Emissary. So that’s kind

0:47:47
of front of mind at the moment, which is

0:47:48
a really big book, but but a really good

0:47:50
one. So that’s not necessarily my

0:47:52
favorite, but that’s the one that comes

0:47:54
to mind straight away. All right.

0:47:55
Favorite food?

0:47:58
Pizza. I love a good pizza.

0:48:00
Crispy, thin base.

Recharging and Regeneration

0:48:02
How do you recharge and regenerate your

0:48:04
mind?

0:48:06
So, for me, it’s just spending time with

0:48:08
my wife and my my kids, a relaxed

0:48:10
Saturday, glass of wine, some crisps or

0:48:14
chips as we call it, and a movie. That’s

0:48:16
just perfect.

Surprising Facts

0:48:17
What’s a surprising fact about you?

0:48:21
um that people think that I’m really

0:48:24
organized and disciplined, but I’m

0:48:25
actually completely chaotic and the only

0:48:28
way I can survive is having systems and

0:48:30
if I didn’t have the systems, I would

0:48:32
just live in chaos permanently. So, what

0:48:34
you see uh in terms of this organized

0:48:36
professional self is is just a coping

0:48:39
strategy for for the craziness that’s

0:48:40
behind the scenes.

Favorite Places

0:48:42
Where’s where’s one of your favorite

0:48:44
places you’ve been?

0:48:46
So, it’s where we used to live in the

0:48:48
French Alps. Um uh so we lived u um just

0:48:51
beside a town called Anacey where you

0:48:53
know you’ve got a beautiful lake that

0:48:55
you can swim in in the summer and you’re

0:48:56
right next to the mountains where you

0:48:58
can ski in the winter. So that’s one of

0:49:00
my top places in the world.

Travel Aspirations

0:49:01
Is there anywhere you want to go that

0:49:03
you haven’t been?

0:49:05
Yeah. You know what? Um I’ I’ve spoken

0:49:07
now in over 36 countries and um uh

0:49:12
ticked off all kinds of places around

0:49:13
the world. Uh more than that in terms of

0:49:15
place I’ve visited. I’ve still never

0:49:16
been to Japan. How’s that happened?

0:49:18
Wow. So that’s that’s really hype on my

0:49:20
list.

0:49:21
We got to get you a speaking gig in

0:49:22
Japan then. Hopefully some

0:49:23
Absolutely. Bring you in.

Best Advice

0:49:25
Uh best advice you’ve ever received.

0:49:29
Um it was to try to be the friend to

0:49:32
yourself that you aspire to be to

0:49:35
others.

0:49:37
I really struggle with self-compassion.

0:49:39
I’m very hard on myself and I try and

0:49:42
convince myself that that’s helpful, but

0:49:43
often it’s not. So, I give that advice

0:49:46
to other people because I’m always

0:49:49
giving it to myself as well.

Servant Leadership Importance

0:49:51
That hits deep for anyone high

0:49:52
performing. I think that’s like spot on.

0:49:54
So, I I like that. Uh, all right.

0:49:56
Finally, last question. People are

0:49:59
listening to this podcast on servant

0:50:01
leadership hearing you talk. Why should

0:50:02
they even care about being better

0:50:04
servant leaders?

0:50:07
Because ultimately when you get to the

0:50:10
end of your life and you’re reflecting

0:50:12
back on was it meaningful? I think a lot

0:50:16
of that meaning is going to emerge from

0:50:18
the impact that we had on others.

0:50:21
Did we did we love well? And you know

0:50:24
were we a good friend, a good father if

0:50:27
that’s relevant to you, a good boss. Um

0:50:31
and and so I think being a servant

0:50:33
leader matters because I I really think

0:50:35
that serving others um giving of

0:50:39
ourselves is really probably the

0:50:42
greatest meaning that we can derive from

0:50:44
this pretty short fragile life that we

0:50:46
have. So I know that’s that’s a little

0:50:49
bit morbid and it’s a bit of a shift in

0:50:51
gear but that is honestly my my

0:50:54
reflection on that question.

Closing Remarks

0:50:56
I love it. Well, thank you, James, for

0:50:58
all your wisdom, your knowledge, and

0:51:00
just sharing with us. What’s the best

0:51:02
way for people to go follow you and get

0:51:03
engaged in some of the stuff you’re

0:51:05
doing?

0:51:06
So, um, on my website, which you

0:51:08
mentioned you’d share, um, drshwitt.com.

0:51:11
I’ve got a newsletter there. I would

0:51:12
love it if people signed up to that and

0:51:13
hear from me on LinkedIn, um,

0:51:16
jamespwitt. I post regularly there as

0:51:18
well as on Instagram. So, feel free to

0:51:20
connect with me on any of those channels

0:51:22
and would really welcome the opportunity

0:51:23
to to continue the conversation with

0:51:25
people.

Podcast Outro

0:51:27
Love it.

0:51:29
Thank you for listening to this episode

0:51:30
of the Servant Leadership Podcast. If

0:51:33
you enjoyed what you heard, please give

0:51:35
it a thumbs up [music] and leave a

0:51:37
comment below. Don’t forget to subscribe

0:51:40
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0:51:42
miss an update. Be sure to check out the

0:51:44
servantleershippodcast.org

0:51:46
for more updates and additional bonus

0:51:48
content.

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