{"id":3434,"date":"2014-10-28T22:13:17","date_gmt":"2014-10-29T05:13:17","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/thefearlesshustle.com\/?p=3434"},"modified":"2017-01-09T11:49:12","modified_gmt":"2017-01-09T19:49:12","slug":"sit-in-the-front-row-in-life","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/thefearlesshustle.com\/sit-in-the-front-row-in-life\/","title":{"rendered":"Sit In The Front Row In Life"},"content":{"rendered":"
Before my current position at my current employer, I was the 12 employee hired at a small wellness company. When the company sold, we were 80 employee strong. The CEO of the company was one of the most amazing minds I have ever had the pleasure to work for. Each and every day, no matter if it was the days of 12 employees or 80, he walked around the office – every single day – and said good morning to each and every single one of his employees. What CEO, even at a small company, does that? The great ones.<\/p>\n
He also was a big happy hour on friday guy. One happy hour. he revealed\u00a0one of the most influential conversations to me that altered the way I see the world.<\/p>\n
<\/a>He said that life is like high school. In high school, we start to see society develop because people develop. We start to find ourselves, develop our likes, opinions, open-mindedness and close-mindedness. And those habits we develop there stick with us the rest of our lives. Nerds stay nerds, and probably make the most money. The most outgoing people usually go into some sort of sales\/marketing\/PR field. Jocks try to play sports, then usually doing something that takes brawns, like construction. Varsity players usually go into some management position as they know how to run a team. It was an amazing conversation and when I take a step back and look at the life around me, this conversation holds true more and more.<\/p>\n His concept behind the story was if we think back to high school, then approach the people in our lives around the high school cliques, you can create rapport and better manage the people around because you know how they think and work.<\/p>\n That’s a bomb isn’t it? That is how I felt when he was telling me this.<\/p>\n Now, that information there was enough of a mind blowing post to leave it at that, but I am not done…<\/p>\n I recently gave a presentation to a group of 20 people. The auditorium that we were in was empty when I started setting up, and one by one, people started trickling in. Some sat in the middle, some in the back, and some in the front.<\/p>\nBOOM!<\/strong><\/h2>\n