Episode Summary –
COMMIT TO DO LESS AND GET MORE DONE! Episode 97 of the Shining Brightly Podcast Show titled, “IMPACT DRIVEN LEADERS – BUILDERS” (links in the comments). I am joined by strategic advisor extraordinaire, Alex Snider. She is host of the BUILDERS PODCAST, and she has worked across 4 continents leading strategic planning and operational improvements for multinationals, corporate divestments and led startups to exit. We learn that Alex attributes some of her skill building to being a top-level equestrian and rugby player. We both agree that BUSINESS IS A TEAM SPORT! We hit leadership, teambuilding, strategic growth, customer retentions and success on your terms. Shout out to my alma mater Babson College #1 for Entrepreneurship. Come listen, download, share and review this great hard hitting episode!
Mentioned Resources –
Join The BUILDERS Club: https://alexsnider.com/join-builders-club/
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/snideralex/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/asyetunknown/?hl=en
https://youtube.com/@asyetunknown?si=Nb3L6R4TdiJEHIv6
The podcast for leaders who want to build great companies.
General page: https://builderswithalexsnider.my.canva.site/
Spotify: https://spoti.fi/4emgzAy
Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/builders-with-alex-snider/id1752881280
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@asyetunknown
About the guest –
Alex Snider is a keynote speaker, strategic advisor and podcast host. She advises founders, executives and accelerators and she’s the host of the Builders podcast. A consummate builder herself, Alex has worked across 4 continents leading strategic planning and operational improvements for multinationals, multi-billion-dollar divestments and startup growth and exits. Today, she leverages the connections, insight and experiences she has gained to advise impact driven business leaders and executive teams on how to build world class companies with best in category performance and teams. A sought-after keynote speaker and presenter, Alex’s insights have been featured at industry-leading conferences and events including Volcano Summit, ImpactHub and Collision Conference. When she's not supporting clients, running workshops or speaking about Strategy and Leadership, you'll find her in the gym, on a plane, cuddling rescue dogs, reading a book or embarking on a random experiential adventure!
About the Host:
Howard Brown is a best-selling author, award-winning international speaker, Silicon Valley entrepreneur, interfaith peacemaker, and a two-time stage IV cancer survivor. He is also a sought-after speaker and consultant for corporate businesses, nonprofits, congregations, and community groups. Howard has co-founded two social networks that were the first to connect religious communities around the world. He is a nationally known patient advocate and “cancer whisperer” to many families. Howard, his wife Lisa, and daughter Emily currently reside in Michigan, and his happy place is on the basketball court.
Website
Http://www.shiningbrightly.com
Social Media
Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/howard.brown.36
LinkedIn - https://wwwlinkedin.com/in/howardsbrown
Instagram - @howard.brown.36
Thanks for listening!
Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page.
Don't forget to subscribe on your favorite podcast app so that you do not miss future episodes. And while you are there, it would help us get the word out to more people if you could leave an honest review.
Subscribe to the podcast
If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can also subscribe to your favorite podcast app.
Leave us an Apple Podcasts review
Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts.
Social Hashtags -
#business #strategy #builders #leadership #impact #growth #entreprenuers #coaching #strategic #advisor#executive #teams #worldclass #companies #visibility #credibility #keynote #speaker #motivation #education #inspiration #podcast #listen #download #share #review #shiningbrightly
Hello, it's Howard Brown. It's the Shining Brightly
Podcast show. So glad you're here. I have an amazing guest.
Oh my God all the way from Mexico. Alex Snider, welcome.
How are you?
I'm so good. Howard, thank you so much for
having me.
I have to tell you that although I talk a lot about
human resolve in healthcare, I love talking about business
growth, stimulation startups technology, because I have a
true blue true green Babson guy. And so entrepreneurship, it just
runs in my DNA. So I've got an amazing strategy advisor with me
today. And let me just tell you a little bit about Alex.
Alexandra is a keynote speaker, strategic advisor and a podcast
host. And she advises founders, executives and accelerators. And
she also is the host of the builders podcast. So she is the
Content Builder herself. We're gonna dig into that and show you
what she's built. And she has worked across four continents,
she leads strategic planning, Operation improvements, for
multinational multibillion dollar, divestments and startups
and all leading to exits. Today. She leverages the connections of
insight and experience she's gained to advise impact driven
business leaders. And it's really important to get this
guidance, I can tell you that she's a sought after keynote
speaker presenter and her insights have been featured on
industry leading conferences, events, the volcano summit, the
Impact Hub collision conference, when she's not supporting
clients, she has a real life and she's working for that work life
balance. She actually, you actually I said you hit the gym
a lot. You actually cuddled rescue dogs and you reading and
your big adventure. So Alex, welcome. Now that we know a
little bit about you, okay, tell us something that we may not
know about you that you want to share? Hmm.
I think something that isn't always really
evident, I talk so much about leadership and strategy and you
know, really exist in this world of business. The foundation of
that actually came from growing up as an athlete. So I grew up.
And I politics taught me how to think strategically. It's wired
into my brain to analyze and scenario plan and then execute
on that. It also taught me about discipline, and really being my
own competitor, like that, you know, person, you need to be
this view every day. And to the persistence and long term kind
of focus and strategy, you have to have that when you're
pursuing high level athletics. So I think that's an interesting
tie in that's maybe not a huge secret that I was, you know, I'm
still very athletic, I hit the gym all the time. It's a huge
part of my identity, but that that foundation, you know,
hindsight is 2020. Looking back. That is where it started,
literally, you know, as a child.
I love that because a lot of leaders have
some relationship with athletics. So for you as an
equestrian, it's one with the horse, right? I mean, that's
really, you and the horse, just like a golfer with a golf ball,
or someone maybe playing tennis with a tennis ball. But you also
played a team sport of rugby. All right, and you're only as
good as the weakest link on the team and me being a basketball
player. I was the point guard. Right? So I was the floor
general. Okay, the floor general on what play? We're running.
Okay, what defense we're calling, okay. And I had to pace
the game. These are decisions. These are decision making. Real
time. Right. Exactly. Right. So this is amazing. So I do believe
that there is a relationship between leadership discipline,
strategy and athletics that we have in life. So I love that. So
maybe you want to share a little bit more of your background?
That would be
Yeah, absolutely. And I think, you know, we'll
come to leadership and style, but also I was actually really
quiet. But I was the captain of every team I was on. So I think
there's like a really cool tie in that we can talk more about
that. beyond athletics. And you know, I played rugby for 20
years, I played into my kind of early to mid 30s. So that's
something that I continued to do. But in terms of more
professional, I did a lot of different things when I was
younger, partly because athletics meant I didn't
necessarily have a second plan. But I eventually found my way
after working in marketing and medicine space into an MBA, and
I discovered the world of entrepreneurship and strategy
and all of the things and I was so lit up because it really
brought into focus. I thought I was always a bit of a numbers
person, and that I was kind of quiet and shy, but I loved
psychology and how people think and so I realized actually, that
all of these things kind of could come together in business.
and strategy and all the elements of it that you need to
build a great business. And I was very fortunate. Despite the
timing of my graduation to get opportunities in strategy
consulting, I went into that. So I've done strategic consulting.
I've also done operational optimization I bought, loaned
into the m&a team for a while to do mergers, acquisitions,
divestments and carve outs, predominantly in energy and
natural resource spaces, all around the world. So I've worked
in Africa on mine sites. And in Johannesburg, I've worked I
lived in London, I've been in Singapore, I've been in, you
know, North America and South America. So I've really been all
over the place. And, and I love that. And I really got to hone a
lot of that maybe like, thinking that I grew up with
strategically from sports, right. And if we think of
strategy, start strategy with like war tactics, then sports is
basically simulated more of some kind. And now we've taken it
into business. So I got to really hone that through seeing
so many different businesses and working through so many
different business opportunities and problems. And then I got to
a point where I just felt like, I didn't want to go into the
partner track. And that was where I was being pushed, I, you
know, really grateful for the opportunities, but I knew I
wanted to explore some other areas. And so I actually left
sold everything, became nomadic, and just embarked on a bit of a
journey of exploration of what was out there in, you know,
venture capital social impact startups, I was already on the
board for a few startups and got more involved, ended up
partnering into one co founding some others, we could fill in
five shows with those stories. But long story short, through
that, I learned to right size, everything I had learned in the
more corporate consulting space into tools, and growth and
maturation of these organizations. And when we
exited them, you know, the main business in 2021, after we were
supposed to exit in 2020, March, we'll spare you that story. But
we almost failed. After the deal fell through we 3x and 10
months, and then we sold the business. I really knew that I
wanted to take the tools I had developed and all of the like
weekend coaching sessions I had been doing with other founders
that you know, we're in our co working space, and turn that
into something more formal, where I could take strategy and
strategic planning and the processes of maturing of
business, things you need into other organizations and really
help other leaders achieve their dream make their company a great
place to work for their team members and deliver amazing
things for their customers. And so that's what I've done.
Well, where are you when I started three
companies that I didn't have an Alex to, you know, help me with
my blind spots and the stuff that I'm not good at, which
actually is strategy and analytics and the good stuff
that you are. So I think what you're really pointing out
though, it is building a business is a team sport. And I
actually call it Life a team sport, but but I call cancer
fighting cancer, a team sport, everything is finding it alone
is very difficult. And a lot of founders and a lot of business
leaders, they internalize this and they feel like they they you
know you're weaker, or you're not as capable if you go for
help. But it's not true. It's actually more that actually
shows your growth if you're actually willing to, you know,
take in the proper mentorship and consultation and things like
that. Talking about. Yeah, so take me into your, you know,
your your highlight reel of your leadership and team building.
And and also I asked you to also think about mentioned some, some
maybe iconic or not so iconic leaders that we all should kind
of look towards. Oh, yeah,
I mean, I couldn't agree more. I always say
entrepreneurship leadership is a team sport. And it's a lot less
sexy, and often more lonely than like, we're sold on the
internet, right? Like learning to build a team learning to lead
a team, it's so vital to your success and to actually enjoying
it, because we, I think miserable leaders are out.
Right? Like nobody wants to work for the miserable leader who
makes their life miserable anymore. And I think that's also
my second big belief is that strategy and leadership go hand
in hand. And so to your question, yeah, I don't know if
I, I would love to bring it maybe notable leaders, I'm not
going to say these are leaders that I think are people you
should emulate. But when I think about strategy, and I think
about leadership and how they amplify each other, there are
some really fundamental components to leadership is a
skill and leadership style is a choice. And so you really need
to decide what leader you want to be. And that takes effort to
be that person just like being the best you in life takes
effort being the best leader takes life and it means
overcoming a lot of your background. So I'm gonna keep
this PG Ah. So I think it's something that we see the
leaders that we see, they are not always people that I would
say exemplify amazing leadership, they often exemplify
one element of it. And then they have a team and duality, maybe
behind the scenes that actually makes the business have
successful leadership as to your point as a team, right? So if
you think about somebody like Henry Ford, so one of the things
I often say is like, drop the ego, maintain the audacity.
That's one of the things that's really great about a great
leader. They can ask for help, they can accept feedback, they
know that their job is to rally the troops and not have all the
answers. But you think of someone like Henry Ford, he
possessed the audacity to see and pursue a different world.
Okay, he possessed a vision that nobody was gonna believe in. And
what's that mean? That means that cars became a reality that
manufacturing and assembly lines were forever changed, the cost
of things changed accessibility to vehicles change, I would
never hold Henry Ford up and say I want to be the leader like
him. But that is one component, the audacity to see something
when no one else believes in it, and continue to pursue it. That
is incredible. Somebody else that comes up all the time is
Steve Jobs. Steve Jobs was an autocratic leader, he was not a
pleasure to be around, he was not a particularly nice person.
But he again, had audacious vision, and was inspiring enough
because obviously, the timing meant we're a little further
along in history, we know a little bit more of what it was
like to work with him, he worked in a knowledge base, as opposed
to big manufacturing. He inspired people enough that they
put up with it, but he also hired people around him to help
manage that. Right. That's another element though. How do
you can you articulate and communicate something that
inspires people to be driven and own and pursue again, a real
vision for something? And then you think of somebody else who's
really well known Richard Branson, it's a completely
different vibe, right? Richard Branson is approachable, he's
unconventional. He's customer focused. He's known as a risk
taker, right, obviously calculated. And he's known for
making a fun, kind of flat hierarchy environment in his
companies, right. So that's somebody who has taken some of
these elements of these other guys who are known to be
challenging, you know, personalities. And he's
integrated those some of those skills and capabilities and
approaches, but into something that has a lot more of the soft,
intangible components of leadership, that I would argue
make you an amazing leader, and make you a more sustainable
leader, somebody who is able to succeed in multiple different
areas, which is actually something Richard Branson has
done, right. I mean, he has crossed so many industries, he
is able to connect the dots and connect people in a way that a
lot of people aren't, while also having this amazing, you know,
set of leadership skills that he has developed over time, and
frankly, trial and error, which he's been very open about.
It gets incredible. So thanks for using
those examples. It's, again, there's there's some things to
emulate. There's some things to learn from. But leadership takes
lots of shapes, sizes and forms. But I think you said the key
thing that you surrounding yourself with the right teams,
and the right people around you is really key and very vital. I
call that from athletics. team chemistry, can't predict team
chemistry.
And I often say to people, you know, and I work
with not just entrepreneurs, I work with leaders in all
different places. But we love to put an entrepreneur on a cover
of a magazine, right? We love that. It's like we love to put
these people up there. The people you see on the covers of
magazines, they do not represent your average entrepreneur. When
I say average entrepreneur, I mean successful entrepreneur,
people who are building amazing things, so many of them, they're
not on the cover, and they are not somebody who they may be
yes, you can be polarizing and audacious to a degree. But I'm
not going to name names, you know who I'm talking about these
guys from Silicon Valley, who are on the cover of everything
and are, you know, constantly quoted, they have duality in
their leadership team that compensates for the fact that
they are so strong on certain things and completely lacking in
others. If people had to work directly for them only at this
point of how strong their leadership personality and style
is. They would struggle to run a successful company, because they
do not do the people side of things. Yeah,
you're right. So let's let's transition a little
bit because something that you're really your expertise is
in strategic planning. and why that is so important to sustain
sustainable growth? Yeah, right in your wheelhouse. Oh, god,
yeah, I love strategic planning, I get giddy
for my client workshops. And they're often tough the first
time too, but my clients get giddy either for the workshop or
like a couple months later when they start seeing the results.
But strategic planning is so important. You have to know what
your vision is right? And I talked about success on your
terms, we can come back to that. But you have to figure out why
are you doing this? Where do you want it to go? And kind of what
do you want to play? What part do you want to play in that, and
then you have to decide how you're gonna get there. Right,
you have to have a strategy strategy is like the glue
between the vision and the operations, tactics, activities.
And what often happens is either people get stuck in vision. And
they're like, really big picture. And they're really like
doing a lot, or they're doing a ton, but it's not aligned
through this guide rail, a vision of strategy. And so
they're not making the progress. And so what strategy does is it
allows you to assess your options, make choices, and then
have those choices be the guide for the day to day decisions and
activities. And what we do is, we narrow it from the strategy
down to tactical operational components, and then decide
which ones need to happen first, and you really commit to less
get more done. So you have a few priorities in a quarter. And
that is something that everyone in the organization
communication is really important here agrees is most
important, and is where majority of resource and energy is going
to go. And once that is done and implemented, then we will take
the next set of priorities, and we will do those. And what that
does is it allows alignment, streamline to focus and also
allows you to say no, right? So when something comes in, you're
able to assess, is this in line with what our priorities are
this quarter this month, or this next three months? Or do we need
to put in a parking lot and come back to it because shiny object
syndrome is the Achilles heel of leaders and on particularly
entrepreneurial, visionary leaders, like, everything is
exciting, and everything is an opportunity. But if you try and
pursue everything as it comes up, you never get anything done.
And you will see people who are maybe overly entrepreneurial, or
don't have somebody to like balance them. They'll have a
graveyard of ideas, things that got off the ground, but never,
never stabilized into a true business.
Well, free consulting from Alex commit to
less and get more done. There you go. So so that relates to
you know, business, customer, company success, employee
stakeholder success and retention, speak a little bit
about that.
To customer retention or employee retention.
Both both Okay, short, in a short amount of time. Yeah.
Okay, cool. So for your employees, strategic planning,
helps narrow down what we're doing, and then helps you
delegate it and give them clarity, as does performance and
development. Frozen development is not about, you know, giving
somebody bad feedback. It's about knowing your team, knowing
what they're working towards in their career, what you their
role is how they're going to progress. They know what's
coming. So employee retention is really about if people know what
their job is, know how it ties to the vision, so they know why
it's important, and knows if they're doing a good job that is
fundamental to retaining your employees. I like to talk about
customer retention, because I think there is a over focus on
customer acquisition. So how do you market? How do you do sales?
How do you get people in the door? It's very important. You
don't have a business, if you can't get customers, you can't
sell what you're doing. But equally and I would argue more
important is once people are in how do you ensure that and I say
it's customer success, not customer service, because you're
looking at how to make them successful as a customer service
is like I call you when I have a problem. Success is proactive.
What is the experience of being a customer? How am I always
innovating and bringing you in to what's next? what's new,
what's going to help you get even further as a customer. And
if you were looking at from brass tacks, let's say you're an
investor, I want to know what your cost of acquisition is how
many customers you're bringing in. But if they're all going out
the back door, you're not making money. Right? And you're not
certainly not growing. So customer success and customer
retention is so important
is so give us a little bit of a wrap up with
success on your terms.
There's so much out in the world. And of course the
internet is an amazing thing. But there's so much out in the
world of what is successful or what you see in social media, or
growth at all costs was a big thing for a few years and
especially in startups space. Debris Odie is not everyone
wants to run a multinational multibillion dollar company, and
nor should you, right? Family businesses are a huge part of
the economy. Businesses that never grow beyond, you know,
seven figures are a huge part of the economy. And I think when we
start, we don't often think about, what do I actually want
this business to achieve? What are my values? What's important?
What are we doing, but also what do I want my life and my
leadership to look like? And so I really make sure whenever I'm
working with clients, I take them back to that, because often
you're running you're a few years in, you're making a few
million a year, or maybe even more, maybe you're an eight
figure company. And you're just like, Okay, I just gotta keep
going. And I gotta keep going. And there's no real clarity on
like, what does success mean, right. And it's the same reason
you need to tell your employees what successes so that they can
achieve it, if you don't tell them, it's really hard for them
to succeed, you actually have to define it for yourself. And that
is one of the challenges of either being a leader at the top
or an entrepreneur, nobody is there telling you, I mean, the
world is telling you. And if you want to just try and live
someone else's version of success, good luck to you,
you're probably not going to be very happy. And you're going to
work really hard to get there no matter what. So I really come
back with my with my clients. And this is something I would
encourage everybody to do, whether it's in business or
life, really reflect at fairly regular intervals on where you
want to be going and what your days look like what the people
around you look like, what you're spending your time doing,
and what is most important, so that then, if you don't know
what that is, you can't really chart a course for it. And you
can run a really long marathon and end up somewhere that you
don't really want to be.
I will add one thing only to this because that
we could talk for a long time on this. I love companies with the
triple bottom line. I want them to do good in their communities,
do good by their people help others. And if that is part of
their mission as well. I think that it rounds it out for me.
And that's one of the things that my big takeaway that I you
know, I'm running basically a start up in the nonprofit world.
And it's that to me, I call that noble and I call that admirable,
okay, and that's, that's my one addition to what you added to if
they if leaders can do that, boy, I put them up higher on the
pedestal as well as well. But here's the time, I know that you
went so fast, put your glasses on because it's the shining
brightly spotlight, we are going to shine our light so brightly
from Mexico, from Michigan around the world. Because Alex
helps business leaders, she lifts him up every single day.
And you should get in touch with her. So please tell people how
to best get in touch with you share. Also a little bit of
inspiration as we close out the show. Amazing.
You can get in touch with me via LinkedIn. It's
Alex Snider, you'll see in the show how to spell my name. My
website is AlexSnider.com. And my email is Alex@Alex
Snider.com. So you can find me there you can find links to the
builders podcast, which has amazing guests. And there's also
a link to my Instagram if you want to check out where I am in
the world or if I went to the gym that's on there. So that's
best way to find me. In terms of inspiration. This is maybe a bit
unconventional, but I'm going to talk about being underestimated.
being underestimated by others is not necessarily a bad thing.
I spent a lot of my career being underestimated and allow me to
like surprise and shine. But never underestimate yourself.
And I think one of the keys to that is to really intentionally
surround yourself with people who exemplify where you want to
go. They will hold you accountable, they will inspire
you and they will generally see you for who you really are and
not all the insecurities you have inside. And if you can
learn to borrow their belief the days that you don't have your
own, then you will not spend or waste time under estimating
yourself and you will take action.
Well Wow. Whoa from a quiet shy Canadian girl
to a real leadership strategy. Whisper impressive. Thank you so
much. This is great. i i We have more to talk about so we will.
But this has been the shining brightly show. I want to just
give a couple shout outs to the people that make me look great,
which is front edge publishing. Read the spirit magazine and the
amplify you podcast folks that make me look great as well as
diamond beauties magazine and I've got a shout out to Babson
College as well. You can find me at shining brightly.com and
learn about speaking I'd love to speak at any types of events or
fundraisers or workshops, as well as this podcast and my
book, of course, my memoir, and more importantly, my advocacy,
my accuracy in the cancer world in the entrepreneurship and
mentoring world and the interfaith world, that's the
most important to me. And remember, if we shine brightly
just a little bit each day for ourselves and for others, we
become a force multiplier for good and positive change and we
make the world a better place. And Alex, thank you for coming
on and doing your part to make the world a better place in
business and strategy. And also just you know, hanging out at
the beach and, and going to the gemba to. So thank you for being
here. It's just a real pleasure.
Thank you so much, Howard. It's been a pleasure.
Thank you.