mattschnuck Profile picture
Aug 16 13 tweets 5 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
In 1860, The Pony Express used a strategy that Steve Jobs, Sam Altman, and countless others have since stolen to create empires.

The "Call to Adventure": Image
There is a spark deep within us that wants to pursue something big and bold.

The Pony Express captured the imagination of the new West.

It invoked the first step of Joseph Campbell's Hero's Journey - The Call to Adventure: Image
Over a century later, in 1983, Apple decided to bring on an outside CEO.

Steve Jobs was convinced that PepsiCo’s CEO John Sculley was the guy for the job. He closed him with one simple line. Image
“Do you want to sell sugar water for the rest of your life or come with me and change the world?”

Sculley was hooked.

Even if the hire of Scully didn't work out for Jobs and Apple, the Call to Adventure strategy is an incredibly powerful tool that has worked for centuries. Image
Creating an effective Call to Adventure is counterintuitive because highlighting risk is essential to the strategy.

Just look closely at this copy for the pony express: Image
Similarly, when the explorer Earnest Shackleton needed men to accompany him to explore the artic, he was not subtle about the risk: Image
When Merriweather Lewis was recruited by Thomas Jefferson to find the unknown path to the Western Ocean, Lewis knew he wanted only 1 man to be his co-captain.

His letter to Clark is a master class in the Call to Adventure strategy.

Step 1: This opportunity is just for you Image
Step 2: Warn of Danger

"The plan is risky. Yet...you are the only person right for this challenge."

Destiny is invoked. Image
Step 3: Establish unknowns to be discovered.

To an explorer, discovering unknowns can be irresistible. Image
Step 4: Create FOMO.

The Adventure is happening with or without you.

Lewis finishes by telling Clark that if he won't join him, at least see him off at the beginning of the journey as a friend.

Then he's going off no matter what... Image
The power of the Call to Adventure strategy contributes to why Sam Altman observed that a "Hard Startup" was sometimes an easier path. Image
I've hired CEOs for my companies, recruited 100s of teammates, even inspired resistant kids to cooperate with the Call to Adventure strategy.

To recap:
1) Tailor the ask - it's not for everyone
2) Describe Danger
3) There is No Map
4) FOMO - This is happening with or without you
One more thing...how else do I know this works?

My wife adapted the letter of Lewis to Clark when she proposed to me.

It was an instant yes.

10 years later...it's been the best adventure of my life. Image

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More from @mattschnuck

Aug 12
Want the technique Tony Robbins uses to design his life?

It’s taught by the most expensive executive coaches in the world.

Here’s how it works (and how you can use it immediately):

(a visual thread) Image
The closer life feels to play the more we are thriving.

To find missing flow, it helps to have a scorecard.

Enter: The Wheel of Life. Image
The Wheel of Life is a simple but powerful tool to assess your life.

Many executive coaches have new clients complete this in meeting #1. Image
Read 13 tweets
Aug 10
There’s a famous psychologist who can predict divorce with 91% accuracy.

A-list celebs and billionaires go to him with their relationship challenges.

Here’s the trick he uses to unlock hostile conflicts:

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For 50 years Dr. John Gottman has studied the science of relationships.

Research revealed: 69% of conflicts can't be solved. Image
Gottman's path forward: embrace the metaphor "Dreams within Fists"

Inside each fist is actually a dream. Image
Read 9 tweets
Jul 25
The most sought-after exec coach in Silicon Valley coached @naval and Sam Altman.

Then went on to coach the CEOs of Reddit, Coinbase....even Sequoia Capital.

Today I got a sneak preview of his new software designed to kill bad meetings––here's how it works: Image
You can’t easily hire Matt Mochary as a coach.

His clients are either the fastest-growing tech companies or the top 5 VC firms.

Fortunately, he has been building his method into new software and I got a sneak peek.
The product is called CompanyOS and I’m convinced it solves bad meetings.

As a founder, I HATE lame meetings but lack inspiration to create structure to make them great.

CompanyOS solves this.
Read 14 tweets
May 27
The Explorer's Trap is a captivating paradox that has ensnared many of the world's greatest adventurers.

And it applies to anyone with a BIG goal.

This is fascinating... Image
Explorers are often heroes.

They find new frontiers. They bring back discoveries, knowledge, and riches.

We look up to them when we are kids.

But If you are an Explorer with an ambitious goal, on the other side of your destination is a trap.
Many of the world's greatest explorers have lives that end in tragedy.

Meriwether Lewis, of Lewis and Clark fame, committed suicide after finding the western ocean for America and Thomas Jefferson.

Why?

When he came back, he didn’t have a new frontier to explore. Image
Read 13 tweets
Apr 6
How to avoid a life of regret.

The Paradox Map.

What it is and why everyone needs to know it:
People work hard to achieve.

Some hope there will be no stress on the other side of achievement. I did.

But stress is not a one-time problem to solve.

That is an illusion.
A problem to be solved is something that can be done ONCE.

Think of it like catching a ball.

It might be a difficult catch, but once the ball is caught, the problem is solved.
Read 17 tweets
Apr 1
A former Zen monk taught meditation to Google's top leaders.

He developed a “cheat sheet” for finding clarity in your life.

Here it is (and why everyone needs to know it):
Marc Lesser spent decades as a Zen monk.

He then became an entrepreneur and helped launch Google’s “Search Inside Yourself” program.

In his book, “Finding Clarity,” Marc gives us a cheat sheet.

It has 9 components:
Start by stopping:

Knowing and understanding ourselves takes time and effort, but it’s worth it.

The first step to finding clarity is to STOP. Create space to reset.

Practices like meditation and reflection help with this.
Read 13 tweets

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