Former NBA star Charles Smith asks: Is versatility your blessing or your curse?
Is your willingness to play any role furthering your career or stalling it? In this episode, former NBA star and entrepreneur Charles Smith helps you find out.
Charles recounts his careers in basketball and business. His ten years in the NBA included time with the Los Angeles Clippers, New York Knicks, and San Antonio Spurs. Still today, Charles ranks in the NBA’s top one percent of all-time shot blockers.
He participated in the Executive Entrepreneurs program at Stanford University and has recently partnered with Fierce Inc., a global leadership development and training company whose client roster includes Apple, Coca-Cola, and HBO. One of Fierce’s critical areas of focus involves helping teams communicate better.
“There’s an old saying in sport,” Charles said, “The game tape or practice tape doesn’t lie. If you fall down, it’s there for all to see.”
And if the tape doesn’t get you, observed the 10-year NBA player, your teammate will. “If I messed up on the floor, Charles Oakley would be the first one to say, ‘C, get your butt over there when you’re supposed to!’ It was a quick dialogue,” recounted Charles of his former Knicks teammate. “I found that in corporations, there’s more room to deflect mistakes or lack of hustle or to hide behind fake tolerance.”
Listeners to this podcast will enjoy Smith’s no-nonsense insights forged in the heat of world-class competition, including:
- The major difference between “accommodating difference” and ducking an issue using “fake tolerance,” and why the latter can be the kiss of death to organizations.
- How leaders limit their team’s (and their own) development by focusing on nurturing “sweet spots” of talent at the expense of becoming more versatile.
- How (and why) having hard conversations enables leaders to build more, rather than less, trust with their teams.
- This podcast is a slam dunk for leaders who want to push themselves and their teams to the next level. Have a listen.
You will learn:
- 11:00 What it means to live in your “flawed margin.”
- 17:00 wisdom gained from not taking the easy route.
- 23:00 How to prove your work ethic.
- 33:30 Why you need to have hard conversations with your team.
Resources:
- Connect with Charles Smith on LinkedIn.
- Learn more about Fierce Inc.