You've got somebody with real potential. You can see exactly what they could become, so you pour in time, coaching, and energy, and they just don't move. Instead of reading that, you double down, because surely if you care a little more or explain it one more time, it'll click. Here's what I want you to walk away with today. You can coach skill, you can coach strategy, but you cannot coach desire. And the day you learn to tell the difference is the day you get your time, your energy, and your focus back. I'll give you a five-move framework I call Stop Coaching Desire, Start Reading It. Episode Breakdown [00:01:22] The $9,000 Book Bet Back in 2022 I wanted to write my book, and I'd wanted to for years, but wanting it wasn't getting it done. Life kept winning, the book kept losing. So I did something a little crazy. I went to a friend and made a bet. For every day I didn't write for at least one hour, I owed him $1,000. Real money, real checks, no way out of it. Over that year I wrote that man $9,000 in checks. But I finished the book. The bet didn't make me want to write it. The want had been there for years. All the accountability did was take a desire I already had and force it into motion. [00:02:12] The Insight: Structure Amplifies Desire, It Can't Manufacture It You can build the most beautiful structure in the world around somebody, the coaching, the accountability, the deadlines, and if the want isn't already inside them, you're bracing up thin air. That's what leaders miss with their people. [00:02:32] Move 1: Know the Difference Between Potential and Desire Potential is what somebody could do. Desire is what they're already doing. Confusing the two is the most expensive mistake leaders make, because the most dangerous person on your team is the one with enormous potential and no desire. Their potential keeps you hooked while their lack of desire drains you dry. [00:03:05] Move 2: Read Desire Through Behavior, Not Words Everybody will tell you they want it. Talk is easy and free. Desire shows up in one place, and that's who does the homework. Give them a small assignment, some research, a script to role play, one call to make before you talk again, then watch what comes back. The one who shows up the next day with it done is telling you something the one who forgot never will. Run it this week with someone already on your team or someone you're recruiting, and inside a couple of weeks you stop guessing about who wants it. [00:04:00] Move 3: Teach Before You Push Sometimes what looks like no desire is a skill gap in disguise. Motivation without education backfires. Push somebody to recruit before you've taught them how, and they'll try, it'll feel awful, and they'll quietly decide recruiting just isn't for them. So lead with education first, then motivation, then application. Think about how we develop a young athlete. My own son had a mindset coach, skills coaches, and years of structured play around him, but all of that structure was wrapped around a kid who wanted it. The coaching made a willing athlete great. It would have made an unwilling one quit. [00:05:05] Move 4: Stop Carrying the Unwilling This is where leaders get stuck. We take the person with the most potential and the least desire and pour our best hours into them month after month, hoping. Put a budget on it. Decide how much time and energy you'll invest before the behavior has to show, and then hold that line. Carrying someone who won't move isn't kindness, it's a slow leak in your leadership. [00:05:35] Move 5: Pour Into the People Already Moving Take the energy you were spending trying to light a fire under the unwilling and move it to the people already showing you desire through their actions. That's where coaching compounds. Desire plus your coaching is a multiplier. No desire plus your coaching is just you worn out. [00:05:55] Why It Works Desire is internal. Skill moves from one person to another, you can teach it, but desire has to already live inside someone, and you can't install it from the outside no matter how much you care. Behavior is the only honest signal you've got, because talk is free and action costs something, so the person who does the small, hard thing is telling you the truth about their want. And here's the part that stings. Your time and energy are finite, so every hour you spend carrying someone who won't move is an hour you stole from someone who would. [00:06:45] Your Small Win Tonight Pick the one person you've been over-investing in with little return and answer one straight question, skill gap or desire gap. If it's skill, you've got a teaching plan. If it's desire, you've got a decision to make. Naming it plainly is the win for tonight. [00:07:10] Three Bigger Moves This Week Give one small assignment and watch who does the homework, because that shows you your real movers in days instead of months. Teach one skill before you ask anyone to hit a number, which separates the ...
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