Shownotes
Are you known for your output… or for what happens to other people when you’re in the room?
Most people define high performers by their output: discipline, drive, execution, results. But over time, the true difference between high performers isn’t how much they accomplish. It’s what happens to other people around them.
In this episode, James challenges high performers directly: your strength either expands others or shrinks them. If your presence consistently improves the work but diminishes initiative, you are impressive, but you are not multiplying.
Real leadership begins when your strength creates more strength.
Common belief:
High performance is about doing more, moving faster, and raising the bar personally.
Truer view:
High performance matures when your strength causes other people to grow, not just comply.
This Episode Is For:
- High performers who carry more than most
- Individuals frustrated by mediocrity but unsure how to respond
- Quiet drivers who want responsibility, not recognition
- Leaders who sense their next level is influence, not output
In This Episode:
- The incomplete definition of high performance
- The difference between impressive and multiplying
- How strength can unintentionally shrink others
- Why becoming indispensable can limit growth
- The shift from producing results to producing producers
Reflection Question
When you leave a room, are people stronger because of you, or more dependent on you?