Ever thought about the true power of choices? Dive into Zafar's insights on destiny versus drive and uncover the profound mindset shift that can change everything.
I guess the key challenge is becoming aware of yourself.
Speaker:And realizing where you need to grow, uh, realizing it's actually about you.
Speaker:Well, what do I mean by that?
Speaker:It's about pretty much everything that happens.
Speaker:Pretty much where you are now is because of the decisions on
Speaker:the whole that you have made.
Speaker:Sure, if you...
Speaker:Run out into the road and you get hit by a car, and you know,
Speaker:God forbid, and something bad happens, you couldn't control that.
Speaker:But if you get hit by a car and you're in hospital for a while, or
Speaker:if you lose an arm, you can still control what happens afterwards.
Speaker:Okay, I haven't got an arm, so what am I going to do about it?
Speaker:And so you've got to realize...
Speaker:limitations and see how you can address them
Speaker:Welcome to Push To Be More with me your host Matt Edmundson.
Speaker:Now this is a show that talks about the stuff that makes life work.
Speaker:And to help us do just that, today I'm chatting with Zafar Karim, also known as
Speaker:Zaf, from Blockapt about where he's had to push through, what he does to recharge
Speaker:his batteries, and what does growth look like, what does more look like.
Speaker:for him.
Speaker:Now the show notes and transcript from our conversation will be
Speaker:available on our website pushtobemore.
Speaker:com and also on our website you can sign up for our newsletter and each
Speaker:week we will email you the links and the notes from the show automatically.
Speaker:They go straight to your inbox totally for free so do make sure you sign up for that.
Speaker:Now this episode is brought to you by Aurion Media.
Speaker:Which helps entrepreneurs and business leaders like you set up and
Speaker:run their own successful podcast.
Speaker:Why on earth would you want to do that, you may ask yourself.
Speaker:Well let me tell you, I have found running my own podcast to be insanely rewarding.
Speaker:It is one of the best marketing tools that I've ever come across.
Speaker:It opens doors to amazing people like nothing I have seen.
Speaker:I've built networks, made friends, and had a platform to champion my customers.
Speaker:My team and my suppliers and I think just about every entrepreneur
Speaker:and business leader should have a podcast just because it's had such
Speaker:a huge impact on my own business.
Speaker:Now of course this all sounds great in theory but in reality there's a whole
Speaker:bunch of Problems aren't there, like Setup, Distribution, Strategy, Tech.
Speaker:I mean the whole list goes on, and this is where Aurion Media enter into the scene.
Speaker:They take all of that off your plate.
Speaker:You see, I love talking to people, but I'm not a big fan of production and editing.
Speaker:I'm just not, which is why Aurion Media do it.
Speaker:I do what I'm good at, and they brilliantly take care of the rest.
Speaker:So if you're wondering if podcasting is a good marketing strategy for your
Speaker:business, have a look, check them out.
Speaker:aurionmedia.
Speaker:com, that's A U R I O N M E D I A dot com.
Speaker:They've got some great free resources on there that you can also check out.
Speaker:So do check that out.
Speaker:aurionmedia dot com.
Speaker:Now.
Speaker:again
Speaker:Let's talk about today's guest.
Speaker:Emerging from the humble streets of East End London to the prestigious
Speaker:halls of Cambridge University, Zaf exemplifies success and resilience
Speaker:in the tech business world.
Speaker:A business maestro, he has mastered the art of steering fledgling tech IPOs.
Speaker:Following, following an illustrious decade long journey in investment banking
Speaker:with titans like the Solomon Brothers, Rothschilds, I mean, beyond a seasoned
Speaker:business leader, Zaf is trailblazing Oxbridge alumni's, being the first in
Speaker:his family and the sole representative from his school to attain this milestone.
Speaker:That's a heck of a bio, Zaf, I'm not gonna lie.
Speaker:It's great to have you on the show.
Speaker:Thanks for joining me.
Speaker:How are we doing?
Speaker:Thank you very much for inviting me.
Speaker:I think you, um, over compliment me, but hey, you know.
Speaker:I just love, I say this quite often now on the podcast, Seth, that, um, I, I
Speaker:never read a guest bio and until it's live as we're recording, because I just love
Speaker:the way these things have been written.
Speaker:Uh, and the production team do such a great job on them.
Speaker:Uh, so great to have you.
Speaker:Are you still in the East end of London?
Speaker:Where are you now in the world?
Speaker:Uh, so I, uh, uh, my office is in London Bridge, uh, but I guess
Speaker:technically I'm in the East End, but it's now called Canary Wharf as opposed
Speaker:Uh, yeah.
Speaker:uh, the less salubrious parts of the East End.
Speaker:Canary Wharf is just a lot more trendy, isn't it, and a lot
Speaker:more, a lot more fashionable.
Speaker:It's
Speaker:Yeah, yeah.
Speaker:I do like Canary Wharf.
Speaker:I like to walk around there late at night whenever I'm down in London.
Speaker:It's quite a nice place to go.
Speaker:But, um, well, so you're in the illustrious Canary Wharf.
Speaker:Now, Zaf, let's start off the podcast the way I like to start off the
Speaker:podcast with the podcast question.
Speaker:And I wonder how many more times I can mention the word podcast.
Speaker:Now, uh, as you know, this show is sponsored by aurion Media,
Speaker:they're a brilliant podcast agency.
Speaker:Can I ask if you had your own podcast?
Speaker:And you could have any guest that you liked on your show, past or present,
Speaker:the only caveat being that they've had a big influence on your life.
Speaker:Who would be a guest on your show and why?
Speaker:Oh my God, that's, um, that's a difficult one.
Speaker:Um, uh, look, I, I, I'm where I am because I stand on the shoulders of giants.
Speaker:Um, and, um, so, There's people as far ranging as, say, Arnold Schwarzenegger.
Speaker:Now, you might not associate him with academia or tech or something, but he's
Speaker:probably one of the only people I know of who has come from Nothing, and being
Speaker:incredibly successful, indeed got to the top of the tree in three highly
Speaker:competitive careers, um, bodybuilding, Hollywood, and then politics, um, and,
Speaker:uh, you know, I've read his biography, it's, it's, I normally don't read
Speaker:autobiographies, but his one is actually quite good, um, I would, uh, Uh, invite,
Speaker:uh, you know, some of the teachers that inspired me, uh, while I was at school.
Speaker:Uh, I would invite some of the dons that inspired me and gave me an intellectual
Speaker:awakening while I was at Oxford.
Speaker:I had some mentors, um, while I was at the banks and, and,
Speaker:and, um, uh, subsequent to that.
Speaker:I'd invite, you know, villain characters like Al Fayed, um, Muhammad
Speaker:Al Fayed, because if you actually read his biography, which is Not an
Speaker:autobiography, warts and all, um, it's quite remarkable what he has
Speaker:achieved given where he came from.
Speaker:The same with Maxwell, Robert Maxwell, so, um, but again, all of these people
Speaker:don't have to be in academia or in business, um, you know, if you, if
Speaker:you took, take someone like Mo Farah.
Speaker:Um, you know, the, the sprinter, the, the long distance runner, uh, if you
Speaker:actually look at what he's achieved and what's coming out about him, you know,
Speaker:it takes a particular kind of mindset and the resilience to achieve that much.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That's not taking away achievements from people that have had the silver spoon or
Speaker:whatever, but it's the distance you've traveled rather than where you end up.
Speaker:And, um, there's lessons to be learned from all of them.
Speaker:Absolutely.
Speaker:true, that's so true, and um, it's interesting isn't it when you still,
Speaker:I finally, like you have done here, Zaf, you know, one of the interesting
Speaker:things that happens when you think about this question, um, you come
Speaker:up with an answer and you think.
Speaker:Well, this person inspired me because of X, Y, and Z, or this person's had an
Speaker:influence on me because of X, Y, and Z.
Speaker:And it just snowballs.
Speaker:You can quickly just keep going and keep going and keep going, you know,
Speaker:and, and the, the whole level of inspiration, uh, is, is fascinating.
Speaker:What does fascinate me about your answer is no one yet has mentioned
Speaker:Arnold Schwarzenegger, um, as a, as a, as a guest on the show, but actually.
Speaker:Um, I think you're right.
Speaker:I think he would make a fascinating guest on the show because he has done it in sort
Speaker:of three areas and you, uh, he's gone, he's back in Hollywood now, isn't he?
Speaker:He's, he's now making films.
Speaker:I saw that there was a TV series with him, uh, uh, I think on Netflix.
Speaker:Um, and so you're kind of like, This guy, him and Sylvester Stallone, you
Speaker:kind of, I, in my head, you compare the two of them, do you know what
Speaker:I mean, but Schwarzenegger has done what Stallone hasn't, in the sense
Speaker:that he has been successful in other arenas, whereas Stallone was always
Speaker:the, sort of, the actor and the writer.
Speaker:Um, but I, I, I would find it fascinating, uh, like you, Zaf, I, I
Speaker:think that's a, that's a great answer.
Speaker:I'm curious though, when you said, um,
Speaker:I don't know what it
Speaker:You, you use this phrase, you had an intellectual awakening, uh, I
Speaker:think, was it, um, uh, the phrase that you used, what, what was that?
Speaker:What was that all about?
Speaker:Um, so, um, my parents were immigrants from, um, Pakistan and, um, in the
Speaker:seventies, eighties, and there's this very much thing about, um, um, you know, you
Speaker:are either gonna be a doctor, an engineer, an accountant, a physicist, et cetera.
Speaker:So when I went up to, uh, Cambridge, Um, I, um, I actually did A levels in
Speaker:Physics, Chemistry, Maths, and prior to that, as a teenager, I used to program
Speaker:computers, so I was very much in that kind of mold that my parents can hold me up
Speaker:and say, you know, my son's a scientist
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:. Mm-hmm.
Speaker:I decided to read economics, um, much to the, uh, annoyance of my
Speaker:parents who thought, economics?
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:that?
Speaker:Don't forget this was, uh, the mid 80s, mid to late 80s.
Speaker:Um, but even at that time, I had a kind of...
Speaker:Disdainful view of classics or philosophy or history.
Speaker:What's the point?
Speaker:Um, and then by the time I got to the end of my Cambridge career, and certainly
Speaker:subsequently, I started realizing how valuable those subjects actually are.
Speaker:Philosophy and the clarity of thought it can give you.
Speaker:History, because, you know, if you don't study history and if you don't learn
Speaker:from it, you're destined to repeat it.
Speaker:I mean, that's a cliché, but it's actually true.
Speaker:Um, uh, Classics, because the, the texts that you study are as applicable today
Speaker:as they were, you know, 3, 000 years ago.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And my kind of intellectual, intellectualization of that
Speaker:is simply the following.
Speaker:Whereas.
Speaker:As human beings, we've massively changed our environment.
Speaker:We've advanced, you know, we've gone from walking to horse and
Speaker:cart to electric cars, etc.
Speaker:Fundamentally, The world is about what humans do, and what humans do
Speaker:comes from the brain, and it comes from the intellectual part to the
Speaker:extent of rationalization, but actual making decisions is an emotional part.
Speaker:And, believe it or not, the brain hasn't evolved that
Speaker:much in the last 3, 000 years.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:So the, so the things that were applicable to how humans think...
Speaker:And the emotions and what drives humans and what doesn't, I, it's applicable now.
Speaker:And, and so, so it was exposure to those ideas and having debates with,
Speaker:um, you know, people who were reading, in quotes, lesser subjects, which I
Speaker:realize aren't lesser subjects at all.
Speaker:In fact, they're the basis of so many things.
Speaker:Um, Cambridge taught me to think, how to think.
Speaker:Uh, you know, doing my A levels and O levels and, you know, I did well.
Speaker:But I realize there's a big difference in learning how to think.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, so yeah, that's, that's what I'd say intellectual awakening.
Speaker:I wish it had occurred earlier, but hey, you know, um, everybody
Speaker:has different circumstances.
Speaker:They do, and it's fascinating listening to you talk, Zaf, because I'm, and I'm
Speaker:smiling because uh, I, as I get older, um, the more I realise, uh, actually some
Speaker:of the things that I, like you, thought were a bit dull and boring, uh, actually
Speaker:is super interesting all of a sudden.
Speaker:So, thank you.
Speaker:I remember, you know, again, having that, that, that moment of realisation, probably
Speaker:in my mid twenties, uh, that actually history is actually quite interesting,
Speaker:uh, and, and, and it was only then that I started to really understand it, uh,
Speaker:more and started to read around it more.
Speaker:It was only sort of in my, I guess, early 30s that I actually started
Speaker:to care about our grandparents who were in World War II and actually
Speaker:really understanding their story.
Speaker:And I think for me, cinema in a lot of ways has helped bring history
Speaker:to life recently, you know, with the advances in technology and CGI.
Speaker:But pre tech, I mean, when I was in my 20s, it was a while ago.
Speaker:Let me, let me just be clear with you.
Speaker:Um, it's, this is before technology, but I, I, I do sit here and think, yes,
Speaker:I, I do wonder what it was that, or I wonder what it is that is an age thing
Speaker:that makes me appreciate these topics.
Speaker:The more I go through life rather than appreciating them when I
Speaker:have the opportunity to learn and absorb a lot more, like at
Speaker:school, for example, I don't know.
Speaker:I don't know if you have any thoughts on this.
Speaker:Um, growth, um, maturing, um, uh, you know, people mature at different levels,
Speaker:people maturing to different things.
Speaker:Um, I'm certainly not the person I was ten years ago and, um, Probably unrecognizable
Speaker:from the person I was 20 years ago.
Speaker:Um, uh.
Speaker:Um, if I kind of turn that on its head, uh, 30 years ago I was
Speaker:so clever and everything else I knew I had nothing to learn.
Speaker:Uh, 20 years ago I was a lot clever and realize I had quite a bit
Speaker:to learn and now I know nothing.
Speaker:Uh, I, I've still got everything to learn.
Speaker:I, I, I make no assumptions anymore.
Speaker:it is funny that curve that you go through, isn't it, and um, we often
Speaker:say that about the teenagers, you know, teenagers know everything in the
Speaker:world, those in their twenties kind of know most things about the world,
Speaker:and then by the time you get to your forties and fifties you realise you
Speaker:actually know nothing about the world.
Speaker:Uh, that's quite a fascinating journey that we all sort of go on with that.
Speaker:So, looking back then.
Speaker:Zaf over, you know, over this period of growth, you know, from your
Speaker:twenties to your fifties and, and your, your sort of remarkable story.
Speaker:What, what jumps out at, of, you know, to you as maybe one or two
Speaker:of the key challenges in life that you sort of had to face, you know,
Speaker:that you, that you came through.
Speaker:What, what were some of those turning points for you?
Speaker:Well, look, I, I think, um,
Speaker:you do ask quite deep questions, which is good.
Speaker:Um, I, I guess the key challenge is becoming aware of yourself.
Speaker:And realizing where you need to grow, uh, realizing it's actually about you.
Speaker:Well, what do I mean by that?
Speaker:It's about pretty much everything that happens.
Speaker:Pretty much where you are now is because of the decisions on
Speaker:the whole that you have made.
Speaker:Sure, if you...
Speaker:Run out into the road and you get hit by a car, and you know,
Speaker:God forbid, and something bad happens, you couldn't control that.
Speaker:But if you get hit by a car and you're in hospital for a while, or
Speaker:if you lose an arm, you can still control what happens afterwards.
Speaker:Okay, I haven't got an arm, so what am I going to do about it?
Speaker:And so you've got to realize...
Speaker:limitations and see how you can address them.
Speaker:Um, I, I, I think that's the key challenge.
Speaker:So let me put this in, into perspective.
Speaker:So people say to me, Oh my God, you know, you're brought up in the East
Speaker:End and, uh, you know, the West End football ground was the center for the
Speaker:National Front and everything else.
Speaker:And see, but that's all I knew.
Speaker:And my attitude towards it.
Speaker:Yeah, so, I just got to deal with it, you know, I didn't know that
Speaker:my school was not a good school.
Speaker:I just did what I did, and I've got exams coming up, I better do some work, right?
Speaker:Um, I didn't know that, um, uh, uh, you know, there was
Speaker:racism then, there's racism now.
Speaker:I don't see it as a challenge, as something to overcome.
Speaker:I just thought, okay, that's, that's, that's, that's a given.
Speaker:I can blame everything on that, or I can just get on and try and
Speaker:do what I'm going to try and do.
Speaker:So, there are obstacles, but I don't see those as challenges.
Speaker:Now, when I look back, I realize that at that time, the schooling
Speaker:in my area was very bad.
Speaker:But if you ask, go back 40 years and ask me, I'd just say, no, it's
Speaker:great school, you know, whatever.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:When I go back, uh, say 20 years, 30 years, and I look back and I think, you
Speaker:know, when I started my professional career, there was a lot of ways of
Speaker:behaving and norms and the rest of it, which I just wasn't aware of
Speaker:because I'd never been exposed to this.
Speaker:And I, I'd never known anyone in my circle of family, friends, anything
Speaker:that, exposed to this, but I didn't see that as, oh, that's a challenge.
Speaker:I've got to overcome it.
Speaker:I realize now it took me longer to overcome those
Speaker:things because I had to grow.
Speaker:I had to be aware that I didn't
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:those things, but it wasn't like, oh, that's an obstacle in the way
Speaker:and how am I going to overcome it?
Speaker:Do you see my point?
Speaker:So my, my, my attitude has always been Well, you just get on with it.
Speaker:And then maybe five years later, you're like, my God, everybody else that's done
Speaker:this didn't have that problem to overcome.
Speaker:But I didn't see it as a challenge at the time.
Speaker:It's just, I've just got to get on with it.
Speaker:yeah,
Speaker:I think resilience, resilience is, is really important.
Speaker:In the credit crunch, I, I suffered very badly.
Speaker:Um, and I basically had to get up and start again.
Speaker:And, you know, I wasn't a 20 year old.
Speaker:I was a 40 year old.
Speaker:So, so what's the alternative?
Speaker:You're going to sit there and mope until your friend, you had a bad time
Speaker:and everything else and then 20 years look back and say well I spent the last
Speaker:20 years of my life pitying myself.
Speaker:um,
Speaker:Or you can say, well, you know, stuff happens.
Speaker:It probably happened for a reason.
Speaker:To teach me a lesson.
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:I don't know what the lesson is but I'm going to bloody well find out.
Speaker:That's such a great attitude.
Speaker:As you're talking, um, I'm reminded, Zaf, of an episode we recorded on
Speaker:the podcast quite early on, actually, with a guy called Ram Gidimal.
Speaker:Who's also in London, uh, immigrated, uh, I think it was in the sixties, um,
Speaker:into the UK from India via, via Kenya, I think it was, um, very similar mindset.
Speaker:It's like, we have all of these problems, we can't control them, but what can we do?
Speaker:Let's get on and do something.
Speaker:And it's, it's, it's, it's fascinating listening to you talk.
Speaker:And I, I don't know, is this something that, um, you learned?
Speaker:Yourself, is this something that came through your parents, this attitude?
Speaker:I'm kind of curious where it came from.
Speaker:If you'd asked me these questions before the podcast, I would still have had as
Speaker:much difficulty trying to answer them.
Speaker:But you haven't, so this makes it more difficult.
Speaker:Um, look, you're really talking about nature versus nurture, I think.
Speaker:Um, and...
Speaker:Uh, when I was growing up, I, I was cognizant of the fact that,
Speaker:you know, we were in the East End, you know, East End people do this.
Speaker:I was cognizant of the fact that, um, you know, there was never much money around.
Speaker:Um, and, um, you know, there wasn't the internet and stuff, but,
Speaker:you know, you had TV and things.
Speaker:And, I just knew I wanted better, I wanted, this is not
Speaker:what I wanted for my life.
Speaker:Um, and so that gave me a massive drive.
Speaker:Now let's take the same Zaf Karim.
Speaker:Let's say I'd been born, um, in much more fortunate circumstances
Speaker:with much more, uh, well endowed parents and a better school and
Speaker:everything else and the rest of it.
Speaker:I may not have had that drive.
Speaker:mm,
Speaker:Because I would have thought, this is pretty good, I want to stay here.
Speaker:yeah,
Speaker:And, and staying there may still have taken effort, but it might
Speaker:not have taken as much effort.
Speaker:Um, once you've got that drive, it kind of stays short and mellows out over time.
Speaker:Um, so is that nature, or is it nurture?
Speaker:I think it's a mixture.
Speaker:So, I've got four siblings, and, uh, we have, A wide variation in the degrees
Speaker:of success we've had in our lives.
Speaker:I don't just mean career wise, but otherwise.
Speaker:Yet we were brought up by the same parents in the same circumstances.
Speaker:So, yes, there must be some element of, uh, uh, uh, nature.
Speaker:mm,
Speaker:But there must be some element of nurture as well.
Speaker:Um, So, you know, look, it's a difficult one.
Speaker:Has everybody with my circumstances ended up being as successful or
Speaker:unsuccessful, depending on, you know, which part of the tree you're on?
Speaker:Um, uh, no.
Speaker:Uh, so, yeah, I think it's a drive.
Speaker:I think I've always been driven, fairly driven, uh, from an early age.
Speaker:Um, it's just, it's just, yeah.
Speaker:But nature, nurture, huh, you know, I don't know.
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:It's an interesting one, isn't it?
Speaker:And I like, I like...
Speaker:How you talk about that, you know, and how it's a mixture of two things.
Speaker:And if you were born into different circumstances, would
Speaker:you still have the drive?
Speaker:I'm kind of curious though, for you, um, you know, the, the whole resilience,
Speaker:uh, which I think is a great word.
Speaker:It's not a word we hear a lot of these days, if I'm honest with you, um,
Speaker:I had to look it up before I used it.
Speaker:Brilliant.
Speaker:Uh, it's, it's, uh, it's an interesting, because I think if I was to categorize
Speaker:a word at the moment, I don't know if I'd, of culture at the moment,
Speaker:I don't know if I'd use the word resilience more than I'd use the word
Speaker:victim, in the sense that everybody's become a victim about various things.
Speaker:And it's,
Speaker:Please.
Speaker:yeah, it seems to be the opposite.
Speaker:But I'm kind of, I'm kind of curious, um, for you, Zef, um, You had this
Speaker:drive, you wanted to develop, you wanted to get out, you wanted to have more.
Speaker:Do you feel like you've done that?
Speaker:Do you feel like you've achieved that?
Speaker:Or is it still a quest that you're on?
Speaker:Look, I, I think for me, um, you know, my life in, in various fields, personal,
Speaker:um, professional, Intellectual, whatever.
Speaker:It's basically, um, kind of been fairly volatile, you know, going
Speaker:up and then suddenly you crash down and going up and crash down.
Speaker:And, um, um, I was talking to one of my very good friends over Christmas, um, Uh,
Speaker:and, uh, funnily enough about the podcasts that we listen to, you know, while we're
Speaker:out jogging or whatever we're doing.
Speaker:And um, so she told me what she listens to and, and, and I said to her, Oh, I
Speaker:tend to listen to a lot of, um, podcasts about, uh, uh, Self improvement.
Speaker:Um, so, you know, this might be Tony Robbins.
Speaker:It might be, I'm not going to mention others, but you know,
Speaker:there's lots of these things.
Speaker:It might be about startups and how you grow startups.
Speaker:It might be about sales.
Speaker:It might be about, uh, kind of, um, Moral philosophy.
Speaker:Um, I don't want to plug others, but I listen to the Moral Maze, for example,
Speaker:hmm.
Speaker:Um, and she, because she's known me for too long, um, she said, I, Zaf,
Speaker:you're still on that quest for self improvement and, you know, but you
Speaker:have, you, you haven't changed a, you know, a dot since I met you kind
Speaker:of thing, like you're still pure or immature, but she's a friend of mine.
Speaker:And so, you know, I, I, I think.
Speaker:The moment you stop pursuing that, I think it would be, for me, it would
Speaker:be a disaster because I mentioned earlier, you know, in my career there
Speaker:was lots of mores and ways of behaving and doing things which I didn't know
Speaker:because I'd never experienced anything.
Speaker:But because I was so good at other things, I was able to mask them.
Speaker:Now I wasn't masking them intentionally, I just didn't know
Speaker:I had all those deficiencies.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But over time I became more and more self aware and I've been able to...
Speaker:Plug those deficiencies.
Speaker:And as a result, across the board, aspects of my life got better.
Speaker:So I think this is a continuous, continuous thing.
Speaker:So, so I read a hell of a lot, for example, usually, uh, fact, um,
Speaker:biographies, uh, books on business, books, books on, I don't know,
Speaker:philosophy, etc, etc, history.
Speaker:Finance, whatever.
Speaker:Every now and again I read a fiction book because my wife reads a lot of
Speaker:those and she gives me one of those that she thinks I'll enjoy and I read
Speaker:and I think, yeah, this is really good.
Speaker:Um, it's a continual process.
Speaker:Um, uh, yeah, it's a continual process.
Speaker:No, it is.
Speaker:I think that's why they call it growth, right?
Speaker:Uh, you keep moving and it's, um, it's, it's one of those and I, but I'm, I'm,
Speaker:I guess the reason I'm asking this question is, you know, when you, when
Speaker:you go back to being a lad growing up in the East End or, you know, you're doing
Speaker:your A levels or you're at Cambridge and, you know, you're, you're envisioning
Speaker:your life in the future, which is more than what it was in the past, you
Speaker:know, whether it was the circumstances, the money, whatever it was, um.
Speaker:Bye.
Speaker:Bye.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I wonder what that, what that sort of younger version of Zaf
Speaker:would think about the, where you are now, if that makes sense.
Speaker:Did you, did the younger version anticipate kind of where you are?
Speaker:No, absolutely not.
Speaker:Um, so, when I was, um, at school, I was very much the geek scientist,
Speaker:chemistry, physics, maths.
Speaker:I designed electronic circuits, they got published in magazines,
Speaker:I wrote computer games which were published, you know, etc, etc.
Speaker:Um, and, um, when I went up to university, I...
Speaker:I decided I wanted to do something that was more real world.
Speaker:So, you know, when you're talking to people, they don't talk about, if I drop a
Speaker:stone from a 100 meter building, how long is it going to take to hit the ground?
Speaker:They talk about, bloody hell, when is inflation going to come down?
Speaker:So I thought, there's this subject called economics.
Speaker:Let's, let's have a crack.
Speaker:Um, and so, so when I went up to university, I, I, I read economics.
Speaker:And, um, Cambridge is a different world.
Speaker:Um, it was a foreign world.
Speaker:You know, I ended up there.
Speaker:I applied almost by accident, um, because it was so much outside of
Speaker:the realm of my entire existence.
Speaker:It was because somebody persuaded me to go to an open day, and I went to an open day,
Speaker:and I thought, you know what, if I don't apply, I won't know, so I kind of applied.
Speaker:Um, but then everything was so new.
Speaker:It wasn't until The first term of my third year that I actually started
Speaker:thinking, Oh, what am I going to do?
Speaker:Um, you know, because economics, you can do lots of things.
Speaker:And, um, at the time, the most glamorous and highest paying jobs were investment
Speaker:banking and strategic consultancy.
Speaker:So I thought, you know what, give it a go.
Speaker:And I managed to get into Solomon Brothers, which at the time was probably
Speaker:the best investment bank in the world.
Speaker:So, you know, if you look at it from that honest perspective, I can't
Speaker:then say, oh, in my first year, I'd planned to be prime minister by the
Speaker:time I was 25 years old or something.
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:Because, because it was all so foreign to me.
Speaker:yeah, yeah.
Speaker:You know, it was something I saw on TV and it was for other people.
Speaker:Um, so I was kind of floating along and doing what I do and
Speaker:getting involved in society.
Speaker:Now, oh, I have to make a decision now.
Speaker:What shall I do?
Speaker:And I thought, well, I know that these look glamorous and you make
Speaker:a lot of money and let's go for it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Um, a few years into my career, I thought, you know, I'd been
Speaker:investment banking all my life and everything else and the rest of it.
Speaker:And I'd be a, you know, gilded banker kind of thing.
Speaker:I was far more wanted to do my own kind of thing and, and I left to
Speaker:start doing what, what I do, which is identify businesses, particularly
Speaker:in tech, get involved and hopefully make a massive difference, turn them
Speaker:around, grow them, et cetera, et cetera.
Speaker:But the kind of planning stage, even I know some of my friends who literally had
Speaker:plans that, you know, they'd be married by the time they were 30 and the rest of it.
Speaker:Um, And they were, and in some ways their lives on some measures
Speaker:gone far better than mine because they actually had a plan.
Speaker:They knew where they were going, but I didn't because, you know, from
Speaker:the East End to Cambridge and then investment banking, where you didn't
Speaker:even know what investment banking was at the interview, you just kind of.
Speaker:it.
Speaker:Um, of course you read all the stuff and everything else, but you
Speaker:didn't really know what it was.
Speaker:People still don't know, to be fair, and that's fine.
Speaker:Yeah, that includes me.
Speaker:Um, and, um, uh, so you can't, you can't really plan on that
Speaker:basis when you're moving.
Speaker:So, well, I certainly couldn't.
Speaker:Now, you know, I'm 54, right?
Speaker:So I kind of have a plan that, you know, there's certain things
Speaker:I want to get done in a certain space of time because I've seen it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I'm standing on sufficient number of shoulders that I can look down
Speaker:and say, you know, this is where I am and this is where I want to be.
Speaker:Because when I was in the East End, I was standing on no shoulders, and so I
Speaker:didn't know what existed, so if I don't know what exists there, how can I decide
Speaker:if I want to be there or there or there?
Speaker:Does that make sense?
Speaker:No, it does.
Speaker:Totally.
Speaker:It's a very similar story to mine, although I didn't do the
Speaker:investment banking thing, but a very, very, very similar story.
Speaker:So I'm curious then, uh, Zaf, what does more look like for you now?
Speaker:What's growth look like for you now?
Speaker:If you, if you, um, I don't know if, if you thought about the sort
Speaker:of next 5, 10, 20 years, what does, what does that sort of look like?
Speaker:Absolutely.
Speaker:Because I've experienced so much more, I kind of, you know, I know
Speaker:people, I don't mean know of, I know people who are billionaires.
Speaker:Um, I know people who are, um, working at charities or in need of charity.
Speaker:So I have a much wider scope.
Speaker:So...
Speaker:I think, uh, there's, you know, I'm working on a particular business, Block
Speaker:APT, I want to grow that, I want to make it as valuable as possible and
Speaker:then, uh, pass it on to the next person who can take it to the next level.
Speaker:Um, that seems to be going fairly well, but...
Speaker:You know, in this arena, startup arena, early stage,
Speaker:it's high risk, very high risk.
Speaker:Um, so, so there's that.
Speaker:Then post that, I need to think about what, what I'm going to do after
Speaker:that, maybe start up a fund, maybe.
Speaker:So I have a much clearer idea, but that's from a career standpoint.
Speaker:In what I do, I might end up broke, literally, or I might
Speaker:end up being worth 100 million.
Speaker:Mm
Speaker:It's not out of, uh, you know, scope.
Speaker:It's not like, um, you know, a partner at a law firm.
Speaker:And I know over the next five years, maybe I'll make a million, a million, a million,
Speaker:a million, and there'll be 5 million.
Speaker:And that's kind of where it, you know, it could be very high.
Speaker:It could be disastrous.
Speaker:Um, if I achieve.
Speaker:Uh, the latter, which is, you know, the hundred or billion or whatever.
Speaker:I have a very clear ideal of, um, what I would want to do with that money.
Speaker:And past a certain amount, the rest I would basically, um,
Speaker:uh, uh, uh, give to charity.
Speaker:And I know precisely what the charity is and indeed what I'd like them to
Speaker:do with it and every, you know, I've, because I have this wider scope now.
Speaker:This wider perspective, it's not just an idea, so I know that would
Speaker:cost this, and that would cost this, and that would cost this, and
Speaker:that would cost this kind of thing.
Speaker:Um, growth, um, my daughter who's um, eight next month, um, she's told
Speaker:me that I need to increase my one pack to a six pack, otherwise she's
Speaker:not going to be my daughter anymore.
Speaker:Um, so there's a lot of pressure there, um, and then, um,
Speaker:her.
Speaker:and then there's, um, Uh, yeah, uh, you know, I've been very lucky in my
Speaker:life in terms of, I've learnt a lot.
Speaker:I don't just mean intellectually, I mean in many other ways as well.
Speaker:I'd love to be able to pass that knowledge on.
Speaker:Um, you know, again, not taking anything away from my background or the rest
Speaker:of it, but there's lots of aspects of which, if I had a different background,
Speaker:I would have had that knowledge earlier.
Speaker:Um, and it's not knowledge as in hard facts or things, it's ways of doing
Speaker:things, you know, et cetera, et cetera.
Speaker:Um, growth.
Speaker:Yeah, look, you know, um, I've run an 80 person company.
Speaker:It would be interesting to run a 100 person company, a 1000 person company.
Speaker:Whether I would want to do that or just pass it on, I don't know.
Speaker:But you need to keep doing things.
Speaker:You can't, you know, you're either dying or you're growing.
Speaker:There is actually no standing still.
Speaker:That's the way I look at it.
Speaker:And, uh, it's up to you what or how you do that.
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:it's not what happens to you.
Speaker:It's, it's, um, it's what you do about it.
Speaker:Now, one of, one of, one of the people I admire, uh, Warren Buffett,
Speaker:Mm.
Speaker:right?
Speaker:I've read lots of his biography and, and, uh, well, one, he comes
Speaker:out with lots of pithy phrases.
Speaker:And once he was asked, you know, if you had one piece of,
Speaker:um, uh, advice for someone.
Speaker:Uh, uh, investment advice or advice, what would you, what would, would that be?
Speaker:And he answered, choose the right womb to be born into or born from.
Speaker:Brilliant.
Speaker:Brilliant.
Speaker:Because, because no matter what you do in
Speaker:Yeah,
Speaker:if you happen to be born in certain particular rooms, you are set for life.
Speaker:Under normal, uh,
Speaker:yeah,
Speaker:But, you know, that may mean that you're aimless, you, you don't have
Speaker:any challenges, you, you don't lead a fulfilled life because of that.
Speaker:But it is, it's brilliant.
Speaker:Do you, do you see my point?
Speaker:So, yeah, so you've got to, you've got to, you've just got to
Speaker:keep, keep at it, keep growing.
Speaker:Yeah, you can, ups and downs and the rest of it, you just push through.
Speaker:Or you can sit there and pity yourself and blame it on everything else.
Speaker:One of my friends.
Speaker:Mentors, um, who I consider a mentor, very successful, uh, individual, uh, massively
Speaker:successful, one of the first successful Asian people in, in the country.
Speaker:Um, as in, you know, in the 80s and 90s, there were no successful
Speaker:Asian people that made it to the general public's consciousness.
Speaker:I remember one of the things he said to me, uh, you know, we were
Speaker:discussing something and, and he said, he said, everything's my fault.
Speaker:I looked at him and I said, What do you mean everything's your fault?
Speaker:You're so bloody successful and everything
Speaker:mm.
Speaker:and blah blah blah blah.
Speaker:And he said, look, if, uh, tomorrow, um, you know, one of my, my son, I'm
Speaker:trying not to give away who he is.
Speaker:My son is walking down the road to come and visit me.
Speaker:And he gets hit by a car or something.
Speaker:That's my fault.
Speaker:And I said, how is it your fault?
Speaker:And he said, because I have a chauffeur that could go and pick him up.
Speaker:Mm
Speaker:That mentality is brilliant, because once you realize not everything is
Speaker:your fault, but everything is your responsibility, then you have the
Speaker:power to do something about it.
Speaker:But if you think, oh, it's...
Speaker:Racism.
Speaker:Well, okay, you can't change that.
Speaker:You can't do anything about it.
Speaker:Oh, it's um, I'm missing one arm.
Speaker:You can't change that.
Speaker:So you can't do anything about it.
Speaker:So it's disempowering, but if you are actually strong enough to
Speaker:say, you know what, it actually comes down to me, doesn't it?
Speaker:No matter what my circumstance is, then you have the ability.
Speaker:That's the first step in psychologically realizing that you have the
Speaker:ability to do something about it.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:No, that's great.
Speaker:So,
Speaker:Super powerful, Zaf.
Speaker:Listen, uh, you reminded me of a book I read called Extreme Ownership,
Speaker:uh, by Jocko Wilkins, innit?
Speaker:Yeah, a great book, uh, written by a Navy SEAL.
Speaker:Um, and you'll love it.
Speaker:Uh, it's that kind of mentality all over.
Speaker:Um, listen, I'm aware of time, uh, which has rapidly got away from us.
Speaker:I realise I've got a thousand more questions.
Speaker:Uh, but if people listening to the show want to connect with you, want to reach
Speaker:out to you, want to find out more about Block Act, what's the best way to do that?
Speaker:Um, probably on LinkedIn, uh, but I get lots of LinkedIn requests.
Speaker:So, if I'm on LinkedIn, they, you know, use the headline that,
Speaker:Uh, relates to this podcast.
Speaker:Then I know it will have come through this.
Speaker:So, I'm far more likely to, uh, uh, respond to it.
Speaker:Fantastic.
Speaker:I mean, I read them all, but, you know, responding, different thing.
Speaker:Yeah, the same way.
Speaker:I'm exactly the same way.
Speaker:Yeah, no, I'm on LinkedIn under Zafar Karim, Z A F A R K A R I M.
Speaker:There might be some other Zafar Karims there, but if you look for
Speaker:Zafar Karim, that's at BlockAPT at the moment, then you'll get me.
Speaker:And there's a picture there, which should look like me, but, you know.
Speaker:You never know.
Speaker:You never know.
Speaker:We will of course link to Zaf's info in the show notes as well, which
Speaker:you can get along for free, uh, with the transcript, um, at pushtobemore.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:Zaf, listen, uh, really appreciate you taking the time and coming
Speaker:and sharing your wisdom with us.
Speaker:Thanks for...
Speaker:Thanks for just being totally straight and I, I just love
Speaker:your insights and philosophy on life, really, really insightful.
Speaker:I have lots of notes, um, and I wish you every success with becoming
Speaker:the billionaire and turning the one pack into a six pack, my friend.
Speaker:Thank you so much and thank you for being very generous in your compliments, um,
Speaker:maybe one day I'll be deserving of them.
Speaker:Thanks, Matt.
Speaker:Uh,
Speaker:No problem, thanks.
Speaker:Huge thanks again to Zaf for joining me today.
Speaker:Also, a big shout out to today's show sponsor, Aurion Media.
Speaker:If you're wondering if podcasting is a good marketing strategy for your
Speaker:business, and I think it probably is, do connect with them at aurionmedia.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:That's A U R I O N M E D I A dot com.
Speaker:Now be sure to follow Push To Be More wherever you get your podcasts from,
Speaker:because we've got some more great conversations just like this one, lined
Speaker:up, well not just like this one because every conversation is different, but it
Speaker:will be a great conversation, so make sure you are subscribed, and in case no one
Speaker:has told you yet today, you are awesome.
Speaker:Awesome.
Speaker:Yes you are.
Speaker:It's just a burden you have to bear.
Speaker:Created awesome.
Speaker:Zaf has to bear it, I have to bear it, you've got to bear it as well.
Speaker:Now, Push To Be More is produced by Aurion Media.
Speaker:You can find our entire archive of episodes on your favourite podcast app.
Speaker:The team that makes this show possible is Sadaf Beynon, Estella
Speaker:Robin and Tanya Hutsuliak.
Speaker:Our theme music was written by Josh Edmundson.
Speaker:And as I mentioned, if you would like to read the transcript or show notes, you can
Speaker:find them on the website, pushtobemore.
Speaker:com.
Speaker:That's it from me.
Speaker:That's it from Zafar.
Speaker:I appreciate you being with us.
Speaker:Have a fantastic week, wherever you are in the world.
Speaker:I'll see you next time.