Founders
Episode 106 #106 Bill Walsh (The Score Takes Care of Itself)
Founders

Episode 106: #106 Bill Walsh (The Score Takes Care of Itself)

Founders

Episode 106

#106 Bill Walsh (The Score Takes Care of Itself)

David Senra is the host of Founders, where he studies history's greatest entrepreneurs. This is what he learned from reading The Score Takes Care of Itself: My Philosophy of Leadership by Bill Walsh.

What I learned from reading The Score Takes Care of Itself: My Philosophy of Leadership by Bill Walsh. 

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[0:01] I believe it’s much the same in one’s profession: Superb, reliable results take time. 

[4:55] How Jack Dorsey describes The Score Takes Care of Itself: He took at team that was at the bottom and brought them to the top. He focused on the details. He didn’t say you need to win games. He said you need to tuck in your shirts. You need to clean your lockers. This is how we answer the phones here. He set a new standard of performance. 

[6:53] Bill Walsh on his father / What he learned from his early life 

[10:15] Bill Walsh on why should you care about your standard of performancePursuing your ambitions, especially those of any magnitude, can be grueling and hazardous, and produce agonizing failure along the way, but achieving those goals is among life’s most gratifying and thrilling experiences

[14:15] A great description of the book: Bill Walsh loved to teach. This is his final lecture on leadership

[16:20] Bill Walsh built a new culture. He calls it his Standard of Performance. 

[20:30] Make a commitment to be the best version of yourself— even when your current external results may not warrant that belief 

[26:16] The prime directive was not victory  

[28:45] Winners act like winners before their winners  

[32:20] Bill Walsh experiences the entrepreneurial roller coaster 

[37:00] An incredible story about his idea of the west coast offense 

[46:20] Be unswerving in moving towards your goal 

[47:25] Sweat the little details but the right little details 

[49:00] Don’t focus on your competitors —spend that time making yourself better so it is harder for them to compete against you 

[50:00] Don’t let anybody call you a genius / If you sleep on a win you’ll wake up with a loss / Success Disease 

[54:15] Without a healthy ego you’ve got a big problem  

[58:05] There is no mystery to mastery  

[1:03:05] A pretty package will not sell a crappy product  

[1:04:16] Avoid burnout: Can you imagine how burned out you must be to wait fourteen years to return to doing something you love? 

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#106 Bill Walsh (The Score Takes Care of Itself)

Introduction

"The Fujian Province of China is known as the Venice of Asia because of the superb stone sculptures created there over the centuries. Hundreds, perhaps thousands of years ago, stone sculptures worked in a time-honored and time-consuming way. When their sculpture was completed, the artist immersed it in a nearby stream where it remained for many years as the waters constantly flowed over it. During this period, the finishing touch was applied by Mother Nature and Father Time. The gentle but constant flow of water over the stone changed it in subtle but profound ways."

"Only after this occurred, would the sculptor consider it complete. Only when time had done its work was the sculpture perfect. I believe it's much the same in one's profession. Superb reliable results take time. The little improvements that lead to impressive achievements come not from a week's work or a month's practice, but from a series of months and years until your organization knows what you are teaching inside and out, and everyone is able to execute their responsibilities in all ways at the highest level."

"I believe that every organization has a cultural conscious that it carries forward year after year. That ethos may be good or bad, productive or unproductive, but it exists, and it is guiding ongoing personnel and informing new arrivals as they come on board. The attitudes and actions I installed, including the inventory of San Francisco's football plays, werethe results of the same guys doing the same thing for years and years. Subsequently, it became almost routine to execute at the highest level when the heat was on. Excellence in every single area of our organization had been taught and expected from the day I arrived as head coach. The big plays in business or professional football don't just suddenly occur out of thin air. They result from very hard work and painstaking attention over the years to all of the details related to your leadership."

"Talent, functional intelligence, experience, maturity, effort, dedication, and practice may not be perfect, but they will get you so close to perfection that most people will think you achieved it. And the results will show it. It takes time to develop the standard of performance. It's not just a seminar or a practice or a season's worth of seminars and practices, but thoughtful and intense attention over years and years. This is a powerful force to have within you. I was filled with an appreciation that what these players and members of our organization were doing was a work of art, one that had been created over many years, similar in a way to the sculptures in China."

"It was a thing of beauty. I believe it's true in your profession. Your effort, in the beginning, is part of a continuum of effort. Your standard of performance is part of a continuum of standards. Today's effort becomes tomorrow's results. The quality of those efforts becomes the quality of your work. One day is connected to the following day and the following month to the following years. Your own standard of performance becomes who and what you are. You and your organization achieve greatness."

All right. So those are one of my favorite excerpts from the book that I read this week and the one I'm going to talk to you about today, which is The Score Takes Care of Itself: My Philosophy on Leadership by Bill Walsh. So this is one of -- for years and years and years, this book -- this is probably one of the most recommended books in Startup Land. I can't tell you how many different entrepreneurs have recommended this book. So I'm going to start before -- before I jump back into the book, I want to talk to you about -- so I went back to my notes and I searched for every time that this book has recommended.

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