Last Updated on: June 13, 2023
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

In this episode of The Power Producers Podcast, David Carothers interviews Paul Epstein, bestselling author, and keynote speaker. Paul discusses the importance of adaptability, resilience, and a positive mindset and the importance of understanding yourself and your purpose.

Episode Highlights:

  • Paul discusses his experiences in sales leadership and how he learned to play offense in defensive environments. (2:42)
  • Paul shares his thoughts on overcoming adversity and applying past experiences to current challenges. (11:11)
  • Paul mentions that his book “The Head Heart Hands Equation” aims to help individuals make better decisions faster and will be available in September 2023. (24:47)
  • Paul explains that culture transformation involves focusing on the three subsets of people: partners, tourists, and prisoners. (30:58)
  • Paul discusses how the majority of people haven’t done the inner work of understanding themselves and their purpose, but successful people have intentionally put themselves in environments to understand themselves better. (35:22)
  • Paul explains that achieving success is a never-ending climb and it’s important to define what success looks like in our own words. (43:39)

Tweetable Quotes:

  • “I have done the inner work, to know who I am, to know why I do what I do, to have a vision on where I’m going to position it as a mission so that I don’t give up at the first signs of hurdles, obstacles, setbacks, adversity, like this is the fortitude that’s needed.” – Paul Epstein
  • “The number one way to battle through all these very human feelings is unshakable confidence.” – Paul Epstein

Resources Mentioned:

The Power Producers Podcast where we are refining and redefining the sales game.

Kyle Houck

Captive

Captives Have Moved Downstream: Why Middle-Market Producers Must Master the Conversation—Or Get Left Behind

For most of my 20-year career, captives felt like something reserved for the insurance elite—the jumbo accounts, the Fortune-level operations, the companies with multimillion-dollar manual premiums and entire departments dedicated to risk management. If you had asked me ten or fifteen years ago whether a $250,000 account was a legitimate captive candidate, I would’ve laughed. I thought captives were reserved for companies so complex and so large that the only rational way to insure them was to build an insurance company around their risk.

Read More »

Test Message

Killing Commercial Login