The Secret To Loving Your Work with Bruce Daisley | E66

Published 2021-01-24
This weeks topics:
0:00 Intro
01:52 Your take on this new remote working culture?
12:11 What causes burn out?
29:03 What kills and causes creativity
42:43 How do I know when to quit?
45:53 Childhood trauma in the elite
52:54 The Trump Twitter ban
01:01:34 Where does social media go from here?
01:08:44 Whats next for you to keep joy in your work?
01:11:32 Whats the one thing you'd do to make work enjoyable for everyone?


Bruce:
www.linkedin.com/in/brucedaisley
twitter.com/brucedaisley


Listen on:
Apple podcast - podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-diary-of-a-ceo-b…
Spotify - open.spotify.com/show/7iQXmUT7XGuZSzAMjoNWlX


My book pre-order:
(UK, US, AUS, NZ Link) - hyperurl.co/xenkw2
(EU & Rest of the World Link) www.bookdepository.com/Happy-Sexy-Millionaire-Stev…

FOLLOW ►
Instagram: www.instagram.com/steven/
Twitter: twitter.com/SteveBartlettSC
Linkedin: www.linkedin.com/in/steven-bartlett-56986834/


Sponsor:
uk.huel.com/
www.fiverr.com/ceo

All Comments (21)
  • @TheDiaryOfACEO
    Thanks everyone for watching! Don't forget to like and subscribe to know when I drop another episode x
  • You really are making the world a better place. Not many people see the world the way I do but you consistently instil hope that one day (hopefully soon) that people will awaken. The deletion of dogmas and enforced views and creating one's own personal rule book - virtues, values and ethics included. Thoroughly enjoy the content!
  • Bruce's podcast and book is amazing - the GOAT of knowing how to make a workplace great. Loving this collab
  • @artfulaaron
    I loved this episode. I've been furloughed for most of the year and I still talk to all my team regularly. We love our jobs and are genuinely a little family so this episode really resonated with me in the segment about work culture
  • I stumbled across you and your podcasts Steven when Jake Humphrey tweeted his upcoming interview with you. Brilliant listen and since subscribed and listening to both current and past podcasts. So interesting and thought provoking. Keep up the great work. 👏🏻
  • Thanks for all your videos/podcasts! I didn't miss any ☺️ One thing I'd add to this conversation is that, at work, there is always gonna be someone or something that we don't like and we have to deal with it, there is not a perfect work environment. However, we need to prioritize what we do like and balancing the pros and cons of the job as a whole :)
  • Great episode! We discuss this at work all the time and I'm happy to say I'm part of the percentage that loves my job. Also love Bruce's Greta t-shirt!!
  • @joealley0
    Loving all the content bro, really inspires me. Always look forward to the future uploads x
  • @winickp
    Excellent podcast, thank you Steven and Bruce!
  • @ExposureNinja
    "The cause of self-development is discipline. The cost of self-development is loneliness." - Steven Bartlett
  • Wow so much of this resonates with me. In 2014 I moved from Wales to Aberdeen to support my ex partners new job working offshore. Long story short he was never there. For the first 6 weeks I was completely on my own with no family, friends and I became really ill. I started having daily vertigo attacks lasting hours and eventually I lost the hearing in my left ear. I honestly believe to this day that it’s because of the extreme loneliness I went through. I love the topics you chose to discuss Steven, they are so meaningful and relevant. They keep me going through lockdown 💪
  • Great video dude ! Been fighting my way through burnout for the last few years. Do you think that we are now pushing into constantly creating new content to stay ahead of the game ?
  • @gidigidi22
    Hey Steve, quick reflection on your theory that successful people have most certainly lived through some kind of childhood trauma. I heard you saying that for you there was either the chance to be successful or deeply in trouble.  Studies about Germany show that close to 50% of people dealt with some kind of emotional, sexual or physical abuse during childhood. Though, most of them just live a pretty normal life, neither successful nor miserable. Having dealt with a childhood trauma can't be the crucial characteristic to this question then. What's your opinion on that?