What We Don't Say
Jeff Miller built his career in the wrong order, at least by conventional standards. He was teaching in one of the most dangerous schools in Los Angeles before he ever managed a corporate team. He violated a university contract to take a director role he didn't fully understand yet. And he didn't get his first real corporate job until his late 30s. Jeff is a partner at Door Two, but the path there ran through gang-violence schools in South Los Angeles, English teaching in Japan, a contract violation he made knowingly, and a stretch where he was working a corporate training job by day and teaching graduate school until 10pm three nights a week. This is Part 1 of a two-part conversation. Jeff and I talk about what it actually cost to build a career "backwards," why imposter syndrome doesn't go away (and what it means when someone tells you it does), and why 30 students in a classroom aren't that different from 30 people on a corporate team. This episode is for anyone who has ever looked around the room and wondered how they got there and whether they belong. Three Specific Realizations from This Conversation * The moment Jeff realized he had authority wasn't a meeting or a title announcement. It was someone snapping to attention in a retail store, and he had to recalibrate on the spot. * Imposter syndrome isn't a phase you graduate from. Jeff's framing: "the greatest deception is self-deception," and most people who claim to be past it aren't being honest with themselves. * Managing a classroom of children in a high-violence school was better preparation for corporate leadership than most formal management training. Not metaphorically. Literally the same skills.
14 episodios
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