Entrepreneurial Spirit: Move Ideas To Action With Bravery & Passion

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After a warm, amusing and enchanting performance by the ever so talented WJM Band, a rock band of 10 year old boys, Paul Katz took the TEDxUNPlaza stage on September 16, 2013 at the United Nations to kickstart a conversation about the third session of the event: Ideas to Action.

Entertainment industry executive, two-time Grammy nominee and social entrepreneur, Paul Katz is the founder and CEO of Commit Media.

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He cited Catapult, an example of an idea moved to action in the real world. The first crowdsourcing platform dedicated to girls and women’s rights, it is run by small start-up team of people hailing from design, technology, advocacy, journalism and of course the girls and women’s sector.

The team’s passion is driven by the fact that there’s an urgent need for increased funds and engagement for girls’ and women’s rights and development, something which has been obvious for years to activists, advocates and everyone else working and campaigning on behalf of girls and women.

When you realize how low the stats are, your ears perk up. For example, only 6% of all funding goes to girls and women’s issues. One very real example in the developing world is the use of mobile phones being used to teach Afghanistan girls to read when they can’t leave the house.  To-date Catapult has helped roughly 200 projects in 81 countries worldwide.

While one of Paul’s key drivers is social entrepreneurship and change, he is also well known for the key role he played in building Zomba’s (later Jive) successful worldwide interests in record production and distribution, publishing, equipment rental, recording studios and producer and artist management. With more than 100 million albums sold and numerous Grammy Awards won, Zomba featured artists such as Britney Spears, Justin Timberlake, Backstreet Boys, and others, as well as composers whose songs were recorded by Michael Jackson, Celine Dion, Brian Adams, Barbra Streisand and more.

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It was fitting that Paul was in the Ideas to Action session since he is so often called upon to speak about the intersection of entertainment and philanthropy.

Take Away: Just because you have a career in the for profit business world, whether its in entertainment or technology, it doesn’t mean you can’t have an impact however small in the non-profit and socially conscious world. Find your passion and tell its story, utilizing your talents and exercising your voice as often as you have an opportunity to do so.

Jim Stolze is known for his successful launch of a commercial magazine and as a co-founder of an advertising agency specializing in digital marketing. Today, he is the editor-in-chief of the largest website in The Netherlands.

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While content may be a core strength, Jim has stepped above and beyond his roles on many occasions. As a senior ambassador for the TEDx program, he has organized many TEDx events and set up an organization in Doha Qatar to foster “ideas worth spreading” in the Middle East region.

He talked about a festival called Rise My Friend, which involves one million people dancing on 6 continents in the summer of 2015, all as he puts it “dancing to the same beat.” To generate awareness, interest and attendees to sign up however, “the ask” is a little different.

If you volunteer 20 hours of your time, only then do you get an invitation to the festival.  The idea is to raise the number of hours people spend on community work in exchange for a ticket, such as painting a school, singing to elders in an old folks home or helping pick up garbage. Once people volunteer and help a community, then they more authentically understand the value, leading to continued volunteer work without any incentive at all.

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Rise My Friend will allow local communities to use an online platform to give people credits for their volunteer work, which will lead to a ticket to the festival in 2015. “Rise My Friend is so much more than a party,” he says. “It is literally one million people joining hands all over the world because they love to dance and because they love to help out.”

Take Away: Volunteer work matters and can make a significant difference in the world, but people don’t always understand the impact they can make, nor do they take the time in their daily lives. The idea that volunteering your time allows you to be part of something bigger than yourself, while having fun with a community doing the same, is a great way to get people to “feel” the impact of helping others. I personally love this idea!

Manoj Bhargava asks with a satirical tone “what is a good idea? How do you define a good idea really? Is the idea useful and is it simple to execute? If the latter two things aren’t there, then it’s not a good idea. There are lots of solutions but if it’s not helpful to someone or a community or accessible, then it’s not a real solution.” He asserts that the only good ideas are the ones that can be done easily and believes that everything should be thought of in that way.

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He notes that there are three things worth investing in: technology, invention and innovation. Looking at it in the simplest of terms, innovation is something you’re going to do that is useful that wasn’t done yesterday. Just being simple can change everything. Look at Apple. Look at Twitter.

On invention, he asked us all to reflect on history and think of the people who have come up with the best inventions in the world. In other words, no invention has ever been made by 1,000 Ph.D.’s getting together in a room.

Manoj is an entrepreneur, philanthropist, and founder and CEO of 5-hour Energy. He realized over time that the main problem in the world was water and so, he has set out to purify water cheaper than anyone else, which he refers to as the “biggest project in the world.” Without water, at least a billion people will die.

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Take Away: There are a lot of ideas in the world and many may be worth doing, but if they’re not simple and useful, they will have a hard time of being sustainable. Focus on ideas that can lead to something useful and change people’s lives in a big way. Make your idea easy, digestable and sustainable and then, you can move that idea to action in a way that will have a huge impact on communities and individuals around the world.

Harry Kraemer says from a place of passion and conviction as he walked out onto the United Nations stage: We enter the modern world with multitasking. From his perspective as someone who drives leadership and management in the world as a Northwestern University’s Kellogg School of Management professor, he notices that people are driving, eating a Big Mac, shaving and texting in the car, sometimes all at the same time. He says, “we just go faster and faster.”

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In this race we call life, he asserts that we have we confused activity with productivity. He asks: “we’re very active, but how productive are we? As leaders, it matters to define what doesn’t matter and what does and start moving your values and ideas to action.”

He believes that there are four key principals that make up really great leadership. I loved his list so much that I decided to list them in detail here.

  • Self Reflection: Ask yourself: what are my values? What do I really stand for? What really matters? What difference to I make? What example would I like to send to the world? By slowing down, we really can separate noise from what really matters. Ask myself how do I lead people? What am I proud of today? If I lived today over again, what would I do differently? If I have tomorrow and if I’m a learning person, what would I do differently based on what I learned today. Doing so can help me me figure out what kind of impact I want to have. Taking time and making quality time differentiates real leaders. Remember that true leadership is not about control and organizational charts.
  • Balanced Perspective: This is the ability to take the time to understand other sides of the story. Seek to understand before you’re understood. If I’m really listening, I may hear the answer if I take the time to listen to them. Ask yourself: are you listening enough on a regular basis that the other people actually feel heard?
  • Having True Self Confidence: Many of us have worked for macho people who appear to be confident but they don’t have true self confidence. Step back and realize that there will always be people who are smarter, more athletic and more analytical than I am. You need to have the ability to feel comfortable with yourself and know that you will continue to learn more everyday. Having true confidence says that I’m going to get better every day. This is about surrounding yourself with people who are better than you at all the things you’re not very good at and embracing it.
  • Genuine Ability: Ask yourself: how did you get to where you are? The two most common responses is a combination of working hard and having a certain skill set.  In addition, there are four others: luck, timing, the team and a spiritual dimension. If any of those four work for you, then you start to realize a few things. You realize and remember where you came from and keep things into perspective. In other words, tell yourself: I’m not going to read my own press clippings. If true leadership is about influencing people and understanding people and remembering that every single person matters, then we won’t go a place of ego.

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Take Away: Leadership has everything to with influencing people but you can’t influence people if you can’t influence yourself and trust yourself. By slowing down, we really can separate noise from what really matters. Be comfortable with yourself and know that you will continue to learn more everyday. Having true confidence means that I’m going to get better every day and truly listen to people along the way. Letting go of ego and making people feel truly heard and understood is a strong quality of true leadership.

Chicago-based Dean DeBiase is a serial rebooter, author, speaker and director at AKTA, DonorPath, IXchat, KINGlobal and 1871Chicago and among other initiatives, he’s also the cofounder of  Reboot Partners which blends entrepreneurial talent with corporations to reboot innovation and growth.

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Says Dean, “if you bring together an intellectual and supportive ecosystem, the innovators and entrepreneurs will come. When united, that’s when real movement and change happens.”

He encouraged all of us to think about being a mentor and all it takes to be one is a little bit of passion. I think about mentorship a lot and even moreso recently since I attended a high school class reunion in New York. En route, I thought about who my mentors were growing up and who they are today.

I realized that I assigned mentors in my own head or minds eye and while they have been encouraging and motivating sources in my life, as a woman, I have never had a “formal one.”

Mentors can be transformative, Connectors can really help accelerate growth, and Ambassadors are the ones who can scale the passion. Ambassadors can make sure an idea or a company has a sustainable life.


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A digital thought leader and regular media guest, Dean is a co-author of the best-selling book The Big Moo with Seth Godin and Malcolm Gladwell. He is also a Silicon Valley veteran with a track record scaling emerging growth companies, starting-up new ventures and embedding entrepreneurial-grade talent into multi-national corporations.

Take Away: If you bring together an intellectual and supportive ecosystem, the innovators and entrepreneurs will come. When united, that’s when real movement and change happens. Embrace this and whatever hybrid role you decide to be (mentor, visionary, ambassador or simply someone who cares) and contribute “it” to a startup or an entrepreneur’s idea.

Paralympic swimmer Mallory Weggemann nearly had me in tears. Her story isn’t one for the light hearted! She became paraplegic after an epidural injection to treat post-shingles back pain in 2008, a decision which turned her life upside down.

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Overcoming obstacle after obstacle emotionally and physically, she is a true source for inspiration. Since then, she has demonstrated not just an outrageous amount of courage and resilience, but compassion and empathy for herself and the world around her.

Today, she has a lot to be proud of: Mallory broke many world records in the S7 classification, and won multiple gold medals at the IPC Swimming World Championships in 2009 and 2010.

She says of the moment that changed her life forever, she made a decision not to let that one incident define who she is and fight for something better. She says, “it’s not the moments in life who define who we are, it’s how we react to those moments in life.”


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She reflects on when she decided to fight back and find a happy ending in her situation. Says Mallory: “It’s how we react to the moments in our lives that define who we are.”

Swimming and competition was something that set her free and brought her back to life. She says, “the world I was opened up to is limitless; tt’s about pushing your body to new limits regardless of your situation.”


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In 2012, when she participated in the London paralympics and became a paralympic gold medalist, she reflects on that time and says, “a dream you dream alone is only a dream. A dream you dream together is reality. I know that dream didn’t become a reality because of myself; it was because of the supporters around me who gave me support.” Here, she is referrring to her family, her friends and her community.

“When circumstance steps in and alter our course in our life, it’s what do we do with that is what defines us,” says Mallory. She adds: “do we allow us to paralyze us and do we allow it to define us or do we push forward and move on with our life?”

Clearly she has chosen the latter in a big way…in such an inspirational way that is life alterating to anyone listening.

So given that the theme of the conference is indeed Bravery, what is indeed BRAVE? Mallory says of bravery that it carries multiple faces and we all have the ability to be brave. “Bravery cannot be defined but it can be challenged.” She encouraged everyone to live their lives with passion and with a full heart AND without judgment or fear.

Take Away: Don’t let negative incidents that happen in your life define who you are as a person. It’s not the moments in life who define who we are, it’s how we react to those moments in life. If you think about it, everyone in this life has a disability; we all have things that will hold us back in life if we let them, but it’s up to us to decide to rise above and push forward. If we have dreams, and we all have dreams, it’s up to us to create them and not let obstacles however large stop us. Sometimes this is the bravest act of courage we can have in our lives.

Hear hear Mallory! Thanks to you and your bravery and resilience and to Paul, Jim, Manoj, Harry and Dean for your words of encouragement and and inspiration to moving “ideas to action.”

Photo credits: Renee Blodgett except for the Olympics medal photo of Mallory which is from www. malloryweggemannusa.com. 

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