3 episodes taggedApproximate match across all podcasts
Home/Tags/MANAGE SUCCESS

MANAGE SUCCESS

All podcast episode summaries matching MANAGE SUCCESS β€” aggregated across every podcast we track.

3 episodes Β· Page 1/1

β€œI was talking to Jim Collins, the guy who wrote Good to Great last night on stage because he has a new book out. And he talked about the bewildering fog of success. And that year, 2013, was exactly that for me. Like on paper, it was the best year of my life. I had a best-selling book. I won a Pulitzer Prize. In reality, it was like the hardest year of my life.”

β€” Charles Duhigg
Good interview shows
APR 16, 2026Hubspot Media
  • β€’

    Habits are replaced rather than extinguished

    β€œThe key is, don't try and extinguish the habit, rather try and change it, find a new behavior, like eating M&Ms, that corresponds to the old cue, and that delivers something similar to the old reward. And in doing so, you're kind of overriding that neural pathway inside your brain.”

    β€” Charles Duhigg
  • β€’

    Keystone habits trigger automatic positive routines

    β€œI actually did come up with a phrase Keystone Habit. My wife is a biologist and there's this concept of Keystone Species. And so I was talking through this idea... it just makes it so easy to like take the next step and like go out the door, right? Like you probably at this point, when you are running, you're not even thinking about running as you start.”

    β€” Charles Duhigg
  • β€’

    Systems matter more than individual willpower

    β€œThere's this phrase in the CEO world, something like you don't rise to your willpower, you fall to your systems, or something like that, where it's like the system is what dictates whether you're going to be successful or not, not like willpower or not how you feel. And the point being at a company, you have to have systems because that's what you default to.”

    β€” Sam Parr
  • β€’

    Behavior reveals true internal preferences

    β€œOur brain actually is kind of skeptical of our stated preferences, but it pays attention to how we behave to figure out who we really are. And so this act of cleaning up every day at three o'clock... it's not about organizing the clutter, it's about revealing to ourselves, proving to ourselves that we are the kinds of people who do this.”

    β€” Charles Duhigg
  • β€’

    Success creates a bewildering fog of demands

    β€œI was talking to Jim Collins, the guy who wrote Good to Great last night on stage because he has a new book out. And he talked about the bewildering fog of success. And that year, 2013, was exactly that for me. Like on paper, it was the best year of my life. I had a best-selling book. I won a Pulitzer Prize. In reality, it was like the hardest year of my life.”

    β€” Charles Duhigg
Startups & Tech
APR 16, 2026Hubspot Media
  • β€’

    Habits are replaced rather than extinguished

    β€œThe key is, don't try and extinguish the habit, rather try and change it, find a new behavior, like eating M&Ms, that corresponds to the old cue, and that delivers something similar to the old reward. And in doing so, you're kind of overriding that neural pathway inside your brain.”

    β€” Charles Duhigg
  • β€’

    Keystone habits trigger automatic positive routines

    β€œI actually did come up with a phrase Keystone Habit. My wife is a biologist and there's this concept of Keystone Species. And so I was talking through this idea... it just makes it so easy to like take the next step and like go out the door, right? Like you probably at this point, when you are running, you're not even thinking about running as you start.”

    β€” Charles Duhigg
  • β€’

    Systems matter more than individual willpower

    β€œThere's this phrase in the CEO world, something like you don't rise to your willpower, you fall to your systems, or something like that, where it's like the system is what dictates whether you're going to be successful or not, not like willpower or not how you feel. And the point being at a company, you have to have systems because that's what you default to.”

    β€” Sam Parr
  • β€’

    Behavior reveals true internal preferences

    β€œOur brain actually is kind of skeptical of our stated preferences, but it pays attention to how we behave to figure out who we really are. And so this act of cleaning up every day at three o'clock... it's not about organizing the clutter, it's about revealing to ourselves, proving to ourselves that we are the kinds of people who do this.”

    β€” Charles Duhigg
  • β€’

    Success creates a bewildering fog of demands

    β€œI was talking to Jim Collins, the guy who wrote Good to Great last night on stage because he has a new book out. And he talked about the bewildering fog of success. And that year, 2013, was exactly that for me. Like on paper, it was the best year of my life. I had a best-selling book. I won a Pulitzer Prize. In reality, it was like the hardest year of my life.”

    β€” Charles Duhigg
Politics and News
APR 7, 2026The Daily Wire
  • β€’

    Artemis missions signal American space dominance

    β€œWe’re sending humans around the moon for the first time in decades.”

    β€” Ben Shapiro
  • β€’

    US policy is dismantling the Iranian regime

    β€œWe’re breaking the entire machine of the Iranian tyranny.”

    β€” Ben Shapiro
  • β€’

    Critics prioritize domestic stagnation over American success

    β€œThe usual suspects are screaming their prayers that America returns to stagnation.”

    β€” Ben Shapiro
  • β€’

    Technological progress is debunking the decline narrative

    β€œWe are busy kicking ass and our enemies and critics alike hate it.”

    β€” Ben Shapiro
  • β€’

    American ingenuity is defeating internal political cynicism

    β€œWhy does the left want to return to a state of managed decline?”

    β€” Ben Shapiro

Stay in the Loop

Free summaries of top podcasts. More signal, less noise.