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To get employees to believe in a bold growth plan, leaders must be evangelists for the mission. Highlighting early successes, like a partnership with Beyoncé, proves collective capability and creates a virtuous cycle of pride and momentum that fuels future efforts and builds confidence.

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To be seen as a strategic executor, consistently apply a simple three-step process: 1) Say what you're going to do. 2) Do the work. 3) Say you did it, celebrating the outcome and reminding stakeholders of the original commitment. This loop builds trust and reinforces your strategic capability.

Don't expect your organization to adopt a new strategy uniformly. Apply the 'Crossing the Chasm' model internally: identify early adopters to champion the change, then methodically win over the early majority and laggards. This manages expectations and improves strategic alignment across the company.

While motivational speeches and office amenities are often cited as culture-builders, the most effective way to create a positive and engaged company culture is simply to win. Success itself is the ultimate motivator, making everyone excited to contribute and perform at their best.

Patient success stories are a powerful internal motivational tool, not just a marketing asset. Sharing them internally serves as a "galvanizing force" for the team, especially on difficult days. This practice reinforces the company's mission and provides the energy to persevere through startup challenges.

Top-down mandates for change, like adopting new tools, often fail. A more effective strategy is to identify and convert influential, respected figures within the organization—like a founder—into passionate advocates. Their authentic belief and evangelism will drive adoption far more effectively than any executive decree.

Use company-wide meetings to reinforce your operating system. Instead of only celebrating wins, have successful teams present the specific processes and methods they used. This turns every success story into a practical, scalable lesson for the entire organization.

As former Home Depot CEO Frank Blake said, 'You get what you celebrate.' Publicly recognizing and telling stories about specific employees who embody desired values is a more effective culture-shaping tool than writing rules. It re-shapes the entire organization's mental model of what success looks like.

You cannot directly instill passion in your team. Passion emerges from a genuine belief that a goal is both attainable and worthwhile. As with Roger Bannister breaking the 4-minute mile, a leader's job is to first build that foundational belief through evidence, stories, and a clear plan. Only then can authentic passion ignite.

A powerful brand story serves as an internal rallying cry. By sharing marketing assets like brand videos internally, teams like product, engineering, and finance become inspired by the mission. This raises the internal bar and motivates them to build a product that lives up to the brand's promise.

Focusing a team only on a distant, major goal is a recipe for burnout. Effective leaders reframe motivation to include celebrating the process: daily efforts, small successes, and skill development. The journey itself must provide fuel, with the motivation found in the effort, not just the outcome.