It is easy to understand a person who is driven by their passions.
Your passions take you to your happy place.
I have friends who have a passion for sporting events on television. Others have a passion for gambling, and the paripatetic have a passion for traveling to all the far-flung places on this spinning rock we live upon.
People who have a passion for achievement live to make things different.
Planning and research puts a candle to the wick of some people. They go without sleep and burn bright throughout the night as they gather, collate, and organize information that will set the future on fire.
Your scars are the memories of bitter experiences.
The pain is gone, but the benefits of those experiences remain. Your scars help you see danger on the horizon.
Your scars are the diplomas of lessons you will never forget.
It is good to have scars.
But wounds… wounds are different.
The pain remains and it triggers you to act in ways that everyone notices but no one understands. Sometimes not even you.
I have known men whose only passion was to seduce every woman they encountered. Those men like to believe that they are “in love with falling in love.” But when you have known them long enough you will see a knife wound in their chest that has never healed. Way back in the long ago, they had a wife who began sleeping with another man. And ever since that day, they have been trying to become that man.
The pain of a wound is a powerful thing. It shouts, “Never again! Never again! Never again!”
I don’t believe that any of those men have ever figured out why they feel driven to become the living embodiment of the imaginary Don Juan, and I have never felt that it was my place to tell them.
Every person is formed by their passions, scars, and wounds. Even imaginary people.
All of the famous characters in literature were created from their passions, scars, and wounds.
Novelists, playwrights, and screenwriters know this. Ad writers do not. This is why most advertising is dull, dead, and untwitching.
When an ad writer is guided by the ambitions, demands, and expectations of their clients, you can expect to hear the glorious trumpets of a ringing call to action. “Come! Come now! Give me your money! Hurry! Hurry! I want your money Today! Today! Today! Act now! Don’t delay!”
We are not enchanted by these ads.
Did it ever occur to you that every successful brand is a character that lives in the mind of the customer?
A successful brand is driven by its passions, scars, and wounds.
Passion: Why does this brand exist? What is it chasing? What love does it represent?
Scars: What does it know? What has it learned? Why can I trust this brand?
Wounds: What is this brand trying to erase from the earth?
To what does it shout, “Never again! Never again! Never again!”
Roy H. Williams
Sébastien Page is the Chief Investment Officer for one of the world’s largest financial portfolio management companies, where he leads a team entrusted with more than $500 billion in actively managed assets.
Four years ago, Sébastien turned the same rigorous analytical lens he applies to markets toward a different challenge: what truly drives effective leadership. Drawing on deep research across positive psychology, sports psychology, and personality science, he discovered that the qualities that make a world-class portfolio manager are strikingly similar to those that shape exceptional people managers.
Sébastien has now distilled these insights into a compelling new book outlining 18 core principles that consistently produce high-performance leaders — of teams, and of themselves. This week on Monday Morning Radio, Sébastien shares with roving reporter Rotbart — himself a former Wall Street Journal investment columnist — the lessons, frameworks, and practical behaviors that he believes can turn average performers into standouts. Rotbart rates Sébastien’s leadership insights “a strong buy.”
