Show Notes
"The race you are starting, I've finished. I survived. You can take your life experiences that are personal to you and you can open yourself up. There are people at the starting point of the race you've finished. The social media lens we have into people's lives is unfair. All you see is their best picture on vacation or their perfect cup of coffee with their devotion. You don't see the chaos on either side of the phone. It's the same thing with entrepreneurship. You compare yourself to the highlight reel of all of these companies, and that's not fair. It's not real. If you can peel back the onion, maybe 10 layers back, you'll see they were where you were at at some point too." -- Tymber Lee
Tymber Lee (@tlee3232) is an investor, board member, former professional baseball pitcher, and commercial real estate investor and developer. Tymber is a get-after-it use every ounce of blood, sweat, and tears kind of entrepreneur and business owner. With entrepreneurialism in his blood, he’s been involved in various business opportunities and endeavors since he was a kid helping in his family business of custom homebuilding and development. His love for competition, teamwork, and winning carried over into his studies as he attended Wichita State University as a student athlete and was selected in the Major League Baseball draft as a pitcher by the Anaheim Angels. His career evolved into specializing in commercial investment property and industrial sales and leasing, which has led to the development of The Lee Companies (TLC).
He joins Bob in this podcast episode to talk about fear and failure, the lessons from heartbreak, and the grandfather who taught and mentored him growing up. They hash out the journeys they’ve experienced as entrepreneurs, investors, and business executives in this heart-wrenching and thought provoking episode.
Notes on Fear and Failure:
-Ask thought leaders, “If you were to go back and do anything differently, would you?”
-Then, “shut up, and listen.”
-Action cures fear.
-Don’t be afraid of failure. Failure is where the gems are.
-People want to see how you’re going to fail. How will you handle the failure? How you handle failure determines your success.
-Failure is not a matter of how or if. It’s a matter of when.
Links in this episode include:
Bonvera, a business platform that Bob and Tymber are both passionate about
Audible, Amazon’s audible book platform
To learn more about Bob’s two books, find them on Amazon here:
The Leap and
Love Your Work.
Follow Bob Dickie on Twitter @RobertDickie