Dmitriy Kozlov

Accelerating The Evolution of Love Through Inspiring & Empowering Influencers

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How To Use Core Values As The Ultimate Management Tools

January 15, 2017 by [email protected] Leave a Comment

Core values are a collection of vital guiding principles that determine the foundation for your company culture. If you don’t already have core values in place for your company, the Evolved Enterprise book shares great examples of these and the Evolved Business Blueprint has a detailed step by step process to successfully create these for your organization.

More Than Just a Wall Plaque

Many companies though – from startups to large organization with thousands of employees – have theoretically great values that sit on the literal or proverbial wall, but do little to influence the day to day operations of the organization.

Yes, core values are outward facing phrases that illustrate what your culture stands for, and can help you recruit aligned team members and customers. Beyond that though, they can be some of your greatest operational and management tools.

Core Values for Empowered Growth

Once you have core values in place, you can actively use them to operate your organization and optimize for your team’s empowered growth. With this approach, your core values guide your team’s day to day decisions, relationships and behavior – and provide your leadership team with an empowering coaching framework for your team’s performance.

Regardless of how great your team is, even your best “A players” will make mistakes, and you’ll find it essential to give feedback for improvement. Feedback can be an uncomfortable, confrontational process, where people get defensive and take things personally… or you can take a value driven approach to maximize results and minimize personal tension, using core values as your management tools.

When someone makes a mistake, identify a core value that, if it were fully embraced would help avoid that mistake in the future. Then inquire, “Do you feel this situation is a full expression of this core value?” – oftentimes, this inquiry alone will be enough to drop defenses and inspire a level of personal reflection to learn from the situation and empower your team member with a healthy perspective for the future to navigate similar challenges.

For example, one of our core values in Vision Tech Team is “Own It! Be responsible and reliable.” When someone points blame to another team member, or a client, for a particular issue, I often give the reflection and inquiry “Do you feel this is an example of Owning It?” which almost immediately shifts to a more empowering perspective.

If your core values are truly principles that you would hire and fire on, they are also principles for constant reflection of how your team is actually showing up. In theory, if you have the right core values and your team is actually living to them, you have a great organization. In practice, once you have the right core values in place, it takes coaching, leadership and constant feedback to fully express and embody these values. Every time you use a core value to give feedback, you not only take personal pressure off of yourself and other managers, you also align your team members more deeply with the foundation you set for your company culture in the first place.

Evolving Your Values Through Active Reflection

Finally, actively using your core values for feedback will empower the evolution of your company’s value system through real-world practice and active reflection, improving the essence and expression of these values to be more reflective of how you’d like your organization to show up in the marketplace.

For example, we’ve operated Vision Tech Team for over two years with the core value of Very Fast Response Times – a value we held in high esteem, as the standard client experience of design agencies and freelancers in our industry is to be left in the dark on progress and frustratingly slow response times from vendors. As we’ve evolved our organization and consistently used this value to coach our people, we’ve realized it’s made us really great at being reactive and fighting fires, rather than being proactive.

Through reflection on how this value and expectation has consistently impacted our organization, we’ve flipped it on its head to be “Vision First: be proactive and begin with the end in mind.” While we still believe in responding quickly to our team members and clients, we now have a more forward focus with our overall culture and systems and a much greater confidence in our company’s future (not to mention less stress for each team member). This shift didn’t come from theory, it came from actively using our core values to manage our team and processes and reflecting on what that practice was teaching us.

Where to Next?

For examples of other business who have successfully implemented these strategies be sure to check out the Evolved Enterprise book, and for a step by step guide to replicate their success in your own business check out Evolved Business Blueprint.

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: blog

The Reflection Ritual: A Simple System To Scale Team Coaching

January 15, 2017 by [email protected] Leave a Comment

The Reflection Ritual is a simple system that solves one of the greatest challenges evolved business leaders experience today: providing consistent, structured, and meaningful feedback to support their team’s growth in alignment with the company vision and core values.

Imagine having a simple tool that allows for systematic check-ins, coaching, and feedback across your entire organization, whether you have a single employee or a team of hundreds…

This tool was born out of need as my company and team started to grow, and I wanted to continue coaching my team members but didn’t have the bandwidth (or the skills) to do so effectively and consistently as we expanded.

When we first started our agency Vision Tech Team with about half a dozen people, my partner James Guldan and I were actively doing one on one meetings with each team member every other week, checking in on how they were doing, offering coaching for growth, and getting feedback on how we were doing as a company and what we could improve.

As we grew, it became increasingly difficult to scale and track these conversations.

When we did briefly canceled the meetings for a while to free up our schedules, we quickly noticed we had less of a pulse on our business and less connection to our team members, especially as we grew. So we innovated and designed a simple and scalable system that allows a similar process to take place with a lot less time commitment for everyone (including each team member), improved accountability, and increased self-reflection.

Every two weeks, right before payroll, each team member fills out a form answering specific questions that inspire insights, feedback, self-reflection, and an opportunity to ask for support.

We started doing this right before payroll to keep everyone accountable to filling it out consistently, and at first told people “if you don’t fill this out on time, you don’t get paid on time” – and we actually stuck to that.

It built the muscle of growth and consistency for our team and reflected just how important growth is to our organization (we applied this for ourselves as ownership too, and we wouldn’t get paid our salaries until we filled this out. As entrepreneurs we often break the rules but force a standard on our team members that we don’t meet ourselves – we believe in leading by example instead.)

Here’s the exact template we use:
As you apply this in your organization, you can modify the questions to reflection what’s most important to your company.

On a scale of 1 – 10, what is your current stress level at work?

On a scale of 1 – 10, what is your current happiness level at work?

What would increase your happiness at work?

What have you learned over the last two weeks (in relation to your learning track or otherwise)?

What have been your biggest challenges over the last two weeks?

What have been your biggest accomplishments over the last two weeks? How are these accomplishments reflective of at least one of our core values?

What do you intend to learn over the next two weeks?

When we first started this process, my co-founder and I would give direct feedback to each team member. As we grew, we put managers in charge of their own departments. Our Design Director replies to all designers, our CTO replies to our developers, James and I reply to the managers and to each other. This makes the system more scalable and improves the leadership and coaching abilities of our management team.

The Reflection Ritual addresses one of the biggest challenges many organizations face: leaders don’t give consistent feedback to their teams outside of quarterly reviews (at best), so most employees don’t know where they stand, and entrepreneurs (especially those who aren’t great managers, which includes a lot of us) don’t know how to give consistent feedback without being confrontational, often until it’s too late.

This process also helps to keep a pulse on our organization. We flag any high stress levels or low happiness levels, or other concerns to discuss in coaching conversations. We gain insights of where we can improve our culture and support structures, so that our initiatives are based on actual data and feedback from our team.

When we do one on one or group coaching and mentoring meetings with our team members, we often source many of our topics from these Reflection Ritual answers, giving us a foundation for our inquiries and bringing us closer to solutions.

Beyond the interaction, answering these questions alone encourages increased self-reflection – like a journaling process, where the questions themselves inspire solutions, and they can look back back on their own answers over time to track their personal evolution within your company.

As you apply this to evolving your own team, please comment below with your results!

Side note: Dmitriy (along with Yanik Silver) will also be teaching the Evolved Startup Live Classes, sharing his all of his expertise in recruiting, training and retaining a great team to bring your mission to the marketplace. It’s all part of the Evolved Business Blueprint and sparking 10,000 ideas to change the world.

Click here for more...

Attention Evolved Entrepreneurs, Visionary creators and Maverick leaders ready to rewrite the rules of business – here’s how we can co-create innovative business solutions to some of the world’s biggest issues…

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: blog

Experience vs. Expression: A Life Of Interconnected Work And Play

September 18, 2014 by [email protected] Leave a Comment

[Day 21 of my open journal experiment] This struggle will sound familiar to you:

When you’re working a lot, creating, expressing your talents, you often feel guilty that you’re not experiencing more of life. You wonder while working, “Isn’t life all about experiences? I should go travel, have adventures, new experiences, try everything the world has to offer… I’m spending, even wasting, way too much time just working right now. I’m missing out.”

And when you’re playing, traveling, experiencing all that life has to offer, there’s a sense of guilt in the back of your mind… “I should be creating more. Time is passing me by, and I’m not fully expressing my potential, I’m not creating enough. Sure I’m having fun, but I’m losing valuable time that I could use productively to move my life and business forward.”

You’re obviously not alone. Virtually everyone I meet struggles with this dichotomy. 

Here’s the good news: you don’t have to struggle with it. And just ‘being where you are, being in the moment’ might not be enough of an answer, because this dichotomy still bothers you on some level. Here’s a philosophical approach. I’ve shared this with a lot of people individually so far, and it has created some big breakthroughs.

It’s simple: these are not opposing forces at all, but rather synergistic ones that rely on each other for maximum depth and growth in each.

Let’s start with a quick definition so we’re on the same page. I define work, creation, building, etc as “expression” here. I do so because when you live and work authentically, your work, your creation is expression. It is an expression of your heart, of your talents, of your mind, of your abilities, of your full self. Whether you are an entrepreneur, a musician, or an accountant, your work is an expression of you. If your work doesn’t feel like ‘expression’ at all, you should look into adjusting your work as you’ll find greater happiness and a higher service to others when your work becomes more closely tied with expression of your talents, abilities, and desires.

Experience here is defined as what you get to do in life. Play, travel, relationships, music, food, adventures, and everything else you flow through.

Let’s integrate experience and expression…

I like to use triangles to integrate dichotomies. Recognize that two things that seem juxtaposing typically have an integrated answer above and beyond either position, but sitting on top of both of them at the top of the triangle. In this case, we’re putting Experience and Expression on opposite sites, then drawing a triangle on top of them and asking “What’s at the top?”

Intentional experiences, in addition to being there for their own sake, expand you. They make you grow. If you travel to another country, or you go skydiving, or you enter a new relationship… you grow from it. You expand your consciousness. If most of your experiences do not expand yourself and your consciousness in some way, then choose different experiences.

Creation is expression of self, and the greater the self (expanded through experiences) the greater the levels at which you can express the self. You literally have a more expanded self to create. Every experience expands your power to express and create.

So the more consciousness expanding experiences you have, the greater your ability to express, and the more of you there is to express.

What do you need to have great experiences? Sometimes, you need money. Other times you need great relationships. Sometimes a reputation, contacts, freedom, power, opportunities. All these things expand your possibilities to experience all that the world has to offer.

How do you acquire more of those powers? Through creation, through expression. As you express more of yourself and your abilities, you grow your business, your network, your abundance – as that expression creates direct value in the world and the marketplace.

So expressing more gives you more experiences. Also, if you really love your work, expression in itself largely becomes as much of an experience as an external one, if not more.

The way to grow yourself is largely through experiences; as you grow yourself, you get to express at a higher level, adding more value to the world, by expressing a higher version of you. 

The way to expand your opportunities for new experiences is through greater expression, through creation of value, freedom, and abundance.

Whichever you are doing at the moment, whether experience or expression, you are not sacrificing the other, but rather enhancing both. So dive fully into your experiences, let them expand you. Dive fully into your expression and creation, let it create freedom and abundance for you.

Of course, you’ll have to ask yourself some questions about experience and expression for this to fully apply in your life… Are you having experiences that expand you? Is your work an expression of you (talents/skills/abilities, heart, mind)?

This would certainly apply to a purpose driven entrepreneur who travels the world. To a life coach who experiences deep relationships. To an artist who parasails at sunset with his best friends. To a musician who holds deep conversations over wine and cigars with his lover. To a software developer who goes to art museums. To someone whose work, at least to some extent, is an expression of self, and to whom experiences are an expansion of self. 

It probably wouldn’t apply so much to someone working a desk job they hate, whose ‘experience’ consists of getting drunk at the local bar every weekend. Or to someone dispassionate about their work, whose experience consists of watching hours of mindless TV per day.

If you are living life on purpose, expanding yourself through your experiences, and expressing your expanded self through your work, then the two are already integrated, and you can know that you are exactly at the right place, at the right time, whether you are working (expressing) or playing (experiencing). And you can further integrate by choosing experiences that spark your growth, and shifting your work to be a greater expression of that inner growth.

Filed Under: Philosophy, Uncategorized Tagged With: experience, expression

I’ve Been Greedy

January 12, 2013 by [email protected] 1 Comment

I was on a casual call with my good friend and business partner Cory Shanes, and he and Marcelle pointed out something that I knew, but it shocked me to hear it: I’ve been greedy and selfish… by not building my list.

I knew I was slacking on building my personal list… but didn’t realize that it was actually hurting my potential subscribers more than me! Over the past year I’ve had some incredible experiences, met some extremely intelligent and mega successful entrepreneurs (from Tim Ferriss to top Internet marketers to Maverick Millionaires to Billionaire Moguls), and have learned a lot of life changing lessons… not to mention have traveled to some interesting places. Sharing these experiences and information can be transformational for many entrepreneurs out there.

And in 2013, I plan to put that same lifestyle on acceleration. So here’s the deal: I plan to keep you posted. I’ll share my lessons. My experiences. My tools, techniques, and systems. As I rapidly scale my company from 6 to 7 figures, I’ll share my methods and tips along the way.

Occasionally I might even throw in some really valuable interviews.

Just enter your name and email on the right side, or right below, and I’ll even send you Yanik’s 34 Rules For Maverick Entrepreneurs free… I actually use these as my personal entrepreneurial operating principles and they have been life changing.

Note: If I ever send you any promotions or recommendations, you’ll be damn sure I stand behind whatever I recommend 100% with total integrity.

Filed Under: Internet Marketing, Life Updates, Uncategorized Tagged With: dmitriy kozlov's email list, list building

Maverick M3 Summit: Mayan Adventure

January 12, 2013 by [email protected] Leave a Comment

Props to Alex Kane for putting the video together! This event was unforgettable (like most Maverick events, or Maverick anything).

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: maverick m3 summit, mayan experience, mayan village

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