I was born in Kazakhstan, raised in Germany,
Waldemar:and currently I'm based in Italy.
Waldemar:So I moved to Italy in 2015 to fall forward for job, basically for business.
Waldemar:And I supposed to stay a couple of years.
Waldemar:I stayed four years.
Waldemar:Then I went back to Germany, didn't like it.
Waldemar:Come back to Italy.
Waldemar:Yeah now I'm here based and not planning to move back to Germany.
Waldemar:Maybe in a few years time, I don't know.
Waldemar:I will go still explore some other Southern European countries.
Waldemar:Spain, Portugal are interesting destinations.
Waldemar:So we'll see.
Rob:The climate's much
Waldemar:better, isn't it?
Waldemar:Yeah.
Waldemar:Yeah.
Waldemar:It's it's climate.
Waldemar:It's the life, the quality of life.
Waldemar:I enjoyed it more, the food, the people, it's everything bit
Waldemar:more like people are happier.
Waldemar:It seems like people are happier.
Waldemar:In Germany, what I got what I was struggling with because then
Waldemar:it was also COVID because it was 2019 to 20 21 when I went back.
Waldemar:People were a lot complaining.
Waldemar:It was just terrible in my opinion.
Waldemar:So it was really yeah, draining some, I felt no energy.
Waldemar:So it was a whole nother story when you look into the South
Waldemar:and European countries, people are wide, open, easygoing.
Waldemar:So yeah it's
Rob:nice.
Rob:Whereabouts in Germany.
Waldemar:I've been living close to Cologne.
Waldemar:Cologne, yeah, the last years I was in Dusseldorf.
Waldemar:North Rhine Westphalia, it's in Western Germany.
Waldemar:Close to the border of Netherlands.
Waldemar:Okay.
Rob:And where are you in
Waldemar:Italy?
Waldemar:North of Italy, Bologna.
Waldemar:It's actually a good strategic place to be because it's between Rome and
Waldemar:Milan and it has a great connection with the train, fast trains.
Waldemar:So you can reach basically all the hotspots like Florence, Venice.
Waldemar:Milan, Rome.
Waldemar:So whenever people are coming to Italy, I'm telling them stay in Bologna because
Waldemar:you enjoy really the nice city because it's a smaller city than Rome and Milan.
Waldemar:You can really enjoy everything here.
Waldemar:And when you want to visit other cities that are interesting
Waldemar:you just take the train.
Waldemar:It's quite cheap transportation here and you go.
Waldemar:Visit the other places and then you go back to Bologna.
Rob:So so you've grown up in one culture and you've moved Yeah, you've
Rob:experienced really three, major ones.
Rob:You remember much of Kazakhstan?
Waldemar:Yes and no.
Waldemar:So I remember, of course like the first, because I was very young.
Waldemar:I was six years old when I came to Germany.
Waldemar:But I was raised in a quite Russian way.
Waldemar:So it was USSR back then.
Waldemar:So my mom is Russian.
Waldemar:My dad is German, born in Kazakhstan, but German parents.
Waldemar:But I was raised basically the Russian way.
Waldemar:So with the Russian culture, food and everything like what's
Waldemar:around the Russian culture.
Waldemar:I had never the feeling this connection with Kazakhstan, with the country,
Waldemar:but with the Russian culture, yes.
Waldemar:So I'm really connected to that.
Waldemar:So from family standpoint, yeah.
Rob:I have a little experience.
Rob:I did a martial art Sistema, which is actually it was a Russian in
Rob:Canada, Vladimir who he brought it to the West, but it was very
Rob:rooted in Russian orthodoxy.
Rob:There was a lot of deep, profound ideas.
Rob:It's like you hit someone to take the aggression away.
Rob:You don't hit to destroy, you hit to remove the tension and it
Rob:was a lot about just a different way of relating to people.
Rob:It was more.
Rob:Inclusive than like a western.
Rob:Yeah.
Rob:It was more about the group and more about it's remove ego of those kind of things.
Rob:Like it didn't have any belt system.
Rob:It didn't have rankings.
Rob:It was about you just doing the best you can do rather than.
Rob:Yeah.
Rob:Where a lot of martial arts are very you wait till these have, yeah, you
Rob:will have your place and it's, yeah,
Waldemar:you got it.
Waldemar:I'm very passionate about martial arts myself, and this is something
Waldemar:that definitely is coming from my Russian side, because in Russia.
Waldemar:You are born into like combat sports a bit.
Waldemar:So there are in schools, some of starting from my father, my uncle, you are half
Waldemar:like wrestling and the wrestling Sambo and boxing are basically like the school sport
Waldemar:subjects, and There, I totally agree.
Waldemar:And what's with your experience?
Waldemar:So that the way they are living martial arts and all the combat sports around
Waldemar:is more like creating a community.
Waldemar:Creating the sense of discipline, of work ethic, of dedication.
Waldemar:So it's really, This is fascinating.
Waldemar:So because Russia and the former Soviet Union, it has so many different
Waldemar:influences from different cultures.
Waldemar:They have a huge Muslim culture there and Islam culture, and they
Waldemar:have a huge religious background.
Waldemar:So it's really fascinating.
Waldemar:The people I've connected with from this part of the world also.
Waldemar:After I grew up in business and was always a lot of exchange about these
Waldemar:topics how you get raised with these values from the Russian culture.
Rob:So what martial arts did you do?
Waldemar:Now I'm still into boxing.
Waldemar:I was doing Muay Thai for 17 years.
Waldemar:Then I stopped.
Waldemar:I was active, actually, I was fighting in 2013, 2014.
Waldemar:Then I injured myself, broke my hand, nothing serious, but back
Waldemar:then I was working and my employer was not very happy about that.
Waldemar:So it was basically, you choose.
Waldemar:You go, it's working still as a mechanic.
Waldemar:So you have to work with your hands.
Waldemar:So it was basically choose the sport or your job, choose the job,
Waldemar:still continue with the sports.
Waldemar:And in COVID, I started with Brazilian jujitsu.
Waldemar:I started with jujitsu grappling because funny story, my.
Waldemar:neighbor in Dusseldorf.
Waldemar:Back then he came from Mexico and he was a jujitsu instructor of purple belt.
Waldemar:And during COVID, he had a nice place.
Waldemar:And in his in his flat, he had a room where he basically had all the mats
Waldemar:and equipment to practice jujitsu.
Waldemar:And he was doing somehow like Illegal private classes for jiu jitsu students and
Waldemar:we catched up because we were talking a lot about UFC and we were watching fights
Waldemar:together and he was like, Oh, come over.
Waldemar:I'm going to show you some moves.
Waldemar:And I really fell in love with how exhausting this sport is.
Waldemar:I started to to roll a bit with him to wrestle to do that kind of stuff.
Waldemar:And yeah, ever since I'm practicing that as well.
Waldemar:So I'm not trying to do three times for a week combat sports, mixing it up.
Waldemar:Nothing like too strict, nothing too, no competition but I really
Waldemar:enjoyed the community and the mental and physical benefits, of course.
Rob:Yeah.
Rob:It teaches you a lot as well.
Rob:I used to box just as a teen for a couple of years.
Rob:You have to be so fit that I remember is the only time I ran.
Rob:If you weren't fit enough, it was like, you were so tired in the end that you'd
Rob:rather be punched than hold your arms up.
Rob:So it's really tough to do that and any kind of job just
Rob:because it takes so much time.
Rob:I only did a couple of sessions of.
Rob:Brazilian Jiu Jitsu, but if I'd known younger, I would have spent much more
Rob:time because I've got my girlfriend's two boys, they do Brazilian Jiu Jitsu.
Rob:So I think that's, it's a lot of fun, but it's also the most
Waldemar:useful.
Waldemar:Yes, I think so for self defense, for mental strength, for
Waldemar:physical strength it's the best thing you can do in my opinion.
Waldemar:I wish also I would have discovered that way sooner because I see
Waldemar:that I'm very stiff in the hips.
Waldemar:So I'm really struggling.
Waldemar:I'm doing a lot of mobility every day, stretching out, but I'm so stiff in
Waldemar:the hips that you're really limited in certain aspects of doing that.
Waldemar:If you want to reach a certain level, if you just want to have fun and you
Waldemar:have a good instructor, which I have who like somehow goes down to your level,
Waldemar:he creates this flow moment where he's like above, just above your skill set.
Waldemar:And he's going probably 30 percent while I'm giving 112.
Waldemar:But that's the way like they know how to balance that.
Waldemar:And then it becomes really fun for me.
Waldemar:And it's completely crazy.
Waldemar:I'm doing that.
Waldemar:Once per week, maybe because after a session, I'm so exhausted.
Waldemar:My arms are sore for one week like for just grabbing them and holding
Waldemar:the people, it's incredible.
Waldemar:Yeah,
Rob:I started to do cause this systema that I went to is like two
Rob:and a half hours is the nearest class.
Rob:So I thought I would do it, but just looked at my age.
Rob:I looked at how long it's going to take to do it.
Rob:I looked at, how many injuries and things and I just thought, it's just fitness now.
Rob:But what I really, one of the things that really that I really
Rob:enjoyed most about Systema was the first thing they do is most of what
Rob:they teach is confronting fear.
Rob:I've been in karate class, I never really liked oriental martial arts because there
Rob:always seemed to be a lot of ego in it.
Rob:I was at karate and I'd gone cause I wanted my daughters to have
Rob:some kind of thing and we used to go and I didn't really enjoy it.
Rob:I remember there was a grading.
Rob:And there was this like fifth Dan black belt or something came
Rob:down and it was clearly a show.
Rob:And it was like strictly judge or something.
Rob:He sits and he is prancing about.
Rob:And this one was like, you're doing this wrong and shouting
Rob:to people, no, do it like this.
Rob:And it was like very much entertainment.
Rob:He was criticizing and picking at everyone.
Rob:I was like, you're just wanting to make a show of yourself And yet everyone passed.
Rob:I'm like, how can you like be ripping into people?
Rob:First of all, whatever you do, there's gonna be Like 50 people go
Rob:for a show grading or something.
Rob:Some of them shouldn't pass because if they're passing then what's the grading?
Rob:Yeah and but you can't be ripping in and going you're not doing this, right?
Rob:You should be doing this.
Rob:You should be doing this and then go.
Rob:Yeah.
Rob:Okay, you passed it's like it devalued it for me.
Rob:Then the other thing I had was we very rarely did any actual it was all
Rob:choreographed and you very rarely did any actual sparring and then I was sparring
Rob:with this brown belt and because he was used to what he was doing, whereas I was
Rob:used to boxing, so I knew how to score points and I was scoring points and I
Rob:could see him getting wound up and then when he did get punched, he broke my rib.
Rob:Oh my God.
Rob:And it was.
Rob:Yeah, it was just a frustration.
Rob:It wasn't actually real.
Rob:It was very choreographed and you do this and then you do this.
Rob:So when I went to Systema, it was just like, okay, fine.
Rob:And what they actually did was they did a lot of stuff like blindfolding you.
Rob:So like I remember we did Systema camp and you do it blindfolded,
Rob:walking through the woods.
Rob:And so it was stuff like.
Rob:They would push you into trees you had to avoid quickly.
Rob:So it was a lot of things, but the first thing they taught you
Rob:was breathing to manage your fear.
Rob:And it was things like you would lay down and be punched and you
Rob:would try to wind each other.
Rob:So that you would learn how to recover.
Rob:So when you were winded that you weren't.
Rob:Because normally I think if you were in a karate fight or something and you
Rob:got winded, it's like, it's a shock and you don't know how to deal with it.
Rob:Yeah.
Rob:Whereas the first thing they did was to teach you how to deal with fear and all
Rob:of those things so that you were able to cope I think because it comes from it's
Rob:a, or the story is it's a Spetsnaz thing.
Rob:So they teach you the idea is that you're able to fight.
Rob:Even when you're injured, not that you have to train to be at your best.
Rob:So what were, would you say are the lessons that all of your
Rob:experiences with martial arts have taught you and how does that inform
Rob:and shape the work that you do.
Waldemar:The biggest benefits that I always noticed and especially now
Waldemar:noticing after this so many years doing martial arts and working out in general.
Waldemar:I think that doing hard things, and this is not like the mental coach
Waldemar:speaking that we used to, but doing hard things every day, somehow helps you
Waldemar:really to live an easier life somehow,.
Waldemar:I actually, I listened to a podcast from Andrew Huberman recently that
Waldemar:they discovered very recently, actually a part in the brain.
Waldemar:So please don't call me out on this specific term, but there is a
Waldemar:part in the brain actually, which is growing with the fact of doing
Waldemar:stuff that we don't want to do.
Waldemar:And the interesting thing is that it's really growing only
Waldemar:when we dislike something doing.
Waldemar:So for example, if you do the first time a cold plunge and you hate it because
Waldemar:it's cold, but then you are getting used to that and you suddenly become
Waldemar:like, okay, it's nice I like that.
Waldemar:The, it has no more effect on this growth of this specific area of the
Waldemar:brain to surpass difficult situations.
Waldemar:What he says is that you should try to find every day something that goes
Waldemar:beyond this level of comfort that you have, even if you're doing a hard
Waldemar:workout and you enjoy the workout, it means you need to work harder.
Waldemar:I started somehow to follow this and the biggest benefit that I see is actually
Waldemar:really to have a better focus in my life.
Waldemar:Better focus on, on, on all aspects of life, business, private life,
Waldemar:personal life goals, whatever.
Waldemar:So it gives you somehow more clarity.
Waldemar:In your mind.
Waldemar:So when I work out, when I do hard things, independent of martial arts
Waldemar:or just weightlifting or whatever I really try to push myself hard,
Waldemar:always harder than the day before.
Waldemar:This translates actually in a very relaxed day because I did something
Waldemar:that I already didn't want to do.
Waldemar:Throughout my entire life when I was doing martial arts when I was doing that
Waldemar:and because it's you did it yourself.
Waldemar:It's not nice to be punched in the face and Even if you're not having
Waldemar:this fighting experience where there is a lot of fear also coming in.
Waldemar:So what you said before that people, when they start fighting,
Waldemar:they have to deal with the fear.
Waldemar:You have to deal with the fear also when you're going into the sparring session,
Waldemar:you have to do also with the fear when you are working hard towards a certain thing.
Waldemar:You need to get used to that.
Waldemar:So the real benefits that I see is that I was able to get used to do harder
Waldemar:things used to, to complain less.
Waldemar:Also, if you want.
Waldemar:So really this had a big impact on my life to complain less and just push through it.
Waldemar:Like in, in sports, when you see there is a three minutes timer, you are in a
Waldemar:sparring session, you're completely dead and you're like, okay, I can't make it.
Waldemar:And you see the clock ticking, you push through it and you say,
Waldemar:okay, in three minutes, it's over.
Waldemar:When you find the same situation in your life and you have to do something you
Waldemar:don't want you somehow remember this and say, okay, this is not forever.
Waldemar:I'm just going to push through it and it will be over.
Waldemar:Maybe it takes a week.
Waldemar:Maybe it takes two weeks, maybe one month, but it will be over one day.
Waldemar:Yeah.
Waldemar:So this is something that I really transferred from this.
Waldemar:Daily workout and martial arts.
Waldemar:Yeah,
Rob:that's Yeah, that's something that I noticed.
Rob:In Systema I remember when we were doing something that we were doing an exercise
Rob:it wasn't to be winded or anything and I was Sparring with someone or fight And he
Rob:winded me And it was, like you're winded.
Rob:And then there's everyone's around and you're like, okay,
Rob:I've been trained for this.
Rob:I have to get my breath back.
Rob:And he's he punched me and he wasn't supposed to wind me.
Rob:And it was unfair and he shouldn't have done this.
Rob:And there's all this kind of whining in your head.
Rob:And then it's Oh, look, they're looking.
Rob:Look, he's looking at me and you should be recovered quicker than this.
Rob:And so there's all this kind of like public shame and it's not
Rob:feeling good enough and it's feeling sorry for yourself.
Rob:And that's really what I learned from that and the same thing when I started ending
Rob:the shower with a cold shower and you step in the shower and first it's fuck you.
Rob:And you do it, you can do it from a kind of hate of I'm going to be defiant.
Rob:And and eventually after a while, it just, it's just Okay.
Rob:It just is, and you just accept it.
Rob:Yeah.
Rob:And you're learning that to get to that place of acceptance quicker.
Rob:I noticed that also as well my, both my daughters hated maths and
Rob:I tried teaching them maths and they're like, no, not doing it.
Rob:I'm not doing it.
Rob:I'm not doing it.
Rob:And the amount of resistance and then they'll go, okay, I did it.
Rob:And then it's five minutes and it's done.
Rob:So I noticed that myself and with other people.
Rob:And when I hate the gym, it's Oh, I've got to get myself to go there.
Rob:And then, Oh, and then it's all this kind of whining.
Rob:So I can definitely see that there is definitely a muscle.
Rob:And once you've been through it a few times, you can go,
Rob:okay, you're just whining.
Rob:Shut up and just do it.
Rob:And I think how do I say this?
Rob:In a kind way, but I think for all of us, like we can recognize it in ourself
Rob:and we can go, okay, stop whining.
Rob:But sometimes we see it in other people and we're like, okay, you just need
Rob:to stop whining and just do the thing.
Rob:But someone who maybe hasn't had that experience or that realization
Rob:yet, we have to be able to get over.
Rob:The same message by in a more, I don't know, can you give it in a softer way?
Waldemar:Yeah.
Waldemar:I agree on that.
Rob:I'm getting a sense of your background, where you've come from.
Rob:So now I'm interested in, so you've been talking a lot about a new age of leaders.
Waldemar:Yes.
Waldemar:Yeah.
Waldemar:Leadership.
Waldemar:New age leaders.
Waldemar:Oh yeah.
Waldemar:Let's call it everything.
Waldemar:What's future leader.
Waldemar:Yeah.
Waldemar:That stuff.
Waldemar:Yeah.
Rob:So this is where, this is your focus is like training
Rob:the next generation of leaders.
Rob:Yeah.
Rob:So where did this come from?
Rob:What has been your experiences and what led you to this?
Waldemar:It started basically from my own experience.
Waldemar:So when I started working in corporate., it was actually a very
Waldemar:funny story how I became a leader myself or how I actually got the
Waldemar:ambition to become a leader myself.
Waldemar:I started working at a very young age, 15 years old.
Waldemar:Two decades now, 34, 2006.
Waldemar:And I came back home complaining quite a lot with my dad, about my boss.
Waldemar:I was like going this guy is absolutely, horse shit.
Waldemar:I can't work with him.
Waldemar:And he was like, why are you complaining?
Waldemar:If you can do it better become your a leader yourself.
Waldemar:Do something because this guy is in this position because he worked hard.
Waldemar:Of course me as a 16 years old, it's like work harder while he's not doing a shit.
Waldemar:No, it's not so hard.
Waldemar:But then my father somehow planted this.
Waldemar:This thought in my head, and I was like, okay, maybe I should do
Waldemar:something better if I'm not in the opinion that he's doing a great job.
Waldemar:So a few weeks after we had this chat, I actually quit my job as a technician, went
Waldemar:to university, graduated from university in mechanical engineering, started having
Waldemar:my vision to go towards leadership.
Waldemar:And I was saying directly, I'm going to go all in, I want to be a CEO of a company.
Waldemar:Back then the thought was being a CEO is being your own boss, but it's not so true.
Waldemar:I was like, still a young naive.
Waldemar:I was like, I need to be a CEO.
Waldemar:And I started working on that.
Waldemar:Went into project management because I wanted to see a broader
Waldemar:picture of how the landscape is, how the company's functioning.
Waldemar:Started moving up my way in, in the career and working with great
Waldemar:people, leaders, bad people, leaders, and trying really to capture the
Waldemar:essence of good, bad leadership.
Waldemar:And I arrived at a certain point where I really I became a leader first time in
Waldemar:2017, started to lead a small team, then growing into a managing director role,
Waldemar:having 70 people, big responsibility.
Waldemar:This is the moment where I started also to coach, where I became a coach
Waldemar:myself because I knew I need some instruments, some assets to, to manage
Waldemar:these people, especially in a young age.
Waldemar:And So back then the focus was not so much on next generation
Waldemar:leaders or what's going on.
Waldemar:But once I reached that point where I was sitting together with other people
Waldemar:on the table, I noticed, and I had the privilege, I call it privilege, at a very
Waldemar:young age to be offer this opportunity.
Waldemar:I worked hard for it, but I was offered this opportunity to participate to board
Waldemar:meetings, steering meetings with really good people, high level professionals.
Waldemar:They were all older than me, 15, 20 years plus.
Waldemar:And I noticed While talking to them while talking about the business,
Waldemar:how big actually the gap is between the workforce and what's going on in
Waldemar:certain meetings on a board level.
Waldemar:So I was asking myself, what's the reason?
Waldemar:Is there a communication?
Waldemar:Is there a lack of leadership skills?
Waldemar:Is the organization not good?
Waldemar:And there are a lot of reasons.
Waldemar:There are so many different things to be considered, but Where I really started
Waldemar:to work towards the next generation of leaders to work, how to build the next
Waldemar:workforce was during my last experience.
Waldemar:I got hired by a company for a promising project.
Waldemar:I was leading an R and D department which was supporting a European
Waldemar:project for battery manufacturing.
Waldemar:It was great experience, 27 young people.
Waldemar:And this company's leadership blew basically all the talent burned
Waldemar:the talent within 16 months, 18 months including myself.
Waldemar:So I left the company as well because there was a very difficult situation
Waldemar:also in terms of company, but it was so evident that the company was
Waldemar:not able to manage the people and there was multiple reasons for that.
Waldemar:One of them was that leadership was not ready to work with the younger workforce
Waldemar:and was not ready to support them in their needs and their development.
Waldemar:And in my opinion, how companies can, that it's not about changing people.
Waldemar:I'm not believing so much into improving, into changing people.
Waldemar:I'm more into giving them an opportunity to do things differently because if you're
Waldemar:a senior manager or if you're a younger manager, it actually doesn't matter.
Waldemar:So when I talk about next generation leaders.
Waldemar:It's of course, somehow with a point generational gap and generational
Waldemar:transition, but on the other hand, next generation leadership for me is
Waldemar:the way we do the way we lead people.
Waldemar:Okay.
Waldemar:So a next generation leader can be a senior leader, 60 years old.
Waldemar:And the goal is, or my goal and my vision is not to change him or her.
Waldemar:how things have been done, but offer an opportunity to do things differently.
Waldemar:Because now we have a different landscape.
Waldemar:We have a different world.
Waldemar:And maybe it's my perception because I just also grew up in this, but
Waldemar:I have the perception that things accelerated in a quite Let me say
Waldemar:impressive way that of course COVID changed a lot of things and so on.
Waldemar:But it's not only COVID it's everything around there changed
Waldemar:so fast and that companies are struggling to adapt it to this change.
Waldemar:At the same pace.
Waldemar:So they're always a step behind.
Waldemar:And in this moment, I have the feeling they are not even one
Waldemar:step but two, three steps behind.
Waldemar:So when I talk about next generation leaders, I'm actually well focused,
Waldemar:of course, on working on the younger workforce and giving them the opportunity
Waldemar:because I'm also a big believer into the fact that If you are a good
Waldemar:leader or if you want to be a good leader you don't have to have 20 years
Waldemar:of experience so you can be a good people leader also at the younger age.
Waldemar:I saw it myself.
Waldemar:I experienced myself.
Waldemar:I got accepted by all the workforce.
Waldemar:I was 30 years old managing director.
Waldemar:People were 60 years old.
Waldemar:They were following me as a as their leader because I have a certain approach.
Waldemar:Towards this kind of people.
Waldemar:And this is basically my mission.
Waldemar:This is what I want to teach people how to basically go and explore a different
Waldemar:opportunity, a different way to go and practice leadership rather than
Waldemar:telling the same things that everybody's saying okay, we need to be empathic.
Waldemar:You need to be open.
Waldemar:You need to communicate.
Waldemar:This is the theory and we need this, but then there is the practical
Waldemar:part that we need to think about.
Waldemar:How can we actually change, not change, how can we offer people the
Waldemar:opportunity to think, behave and feel different about things and situations.
Rob:So you've got the old way, the new way and then
Rob:you've got think, feel, behave.
Rob:So what would be the old way?
Waldemar:The old way, not to finger point or something, I think the
Waldemar:old way, the business world, it has seen different kinds of revolutions.
Waldemar:We started somehow with industrial revolutions, then we go to information.
Waldemar:revolution.
Waldemar:And now it's more social, digital.
Waldemar:And when you look in these free revolutions that we faced, the
Waldemar:needs of the people, of course, were different and they changed.
Waldemar:Today I made a post about loyalty and that loyalty never existed before.
Waldemar:Why?
Waldemar:Because my opinion.
Waldemar:people, my grandparents, they were working for survival.
Waldemar:Okay.
Waldemar:So they had a job where the boss could treat them very bad.
Waldemar:And they were going to work every day anyway, without complaining because job
Waldemar:was food on the table for me, my family.
Waldemar:Then already with my parents and with my generation,
Waldemar:especially things changed a lot.
Waldemar:We got options.
Waldemar:We are more working towards a better lifestyle.
Waldemar:Okay.
Waldemar:We want a better life.
Waldemar:This is where it comes.
Waldemar:We want to be earning more.
Waldemar:So we are able maybe to accept a job that is not fulfilling us.
Waldemar:That's not so purposeful, but if it's paid well, it's good because we can buy
Waldemar:nice things and we can live a good life.
Waldemar:A better life that our parents had, maybe a bigger house, a fancy car.
Waldemar:And now what we experience with the social revolution, we see that people
Waldemar:are aiming for quality of life.
Waldemar:They're not aiming anymore for having this nice things.
Waldemar:First and foremost, they already have it.
Waldemar:So their parents took care of that.
Waldemar:They are now living in a basically good world.
Waldemar:So most of them are like, okay, I don't care.
Waldemar:Earning a lot of money.
Waldemar:What I want is I want to have fun.
Waldemar:I want to have freedom.
Waldemar:I want to have purpose, flexibility, and all that stuff.
Waldemar:The old way, if you look at this three stages, so the old way that this
Waldemar:basically in between my grandparents and my parents was a lot of commands and
Waldemar:control and the boss is always right.
Waldemar:You come to work, this is your task, do it and not complain.
Waldemar:And people were not complaining because they had this this need.
Waldemar:Yeah.
Waldemar:The basic need was to earn and to not upset your boss, because it
Waldemar:could mean that you lose your job and then you don't earn anymore.
Rob:Okay.
Rob:A new world.
Rob:So this is what I talk about as well, but I talk about it in a very different way.
Rob:My whole thing, my background is relationships.
Rob:And I don't think we ever needed the relationships that we need now.
Rob:I don't think the old way, when you look at the industrial
Rob:revolution, it's about logistics.
Rob:It's about factories.
Rob:It's about concrete things that you can see.
Rob:And when you say, do you see the table over there?
Rob:Can you take something from the table and put it on a desk over there?
Rob:Everyone understands that because we can see it.
Rob:But when you talk about I want you to improve the efficiency
Rob:of this spreadsheet or something like that it's something nebulous.
Rob:Yeah.
Rob:And so there's an entirely different layer and different level
Rob:of communication that we need.
Rob:So when we're working in, someone's.
Rob:I don't know, in finance or someone's in marketing and then they're talking
Rob:about something that's abstract.
Rob:The other person doesn't fully understand it.
Rob:So we need the communication to be able to get something that they don't understand.
Rob:Because it's not a job role that they like we all understand plumber.
Rob:We all understand builder or something.
Rob:So the communications needs are different, but also the amount that we need to
Rob:work together and the amount like.
Rob:If you're fed up and you're working in a factory, the factory still goes, it
Rob:doesn't matter how happy you are, you can still press the button, you can
Rob:have a supervisor who can watch it all whereas today no one can watch you and the
Rob:ability, the difference in potential of what you can bring between you being happy
Rob:and you being miserable is you're going to be so much more creative, you're going to
Rob:be much more open, you're going to have, It only tells you how to have an idea.
Rob:Say if you're a technology company, someone has an idea for a new app, that
Rob:could be a billion dollar app idea.
Rob:And the difference between that idea.
Rob:To anything is how much, how creative the person is, how free they feel able
Rob:to communicate the idea, to share the idea, how supportive the environment
Rob:is to take that idea and implement it.
Rob:So there's so much more value.
Rob:And I think that's what, that's the difference that you're talking about in
Rob:that we, back when I look at my parents.
Rob:My dad worked for Kodak for 45 years.
Rob:And the idea then was you would find a job and you'd stay in that job and you'd
Rob:find a job that you could stay for life.
Rob:Yeah.
Rob:Retiring.
Rob:Yes.
Rob:Yeah.
Rob:It was even my age that, it's like, Oh, people changing their jobs all the time.
Rob:And now.
Rob:Yeah, we are so rich that people don't, no one needs to work, in the Western
Rob:world, there's enough of a security blanket that you're going to be okay.
Rob:You're going to survive.
Rob:You're still going to have an iPhone.
Rob:You can probably still play on the Xbox.
Rob:You can watch TV.
Rob:Nothing bad's going to happen.
Rob:And companies, yes, that's what companies, they need and especially
Rob:today so this might be something that you can help me with.
Rob:So people of my generation so I'm 52 soon.
Rob:And for me, I talked to my daughters and that, and they've got completely different
Rob:view of the world, and for someone like us we're now having to adapt to trans and
Rob:it's everything that we were built to.
Rob:To grow up with these are the solid foundations.
Rob:And so a lot, so you hear a lot of people and everyone's talking about
Rob:Gen Z and millennials and they're entitled and all of this stuff.
Rob:So I'm interested to understand your views.
Rob:So when someone complains to you, say, Oh, Gen Z doesn't want to work today.
Rob:And what do they want?
Rob:Maybe they want everything and they want it now.
Rob:So what's your understanding and your insight to that?
Waldemar:First, I would like to leave a first small comment on the
Waldemar:communication because I really like and follow your content very actively
Waldemar:due to that because communication.
Waldemar:I think it's one of the people skills that will ensure that you're doing fine
Waldemar:in life today because This one thing and I see communication from two standpoints.
Waldemar:So you have clearly like the verbal nonverbal communication.
Waldemar:This is one thing.
Waldemar:But what it's more important is especially in the context of leadership,
Waldemar:and now we'll make the bridge to your question is whenever you are
Waldemar:in the room and no matter which.
Waldemar:To which generation you belong yourself.
Waldemar:Now, nowadays you will have a multi generational audience.
Waldemar:So you come into a meeting and you will have senior leadership.
Waldemar:You will have a young people just hired.
Waldemar:So gen Z, millennials, boomers will have everybody around the table and
Waldemar:the real key and the real skill, the secret skill and communication
Waldemar:is to communicate in a way that you get everybody on board, right?
Waldemar:So you have to be really good in delivering a message that is
Waldemar:understood on all the different layers of different generations.
Waldemar:So this is something that I really Proactively studying.
Waldemar:So how can this be done to ensure that you are perceived on all
Waldemar:different levels of generations?
Waldemar:Same way.
Waldemar:Just wanted to add this to your communication topic.
Waldemar:When people come and I hear that often actually especially from the older
Waldemar:generation, when we speak about the young people and they don't want I've been
Waldemar:actually Friday and Monday yesterday morning, I was delivering training to
Waldemar:a technical college, 20 years old guys.
Waldemar:So I was not delivering training.
Waldemar:I was there as a guest for a testimonial speaking about my experience and so on.
Waldemar:And I was so surprised about how Great, these people are, because
Waldemar:there, there was a session where I had the opportunity to speak and
Waldemar:then there was a smart questions.
Waldemar:So they had the opportunity to ask questions they typed it in digital.
Waldemar:And then there was like a quick question round and the questions
Waldemar:they made were made me understand how well prepared they are actually.
Waldemar:So they really understand what they want.
Waldemar:And they really see that there was a shift, but I think somehow they
Waldemar:feel still misunderstood from other generations, because when we speak
Waldemar:about "they are lazy", they are not
Waldemar:" They don't want to work.
Waldemar:They don't have clear ideas".
Waldemar:It's because we are not listening.
Waldemar:This is a clear stereotype that we're having say, okay, they are 20
Waldemar:years old and they continue studying because they don't want to work.
Waldemar:I started working with 16.
Waldemar:They are still studying their master with 36, and there is okay, all this stuff.
Waldemar:But when you are actually speaking to this generation and you try to understand them
Waldemar:rather than making assumptions about what they're doing or what they're not doing.
Waldemar:You really fast understand what they really need.
Waldemar:And if a company leader, a person, a parent tries really to understand
Waldemar:what is their need and supports act as a sponsor towards these needs I
Waldemar:think a lot of good things can happen.
Waldemar:Not all things will be aligned with what is maybe our own ideas
Waldemar:of how things should be done.
Waldemar:But this is at the same time the good thing when it comes to have Different
Waldemar:generations when it comes to have different cultures among the table.
Waldemar:Also when I speak about cross cultural communication and management, and I
Waldemar:say the exact same things when working with different generations, try to
Waldemar:bring as much as possible diversity to the table and pick cherry from every
Waldemar:single generation, every single culture.
Waldemar:If you do you really get the best result.
Waldemar:I guarantee that everybody has something to add to the discussion.
Waldemar:It's just about our own willingness to extract this information and
Waldemar:to use it to our own benefit.
Rob:When you talk about communicating a message in different ways what
Rob:specifically, in what specific different ways are you, like when you're coming
Rob:up with a message, how are you thinking about portraying it in what different
Rob:ways as in the different words or as in the different references?
Waldemar:I think it's all together.
Waldemar:So it's about verbal nonverbal communication towards
Waldemar:a diversified audience.
Waldemar:So it's a blend of things that we need to consider in my opinion.
Waldemar:The easy thing is when I speak to Gen Z audience or to senior management
Waldemar:audience, you and I, we adopt the way we talk, we speak, we are
Waldemar:showing, let me, a different posture.
Waldemar:Maybe when I speak to the young people, I speak like they're speak,
Waldemar:I'm really like easygoing with them.
Waldemar:And this is where I create also the great connection to them.
Waldemar:Great relationships.
Waldemar:So I'm somehow showing them that I'm not superior than them.
Waldemar:On the other hand, when I speak with senior executives, I show respect
Waldemar:for their seniority, for their experience, for how far they came.
Waldemar:So I adopt that.
Waldemar:Now you're coming together and you bring both together.
Waldemar:If I would straight away communicate, like I do with senior executives, I
Waldemar:will immediately lose the young people.
Waldemar:If I start speaking slang, young people, senior executives would be like, Oh
Waldemar:my God, this guy is not he's crazy.
Waldemar:He's not reliable.
Waldemar:He's not he's not a professional, so I think it's it's really tricky to find
Waldemar:out how to communicate efficiently when you are trying to address such
Waldemar:a big gap or to close such a big gap in terms of communication and
Waldemar:understanding on the generational.
Waldemar:So what I do usually is I blended, I try to stay very composed and professional
Waldemar:in my language, in my body language.
Waldemar:But I use very simple communication to not lose the younger audience.
Waldemar:So to make them understand that I care.
Waldemar:That they understand what I have to say.
Waldemar:So this helped me a lot when I was delivering communication meetings back
Waldemar:then when I was a general manager.
Waldemar:So I did every few months communication meeting and what I see from senior
Waldemar:management, for example, when they are doing a communication meeting
Waldemar:and sharing the company results and new projects and whatever.
Waldemar:So what are they saying?
Waldemar:They're saying, okay, this is the revenue.
Waldemar:This is the eBit, this is that, this is this.
Waldemar:And they're using a lot of words and terms that many people don't understand.
Waldemar:Not only because, there's a generational gap, but also
Waldemar:because there is a knowledge gap.
Waldemar:I heard once a general manager or CEO speaking a lot about sales and
Waldemar:everything to an audience, which was 80 percent technicians and guys who were
Waldemar:taking care of assembly departments.
Waldemar:And these guys, what they wanted to hear.
Waldemar:So you need to adjust also the information is okay.
Waldemar:When are the next machines coming?
Waldemar:What should we do the next six months?
Waldemar:So also adjusting the information.
Waldemar:So you are in a difficult situation because you have to speak to a
Waldemar:diversified audience and you have to deliver information that for some people
Waldemar:is relevant and for others not but what you really want if you do that is
Waldemar:that all the information you give is relevant to everybody and you want that
Waldemar:everybody somehow understands that.
Waldemar:So what I really suggest when I do it myself or when I work with my clients
Waldemar:is to keep it simple and you can actually don't mistake if you keep
Waldemar:your communication simple, but in the professional way start there and then
Waldemar:see, and it's adjust and it has so many different aspects that need to be
Waldemar:considered, but that worked fine for me.
Rob:When I think along those lines, I always remember Steve jobs and how
Rob:much effort he made on simplicity.
Rob:I think that is really the key is that when you share information, there's
Rob:there's a certain amount of digestion and the digestible your messages, the
Rob:more people will pay attention to it.
Rob:So you can either, have this wordy, complicated thing.
Rob:And very few people will take the effort to digest it, or you
Rob:can digest it, and so it's simple and everyone understands, right?
Rob:I agree with what you say.
Rob:I think people are people and there is like we're all the same.
Rob:When you look at.
Rob:I think a lot of, like older people will look at kids and they go, Oh, they're
Rob:always on their phones and all this, but so are we it's because technology
Rob:is a bit like, like food companies, they make the most money by providing
Rob:the most amount of sugar and salt.
Rob:So the more junk food they have, the more we will like it.
Rob:Same thing with technology.
Rob:They're doing the same to our attention.
Rob:It's like the most amount of dopamine per minute is what's going to win.
Rob:And we've become, we've become an attention deficit society
Rob:because we are dopamine addicted.
Rob:Having said that there are distinctions.
Rob:I don't know if you've ever come across morgan housel.
Rob:And he's got a psychology of money
Rob:I really love his insight that yeah what people have lived through the
Rob:experiences that people have lived through the 40s What was it 30s depression?
Rob:Yeah the world wars the 60s like You know the materialistic 80s
Rob:That is going to shape a generation, how a generation thinks about money.
Rob:And in the same way what has happened culturally is going to shape how a
Rob:generation, their orientation and the way that they look at the world.
Rob:And I had a conversation, one of these conversations, and it actually
Rob:went to about Gen Z and things.
Rob:And what I.
Rob:really understood there was that.
Rob:So when you look at Gen Z now, which is probably, like the people that you
Rob:were speaking to yesterday, a little bit younger than you is they've grown
Rob:up where most of their life, from before teenage has been spent on social
Rob:media, the people they follow and no longer TV shows and unrealistic stars,
Rob:but they're YouTubers who they've grown up with their vlogs and they're
Rob:people that they feel that they know.
Rob:What I realized is they learn less from life by being taught than by
Rob:watching and vicariously experiencing.
Rob:And I think they struggle when they go into a organization that's you're going
Rob:to learn this and you're going to do this.
Rob:And they're like, no, like this YouTuber just goes in and does it.
Rob:I'm just going to go in and do it.
Rob:Exactly.
Rob:And I think that is the problem.
Rob:And this was Sandy said, you have to show me take me to the water, give
Rob:me basically give me the experience.
Rob:And they want the experience, but not being told about the experience.
Rob:So I'm wondering your thoughts on that.
Waldemar:Yeah, I really like that.
Waldemar:That example that you made.
Waldemar:And I actually thought recently about that, but you're saying growing with
Waldemar:social media and only if you think about the amount of input and information
Waldemar:that you get, and when you're younger you try to identify with your hero.
Waldemar:For me, it was, maybe that's why I started to do a lot of combat sports
Waldemar:and sports in general, because I was like a big fan of action movies, Arnold
Waldemar:Schwarzenegger, Sylvester Stallone, Rocky movies, Jean Claude Van Damme.
Waldemar:This was my world, and they were my heroes.
Waldemar:And I somehow pictured, I want to be like them, fit and cool,
Waldemar:but I have three people I admire.
Waldemar:And I try to work something towards somehow to look like
Waldemar:them, to do stuff like them.
Waldemar:The younger generations.
Waldemar:We think they have so many inputs, so much input from all different types of
Waldemar:sources, and it gets way more realistic for them to reach certain goals.
Waldemar:And they are more willing what I experienced to approach this
Waldemar:in a try and fail approach.
Waldemar:So they are more willing, in my opinion, to try new things to
Waldemar:fail and to retry while already my generation, so millennials.
Waldemar:I was raised very very traditional.
Waldemar:Let me say.
Waldemar:So you start you study you, you graduate and graduated mechanical engineering.
Waldemar:So this is going to be my life, mechanical engineer.
Waldemar:And then, okay.
Waldemar:I shifted towards some different stuff, but the way that we are living
Waldemar:today, that people change careers, change paths almost every two years.
Waldemar:And they build something.
Waldemar:On social media, you build something you're two years later, you do
Waldemar:something completely different than you built in a completely new life.
Waldemar:And three years after that you start again and you build again, something.
Waldemar:So it gives people the belief to.
Waldemar:That this is possible.
Waldemar:So I can do that.
Waldemar:When such a person coming in into a company and wants to
Waldemar:do stuff, I want to do stuff.
Waldemar:I want to experience that.
Waldemar:I want to make a difference.
Waldemar:We are from the other generation.
Waldemar:We think no, you should do the thing slowly learn, because this is the
Waldemar:path, because in our head, we are like we don't want something bad for them.
Waldemar:We want to help them.
Waldemar:Because in our head, we want to help them to create a path, professional
Waldemar:career, long term career, so that in 10, 15 years, they're going to be
Waldemar:successful in what they are doing now.
Waldemar:But they are not looking 10, 15 years.
Waldemar:They are looking today.
Waldemar:They're looking maybe in five years.
Waldemar:They are having maybe an idea of what they're going to do,
Waldemar:but they're more on this level.
Waldemar:I'm going to try this.
Waldemar:And if I'm not liking this.
Waldemar:I'm going to change and do something else, but to understand if they like or not,
Waldemar:they need to have the opportunity to try.
Waldemar:And if we don't give them the opportunity to try their
Waldemar:immediate reaction will be okay.
Waldemar:For me, not trying is I'm going to do a thing that I can try.
Waldemar:So I will not stay here for not trying to do it myself.
Waldemar:I will just go for the next thing.
Waldemar:And the next thing that's where the, all the job hopping and everything comes.
Waldemar:They are very demanding in terms of of opportunity in terms of taking action
Waldemar:rather than being shown, as you said, to how do the things they don't like that.
Waldemar:This is my
Rob:experience.
Rob:They're coming into an organization where, traditionally the view has
Rob:been you've got to earn your way, like you do this for 15 years And
Rob:then maybe you can get another job.
Rob:This is something I hear is the frustration that people have is
Rob:You know, I spent 15 20 years waiting To earn my way up.
Rob:I got the role and then they want my role straight away.
Rob:Yeah.
Rob:So there's a there's that conflict there's that's the generational conflict between I
Rob:earned it You want it without earning it?
Rob:They're saying like I want the experience now and if you're not gonna give it to
Rob:me I'm gonna go somewhere else so how do we reconcile those two perspectives
Rob:and those two desires and worldviews?
Rob:This
Waldemar:is a very good question, Rob.
Waldemar:My idea is really to help both parties somehow understanding each other.
Waldemar:So here is what your expertise also comes in communication.
Waldemar:How do I want to do that?
Waldemar:I mentioned it before.
Waldemar:I really want to show both sides rather telling one side, you have to comply
Waldemar:with their needs or telling Gen Z that you have to omit, and you have to
Waldemar:go for the way that they are saying, because they don't need, I think both
Waldemar:parties, or when we look like the big generation gap, both parties are somehow
Waldemar:able and willing to compromise, but not to compromise on certain things.
Waldemar:So what we need to find really is the balance to bring these two
Waldemar:together, to communicate And to sell more the opportunity than
Waldemar:what they should change again.
Waldemar:It's about the approach, not lecturing people what they should
Waldemar:change, what they should do better because it's also a psychology thing.
Waldemar:If you tell people to do better, they first have to admit that
Waldemar:they suck and nobody likes that.
Waldemar:So rather than saying that you go and you explain to people, look, guys, there is
Waldemar:an opportunity to do things differently.
Waldemar:And what is the most important thing?
Waldemar:There is a win.
Waldemar:There is, it's not a compromise.
Waldemar:So I don't like compromise because compromise means I lose something.
Waldemar:Generally, it means I lose something.
Waldemar:I want to focus not on compromise.
Waldemar:I want to focus on opportunity.
Waldemar:Both sides get to win something.
Waldemar:So it's up to us if you want to win that.
Waldemar:I strongly believe in the fact that we should offer younger generations
Waldemar:opportunity to try and to fail.
Waldemar:Because they will grow with that.
Waldemar:And on the other hand, I understand it's my generation is also closer to
Waldemar:the mindset of the senior executives that certain things take time.
Waldemar:And this is such an amazing opportunity.
Waldemar:If you pair those people, the really senior executives who have
Waldemar:the experience, who failed already.
Waldemar:Because this is actually what I said, try to tell people what is the beauty
Waldemar:of a mentor of somebody who has the experience you want to go try and fail.
Waldemar:That's fine.
Waldemar:This is how you should learn.
Waldemar:And this will lead you to success.
Waldemar:But how can you be faster?
Waldemar:How can you grow faster and better?
Waldemar:There is one shortcut.
Waldemar:Maybe the only shortcut in the career that exists is you go with a mentor
Waldemar:with somebody who helps you because this person already failed for you.
Waldemar:Okay.
Waldemar:So it will.
Waldemar:Be helpful to you and it will be helpful to the mentor because this is the
Waldemar:classic sponsorship, which kicks in.
Waldemar:So when you're able to pair, senior executives with younger people, and
Waldemar:they somehow create a great base of collaboration where this is,
Waldemar:I think gens that will work like crazy and senior executives will
Waldemar:be very happy with the results.
Waldemar:And this is the win, I think.
Rob:I think in relationships, people think it's about compromise, but
Rob:it isn't necessarily compromise.
Rob:It can be compromised, like whether you have an Indian or whether you have a
Rob:Chinese that which is insignificant, but if you compromise, what you have is you
Rob:have I want this, and then one goes, yeah, okay I'll have this, they'll have this,
Rob:and neither of them want what they want.
Rob:I think that's what we've got with the different generations.
Rob:We've got one view here, one view here.
Rob:And whenever we have that, what we need to do is find the seed of what's in
Rob:here and the seed of what's in here, and we have to find the solution.
Rob:which is the higher level of thinking.
Rob:It's like it goes back to Einstein, that every problem is solved
Rob:at a higher level of thinking.
Rob:When I look from that perspective, I can see how Gen Z are going to
Rob:change the organizational structure.
Rob:Because in order to accommodate them I think people like yourself
Rob:are going to spread the word that we have to give them experience.
Rob:What you then run into is someone's 10 years into waiting
Rob:for their chance to go there.
Rob:And then someone's how come they just walk in and they get that?
Rob:And other people are going to want that.
Rob:So I see there being a big organizational restructuring of
Waldemar:that.
Waldemar:I think we will have this for the next decade.
Waldemar:So this is a long term process.
Waldemar:I think when we start moving towards millennials into the senior leadership
Waldemar:and senior executives position, so millennials will make the entrance for
Waldemar:Gen Z easier and make the transition.
Waldemar:And accommodate their needs way better in the organization.
Waldemar:I guess we will be back to the start because then another
Waldemar:generation is following, I think they call it generation alpha.
Waldemar:So who the God knows what they want from us and from the business.
Waldemar:I guess this is never ending loop, but I really like how you rephrase that of
Waldemar:having two point of views and a high level of thinking of seeing to creating a
Waldemar:new solution and new opportunity, rather than trying to figure out which is the
Waldemar:best or what are the pieces of the best.
Waldemar:Just create one that both are committed
Rob:to.
Rob:I definitely think it's going to be an interesting time and I think you've
Rob:chosen is a really interesting field.
Rob:Also your personality seeing your background, I can see like the
Rob:Russian philosophy because all of that and the martial arts is like my
Rob:experience of Russians is they're very direct, they're strong.
Rob:Like they've coped with freezing cold weather, they've coped with
Rob:hardship of, when you go back to the old Soviet times where food was
Rob:scarce, they've coped with adversity.
Rob:My understanding of the Russian culture is, it's No whining,
Rob:no bullshit, just do it.
Rob:Very much yeah.
Rob:I think your experience in.
Rob:martial arts has given you steel.
Rob:It's made you understand how to deal with life without
Rob:whining and without complaining.
Rob:So I was really interested to uncover that because I think then pairing
Rob:that with the Gen Z where everyone says, Oh, it's entitled and they're
Rob:soft and they're all of this.
Rob:I think that makes you the perfect person to work with them because that's
Rob:what everyone seems that they need.
Rob:And when you tally that with the understanding of where they're
Rob:coming from and why they want what they want I think you're really
Rob:well set up to make a difference.
Rob:It's one of the biggest, it's probably, I think communication, which you're also
Rob:dealing with, communication relationships, obviously, I think, The emotional
Rob:intelligence and the generational differences I think are really the key
Rob:things, going forward that organizations are going to have to deal with.
Rob:That's going to be really exciting times.
Rob:To see how it all unfolds.
Waldemar:Yeah, I agree.
Waldemar:Rob, the time is very exciting and I'm somehow grateful of how
Waldemar:technology is involving and very fast.
Waldemar:I was long time.
Waldemar:I was critically, I was at the critical thought about that.
Waldemar:Is that so good, but I somehow see that all this technology advancement brings
Waldemar:us back to the values and to human nature and to think about and rethink
Waldemar:about our feelings and how we should behave and think about ethical standards.
Waldemar:I see this as coming more and more in organizations and in people.
Waldemar:It's somehow okay, we saw technologies advancing, everything becoming,
Waldemar:everybody's becoming a robot somehow.
Waldemar:And now we are back on, let's discover the human part of us.
Waldemar:And this is something I really enjoy.
Waldemar:Doing what I do now.
Rob:I really like how you said that because I think we're in a spiral I
Rob:think we went from you know before the Industrial Revolution we were all at
Rob:home and working on the small holdings and just surviving and then we got
Rob:to a point where we got security, but we lived an artificial life.
Rob:And I think now digitally, we're going back to that way where we can
Rob:be back in the family and we can interact outside and we can reach the
Rob:whole world, but we do it digitally.
Rob:And I think there is a lot of growth in becoming a digital citizen.
Rob:I think we've already become a citizen, but now it's a digital citizen.
Rob:Within that, it becomes critically important how we
Rob:like our emotional intelligence.
Rob:But yeah, so it's been fascinating.
Rob:So thank you for taking the time to chat.
Waldemar:Really enjoyed talking to you.
Rob:It's given me some new ideas.
Rob:I am really interested in, what happens with this new generation.
Waldemar:It's cool.
Waldemar:I really appreciate your podcast.
Waldemar:I listened very careful to the episode with Matthew Ward.
Waldemar:Really enjoyed that one.
Waldemar:This guy is like leadership guru.
Waldemar:Old style, but very open way.
Waldemar:This is, we need more of that.
Waldemar:He's a senior leader, a lot of experience following a bit in this
Waldemar:exchanging, engaging a bit with him.
Waldemar:So this was a great episode.
Waldemar:Then you recently spoke with my good friend Saieed, also amazing guy.
Waldemar:Yeah.
Waldemar:Doing great job.
Waldemar:Really enjoying also listening to your conversations.
Waldemar:Thank you.
Rob:I've loved my conversation.
Rob:So there's so many interesting people and they're all doing slightly different
Rob:and have slightly different perspectives.
Rob:Thanks Rob.
Rob:No, I appreciate it.
Rob:Have a great week and I'll catch up with you.
Waldemar:Likewise.
Waldemar:Thanks Rob.
Waldemar:Take care.
Waldemar:Bye.
Waldemar:Bye.