Dre Baldwin: The Third Day Principle for Consistent Execution Overview: In this episode, Julie sits down with Dre Baldwin, an entrepreneur, author of forty three books, speaker, and creator of the Work On Your Game philosophy. Dre has built a career around helping professionals, entrepreneurs, and leaders develop the discipline, confidence, and mental toughness needed to perform at a high level with consistency. Julie and Dre explore what separates professionals from amateurs and how leaders stay on course when the work gets hard, diving deep into the third day concept and the identity level work required for lasting transformation, purpose, and growth.
Dre Baldwin: The Third Day Principle for Consistent Execution
Key topics covered in this episode:
The Third Day Concept
- The first day is when everyone shows up excited to start something new
- The second day still holds a crowd, though a smaller one
- The third day reveals who is truly committed, since the initial excitement fades and the actual work begins
- The third day is not the moment someone realizes the work is hard, it is the decision made in that moment about whether to continue
Principle, Structure, and Discipline
- Principle creates structure, and structure leads to discipline
- Principles are identity based unbreaking standards that suffer no exceptions, unlike preferences, which are simply what someone wishes they were
- When identity is locked in, actions become automatic and willpower becomes irrelevant
- Discipline is a description of consistent behavior, not a personality trait
The Be, Do, Have Framework
- Most people work backwards, focusing first on actions rather than identity
- The order that leads to lasting change is be, do, have. Who a person is being comes first, then what they are doing, and finally what they have
- Internal identity change must happen before permanent action change is possible
Motivation Versus Discipline
- Motivation is an emotion and is fickle, since it does not always show up
- Discipline is the result of a process and does not depend on feelings
- At some point, motivation must hand the job over to discipline for anything meaningful to last
Confidence as a Byproduct
- Confidence is not a personality trait, it is uncovered by doing a hard thing for a long period of time
- Confidence is the absence of self consciousness and internal anxiety
- Confidence is available to everyone through consistent effort, not something only certain people are born with
The Scientific Law of Entropy
- Anything without standards or parameters keeping it contained moves toward increased chaos and disorder over time
- Without a process for keeping something in line, it naturally drifts out of line
Memorable quotes from this episode:
- The behavior is discipline, not the person
- Confidence is uncovered by doing a hard thing for a long period of time
- The question is not how you feel, the question is what did you commit to
- Motivation is an emotion, it is energy, discipline is the result of a process
Key takeaways for leaders:
- Identity comes first, structure and discipline are end products of a deeper identity shift
- Discipline is a behavior, not a trait, consistent follow through defines it
- Motivation fades, discipline remains, build systems that do not depend on how someone feels each day
- Confidence is earned through doing hard things consistently, not through natural ability
- Watch for entropy, without structure, everything drifts toward disorder, in health, business, and leadership alike
Connect with Dre Baldwin: Website: thirddaybook.com Brand: Work On Your Game
Connect with Julie Riga: Stacklist: https://stacklist.app/julieriga
Subscribe to Stay On Course wherever you listen to podcasts and share this episode with leaders who need encouragement to stay on course when motivation fades.
#stayoncourse #leadershipmindset #confidence #growthmindset #discipline
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