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22. Getting Your Team To Row In The Same Direction

Episode 22 of the The Closing Pitch Baseball Podcast podcast, hosted by Spiker Helms and David Birkby, titled "22. Getting Your Team To Row In The Same Direction" was published on June 2, 2020 and runs 53 minutes.

June 2, 2020 ·53m · The Closing Pitch Baseball Podcast

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Coaches, have you lost a player due to the lack of communication? Do you really know your players? Communicating and building a relationship with your players will help you discover who they are and what makes them trust you by using persuasion. Persuasion can be used to manipulate, but we teach you how to use it to become a better leader. We explain that establishing a culture is the most important key to success, having player leaders explain the team’s mission or goals, and using persuasion to get the best of out of your players. In this episode Spiker and Dave talk about persuasion. We explore what happens when you lose a player’s interest or trust as a coach. Spiker dives in his experience as a player and Dave talks about his experience as a coach. The rule 20/60/20 rule becomes a topic of conversation once again. YOUR ACTIONS WILL SPEAK LOUDER THAN WORDS. We also have a special guest, Intern Todd, on this episode. He is a collegiate pitcher at Notre Dame College in Cleveland, Ohio. He gives us a question about his experience with the 20/60/20 rule. This is absolutely the best way to give us a compliment. Thank you for listening! Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/closing-pitch/message ------GET NOTIFIED WHEN WE UPLOAD A NEW EPISODE! SUBSRIBE and GIVE US A REVIEW ------What if the player wants to do one thing, but it is not is his best interest? How do you get the mission to all fourteen team members or a small group? When you look at a business or team, is this a good situation for me or is it not? To explore this topic and have a conversation with Dave, Aaron, or myself visit http://ww.rawlingstigers.com We’d love you to review our show on Apple Podcasts --- --- Send in a voice message: https.//http://anchor.fm/closing-pitch/message

Coaches, have you lost a player due to the lack of communication? Do you really know your players? Communicating and building a relationship with your players will help you discover who they are and what makes them trust you by using persuasion. Persuasion can be used to manipulate, but we teach you how to use it to become a better leader. We explain that establishing a culture is the most important key to success, having player leaders explain the team’s mission or goals, and using persuasion to get the best of out of your players. In this episode Spiker and Dave talk about persuasion. We explore what happens when you lose a player’s interest or trust as a coach. Spiker dives in his experience as a player and Dave talks about his experience as a coach. The rule 20/60/20 rule becomes a topic of conversation once again. YOUR ACTIONS WILL SPEAK LOUDER THAN WORDS. We also have a special guest, Intern Todd, on this episode. He is a collegiate pitcher at Notre Dame College in Cleveland, Ohio. He gives us a question about his experience with the 20/60/20 rule. This is absolutely the best way to give us a compliment. Thank you for listening! Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/closing-pitch/message ------GET NOTIFIED WHEN WE UPLOAD A NEW EPISODE! SUBSRIBE and GIVE US A REVIEW ------What if the player wants to do one thing, but it is not is his best interest? How do you get the mission to all fourteen team members or a small group? When you look at a business or team, is this a good situation for me or is it not? To explore this topic and have a conversation with Dave, Aaron, or myself visit http://ww.rawlingstigers.com We’d love you to review our show on Apple Podcasts --- --- Send in a voice message: https.//http://anchor.fm/closing-pitch/message
Private Equity Fast Pitch Northstar Consistent with all programs delivered by Northstar, "Private Equity Fast Pitch" podcasts are meaningful, insightful and provide actionable information from leaders in the Private Equity community that will help you connect with the speaker in an efficient way. Each Tuesday, Jeff Henningsen from Lockton will spend time talking with his friends in the private equity community while they share insight into their world. Similar to an introductory meeting, Private Equity and Investment Banking guests will talk about their firms, recent activities, target industries, desired acquisition profile or companies they are prepping for sale, advice to aspiring professionals and their "closing pitch". If you would like to be considered for a Private Equity Fast Pitch interview please email [email protected] The Closing Bell Boyer Financial Services Welcome to "The Closing Bell," your ultimate destination for a deep dive into the ever-evolving world of financial markets, investing, and economic news. Join us as we dissect the week's developments and explore the trends that matter most to your financial success.📊 Expert Analysis: Our seasoned team of financial experts provides you with unparalleled insights and analysis of the latest market movements. We bring decades of experience to the table, offering you a well-informed perspective on the complex dynamics of the global economy.📈 Data-Driven Discussions: At "The Closing Bell," we don't just offer opinions; we back them up with cold, hard data. Our commitment to data-driven journalism ensures that you receive reliable, up-to-the-minute information to inform your investment decisions.🌐 Global Perspective: In today's interconnected world, understanding international markets is crucial. We take you on a global journey, exploring how economic events and geopolitical shifts impa Buy the Point Dane Schroeder Sports Betting tips, tricks, winners, losers. It’s all real, it’s fast.Always beat the closing line. Gift by Amy Lowell Loyal Books Amy Lawrence Lowell was an American poet of the imagist school from Brookline, Massachusetts, who posthumously won the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1926. Though she sometimes wrote sonnets, Lowell was an early adherent to the "free verse" method of poetry and one of the major champions of this method. She defined it in her preface to "Sword Blades and Poppy Seed"; in the North American Review for January, 1917; in the closing chapter of "Tendencies in Modern American Poetry"; and also in the Dial (January 17, 1918), as: "The definition of Vers libre is: a verse-formal based upon cadence. To understand vers libre, one must abandon all desire to find in it the even rhythm of metrical feet. One must allow the lines to flow as they will when read aloud by an intelligent reader. Or, to put it another way, unrhymed cadence is "built upon 'organic rhythm,' or the rhythm of the speaking voice with its necessity for breathing, rather than upon a strict metrical system. Free verse within its ow
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