Joe Jacobi
1 min readMar 13, 2017

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Thank you for the message, Greg — and for reading and for leaving for a comment!

My experience in Chattanooga provided a little runway to discuss how people evaluate changes and growth within technology, which naturally runs wide and all over. People ask themselves, “What does this mean to me?” And the reactions are very different.

But, to your question, my own experience in asking better questions that reveal more of the untold story comes down to how I approach my own health — physically, mentally, emotionally, and spiritually. When I figure out how to check these boxes each day, my conditions to ask better questions and experiment based on better questions improve.

When these boxes are left unchecked, technology can strip away these core layers even further. Here, I’m more likely to reach out for something shiny or stubbornly stick with something that is flawed.

Many decades in high performance sport certainly taught me that technology has its own growth curve to it — and that someone’s mistakes or gaps can lead to the next step up for somebody else to raise the bar. But, when I see a better potential for ideas and technology to work together today, especially in areas that are important to me, I lean into my values and performance process to ask better questions.

Thank you, Greg!

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Joe Jacobi
Joe Jacobi

Written by Joe Jacobi

Olympic Gold Medalist, Performance Coach, & Author helping leaders & teams perform their best without compromising their lives. https://www.amazon.com/gp/produc

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