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Home » Drew Dudley: Leading with Lollipops at TEDxToronto (Full Transcript)

Drew Dudley: Leading with Lollipops at TEDxToronto (Full Transcript)

Drew Dudley

Here is the full transcript and summary of leadership educator Drew Dudley’s TEDx Talk: Leading with Lollipops at TEDxToronto conference.

Listen to the MP3 Audio here:

TRANSCRIPT: 

I want to just start by asking everyone in the audience here a question: How many of you are completely comfortable with calling yourselves a leader?

See, I’ve asked that question all the way across the country, and everywhere I ask it, no matter where there’s always a huge portion of the audience that won’t put up their hand. And I’ve come to realize that we have made leadership into something bigger than us. We’ve made it into something beyond us. We’ve made it about changing the world. And we’ve taken this title of leader, and we treat it as if it’s something that one day we’re going to deserve, but to give it to ourselves right now means a level of arrogance or cockiness that we’re not comfortable with.

And I worry sometimes that we spend so much time celebrating amazing things that hardly anybody can do that we’ve convinced ourselves those are the only things worth celebrating, and we start to devalue the things that we can do every day, and we start to take moments where we truly are a leader and we don’t let ourselves take credit for it, and we don’t let ourselves feel good about it.

And I’ve been lucky enough over the last 10 years to work with some amazing people who have helped me redefine leadership in a way that I think has made me happier. And with my short time today, I want to share with you the one story that is probably most responsible for that redefinition.

I went to school in a little school called Mount Allison University in Sackville, New Brunswick, and on my last day there, a girl came up to me and she said, “I remember the first time that I met you.” And then she told me a story that had happened four years earlier.

She said, “On the day before I started university, I was in the hotel room with my mom and my dad, and I was so scared and so convinced that I couldn’t do this, that I wasn’t ready for university, that I burst into tears.