An excerpt from "The Human Being's Guide to Business Growth." To get your copy, reach out.
MVP vs. Weakest Link Mindset
As you apply the concepts in The Human Being’s Guide to Business Growth, you’ll run into one of two mindsets. Specifically, people are either inclined to believe in Most Valuable Players (MVPs) or they think that you’re only as strong as your weakest link, see Figure 1.3.
The MVP mindset is best described as the belief that one person can have an outsized effect on your organization. Let me give you an example. In the world of sports, there are endeavors that are MVP oriented and others that are weakest link oriented. The 2011–2017’s NBA finals showed us that the game of basketball is MVP oriented. As a team owner, you can bring in a LeBron James and he can almost single-handedly get you to the finals, and most of the time, win the championship. There are only five players on the floor at once, and one player can have an outsized impact. That’s a sport with an MVP orientation.
On the other hand, the 2016 MLB World Series suggests that any single superstar player will only have so much impact. The Los Angeles Dodgers and San Francisco Giants may have had the top pitchers in the game, but the Chicago Cubs were tougher top-to-bottom, night after night. Especially the bottom of their batting order. They had a better chance at winning because baseball puts nine players on the field and plays 162 games in six months. It makes sense that you’re only as good as your weakest link.
That’s a weakest-link orientation.

Figure 1.3 MVP vs. Weakest link mindset
As you roll out The Human Being’s Guide to Business Growth to your leadership, you’re going to hear some of them buy-in right away. Especially the leadership of your marketing department. They tend to sell one message to many recipients, so they’re biased to weakest link think- ing. Contrast that with your sales leadership. They have been exposed to incredible producers before, the kind of sales talent that can carry an entire company. They’ll be biased toward an MVP mindset.
How will that impact your rollout? The MVP oriented will hear it like, “Unleashing the power of everyone in the company? Well, maybe... I’ll say almost everyone.” The weakest link oriented will hear it like “The power of everyone? Well, of course. That’s what I’ve been saying.”
You’d think that means the weakest-link-oriented people are easier to work with on this idea, but that’s not necessarily true. The MVPs have a point about not everyone being able to grow a business. It’s true and we’ll address that in Chapters 7 and 8. Sometimes it’s easier to find a new person to put on the bus.
On the other hand, the weakest links are optimistic enough that they can’t imagine anyone pushing back or not participating at some level. We’ll need to prepare them for dealing with the “I don’t care, selling’s not my job” people of the world and that will happen in Chapters 5 and 6.
There is no right or wrong mindset and we move fluidly from one to the other as it suits our needs. It’s a spectrum ranging from “we need everyone” to “I can do this by myself.”
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