"Curiosity has been the most valuable quality, the most important resource, the central motivation of my life."
- A Curious Mind, page xiii
"Curiosity can add zest to your life, and it can take you way beyond zest – it can enrich your whole sense of security, confidence, and well-being."- A Curious Mind, page 9
What do all the public speaking, leadership and self-help books tell you? Feeling confident will allow you to succeed. A lot of those books will even go so far as to teach you how to trick yourself into feeling confident so you can speak in front of a room of people, or effectively run a meeting, etc., etc.
But what if there wasn’t a trick for feeling confident? What if it came organically because you allowed yourself to stop ignoring something else that was already part of your organic makeup? Wouldn’t that be a much faster, easier and long-term solution?
Brian spends a lot of time talking about how we are all taught that asking questions are bad and that we should quell our curiosity so that we can become more efficient and successful at school, work, life. What exactly are we scared of? Why are asking questions about how something works, how someone accomplished a task, or how someone feels about anything so wrong?
In A Curious Mind, Brian tells the story of his life through countless moments in time where he was able to start and accomplish things as a direct result of his natural curiosity. He attributes the doors that have opened up for him professionally and personally to specific questions or moments of wondering why something “x” he had throughout his life.
"The questions communicate both authority and a sense of our values..."- A Curious Mind, page 184
How can asking questions make you a better manager, leader or businessperson? Take yourself out of the “manager” role and place yourself in the place of being managed. How have you felt when your boss took the time to ask you questions and demonstrate interest in you and your work? Probably very happy and a little proud that time was made to talk with you.
Being curious about your colleagues and the work they are doing inherently creates an atmosphere of respect, openness and collaboration. All things that end up helping the success of a career, project, team and company. It’s amazing how one simple thing can have such a large impact.
"Curiosity rewards persistence."- A Curious Mind, page 109
Curiosity can be a very powerful tool and harnessing it can lead to success. In this book Brian presents the following scenario. Think back to when you had a question, and weren’t able to find the answer immediately. If you gave up, you failed to use your natural curiosity. You instead allowed your frustration to win. If you harness you curiosity you persistently work to reward yourself with the answer to your question.
Brian tells a story about how difficult it was to get Splash made. He thought his idea for the movie was a fantastic story that was worth telling but countless movie executives disagreed year after year. It was his curiosity about the “why” they didn’t like the story, which was fueled by his persistence to find the answers that ended up in him making the movie Splash. He used the answers to his question of why the movie executives hated his idea to make changes that allowed them to love it and allow him to achieve his goal of making the movie in the end.
As Brian so succinctly sums it up: “Persistence is the drive moving you forward. Curiosity provides the navigation.”
Asking questions is the key to life. It will take you in directions you never dreamed of and will provide you insights in people and things you never could have hoped for. Curiosity is the secret to great communication, and great communication leads to personal and professional success.
Academy Award®-winning producer and NYT bestselling author Brian Grazer has been making movies and television programs for more than 25 years. Grazer’s films and TV shows have been nominated for a total of 43 Oscars® and 152 Emmys. His films have generated over $13.5 billion in worldwide grosses. Grazer has been personally nominated for four Academy Awards®, and in 2002 he won the Best Picture Oscar® for A Beautiful Mind.Other film credits include Get On Up, Rush, J. Edgar, Frost/Nixon, American Gangster, The Da Vinci Code, 8 Mile, Apollo 13, Dr. Seuss’ How the Grinch Stole Christmas, Liar Liar, Backdraft, Parenthood, and Splash.