How do you unite a team of elite athletes who all have full-time day jobs, zero financial incentive, and have just endured a pandemic-delayed tournament cycle? And more importantly, how do you do it in a way that actually wins a World Cup?
In this inspiring archive episode of Connected Leadership Bytes, Andy Lopata sits down with inspirational speaker and performance coach Steve Head. Steve was the “1%” mindset coach behind the England Wheelchair Rugby League team’s stunning 2022 World Cup victory.
Steve reveals the counter-intuitive truth about motivating elite performers (hint: they don’t need motivation) and shares the exact, grassroots process he used to help the team define their core values. This is a masterclass in ditching the “eye-roll” of corporate buzzwords. Discover why the most powerful values are written in messy Sharpie on a flip chart, launched by the team rather than the boss, and sustained by a culture of absolute selflessness and sacrifice.
What You Will Learn In This Episode
The Motivation Myth: Why you cannot “motivate” elite performers who have already overcome immense adversity (like losing limbs in combat), and what they actually need from a coach instead.
The 20% Rule: Why losing focus for just 60 seconds in a fast-paced game (or business environment) can completely derail your entire operation.
The “Eye Roll” of Corporate Values: Why top-down, management-dictated values always fail, and how to facilitate a process where the team builds their own.
The Power of the “Quiet Voice”: Why identifying and empowering the highly respected, quiet leaders in your team is the key to launching a successful culture shift.
The “Messy Sharpie” Commitment: Why authenticity—like signing a raw, messy flip chart—is far more effective at securing team buy-in than a polished, multi-million-pound corporate rollout.
Actionable Insights
Ditch the Top-Down Rollout: If you want your team to adopt new values or standards of behavior, do not present them as a finished product. Facilitate a session where a small, highly respected group of team members brainstorm and refine the values themselves.
Let the Team Launch the Culture: When introducing new values or strategies to the wider organisation, step back. Have the respected team members who helped create the values present them. Peer-to-peer communication carries far more credibility and eliminates the “boss’s new initiative” cynicism.
Create a Physical Symbol of Commitment: Make buy-in tangible. Just as the England team signed an A1 flip chart with a Sharpie, find a simple, unpolished way for your team to physically signal “I’m in.” Carry that symbol with you as a constant, authentic reminder of the behaviors that drive everything you do.
SELECTED LINKS FROM THE EPISODE
Connect with Andy Lopata: Website | Instagram | LinkedIn | X/Twitter | YouTube
Connect with Steve Head: Website |LinkedIn |