How do influential people really spend their time?
This week, we look at the small details. A routine stock transaction, a warning about your phone, and a principle that has lasted 300 years. Success isn't one big event, it's built from thousands of consistent choices.
MENTOR SPOTLIGHT
Arianna Huffington
Media Entrepreneur, Co-founder of The Huffington Post, Founder & CEO of Thrive Global
On June 11, Arianna Huffington did something that doesn't make headlines. As a director at Williams-Sonoma, she converted 1,233 stock units she had been granted. The transaction price was listed as $0.00 per share.
This isn't a dramatic stock trade. It’s the quiet, long-term result of being in the right rooms. Her compensation is tied to the company's success over time, not a quick win. It's the kind of boring administrative task that underpins a large career.
The same day, she posted a photo on Instagram about the NBA finals. She also recently shared advice for new graduates on LinkedIn and an article about exercise for brain health. Her public life is a mix of high-level business, personal interests, and her wellness brand.
Your career is built the same way. It's a combination of unglamorous paperwork, staying current with your interests, and consistently sharing what you know. The big titles come from managing the small details.
IN THE NEWS
Mark Hyman Mark Hyman recently warned his followers that their phones might be stealing their sleep and focus. In a June 10 Instagram post, he also pointed to a podcast conversation about a “hidden mental health condition” affecting high-functioning people. He constantly connects our small, daily habits to our long-term health. His message is that your choices about what you consume—from food to information—are the most powerful medicine you have.
Isaac Newton Isaac Newton has not been in the news for over 300 years. Yet his laws of motion are still used to send rockets into space. His work is a reminder that true impact is not about daily headlines. It's about discovering a fundamental principle that lasts. He focused on the underlying rules of the universe, not the temporary noise.
QUICK WISDOM
"Our eulogies are always about the other stuff: what we gave, how we connected, how much we meant to our family and friends, small kindnesses, lifelong passions." — Arianna Huffington This quote argues that true success is measured by our relationships and impact, not just professional achievements.
"The fork is your most powerful tool to change your health and the planet; food is the most powerful medicine to heal chronic illness." — Mark Hyman He emphasizes that daily dietary choices have more influence on our well-being than most medical interventions.
"Truth is ever to be found in simplicity, and not in the multiplicity and confusion of things." — Isaac Newton This reminds us to look for the simplest underlying principle instead of getting lost in complex details.
FROM THE BLOG
Burned Out? Have These 4 Conversations With Your AI Mentor App Before You Quit Burnout distorts judgment at the exact moment you need it most. Before you quit, pivot, or spiral, these four conversations help separate the signal from the noise.
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— Jesse Krim Founder, Get Mentors