Welcome! If you're here, it means you're ready for a for a Core Powered Life.
The Powder Day Mindset offers a structured, actionable process to help you navigate daily challenges, maintain your passion, and achieve peak performance in your business.
Applications
Growing your business in a way that works for you, your people, and your clients.
Creating and maintaining a relationship that works for you and your partner.
Developing mental and physical well-being in ways that are effective and sustainable.
Adopting habits that work and letting go of those that don't
Is This For You?
You are a business owner or founder who wants more confidence in yourself and your ability to achieve your goals. You face the challenge of feeling stuck, inefficient, and misaligned with your core values, which can lead to frustration and burnout. You want a solution for solving your problems, but you don't have the time or energy to learn new things.
I want to show you a simple process that leverages and maximizes how you already do things to achieve your goals faster and increase your confidence.
If you want that as well, schedule a call and we'll discuss what confidence means to you, how it would benefit you, and how we can make it happen using the Easy Growth System.
My Journey to this Realization:
I started my core-based work in 2015 after producing several hundred tribute videos. Through these videos, I listened to thousands of individuals express their affection for loved ones. These experiences confirmed my belief that we all possess innate qualities at our core, and the more we tap into them, the better off we are.
In 2022, after experiencing burnout from personal and professional challenges, I discovered the power and importance of focusing on three core values (mine are courage, connection, and curiosity).
In 2023, I realized the distinction between who we are and how we operate, leading to the development of the Core Process concept. This realization, combined with my experience, culminated in the creation of the Easy Growth System.
My entire journey has been a series of efforts to apply my core process (even before I knew what it was) to my coaching practice and life. This makes me uniquely qualified to help you clarify how you do things and then use it to achieve your goals.
Let's be honest - People don't believe in core values. For most, core values are more marketing than meaningful.
I used to think the same way. But everything changed when I figured out how to tap into my core self.
By clarifying and using your core values (personal and corporate), you solve problems and achieve goals faster and with less effort.
I'm on a mission to turn core value statements from ignorable to impactful so people can achieve more with less stress.
Have a great day, and I hope to talk soon.
Joey Chandler
TESTIMONIALS
Client Reviews
After just a one-hour conversation with Joey he detected the issues in our sales system regarding our messaging and suggested specific changes that triggered a complete transformation of our business. We went from overwhelmed prospects that didn't convert to a waitlist of prospects for our high ticket offer in less than a month.
Gaspi Montllonch
CEO & Co-Founder
Digital Taktik
Working with Joey has been a revelation. Through his program, we discovered that I subconsciously follow my own process when I am successful. Joey’s method helped me recognize and refine this inherent process, integrating it seamlessly into my daily life and business. His approach has brought me greater clarity, confidence, and consistency in achieving my goals - "my way." I am truly grateful for Joey’s insight and guidance.
About six months ago, I hit a wall and stopped doing my morning routine after doing it for years. I knew my routine helped me, but I didn’t have the energy to get it back going. But after answering your celebration questions for the past few days, I felt my energy return, and I feel like I’m back. It only took a few minutes each day and made a huge difference.
LinkedIn coach and founder of The Epic Encore Life
Joey is a relatable person without pretense. This fits my needs perfectly. About 6 weeks into the coaching and I have gone from the sense of complete overwhelm to excitement. This is no joke. I find the process logical and it fits into my already busy schedule. If you are willing to put in the work you will get great results.
James Urquhart
Owner, Rock Solid Electrical
Burnout is at epidemic levels and hindering our efforts to grow our businesses and live the life we want. I suffered burnout in January of 2022. After 17 years of marriage, I was divorcing, living alone, struggling in my business, and dealing with post-Covid life. I woke up one morning with no energy and couldn't get out of bed. Fortunately, I recovered within a few months, more clear about who I am, energized, and focused. I want to share my journey and how you can use it to recover personally from burnout and create an environment at your place of work that improves well-being and increases productivity.
I recovered from burnout by asking myself, "Who am I at my core, and how can I be more of that today?" I figured out that at my core, I am love, and what love means to me is courage, connection, and curiosity. After hitting that wall and having no energy left, I asked myself, "How can I bring courage, connection, and curiosity to my day?"
That question led to baby steps, eventually leading to something bigger, and I recovered within a few months. At no point in that journey was I trying to recover from burnout. I didn't have that energy or focus. I was asking, "Who am I, and how can I be more of that" and doing what I saw to do that day. That repetitive process built my energy and confidence, and within a few months, I was back to being myself.
(Rather than trying to explain all the steps I used to create my core statement, I built a form that helps you create your own in a few minutes.)
Later, I realized there is a difference between who we are and how we make things happen. I thought about how I make things happen and came up with Clarity, Action, and Growth. I help people get clear, take action, and grow. When I am at my best and facing a challenge, I create clarity, take action, and help myself and others grow.
Clarity, Action, and Growth majorly affected my burnout recovery. I didn't do this intentionally, but I clarified who I was at my core, took actions aligned with that core, and grew through evaluating, celebrating, and revising my efforts.
I share this to give options for people looking to address well-being and burnout in their personal lives or at their company.
If you are burnt out or slipping in that direction, you can create your core statement and ask, "How can I bring more of my core self to my life today?" That question will reveal possible actions that you can do today. Take that step, no matter the size. Repeat the process the next day and continue until you are energized and being your full self. This is not to say that there aren't issues in your home, business, and community contributing to your burnout. Yes, those will have to be addressed. But you'll find the actions you can do in those areas by asking, "Who am I at my core, and how can I bring more of that to my life today?"
I propose a similar process to address well-being and burnout in businesses and corporations. The company asks, "What are our core values, and how can we make them true for the staff and clients?" Those questions will provide actionable baby steps that people can do today. Ideally, leaders and executives initiate the process, but the process can start elsewhere. Anyone with a bit of courage and willingness to ask questions that probably sound a little funny can ask, "What are our core values, and how can we make them more true today for the staff and clients?"
Three caveats on this.
First, yes - anyone can initiate this process, but at some point, leadership must join. Founders and executives play too significant a role in a company to think that the core values will be valid if the leaders don't participate in the efforts to make the core values more true. If you are a leader and reading this, save your people some stress and anxiety and ask, "What are our core values, and how can we make them more true?"
Second, making your core values more true will require revising or letting go of things that don't align with your core values. Depending on how long your company has been in its current state, people will have systems, habits, and routines based on things other than your core values. Change is rarely easy, so you'll have to ask, "What are our core values, and how can we make them more true today?"
Thirdly, simplifying the "how do we make things happen" process will help. For this, you can create Core Drivers - three steps explaining how to make things happen (aka your version of Clarity, Action, and Growth). These steps give everyone in the company a framework to bridge the ideals of the core values with the reality of day-to-day life. For the Core Drivers to be effective, the founders or executives of the company must be involved. Again, those leaders play an oversized role in how things get done at a company, so the Core Drivers reflect how they operate. Fortunately, creating the core drivers isn't complicated.
You may be skeptical of this approach. The majority of people don't believe in core values. They see core values discussed in marketing meetings, hung on the break room wall, and mostly ignored. And that is a valid assessment. Researchers from Sloan Business School at MIT looked at the core values of 500 companies. They concluded, "There is no correlation between the cultural values a company emphasizes in its published statements and how well the company lives up to those values in the eyes of employees."
So, I understand if you are skeptical.
The problem is that we need to have a good tool for connecting the ideals of core values with daily life's ups and downs.
That's where the Core Drivers come in. They are repeatable, actionable and help people see how to make the core values more true in work and life's daily ups and downs. Core Drivers allow for simple, everyday conversations to address ongoing challenges, celebrate efforts, and make revisions.
Core Drivers are not an immediate fix, but they can be developed and implemented in days and put to use quickly. They reflect how the company already operates at its core, so you spend less time or energy creating new policies and procedures.
I want to discuss how this approach compares to other methods to address burnout.
The standard approach to combating personal burnout involves:
Setting boundaries and managing workloads.
Taking regular breaks for self-care.
Seeking support from friends and family.
Focusing on personal growth and development.
Evaluating and adjusting personal goals and expectations.
Similarly, In the workplace, preventing burnout involves:
Fostering a supportive environment.
Providing clear communication.
Recognizing and rewarding hard work.
Ensuring employees have the resources to manage their responsibilities effectively.
These all make sense and sound great, but there are three problems.
First, they are hard to start and maintain because when you are burnt, you are burnt. When you hit a wall or are slipping in that direction, you don't want to do anything more than you already do, even if those things are simple and good for you.
Second, they are hard to implement at a company because, most likely, anyone leading such an effort is either burnt or slipping in that direction. Founders, executives, managers, and employees are all experiencing various levels of burnout. Harvard Business Review reports 50% of managers are burnt. Deloitte reported that 70% of C-level executives are considering leaving their jobs for a position with better well-being. So it's not surprising that Deloitte just put out another report that says the numbers are still headed in the wrong direction despite massive efforts to improve well-being in the workplace. "Most employees say their well-being either worsened or stayed the same last year, and only around one-third say their health improved."
I can tell you that addressing burnout is very difficult when burnt. The process must be simple and repeatable because anything else is too difficult.
And third, these personal or corporate activities are tough to do in an environment where there is a misalignment between the employee experience and the company's core values, and no one is talking about it. I don't mean to be overly dramatic, but rolling out more wellness programs without addressing the underlying misalignment is a bit like rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. Even if people do improve their health, if the environment isn't improved, all they are going to do is develop the energy to find another job or start their own business.
The standard ways of addressing burnout, personally or professionally, aren't proving effective despite the efforts of some very well-intended and hard-working people. But no matter what is going on, people and companies can ask themselves, "Who are we at our core, and what is something we can do to bring more of that to our lives/business today?" The answers and actions will start small, but over time, they will build, and you'll find solutions that work.
Lastly, I want to discuss post-burnout recovery productivity because this is important. The system you use to address burnout must also apply to increasing productivity; otherwise, your high performers will not continue using it. And if they don't continue with their efforts to address burnout, they will slip back into old habits and undermine your efforts to help them and others avoid burnout.
How does taking this approach to core values improve productivity? A few ways:
First, the Core Drivers simplify decision-making and keep you at your best. The story and the three steps give direction and a way to recover if things don't go as planned.
Second, the repetitive nature of the Core Drivers deepens your understanding of what works for you and how to implement it. With so much information available, it's easy always to think there is a better way. The Core drivers keep you focused and moving forward in ways that work for you and your team.
Third, referencing your core self and corporate core values helps you tap into your natural creativity, confidence, and problem-solving skills. Every leadership training includes some aspect of "getting to know yourself." Knowing your core self and acting in alignment with your core values is nothing if not an exercise in getting to know yourself. As you do that, your natural skills and abilities surface.
Lastly, the more you discuss your core self, your core values, and your core drivers, the more you learn. There are things you will learn about your core self only through discussing it with others, and there are things you will learn about others only by looking at yourself. Ultimately, the more you discuss and use the various aspects of your core self, values, and drivers, the more you can help others do the same, which increases alignment and makes productivity sustainable.
I started this as a way to help you recover from burnout, and that still holds. Create your core statement and ask yourself over and over, "Who am I at my core, and how can I be more of that today?" After taking enough of the actions you see, your natural courage, confidence, and energy will surface, and you'll return to being yourself.
But given how many people are experiencing extended levels of exhaustion, overwhelm, and frustration in our businesses and careers, I hope you start to look at ways to make your corporate core values more true. The fact is, anywhere where you or your fellow team members are experiencing or slipping toward burnout, some aspects of your core values are either missing or could be elevated.
Your corporate core values mean something. The more the experience in the company aligns with those values, the more your effectiveness and well-being will increase.
You aren't the problem
In the places where you struggle, you simply don't have enough practice being yourself.
To create confidence, compassion, assertiveness, grit or determinations, the secret is being more of yourself in more places. Not trying to be something you aren't because that is exhausting.
When you a NOT being your core self, you are being something you are not which is exhausting and frustrating, and leads to isolation and burnout.
When you being your core self, your confidence, creativity, and courage increases so you connect with others to find solutions that work over time.
I help people understand...
Their Unique Strengths
3 misconceptions about our Core Selves
And how they are holding you back.
I already know (or at least I think I do)
You probably have some sense of who you are at your core but your level of clarity isn't sufficient for your goals. Your core self is like your numbers for your business. The more clarity you have, the more power you have to make positive changes.
I can be myself in some places but it's impossible in other areas. There is nothing I can do about it.
Being your core self takes practice. If you are struggling, you just aren't as good at being your core self in that area. There is nothing wrong with you but you need to practice being your core self.
Core work takes too much work.
This true if you don't have a system to use your core self. The uncertainty and overwhelm associated with asking, "who am I," goes away when you have system to clarify who you are, take action in alignment with who you are, and grow you ability to stay true to yourself in more areas of life.
I've spent the last ten years exploring the question, "who am I at my core and how can I bring more of that to my life?" I created the Core Power Framework so you can learn in minutes and hours what took me months and years.
Tell me if any of this resonates with you...
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You keep asking yourself, "Am I doing this right?" or "Will this work for me?"
It's time to put an end to the uncertainty and boost your confidence in your decisions.
You are confident in some areas of your life, but unsure in others?
Let's work on creating a consistent sense of self-assurance across all facets of your life.
You have a vision for what's possible but you struggle with making it happen.
You have what it takes, and I'm here to help you realize that.
If these situations sound familiar, you're not alone, and most importantly – you don't have to stay stuck. I've developed a unique process that has already helped numerous people build real confidence and overcome their challenges.
Working with me
Rather than focusing on tips and techniques, we focus on bringing your core self to your life.
We clarify who you are and what you want to accomplish.
We determine any doubts hindering your efforts, you learn to let them go, and then you take action.
We evaluate, celebrate, and revise your efforts so you keep moving forward and connected to your core self.
You repeat the process until your goal is achieved. You benefit from that success and knowing how to achieve it without being fake or burning out. The process works because of the power of your core self. Keep tapping into that and you will succeed.
What I live for and how I can be useful to you
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My life
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Education
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HR sphere
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My hobbies
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Coach and life coach
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My projects
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Burnout is at epidemic levels and hindering our efforts to grow our businesses and live the life we want. I suffered burnout in January of 2022. After 17 years of marriage, I was divorcing, living alone, struggling in my business, and dealing with post-Covid life. I woke up one morning with no energy and couldn't get out of bed. Fortunately, I recovered within a few months, more clear about who I am, energized, and focused. I want to share my journey and how you can use it to recover personally from burnout and create an environment at your place of work that improves well-being and increases productivity.
I recovered from burnout by asking myself, "Who am I at my core, and how can I be more of that today?" I figured out that at my core, I am love, and what love means to me is courage, connection, and curiosity. After hitting that wall and having no energy left, I asked myself, "How can I bring courage, connection, and curiosity to my day?"
That question led to baby steps, eventually leading to something bigger, and I recovered within a few months. At no point in that journey was I trying to recover from burnout. I didn't have that energy or focus. I was asking, "Who am I, and how can I be more of that" and doing what I saw to do that day. That repetitive process built my energy and confidence, and within a few months, I was back to being myself.
(Rather than trying to explain all the steps I used to create my core statement, I built a form that helps you create your own in a few minutes.)
Later, I realized there is a difference between who we are and how we make things happen. I thought about how I make things happen and came up with Clarity, Action, and Growth. I help people get clear, take action, and grow. When I am at my best and facing a challenge, I create clarity, take action, and help myself and others grow.
Clarity, Action, and Growth majorly affected my burnout recovery. I didn't do this intentionally, but I clarified who I was at my core, took actions aligned with that core, and grew through evaluating, celebrating, and revising my efforts.
I share this to give options for people looking to address well-being and burnout in their personal lives or at their company.
If you are burnt out or slipping in that direction, you can create your core statement and ask, "How can I bring more of my core self to my life today?" That question will reveal possible actions that you can do today. Take that step, no matter the size. Repeat the process the next day and continue until you are energized and being your full self. This is not to say that there aren't issues in your home, business, and community contributing to your burnout. Yes, those will have to be addressed. But you'll find the actions you can do in those areas by asking, "Who am I at my core, and how can I bring more of that to my life today?"
I propose a similar process to address well-being and burnout in businesses and corporations. The company asks, "What are our core values, and how can we make them true for the staff and clients?" Those questions will provide actionable baby steps that people can do today. Ideally, leaders and executives initiate the process, but the process can start elsewhere. Anyone with a bit of courage and willingness to ask questions that probably sound a little funny can ask, "What are our core values, and how can we make them more true today for the staff and clients?"
Three caveats on this.
First, yes - anyone can initiate this process, but at some point, leadership must join. Founders and executives play too significant a role in a company to think that the core values will be valid if the leaders don't participate in the efforts to make the core values more true. If you are a leader and reading this, save your people some stress and anxiety and ask, "What are our core values, and how can we make them more true?"
Second, making your core values more true will require revising or letting go of things that don't align with your core values. Depending on how long your company has been in its current state, people will have systems, habits, and routines based on things other than your core values. Change is rarely easy, so you'll have to ask, "What are our core values, and how can we make them more true today?"
Thirdly, simplifying the "how do we make things happen" process will help. For this, you can create Core Drivers - three steps explaining how to make things happen (aka your version of Clarity, Action, and Growth). These steps give everyone in the company a framework to bridge the ideals of the core values with the reality of day-to-day life. For the Core Drivers to be effective, the founders or executives of the company must be involved. Again, those leaders play an oversized role in how things get done at a company, so the Core Drivers reflect how they operate. Fortunately, creating the core drivers isn't complicated.
You may be skeptical of this approach. The majority of people don't believe in core values. They see core values discussed in marketing meetings, hung on the break room wall, and mostly ignored. And that is a valid assessment. Researchers from Sloan Business School at MIT looked at the core values of 500 companies. They concluded, "There is no correlation between the cultural values a company emphasizes in its published statements and how well the company lives up to those values in the eyes of employees."
So, I understand if you are skeptical.
The problem is that we need to have a good tool for connecting the ideals of core values with daily life's ups and downs.
That's where the Core Drivers come in. They are repeatable, actionable and help people see how to make the core values more true in work and life's daily ups and downs. Core Drivers allow for simple, everyday conversations to address ongoing challenges, celebrate efforts, and make revisions.
Core Drivers are not an immediate fix, but they can be developed and implemented in days and put to use quickly. They reflect how the company already operates at its core, so you spend less time or energy creating new policies and procedures.
I want to discuss how this approach compares to other methods to address burnout.
The standard approach to combating personal burnout involves:
Setting boundaries and managing workloads.
Taking regular breaks for self-care.
Seeking support from friends and family.
Focusing on personal growth and development.
Evaluating and adjusting personal goals and expectations.
Similarly, In the workplace, preventing burnout involves:
Fostering a supportive environment.
Providing clear communication.
Recognizing and rewarding hard work.
Ensuring employees have the resources to manage their responsibilities effectively.
These all make sense and sound great, but there are three problems.
First, they are hard to start and maintain because when you are burnt, you are burnt. When you hit a wall or are slipping in that direction, you don't want to do anything more than you already do, even if those things are simple and good for you.
Second, they are hard to implement at a company because, most likely, anyone leading such an effort is either burnt or slipping in that direction. Founders, executives, managers, and employees are all experiencing various levels of burnout. Harvard Business Review reports 50% of managers are burnt. Deloitte reported that 70% of C-level executives are considering leaving their jobs for a position with better well-being. So it's not surprising that Deloitte just put out another report that says the numbers are still headed in the wrong direction despite massive efforts to improve well-being in the workplace. "Most employees say their well-being either worsened or stayed the same last year, and only around one-third say their health improved."
I can tell you that addressing burnout is very difficult when burnt. The process must be simple and repeatable because anything else is too difficult.
And third, these personal or corporate activities are tough to do in an environment where there is a misalignment between the employee experience and the company's core values, and no one is talking about it. I don't mean to be overly dramatic, but rolling out more wellness programs without addressing the underlying misalignment is a bit like rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic. Even if people do improve their health, if the environment isn't improved, all they are going to do is develop the energy to find another job or start their own business.
The standard ways of addressing burnout, personally or professionally, aren't proving effective despite the efforts of some very well-intended and hard-working people. But no matter what is going on, people and companies can ask themselves, "Who are we at our core, and what is something we can do to bring more of that to our lives/business today?" The answers and actions will start small, but over time, they will build, and you'll find solutions that work.
Lastly, I want to discuss post-burnout recovery productivity because this is important. The system you use to address burnout must also apply to increasing productivity; otherwise, your high performers will not continue using it. And if they don't continue with their efforts to address burnout, they will slip back into old habits and undermine your efforts to help them and others avoid burnout.
How does taking this approach to core values improve productivity? A few ways:
First, the Core Drivers simplify decision-making and keep you at your best. The story and the three steps give direction and a way to recover if things don't go as planned.
Second, the repetitive nature of the Core Drivers deepens your understanding of what works for you and how to implement it. With so much information available, it's easy always to think there is a better way. The Core drivers keep you focused and moving forward in ways that work for you and your team.
Third, referencing your core self and corporate core values helps you tap into your natural creativity, confidence, and problem-solving skills. Every leadership training includes some aspect of "getting to know yourself." Knowing your core self and acting in alignment with your core values is nothing if not an exercise in getting to know yourself. As you do that, your natural skills and abilities surface.
Lastly, the more you discuss your core self, your core values, and your core drivers, the more you learn. There are things you will learn about your core self only through discussing it with others, and there are things you will learn about others only by looking at yourself. Ultimately, the more you discuss and use the various aspects of your core self, values, and drivers, the more you can help others do the same, which increases alignment and makes productivity sustainable.
I started this as a way to help you recover from burnout, and that still holds. Create your core statement and ask yourself over and over, "Who am I at my core, and how can I be more of that today?" After taking enough of the actions you see, your natural courage, confidence, and energy will surface, and you'll return to being yourself.
But given how many people are experiencing extended levels of exhaustion, overwhelm, and frustration in our businesses and careers, I hope you start to look at ways to make your corporate core values more true. The fact is, anywhere where you or your fellow team members are experiencing or slipping toward burnout, some aspects of your core values are either missing or could be elevated.
Your corporate core values mean something. The more the experience in the company aligns with those values, the more your effectiveness and well-being will increase.
You can cause an eruption in your life by tapping into your core values and making use of your best self. We do this in the Volcano Club.
Email:info@joeychandler.net
Site: www.joeychandler.net
Location: Reno, NV