"Nick Mangold was the man and he was such an unbelievable person..
He was always smiling and my prayers are with his entire family" ~ @OfficialAJHawk#PMSLive
"Our backs were against the wall heading into the College Football Playoff..
The atmosphere at that Tennessee game really kick started us" ~ @ryandaytime#PMSLive
Be a Pro
Early in my career, an older mentor told me, "Be a pro." I nodded like I understood, but I didn’t know what he meant. As time has gone on, I’ve learned more about what it means to be a pro.
Being a pro is about recognizing that everything you do sends a signal about who you are. Show up early. Proofread your emails. Make your slides clean. Respond quickly. Be helpful without being asked. Be proactive. These seem trivial until you realize most people don't do them consistently. And consistency is where trust is built. The person who always shows up prepared becomes the person others want on their team. Small standards compound into big reputations. When you're sloppy, other people pay the price. Send an email with typos, and the reader has to decode what you meant. Show up late, and everyone else's time becomes less valuable. Run a disorganized meeting, and you've wasted collective human attention. Every time you make someone else's life worse, you're making a withdrawal from your reputation account. Every time you make their life better, you're making a deposit. People gravitate toward those who improve their lives, not those who create extra work.
Good lighting and audio for your Zoom calls aren't vanity. They're the basic tools of modern work. When you can't share your screen or your audio cuts out constantly, you're signaling that you haven't learned the fundamentals. It's like showing up to a construction site without knowing how to use your tools. The people who master these basics are showing respect for everyone else. The biggest myth about professionalism is that you have to choose between being fast and being good. The best professionals are both. They respond quickly because they've built systems to do it. They deliver quality because they've practiced enough to make quality their default. This is about being intentional.
The benefits of being a pro compound over time. The person known for running great meetings gets invited to more important meetings. The person who delivers clean work gets more interesting projects. The person who makes collaboration easy becomes indispensable. Better opportunities lead to better skills. Better skills lead to better opportunities. The gap between professionals and everyone else widens over time.
Being a pro is a choice about how you want to move through the world. You can see standards as constraints that limit your authenticity. Or you can see them as tools that amplify your impact. You can think details don't matter. You can also recognize that details often separate good from great. You can believe being casual makes you more relatable. Or you can understand that being reliable makes you more valuable. The older mentor who told me to "be a pro" understood something fundamental: professionalism isn't about impressing people. It's about creating the conditions for everyone to do their best work. In a world full of people who are just good enough, being great consistently is a superpower.
🗣️🗣️AJ HAWK AJ HAWK AJ HAWK
“Unfortunately my youngest son puked all over the section they were in so my family isn’t gonna get to hear that” 😂😂 ~ @OfficialAJHawk#PMSCFPESPN2
For the past decade, my life has been built around curiosity and consistency.
• I’ve recorded 610+ episodes of my podcast
• I’ve published 450+ newsletter editions
• And written 3 books
Dive deeper here: https://t.co/GgdsAbErV0
"Great question @OfficialAJHawk 😂😂
I've used my cadence my entire career and everything that we do in the game we do in practice..
It's a weapon for us and we've just gotta stay onside..
The cadence is the cadence is the cadence"
@AaronRodgers12#PMSLive
"People either live up to or down to your expectations. And most people set their expectations for themselves too low. So it’s on you as a leader to raise those expectations for them. Demand more because you know they can do more." - Ron Ullery
https://t.co/rQG79JhEhr
Go behind the scenes as Pat McAfee, AJ Hawk, Darius Butler, Boston Connor & Ty Schmit get scanned for #WWE2K24’s @PatMcAfeeShow DLC pack, available now!
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