Episode 197 - Israel Duran - Leaders On Leadership




Ready to step up your leadership game? Join Dr. Tracey Jones and business growth strategist Israel Duran as they delve into the core principles of leadership, emphasizing self-discovery, consistent personal growth, and compassionate service. Israel shares his powerful "4 Questions of Purpose" framework, inspired by Jesus Christ's ministry, to help you identify your unique gifts and unlock your full potential as a leader. This episode is packed with insights and inspiring stories to ignite your leadership journey!

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Israel Duran - Leaders On Leadership

Everyone. Welcome to the show where we pull back the curtain on leadership and we talk to leaders of all ages and stages about what it takes to truly pay the price of leadership. I have a very special guest. His name is Israel Duran.

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Israel, welcome.

Thank you so much, Dr. Tracey. It's an honor to be here.

Thank you. Now let me tell you a little bit about this amazing individual you're about to hear from. He is a highly sought-after business growth strategist. He's a speaker and a trainer who is passionate about helping purpose-driven leaders. Discover, design, and deliver their unique gifts to the world.

Israel specializes in equipping entrepreneurs to build generational wealth and scale profitable businesses that create a lasting global impact, all by leveraging the power of the internet. That's how we met. I'm going to tell you about that. Whether you're scaling to seven figures or leading a Fortune 500 company. Israel's innovative strategies are designed to unlock potential and help you profit with purpose. Let's dive in and learn from this incredible leader.

Israel, our folks always like to know how we connected and I got an email from somebody representing you and said, “You have to meet this individual.” As I got many of those, and the Lord prompted me, “I'm going to check this out because there's an awful lot of them.” I just looked at your website, I looked at your messages, and we talked shortly after that. We've talked several times since then. I just want to thank you again for agreeing to be on the podcast and to our tribe, you're in for a real treat. Israel, thank you so much.

Thank you, Dr. Tracey. That's such a heartfelt message. You're right, sometimes these conversations, these connections are ordained for being able to create and help others create something. I was talking to someone about this. When we mix painting colors together. To get pink, you mix red and white. Many times God wants to create partnerships, and collaborations, and He'll connect His people because He's trying to create something new. He wants to reach the unreachable. I'm excited to be on here with you to be able to add value and also just bless the people.

Thank you. I love that mental hook of mixing the paints. That's beautiful. 2025 truly is going to be a year of collaborations. Is it not?

Yes, it is.

The Price Of Leadership: Loneliness And Its Impact

You're the first one on my podcast for this year. I think that's definitely true. Israel, I sent you a copy of my father, Charlie Jones's speech that he gave again and again. There you go, The price of Leadership. For those of you who know my father, many of our readers do, he was very pragmatic. He was a practitioner, and he loved leadership, but he was also very down to earth about if you're really going to be a leader, there's a price that you're going to have to pay.

The first price that he talked about in Israel is loneliness. We've heard that it's lonely at the top and heavy is the head that wears the crown. Can you unpack for us what loneliness means in the leadership context because it's part, it's a fact. Perhaps a time when you went through a season of it in your life and some wisdom for our listeners.

100%, I'm reminded of this great truth. A man's gift will make room for him in bringing before great men and women. However, many times that gift has to be developed, it has to be designed, it has to be discovered in secret, in loneliness, where no one's seeing you. Where you're all alone, you're dark, it's hidden, it's the secret place, and that's where you get refined. When we look outside, depending on where you are in the United States, right now it just snowed yesterday, so there are not a lot of leaves on the trees.

Leadership: A man's gift will make room for him and bring him before great men and women. However, many times that gift has to be developed, designed, and discovered in secrecy and loneliness.

If I were to look outside in the summertime, I would see leaves coming off of the tree. Why? Because that tree has roots, and a tree grows in two directions. It grows gravitropically, where nobody sees it, where it's hidden, loneliness, and then it grows phototropically. You see, we as leaders, depending on what your calling is, your vision, your purpose, the common denominator between all of us is making sure we spend that time going deep, gravitropically where nobody sees us. When people do see us, we have those roots that hold us and sustain us.

We're strong when we actually spend that time resting with God and putting all distractions aside.

I love what your dad has shared with that principle because I think it's something that in today's age, it's missing. I know I didn't understand this concept when I first got into what I was doing. I had to learn by falling on my face, but it's such a great resource because even Jesus said, if any man seeks to follow me, first, he must deny himself and pick up his cross. This book here, the messenger your Dad gave, does the same thing. It gives people the clarity. If you desire to be a leader, understand that these are things that you need to pay.

How To Combat Weariness In Leadership

Beautiful. I love that. Gravitopically. Again, illustration as we're going through this. Go deep and only you can go down and get that nourishment. Thank you, Israel, for that. We talked about loneliness. The next topic he talked about was weariness. I can remember growing up and listening to him and he was like, “Tracey, as you go out amongst people, there's going to be some people that do way more than what you expect of them. There's going to be a lot that do less. It's tiring because it all falls, the buck stops with you.” How do you stay at top fighting form and combat weariness, which is a part of just this mortal coil that we're in right now?

I love the promise of God that he talks about the Sabbath's rest. Being able to rest is such a key concept that I think in the 21st century has been missed because we live in a democracy. We live in a world of democracy but back in the day when people used to have kingdoms and there was kings and Caesars, and queens, there was a principle or a concept that people went by and it was the principle that's the following, by resting you reign.

True kings and queens, they reign by resting. I think when it comes to weariness, if we're not careful, because there's always going to be that season of weariness, like you said, the crown is sometimes heavy. There has to be an intentional season where we shut things off and we have a day of the week where we don't do any work, where you don't answer calls, where you just focus in on your family, focus in on just spending time on you so you can actually be a caregiver for others.

If you're constantly pouring out, you're going to get overwhelmed. You're going to get burnt over, like they say, burnt. By resting you rain is something that I like to think about often because it reminds me, “I got to spend time in my secret place. I have to spend time with God. I have to focus on. I have to pray. I have to meditate. I have to read because that's what's going to allow me to gain strength through that.” I'm also reminded of another scripture that I love and it says, “Let the weak say I am strong.” How are we strong? We're strong when we actually spend that time with God, spend that time resting and putting all the distractions out.

Do you pick a particular time to Sabbath? I know some people still do. You talked about the things that you do daily. Of course, 100% of the people on here do. Do you Sabbath? Do you set carve out time in your calendar, and block it off?

Yes, we have a process where my wife and I, we have five children as well. The Sabbath for us is a rest within the family. That's why I said focus on the family.

Beautiful, I like that.

Before I say about what we do, let me talk about what we're thinking or what we're being because I am a big believer. Especially with leadership, being or thinking or that mindset always comes before the actual behavior that will then lead to the outcome. For the readers, regardless of where you are, if you're already in senior leadership or you're at a high level already looking to that next season of your life, one of the things that I learned from falling on my face was that consistency is key and Christ is King.

What do I mean by that? Sometimes we listen to things. I could talk about consistency, for example. You might say, “I already know about consistency.” That's the most dangerous thing that someone can do because what I found out in my own life is I had that mindset. Consistency, I had that already. I would avoid really tuning in and focusing in until I fell on my face, Dr. Tracey. I said, “Wait a second, I have to come into covenant with consistency. I have to come into a covenant with charity. I have to come into covenant with compassion.”

Those are the three C's, by the way. We as leaders, need to come into covenant with charity, which is the form of love. We need to come into connection with compassion and with connection with our calling. Those mindsets with consistency as well, those three Cs, it's what's more important to focus on that to really adhere to that because that's going to naturally give you the flow of what to do.

Leadership: We as leaders need to come into a covenant with charity, compassion, and consistency.

When sometimes we often focus on what to do, people say, “I'm just going to do what she did.” That may not be the right move for you. If you focus on the identity, the mindset, those three C's, practically charity, which is love to God and love to your fellow neighbor. The consistency, meaning being consistent with whatever you're doing. Compassion is the fountain of miracles.

That's what's really going to unlock whether you choose to do a Sabbath however you would want to do it. I just don't want to give somebody a specific because I don't want people to make the assumption, “Why just I do what he does? I'm going to get the same results” People do that Dr. Tracey and I feel like a lot of people I stuck because they're trying to put someone else's armor and they haven't figured out their own stones yet.

You talked about stock it gives you the flow. When we're weary, like you said we put on the wrong armor where we're trying to go into a stream that is not the designated stream. We're trying to open a door that does not have our name on it. I love that you said when you get in that flow, you know, you don't just believe it, but you get that knowledge of, “Here we go.”

It’s so important because leaders are leadership. The people that are reading now, you reading now at home or your home office or driving or in the gym, you are a leader of a leader. That's who you are. Many times with leaders, we are constantly giving out, pouring out so much that many times we don't have that opportunity to have somebody to pour into us. That's why I love what you do with tremendous leadership in providing the best of the best, literally, for an affordable cost, by the way, too.

Motivational material at all levels and all spheres to do what? To empower people, to encourage them, to edify them, to build their faith because that's what we need because it's really hard to get us when we're constantly given out. We need a flow, we need a stream, we need a fountain that we can also tap into so we can receive our daily wisdom. I love what you're doing with your platform and everything you and your data have built into the foundation. It's a beautiful thing.

Abandonment In Leadership: Choosing Purpose Over Pressure

Thank you, Israel. I claim that and I really appreciate you saying that. We talked about loneliness. We talked about weariness and getting in the flow to combat that. The next thing he talked about was the term called abandonment. We hear about that, there's fear of abandonment that leads to co-dependency. As an animal rescuer, it's like, “You abandoned that pet.” What he meant was that abandonment means stop doing what you like and want to do in favor of what you ought and need to do.

It's much more about singularity, pruning, and habits. Israel, we talked about this, the right time versus the right time. I mean, God has gifted us, we're driven, we're knowledgeable. There isn't pretty much anything that we couldn't pick up and have just a modicum of success with it, but that's not what we're here to do. How do you hone in and know exactly what your zone is, what that particular door? Like you said, “This armor has my name on it.” How do you deal with abandonment when there are so many wonderful needs out there, but as we know, not every need is a calling?

I love the question and I want to share a little bit of my history to then give the answer because I think it would give people the perspective and the vision and clarity to see, “Why? I get it.” People are going to love this. Back in 1993, my dad, his name was Domingo Duran, and my dad was having a bunch of chest pains on his left side. He had said to my mom, who was a doctor in the Dominican Republic, that she wasn't able to transfer the license, but here because of the language barrier. My mom had told him, “Go to the ER.”

My dad went to the ER. My dad waited three and a half hours. For whatever reason, they were attending to other people before him because there were other bigger emergencies at the time. My dad unfortunately went back home and he had what the medical community called STEMI. He died. He died of a massive heart attack at home. He died alone. My mom essentially found him. Israel David Duran, I was only about three months old when my dad stepped into eternity. Growing up, Dr. Tracey, when you say the word abandonment, I can feel that, I can sense it because that's how I felt for a long time.

I made a lot of mistakes growing up but I've also discovered this treasure as well, that what children don't have as a child, they typically value as an adult. There are four specific things, Dr. Tracey, that I did not have as a child, that I value as an adult. Now because I had to become the man that I wanted in my own life. Those four different things, number one, identity, number two, purpose. Number three, vision, and you get your voice from your vision. Number four is a custom plan. Those are the four things I wanted from my dad.

Why am I bringing this up? We talk about abandonment and being able to focus in on the key thing that you're supposed to be focusing on in this season, we cannot answer that question without positioning purpose first because purpose will always flow from identity. Identity is the highest mounting of purpose. The thing about purpose is purpose may change. Let me explain it in this way. You might have been in a certain position 20 years ago, but now you're doing something completely different.

Purpose will always flow from your identity, and that identity is the highest mountain of purpose.

A lot of times when people have to deal with transition, there's a sense of abandonment because there's a sense of, “I was doing this for so long, people knew me under this identity, and now that I'm letting go of this thing, now there's an abandonment because now I have to now refocus or refine or realign to what my purpose is in this season or what God's calling me to do.” A lot of people don't only go through that abandonment stage, but they go through the depression stage because they have what is called their identity.

I'm going to say this and hopefully, nobody throws stones at us, but they have what we call an idol in place of their identity. The thing that they did for that season became their identity. When God calls them to let go of it, it's like they're fighting with God. There has to be that abandonment where God says, “I need you to leave your promised land, Abraham.” Abraham is like, “Lord, you want me to leave? I'm going to take you to a land flowing with milk and honey, but I need you to leave your promised land.”

Clarifying Your Purpose: Four Practical Questions

Abraham's like, “He kind of got the memo, but he brought Lot.” We know what happened there. We can go on and on. I just wanted to give you that frame, that pre-frame there, that purpose is so important. I do have four practical questions that people can ask themselves and meditate and think through that can give clarity and confidence and help people communicate what their purpose is in this next season. I can go over those four if you'd like, but I want to at least give you, I'm talking a lot here.

I love the context. That's fantastic and touching on that, but please go right ahead.

The four questions of purpose for those of you who are believers or consider yourself to be a born-again believer like myself. These four questions, you'll be able to go a little bit deeper because I actually got them from Jesus Christ of Nazareth. He started his earthly ministry when he was about 30 years of age, and then he died a horrific death. Very terrible. He got beaten 39 stripes, by the way, and that's a Roman stripe. Just like the passion of Christ didn't do it justice. It was much worse than that.

He went to the cross and he died a horrific death with his mother in front of him. That's very hard and he was in the grave for three days and then God rose from the dead. When I was reading one day and after listening and being inspired through another minister, I identified four questions that he had in his life that were very essential in his life that I now teach when I'm dealing with leadership, but also when I'm dealing with business owners as well. Those four questions are extremely simple. They start with question number one, what do you love to do?

Now, what you love to do reveals a gift that you have because people tell me all the time, “Israel, I don't know where to start. I don't know. What do you love to do? Start there.” “I love to do this.” Let's go into that. The thing that you love is typically the thing that you're called to release to the world. That's why John 3:16 says, “For God so loved the world, His love, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believes in Him, Jesus, shall not perish but have everlasting life because God so loved the world that he gave.”

Leadership: The thing that you love is typically the thing that you're called to release to the world.

The thing that you love reveals in part a gifting that you can have and that you have. Question number two is what do you hate? Now, that word is strong. I need a lot of believers. That's a strong word, but even God says that there are six things that he hated seven that are about abominations into his sight. That word hate is very important though, because it's polarization. The law of polarization teaches us that when you go to an ultimate extreme, like for example, cold, and you go really cold, you'll get to the, like at the peak of the really cold, it'll actually burn you there'll be heat.

It's the same thing with hot or heatness. When you go extremely hot, it gets to a point where you actually get a cold, it gets cold and then they meet in the middle. That's the law of polarization. The word hate is there for a reason. What you hate reveals a situation in which you're called to bring a solution to 1 John 3:8, it says, “For the devil's sin is from the beginning. For this purpose, the Son of God was, there's that word purpose again, for this purpose, the Son of God was manifested that he might destroy the works of the devil.”

Part of God Jesus' purpose was to be manifested to destroy sin on the cross, to destroy the works of the devil, the power that sin had over mankind. The things that you hate in your life, things that you've maybe gone through, the voids that you've gone through, those are the voids that you're called to use your voice to speak against. It's going to give you that vision so you can speak to those voids. It's also going to give you a solution that you can bring to. You can change that problem and create a solution in that place. I can go on and on, but I want to be able to flow a riff back and forth.

No, I love that. I love that you brought up that first. There are things God hates is sin. Most of all but he does list that. I love that. Bring a solution and your gift becomes your identity. I'm ready for numbers 3 and 4.

Number three is what makes you cry. A lot of men say, “I'm a man. I don't cry. Women cry.” I cry often because I know where I was and where I am now by God's grace and where I'm headed, and he still struggles that we go through in life. I'm thankful because it could have been differently if I didn't have him in my life. What makes you cry, by the way, reveals the situations that you're called to bring joy to. Now you can take those tears of pain and transform them into tears of joy. Jesus is the resurrection.

What makes you cry reveals the situations you're called to bring joy to, transforming tears of pain into tears of joy.

The Bible records a couple of times when Jesus cried, one of them was when he looked over Jerusalem and he said, “How often did I wanted to bring you in as the hen does, but you wouldn't listen.” He said that He literally weeped over Jerusalem. He also weeped over Lazarus' death, his friend. He literally turned those tears of pain into tears of joy. Also too, compassion is such a beautiful thing. Like when we have compassion, when we have compassion in leadership, it's such an amazing thing because one of my brands is called Service of Speaking.

I teach people that service is for everyone, but the highest level of service is speaking. Like actually speaking into the lives of people. I give people this analogy, Dr. Tracey. When we speak, our words should be like water that wash people's feet. The way that you can really make an impact in your organization, in your business, in your ministry, in your calling, and even in your family with your children, is speaking with compassion.

Leadership: When we speak, our words should be like water that washes people's feet.

Some of the greatest miracles I've seen, some of the greatest, highest, most grossing, let's just go on the profit side financially that I've seen, are events and books and things that are created with compassion. Something supernatural about it. That what makes you cry reveals compassion. We need more leaders who are more vulnerable because that's what actually creates a connection with the people that you're looking to inspire and help with your leadership.

Excellent. Number four.

Number four is what or who annoys you. What are the attributes to get on your nerves? One of the attributes that annoyed Jesus was pride. What did Jesus do? He saw Peter and all the other eleven disciples, apostles. One of them betrayed him, but he still was going to do the same thing, meaning washing his feet. He said to them, “I'm going to wash your feet.” Peter said some interesting words. This is Peter, the one who got right who the Son of God was. He said you're the Son of the living God when Jesus asked him. This is the same Peter.

Peter still had pride. Jesus said because Peter said, “You're not going to watch my feet. Absolutely not.” It sounds good, but it's actually pride. Sounds like super spiritual, but no, we leaders, we're so quick to give, to be able to serve. What about when God says, “I want you to sit now and I want somebody else to watch your feet.” See that's the test of a true leader. Peter, I'm sure he could look around and say, “I'm not going to let him watch, I got to watch his feet.” He was, and then Jesus said these amazing words that were so powerful.

He said, “Peter, if you don't let me wash your feet, you will have no part in me.” Watch him now. That word part is connected to the word impartation. In other words, Jesus was trying to become one with Peter. Peter understood the message, he got it. Just like he understood the son. He changed his words in the book of John, he said, “Wash my feet, my hands, and my head.” He completely humbled himself, he got it. Humility is something that gives us one of the attributes that get on my nerves, by the way, is introverted pride in leaders and people, because it's robbing you, it's stealing from you.

It's that thief that's there that we cannot many times see, but it's stealing from us. Humility, we have heard it said, “You just have to decrease brother and he must increase.” You've heard that say, people miss quote John the Baptist. That's talking about a dispensation of law and grace, the law and the prophets that were transitioning to grace. That's what that's talking about there, by the way. Humility, Dr. Tracey, you know this already, is not about thinking less of myself, but humility is not

even thinking about ourselves. When someone says, “Me wash your feet.” Go ahead. When someone says, “Dr. Tracey, you did a great job.” You're not going to say, “It's not me.” You're going to say, “Thank you.” That's humility.

Humility is not about thinking less of yourself, but about not thinking about yourself at all.

It is. I laugh because we're so quick to do that.”It wasn't me.” It's like, just say thank you. That's why I'm cracking up because I do that sometimes. It's like, “Tracey, just shut up and say thank you.”

We've all done it. God is not insecure.

I know, yeah.

God is on the phone. It's like sometimes you think, “God, let me tell you something.” No one's going to take God's glory. God's glory, no one's taking it.

I love it.

These four questions, the attributes is that fourth question about what annoys you and are actually the things that you're called to serve through speaking. Jesus, the Bible says in the book of Mark, Chapter 6:30 to 36 around there, it says that Jesus saw, so he had a vision. He saw. The people are like sheep without a shepherd. That's what he saw. What did he see? He saw a void. His vision revealed a void.

What did he begin to do? The Bible says he was moved by compassion and then he began to teach them many things. What did he do? His vision was activated by seeing his voice or his void created his voice. Same thing he did in the beginning. In the beginning, God created heaven and earth, and the earth was darkness, and there was a void upon the face of the deep. God saw this, and then God said, “Let there be light.” Same thing. Vision, void, voice. These four questions hopefully have brought some clarity to you.

Vision In Leadership: Seeing And Doing What Needs To Be Done

Absolutely, and I know it will. That really dovetails very nicely into the next one, which is vision. Again, Charles was it's not like, you don't have to have a dove, alight your head while you're being baptized. Sometimes I know I grew up learning about the heroes of the Bibles and like Zig Ziglar and Og Mandino listening to these people thinking, “Now they're a vision person, but I'm just, I'm in the real world.” My dad's like, “No, vision is really seeing what needs to be done and doing it.”

Like you said, when Jesus looked out, he saw the void, and then that translated into, he did something about it. That's what leads to that. Any other thoughts because vision is a lot of times when I'm working with leaders, they were great executors, were very pragmatic and practical, very tactical. When it gets to the vision thing, sometimes it comes very naturally to the people, but what words of advice would you have for our leaders out there? A lot of them are in this next phase where they're free to serve and they're looking for that visionary calling.

I want to share a story about a young gentleman that I heard his history. He grew up in Compton, California in a very bad neighborhood. Most people make it out either dead or in prison or just really bad stuff. Less than I think 3% of the people that the males there actually come out alive or even successful. They interviewed him. He was a very successful football guy and they interviewed him and they asked him. He's like, “How did you make it out? How did you get everybody around you? All your friends, they're not alive or they're in prison. How did you make it out?”

They were like, “How did you make it out when your father didn't do anything?” It started to go under the generations. He said these words and I want to find this interview again because I saw this like maybe 9 to 10 years ago, around there, like maybe eight years ago. I cannot remember the interview, but he said these words and it never left me. He looked at the guy and he said, “I dream so big and so wide and so deep and so profound and so out of my reach that the only way that the vision can come to pass is if God himself says, I'm going to partner with this.”

When he said that to me, I said, I heard him say, “What I got, like imparted into me is a dream with God, dream bigger.” My recommendation for the leaders who are under my voice is to dream bigger. Don't just plan according to what you're able to do. Allow for some faith, allow for God to say, “I'm going to partner with this, and allow for God to overwhelm me with his goodness and his abundance.”

Leadership: Dream bigger. Allow for some faith and plan beyond what you're capable of.

The evidence of things not seen. Just like you said, dream bigger. That's amazing. Thank you, Israel. We covered loneliness, we covered weariness, abandonment, and vision. Is there anything else Israel that God's laid on your heart as we're sharing with our readers? I know they're just waiting for the next insight or story to come from you. What else would you like to leave our readers with?

Anytime when someone asks me that question, Tracey, or they ask me, “What would you do if you could go back, or would be the last thing you can say to our listeners?” My answer is always the same. It's founded in Proverbs 18:16. My answer is this, discover your gift, hone into it, and begin serving it now.

Let's talk about that. How do people get in touch with you, Israel? They're listening to you, they want to connect with you, they want to maybe even work with you. What's the best way to contact you?

The best way to contact me would be going to my website, IsraelDuran.com, and we have free gifts available for everyone, and there's also a form there that you can fill out if you are interested in how we can serve you.

We will have that in the show notes. Israel, tell me a little bit about your website and the listeners out here the type of clients you work with? I know you mentioned different people in the past, but just so people get an idea of it.

We work with leaders, entrepreneurs, and visionaries who want to get their message out there using speaking, social media, and the internet. We have a process we've been working with over the last twelve months, a little bit over 1,300 people, called the Service of Speaking, which is really a way that's aligned to God's Word and biblical and business-based principles to help you grow and get your message out there. We don't only teach a US framework, we teach something that can take your message globally as well.

Setting Vision For 2025: What’s Next

Is that speaking of your vision, where do you want to go in the year to come? We're just on the cusp of a new one. What's your vision for 2025, Israel?

We want to continue to serve the market and help people build generational wealth through speaking and business. What's interesting, Dr. Tracey, we just had a summit that we did, a global summit. We were marketing to all 50 countries, all the way from Japan to Qatar to the United Kingdom to Dubai to the Caribbean islands, and Canada. I mean, we went United Kingdom, Germany, and Australia. We went through a bunch of different nations. We're going to continue to build the global platform because I believe that people's gifts are not just based in their own community, but their gifts are also for the global market, the people out there. We're going to be honing in on that and really focusing on serving the people through what God has given us.

That's beautiful. Israel, again, thank you. This has been a wonderful time. I feel poured into, I feel rejuvenated. You've given me much to think about. Thank you for your knowledge of the word and your rightful dividing of it and its applications. Thank you again, Israel.

Thank you so much.

You're welcome.

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To our tremendous tribe out there, thank you so much for being a part of all that we do. Remember, as Charlie Jones said, “You'll be the same person five years from now that you are today, except for two things, the people you meet and the books you read.” Make them both tremendous. If you like what you heard, please hit the subscribe button. Share this incredible message that you heard from Israel with another leader that needs to hear it as well. Thank you so much. Keep on paying the price of leadership. Have a tremendous rest of the day.

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About Israel Duran

Israel Duran, a highly sought-after business growth strategist, speaker, and trainer who is passionate about helping purpose-driven leaders discover, design, and deliver their unique gifts to the world. Israel specializes in equipping entrepreneurs to build generational wealth and scale profitable businesses that create a lasting, global impact—all by leveraging the power of the internet. Whether you’re scaling to seven figures or leading a Fortune 500 company, Israel’s innovative strategies are designed to unlock potential and help you profit with purpose.

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Episode 196 - Bob Dixon - Leaders On Leadership