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Eric Thomas Reveals How Ed Mylett Book Launch Exposed His Business Deficiencies

Ed Mylett Show · How To Do 10 Years Of Work In 2 | Ed Mylett · May 10, 2026
Eric Thomas Reveals How Ed Mylett Book Launch Exposed His Business Deficiencies
Ed Mylett Show
Ed Mylett Show
How To Do 10 Years Of Work In 2 | Ed Mylett
"When I was with Ed and he was doing the book launch, I'm just being real. I did a book launch. It was probably 70% on that level in terms of I wasn't just in the room. I was in the room learning. I was all the way in the back sitting down. With a pen and a pad. Like studying, like, yo, E, bruh, this is being real. You not on this level."
Motivational speaker Eric Thomas candidly admitted that attending Ed Mylett's book launch revealed major gaps in his own business operations. Despite his success as a speaker, Thomas realized he lacked the organizational systems, networking sophistication, and structural frameworks that Mylett had mastered. He returned home and removed team members who couldn't help him reach the next level.

About this episode

This weekend special episode of The Ed Mylett Show features multiple powerful conversations compiled from previous interviews, focusing on the mindset, habits, and standards required for sustained excellence. The episode opens with Mylett delivering a solo monologue on advice he would give his younger self, emphasizing 15 core principles including outworking everyone, finding mentors, early entrepreneurship, mastering communication, and living below your means. The compilation then moves to a deeply vulnerable conversation where Mylett admits his default personality remains insecure despite massive success, revealing that Wayne Dyer once told him to link confidence to intentions rather than achievements during a sunrise encounter in Maui. Motivational speaker Eric Thomas provides one of the most candid moments, describing how attending Mylett's book launch exposed major deficiencies in his own business systems, forcing him to remove team members and completely restructure his operations. Mylett shares a breakthrough realization about an unknown person in recovery who helped his alcoholic father get sober, arguing that person's struggles qualified them to change millions of lives through the chain reaction that followed. Performance coach Alan Stein discusses visualization research showing mental practice produces nearly the same results as physical practice, while Mylett recounts how sports psychology helped him improve his college batting average from .215 to .380 through intensive visualization training. The overarching theme emphasizes that sustained success comes not from goals but from standards, habits, and the ability to perform at high levels even on bad days.

Key takeaways

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