Subtitles section Play video
-
Today we are talking to Morgwn Rimel director of The School of Life. We will be finding
-
out ways entrepreneurs can improve their quality of life.
-
Hello Morgwn, pleasure to meet you. For the benefit of our viewers and Pioneers, I want
-
you to define for us, explain to us what The School of Life is all about.
-
Sure, well in the simplest terms The School of Life is a business that's devoted to good
-
ideas for everyday living. We are primarily concerned with how to help people live the
-
most fulfilling lives possible. And how long has The School of Life been running? Three
-
years, so we've had about 40,000 people participate in our public programs. What are the goals
-
and plans for The School of Life? When the school was originally founded, the initial
-
vision was to create an alternative form of education for adults that was sort of non-traditional,
-
so a way of bringing ideas out of the ivory tower and onto the high street, and to make
-
it more accessible, learning more accessible and relevant to everyday lives. So we started
-
out by launching a range of classes, workshops and other weekend events, and now we've moved
-
into publishing, so we'll be launching a series of books next May, we've started to design
-
our own sort of knowledge led, very thoughtful gifts, games and stationary, and we will be
-
running events around the world. You seem very very passionate about being able to run
-
The School of Life, why is this? Ah because it's an amazing idea and it's just wonderful
-
to see people come together in the community that's based around good thinking and good
-
ideas, it's also an incredibly inspiring place to work because you get to meet so many interesting
-
people from all walks of life. So which are your most popular classes? Ah this is an easy
-
one actually, we have three, well four, we have a lot of popular classes actually, but
-
there are four in particular, one is how to find a job you love, I think for obvious reasons,
-
how to realise your potential, again this idea of re-appraising ones values and trying
-
to work out what's really important, people thinking more about their relationships, their
-
creative lives, the things that they're really passionate about and maybe they're not getting
-
that from their career, and trying to find a way to reconcile that through past-times,
-
volunteer work, side projects, starting businesses, and kind of taking the leap from salaried
-
work into a completely new venture that's self supporting.
-
What types of people attend the classes? Ah, you never know who you're gonna get! And that
-
is the beauty of The School of Life, I think if you kind of like had to pick a primary
-
group, I'd say people probably from their mid 20's to their mid-forties who are obviously
-
kind of dealing with the big issues in life. So, sorting out their career, working through
-
their first serious relationships or marriages, starting families, like some of the really
-
big pressing issues in life. How do you think the old wisdom that you have here in the school
-
matches up with the modern entrepreneurial mindset. We're actually really good in the
-
sense that we draw in the old and the new, so it's very much everything from ancient
-
philosophy through to the latest neuro scientific research, as far as we're concerned, it doesn't
-
really matter if the idea is 2000 years old or like two weeks old, both have merit and
-
the beauty is in finding the underlying principles and the universal truths that underpin every
-
age and every epic in history. I want you to give me at least three entrepreneurs or
-
business people who are role models or influencers for you?
-
That's difficult, okay, so, why don't we choose, we'll go large scale, small scale and sort
-
of creative, so I think on a large scale it would be Jamie Oliver, and that's purely because
-
he has created a business that is devoted in large part obviously to his own benefit,
-
but to the good, for social good, but it's come from a place of passion, like he loves
-
food and he wants other people to love food and to consider their health. Another person
-
that I really admire is one of our faculty members, Richard Reynolds, who in a former
-
life was a marketing executive, and worked in the ad industry, and now is known as the
-
father of the guerrilla gardening movement and this all sort of came about because he
-
lived in Elephant and Castle, he had no garden, and it was quite depressing, this urban jungle,
-
no greenery, and so he started to transform derelict spaces around his neighbourhood,
-
seed-bombing, planting beautiful wildflowers at the roundabout, and this became a movement.
-
One more! Okay, so one more, well actually, this one is very close to the mission of The
-
School of Life, and that would be Dave Eggars, and his 826 National movement. Dave Eggars
-
is a writer whose based in San Francisco and he founded a series of quite extraordinary
-
workshop spaces which are fronted by unusual shops in the States, so there's the superhero
-
supply store where you walk in in Brooklyn, you can try on a cape, you can buy like, invisibility
-
powder an all this sort of thing and the idea is that kids can go into this shop that is
-
essentially completely surreal and sort of fantasy space, and there's a little secret
-
door, that just they go through and in the back of this space is a workshop area where
-
they are taught writing skills and they are free workshops run by volunteers in the community
-
and the whole business is geared toward getting kids to write. What key areas do you think
-
that entrepreneurs should focus on to have a more balanced and healthier and happier
-
life. I think first it's the idea that work is not the kind of be all end all, especially
-
when you're working on your own venture and running your own business, it's very easy
-
to sort of get tunnel vision and nothing else matters, but as important as it is to devote
-
yourself completely to your mission and to your work, it's equally important to take
-
time away and to make the time off work a very productive and fruitful time for thinking.
-
I know I'm so guilty of this, it's really difficult to turn off and put the blackberry
-
down at the end of the day and to go home and do something different but it's so important
-
to give your mind a rest. Entrepreneurs are obviously focussed on the bottom line or making
-
profit, how important is it to you that entrepreneurs also focus on their personal development.
-
It's incredibly important to develop your financial resources but developing your emotional
-
resources is equally as important because as the leader of a business and as somebody
-
whose an owner of a business, you're also responsible for other people and for managing
-
a number of different relationships whether those are within your organisation or with
-
external parties, and particularly in environments where it is very stressful and there's a fast
-
pace of change, so much happening, it's about developing that internal ability to kind of
-
manage and check your own emotions but to respond appropriately to the emotions and
-
concerns of the people around you. It's been fantastic meeting you Morgwn, thank you very
-
much and look forward to seeing you again. It's been a pleasure.