Advice and Observations from David Pivnick on Building Elite and Winning Careers at the Highest Level 2-27-26
37 min
•Feb 27, 2026about 2 months agoSummary
David Pivnick, partner at McGuire Woods, discusses the habits and mindsets that drive elite career performance, emphasizing the importance of clear goals, consistent execution, self-awareness, resilience, and building authentic relationships with colleagues. He shares insights on balancing family and career, compartmentalizing challenges, and the critical role of reputation management in long-term professional success.
Insights
- Elite performers combine talent with consistency and reliability rather than relying solely on raw intelligence; showing up and delivering at high levels daily creates competitive advantage
- Clear goal-setting with periodic review (quarterly, annually) is essential; vague aspirations like 'be a good lawyer' must be replaced with specific, measurable objectives and actionable plans
- Self-awareness about strengths, weaknesses, and personality fit is a differentiator; success requires finding environments where your authentic self is valued rather than suppressed
- Resilience is built through perspective-taking and contextualizing setbacks within broader career narratives; most perceived major failures are minor in the grand scheme
- Authentic relationship-building with mentors and colleagues happens naturally through genuine interest in people as individuals, not through forced formal mentoring programs
Trends
Emphasis on work-life balance and compartmentalization as professional skills rather than lifestyle choicesShift from rigid career paths to flexible, goal-oriented planning with periodic pivots based on feedbackGrowing recognition that personality fit and cultural alignment are as important as credentials for career successMentorship moving from formal assigned relationships to organic, authentic connections based on mutual respectReputation management becoming critical in social media era; building strong track records to buffer against isolated misstepsFocus on self-reflection and feedback incorporation as differentiators between high performers and plateauing professionalsHealthcare and private equity litigation emerging as specialized high-value practice areas in large law firms
Topics
Career goal-setting and strategic planningBuilding elite performance through consistency and reliabilitySelf-awareness and personal strengths assessmentWork-life balance and compartmentalization skillsAuthentic relationship-building and mentorshipResilience and bouncing back from setbacksReputation management and personal brandingFeedback incorporation and self-reflectionOrganizational culture fit and environment selectionLeadership development and inspiring confidenceHealthcare regulatory enforcement and litigationPrivate equity practice areasLarge law firm partnership trackTalent development and associate mentoringPersonality-driven career differentiation
Companies
McGuire Woods
Law firm where David Pivnick is a partner in commercial litigation and co-chair of healthcare regulatory enforcement ...
People
David Pivnick
Partner at McGuire Woods, commercial litigation specialist, law school valedictorian, primary speaker on career building
Scott Becker
Host of Becker Private Equity & Business Podcast, mentor to David Pivnick, discusses career progression and firm culture
Tim Fry
McGuire Woods colleague cited as example of sustained rapid career growth and elite performance
Holly Buckley
McGuire Woods healthcare group leader, current/former department chair, example of strong leadership development
Amber Walsh
McGuire Woods healthcare group leader, current/former department chair, example of strong leadership development
Quotes
"I think it's a matter of figuring out how long it takes, how much time is required to be committed to achieving your goals on each front and then moving forward accordingly."
David Pivnick•Early in episode
"The people who are most talented and have the strongest careers, they show up every day. That consistency, you and I have talked about it on podcasts before, having that consistency day in, day out, showing up, being consistent, delivering what people are expecting of you and exceeding it."
David Pivnick•Mid-episode
"I think you have to know where you're trying to go and then have a plan to get there. And so I think coming out of law school, for example, I think it's very easy to say I want to be a good lawyer. I think that's a very general topic, general concept."
David Pivnick•Mid-episode
"Building your reputation is something that is done brick by brick and block by block. It takes a long time to build a reputation, a little bit of time to tear it down."
David Pivnick•Later in episode
"Don't try and make them artificial. I think the biggest thing is figuring out how to build those connections naturally and not trying to force it."
David Pivnick•Q&A section
Full Transcript
This is Scott Becker with the Becker Business and the Becker Private Equity Podcast. Today's discussion, we've got a special episode. This is a webinar that we did in front of a live group with David Pivnick. In the discussion with David is, David's a brilliant, brilliant lawyer, partner at McGuire Woods, but he's more than that. He's just an incredibly successful person. He's valedictorian from his law school class. He's got some great thoughts on how you build great careers. And today's discussion is an interview, a discussion, a webinar with David about building great careers. We hope you enjoy it. We hope you find it useful and helpful and entertaining and all of that. Thank you for listening. David, let me ask you to start by introducing yourself. I know you were a valedictorian in law school, have this tremendous drive and ability. Take a moment to introduce yourself to the audience. And then we'll start talking about what it takes to be an elite performer and how you've done it over a prolonged period of time. David? Perfect. Thanks, Scott. I appreciate you having me on and always appreciate the opportunity to chat with you. I'm, as you said, David Pivenick. I'm a partner in the commercial litigation department at McGuire Woods and one of the co-chairs of the firm's, you know, healthcare regulatory enforcement practice group. I spend most of my time involved in healthcare and private equity litigation. That's sort of been my focus for the last 16 years at this point, heavily concentrated on government fraud abuse and defending false claims act cases or responding to government investigations. And I live in the suburbs of Chicago, in the northern suburbs with my wife and three kids. And my life, other than work, is largely centered around them and spending time with them. Well, maybe take one moment on that, because I think that itself is so important. If you want to have an elite career, how many different things can you be focused on besides your career? I mean, you've just mentioned it's career and family. Do you want to take a moment to talk about that? Yeah, I mean, first of all, I would say it's family and career. And you're right, I framed it in the opposite there. But I don't think there's a limit. I think it's more a matter of planning and scheduling your day and your time in a way that effectively allows you to accomplish what needs to get done and balance that with what you want to get done. So for some people, that's family, friends, activities, hobbies, and career. For some people, it's career, second career, side business, and then family. I mean, it could be any number of things. I think it's a matter of figuring out how long it takes, how much time is required to be committed to achieving your goals on each front and then moving forward accordingly. So for me, I tend to focus my life on figuring out how I want to spend my time and what I want to be doing with my family, how I want to enjoy family time and build those bonds and relationships that mean the most to me. And so I work really hard. I work my ass off, frankly, to make sure that I can continue to do those things and spend the time on the things that I love and value for my own entertainment as well. But the point being, if you want to have a great career, you can't have 12 different priorities. You sort of mentioned the two big priorities are family and career or family and business. Is that a fair statement? I mean, you can't be, while you're really building a career, out playing golf every day, out doing guys' nights out all the time. There's only so many things you could do. So it's really focused on, for you, family and career. And I agree. And I think like most things in life, it's all about balance and figuring it out. Some people, a big part of their career might be getting out and taking clients golfing on a regular basis and building that relationship. Or there might be a stage in their career where that's important. And that's fine, too. But that doesn't work for everybody. And so I think the biggest thing is figuring out where your priorities lie and how much time it takes to succeed at the level you want to succeed in connection with each of those avenues. I think for most people, that means having two, three, maybe four at most areas of focus. For other people, they may have better time management skills. They may not sleep or they may have a bunch of priorities that are each of a lower time commitment. But doing well at anything takes a lot of time. Being a good father takes a lot of time. Being a good husband takes a lot of time. Being a good partner at a law firm clearly takes a lot of time. So I think it's navigating that and managing all the different competing priorities. And the first thing is understanding what those are, but also how much time you need to commit to do them well. Thank you. When you look at both back at your career and other careers that you've seen people perform really well, is there a specific habit or mindset that shows up regularly amongst people that perform really well? Yeah, absolutely. The first thing, this very well dovetails what we were just talking about, which is I think you have to know where you're trying to go and then have a plan to get there. And so I think coming out of law school, for example, I think it's very easy to say I want to be a good lawyer. I think that's a very general topic, general concept. No one goes to law school to be bad as a lawyer. But I think there's a difference between being a prosecutor versus being a defense attorney versus a transactional lawyer. Then the nature of the practice is different. So I think the first thing is figuring out where it is that you want to go so you can start charting the way to get there. Having a plan, in other words, having a destination. If you want to be a big firm attorney and a partner at a big firm, and that's the goal, I think it's important to think about that at the outset and then start planning. towards that and thinking about ways to get there. So the first thing I would say is having the goal in a corresponding plan, routinely checking in on your plan and updating it and making sure that progress is being made. And then the last thing I think, you know, the people who are most talented and have the strongest careers, they show up every day. That consistency, you and I have talked about it on podcasts before, having that consistency day in, day out, showing up, being consistent, delivering what people are expecting of you and exceeding it. And building that as a habit is important. That consistency of thriving is a habit that you need to build. And you talked about that, you know, and I use this example because I know how hard this is and wasn't able to do it. You were valedictorian in your law school class, which means you finished first. And you often said it wasn't necessarily that you were the brightest in the class. Like you probably were one of the brightest in the class. Everybody that I know that was valedictorian was the brightest in the class. But you always, always said a lot of it was reliability and showing up for every single test, every single assignment. How important is that in building a great professional career? I think it's incredibly important. And your point about the law school, I mean, it is. Look, I went to law school with a ton of incredibly bright, incredibly capable people. Some of them likely are smarter than me. And at the end of the day, they could have had one bad day, one really bad exam, one disappointment. I think showing up consistently and delivering. And I don't know that I'm at my absolute 100% best on every single occasion, on every single day. But I think I'm pretty close to it every day. I think even if I'm a little bit under the weather, even if there's something going on personally, I'm in a disagreement with family or someone is sick and I'm trying to navigate that. Someone passes away, unfortunately. I think I'm able to do a pretty good job compartmentalizing different facets of my life. And when it comes time to focus on work and delivering client service or showing up to court, doing the job, doing what's necessary and doing it at a high level. And that's certainly something I brought as a skill in law school that isn't really about smarts. It's just about being able to compartmentalize different issues, focus on the task at hand, and do that task well, even if there's other things nagging in the back of your mind, just keeping them there for the time being to accomplish what's necessary. Right. That ability to compartmentalize is a very hard thing for so many people to do when they're having challenges in other parts of their life. Can they still bring 100% to their core business, their core job, whatever their profession is? That's a hard skill and a hard thing to do for many people, and it takes a lot of work. I love that point. It's not easy to do. At the highest level, you see some people that rise very quickly in their careers and sustain it over a long period of time. One of the people in our group is a gentleman named Tim Fry, who just has had this fantastic career, doing great, great growth. Many others as well, Holly Buckley, Amber Walsh, so many. Some people don't rise as quickly or don't ultimately succeed at that level. What separates those from that really end up thriving versus not What are a couple of the things that separate those Sure absolutely So I mean look the first thing is you sort of frame the question on the assumption that people are talented and hardworking And I think that is the right starting point. You have to have the right amount of talent. Some people don't have the exact skill set and the exact talent that they need to have to reach the highest level. So I think the first thing is making sure that you have the talent. Hard work, it's a little easier to put in the extra hours. It's not easy to do, but anyone can do that. But having the right talent is hugely important. I think the second thing, and unfortunately this dovetails with something I said earlier, so I'm not trying to be repetitive, but planning and figuring out what you're trying to accomplish is critically important. It's hard to have a really terrific career and get to the highest levels if you don't know what levels you're aiming at. And I remember sitting down with you years ago when I was first joining the firm and talking about things that I viewed as important in the progression of a lawyer at a big law firm. And I remember your response was sort of, yeah, that's great. Good for you. But here's some things I think you should work on. And your pathway made a heck of a lot more sense than what I was thinking about. And so having that plan and direction, knowing where you're going and checking in on it is important. And then I think the other dynamic, which it can't be taught, it's innate, although it can be worked on, is having the right personality and fit and leadership to work well with others, inspire confidence in others as you're coming up, and then be able to inspire confidence in others when you become a leader and are helping to really move up. And you mentioned a few of our colleagues at McGuire Woods, Holly and Amber, both current department chair and former department chair of the healthcare group, both of whom were terrific when they were associates, terrific as young partners and terrific as leaders. And they inspired confidence in leaders when they were coming up, and now they inspire confidence in the team around them. And that is that leadership skill that they have, the innate ability to connect with people, to build a rapport, and to inspire confidence. Tim also does that very well. that's something that I think separates people at the highest levels of really being successful but it's something you could work on but there is a level of being able to interact well with others recognize what they're looking for feed that back to them in a compelling manner and then inspire others as you get more seniors so that they're doing the same with you now in the leadership role I think that that really separates the highest performers. How important is it I know in terms of my own career, when I switched to our predecessor firm, Ross and Hardy's, I was in a place where I was comfortable, I was able, I was happy, and thus able to thrive. How important is it that you're in the right environment that works for you to be able to have a great career? I think that's critically important. Critically, critically important. First of all, you spend a lot of time with your colleagues. There's no way around that. I think get any job unless you're a solo practitioner or you run your own business. But even then, you have clients. There's always going to be interpersonal demands and a level where you have to work with other people. And ideally, you have to really enjoy those people. I tell my kids all the time, I feel very fortunate that some of my closest friends are colleagues of mine and that I've met through work, whether it's clients or partners or associates. But I tell my kids all the time, you may not have a job that you like, but you really have to aim to have a job you at least don't dislike. It's got to be at least tolerable. So I think that notion of being able to build those relationships and connect with people is critically important day to day. It will make your success easier and it'll make your life much easier. It's hard to really thrive when you're unhappy day to day. And I look at that for my own career. When I switched firms now, it'll be 16 years ago in a few weeks. It's not that the firm I came from was a bad place. I think there's lots of people who are great lawyers there and do good work and treat their clients well and treat each other well. It wasn't the right fit for me. I couldn't be myself. I couldn't run my own practice, my clients, my interactions with colleagues the way I felt comfortable doing it. For others, it's a great fit. For me, it wasn't. McGuire Woods has been a really good fit. We respect individuality, And I think we know how people are. We've built a good team because of it. But for me, it's critically important. If you want to be a great leader and have a great career, how important is it to know yourself really well and have your own self-awareness about what your strengths are and what you're great at? Incredibly important and incredibly challenging. I think it is one of my strengths that I know I'm not everybody's cup of tea and that I've got my own way of doing things in my own personality. I'm loud and vocal. I'm opinionated and share those opinions. And I think finding the right place and group where I'm appreciated for that and people see the value in that is critically important to me. And I think others are in the same spot. You could be quiet and somewhat reserved, but if you're doing that in a way where when you talk, people recognize that you're articulate and thoughtful, that could be a good fit too. I don't think it's one size fits all, but I think figuring out the right fit is critically important for everybody. And it's not going to be the same for each person. I think McGuire Woods is a wonderful place. It doesn't mean it's for everybody, but I think we do a good job for the people that are doing well at the firm. David, let me ask you the next thing. How important is it in building a great career that you build that around your strengths and How much time do you spend on really pursuing things that are your strengths? One of your great strengths is both your brothers. You've got this crazy mix of talents of being incredibly analytical, plus very good at speaking, articulating, talking to people. How important is it that you build a career around your strengths? And how much time do you spend working on one's weaknesses? How do you divide those two things? So the short answer, I'd appreciate the kind words. I think about it less in terms of how to divide the time and more about making sure that I'm doing my best to emphasize my strengths and externally and showcase them and continue to improve them while trying to, as best as possible, minimize my weaknesses, improve where I can and not make them as apparent to others. I think that's often one of the challenges is not just demonstrating your weaknesses day in, day out. I had a discussion earlier today with an opposing attorney that, frankly, in my opinion, stepped in the mud during the call. And I think, unfortunately, that attorney kind of kept digging once they were in the mud, even when I was trying to give them a rope to get out. And I think it was, I'll say they were being stubborn in my estimation. I think figuring out how to balance strengths and weaknesses is key. So for me, the first thing is figuring out where your strengths lie and what your weaknesses are. One of them I just alluded to, which is I am fairly unapologetically myself. That is very much something I appreciate about where I currently am situated in life, that I'm able to be myself. But even when I was more junior and that probably wasn't always the best move, I am pretty day-to-day consistently who I am. So figuring out what that means and who that works well with, how I can steer into people who appreciate that and maximize where it will take me versus, you know, minimizing interactions or doing my best to navigate those dynamics that are a little trickier is important. But I think the key is first figuring out your strengths and weaknesses, figure out how you can emphasize those strengths to other people that are your clients, that are your peers, that are your friends and develop them. And then it's turning weaknesses into strengths where possible. But if not, some things you can improve, like, you know, my golf game is a disaster, as you are keenly aware, but it's a work in progress. and one day maybe at least a modest disaster as compared to an abject failure. I think figuring out those weaknesses matters, and that works in work life as well. Not everything is going to be a strength, but figuring out the weaknesses, incremental improvement, and minimizing it is key. I would think, as you talk about the golf game and so forth, and you talk about really building careers around strengths, having seen you as a lawyer and seen you as a golfer, I would disproportionately spend your time on the practice of law and being fantastic there, doubling down on your legal skills because you're a brilliant leader, brilliant, brilliant person. And I think it not important how you golf really If you advising somebody in building a career and you do a lot of mentoring of younger lawyers today what do you advise them if they want to be great at what they doing they want to be at the top of their field, what should they be doing, and what should they stop doing? I know a few of the people that you mentor, what would you tell them about, look, if you want to be great, if you want to be a total leader at what you do, or choosing what you're going to be great at, what should they be doing in the next several years, and what shouldn't they'd be doing? Yeah, I mean, the first thing is, I think soliciting multiple opinions and feedback from different sources is critically important, particularly at a young stage of the career. There's not one right way, one path to build a successful career, to become a partner at a law firm, to become president or CEO of a company, to be a manager, whatever the given designation might be, I don't think in almost any case, there's going to be one road to get there. And so talking to people who have built careers in different ways, who have had success that you might want to emulate, getting their perspectives, and then really thinking about those things, thinking about the feedback that you've received, thinking about how it might apply to you. Because the way one person has done things may not be the best path for a different person. It may not fit their skill sets. It may not fit the effort and approach that they want to take or that they're frankly best suited to take. So I think it's critically important to solicit different opinions, to actually listen to people who are giving you feedback and discussing potential approaches, and then to spend really a lot of time putting together a plan that starts with what am I trying to accomplish? Whether that's in 10 years, whether it's five years, and I would think about it in each of those. What's my plan for this year? What's my plan for the next five years? What's my plan for the next decade? Where am I trying to go? And then start working out how to get there. And so I think the biggest thing I would tell people is think about what you're trying to accomplish. Talk to other people who are where you think you want to go to figure out if it really is what you want to accomplish. And then talk to several of those people to learn how they've achieved the success in their careers. And then start picking apart those answers, not because you're criticizing them and I wouldn't pick them apart to the people's faces. I'm saying internally, think about what you heard and how you can function that, you know, factor that into specific steps that are easy to apply for you as an individual to take those steps forward. And I think the inverse where you talk about, you know, what is the biggest mistake is I think people who make rash decisions early, whether that's just deciding I'm going to be X or I'm not going to be Y. I already know, you know, I came out of law school and I know I'm going to do this. Well, you come out of law school, you really don't know a whole heck of a lot. You learn a little bit about the law. You learn a little bit about how to think as a lawyer. But there's a lot that you don't know yet. And so I think making those bright line decisions early in one's career and then setting a path that may be a little bit more rigid than is best is a mistake. I do see people make it. It tends to lead to burnout or having to pivot later in the career when you could have avoided some of that with a little bit more foresight and a little bit more openness to feedback early on. I'm going to ask you a question about reputation for a second. We're obviously in the social media world where people have reputations all over the board. And I'll give you a couple of different examples, whether in the workplace or not the workplace. You know, one place at the workplace, one of our colleagues at one point famously took charge of the Coke and soda distribution program as to what sodas we're going to have, when we're going to have them. And we laugh at it, but there are certain positions you could put yourself in that are damaging to your reputation because people look at some of those things and think like, why are you doing that? I know periodically you've commented on a different post or something like that saying, you know, doesn't reflect well on you, whatever it is. How important is it to to sort of like live with some of your failures, but also manage your reputation so you don't look like a lightweight if you're trying to build a great reputation? You want to be a real person. But when somebody takes over management of the Coke dispensary, Coca-Cola and sodas and so forth. I mean, obviously, you know, it led to a lots of ridiculous. How important is it that you will try to do the right thing, manage your reputation and position yourself right as well? And obviously, it takes a backseat to substantive work and bringing in clients and business. But how important is it that reputation, you know, sort of a perspective? Yeah, well, I mean, the first thing is I wouldn't have said ridicule instead of ridicule while I was trying to make that point. That would have been the first thing I did. The second thing is I think it's really it's a circular answer, but I think it's true, which is building your reputation is something that is done brick by brick and block by block. It takes a long time to build a reputation, a little bit of time to tear it down. So to me, the biggest thing is figuring out how you can burnish and build a strong reputation day in, day out, so that when you have a bad day, when you might have, you know, a case doesn't go the way you want, a client is frustrated, where you post something that maybe was not your best post ever. people look at that in the context of your overall performance, recognize this guy is still our guy. He's still our lawyer. He's still our business leader. He's still our manager. He's still our CEO, whatever it might be. He's built that for the last X number of years. He's done great work 750 times. So we're not going to think a lot about the mistake, the miss. So I think the key, you know, people talk about it takes years to build a reputation and one day to destroy it. And I think as a general guardrail, that's just good conventional wisdom. But I think practically, if you spend your time intelligently building your reputation day in, day out, those slight mishaps, those slight misses fit in the brighter context, the broader context of who you are. So they land. And you joke about, you know, your posts where I periodically will give you a hard time. But you've spent decades now building a career and a brand and a reputation where people trust you. They know that you're a straight shooter. They know that you're happy, you know, free to give your time, your advice. You're going to say what's on your mind, but also that you're a leader in multiple industries, frankly, at this point. So that if you have those posts that your joke doesn't quite land or whatever else, it fits in that broader context. and is less of a concern. So we joke about the soda dynamic, but to me, it's never about the soda. It's about, are you doing the work day-to-day to be a true leader? Are you doing the work day-to-day to be a great lawyer or a great manager, a great podcaster, whatever it might be, so that when you're doing the soda dispensing, that's just the add-on to what you're doing as compared to people wondering why there's such a focus on it. Yes, and another question, How important is it to sort of intentionally figure out where you're going with your career, what you're planning to do? How important is setting goals? Critically important. I think that's something that people should be doing from day one. But I think the key is it's critically important to have goals. It is critically important to put a plan in place, whether it's, you know, a detailed seven page plan versus bullet points on one sheet of paper with a marker typed up on your computer. But having a goal, having a plan to get there is critical. But I think more critical than that is then, or at least as critical, is the periodic review. Every three months, every six months, every year, checking in, seeing your progress to your goals, seeing whether the steps you're taking have been productive. If they're not, you may want to pivot. Seeing if you're not taking some of those steps. If you said, for example, and I remember you said young associates, you should write and speak 10 times a year. That should be your goal. And so I made that my goal. And I would take an inventory at the end of every year when putting together my business plan for the next year of how many times did I write something that was published somewhere each year? How many times did I speak? And it was a good way to keep myself honest because it was a very low benchmark to hit. So I think making the goal is critical, having a plan to get there is critical, but then actually checking in on what you're doing, how effective you've been in taking those steps, and whether you're making the progress is important. And don't be shy about getting feedback. If you working with colleagues you built a rapport with that are your mentors or friends peers you should be able to sit down with them and say this is what I trying to accomplish Do you have concerns about that goal Do you have feedback on how to get there? Have you seen people that you didn't think would have great careers turn into fantastic leaders or have great careers? You know, people that you wouldn't have expected, oh my goodness, this person is going to be a real leader at the top of their game. and anything that sort of they did or set them apart that led them to greatness? Yes is the answer for sure. I think the biggest thing is self-reflection and recognizing early when things are not quite landing the way you intend or the way they intended. I think being able to look at it, you know, we hire, you know, speaking for the firm, we hire people who have excelled in life. They've got into great law schools. We are hiring from great law schools. We're hiring people with great grades, great credentials. So, you know, you're bringing in folks, for example, to the law firm who have had a great deal of success in their careers and not everybody hits a home run from day one. And so watching people adapt and seeing how they can figure out where they've missed. So that self-reflection, I think, is important. And I've seen people who have gone the other way as well, where they've had a couple mistakes early in their career. And their response to it is to say, look, it wasn't that big a mistake. Or I don't really think I was wrong on this. I think I was right and everybody else is wrong. And I think those people consistently don't improve and don't do better because until they've sort of recognized it wasn't everyone else, it's them, I think it's harder. But the folks who I think have really done the pivot well is they've had the self-reflection to recognize things aren't going quite as I want, whether it's a bad review, whether it's feedback on a given assignment, whether it's a client interaction. I think you can sense those things. And so sitting down, talking to a mentor, talking to a friend, maybe it's at your level, like someone you're here and saying, look, here's what's going on. What's your advice? How do I start working towards it? And I would then say steer, you know, like like driving, steer into the skin. If you can think about it, figure out where the issue is, double down your efforts there. Show the folks who are concerned about it that you're committed, that your goal is to be at the firm or the business long term. You're going to take the steps necessary to correct that mistake and move things forward in a productive manner. And I think most environments are going to be productive. We don't want to invest extra time in hiring and recruiting. That's expensive and time consuming. We want to make things work with folks that are already here that we were excited about and invested in the first instance. So it's figuring out that there is an issue and then putting a plan in place to move forward. And people can do that. And let me ask you a question. You're a resilient person by nature. How important is that resilience and can that be taught? Because anybody who has a great career is doubtless going to get punched in the face once in a while, have some setbacks, and that resilience is important. I know you yourself are very resilient, very strong-minded, have that ability to bounce back. Many people don't have that. Is that a career differentiator or do people have to build that skill of being resilient and willing to take chances and have failures and build from that? How important is that that ability to take on some risk and to be resilient when things don't go as you want them to go? Yeah. So first of all, I think some of it is innate or like it's a mindset and some of it is how people are wired. But I think a lot of it is keeping things in perspective and figuring out a lot of the roads lead back to the same place. If you know where you're trying to go in life, in your career, it's very easy to start thinking about, well, shoot, this was a minor. I mean, some things are major and they are major and you need to deal with them as such. But a lot of things feel major or feel significant, but are ultimately in the grand scheme of things pretty minor. And I remember years ago, you know, I got a bad grade, a disappointing grade in college, and I was very unhappy about it. I mentioned it to my mother and she sort of said, did you do your best? And I said, yeah, I really think I did. She said, don't worry about it. Sometimes things don't go well. And I remember sort of thinking I was going to get chewed out by her. And I think the much more realistic approach, which I remember that discussion, you know, 25 years later, give or take, I think is telling. And I think that's what's important. You can't necessarily make yourself resilient. I think you can consistently think about issues that arise in the context of, A, how big a deal was this really? You know, in the day-to-day existence of my life, how big a deal? Was this major? Was this minor? How hard is it going to be to bounce back? And then once you've sort of contextualized it, thinking about how you move forward, what the steps are to push forward, understanding that there was an issue, I think those things are very important and can help build that resilience, which to me more than anything else is just trying to keep things in the broader context as much as possible. Thank you so much. David, before we finish up, I want to ask the audience any questions for David. I think the chat function is working. I hope so. Please feel free to ask or myself or again, text me the questions 773-766-5322. Two, David's been this incredible leader, incredible career. David, let me have you continue. Anything else you wanted to add in? And then does anybody in the audience have a question? No, the only thing I would add is, again, I think this is going to sound so trite, but a lot of these questions do focus on or come back to having the right perspective and thinking about what you're trying to accomplish and having a plan to get there. And then when things go badly, thinking articulately about intelligently about how to build back. Like, you know, right now, we did the webinar froze. We're going to figure out how to move forward productively as necessary. And if there aren't any questions, we'll be able to wrap it up and and move on as if Scott didn't freeze. Let me ask you a question, David. No, I think having a plan and a career plan is so important that you have goals. We have a plan and then you have to have the energy and the talent to pursue that plan. but you've got to decide what you're trying to do. The plan doesn't have to be a 30 page business plan. It could be a two page plan. It could be a seven page plan. It could be bullet points. If some plan, here's what I'm trying to do. Here's what I'm trying to accomplish. We have a great question from the audience. You mentioned having good relationships with colleagues. Any thoughts and suggestions on how to build those those relationships? Yeah, I mean, the first thing is don't don't try and make them artificial. You know, I think, you know, we as a firm, for example, assign associate level and partner level mentors to every summer associate and associate when they start with the firm. And I think conceptually, it's terrific. I've served in those roles. But as I'm sure everybody who's listening appreciates, sometimes those assigned relationships work great. And sometimes they're not the right fit. I think, you know, for example, you've been probably the most significant mentor for me over the course of my career. but I don't think you've ever been assigned in a formal mentoring role to me. We built a rapport. We have a good relationship. And you were always very generous with your time and advice, which I've always appreciated. And you're trying to reciprocate by doing good work in return. So I think the biggest thing is figuring out how to build those connections naturally and not trying to force it. Building actual commonality. Figure out where you have a good personality fit, which people you have that fit with, where there's going to be people who are receptive to giving advice, and then doubling down your efforts there. I think the second part of it is building good human connections. I mean, we are ultimately all people. We have our own personalities. We have our own problems. One of the things I really like about the firm is I think the firm respects individuals and that people have a life outside of the office. So learning about your colleagues as people, you know, I think is critically important. And I think, you know, our chairman, the first time I spoke with him, I can still remember the discussion. It was over a decade ago at this point. But the first thing he said to me is, tell me about yourself. And I started by telling him about my practice because I thought that's what he was asking. And he let me speak for a few minutes and then very politely redirected me and said, I've heard about your practice. I sort of know who you are work-wise. I'm asking about you. Tell me about your family. Are you married? Do you have kids? What gets you up in the morning? And I think it really encapsulates who he is as a person where he can build a connection with anyone and do it quickly. But having that dynamic, figuring out who people are, what makes them tick, and learning about them individually, and then thinking about them as people and building that rapport is the best way to build those relationships and advance your career. not doing it for the purpose of advancing the career, but being sincere and getting to know people, I think is critically important. Thank you for listening to this version of the Becker Business and Becker Private Equity Podcast. Again, featured David Pivnik on one of our webinars on building great careers. Thank you so much, David, for joining us. And thank you to our audience for listening. Thank you.