Adaptability Mindset Lessons to Change Your Life
Kathy Klotz-Guest

Adaptability Mindset Lessons to Change Your Life

According to LinkedIn’s 2024 analysis of 1 billion global users (Feb), the hottest skill right now is adaptability.

A growth mindset, adaptability, is an improv mindset. You might even hear it as a “Yes and” mindset.

It’s the ability to navigate whatever is thrown at us with confidence by accepting what comes our way and rolling with and adding on. You are already an improviser because you adapt every day and did during a pandemic. You may not think of yourself this way; you are.

That’s the power of an improv mindset and skillset in life. And most of us sadly never learn this invaluable skill in a classroom.

You can learn it, though. (See my LinkedIn Learning course on Adaptive Leadership Through Improv).

It’s so much more than being funny.?Adaptability?means that bravery, laughter and humor flourish because we lean into change with less fear and more confidence. These are precursors to big, bold innovation.

Want to change your life, your output, and how you show up? It will also change your culture

Here are 6 improv mindset lessons (more in my book,?Stop Boring Me!) to change your life. It will change how you innovate, communicate and connect.

Improv in business isn't being 'funny.' It's about being flexible and THAT has many benefits including being more innovative, and a better communicator. It will also make you funnier because it makes us more confident. Source: Kathy Klotz-Guest


1. Play the Scene (Hand) You Are In

You don’t choose the scene or what happens to you; you can choose your response. This requires deep listening. Play the hand you are dealt the best way possible.

2. Take Risks and Celebrate Mistakes

Innovation is experimentation. Risk is a muscle; when you exercise, it grows. View mistakes as?learning vs. failure. We don’t have to be perfect! Plus, perfect is not funny. Want to be funnier? Be human, get out of your head, embrace imperfection and your truth.

3. “Yes, and” to Co-Create Powerfully (this is everything when it comes to innovation and storytelling)

“Yes, and…” is how we build scenes and move forward.

1) Listen for an offer;

2) accept and say yes;

3) add on to what someone says (The AND) to move forward.. That’s how we stay in collaboration with others vs. a ‘yes but’ mentality which kills ideas.

We don’t have to DO those ideas. We are SIMPLY exploring. For example, if your on-stage partner calls you “Mom,” you are a?mom, and you build onto the reality your partner creates. Don’t drop your stuff; Integrate. In one scene, I was a werewolf because I came into the scene that way, and then I was called ‘mom,’ by my partner...so I combined it into a super idea: a werewolf mom. Integrating ideas expands creativity! In cultures filled with people who “yes, but” ( a “no”), little creativity happens. “Yes, but” someone and watch the reaction. Contrast that with 'yes and.'

4. Make Your Partner Look AMAZING

In life and improv, you get offers, asks, invites, etc. When we make people look amazing without judgment, we build relationships, trust and better ideas because we make it safer to try things.

5. Listen to Respond Honestly

Clearing your head rather than thinking about what you’ll say next is hard. Yet, being present in the moment allows you to react spontaneously to what is in front of you.

When we choose to respond honestly, people feel heard. Ex: “I don’t know what to say. That’s a first for me. That must have been hard for you.” Choosing honest emotions allows us to show up as we are. And it brings us closer to what’s naturally funny because we are being human vs. trying too hard.

6. Prepare and Let Go

When the scene (at work or life) naturally coalesces around someone else’s idea, rally around it instead of ‘driving’ the scene your way. Every day unforeseen stuff – both good and bad – happens. Preparing and letting go as needed grows our resilience and adaptability.


People with an improv (growth) mindset…

  • Listen and are present in the moment (where natural humor lives)
  • Accept the reality of the moment, add on to each other’s ideas: ‘Yes and’ vs. ‘Yes but' which kills creativity (you don’t have to do the idea; just explore)
  • Make each other look good (no judging; have each other’s backs)
  • Celebrate mistakes as learning and make it safe to take risks
  • Prepare and let go as needed
  • Accept and celebrate imperfection – when you do, you are more connected to audiences and yourself because you are approachable, relatable and funnier. You’ll also make it safer for others to do the same.
  • Unlock more creativity, storytelling and speaking that gets results


That’s how you grow and have others’ backs.

Plus, this way, people can’t cough on you.


Check out my course from?Madecraft?on?LinkedIn Learning:?leading in the moment through improv.


Want a speaker, transformational workshop leader or MC that wraps big business and innovation lessons in laughter and interactivity??Reach out. keepingithuman(dot)com.

Lon Graham

Sales Leadership Expert | Sales Professional | Speaker | GA Dawg Fan ??

11 个月

Adaptability is "in demand" indeed. If you can use it "on demand", you will be much more successful.

Mandi Toutsch

National Account Manager - Career and Life Skills | Nationwide Sales Representative

11 个月

Great points, Kathy!

Woodley B. Preucil, CFA

Senior Managing Director

11 个月

Kathy Klotz-Guest MA, MBA Very insightful. Thank you for sharing

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