Aaron McCormick is an author, entrepreneur, inspirational speaker and artist whose path to success and fulfillment defies societal norms and expectations in nearly every way.
Raised by a single mom on the South Side of Chicago, McCormick, since the age of 23 was one of the world’s leading technology business transformation sales executives, earning millions and receiving numerous awards and distinctions. He has been honored as “Best of IBM,” an award bestowed upon the top 1% of 400,000 employees, founded several companies and earned an MBA from a top business school with the rare precedent of having no prior undergraduate college degree. McCormick courageously stood up to and escaped the fundamentalist religious cult in which he was raised, resulting in loss of his universe of friends and family. With the combination of deep empathy, wisdom, and self-made success, McCormick ignites the innate ability we all have within to decode our own answers for maximum clarity and self- actualization. Aaron has helped countless people of all backgrounds realize greater fulfillment and success in areas of career, personal power, love & relationships, sales, entrepreneurship and leadership.
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I found some of Mr. McCormick’s comments on the pandemic disturbing. ‘No more deaths than the flu or “that other disease” ‘ that he couldn’t remember is not a stellar point. They are excess deaths that, despite his point about pressure on doctors and hospitals to call deaths covid related for funding reasons, are well-verified by year-over-year excess death analysis that takes into account seasonal variations. Other countries don’t have similar financial pressures to label deaths. For some time during the peak of the death rates in Italy, that country was in fact not counting deaths that were not in institutions (which might very well be the case in the U.S. – there have also been excess heart attack deaths in New York). On this topic, your guest was neither well-informed, nor particularly insightful. But, I did enjoy the rest of the podcast.
Rob, I agree. I was shocked by his casualness about both covid and the vote.