Couverture de Christopher Lochhead Follow Your Different™

Christopher Lochhead Follow Your Different™

Christopher Lochhead Follow Your Different™

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Christopher Lochhead | Follow Your Different is pioneer in real dialogue podcasts. “The best business podcast” – Podcast Magazine “The worst business podcast” – Neil Pearlberg© 2022 Christopher Lochhead Follow Your Different™ Podcast Economie Sciences sociales
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    • 420 How to Flourish with Daniel Coyle, NYT Best-selling Author of The Culture Code, on new book “Flourish: The Art of Building Meaning, Joy, and Fulfillment”
      Jan 28 2026
      In a world overflowing with business content and quick-fix success formulas, authentic dialogue about what gives life meaning can feel rare. On this episode of Christopher Lochhead: Follow Your Different, we have a conversation with Daniel Coyle, bestselling author of “The Culture Code” and the new book “Flourish.” We unpack why thriving individually and collectively goes far beyond achievements. Their dialogue serves as a blueprint for building a life and community that feels connected, alive, and meaningful. You’re listening to Christopher Lochhead: Follow Your Different. We are the real dialogue podcast for people with a different mind. So get your mind in a different place, and hey ho, let’s go. Beyond the Mountain: What Happens After Success? For many, life is a climb toward results: career milestones, fame, or financial rewards. Both Lochhead and Coyle share how, after reaching some form of the summit, people often ask “What’s this all for?” The answer, according to years of research on happiness and human development, isn’t another achievement. Instead, life satisfaction comes from meaningful relationships. Despite this, Western culture pushes us to optimize, perform, and automate, treating life and business as machines instead of thriving ecosystems. To flourish means to recognize life as something to be tended like a garden, not a hill to conquer. The Paradox of Results and Meaning High performers often value discipline, drive, and outcome; the thrill of legendary results. Coyle acknowledges the paradox: results are important, but without serving something higher, they feel empty. Achieving big goals can even hollow out life if not connected to deeper values or service beyond oneself. True flourishing involves aligning your pursuits with something greater and knowing what you want to exist in the world even if you’re not there. As Coyle puts it, life’s best moments often come when “you kind of vanish” into connection, contribution, or flow: whether with people, ideas, or experiences. Cultivating Flourishing in Daily Life If flourishing is rooted in shared, joyful, and meaningful growth, how can we cultivate it amid daily pressures? Coyle’s advice is to start small and intentionally reflect on where you already feel most resonant, moments when you lose yourself in work, play, or connection. Track these periods and aim to create more of them. Meaningful relationships come from deep questioning and mutual investment, not from perfect routines or solitary habits. Prioritize the “animate” parts of your life: the conversations, surprises, and even the messiness of real relationships, which are hallmarks of flourishing communities and partnerships. Ultimately, flourishing is mutual: you cannot thrive alone, and your aliveness helps those around you come alive too. The message is clear. Achievements matter, but without connection and mutual flourishing, they become hollow victories. Designing a flourishing life is not only possible but necessary for real fulfillment, and it starts with tuning into what gives your days meaning and builds authentic relationships along the way. To hear more from Daniel Coyle and how to flourish in business and daily life, download and listen to this episode. Bio Daniel Coyle is a bestselling author and leading voice on peak performance, talent development, and organizational culture. He is best known for The Talent Code, The Culture Code, and The Little Book of Talent, which explore how individuals and teams achieve extraordinary results. Through immersive research with elite sports teams, businesses, and creative organizations, Coyle uncovers the habits and environments that spark learning, trust, and sustained excellence. His work translates complex science into practical, actionable insights. Coyle’s writing has been featured in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and Harvard Business Review. As a sought-after speaker, he helps leaders build cultures that drive growth, resilience, and long-term success. Links Follow Daniel Coyle! Daniel’s Blog | LinkedIn | Facebook We hope you enjoyed this episode of Christopher Lochhead: Follow Your Different™! Christopher loves hearing from his listeners. Feel free to email him, connect on Facebook, X (formerly Twitter), Instagram, and subscribe on Apple Podcast / Spotify!
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    • 419 The Secret to Success In 2026 Is Hiding in Plain Sight (LinkedIn, Lenny & Noam Just Proved It) | Category Pirates
      Jan 21 2026
      On this episode of Christopher Lochhead: Follow Your Different, we sail with the Category Pirates to unpack why career success in the coming years hinges on moving beyond using AI as just another productivity tool and embracing it as a co-founder and thought partner. The insights aren’t just for techies or founders, they are relevant for anyone who wants to future-proof their career and unlock uncommon leverage in a world being remade by generative AI. As we find ourselves deep in the rise of artificial intelligence, the ways people define their careers and generate value are evolving rapidly. This episode dives into two key research reports that uncover a powerful trend shaping the very foundation of work and entrepreneurship. You’re listening to Christopher Lochhead: Follow Your Different. We are the real dialogue podcast for people with a different mind. So get your mind in a different place, and hey ho, let’s go. LinkedIn and Lenny: Two Data Sets Signal a Seismic Shift Very recently, two independent research efforts converged on a striking insight. LinkedIn, with its enormous database tracking millions of real career moves, revealed the fastest-rising roles: founder, AI engineer, independent advisor, and AI strategist and consultant. The title “founder” alone is up 60 percent year-over-year and has nearly tripled since 2022. This isn’t just a startup wave; it’s a broad career escape pattern: a mass migration away from conventional jobs towards agency, creativity, and ownership. Meanwhile, the renowned Lenny Rachitsky, together with Noam Segal, surveyed 1750 tech workers who are already deep in the trenches of AI adoption. Their data not only reinforced the LinkedIn findings but made something even clearer. The workers getting the greatest value from AI weren’t simply using it to write faster emails or crank out code a bit quicker. Founders (those who saw themselves as owners) were extracting exponentially more value, driving higher ROI, more time savings, and better work quality by leveraging AI not just to improve execution, but to reimagine strategy and decision making. Moving Beyond Tool: AI as Your Career’s Co-Founder What’s the real difference between the “founders” in these studies and many other professionals? It’s not intelligence or technical skill. It’s mindset and operational practice. Founders use AI as a co-founder rather than a generic tool. They treat their careers as if they are companies, and AI is their essential collaborator. While engineers, managers, and designers may use AI to automate tests, generate presentations, or speed up research, founders leverage AI for decision making, vision, and strategic moves. The approach goes even deeper. Top performers are building their own custom AIs, trained on their unique intellectual property: their notes, writing, frameworks, and research. This isn’t about using a public ChatGPT prompt or borrowing from generic knowledge bases. The new class of “creator capitalists” construct a persistent AI thought partner that challenges their assumptions, remembers everything they’ve produced, and becomes an always-on collaborator for new ideas, product invention, and critical thinking. At Category Pirates, for example, their internal “Lucy” AI has become the sharpest mind on their team: always ready to spark new value, and even surpassing the domain expertise of its human creators in key areas. From Execution Labor to Creator Capitalists: The New Career Divide This transformation signals a far deeper change in the job market. The traditional divide of technical versus non-technical roles, or employed versus unemployed, is becoming less relevant. Instead, the real split now is between execution labor and creator capitalists. AI is driving the cost of accessing knowledge and automating rote tasks toward zero. Execution labor (those who focus on applying known inputs to familiar problems) can use AI to go faster but are still replaceable. In contrast, creator capitalists use AI to design new futures, develop judgment, and build intellectual capital that compounds over time. The LinkedIn and Lenny data make it clear: career value is migrating from mere knowledge and execution to originating new insight and value. The people outpacing the pack aren’t simply working harder or faster. They’ve redrawn the boundaries of their roles, shifted from employee to owner in mindset, and made AI their partner in creation, decision-making, and value extraction. The future belongs to those who build and train their own custom AIs, transforming themselves into categories of one, and compounding their expertise every single day. If you want to move from knowledge worker to creator capitalist, and from user to AI collaborator, the playbook is already available and the evidence is hiding in plain sight. The choice is yours: stick with generic tools and returns, or invent the future side by side with your own AI ...
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    • 418 Frontline Diplomacy: Israel’s Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Sharren Haskel on Iran, Gaza, and Hope for the Region
      Jan 14 2026
      On this episode of Christopher Lochhead: Follow Your Different, Israeli Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs Sharren Haskel joins us to discuss the rapidly evolving regional dynamics, the impact of October 7th, and the broader implications for Western democracies facing the challenges posed by radical ideologies and political inaction. You’re listening to Christopher Lochhead: Follow Your Different. We are the real dialogue podcast for people with a different mind. So get your mind in a different place, and hey ho, let’s go. Sharren Haskel on the Rising Extremism and Western Political Paralysis Deputy Minister Haskel’s personal story and her reflections on recent attacks in places like Australia, the UK, and across Europe, reveal a growing concern about the unchecked rise of extremism and anti-Semitism in historically tolerant Western societies. Drawing on her years in Australia and the tragedy at Bondi Beach, Haskel expressed her deep shock and frustration over the persistent inaction by local governments in the face of escalating hate crimes against Jewish communities. According to Haskel, the roots of this problem go far beyond foreign policy. She attributes much of the inaction to internal politics and the pursuit of re-election, wherein politicians seek to appease immigrant communities that often arrive with deeply ingrained cultural prejudices, including anti-Semitism, from the Middle East. She criticized governments in Australia, Canada, and the UK for failing to enforce clear boundaries against hate speech and violent incitement. Instead, she argued, there has been a pattern of rhetorical condemnation without concrete protective measures, resulting in what she described as an environment where radicalization can flourish unchecked and Jewish communities are left vulnerable. The October 7th Attack and Israel’s Existential Resolve The conversation turned to the profound impact of October 7th, 2025, an event described as the largest and most brutal attack on Jews since the Holocaust. Haskel recounted the collective mourning and soul-searching that swept Israel, as well as a wave of determination to prevent such atrocities from ever happening again. For Haskel and many Israelis, the attack was not only an unspeakable tragedy but also a moment of disappointment in their generation’s promise to uphold the creed of “never again.” Yet, from the aftermath of horror emerged a powerful sense of resolve. Lochhead remarked that Israel appeared stronger after the attack, not weaker. Haskel recounted how, rather than fleeing, tens of thousands of Israelis and Jews from around the world returned to the country to support its defense. She described this as a pivotal moment, a ‘make it or break it’ scenario in which Israel had to repel attacks from multiple fronts—Hamas, Hezbollah, and hostile forces backed by Iran from Syria, Iraq, and Yemen. The attacks were not only aimed at Jews but also targeted Christians, Muslims, and citizens from various nations, further underscoring the broader threat posed by radical groups. Iran’s Uprising and the Global Stakes for Freedom As the Iranian regime confronted an unprecedented uprising (sparked by years of repression, economic hardship, and the regime’s violent response), international attention intensified. Haskel spoke of thousands of Iranians killed or missing, the regime shutting down the internet, and the desperate situation faced by protesters, many of whom were being shot or abducted in broad daylight. Despite threats from Tehran aimed at both Israel and the United States, the Israeli government has maintained a cautious but attentive stance, recognizing both the risks and opportunities presented by the unrest. For Haskel, the Iranian regime stands as the foremost threat to global freedom, having long exported terror and repression while suppressing its own people. She called for solidarity among all who value democracy, emphasizing that the fall of the regime would be a victory for human rights, women’s rights, and the pursuit of liberty everywhere. Despite the cautious approach taken by Israel and its allies, she noted that the most vital pressure must come from within Iran, recalling the historic example of the Shah, who fled under international but primarily popular pressure. The world now stands on the verge of profound change, as old certainties crumble and new alliances and realities emerge. Haskel’s message for Iran’s protesters was clear: though international support matters, lasting liberation rests on the courage and resilience of the Iranian people themselves. The lesson for the broader international community is that the defense of freedom requires vigilance, unity, and unflinching resolve, both against external enemies and the creeping dangers within democratic societies. As the fate of the Iranian uprising, and indeed the region, hangs in the balance, the stakes extend far beyond the Middle East. The choices made...
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