Épisodes

  • Six Weeks To Better Leadership Habits
    Feb 18 2026

    Ever notice how fast “great” shows up in status updates—and how little it explains? We dig into the quiet habits that separate busy leaders from effective ones, starting with a bold experiment: give up being right for six weeks. Instead of supplying answers, we practice staying curious longer, asking for specifics, and creating short pockets of headspace that sharpen judgment and reduce reactivity.

    We share simple scripts to turn shallow check-ins into real conversations: What does great mean? What changed since last week? What risk remains? What help do you need? When you pair those questions with the intent to support rather than to catch, teams lean in, own their choices, and surface issues early. We also confront the comfort of platitudes—those political-sounding lines that soothe without informing—and replace them with concrete tradeoffs, timelines, and metrics that actually steer work.

    You’ll hear personal stories of parenting language, leadership missteps, and the surprising power of seven quiet minutes in a parked car. We map a practical six-week challenge: remove one answer you’d usually give, add one probing follow-up to every 1:1, block ten minutes of thinking time each day, and ban “it was great” unless it comes with evidence, decision, and next step. The payoff is real capacity growth without extra headcount—clearer ownership, fewer surprises, and faster iteration driven by the people closest to the work.

    If this sparks a change in how you lead, share it with a manager who needs less control and more curiosity. Subscribe for more practical leadership playbooks, and drop a review telling us what you think leaders should give up next.

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    18 min
  • Create For Meaning, Not Hype
    Feb 11 2026

    Stuck between “I could write a book” and an actual manuscript? We unpack the messy middle with a candid look at purpose, process, and the practical moves that turn ideas into finished pages. From the spark that pushes you to write to the systems that keep you going, we share what truly matters when the goal is to publish work you’re proud of.

    We start by interrogating motivation: legacy, learning, credibility, or pure creativity. That clarity sets your scope, shapes your voice, and protects you from chasing vanity metrics or empty trends. Then we get tactical—choosing the right format for your stage, whether it’s a single ebook chapter, a series of blog posts, or a full-length manuscript. You’ll hear how outlines, freewriting sprints, and strict time blocks help overcome perfectionism, and why early feedback from the right readers beats late-stage panic edits. We talk openly about editors, critique groups, and accountability cohorts that hold you to weekly word counts and turn “someday” into scheduled work.

    Money myths get a reality check. A book rarely showers you with instant cash, but it can pay off through reputation, speaking, workshops, and new clients. We also dig into tools: dictation for talkers, distraction blockers for focus, and AI for structure and clarity—with frank guidance on ethics and disclosure now required by major platforms. Along the way, we share a first-draft story that proves momentum starts with one strong chapter and grows with honest feedback, patience, and persistence.

    If you’ve been waiting for permission, this is your nudge. Pick a purpose you can defend, choose a format you can finish, and guard time like your book depends on it—because it does. Subscribe, share this with a friend who keeps saying “I should write,” and leave a review telling us your next concrete step.

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    12 min
  • Who Helped You: A Leader’s Most Powerful Question
    Feb 4 2026

    The quickest way to change a team’s culture might be just four words: Who helped you? We dug into this deceptively simple question and uncovered how it disarms ego, turns success into a teachable process, and brings unseen contributors into the light. Instead of celebrating lone heroes, we trace the gratitude chain behind real wins, from mentors and managers to the people who polish details and keep systems stable.

    We share concrete stories: closing big deals that leaned on old lessons and recent coaching, operational wins made possible by coordinators who package submissions on time, and even everyday problem-solving shaped by the skills parents and teachers planted years ago. Along the way, we talk candidly about ego—why a little confidence energizes work, and how too much blocks feedback, hides dependencies, and eventually erodes performance. By shifting the spotlight with a simple question, leaders model humility, surface the true workflow, and make recognition part of the operating system.

    You’ll hear how to make this stick without fluff. Build quick prompts into weekly wins, ask presenters to name helpers and upstream influences, capture shoutouts where everyone can see them, and map the gratitude chain in project debriefs. We also unpack the dynamic between starters and finishers, and why sustainable excellence demands both vision and detail. If you want a team that learns faster, ships better, and feels seen, start asking “Who helped you?” and watch what changes.

    If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a leader who needs a nudge, and leave a review with your own gratitude chain—we’ll read our favorites on a future episode.

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    13 min
  • Leaders Who Delegate Grow Faster
    Jan 28 2026

    Ever notice how “I’ll just do it” feels efficient and heroic, right up until you’re answering emails at 10 p.m. and your team waits on you for every decision? We dig into the invisible costs of holding on and the practical steps that turn delegation from a guilt trip into a growth engine.

    We start by calling out the classic excuses leaders use to avoid asking for help and why those patterns create yes‑people instead of thinkers. Then we flip the script: as leaders, we own the learning curve. That means setting a reasonable timeline to competence, defining clear checkpoints, and offering feedback that’s specific and time‑bound. We share concrete signals to watch during onboarding, how to rotate trainers when style is the obstacle, and when it’s time to make the tough call if milestones keep slipping. Along the way, we challenge perfectionism with a question that frees up capacity: where is solid “good enough” the right standard for the outcome?

    From there, we offer a simple, high‑leverage audit to surface recurring tasks you can turn into systems. Track a few days of your real work, ask why each item had to be you, and decide who could own it next with the right tools or documentation. If no one can yet, make the next pass a teaching moment: shadow me, do it with me, do it while I watch, then you own it. This laddered handoff transforms delegation into a repeatable process that develops people while protecting quality. The payoff is a team that thinks, decides, and delivers without waiting for your inbox to clear.

    If you’re ready to stop being the bottleneck and start being a multiplier, this conversation gives you the framework, language, and first steps to get moving. Subscribe for more practical leadership coaching, share this with a manager who needs it, and leave a review with one task you’ll delegate this week.

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    27 min
  • Turning Feedback Into Growth Without Fear
    26 min
  • How Great Coworkers Step Up, Speak Up, And Grow Together
    Jan 14 2026

    What does a good coworker look like when the stakes are real, the calendar is packed, and life crashes through the door? We share the story of a year that stripped leadership down to the studs and revealed a team stronger than anyone realized. When personal loss shook the top, our crew didn’t freeze—they stepped in, made decisions, and carried the load without keeping score. That experience reframed how we think about support, accountability, and the space leaders must create for others to grow.

    We dig into a practical playbook for everyday teamwork. First, act when you see a need, even if it’s “not your job.” That see something, do something mindset compounds into a culture of ownership. Then, speak up with hard truths in a soft way. Don’t triangulate; go direct. We talk through scripts, timing, and tone so feedback feels like maintenance, not warfare. Civility matters, especially when the default is blame and name calling. And timing matters even more—address issues early, before resentment builds and voices rise.

    We also unpack the other side of feedback: receiving it. Most workplaces reward defensiveness and perfection theater. We want the opposite. Curiosity, clear asks, and next steps create momentum and trust. Leaders have a special role here: stay small longer so the team can get big. It’s uncomfortable, but it’s the fastest route to discovering hidden capacity and building resilience that lasts beyond any one person. If you’re ready to cultivate coworkers who are co-builders, not bystanders, this conversation gives you the language, habits, and mindset to start today.

    If this resonated, follow the show, share it with a teammate who needs it, and leave a quick review so others can find it. What’s one hard truth you’ll say softly this week?

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    25 min
  • Commitments, Calendars, And Keeping Promises To Yourself
    Jan 7 2026

    New year, clear eyes. We open the door to 2026 by examining what 2025 really taught us about promises, time, and the quiet habits that make or break momentum. Instead of scoring our stop, start, continue pledges, we dig into what changed just by naming commitments out loud—and what didn’t change until we wrote them down, protected time, and owned the tradeoffs.

    We talk frankly about integrity and self-trust: when a “commitment” is just a wish, confidence leaks and imposter feelings grow. Shifting from corporate calendars to self-directed days didn’t magically fix that; freedom without design becomes drift. So we get practical about time ownership—guarding Mondays, blocking deep work, and leaving space to think—while staying accountable for outcomes. Autonomy doesn’t cancel delivery. You can decline a meeting and still ship the result, as long as you plan, communicate, and accept the consequences of your choices.

    The conversation gets real around morning routines, distraction, and the lure of “productive later.” We unpack how an hour of daily writing turned into a last-minute sprint to hit a book deadline, why compression carries a hidden tax, and how to rebuild with smaller starts, better environments, and visible commitments that stick. On the team side, we show how early asks, clear windows, and honest client expectations transform emergencies into scheduled work—and how to handle true fires without normalizing chaos.

    If you’re ready to treat your calendar like a promise and your promises like a path to real outcomes, this one’s for you. Subscribe for more practical growth conversations, share with a teammate who needs stronger boundaries, and leave a review to tell us the one promise you’re writing down today.

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    19 min
  • The Art of Saying No at Work
    Oct 1 2025

    Ever been handed “one more thing” and wondered whether pushing back would help you or haunt you? We dig into the real art of saying no at work—how to protect your bandwidth without damaging trust, and how to turn tense requests into clear decisions that move the right work forward. Along the way, we share the exact phrases that keep conversations calm, the questions that reveal hidden context, and the negotiation steps that map tradeoffs without sounding defensive.

    We start by separating core responsibilities from additive requests and unpack why that distinction changes your next move. If the work is core, we talk about ownership and execution; if it’s additive, we show you how to probe for intent—stretch assignment, urgent fire drill, or visibility play—so you can assess risk and reward. Then we dive into tone and power dynamics: with a boss, ask permission before offering alternatives; with peers, redirect or delay while still being helpful; with direct reports, be clear and candid so they can succeed. You’ll hear simple scripts like “Help me understand why this, why now, and why us,” “Where does this fit among A, B, and C?,” and “If we prioritize this, X slips two weeks—acceptable?”

    Expect practical tools you can use today: a fast mental checklist for on‑the‑spot decisions, ways to avoid over‑questioning that sounds like stonewalling, and a framework to document impacts so leaders can make informed calls. We also cover when a firm refusal is non‑negotiable—anything illegal, unethical, or harmful—and how to do that with professionalism. By the end, you’ll be able to choose among no, not yet, yes if, and yes—and know why each choice fits the moment.

    Afficher plus Afficher moins
    21 min