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- 🇮🇹IT · Business#1921K to 10K
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500 to 5K🎙 ~2x weekly·178 episodes·Last published yesterday - Monthly Reach
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1K to 10K🇮🇹100% - Active Followers
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Recent episodes
Zach Mercurio: Why People Need to Feel They Matter at Work
Jun 26, 2026
Eric Ries: Why Most Companies Are Built to Fail
Jun 12, 2026
Shawn Achor: The Power of Belief and the Hidden Architecture of Human Performance
May 29, 2026
Gillian Sandstrom: How Talking to Strangers Boosts Well-Being and Leadership Impact
May 15, 2026
Julianne Holt-Lunstad: Connection Is the Most Powerful Tool Leaders Are Ignoring
May 1, 2026
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| Date | Episode | Topics | Guests | Brands | Places | Keywords | Sponsor | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6/26/26 | ![]() Zach Mercurio: Why People Need to Feel They Matter at Work | What if one of the greatest threats to employee well-being isn’t workload, stress or even burnout— but the growing feeling that people simply do not matter where they work? That is the premise behind The Power of Mattering by Zach Mercurio, and the foundation of this compelling conversation about leadership, human significance, and the emotional realities of modern work. At a time when nearly 60% of employees say their job is negatively affecting their mental health, Zach argues that organizations are overlooking one of the most fundamental human needs: feeling valued by others and knowing we add value to others. In other words, people need to know they matter. The discussion explores why loneliness at work is less about physical isolation and more about feeling unseen, unheard, and ultimately insignificant — and why treating people as interchangeable or disposable quietly undermines emotional well-being, trust, commitment, and performance. Throughout the conversation, Mercurio argues that cultures where people feel noticed, affirmed, and needed are the very cultures where people thrive and organizations perform at their best. The interview also examines how many workplaces unintentionally create what could be called a “crisis of disposability,” where employees increasingly feel replaceable rather than essential. Many of the solutions Mercurio discusses will feel familiar to longtime listeners of the podcast because themes like belonging, emotional connection, recognition, empathy, and genuinely caring for people have been central to these conversations from the very beginning — and are core ideas presented in Lead From The Heart and The Power of Employee Well-Being. But this episode goes deeper into the specific concept of mattering itself — what it means, why it affects mental health so profoundly, and how leaders can intentionally create environments where people feel significant. Grounded in research yet deeply human, this conversation ultimately asks leaders to reconsider what their role truly is. Perhaps leadership is not primarily about managing performance at all. Perhaps it is about making people feel they’re essential — because when human beings feel that they matter, healthier cultures and better results naturally follow. The post Zach Mercurio: Why People Need to Feel They Matter at Work appeared first on Mark C. Crowley. | — | ||||||
| 6/12/26 | ![]() Eric Ries: Why Most Companies Are Built to Fail✨ | organizational successemployee well-being+4 | Eric Ries | 3MPrice Club+3 | — | business ethicsemployee care+4 | — | — | |
| 5/29/26 | ![]() Shawn Achor: The Power of Belief and the Hidden Architecture of Human Performance✨ | beliefshuman performance+4 | Shawn Achor | The Happiness AdvantageThe Power of Belief+1 | — | beliefshuman performance+5 | — | — | |
| 5/15/26 | ![]() Gillian Sandstrom: How Talking to Strangers Boosts Well-Being and Leadership Impact✨ | human connectionleadership+4 | Dr. Gillian Sandstrom | University of SussexOnce Upon a Stranger: The Science of How Small Talk Can Add Up To a Big Life | — | micro-social interactionsanxiety reduction+3 | — | — | |
| 5/1/26 | ![]() Julianne Holt-Lunstad: Connection Is the Most Powerful Tool Leaders Are Ignoring✨ | employee well-beinghuman connection+4 | Julianne Holt-Lunstad | Brigham Young UniversitySocial Connection & Health Lab+1 | America | disconnectionburnout+5 | — | — | |
| 4/17/26 | ![]() Frank Giampietro: How EY’s Chief Well-Being Officer Drives Impact✨ | employee well-beingC-suite leadership+4 | Frank Giampietro | Ernst Young (EY) | — | well-beingC-suite+6 | — | — | |
| 4/3/26 | ![]() Jen Fisher: Leading With Hope And Well-Being✨ | workplace well-beinghuman-centered leadership+5 | Jen Fisher | Deloitte USHope IS The Strategy | — | workplace well-beinghuman-centered leadership+5 | — | 34m 29s | |
| 3/23/26 | ![]() Joshua Freedman: The Secret Power Leaders Ignore✨ | emotional intelligenceleadership+3 | Joshua Freedman | Inc. MagazineEmotion Rules: The Science and Practice of Emotional Wisdom | — | emotional intelligenceleadership+3 | — | — | |
| 3/6/26 | ![]() Daniel Coyle: How Leaders Create The Conditions For Flourishing✨ | human flourishingemployee well-being+4 | Daniel Coyle | Flourish: The Art of Building Meaning, Joy, and FulfillmentThe Culture Code | — | flourishingleadership+5 | — | — | |
| 2/20/26 | ![]() Phil Le-Brun & Jana Werner: How Organizations Thrive When They Have Three Hearts✨ | organizational behaviorleadership+3 | Phil Le BrunJana Werner | Amazon Web ServicesThe Octopus Organization: A Guide to Thriving in a World of Continuous Transformation+1 | — | Octopus organizationsTin Man organizations+3 | — | — | |
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| 2/6/26 | ![]() David Van Adelsberg: Why Wall Street Is Betting on Employee Well-Being✨ | employee well-beingbusiness performance+3 | David Van Adelsberg | Irrational Capital | — | employee well-beingbusiness performance+5 | — | — | |
| 2/5/26 | ![]() Mark C. Crowley: The Next Era Of The Lead From The Heart Podcast! | Due to a technical problem with Apple Podcasts, we had to reissue this episode to ensure all subscribers received it. Sorry if it’s a duplicate for some. For only the second time since launching the Lead From The Heart podcast eight years ago, Mark is opening a new season by speaking directly to you—without a guest. In 2018, Mark used the very first episode to introduce himself and his mission for the show. As this new season begins, he felt it was important to pause again, reflect, and—once more—clearly frame the context for what lies ahead. Over the past seven years, the podcast has featured 170 remarkable guests—CEOs, researchers, academics, and thinkers whose work helped shape and advance a leadership philosophy that was once considered unconventional. What began as a challenge to traditional management thinking has steadily become part of the mainstream conversation about leadership, performance, and culture. Today, many of Mark’s ideas that once provoked debate—or even ridicule—are no longer contested. In this solo episode, Mark revisits why he created the podcast, what it set out to influence, and how the leadership landscape has changed since it began. As you’ll hear, Season 8 marks an important inflection point. Mark introduces a new dimension he’s adding to the show—one designed to keep the podcast vital and relevant while aligning it more closely with the moment leaders now find themselves in. Just before the new year, Mark published an article in Fast Company outlining why he believes employee well-being is poised to become a true business priority. In this episode, he expands on that thinking and explains how the podcast will support leaders navigating what comes next. The post Mark C. Crowley: The Next Era Of The Lead From The Heart Podcast! appeared first on Mark C. Crowley. | — | ||||||
| 2/2/26 | ![]() Mark C. Crowley: The Future Of The Lead From The Heart Podcast | For only the second time since launching the Lead From The Heart podcast in 2018, Mark is opening a new season by speaking directly to you—without a guest. Eight years ago, Mark used the very first episode to introduce himself and his mission for the show. As this new season begins, he felt it was important to pause again, reflect, and—once more—clearly frame the context for what lies ahead. Over the past seven years, the podcast has featured 170 remarkable guests—CEOs, researchers, academics, and thinkers whose work helped shape and advance a leadership philosophy that was once considered unconventional. What began as a challenge to traditional management thinking has steadily become part of the mainstream conversation about leadership, performance, and culture. Today, many of Mark’s ideas that once provoked debate—or even ridicule—are no longer contested. In this solo episode, Mark revisits why he created the podcast, what it set out to influence, and how the leadership landscape has changed since it began. As you’ll hear, Season 8 marks an important inflection point. Mark introduces a new dimension he’s adding to the show—one designed to keep the podcast vital and relevant while aligning it more closely with the moment leaders now find themselves in. Just before the new year, Mark published an article in Fast Company outlining why he believes employee well-being is poised to become a true business priority. In this episode, he expands on that thinking and explains how the podcast will support leaders navigating what comes next. The post Mark C. Crowley: The Future Of The Lead From The Heart Podcast appeared first on Mark C. Crowley. | — | ||||||
| 11/14/25 | ![]() Margaret Andrews: Why Leading Others Begins with Understanding Yourself | The first chapter of my new book, The Power of Employee Well-Being is titled Know Thyself—and for good reason. I’ve long believed that the most important work a leader can do begins inward, with deeply understanding who you are, how you show up, and the patterns that shape your behavior. That’s exactly what Margaret Andrews explores in Manage Yourself to Lead Others. Leadership, she argues, isn’t about talent, technical skill, or even hard work alone. Those things matter, but they aren’t enough. Sustainable, effective leadership starts with self-awareness—the willingness to examine the experiences, influences, and assumptions that shape your decisions and relationships. It’s the foundation that allows you to manage yourself, work effectively with your team, navigate your relationship with your boss, and make better choices under pressure. Margaret draws on decades of experience teaching executives at Harvard to show how this self-understanding translates into practical leadership. In the book, she invites readers to reflect on the leader they are now, the leader they want to become, and the gaps that stand in the way. She explores the blind spots that derail leaders, the relational skills that often outweigh technical ability, and the ways composure and authenticity separate the most capable leaders from the rest. In our conversation, we discuss why interpersonal skills continue to be undervalued in leadership development, how leaders can begin the work of self-assessment today, and the subtle ways self-awareness transforms how we influence, support, and collaborate with others. Whether you’ve just taken on a leadership role or have been leading for decades, this episode is a reminder that the work of leadership is never just outward. It starts with curiosity, honesty, and the real courage to confront what you may not yet fully see about yourself. Margaret’s insights offer a roadmap to that work—and a simple but powerful challenge: to lead others, first understand yourself. The post Margaret Andrews: Why Leading Others Begins with Understanding Yourself appeared first on Mark C. Crowley. | — | ||||||
| 11/7/25 | ![]() Mark Thompson — The #1 Coach to CEOs Prepares Leaders for Their Next Opportunity | Mark Thompson is widely recognized as the world’s #1 CEO coach, bringing more than 30 years of experience preparing top executives and boards — from global corporations to fast-growing startups — to step confidently into their next leadership roles. As founding Chairman of the Chief Executive Alliance and former Chief Experience Officer at Charles Schwab Corporation, he has guided leaders through high-stakes challenges, career transitions, and moments that define organizational success. Few guests bring the depth of operating experience, boardroom insight, and leadership wisdom that Mark does, making this conversation a rare opportunity for any leader seeking to grow. High performance alone is not enough to secure the promotion you deserve — and Mark knows it. He helps leaders prepare in ways they often don’t realize matter: building the confidence of decision-makers, developing influence without self-promotion, uncovering blind spots, and cultivating leadership agility. In this discussion, he shares practical strategies to navigate these subtleties so leaders are ready when opportunity knocks. We also explore lessons from his new book, CEO Ready: What You Need to Know to Earn the Job and Keep the Job, which offers an actionable roadmap for leaders at every level. Whether you aspire to the corner office or want to lead more effectively today, Mark’s insights reveal the often-overlooked factors that determine who rises and who stalls — and how to position yourself to succeed. Mark goes deeper into the human side of leadership, showing how emotions, relationships, and self-awareness shape career growth and organizational impact. He offers guidance on building trust, earning respect, creating cultures where people feel seen and motivated, and addressing challenges like impostor syndrome before they derail your progress. Finally, Mark shares lessons few leaders ever get the chance to hear directly from someone with his experience: how to reinvent yourself proactively, stay agile, and elevate your leadership so you’re not only prepared for promotion but also ready to excel once you get there. This is a conversation packed with rare insight, practical strategies, and wisdom you can apply immediately — one you’ll want to listen to all the way through. The post Mark Thompson — The #1 Coach to CEOs Prepares Leaders for Their Next Opportunity appeared first on Mark C. Crowley. | — | ||||||
| 10/24/25 | ![]() Jon Rosemberg: How To Break Out Of Survival Mode — And Start Thriving | Have you ever noticed how many people — even highly successful leaders — live in constant overdrive? They’re productive, disciplined, and always “on,” but inside, they’re exhausted. That’s survival mode — and according to Jon Rosemberg, author of A Guide to Thriving: The Science Behind Breaking Old Patterns, Reclaiming Your Agency, and Finding Meaning, it’s where far too many of us spend our days. In our conversation with Jon, he shows that survival mode isn’t just about burnout — it’s about a deeper disconnection from calm, choice, and purpose. We get stuck reacting to life instead of truly living it. While it can look like high performance on the outside, it quietly erodes creativity, well-being, and authentic leadership. In this conversation, Jon explains: Why high achievers are especially prone to it — and why it often feels “normal” How to recognize the subtle signs that you’re no longer thriving How to reclaim your agency and live with greater energy, clarity, and meaning How leaders can create cultures where people feel safe, inspired, and fully alive at work Jon also introduces his highly adoptable “AIR model” — Awareness, Inquiry, and Reframing — a set of tools to help you move from autopilot to intention, from surviving to thriving. We discuss this at length. At its core, thriving isn’t about having easy days. It’s about learning to meet challenges with grounded confidence, to respond rather than react, and to cultivate environments where people can flourish. If you’ve ever felt like you’re running on autopilot — or want to help your team move beyond stress and into sustainable performance — this episode offers both insight and hope. Listen now to learn how to shift from surviving to thriving — in your leadership, and in your life. The post Jon Rosemberg: How To Break Out Of Survival Mode — And Start Thriving appeared first on Mark C. Crowley. | — | ||||||
| 10/17/25 | ![]() Muriel Wilkins: Breaking Through the Hidden Beliefs That Hold Leaders Back | Why Do Smart, Capable Leaders So Often Get In Their Own Way? Muriel M. Wilkins — executive coach, host of the Harvard Business Review podcast Coaching Real Leaders, and author of the brilliant new book Leadership Unblocked: Break Through the Beliefs That Limit Your Potential — has spent her career helping senior leaders uncover the invisible beliefs that quietly sabotage their effectiveness. In this episode, Muriel joins me to explore what she calls hidden blockers — seven deeply ingrained mindsets that cause leaders to overcontrol, overwork, or second-guess themselves. These blockers sound deceptively simple — “I need to be involved in every detail,” “I need it done now, no matter what,” “I know I’m right,” and “I don’t belong here” — but they drive some of the most common leadership breakdowns we see today. Muriel shares how her own leadership struggles early in her career — and one pivotal question from her partner, “Did you ever think maybe the problem is you?” — led her to uncover the truth that changed everything: the biggest obstacles to our leadership rarely come from others; they come from within ourselves. Together, we dive into: Why it’s so hard for leaders to see that we might be the problem How the need for control and speed quietly destroys trust and engagement Why certainty can masquerade as confidence — and how to lead with curiosity instead How even the most accomplished leaders can secretly feel like outsiders, a belief closely tied to impostor syndrome, and what to do about it The single underlying fear that fuels all these hidden blockers If you’ve ever wondered why you keep repeating the same patterns — or why leading sometimes feels harder than it should — this conversation will help you see what’s really been standing in your way. Muriel’s insights are both deeply human and immediately actionable. You’ll walk away seeing leadership — and yourself — through a whole new lens, with practical tools to unstick the hidden beliefs that have been holding you back. The post Muriel Wilkins: Breaking Through the Hidden Beliefs That Hold Leaders Back appeared first on Mark C. Crowley. | — | ||||||
| 10/10/25 | ![]() Colin Fisher: Why Teams, Not Stars, Create Lasting Success | The core message of Colin M. Fisher’s new book, The Collective Edge: Unlocking the Secret Power of Groups, is simple but profound: we dramatically overestimate the role of individuals in success and underestimate the extraordinary power of groups. History celebrates “great men” like Edison, Jobs, and Musk, but the truth is that real breakthroughs nearly always come from teams—groups that learn how to cooperate effectively, stick together, and build upon one another’s strengths. Too often, workplace managers mirror this cultural bias becoming infatuated with star performers. They lavish praise and resources on individuals, hoping one person’s brilliance will carry the whole. But as Colin makes clear, the true competitive advantage lies in developing cohesive, resilient teams. A star may dazzle for a while, but groups that collaborate well produce enduring results—driving innovation, loyalty, and resilience that no single person can deliver on their own. Colin argues that our obsession with individual genius has left workplaces fractured and often mismanaged. And when leaders cling to fear-based tactics—believing pressure and intimidation will push people to perform—they undermine the very conditions groups need to excel. Negative experiences weigh five times more heavily on the human brain than positive ones. They consume energy, erode trust, and ensure people take fewer risks. Fear creates compliance, at best, but never the creativity, loyalty, or innovation required for long-term success. Our conversation zeroed in on what makes groups thrive. Loyalty, belonging, and well-being aren’t “soft” ideas (as our podcast audience knows very well); they are competitive advantages. Teams that stay together outperform those plagued by turnover. Organizations that invest in caring for people not only attract and retain talent but also become more adaptable in times of disruption. Colin’s research powerfully confirms what many of us already know: well-being is not separate from performance—it’s the fuel that allows groups to commit fully, collaborate deeply, and sustain high achievement over time. Colin’s research also reveals that truly effective cooperation requires more than just hitting goals—it demands that members feel satisfied enough to remain personally committed. That’s why enduring teams, like the Rolling Stones, last for decades: they balance performance with the relational glue that keeps people engaged. We also explored some of Colin’s most compelling insights for leaders not previously heard with past guests. In a world increasingly divided and polarized, Colin’s work is a reminder that our greatest strength comes not from going it alone, or idolizing lone stars, but from rediscovering the collective edge—unlocking the trust, creativity, resilience, and well-being that only groups can deliver. The post Colin Fisher: Why Teams, Not Stars, Create Lasting Success appeared first on Mark C. Crowley. | — | ||||||
| 10/3/25 | ![]() Klaus Kleinfeld: A CEO Who Believes Well-Being Is the Real Edge in Leadership | Klaus Kleinfeld has lived one of the most extraordinary leadership journeys of our time. He’s the only executive ever to serve as CEO of two Fortune 500 giants on different continents—Siemens in Germany and Alcoa in the U.S.—and he’s advised presidents and global leaders around the world. What struck me most in speaking with Klaus isn’t just the scope of his career—it’s what he believes makes leadership truly sustainable. His new book, Leading to Thrive: Mastering Strategies for Sustainable Success in Business and Life, places enormous emphasis on what he calls the “Inner Game.” Unlike most leadership books written by CEOs, Klaus argues that the foundation of thriving organizations begins not with strategy or financial goals, but with the well-being of leaders themselves. By “Inner Game,” he means building and renewing energy across four dimensions—physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual. He challenges the widely held belief that business success must come first, and that well-being can only follow later. To Klaus, that logic is upside down. Ignoring one’s inner life, he says, inevitably leads to burnout, stress, broken relationships, and declining performance. The healthier and more energized we are, the more sustainable our leadership becomes—and the more we elevate the people around us. In our conversation, we explore how Klaus personally integrated these practices while leading global corporations, and how his philosophy flowed through his organizations. We also talk about the unusual influences behind his leadership—drawing inspiration from timeless wisdom traditions and even the philosophy of memento mori (“remember you must die”) as a reminder to live and lead with perspective. One of the most powerful themes in our discussion is Klaus’s conviction that love belongs in leadership. He writes that “few energy forces are as potent and transformative as love”—and we talk about how he expressed that through kindness, care, and support for his teams at Siemens and Alcoa. This is a rare conversation with a major CEO who openly believes that leadership must be rooted in well-being—not only for ourselves, but for our employees. Klaus Kleinfeld shows us that thriving leaders create thriving organizations. The post Klaus Kleinfeld: A CEO Who Believes Well-Being Is the Real Edge in Leadership appeared first on Mark C. Crowley. | — | ||||||
| 9/26/25 | ![]() Laurie Santos: Yale’s Star Professor Brings the Science of Happiness & Well-Being to Work | Laurie Santos is one of the world’s leading voices on the science of happiness and well-being. She’s a psychology professor at Yale University, where her course Psychology and the Good Life became the most popular class in Yale’s 300-year history. So many students enrolled that the university had to move it to a concert hall to accommodate the crowds. Building on that success, Laurie created the online version—The Science of Well-Being—which has now been taken by millions worldwide, making her one of the most influential teachers on happiness anywhere. But Laurie’s work reaches far beyond the classroom. She hosts The Happiness Lab podcast, downloaded tens of millions of times, where she translates the latest scientific discoveries about human flourishing into insights anyone can use. Her ability to take rigorous research—whether from psychology, behavioral science, or neuroscience—and make it deeply practical is what has made her a global thought leader. What she’s uncovered challenges some of our most deeply held assumptions. Laurie shows that the things we chase—money, promotions, material success—aren’t nearly as powerful as we think. Instead, small intentional practices like gratitude, social connection, exercise, and sleep have profound effects on our happiness and resilience. These findings are not just personally transformative; they have enormous implications for leaders and workplaces. At a time when stress, burnout, and disconnection are at record highs, Laurie’s research is a wake-up call. She helps leaders see the blind spots that keep employees from thriving, and she offers evidence-based strategies for creating cultures of well-being that fuel both human and organizational performance. Her insights cut through outdated engagement metrics and show what really makes people flourish at work and in life. This is a remarkable and powerfully insightful conversation that no leader, manager, or professional should miss. Laurie brings both the science and the practical wisdom to help us understand what truly drives human happiness—and why supporting employee well-being is one of the most important investments any organization can make. The post Laurie Santos: Yale’s Star Professor Brings the Science of Happiness & Well-Being to Work appeared first on Mark C. Crowley. | — | ||||||
| 9/19/25 | ![]() Amy Gilliland: A CEO Who Puts Employee Well-Being at the Center of Success | For the second half of this podcast season, we’ve been focused on employee well-being—why it matters, how to foster it, and what happens when leaders fail to take it seriously. Our new guest, Amy Gilliland, shows what it looks like when a CEO makes well-being a true priority, not a mere slogan. Amy is president of General Dynamics Information Technology (GDIT), a $9 billion global technology enterprise with 28,000 employees. Under her leadership, GDIT has achieved four straight years of revenue growth, a 27% increase in operating earnings, and a record $15.4 billion in contract awards in 2024. What makes her stand out isn’t only the results, but how she’s achieved them. Amy believes compassion and performance go hand in hand. She has been a visible advocate for employee well-being and mental health, launching GDIT’s groundbreaking “How Are You, Really?” campaign in 2021. This initiative opened conversations about mental health, reduced stigma, and ensured people know support is available. I’ve had the privilege of visiting and speaking at GDIT headquarters outside of Washington D.C., and seeing Amy in action. She’s the real deal, which is why I invited her on the show. In our conversation, we cover: Her leadership journey from the Naval Academy and Navy service to president of GDIT. The philosophy guiding her leadership of nearly 30,000 employees. Why companies must move beyond surveys and perks to embed mental, emotional, and social well-being into culture. How she’s overcome resistance, educated her team, and built practices that support employees while driving results. The ways she captures employee voices to evolve wellness initiatives. Too often, CEOs treat well-being as a nice-to-have while pushing employees to meet goals at any cost. Amy has shown that when leaders make well-being essential to performance, the results are transformative. Amy delivers a compelling call for leaders everywhere—HR professionals, managers, and executives—to take meaningful action. Her message: when organizations invest in the health of their people, everyone wins. The post Amy Gilliland: A CEO Who Puts Employee Well-Being at the Center of Success appeared first on Mark C. Crowley. | — | ||||||
| 9/12/25 | ![]() Angela Jackson: What If Thriving Employees Were The Key To Thriving Companies? | That’s the groundbreaking case made by Dr. Angela Jackson, Harvard University professor and New York Times bestselling author of The Win-Win Workplace: How Thriving Employees Drive Bottom-Line Success. Angela’s journey is remarkable. After losing her mother at age four, she was raised by grandparents who grew up in the Jim Crow South and never advanced beyond sixth grade. Nonetheless, their resilience and determination gave Angela the foundation to earn a PhD, teach at Harvard, and become a leading voice for creating workplaces where people truly flourish. Drawing on research from over 1,200 organizations—from global giants like Walmart to small manufacturers—Angela demonstrates how the old zero-sum model of “wages for labor” is breaking down. In its place, she shows how win-win cultures—where employee well-being is prioritized alongside company performance—deliver superior results. In our conversation, Angela shares truly actionable strategies leaders can use right now: transforming manager mindsets, investing in overlooked employees, listening with intention, and boldly reshaping benefits so all workers feel valued. Her message is clear: the future of work is already shifting toward more humane, caring organizations—and leaders must be ready to meet the moment. A wonderfully inspiring conversation that proves the future of work is fully aligned with the longstanding themes of our show! The post Angela Jackson: What If Thriving Employees Were The Key To Thriving Companies? appeared first on Mark C. Crowley. | — | ||||||
| 9/4/25 | ![]() Nick Foster: What If Most Predictions About the Future Are Just Noise? | Nick Foster, former head of design at Google X — the “moonshot factory” — and author of Could, Should, Might, Don’t: How We Think About the Future, joins us to discuss his stunning conclusion that human beings are terrible at predicting the future, calling most forecasts “mostly nonsense.” For leaders, this insight is absolutely essential: we’re constantly asked to make or evaluate predictions that shape strategies, investments, and organizational futures. Foster’s book provides a vital framework to assess these pitches, helping leaders navigate the uncertainty of forecasts (whether making them or receiving them) with clarity and skepticism, avoiding costly missteps. Foster outlines four mindsets—Could, Should, Might, Don’t—that define how people generally pitch future outcomes. Each carries strengths but also huge traps that can derail effective decision-making: The “Could” mindset fuels bold visions, like Theranos’ claim of running hundreds of blood tests from a single drop. But unchecked optimism can obscure feasibility, leading to failures that leaders, swayed by hype, might miss. The “Should” mindset, as seen in Blockbuster’s focus on in-store rentals, aligns with identity but can blind leaders to disruptive shifts like streaming. The “Might” mindset relies on data, as Sears did before missing e-commerce, yet past trends can mislead when predicting new realities. The “Don’t” mindset, like Kodak’s resistance to digital photography, protects strengths but risks stagnation. Through stories from his career at Google, Dyson, and beyond, Foster reveals how these mindsets manifest in boardrooms and why they often fail. He equips leaders with tools to spot red flags—over-optimism in “Could” pitches, rigidity in “Should” arguments, outdated data in “Might” forecasts, or fear-driven “Don’t” resistance. Drawing from his time at Google’s X lab, where he asked “dumb questions” to unpack emerging tech, Foster urges non-technical leaders to embrace curiosity to challenge predictions without being swayed by charisma or budgets. Foster’s key takeaway? Leaders must approach predictions—whether their own or others’—with rigorous skepticism, using his framework to test ideas while staying open to change. Leaders must learn to challenge all predictions when tasked with making high-stakes decisions or evaluating pitches that could shape their organization’s future. This episode explores how to navigate uncertainty, avoid flawed forecasts, and make smarter choices in a prediction-obsessed world, offering a clear-eyed guide for leaders steering businesses or personal goals. The post Nick Foster: What If Most Predictions About the Future Are Just Noise? appeared first on Mark C. Crowley. | — | ||||||
| 8/29/25 | ![]() Mita Mallick: Bad Bosses Have Much To Teach Us | What’s worse than a boss who emails you at midnight, demanding instant replies? How about one who calls you “Mohammed” instead of your real name, Madhumita, or another who expects you to dive back into work just days after your father’s sudden death. Wall Street Journal and USA Today bestselling author, Mita Mallick has faced these and 10 other toxic manager archetypes in her career, and brings them all to life in her new book, “The Devil Emails at Midnight: What Leaders Can Learn from Bad Bosses.” As former Head of Inclusion, Equity, and Impact at Carta and Head of Diversity & Inclusion at Unilever, Mita joins our podcast with hard-earned lessons drawn from navigating a gauntlet of workplace dysfunction. Her stories are both stupefying and instructive, from bosses who ruled by fear to those whose micromanaging stifled creativity. During our conversation, I ask Mita whether we learn more from our worst bosses or our best?” One thing for certain is that too many workplace managers are blind to the behaviors that undermine trust, make people feel disrespected — and even quit because they are so undermining. Hearing Mita’s stories is amusing, but they also teach us about building stronger, more inclusive teams. Mita exposes why toxic behaviors like bullying (1 in 2 workers has faced or witnessed it) or relentless email barrages take root in organizations. She unpacks the most damaging archetypes and why companies tolerate them, offering leaders strategies to replace chaos with cultures of respect and collaboration. It should be obvious that no one wants to respond to emails at midnight, but to many a leader, apparently it isn’t. The post Mita Mallick: Bad Bosses Have Much To Teach Us appeared first on Mark C. Crowley. | — | ||||||
| 8/22/25 | ![]() Urs Koenig: Humility Is Leadership’s Secret Weapon | In this thought-provoking episode, we sit down with Urs Koenig, author of “Radical Humility: Be A Badass Leader And A Good Human,” to explore leadership through a lens of selflessness and authenticity. Drawing from his experience as a peacekeeping mission commander in Kosovo, Urs shares surprising insights on leading in high-stakes environments, revealing how humility shaped his approach in ways that challenge conventional leadership norms. Few could argue that humility is a great strength in workplace leadership – and it’s a core value across all major world religions. One question we ask Urs is why humility is too often missing in leadership –subsumed by the ego-driven leadership style so prevalent in business today? In our conversation, Urs highlights key research, including a University of Washington study which underscores humility’s profound impact on effective leadership. He also discusses a study from the book, Humbitious on how encouraging deep relationships between co-workers not only fosters greater connection, but also builds stronger, more cohesive teams. We also question Urs on whether the current leadership selection paradigm needs an overhaul (we advocate for choosing people for leadership roles who prioritize genuine care to create more humane workplaces). Urs dares us to imagine a world where radical humility redefines leadership, and we ask if this is possible in our ego-driven world? The post Urs Koenig: Humility Is Leadership’s Secret Weapon appeared first on Mark C. Crowley. | — | ||||||
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