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Recent episodes
Clare Kitching: Make My Business Grow, How Can I Do This?
May 26, 2026
54m 11s
Nine Years, One Number
May 19, 2026
11m 03s
Pascal Uerlings: Good Thing, Bad Thing, Who Knows?
May 12, 2026
1h 08m 33s
The Chair's Dilemma: When the Board Becomes the Problem
May 8, 2026
9m 38s
Nick Hassett: The Problem Won't Be Solved by the Thinking That Created It
Apr 28, 2026
1h 04m 41s
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| Date | Episode | Description | Length | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5/26/26 | ![]() Clare Kitching: Make My Business Grow, How Can I Do This? | Most organisations now claim to be adopting artificial intelligence. Far fewer can describe what they are actually adopting it into. In this episode of On the Subject of Leadership, I speak with Clare Kitching, founder of Cambiq Consulting—formerly of McKinsey, QuantumBlack, and Treasury Wine Estates—about what responsible AI leadership actually requires in this country, at this moment.Clare's argument is organisational rather than technological: governance cannot exist as a paper exercise; shadow AI persists because employees do not know whether policies exist; and the genuinely strategic question—how do I grow my business—is precisely the question the technology cannot answer for you.TakeawaysThe institutional credibility leaders quietly outsource, and what is left when they leave.Why executives who have never logged in cannot lead AI adoption credibly.The difference between what clients say they want to know and what they are actually asking.The portfolio of productivity, growth, and reimagination—and why most organisations confuse the three.Curiosity as the distinguishing trait, regardless of age or education.The maintenance problem for which nobody planned.The team-level conversation that has yet to happen in most organisations.Chapters[00:00] Introduction[03:44] Welcome & opening question[04:37] Outsourcing your identity to the institution[07:36] Buzzwords versus business problems[10:24] What to unlearn from McKinsey[13:09] The executive who has never used AI[17:03] Just get started: the case for low-stakes entry[19:41] The best AI tool is the one you use[22:01] Chasing the bleeding edge: a waste of attention[24:25] Shopping for permission, or open to challenge?[26:54] No excuses: curiosity as the differentiating trait[29:27] It's not age, it's not education: the mindset argument[31:45] Curiosity, cognitive load, and burnout risk[33:11] AI as a brainstorming partner: the filtering problem[34:07] Productivity, growth, or reimagination: the portfolio question[36:42] You can't cut your way to success, even with AI[37:33] When to go for efficiency gains first[39:41] The question AI cannot answer: how to grow your business[41:03] Risk appetite, psychological safety, and where to start[42:07] Freeing up time: staff development as the upside[42:58] The three-month journey to meaningful adoption[45:51] AI is not set-and-forget: the maintenance problem[47:11] The bottom-up conversation: rank and file as drivers[49:17] Three bullet points versus three pages: the volume problem[50:53] Synthesis as a leadership discipline[52:38] Lightning round[54:03] CloseGuest Links & ReferencesClare KitchingCambiq ConsultingAbout the ShowOn the Subject of Leadership is a long-form interview series on governance, organisational culture, and the realities of decision-making — without slogans or motivational gloss.Hosted by Dr Robert N. Winter.Subscribe / FollowNewsletter / Website: robert.winter.inkLinkedIn: dr-robert-winterX: @DrRobertWinterInstagram: DrRobertWinterMastodon: social.winter.ink/@robertYouTube: @OnTheSubjectOfLeadershipCreditsRecorded remotely via RiversideMusic: The Hidden Thread by Roberto Prado / Artlist | 54m 11s | |
| 5/19/26 | ![]() Nine Years, One Number | A bonus release from the Inner Circle feed, made available to all listeners. Weekly article readings are normally reserved for Inner Circle members; this is the opening piece of a four-part series, opened more widely as a way in. The remaining three articles are available to read at robert.winter.ink or to hear on the Inner Circle's private podcast feed. Join the Inner Circle at robert.winter.inkFor nine consecutive years, three of the world's most influential research operations have surveyed thousands of executives on artificial intelligence. The technology has matured through three or four generational shifts. The proportion of organisations capturing real financial value from any of it has remained, with a stubbornness that is almost dignified, somewhere between five and twenty per cent. This article sets out the longitudinal evidence, names the half-lie that allows the contemporary conversation to ignore it, and previews the three pieces to follow.In This ArticleThe technology has changed enormously. The numbers have not. MIT and BCG in 2017 found that five per cent of companies had extensively incorporated AI; McKinsey in 2025 finds six per cent capturing meaningful EBIT impact. The proportion has moved within a narrow band for nearly a decade."AI is moving too fast for the surveys to be reliable" is the half-lie at the centre of the executive conversation. The technology is moving fast at the level of model capability. It is not moving fast at the level of enterprise value capture, which is the level a board needs to care about. The conflation provides cover for the executive who cannot deliver.Research for Governing Digital with Courage and Clarity surfaced an unusual pattern of anonymity. Contributors who saw the landscape clearly were happy to be named. Those insisting on the convenient lie — that the inconvenient findings were stale — would only speak unattributed.Trollope worked out the social mechanics 150 years ago. In The Way We Live Now (1875), Augustus Melmotte raises capital across London society for a railway that will never be built. The fraud is not in the prospectus. The fraud is in the dinner.These numbers are the empirical case for the saviour industrial complex thesis: the substitution of expensive acquisition and confident signalling for the patient development of organisational capacity.Three pieces follow this one. The Permanent Pilot examines why only a quarter of organisations have moved AI to production after nine years of trying. The Theatre of Transformation examines the gap between deep-transformation claims and the absence of job redesign. The Books That Don't Balance, reserved for Inner Circle members, ties the threads together with a six-question diagnostic for boards.A Thought With Which To SitThose who tell whole lies are merely concealing the truth. Those who tell half-lies have forgotten where they put it.Coming UpThe remaining three articles in the series are available to read on the site and to hear on the Inner Circle's private podcast feed. Subscribe via the Commons at robert.winter.ink for site access, or join the Inner Circle for the audio.Further ReadingTrollope, A. — The Way We Live Now (1875).Ransbotham, S., Kiron, D., Gerbert, P., & Reeves, M. — Reshaping Business with Artificial Intelligence (2017).McKinsey & Company — The State of AI in 2025: Agents, Innovation, and Transformation (2025).Khurana, R. — Searching for a Corporate Savior: The Irrational Quest for Charismatic CEOs (2002). | 11m 03s | |
| 5/12/26 | ![]() Pascal Uerlings: Good Thing, Bad Thing, Who Knows? | Most technology transformations do not stall because the technology fails. They stall because no one in the room has resolved a prior question—what, precisely, is being changed, and who is accountable for that change surviving contact with the business. Pascal Uerlings has spent six years working at that unresolved question, building one of Australia's more prominent Salesforce and AI implementation consultancies in the process. This is a conversation about why most AI initiatives fail in the operating model rather than the server room, what genuine psychological safety actually requires of a leader, and the gap between the founder narratives one reads on LinkedIn and the slower, less photogenic work of building something that lasts.TakeawaysThe model that made Pascal walk: why a consultancy organised around revenue targets cannot, in practice, organise around customersFounding J4RVIS in April 2020, weeks before the pandemic — and why timing concerns were never the strongest argument against doing itThe structural reasons AI pilots produce enthusiasm in strategy decks and entropy in operating modelsVoice agents and the architecture of agentic AI: why the future is multiple agents talking to each other, and why that resembles the integration challenges of the past at higher sophisticationThe mischaracterisation of Gen Z as disengaged — and how the complaint usually says more about the leaders making itWhat it actually takes to build a culture of safety in cross-cultural teams, particularly across Australia and the PhilippinesImposter syndrome reframed not as a deficit but as evidence of care — and why performing certainty is a worse leadership failure than admitting doubtChapters[00:00] – Cold open[01:14] – Subscriber message[03:14] – Introduction[05:37] – From Belgium to Australia: the path to founding J4RVIS[13:00] – Building a people-centred consultancy: values before customers[19:15] – Pulling the trigger: launching weeks before COVID[23:09] – Imposter syndrome as a leadership superpower[29:19] – Why AI initiatives stall before production[39:04] – Voice agents and the architecture of agents talking to agents[48:22] – Leading across generations and cultures[57:12] – Identity, safety, and leading from who you are[01:02:56] – Good thing, bad thing, who knows? Lessons from six years[01:06:58] – Lightning round and closeGuest Links & ReferencesPascal Uerlings — linkedin.com/in/puerlings/About the ShowOn the Subject of Leadership is a long-form conversation series examining leadership, governance, organisational life, and decision-making—without slogans or performative certainty.Hosted by Dr Robert N. Winter.Subscribe / FollowNewsletter / Website: robert.winter.inkLinkedIn: dr-robert-winterX: @DrRobertWinterInstagram: DrRobertWinterMastodon: social.winter.ink/@robertYouTube: @OnTheSubjectOfLeadershipCreditsRecorded remotely via RiversideMusic: The Hidden Thread by Roberto Prado / Artlist | 1h 08m 33s | |
| 5/8/26 | ![]() The Chair's Dilemma: When the Board Becomes the Problem | A bonus release from the Inner Circle feed, made available to all listeners. Weekly article readings are normally reserved for Inner Circle members; this is one of the occasional pieces opened more widely. Join the Inner Circle at robert.winter.inkThe most dangerous failure in corporate governance is rarely the rogue executive or the captured auditor. It is the quieter pattern of a board of intelligent, well-credentialled directors collectively unable to act on what each of them already privately suspects. This week's article works through how that silence forms, why governance codes cannot legislate against it, and what a chair can do about it before the crisis breaks rather than after.In This ArticleBoard failure usually looks ordinary. The dramatic governance scandal is rarer than the Monday meeting at which a softening result is referred to the next strategy session and nothing follows.Pluralistic ignorance, not lack of information, is the principal mechanism. Directors privately hold concerns they fail to voice because they assume their colleagues do not share them.Governance codes describe the architecture of a boardroom but say very little about its inhabiting. A board with every box ticked can still fail at the task its structure exists to enable.Burke's 1774 distinction between trustee and delegate, addressed to the electors of Bristol, defines the office of director more accurately than any code currently on the books.The markers of a healthy board are not exotic. They are visible to anyone who attends one for an hour, and the conditions for them are established years before any crisis arrives.A Thought With Which To SitThe director is a trustee of the company's long-term interest, not a delegate of the room's mood. Boards forget this and call the forgetting collegiality.Further ReadingJanis, I. L. — Victims of Groupthink (1972)Westphal, J. D., & Bednar, M. K. — Pluralistic Ignorance in Corporate Boards, Administrative Science Quarterly (2005)Sonnenfeld, J. A. — What Makes Great Boards Great, Harvard Business Review (2002)Burke, E. — Speech to the Electors of Bristol (1774) | 9m 38s | |
| 4/28/26 | ![]() Nick Hassett: The Problem Won't Be Solved by the Thinking That Created It | Nick Hassett has spent more than three decades intervening in organisations under pressure—not as a theorist, but as someone called in when the politics are already difficult and the gap between what the board believes is happening and what is actually happening has grown wider than anyone has yet said aloud. His work spans banking, technology, essential infrastructure, and sport across Australia and Asia, covering the full arc of an organisation in trouble: mobilisation, intervention, and recovery.In this conversation, we explore why transformation programmes fail when the people leading the change are, in important respects, the architects of the conditions they are trying to fix. Drawing on Nick's extensive experience working at the intersection of boards, executive teams, and operational reality, we discuss what it actually takes to bring a different structure of thinking to bear—where alignment breaks down, why accountability cultures can paradoxically produce silos, and what boards are getting wrong about AI governance while their staff adopt it unsanctioned.TakeawaysWhy the thinking that built the current operating model cannot be the same thinking that dismantles it — and what a "different brand of leadership" requires in practice.How accountability cultures, left uncalibrated, create silos and destroy the cross-functional collaboration on which real execution depends.The fragility of organisational alignment — why consensus often evaporates at the boardroom door, and what that costs in misdirected effort.Where the board–CEO relationship breaks down during transformation, and why that single relationship is the first point of failure.What boards are missing about shadow AI adoption — and why banning a technology does not eliminate the risk.The question nobody asks at the start of a transformation: what does success look like, how will we measure it, and what is my exit strategy?Why the pattern repeats — Six Sigma, digital, AI — and what that tells us about the enduring nature of leadership problems beneath the technology of the moment.Chapters[00:00] – Cold open: every box ticked, still failing — the accountability trap that creates silos[01:14] – Subscriber message[01:41] – Show introduction: the thinking that built the problem cannot fix it[03:58] – A career forged by evolution: thirty-five years in strategy execution[05:22] – The constant is people: helping organisations think through problems[05:50] – The common thread across banking, infrastructure, technology, and sport: regulation and complexity[07:58] – Mobilisation, intervention, and recovery: how engagements begin[08:32] – "I'll see you in two years": why organisations that try to go it alone usually fail[10:54] – Headcount reduction as the lazy option, and strategy by "throwing wheat at the side of a barn"[13:13] – The humility to not compete on subject matter expertise[14:23] – Challenging the starting hypothesis: when the board's diagnosis is part of the problem[16:35] – Coaching through the valley of despair — and futures that don't include everyone[18:07] – Scientism versus the relational: why diagnosis alone does not produce change[18:49] – Case study: an accountability culture that siloed itself into failure[21:43] – True accountability is cross-functional: responsibility, ownership, and ramifications[22:42] – Getting off the dance floor and onto the balcony: input measures versus outcomes[23:59] – The disinterested third party: putting yourself in the MD's shoes[26:59] – Pragmatism and the rate of change an organisation can absorb[28:00] – Where alignment breaks down: the board–CEO relationship as first point of failure[31:36] – Translation risk: how board priorities wash through policy, management systems, and operations[33:41] – Alignment that is only room deep: when consensus evaporates at the door[35:08] – The investment in alignment: spend the time or guarantee the points of failure[36:02] – The board's information problem: filtered reporting and the limits of oversight[37:04] – How board directors discharge their obligations: questioning management[38:15] – Intergalactic battlestars: boards that bounce from issue to issue[39:15] – AI and the board: why workshopping how to use AI may be the worst thing a board could do[41:33] – Men in Black and collective panic: when AI-generated material is convincing but not plausible[43:49] – Shadow AI: banning a technology does not eliminate the risk[44:15] – Head in the sand: the competitive cost of inaction on AI[45:56] – Discussing failure rates: the reluctance to talk honestly about what is not working[47:10] – Digital déjà vu: ten years ago it was digital, twenty years ago it was Six Sigma[49:31] – The flight magazine and the sixteen black belts: impetuous adoption without thinking through implications[51:15] – The problem remains a leadership problem: replace the technology label, and the pattern holds[52:23] – "We can solve these problems with AI": throwing technology at a dysfunctional organisation[53:55] – The leader who shaped the approach: John Chambers at Cisco and the discipline of stakeholder engagement[55:44] – The cost of inaction: when strategic patience becomes institutional inertia[56:23] – "If we still have options, we haven't waited long enough": the pathology of regulated monopolies[57:19] – The question nobody asks: what is my exit strategy?[59:31] – The Apollo flight path: on the planned trajectory 3% of the time, but there was a trajectory[01:00:59] – Plans are worthless, but planning is invaluable[01:01:44] – The hidden dynamic: when the plan creates calm and the adults are in charge[01:03:06] – Lightning round[01:04:19] – ClosingGuest Links & ReferencesNick Hassett — LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/nick-hassettEinstein (attributed) — "We cannot solve our problems with the same thinking we used when we created them"Jan Carlzon — Moments of Truth (1987), Harper Perennial.John T. Chambers — former executive chairman and CEO of Cisco Systems.Eisenhower, D.D. — "Plans are worthless, but planning is everything" (Remarks to the National Defense Executive Reserve Conference, 14 November 1957).Related episode: Episode 003 — Martin Kearns: From Empowerment to Ritual — Agile's Unintended Consequences.Related episode: Episode 004 — Craig Baker: Leadership at the Point of Contact.About the ShowOn the Subject of Leadership is a long-form conversation series examining leadership, governance, organisational life, and decision-making—without slogans or performative certainty.Hosted by Dr Robert N. Winter.Subscribe / FollowNewsletter / Website: robert.winter.inkLinkedIn: dr-robert-winterX: @DrRobertWinterInstagram: DrRobertWinterMastodon: social.winter.ink/@robert<... | 1h 04m 41s | |
| 4/14/26 | ![]() Craig Baker: Leadership at the Point of Contact | Craig Baker has spent the past eighteen months in growth and sales leadership at Jarvis, shaping strategy and securing commitment at the front end of enterprise technology engagements—predominantly in utilities and infrastructure. When a customer gap demanded more than arm's-length management, he chose to step back into delivery. What he found was not the reassurance that a well-sold solution was tracking to plan, but friction: between what leaders confidently promise and what teams can sustainably build, between seamless integration on a slide and the reality of aging systems, regulatory constraint, and field conditions.In this conversation, we explore what happens when a leader closes the distance between the boardroom and the tools—how proximity to consequence reshapes credibility with customers and teams alike, and why the art of saying no is a consultancy's most valuable and least intuitive capability. Craig discusses what organic growth at a firm like Jarvis demands of leaders who treat the company's money and reputation as their own, and how knowing when to hand over—not just when to step in—is itself a leadership act.Along the way, we examine the tension between sales creativity and operational honesty, the distinction between building teams and merely employing them, and why the ultimate measure of leadership may be a silent legacy: behaviours that echo forward through people you no longer manage.TakeawaysWhy stepping back into delivery after selling a solution sharpened Craig's credibility—and chastened his confidenceThe discipline of saying no in the right way: to customers, to stakeholders, and to your own ambition as a consultancyHow change management, not technology, determines whether a transformation succeeds or quietly dies on arrivalThe difference between building a business organically—with your own time, money, and reputation at stake—and simply writing cheques to grow headcountWhy not everyone should be promoted into leadership, and how separating individual contributor and leadership pathways protects both people and performanceThe leader as multiplier: letting go of the tools, absorbing the blame, and ensuring the team takes the bowChapters[00:00] – Cold open: the honesty to say "I can't promise it"[03:34] – From delivery to sales: what drifted when Craig moved to the front end[06:36] – Return to the tools: what he expected versus what he found[08:55] – The confidence to prioritise: why junior staff struggle to say no[10:05] – "Not no—not right now": setting foundations before building features[12:53] – The vendor as scapegoat: saying no when you're the third party in the room[16:52] – What is the actual business problem? Technology as symptom, not cure[17:45] – Experimentation over transformation: testing hypotheses before committing millions[19:31] – Layering trust: from proximity, to process, to empirical proof[22:34] – The cost of outcomes: when the rate of return stops making sense[23:58] – Growing by reputation: why Jarvis invested in advisory over marketing[26:25] – Sales versus operations: creativity within the bounds of deliverability[30:55] – Having their back: absorbing risk so the team can experiment[33:20] – Introversion and humility: why Craig doesn't want the limelight[35:25] – The silent legacy: leadership behaviours that echo through generations[37:11] – Building teams versus employing them[38:58] – Skin in the game: when it's your own money on the line[41:47] – Knowing when to hand over: what gets you to 50 won't get you to 100[43:11] – Building the wings while flying the plane: structure at pace[45:37] – Can leadership be taught? The innate desire to be accountable[47:22] – Valuing individual contributors: not everyone needs to lead[49:56] – What must you let go of? The leader as multiplier, not maker[52:42] – "Let's figure it out together": relating to the problems your team face[54:04] – Training, coaching, mentoring: unlocking dormant capacity[55:42] – Lightning round: promises, proximity signals, and a field lesson from the utilities sectorGuest Links & ReferencesCraig Baker - LinkedInAbout the ShowOn the Subject of Leadership is a long-form conversation series examining leadership, governance, organisational life, and decision-making—without slogans or performative certainty.Hosted by Dr Robert N. Winter.Subscribe / FollowNewsletter / Website: robert.winter.inkLinkedIn: dr-robert-winterX: @DrRobertWinterInstagram: DrRobertWinterMastodon: social.winter.ink/@robertYouTube: @OnTheSubjectOfLeadershipCreditsRecorded remotely via RiversideMusic: The Hidden Thread by Roberto Prado / Artlist | 59m 39s | |
| 3/28/26 | ![]() Martin Kearns: From Empowerment to Ritual—Agile’s Unintended Consequences | Agile promised empowered teams and faster learning. In many organisations, it has delivered something closer to ritual—stand-ups, sprints, and dashboards—often without the autonomy those practices were meant to enable.Martin Kearns has observed this shift from the inside. An early Scrum practitioner and now an enterprise agility advisor, he has spent two decades helping organisations rethink how work is structured and decisions are made. That experience gives him a clear view of where Agile has travelled—and where it has lost its way.In this conversation, we examine the gap between the rhetoric of empowerment and the reality of managed workflows. Why do frameworks designed to increase adaptability so often produce compliance? When does cadence become control? And why do large organisations struggle to grant autonomy while still demanding predictability?We also explore the broader system: how metrics shape behaviour, how technical debt and complexity are routinely underestimated, and why new technologies such as AI risk amplifying existing organisational confusion rather than resolving it.At its core, this is a discussion about judgement. What does it take to build organisations where professionals are trusted to think, not merely to execute—and where that trust does not come at the expense of coherence or accountability?TakeawaysAgile's original promise was autonomy. In many organisations, however, the language of empowerment has survived while genuine discretion has quietly disappeared.Ritual is not the same as agility. Stand-ups, sprints, and dashboards can create the appearance of progress while masking deeper organisational rigidity.Frameworks often satisfy managerial desire for control. The attraction of scaled Agile models lies partly in their promise of predictability—yet that predictability can undermine adaptability.Complex systems resist simplistic management. Real organisational resilience requires leaders who understand uncertainty, technical debt, and the limits of planning.Leadership in complexity begins with humility. Curiosity, facilitation, and systemic awareness matter far more than adherence to any particular methodology.Technological enthusiasm should be treated cautiously. AI and automation may transform work, but they cannot substitute for clear thinking about how organisations actually function.Chapters[00:00] - Intro[05:12] - The promise vs. reality of frameworks like Scrum and SAFe[07:07] - The systemic roots of organisational dysfunction[09:35] - Navigating the push for certainty in complex work[11:17] - Strategic partnerships versus contractual thinking[13:26] - The challenge of translating strategy to teams[15:35] - The danger of technical debt and iterative band-aids[17:29] - AI hype, failure rates, and agility in the age of technology[19:57] - The influence of investment bubbles on organisational agility[22:36] - The importance of self-awareness and psychological safety[24:53] - Handling complex problems and avoiding oversimplification[27:51] - The role of creativity and discovery in continuous learning[31:28] - The path of least resistance and reframing change[35:32] - Facilitating with authenticity and emotional intelligence[38:33] - The importance of reflection and stopping habits[41:52] - The limitations of NLP, life coaching, and systemically focused agility[44:40] - The leadership boundary of influence and expertise[46:51] - Legal and ethical considerations around mental health at work[51:35] - The value of diverse perspectives and humility in teams[56:52] - The cognitive biases of certainty and overconfidence[61:25] - The power of open dialogue and shared understandingGuest Links & ReferencesMartin Kearns - LinkedInBook (coming soon)About the ShowOn the Subject of Leadership is a long-form conversation series examining leadership, governance, organisational life, and decision-making—without slogans or performative certainty.Hosted by Dr Robert N. Winter.Subscribe / FollowNewsletter / Website: robert.winter.inkLinkedIn: dr-robert-winterX: @DrRobertWinterInstagram: DrRobertWinterMastodon: social.winter.ink/@robertYouTube: @OnTheSubjectOfLeadershipCredits / DisclosuresRecorded remotely via RiversideMusic: The Hidden Thread by Roberto Prado / Artlist | 1h 05m 44s | |
| 3/8/26 | ![]() Abdullah Ramay: The Power of Purpose-Driven Leadership in Business | Abdullah Ramay is the Chief Executive Officer of Pablo & Rusty’s Coffee Roasters—a name many listeners will recognise from the label on their morning brew.In this episode of On the Subject of Leadership, we explore what it actually means to run a purpose-led business when purpose stops being a slogan and starts imposing constraints. In Abdullah’s world, flavour, margin, agriculture, and environmental stewardship all meet in a single cup. The rhetoric of sustainability is easy; the discipline of it is not.Our conversation ranges across the real mechanics of purpose in leadership: how boards weigh financial return against impact, why authenticity is different from popularity, and how leaders maintain focus when fashionable causes and technologies compete for attention. Abdullah makes a simple but demanding argument: profit and purpose are not rivals. Profit is the fuel; purpose is the direction. Remove either and the enterprise stalls.We also examine the harder edge of stewardship—what happens when values introduce friction. When decisions disappoint customers. When integrity costs money. When leaders must decide whether coherence matters more than applause.If you care about leadership beyond slogans—about governance, conviction, and the long-term stewardship of organisations—this is a conversation worth your time.TakeawaysPurpose as an organisational anchorBalancing profit with sustainability and impactAuthenticity in leadership and organisational cultureBoard governance and strategic decision-makingThe importance of long-term vision and resilienceChapters[00:00] - Introduction to Purpose-Driven Leadership[04:14] - The Evolution of Purpose in Organisations[11:20] - Authenticity vs. Popularity in Leadership[20:37] - The Role of Boards in Balancing Purpose and Profit[26:09] - The Importance of Certifications and Governance[31:49] - Decision-Making in a VUCA World[39:05] - Prioritisation, Delegation, and Resource Allocation in Organisations[48:13] - Leadership Burnout and Change Management[57:10] - Cross-Skilling and Adaptability in the Workforce[1:00:21] - The Essence of Leadership and EmpowermentGuest Links & ReferencesAbdullah Ramay: https://www.linkedin.com/in/abdullah-ramay-3879476/Pablo and Rusty’s Coffee Roasters: https://www.pabloandrustys.com.auAbout the ShowOn the Subject of Leadership is a long-form conversation series examining leadership, governance, organisational life, and decision-making—without slogans or performative certainty.Hosted by Dr Robert N. Winter.Subscribe / FollowNewsletter / Website: robert.winter.inkLinkedIn: dr-robert-winterX: @DrRobertWinterInstagram: DrRobertWinterMastodon: social.winter.ink/@robertYouTube: @OnTheSubjectOfLeadershipCreditsRecorded remotely via RiversideMusic: The Hidden Thread by Roberto Prado / Artlist | 1h 02m 30s | |
| 2/7/26 | ![]() Chris McGowan: The Recruitment Insider Who Built a Company With No Managers | Chris McGowan is the founder and CEO of ThunderLabs, an Australian firm working across digital experiences, customer identity, and specialist recruitment. Before building ThunderLabs, Chris spent years inside the recruitment industry—giving him a front-row view of how organisations actually coordinate work, reward competence, and quietly fail when hierarchy substitutes for judgment.In this conversation, we examine what happens when you remove general managers and formal executive layers—and what must replace them if the organisation is to function. Chris explains how ThunderLabs operates through informal leadership, discretionary boundary spanning, and high-trust expertise, and why recruitment becomes the central strategic lever in a system built on autonomy rather than control.TakeawaysThe importance of building genuine relationships in business.A networked organizational structure fosters collaboration and innovation.Cultural influences shape leadership styles and team dynamics.Recruitment should focus on finding diverse talents that fit the organizational culture.Language and communication are crucial for team cohesion and understanding.Balancing freedom and structure is essential for effective leadership.Intrinsic motivation leads to greater job satisfaction and performance.Good governance is necessary to prevent ethical lapses in organizations.Leaders must be aware of their influence and responsibility towards their teams.Creating a supportive environment encourages creativity and problem-solving.Chapters[00:00] - Intro[02:00] - Understanding Thunder Labs' Structure[04:22] - The Necessity of Collaborative Problem Solving[07:39] - Navigating Bureaucracy in Organisations[11:02] - The Role of Leadership in Team Dynamics[13:28] - Recruitment and Team Composition[16:05] - The Art of Enabling Others[21:49] - Creating an Adaptive System[23:07] - The Importance of Shared Language[26:06] - Balancing Commercial Focus with Team Culture[32:59] - Organic vs. Structured Organizations: Finding Purpose[34:21] - Organic vs. Structured Organizations: Finding Purpose[37:21] - The Quest for Meaningful Work: Beyond Financial Metrics[40:06] - Unlocking Potential: The Value of Diverse Teams[43:16] - Navigating Leadership: Balancing Individual Strengths[51:11] - Cultural Fit vs. Sameness[52:32] - Motivation vs. Necessity: The Driving Forces in Work[58:57] - Governance and Integrity: Preventing Corporate Malfeasance[01:06:42] - The Role of Leadership: Intrinsic vs. Extrinsic MotivationGuest Links & ReferencesChris McGowan: chris-thunderlabsThunderLabs: www.thunderlabs.com.auAbout the ShowOn the Subject of Leadership is a long-form conversation series examining leadership, governance, organisational life, and decision-making—without slogans or performative certainty.Hosted by Dr Robert N. Winter.Subscribe / FollowNewsletter / Website: robert.winter.inkLinkedIn: dr-robert-winterX: @DrRobertWinterInstagram: DrRobertWinterMastodon: social.winter.ink/@robertYouTube: @OnTheSubjectOfLeadershipCreditsRecorded remotely via RiversideMusic: The Hidden Thread by Roberto Prado / Artlist | 1h 12m 27s |
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