
Organizational Leadership and Change Review
by Organizational Leadership and Change Review
Insights from recent episode analysis
Audience Interest
Podcast Focus
Publishing Consistency
Platform Reach
Insights are generated by CastFox AI using publicly available data, episode content, and proprietary models.
Est. Listeners
Based on iTunes & Spotify (publisher stats).
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
10,001 - 25,000 - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
5,001 - 25,000 - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
5,001 - 15,000
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Platform Distribution
Reach across major podcast platforms, updated hourly
Total Followers
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Total Reviews
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* Data sourced directly from platform APIs and aggregated hourly across all major podcast directories.
On the show
Recent episodes
Resilience@Work: How to Coach Yourself Into a Thriving Future, with Simon T. Bailey
Nov 12, 2025
31m 01s
Beyond the Job-Hopping Myth: Why Gen Z Turnover Signals a Leadership Crisis, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Oct 15, 2025
27m 33s
The Capability Frontier: How Organizations Navigate Talent Mobility to Drive Economic Complexity, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Oct 11, 2025
25m 29s
Commitment over Compliance: Creating a Dynamic and Engaging Organizational Culture, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Oct 10, 2025
41m 27s
Reconfiguring Productive Knowledge: Organizational Responses to Shifting Work Patterns, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD
Oct 9, 2025
24m 51s
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| Date | Episode | Description | Length | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 11/12/25 | Resilience@Work: How to Coach Yourself Into a Thriving Future, with Simon T. Bailey | In this podcast episode, Dr. Jonathan H. Westover talks with Simon T. Bailey about his recent book, Resilience@Work: How to Coach Yourself Into a Thriving Future. Simon T. Bailey is the world’s leading expert in Brilliance. His groundbreaking research, State of Working America Report Thriving in Resilience and Brilliance, solidifies his insights in his 11th book, Resilience@Work: How to Coach Yourself Into a Thriving Future. With Disney Institute as his launchpad, he’s left an indelible mark on 2,400 plus organizations in 54 countries, including American Express, Deloitte, Visa, Signet Jewelers, and Taco Bell. He has made a remarkable impact on 120,000 professionals who’ve experienced his pioneering courses on the LinkedIn Learning platform. He’s also been recognized as Success Magazine’s Top 25, alongside Brené Brown, Tony Robbins, and Oprah Winfrey, as well as being on leadersHum Top 200 Power List. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 31m 01s | ||||||
| 10/15/25 | Beyond the Job-Hopping Myth: Why Gen Z Turnover Signals a Leadership Crisis, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD | Abstract: Gen Z's shorter job tenures have often been mischaracterized as disloyalty or entitlement. Emerging evidence suggests that these patterns reflect unmet expectations around meaningful work, career development, and organizational support rather than generational fickleness. With entry-level opportunities contracting sharply and artificial intelligence reshaping skill requirements, Gen Z workers navigate unprecedented uncertainty while demonstrating high technological fluency and adaptive capacity. Organizations that frame this cohort as "a problem to solve" risk forfeiting competitive advantage. This article synthesizes recent workforce analytics, organizational behavior research, and practitioner interventions to reframe Gen Z mobility as a signal of leadership gaps rather than character deficits. Drawing on cross-industry examples and evidence-based retention strategies, we propose four organizational imperatives: transparent career architecture, embedded developmental support, AI-enabled self-directed learning, and redefined psychological contracts that emphasize growth over tenure. Organizations that recalibrate their talent systems around these pillars position themselves to attract, develop, and retain the workforce that will define the next decade of competitive performance. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 27m 33s | ||||||
| 10/11/25 | The Capability Frontier: How Organizations Navigate Talent Mobility to Drive Economic Complexity, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD | Abstract: This article examines how organizations leverage talent mobility to develop economic complexity—the knowledge network capacity that enables economies to produce diverse, sophisticated goods and services. Drawing on literature from economic geography, organizational science, and knowledge management, it explores how talent mobility drives the diffusion and recombination of productive capabilities across organizational boundaries. Analysis reveals that firms with strategic talent mobility practices demonstrate enhanced innovation capabilities, knowledge spillovers, and resilience to market disruptions. However, these benefits are unevenly distributed, with significant variations by industry, geography, and organizational maturity. The article presents evidence-based strategies for cultivating productive knowledge networks through talent mobility, including capability mapping, cross-functional deployment systems, and strategic diaspora engagement. Organizations that successfully manage these dynamics gain competitive advantage while contributing to broader economic development and complexity in their regions and sectors. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 25m 29s | ||||||
| 10/10/25 | Commitment over Compliance: Creating a Dynamic and Engaging Organizational Culture, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD | Abstract: Organizations face a critical choice in how they motivate employees: enforce compliance through rules and monitoring, or cultivate genuine commitment through engagement and shared purpose. Research demonstrates that commitment-based cultures significantly outperform compliance-oriented ones across metrics including innovation, retention, customer satisfaction, and financial performance. Yet many organizations default to compliance mechanisms due to their perceived simplicity and control. This article examines the distinction between commitment and compliance cultures, reviews evidence on their organizational and individual consequences, and synthesizes research-informed interventions for building commitment. Key strategies include transparent communication, procedural justice, capability development, autonomy-supportive leadership, and meaningful work design. Building long-term commitment requires recalibrating psychological contracts, distributing leadership authority, and embedding continuous learning systems. Organizations that successfully shift from compliance to commitment create sustainable competitive advantages while enhancing employee wellbeing and stakeholder outcomes. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 41m 27s | ||||||
| 10/9/25 | Reconfiguring Productive Knowledge: Organizational Responses to Shifting Work Patterns, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD | Abstract: Organizations are experiencing profound shifts in how productive knowledge is created, stored, shared, and leveraged amidst changing work patterns. This research-based article examines the restructuring of organizational knowledge ecosystems in response to hybrid work, technological disruption, and evolving workforce expectations. Drawing on recent empirical studies and organizational cases, it analyzes the consequences of knowledge fragmentation and presents evidence-based interventions to strengthen knowledge continuity. The analysis reveals that organizations implementing structured knowledge management approaches—including digital knowledge architecture, collaborative documentation practices, and intentional knowledge transfer mechanisms—demonstrate greater operational resilience and innovation capacity. The article concludes with a framework for building long-term knowledge capabilities through organizational learning systems, knowledge governance structures, and strategic talent practices that preserve critical expertise while adapting to emergent work models. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 24m 51s | ||||||
| 10/8/25 | Global Talent Networks and Local Economic Complexity: The Mediating Role of Organizational Structures, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD | Abstract: This article examines how organizational structures mediate the relationship between global talent networks and local economic complexity. As economies become increasingly knowledge-driven, the interaction between internationally mobile talent and local economic ecosystems has emerged as a crucial determinant of innovation capacity and economic diversification. Drawing on research from economic geography, organizational science, and talent management, this analysis identifies how organizational architecture either facilitates or impedes the translation of global knowledge flows into local economic complexity. The evidence suggests that organizations with permeable boundaries, cross-functional collaboration mechanisms, and decentralized decision-making are better positioned to leverage international talent networks to enhance local capabilities. By deliberately designing organizational structures that support knowledge transfer across geographic and cultural boundaries, firms can serve as crucial intermediaries that transform global talent mobility into locally embedded economic complexity, ultimately driving regional competitive advantage and resilience. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 27m 11s | ||||||
| 10/3/25 | Human Capital as a Driver of Business Performance: The Netflix Approach, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD | Abstract: This article examines how leading organizations are reimagining the human resources (HR) function as a strategic driver of business performance rather than a traditional support function. Using Netflix as a primary case study, the analysis explores how the company's HR team has grown 47% faster than the rest of the organization since 2012, demonstrating a fundamental shift in HR's organizational positioning. The research synthesizes evidence on the organizational and performance benefits of investing proactively in HR capabilities, especially in knowledge-intensive and innovation-driven environments. The article presents evidence-based approaches to HR transformation, including strategic workforce planning, performance-oriented talent systems, and data-driven people analytics. Practical implications focus on how organizations can reposition HR functions to create competitive advantage through human capital optimization in rapidly changing business environments. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 26m 32s | ||||||
| 10/2/25 | The GDP Benchmark: A New Frontier for Measuring AI Capabilities in Professional Knowledge Work, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD | Abstract: This article examines OpenAI's recently released GDPval benchmark, which represents a significant advancement in evaluating artificial intelligence capabilities on economically valuable knowledge work. Unlike previous AI evaluations that focus on academic reasoning or specific domains, GDPval assesses performance on real-world tasks spanning 44 occupations across 9 major economic sectors that contribute $3 trillion annually to the U.S. economy. Analysis of benchmark results reveals that frontier AI models are approaching expert-level performance on many professional tasks, with the best models winning or tying with human experts approximately 50% of the time. The benchmark also demonstrates that human-AI collaboration strategies can potentially increase productivity while maintaining quality. This article synthesizes the methodology, findings, and implications of GDPval, offering evidence-based recommendations for organizations seeking to integrate AI capabilities into knowledge work processes. While these results show impressive AI progress on standalone professional tasks, they should be interpreted as indicators of task-level capabilities rather than predictions of occupational displacement. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 21m 25s | ||||||
| 10/2/25 | The Strategic Competency Gap: Perception versus Reality in Organizational Leadership, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD | Abstract: This article explores the prevalent discrepancy between perceived and actual strategic competencies among organizational leaders. Drawing on recent research in leadership development, cognitive biases, and organizational performance, the analysis reveals that many executives overestimate their strategic capabilities, creating significant performance gaps within organizations. The research examines five core strategic competencies: understanding present contexts, envisioning futures, influencing systems, delivering results, and adapting to change. The findings demonstrate that addressing these competency gaps through systematic assessment and targeted development can significantly improve organizational performance, strategic execution, and leadership effectiveness. The article presents evidence-based approaches to close these gaps, providing practical frameworks for organizations seeking to enhance their strategic capabilities in increasingly complex business environments. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 24m 20s | ||||||
| 9/28/25 | Embracing Otherness: The Organizational Impact of Otroverts in the Workplace, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD | Abstract: This article explores the emerging concept of "otroverts"—individuals characterized by their sense of otherness and comfort existing outside social groups while maintaining empathetic connections. Unlike introverts who recharge in solitude or extraverts who draw energy from social interactions, otroverts possess a distinct relational style that positions them as eternal outsiders who paradoxically can integrate anywhere. Drawing on recent research and organizational case studies, this article examines how recognizing and leveraging otrovert traits can enhance workplace dynamics, leadership models, and organizational outcomes. The paper presents evidence-based strategies for harnessing the unique strengths of otroverts, discusses implications for talent management, and proposes a framework for cultivating environments where diverse relational styles can thrive. Findings suggest that organizations acknowledging the otrovert experience may gain competitive advantages through enhanced innovation, leadership diversity, and cultural resilience. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 26m 42s | ||||||
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| 9/24/25 | Economic Complexity from Within: How Organizational Adaptability Drives Regional Diversification, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD | Abstract: This article examines the critical relationship between organizational adaptability and regional economic diversification. While economic complexity research has predominantly focused on macro-level patterns, this analysis explores the organizational mechanisms that enable regions to develop new capabilities and expand into related industries. Drawing on evidence from economic geography, organizational science, and innovation studies, the article identifies how firms' internal capabilities—particularly knowledge absorption, network formation, and strategic flexibility—contribute to broader regional diversification. The analysis demonstrates that regional diversification trajectories are significantly shaped by organizations' capacity to recombine existing knowledge into novel applications. The paper presents evidence-based organizational strategies and governance mechanisms that foster adaptability, highlighting practical approaches for policymakers, business leaders, and regional development agencies seeking to enhance economic complexity and resilience against sectoral shocks. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 26m 58s | ||||||
| 9/24/25 | Quantifying and Harnessing Human-AI Work Synergy in Organizations, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD | Abstract: Organizations increasingly implement generative AI tools to enhance employee productivity, yet standalone AI benchmark results offer limited insights for real-world deployment. This article examines emerging research on human-AI synergy—the performance gains achieved through human-AI collaboration that exceed what either can accomplish alone. Drawing on recent findings from Item Response Theory frameworks and interactive benchmarks, we analyze when and how human-AI teams outperform solo performance across task difficulties and user abilities. The evidence reveals that collaboration with AI represents a distinct capability from individual problem-solving ability, with Theory of Mind—the capacity to understand others' perspectives—emerging as a key predictor of effective human-AI partnerships. Organizations can cultivate synergistic human-AI collaboration through structured delegation practices, strategic capability alignment, cognitive complementarity approaches, adaptive collaboration training, and psychological safety initiatives. These evidence-based strategies help organizations move beyond seeing AI as merely a productivity tool toward creating genuine synergistic partnerships that enhance collective intelligence. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 23m 49s | ||||||
| 9/24/25 | The Rise of the Supermanager: Leadership Transformation in the AI Era, by Jonathan H. Westover PhD | Abstract: This article examines the emerging role of the "Supermanager" in contemporary organizations facing rapid technological change. As artificial intelligence transforms business processes, traditional management approaches focused on supervision have become insufficient to drive organizational performance. Drawing on research across multiple industries, this analysis defines the Supermanager paradigm, explores its prevalence and drivers, and details its impact on organizational and individual outcomes. The evidence suggests that Supermanagers—characterized by their ability to empower teams, foster experimentation, and drive innovation from the bottom up—are creating significant competitive advantages. Organizations seeking to thrive in the AI era must develop leadership capabilities that emphasize coaching over commanding, learning over directing, and innovation over maintenance. This article provides evidence-based strategies for cultivating Supermanagers and building long-term organizational resilience in an increasingly AI-enabled business landscape. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices | 23m 23s | ||||||
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