
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.
Total monthly reach
Estimated from 4 chart positions in 4 markets.
By chart position
- 🇦🇺AU · Management#1375K to 30K
- 🇫🇮FI · Management#853K to 10K
- 🇦🇷AR · Management#181500 to 3K
- 🇵🇪PE · Management#183500 to 3K
- Per-Episode Audience
Est. listeners per new episode within ~30 days
4.5K to 23K🎙 ~2x weekly·203 episodes·Last published yesterday - Monthly Reach
Unique listeners across all episodes (30 days)
9K to 46K🇦🇺65%🇫🇮22%🇦🇷7%+1 more - Active Followers
Loyal subscribers who consistently listen
3.6K to 18K
Market Insights
Platform Distribution
Reach across major podcast platforms, updated hourly
Total Followers
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Total Plays
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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
Moral Economics: Where Human Values Shape Markets | Alvin Roth
May 19, 2026
1h 05m 11s
Team Chemistry: The Intangible Forces That Make Teams Win | Joan Ryan, Revisited
May 12, 2026
1h 06m 15s
The Hidden Cost of Leaving Faith Outside Work | Elaine Ecklund
May 5, 2026
1h 10m 23s
Why People Want Conflicting Things from Work | Derek Sivers, Revisited
Apr 28, 2026
1h 03m 54s
What Does It Mean to Be Rational at Work? | Barry Schwartz
Apr 21, 2026
1h 03m 31s
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| Date | Episode | Description | Length | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5/19/26 | ![]() Moral Economics: Where Human Values Shape Markets | Alvin Roth | A kidney transplant does not work like buying a gallon of milk. Neither does hiring or getting into a medical residency. In these markets, both sides care deeply about who they end up with, and a good outcome depends on more than money. Alvin Roth has spent his career studying what makes those systems succeed or fail. His work designing kidney exchange programs showed that even when people desperately want to help each other, the market can still break down unless the rules create the right... | 1h 05m 11s | ||||||
| 5/12/26 | ![]() Team Chemistry: The Intangible Forces That Make Teams Win | Joan Ryan, Revisited | When Joan Ryan stepped into the locker room to conduct her first post-game interview as a sports journalist, she was all but kicked out by the players. Feeling both unwelcome and undeterred, she made a firm decision to stick around and make a name for herself as one of the first female sports columnists in the country. Intrigued by the concept of team chemistry, Joan wrote Intangibles, where she shares what team chemistry really is, how to identify it, and how to use it to elevate the perfor... | 1h 06m 15s | ||||||
| 5/5/26 | ![]() The Hidden Cost of Leaving Faith Outside Work | Elaine Ecklund | Most workplaces don’t quite know what to do with faith. It often gets simplified, avoided, or treated as something too divisive to bring into professional life. Elaine Ecklund studies what happens when people try to leave that part of themselves outside the workplace, and what is lost when they do. Her research shows that faith is rarely just about religion. It becomes a window into bigger tensions around ethics, identity, belonging, and the struggle to feel fully present at work. In this e... | 1h 10m 23s | ||||||
| 4/28/26 | ![]() Why People Want Conflicting Things from Work | Derek Sivers, Revisited | People often want conflicting things from work because they carry different ideas about what makes a good life. What feels meaningful to one person can feel draining to another, and those differences often go deeper than personality or preference. That is what makes Derek Sivers’s book, How to Live, so useful here. It lays out 27 competing ways to live, each one convincing in its own voice. In this revisited episode, Dart and Derek discuss how those deeper beliefs shape the way people think a... | 1h 03m 54s | ||||||
| 4/21/26 | ![]() What Does It Mean to Be Rational at Work? | Barry Schwartz | Rational choice theory has become so familiar that it can feel like common sense. We talk about trade-offs, optimization, ROI, and risk as if they capture what it means to think clearly. But many of the decisions that matter most do not work that way. They are shaped by context, values, relationships, and the larger story of a life. In this episode, Barry Schwartz returns to discuss how rational choice theory became the default way we think, how it shapes work and decision-making, and what a ... | 1h 03m 31s | ||||||
| 4/14/26 | ![]() The Future of Work Starts Now: What You Do Today Shapes Tomorrow | Reanna Browne, Revisited | In many organizations, some people are focused on keeping the lights on. Others are pushing for change. But what if the future isn’t something out there waiting for us at all? What if it’s shaped by what we do—and don’t do—right now? For Reanna Browne, that shift starts with how we think. Change how we think about the future, and we change how we act in the present. In this revisited episode, Dart and Reanna discuss how the way we think about the future shapes what we do today. Reanna Browne... | 1h 08m 42s | ||||||
| 4/7/26 | ![]() Still Working at 80: When Retirement Isn’t an Option | Noah Sheidlower | An 81-year-old woman shows up for work at Home Depot while managing serious health issues. She isn’t there because she loves retail. She’s there because stopping isn’t really an option. That story is one of many Noah Sheidlower encountered while reporting on Americans working into their 80s and 90s. Together, they point to something that's changing about retirement: for many people, it doesn’t arrive as a clear finish line, but as something delayed, reshaped, or out of reach. In this episode... | 1h 11m 48s | ||||||
| 3/31/26 | ![]() Designing Transformation: How Experience Changes People | Claus Raasted and Paul Bulencea, Revisited | Most organizations approach change as something to manage. A new strategy, a new structure, a new set of goals. But what if real transformation doesn’t come from plans or policies, but from experiences that change how people see themselves and each other? Claus Raasted and Paul Bulencea design those kinds of experiences. Through the College of Extraordinary Experiences, they bring together people from very different worlds and immerse them in something unfamiliar, often uncomfortable, and dee... | 51m 36s | ||||||
| 3/24/26 | ![]() From “Me” to “We”: What Leadership Is Really About | Josh Block | Josh Block became president of his family’s medical imaging company at 29, just months after layoffs had shaken trust across the business. People were asking whether he was ready. His answer was simple: not fully. But he knew what he didn’t know. That humility became the starting point for how he chose to lead. Instead of protecting his position or pushing for performance at any cost, Josh shifted from what he calls the “Me Cycle” to the “We Cycle.” In this episode, Dart and Josh discuss whe... | 1h 04m 31s | ||||||
| 3/17/26 | ![]() Building a Customer Movement: How Companies Create Experiences That Work | Alain Thys, Revisited | Many companies treat experience as the final layer of the business: a nicer interface, a friendlier script, a smoother customer interaction. But the real experience of a company comes from something deeper. It grows out of the systems, incentives, and environments that shape how people behave. If those foundations are wrong, no amount of design can fix it. Experience architect, Alain Thys, has spent years helping organizations rethink those foundations so the experience customers and e... | 1h 15m 30s | ||||||
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| 3/10/26 | ![]() The Hidden Cost of Certainty at Work | Margaret Heffernan | In a world that feels increasingly uncertain, making confident business decisions is hard. So we grasp for certainty. Numbers feel certain, but they often give us the false comfort of measuring the wrong things. In her book Embracing Uncertainty, Margaret Heffernan explores a different approach. Looking at artists, writers, and musicians, she asks what we can learn from people who produce extraordinary work in conditions where the future simply can’t be known. In this episode, Dart and Margar... | 58m 06s | ||||||
| 3/3/26 | ![]() The Cost of Managing From Above | William Hurst, Revisited | William Hurst is all too familiar with the disasters that have resulted from tops-down governance. Through years of fieldwork in China and Indonesia, William has seen what happens when decision-makers are cut off from life on the ground. In this revisited episode, Dart and William explore how companies experience similar problems when they try and optimize complex systems for narrow outcomes. William Hurst is a political scientist who studies power, institutions, and labor. His work focuses o... | 1h 16m 16s | ||||||
| 2/24/26 | ![]() The Toxicity We Tolerate at Work | Catherine Mattice | Toxicity at work isn’t always obvious. Most times, it shows up as sarcasm, neglect, and unresolved conflict. Catherine Mattice learned this firsthand while working as an HR leader inside an organization where one person slowly broke a good culture. Leadership would not step in, and she watched good people leave. That experience led her to spend years helping organizations understand and address the quiet harm they often ignore. In this episode, Dart and Catherine discuss how toxicity emerges ... | 1h 02m 57s | ||||||
| 2/17/26 | ![]() Technology Alone Won’t Change the World | Kentaro Toyama, Revisited | Kentaro Toyama spent a decade designing technologies to fight global poverty and improve education and health. As co-founder of Microsoft Research India lab, he made a troubling discovery – innovative technologies can’t create change on their own. Realizing that social progress depends more on people than on the technology they use, Kentaro became a self-proclaimed “geek heretic” who now teaches others the importance of putting people over tech. In this revisited episode, Dart and Kenta... | 1h 06m 06s | ||||||
| 2/10/26 | ![]() The Problem With Scale: What Growing Too Big Does to Work | Geoffrey West | Geoffrey West didn’t set out to explain work. He was a physicist trying to understand why living things grow, age, and die. But when his questions expanded into biology, cities, and organizations, they offered a way to think about why growth changes how organizations behave and why success often brings new constraints. In this episode, Dart and Geoffrey discuss why work feels different as organizations scale, why cities keep renewing themselves while companies tend to burn out, and what these... | 1h 10m 15s | ||||||
| 2/3/26 | ![]() What Classrooms Reveal About Designing Better Work | Peter Liljedahl, Revisited | After decades in education, Dr. Peter Liljedahl realized that many classrooms fail to engage the people inside them. Rather than accept that reality, he began challenging every classroom norm he could find, asking a single question of each one: does this increase thinking? What followed was a decades-long effort to redesign learning environments from the ground up, dramatically increasing student engagement and understanding. In this revisited episode, Dart and Peter discuss how rethinking c... | 1h 10m 29s | ||||||
| 1/27/26 | ![]() What Complex Organizations Do to Ethics | Ed Freeman | Ethical questions at work rarely show up as rules or compliance issues. They show up in the systems organizations design and the outcomes those systems produce. And even well-intentioned leaders can create harm without meaning to. In this episode, Dart and Ed explore legitimacy, responsibility, employees, power, and why acting ethically inside complex systems is so difficult, even when people know what the right thing is. Ed Freeman is best known for stakeholder theory, which challenged the ... | 1h 06m 11s | ||||||
| 1/20/26 | ![]() The Experience IS the Brand | Alder Yarrow, Revisited | Experience is brand. The experiences people have with a company shape how they feel, what they trust, and whether they stay. Creating those experiences is not just about interfaces or marketing. It requires rethinking internal processes, digital systems, and the everyday realities of work. Alder Yarrow has spent decades helping organizations understand experience from the inside out, and why lasting growth depends on getting it right. In this revisited episode, Dart and Alder talk about exper... | 1h 18m 31s | ||||||
| 1/13/26 | ![]() What Happens When AI Removes Friction from Work | Aaron Horwath | While leading L&D at Creative Force, Aaron Horwath and his leaders began treating work as a product to be designed. That shift had wide effects, including something unexpected. Creative Force became one of the few companies to implement AI in a way that actually improved the experience of work. Instead of chasing tools, Aaron and his team started with people. In this episode, Dart and Aaron discuss why starting with people led to AI success, how work can be designed as a product, and what... | 1h 13m 44s | ||||||
| 1/6/26 | ![]() Psychological Design: How Environments Predict Our Psychology, Behavior, and Ability to Thrive | Jan Golembiewski, Revisited | Every building comes with a set of expectations. Students are quiet in a library, but loud on a playground. Adults are focused in their deckchairs yet chatty on bar stools. Witnessing the limitations of conventional building design, Jan Golembiewski began to leverage design psychology to improve the lives of different groups, from inmates to the elderly. As one of the world’s leading researchers in architectural design psychology, Dr. Golembiewski works to create spaces that prioritize health... | 1h 07m 45s | ||||||
| 12/30/25 | ![]() Investing in the Future of Work: A New Path for Venture Capital | Virginie Raphaël | Ideas don’t grow on their own. Something has to amplify them. Universities amplify what they teach, consultants amplify what they recommend, and money amplifies the ideas it chooses to back. If we want to understand how work changes at scale, we have to look at how capital shapes which ideas take root. Virginie Raphaël is redesigning that amplifier. In this episode, Dart and Virginie discuss how venture capital amplifies ideas, how trust networks shape who gets funded, and why rethinkin... | 1h 06m 10s | ||||||
| 12/23/25 | ![]() Alive at Work: The Neuroscience of Helping Your People Love What They Do | Daniel M. Cable, Revisited | Dan Cable was doing his job and getting compensated for it, but there was a problem: he was going through the motions with no growth, learning, or sense of excitement. He knew he needed to make a change to excel. By exploring the neuroscience behind thriving at work, Dan has since used his experience to help companies like Coca-Cola and Twitter (now X) optimize employee conditions. In this revisited episode, Dart and Dan discuss the neuroscience of enthusiastic employees, the practices that s... | 1h 08m 43s | ||||||
| 12/16/25 | ![]() The Business Case for Experience Design: A New Lens for Work | Mat Duerden | We experience the world through what we notice, how we feel, and what we remember. Yet most organizations still focus on products instead of the experiences those products create. Mat Duerden has spent his career studying how experiences work, why they matter, and what turns an ordinary moment into something meaningful or even transformative. In this episode, Dart and Mat discuss what makes an experience meaningful and how reflection deepens its impact. They look at how organizations can buil... | 1h 09m 00s | ||||||
| 12/9/25 | ![]() Rethinking Career Design: How Traditional Education Set Up a Generation to Fail, and How to Course Correct Today | Farouk Dey, Revisited | In an ideal world, college would help students explore possibilities and imagine a future that fits who they are. Instead, many choose majors before they know themselves and get pushed onto a career conveyor belt with little space to discover what matters to them. Farouk Dey wants to change that. His work encourages students to pause, experiment, and learn from real experiences before deciding where they want to go. In this episode, Dart and Dr. Farouk Dey discuss how life design can help stu... | 1h 05m 21s | ||||||
| 12/2/25 | ![]() Workflow Friction: The Missing Link in Work Design and AI Transformation | Stephanie Denino | Friction is part of every workplace. It shows up in the meetings that don’t need to happen, the unclear steps, and the small barriers that make work harder than it has to be. It’s a cost we’ve come to accept, but it doesn’t need to stay that way. When we look more closely, we start to see the real experience of work where people get stuck, where energy drains away, and where better design could help them thrive. In this episode, Dart and Stephanie Denino discuss what friction really means, ho... | 1h 02m 51s | ||||||
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Chart Positions
4 placements across 4 markets.
Chart Positions
4 placements across 4 markets.
