Each episode covers one challenge, one root cause, and three practical moves you can use before your next meeting. Browse all topics below. Videos are in production and will be added as they are released.
If you've recently been promoted from within your team, you may have noticed something unexpected: the relationships you had as a peer start to shift the moment you step into a leadership role.
If you've ever sat in a leadership meeting and thought, "Does everyone here know what they're doing except me?", you're not alone.
Yes, this is AI-generated. I'm experimenting with the format to see whether it works better than a traditional recording. I'm not trying to pass it off as anything else. Feedback welcome, jokes encouraged.
There's a version of leadership that a lot of managers fall into early on, especially when they're trying to prove themselves, and it looks like this: tight control, quick corrections, a lot of telling and not much listening.
Most managers know they need to give feedback. Very few feel genuinely comfortable doing it, especially when the feedback is corrective.
This is a situation a lot of newer leaders find themselves in: you're the manager, but someone on your team has been doing this work for ten, fifteen, maybe twenty years longer than you have.
If you've ever caught yourself hoping a problem would just resolve itself, if you've ever put off a conversation because you told yourself it wasn't quite the right time, you're in good company.
High performers are often the employees managers worry least about, and that's sometimes the problem.
There's a pattern that shows up often in managers who are genuinely committed, and it works against them.
Most managers have a fairly settled view of who's strong on their team and who isn't.
There's a version of leadership that sounds good, maybe even feels virtuous, but quietly creates problems over time.
AI-generated again. I'm road-testing the format before I commit to recording 50 of these myself. If you'd rather see a real human struggle through it, that version is coming. In the meantime, enjoy the suspiciously smooth delivery.
Hvis du for nylig er blevet forfremmet i din egen afdeling, har du måske opdaget noget uventet: de relationer, du havde som kollega, begynder at ændre sig i det øjeblik, du træder ind i en lederrolle.
Har du nogensinde siddet til et ledermøde og tænkt: "Er det kun mig, der ikke ved, hvad jeg laver?" — så er du i godt selskab.
Der er en ledelsesstil, mange falder i — især når de er nye og skal bevise sig — og den ser sådan ud: tæt kontrol, hurtige korrektioner og en klar forventning om, at tingene gøres på din måde.
De fleste ledere ved godt, at de skal give feedback. Meget få er virkelig komfortable med det — især når feedbacken er korrigerende.
Det er en situation mange nye ledere havner i: du er leder, men en på dit team har arbejdet med det her i ti, femten, måske tyve år længere end dig.
Har du nogensinde håbet, at et problem løste sig selv? Har du udskudt en samtale, fordi tidspunktet aldrig rigtig føltes rigtigt?
Højt præsterende medarbejdere er dem, ledere bekymrer sig mindst om — og det er nogle gange netop problemet.
Der er et mønster, der opstår hos ledere, der er oprigtigt engagerede — og som arbejder imod dem.
De fleste ledere har et ret fast billede af, hvem der er stærk på deres team, og hvem der ikke er.
Der er en form for lederskab, der lyder godt — og måske endda føles rigtig — men som stille og roligt skaber problemer over tid.
Most leaders get promoted because they're great at getting things done. They're fast, reliable, and good at solving the problem in front of them.
You might already be thinking strategically, but if the people around you can't see it, it doesn't count.
It's natural to care most deeply about the work in front of you, your team, your goals, your results. That focus is part of what makes you good at your job.
Leaders are often promoted because they're excellent problem solvers. They're the ones who could be counted on to figure it out, quickly, reliably, under pressure.
Managing up, influencing, informing, and building a productive relationship with the people above you, is one of the most important and least discussed leadership skills.
Most leaders spend a significant portion of their week in meetings.
One of the frustrating realities of leadership is that the right answer is rarely obvious, and it's almost never free.
Most managers are trained to solve problems, not to anticipate them.
One of the clearest signs that a leader is ready for more responsibility is how far ahead they're thinking.
Execution mode is comfortable. You know what needs to get done, you know how to do it, and there's a clear satisfaction in moving things forward.
There's a tension that every leader at a certain level has to navigate: the organization needs you to think strategically, but it also needs your team to function operationally.
Not all leadership happens through a reporting structure.
The word "politics" makes a lot of leaders uncomfortable, and understandably so. Nobody wants to feel like they're playing games or being manipulative.
Everyone makes decisions. But under pressure, when the stakes are high, the information is incomplete, and the clock is running, decision-making quality drops for most leaders.
It's going to happen. Your leader, or the leadership team above you, is going to make a decision you disagree with.
Senior leaders spend a lot of time developing strategy.
Credibility with senior leaders isn't just about doing good work. A lot of people do good work and remain invisible.
Some decisions are simple to explain. Others, the ones that involve competing priorities, difficult trade-offs, or significant change, are not.
Most leaders want to be seen as valuable.
A lot of leaders who are ready, or nearly ready, for senior leadership don't actually get there, not because they lack the capability, but because they haven't made the shift in how they think about themselves, their role, and their contribution.
De fleste ledere bliver forfremmet, fordi de er gode til at få tingene gjort. De er hurtige, pålidelige og dygtige til at løse det problem, der er foran dem.
Du tænker måske allerede strategisk — men hvis de mennesker omkring dig ikke kan se det, tæller det ikke.
Det er naturligt at have størst engagement i det arbejde, der er foran dig — dit team, dine mål, dine resultater.
Ledere bliver ofte forfremmet, fordi de er fremragende problemløsere. De var dem, man kunne regne med til at finde ud af det — hurtigt, pålideligt, under pres.
At påvirke opad — at informere, bidrage til og opbygge et produktivt samarbejde med dem over dig — er en af de vigtigste og mindst diskuterede lederkompetencer.
De fleste ledere bruger en betydelig del af deres uge i møder. Og alligevel er meget få bevidste om, hvordan de bidrager til dem.
En af de frustrerende realiteter ved lederskab er, at det rigtige svar sjældent er oplagt — og næsten aldrig gratis.
De fleste ledere er trænet til at løse problemer — ikke til at forudse dem.
Et af de tydeligste tegn på, at en leder er klar til mere ansvar, er, hvor langt frem de tænker.
Eksekvering er en behagelig tilstand. Du ved, hvad der skal gøres, du ved, hvordan man gør det, og der er en klar tilfredsstillelse i at flytte ting fremad.
Der er en spænding, alle ledere på et vist niveau må navigere i: organisationen har brug for, at du tænker strategisk, men den har også brug for, at dit team fungerer operationelt.
Ikke al lederskab foregår i et rapporteringsforhold. Nogle gange kræver dit vigtigste arbejde, at du påvirker mennesker, der ikke refererer til dig.
Ordet "politik" gør mange ledere utilpasse — og med god grund. Men realiteten er, at enhver organisation med mere end én person har politiske dynamikker.
Alle træffer beslutninger. Men under pres — når indsatsen er høj, informationen er ufuldstændig og uret tikker — falder kvaliteten af beslutningstagning for de fleste ledere.
Det vil ske. Din leder — eller ledelsesteamet over dig — vil træffe en beslutning, du er uenig i.
Ledere på topniveau bruger meget tid på at udvikle strategi. Og så annoncerer de den — og forventer, at alle forstår den og handler på den.
Troværdighed hos seniore ledere handler ikke bare om at gøre dit arbejde godt. Mange mennesker gør godt arbejde og forbliver usynlige.
Nogen beslutninger er enkle at forklare. Andre — dem der involverer konkurrerende prioriteter, vanskelige afvejninger eller betydelig forandring — er ikke.
De fleste ledere ønsker at blive set som værdifulde. Men der er et niveau af værdi, der rækker ud over at gøre sit job godt — og det er at blive en person, andre søger råd hos.
Mange ledere, der er klar — eller næsten klar — til senior lederskab, når aldrig derhen. Ikke fordi de mangler evnen, men fordi de ikke har foretaget skiftet i, hvordan de præsenterer sig selv.
Burnout rarely announces itself.
Every team goes through phases.
Every leader carries habits from earlier in their career, ways of communicating, making decisions, responding to pressure, and relating to their team that were shaped by the environments they came from.
Long-term employees are often the backbone of a team, steady, reliable, deeply knowledgeable about the work and the organization.
Psychological safety, the belief that you can speak up, take risks, and be honest without fear of punishment or embarrassment, is one of the most important conditions for a high-functioning team.
Cynicism is one of the most contagious things that can take hold in a team.
Most organizations have a performance management system. Very few have a coaching culture.
Most leaders think of coaching as something that flows in one direction: from leader to team member.
Long-term teams develop deep loyalty, to each other, to the work, and to their leader. That loyalty is a genuine asset.
Most leaders, when they think about succession, think about their own, who will replace them when they move on? That's important.
Every team has untapped capability, skills, passions, and ways of thinking that never get used because the work doesn't call for them, no one has thought to ask, or the culture doesn't create space for them to show up.
Promotions are one of the clearest signals an organization can send that someone's contribution is valued.
Leadership in resource-limited environments presents challenges that most leadership development content doesn't address.
Stability is a genuine leadership achievement. When a team runs smoothly, relationships are healthy, and results are consistent, that's the product of real leadership work.
One of the loneliest aspects of senior leadership is this: the more authority you have, the less honest feedback you tend to receive.
Every leader who cares about their people eventually faces this tension: holding a high standard while also being genuinely responsive to the human realities that make it hard to meet.
Every leader carries a mental model of each person on their team, a set of assumptions about what that person is good at, how they handle pressure, what they care about, and what they're capable of.
Leading a team that has been together for a long time is a different challenge than building a new one.
Leadership is one of the most psychologically demanding roles there is.
At some point in every leader's journey, the question shifts from "how do I perform well?" to "what do I want to leave behind?" That shift, from achievement to legacy, is one of the most important transitions in a leader's development.
The first conversation is free. Thirty minutes to talk through what's not working and whether Interface Coaching is the right fit.
Book a free call