『The Lead Relationally Podcast』のカバーアート

The Lead Relationally Podcast

The Lead Relationally Podcast

著者: Chris and Brad
無料で聴く

An invitation to discover a better way to lead people! Join the conversation with Chris and Brad as they walk, talk, and share what they're discovering.Chris and Brad マネジメント マネジメント・リーダーシップ 経済学
エピソード
  • The 7 C's of Relationships - Context
    2026/06/05


    What actually makes a relationship tick - and why do some connections fade the moment circumstances change?


    In this episode, Brad and Chris kick off their new series on the 7 Components of Relationship with the first "C" - Context.


    Whether it's a shared workplace, a carpool, a hockey team, or a life experience like illness or loss, context is the invisible engine powering most of our connections.


    And once you understand it, you'll never look at your relationships the same way again.


    From the colleague you'd follow to a new city, to the instant bond formed between two strangers who've faced the same hardship, the guys unpack how context works at every level - current, historical, and life-based.


    They also get practical: how can leaders intentionally create or shift context to strengthen their teams?


    Key Takeaways


    - Context is one of 7 measurable components of any relationship - and it works as a powerful accelerant when shared, or a barrier when lost.


    - There are three layers of context: current (shared spaces/activities), historical (past shared experiences), and life context (shared life circumstances).


    - When context changes, relationships often change with it - and that's not a failure; it's just how human connection works.


    - Leaders can intentionally engineer context to increase team connection through simple tweaks like shared lunches, clubs, or cross-department collaboration sessions.


    - Context alone doesn't tell the full story of a relationship, but it gives you a huge piece of the puzzle, and it's always a great place to start.


    Grab your walking shoes and join the conversation!


    続きを読む 一部表示
    19 分
  • Rewarding Relationally
    2026/05/22

    Because we don't all scream for ice cream...

    What if the way you're rewarding your team is actually driving them away?

    In this candid conversation, Chris and Brad dig into one of leadership's most overlooked blind spots — the disconnect between how leaders think they're motivating their people and what their people actually need.

    From promotions that backfire to bonuses that feel hollow, they unpack why the go-to rewards (money, titles, or even ice cream) often miss the mark entirely.

    Whether you're managing a big team or a small one, you'll be challenged to rethink how you're appreciating your people.

    The guys make the case that relational leadership isn't just "nice to have" — it's the difference between a team that stays, grows, and thrives, and one that quietly walks out the door.


    Key Takeaways

    • Money is a very limited currency. Compensation matters, but when it becomes the only reward, you've unintentionally built a culture where loyalty is for sale to the highest bidder.

    • A premature promotion can be a punishment in disguise. Elevating someone before they're ready — without support or preparation — doesn't actually reward them, it isolates them.

    • Different people are driven by different currencies. One person wants a raise. Another wants to lead a project. Another just wants more of a voice at the table. Assuming everyone values the same reward is one of the most common (and costly) leadership mistakes.

    • Relational equity is your best retention strategy. A great culture is so valuable that people will turn down higher-paying opportunities to be part of it. Being known, valued, and invited into the conversation is a reward that money simply can't replicate.

    Join the guys on the path for another great chat!

    続きを読む 一部表示
    20 分
  • Rest & Relaxation...a Rebuttal
    2026/05/08


    It sounds so great! So why isn't it working?


    Have you ever come home from a holiday feeling like you need another one?


    There's a reason for that, and it's not because you didn't get enough sleep.


    While we can take a break from the tasks and even the challenges of work, what we cannot do is leave behind who we are as leaders.


    We don't become different people on a weekend away. Everything we believe about ourselves and those we lead gets packed up and brought with us.


    So what do we actually need from our time away? And how do we come back ready to be the best leaders we can be?


    Well, we weren’t entirely sure, so we put on our shoes, hit the path, and ended up questioning one of leadership culture's most overused words: balance.


    What we dig into:

    • Why the standard R&R philosophy often doesn't deliver what it promises, and the questions we should be asking instead
    • The uncomfortable difference between resting and running away (and only you know which one you're doing ;)
    • Why the healthiest way to reset and refocus isn't more time alone, and the relational solution to this


    Come with us for a walk and a conversation about a sustainable leadership lifestyle built on rhythms, honest self-reflection, and ensuring the right people are alongside you.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    27 分
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_t1
まだレビューはありません