The Leading Blog






05.15.26

Workplace Design Is a Big Contributor to Worker Wellbeing

Good Work

THE causes of job strain, burnout, and poor mental health at work are well understood — and so are the solutions. Workload can be managed. Jobs can be designed with autonomy and voice. Leaders can be trained to create psychological safety. Systems can be built that reward recovery and fairness, not just output. Which means harm to our workers isn’t inevitable — it’s a design choice.

Organizations that fail to design for good work will pay for it in absenteeism, turnover and disengagement. But the deeper cost is borne by the workers.

People don’t thrive when they’re confused, unsupported, or underused. They thrive when they feel capable and valued. Research by organizational psychologist Arnold Bakker shows that when employees have structural resources (such as autonomy), social resources (such as support), and challenging demands (such as growth tasks), they experience more flow and less burnout.

If organizations are serious about sustainable performance, they need to design for it. That means pacing workloads instead of treating every week like quarter-end.

Well-designed work provides energy. Poorly designed work sucks it out. Designing roles that are sustainable, setting realistic expectations, and creating cultures where people feel safe and valued are central to worker’s mental health and sustainable high performance. They also fuel innovation and pay dividends in productivity.

The pathway for enabling a fully functioning and committed workforce is through designing the way that people work. Every role has an architecture — the tasks, responsibilities, and demands that make up a day. Too often, that architecture grows by accident: jobs are patched together over time, loaded with new tasks but rarely redesigned with intention. The result? Roles that look efficient on paper but leave people feeling like crap.

The alternative is positive job design — treating the structure of roles as a wellbeing lever, not just an operational one. Done well, it turns work into a source of energy rather than depletion.

Being intentional about work design means stepping back and asking: What are we really trying to achieve here, and how can this role be structured so it fuels rather than drains energy? From there, it’s about making deliberate choices. That might mean:

  • Stripping away tasks that no longer add value
  • Redesigning workflows so people can focus on the most meaningful parts of their role
  • Checking whether decision rights actually match responsibilities

To make work contribute to worker wellbeing, job design needs to be embedded into the systems of work — shaping the policies, structures and rhythms that govern how people work. This involves:

1. Building it into strategy, not side projects — Treat work design as a lever for performance and wellbeing, not just a P&C responsibility. Ask in strategy reviews: Are our roles structured tofuel human energy as well as output?

2. Using a SMART check in decision-making — When restructuring, allocating resources, or introducing new technology, run a SMART check. For each decision, ask: Will this increase stimulation, mas tery, agency, relationships, and tolerable d emands or undermine them?

3. Making job audits routine — Every couple of years, or after major change, review roles and workflows. Look for where tasks have piled up, where decision rights are mismatched, or where demands outstrip resources. Don’t wait for burnout data or turnover to tell you.

4. Empowering leaders to co-design with their teams — Encourage managers to have regular design conversations with their people: What’s energizing? What’s draining? What could we shift?

5. Embedding work design into leadership development — Treat work design as a core leadership skill, not a niche topic. Teach leaders how to analyze jobs through the SMART lens, how to run role-redesign conversations, and how to balance demands with resources.

6. Tracking energy, not just output — Alongside KPIs and dashboards, measure how energizing jobs are. Pulse surveys can include questions about variety, agency, and connection. Imagine if leaders were held accountable not just for results, but for how they structured jobs to unleash energy?

When leaders and teams take these small, deliberate steps, they contribute to worker wellbeing in ways that are practical and immediate.

Keep in mind that good work design isn’t a policy or even a program. It’s a practice that’s shaped and reshaped with people over time. Think of it less like drawing up blueprints for a house and more like tending a garden. You don’t plant once and walk away. You prune, water and replant depending on the season.

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Leading Forum
Kathryn Page is an organizational psychologist, author, and leadership partner at ByMany, who has spent her career asking one big question: What makes work good for us? Based in Melbourne, she has worked with leaders across industries to design work that protects people, fuels wellbeing, and unlocks performance. Her clients include some of the world’s largest companies and health systems, and her research is cited broadly. Her new book, Good Work:Transform Your Work from the Inside Out (Wiley, May 11, 2026), shows how leaders and teams can design work that’s both human and high performing. Learn more at drkatpage.com.

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Wellbeing At Work Great Workplace

Posted by Michael McKinney at 10:38 AM
| Comments (0) | Find more on this topic in Human Resources

05.14.26

Leading Thoughts for May 14, 2026

Leading Thoughts

IDEAS shared have the power to expand perspectives, change thinking, and move lives. Here are two ideas for the curious mind to engage with:

I.

Nicole Vignola on learning as default thinking:

“The first major underpinning of a growth mindset is that people with this mindset understand that learning is a valuable opportunity in the face of adversity. When people believe that they can improve and grow from failure and setbacks, they are more likely to engage in challenging tasks and persist through difficulty. When people know and understand that the brain is malleable and are willing to adapt to circumstance, they are more likely to persist in the face of obstacles. This perseverance can enhance pathways in the brain that are associated with learning, which strengthens the notion that learning is a dynamic process that’s forever evolving.”

Source: Rewire: Break the Cycle, Alter Your Thoughts and Create Lasting Change (Your Neurotoolkit for Everyday Life)

II.

Morgan Housel on happiness:

“Your happiness depends on your expectations more than anything else. So in a world that tends to get better for most people most of the time, an important life skill is getting the goalpost to stop moving. It’s also one of the hardest. A common storyline of history goes like this: Things get better, wealth increases, technology brings new efficiencies, and medicine saves lives. The quality of life goes up. But people’s expectations then rise by just as much, if not more, because those improvements also benefit other people around you, whose circumstances you anchor to. Happiness is little changed despite the world improving.”

Source: Same as Ever: A Guide to What Never Changes

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Leading Thoughts Whats New in Leadership Books

Posted by Michael McKinney at 02:08 PM
| Comments (0) | Find more on this topic in Leading Thoughts

05.11.26

Have You Outgrown Your Own Company?

High Altitude Entrepreneur

MOST leaders reach a point where they can see exactly where their company needs to go. The vision is clear — more sophisticated, more scalable, more aligned with the leader they’ve become. They didn’t get to this point by accident. The clarity they have now is the product of a commitment to transformation expressed through years of building, learning, and evolving.

But the company is still organized around an earlier version of their leadership. The revenue is real. The clients are happy. On paper, it works. But the routines, the roles, the decision-making patterns were designed for a different stage. Maybe a different strategy entirely.

As the founder, every day pulls you back into the same patterns: the firefighting, the decisions only you can make, the sense that if you stop moving, everything stops.

This is the tension between where you’re going and what got you here, and it’s one of the most common inflection points in a founder’s journey. At this stage, part of your responsibility as a leader is to transform the company along with you.

New Goals Demand New Thinking

A founder I worked with ran a specialized professional services firm. Over a few years, he had made an important leap from transactional operator to strategic advisor. He built a new framework, renamed his practice, and reimagined his value proposition to create a market segment he could own — higher-trust, higher-fee, more durable client relationships.

He knew where he was going. But the company was still organized around what had gotten him here.

The team’s routines were built for the old model: high volume, fast turnaround, lots of reactive work. The systems rewarded output, not depth. His top producer embodied the old approach perfectly, earning seven figures doing it the traditional way.

There was no reason for that person to change. Because they were successful, challenging the model felt like challenging results.

The founder said it plainly: I can see it. My challenge has been to get there.

He wasn’t confused about the destination. He was caught in the tension between the leader he had become and the organization that was still designed to produce something else.

This is the principle most founders eventually collide with: personal transformation enables organizational transformation, but it doesn’t happen automatically. You have to redesign the organization to match the leader you’re becoming.

Creating that alignment is the hardest part of leadership. But there is a way through it, and it starts with seeing clearly.

Stepping Back to Move Ahead

Rose, a co-founder I worked with, ran a predictive-maintenance startup. In a single hour-long meeting about one of her strategic priorities, she got interrupted eight times; every decision, every customer question, every call was routed through her. She was the bottleneck and she knew it.

The conventional answer would have been to delegate more. However, delegation wasn't the issue. As we worked together, Rose started to recognize that she was actively choosing urgency.

Once she could see what urgency gave her (a feeling of being essential and in control) and what made strategic focus so easy to avoid (it felt boring and lacked immediate payoffs), she recognized that her own choices were keeping her stuck as the bottleneck.

Her dedication to urgency had built a system where her team had no way to make decisions without her, not because they lacked capability, but because she had never designed the conditions for them to use it.

As she changed her relationship to urgency, her team’s relationship to it started to shift as well. Instead of answering questions, she started designing what her team needed to move ahead on their own: clear context, clear constraints, clear freedoms. The company didn't change because she hired new people. It changed because she became a different kind of leader — a designer instead of a doer.

And once she made that shift, she could actually spend her time on strategy instead of being drowned in the urgent. That shift didn't just free up her calendar, it changed what the company was capable of without her in the room.

This kind of transformation starts with three moves:

  1. See the tensions you’ve been avoiding: Where loyalty to what built this company conflicts with what the company needs next. Where your habits serve comfort instead of progress. Where good enough has become the ceiling. These aren’t problems to solve. They’re tensions to navigate.
  2. Own your contribution to the pattern: Acknowledge that you designed this system and it’s doing exactly what it was built to do. The meeting cadence, the decision flow, the hiring bar, the standards you enforce and the ones you work around are living expressions of your leadership. The company is a mirror.
  3. Shift from doer to designer: Stop solving problems and start redesigning the processes, roles, and culture of accountability that align better with the future you've envisioned, not the past you’re coming from. Finally, curtail your instinct to intervene so your team learns to trust themselves and stops gravitating toward old habits.

The next phase of growth is a different kind of growth. Not more effort, not better systems, not another hire who’ll finally take things off your plate. It’s the work of closing the gap between where you’re going and what got you here so that growth stops being a grind and starts feeling like momentum.

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Leading Forum
Chris Clearfield is a leadership strategist and author of The High-Altitude Entrepreneur: A Framework for Scaling Smarter, Leading Better, and Living Freer. Learn more at highaltitudebook.com

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Align Your Organization How to Align Yourself

Posted by Michael McKinney at 10:54 AM
| Comments (0) | Find more on this topic in Entrepreneurship

05.07.26

Leading Thoughts for May 7, 2026

Leading Thoughts

IDEAS shared have the power to expand perspectives, change thinking, and move lives. Here are two ideas for the curious mind to engage with:

I.

Carey Nieuwhof on large and loud opponents to change:

“The loudest people affected by a proposed change are those who are most opposed. The more opposed people are, the louder they tend to become. The problem arises because the noise of opponents to any change will make you a bad mathematician.

“You will confuse loud with large. And you will confuse volume with velocity. You will begin to believe that because opponents are loud, they are many, and because they have volume, they have momentum. Those are the two traps almost every leader falls into at some point. We simply assume loud means large, and that volume signals velocity. But loud does not equal large. And volume does not equal velocity. Just because a voice is loud doesn’t mean you should listen to it most.”

Source: Leading Change without Losing It: Five Strategies That Can Revolutionize How You Lead Change When Facing Opposition

II.

Julia Dhar, Kristy Ellmer and Philip Jameson on leading change:

“Leaders of successful change do more than follow a checklist; they draw on a nuanced understanding of human nature to respond to unique challenges every day. For this reason, we sometimes say that change leadership is a rough-water sport. Every four years, you may watch some footage of an Olympic event called canoe slalom, in which competitors crash down a course of surging whitewater—reading the currents ahead of them, positioning their boat in the right spots at the right moment, and getting back on course when the unexpected occurs. Just like these competitors, change leaders need to predict and respond to the changing currents of human behavior, emotion, and thought across their organizations. Like canoe slalom, leading change is messy and tough—and there is no such thing as a perfect run.”

Source: How Change Really Works: Seven Science-Based Principles for Transforming Your Organization

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Leading Thoughts Whats New in Leadership Books

Posted by Michael McKinney at 01:47 PM
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05.04.26

Why AI Belongs in Your Crisis Planning Playbook

Crisis AI

THERE’S a phrase that seems to be everywhere in the business world right now, but it is likely missing from most companies’ crisis management plans: Artificial Intelligence (AI).

Crack open any decent crisis planning playbook, and you’ll find detailed roadmaps for navigating natural disasters, system failures, and traditional cyberattacks. These risks are well understood, and crisis management planners have often seen how other organizations have handled these setbacks or even dealt with them themselves.

Although AI now touches on great swaths of our professional and personal lives, it is still a very young technology. And while most people vaguely understand that AI introduces some new level of risk, these dangers largely have yet to materialize in the sorts of public disasters that make headlines and get business leaders to take notice.

Although no one can predict exactly how AI-related risks will unfold in the years to come, businesses should start incorporating the technology into their crisis management plans now. Bad actors are already using (and misusing) the technology, and some of the vulnerabilities in early AI deployments are starting to reveal themselves. Armed with this knowledge, organizations can prepare for AI-driven incidents before these events cause full-blown crises.

How AI Is Reshaping Cyber Threats

Unfortunately, AI is already making cyber attackers faster and more effective. Attacks that once required ample time, expertise, and manual effort to carry out can now be automated and scaled. The technology is also opening organizations to new attack types meant to leverage the vulnerabilities of AI systems.

Consider phishing attacks - a form of social engineering in which users are tricked into clicking a malicious link, downloading an infected file, or providing sensitive information such as passwords or banking information. With the help of AI, attackers can generate countless highly personalized messages, tailoring their tone, language, and details to specific targets. This makes fraudulent communications more difficult for employees to identify, increasing the likelihood of a successful breach.

At the same time, AI is introducing entirely new categories of risk. Many businesses are deploying the technology for processes such as customer service, which involve troves of sensitive information. Emerging cyber-attacks such as prompt injection, data poisoning, and model manipulation can be used to expose this information, or to manipulate AI outputs in ways that harm the business.

Finally, AI is blurring the line between fact and fiction. With deepfake video or audio messages, attackers have impersonated executives or colleagues, creating the trust needed to convince employees to take potentially disastrous actions.

Bringing a Crisis Planning Lens to AI

Perhaps understandably, many organizations still treat AI as a mostly technical capability aimed at transforming business outcomes. However, leaders must also carefully consider the risks of the technology. Looking at AI through a crisis planning lens means considering it with the same seriousness that teams bring when planning for a potential natural disaster, a system outage, or a data breach that exposes customer payment information.

Crisis management teams must think through how they would respond if an operations or management system were compromised by external AI. For instance: What is the role of legal, public relations, and product teams if a company’s chatbot begins providing users harmful or biased responses? What steps will the organization take if an attacker impersonates the CEO with a deepfake video that leads to a large fraudulent transaction or jeopardizes the company’s reputation? And what happens if a previously unknown vulnerability in an AI tool makes confidential human resources data available to users across the company or, worse, external bad actors?

AI is evolving quickly; crisis plans must be revisited frequently. It’s important that these conversations include cross-functional teams, because that is who will be responding to virtually any crisis involving AI. IT Security teams may be the first to detect an issue, but legal departments, communications professionals, and executive leadership will all likely play critical roles in determining how the organization responds. Aligning these groups ahead of time will avoid delays and confusion when the time comes to act.

Although all the risks surrounding AI may not yet be fully understood, we can say with certainty that the technology will play a role in future high-profile crises. Organizations that wait for an incident to force action will find themselves making critical, on-the-spot decisions under extraordinary pressure. But those that begin integrating AI into their crisis planning now will be able to respond from a position of preparedness rather than panic.

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Leading Forum
Steven B. Goldman is an internationally recognized expert and consultant in Business Resiliency, Crisis Management, Crisis Leadership, and Crisis Communications. He has over 40 years’ experience in the various aspects of these disciplines, including program management, plan development, training, exercises, and response strategies. He is the Director of the program offered through MIT Professional Education. The 2026 sessions run live on campus July 13-17 and online during the last two weeks of October. This comprehensive program provides important knowledge, current assessments, and several case studies on issues that affect you and your organization — regulations and standards, response strategies, cyber security, supply chain, crisis leadership, artificial intelligence, communications, news media, social media, federal/state/local government response, drills and exercises — from the experts involved with these efforts.

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AI Survival Competing in the Age of AI

Posted by Michael McKinney at 03:07 PM
| Comments (0) | Find more on this topic in Artificial Intelligence

05.01.26

First Look: Leadership Books for May 2026

First Look Books

HERE'S A LOOK at some of the best leadership books to be released in May 2026 curated just for you. Be sure to check out the other great titles being offered this month.

9780593715710Inside the Box: How Constraints Make Us Better by David Epstein

We live in a world that gives us seemingly infinite choices and prizes freedom above all else. We have an unprecedented number of options regarding what to do, who to be, and how to spend our time. All that choice is wonderful; it is also overwhelming. The irony is that total freedom can be paralyzing, and unlimited resources don’t necessarily lead to the biggest breakthroughs. In fact, overvaluing complete freedom can be disastrous for everything from starting a company to harnessing creativity to finding personal satisfaction. David Epstein argues that all of us—individuals, businesses, institutions, even societies—can benefit from narrowing our options.

9781394395002Valuable and Visible: Redefining Personal Branding by Leading with Impact Over Image by Vanessa Errecarte

You’ve built real skill. You’ve solved real problems. But in a world that rewards visibility, doing meaningful work isn’t enough. Recognition matters. Yet the modern version of “personal branding” feels exhausting. Somewhere along the way, personal branding became synonymous with self-promotion, follower counts, and algorithm-chasing. For thoughtful professionals and students like you, that version feels performative at best and misaligned at worst. And yet invisibility is no longer neutral. If your work is going to matter, your ideas have to travel. In Valuable & Visible: Redefining Personal Branding by Leading with Impact Over Image, award-winning marketing lecturer Vanessa Errecarte offers a different path: a service-first approach designed for professionals who want credibility, not clout.

9781399430227Why Start-Ups Fail: Avoiding the Traps on the Path to Commercial Success by Bernie Bulkin

A shocking 90% of start-ups fail. Many of these failures are preventable, but you need to understand the causes and how to avoid them – both as an entrepreneur and an investor. From technology to the market, from leadership to money, there are numerous reasons why your start-up will fail. Bernie Bulkin guides you through the six major reasons why start-ups fail, and how to avoid them. Instead of accepting failure as inevitable, this book breaks down the main reasons why start-ups fail and how to turn them on their head. Whether you're a founder or an investor, if you're going to put in the time, money, and effort to ensure a company succeeds, you should go in with your eyes open. Bernie's common-sense approach offers the experience of a venture capitalist who has been there and done that. Leadership at all levels makes a difference.

9798892792110How Change Really Works: Seven Science-Based Principles for Transforming Your Organization by Julia Dhar, Kristy Ellmer and Philip Jameson

Companies have never invested more in transformation—or wasted more on failed attempts. Finally, a science-based, practical guide to making change stick. Market volatility. AI. Regulatory uncertainty. Geopolitical risk. Leaders know they must adapt faster than ever—yet most transformation programs still fail to deliver their expected outcomes, with enormous costs to companies, shareholders, and the broader economy. But some companies do succeed. In How Change Really Works, Boston Consulting Group experts Dhar, Ellmer, and Jameson show that these successes aren't random—they're connected by a common set of principles and practices. The authors offer seven principles that form the core of a truly human-centered approach to successful organizational change.

9798900260150Enlightened Bottom Line: Exploring the Intersection of Spirituality, Business, and Investing by Jenna Nicholas

What if business and investing could be rooted in the deepest values of the human spirit? In Enlightened Bottom Line, Nicholas explores the powerful intersection of spirituality, business, and investing—an intersection too often overlooked in a world driven by profit alone. Drawing on moving stories of entrepreneurs, investors, and leaders who are living out this integration, along with cutting-edge research, Nicholas reveals how spiritual wisdom can guide ethical choices in finance and business. Unlike other books on business or investing, Enlightened Bottom Line is not just about strategies, numbers, or policies. It is about reimagining what wealth, success, and leadership can truly mean when guided by purpose, compassion, and integrity. It offers readers concrete frameworks and real-world examples to align their financial decisions with their deepest beliefs.

9798893311860Incorruptible: Why Good Companies Go Bad... and How Great Companies Stay Great by Eric Ries

For decades, we've explained corporate corruption as a problem of bad actors, moral weakness, or isolated scandals. But that story doesn't match reality. Again and again, companies founded with strong ideals drift toward short-term thinking, extractive behavior, and mission abandonment—often despite the best intentions of the people inside them. Incorruptible argues that this failure is not primarily ethical. It is structural. As organizations grow, the systems that govern them—ownership, incentives, charters, accountability, and decision-making—quietly reshape behavior. When those systems are poorly designed, even principled leaders are pushed toward outcomes they never wanted. Success itself becomes a form of financial gravity, bending companies away from their original purpose. Ries shows how these failures arise predictably—and how they can be prevented. He reframes corporate governance not as bureaucracy or compliance, but as a creative and strategic act at the heart of building enduring, mission-controlled companies.

More Titles

9798217087808 9781510786622 9781637635247 9781394365777

For bulk orders call 1-626-441-2024

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“Books are the quietest and most constant of friends; they are the most accessible and wisest of counselors, and the most patient of teachers.”
— Charles W. Eliot

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Best Books of 2025 Ingram Values

Posted by Michael McKinney at 12:27 AM
| Comments (0) | Find more on this topic in Books

04.30.26

Leading Thoughts for April 30, 2026

Leading Thoughts

IDEAS shared have the power to expand perspectives, change thinking, and move lives. Here are two ideas for the curious mind to engage with:

I.

Paul Ingram on values:

“When you know your values-really know them-you unlock something vital. You get clarity when things are uncertain. You gain confidence when decisions get hard. You find resilience when life throws something unexpected your way. And you create deeper connections with others because you’re leading from a place that’s honest and grounded.”

Source: What Do You Really Stand For? The One Question That Will Transform Your Work and Life

II.

Stanley McCrystal on the ends justify the means:

“It is the ‘end justifies the means’ conundrum. We often can’t be all we want to be without departing from the character we aspire to cultivate. The choice is rarely binary, although we often wish it were. But, if we choose an inflexible adherence to certain values, this can prove difficult to pull off within the complexities of the real world. On the other hand, once we depart from our core character, we join the legions of those who have abandoned what matters most.”

Source: On Character: Choices That Define a Life

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Leading Thoughts Whats New in Leadership Books

Posted by Michael McKinney at 10:46 AM
| Comments (0) | Find more on this topic in Leading Thoughts

LeadershipNow 140: April 2026 Compilation

LeadershipNow Twitter

twitter Here is a selection of Posts from April 2026 that you will want to check out:

See more on twitter Twitter.

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Best Practices Ingram Values

Posted by Michael McKinney at 08:59 AM
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