HeartWired: Emotionally-Intelligent Leadership for an AI World
SHOW NOTES: HEARTWIRED – EMOTIONALLY INTELLIGENT LEADERSHIP Episode Title: Kind, Not Nice: Building Human Leaders in a Robotic World Host: Dr. MJ Guest: David Shar, PhD, SHRM-SCP, President & Founder, Illuminate PMC EPISODE SUMMARY In this episode of Heartwired, Dr. MJ sits down with David Shar — behavioral scientist, organizational consultant, and lecturer in the University of Maryland's I/O Psychology graduate program — to draw a hard line between being nice and being kind, and to explore what that distinction means for leadership in an AI-driven workplace. David has spent his career building kinder organizations, conducting the first qualitative study on passion decline at work, and translating psychological research into strategies leaders can actually use. In this conversation, he makes the case that kindness isn't softness — it's the willingness to tell people the hard truths nobody else will. He connects that idea directly to AI, arguing that as sycophantic chatbots tell us how brilliant we are, the leaders who can still deliver honest, sometimes uncomfortable feedback will be the ones their people trust most. The conversation covers the real difference between conflict avoidance and healthy conflict, why stagnation is as dangerous as burnout, the choice every leader faces between doubling down on AI or doubling down on being human, and how to lead a team through change without pretending you have all the answers. KEY TAKEAWAYS KINDNESS ISN'T NICE — IT'S HONEST Being nice means avoiding conflict to make people feel comfortable and to be liked. Being kind means caring enough to tell someone the hard truth nobody else will. David argues that real kindness in leadership looks like feedback, not flattery — and that organizations built on kindness, not niceness, perform better because people aren't afraid to disagree. CONFLICT IS A FEATURE, NOT A BUG Leaders who surround themselves with people who never push back start to believe they're infallible. Healthy conflict means people care enough to argue for their ideas and offer different perspectives. The absence of conflict in a room isn't peace — it's often a warning sign that no one feels safe enough to say no. STAGNATION IS AS DANGEROUS AS BURNOUT David's doctoral research on passion decline found that roughly half of people who fell out of love with their work cited overwork — but the other half cited the opposite: too little challenge, no growth, no new place to go. Letting someone stagnate, David argues, is one of the least kind things a leader can do. Growth and challenge are innate human drivers, and leaders need to actively feed them through stretch assignments, new goals, and real feedback. AI CAN FREE PEOPLE FOR MEANINGFUL WORK — IF LEADERS USE IT RIGHT Offloading mundane, repetitive tasks to AI can free people to reconnect with the deeper mission that brought them to a job in the first place. But David is candid about the uncertainty at scale: if entry-level and frontline roles traditionally use "mundane" work to build skill and context, what happens to that pipeline when AI absorbs those tasks? It's a question without a clean answer yet. DOUBLE DOWN ON HUMAN, NOT JUST ON AI As every organization races toward more AI, more automation, more robotic efficiency, David suggests the more interesting opportunity might be moving in the opposite direction. The brands and workplaces that double down on genuine human connection — not transactional efficiency — may be the ones people choose to work for, shop with, and stay loyal to. Robots get replaced by other robots. Humans can't be. MAKE SPACE TO MOURN THE OLD BEFORE PULLING PEOPLE TOWARD THE NEW Change management tends to focus entirely on the future and the benefits ahead. David argues leaders need to also make room for what's being lost — and resist labeling anyone who isn't immediately excited as a "resister." Listening to resistance, rather than shutting it down, often surfaces real concerns worth addressing. "I DON'T KNOW" IS A VALID, TRUSTWORTHY ANSWER When employees worry they're training their own replacement, the most honest response isn't false reassurance — it's acknowledging the uncertainty directly. David references a striking example from a healthcare crisis: a hospital administrator who told staff, "I can't promise everything will be okay, but we're figuring this out together." That kind of honesty builds trust. Toxic positivity destroys it. TRUST IS THE MOST VALUABLE COMMODITY AT WORK When someone brings a real concern to a leader — even expressed with frustration or anger — that's an act of trust. Shutting it down, dismissing it, or rushing to reframe it positively erodes that trust immediately. The leaders who can sit with discomfort and really listen are the ones people will continue to be honest with. MEMORABLE QUOTES > "Being kind means I care enough about you that I'm gonna tell you the hard things that maybe nobody else will."— David Shar > "As everybody becomes more robotic, what would happen if we became more human?"— David Shar > "Robots get replaced by robots. Humans can't be replaced by robots."— David Shar > "We're in this together, that we're figuring this out together — that, together, we are going to navigate this."— David Shar ABOUT OUR GUEST David Shar, PhD, SHRM-SCP, is President & Founder of Illuminate PMC and a keynote speaker, corporate trainer, and organizational consultant. He is also a popular lecturer in the University of Maryland's I/O Psychology graduate program. As a behavioral scientist and work passion researcher, David conducted the first qualitative study on passion decline in the workplace. He translates cutting-edge psychological research into actionable strategies that help organizations reduce burnout, reignite employee engagement, and build stronger cultures. Known for his infectious passion, humor, and real-world applicability, David has delivered impactful keynotes and workshops across healthcare, law, technology, manufacturing, and more. Website: DavidShar.com [http://davidshar.com/] LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/DavidShar [http://linkedin.com/in/DavidShar] YouTube: youtube.com/@DavidShar [http://youtube.com/@DavidShar] CONNECT WITH HEARTWIRED Email: drmj@drmjheartwired.com Website: drmjheartwired.com Subscribe: Don't miss an episode — follow on Spotify. 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