Your Future Realized

130: When Your Ops Team’s Urgency Is Not Your Emergency

5 min · 29. Apr. 2026
Episode 130: When Your Ops Team’s Urgency Is Not Your Emergency Cover

Beschreibung

Find the full transcript plus more support for ops execs at: YourFutureRealized.com/130 [https://www.yourfuturerealized.com/130]. A client said to me a few months ago, “I’ve got to get my team to own more of this, because right now I’m the go‑to for 200 people.” She said it with this quiet exhale, and you could tell she’d been carrying that weight for a long time. When I asked her recently if she’d met that goal, she said, “One hundred percent. I have way fewer Slacks, fewer emails, and a lot less swirl before I’m out of the office. I feel like I can breathe.” The way she said it felt grounded and real, that kind of ease that usually takes a lot of letting go to get to. What changed between those two conversations? That’s what we’re unpacking today - how she stopped treating other teams’ urgency as her personal emergency and started letting her team rise up to own it.

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Alle Folgen

135 Folgen

Episode 134: When Ops Executives Realize They’re the Only One Who Knows Cover

134: When Ops Executives Realize They’re the Only One Who Knows

Find the full transcript, and more resources for operations executives, at YourFutureRealized.com/134 [https://www.yourfuturerealized.com/134]. She didn’t plan to become the only one who knew how everything worked. It just kind of happened. One project turned into two. A few shortcuts lived in her head instead of anywhere written down. People started coming to her because it was faster. Easier. And after a while, when someone asked, “Who should we go to for this?” the answer was just… her. It felt a little reassuring for her, like job security. For everyone else, things were under control. Until the day that someone left: Went on sabbatical, shifted roles, or got pulled into something new. Suddenly, everyone realized how much of the work wasn’t actually in the system. It was in a person. In this episode, you’ll get one small experiment to help you step out of being “the only one,” without blowing up your whole way of working.

27. Mai 20265 min
Episode 133: When Your Ops Team Says ‘We’re Fine’ (And You Know They’re Not) Cover

133: When Your Ops Team Says ‘We’re Fine’ (And You Know They’re Not)

Find the full transcript at YourFutureRealized.com/133. He was relieved the reorg work was over. Weeks of prep, stacked meetings, late‑night revisions: done. It was a lot to get that new org chart over the line, but at least things were moving again. It was just one more change stacked on a few very rocky years. For many on his team, it was the biggest shakeup of their careers, and that’s saying something. He sensed something rumbling under the surface but it didn’t have a name yet. What I notice in this phase is something we rarely say out loud. Beneath the polite efficiency, there’s often a quiet missing, people grieving what the company used to be while trying to convince themselves the new thing is okay. In this episode, you’ll get one simple thing you can do when they’re saying “we’re fine,” but you know there’s more going on underneath.

20. Mai 20265 min
Episode 132: Why Your Ops Team Goes Flat After a Transition—and What to Do Next Cover

132: Why Your Ops Team Goes Flat After a Transition—and What to Do Next

Find the full transcript at YourFutureRealized.com/132 [https://www.yourfuturerealized.com/132]. She thought, “Wow, the transition went much better than last time.” Roles shifted. Timelines complete. No one asking, “Wait, who owns this now?” A week later, everything was just… still. Nothing blew up, no one quit. Everything was moving forward, but something was different. The team’s energy had gone from tense to… kind of flat. Waiting in that limbo where the old plan is done and the new one hasn’t quite landed. And that’s when she got nervous, because it didn’t feel like progress anymore. Just, disturbingly quiet.  It’s something we don’t always pay a lot of attention to: That time right after a big change, when everyone is absorbing it and figuring out the new normal. In this episode I’ll share the simple experiment this exec tried in that confusing little phase to uncover what was really going on.

13. Mai 20264 min
Episode 131: That One Question All Ops Execs Eventually Ask Me Cover

131: That One Question All Ops Execs Eventually Ask Me

Find the full transcript at YourFutureRealized.com/131 [https://www.yourfuturerealized.com/131]. This is something I always hear from ops execs: “I just can’t make time for strategy.” On the surface, it sounds like a scheduling thing. But underneath, there’s usually a deeper worry:“What if I’ve gotten too far from my best thinking and can’t find my way back?” There’s usually also background pressure when the bigger priorities keep slipping. Not long ago, when a calf strain benched me from running, I wasn’t just frustrated — I was scared my get-up-and-go would die. That I’d lose the part of me that comes alive when I run, the rhythm and the mental reset. That led me to a simple practice I use with leaders who want strategy time back in the real world. In this episode, I’ll share it so you can reconnect with what you truly miss and start moving again on the big priorities.

6. Mai 20265 min
Episode 130: When Your Ops Team’s Urgency Is Not Your Emergency Cover

130: When Your Ops Team’s Urgency Is Not Your Emergency

Find the full transcript plus more support for ops execs at: YourFutureRealized.com/130 [https://www.yourfuturerealized.com/130]. A client said to me a few months ago, “I’ve got to get my team to own more of this, because right now I’m the go‑to for 200 people.” She said it with this quiet exhale, and you could tell she’d been carrying that weight for a long time. When I asked her recently if she’d met that goal, she said, “One hundred percent. I have way fewer Slacks, fewer emails, and a lot less swirl before I’m out of the office. I feel like I can breathe.” The way she said it felt grounded and real, that kind of ease that usually takes a lot of letting go to get to. What changed between those two conversations? That’s what we’re unpacking today - how she stopped treating other teams’ urgency as her personal emergency and started letting her team rise up to own it.

29. Apr. 20265 min