Leadership Limbo

The False Summit Bonus Episode: Rapid-Fire Questions, Leadership Lessons, and a Few Surprises

1 h 5 min · 16. juni 2026
episode The False Summit Bonus Episode: Rapid-Fire Questions, Leadership Lessons, and a Few Surprises cover

Description

Episode Overview In this special bonus episode of Leadership Limbo, Josh Hugo and John Clark realize they accidentally miscounted the season schedule and discover they aren't quite at the summit of Season 2 after all. Instead of wrapping things up, they take the opportunity to do something different: turn the microphones on themselves. Through a mix of leadership reflections, personal stories, rapid-fire questions, and a healthy amount of humor, Josh and John explore the experiences, beliefs, and lessons that have shaped them both as leaders and as people. Along the way, they discuss formative jobs, parenting, leadership advice they've abandoned, feedback that challenged them, books that influenced their thinking, and the guests who most impacted their perspectives over the past two seasons. The conversation serves as both a retrospective on the podcast and a deeper look into the people behind it. Themes of self-awareness, curiosity, development, ownership, psychological safety, overfunctioning, and leadership maturity all resurface—but through a more personal lens than listeners typically hear. The episode ultimately reinforces one of the central ideas of Leadership Limbo: leadership is less about having the right answers and more about continually learning, growing, reflecting, and becoming more intentional in how we show up for ourselves and others. Timestamped Chapters 00:00 – The False Summit and Bonus Episode Introduction 04:25 – Unexpected Jobs and Early Work Experiences 09:40 – Leadership Advice We've Changed Our Minds About 17:00 – Leadership Concepts We Resisted and Eventually Embraced 22:45 – Feedback That Stung but Turned Out to Be True 27:40 – Guests and Ideas That Changed Our Thinking 33:20 – Topics Leaders Still Misunderstand 36:15 – If You Could Recommend Only One Book 41:50 – Coaching Questions and Leadership Buzzwords 45:00 – Leadership Habits, Workplace Pet Peeves, and Dream Guests 51:00 – Leadership Lessons We Still Struggle to Practice 56:00 – What We Hope Our Children Learn From Watching Us Work 59:20 – Rapid Fire Lightning Round Key Takeaways Leadership development starts with self-awareness. Many of the most meaningful lessons discussed in the episode stem from understanding personal tendencies, blind spots, and patterns of behavior. Curiosity is a leadership skill. Both hosts reflect on the importance of remaining learners and resisting the temptation to believe they already have the answers. The hardest leadership work is often internal. Presence, emotional awareness, overfunctioning, underfunctioning, and authentic connection remain ongoing areas of growth. Many leadership concepts become distorted through overuse. Terms like psychological safety, servant leadership, priorities, and ownership often lose meaning when leaders stop wrestling with their deeper implications. Leadership is ultimately relational. Whether discussing family, teams, coaching, or organizational culture, the episode repeatedly returns to the importance of how leaders function in relationship with others. Listener Homework Take a few minutes to answer three of the questions from this episode for yourself: What feedback have you received that stung but turned out to be true? What leadership concept did you resist before eventually embracing? If someone observed you at work every day, what leadership habit would they find most annoying? Then consider this final reflection: If someone listened to every conversation you've had as a leader over the last year, what would they conclude you believe about leadership? Resources Referenced A Failure of Nerve by Edwin Friedman The Social Animal by David Brooks A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens The PIQ Perspective by Josh Hugo (josh482.substack.com)

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episode The False Summit Bonus Episode: Rapid-Fire Questions, Leadership Lessons, and a Few Surprises artwork

The False Summit Bonus Episode: Rapid-Fire Questions, Leadership Lessons, and a Few Surprises

Episode Overview In this special bonus episode of Leadership Limbo, Josh Hugo and John Clark realize they accidentally miscounted the season schedule and discover they aren't quite at the summit of Season 2 after all. Instead of wrapping things up, they take the opportunity to do something different: turn the microphones on themselves. Through a mix of leadership reflections, personal stories, rapid-fire questions, and a healthy amount of humor, Josh and John explore the experiences, beliefs, and lessons that have shaped them both as leaders and as people. Along the way, they discuss formative jobs, parenting, leadership advice they've abandoned, feedback that challenged them, books that influenced their thinking, and the guests who most impacted their perspectives over the past two seasons. The conversation serves as both a retrospective on the podcast and a deeper look into the people behind it. Themes of self-awareness, curiosity, development, ownership, psychological safety, overfunctioning, and leadership maturity all resurface—but through a more personal lens than listeners typically hear. The episode ultimately reinforces one of the central ideas of Leadership Limbo: leadership is less about having the right answers and more about continually learning, growing, reflecting, and becoming more intentional in how we show up for ourselves and others. Timestamped Chapters 00:00 – The False Summit and Bonus Episode Introduction 04:25 – Unexpected Jobs and Early Work Experiences 09:40 – Leadership Advice We've Changed Our Minds About 17:00 – Leadership Concepts We Resisted and Eventually Embraced 22:45 – Feedback That Stung but Turned Out to Be True 27:40 – Guests and Ideas That Changed Our Thinking 33:20 – Topics Leaders Still Misunderstand 36:15 – If You Could Recommend Only One Book 41:50 – Coaching Questions and Leadership Buzzwords 45:00 – Leadership Habits, Workplace Pet Peeves, and Dream Guests 51:00 – Leadership Lessons We Still Struggle to Practice 56:00 – What We Hope Our Children Learn From Watching Us Work 59:20 – Rapid Fire Lightning Round Key Takeaways Leadership development starts with self-awareness. Many of the most meaningful lessons discussed in the episode stem from understanding personal tendencies, blind spots, and patterns of behavior. Curiosity is a leadership skill. Both hosts reflect on the importance of remaining learners and resisting the temptation to believe they already have the answers. The hardest leadership work is often internal. Presence, emotional awareness, overfunctioning, underfunctioning, and authentic connection remain ongoing areas of growth. Many leadership concepts become distorted through overuse. Terms like psychological safety, servant leadership, priorities, and ownership often lose meaning when leaders stop wrestling with their deeper implications. Leadership is ultimately relational. Whether discussing family, teams, coaching, or organizational culture, the episode repeatedly returns to the importance of how leaders function in relationship with others. Listener Homework Take a few minutes to answer three of the questions from this episode for yourself: What feedback have you received that stung but turned out to be true? What leadership concept did you resist before eventually embracing? If someone observed you at work every day, what leadership habit would they find most annoying? Then consider this final reflection: If someone listened to every conversation you've had as a leader over the last year, what would they conclude you believe about leadership? Resources Referenced A Failure of Nerve by Edwin Friedman The Social Animal by David Brooks A Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens The PIQ Perspective by Josh Hugo (josh482.substack.com)

16. juni 20261 h 5 min
episode 40 Episodes In: What 40 Conversations Revealed About Leadership artwork

40 Episodes In: What 40 Conversations Revealed About Leadership

Episode Overview As Leadership Limbo approaches its 40th episode and the close of Season 2, Josh Hugo and John Clark pause to reflect on the ideas, guests, and leadership lessons that have most shaped their thinking over the past year. Rather than revisiting individual episodes, this conversation explores the recurring themes that surfaced again and again across discussions with guests from education, healthcare, manufacturing, consulting, construction, and beyond. The result is a thoughtful look at what leadership development actually requires—and where many leaders unintentionally get stuck. Josh and John examine the tension between leadership frameworks and real-world complexity, arguing that many leadership concepts are oversimplified and often misunderstood. They revisit the central idea that leadership is rarely about certainty and control; instead, it requires learning to navigate ambiguity, make decisions without perfect information, and remain grounded amid competing pressures. The conversation also returns to one of the podcast's most consistent themes: leaders as developers of people. Drawing on past discussions about de-envelopment, coaching, accountability, and growth, Josh and John reflect on why great leadership begins with a belief in the capacity of others and why development requires more than simply telling people what to do. The episode also explores self-differentiation, mature functioning, emotional awareness, presence, and the importance of understanding how leaders respond to pressure. Throughout the discussion, the hosts challenge listeners to think differently about leadership—not as a collection of techniques, but as an ongoing practice of helping people grow, contribute, and flourish. Ultimately, the episode lands on a powerful idea: leadership is less about directing others and more about creating the conditions that help people become more fully themselves. Timestamped Chapters 00:00 – Celebrating 40 Episodes of Leadership Limbo 05:00 – Leadership Advice Is More Nuanced Than It Appears 08:00 – Navigating Ambiguity and Uncertainty as a Leader 10:30 – Development, De-Envelopment, and Believing in Others 15:00 – Self-Differentiation and Mature Leadership 23:00 – Why Technical Expertise Isn't Enough 26:00 – Human Beings vs. Human Doings 31:00 – Care, Competence, and the Work of Leadership 34:00 – Liberation, Storytelling, and Helping Others Flourish 37:00 – Final Reflections and Listener Homework Key Takeaways Leadership is rarely as simple as leadership books make it seem. The most important leadership concepts often require deeper reflection, context, and nuance than many frameworks suggest. Ambiguity is a reality to navigate. Effective leaders learn to act thoughtfully even when certainty is unavailable. The best leaders see themselves as developers of people. Growth happens when leaders believe others are capable of learning, improving, and taking ownership of their development. Technical expertise may earn leadership opportunities, but relational skills determine long-term effectiveness. Self-awareness, emotional intelligence, communication, and presence consistently matter more than many leaders realize. Leadership is ultimately about creating conditions for others to thrive. Great leaders challenge, support, develop, and liberate others rather than simply directing their work. Listener Homework Reflect on the people you currently lead, support, coach, teach, or influence. Ask yourself: Where am I solving problems for people that they could solve themselves? Where am I confusing caring for someone with developing someone? What would it look like to create more conditions for growth, ownership, and responsibility? Finally, consider John's closing question: How are you helping liberate others to become their best selves—and what might need to change in your own leadership to make that possible? Resources Referenced A Failure of Nerve — Edwin Friedman The Support-Challenge Matrix — GiANT Worldwide The Death of Demographics — David Allison The PIQ Perspective — Josh Hugo (josh482.substack.com)

9. juni 202637 min
episode Leadership Limbo Conversations: Dan Beatty — Why Great Leaders Tell Better Stories artwork

Leadership Limbo Conversations: Dan Beatty — Why Great Leaders Tell Better Stories

Episode Overview In this episode of Leadership Limbo, Josh Hugo and John Clark welcome construction industry leader, consultant, and founder of Constructive Leadership Solutions [https://constructiveleadershipsolutions.com/], Dan Beatty, for a conversation about one of leadership's most overlooked tools: storytelling. Drawing on more than three decades in the construction industry, Dan shares how his unlikely combination of construction experience and a lifelong love of theater shaped his understanding of leadership. While technical expertise may get projects built, Dan argues that stories are what connect people, create meaning, build trust, and help teams navigate complexity. Throughout the conversation, Dan explains why storytelling is far more than entertainment. Effective leaders use stories to help people visualize the future, connect work to purpose, lower defensiveness, communicate lessons, and create shared understanding. Whether onboarding a new employee, launching a project, developing a team member, or navigating a difficult challenge, stories help leaders engage both the head and the heart. The discussion also explores the tension many industries face between technical competence and people leadership. Dan reflects on how construction has historically emphasized hard skills and measurable outcomes while often overlooking the relational and emotional skills that drive culture, engagement, and long-term performance. As younger generations enter leadership roles, he sees growing demand for purpose, belonging, and meaningful work—creating new opportunities for leaders who can paint a compelling picture of what is possible. One of the strongest themes of the episode is the role of the middle manager as a translator and conductor. Great managers help bridge the gap between executive vision and frontline reality, creating clarity while helping people understand how their individual work contributes to something larger than themselves. Whether you lead a construction crew, a school, a healthcare team, or a growing business, this conversation offers practical insights into how stories help leaders influence, develop, and inspire others. Timestamped Chapters 00:00 – Welcome and Introducing Dan Beatty 06:00 – Dan's Construction Journey and Three-Act Career Story 09:30 – Why Storytelling Matters in Leadership 17:30 – The Challenge of Measuring Leadership ROI 22:10 – Purpose, Belonging, and the Next Generation Workforce 25:10 – Storytelling on Projects and Building Shared Vision 30:00 – Coaching, Development, and Personal Growth Stories 34:00 – Leading Through Complexity and Change 40:15 – Visualization, Narrative, and Untapped Leadership Potential 46:00 – Onboarding, Belonging, and Creating a Roadmap for Success 52:50 – Dan's Leadership Inspiration: Captain Kirk 56:00 – Final Reflections and Closing Thoughts Key Takeaways Storytelling is one of the most powerful ways leaders connect people to purpose, meaning, and action. The best stories do more than entertain—they provide lessons, create clarity, and help people visualize success. Leadership influence grows when people can see themselves inside the story rather than simply receiving instructions. Purpose and belonging remain two of the strongest motivators across industries, especially for younger generations entering the workforce. Great middle managers act as translators between executive vision and frontline reality. Storytelling is particularly valuable during periods of uncertainty because it helps people make sense of challenges while maintaining hope and direction. Effective onboarding is ultimately narrative building—helping people understand where they are today, where they are going, and how they fit into the journey. Listener Homework Think about a challenge, project, or change initiative you're currently leading. Instead of immediately focusing on tasks, metrics, or deliverables, ask yourself: What story am I helping people see? Can your team visualize the outcome? Can they connect their work to a larger purpose? Do they understand where they fit into the journey? This week, intentionally use a story, metaphor, or personal experience to help someone better understand a challenge they're facing. Resources Referenced Constructive Leadership Solutions [https://constructiveleadershipsolutions.com/] (Dan Beatty) The 7 Habits of Highly Effective People [https://www.thriftbooks.com/w/the-7-habits-of-highly-effective-people-by-stephen-r-covey/246855/item/47646809/?utm_source=google&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=pmax_non_scarce_used_nca_22292660096&utm_adgroup=&utm_term=&utm_content=&gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=22296401182&gbraid=0AAAAADwY45h_iHvM2m2Hs3xPZudZeWVvk&gclid=Cj0KCQjw2_TQBhCnARIsAF3-XhxnLU9XRCTQZl637LjPt8NPeJVQknZaxPcDXm5LynlbTectAh9C-CcaAqMhEALw_wcB#idiq=47646809&edition=24086584] by Stephen Covey The Death of Demographics [https://www.amazon.com/Death-Demographics-Valuegraphic-Marketing-Values-Driven/dp/1544534620] by David Allison The PIQ Perspective [http://josh482.substack.com] by Josh Hugo

2. juni 202655 min
episode Extreme Ownership: What Leaders Get Wrong About Accountability artwork

Extreme Ownership: What Leaders Get Wrong About Accountability

Episode Overview In this episode of Leadership Limbo, Josh Hugo and John Clark explore one of the most overused, and often misunderstood, concepts in leadership: ownership. Leaders frequently say they want teams that “take ownership,” “act like owners,” or are “biased toward action.” But what do those phrases actually mean in practice? And more importantly, what conditions are leaders responsible for creating before they can reasonably expect ownership from others? The conversation begins by unpacking the tension beneath common leadership frustrations. While many leaders claim they want initiative, solutions, and autonomy from their teams, they often unknowingly create cultures that discourage risk-taking, punish imperfect ideas, bottleneck decision-making, or leave responsibilities undefined. In those environments, calls for “ownership” become less about empowerment and more about leader frustration. Josh and John challenge the simplistic idea that ownership is merely initiative or hustle. Instead, they define ownership as understanding your responsibilities, acting within them courageously, and resisting both passivity and over-functioning. Real ownership requires clarity, trust, development, and appropriate authority—not just motivational language. A major theme throughout the episode is the role of leaders in either enabling or suppressing ownership. Leaders who immediately shoot down ideas, reclaim decisions, or maintain control over every outcome unintentionally train teams to stop taking initiative. Likewise, organizations that fail to define roles, decision-making rights, and developmental pathways often create confusion rather than accountability. The episode also explores the relationship between ownership and growth. Strong teams are not built by collecting experts who stay comfortably within their lane. They are built by consistently challenging people within their zone of proximal development—stretching them enough to grow while still providing coaching and support. Ultimately, the conversation reframes ownership as a leadership systems issue rather than simply an employee mindset issue. If leaders want courageous, accountable, solutions-oriented teams, they must first create environments where people are trusted, developed, and genuinely empowered to act. Timestamped Chapters 00:00 – Introduction and Spring Chaos with Kids and Sports 04:16 – Recapping Psychological Safety and Team Development 06:28 – What Do Leaders Actually Mean by “Ownership”? 09:17 – Why Teams Often Flinch at “Extreme Ownership” 12:48 – Defining Ownership More Clearly 16:06 – Generational Complaints and Leadership Frustration 20:49 – “I Want Solutions, Not Problems” 25:34 – “Act Like an Owner” and “Bias Toward Action” 27:43 – Risk-Taking and Creating Conditions for Ownership 31:32 – Leadership Bottlenecks and Decision-Making Rights 35:22 – Challenging People Within Their Growth Zone 39:48 – Coaching vs. Simply Demanding Ownership 41:10 – Roles, Responsibilities, and Organizational Clarity 46:22 – Homework and Final Leadership Reflections Key Takeaways Ownership is not the same thing as over-functioning or taking over everyone else’s work. Leaders often unintentionally suppress ownership through defensiveness, bottlenecks, and lack of clarity. Psychological safety and ownership are deeply connected because ownership requires risk-taking. Teams stop bringing solutions when leaders consistently shut ideas down or reclaim control. Clear decision-making rights are essential for real accountability. Strong leaders challenge people within their growth zone while also coaching and supporting them. Undefined roles and vague expectations create confusion, not ownership. Leadership phrases like “be biased toward action” only work if leaders clearly define what that actually means. Listener Homework Think about one leadership phrase you frequently use with your team—“take ownership,” “be proactive,” “bring solutions,” or something similar. Now ask yourself honestly: have I actually created the conditions where people can succeed at this? Then ask someone you trust on your team what those phrases actually sound like from their perspective. Do they feel empowering, confusing, risky, frustrating, or unclear? Pay attention this week to whether your leadership behaviors truly reinforce the ownership you say you want. Resources Referenced Jocko Willink’s concept of “Extreme Ownership” Effective Coaching by Myles Downey M. Scott Peck’s community development model Concept of Zone of Proximal Development Liz Wiseman’s Multipliers and the “80% rule”

26. maj 202647 min
episode Psychological Safety: The Chaos Signal - What Great Teams Do With Tension artwork

Psychological Safety: The Chaos Signal - What Great Teams Do With Tension

Episode Overview In this episode of Leadership Limbo, Josh Hugo and John Clark continue their series on psychological safety by exploring a deeper question: how do teams actually become psychologically safe over time? Rather than treating psychological safety as a static value or aspirational slogan, this conversation reframes it as a developmental process that teams must move through together. Drawing on models of team formation, coaching, and community building, Josh and John unpack why healthy teams inevitably experience tension, disagreement, and emotional discomfort—and why avoiding those moments prevents true trust from forming. The episode begins by revisiting the central role leaders play in shaping psychological safety. Josh shares an example of a leader who deeply cares about the mission of the organization but unknowingly shuts down feedback through defensiveness, overcorrection, and lack of curiosity. The result is a team that talks about the leader rather than to the leader. This dynamic becomes the foundation for a larger conversation about how organizational culture is often shaped by the emotional maturity and feedback capacity of its most senior leaders. From there, the discussion introduces a four-stage framework for team development: pseudo-community, chaos, emptying, and community. In pseudo-community, teams maintain surface-level harmony and avoid real disagreement. Chaos emerges when authentic differences surface and tension becomes unavoidable. The critical leadership challenge is whether teams avoid that discomfort—or move through it. A major focus of the episode is how leaders respond during the chaos stage. Strong leaders normalize disagreement, resist premature consensus, and help teams stay emotionally present during tension instead of retreating into avoidance or conflict camps. Rather than rescuing teams from discomfort, they create conditions where people can remain engaged within it. The conversation then moves into the concept of “emptying,” where individuals begin letting go of ego, defensiveness, and the need to be right. Josh and John argue that this stage is essential for true collaboration and psychological safety because it creates the possibility for people to hear perspectives beyond their own. The episode ultimately reframes psychological safety as something earned through intentional leadership, honest conflict, and emotional maturity—not through comfort or superficial harmony. Healthy teams are not the teams without tension; they are the teams capable of moving through tension together. Timestamped Chapters 00:00 – Introduction and Returning to Psychological Safety 04:49 – Revisiting Leadership’s Central Role in Psychological Safety 09:42 – Why Middle Managers Often Feel the Least Safe 12:21 – Using “I Statements” to Create Better Feedback Conversations 18:00 – Introducing the Four Stages of Team Development 21:59 – Pseudo-Community and Surface-Level Harmony 25:02 – Chaos, Conflict, and Emotional Reactivity 30:17 – What Leaders Must Model During Team Tension 39:48 – Emptying Ego and Letting Go of the Need to Be Right 45:07 – From Chaos to Community and High Performance 47:24 – Final Reflections and Homework for Leaders Key Takeaways Psychological safety is built through process, not declarations. Teams often begin with surface-level harmony before authentic tension emerges. Avoiding conflict keeps teams stuck in pseudo-community. Leaders must normalize disagreement and emotional discomfort during moments of tension. Receiving feedback well is one of the strongest indicators of psychologically safe leadership. Strong teams require individuals to let go of ego and the need to always be right. Healthy conflict creates the conditions for trust, collaboration, and performance. Psychological safety is not the absence of chaos—it is the ability to move through it together. Listener Homework Reflect on your current team and ask yourself honestly: where are we right now? Are we maintaining surface-level harmony? Are we stuck in unresolved chaos? Or are we beginning to move toward deeper trust and honest engagement? Then reflect on your own leadership posture during moments of tension. Do you move toward premature agreement, avoidance, defensiveness, or over-control? This week, practice staying emotionally present during one uncomfortable conversation. Resist the urge to rescue the team from tension too quickly. Instead, help the group remain engaged long enough to work through it honestly. Resources Referenced Effective Coaching by Myles Downey The Different Drum by M. Scott Peck

19. maj 202647 min