Cover image of show SBR2TH C-SUITE EDGE

SBR2TH C-SUITE EDGE

Podcast by SBR2TH

English

Business

Limited Offer

2 months for 19 kr.

Then 99 kr. / monthCancel anytime.

  • 20 hours of audiobooks / month
  • Podcasts only on Podimo
  • All free podcasts
Get Started

About SBR2TH C-SUITE EDGE

C-SUITE EDGE by SBR2TH: the briefing senior leaders look forward to. Actionable strategy, modern leadership thinking, and lessons you won’t find on LinkedIn. Built for leaders who want to think sharper and lead with clarity. sbr2th.substack.com

All episodes

5 episodes

episode The 4-Point Interview Framework, Part 4: You’ve Got to Close artwork

The 4-Point Interview Framework, Part 4: You’ve Got to Close

“You’ve Got to Close: How to End an Interview with Confidence and Momentum” with John Light, CEO - SBR2TH Every interview ends. But not every interview lands well. By the time you reach the final minutes, the interviewer has already formed a view of your capability. What they are now deciding—often subconsciously—is something else entirely: How do I feel about moving this person forward? This is where most candidates go wrong.Not because they lack skill.But because they mishandle the close. John Light has seen this moment derail otherwise excellent interviews for over 20 years—and his advice is clear: “The goal of the close is not to force a decision.It’s to leave the interviewer feeling confident in your interest and your competency.” Why the Close Matters More Than You Think People don’t remember interviews clearly.They remember how the interview made them feel. An awkward close creates friction.A pressured close creates resistance.A confident close creates momentum. Hiring is not a solo decision—it’s a team sport.Most interviewers cannot give you a yes or no in the moment. When candidates push for certainty, they create discomfort—and that discomfort lingers. The Mistake: Binary Closing Questions Many candidates end with questions like: “Is there any reason you see why I shouldn’t get this job?” “Do you think I’m a good fit?” “Can you tell me where I stand?” John strongly advises against these. Why? Because they corner the interviewer.They force an answer the interviewer isn’t authorized—or ready—to give. “The interviewer won’t remember your question.They’ll remember how you made them feel.” And pressure rarely feels good. The Solution: The Two-Step Affirmative Close Instead of asking for validation, John teaches a simple, powerful structure: 1. An Affirmative Statement State your interest and alignment clearly. This removes ambiguity. Example: “I’m extremely excited about this opportunity.It aligns closely with what I’ve done, and I can clearly see how I’d have a positive impact on the team and the company.” 2. An Affirmative Question Invite next steps—without forcing a decision. Example: “What are your thoughts on timing for next steps?” This works because it: Signals confidence without arrogance Expresses interest without pressure Respects the interviewer’s process And most importantly—it keeps the conversation moving forward. Then Do the Hardest Part Stop talking. Silence is intentional here. John emphasizes this repeatedly: “The close only works if you listen.” Give the interviewer space to respond.They may explain the process.They may outline next steps.They may share concerns or clarifications. All of that information is valuable—and none of it comes if you keep filling the silence. Why This Close Works The two-step affirmative close does three things simultaneously: Removes doubt about your interest Reinforces your confidence and maturity Leaves the interviewer comfortable and in control Comfort matters. People move forward with candidates who feel: Safe to advocate for Easy to explain to others Clear in their intent This close creates all three. The Interview Isn’t About You This is the final mindset shift John wants candidates to understand: Interviews are not about getting hired.They’re about creating clarity. Clarity for: The interviewer The hiring team And you When both sides leave with confidence and alignment, decisions happen naturally. The Full Framework, Revisited To recap John Light’s Four-Point Interview Framework: 1️⃣ Be Yourself — authenticity cuts through noise2️⃣ Don’t Tell Me, Show Me — demonstrate value with PAR/TAR3️⃣ Ask Great Questions — curiosity signals competence4️⃣ You’ve Got to Close — end with confidence, not pressure Each point builds on the last.Together, they create a human, repeatable, and effective interview experience. Final Thought “You don’t win interviews by saying the perfect thing.You win them by making it easy for someone to say yes later.” That is what this framework does. If you’ve followed along through all four parts—thank you.And if you’re preparing for interviews in the months ahead, use this framework as a guide—not a script. Because the best interviews don’t feel rehearsed. They feel real. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit sbr2th.substack.com [https://sbr2th.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

29 Dec 2025 - 5 min
episode The 4-Point Interview Framework, Part 3: Ask Great Questions artwork

The 4-Point Interview Framework, Part 3: Ask Great Questions

“Ask Great Questions: How Curiosity Signals Competence”**with John Light, CEO — Saber-Tooth Recruiting By this point in the framework, something important has already happened. You’ve shown up as yourself.You’ve demonstrated your value through clear, quantified examples. Now comes the moment that quietly separates average interviews from memorable ones. The questions you ask. Most candidates underestimate this part.Some rush it.Some treat it as a formality.Others get it completely wrong. John Light sees it differently. “Asking great questions is not about getting answers.It’s about demonstrating how you think.” Why Questions Matter More Than Answers When an interviewer asks, “Do you have any questions for me?” They are not being polite. They are assessing: Your intellectual curiosity Your judgment Your level of preparation Your genuine interest in the role And there is one answer that immediately works against you: “No, I think you covered everything.” John is direct about this: “That answer tells the interviewer you’re either not interested, not curious, or not prepared.” None of those are signals you want to send. The Rule: Avoid Conversation Killers Any question that can be answered with “yes” or “no” is a mistake. Why? Because it shuts the conversation down. Examples of bad questions: “Is the team collaborative?” “Is there room for growth?” “Is this a fast-paced environment?” These don’t create dialogue.They end it. John’s rule is simple: Great questions are open-ended. They start with:How. What. When. Why. Where. Who. What Great Questions Actually Do The right question accomplishes three things at once: Signals strategic thinking Invites the interviewer to reflect Shifts the interview from Q&A to conversation At this stage, the goal is subtle but powerful: You want the interviewer talking 60–70% of the time. When that happens, something changes.You stop feeling like a candidate—and start feeling like a peer. Examples of Great Questions Here are two that John consistently recommends: “What are your expectations for success in this role?” And: “What are the top three or four things you want to see accomplished in the first 6–12 months that would really define success?” Why these work: They focus on outcomes, not perks They show you’re thinking beyond the interview They invite detail, nuance, and storytelling And most importantly—they give you insight into what actually matters. How Many Questions Should You Ask? Another common mistake: extremes. One question → feels underprepared Four or five questions → feels scripted or unfocused John’s guidance: Have two or three strong questions in your back pocket. That’s it. Enough to show depth.Not so many that it feels performative. What Not to Ask (Yet) In professional and executive-level interviews, there’s an important boundary: Do not lead with compensation or benefits in the first conversation. Not because those things don’t matter—but because timing matters more. John explains it this way: “You want mutual interest established first.Once that’s clear, everything else becomes easier.” Early interviews are about alignment, impact, and fit.Once those are locked in, the rest follows naturally. The Real Objective of Great Questions You are not trying to impress. You are trying to engage. Great questions create space for: Mutual discovery Shared language Forward momentum They tell the interviewer: This person thinks ahead.This person listens.This person is already imagining success in the role. And those signals linger long after the call ends. Coming Next: Part 4 — “You’ve Got to Close” The final pillar of the framework addresses the moment most candidates mishandle: How you end the interview. In Part 4, we’ll cover: Why binary closing questions create discomfort The emotional memory interviewers carry forward The two-step affirmative close that works without pressure How to leave the room with clarity, confidence, and momentum The close doesn’t secure the job.But it does secure the feeling that makes the next step inevitable. Part 4 is coming next. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit sbr2th.substack.com [https://sbr2th.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

22 Dec 2025 - 4 min
episode The 4-Point Interview Framework, Part 2: Don't Tell Me, Show Me artwork

The 4-Point Interview Framework, Part 2: Don't Tell Me, Show Me

“Don’t Tell Me - Show Me: The Storytelling Technique That Wins Interviews”**with John Light, CEO - SBR2TH Recruiting [https://www.sbr2th.ai/] In Part 1, we explored why authenticity is your most underrated competitive edge.Now we shift into the operational core of the framework, the part that transforms both your resume and your interviews: Stop telling people you’re great.Show them. This is where the decision-making truly happens. Why Showing Beats Telling Most candidates talk in generalities: “I’m a strong communicator.”“I work well under pressure.”“I’m a team player.”“I led a major project.” These statements sound fine, but they do nothing to differentiate you. They are claims, not evidence. John Light teaches every candidate one of the simplest, most effective communication tools in the hiring world: PAR / TAR Storytelling Problem (or Task) → Action → Result It’s not new, but almost no one does it well.Done right, this structure does three things instantly: Shows how you think Demonstrates how you solve problems Reveals the business impact you can create This is how you let an interviewer experience what it’s like to work with you. How to Build a Great PAR/TAR Example Whether on your resume or in an interview, your stories should follow this rhythm: 1. Problem or Task Set the scene. Provide context.What was broken? What was missing? What goal needed to be achieved? “Customer renewal rates were falling for two quarters, and we needed a turnaround plan.” 2. Action What you specifically did.Not your team. Not your manager. You. Most candidates lose points here-they drift into group language (“we,” “the company,” “our team”).John’s advice? “Own your actions. Your interview is not a team sport.” 3. Result (Quantified) This is the moment that matters.Because: Numbers draw eyeballs.And in interviews, numbers buy you time. Use before-and-after metrics:“Increased X from A → B.”“Reduced Y by Z%.”“Accelerated timeline from 10 weeks → 6.” And then-this part is critical: Stop talking. Silence is the interviewer’s cue to ask: “Interesting… how did you do that?”or“Tell me more-what drove that improvement?” John calls this the permission moment.This is where curiosity deepens, rapport grows, and your value becomes undeniable. What This Looks Like on Your Resume Your bullet points should follow TAR/PAR structure consistently. Task/Problem: What you were solving Action: What you did Result: Quantified outcome Each bullet should be: 2–5 sentences max Focused on your contribution Centering before/after numbers Specific, not conceptual Remember:A recruiter may only spend 6–8 seconds on your resume before deciding whether you’re worth a deeper look.PAR/TAR forces clarity.Clarity earns time.Time earns interviews. Why This Matters in the Interview PAR/TAR gives interviewers three things they crave: 1. Predictability Your examples signal how you will behave on the job. 2. Pattern Recognition They begin seeing consistent strengths—and consistent impact. 3. Cognitive Relief Because you’re structured, you’re easier to listen to.And candidates who are easy to listen to are easier to hire. PAR/TAR is not just storytelling—it’s a user experience upgrade for the person across the table. The Big Mistake Candidates Make Claiming attributes without demonstrating them. “I’m collaborative.”“I’m a strategic thinker.”“I’m data-driven.” PAR/TAR makes these claims unnecessary—because the interviewer will conclude them on their own. John says it simply: “If you communicate by example, you never have to sell your personality.They see it for themselves.” Coming Next: Part 3 - “Ask Great Questions” The third pillar of the framework is the most misunderstood—and often the difference between a forgettable interview and a memorable conversation. Next week, we’ll break down: Why open-ended questions signal intellectual curiosity The 2–3 questions every candidate must have ready Why great interviews should be 60–70% them talking The question you should never ask How to avoid killing the conversation in the final minutes Part 3 is where candidates learn to shift from interviewee to peer. Stay tuned. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit sbr2th.substack.com [https://sbr2th.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

10 Dec 2025 - 7 min
episode The 4-Point Interview Framework: Point 1 - Be Yourself artwork

The 4-Point Interview Framework: Point 1 - Be Yourself

“Be Yourself: The Most Underrated Competitive Advantage in Hiring”**with John Light, CEO - Sbr2th Recruiting Welcome to Part 1 of our four-part series unpacking John Light’s Four-Point Interview Framework, the same framework he has used for 20+ years to prepare candidates who consistently win offers, outperform peers, and communicate their value with clarity and confidence. John spent the first chapter of his career as an accountant before becoming a headhunter. Across thousands of searches, and tens of thousands of conversations, he discovered something simple but transformative: The goal of the interview is not to impress someone.The goal is to engage them.And engagement comes from authenticity + clarity, not performance. This series is built on that truth. 1. BE YOURSELF Why authenticity is your strongest differentiator in the AI era If you’re interviewing in 2025, you’re not competing in a traditional labor market. You’re competing in a high-noise digital ecosystem, AI-written resumes, AI-tailored LinkedIn profiles, and automated processes that make mediocre candidates look polished and polished candidates look… average. John says it bluntly: “We’re living in a world with a massive density of signal noise.” A candidate who is a 50% fit can now appear like a 90%+ fit simply by running their resume through a few AI tools.The result?Authentic, high-caliber candidates get lost in the crowd. The antidote: be yourself-everywhere. That means: ✔ Your digital footprint should be an accurate representation of you. LinkedIn, your resume, and the person who walks into the room should feel like the same person.The biggest red flag hiring managers report? “Lack of consistency.” It signals misalignment, uncertainty, or—worse—exaggeration. ✔ Don’t shrink your story to fit outdated resume rules. One or two pages, if it removes critical context, can actually hurt you.John’s advice: “Context is everything. Don’t cut it just to cut it.” A strong resume doesn’t list accomplishments.A strong resume explains why they mattered and how you achieved them. ✔ Authenticity builds trust faster than polish. What interviewers want isn’t perfection.It’s alignment. Authenticity offers two advantages AI will never provide: * Human coherence * Signal clarity in a noisy market John’s core reminder: “You are enough.” That’s not sentiment, it’s strategy.In a sea of artificially optimized candidates, the most powerful competitive advantage is being genuine, grounded, and consistent. Why Part 1 Matters Before any technique, before STAR stories, before great questions, before closing, your authenticity sets the baseline for trust, credibility, and connection. If you show up misaligned, no amount of skillful communication can repair that. If you show up as yourself, consistently and confidently, everything else in this framework works better. Coming Next: Part 2 - “Don’t Tell Me, Show Me” We explore the tactical core of the framework:how to use PAR/TAR storytelling to demonstrate value, trigger curiosity, and earn permission to share the deeper layers of your impact. This next episode will cover: * How to structure bullet points that get double the reading time * Why quantified results make interviewers lean in * The moment you must stop talking (and why it works) * How PAR/TAR reveals the experience of working with you Stay tuned, the next installment is the one that transforms both resumes and interviews. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit sbr2th.substack.com [https://sbr2th.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

9 Dec 2025 - 5 min
episode C-SUITE EDGE - Roland P. Gaudet, VP & Business Development Officer at Citizens Bank & Trust Co. artwork

C-SUITE EDGE - Roland P. Gaudet, VP & Business Development Officer at Citizens Bank & Trust Co.

C-SUITE EDGE - Roland P. Gaudet, VP & Business Development Officer at Citizens Bank & Trust Co. 🎙 Watch the full episode: Why This Conversation Matters In this episode, Roland P. Gaudet brings clarity to a question every senior leader eventually faces: How do you build an operating system for leadership—one that scales with growth, complexity, and team maturity? Roland has served across banking, business development, and organizational leadership, and he lays out a practical framework for turning vision into execution, culture into structure, and ambition into a repeatable system. If you’re a CEO, VP, founder, or high-leverage operator, this conversation will help you diagnose your gaps and tighten your organizational machinery. Key Takeaways 1. Vision means nothing without an Operating System Roland is clear: leadership only works when it is systematized.He describes an “Executive Operating System” built around: * Clear decision pathways * Defined rhythms * High-trust cross-team handoffs * Accountability that scales This is how you turn direction into momentum. 2. Culture must be engineered, not assumed Roland reinforces a truth many leaders forget:Your culture will be built either by design or by default. He shares how values must translate into: * Behaviours * Hiring decisions * Meeting structure * Feedback loops * Incentives Culture becomes the architecture your strategy sits on. 3. Senior leadership is about managing the boundaries A standout insight: “The higher you go, the less you manage tasks and the more you manage the boundaries between tasks.” Roland focuses on how friction forms at: * Team interfaces * Handoff points * Decision bottlenecks * Alignment gaps Strengthen the boundaries, and you strengthen the business. 4. Urgency is not a strategy — rhythm is Growth creates pressure, but pressure without cadence leads to burnout.Roland’s solution: establish a leadership rhythm. Weekly or bi-weekly cycles of: * Alignment review * KPI check-ins * Accountability tracking * Escalation resolution A good cadence replaces chaos with clarity. 5. Complexity isn’t the enemy — unmanaged complexity is High-growth teams often break because they add people faster than they add architecture. Roland emphasizes designing systems that can absorb scale: * Role clarity * Decision rights * Processes built for the next stage, not the current one Architect your future now, not when the pain arrives. Leadership Action Steps Here are practical next steps inspired by Roland’s frameworks: ✓ Map your operating system.Write down your core rhythms, decision flows, and leadership mechanics. ✓ Audit one value.Pick a company value and trace where it shows up in action—not in theory. ✓ Resolve one boundary friction.Identify a recurring cross-team tension and fix the handoff. ✓ Build your cadence.If you don’t have a weekly or bi-weekly leadership rhythm, create one today. ✓ Design for the next stage.Ask: “If we doubled in size tomorrow, what would break?”Then start building the fix. Quotes from the Episode “If you don’t build the operating system, you end up chasing the firehose—you never guide it.”— Roland P. Gaudet “Culture is what people do when no one is watching and things are moving fast.”— Roland P. Gaudet “Boundaries aren’t walls; they’re highways. Build them well or you get gridlock.”— Roland P. Gaudet Why I Recommend This Episode Roland delivers genuine executive-level insight—the kind that comes from lived leadership, not theory.This episode is especially powerful for leaders who want to: * Scale without losing clarity * Strengthen culture while growing headcount * Build an operating system others can follow * Reduce internal friction and increase throughput * Lead with maturity, not just urgency It’s one of those conversations where the frameworks can be implemented immediately. Next Steps * 🎧 Watch or listen to the full episode. * 📝 Choose one action step above and implement it this week. * 💬 Share your biggest insight from Roland in the comments. * 🔔 Subscribe to C-SUITE EDGE for weekly conversations built for senior leaders who want to think sharper and lead with clarity. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit sbr2th.substack.com [https://sbr2th.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]

20 Nov 2025 - 14 min
Sign up to listen
En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
En fantastisk app med et enormt stort udvalg af spændende podcasts. Podimo formår virkelig at lave godt indhold, der takler de lidt mere svære emner. At der så også er lydbøger oveni til en billig pris, gør at det er blevet min favorit app.
Rigtig god tjeneste med gode eksklusive podcasts og derudover et kæmpe udvalg af podcasts og lydbøger. Kan varmt anbefales, om ikke andet så udelukkende pga Dårligdommerne, Klovn podcast, Hakkedrengene og Han duo 😁 👍
Podimo er blevet uundværlig! Til lange bilture, hverdagen, rengøringen og i det hele taget, når man trænger til lidt adspredelse.

Choose your subscription

Most popular

Limited Offer

Premium

20 hours of audiobooks

  • Podcasts only on Podimo

  • No ads in Podimo shows

  • Cancel anytime

2 months for 19 kr.
Then 99 kr. / month

Get Started

Premium Plus

Unlimited audiobooks

  • Podcasts only on Podimo

  • No ads in Podimo shows

  • Cancel anytime

Start 7 days free trial
Then 129 kr. / month

Start for free

Only on Podimo

Popular audiobooks

Get Started

2 months for 19 kr. Then 99 kr. / month. Cancel anytime.