Sherpa Leadership Podcast

Episode 15 - When Your Leadership Audio Matches Your Video

47 min · 6. maj 2026
episode Episode 15 - When Your Leadership Audio Matches Your Video cover

Description

Your values don’t become real when you say them out loud. They become real when the people closest to you can predict how you’ll act under pressure, in conflict, and when nobody is clapping. We’re closing our first iServe leadership model series with what might be the most confronting habit of all: embody the values, because leadership trust is built when your audio matches your video. We unpack why skills, drive, and charisma can “win the day” for a while, but long-term organizational leadership is sustained by integrity, character, and consistency. Values are better caught than taught, so we talk about what it looks like to model mission, vision, and values in the moments that actually shape workplace culture: hiring and firing decisions, hard conversations, boundaries, and how we respond when we’re stressed, tired, or triggered. We also name two ditches leaders fall into. One is hypocrisy, where we ask others to live standards we don’t practice and slowly leak credibility. The other is hiding, where perfectionism pushes us to cover up small failures until they turn into something catastrophic. Authentic leadership is the path out: owning misalignment, repairing quickly, and inviting challenge so blind spots don’t quietly run the show. To make it practical, we leave you with three questions, including the gut-check: if someone followed you for 30 days, what values would they say you live by? If you want to strengthen trust, build a healthier culture, and lead by example at work and at home, hit subscribe, share this with a fellow leader, and leave a review so more people can find the Sherpa Leadership Podcast.

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19 episodes

episode Bonus Episode - Why Your Business Feels Harder at $1M+ artwork

Bonus Episode - Why Your Business Feels Harder at $1M+

Your business grows, your revenue climbs, and somehow the work starts to feel heavier instead of lighter. That’s the moment Chase Williams calls the million-dollar paradox: the skills that got you here are not the skills that will scale you forward. If you’ve been telling yourself you just need to grind harder, this conversation offers a more honest diagnosis and a more practical way out. I walk through three predictable friction points that show up as you scale: people, systems, and key drivers. We get specific about what “people problems” usually look like in real companies, including how overfunctioning leaders accidentally create underfunctioning teams, why hiring too fast (or too late) stalls growth, and how lack of clarity gets mistaken for lack of capability. From there, we tackle accountability, retention, and the uncomfortable truth that if you’re still the best producer, fixer, and decision maker, you’ve become the bottleneck. Then we shift into scaling systems and strategic focus. You’ll hear how to spot chaos patterns like whack-a-mole leadership and tribal knowledge, why leverage is focus not laziness, and how to identify two to five key metrics that actually drive business growth. The goal is an identity shift from operator to CEO, building a company that can run without your constant presence and creates real enterprise value. If you found yourself nodding along, share this with a business owner who feels stuck, then subscribe and leave a review so more leaders can find it. What’s the friction point hitting you hardest right now?

17. juni 20261 h 27 min
episode Episode 16 - Hiring The Wrong Person Is A Team Sport artwork

Episode 16 - Hiring The Wrong Person Is A Team Sport

Your culture is not what you say in a meeting. It is what you tolerate, what you reward, and who you decide to bring onto the team. We sit down with Paul Hansen to get uncomfortably practical about values-based leadership, especially when growth, urgency, and pressure tempt leaders to cut corners. Paul walks us through his leadership story from early responsibility at home to building a career in financial planning and leadership at Northwestern Mutual. Along the way, he explains the “three I’s” that drive people to commit to a path income, independence, and impact and why independence became a north star for him. We also talk about a surprising training ground for character: guiding clients on the river, where your integrity shows up in small choices and people learn whether your “audio matches your video.” From there we get into the hard parts leaders face: taking over a big organization too early, feeling over your skis, and learning to choose action instead of spinning in your head. Paul shares recruiting lessons you only earn the expensive way, including why trusting your gut matters, how a strong culture attracts the right people, and why vision has to be clear enough that others can see their future in it. He also breaks down real hiring calls, using tools like Life Languages and the Culture Index, plus the difference between the wrong person and the right person in the wrong seat. If you care about leadership values, organizational culture, hiring, succession planning, and building leaders who build leaders, this conversation will give you language and frameworks you can use immediately. Subscribe, share this with a leader you respect, and leave a review so more people can find the show.

3. juni 202636 min
episode Episode 15 - When Your Leadership Audio Matches Your Video artwork

Episode 15 - When Your Leadership Audio Matches Your Video

Your values don’t become real when you say them out loud. They become real when the people closest to you can predict how you’ll act under pressure, in conflict, and when nobody is clapping. We’re closing our first iServe leadership model series with what might be the most confronting habit of all: embody the values, because leadership trust is built when your audio matches your video. We unpack why skills, drive, and charisma can “win the day” for a while, but long-term organizational leadership is sustained by integrity, character, and consistency. Values are better caught than taught, so we talk about what it looks like to model mission, vision, and values in the moments that actually shape workplace culture: hiring and firing decisions, hard conversations, boundaries, and how we respond when we’re stressed, tired, or triggered. We also name two ditches leaders fall into. One is hypocrisy, where we ask others to live standards we don’t practice and slowly leak credibility. The other is hiding, where perfectionism pushes us to cover up small failures until they turn into something catastrophic. Authentic leadership is the path out: owning misalignment, repairing quickly, and inviting challenge so blind spots don’t quietly run the show. To make it practical, we leave you with three questions, including the gut-check: if someone followed you for 30 days, what values would they say you live by? If you want to strengthen trust, build a healthier culture, and lead by example at work and at home, hit subscribe, share this with a fellow leader, and leave a review so more people can find the Sherpa Leadership Podcast.

6. maj 202647 min
episode Episode 14 - How To Drive Results Without Burning Trust artwork

Episode 14 - How To Drive Results Without Burning Trust

The fastest way to lose a team is to chase the numbers like people are optional. Reed Moore and Chase Williams sit down with Mike Schramm, a longtime corporate account manager, to unpack the daily leadership tension almost every manager feels but few can name, valuing results and relationships at the same time. We get specific about what “results pressure” actually looks like inside real organizations, executive expectations, shifting priorities like margin and growth, and personal scorecards that quietly push leaders into urgency and tunnel vision. Mike shares how his view of leadership evolved over time, from thinking leadership was a role to realizing it is a choice to take care of the people around you, even when you do not have direct authority. Then we move into the practical side of trust. We talk about connection that is not a tactic, why not every conversation needs an agenda, and how short calendar wedges and leadership by walking around can create real engagement without pretending time is unlimited. We also go to the hard places, underperformance, boundaries, and what relationships actually reveal when results drop. If you care about servant leadership, coaching, and building a high trust culture that still performs, this episode gives you language and next steps you can apply immediately. Subscribe, leave a review, and share it with a leader who is trying to balance people and performance.

1. apr. 202651 min
episode Episode 13 - Harmony That Wins: Results And Relationships artwork

Episode 13 - Harmony That Wins: Results And Relationships

What if the secret to durable growth isn’t choosing sides, but learning to carry a healthy tension? We explore the real work of leadership: holding results and relationships together so teams move faster, stay resilient, and deliver impact without burning out. We start by naming the bias many of us bring into leadership—some of us push hard on targets and timelines, others protect harmony and morale—and show how either extreme backfires. Drawing on Stephen Covey’s golden goose parable and Simon Sinek’s people-purpose-profit lens, we map why outcomes validate your mission and attract top performers, and why trust is the speed of execution. You’ll hear vivid examples of what goes wrong when leaders over-index on performance (burnout, skipped middle leaders, resentment) or on relationship (artificial harmony, low standards, delayed hard conversations). Along the way, we get honest about our own defaults—one of us leans people-first, the other results-first—and what it’s cost us. Then we get practical. We lay out a meeting rhythm that opens with human connection and moves into crisp metrics, so care and candor sit side by side. You’ll learn the “double helix” model for weaving trust with accountability, the one question that keeps results personal and meaningful, and why silence is your ally when conversations get uncomfortable. We offer scripts to frame accountability inside care, ways to read body language before you push for numbers, and a simple self-audit to spot where your leadership is lopsided. By the end, you’ll have a toolkit to set clear goals, ask better follow-ups, and calibrate your presence so people feel seen and standards stay high. If this conversation sparks a shift in how you lead, tap follow, share it with a leader who needs it, and leave a quick review. Tell us: do you naturally lean toward relationships or results—and what will you adjust this week?

4. mar. 202639 min