The Ready Set Podcast

She Never Crossed the Line Alone - The Ready Set Podcast - 011

11 min · 30. apr. 2026
episode She Never Crossed the Line Alone - The Ready Set Podcast - 011 cover

Description

She Never Crossed the Line Alone The Ready Set Podcast | Episode 10 — Series Finale In the final episode of The Ready Set podcast series, we close out ten behaviors with the one that makes all the others matter — Shared Success — told through the story of Harriet Tubman. A woman who reached the finish line, felt nothing, and went back nineteen times. What we cover: Why a significant win that leaves the room empty is the clearest signal that individual success isn't enough The moment Tubman reached Philadelphia in 1849 — free, alone, and immediately planning to go back — and what it reveals about what Shared Success actually costs How she managed risk for others the way most leaders won't manage it for themselves — and never lost a single passenger in nineteen missions The Combahee River Raid: 700 people liberated in a single night, and what it means to keep scaling your impact on behalf of others Why Tubman never stopped — from the Underground Railroad to the Civil War to the suffrage movement — and what that sustained investment in people who couldn't return the favor looks like as a leadership standard The difference between passive goodwill and an active behavioral orientation toward mutual gain What it means to look around when you cross the finish line — and what to do if the room is empty Three things to try this week: Before any significant decision or negotiation, add one question: who else is affected by this outcome, and what would success look like for them? The next time your team delivers, name specific contributions from specific people — not for optics, for accuracy Invest in someone who can't immediately return the favor — a junior team member, a new hire, a peer navigating something hard For the full development framework on Shared Success, including the research and the complete developmental sequence, check out the article that dropped this Tuesday at thereadyset.substack.com [http://thereadyset.substack.com] The series is complete. KLIR is open. KLIR — Key Leader Impact and Readiness — is the diagnostic tool built around all ten Ready Set behaviors. It takes roughly fifteen minutes and produces a personalized report showing where you stand, where your strongest assets are, and what a focused development path looks like for your specific profile. Available exclusively to paid members starting today, with founding member pricing locked permanently for the first 25 subscribers. Full details: https://ready-set-membership.c2advising.com/ [https://ready-set-membership.c2advising.com/] The Ready Set is a behavioral leadership model built on 15+ years of observational data. Subscribe: thereadyset.substack.com [http://thereadyset.substack.com] Get full access to The Ready Set at thereadyset.substack.com/subscribe [https://thereadyset.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

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17 episodes

episode He Never Talked About Winning - 017 - The Ready Set Podcast artwork

He Never Talked About Winning - 017 - The Ready Set Podcast

In this episode, we look at the shift from managing to developing through the story of John Wooden — the UCLA basketball coach who won ten NCAA championships in twelve years by investing in who his players were becoming rather than managing what they were producing. And what his players said about him thirty years after they left tells you everything about what developing leadership actually builds. What we cover: * The first practice: why Wooden spent the opening session of every season teaching players how to put on their socks — and what he was actually teaching them * Why Wooden never talked about winning — and how his definition of success as capability fully expressed produced a scoreboard that nobody has matched since * How Wooden ran practice: real-time feedback, deliberate challenge, and the difference between correcting a task and developing a person * The pattern that turns competent leaders into bottlenecks — and why it almost always starts with being good at the job * Why Wooden’s players kept coming back for thirty years after they left UCLA — and what that reveals about the difference between managing output and developing people * What developing leadership actually produces that managing never can: people who keep growing long after they’ve left the room Three things to try this week: * The next time someone brings you a problem, ask what options they’ve considered before you offer your answer — every time you fix instead of coach, you solve today’s problem and create tomorrow’s dependency * After your next meeting or project milestone, ask one reflective question: how do you think that went, and what would you do differently? That’s where experience becomes expertise * Look at your team honestly — who depends on you more than they should, and what would it take to start developing their capability to handle it themselves? For the full framework on developing leadership — including the complete reflection questions and practical guidance — check out the article that dropped this Tuesday at thereadyset.substack.com [http://thereadyset.substack.com] Paid membership for The Ready Set is open. KLIR gives you a personalized behavioral picture of where you actually stand across the ten behaviors we’ve covered. The AI Ready Set Coach helps you build a real development plan around your specific results. It’s not a content upgrade — it’s a genuine development experience. Learn more: ready-set-membership.c2advising.com [http://ready-set-membership.c2advising.com] The Ready Set is a behavioral leadership model built on 15+ years of observational data. New content drops weekly on Substack. Subscribe: thereadyset.substack.com [http://thereadyset.substack.com] Get full access to The Ready Set at thereadyset.substack.com/subscribe [https://thereadyset.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

11. juni 202611 min
episode The Smartest Person Who Chose Not to Win - 016 - The Ready Set Podcast artwork

The Smartest Person Who Chose Not to Win - 016 - The Ready Set Podcast

In this episode, we look at the shift from controlling to facilitating through the story of Benjamin Franklin at the Constitutional Convention — and what four months of deliberate restraint from the most accomplished man in the room reveals about where collective intelligence actually comes from and what it takes to create it. What we cover: Why control narrows thinking and facilitation expands it — and what that costs organizations that never make the shift The Constitutional Convention of 1787: why the stakes were genuinely existential and why Franklin's choice to facilitate rather than dominate was anything but passive The Great Compromise: how Franklin helped fifty-five deeply disagreeable men find something none of them could have reached alone — not by imposing a solution but by reframing the question Franklin's final speech on the last day of the Convention — and why openly admitting he didn't agree with everything in the document was the most powerful facilitating move of the entire summer Why facilitation requires more confidence than control — and what Franklin's security in that room reveals about the fear underneath most controlling leadership The single habit shift that changes what your team brings to you and how they engage when you're not in the room Three things to try this week: The next time someone brings you a problem, resist your answer — ask what options they're considering and what's getting in the way before you say anything Find one place where you're resolving tension too quickly — and practice holding the space long enough for something better than either original position to emerge Ask yourself honestly: when you step in to control, is it because the situation requires it — or because you're uncomfortable with what might happen if you don't? For the full framework on facilitating leadership — including the complete reflection questions and developmental guidance — check out the article that dropped this Tuesday at thereadyset.substack.com [http://thereadyset.substack.com] Paid membership for The Ready Set is open. KLIR gives you a personalized behavioral picture of where you actually stand across the ten behaviors we've covered. The AI Ready Set Coach helps you build a real development plan around your specific results. It's not a content upgrade — it's a genuine development experience. Learn more: https://ready-set-membership.c2advising.com/ [https://ready-set-membership.c2advising.com/] The Ready Set is a behavioral leadership model built on 15+ years of observational data. New content drops weekly on Substack. Subscribe: thereadyset.substack.com [http://thereadyset.substack.com] Get full access to The Ready Set at thereadyset.substack.com/subscribe [https://thereadyset.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

4. juni 202612 min
episode The Day the New Deal Began - The Ready Set Podcast - 015 artwork

The Day the New Deal Began - The Ready Set Podcast - 015

In this episode, we look at what a recent Fast Company investigation into the lives of a hundred senior-level mothers reveals about leadership — and connect it to the story of Frances Perkins, the woman who witnessed the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire in 1911 and spent the next forty years building the structural requirements that forced leaders to close the gap between what they said they valued and what they actually built. What we cover: The AI bedtime story — and why what looks like ingenuity is actually a signal about what the system is extracting from the people inside it Why the problems we call systemic almost always have a behavioral layer underneath them that individual leaders are choosing every single day The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire and the moment Frances Perkins said everything she would eventually fight for came into focus Why Perkins understood that leaders don't voluntarily close the gap between stated values and actual practice — and what she built to force them to How four Ready Set behaviors — Shared Success, Values-Based Integrity, Clarity Establishment, and Mission Minded — show up in this conversation and what closing the gap actually looks like in practice The question every leader should be sitting with after this episode: what are you currently requiring of people that they should never have to compensate for in the first place? Three things to sit with this week: Where is the gap between what you say you value and what the actual daily experience of being on your team confirms? Who on your team is building their own workarounds to compensate for clarity, flexibility, or support you never provided — and what would it look like to close that gap instead? What is one behavioral decision you could make this week — not next quarter, this week — that would make the culture you describe more honest? For the full behavioral breakdown — including all four behaviors and the research behind them — check out the article at thereadyset.substack.com [http://thereadyset.substack.com]. The Fast Company piece that sparked it is linked below as well as in the article and worth reading in full. https://www.fastcompany.com/91541720/corporate-america-is-crushing-senior-level-mothers [https://www.fastcompany.com/91541720/corporate-america-is-crushing-senior-level-mothers] Paid membership for The Ready Set is open. KLIR gives you a personalized behavioral picture of where you actually stand across the ten behaviors we've covered. The AI Ready Set Coach helps you build a real development plan around your specific results. It's not a content upgrade — it's a genuine development experience. Learn more: https://ready-set-membership.c2advising.com/ [https://ready-set-membership.c2advising.com/] The Ready Set is a behavioral leadership model built on 15+ years of observational data. New content drops weekly on Substack. Subscribe: thereadyset.substack.com [http://thereadyset.substack.com] Get full access to The Ready Set at thereadyset.substack.com/subscribe [https://thereadyset.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

28. maj 202611 min
episode The Score Takes Care of Itself - The Ready Set Podcast - 014 artwork

The Score Takes Care of Itself - The Ready Set Podcast - 014

In this episode, we look at the shift from directing to enabling through the story of Bill Walsh — the coach who took a San Francisco 49ers team that won two games and built one of the most dominant dynasties in NFL history, not by being the smartest person in every room, but by building rooms full of people who could think for themselves. What we cover: Why directing breaks down at scale — and the specific moment a leader becomes the bottleneck instead of the engine The Standard of Performance: what Walsh built before he worried about wins — and why defining how people should think is more powerful than defining what they should do How the West Coast Offense was designed to build decision-makers, not play-executors — and what that means for how you structure your own team The difference between abdication and enabling — and why clarity before autonomy is what makes the whole thing work Walsh's coaching tree: why directing builds followers and enabling builds leaders — and what that looks like at scale across decades Why the score takes care of itself — and what it means to control the conditions that produce outcomes rather than chasing the outcomes themselves Three things to try this week: The next time someone brings you a problem, resist solving it — ask what options they're considering, what the tradeoffs are, and what they'd recommend Ask yourself honestly: where do decisions still depend too heavily on you? What could people handle themselves with more clarity or authority? Define your guardrails explicitly — let people know where they have the authority to decide and where they need to escalate, so they stop defaulting to asking you everything For the full framework on enabling leadership — including the complete reflection questions and developmental guidance — check out the article that dropped this Tuesday at thereadyset.substack.com [http://thereadyset.substack.com] Paid membership for The Ready Set is open. KLIR gives you a personalized behavioral picture of where you actually stand across the ten behaviors we've covered. The AI Ready Set Coach helps you build a real development plan around your specific results. It's not a content upgrade — it's a genuine development experience. Learn more: https://ready-set-membership.c2advising.com/ [https://ready-set-membership.c2advising.com/] The Ready Set is a behavioral leadership model built on 15+ years of observational data. New content drops weekly on Substack. Subscribe: thereadyset.substack.com [http://thereadyset.substack.com] Get full access to The Ready Set at thereadyset.substack.com/subscribe [https://thereadyset.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

21. maj 202611 min
episode He Didn't Have a Plan. He Had a Dream. - The Ready Set Podcast - 013 artwork

He Didn't Have a Plan. He Had a Dream. - The Ready Set Podcast - 013

In this episode, we look at the shift from planning to inspiring through the story of Martin Luther King Jr. — and what leading one of the most complex, dangerous, and unpredictable movements in American history almost entirely through the power of a destination that never moved reveals about what leadership actually requires when conditions keep changing. What we cover: The difference between a plan and a vision — and why only one of them survives contact with a changing reality The Montgomery Bus Boycott: how 381 days of sustained resistance held together without a master roadmap — and what that reveals about what actually keeps people moving when the path gets hard The Letter from Birmingham Jail: written in the margins of a newspaper from a solitary cell, with no platform and no team — and why it has directed action for over sixty years Link to the letter: https://minio.la.utexas.edu/webeditor-files/coretexts/pdf/1963_mlk_letter.pdf [https://minio.la.utexas.edu/webeditor-files/coretexts/pdf/1963_mlk_letter.pdf] Why "I Have a Dream" is not a plan — and why that's exactly what makes it still matter How King expanded the scope of his vision significantly in his later years without losing the people who had been with him from the beginning Why inspiration scales and control doesn't — and what that means for how you communicate with your team today Three things to try this week: The next time you're about to walk your team through a plan, lead with the why first — in plain language that connects the work to real impact Ask yourself honestly: do you lead more with plans or with purpose? Can your team articulate why their work matters beyond the deadline? Identify one decision your team is waiting on you to make that they could make themselves — if the vision were clearer For the full framework on inspiring leadership — including the complete reflection questions and developmental guidance — check out the article that dropped this Tuesday at thereadyset.substack.com [http://thereadyset.substack.com] Paid membership for The Ready Set is open. KLIR, the diagnostic at the center of it, gives you a personalized behavioral picture of where you actually stand across the ten behaviors we've covered. The AI Ready Set Coach helps you build a real development plan around your specific results. It's not a content upgrade — it's a genuine development experience. Learn more: https://ready-set-membership.c2advising.com/ [https://ready-set-membership.c2advising.com/] The Ready Set is a behavioral leadership model built on 15+ years of observational data. New content drops weekly on Substack. Subscribe: thereadyset.substack.com [http://thereadyset.substack.com] Get full access to The Ready Set at thereadyset.substack.com/subscribe [https://thereadyset.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

14. maj 202613 min