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Courage to Advance with Kim Bohr

Podcast de SparkEffect

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Courage to Advance is built for CHROs, VPs, and senior leaders who know their organizations can do better and are willing to do the hard work to get there. Host Kim Bohr, CEO of SparkEffect, brings you real conversations with leaders who challenged outdated practices, rebuilt trust during disruption, and created something worth following. Every episode pairs honest storytelling with practical strategies you can put to work. If you’re leading people through change, you’ll find both the inspiration and the tools here.

Todos los episodios

25 episodios

Portada del episodio The Psychology Behind Why Your Team Won't Ask for Help

The Psychology Behind Why Your Team Won't Ask for Help

Most organizations say they care about employee wellbeing. But when your therapist's office hours don't fit the windows your employer leaves open, when you're the only person trained to run a Friday report so you can never actually take a Friday off, when the word "accommodation" makes you feel like a problem before the conversation even starts, the message your people receive is different from the one you think you're sending.  Sarah Harris [https://www.linkedin.com/in/sarahharrisspeaks/] is a licensed clinical social worker with more than two decades of clinical practice who still sees therapy clients every week. That experience is what drove her into workplace culture consulting. She kept watching her clients learn new coping skills in session and then walk back into workplaces that made those skills nearly impossible to use. Her book, The Culture Garden, gives leaders practical, script-ready tools they can read at their desk and use in their next conversation.  In this episode, Sarah joins Kim Bohr [https://www.linkedin.com/in/kimbohr/] to explain the neuroscience of perceived threat in the workplace, why one word swap changes whether someone feels safe enough to ask for help, and how the smallest, free changes often produce the biggest gains in productivity and trust.    What You'll Discover:  * Why your wellbeing policy may be communicating the opposite of what you intend  * What happens in the brain when a perceived threat is triggered at work, and why your colleague hasn't heard the first four sentences of your question  * How replacing "accommodation" with "support" changes the entire nervous system response to the conversation  * The 20-minute message-checking rule that transformed an IT worker's ticket-clearing speed  * Why approaching with curiosity is accountability and compassion at the same time  * What two-way transparency looks like during disruption, and why naming what you don't know is as important as sharing what you do    Sarah Harris: "The implied message of accommodation is that you are somehow a burden, that this is somehow a drastic change, that you're a problem. And so folks don't want to ask for accommodation because of the stigma attached to the word."  Kim Bohr:  "That's the illusion of inclusion. It may be well intended, but the realities of how the world is working isn't being considered." Courage to Advance brings senior HR and business leaders into honest conversation about the work of leading people through real complexity. Hosted by Kim Bohr, CEO of SparkEffect. New episodes drop every second, third, and fourth Tuesday of each month. Subscribe at couragetoadvancepodcast.com. rPoG2nGNhym8y5OjgRjF

Ayer - 40 min
Portada del episodio The 5 Culture Challenges Every CPO Is Still Struggling With

The 5 Culture Challenges Every CPO Is Still Struggling With

Most culture problems don't surprise anyone. That's the uncomfortable truth at the center of Scott McInnes's [https://www.linkedin.com/in/scottwmcinnes/] research - a study of Chief People Officers across Ireland that set out to identify what's actually blocking progress from the culture organizations have to the one they need. When Scott debriefed a group of respondents on his findings, the room didn't react with shock. They responded with wry smiles. Same stuff, different year. Scott founded Inspiring Change in Dublin in 2017 after 25 years working in internal  communications and organizational culture across Ireland, the UK, and Europe. His clients include Boots Ireland, the FAI, Enterprise Ireland, and the Police Service of Northern Ireland. He's also the host of the Building Better Cultures podcast, with more than 150 episodes on culture, leadership, and engagement. In this episode of Courage to Advance, Scott and host Kim Bohr [https://www.linkedin.com/in/kimbohr/]compare what his Irish CPO research found with what SparkEffect's own US-based research is surfacing - and the overlap is striking. Geography changes very little. The five challenges Scott named are just as present in American organizations as in Irish ones. What You'll Discover: * Why the same five culture challenges keep showing up decade after decade * How senior leaders cast a "long shadow" through behavior, not announcements * Why middle managers are the real culture carriers, as "chief sense makers" * How reframing "difficult conversations" as developmental ones changes everything * Why return-to-office mandates won't fix disconnection * Why trust is an outcome of behavior, not a value you can declare Scott McInnes:  "I might not know your values. But I can see your behaviors." "Trust isn't a value. It's an outcome of us doing the things that we say we'll do." Kim Bohr:  "Most organizations know they have a culture problem long before they do anything about it. And the longer they wait, the more it costs them in talent, in performance, and in trust." "If we can reframe difficult conversations as developmental conversations or support conversations, it changes everything about how people show up."   Courage to Advance is hosted by Kim Bohr, CEO of SparkEffect, and explores how leaders are building the organizations they wish existed. New episodes drop every second, third, and fourth Tuesday of each month. Subscribe and listen at https://couragetoadvancepodcast.com [https://couragetoadvancepodcast.com]

19 de may de 2026 - 38 h 25 min
Portada del episodio The Bravest Thing a Leader Can Say Right Now Is “I Don’t Know”

The Bravest Thing a Leader Can Say Right Now Is “I Don’t Know”

Most leadership advice assumes everyone on your team is okay. What happens when they aren’t?  That gap between caring deeply and not knowing how to help is where most leaders live right now. Dr. Gretchen Schmelzer [https://www.linkedin.com/in/gretchen-schmelzer-92933a4/?skipRedirect=true] names what’s underneath it. Leaders aren’t undertrained on strategy. They’re undertrained on what to do when the people they lead are struggling. Many try to skip straight to healing without first stabilizing the team. Others mistake ongoing wear and tear for a one-time crisis and treat it as such.  Dr. Gretchen Schmelzer is a Harvard-trained psychologist, author of Journey Through Trauma, and co-founder of the Center for Trauma and Leadership. She has spent two decades helping organizations including the CDC, hospital systems, forest service firefighters, and Alaska Native communities lead through the kinds of seasons most leadership programs don’t prepare anyone for.  In this episode, Gretchen and Kim Bohr [https://www.linkedin.com/in/kimbohr/]talk about the difference between trauma and moral injury, why community is the antidote leaders keep missing, what real vulnerability sounds like in a one-on-one, and why the survival strategies that get people promoted are often the same ones that hold them back as senior leaders.  What You’ll Discover:  * The three situations every leader faces and why misreading which one you’re in costs you the team  * Why mission-driven leaders are the most likely to burn out, and what they tend to get wrong about helping  * The distinction between psychological trauma and moral injury, and why moral injury can’t be healed alone  * What real vulnerability sounds like in a one-on-one when a leader genuinely doesn’t have the answer  * Why perfectionism, hyper-independence, and refusing to delegate become liabilities at senior levels  * How to help a team in survival mode build base camp before asking them to climb anything  * Why stress management isn’t a perk. It’s how leaders stay capable enough to lead.  Dr. Gretchen Schmelzer:  “Moral injury is not a psychological disorder. It is a wound of identity. It’s when I don’t get to behave in a way that’s congruent with my values and with who I believe myself to be.”  Kim Bohr: "In our research around the state of organizational trust, psychological safety is one of the most fragile domains we measured, especially during disruption." Courage to Advance brings senior HR and business leaders into honest conversation about the work of leading people through real complexity. Hosted by Kim Bohr, CEO of SparkEffect. Subscribe for new episodes weekly at couragetoadvancepodcast.com [https://couragetoadvancepodcast.com/].

12 de may de 2026 - 32 min
Portada del episodio The Courage to Be Visible Before You Need to Be

The Courage to Be Visible Before You Need to Be

Kim Bohr [https://www.linkedin.com/in/kimbohr/], CEO of SparkEffect and host of Courage to Advance, sees it all the time: leaders who don’t think about professional visibility until they’re forced to. A layoff, a reorg, a pivot they didn’t plan for. And suddenly they’re trying to build a presence from scratch on a platform they’ve been ignoring. That’s not just inconvenient. That’s starting from zero when the stakes are at their highest. The common pattern is to treat professional presence as someone else’s job. The marketing team handles the brand. The company page is there. But the reality is simpler than that: people trust people, not logos. Company pages generate almost no real engagement. And a leader who only shows up when they need something is working from the same deficit as someone who only calls a friend when they need a favor. You feel the difference. So does everyone else. In this episode, Kim sits down with Nina Froriep [https://www.linkedin.com/in/nina-froriep/], a visual storyteller, Emmy-winning producer, and LinkedIn content strategist who spent the early part of her career producing for Oprah and winning awards in documentary filmmaking. When the industry shifted, she turned that storytelling skill toward helping business leaders show up authentically through her firm, Clockwise Productions. What You’ll Discover * Why leaders who wait until a crisis to build their network are already behind * How Nina’s move from Oprah to LinkedIn showed her that less production builds more real connection * The “List of 25”: a simple way to keep professional relationships warm before you need them * Why sharing personal things you care about (a dog, a photo exhibit, a place you love) actually builds professional credibility * How LinkedIn’s algorithm penalizes inconsistency and why once a week is plenty * Why engagement, not posting, is the real growth strategy right now “If we create a void, it will be filled with conjecture. So give them something about you personally.” — Nina Froriep Courage to Advance is where we talk to leaders who are building the organizations they wish existed. Hosted by Kim Bohr, CEO of SparkEffect. New episodes drop every second, third, and fourth Tuesday of each month Subscribe and listen at https://couragetoadvancepodcast.com. [https://couragetoadvancepodcast.com] w0QAOJrG1hWLYYmmlIqB

28 de abr de 2026 - 32 min
Portada del episodio Why Your Employees Aren't motivated - And It's Not Their Fault

Why Your Employees Aren't motivated - And It's Not Their Fault

Most companies treat employee motivation like a personality trait. When engagement drops, the default assumption is that the employee isn't driven enough or doesn't care enough. But what if the problem isn't who you hired? What if it's what you never asked them? Host Kim Bohr [https://www.linkedin.com/in/kimbohr/] sits down with Daniela Tancau [https://www.linkedin.com/in/daniela-tancau-improvework/] to unpack where the disconnect starts. That's the pattern Daniela has spent 18 years diagnosing. Across thousands of interviews with employees and candidates, she's watched organizations reduce HR to two functions (hiring and administration) while ignoring the tools that actually shape whether people stay and produce. Companies run anonymous surveys that can't identify individual motivational drivers. They train employees based on company needs, not employee goals. They assume a shared mission means shared motivation. Daniela founded Improve Work to close that gap. Based in Romania and serving entrepreneurs and team leaders across the U.S. and Western Europe, she developed a structured interview methodology organized around seven factors that affect employee motivation, from task alignment and manager relationships to salary expectations and career development. Her program is available as both a consulting engagement and a self-paced online course. What You'll Discover: * Why "motivation comes from within" lets companies off the hook, and what they actually control * The difference between personal motivation and employee motivation, and why confusing them leads to disengagement * Why CEO-led motivation conversations signal care before asking for commitment * The seven factors that determine whether an employee stays engaged or quietly checks out "You have to show care before you ask for the employees to care about your company and about your goals. So it's a two way street." – Daniela Tancau Courage to Advance is hosted by Kim Bohr, CEO of SparkEffect, and explores how leaders are building the organizations they wish existed, sharing the real decisions, setbacks, and strategies behind meaningful change. New episodes drop every second, third, and fourth Tuesday of each month. Subscribe and listen at https://couragetoadvancepodcast.com [https://couragetoadvancepodcast.com]

21 de abr de 2026 - 19 min
Soy muy de podcasts. Mientras hago la cama, mientras recojo la casa, mientras trabajo… Y en Podimo encuentro podcast que me encantan. De emprendimiento, de salid, de humor… De lo que quiera! Estoy encantada 👍
Soy muy de podcasts. Mientras hago la cama, mientras recojo la casa, mientras trabajo… Y en Podimo encuentro podcast que me encantan. De emprendimiento, de salid, de humor… De lo que quiera! Estoy encantada 👍
MI TOC es feliz, que maravilla. Ordenador, limpio, sugerencias de categorías nuevas a explorar!!!
Me suscribi con los 14 días de prueba para escuchar el Podcast de Misterios Cotidianos, pero al final me quedo mas tiempo porque hacia tiempo que no me reía tanto. Tiene Podcast muy buenos y la aplicación funciona bien.
App ligera, eficiente, encuentras rápido tus podcast favoritos. Diseño sencillo y bonito. me gustó.
contenidos frescos e inteligentes
La App va francamente bien y el precio me parece muy justo para pagar a gente que nos da horas y horas de contenido. Espero poder seguir usándola asiduamente.

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