Labyrinth Mind: The Executive’s Guide to Mindset, Wellbeing and Business Success

The Power Map: Reading and Navigating Organisational Politics | Labyrinth Mind S4 E9

20 min · Ayer
Portada del episodio The Power Map: Reading and Navigating Organisational Politics | Labyrinth Mind S4 E9

Descripción

A director, exceptionally capable, with glowing reviews and outstanding three hundred and sixty degree feedback, has been passed over for promotion three times. A colleague who delivers visibly less just became her boss. She is convinced the system is broken. It isn't. It's simply not the system she thinks it is. This episode tackles the conversation most capable executives avoid because they find it distasteful. Organisational politics. Not the unethical version, but the legitimate, navigable, entirely honest version that determines far more about career outcomes than most people admit. Trevor and Joe name the Politics Paradox. The most capable executives are often the worst at navigating political environments, because they reasonably believe competence alone should be enough. Research shows that fifty nine percent of workers say their manager's political behaviour significantly shapes their entire work environment, and that ignoring this reality leads directly to being passed over, excluded, and limited, regardless of underlying performance. The episode introduces the Power Map, a practical tool for identifying the real, informal structure of any organisation by asking who actually moves decisions forward and who can quietly kill them. Three categories matter most. The Quiet Vetoes, who hold no formal authority but real influence. The Trusted Confidants senior leaders consult privately. And the Culture Carriers whose reaction shapes how everyone else responds to a new idea. Then the practical tools. The Alliance Architecture for building genuine relationships before you need them. The Visibility Protocol for ensuring excellent work doesn't disappear into a void. And the Ethical Political Playbook, with a single clear test for the line between legitimate influence and manipulation. Essential listening for any capable professional who has ever been confused about why the org chart doesn't seem to predict outcomes the way it should. Labyrinth Mind: The Executive's Guide to Mindset, Wellbeing and Business Success — hosted by Trevor Brown, former senior executive and online hypnotherapist, and Joe, mindset coach. Chapters: 00:00 Introduction [3:16] Part 1: The Politics Paradox [6:49] Part 2: The Power Map [12:37] Part 3: The Ethical Political Playbook

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44 episodios

Portada del episodio The Power Map: Reading and Navigating Organisational Politics | Labyrinth Mind S4 E9

The Power Map: Reading and Navigating Organisational Politics | Labyrinth Mind S4 E9

A director, exceptionally capable, with glowing reviews and outstanding three hundred and sixty degree feedback, has been passed over for promotion three times. A colleague who delivers visibly less just became her boss. She is convinced the system is broken. It isn't. It's simply not the system she thinks it is. This episode tackles the conversation most capable executives avoid because they find it distasteful. Organisational politics. Not the unethical version, but the legitimate, navigable, entirely honest version that determines far more about career outcomes than most people admit. Trevor and Joe name the Politics Paradox. The most capable executives are often the worst at navigating political environments, because they reasonably believe competence alone should be enough. Research shows that fifty nine percent of workers say their manager's political behaviour significantly shapes their entire work environment, and that ignoring this reality leads directly to being passed over, excluded, and limited, regardless of underlying performance. The episode introduces the Power Map, a practical tool for identifying the real, informal structure of any organisation by asking who actually moves decisions forward and who can quietly kill them. Three categories matter most. The Quiet Vetoes, who hold no formal authority but real influence. The Trusted Confidants senior leaders consult privately. And the Culture Carriers whose reaction shapes how everyone else responds to a new idea. Then the practical tools. The Alliance Architecture for building genuine relationships before you need them. The Visibility Protocol for ensuring excellent work doesn't disappear into a void. And the Ethical Political Playbook, with a single clear test for the line between legitimate influence and manipulation. Essential listening for any capable professional who has ever been confused about why the org chart doesn't seem to predict outcomes the way it should. Labyrinth Mind: The Executive's Guide to Mindset, Wellbeing and Business Success — hosted by Trevor Brown, former senior executive and online hypnotherapist, and Joe, mindset coach. Chapters: 00:00 Introduction [3:16] Part 1: The Politics Paradox [6:49] Part 2: The Power Map [12:37] Part 3: The Ethical Political Playbook

Ayer20 min
Portada del episodio Executive Confessions: The Decisions We'd Never Admit To | Labyrinth Mind S4 E8

Executive Confessions: The Decisions We'd Never Admit To | Labyrinth Mind S4 E8

Every executive has a decision they would never put in a case study. The hire kept eighteen months too long. The strategy meeting that ran two hours past the point everyone privately knew it was wrong. The email sent at twenty past eleven at night that was, by any reasonable measure, entirely justified in content and catastrophically unwise in tone. This week Trevor and Joe stop being your guides through the executive mind and become two slightly embarrassed examples of it. No frameworks. No research citations. Just two genuinely uncomfortable confessions, told properly. The hiring disaster that came from mistaking nostalgia for judgement. The brilliant interviewee who turned out to be a fairly ordinary employee, and the menu photo problem that explains why. The meeting that should have ended after fifteen minutes and somehow continued for two hours longer. The promotion given to avoid one difficult conversation that quietly guaranteed fourteen more. And the consultant hired not to assess a decision, but to validate one that had already been made. By the end of the episode a single thread connects every story. Each decision traded a smaller, nearer discomfort for a much larger one further down the line, because the nearer discomfort was the one that felt psychologically present and the distant one felt abstract right up until it wasn't. This isn't an episode about being a bad executive. It's an episode about being a human being under pressure, told with enough honesty that you'll probably recognise at least one of your own stories somewhere in it. Labyrinth Mind: The Executive's Guide to Mindset, Wellbeing and Business Success — hosted by Trevor Brown, former senior executive and online hypnotherapist, and Joe, mindset coach.

28 de jun de 202620 min
Portada del episodio The Relevance Trap: The Ageing Executive and the Fear of Being Left Behind | Labyrinth Mind S4 E7

The Relevance Trap: The Ageing Executive and the Fear of Being Left Behind | Labyrinth Mind S4 E7

A leadership team meeting. Multiple voices, energy, pace. Then one voice goes quiet. Then another. The meeting continues without them. This episode tackles the conversation almost no organisation has honestly. Ageism in the corporate world. Not as a legal compliance issue, but as a strategic catastrophe that organisations are committing against themselves, often without realising it. For the first time on Labyrinth Mind, Trevor and Joe are joined by Margaret, a former senior HR director with over thirty years of experience across global organisations, who now campaigns actively against ageism in the corporate world. The data is staggering. Research from Pearn Kandola found that eighty-eight percent of people believe age discrimination exists in the workplace, and seventy-seven percent of people aged fifty-one and over say it is directly affecting their current employment status. The Page Executive Talent Trends report found forty-four percent of workers globally have suffered age discrimination at work. The National Audit Office estimates the cost to the UK economy at up to thirty-one billion pounds a year. Margaret explains the mechanism. The language that does the discriminating without ever using the word age. The Three Relevance Traps that experienced executives fall into when the anxiety takes hold. The Knowledge Hoarder, who protects expertise rather than sharing it. The Frantic Adapter, who exhausts themselves trying to learn everything new at once. The Quiet Abdicator, who withdraws under the weight of marginalisation. And then the reframe. The Experience Premium. What experienced executives actually offer that cannot be downloaded, learned on a course, or replicated by an AI tool. The Reverse Mentoring Protocol. The Experience Premium Audit. The Succession Preparation Framework. This episode says what the corporate world needs to hear. Essential listening for any experienced professional who has felt the room go quiet around them, and any leader who has the power to change that. Labyrinth Mind: The Executive's Guide to Mindset, Wellbeing and Business Success — hosted by Trevor Brown, former senior executive and online hypnotherapist, and Joe, mindset coach.

21 de jun de 202624 min
Portada del episodio The Entrepreneurial Brain: Why Corporate Thinking Is Killing Your Best Ideas | Labyrinth Mind S4 E6

The Entrepreneurial Brain: Why Corporate Thinking Is Killing Your Best Ideas | Labyrinth Mind S4 E6

She had a genuinely good idea. The kind that doesn't come along very often. A real market gap, real competitive advantage, real revenue potential. She spent six months building the business case. The response was positive. Really positive. Eighteen months later a startup had launched the same product with two million pounds in seed funding and a team of five. The window had closed. Her business case was in a shared drive in a folder called Initiatives 2023. This episode is about why that happens — and what to do about it. Every large organisation has what Trevor calls the Corporate Antibody System. A self-reinforcing set of processes, governance structures, and cultural norms that neutralise innovative ideas not through malicious intent but through accumulated weight. Steering groups, working groups, sign-off chains, and shared drives. Nobody decides to kill the idea. The system just does it anyway. Drawing on the Innovate UK State of Innovation Report 2024, London Business School innovation research, McKinsey's Global Innovation Survey 2025, and Wharton School intrapreneurship research, Trevor and Joe map the Mindset Matrix — the four dimensions where corporate and entrepreneurial thinking diverge most — and give you three practical tools to navigate the system without losing what made the idea good in the first place. The Minimum Viable Proposal. The Internal Sponsor Strategy. The Ninety-Day Proof of Concept. Three tools. One operating system. For the executive with a good idea and an organisation that keeps finding ways to stop it. Essential listening for senior executives, innovation leads, division heads, and anyone who has ever watched a startup do in three months what their organisation spent two years failing to decide about.

14 de jun de 202624 min
Portada del episodio The Rival: The Psychology of Professional Competition | Labyrinth Mind S4 E5

The Rival: The Psychology of Professional Competition | Labyrinth Mind S4 E5

Think of someone. You don't need to say their name out loud. The colleague at roughly your level. Same ambition. Same organisation. Possibly the same target role. The one you're always slightly aware of in a meeting. Whose name in your inbox creates a small, specific tension that nobody else's name creates. Your rival. Almost every senior professional has one. Almost none of them will admit it. And the ones who most strongly deny having a rival are, in most cases, the ones most profoundly shaped by having one. In this episode, Trevor and Joe go into the psychology of professional rivalry — one of the most universal and least honestly discussed dynamics in corporate life. Drawing on Professor Gavin Kilduff's Psychology of Rivalry framework at New York University, the Oxford Handbook of the Psychology of Competition 2024, and research from the Journal of Vocational Behavior, they map the Rival Paradox — the uncomfortable truth that your rival simultaneously improves your performance and degrades your wellbeing. The Three Rival Archetypes give you the diagnostic framework to identify exactly what you're dealing with. The Open Competitor — visible, direct, and actually the easiest to manage. The Political Underminer — who competes sideways, each action deniable, the pattern unmistakeable. The False Ally — who competes using your trust as their primary resource. Then the tools. The Social Comparison Audit to separate useful competitive insight from corrosive anxiety. The Strategic Detachment Protocol — three commitments made when you're calm that hold when you're not. And the Rival Reframe — the most powerful shift available when a rivalry is costing you more than it's giving you. The rival is the person most consistently pushing you towards your highest performance. The question is whether you're getting the benefit or just paying the cost. Essential listening for senior executives, ambitious professionals, and anyone who has ever found themselves thinking about a colleague more than they'd like to admit. Labyrinth Mind: The Executive's Guide to Mindset, Wellbeing and Business Success — hosted by Trevor Brown, former senior executive and online hypnotherapist, and Joe, mindset coach.

7 de jun de 202622 min