Success Secrets and Stories

MBR Public Speaking - Great Talks Put The Audience First

19 min · Eilen
jakson MBR Public Speaking - Great Talks Put The Audience First kansikuva

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2220934/fan_mail/new] Public speaking gets labeled as “stage work,” but for most of us it shows up in conference rooms, staff meetings, budget reviews, project updates, and the moments when a leader has to be clear under pressure. John Wandolowski and Greg Powell dig into a different way to think about presentation skills: it is not a performance, it is an engagement. When we stop trying to sound impressive and start trying to serve the listener, we become calmer, clearer, and more credible.  We apply the MBR mindset to executive communication and leadership development, where responsibility means owning not just what we said, but how it lands. If the room is confused or checked out, something in the communication broke and it is on us to fix it. We talk about what great speakers do differently, why strategic speaking must connect to what matters, and how nerves can spike when you start measuring yourself against experts. The fix is practical: return your focus to the audience and build familiarity through practice.  You will leave with four disciplines you can use immediately apply in workplace presentations: (1) protect audience engagement by reading the room, (2)cut jargon so your first sentence lands, (3) practice until you sound prepared (not memorized), and (4) focus on one central idea so people remember what matters. We also point to resources like Toastmasters-International as a resource for practicing your skills. If you want your next talk to earn trust and move decisions forward, listen, share this with a teammate, and leave a review with your best public speaking tip. Support the show [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/SuccessStories] Presented by John Wandolowski and Greg Powell

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jakson MBR Public Speaking - Great Talks Put The Audience First kansikuva

MBR Public Speaking - Great Talks Put The Audience First

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2220934/fan_mail/new] Public speaking gets labeled as “stage work,” but for most of us it shows up in conference rooms, staff meetings, budget reviews, project updates, and the moments when a leader has to be clear under pressure. John Wandolowski and Greg Powell dig into a different way to think about presentation skills: it is not a performance, it is an engagement. When we stop trying to sound impressive and start trying to serve the listener, we become calmer, clearer, and more credible.  We apply the MBR mindset to executive communication and leadership development, where responsibility means owning not just what we said, but how it lands. If the room is confused or checked out, something in the communication broke and it is on us to fix it. We talk about what great speakers do differently, why strategic speaking must connect to what matters, and how nerves can spike when you start measuring yourself against experts. The fix is practical: return your focus to the audience and build familiarity through practice.  You will leave with four disciplines you can use immediately apply in workplace presentations: (1) protect audience engagement by reading the room, (2)cut jargon so your first sentence lands, (3) practice until you sound prepared (not memorized), and (4) focus on one central idea so people remember what matters. We also point to resources like Toastmasters-International as a resource for practicing your skills. If you want your next talk to earn trust and move decisions forward, listen, share this with a teammate, and leave a review with your best public speaking tip. Support the show [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/SuccessStories] Presented by John Wandolowski and Greg Powell

Eilen19 min
jakson When Resume Bots Meet HR Bots - Who wins? kansikuva

When Resume Bots Meet HR Bots - Who wins?

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2220934/fan_mail/new] AI can write your resume in seconds. AI can also reject your application in seconds. The hard part is the question nobody wants to own: when an algorithm screens people out, who is responsible for the damage it can cause? We dig into the real-world legal and leadership stakes behind AI in hiring, including the warning shot from the Workday case and how automated scoring and sorting can create algorithmic bias, including age discrimination risk. From there, we get practical about what actually happens inside applicant tracking systems (ATS) and HR AI: pattern matching, keyword rules, knockout questions, and the hidden ways a job description can accidentally become a mass rejection tool. If you lead a team, we explain why “the system decided” is a dangerous sentence. We also talk to job seekers navigating AI resume screening. We share ATS-safe resume formatting, why columns and graphics can break parsing, how keyword stuffing backfires, and why measurable results beat vague claims every time. And we end with the human side of the process: networking, referrals, and panel interviews that reduce bias and focus on real job skills instead of wordsmithing. Our bottom line is Management By Responsibility. AI can assist, but leadership must define standards, audit outcomes, review false negatives, and sign off on the process. Subscribe, share this with a hiring manager or job seeker, and leave a review. What part of hiring should never be automated? Support the show [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/SuccessStories] Presented by John Wandolowski and Greg Powell

3. heinä 202620 min
jakson How Leaders Spot Burnout And Restore Hope And Communication kansikuva

How Leaders Spot Burnout And Restore Hope And Communication

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2220934/fan_mail/new] Burnout doesn’t always look like falling apart. Sometimes it looks like a capable person still hitting deadlines while quietly losing sleep, losing humor, and losing the feeling that their day is theirs. Greg and I start with that familiar late-night moment: one last email, a new problem, and the steady pressure that keeps your nervous system switched on. From there, we break down a simple leadership framework that makes burnout easier to spot and talk about: the difference between living “above the line” (you still feel choice and traction) and “below the line” (your calendar, urgency, and anxiety push you around). We also get practical about what managers can say when someone answers “I’m fine” in a way that clearly means the opposite. You’ll hear specific opening lines, real questions that invite honest answers, and how to avoid the worst vibe of all: telling someone who’s drowning to “just have a better attitude.” We also zoom out to the workplace systems that fuel job burnout, including themes found in the Maslach Burnout Inventory (MBI) research like too much workload, too little control, unclear expectations, and weak support. Then we move from empathy to action with a simple method: pick one concrete change that makes next week 10% better, and build a plan that helps boundaries hold, especially around after-hours email. If this helps, subscribe, share the episode with a manager or teammate, and leave a review so more people can find practical leadership tools for workplace stress and burnout recovery. Support the show [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/SuccessStories] Presented by John Wandolowski and Greg Powell

26. kesä 202619 min
jakson What If Your Best Talent Are Already Within Your Organization? kansikuva

What If Your Best Talent Are Already Within Your Organization?

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2220934/fan_mail/new] A hiring freeze hits, overtime gets cut, deadlines don’t move, and suddenly every manager hears the same message: make do with what you have. We start with a real factory-floor moment where the pressure is obvious, the team is tired, and the work still has to ship. Then we share the twist: performance improves anyway, not by adding people, but by growing people. We dig into Management By Responsibility (MBR) and why it works so well in a stagnant labor market. Instead of pushing harder or slipping into micromanagement, we focus on capacity building through strengths-based coaching, emotional readiness, and clear agreements that create real ownership. We talk about why responsibility is personal, why people grow when they choose responsibility, and how leaders become talent developers rather than task distributors. We also connect the dots to today’s trends, including where AI can help with task data while leaders double down on developing the humans doing the work. You’ll hear practical tools you can use immediately: questions that reveal what gives employees energy, a simple readiness check before adding responsibility, and a “growth agreement” that avoids corporate jargon but still measures progress. We also walk through cross-training and internal transfers, plus how HR can support the approach, especially when the freeze doesn’t stop the workload. If you want more leadership tools, check out John’s book Building Your Leadership Toolbox, explore Dr. Durst’s MBR program at SuccessGrowthAcademy.com, and then subscribe, share, and leave a review so more managers can lead better under pressure. Support the show [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/SuccessStories] Presented by John Wandolowski and Greg Powell

19. kesä 202618 min
jakson Agreements Beat Expectations kansikuva

Agreements Beat Expectations

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2220934/fan_mail/new] A missed deadline can feel like disrespect, but it often starts with something far less dramatic: an expectation nobody ever agreed to. We open with a simple workplace story a budget report “due Monday” that someone thought was due Wednesday and use it to expose how easily leaders create conflict through vague requests, inherited norms, and unspoken rules. Our goal is practical leadership: less frustration, fewer surprises, and more follow-through. We walk through the most powerful tool in the MBR framework: agreements. An agreement is not just “do the task.” It is clear what is being done, why it matters, who owns each piece, when it is due, and what support is needed. That one shift turns accountability into something people can actually meet with dignity. We also tackle the classic management landmine: “ASAP.” If everything is urgent, nothing is clear, and your team ends up guessing. We share a simple script for setting realistic timelines, confirming dependencies, and documenting commitments so responsibility is shared instead of imposed. Then we connect the dots of leadership trends: individualized growth, emotional readiness, influence over authority, AI-enhanced clarity, and culture as a performance multiplier. We explain how AI can help track deadlines and reduce ambiguity, while trust and readiness still require human leadership. If you want a better way to lead without micromanaging, start by replacing expectations with agreements and pressure with partnership. Subscribe for more practical leadership tools, share this with a manager who needs it, and leave a review so more people can find the show. What’s one expectation at work you wish had been an agreement? Support the show [https://www.buymeacoffee.com/SuccessStories] Presented by John Wandolowski and Greg Powell

12. kesä 202623 min