WiLD Conversation

The Trust Process: Why Healthcare Leadership Depends on More Than Just Competence with Chris Nicholas, COO Renown Health

1 h 4 min · 5. touko 20261 h 4 min
jakson The Trust Process: Why Healthcare Leadership Depends on More Than Just Competence with Chris Nicholas, COO Renown Health kansikuva

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In an industry where "box-checking" can often replace "soul-shaping," trust remains the invisible engine of successful healthcare organizations. This episode explores why trust isn't a light switch you can simply flip on, but a living process of maintenance, recovery, and truth-telling. We dive into the hidden costs of low-trust environments, where employees spend more time appearing trustworthy than actually being it, and how leaders can shift from managing assumptions to building authentic alignment.   Key Leader Takeaways: * Trust is a Process, Not a Switch: It isn't binary (on/off). It requires daily "maintenance and recovery" rather than a one-time achievement. * The Cost of "Invisible Assumptions": In low-trust environments, staff waste cognitive energy managing perceptions instead of performing. * The "Quiet Exit" of Trust: Customers and patients rarely protest when trust is lost; they simply stop showing up. * Vulnerability over Perfection: Trust is built by being honest about where work still needs to be done, not by projecting a flawless image. * Soul-Shaping vs. Box-Checking: Real organizational health comes from fostering courage and job clarity, not just completing compliance checklists.

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jakson The Trust Process: Why Healthcare Leadership Depends on More Than Just Competence with Chris Nicholas, COO Renown Health kansikuva

The Trust Process: Why Healthcare Leadership Depends on More Than Just Competence with Chris Nicholas, COO Renown Health

In an industry where "box-checking" can often replace "soul-shaping," trust remains the invisible engine of successful healthcare organizations. This episode explores why trust isn't a light switch you can simply flip on, but a living process of maintenance, recovery, and truth-telling. We dive into the hidden costs of low-trust environments, where employees spend more time appearing trustworthy than actually being it, and how leaders can shift from managing assumptions to building authentic alignment.   Key Leader Takeaways: * Trust is a Process, Not a Switch: It isn't binary (on/off). It requires daily "maintenance and recovery" rather than a one-time achievement. * The Cost of "Invisible Assumptions": In low-trust environments, staff waste cognitive energy managing perceptions instead of performing. * The "Quiet Exit" of Trust: Customers and patients rarely protest when trust is lost; they simply stop showing up. * Vulnerability over Perfection: Trust is built by being honest about where work still needs to be done, not by projecting a flawless image. * Soul-Shaping vs. Box-Checking: Real organizational health comes from fostering courage and job clarity, not just completing compliance checklists.

5. touko 20261 h 4 min
jakson “Trust doesn’t grow from the absence of failure, it grows from the presence of repair” with Executive Director, Dr. Matt Russell kansikuva

“Trust doesn’t grow from the absence of failure, it grows from the presence of repair” with Executive Director, Dr. Matt Russell

In this soulful episode, Rob sits down with long-time peer and "architect of hope," Dr. Matt Russell, Executive Director of Iconoclast Artists & projectCURATE.  Together, they deconstruct the traditional myths of leadership, moving past "performative vulnerability" toward something much more rugged: Wild Trust. Sharing a powerful excerpt from his book, Whole Leaders Wild Trust, Rob sets the stage for a discussion on why trust isn't a byproduct of perfection, but rather a result of courageous systems and the "presence of repair" in the face of human brokenness. Key Takeaways: * The Architect’s Role: Leadership isn't just about dreaming; it's about building the "scaffolding" that allows others to find hope. * Beyond Performance: Distinguishing between "performative vulnerability" and "sacrificial courage" that actually costs a leader something. * The Trust Paradox: Why vulnerability isn't the foundation of trust, but an inherently unsafe act that requires a foundation of courageous systems to survive. * The Power of Repair: Understanding that trust is forged not when things go right, but when we navigate what went wrong with self-awareness and love.

21. huhti 20261 h 5 min
jakson Why Thousands of College Students Gather Weekly at Reed Arena at Texas A&M: Fighting for the Minutes with Brian McCormack kansikuva

Why Thousands of College Students Gather Weekly at Reed Arena at Texas A&M: Fighting for the Minutes with Brian McCormack

Why are more than 8,000 college students gathering every week at Reed Auditorium at Texas A&M? In a cultural moment marked by perpetual stimulation without satisfaction, they aren’t showing up for more noise, they're showing up for something real. For leaders who are awake. In this episode of The WiLD Conversation Podcast, Dr. Rob McKenna and Sabeth Kapahu sit down with Brian McCormack to explore the growing hunger for truth, trust, and transcendence among the next generation. Together, they unpack the high-stakes reality of leading in a time where truth moves at lightspeed and authenticity is often questioned. They discuss why college campuses are becoming epicenters of both cultural disruption and spiritual awakening, and what it means to lead in the midst of it. This conversation invites leaders to move beyond performance and into presence, embracing brokenness, owning limitations, and stepping into what Brian calls ferocious intentionality: a disciplined, awake, and deeply purposeful way of stewarding time. The fight for this generation may not be about attention,it may be about the minutes. Key Takeaways * The Campus as the Epicenter: Why movements, both cultural and spiritual, are igniting among students, and what leaders must recognize * The AI Truth Crisis:  Leading in a world where reality feels increasingly unstable * Perpetual Stimulation vs. Satisfaction:  Understanding the deeper hunger driving students toward meaning and the supernatural * Leading from Brokenness:  Why trust begins with the courage to say, “I may fail you” * Fighting for the Minutes:  Practicing ferocious intentionality in a world designed to keep us distracted and asleep

7. huhti 20261 h 0 min
jakson How Mark Whitacre Went from FBI Informant to Culture Leader: Lessons on Trust, Purpose, and Repair kansikuva

How Mark Whitacre Went from FBI Informant to Culture Leader: Lessons on Trust, Purpose, and Repair

How Mark Whitacre Went from FBI Informant to Culture Leader: Lessons on Trust, Purpose, and Repair In this powerful episode of the WiLD Conversation Podcast, Mark Whitacre once known as “The Informant” at the center of the largest price-fixing case in U.S. history, shares the deeper story rarely told: the long, costly, and redemptive journey of rebuilding a life. Hosted by Dr. Rob McKenna and Sabeth Kapahu, Mark reflects on what it means to move from public failure to purposeful leadership. Now serving as Vice President of Culture and Care at Coca-Cola Consolidated, he brings a unique lens shaped by his PhD in biochemistry, his corporate rise and fall, and his ongoing commitment to helping leaders and organizations flourish from the inside out. This conversation goes beyond headlines and into the heart of trust, identity, and restoration. It invites us to consider a deeper question: What does it really take to repair what’s been broken in ourselves and in the cultures we lead? Grounded in a faith-informed perspective and aligned with the WiLD Leaders commitment to whole and intentional leadership, this episode offers a compelling exploration of humility, resilience, and the long-haul proposition of becoming trustworthy again. Leadership Insights: 1. The Anatomy of Restoration Trust is not a switch, it's a process. Mark unpacks how trust is rebuilt over time through consistent action, humility, and a willingness to be formed, not just forgiven. 2. Leading with Care and Culture At Coca-Cola Consolidated, leadership isn’t just about performance metrics, it’s about people. Mark shares how a care-first, faith-rooted approach reshapes organizational culture from the inside out. 3. The Urgency vs. Patience Paradox Leaders often feel the pressure to move fast, but personal growth, healing, and reintegration require time. This tension is where much of the real work of leadership development happens. 4. Whistleblowing and Beyond Mark offers honest insight into the internal transformation required to move from public scandal to a life marked by integrity, consistency, and purpose. To connect with Mark email: Mark.Whitacre@cokeconsolidated.com [Mark.Whitacre@cokeconsolidated.com] To learn more about Mark : www.markwhitacre.com [http://www.markwhitacre.com/] The Investigation Discovery (ID) Channel Documentary with the 3 real FBI agents:   https://www.markwhitacre.com/discovery.html [https://www.markwhitacre.com/discovery.html]

24. maalis 202658 min
jakson Harvard Business Review Author John Blakey: If Trust Is So Important, Why Aren’t Leaders Measuring It? kansikuva

Harvard Business Review Author John Blakey: If Trust Is So Important, Why Aren’t Leaders Measuring It?

In this WiLD Conversation Podcast, Dr. John Blakey joins Dr.Rob McKenna and Sabeth Kapahu to challenge one of leadership’s most common assumptions: if trust is the most important currency in leadership, why aren’t organizations measuring it? Drawing from his research, executive coaching experience, and his recent Harvard Business Review article, Blakey argues that trust must move beyond inspirational language and become a measurable strategic asset. Leaders cannot build cultures of trust by intuition alone; they must develop the courage to expose blind spots, measure what matters, and intentionally cultivate the habits that create trust over time. Together, the conversation explores: * Why trust is the foundation beneath performance and culture * The difference between talking about trust and operationalizing it * How measurement builds self-awareness, shared language, and strategic alignment * Why leaders consistently overestimate their own trustworthiness * The role of kindness, courage, and behavioral habits in trusted leadership Blakey also shares the pivotal career moment that sparked his life’s work, being told by a CEO that he was “too nice” to succeed in corporate leadership, and how that challenge ultimately led him to prove that leaders who rely on the power of trust can outperform those who rely on power itself. For leaders navigating a moment when trust is eroding across institutions, this episode offers a clear call to action: Stop treating trust like a feeling and start treating it like the leadership system it truly is. For more on the WiLD Trust Index: https://www.wildleaders.org/wild-trust-index [https://www.wildleaders.org/wild-trust-index] For more on The Trusted Executive: https://trustedexecutive.com/ [https://trustedexecutive.com/]

10. maalis 202646 min