3-Minute Reframe with Cameron Conaway

Our History Parts

3 min · 4 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Our History Parts

Descripción

In Fall 2025, Cameron Conaway opened his office door at Penn State Smeal to find Don Hambrick — one of the most cited management scholars in the world — simply stopping by to say hello. No ego, no performance, just warmth. It was a quiet illustration of the very theory Hambrick is famous for. In this episode of 3-Minute Reframe, Cameron connects Hambrick's Upper Echelons Theory to a question every leader is worth sitting with: which three experiences from your history are most shaping how you show up right now? Show Notes: Upper Echelons Theory: An Update — Hambrick (2007) [https://www.jstor.org/stable/20159303] 3-Minute Reframe Archive [https://cameronconaway.com/3mr/]

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de 3-Minute Reframe with Cameron Conaway!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

31 episodios

episode Stacking Small Wins artwork

Stacking Small Wins

When it rains it pours — but it can go the other way too. A small win creates the conditions for another, and another, until momentum that started almost imperceptibly becomes real. The trouble is most of us are so wired to notice what's going wrong that we dismiss what's going right as too small to count. In this episode of 3-Minute Reframe, Cameron connects poet Samuel Green's idea of "small noticings" to Teresa Amabile and Steven Kramer's landmark Progress Principle research — which analyzed nearly 12,000 diary entries to discover that small, forward momentum on meaningful work is the single greatest driver of inner work life. Show Notes: The Progress Principle — Amabile & Kramer, HBS [https://www.hbs.edu/faculty/Pages/item.aspx?num=40692] 3-Minute Reframe Archive [https://cameronconaway.com/3mr/]

28 de may de 20263 min
episode How Layoffs Changed Us artwork

How Layoffs Changed Us

In 2025, Cameron Conaway was leading one of the best teams of his career at Cisco when the company announced it was laying off 4,000 people. What followed wasn't just grief — it was a quiet, almost invisible shift in behavior. He stopped taking risks. Some colleagues stopped asking for feedback entirely. Others asked for it performatively, hoping visibility would protect them. In this episode of 3-Minute Reframe, he connects that experience to a landmark 1981 paper by Barry Staw, Lance Sandelands, and Jane Dutton on threat rigidity — and explores why a threat environment is often the exact moment we become least able to give or receive honest feedback. Show Notes: Threat-Rigidity Effects in Organizational Behavior — Staw, Sandelands & Dutton (1981) [https://www.jstor.org/stable/2392337] 3-Minute Reframe Archive [https://cameronconaway.com/3mr/]

21 de may de 20262 min