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Built On Purpose: Culture, Resilience, and the Fight to Get It Back

58 min · 19 de may de 2026
portada del episodio Built On Purpose: Culture, Resilience, and the Fight to Get It Back

Descripción

Summary What does it actually mean to build a people-centric and purpose-driven culture worth fighting for? Not the version that ends up in the employee handbook. Not the mission statement on the wall. The real, daily, sometimes uncomfortable work of building something that holds together under pressure. In this episode, Clarence sits down with Jodi Scott, co-founder and CEO of Green Goo, a plant-based first aid and herbal wellness company that grew from a family kitchen to over 120,000 retail locations. Her story is not a standard entrepreneurship story. She built something real with her mother and sister, navigated a pandemic without losing her team, lost her company, and fought to buy it back not because the numbers made sense, but because the purpose did. This conversation moves through four dimensions of that journey: the intentional work of building a strong culture, the role of purpose as an organizational north star, what it takes to stay engaged through loss and uncertainty, and what a leader's internal state actually costs (or creates) in the people around them. Takeaways 1. Alignment starts with purpose and is the foundation for engagement and leadership. 2. How a positive and non-toxic "family" culture is possible when done right 3. A strong culture, intentionality, and interconnectedness are crucial in building a successful organization. 4. Purpose and alignment lead to trust and resilience 5. The connection between a leader's internal state and organizational culture is profound. 6. What staying engaged looks like when the rational decision would have been to walk away. 7. How staying grounded in purpose lays the foundation for resilience Chapters * 00:00 Alignment and Purpose in Engagement * 07:51 Family Culture and Intentionality * 16:15 Leadership and Organizational Design * 22:47 Nature-Inspired Leadership and Decision-Making * 28:17 Purpose-Driven Decision-Making in Crisis * 35:36 Navigating Loss and Rebuilding * 51:33 The Impact of Personal Well-being on Organizational Culture Links * Connect with Jodi [https://www.linkedin.com/in/jodi-scott-7234331b8/] * Learn More About Green Goo [https://www.greengoo.com/] * Connect with Clarence [https://www.linkedin.com/in/clarencebongalos] * Take the Alignment Assessment [https://alignmentassessment.netlify.app/] Keywords #culture #family #purpose #alignment #people #leadership #founder #intentionalleadership #resilience

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30 episodios

episode Equity is Leadership 101: What Most Organizations Still Get Wrong artwork

Equity is Leadership 101: What Most Organizations Still Get Wrong

Summary What if the reason most organizations struggle with equity isn't because it's too complicated but because they've been treating it as the wrong kind of problem? Not a compliance problem. Not a political problem. Not a special initiative to be managed by a dedicated team and measured in a quarterly report. A leadership problem. A management problem. A foundational organizational design problem that determines whether the people inside your organization can actually do what you hired them to do. That's the argument Celeste Warren has been making for nearly four decades and it's the argument she brings to this episode with the clarity of someone who built equity infrastructure from the inside, at scale, inside one of the world's largest companies, for a decade. This conversation is the final guest episode of Season 2, and it's intentional. All season, we've been building the case for what engagement actually requires: effective leadership, fair compensation, psychological safety, shared culture, the right systems, intentional language, better hiring practices, and purpose. Today we add the final piece — the structural condition that determines whether all of those things are equally available to everyone in the room. Takeaways: 1. Equity as a structural condition that requires changing systems, not just individuals 2. Equity is a foundational aspect of organizational leadership and management 3. Equity meets people where they are to get them to a collective purpose 4. Diversity without inclusion without equity is an incomplete equation 5. How equity connects directly to Maslow's Hierarchy and the Maur Method: belonging and esteem as the prerequisite conditions for engagement 6. The real organizational cost of structural inequity 7. What it means for people to bring their full identity to work and what it costs the organization when they can't 8. Why asking the right questions around equity matters more than making the right case 9. What authentic leadership looks like on this issue in a moment when institutional pressure is pushing leaders toward silence 10. Engagement is the outcome of alignment, and alignment requires an environment designed to receive all individuals Chapters * 00:00 Building a Case for Engagement * 13:29 The Truth About Equity * 19:30 Sustainable Equity and Systems Design * 25:55 The Critical Role of Intentionality * 32:50 Belonging and Authenticity in the Workplace * 55:15 Equity as a Core Business Practice Links * Celeste Warren Consulting [www.crwdiversity.com] * Celeste on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/celestewarrenllc/] * Clarence Maur Coaching & Consulting [www.clarencemaur.com] * Clarence on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/clarencebongalos] * Take the Alignment Assessment [https://alignmentassessment.netlify.app/] Keywords #DEI #diversity #equity #inclusion #leadership #alignment #engagement #employeeengagement #organizationalalignment #management #business

Ayer59 min
episode Built On Purpose: Culture, Resilience, and the Fight to Get It Back artwork

Built On Purpose: Culture, Resilience, and the Fight to Get It Back

Summary What does it actually mean to build a people-centric and purpose-driven culture worth fighting for? Not the version that ends up in the employee handbook. Not the mission statement on the wall. The real, daily, sometimes uncomfortable work of building something that holds together under pressure. In this episode, Clarence sits down with Jodi Scott, co-founder and CEO of Green Goo, a plant-based first aid and herbal wellness company that grew from a family kitchen to over 120,000 retail locations. Her story is not a standard entrepreneurship story. She built something real with her mother and sister, navigated a pandemic without losing her team, lost her company, and fought to buy it back not because the numbers made sense, but because the purpose did. This conversation moves through four dimensions of that journey: the intentional work of building a strong culture, the role of purpose as an organizational north star, what it takes to stay engaged through loss and uncertainty, and what a leader's internal state actually costs (or creates) in the people around them. Takeaways 1. Alignment starts with purpose and is the foundation for engagement and leadership. 2. How a positive and non-toxic "family" culture is possible when done right 3. A strong culture, intentionality, and interconnectedness are crucial in building a successful organization. 4. Purpose and alignment lead to trust and resilience 5. The connection between a leader's internal state and organizational culture is profound. 6. What staying engaged looks like when the rational decision would have been to walk away. 7. How staying grounded in purpose lays the foundation for resilience Chapters * 00:00 Alignment and Purpose in Engagement * 07:51 Family Culture and Intentionality * 16:15 Leadership and Organizational Design * 22:47 Nature-Inspired Leadership and Decision-Making * 28:17 Purpose-Driven Decision-Making in Crisis * 35:36 Navigating Loss and Rebuilding * 51:33 The Impact of Personal Well-being on Organizational Culture Links * Connect with Jodi [https://www.linkedin.com/in/jodi-scott-7234331b8/] * Learn More About Green Goo [https://www.greengoo.com/] * Connect with Clarence [https://www.linkedin.com/in/clarencebongalos] * Take the Alignment Assessment [https://alignmentassessment.netlify.app/] Keywords #culture #family #purpose #alignment #people #leadership #founder #intentionalleadership #resilience

19 de may de 202658 min
episode Ghosted, Ignored, and Misaligned: Why the Hiring System Fails Everyone artwork

Ghosted, Ignored, and Misaligned: Why the Hiring System Fails Everyone

What happens when the people who built the broken system decide to fix it? In this episode, Clarence sits down with career strategist, fractional HR consultant, and Emppowered co-founder Caty Toro for a candid, unflinching look at what's actually broken in today's hiring process and what it's going to take to build something better. Caty was a guest in Season 1, where she and Clarence had a two-part conversation about career change that resonated deeply with listeners. A lot has changed since then. They've become business partners. They've built a platform. And they've had to reckon, honestly, with a truth that changed everything: they were both part of the system they now spend their time trying to dismantle. This episode doesn't offer surface-level advice. It goes straight to the root—the broken incentives, the misplaced blame, the fiction-matching exercise that passes for hiring in most organizations today, and the harder question of what it actually means to stop optimizing for the wrong system and start building a better one. In this episode, Clarence and Caty unpack: 1. Why AI didn't break the hiring system—it just revealed the cracks that were already there 2. The blame loop between job seekers and recruiters, why both sides are right, and why both sides are wrong 3. The difference between being qualified for a role and being aligned with it—and why that distinction changes everything 4. Why most job descriptions are fiction, and what that means for every step of the process downstream 5. The empathy deficit at the center of the hiring experience—and why it's the one thing AI will never be able to replicate 6. What it's actually been like to try to catalyze systemic change in a landscape this complex, this entrenched, and this resistant to it 7. Why "comfortable hell" keeps so many people—and organizations—from ever starting something different The honest admission at the heart of this conversation: Clarence and Caty have both been on the hiring side of the table. They've ghosted candidates. They've passed on résumés without a conversation. They've run the process the way the system incentivized them to run it. And at some point, they recognized they were feeding people through a cycle rather than getting them out of it. That recognition became Emppowered. * Connect with Caty Toro [https://www.linkedin.com/in/caty-toro/] * Connect with Clarence Bongalos [https://www.linkedin.com/in/clarencebongalos] * Learn more about Emppowered [www.emppowered.com] * Find Out What Misaligned Hiring is Costing You [www.emppowered.com/costcalculator] * Take the Alignment Assessment [https://alignmentassessment.netlify.app/] Keywords #hiring #hiringprocess #alignment #misalignment #jobsearch #jobseekers #recruiters #hiringleaders #futureofwork #brokensystems #employeeengagement #jobboard

5 de may de 20261 h 19 min
episode Fix the Manager: Why the Generational Divide Is a Leadership Design Problem, Not a People Problem artwork

Fix the Manager: Why the Generational Divide Is a Leadership Design Problem, Not a People Problem

Summary The conversation everyone is having about generational conflict in the workplace is pointed at the wrong problem. Blame has been leveled at Boomers, Millennials, and Gen Z in equal measure—but Clarence and returning guest Lynda Harvey make the case that the real crisis isn't the people. It's the systems we've built around them, and specifically, the manager sitting at the center of all of it. Drawing on the freshly released 2026 Gallup State of the Global Workplace Report, Clarence and Lynda unpack why manager engagement has dropped faster than any other group—the very people responsible for driving culture are the ones checking out first. They expose the paradoxes hiding inside each generation, and the rocky foundation underneath all of it: managers being asked to lead across six simultaneous generational belief systems with zero training, zero support, and zero room to fail. They assert that if you fix the manager, you move the needle on everything else. Takeaways 1. The generational divide isn't the problem. The underprepared, undersupported manager in the middle of it is. 2. You're not managing four generations — you're managing six. Traditionalists are still present, and Gen Alpha has already arrived. 3. Manager engagement dropped faster than any other group in the 2026 Gallup data. The people responsible for driving culture are the first ones checking out. 4. Culture isn't something you build and protect — it's a living entity shaped by the people inside it. "We protect our culture" is a red flag, not a selling point. 5. Every generation in history has been called lazy by the one before it. Boomers and Gen Z entered the workforce with nearly identical job tenure averages. The data doesn't lie. 6. There is no universal language — but there is a universal truth: every generation is asking "what's in it for me?" Start there. 7. Gen Z craves in-person mentorship more than any generation right now. We're deploying AI at the exact moment they need human connection most. 8. Dangling a promotion stopped working the day Gen Z watched their parents climb the ladder and still not afford a home. 9. Managing humans and managing AI agents are two completely different skill sets. Treating them as one is how you break both. 10. The first move for any burned-out manager is simple: identify one boundary you've given away and take it back. Chapters * 00:00 The Complexity of Leadership in a Multi-Generational Environment * 06:25 The Engagement Crisis and Managerial Challenges * 13:15 Navigating Generational Paradoxes in the Workplace * 19:28 Understanding Generational Perspectives and Work Ethic * 58:02 Integration of AI Agents in the Modern Team Keywords #manager #management #managerengagement #managerburnout #multigenerationalworkforce #generationaldivide #employeeengagement #leadership #middlemanagement #generationaldifferences #AIintheworkforce Links * Lynda on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/lyndaharvey01/] * In the Business of Humans Podcast [https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/in-the-business-of-humans/id1865342286] * Clarence on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/clarencebongalos]

21 de abr de 20261 h 4 min
episode Rewire the Room: How the Language You Choose Builds (or Breaks) Your Capacity to Engage artwork

Rewire the Room: How the Language You Choose Builds (or Breaks) Your Capacity to Engage

Summary When we are completely burned out, the idea of having to "rewire our mindset" feels like an exhausting chore. We often blame toxic cultures and broken systems for our disengagement—but what if the exact words we are using to describe our reality are the very things draining our capacity to engage? In this episode of Aligned > Engaged > Fulfilled, Clarence sits down with Stephanie Garcia, an award-winning digital marketing expert and certified Neuro-Linguistic Programming (NLP) Trainer who has coached everyone from MasterChefs to astronauts orbiting the Earth. If our last episode looked at the macro-forces pulling us apart, this conversation zooms in on the micro-forces of the mind. Stephanie breaks down the practical applications of NLP in the workplace, explaining how our internal monologues construct our professional realities. Together, Clarence and Stephanie map NLP techniques directly onto The Maur Method, revealing how leaders and professionals can permanently fix misalignments in their Identity, Behavior, and Communication. Takeaways * Communication isn't about what you broadcast; it is entirely about how the other person’s neurological wiring receives and interprets it. * When you are at zero capacity, shifting your language from "what is the problem?" to "what is the desired goal?" is the fastest way to protect your energy. * Using the NLP "Meta Model," we can catch the subconscious scripts (like telling ourselves we are never picked for strategic projects) before they destroy our careers. * While broken corporate systems contribute to the 79% of disengaged workers, a massive portion of that disengagement is a direct byproduct of our own negative self-programming. * You can use NLP to associate a specific internal response (like confidence) with an external trigger, allowing you to step out of the shadows and command a room even when your nervous system is screaming. * There is a profound psychological difference between labeling someone a "performer" (which implies putting on a show) versus an "achiever" (which implies generating a result). * True engagement is impossible if there is a gap between your internal values (Personal Leadership) and how you present yourself to the world (Personal Brand). * If you are stuck in a rigid behavioral loop at work and aren't getting the outcome you want, you must shift your actions—doing the same thing harder will not yield different results. * If marketing is how you build a brand that attracts customers, leadership is how you build an internal culture that magnetizes employees. * NLP is a tool for genuine cognitive alignment, not a manipulative corporate tactic to gaslight employees or sugarcoat massive systemic failures. Chapters * 00:00 Understanding the Neurological Wiring of Our Brains * 07:06 Outcomes Thinking and Policing Internal Language * 17:19 Communication Styles and Their Influence * 32:52 Understanding Communication Styles * 41:06 Managing Triggers and Behavior * 47:12 Applying NLP in Leadership and Culture * 54:05 NLP and Language in Organizational Context Keywords #neurolinguisticprogramming #NLP #work #communication #employeeengagement #burnout #careergrowth #outcomesthinking #leadership #organizationalpsychology #communicationskills Links * Stephanie on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/stephanie-liu/] * Clarence on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/clarencebongalos]

14 de abr de 20261 h 3 min