Leader On The Rise

Wired To Rise

21 min · 19 de oct de 2025
Portada del episodio Wired To Rise

Descripción

Why do some professionals rise while others stay stuck — even when they're equally talented? And what's the difference between working hard and truly moving forward? In this kickoff to the Leader on the Rise Masterclass Series, host Mim Abbey unpacks a powerful truth: we are wired to rise — and leadership is the key. Through research, personal story, and practical insights, you'll discover why rising isn't just ambition — it's biology, psychology, and purpose coming together. What You'll Learn in This Episode * The science behind growth: dopamine, neuroplasticity, and the power of progress * Why a growth mindset rewires the way you tackle challenges * What London taxi drivers can teach you about your brain's capacity to change * The link between leadership and happiness, resilience, and flourishing * How imposter syndrome holds even high performers back — and what to do about it * Why leadership is both an identity and an activity * The three levels of leadership that drive long-term career growth Why It Matters Research shows that: * 60% of professionals are unsatisfied with their career progress. * 70% experience imposter phenomenon at some point. * Technical skills account for only 15% of advancement, while leadership skills and presence account for 85%. Translation? Hard work alone won't get you there. Leadership — of yourself, others, and the world around you — is the multiplier. Episode Highlights Mim shares her own journey of rising: taking leadership roles in her 20s, feeling like an imposter, and the game-changing shift that happened when she began to lead from the inside out. You'll also hear how science, psychology, and practice all point to the same conclusion: rising is part of being human. Why You'll Want to Listen This isn't another career podcast about tips and tricks. Leader on the Rise is about becoming the kind of leader others want to follow — starting with yourself. If you've ever felt stuck, overlooked, or like you're capable of more but don't know how to get there, this series will show you the path.

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17 episodios

episode The 5 Conversations That Change Your Career Trajectory artwork

The 5 Conversations That Change Your Career Trajectory

Episode Description What actually shapes a career? Most people assume it's major projects, performance reviews, or big opportunities. And while those things matter, careers are often shaped by something much smaller—and much more frequent. Conversations. In this episode of Leader on the Rise, Mim Abbey explores the five conversations that consistently accelerate careers and strengthen leadership readiness. These are the conversations many professionals avoid because they feel uncomfortable, vulnerable, or risky. Yet they're often the very conversations that create clarity, visibility, trust, and advancement. Drawing from workplace communication research, leadership psychology, and real coaching examples, Mim breaks down the five career-changing conversations every ambitious professional should be having—and provides practical language you can use to start them. If you've been waiting to be noticed, hoping things will change on their own, or delaying conversations you know you need to have, this episode will help you take the initiative and create momentum. What You'll Learn * Why avoided conversations often become career obstacles * The psychology behind communication avoidance * Why difficult conversations strengthen relationships more often than they damage them * How to align expectations with your manager * The importance of visibility conversations * How to ask for meaningful feedback * Why boundary conversations demonstrate leadership maturity * How to discuss advancement proactively * The role of curiosity in high-stakes conversations * How conversations create clarity, trust, and opportunity Featured Research & Insights * Crucial Learning research on high-stakes conversations and workplace avoidance * Research on manager-employee expectation alignment * Tasha Eurich's work on self-awareness and perception gaps * Studies on career advancement and proactive communication * Research on workplace trust and relationship-building * Leadership development findings on feedback-seeking behavior * Organizational psychology research on difficult conversations and professional growth Why It Matters Many professionals spend years waiting for recognition, feedback, opportunities, or advancement conversations to find them. But careers rarely move forward through hope. They move forward through clarity. The professionals who rise learn how to initiate conversations that create alignment, surface opportunities, close perception gaps, and make their ambitions visible. Because your manager cannot read your mind. Leadership cannot support goals you've never expressed. And opportunities often begin with a conversation someone was willing to start.

2 de jun de 202617 min
episode Why High Performers Get Stuck (Even When They're Doing Everything Right) artwork

Why High Performers Get Stuck (Even When They're Doing Everything Right)

Episode Description You work hard. You deliver results. You're reliable, capable, and committed. So why does it sometimes feel like your career has stalled? In this episode of Leader on the Rise, Mim Abbey explores one of the most frustrating realities in professional life: why high performers often get stuck despite doing many of the things that made them successful in the first place. This episode challenges the common belief that hard work alone drives advancement and explores the hidden shifts that occur as careers progress. You'll learn why the behaviors that help professionals stand out early in their careers can eventually become the very things that limit growth. Drawing from leadership psychology, organizational behavior, and executive coaching, Mim unpacks the patterns that keep talented professionals from reaching the next level—and what rising leaders do differently. If you've ever felt overlooked, underutilized, or uncertain about what's holding you back, this episode will help you identify the invisible barriers that may be standing between you and your next opportunity. What You'll Learn * Why hard work alone eventually stops driving advancement * The hidden difference between performance and leadership * Why high performers often become trapped in execution * How visibility influences career growth * The role of strategic thinking in advancement * Why leaders are evaluated differently than contributors * How identity can limit future growth * The importance of influence and relationship-building * Why leadership readiness is often misunderstood * Practical ways to break through career plateaus Featured Research & Insights * The Peter Principle and its implications for advancement * Leadership Pipeline research on the transition from contributor to leader * Herminia Ibarra's work on leadership identity and career transitions * Center for Creative Leadership research on leadership derailment * Studies on visibility, influence, and organizational perception * Research on strategic thinking and executive advancement * Organizational psychology findings on leadership readiness and promotion decisions Why It Matters Many professionals assume that if they continue producing excellent work, advancement will naturally follow. But as careers progress, the criteria change. Leaders begin looking for different signals: * strategic thinking * judgment * influence * visibility * leadership presence * the ability to elevate outcomes through others The challenge is that most people never receive direct feedback about this shift. Instead, they continue optimizing for the behaviors that made them successful in the past. Understanding what changes at higher levels can help you stop working harder and start growing differently. Because the next level rarely requires more effort. It often requires a different way of thinking, communicating, and leading.

Ayer22 min
episode How to Influence Decisions When You're Not in the Room artwork

How to Influence Decisions When You're Not in the Room

Episode Description Somewhere inside your organization, conversations are happening right now that will shape careers, promotions, opportunities, and leadership trajectories. And you are not in the room. In this episode of Leader on the Rise, Mim Abbey explores one of the most advanced — and least understood — leadership skills in organizations: how to influence decisions when you are not physically present. This conversation breaks down the hidden architecture of organizational influence, including informal networks, trusted relationships, advocates, connectors, and the invisible conversations shaping leadership decisions behind the scenes. You'll learn why influence is not about manipulation or politics, but about building trust widely, investing in relationships intentionally, and creating a reputation that travels through the organization even when you are absent. Drawing from organizational network theory, leadership psychology, and real-world executive coaching, this episode explains how rising leaders build influence long before they need it. If you want your leadership to scale beyond the rooms you enter personally, this episode will help you understand how influence truly moves through organizations. What You'll Learn * Why organizations operate through informal influence networks * The hidden structure behind leadership decisions * How trusted relationships shape advancement * The importance of connectors and advocates * Why influence depends on trust, not visibility alone * How to map organizational influence * The role of pre-wiring important conversations * Why strong advocates accelerate careers * How rising leaders build influence strategically * The relationship habits that create long-term career leverage Featured Research & Insights * Stanley Milgram's "small world" and six degrees research * Organizational network analysis research from IBM's Institute for Business Value * Adam Grant's research on "otherish" givers and organizational influence * Harvard Business School research from Michael Roberto on pre-wiring and decision quality * Herminia Ibarra and Mark Hunter's research on diverse advocate networks * Organizational psychology research on trust, reputation, and informal influence Why It Matters Careers are shaped not only by performance — but by trust traveling through networks. Inside organizations, influence spreads through: * relationships * advocates * connectors * trusted voices * informal conversations The professionals who rise consistently understand that leadership is not confined to formal authority. It is built through credibility, generosity, relationship depth, and the ability to create trust across multiple parts of the organization. Influence is not a personality trait. It is a leadership practice. And it compounds over time.

31 de may de 202628 min
episode How to Position Your Work So Leadership Notices artwork

How to Position Your Work So Leadership Notices

Episode Description You can do exceptional work — and still communicate it in a way that leadership barely notices. In this episode of Leader on the Rise, Mim Abbey explores the hidden communication gap between professionals and senior leaders, and why the ability to position work strategically is one of the most important leadership skills in modern organizations. This conversation breaks down how senior leaders actually process information, why most updates fail to land, and how rising leaders communicate in ways that create clarity, trust, and strategic visibility. You'll learn practical frameworks for communicating with leadership more effectively, including how to lead with the headline, frame work in organizational terms, clarify decisions, and communicate trade-offs with maturity and credibility. Drawing from cognitive psychology, executive communication research, and real-world leadership examples, this episode explains why communication quality often shapes advancement more than the work itself. If you want your ideas, projects, and leadership thinking to carry more weight inside your organization, this episode will help you understand how senior leaders truly listen. What You'll Learn * Why leadership communication differs from execution communication * How senior leaders process information under cognitive load * The importance of leading with the headline * Why concise communication signals authority * How to position work strategically * The role of organizational relevance in visibility * Why explicit decision framing matters * How to communicate trade-offs effectively * The communication habits of rising leaders * How to make leadership pay attention to your work Featured Research & Insights * George Miller's "Magical Number Seven" cognitive load research * Executive communication studies from the University of Southern California * Wharton School research on relevance framing and executive communication * Daniel Kahneman's research on decision framing * William McGuire's persuasion and credibility research on two-sided arguments * Leadership communication research on concise messaging and executive perception Why It Matters Senior leaders operate under enormous cognitive load. That means they are constantly filtering for: * clarity * relevance * implications * decisions * risk The professionals who rise are not always the ones doing the best work. They are often the ones who communicate their work in ways leadership can process quickly and confidently. Positioning your work is not about spin. It's about helping leadership understand: * what matters * what changed * what decision exists * and why your thinking can be trusted

31 de may de 202627 min
episode Why Some People Look Promotion-Ready Before Others artwork

Why Some People Look Promotion-Ready Before Others

Episode Description Why do some professionals seem promotion-ready long before others — even when their experience and performance appear similar on paper? In this episode of Leader on the Rise, Mim Abbey explores the psychology behind promotion-readiness and the hidden perception mechanics shaping advancement inside organizations. This conversation breaks down why readiness is not simply an objective milestone, but a perception formed through dozens of small moments: how someone communicates, responds under pressure, handles ambiguity, and carries themselves in leadership settings. Drawing from leadership psychology, organizational behavior, and Nalini Ambady's groundbreaking "thin slices" research, this episode explains how people form durable impressions of leadership potential far faster than most professionals realize. You'll learn why some professionals feel "senior" before they officially become senior — and how leadership perception compounds into opportunity over time. What You'll Learn * Why promotion-readiness is largely perception-based * The psychology behind leadership impressions * How "thin slicing" shapes career advancement * Why some professionals feel more senior early * The role of emotional steadiness in leadership perception * How leaders evaluate ambiguity tolerance * Why visible thinking matters in leadership settings * The importance of external self-awareness * How reputation influences advancement * The leadership habits that signal readiness Featured Research & Insights * Nalini Ambady's "thin slices" research on rapid impression formation * Center for Creative Leadership research on role anticipation * Tasha Eurich's research on external self-awareness * INSEAD leadership research on tolerance for ambiguity * Academy of Management Journal research on developmental feedback * Leadership psychology research on trust and perception Why It Matters Promotion decisions are rarely based on one dramatic moment. They are formed through accumulated impressions: * how you communicate * how you respond to uncertainty * whether people feel steadier around you * how visible your thinking becomes * whether leadership already experiences you as operating at the next level The professionals who look ready earliest are often the ones who have already mentally stepped into the role above them. Because readiness is not discovered. It is perceived. And perception compounds over time.

28 de may de 202629 min