Management In Minutes with Charles Evans

EP16: The Lonely Square — Why Leadership Is Lonely and What to Do About It

17 min · 11 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio EP16: The Lonely Square — Why Leadership Is Lonely and What to Do About It

Descripción

Nearly half of CEOs report feelings of loneliness. Over 70% of new CEOs feel it from day one. And 55% reported mental health challenges in 2024 — up 24 percentage points from the prior year. In this episode of Management in Minutes, Charles Evans goes deeper than the statistics and names the four human dynamics that create leadership distance: the us/them divide that reclassifies you the moment you take the title, the accountability wall that makes people pull away from the person who holds the standard, the invisible role that invites others to question and minimize your contribution, and the mirror effect — where your position becomes a painful reflection of someone else's unreached goal. But the separation carries an unexpected gift: objectivity. Charles explores how leaders can use the distance as a lens rather than a wall, and delivers four strategies for overcoming the isolation — building a Peer Sanctuary, creating an Executive Leadership Team, protecting personal relationships, and practicing vulnerability with boundaries. #LeadOnPurpose

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Management In Minutes with Charles Evans!

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

21 episodios

episode EP 20: The Culture Myth — Why Leadership Alone Doesn't Build Culture artwork

EP 20: The Culture Myth — Why Leadership Alone Doesn't Build Culture

Peter Drucker said culture eats strategy for breakfast. But culture eats the leader, too. In this episode of Management in Minutes, Charles Evans challenges one of the most widely held beliefs in leadership: that culture starts at the top. Drawing on Edgar Schein's foundational work on organizational culture, James March and Herbert Simon's research on organizational routines, and Everett Rogers' Diffusion of Innovation theory, Charles argues that culture is a shared construction — as much a creation of the staff as the leader. The episode explores two models of culture formation (the founder's culture versus the inherited culture), introduces the dynamic tension between the leader's aspirational culture and the staff's lived culture, and delivers a four-step Cultural Stewardship Framework for leaders who want to influence culture without the illusion that they control it. #LeadOnPurpose

8 de jun de 202620 min
episode EP19: The Tool, Not the Replacement — AI and the Future of Leadership artwork

EP19: The Tool, Not the Replacement — AI and the Future of Leadership

91% of businesses now use AI. 73% of senior leaders have adopted it. And Federal Reserve research shows it saves roughly one full workday per month. In this episode of Management in Minutes, Charles Evans tackles AI head-on — not as a tech conversation, but as a leadership conversation. From moving to final drafts faster and parsing financial data in minutes to building the scaffolding of strategic documents, Charles breaks down how leaders can use AI as a time multiplier that amplifies their impact without replacing their judgment. But this episode also draws a clear line: AI will never replace the emotionally intelligent, interpersonally skilled leader who can read the room, empathize with the person across the table, and calibrate their approach based on lived experience. AI is a tool, not a competitor. And as long as leaders continue to hone their own skills, AI remains a resource that works alongside them — without thinking for them. #LeadOnPurpose

1 de jun de 202610 min
episode EPISODE 18: Let Them Lose — The Leadership Discipline of Letting People Learn artwork

EPISODE 18: Let Them Lose — The Leadership Discipline of Letting People Learn

Seneca wrote: "I judge you unfortunate because you have never lived through misfortune. You have passed through life without an opponent — no one can ever know what you are capable of, not even you." In this episode of Management in Minutes, Charles Evans challenges the assumption that good leadership means protecting people from making mistakes. Drawing on Seneca's Stoic philosophy and the Karpman Drama Triangle, Charles makes the case that rescuing your team from adversity doesn't develop them — it creates dependency. The episode covers four pillars: why lessons and learning come from losing, how adversity builds leadership capacity, the psychological trap of dysfunctional rescuing, and why leaders must protect their time to stay at the altitude their role demands. Sometimes, the most powerful thing a leader can do is step back. #LeadOnPurpose

26 de may de 202612 min
episode EP17: The Four Conversations — The Hardest Words a Leader Will Ever Say artwork

EP17: The Four Conversations — The Hardest Words a Leader Will Ever Say

69% of managers are uncomfortable with difficult conversations. And yet these conversations define leadership more than any strategy or result ever will. In this episode of Management in Minutes, Charles Evans walks through the four toughest conversations every leader will face: holding someone accountable, delivering bad news to a group, letting someone go, and telling your team you are leaving. For each one, Charles breaks down why the conversation is difficult, what you should never say, and what you should say instead — with language you can use the next time you're in the room. The wrong sentence can erode years of credibility in thirty seconds. The right sentence can build trust that outlasts your tenure. This is the episode every leader needs before the conversation they're dreading. #LeadOnPurpose

18 de may de 202617 min