Maps Are Dead
Summary In this episode, Mike Dauphinee sits down with Sarah Hassaine — global inclusion and diversity leader, TEDx speaker, and founder of Effective Immediately, for a conversation about what it actually takes to build cultures that work, and why the most human problems require the most disciplined strategy. Sarah has spent a decade doing the work that most companies rush to label and few actually understand: designing systems of belonging, trust, and psychological safety inside organizations that often don't know what they're asking for. She's done it at Qualcomm. At ResMed. In refugee camps. In Riyadh. And she's done it while quietly burning out, until a closed-door session at a conference lifted the veil and reminded her that even the person holding everyone else together needs a community. This is a conversation about the difference between passion and strategy, about why DEI failed when it forgot to be rigorous, about what AI is doing to our courage and our critical thinking, and about what it actually means to define what good looks like before you try to build it. About Sarah Hassaine Woo · Responsibility · Input · Strategic · Analytical Sarah Hassaine is an AI-Culture Business Strategist, helping small companies and nonprofits with their growth strategy, organization, and people management and development. She has built a strong and influential career in high-tech leading culture change and in non-profits sitting on boards providing a strategic business lens. Sarah works at the intersection of tech, people and social impact and values access and enablement for all. She is a public speaker, writer, and professional development trainer. Sarah has her MBA from Wharton and MPP from George Washington University. Check out her Ted Talk [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R-9xPAmduNQ] and learn more about her company here [https://effective-immediately-zd0az09c.durable.site/] Takeaways * Passion without strategy is how DEI failed. If you don't know how to measure it, you can't build it. * Culture eats strategy for breakfast, but culture still has to be designed, not just felt. * The label hurt the work. When inclusion became a category, it stopped being embedded and started being performed. * You can't fill anyone else's cup if yours is empty. Responsibility without self-care is just slow burnout. * We are designed for community. Finding people who do similar work in similar directions is not networking, it's survival. * A value is non-negotiable. A preference isn't. Most companies can't tell the difference, and it costs them. * Nobody goes to the hardware store for a drill. They go for a hole. Know the outcome before you design the tool. * AI is not replacing our workload. It's atrophying our ability to think critically and make courageous decisions. * You don't know what you don't need to de-risk until something breaks. The best time to ask is before it does. * Define what good looks like first. Everything else, strategy, measurement, iteration, follows from that. Soundbites * "You will fail if it's about passion. You have to have a strategic lens." * "There's only 24 hours in a day and one Sarah. The responsibility part was hard." * "We are designed for community. We're not designed not to have it." * "Culture each strategy for breakfast. And if people don't trust each other, you will not build anything that goes strong." * "Companies had values splattered on walls. Very few actually lived by them." * "I find it hard when no one wants to take responsibility if things go wrong. All right, I didn't do well, but I learned." Enjoyed this episode? Subscribe to Maps Are Dead with Mike D on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and YouTube so you never miss a conversation. Have a question or want to be on the show? Drop a comment or reach out through the link below. Join The Fit Forum [https://the-fit-forum.circle.so/join?invitation_token=16ea8b9138fd44fdfbf36088e37d8b8e8c7883e2-bdec3b91-4d6d-4387-b78c-e1a2cc553cde] Mike's free CliftonStrengths community — bring your Top 5 and find your people.
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