The Stoic Inner Strategy – A Leadership & Strategy Podcast

Ep 318 – The Trap of False Economy

8 min · 1 jun 2026
aflevering Ep 318 – The Trap of False Economy artwork

Beschrijving

We'd love to hear from you! Click this link to text us feedback or to share your thoughts. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2465553/fan_mail/new] META DESCRIPTION Stoic leadership requires measuring the true cost of decisions. Scott Smith explains how false economy drains attention, reduces leverage, and weakens decision making. 🎙️ Episode Summary "The leader's responsibility is to look clearly enough to see the real price, not the sticker price, the full price." — Scott Smith Stoic leadership is not about finding the cheapest option. It is about making decisions that create sustainable leverage. In this episode, Scott Smith explores the hidden costs that founders and executives often overlook when making business decisions. Leaders frequently focus on visible expenses—vendor fees, salaries, software subscriptions, or outsourcing costs—while ignoring the invisible costs of confusion, rework, poor communication, and constant intervention. What appears inexpensive on paper can become extraordinarily expensive when it consumes attention, judgment, and leadership capacity. Drawing on Stoic principles and the teachings of Marcus Aurelius, Scott examines the concept of false economy: the tendency to save money in one area while quietly spending something far more valuable elsewhere. Whether through rushed hiring, poorly structured outsourcing, unclear delegation, or immature operating models, leaders often end up paying an execution tax that erodes momentum and drains focus. For founders and executives, attention is not a secondary resource—it is a primary asset. This episode challenges leaders to stop evaluating decisions solely through financial cost and begin measuring the true cost of complexity, interruptions, dependency, and operational friction. Stoic leadership for founders and executives requires seeing beyond the invoice and asking a better question: Does this decision create leverage, or does it consume the very attention it was meant to free?  🧠 What You'll Learn Today *  Why the cheapest option is often the most expensive in execution  *  How false economy creates hidden operational and leadership costs  *  What the "execution tax" looks like inside growing organizations  *  Why attention is a leader's most valuable and limited resource  *  How better systems and operating structures create true leverage  🔍 Tags Stoicism, Stoic Leadership, Founder Mindset, Leadership Discipline, Decision Making, Business Resilience, Strategic Thinking, Executive Leadership, Operational Excellence, Business Strategy Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2465553/support]  — The Stoic Inner Strategy is your daily shortform podcast—your blueprint for modern leadership rooted in timeless truths. Hosted by Scott Smith, founder of Akhada Consulting [https://akhadaconsulting.com/], co-founder of ChatWorx [https://chatworx.co/], and host of The Outsourcing Blueprint podcast, this series blends ancient Stoic wisdom with real-world business strategy to help you lead with clarity, manage both your teams and yourself effectively, and move with purpose.  🔹 Subscribe to the show and leave a review if today’s insight helped you lead with more clarity and strength.  🔹 Connect with Scott at akhadaconsulting.com [https://akhadaconsulting.com] or on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/scott8smith/].  Follow for daily episodes. New drops every weekday morning. Memento Mori — so live today to your fullest!

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358 afleveringen

aflevering Ep 350 – You Cannot Choose for Them artwork

Ep 350 – You Cannot Choose for Them

We'd love to hear from you! Click this link to text us feedback or to share your thoughts. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2465553/fan_mail/new] Meta Description: Stoic leadership teaches founders to release control. Scott Smith explains why love, support, and wisdom cannot replace another person’s agency. 🎙️ Episode Summary “Some things are up to us, and some things are not.” — Epictetus Stoicism begins with a simple but difficult truth: we control our own choices, not the choices of others. In this episode, Scott Smith reflects on how that lesson applies to family, friends, teams, and the people we care about most. For founders and executives, this principle is not only personal. It is a leadership discipline. You can offer wisdom. You can show up. You can pray, serve, guide, and support. But you cannot make another person’s decisions for them. Their agency belongs to them. Scott explains that trying to control what is not yours to control creates emotional strain and weakens clarity. Stoic leadership asks us to separate our responsibility from someone else’s choices. That does not mean detachment, indifference, or lack of love. It means learning to care without taking ownership of what another person must choose for themselves. This episode is a practical reminder that love and control are not the same thing. You can support people as they make their choices, even when you disagree. You can offer guidance when it is welcome. But their path is not yours to carry. That is Stoic leadership for founders and executives: know what belongs to you, release what does not, and lead yourself with wisdom and restraint. 🧠 What You’ll Learn Today • Why Stoicism begins with separating what is yours from what is not • How leaders can support others without controlling their choices • Why love does not require taking ownership of someone else’s agency • How releasing control strengthens clarity and emotional discipline • Why guidance is most useful when it is invited and received 🔍 Tags: Stoicism, Epictetus, Stoic Leadership, Founder Mindset, Leadership Discipline, Self-Control, Decision Making, Personal Responsibility, Modern Stoicism, Executive Leadership Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2465553/support]  — The Stoic Inner Strategy is your daily shortform podcast—your blueprint for modern leadership rooted in timeless truths. Hosted by Scott Smith, founder of Akhada Consulting [https://akhadaconsulting.com/], co-founder of ChatWorx [https://chatworx.co/], and host of The Outsourcing Blueprint podcast, this series blends ancient Stoic wisdom with real-world business strategy to help you lead with clarity, manage both your teams and yourself effectively, and move with purpose.  🔹 Subscribe to the show and leave a review if today’s insight helped you lead with more clarity and strength.  🔹 Connect with Scott at akhadaconsulting.com [https://akhadaconsulting.com] or on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/scott8smith/].  Follow for daily episodes. New drops every weekday morning. Memento Mori — so live today to your fullest!

14 jul 20263 min
aflevering Ep 349 – Leadership Is Lonelier Than People Think artwork

Ep 349 – Leadership Is Lonelier Than People Think

We'd love to hear from you! Click this link to text us feedback or to share your thoughts. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2465553/fan_mail/new] Meta Description: Stoic leadership helps founders carry responsibility with integrity. Scott Smith explains why leadership feels lonely and how to decide with courage. 🎙️ Episode Summary Leadership is lonelier than people think because responsibility eventually asks you to decide alone. In this episode, Scott Smith reflects on the weight of responsibility and why leadership changes the person who carries it. When you are young, most decisions affect you directly. But as life expands into family, business, employees, teams, callings, and commitments, your decisions begin shaping the lives of others. For founders and executives, this is where Stoic leadership becomes practical. Advice matters. Counsel matters. Wise leaders listen carefully. But there comes a moment when no one else can make the decision for you. You must slow down, think clearly, seek wisdom, and then choose with integrity. Scott connects this responsibility to Marcus Aurelius, who was surrounded by advisors, generals, and senators, yet still wrote private reminders to govern his own mind. Leadership discipline begins there. No one else can govern your judgment, your courage, your honesty, or your love. This episode is a reminder not to fear responsibility or chase it for status. Responsibility is not about importance. It is about service. Leadership is not power or recognition. It is the willingness to carry responsibility for the good of someone else. That is Stoic leadership for founders and executives: accept what life has entrusted to you, and carry it well. 🧠 What You’ll Learn Today • Why responsibility changes how leadership feels • How Stoicism helps leaders make difficult decisions with integrity • Why wise counsel matters, but final responsibility remains yours • How Marcus Aurelius modeled inner self-government under pressure • Why leadership is service, not power or recognition 🔍 Tags: Stoicism, Marcus Aurelius, Stoic Leadership, Leadership Responsibility, Founder Mindset, Leadership Discipline, Decision Making, Executive Leadership, Business Resilience, Modern Stoicism Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2465553/support]  — The Stoic Inner Strategy is your daily shortform podcast—your blueprint for modern leadership rooted in timeless truths. Hosted by Scott Smith, founder of Akhada Consulting [https://akhadaconsulting.com/], co-founder of ChatWorx [https://chatworx.co/], and host of The Outsourcing Blueprint podcast, this series blends ancient Stoic wisdom with real-world business strategy to help you lead with clarity, manage both your teams and yourself effectively, and move with purpose.  🔹 Subscribe to the show and leave a review if today’s insight helped you lead with more clarity and strength.  🔹 Connect with Scott at akhadaconsulting.com [https://akhadaconsulting.com] or on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/scott8smith/].  Follow for daily episodes. New drops every weekday morning. Memento Mori — so live today to your fullest!

Gisteren4 min
aflevering Ep 348 – Define the Best for Yourself artwork

Ep 348 – Define the Best for Yourself

We'd love to hear from you! Click this link to text us feedback or to share your thoughts. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2465553/fan_mail/new] Meta Description: Stoic leadership helps founders define success with clarity. Scott Smith explains how to use your gifts, set standards, and choose what matters. 🎙️ Episode Summary “How long are you going to wait before you demand the best for yourself?” — Epictetus Stoicism teaches that demanding the best from yourself begins with knowing what “the best” actually means. In this continuation of Episode 347, Scott Smith reflects on gifts, standards, ambition, and the deeply personal work of defining success for yourself. For founders and executives, this is a critical leadership discipline. It is easy to inherit someone else’s definition of achievement: bigger dreams, more money, more status, more visible success. But Stoic leadership asks a quieter and more demanding question: what is actually worth building? Scott reminds listeners that every person carries gifts they may not fully recognize yet. Those gifts may be public, like speaking, writing, or music. They may also be quieter, like patience, kindness, clarity, or the ability to keep a commitment. The responsibility is not to compare gifts, but to discover them, develop them, and share them with courage. This episode also challenges the assumption that every worthy life must be driven by huge external dreams. For some people, the dream is stability, food, shelter, providing for children, strengthening family relationships, keeping promises, or being ready for the next season of life. Leadership discipline means respecting that truth and refusing to let someone else’s ambition define your path. That is Stoic leadership for founders and executives: demand the best from yourself, but decide for yourself what the best means. 🧠 What You’ll Learn Today • Why defining “the best” is a personal leadership responsibility • How founders can recognize and develop their unique gifts • Why high standards must be held with kindness and grace • How systems help turn goals into daily disciplined action • Why success does not have to be defined by status, wealth, or scale 🔍 Tags: Stoicism, Epictetus, Stoic Leadership, Founder Mindset, Leadership Discipline, Self-Worth, Personal Standards, Decision Making, Modern Stoicism, Executive Leadership Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2465553/support]  — The Stoic Inner Strategy is your daily shortform podcast—your blueprint for modern leadership rooted in timeless truths. Hosted by Scott Smith, founder of Akhada Consulting [https://akhadaconsulting.com/], co-founder of ChatWorx [https://chatworx.co/], and host of The Outsourcing Blueprint podcast, this series blends ancient Stoic wisdom with real-world business strategy to help you lead with clarity, manage both your teams and yourself effectively, and move with purpose.  🔹 Subscribe to the show and leave a review if today’s insight helped you lead with more clarity and strength.  🔹 Connect with Scott at akhadaconsulting.com [https://akhadaconsulting.com] or on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/scott8smith/].  Follow for daily episodes. New drops every weekday morning. Memento Mori — so live today to your fullest!

10 jul 20264 min
aflevering Ep 347 – Demand the Best From Yourself artwork

Ep 347 – Demand the Best From Yourself

We'd love to hear from you! Click this link to text us feedback or to share your thoughts. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2465553/fan_mail/new] Meta Description: Stoic leadership teaches founders to raise their standards. Scott Smith explains why self-worth, discipline, and clarity begin with demanding your best. 🎙️ Episode Summary “How long are you going to wait before you demand the best for yourself?” — Epictetus Stoicism teaches that leadership begins with the standards we are willing to keep. In this episode, Scott Smith reflects on self-worth, discipline, and the quiet decision to stop accepting less than what is good, healthy, and aligned with who you are becoming. For founders and executives, this is not about ego or material status. It is about refusing to shortchange yourself in your relationships, living conditions, work, choices, and expectations. Stoic leadership asks leaders to examine where they have been conditioned to accept less than they deserve and where they need to raise the standard. Scott reminds listeners that demanding the best from yourself is not the same as harshness. It is a disciplined commitment to live, lead, and choose from a place of clarity. When you hold yourself to a higher standard than anyone else could reasonably expect, you become a model for the people around you. This episode challenges leaders to stop waiting for permission to value themselves properly. You are not less than. You are worthy of good things. And your leadership grows stronger when your choices reflect that truth. That is Stoic leadership for founders and executives: know your worth, set the standard, and lead yourself first. 🧠 What You’ll Learn Today • Why Stoicism connects self-worth with leadership discipline • How founders can stop accepting less than what aligns with their values • Why high standards begin with how you see yourself • How demanding more from yourself can shape the culture around you • Why leadership clarity starts with refusing to believe you are less than 🔍 Tags: Stoicism, Epictetus, Stoic Leadership, Founder Mindset, Leadership Discipline, Self-Worth, Personal Standards, Decision Making, Modern Stoicism, Executive Leadership Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2465553/support]  — The Stoic Inner Strategy is your daily shortform podcast—your blueprint for modern leadership rooted in timeless truths. Hosted by Scott Smith, founder of Akhada Consulting [https://akhadaconsulting.com/], co-founder of ChatWorx [https://chatworx.co/], and host of The Outsourcing Blueprint podcast, this series blends ancient Stoic wisdom with real-world business strategy to help you lead with clarity, manage both your teams and yourself effectively, and move with purpose.  🔹 Subscribe to the show and leave a review if today’s insight helped you lead with more clarity and strength.  🔹 Connect with Scott at akhadaconsulting.com [https://akhadaconsulting.com] or on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/scott8smith/].  Follow for daily episodes. New drops every weekday morning. Memento Mori — so live today to your fullest!

9 jul 20263 min
aflevering Ep 346 – Courage Is Standing Your Ground artwork

Ep 346 – Courage Is Standing Your Ground

We'd love to hear from you! Click this link to text us feedback or to share your thoughts. [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2465553/fan_mail/new] Meta Description: Stoic leadership trains founders to act with courage. Scott Smith explains how to stand for what is right when pressure tests your resolve. 🎙️ Episode Summary “Sometimes even to live is an act of courage.” — Seneca Stoicism teaches that courage is not only found in dramatic moments. In this episode, Scott Smith reflects on the quieter, daily courage required to show up, hold your ground, speak truth, and do what is right when pressure tempts you to compromise. For founders and executives, courage often appears in difficult conversations, toxic work relationships, unethical environments, or moments when the louder voice in the room pushes against what you know is right. Stoic leadership requires more than strategy. It requires character under pressure. Scott reminds listeners that no one else can define the line for you. You must decide where your courage begins, when it is time to stand up, when it is time to say no, and when it is time to advance in a different direction instead of giving up. Leadership discipline means trusting your judgment, listening to your conscience, and refusing to let fear or discouragement choose your response. Drawing from Seneca and a story connected to the Korean War, this episode reframes courage as disciplined action. Sometimes courage looks like staying. Sometimes it looks like stepping away. Sometimes it looks like refusing retreat and simply advancing in another direction. That is Stoic leadership for founders and executives: staying true to what is right, even when the moment is hard. 🧠 What You’ll Learn Today • Why courage is often quiet, daily, and practical • How Stoic leadership helps founders stand firm under pressure • Why ethical decision making requires personal resolve • How to know when to hold your ground or step away • Why advancing in a different direction is not the same as quitting 🔍 Tags: Stoicism, Seneca, Stoic Leadership, Courage, Founder Mindset, Leadership Discipline, Decision Making, Executive Leadership, Business Resilience, Ethical Leadership Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2465553/support]  — The Stoic Inner Strategy is your daily shortform podcast—your blueprint for modern leadership rooted in timeless truths. Hosted by Scott Smith, founder of Akhada Consulting [https://akhadaconsulting.com/], co-founder of ChatWorx [https://chatworx.co/], and host of The Outsourcing Blueprint podcast, this series blends ancient Stoic wisdom with real-world business strategy to help you lead with clarity, manage both your teams and yourself effectively, and move with purpose.  🔹 Subscribe to the show and leave a review if today’s insight helped you lead with more clarity and strength.  🔹 Connect with Scott at akhadaconsulting.com [https://akhadaconsulting.com] or on LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/scott8smith/].  Follow for daily episodes. New drops every weekday morning. Memento Mori — so live today to your fullest!

8 jul 20264 min