Forsidebilde av showet Behind the Measures with Geremy Hurley

Behind the Measures with Geremy Hurley

Podkast av Geremy

engelsk

Teknologi og vitenskap

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Les mer Behind the Measures with Geremy Hurley

Behind the Measures is a podcast about public-sector leadership, quality, and accountability, and the work that doesn’t show up in dashboards, audits, or reports.Hosted by Geremy Hurley, a public-sector quality leader and Lean Six Sigma Black Belt, the show explores what it really takes to build systems, fix broken processes, and lead without formal authority. Each episode breaks down the gap between compliance and real improvement, drawing from real-world experience inside government and public health systems.This podcast isn’t about theory or trends. It’s about the work, the decisions, tradeoffs, and accountability behind the measures.The views expressed in this podcast are my own and do not represent the views of my employer or any affiliated organizations.

Alle episoder

12 Episoder

episode Where Work Actually Slows Down cover

Where Work Actually Slows Down

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2568262/fan_mail/new] Most systems think they understand where work slows down. They look at delays, missed timelines, and backlogs and assume the problem is where the work appears to stop. But that’s not where bottlenecks actually exist. In this episode, I break down how bottlenecks operate beneath the surface, why they’re often misidentified, and how systems respond to symptoms instead of fixing the constraint. Because bottlenecks don’t always look like stopped work. They often look like busy work. This episode explores: *  Why bottlenecks are usually upstream from where problems show up  *  How systems misidentify constraints and focus on the wrong areas  *  Why pressure and urgency don’t fix flow  *  How workarounds and “hero effort” hide real system issues  *  The difference between activity and actual movement of work  Because improving performance isn’t about pushing harder. It’s about understanding how work actually flows… and fixing where it can’t. The views and perspectives shared in this podcast are my own and do not represent the views of my employer or any organization I am affiliated with.  Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2568262/support]

26. mai 2026 - 13 min
episode When Measurement Creates False Confidence cover

When Measurement Creates False Confidence

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2568262/fan_mail/new] Most systems rely on measurement to understand performance. Dashboards, reports, and metrics are used to define whether something is working. And because of that, measurement creates confidence. But not all confidence is earned. In this episode, I break down how measurement can create a false sense of control when it becomes disconnected from how the work actually happens. When numbers are trusted without understanding the reality behind them, systems can appear stable while quietly drifting underneath the surface. This episode explores: *  Why performance on paper is not the same as performance in practice  *  How systems begin responding to metrics instead of reality  *  What “drift” looks like in real-world operations  *  How measurement changes behavior, even without intent  *  Why leadership requires better questions, not more data  Because numbers don’t improve systems. They reflect them. And reflection without understanding can be misleading. The views and perspectives shared in this podcast are my own and do not represent the views of my employer or any organization I am affiliated with.  Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2568262/support]

12. mai 2026 - 14 min
episode Activity vs Progress: Why Busy Systems Stay Stuck cover

Activity vs Progress: Why Busy Systems Stay Stuck

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2568262/fan_mail/new] Activity is easy to see. Meetings. Reports. Updates. New initiatives. Full calendars and constant communication. And when all of that is happening, it feels like progress. But in many systems, activity and progress are not the same thing. In this episode, I break down the difference between motion and meaningful change, and why confusing the two can quietly keep systems stuck. Because activity creates movement. But progress creates change. And a system can be very busy… without actually improving. In this episode, I talk about:  • why activity feels like progress, and why systems reward it  • how effort can exist without anything actually changing  • what progress really looks like (and why it’s harder to recognize)  • how constant discussion and new initiatives can replace real improvement  • why systems default to activity under pressure  • and what leaders should actually be paying attention to instead This isn’t about doing less. It’s about making sure the work being done is actually moving the system forward. Because if nothing is different… nothing has improved. The views and perspectives shared in this podcast are my own and do not represent the views of my employer or any organization I am affiliated with.  Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2568262/support]

28. april 2026 - 17 min
episode Why Systems Resist Change (And It’s Not Because People Are Difficult) cover

Why Systems Resist Change (And It’s Not Because People Are Difficult)

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2568262/fan_mail/new] When change slows down, the first explanation is usually people. People are resistant. People don’t want to change. People are stuck in their ways. But in many cases, resistance has less to do with attitude and more to do with how work actually happens. In this episode of Behind the Measures, Geremy Hurley explores why systems resist change and how that resistance often comes from the way work is structured, coordinated, and sustained over time. Systems don’t function exactly as they’re written. They function as people adapt to them. Over time, workarounds, informal coordination, and learned routines become what actually keeps things moving. When change is introduced without understanding that reality, it can unintentionally disrupt the very things that make the system work. This episode breaks down what people are really protecting when they push back, why many improvement efforts fade over time, and what effective change actually looks like in practice. Because improvement doesn’t start with solutions. It starts with understanding. The views and perspectives shared in this podcast are my own and do not represent the views of my employer or any organization I am affiliated with.  Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2568262/support]

14. april 2026 - 23 min
episode Leading Improvement Without Authority cover

Leading Improvement Without Authority

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2568262/fan_mail/new] Many improvement roles are expected to influence change without having the authority to enforce it. No direct reports. No control over resources. No final decision-making power. And yet, these roles are still responsible for helping systems improve. In this episode of Behind the Measures, Geremy Hurley explores the reality of leading improvement without authority and why improvement work can sometimes feel personal for the people involved. When processes are examined, it can feel like people are being examined. That dynamic often creates tension, defensiveness, and resistance that has less to do with the data and more to do with how work, ownership, and identity intersect inside organizations. This episode looks at what actually helps improvement work move forward in those environments, including the role of trust, curiosity, and pacing conversations in a way that creates alignment rather than defensiveness. Improvement work isn’t just technical. It’s human. The views expressed in this podcast are my own and do not represent the views of my employer or affiliated organizations.  Support the show [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2568262/support]

31. mars 2026 - 23 min
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