Cultivating Executive Presence

Ep. 12: The Best Company Doesn't Always Win

16 min · 8. maj 2026
episode Ep. 12: The Best Company Doesn't Always Win cover

Beskrivelse

There's a conversation I have more than any other. A CEO calls. Twenty years in their industry. Deep expertise. Serious client roster. And they say - with a frustration that is equal parts wounded and furious - "We are losing to a competitor that has a fraction of our experience. They have fewer clients, less track record, less everything. And they are getting more attention than we are. How is that possible?" It's possible because being the best in your market and being perceived as the best are two completely different things. And in the absence of visibility, the market can't tell the difference. In this episode, I explain why this keeps happening - and what to do about it. What You'll Learn: •  Why the frustration of watching a less experienced competitor win is both emotionally valid and strategically costly •  The VHS vs. Betamax story: how a technically superior product lost the market entirely - and what it means for your business •  Three things the less experienced competitor has that you don't (speed, risk tolerance, first mover advantage) •  The one thing they can never have: your twenty years of earned expertise •  Why LinkedIn is a compounding game - and why every month you wait makes the gap harder to close •  How to compete on your terms, not theirs: leaning into what can't be replicated •  The magnetic leader: why bringing who you actually are to LinkedIn is the distribution strategy The best company doesn't always win. The best-perceived one does.

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Alle episoder

13 episoder

episode Ep. 13: What 33 Million Impressions Taught Us About Executive LinkedIn (2026 Report) cover

Ep. 13: What 33 Million Impressions Taught Us About Executive LinkedIn (2026 Report)

Every year we analyze how real executives - not influencers - actually perform on LinkedIn. This year’s dataset is the largest yet: 6,035 posts, 33.2 million impressions, and 457,000 engagements from CEOs and senior leaders. In this episode, Join me as we walk through all ten findings from the 2026 Executive LinkedIn Report and what they mean for how you show up. In this episode: * Why executive reach is up 14% year over year - and the window hasn’t closed * Which formats win: images for reach, video for engagement, and why carousels keep losing * Why your original posts reach 5× more people than reshares * The content type that beats everything else (it’s more personal than you think) * Two myths the data kills: hashtags and the “end with a question” rule * What the 15 highest-performing posts of the year all have in common * Why the biggest reach comes from a system, not raw talent No tactics for the sake of tactics - just what the data actually shows about leading in public.

I går39 min
episode Ep. 12: The Best Company Doesn't Always Win cover

Ep. 12: The Best Company Doesn't Always Win

There's a conversation I have more than any other. A CEO calls. Twenty years in their industry. Deep expertise. Serious client roster. And they say - with a frustration that is equal parts wounded and furious - "We are losing to a competitor that has a fraction of our experience. They have fewer clients, less track record, less everything. And they are getting more attention than we are. How is that possible?" It's possible because being the best in your market and being perceived as the best are two completely different things. And in the absence of visibility, the market can't tell the difference. In this episode, I explain why this keeps happening - and what to do about it. What You'll Learn: •  Why the frustration of watching a less experienced competitor win is both emotionally valid and strategically costly •  The VHS vs. Betamax story: how a technically superior product lost the market entirely - and what it means for your business •  Three things the less experienced competitor has that you don't (speed, risk tolerance, first mover advantage) •  The one thing they can never have: your twenty years of earned expertise •  Why LinkedIn is a compounding game - and why every month you wait makes the gap harder to close •  How to compete on your terms, not theirs: leaning into what can't be replicated •  The magnetic leader: why bringing who you actually are to LinkedIn is the distribution strategy The best company doesn't always win. The best-perceived one does.

8. maj 202616 min
episode Ep. 11: What the Data Actually Says About Executive LinkedIn in 2026 cover

Ep. 11: What the Data Actually Says About Executive LinkedIn in 2026

Most LinkedIn advice is built on data from the wrong people. Influencers. Content creators. Marketing professionals. People whose full-time job is posting. When you study that population, you learn what works for that population. And what works for an influencer is often actively wrong for a CEO. For the fourth year in a row, we published the Executive LinkedIn Report - built entirely on executive data. 6,035 posts. 33 million impressions. 457,000 engagements. From CEOs, C-suite leaders, and senior executives across healthcare, software, financial services, education, and more. The findings are different from what you've been told. In several cases, they directly contradict it. What You'll Learn: •  Why influencer LinkedIn data is the wrong benchmark for executives - and what four years of executive-only data shows instead •  Format performance: images reach 31% more people than text, video leads on engagement, and documents have been declining for two years running •  Why original posts reach 5x more people than reshares - and why resharing is costing you more than you think •  The content hierarchy: personal stories outperform every other category, including industry insight and company news •  Two myths the data kills definitively: hashtags (32% reach penalty, zero engagement benefit) and closing questions (don't drive comments, cost reach) •  The Sunday finding: 88% more impressions than Monday, highest engagement rate of any day - and only 1.3% of posts use it •  How 7 executives generated 47% of all impressions - and the system behind it •  Why human voice is becoming more valuable, not less, as AI floods the platform with noise Full report: https://the-executive-linkedin-r-j780ndt.gamma.site/ [https://the-executive-linkedin-r-j780ndt.gamma.site/]

1. maj 202625 min
episode Ep. 10: The Reluctant CEO - How to Be Visible Without Losing Your Integrity cover

Ep. 10: The Reluctant CEO - How to Be Visible Without Losing Your Integrity

I hate social media. That's not something you'd expect to hear from the CEO of a LinkedIn ghostwriting company. But it's true. And I think it's the most important thing I can tell you before anything else in this episode. Because the discomfort most leaders feel around LinkedIn visibility? I feel it too. After four years of posting. After hundreds of posts. It still stings when something I care about lands in the void. The edge doesn't go away. What changes is that the discomfort becomes purposeful. And that's a completely different thing. In this episode, I share more of my own experience than I usually do - including the meditation retreat post that fell completely flat, the Stanford Business School reunion where I didn't have to explain what I was up to because everyone already knew, and what I've learned from watching the shyest, most reluctant clients generate the most powerful responses when they finally speak. What You'll Learn: •  Why the discomfort of posting doesn't go away - and why that's actually the honest answer •  The difference between being ignored and being criticized - and which one stings more •  Why authenticity alone isn't a strategy (and the meditation retreat post that taught me that) •  Why the most reluctant leaders tend to have the most powerful voice when they finally use it •  The Stanford reunion: what the compound effect of visibility actually feels like in a room •  How to reframe visibility from ego to service - and why that changes everything •  Finding your voice in public: why it's messy, iterative, and worth it anyway If the idea of posting on LinkedIn makes you uncomfortable - this episode is for you.

24. apr. 202619 min
episode Ep. 9: How Do I Know If This Is Working? cover

Ep. 9: How Do I Know If This Is Working?

The question I hear from almost every CEO six months into posting on LinkedIn: "How do I know if this is working?" But here's what I've noticed: most leaders start the conversation telling me exactly what they want - credibility, trust, narrative ownership, the ability to walk into a room and be known. And then the moment I ask "what does success look like," something shifts. They start talking about pipeline, attribution, follower counts, and dashboards. That gear shift is the problem. And it's why so many leaders quit right before the flywheel starts spinning. In this episode, I break down: •  Why the mismatch between what leaders want and how they measure it causes premature quitting •  Dark social: why 70-90% of your audience will never like or comment - and why that's not a bad thing •  The Matt story: a Naval Academy friend I hadn't spoken to in 15 years who introduced me to a CEO client after 18 months of silent reading •  Why probing in sales and hiring conversations is your most underrated attribution tool •  The conference analogy: why LinkedIn ROI looks exactly like conference ROI •  The performance curve: what to expect in months 1, 2, 3-6, and 6-12 •  Four quantitative metrics to track - impressions, precision, profile views, follower growth - and the qualitative signals that get there first •  The practical playbook: what to track, log, and ask If you've been posting and wondering whether it's worth it - this episode is for you.

17. apr. 202629 min