Never Perfect

From Corporate America to Integrator | What Self-Awareness and Hard Conversations Actually Builds

39 min · I går
episode From Corporate America to Integrator | What Self-Awareness and Hard Conversations Actually Builds cover

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Join our FREE Skool Community HERE [https://www.skool.com/steelpointfoundry/about] Learn more about me at caseyryanquinn.com What happens when you are talented, hardworking, and still in the wrong seat? In this episode, I sit down with Julia, who has been with us for almost a year and has moved through more roles than most people would have stuck around for. This conversation is one of the most honest and human episodes we have done because it is not about a win. It is about the messy, uncomfortable, real process of figuring out where someone actually belongs and what it takes to get there. Julia came to SteelPoint from the corporate world after a life-altering experience. She lost her father unexpectedly, uprooted her life, and walked into a brand new environment that was faster, less structured, and more entrepreneurial than anything she had experienced before. She was hired as my personal brand manager and almost immediately knew something was not right. Instead of staying quiet and grinding through it, she did something most people never do. She knocked on my door and told me the truth. That first conversation opened the door to everything that followed. We talk about what it actually feels like to show up every day and use all of your energy just to survive, let alone perform. Julia shares how she was suffering in silence, trying to fake it until she made it, until she realized that approach was failing her personally and professionally at the same time. The moment she started having honest conversations about where she was at, everything began to shift. We unpack the difference between building a personal brand and building a business brand, and why managing someone else's personal brand is one of the hardest creative and psychological challenges there is. You have to know that person deeply, understand how they think, and be willing to make decisions on their behalf every single day. Julia explains why two months in was not enough time to do that with confidence, and why the pressure of not wanting to misrepresent who I am kept her stuck in analysis paralysis. After moving through multiple roles across SteelPoint, Julia found her way to Revive Flooring and Paint, one of our portfolio companies, where she is now stepping into the integrator role. She talks about why having a single clear focus finally gave her the mental stability she needed, and why being able to connect with real customers every day brought her spark back. We also get into her predictive index profile as an altruist and why understanding that one thing helped clarify every role that did not fit before it. The conversation goes deep into self-awareness, psychology in business, and why most people solve the nine surface problems created by one root problem instead of going after the real issue underneath all of it. Getting Julia into the right role was never about fixing her performance. It was about solving the real problem, which was that she was not doing work that fulfilled her. We close with Julia turning the tables and asking me about hobbies. I talk about getting back into golf seriously, joining a local country club, committing to playing once a week, and my goal of getting to a single digit handicap within three years. I also come clean about already falling behind on my commitment to shoot basketball once a week, which is a pretty good reminder that accountability applies to everyone including me. If you have ever felt talented but stuck, if you have ever wondered whether the role you are in is actually the right one, or if you lead people and want to understand how to get them to their highest and best use, this episode is exactly what you need to hear. Casey's links: - Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/share/1TwCw8ewFf/?mibextid=wwXIfr] - Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/caseyryanquinn?igsh=MTdqeGU2M2Vnb2R5cA==] - LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/caseyryanquinn] Revive Flooring and Paint' links: - Website [: https://reviveflooringandpaint.com/] - Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/reviveflooringandpaint] - Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/revive_flooringandpaint/] - LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/company/revive-flooring-and-paint/]

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27 episoder

episode From Corporate America to Integrator | What Self-Awareness and Hard Conversations Actually Builds cover

From Corporate America to Integrator | What Self-Awareness and Hard Conversations Actually Builds

Join our FREE Skool Community HERE [https://www.skool.com/steelpointfoundry/about] Learn more about me at caseyryanquinn.com What happens when you are talented, hardworking, and still in the wrong seat? In this episode, I sit down with Julia, who has been with us for almost a year and has moved through more roles than most people would have stuck around for. This conversation is one of the most honest and human episodes we have done because it is not about a win. It is about the messy, uncomfortable, real process of figuring out where someone actually belongs and what it takes to get there. Julia came to SteelPoint from the corporate world after a life-altering experience. She lost her father unexpectedly, uprooted her life, and walked into a brand new environment that was faster, less structured, and more entrepreneurial than anything she had experienced before. She was hired as my personal brand manager and almost immediately knew something was not right. Instead of staying quiet and grinding through it, she did something most people never do. She knocked on my door and told me the truth. That first conversation opened the door to everything that followed. We talk about what it actually feels like to show up every day and use all of your energy just to survive, let alone perform. Julia shares how she was suffering in silence, trying to fake it until she made it, until she realized that approach was failing her personally and professionally at the same time. The moment she started having honest conversations about where she was at, everything began to shift. We unpack the difference between building a personal brand and building a business brand, and why managing someone else's personal brand is one of the hardest creative and psychological challenges there is. You have to know that person deeply, understand how they think, and be willing to make decisions on their behalf every single day. Julia explains why two months in was not enough time to do that with confidence, and why the pressure of not wanting to misrepresent who I am kept her stuck in analysis paralysis. After moving through multiple roles across SteelPoint, Julia found her way to Revive Flooring and Paint, one of our portfolio companies, where she is now stepping into the integrator role. She talks about why having a single clear focus finally gave her the mental stability she needed, and why being able to connect with real customers every day brought her spark back. We also get into her predictive index profile as an altruist and why understanding that one thing helped clarify every role that did not fit before it. The conversation goes deep into self-awareness, psychology in business, and why most people solve the nine surface problems created by one root problem instead of going after the real issue underneath all of it. Getting Julia into the right role was never about fixing her performance. It was about solving the real problem, which was that she was not doing work that fulfilled her. We close with Julia turning the tables and asking me about hobbies. I talk about getting back into golf seriously, joining a local country club, committing to playing once a week, and my goal of getting to a single digit handicap within three years. I also come clean about already falling behind on my commitment to shoot basketball once a week, which is a pretty good reminder that accountability applies to everyone including me. If you have ever felt talented but stuck, if you have ever wondered whether the role you are in is actually the right one, or if you lead people and want to understand how to get them to their highest and best use, this episode is exactly what you need to hear. Casey's links: - Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/share/1TwCw8ewFf/?mibextid=wwXIfr] - Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/caseyryanquinn?igsh=MTdqeGU2M2Vnb2R5cA==] - LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/caseyryanquinn] Revive Flooring and Paint' links: - Website [: https://reviveflooringandpaint.com/] - Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/reviveflooringandpaint] - Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/revive_flooringandpaint/] - LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/company/revive-flooring-and-paint/]

I går39 min
episode One Conversation Could Have Saved Years | The Real Cost of Avoiding Conflict cover

One Conversation Could Have Saved Years | The Real Cost of Avoiding Conflict

Join our Skool Community: https://www.skool.com/steelpointfoundry/aboutLearn more about me at caseyryanquinn.comWhat happens when people avoid the conversations they know they need to have?In this episode of the Never Perfect Podcast, TJ and I dive into one of the biggest problems holding people back in business, leadership, relationships, parenting, and personal growth: conflict avoidance. This conversation started organically and turned into one of the rawest discussions we’ve had around communication, accountability, emotional intelligence, leadership, and building genuine relationships.We talk about why most people avoid hard conversations, how unresolved conflict creates long-term damage, and why clarity almost always comes from addressing uncomfortable situations early instead of letting them build over time. Whether it’s inside a company, a marriage, parenting, investor relations, friendships, or leadership teams, avoiding difficult conversations rarely solves the problem. It usually makes it worse.A major part of this episode focuses on relationship building and investor relations. TJ shares what it’s like handling outreach, follow-ups, and raising capital through genuine relationships rather than transactional sales tactics. We discuss why follow-up is often harder than the initial outreach, why people avoid making decisions, and how emotional discomfort impacts communication in both business and life.We also dive into sales psychology, human behavior, and decision-making. One of the biggest themes throughout the conversation is that most people are not actually avoiding opportunities — they are avoiding making decisions. We break down how fear, uncertainty, ego, and discomfort influence the way people respond to conversations around investing, leadership, and personal growth.The conversation also explores EOS tools like the People Analyzer and how frameworks can help leaders navigate difficult conversations inside organizations without making those conversations personal or emotional. We explain how creating systems around accountability and communication can remove unnecessary drama while improving company culture and leadership alignment.Another major topic throughout the episode is parenting and emotional development. We share real stories about navigating tough conversations with our kids, teaching emotional control, building accountability, and preparing children to communicate directly instead of avoiding discomfort. These lessons connect directly back to entrepreneurship and leadership because the same principles apply everywhere: short-term discomfort often creates long-term growth.We also discuss the importance of direct communication in today’s world. Social media, texting, and digital communication have made it easier than ever for people to avoid real conversations. We talk about why picking up the phone or having face-to-face conversations still matters and why genuine human connection is becoming increasingly rare in business and life.Toward the end of the episode, we discuss leadership styles, closing deals, strategic relationship building, and the difference between being a salesperson versus being a problem solver and strategist. The conversation highlights how leadership is often less about controlling outcomes and more about understanding people, asking better questions, and helping others gain clarity around what they truly want.If you are an entrepreneur, investor, leader, salesperson, parent, or someone trying to improve your communication and relationships, this episode will challenge the way you think about conflict, leadership, accountability, and human connection.

24. maj 202637 min
episode This one of the most overlooked leadership skills in business.... cover

This one of the most overlooked leadership skills in business....

What actually makes businesses grow long term? It’s not just systems, strategy, or execution. It’s relationships, communication, and the willingness to have hard conversations before problems spiral out of control. In this episode of the Never Perfect Podcast, I sit down with Leandra to break down one of the most overlooked leadership skills in business: conflict resolution and relationship building. We talk about why so many people avoid difficult conversations, how fear and ego quietly destroy opportunities, and why communication is the foundation of every successful company, partnership, and team. This episode goes deep into company culture, leadership communication, emotional intelligence, people operations, and the importance of creating environments where people feel safe enough to speak honestly. We unpack how unresolved conflict creates resentment, damages performance, and slowly destroys relationships both personally and professionally. We also talk about the reality of scaling businesses and leading teams. From hiring and firing employees to navigating partnerships, leadership decisions, and organizational growth, this conversation is a raw behind-the-scenes look at how human capital management actually works inside growing companies. One of the biggest themes throughout this episode is understanding that communication solves problems earlier, faster, and more effectively than avoidance ever will. Whether it’s business partnerships, employees struggling in their roles, leadership tension, or personal relationships, the earlier the conversation happens, the easier the solution becomes. Leandra shares her perspective from years of leading people operations and human resources, including lessons learned from toxic work environments, difficult managers, and what it means to truly put people first inside a company. We discuss why culture is not ping pong tables or office perks, but how people treat each other, communicate, and operate under pressure. I also break down my philosophy on leadership, decision making, and why I’ve become obsessed with human capital management over real estate investing or scaling companies alone. We talk about intuition, asking better questions, and why the best leaders focus on understanding people before forcing solutions. Throughout the conversation, we share real examples from inside our businesses, including role transitions, employee growth, conflict management, and how open communication helped team members find positions where they could truly thrive. This episode is packed with practical leadership lessons, communication strategies, and mindset shifts for entrepreneurs, business owners, managers, and anyone trying to build stronger relationships in work and life. If you’re building a company, managing people, leading teams, navigating partnerships, or simply trying to improve communication in your life, this episode will challenge the way you think about conflict, leadership, and relationships. Casey's links: - Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/share/1TwCw8ewFf/?mibextid=wwXIfr] - Instagram [ https://www.instagram.com/caseyryanquinn?igsh=MTdqeGU2M2Vnb2R5cA==] - LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/caseyryanquinn]

21. maj 202633 min
episode You'll Never Have Success Without A Vision I EOS Component 1: Vision cover

You'll Never Have Success Without A Vision I EOS Component 1: Vision

Join our Skool Community: https://www.skool.com/steelpointfoundry/about Learn more about me at caseyryanquinn.com What does it actually mean to build a business around a mission you truly believe in? In this episode, we dive into the first of the six key components of EOS, the Entrepreneurial Operating System, and what it really means to lead with vision. This is not a textbook breakdown of the framework. This is a raw, honest conversation about how vision, mission, and core values show up in real life, inside real companies, and in the everyday decisions that define who you are as a leader, a founder, and a human being. I open up about what our mission, to build happiness, transform lives, and strengthen the community, actually means beyond the words on the page. It is the lens I use for every decision I make in business and in life. Who I do business with, who I spend time with, what opportunities I say yes to, and what I walk away from even when there is serious money on the table. When your mission is real and not just something framed on a wall, it becomes a filter that protects your energy, your time, and your peace of mind. TJ shares how the mission and vision of SteelPoint Capital pulled him away from running his own company six years ago. Not because the opportunity was perfect, but because the conviction behind what we were building was undeniable. At 42 years old, he says it plainly: he is the happiest he has ever been. Danielle brings a fresh perspective as someone who recently stepped into a leadership role inside the organization. She walks through what drew her in during the interview process, how the core values aligned with the way she already lived her life, and why leading with mission and culture made her feel confident about the leap she was taking. We break down all four of our core values. Let's Go means taking massive action every single day. Extreme Ownership means owning your results, your mistakes, and your growth without excuses. We Got Your Back is the team-first mentality that makes everything else possible. And Lead With Heart is about showing up with positivity, authenticity, and a genuine desire to lift the people around you. The conversation also gets into what happens when you do not have clarity around your mission. I share a real example from a call with a founder running over three million dollars in annual revenue who could not articulate her mission or core values on the spot. That lack of clarity was showing up everywhere in her business. The vision statement at SteelPoint Capital, to fuel people with capital, clarity, and culture to create an impact that lasts, is not just a tagline. It is the foundation everything is built on. Whether you are a founder trying to get clear on your why, a leader building a team that actually believes in what you are doing, or someone figuring out what kind of life you want to build, this episode will challenge you to get honest about your mission and start making decisions that reflect it. If you do not know your why, you will say yes to everything and end up building something you do not want to be inside of. Casey's links: - Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/share/1TwCw8ewFf/?mibextid=wwXIfr] - Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/caseyryanquinn?igsh=MTdqeGU2M2Vnb2R5cA==] - LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/caseyryanquinn] Danielle's links: - Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/share/1Ahhu8QbBS/?mibextid=wwXIfr] - Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/daniellehollembaek?igsh=bnIzanJkMjB3OTBk] - LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/danielle-hollembaek] TJ's links: - Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/thomas.bencho] - Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/t.j.bencho/] - LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/t-j-bencho-880661197/]

16. maj 202629 min
episode I'm Letting Alex Take My Place I Being The Face Of A Brand cover

I'm Letting Alex Take My Place I Being The Face Of A Brand

Join our Skool Community here [https://www.skool.com/steelpointfoundry/about]. Learn more about me at www.caseyryanquinn.com [www.caseyryanquinn.com] What happens when the person who hates social media becomes the face of a company? In this episode, I sit down with my longtime friend and business partner Alex to unpack one of the most uncomfortable and necessary transitions we have made inside of Accruity. Alex went from being completely invisible online, zero presence, no bio, a username nobody recognized, to becoming the face of our brand. What started as a conversation over beers at a Christmas party turned into a full shift in how we show up for our clients, our partners, and the people we are trying to reach. We get into why personal branding is not about becoming an influencer. It is about building the know, like, and trust that makes a business real to the people considering working with you. If someone gets off a phone call with you and goes to look you up and finds nothing, you have already lost credibility before you even had the chance to earn it. That was the reality for Alex, and it was the moment that changed everything. Alex walks through the real journey of stepping into this role. Rebuilding his Instagram and Facebook from scratch with our marketing lead Rebecca. Learning how to show up on camera, trust the process, and stop caring what people in his personal life thought about why he was suddenly posting about work. The feedback, the doubts, the jokes from friends, all of it. And how getting even one client from a ten-like post is worth more than a thousand likes that convert to nothing. We also talk about what it actually takes to get confident selling a complex service. For Alex, that meant sitting in on fulfillment calls, watching our accounting team do the technical work, and immersing himself in the delivery side of the business until he could speak to it with authority. That combination of product knowledge and genuine client relationships is what has transformed him into someone who can walk into any room and represent what we do at the highest level. A huge part of this episode is the role that Rebecca, our marketing lead based in Florida, has played in making all of this possible. She rebuilt Alex's entire digital presence, writes his scripts, designs the decks, and creates the content framework that keeps our messaging consistent from the ad someone sees to the call they book to the service they receive. She is a key reason our sales process has become one unified voice. We wrap with a conversation about the next evolution, getting Alex on stage. Public speaking has always been my territory, but we are changing that. I share what my best and worst keynote experiences have taught me, why smaller rooms bring out my best work, and how I think about delivering value that people can actually act on when they leave. If you are a business owner, a sales professional, or someone sitting on the fence about putting yourself out there, this episode is going to push you off that fence. The discomfort is real. The judgment from people around you is real. But the cost of staying invisible in a digital world is far greater than the cost of a bad post. This episode is about doing the hard thing anyway, building trust at scale, and understanding that confidence comes from action, not from waiting until you feel ready. Casey's links: - Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/share/1TwCw8ewFf/?mibextid=wwXIfr] - Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/caseyryanquinn?igsh=MTdqeGU2M2Vnb2R5cA==] - LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/in/caseyryanquinn] Accruity Links: - Website [https://accruity.com/] - Facebook [https://www.facebook.com/accruity/] - LinkedIn [https://www.linkedin.com/company/accruity/] - Instagram [https://www.instagram.com/accruityaccounting/]

14. maj 202638 min