The Leadership Field Guide

Linkedin - Field Entry #47

24 min · I går
episode Linkedin - Field Entry #47 cover

Description

Leaders often get stuck in LinkedIn’s endless performance loop, where authenticity feels like an obscure art form. This matters because your online presence now shapes hiring decisions, credibility, and career advancement more than any coffee‑talk can. This episode is for leaders, managers, and professionals who want practical guidance on mastering LinkedIn without turning into a humblebrag machine or posting motivational fluff that sounds like it was generated by an AI. If you’re tired of seeing cross‑armed executives or car‑selfie visionaries, this is the episode for you. In this episode, we cover: - LinkedIn profile photo best practices - Avoiding performative humility in professional posts - Leveraging weak-tie networking for career advancement - Managing oversharing on social media as a leader - Building authentic leadership presence online - Practical guidelines for LinkedIn content strategy - Humblebrag escalation and credibility risks - Identifying common LinkedIn species: gratitude addict, trauma monetizer, etc. - Effective communication strategies for managers on LinkedIn - Aligning professional image with real behavior - Navigating healthcare‑specific norms on LinkedIn Save this episode or follow the show so Spotify can keep sending you leadership gems that actually help you get real results. "Werq" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Podcast releases Monday Mornings with occasional bonus episodes throughout the week. Produced by N1 Consulting, LLC https://www.linkedin.com/company/n1-consulting-llc/⁠⁠ To suggest field entries, or to reach out about our consulting and leadership coaching services, please reach out to us at LeadershipFieldGuide@gmail.com.

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63 episodes

episode Linkedin - Field Entry #47 artwork

Linkedin - Field Entry #47

Leaders often get stuck in LinkedIn’s endless performance loop, where authenticity feels like an obscure art form. This matters because your online presence now shapes hiring decisions, credibility, and career advancement more than any coffee‑talk can. This episode is for leaders, managers, and professionals who want practical guidance on mastering LinkedIn without turning into a humblebrag machine or posting motivational fluff that sounds like it was generated by an AI. If you’re tired of seeing cross‑armed executives or car‑selfie visionaries, this is the episode for you. In this episode, we cover: - LinkedIn profile photo best practices - Avoiding performative humility in professional posts - Leveraging weak-tie networking for career advancement - Managing oversharing on social media as a leader - Building authentic leadership presence online - Practical guidelines for LinkedIn content strategy - Humblebrag escalation and credibility risks - Identifying common LinkedIn species: gratitude addict, trauma monetizer, etc. - Effective communication strategies for managers on LinkedIn - Aligning professional image with real behavior - Navigating healthcare‑specific norms on LinkedIn Save this episode or follow the show so Spotify can keep sending you leadership gems that actually help you get real results. "Werq" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Podcast releases Monday Mornings with occasional bonus episodes throughout the week. Produced by N1 Consulting, LLC https://www.linkedin.com/company/n1-consulting-llc/⁠⁠ To suggest field entries, or to reach out about our consulting and leadership coaching services, please reach out to us at LeadershipFieldGuide@gmail.com.

Yesterday24 min
episode Law #7: The Culture Residue Principle artwork

Law #7: The Culture Residue Principle

The Culture Residue Principle shows how everyday unaddressed behaviors quietly shape the workplace culture that leaders and managers inevitably inherit, and why those invisible layers determine what is considered normal—often hiding toxic patterns behind a veneer of “just how things work here.” This episode is for leaders, managers, and professionals who find themselves walking into meetings where lateness, delayed decisions, or unspoken feedback have become the status quo. If you’re tired of seeing results achieved at the cost of collaboration, or a workaround turned process that no one wants to fix, this episode will help you recognize the hidden residue in your organization. In this episode, we cover: - Culture residue principle - Tolerated behavior normalizes workplace culture - Reinforcing desired leadership behaviors - Early intervention prevents cultural drift - Unaddressed feedback erodes trust - Leaders delivering results at a cost - Workarounds becoming standard processes - Repeated decisions shape organizational culture - Identifying hidden patterns in meetings - Preventing culture built by repetition - Small corrections stop structural issues - Layered residue becomes invisible environment If you found this helpful, follow or save the episode so Spotify keeps recommending more leadership insights. "Werq" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Podcast releases Monday Mornings with occasional bonus episodes throughout the week. Produced by N1 Consulting, LLC https://www.linkedin.com/company/n1-consulting-llc/⁠⁠ To suggest field entries, or to reach out about our consulting and leadership coaching services, please reach out to us at LeadershipFieldGuide@gmail.com.

Yesterday7 min
episode Law #6 - The Feedback Vacuum artwork

Law #6 - The Feedback Vacuum

In every organization there comes a moment when leadership fails to name the obvious dysfunction. The Feedback Vacuum explains why teams tolerate broken processes instead of confronting them directly, and how that silence fuels costly surveys and consultants. This episode is for leaders, managers, and professionals who have watched their teams drift into unspoken dysfunction and feel the pressure of political risk. It speaks to anyone tired of asking “Why didn’t anyone tell me?” and ready to ask whether it was safe enough to speak. In this episode, we cover: - Leadership vacuum – the silence that replaces honest feedback in meetings - Psychological safety and the cost of speaking up at work - Lowering the risk of giving direct feedback as a manager - Asking better questions to surface truth in team discussions - Modeling vulnerability for leaders to enable candor - Decoding organizational language that avoids reality (“we’ll revisit this”) - Identifying when a meeting masks underlying performance issues - Strategies for confronting leaders who avoid receiving feedback - The “We should talk about this later” loop and its impact on accountability - Evidence‑based approaches to improve feedback flow in the workplace - Building a leadership culture where truth can exist before it reaches a survey If this episode helped you spot a feedback vacuum in your own workplace, hit follow or save the episode so Spotify can surface more practical leadership guidance. "Werq" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Podcast releases Monday Mornings with occasional bonus episodes throughout the week. Produced by N1 Consulting, LLC https://www.linkedin.com/company/n1-consulting-llc/ To suggest field entries or to reach out about our consulting and leadership coaching services, please reach out to us at LeadershipFieldGuide@gmail.com.

15. juni 20267 min
episode Performance Reviews - Field Entry #46 artwork

Performance Reviews - Field Entry #46

The performance review has become a yearly ritual where managers must summarize an entire year of employee behavior from fallible memory, often resulting in vague ratings and surprising feedback. Because the outcome can shape careers yet preparation occurs just minutes before the meeting, organizations suffer from inconsistency, bias, and disengaged employees. This episode is for leaders, managers, and professionals who dread the annual performance review process and struggle with unclear expectations, last‑minute documentation, and feedback that feels like a surprise. If you’ve ever searched old emails for proof of competence or watched a rating discussion dissolve into vague generalities, this guide offers practical alternatives. In this episode, we cover: - Performance review myth that managers can accurately recall a year’s worth of employee performance - Recency bias in manager memory affecting fair evaluations - Subjective rating scales such as “Exceeds Expectations” lacking consistent definition - Annual review meetings ineffective for leaders versus frequent feedback - Critical incident method: documenting specific performance events with dates and evidence - Separating coaching conversations from compensation discussions for managers - Behavior‑focused language over personality judgments in manager‑employee dialogues - Targeted manager training on evaluation techniques rather than budget expertise - Continuous leadership habit instead of yearly paperwork ritual - Reducing bias through documented critical incidents in reviews - Ongoing coaching recommendations for leaders based on research If this episode helped you rethink annual reviews and gave you tools to coach continuously, please follow or save it so Spotify can recommend more practical leadership resources to you. "Werq" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Podcast releases Monday Mornings with occasional bonus episodes throughout the week. Produced by N1 Consulting, LLC https://www.linkedin.com/company/n1-consulting-llc/⁠⁠ To suggest field entries, or to reach out about our consulting and leadership coaching services, please reach out to us at LeadershipFieldGuide@gmail.com.

15. juni 202611 min
episode Law #5 - The Symbolism Trap artwork

Law #5 - The Symbolism Trap

Leadership teams, listen up. In today's workplaces, it's easy to fall into the Symbolism Trap – a pattern where organizations substitute symbolic gestures for real conversations and changes. This episode explores how this phenomenon works and why it matters in your organization. This episode is for leaders, managers, and professionals who want to understand why their teams are stuck in neutral despite all the talk about innovation, transformation, and change. You'll learn how the Symbolism Trap affects employee morale, productivity, and overall job satisfaction. In this episode, we cover: • The definition of The Symbolism Trap and its impact on organizational change • Examples of symbolic gestures that replace real conversations, including values posters, open offices, initiatives with logos, training sessions, surveys, and more • Why the Symbolism Trap happens: conflict avoidance, lack of accountability, and ease of communication vs. actual behavior change • Evidence-based guidance to help you avoid The Symbolism Trap: + Identify the behavior, not the symbol + Pair every initiative with accountability + Have the conversation you're avoiding The Symbolism Trap isn't about bad intentions; it's about substitution. Doing something that looks like work instead of doing actual work is a recipe for staying exactly the same while appearing to change. A new logo, training session, or initiative may seem like progress at first glance, but if it doesn't address the underlying issue, you're just perpetuating the problem. Episode Information: "Werq" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com), Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License, http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ Podcast releases Monday mornings with occasional bonus episodes throughout the week. Produced by N1 Consulting, LLC https://www.linkedin.com/company/n1-consulting-llc/ To suggest field entries or reach out about our consulting and leadership coaching services, please email LeadershipFieldGuide@gmail.com.

15. juni 20267 min