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Mastering Workplace Culture

Mastering Workplace Culture

By: S. Chris Edmonds and Mark S. Babbitt
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The Mastering Workplace Culture podcast examines the hard truths of workplace culture change. Proven culture leaders share unfiltered stories of breakdowns, breakthroughs, and their bold decisions. And they'll discuss the steps they took to drive sustainable, tangible change in which respect and results are modeled, monitored, and validated equally. This is practical insight for executives who cannot afford to let culture fail—and for those who are just as concerned with their leadership legacy as they are with today's results.2026 Economics Management Management & Leadership
Episodes
  • From Associations to Flying Cars: How Culture Drives What's Next
    Apr 7 2026
    🎙️ New Mastering Workplace Culture episode! From association leadership to flying cars, Tim Jackson explains why workplace culture is the connective tissue that enables progress. Leaders now understand that they can't confine culture to a single industry—it shows up wherever people must align around a mission, coordinate under pressure, and adapt as change accelerates. In this wide‑ranging conversation, Tim Jackson draws on decades of experience across association leadership, the automotive industry, public policy, and emerging mobility to show how culture shapes outcomes at scale. Tim reflects on what it takes to build healthy, high‑functioning cultures inside member‑driven organizations—especially when boards, staff, and stakeholders bring competing priorities to the table. He describes strong leadership alignment as riding a tandem bike: Everyone must pedal together, of course. But direction, trust, and coordination—which must come from the leader holding the handlebars—make all the difference. The conversation then moves into the automotive world. Tim offers an insider's perspective on how dealership and manufacturer cultures have evolved—from overcoming long‑standing stereotypes to raising the bar on customer experience, teamwork, and quality. He explains why the most successful dealerships focus equally on employee experience and customer trust, and how cooperation has replaced high-pressure commission based selling models of the past. Tim goes on to share that culture is tested most during disruption. Tim recounts how auto dealers and associations navigated COVID—balancing safety, continuity, and constantly changing regulations while meeting the responsibilities to both employees and communities. In moments like these, culture wasn't a "nice‑to‑have." Instead, it was the infrastructure that enabled leaders to respond with clarity. Finally, the conversation looks ahead as Tim shares insights from his bestselling book, Dude, Where's My Flying Car?, explaining why he shifted from skeptic to believer in advanced air mobility. He unpacks what's actually happening behind the scenes with EVs, air taxis, flying cars, affordability, and why collaboration, trust, and leadership culture will ultimately determine how quickly these technologies integrate into everyday life. ⏱️ Key Moments 00:00–00:30 — MWC intro 00:30–01:10 — Welcome and Tim's Intro 01:10–03:12 — Tim Jackson's association leadership and automotive roots 03:12–04:45 — Why culture is always the first leadership problem 04:45–06:41 — The "tandem bike" metaphor for boards and executives 06:41–08:15 — Managing competing member priorities without fragmentation 08:15–09:38 — How alignment enables associations to scale impact 09:38–11:10 — The "We Card" campaign and changing public behavior 11:10–13:26 — National advocacy wins and long‑term leadership impact 13:26–14:35 — Turning the Denver Auto Show into a growth engine 14:35–15:58 — Culture alignment across dealers and stakeholders 15:58–18:20 — What the best car dealerships do differently 18:20–22:24 — Employee experience and customer trust rise together 22:24–25:10 — Why car quality reshaped the industry's reputation 25:10–28:07 — Teamwork replaces pressure selling in modern dealerships 28:07–31:05 — Innovation raises expectations—and prices 31:05–34:39 — The cultural trade‑off between features and affordability 34:39–36:55 — COVID exposed fragile organizational cultures 36:55–39:24 — Leadership decisions under constant uncertainty 39:24–43:10 — Why strong culture mattered more than strategy in crisis 43:10–47:39 — Associations and dealers navigating disruption together 47:39–50:15 — From skeptic to believer in flying cars 50:15–52:21 — Air taxis vs personal flying vehicles explained 52:21–55:30 — Why advanced air mobility adoption will be gradual 55:30–57:45 — Episode wrap‑up and final leadership reflections 57:45–58:21 — MWC outro 📣 Join the Conversation If this conversation expanded how you think about leadership, culture, and innovation: 👍 Like this episode to support thoughtful dialogue about work and the future 🔔 Subscribe to Mastering Workplace Culture for weekly leadership conversations 💬 Comment with the culture or leadership insight that stood out most 🔗 Share this with someone navigating change, innovation, or organizational growth #MasteringWorkplaceCulture #LeadershipDevelopment #OrganizationalCulture #AutomotiveLeadership #FutureOfMobility #PeopleFirstLeadership

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    58 mins
  • Why Being a Better Human Makes You a Better Leader—with Sarah Cole
    Mar 31 2026

    The just-dropped episode of the Mastering Workplace Culture podcast features a deeply human conversation with Sarah Cole, founder and CEO of Cole Forums and a leader who brings ethics, vulnerability, connection, and real‑world courage into every room she creates. Sarah has spent more than 30 years advising boards, general counsel, senior executives, and CEOs—all while building high‑trust peer forums where leaders can finally speak openly about the challenges they can't discuss anywhere else.

    What makes Sarah's work powerful is its simplicity:

    Great leadership is first about being a good human.

    Sarah explains how culture, risk, compliance, integrity, employee engagement, and innovation all trace back to humanity—the choices leaders make, the behaviors they reward, and the environments they create.

    Throughout this conversation, Sarah shares how loneliness at the top inspired her to build a safe, confidential space where leaders can be vulnerable, challenge each other respectfully, and support one another without ego. She reveals why curated groups of no more than 15 people unlock deeper honesty, and how trust becomes the fuel for real growth.

    Sarah also explores:

    • The intersection of compliance and culture—and how "doing the right thing" is contagious

    • Why vulnerability from one leader emboldens others to be braver in their own roles

    • How organizations can prepare for AI by strengthening culture, not just strategy

    • Why leaders must show integrity first if they expect others to follow

    • How peer support can transform real‑time decision‑making

    • The link between personal resilience and ethical leadership

    • The role of younger generations who expect authenticity, purpose, and respect at work

    • The growing importance of leader self‑awareness and emotional maturity

    As Sarah puts it, culture is what leaders reward, tolerate, and ignore—not vague values written on the wall. And when leaders learn to show up with humanity, consistency, and courage, everything else in the organization changes.

    ⏱️ Key Moments

    00:00–02:20—Sarah's background: ethics, governance, risk, and human behavior

    02:20–04:30—The human core of culture and why leadership begins with humanity

    04:30–06:30—Why senior leaders feel isolated—and how Cole Forums was born

    06:30–08:30—Vulnerability, trust, and creating safe spaces for high‑stakes leadership

    08:30–10:20—Why curated groups stay small and why every voice must be heard

    10:20–12:30—Protecting community trust by refusing transactional "networking"

    12:30–14:45—Building integrity‑based networks in a high‑pressure industry

    14:45–17:00—Why legal and compliance roles are shifting toward business partnership

    17:00–19:30—Leadership resilience and "you don't have to be brilliant, just keep showing up"

    19:30–22:30—How peer conversations are changing real‑world leadership behaviors

    22:30–24:00—WhatsApp groups, rapid support, and the rise of trusted peer circles

    24:00–26:30—Why culture failures are tied to silence, fear, and visibility gaps

    26:30–29:00—Preparing next‑gen leaders through industry‑academic partnerships

    29:00–32:00—Vulnerability as a leadership tool—and why leaders must go first

    32:00–34:00—Personal integrity, difficult decisions, and walking away from misalignment

    34:00–39:00—Culture as risk mitigation; why doing the right thing still matters

    39:00–42:00—Generational shifts: what younger leaders expect from workplaces

    42:00–46:00—AI, uncertainty, and why culture is an organization's best preparation

    46:00–49:00—Learning moments vs. failure; behavioral science insights

    49:00–56:00—Personal stories, family, career pivots, and the humanness behind leadership

    56:00–60:00—Legacy, purpose, and lifting all boats by building better leaders 


    If Sarah's approach to courage, trust, and human‑centered leadership resonated with you:

    👍 Give this video a like to support conversations that make leadership more human

    🔔 Subscribe for weekly insights from real leaders shaping workplace culture

    💬 Comment with one leadership behavior you believe creates trust

    🔗 Share this with someone who's building culture, community, or integrity in their organization


    #MasteringWorkplaceCulture #LeadershipDevelopment #OrganizationalCulture #EthicalLeadership #PeopleFirstLeadership #BusinessIntegrity


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    1 hr
  • How Petco's CEO Rebuilt Values to Play to Win
    Mar 24 2026

    The newest episode of Mastering Workplace Culture features a rare, open conversation with Joel Anderson, CEO of Petco and longtime culture‑focused retail leader. From Toys "R" Us to Walmart to Five Below to Petco, Joel has spent three decades proving that culture—done intentionally—drives passion, discretionary effort, and performance at massive scale.

    Joel shares how his "People → Passion → Performance" leadership playbook began with an hourly associate's hand‑painted mural in Lubbock, Texas, and why it has guided every team he has led since. He explains why culture cannot start with metrics, how leaders get people "on the bus," and why discretionary effort—not pressure—ultimately transforms stores, teams, and the customer experience.

    He also reflects deeply on large‑scale culture transitions:

    • Walmart: Reviving local store culture and connecting hourly teams back to a mission much bigger than their daily tasks.

    • Five Below: Scaling from 361 to 1,600+ stores by formalizing values and behaviors for the first time—moving from "values through osmosis" to a structure that could grow nationwide.

    • Petco: Rewriting the company's values from scratch and shifting a legacy organization from playing not to lose to playing to win, all anchored in pet‑focused passion and human dignity.

    Joel's storytelling reveals what culture really looks like through the eyes of a CEO: Messy, human, imperfect, and deeply personal. He shares how leaders must build self‑esteem, create teams, and celebrate people—not just outcomes. And he offers practical insight for leaders at every level: Focus on strengths, understand superpowers, and build systems that help people succeed.

    This is a conversation about people, purpose, and performance—and how the right culture unlocks all three.

    ⏱️ Key Moments

    00:00–02:00 — Welcoming Joel Anderson, CEO of Petco, longtime retail leader

    02:00–04:00 — His retail journey and early culture roots

    04:00–07:30 — Walmart's culture: strengths, gaps, and the "people first" shift

    07:30–10:00 — The "People → Passion → Performance" mural story

    10:00–13:00 — Why leaders must start with people, not performance

    13:00–15:00 — Changing the conversation with store leaders

    15:00–18:00 — Mission boards, engagement, and activating passion locally

    18:00–21:00 — Why Five Below energized him and what he saw in the founders

    21:00–24:00 — Creating Wow Town: an experiential culture hub

    24:00–27:00 — Building Five Below's first-ever values + behaviors

    27:00–32:00 — Proving culture drives performance (the 2017 breakthrough)

    32:00–36:00 — Petco: playing to win vs. playing not to lose

    36:00–40:00 — Rewriting Petco's values + defining "Foster the Fun"

    40:00–45:00 — Rolling out new values and behaviors across the organization

    45:00–48:00 — The power of superpowers: focusing on strengths, not deficits

    48:00–50:00 — Gung Ho, worthwhile work, and leading with humanity

    50:00–53:00 — Life outside work: family, golf, milestones, and roots

    53:00–56:00 — Joel's advice to young culture leaders

    56:00–57:00 — Final reflections on values, gratitude, and team celebration

    We're confident Joel's leadership insights will help you see culture through a new lens. So, please:

    👍 Give this video a like to support people‑centered leadership

    🔔 Subscribe for weekly conversations with real culture builders

    💬 Comment with the culture principle you're taking back to your team

    🔗 Share this with a leader who's navigating culture change at scale

    #MasteringWorkplaceCulture #LeadershipDevelopment #OrganizationalCulture #RetailLeadership #PeopleFirstLeadership #BusinessTransformation


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    54 mins
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