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Leadership Explored

Leadership Explored

By: Ed Schaefer and Andy Siegmund
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Leadership Explored is a podcast where Edward and Andy dive into what it means to lead. From practical strategies to deep insights, we explore leadership in all its forms—across industries and beyond. Join us for real conversations about how to lead with purpose.

www.leadershipexploredpod.comEd Schaefer and Andy Siegmund
Career Success Economics
Episodes
  • Reading is Leading
    Jul 14 2026
    Reading is Leading: Leadership LiteracyHosts: Ed Schaefer and Andy SiegmundEpisode: 26 (Season 2, Episode 12)Runtime: Approximately 55 minutesRelease Date: July 14, 2026Website: leadershipexploredpod.comEpisode DescriptionFifty-four percent of US adults read below a sixth grade level — and we’re promoting those same adults into management, trusting them with budgets, and calling them leaders. That’s not just a literacy problem. That’s a leadership pipeline problem. In this episode, Ed and Andy make the case that reading is not a personality preference — it’s a core leadership competency, as measurable and consequential as financial acumen or strategic thinking.Ed and Andy dig into what reading actually does to a leader’s brain, challenge the conventional definition of literacy in 2026, and get honest about the limits: reading without synthesis and application is just information collection.In this episode, Ed and Andy Discuss* Why the national readership crisis is quietly becoming a leadership pipeline crisis* The gap between average CEO reading habits (~60 books/year) and the average American (~4 books/year)* Four mechanisms by which reading reshapes a leader’s brain: decision-making, empathy, cognitive sharpness, and stress regulation* Why reading literary fiction measurably improves theory of mind — and why that matters for talent management and negotiation* The difference between a leader who reads and a leader who *leads from* what they read* How frameworks and quotes become “bright, banal platitudes” without the depth of real understanding behind them* What literacy actually means in 2026 — including media literacy, data literacy, and the ability to interrogate AI-generated content* How reading habits evolve across a career, and why fits and spurts are okay* Four practical tactics for becoming a “leader reader” — including reading adjacent, naming your reading publicly, separating surface from analytical reading, and tracking application over volume* Practical entry points for leaders who haven’t built a reading habit yet — and why your favorite TV show might be the best place to startWhether you’re a voracious reader or someone who hasn’t finished a book in years, this episode is packed with real-world insights and practical takeaways that will change how you think about reading as a leadership practice.Episode Highlights⏳ [00:00] – Ed opens with a striking statistic: 54% of US adults read below a sixth grade level — and 21% are functionally illiterate.⏳ [02:15] – The central argument: reading is a leadership competency, not a personality preference.⏳ [04:00] – Andy shares how he uses books reactively — finding reading to solve current problems and to understand how new leaders think.⏳ [07:30] – Ed reflects on books that shaped his leadership: *The Phoenix Project*, *Sooner Safer Happier*, and *The Elegant Puzzle*.⏳ [11:45] – Ed makes the case that the readership gap between CEOs and average Americans signals a fundamental difference in what each group believes reading does for them.⏳ [14:30] – Andy challenges the “book count” metric: reading HBR articles counts, reading select chapters counts, and fits and spurts are okay.⏳ [18:00] – Andy on functional illiteracy: “Just because you can read, if you have not been reading, then for all intents and purposes, there’s no difference between you and the person next to you who cannot read.”⏳ [21:00] – Ed walks through four mechanisms reading builds in a leader’s brain: mental simulations for decisions, theory of mind and empathy, cognitive sharpness, and stress reduction (up to 68%, per University of Sussex research).⏳ [27:30] – Andy on why he deliberately filled his office bookshelf with fiction — and how reading memoirs of people with wildly different lives builds empathy and patience.⏳ [31:00] – Andy invokes General James Mattis: if you haven’t read 100 books in your domain, you are functionally illiterate, regardless of your ability to read.⏳ [33:30] – Ed on expanded literacy: media literacy, data literacy, and science literacy — and how readers are significantly better at detecting misinformation.⏳ [38:00] – The distinction between a leader who reads and a leader who leads from what they read — why frameworks become “cargo cult” behavior without genuine application.⏳ [43:00] – Ed’s four tactics for becoming a leader reader: read adjacent, name your reading publicly, separate surface from analytical reading, and track application over volume.⏳ [50:00] – Andy on using commonplace books, abusing your books with margin notes and dog-ears, and finding your own reading format — print, digital, or audio.⏳ [55:00] – Ed’s closing challenge: Are you a reader, or are you a leader reader? Has reading ever made you change a belief you were comfortable holding?Visit leadershipexploredpod.com for more episodes and resources.Follow ...
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    50 mins
  • Stoicism (Not Broicism!)
    Jun 30 2026
    Stoicism (Not Broicism!): Reclaiming and Ancient Philosophy for Modern LeadersHosts: Ed Schaefer and Andy SiegmundEpisode: 25 (Season 2, Episode 11)Runtime: Approximately 80 minutesRelease Date: Jun 30, 2026Website: leadershipexploredpod.comEpisode DescriptionStoicism is one of the most misread philosophies in popular culture — and the misreading isn’t harmless. A distorted version, what Ed and Andy call “broicism,” has repackaged emotional avoidance, hustle obsession, and cold detachment as ancient wisdom, giving leaders permission to be unreachable and unaccountable and call it a virtue. In this episode, Ed and Andy reclaim the real philosophy — the one Marcus Aurelius was trying to practice while running an empire — and make the case that genuine stoicism is one of the most powerful frameworks available to modern leaders.Ed and Andy walk through what stoicism actually is, how the distortion happened, what it costs teams, and what the four cardinal virtues — wisdom, temperance, courage, and justice — actually demand of a leader. They close with five practical behaviors listeners can start using tomorrow.In this episode, Ed and Andy Discuss* The difference between lowercase stoicism (the philosophy) and the capital-S “broicism” corrupting it today* The dichotomy of control — sorting what’s in your hands from what isn’t — and its roots in Epictetus, the Serenity Prayer, and cognitive behavioral therapy* How the distortion from philosophy to “stiff upper lip” likely began in the Victorian era and was accelerated by hustle culture and social media* Why stoicism is *not* about suppressing emotions — and what the research says about leaders who bottle rather than process* The four cardinal virtues of stoicism: wisdom (phronesis), temperance, courage (andreia), and justice — how they interlock and why none are optional* Marcus Aurelius’s private journal (*Meditations*) as a model of self-examination, self-doubt, and humility — the opposite of alpha posturing* The connection between stoic justice and servant leadership — why the stoics believed power meant greater obligation, not greater license* Why broicism has no healthy mechanism for processing failure — and how genuine stoicism does* The historical range of stoic practitioners: from Epictetus (a slave) to Seneca (a billionaire) to Marcus Aurelius (an emperor) to Admiral Stockdale (a POW)* Five practical behaviors for leaders to build a more genuinely stoic mindset starting this weekThis episode is packed with real-world examples, historical context, and practical takeaways that leaders at every level can apply immediately.Episode Highlights⏳ [00:00] – Ed introduces the episode with a challenge: most people have stoicism wrong, and the misreading has real costs.⏳ [02:15] – Andy distinguishes lowercase stoicism (the ancient philosophy) from capital-S “broicism” — an unfortunate corruption reigning in popular culture.⏳ [05:30] – Ed introduces the stoic flowchart: Do you have a problem? Can you do anything about it? A clean, four-line summary of stoic thinking.⏳ [07:10] – Andy traces stoicism’s roots through Epictetus (a freed slave), Marcus Aurelius (an emperor), and the through-line to cognitive behavioral therapy.⏳ [10:45] – Ed asks: do leaders under pressure actually sort what’s in their control from what isn’t — or do they collapse into panic, denial, or micromanagement?⏳ [13:20] – Andy on the most common failure mode: leaders defaulting to “I’ll do it myself,” confusing locus of control with the need to delegate.⏳ [18:00] – Ed draws the critical distinction: stoicism doesn’t say “don’t feel” — it says feel it, name it, and ask what it’s telling you.⏳ [21:30] – Andy on Marcus Aurelius: “avoiding being dyed purple” — and how *Meditations* reveals a man wildly in touch with his emotions, not burying them.⏳ [27:00] – Ed and Andy trace the distortion: Victorian “stiff upper lip,” the greatest generation archetype, and hustle culture’s co-opting of stoic language.⏳ [33:00] – Ed on broicism’s fatal flaw: it has no healthy way to process failure — only a shame spiral disguised in Roman aesthetic.⏳ [38:00] – Ed introduces the four cardinal virtues and defines *arete* (excellence) and *eudaimonia* (flourishing) — what the stoics actually meant by “virtue” and “the good life.”⏳ [44:30] – The four virtues unpacked: wisdom as discernment and the pause between stimulus and response; temperance as self-mastery, not deprivation.⏳ [51:00] – Courage as moral courage — acting despite fear, standing on principle, and admitting real mistakes to your team.⏳ [55:30] – Justice as the culmination: “What injures the hive injures the bee.” Active responsibility to the people around you — the intellectual backbone of servant leadership.⏳ [1:05:00] – Five practical stoic behaviors for leaders: run the flowchart, ...
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    1 hr and 21 mins
  • Gripes Go Up: What You Do With Complaints Reveals Your Leadership
    Jun 16 2026
    Gripes Go Up: What You Do With Complaints Reveals Your LeadershipHosts: Ed Schaefer and Andy SiegmundEpisode: 24 (Season 2, Episode 10)Runtime: Approximately 43 minutesRelease Date: Jun 16, 2026Website: leadershipexploredpod.comEpisode DescriptionIn this episode of Leadership Explored, Ed Schaefer and Andy Siegmund take on one of the most repeated phrases in management: don’t bring me problems, bring me solutions. It sounds decisive, but Ed and Andy argue that as a leadership posture applied consistently to a team, it functions as a filter — one that raises the cost of speaking up and screens out exactly the raw, early-stage signals leaders most need to hear. The core tension here is straightforward but consequential: the people closest to the work often feel the pain clearly but can’t yet see the path forward, and telling them to come back with answers doesn’t build problem-solving capability — it just teaches them to go quiet.Ed and Andy lay out a directional model that most organizations have backwards. Complaints should flow up the org chart; support should flow down. Drawing on the iceberg of ignorance, the Toyota Andon cord, and research from healthcare settings, they make the case that silence in an organization is almost never a sign of health — it’s a sign that speaking up has become too costly. They also name two failure modes that break the model: leaders who vent their frustrations downward to their teams, creating anxiety without urgency, and leaders who absorb complaints but never surface them upward, quietly eroding trust until the damage shows up as attrition.Ed and Andy don’t let the other side of the equation off the hook. The chronic complainer is a real archetype, and the neuroscience behind habitual negativity — and its spread through emotional contagion — is worth understanding. But the answer isn’t to shut the door. Three specific tools anchor the practical close: the representative grievance question, a directional flow audit, and a reframed team standard — bring me the problem plus your rough thinking, even if it’s not fully baked. If you’ve ever wondered whether the people around you actually feel safe bringing you bad news, this episode is for you.In this episode, Ed and Andy Discuss* Why “don’t bring me problems, bring me solutions” is useful career advice but damaging leadership policy* The iceberg of ignorance and why frontline problems almost never reach senior leadership on their own* The directional model: complaints flow up the org chart, support flows down* The “gripes go up” principle, drawn from a scene in Saving Private Ryan* Why leaders who vent downward undermine their own authority and erode team morale* The danger of leaders who sit on complaints and never surface them upward* The chronic complainer archetype and the neuroscience of habitual negativity* Compassion fatigue and how absorbing unchecked venting burns leaders out over time* Four practical actions leaders can take this week to fix their complaint flowEpisode Highlights⏳ [00:00] – Ed opens with the “don’t bring me problems, bring me solutions” phrase — why it feels sharp for about ten seconds, then makes everything worse⏳ [01:30] – Andy parses the phrase: defensible as career advice, damaging as a leadership mandate — and explains why it chokes off information flow⏳ [04:47] – Ed reflects on the impulse behind the phrase and why it acts as a filter rather than a coaching tool⏳ [07:15] – Ed introduces the iceberg of ignorance: why the “bring me solutions” mandate makes the fraction of problems reaching leadership even smaller⏳ [08:30] – The Toyota Andon cord and healthcare morbidity research: what happens when silence becomes the norm and people stop speaking up⏳ [12:24] – Andy argues that the leader is the filter — and that pre-filtering complaints means catching signal, not just noise⏳ [16:12] – Ed introduces the inverted pyramid of servant leadership and lays out the directional model: complaints go up, support flows down⏳ [18:11] – Andy connects the model to the Saving Private Ryan “gripes go up” scene — and why leaders who vent downward reduce morale without creating any ability to act⏳ [21:16] – Ed names both failure modes: the visible one (venting down) and the invisible one (sitting on complaints and never surfacing them)⏳ [23:44] – Andy recounts a leader who consistently failed to follow through on surfacing issues — and how that pattern drove regrettable attrition over eighteen months⏳ [28:00] – Ed introduces the chronic complainer archetype and the neuroscience behind it: rehearsing grievances without resolution can literally rewire the brain toward a negativity default⏳ [30:00] – Ed connects chronic complaining to compassion fatigue — and how one unproductive complainer can cause a leader to shut down feedback from the other nine people on the team⏳ [33:00] – Andy shares his ...
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    45 mins
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