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Why your policies and procedures are choking performance

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  • 2 min read

Dethatching is a gardening concept that every organisation should steal. Thatch is the layer of dead matter that builds up between the grass and the soil. It blocks water, air and nutrients from reaching the roots. So every now and then, you rake it out… 

Why the best processes start with the people doing the work

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  • 2 min read

Legend has it that when The Ohio State University built its campus, there were no footpaths. Instead, they waited a year or so and let students carve dirt paths into the grass, showing where they naturally walked. Then they paved those paths. This is called… 

Unilever’s strategy, on a page

A case study showing how Unilever’s complex, purpose-led strategy could be captured on a single page using the Team Alignment Canvas

NASA’s strategy, on a page

See how NASA’s vast, multi-decade mission could be captured on a single page using the Team Alignment Canvas. A case study that shows how even the most complex organisations can bring strategic clarity to life

Patagonia’s strategy, on a page

See how Patagonia’s strategy comes to life on a single page using the Team Alignment Canvas. A clear case study in purpose-led planning and strategic clarity

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Why good managers don’t jump to conclusions

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  • 2 min read

A common issue amongst managers is attribution bias. We all do it. This is where we judge others by their actions, and ourselves by our intentions. For example, if someone on our team fails to meet a deadline, we might default to thinking it’s because… 

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Fifty shades of leadership: Why strong leaders sit with the grey

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  • 3 min read

A huge issue in management is falling into the trap of black and white thinking. What is it? It’s called splitting in psychology – when we fail to see the shades of grey in issues (and in ourselves), and instead view people and situations as… 

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Why real leadership means doing the right thing, even when it’s hard

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  • 3 min read

“Leadership is doing the right thing, even when it hurts”. This is a quote I picked up from Scott Galloway recently. And I think it’s a good point. We’re so often faced with a choice – in leadership, as in life – between what’s convenient… 

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The real cause of burnout: it’s not just working too much

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  • 2 min read

Burnout is real. Burnout is tough. It’s the depressing feeling that descends on a Sunday night. The weariness that fills us when waking up before work. Most people have experienced episodes of this at points in their career. A few have experienced the pain of… 

Daily Acts of Leadership: A simple tool to build stronger leaders every day

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  • 2 min read

They’re here! Our Daily Acts of Leadership card decks are officially on sale 🥳🎉! Leadership isn’t just about the big moments. It’s shaped in the small, everyday actions that build trust, inspire others and create meaningful change. That’s exactly why we created this deck. Want… 

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Why avoiding pain leads to more problems (and what to do instead)

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  • 2 min read

Pain is inevitable. But what happens next is up to us. We can process it and grow. Or avoid it and watch it repeat. It’s inevitable that we experience painful moments, at work and in life. Pain is part of being human. Things go wrong:… 

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Sonder and leadership: The one mindset shift that changes everything

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  • 2 min read

Here’s a word for something we all know, but rarely articulate: sonder. American writer John Koenig published an ambitious book in 2012, ‘The Dictionary of Obscure Sorrows’. It’s an amazing project: he set about creating new words to describe complex emotions that lack a precise… 

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Are corporations bad? Exploring the role of leadership in shaping organisational impact

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  • 2 min read

Are corporations inherently harmful, or are they simply reflections of the leaders who run them? It’s increasingly fashionable – particularly on the political fringes – to dismiss corporations as inherently harmful: exploitative, profit-driven and destructive to society. But I don’t think there’s anything inherently wrong…