Explore every episode of the podcast The Vision Architect
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Title
Pub. Date
Duration
Tom Adams: Plan and Prepare for the Future
15 Apr 2026
00:45:10
Most business leaders approach organizational problems through traditional business lenses—marketing strategies, financial models, and operational efficiencies. Yet executive coach Tom Adams reveals that the most persistent business challenges often stem from personal issues masquerading as corporate problems. Through 25 years of coaching experience, Adams has developed a counterintuitive approach that starts not with business metrics, but with personal vision and values.
The conversation begins with Adams' unconventional career path, illustrating how following fascinations rather than rigid plans can lead to unexpected opportunities. His transition from ministry to fashion entrepreneurship, then to television hosting and podcasting, demonstrates how media platforms can serve as powerful business development tools when traditional consulting approaches fail. This "multi-door" philosophy—entering rooms with many potential exits rather than linear career paths—forms the foundation of his coaching methodology.
At the core of Adams' approach is the principle that business owners must first clarify their personal vision before attempting to craft organizational direction. He employs a rigorous pre-engagement process that explores clients' deepest values, regrets, and life aspirations before addressing any business concerns. This includes examining what success looks like if they had unlimited resources, what they would do with limited time, and what personal habitats reveal about their operational patterns. Only after establishing this personal foundation does Adams transition to business strategy, ensuring that organizational goals serve life objectives rather than the reverse.
Adams introduces several transformative frameworks, including his values-based success metrics that begin with "I know I'm being successful when..." statements. These move beyond financial targets to encompass meaningful work, enjoyable relationships, curiosity exploration, and non-adversarial self-relationships. His 25-year planning concept—visualizing life at age 85 and working backward—provides a long-term perspective that prevents short-term reactive decision-making.
The discussion pivots to technological adaptation, where Adams shares insights on AI's impact on the future of work. He predicts fundamental shifts in how we measure "units of work," with AI agents enabling individuals to accomplish what previously required teams. His concept of "new collar work" describes emerging roles that prioritize skills over traditional credentials in the AI era. However, he emphasizes that technological adaptation requires the same personal foundation as business leadership—presence, curiosity, and self-trust.
Adams concludes with practical embodiment practices drawn from equine therapy, demonstrating how physical presence and body awareness enable better decision-making. His "mirror" concept—asking "how am I complicit in creating the conditions I say I don't want?"—provides a powerful tool for personal accountability that transforms both leadership effectiveness and business outcomes.
Highlights
Identify how personal beliefs and patterns create recurring business challenges that traditional solutions can't fix
Develop a 25-year personal vision that informs business strategy rather than serving external success metrics
Implement values-based success measurements that prioritize meaningful work and relationships over financial targets alone
Leverage AI and automation to transform work units while maintaining human connection and intuition
Practice embodiment techniques that improve decision-making by connecting intellectual planning with physical presence
Apply the "mirror" concept to recognize personal complicity in unwanted business outcomes
Important Concepts and Frameworks
Personal Problems Disguised as Business Problems — The framework that most persistent organizational challenges stem from underlying personal issues, beliefs, or patterns that manifest in business operations
25-Year Planning Framework — A long-term visioning approach that starts with imagining life 25 years in the future and working backward to create present-day alignment
Values-Based Success Metrics — A system for measuring success through personal values statements beginning with "I know I'm being successful when..." rather than external financial targets
Equine Therapy for Presence — Using work with horses to develop body awareness and presence, as horses respond to embodied connection rather than intellectual intention
New Collar Work — Emerging job categories in the AI era that prioritize skills and adaptability over traditional educational credentials
Unit of Work Transformation — How AI and automation are fundamentally changing what constitutes a "unit of work" and how value is created
The Mirror Concept — The practice of asking "how am I complicit in creating the conditions I say I don't want?" to identify personal responsibility in challenging situations
Tools & Resources Mentioned
TomAdams.com — Tom Adams' personal website and primary platform for his coaching practice and resources | https://www.tomadams.com/
Flourish Press — Tom Adams' executive coaching and advisory company focused on helping business owners thrive | https://flourishpress.com
BOSU Ball — Balance training equipment used for developing physical presence and body awareness as part of leadership development | https://bosu.com
AI Agents — Automated systems that perform tasks and make decisions, transforming how work gets accomplished in the AI era
Calls to Action
Conduct a personal visioning session exploring what your life would look like with unlimited success, limited time, and identifying deep regrets to clarify true priorities before setting business goals.
Implement a quarterly review of your values using "I know I'm being successful when..." statements to ensure business decisions align with personal fulfillment metrics.
Practice daily embodiment exercises—such as standing on a BOSU ball or focused breathing—to develop the body awareness needed for intuitive decision-making.
Schedule time each week to explore new technologies and AI tools with curiosity rather than resistance, focusing on how they could transform your "unit of work."
When facing business challenges, ask the mirror question: "How am I complicit in creating these conditions I say I don't want?" to identify personal patterns needing adjustment.
Begin 25-year planning by visualizing what you want your life to look like at age 85, then work backward to identify immediate actions that support that long-term vision.
Key Quotes
"Most business problems are personal problems in disguise." — Tom Adams
"Anytime you hit a wall, it's a mirror." — Tom Adams
"How am I complicit in getting the conditions I say I don't want?" — Tom Adams
"I know I'm being successful when I wake up every morning and do the work I wanna do." — Tom Adams
"We built a business to serve our life, and now what we do is just serve the business." — Tom Adams
Chapters
00:00 — Unconventional Career Paths: Following Fascination Over Linear Planning 04:48 — Media as Business Development: From TV Hosting ...
Unlocking Heart Coherence for Creative Performance and Stress Resilience
01 Apr 2026
00:47:26
When stress hijacks your decision-making and creativity feels blocked, the solution may lie in regulating your heart's rhythm rather than just managing your thoughts. This episode reveals how heart coherence—the smooth, efficient pattern of heartbeats associated with positive emotions—serves as a physiological foundation for peak performance, creative insight, and emotional resilience. Through decades of research at the HeartMath Institute, Bruce Cryer demonstrates that our emotional states directly influence heart rhythms, with frustration creating chaotic patterns while appreciation generates coherent sine waves.
The conversation explores the profound implications of this heart-brain connection, revealing that stressful triggers initiate 1,400 biochemical changes in the body—a survival mechanism that now works against us in modern life. Unlike relaxation, coherence represents focused alertness—the "eye of the hurricane" state that enables first responders and surgeons to perform under pressure while maintaining clarity. This physiological state amplifies brain function, making coherent thinking and creative problem-solving more accessible.
Practical applications extend from individual stress management to organizational culture transformation. The Inner Quality Management framework shows how heart coherence principles can enhance team communication, particularly by ensuring quieter team members feel heard—often unlocking their creative contributions. Beyond workplace applications, the discussion reveals how playfulness serves as the "wonder drug of creativity," counteracting the heavy-heartedness that blocks innovation.
Bruce introduces his VYBRATO system and the Wave of Relief technique—practical methods for releasing accumulated stress and generating positive emotional waves. These approaches address the modern epidemic of overwhelm by teaching people to consciously create internal states of appreciation and gratitude rather than being overwhelmed by external pressures. The episode provides concrete strategies for integrating heart coherence practices into daily life, from simple breathing techniques to movement breaks that counteract sedentary work patterns.
Highlights
Shift from chaotic to coherent heart rhythms by focusing on appreciation and gratitude to enhance decision-making clarity
Practice the Wave of Relief technique to release accumulated stress through intentional breathing and imagery
Incorporate movement and nature exposure to counteract sedentary work patterns and stimulate creative thinking
Apply playfulness as a strategic tool for enhancing team creativity and communication in workplace environments
Use heart-focused breathing to regulate emotional responses during stressful meetings or challenging conversations
Develop daily coherence practices through scheduled reminders to build emotional resilience circuitry
Important Concepts and Frameworks
Heart Coherence — The smooth, efficient pattern of heartbeats associated with positive emotional states that enhances brain function and overall physiological efficiency | https://www.heartmath.org/
VYBRATO System — Bruce Cryer's methodology for creating positive emotional waves to counteract stress and overwhelm
Wave of Relief Technique — A breathing and imagery practice for releasing accumulated stress and tension
Coherence vs. Relaxation Distinction — Understanding that coherence represents focused alertness rather than passive relaxation, enabling high-performance under pressure
Tools & Resources Mentioned
HeartMath Institute — Research organization that pioneered heart coherence science and applications | https://www.heartmath.org/
Bruce Cryer's Platforms — Website, LinkedIn newsletter, and social media channels for accessing his teachings | https://brucecryer.com
Stanford University — Institution where Bruce teaches courses on creativity and performance | https://www.stanford.edu/
Dr. Joe Dispenza's Work — Research connecting heart coherence with brain function and healing | https://drjoedispenza.com/
Calls to Action
Set hourly reminders to practice heart-focused breathing combined with feelings of appreciation for someone or something you genuinely love
Implement the Wave of Relief technique whenever you notice tension building—breathe in as if receiving positive energy from the ocean, then exhale fully to release what you're holding onto
Schedule regular movement breaks throughout your workday, especially outdoors when possible, to counteract sedentary patterns and stimulate creative thinking
Practice making quieter team members feel heard in meetings by actively listening and acknowledging their contributions before moving to more vocal participants
Intentionally bring playful energy to challenging situations by finding moments of genuine human connection, even during routine interactions
Key Quotes
"Coherence is not relaxation. Coherence means you can be an EMT first responder and go into an incredibly dangerous situation and still function at a high level." — Bruce Cryer
"Playfulness is the wonder drug of creativity." — Bruce Cryer
"The heart's coherence is a huge booster because the heart's so powerful, it sets the tone in the body." — Bruce Cryer
"We have to let go more often. We have to, and there's something designed into our body called a sigh of relief." — Bruce Cryer
"Every human being, we're born to create life. Whether we create another life isn't even the point." — Bruce Cryer
Chapters 00:24 — Introduction to Heart Coherence and Emotional Physiology 01:22 — The Heart as Intelligence System Beyond Mechanical Pump 04:58 — Live Demonstration of Emotional Impact on Heart Rhythms 08:27 — Daily Practices for Building Heart Coherence Resilience 13:53 — Physiological Costs of Chaotic Heart Signals on Body Systems 18:43 — Applying Coherence Principles to Leadership and Team Dynamics 25:30 — Creativity, Playfulness and Reawakening Creative Expression 34:07 — Simple Movement and Nature Practices for Enhanced Creativity 37:28 — Introducing the VYBRATO System for Modern Stress Management 41:53 — The Wave of Relief Technique for Releasing Accumulated Tension 45:42 — Accessing Resources and Continuing the Coherence Journey
Creative design is a universal, success-critical process in many organizations and businesses: invent a new product; design a new kitchen; plan your office space; craft a new drink; make a movie; design a new wardrobe; build a house, road, or airport.
Design a complex approach requires vision, collaboration, execution, and an inspired team.
This episode features an expert on “Creative Design Process”: Jennifer Luce is the founder and principal of Luce et Studio, a collaborative architecture and design studio practicing at the intersection of architecture, art, and design. The firm’s cross-disciplinary approach supports creative explorations with a wide array of practitioners in various fields, including designers, artists, poets, craftspeople, and thinkers.
Teaming Up Conversations is powered by Stand Out International, and hosted by Simon Vetter. Simon is an executive leadership coach and CEO of Stand Out International, Inc., His expertise is in behavioral change and culture transformation. Simon trains managers and teams in Fortune 500 companies, guiding them toward better performance outcomes, increased collaboration, alignment, and accountability.
Discussion points:
How to bring various, interdisciplinary voices into the design process
Learnings from Mingei International Museum, San Diego, California
The astounding fundraising efforts at Mingei
Key challenges and obstacles in the design project
Career advice that propelled Jennifer’s design skills
Transferring the Luce et Studio collaboration method into business
Value of idols and mentors
Merging art and science
Jennifer’s Advice: Stay true to your vision and persevered
Helping Executive Teams Get Even Better
01 Jun 2025
00:39:51
How are you leading a team of amazing individuals? If your team ranks at 9 on the 10 scale, what does 12 look like? What does it take to help a strong, effective team get even better?
Join our discussion on how executive teams transform and move from good to great. My guest today is my good friend Larry Levin, a sought-after executive team facilitator, advisor, and leadership coach. Larry is the founder and president of The Levin Group LLC. He specializes in working with leadership teams in global Fortune 100 to mid-sized organizations in planning strategic direction and implementing critical business initiatives. His role is to help organizations focus on understanding the dynamics and capabilities of their executive teams. He utilizes custom assessments, team-based interventions, and coaching techniques to improve their effectiveness.
Teaming Up Conversations is powered by Stand Out International, and hosted by Simon Vetter. He is an executive leadership coach and CEO of Stand Out International, Inc., and his focus is on behavioral change and executive leadership coaching. Simon trains managers and teams in Fortune 500 companies, guiding them toward better performance outcomes, increased collaboration, alignment, and accountability.
Discussion Points
What a team is for, and why does a team exist?
Develop excellent, honest, and transparent dialogue in a top team
The importance of “collective intelligence”- the team as a whole is smarter than the smartest member
Challenges and struggles of ineffective, dysfunctional teams
Importance of building trust and establishing psychological safety
Three purposes of meetings: reporting, problem-solving, decision making
How to make executive decisions that everyone commits to (instead of complying)
Team consensus is okay if somebody would speak up if they disagree
Three questions any great leader asks
Examples of highly interdependent teams are medical teams, sports teams
Teams should continually ask, “How are we doing? and, “What does even better look like?”
Larry’s leadership advice:
(1) Be comfortable being uncomfortable
(2) Know what you don’t know
Last words: Ask that next question, go deeper, find out what’s not being said
Leading Positive Change with Humility
01 May 2025
00:46:35
How do you build a brand that captures people’s emotions? What can you do to lead organizational change? What does the wine-making process consist of? If you like to drink wine, you’ll love this episode.
Chris Fehrnstrom is the CEO of White Barn Consulting Group, LLC. He has a deep background in the wine industry and has served as the Chairman of the Wine Institute and the Chairman of the Wine Market Council. He was also the CFO and general manager of the startup, wine.com, Chairman of the Wine Market Council, Brand Manager at the E. & J. Gallo Winery, and even worked as the Business Unit Manager at Ocean Spray Cranberries. Today we’re talking about leadership, team development strategy, in addition to wine. I am your host, Simon Vetter.
Chris has amassed more than 25 years of work experience in both public and private corporations. He’s held the title of everything from President to Chief Financial Officer, to Chief Marketing Officer and has handled tasks that have included organizational design, executive leadership, brand marketing, and innovation. Chris has an MBA from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Teaming Up Conversations is powered by Stand Out International, and hosted by Simon Vetter. Simon is an executive leadership coach and CEO of Stand Out International, Inc., and his focus is on behavioral change and executive leadership coaching. Simon trains managers and teams in Fortune 500 companies, guiding them toward better focus, increased clarity, and personal balance. Simon is the author of “STAND OUT! Branding Strategies for Business Professionals,” and has a Masters in Business and Marketing (lic.rer.pol.) from the University of Bern, Switzerland. He is certified in DISC, CDR, Hogan, Opposite Strengths, viaEdge Leadership Agility, Strength Development Inventory, Alpha Leadership, and 360 Leadership Survey Tools.
Discussion Points
A time when Chris was a part of an engaging and motivating team
What to focus on to make a great product more accessible to a larger group
The uniqueness of working in the wine industry
Do’s and don’ts about acquiring and integrating a company
Endurance Leadership: Develop Mindset, Discipline and Mental Toughness
01 Apr 2025
00:46:53
How can today’s best leaders thrive in the face of challenges? How can you reframe that internal negative self-talk and harness the power of encouragement? We’re going to find out in this episode.
My guest today is a licensed psychologist, a successful Iron(woman) athlete, and a contributing author to “Voices for Leadership” who has applied her methods in her own life and has translated them to coaching families, teams, organizations, and communities around her. I’m so pleased to welcome my friend, Dr. Ann Bowers-Evangelista to today’s episode of the Teaming Up Conversations podcast. I am your host, Simon Vetter.
Dr. Bowers-Evangelista is an expert in “endurance leadership.” With 20+ years as a leadership consultant, coach, and endurance athlete, Ann helps clients discover their individual and collective potential to achieve challenging goals AND long-lasting success – a critical combination to meet today’s business and people needs.
Teaming Up Conversations is powered by Stand Out International, and hosted by Simon Vetter. Simon is an executive leadership coach and CEO of Stand Out International, Inc., and his focus is on behavioral change and executive leadership coaching. Simon trains managers and teams in Fortune 500 companies, guiding them toward better focus, increased clarity, and personal balance. Simon is the author of “STAND OUT! Branding Strategies for Business Professionals,” and has a Masters in Business and Marketing (lic.rer.pol.) from University of Bern, Switzerland. He is certified in DISC, CDR, Hogan, Opposite Strengths, viaEdge Leadership Agility, Strength Development Inventory, Alpha Leadership, and 360 Leadership Survey Tools.
Discussion Points
Ann’s introduction/background
What is it that draws you to Ironman competitions?
How Ann defines endurance
“High performance” is very different at Morgan Stanley vs. a tech startup
What is “winning” for you?
What does a successful year look like for you? Simon’s exercise in visualization
Training and developing your mindset
The mental rehearsing before an event that will help you see a successful outcome
Self-talk– how listening to yourself is different than talking to yourself
Encouraging others is an important part of your own success
What are some tips you can offer us for “self listening”
The difference between mental toughness and resilience
Ann’s four areas of coaching:
Anchoring your mindset
Excelling in execution
Foraging for discipline
Leveraging support
Who is your team? Ann tells us about her support system
Welcome to the inaugural episode of the Teaming Up Conversations podcast. I am your host, Simon Vetter. My guest today is Carolyn Maue, author of the new book, “Gourmet Leadership: Turn Up the Heat on Your Secret Sauce.” A fellow executive coach, Carolyn is the founder of The Maue Center, where she transforms teams, organizations and industry sectors by coaching them on innovative and inspiring leadership. Her mission is to “change the world one leader at a time.”
Are you searching for the perfect recipe of ingredients to create a harmonious, high-performance team? Join us for a discussion surrounding the sometimes intangible qualities of that “secret sauce” that can help leaders and teams strike the right balance for optimum performance.
Teaming Up Conversations is powered by Stand Out International, and hosted by Simon Vetter. Simon is an executive leadership coach and CEO of Stand Out International, Inc., and his focus is on behavioral change and executive leadership coaching. Simon trains managers and teams in Fortune 500 companies, guiding them toward better focus, increased clarity, and personal balance. Simon is the author of “STAND OUT! Branding Strategies for Business Professionals,” and has a Masters in Business and Marketing (lic.rer.pol.) from University of Bern, Switzerland. He is certified in DISC, CDR, Hogan, Opposite Strengths, viaEdge Leadership Agility, Strength Development Inventory, Alpha Leadership, and 360 Leadership Survey Tools.
Discussion Points
Carolyn’s introduction/background
How a passion for cooking food led to writing her book
What is the “secret sauce” of leadership?
Some examples of stand-out chefs in the book
Being honest with yourself about your skill level
A previous boss that Carolyn admired
What are some of the biggest challenges for the chefs you interviewed?
Carolyn shares some insights on teams and employee retention gleaned from some of the best chefs in the world
How to apply the lessons learned from these chefs to other teams in the workplace
A great leader identifies the special skill set in each of her employees
Many sectors are stuck in “Industrial Age” thinking
Examples of the best and worst teams and leaders Carolyn has worked with in her past
All good leaders should work to “catch people doing a great job” more often
Building Unbreakable Organizational Culture Through Clear Agreements
30 Mar 2026
00:24:49
Organizations often struggle with vague cultural definitions, misaligned values, and broken trust that undermine performance and employee retention. The fundamental problem isn't a lack of desire for strong culture, but rather missing frameworks for creating intentional, high-trust environments where people thrive and business objectives are consistently met.
Culture begins as a feeling—that immediate sense you get when entering any group of people. At its core, culture represents what happens in communication between two or more people, encompassing behaviors, beliefs, values, actions, and results. However, the most critical elements defining any culture are the two bookends: who you let in and who you kick out. This hiring and firing framework establishes the permeable boundary that shapes everything within an organization.
The breakthrough insight for building intentional culture lies in understanding agreements. Every interaction, from job descriptions to project deadlines, represents an agreement. Strong cultures are characterized by clear agreements that are consistently upheld, while weak cultures suffer from ambiguous expectations and broken commitments. This agreements framework provides the underlying structure that determines trust levels and operational effectiveness.
Vision and values operate in tandem within this cultural ecosystem. Vision answers the "what"—what are we doing here and where are we going—while values define the "how"—the behaviors and approaches we'll use to achieve that vision. Effective visions must be verifiably achievable within two to five years, allowing employees to see themselves as part of the accomplishment and maintain engagement.
Practical culture building involves both macro and micro strategies. At the macro level, hiring processes must reflect organizational values through behavioral interview questions that reveal authentic alignment. At the micro level, time synchronization emerges as a powerful universal agreement point—everyone shares the same 24 hours, making starting meetings on time, ending on time, and delivering on time a foundational cultural practice.
Employee retention connects directly to four happiness factors from positive psychology: feeling like you're making progress, having control over that progress, developing strong workplace relationships (particularly having a best friend at work), and pursuing purpose beyond money. Organizations that cultivate these four elements naturally retain talent and build resilient cultures.
Trust building requires specific practices, most notably the two-question feedback approach: first asking for general feedback, then specifically requesting "what you think I don't want to hear." This creates psychological safety for honest communication. Additionally, involving people in decisions before implementation—even if their input isn't used—ensures they feel heard and valued.
The hunter versus farmer distinction provides crucial insight for role alignment. Hunters thrive on new projects, innovation, and achieving specific objectives, while farmers excel at maintaining processes, consistency, and operational excellence. Attempting to force hunters into farmer roles or vice versa creates frustration and undermines performance.
Ultimately, financial success follows cultural excellence rather than preceding it. The Alcoa Steel example demonstrates how focusing on safety (a leading indicator) rather than revenue (a lagging indicator) created operational excellence that naturally improved financial performance while earning employee loyalty. This leading versus lagging indicator framework helps organizations prioritize cultural elements that drive sustainable business results.
Highlights
Culture is defined by who you let in and who you kick out—strategic hiring and intentional firing create cultural boundaries
Clear agreements consistently upheld build trust and operational effectiveness across all organizational levels
Synchronize teams using time as universal agreement point—starting and ending meetings on time demonstrates respect
Four happiness factors determine retention: progress, control, relationships, and purpose beyond money
Distinguish between hunters (project-focused innovators) and farmers (process-focused maintainers) for optimal role alignment
Focus on leading indicators like safety and customer experience rather than lagging financial metrics for sustainable success
Important Concepts and Frameworks
Culture Blueprint Framework — Systematic approach to building intentional organizational culture through defined values and practices | https://robertrichman.com/book-long/
Agreements Framework — Understanding that all organizational interactions represent agreements that must be clear and upheld
Four Happiness Factors — Positive psychology elements that determine employee satisfaction and retention: progress, control, relationships, and purpose
Hunter vs Farmer Distinction — Framework for aligning personality types with appropriate organizational roles
Leading vs Lagging Indicators — Strategic framework prioritizing cultural drivers over financial outcomes
Alcoa Steel — Case study demonstrating how focusing on safety (leading indicator) improved financial performance
Calls to Action
Audit your hiring process to ensure interview questions reveal authentic value alignment rather than asking directly about values
Implement time synchronization practices by starting and ending all meetings precisely on time as cultural foundation
Conduct agreement clarity exercises with teams to identify ambiguous expectations and establish clear commitments
Assess hunter versus farmer roles within your organization and realign responsibilities according to natural strengths
Establish regular feedback sessions using the two-question approach to build psychological safety and trust
Prioritize leading indicators like employee safety, customer experience, and team cohesion over lagging financial metrics
Key Quotes
"Culture is a feeling" — Robert Richmond
"Who we let in and who we kick out" — Robert Richmond
"Late is subjective, on time is not" — Robert Richmond
"Money can't be the focus as the strategy" — Robert Richmond
"Clear agreements and upholding them builds trust" — Robert Richmond
Chapters 00:00:25 — Introduction to Vision and Culture Foundations 00:01:21 — Defining Culture as Feeling and Agreements Framework 00:06:46 — Vision, Values and Their Strategic Intersection 00:09:13 — Practical Culture Building Strategies and Implementation 00:11:29 — Four Happiness Factors for Employee Retention
Mastering Endurance Performance Through Vision, Recovery, and Mental Rehearsal
28 Mar 2026
00:42:30
Endurance performance presents a compelling challenge that feels out of reach for most people, yet the strategies used by elite athletes offer powerful lessons for sustained leadership and peak performance. The key distinction lies between goal management and vision-driven motivation—while goals focus on execution and accountability, vision provides the purpose and intrinsic motivation needed to persist through challenges like training in pouring rain or recovering from significant setbacks.
Anne Bowers-Evangelista shares her personal journey of recovering from a hip-breaking bike accident while training for an Ironman, revealing how this experience forced her to confront identity questions and rediscover her deeper purpose beyond athletic achievement. This experience underscores the critical importance of having a vision that extends beyond specific outcomes, preventing what she calls "falling off the identity cliff" when external goals aren't met.
The conversation explores three essential frameworks for sustained performance: different types of goals (outcome, process, and performance goals), the neuroscience of focusing on your ideal self, and strategic disengagement for recovery. Research shows that when people focus on their ideal self, they access brain regions associated with creative thinking and solution-finding, while goal-setting activates more regulatory brain functions that narrow vision. This explains why organizations that excel at goal management often struggle with driving commitment and motivation.
Practical applications include multisensory visualization techniques used by elite athletes, where individuals mentally rehearse performances using all senses—sight, sound, smell, and physical sensations. This mental rehearsal activates mirror neurons and builds neural pathways that enhance actual performance. For leaders, this translates to better preparation for high-stakes presentations, difficult conversations, and team challenges. The episode also addresses the critical importance of recovery, contrasting athletes' intentional periodization with leaders' tendency toward continuous output, and offers strategies for implementing strategic disengagement in corporate environments.
Highlights
Distinguish between outcome goals (what you achieve) and process goals (what you do daily) to maintain focus on controllable actions
Use multisensory visualization to mentally rehearse performances, activating mirror neurons that enhance actual execution
Implement strategic disengagement periods for recovery, recognizing that continuous output diminishes long-term performance
Focus on your ideal self to access brain regions associated with creative thinking and broader perspective-taking
Develop pre-performance routines that prepare both mind and body for high-stakes situations through intentional sequencing
Cultivate team rituals and shared purpose to transform project execution into meaningful collective experiences
Llumos Consulting — Anne Bowers-Evangelista's professional website and consulting practice | https://llumos.com/
Calls to Action
Distinguish your outcome goals from process goals and focus daily energy on the controllable process elements
Schedule strategic disengagement periods in your calendar—whether brief pauses between meetings or dedicated recovery days
Practice multisensory visualization before important events by mentally rehearsing sights, sounds, smells, and physical sensations
Reflect on your ideal self through journaling or coaching conversations to access more creative brain functions
Develop team rituals that define your collective identity and performance culture beyond task completion
Implement pre-performance routines that prepare both physiological and psychological states for challenging situations
Key Quotes
"Goal setting can enhance your focus, but they also can lead to burnout if disconnected from broader meaning" — Anne Bowers-Evangelista
"Recovery is not a nice to have. It's a requirement" — Anne Bowers-Evangelista
"Think of leadership as the long game—your vision is your compass to the top" — Anne Bowers-Evangelista
"These people are not superhuman. They've just trained themselves mentally to go beyond" — Anne Bowers-Evangelista
"If you don't take your own leadership personally, no one else will" — Anne Bowers-Evangelista
Chapters 00:00 — Introduction to Endurance Performance and Leadership 01:35 — Why Endurance Feels Compelling Yet Out of Reach 03:21 — Personal Story: Identity Crisis After Injury 06:19 — Coaching Strategies and Goal Type Distinctions 09:24 — Vision vs. Goals: The Motivation Divide 12:05 — Uncovering Purpose Through Ideal Self Focus 16:09 — Recovery Strategies: From Athletics to Leadership 20:10 — Pre-Performance Routines and Multisensory Visualization 25:25 — Neuroscience of Mental Rehearsal and Mirror Neurons 28:16 — Team Performance Strategies and Collective Rituals 33:05 — Evidence: Purpose-Driven Leadership Outcomes 36:06 — Reflection Questions for Sustained Leadership 39:14 — Long-Game Perspective and Final Insights
Transforming Leadership Through Vision and Enterprise Agility
26 Mar 2026
00:55:18
In this powerful conversation, leadership expert Mike Richardson reveals how intentional vision and strategic agility can transform careers and organizations. Drawing from over three decades of experience as a CEO advisor and thought leader, Richardson shares his journey of purposeful pivots—from petroleum engineer to aerospace CEO to portfolio professional—demonstrating how clear vision creates career momentum even in turbulent times.
The discussion centers on the critical distinction between true vision statements and mission statements, emphasizing that a genuine vision must be a picture of the future you can unambiguously declare victory on. Richardson introduces the three essential questions that guide effective leadership: What do you want? How do you get it? How do you give as much of it away as possible? These questions form the foundation for both personal and organizational direction.
A key insight emerges around enterprise agility in an accelerating world of disruptive change. Richardson explains that most organizations mistake frenetic activity for true agility, which actually requires a harmonious integration of strategic rigor and entrepreneurial spark. He introduces the three levels of adaptability: post-adaptive (reactive, behind the curve), adaptive (on the curve), and pre-adaptive (ahead of the curve, ready for anything). True agility means operating in the pre-adaptive space while maintaining vision as your true north.
The conversation explores practical frameworks for developing whole-brain thinking, using visual tools like mind mapping and sketchbooks to crystallize vision. Richardson shares his personal method of using artist sketchbooks during strategic thinking sessions, which eventually evolved into the vision board that has guided his career for over 20 years. He emphasizes that leading with vision becomes more crucial, not less, as change accelerates, and that the ability to hold vision "just so"—not too tightly, not too loosely—is the key to navigating complexity.
Highlights
Transform reactive leadership into pre-adaptive agility that anticipates change before it happens
Distinguish between true vision statements and disguised mission statements for clearer direction
Develop whole-brain thinking to integrate analytical rigor with creative visioning
Build peer advisory networks to combat leadership loneliness and gain diverse perspectives
Create visual representations of your vision using mind mapping and sketch techniques
Balance short-term execution with long-term vision through harmonious integration
REF (Renaissance Executive Forums) — Peer advisory groups for CEOs and executives | https://ref.global/
Mind Mapping — Visual thinking technique for organizing ideas and creating connections | https://www.mindmapping.com/
Peer Advisory Boards — Confidential peer groups for leadership development and problem-solving
Calls to Action
Purchase an artist's sketchbook and dedicate time to visually map your professional vision without constraints
Audit your organization's vision statement to ensure it represents a true picture of future victory, not just a restated mission
Join or create a peer advisory group where you can discuss challenges confidentially with non-competitive colleagues
Practice whole-brain thinking by representing strategic problems visually before analyzing them analytically
Schedule quarterly "vision check-ins" to assess alignment between your current direction and your true north
Key Quotes
"Leaders are dealers in hope" — "Mike Richardson"
"If you don't know where you're going, any road will do" — "Mike Richardson"
"The work that I can't not do is facilitating peer forums" — "Mike Richardson"
"Agility is an AND proposition where you have the best of both worlds" — "Mike Richardson"
"Leading with vision becomes more crucial when things are speeding up" — "Mike Richardson"
Chapters 00:00 — Introduction to Vision-Driven Leadership 01:29 — Career Pivots: From Petroleum Engineer to Portfolio Professional 04:52 — The Vision Board Method: Sketching Your Future 09:57 — Quiet Time and Creative Thinking for Strategic Clarity 16:53 — The Three Questions Framework for Direction 20:37 — Enterprise Agility in Accelerating Change 27:06 — Abundance Mindset vs Scarcity Thinking 34:05 — Whole-Brain Approaches to Vision Development 38:23 — Complexity Management Through Strategic Moves 45:08 — Leadership Composure in Turbulent Times 52:08 — Advice for Next-Generation Leaders
That is a quote from today’s guest, Azim Khamisa. His personal life experiences taught him the practice of compassion, forgiveness, and peacemaking – something we and our world need more of.
Azim became a peace activist after losing his 20-year-old son Tariq to a tragic, gang-related murder in 1995. Out of unspeakable grief and despair, Azim chose the path of forgiveness and compassion rather than revenge and bitterness. This amazing choice led to the establishment of the Tariq Khamisa Foundation (www.TKF.org) and the subsequent forgiveness movement which has reached millions.
Azim Khamisa is an author, thought leader, and international inspirational speaker. He has received over 80 national and international awards for his work and has written several books, including The Secrets of the Bulletproof Spirit: How to Bounce Back from Life’s Hardest Hits. He also conducts public workshops and training programs in both the corporate world and the nonprofit sector to foster effective, purposeful, and impactful leadership through the process of forgiveness. Over the last 25 years, he has helped thousands of children, families, professionals, and management teams.
“Azim has had a positive impact on my life as I have applied the power of forgiveness in my own relationships with family, friends, and in business. It has given me a sense of relief, and joy and alleviated pain. I encourage everyone to take the concept of forgiveness to heart to heal ourselves, our relationships, families, and communities.” Simon Vetter
Discussion Points
The tragic specifics of his son’s murder in 1995
What the path of forgiveness can to do to individuals and communities
Some staggering statistics on kids killing kids in the U.S.
Four steps to find and practice forgiveness
Embrace the process of grief – practice healthy ways to work through grief
Forgiveness will change your life’s trajectory and possibly blow your mind!
Restorative justice and its societal impact
The five questions to ask in the restorative justice movement
How to apply forgiveness and restorative justice in the corporate world
Words to live by: “Forgiveness is the crown jewel of personal freedom”
Teaming Up Conversations is powered by Stand Out International, and hosted by Simon Vetter. He is an expert on behavior and culture change. He trains and enables teams to create high-performing organizations.
Building Trust Through Secure Base Leadership
01 Nov 2025
00:42:26
High-stress situations pushes people to the edge.
Some people rise the occasion, others fail.
What makes the difference?
Hostage negotiation tactics may at first seem a little too extreme, or intense, to be utilized at work. It’s exactly those situations that can teach us how to deal with tough and highly demanding situations. My guest, Geroge Kohlrieser, a leadership expert and a former hostage negotiator, believes that high-performing leaders are able to use these techniques in any personal or business relationship to ensure they are never a hostage to anyone, including themselves.
In this episode, we speak about the “secure base” concept. George gives us real-life examples and practical advice on how this may manifest in leaders and how to become a secure base for themselves in order to build an inspiring work environment.
George A. Kohlrieser, trained as an organizational and clinical psychologist, is a Distinguished Professor of Leadership and Organizational Behavior at IMD Business School in Switzerland. He is the founder of the High-Performance Leadership (HPL) Program, the flagship six-day program for experienced senior leaders. George is a frequent speaker at management conferences including the World Business Forum, the World Economic Forum, and the United Nations. He is a media commentator on issues related to leadership, conflict, aggression management, and hostage negotiation and has been a presenter at TEDx talks in both New York and Lausanne.
TEAMING UP Podcast is hosted by Simon Vetter. He is an executive leadership coach and expert on building compelling cultures and inspired workplaces.
Discussion Points
What is ‘secure base’ leadership?
Consequences when people don’t have a ‘secure base’
The brain is fundamentally negative – and what to do about it
How to successfully apply the ‘secure base’ concept in sales
Importance of understanding a person’s pain points
Techniques to calm down an angry person
Why do so many leaders often lack excellent listening skills?
Using the mind’s eye to play to win instead of not to lose
Affirmations to shift a mindset or emotional state
How to find a secure base at work: be open and emotionally available
Recognize the power of ‘choice’
Self-Esteem, Dignity and Trust
01 Oct 2025
00:44:38
How do we build a team culture in which teammates feel safe for risk-taking in the face of being seen as ignorant, incompetent, negative, or disruptive?
In a workplace with high psychological safety, everyone is confident that no one on the team will embarrass or punish anyone else for admitting a mistake, asking a question, or offering a new idea.
Today I’m talking with Maya Hu-Chan about the fundamental concept of “saving face”. “Face” represents one’s self-esteem, self-worth, reputation, and dignity. Saving face is often understood as saving someone from embarrassment. It is also about developing an understanding of the background, individuality, and perspective of others to discover the unique facets each person possesses. Without that understanding, we risk causing others to lose face without even knowing it.
Maya Hu-Chan is a globally recognized leadership educator, executive coach, and best-selling author. Her latest book “Saving Face: How to Preserve Dignity and Build Trust” is an Amazon #1 Best Seller. Maya has built a reputation for excellence in global leadership, cross-cultural management, diversity, and inclusion. Born and raised in Taiwan, Maya received her BA in journalism from National Chengchi University. She was an anchor for the China Broadcasting Company, then moved to the U.S. to earn a MA from The University of Pennsylvania’s Annenberg School for Communication. She lives in San Diego, California, with her husband and three children.
Teaming Up Conversations is powered by Stand Out International, and hosted by Simon Vetter. He is an expert on behavior and culture change. He trains and enables teams to create high-performing organizations.
Discussion Points
What does “saving face” mean? What happens when a person “loses face”?
Psychological safety – how can we foster it?
Microaggressions – often unintentional offenses caused by bias
Using the AAA model to work through bias
Impact versus intent – why is it important to understand the nuance
Life lessons from having raised triplets
Turning the Golden Rule into the Platinum Rule: Treat others as THEY wish to be treated
Wellbeing: Practice and Science
01 Sep 2025
00:53:48
According to a recent survey, 78% of people stated that the pandemic had a negative effect on their work life. 56% said it had a negative effect on their family life. The 2020 pandemic has forced people to reflect on our “do” culture and has raised the awareness and importance of health, balance, and overall well-being.
Our discussion today is centered on WELL-BEING: what is it, how do you maintain it, and what are effective practices. You will receive ideas, tips, and methods on how to begin or enhance your “Well-Being Journey”.
Today’s guest is my good friend Beth Schumaker with Bright Star Leadership. Beth is an expert in emotional intelligence, communication, and team, and leadership effectiveness. She has over 20 years of experience working with organizations such as Microsoft; American Airlines; Mayo Clinic; Centers for Disease Control; Kaiser Permanente; and many others.
Teaming Up Conversations is hosted by Simon Vetter, CEO of Stand Out International, Inc. As a behavioral change expert, Simon trains managers and leadership teams toward higher performance, increased collaboration, accountability, and engagement.
Discussion Points
What does “Well-Being” mean?
The PERMAH concept: Positive Emotion, Engagement, Relationships, Meaning, Accomplishment and Health.
Three levels of assessing Well-Being: Me, We, and Us
Beth’s personal daily habits for enhancing Well-Being
Establish healthy habits around positive emotions, relationships and meaning
How to show “appropriate” vulnerability as a leader
Team building activities for remote teams
Recommendations in improving mindfulness, eating habits and sleep hygiene
Advice on changing a habit: Start small and be kind to yourself!
Tragedy, Hardship and Joy
01 Aug 2025
00:46:24
Carlos Paulet’s LinkedIn profile reads: “I am a nerd, with social skills, that help people get results & enjoy their lives! Executive Coach, VR Pioneer, philanthropist & most important job in the world; Dad!”
Carlos is a multi-cultural international management consultant, and an expert in leadership metrics, technology, and team alignment. His focus is on supporting successful people to identify and empower the “X-Factors” that drive performance and results.
Join me for a conversation with my dear friend Carlos about his fascinating path through life. He has experienced many different cultures (Haiti, Peru, Brazil, and Spain) a wide variety of jobs (from Incan trail guide to American Airlines Operations Director to Executive Coach), and also more than enough hardship and tragedy. Losing his daughter to glioblastoma in 2015 shapes his worldview today, but as he tells it, you can eventually progress to feeling joy again, even after this kind of devastation.
Teaming Up Conversations is hosted by Simon Vetter. He is an executive leadership coach and CEO of Stand Out International, Inc. His focus is on cultural transformation and behavioral change, guiding companies and their executive teams toward increased collaboration, accountability and agility.
Discussion Points
What makes Carlos so unique
Being risk-open instead of risk-adverse
The life-changing devastation of losing his daughter
Recovering from the loss, starting a foundation
Advice to others when losing a child
The end of Carlos’ “hippie years” after disillusionment in Haiti
American Airlines job, grad school, and executive coaching
Similarities in different cultures, not differences, are important
Gaming and Virtual Reality: teaching teamwork and problem solving
Best tool in coaching: Getting feedback from others
The “asshole” client story
Advice to younger Carlos? Dare to make more mistakes, then learn from them
You can be the hero or the villain of your own story – be the hero!