The Escalation Podcast

with Edyta

The Escalation Podcast blends thoughtful solo reflections with candid conversations with high-performing leaders across banking, finance, law, and the wider corporate world. Each episode explores the psychology, culture, and unspoken dynamics of ambitious careers — from decision-making under pressure to identity, leadership, and the personal cost of success. Through lived experiences and honest dialogue, the podcast looks beyond titles and achievements to examine what it really means to build a career in an industry that shapes not only what we do, but who we become. This is where the professional and the personal meet — the human side of banking and finance.

  1. 18. Juni

    The Man Behind Cityboy (with Geraint Anderson)

    What if some of the traits we claim to dislike are actually the ones we reward most? What if narcissism, ruthlessness, manipulation and a lack of empathy aren't flaws in the system but features of it? In this episode of ‪@escalationpodcast‬ I sit down with Geraint Anderson — former City insider, bestselling author of Cityboy, satirist, broadcaster and one of the sharpest observers of modern business culture. Nearly twenty years ago, Cityboy pulled back the curtain on life inside the Square Mile, exposing the incentives, ambitions, excesses and unwritten rules that shaped an entire generation of finance professionals. It became a cult classic because it didn't just describe the City - it translated it. Now, with his new book, How to Con Friends and Manipulate People: The Subtle Art of Being a Total Psychopath, Geraint turns his attention to a broader question: Have we built a world where some of our worst traits have become professional advantages? Together, we explore: • Whether industries like finance attract psychopathic traits or quietly cultivate them • Why some people rise to the top while others plateau • The difference between competence, visibility and power • Whether modern organisations reward the behaviours they publicly condemn • How incentives shape culture more than mission statements ever will • The hidden cost of ambition and success • Why the people who appear to be winning aren't always paying the lowest price • Whether the City has fundamentally changed since the days of Cityboy or simply become better at disguising itself • What young professionals should protect in themselves before high-performance environments start changing them This is a conversation about systems. About incentives. About the uncomfortable gap between what we say we value and what we actually reward. Most of us like to believe that success is a product of talent, hard work and good judgement. But what if the story is more complicated than that? What if some of the behaviours that make organisations successful are the same ones that quietly erode trust, relationships and culture? And what happens when an entire industry starts mistaking those traits for strengths? Funny, provocative, insightful and at times uncomfortably familiar, this is a conversation that will resonate with anyone who has ever worked in banking, finance, law, consulting or any high-performance environment. Geraint's new book How to Con Friends and Manipulate People: The Subtle Art of Being a Total Psychopath (already Amazon's number 1 bestseller) is out on 2nd July and available for pre-order now - https://amzn.eu/d/0iilKZap Connect with Geraint: https://uk.linkedin.com/in/geraint-anderson-80602817 ⏱ Episode Chapters 00:00 Introduction — The Man Behind Cityboy 01:54 From Cambridge Graduate to City Insider 04:08 Falling Into Investment Banking 09:48 Imposter Syndrome, Insecurity & Success 10:53 Fast Money, Bonuses & Identity 15:53 Writing Cityboy in Secret 18:08 How Cityboy Was Written 20:39 Are the Human Piranhas Still Winning? 24:36 Culture Programmes, Bonuses & Corporate Behaviour 26:34 The New Book: Corporate Psychopaths Explained 28:26 Is Banking Rewarding the Wrong People? 30:34 When the Job Changes Who You Are 33:36 Self-Promotion, Politics & Playing the Game 35:04 Do Psychopaths Rise to the Top? 37:57 Can the Good Traits of Psychopathy Be Useful? 40:04 Protecting Your Humanity in High Finance 42:01 The Golden Handcuffs Trap 43:11 Why So Many People Never Follow Their Passion 44:51 The Biggest Lie in Banking 45:44 Pressure, Escalations & Perspective 47:54 New Book Launch & Final Reflections

    50 Min.
  2. 28. Mai

    The Human Side of Leadership in Global Finance with Sol Kuckelman

    On this episode of The Escalation Podcast, I’m joined by Sol Kuckelman, who most recently served as General Counsel for the Americas and APAC at Man Group plc, the world’s largest publicly listed asset manager - a role that placed him right at the intersection of financial markets, regulation, and strategy. We first crossed paths years ago when I was at Man, and I remember how clearly his reputation stood out - calm under pressure, commercially sharp, and known for balancing legal precision with commercial reality. A rare combination of emotional intelligence, clarity, and leadership. In this episode, we talk about what it really takes to deliver - and keep delivering - in roles of this scale. About leadership under pressure, the importance of emotional intelligence, and the lessons learned from navigating success and failure in high-stakes environments. I'm excited to share this incredibly thoughtful and grounded conversation with you. A huge thank you to Sol for bringing such depth, openness, and insight to this episode. Connect with him: https://www.linkedin.com/in/solomon-kuckelman/ ⏱ Episode Chapters 00:00 Introduction — Who Is Sol Kuckelman? 01:35 Building a Career at Man Group 02:33 Why Sol Chose Law & Finance 03:21 What Lawyers Really Do 04:35 Early Days in Private Practice 05:55 Joining Man Group During the Financial Crisis 07:48 Letting Go of Perfectionism 09:39 AI, Emotional Intelligence & Modern Lawyering 11:16 The Skills Needed to Become General Counsel 13:36 Stakeholder Management & Building Influence 14:39 Managing Egos & Difficult Negotiations 17:14 Negotiation, Relationships & Getting to Yes 18:49 What Makes a Great Leader? 20:24 Developing Teams & Creating Growth Opportunities 21:35 Failure, Resilience & Learning From Mistakes 24:05 Commercial Awareness vs Legal Semantics 25:45 Sol's Biggest Career Successes 28:08 Why Culture & Conviction Matter 30:12 Did Sol Ever Want to Quit? 33:33 Is the Grind Still Necessary? 35:31 Grind vs Intentional Career Building 37:52 Career Advice for Aspiring Lawyers 40:48 Sol's Negotiation Playbook 43:25 The Future of Finance & Asset Management 47:11 What’s Next for Sol Kuckelman? 48:03 Handling Pressure, Crisis & Escalations 51:49 Final Reflections & Closing Thoughts

    53 Min.
  3. 22. Mai

    Climbing Through the Ranks with Pascale Lebaillif

    On this episode of The Escalation Podcast, I’m joined by Pascale Lebaillif - a woman who’s lived at the very heart of global finance and now reshapes how leaders rise within it. Over two decades, Pascale climbed through the ranks of the world’s most powerful institutions - Crédit Agricole CIB, Morgan Stanley, Credit Suisse, and J.P. Morgan - leading global teams, steering strategy, and shaping the leadership pipelines that define corporate success. Today, she channels that hard-earned experience into her work as a Professional Growth Coach, guiding ambitious women to cut through the noise of corporate life, build real influence, and claim the recognition they’ve worked for. Beyond coaching, she’s also Partner and COO at Susten, an investment firm driving innovation in renewable energy. In this conversation, we uncover what it really takes to move from potential to power: the politics, the presence, and the mindset shifts that separate those who rise from those who stall. Connect with her: https://www.maximumpotentialcareers.com/ ⏱ Episode Chapters 00:00 Introduction — From Global Finance Executive to Career Coach 02:17 An Unexpected Start — Why Pascale Studied Law Instead of Medicine 03:30 Breaking Into Banking & Finance 04:49 Early Career Lessons & The Power of Supportive Teams 06:32 Career Turning Points — Morgan Stanley, London & New Opportunities 08:32 Building Teams & Learning Leadership at JP Morgan 10:45 The Mindset Shift Needed to Climb the Corporate Ladder 13:13 Women in Finance — Ambition, Perception & Double Standards 15:50 Work-Life Balance, Trade-Offs & Building a Support Network 19:30 Why Women Undersell Themselves 20:42 The “Good Girl Syndrome” & Confidence Challenges 21:38 Confidence vs Courage — The Key to Career Growth 22:43 Why We Chase Success & What Really Matters 24:13 Navigating Career Expectations from Family & Society 26:10 Is the Grind Essential for Success? 27:52 A Day in the Life of a COO 29:12 Focus, Productivity & the Pomodoro Technique 30:26 Remote Work vs Office Life — Where Do We Learn Best? 33:32 Managing Pressure in High-Performance Environments 35:04 Setting Boundaries Without Damaging Your Career 37:02 Building Confidence Through Action 38:34 Escalations, Conflict & Leadership Under Pressure 40:49 How Great Managers Handle Difficult Situations 42:14 Trust, Collaboration & the Human Side of Business 42:54 Self-Promotion Without Feeling Like You're Bragging 45:19 Final Reflections, Career Resources & Where to Find Pascale

    47 Min.
  4. 20. Mai

    The Language of Corporate Emails

    Corporate emails: the rules everyone knows, but nobody writes down … and the ones that can make or break your career. From CAPS LOCK panic to CC chaos, “Quick Question” subject lines that are never quick, and the dreaded “As per my last email”, this episode of The Escalation Podcast dives into the unspoken rules of email culture. We all know it’s not just what you write — it’s how people read it. A full stop feels cold. A smiley face feels sarcastic. And sometimes, silence feels louder than any reply. In this witty but insightful breakdown, I’ll explore: - Why email isn’t just communication — it’s interpretation. - The 10 unspoken rules of corporate email culture. - How perception (and the “perception bubble” ‪@jayshetty‬ talks about) shapes our inbox anxiety. - Why sometimes an email is just text on a screen … and sometimes, it’s corporate theatre in 11pt Arial. If you’ve ever hit Reply All by mistake, fallen for the recall button placebo, or overthought a “Thanks,” this one’s for you. 🎧 Listen in and laugh at the chaos — because in the end, the only power an email really has … is the power you give it. ⏱ Episode Chapters 00:00 Corporate Email — The Most Dangerous Language at Work 00:51 Why Emails Matter More Than We Admit 02:00 The Emails That Shape Your Reputation 03:26 Overthinking Tone, Timing & Perception 03:45 CAPS LOCK Means War 04:02 The CC Chain of Doom 04:31 Weaponised Email Timing 04:57 Subject Line Psychology 05:25 The CC Olympics & Reply All Chaos 06:00 Formatting as Passive Aggression 06:19 Email Signatures & Corporate Identity 06:54 The Ghost Emailer & The Power of Silence 07:28 Attachments — The Bermuda Triangle of Email 07:53 The Corporate Passive Aggressive Dictionary 08:22 Why Email Is Really About Perception 09:00 Don’t Take Your Inbox Personally 09:33 Awareness, Sanity Filters & Final Thoughts

    10 Min.
  5. 19. Mai

    What it Takes to Lead 300 Lawyers Across 3 Continents with Simon Welch

    Few leaders leave a mark on your career forever — Simon Welch is one of them. His CV is remarkable: senior roles spanning private banking, asset management, and investment banking. Most recently, he served as Global Head of Legal Sustainability at Credit Suisse AG, shaping the bank’s ESG strategy. Before that, he led global legal & compliance teams supporting more than 18,000 employees worldwide. Behind every big institution are leaders who quietly move the industry forward — Simon is one of those rare people. On this episode of The Escalation Podcast, we talk about what leadership at scale really means, navigating high-stakes decisions, and a few personal stories from our time working together. This one feels full circle for me — and I can’t wait to share it with you. Connect with him: https://www.linkedin.com/in/simon-welch-law/ ⏱ Episode Chapters 00:00 Introduction — Who Is Simon Welch? 01:22 Why Law? Simon’s Early Ambition 02:35 First Jobs & Learning to Deal With People 03:16 From Criminal Law to Banking & Finance 04:37 Breaking Into the Legal Profession 06:44 From Lecturer to Banking 08:24 First Days at Credit Suisse 10:01 Is Banking & Finance Worth It? 11:12 Managing 18,000 People 12:10 The Reality of the Grind 13:13 Building Culture & Leading Teams 15:13 Grind vs Hustle 15:52 The Cost of High Performance 17:27 What Makes a Great Leader? 18:02 Values, Difficult Decisions & Knowing When to Leave 20:07 Pressure, Stress & Banking Culture 22:46 Culture, Relationships & Lasting Impact 23:22 A Day in the Life of a Global General Counsel 24:51 Why Approachability Matters 25:36 Developing People & Future Leaders 26:35 Great Bosses vs Terrible Bosses 27:27 Career Growth & Escaping Pigeonholes 28:11 Creating Opportunities Through Hustle 29:22 Banking Culture, Diversity & Industry Challenges 31:36 Three Words That Define Banking 33:19 Credit Suisse Reflections 33:31 A Memorable Escalation 36:56 What’s Next for Simon Welch? 39:42 Final Reflections & Closing Thoughts

    40 Min.
  6. 2. Apr.

    Relational Capacity: The Missing Link to Thriving (with Kerry-Lyn Stanton-Downes)

    Your body knows before your brain does. The meeting hasn't started, but something in the room already tells you it's not safe to speak. In this episode, I sit down with Kerry-Lyn Stanton-Downes - relationship psychotherapist, advisor, TEDx speaker, and author of the forthcoming "Beyond Words: How to Lead People from Survival to Success" (May 2026) - to explore why workplace mental health can't be fixed with individual coping tools alone. Kerry-Lyn's work centers on a powerful idea: the brain is a relational organ, and psychological safety isn't something leaders declare - it's something people experience in the space between them. This conversation moves away from frameworks and into something more familiar, but rarely named. Together with Kerry-Lyn, we explore: • Why your nervous system reacts before logic has time to catch up • How people adapt their behaviour in real time depending on the room they’re in • Why “high performance” often sits on top of unspoken tension and misalignment • The difference between what organisations say about culture and what people actually experience • Why many workplace challenges labelled as “individual issues” are, in reality, relational dynamics playing out • What happens to communication, trust, and decision-making when relational safety breaks down • And why the most important leadership skill isn’t technical, but something far less visible This is not a conversation about fixing people. It’s about seeing the system - and our place within it - more clearly. We're living through something most of us can feel but few are naming. What Kerry-Lyn calls "relational poverty". Not only in workplaces, but in all the spaces in between us. We're more connected than ever, surrounded by an endless flow of information, yet somehow the human gets forgotten. The relationships we often glorify - because they fill a certain void - feel weaker than ever. The quality of our connection is measured in likes, views and follows. And its not because we're not capable. It's because we've been focusing on the wrong kind of connection. The future exists - between us. Connect with her: Website: www.berelational.co.uk LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/kerry-lyn-stanton-downes Substack: Kerry-Lyn Stanton-Downes | Substack Newsletter: https://www.berelational.co.uk/#newsletter ⏱ Episode Chapters 00:00 Introduction — Who is Kerry-Lyn Stanton-Downes? 01:35 Mental Health in High Performance — Why Spending Isn't Working 02:26 Relational Poverty — The Real Root of the Crisis 04:22 Emotional Intelligence vs Relational Intelligence 05:13 Kerry-Lyn's Origin Story 06:50 The Brain as a Relational Organ 08:20 Patterns in High Pressure Environments 10:31 What Makes a Good Leader Today? 11:27 AI & the Relational Competitive Edge 13:27 Fixing vs Reorienting Organisations 16:29 Bridging the Generational Gap 17:19 The Eight Principles of Relational Capacity 24:17 Most Leadership Challenges Are Relational, Not Transactional 25:50 Three Practical Steps for High Stakes Meetings 27:29 Kerry-Lyn's TEDx Experience 30:03 "The Future Exists Between Us" 31:55 Beyond Words — The Book 35:14 Reading the Room — Beyond the 10% of Words 38:06 Thinking, Emotion & Body — The Three Functions 43:00 How to Expand Your Relational Capacity 46:31 Managing Emotional & Transactional Team Members 49:46 Listening vs Hearing 50:24 Escalations & Relational Capital 52:07 What Is Your Escalation Really in Service Of?

    54 Min.
  7. 5. März

    Derivatives Expert Allan Yip: 30 Years Inside the Industry

    In this episode of The Escalation Podcast, I sit down with Allan Yip, a derivatives lawyer whose career spans more than three decades across private practice and global investment banks.   Allan began at the Bar before moving into banking and finance law at Clifford Chance during the industry’s expansion years. He later moved in-house at JPMorgan Chase and Bear Stearns, experiencing first-hand the shockwaves of the 2008 crisis, before returning to private practice as a partner at Simmons & Simmons.   He was at Bear Stearns when it collapsed. He was advising clients when Lehman Brothers fell. And he went on to build a leading buy-side derivatives practice during one of the most heavily regulated periods in financial history.   This is a conversation about defining moments and what they reveal.   We discuss: The realities of moving between in-house and private practice Why regulation is always reactive How negotiation is won through mindset, not ego The discipline of answering the question, not hiding behind “it’s standard” Managing escalation without retaliation Leadership that invites challenge rather than demands agreement   At its core, this episode is about longevity- what it takes to sustain a career in high-pressure environments without losing perspective, professionalism, or humility.   A huge thank you to Allan for sharing not only his technical insight, but the principles that shaped a remarkable career.   About Allan Yip:  Allan is a specialist in prime brokerage, derivatives, derivatives regulation and structured products. He advises hedge funds and institutional asset managers on all aspects of their trading relationships with market counterparties, including prime brokerage arrangements, derivatives documentation and broader trading agreements. He also provides specialist regulatory advice on derivatives and trading matters, including EMIR, SFTR, BRRD and BMR. Allan is a regular speaker and panelist at industry conferences, including those organized by International Swaps and Derivatives Association (ISDA) and Alternative Investment Management Association (AIMA), where he shares insight on derivatives markets and regulation.   Connect with him:  LinkedIn- https://www.linkedin.com/in/allanyip/?originalSubdomain=uk   ⏱ Episode Chapters 00:00 Introduction – Allan Yip’s 30-Year Legal Career 01:00 From the Bar to Banking Law 02:00 Growing Up & Falling Into Law 04:00 Joining Clifford Chance & Discovering Derivatives 06:00 Career Positioning & Work-Life Balance 09:00 The 2008 Financial Crisis – Bear Stearns & Lehman Collapse 12:00 Rebuilding After the Crisis 15:00 In-House vs Private Practice 17:00 Has the Industry Learned Since 2008? 20:00 Service, Humility & Career Lessons 23:00 Best Advice: “Great Change Comes Great Opportunity” 25:00 Why You Should Never Burn Bridges 26:00 Secrets to Successful Negotiation 29:00 Sun Tzu & Strategic Concessions 31:00 Handling Escalations Under Pressure 35:00 What Makes a Great Leader? 38:00 Final Reflections & Closing Thoughts

    40 Min.

Info

The Escalation Podcast blends thoughtful solo reflections with candid conversations with high-performing leaders across banking, finance, law, and the wider corporate world. Each episode explores the psychology, culture, and unspoken dynamics of ambitious careers — from decision-making under pressure to identity, leadership, and the personal cost of success. Through lived experiences and honest dialogue, the podcast looks beyond titles and achievements to examine what it really means to build a career in an industry that shapes not only what we do, but who we become. This is where the professional and the personal meet — the human side of banking and finance.