Auto Ethnographer with John Stech

John Stech

The Auto Ethnographer is a deep dive into the human experience of crossing cultures—what it feels like to live, work, lead, and belong in places far from home. Hosted by global executive and cultural storyteller John Jörn Stech, the podcast explores the realities of expatriate life, intercultural communication, and the messy, meaningful process of adapting to new norms, new languages, and new ways of seeing the world. John brings more than three decades of international experience across the United States, Germany, Egypt, Russia, Vietnam, and Thailand. His career in global leadership has placed him inside boardrooms, factories, classrooms, and communities on five continents—each move reshaping his understanding of identity, trust, collaboration, and what it truly means to work across cultures. While the show began with roots in the global automotive industry, its focus has evolved. Today, The Auto Ethnographer is a culture‑first exploration of international life, featuring voices from business, education, mobility, technology, the arts, and the broader expat and repat communities. This is a podcast for anyone navigating the complexities of global work: expats building careers abroad, professionals managing intercultural teams, digital nomads learning to belong in new places, and globally curious listeners who want to understand how culture shapes human behavior. Through candid storytelling and thoughtful conversation, the show reveals how people adapt, thrive, and occasionally stumble as they bridge cultural boundaries. What You’ll Hear – Conversations with expats, repats, immigrants, and locals who live and work between cultures – Stories of adaptation, culture shock, misunderstanding, humor, and personal growth – Insights into intercultural leadership, cross‑border collaboration, and global teamwork – Reflections on identity, belonging, and the emotional realities of living overseas – Occasional automotive stories—now framed through a cultural and human lens rather than a technical one Why “Auto Ethnography”? Inspired by the academic method of autoethnography, the podcast uses personal experience as a lens for understanding broader cultural truths. John and his guests explore how values, assumptions, communication styles, and social norms shape the way people work together across borders. These stories illuminate the invisible forces that influence trust, conflict, leadership, and connection in multicultural environments. Who This Podcast Is For – Expats, repats, and global professionals – Intercultural leaders and international managers – Students of global mobility, cross‑cultural psychology, and international business – Anyone fascinated by how humans adapt to new cultural landscapes About John Jörn StechJohn has spent his life navigating cultural transitions—leading teams, launching brands, and building bridges across borders in countries like the United States, Latin America, Russia, Egypt, Vietnam, and Thailand.  He is filled with curiosity about cultures and how they interact since he was a child born in Germany and immigrated to the USA at an early age. His journey is an ongoing experiment in adaptation, one he now shares with listeners through honest storytelling and globally informed insight. The Auto Ethnographer brings those experiences to you—one culture, one conversation, one story at a time.

  1. EP 53:  Ending My Show to Take On Ageism

    3 gg fa ·  Video

    EP 53: Ending My Show to Take On Ageism

    This is the final episode of The Auto Ethnographer podcast. After 53 episodes exploring the human stories of expats, cross-cultural professionals, and the quiet logic behind unfamiliar behavior, I am closing this chapter. Not because the stories stopped mattering. Because the urgency has shifted. In this final episode, we take a global tour of ageism. The numbers are stark: USA: 64% of workers over 50 have experienced age discrimination (AARP). 22% report being actively pushed out of their jobs. Germany: 90% of older job seekers encounter age discrimination during interviews. The working-age population will shrink by 4.3 million by 2036. China: The "Curse of 35" means age discrimination begins at 35, not 50 or 60. The civil service hiring age limit was raised from 35 to 38 in 2025 for the first time in three decades. Japan: 30% of the population is 65 and older. In 2024, adult diapers outsold baby diapers. We hear from Dan Pontefract, author of "The Future of Work Is Grey," who was told by a Bank of Japan economist: "When you go back to Canada, make sure you tell your people not to do what Japan is doing." He calls this the Age Debt Crisis — spanning demographic disruption, ageism, longevity, and the loss of institutional wisdom when older workers are pushed out. And we return to a past conversation with HR recruiter Kelvin Nguyen, who describes how Vietnam — a culture that once venerated age and experience — has seen the threshold for being "too old" drop from 45 to 35 in just a few years. Technology and AI have reshuffled the value equation. Efficiency now overrides tradition. I started Ageism Survival Guide because I watched scores of friends and peers pushed out of work in 2025. Professionals over 50, with decades of experience, finding themselves on the outside of a system they spent their lives building. They need practical help adapting to a new life over 50 and navigating what a next career might look like. The Auto Ethnographer taught me how to listen across cultures. Ageism Survival Guide is where I apply that listening to people who need answers now. Thank you to every listener who has been part of this journey. The curiosity, the cultural humility, and the belief that human stories transcend borders — those values are not going anywhere. They are moving with me. I hope you will come along. Ageism Survival Guide: Homepage: https://www.ageismsurvivalguide.com/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@AgeismSurvivalGuide LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/ageism-survival-guide Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ageismsurvivalguide Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ageismsurvivalguide/ To learn more about Dan Pontefract: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/danpontefract/ Homepage including book listing: https://www.danpontefract.com/the-future-of-work-is-grey/ To learn more about Nguyen Ngo The Cong (Kelvin): LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/congngoheadhunt/

    37 min
  2. EP 52: Stranger in My Own Land: Reporting Back from the USA

    29 mag ·  Video

    EP 52: Stranger in My Own Land: Reporting Back from the USA

    Four years ago, I moved abroad. Three weeks ago, I went back for a visit. In Episode 51, I told you I was returning to the United States with a certain degree of hesitation. I had some honest apprehensions about what I would find. And I promised to bring you back a full report. This is that report. After four years of living overseas, returning to your home country is not the simple homecoming you might expect. The country changes while you are away. You change too. And those two movements do not always move in the same direction. Using the W-curve model of intercultural adjustment as our framework, this episode explores what happens when a changed self steps back into a changed place. What your fresh eyes confirm. What surprises you. And what simply stands out. I focused on three areas. The first was scale. The United States is large. But after four years calibrated to life in Bangkok, just how large? From Jazz Fest in New Orleans to the roads of Pennsylvania, the answer became clear very quickly. The second area was social interaction. Am I still the same person in an American social environment? Has four years abroad reshaped how I engage, observe, and respond? The third area was the political and cultural atmosphere. From the news and social media, you would imagine two countries. But what does the ground actually look like? I will not give away what I found in this description – you will have to watch!  But I will tell you that some of what I expected was confirmed. And some of what I expected most, was not. This episode is for anyone living abroad, planning to move abroad, or simply curious about what it means to return home after a long time away. Reverse culture shock is real. But so is the clarity that distance gives you. LEARN MORE Website: https://auto-ethnographer.com Connect with me on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-auto-ethnographer YOUR TICKET ABROAD Thinking about making the move overseas? My comprehensive video course, Your Ticket Abroad, was built to answer the questions I wish someone had answered for me. Filmed in Bangkok, Thailand. Available now at: https://www.auto-ethnographer.com/your-ticket-abroad-course

    22 min
  3. Reverse Culture Shock: Why Coming Home Is Harder Than Leaving

    29 apr ·  Video

    Reverse Culture Shock: Why Coming Home Is Harder Than Leaving

    What does it feel like to return home for a visit after years of living abroad? In this episode of The Auto Ethnographer, John Jörn Stech prepares to board a plane back to the United States — his home country — and discovers something unexpected: he is approaching the trip the way he would approach a country he has never visited before. With research, anticipation, and a degree of hesitation he did not expect to feel. "Returning home is not that simple, comfortable event that everyone around you expects it to be. It's one of the more quietly demanding experiences in the life of a global professional. And almost nobody talks about it." Drawing on the W-curve model of intercultural adjustment (Gullahorn & Gullahorn, 1963), this episode explores reverse culture shock — why coming home can be as disorienting as moving abroad, and why almost nobody prepares for it. When your mental image of home freezes at the moment you leave, and you spend years absorbing a different cultural logic, you return not as the person who left — but as someone genuinely changed. "You're not bringing your old self back to an unchanged place. You're bringing a changed self back to a changed place. And the collision of those two changes is what creates reverse culture shock." Three anticipations shape this episode: the physical scale of the United States after years in Bangkok, the warmth and openness of American social interaction seen through recalibrated eyes, and the challenge of stepping back into a country in the middle of a deeply public conversation about its own values — without falling into nostalgia or reflexive rejection. "The stereotypes that are the most difficult to resist are not the ones about unfamiliar cultures. They are the ones about the culture that formed you — the ones you carry without even knowing that you are carrying them." John Jörn Stech also shares the deeply personal dimensions of this homecoming: attending the New Orleans Jazz Festival for the first time, celebrating his daughter's graduation from medical school, and visiting his son and future daughter-in-law in their first home together. The Auto Ethnographer will pause for 2 to 3 weeks. New episodes return in the second half of May. 🎓 Ready to make the move abroad? Your Ticket Abroad — the complete guide for global professionals: https://www.auto-ethnographer.com/your-ticket-abroad-course 🌐 The Auto Ethnographer: https://www.auto-ethnographer.com/ 🔗 Connect with the Auto Ethnographer on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-auto-ethnographer 🔗 Connect with John Jörn Stech on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-stech-drive-electric/

    20 min
  4. People Are Not Their Governments - the danger of stereotypes and dehumanization

    17 apr ·  Video

    People Are Not Their Governments - the danger of stereotypes and dehumanization

    Fifty episodes in, and the conversation that matters most is still the simplest one: people are not their governments. Nations are not monoliths. Thank you to every guest who shared their story, every listener who kept showing up, and to my wife, Bernie, whose support made this channel possible from the very beginning. Episode 50 of The Auto Ethnographer returns to the idea that drives everything here. In a media environment that routinely collapses entire cultures into headlines and soundbites, it is worth slowing down to ask what we lose when we do that. We lose individual human beings. We lose nuance. And we lose the kind of truth that genuine cross-cultural understanding depends on. Through two personal stories, including a candid exchange with a Russian friend named Oleg and a sidewalk dinner with a Vietnamese family in Hanoi, this episode examines the psychology behind cultural stereotyping, the role media and physical distance play in flattening human complexity, and the universal human values that connect people across borders, regardless of the governments that claim to represent them. Most expats and global professionals already sense this. When you sit at someone's kitchen table in a foreign country, politics fades quickly. What remains is shared humanity: parents who want their children to thrive, elders who want peace, young people who want opportunity. These are not Western values. They are not tied to any religion, ideology, or passport. They are human values. This episode is for expats living and working abroad, third culture kids, global professionals, and anyone who believes that lived cross-cultural experience reveals truths that headlines simply cannot. If intercultural communication, cultural intelligence, and understanding the world beyond your own borders matter to you, this conversation belongs on your list. Governments act. People live. The more we hold onto that distinction, the harder it becomes to hate, and the easier it becomes to hope. 🌐 The Auto Ethnographer homepage: https://www.auto-ethnographer.com/ ✈️ Your Ticket Abroad — Moving Overseas Course: https://www.auto-ethnographer.com/your-ticket-abroad-course 💼 The Auto Ethnographer on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-auto-ethnographer

    16 min
  5. Your Nationality Is Only One Layer of Who You Are. Pt 2 of 2 ft. Dr. Jerome Dumetz

    8 apr ·  Video

    Your Nationality Is Only One Layer of Who You Are. Pt 2 of 2 ft. Dr. Jerome Dumetz

    What if the cultural frameworks your organization relies on are actually reinforcing the very stereotypes they were designed to eliminate? In Part 2 of our conversation with Dr. Jerome Dumetz, cross-cultural management expert and author of 199 Cross Cultural Case Studies, we explore why real-life case studies offer something no theoretical model can: the full, messy, human context of intercultural work. Dr. Dumetz makes a bold argument. Widely used models such as Hofstede, Trompenaars, and the Lewis Triangle, while historically significant, risk generating stereotypes when applied without context. His answer is a carefully curated collection of 199 one-page, real-world case studies documenting cultural misunderstandings, adaptation moments, and professional breakthroughs from around the globe. Developed in collaboration with Fons Trompenaars and Craig Storti, the book bridges academic intercultural theory with the lived experience of expats and global professionals. One of the most thought-provoking ideas in this episode is the concept of multiple cultural identities. Your nationality, what Dumetz calls your "passport culture," is just one layer of who you are professionally. Where you studied, which industry you entered, and the department where your career began can shape your professional worldview far more deeply than the country on your ID. For expats, international managers, and cross-cultural trainers, this reframing changes how intercultural work gets done. We also explore the growing role of AI in cross-cultural management. Dumetz acknowledges AI's usefulness in translation and language support, but raises critical questions about the cultural bias embedded in AI models and their inability to replicate the nuanced, questioning mindset that genuine intercultural competence requires. His most memorable advice for anyone stepping into a new cultural environment? Slow down. Pause before reacting. And instead of asking "What should I do?", turn to the people around you and ask: "What would you do?" This small shift in framing opens the door to genuine cultural learning and more authentic integration abroad. Whether you are an expat navigating life in a new country, a manager leading a cross-cultural team, or an HR specialist building intercultural training programs, this conversation offers both intellectual depth and practical, grounded insight. 🔗 Connect with Dr. Jerome Dumetz: 🌐 Website: JEROME DUMETZ WEBSITE 📚 Get the Book, 199 Cross Cultural Case Studies: LINK TO AMAZON US BOOKSTORE  (Also available on other Amazon international sites) ▶️ YouTube:  JEROME DUMETZ YOUTUBE CHANNEL 💼 LinkedIn:  JEROME DUMETZ LINKEDIN PROFILE 📩 Free Case Study Excerpt (comment on his LinkedIn post): LINK TO LINKEDIN POST Learn more about the Auto Ethnographer:  https://www.auto-ethnographer.com Want to move abroad but the process seems to imposing? Visit the Auto Ethnographer's Your Ticket Abroad on-line course. The course offers 28 videos and a 54-page checklist guide for tacking the challenge of moving abroad, whether alone, with a partner, or with an entire family. Visit the course page here: Course: "Your Ticket Abroad" — The Auto Ethnographer

    39 min
  6. Dr. Jerome Dumetz on Cross-Cultural Management, the Illusion of Blending In & Intercultural Competence Pt 1 of 2

    2 apr ·  Video

    Dr. Jerome Dumetz on Cross-Cultural Management, the Illusion of Blending In & Intercultural Competence Pt 1 of 2

    Have you ever moved to a new country, convinced you'd adapted perfectly — only to discover the cultural gap was hiding in plain sight? In Part 1 of this two-part conversation, The Auto Ethnographer sits down with Dr. Jerome Dumetz, one of the world's most respected voices in intercultural management and cross-cultural communication. A self-described "consulting professor," Jerome Dumetz has spent decades bridging the gap between academic theory and the real-world management challenges faced by international professionals. As Vice Rector for International Affairs at a leading Czech university, and having lectured at approximately 25 universities across Europe, Russia, North America, and Asia, he brings rare front-line insight into what it truly means to work, lead, and live across cultures. 🔑 IN THIS EPISODE (Part 1): What it means to be a "consulting professor" — blending academic rigor with hands-on corporate consulting Why cultural adaptation comes down to two factors: individual cultural competence and the cultural gap between your home and host country The dangerous "Illusion of Blending In" — why moving to a similar culture can produce greater culture shock than relocating somewhere radically different The "elephant in the room full of mice" — how senior expat executives are often shielded from authentic cultural friction by their position and status Why many cross-cultural trainers are still using models from the 1980s — and why that's a problem for today's global professionals False cognates and cross-cultural miscommunication: real-world examples from French, Spanish, German, and Russian contexts Dr. Dumetz's own expat journey: France → Netherlands → USA → Canada → Russia📚 CONNECT WITH DR. JEROME DUMETZ: Post a comment on Jerome’s LinkedIn post and receive a FREE copy of sample cases: https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7442114253852921856/ 🌐 Website: www.crossculturalstudies.org 📖 His book on Amazon US (also available in other Amazon country sites): https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GPDJCKXJ 🌐 LinkedIn page: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jerome-dumetz/ 🌐 Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@jdumetz-consultingprofessor 🎙️ ABOUT THE AUTO ETHNOGRAPHER: The Auto Ethnographer explores the human stories of expats and global professionals navigating life and work across cultures. From boardrooms to back alleys, these conversations uncover universally applicable lessons that span borders, oceans, and cultures. Whether you're planning your first move abroad or you're a seasoned global citizen, there's something here for you. Learn more about how to move overseas by taking the Your Ticket Abroad class by the Auto Ethnographer. More information can be found here:  Course: "Your Ticket Abroad" — The Auto Ethnographer 🔔 Subscribe and don't miss Part 2 of this conversation with Dr. Jerome Dumetz — coming soon!

    30 min
  7. The 1 Expat Mistake: Over‑Relying on First Impressions

    27 mar ·  Video

    The 1 Expat Mistake: Over‑Relying on First Impressions

    🌍 Your first impression of a new country isn't just incomplete — it might be completely wrong. In this episode of The Auto Ethnographer, host John Jörn Stech breaks down the 6 powerful psychological dynamics that distort your early perceptions when you move abroad — and why most expats don't realize it's happening until they've already made costly misinterpretations. Moving overseas is one of the most transformative decisions you'll ever make. But those first few weeks? Your brain is misleading you. The thrill of a new city, the warmth of strangers, the beauty of everything unfamiliar — all of it is filtered through a cultural lens you didn't even know you were wearing. What feels like clarity is often bias in disguise. Whether you're planning a move abroad, already living the expat life, or fascinated by cross-cultural psychology and intercultural communication, this episode will change how you read your early experiences in any foreign country. 🔍 6 DYNAMICS THAT DISTORT YOUR FIRST IMPRESSIONS ABROAD ✔️ The Honeymoon Phase — Why everything feels like paradise at first, and why that's the danger ✔️ Cultural Filters — How your home country's values color everything you observe in a new culture ✔️ Surface vs. Deep Culture — Why expat life only exposes the tip of the cultural iceberg ✔️ The Outlier Problem — Why one encounter does not represent an entire nation or its people ✔️ The Hidden "Why" — The cultural values behind behaviors that seem offensive or strange ✔️ Self-Fulfilling Prophecies — How a first impression hardens into a belief that blocks real connection 🌐 REAL EXAMPLES FROM 5 COUNTRIES 🇷🇺 Russia: Why serious faces don't mean unfriendly people 🇹🇭 Thailand: The hidden social pressure beneath the famous Thai smile 🇺🇸 United States: Why American friendliness confuses the world 🇩🇪 Germany: How blunt feedback is actually a sign of deep respect 🇪🇬 Egypt: Why "chaotic" streets are rooted in hospitality and human connection 📚 RESOURCES 🎓 Your Ticket Abroad Course — Visas, logistics, housing, AND how to decode cultural behavior so you can build a meaningful, sustainable life overseas from day one: 👉 https://www.auto-ethnographer.com/your-ticket-abroad-course 🌐 The Auto Ethnographer — Homepage: 👉 https://www.auto-ethnographer.com/ 🤝 JOIN THE COMMUNITY 📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/auto.ethnographer/ 💼 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-auto-ethnographer 📘 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61567929329364 📌 New episodes every week on expat psychology, cultural intelligence, and the reality of building a life abroad. Subscribe so you never miss one. #ExpatLife #MovingAbroad #CultureShock #LivingOverseas #CrossCulturalPsychology #FirstImpressions #ExpatTips #MoveOverseas #CulturalDifferences #AutoEthnographer #InterculturalCommunication #ExpatCommunity #RelocationTips #CulturalIntelligence #CultureShockRecovery

    15 min
  8. EP 46 Melissa Rodway: 15 Years Later, She Finally Wrote the Book About Her Journey

    19 mar ·  Video

    EP 46 Melissa Rodway: 15 Years Later, She Finally Wrote the Book About Her Journey

    Melissa Rodway left Toronto at 35 for a months-long backpacking trip across Southeast Asia — and came home a different person. Fifteen years later, those raw, unfiltered emails she sent from the road became her travel memoir, The People You Meet. In this episode of The Auto Ethnographer, host John Jörn Stech sits down with Melissa to unpack the life-changing friendships, cultural shocks, and hard-won lessons from her journey through Thailand, Laos, Cambodia, Vietnam, and China. Melissa didn't plan to write a book. For over a decade, those emails sat untouched — a time capsule from her younger self. It took a series of personal losses, including the passing of her mother, to push her to finally turn those vivid travel memories into something lasting. The result is a deeply personal memoir that captures the beauty of temporary friendships formed on the road, the kind of connections that burn bright and then disappear, yet somehow stay with you forever. In this conversation, Melissa opens up about the tension between being a travel observer and a true participant. She explores the ethical dilemmas of animal tourism in Thailand, the discomfort of photographing strangers, and what it felt like to become "the human zoo" as a foreigner in rural China — where entire villages had never seen a Western face. She shares a moving story about a family in Battambang, Cambodia, who invited her into their home for a meal despite having almost nothing, and how that moment of radical generosity reshaped her understanding of privilege back in Canada. We also dive into the lasting emotional impact of visiting Cambodia's Killing Fields, and how confronting the history of the Khmer Rouge gave Melissa a deeper appreciation for the resilience of the Cambodian people. From a spontaneous dinner with strangers in Hanoi to navigating a Chinese queueing cultre with nothing but hand gestures, this episode is packed with the kind of unscripted human moments that no guidebook can prepare you for. Melissa's advice for travelers of any age: slow down, say hello, and let go of the itinerary. The best experiences abroad don't come from ticking off landmarks — they come from the people you meet along the way. Whether you're an expat navigating life in a foreign country, a backpacker planning your first solo trip, or simply someone who craves stories about cross-cultural connection and living abroad — this episode will inspire you to travel with more purpose, more curiosity, and more kindness. 📖 Get Melissa's Book — The People You Meet: https://www.amazon.ca/People-You-Meet-Interesting-Characters/dp/106904430X/ref=sr_1_1?crid=1S1BKT0SGLCI8&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.TlZrHy0V02MWPGcybuwtIZ36r168mkudXDX-0BnO-PY.RMq3iGOHHwk_fUKjKAbvOpOHqcoGuXa_ytyCwKSY9wE&dib_tag=se&keywords=the+people+you+meet+melissa+rodway&qid=1751586775&sprefix=the+people+you+meet%2Caps%2C99&sr=8-1 🌐 Learn More About Melissa Rodway: https://flyrodway.com/2025/07/03/travel-memoir-the-people-you-meet/ 🎓 Ready to Move Abroad? Take the Course: Your Ticket Abroad — The Complete Expat Video Course https://www.auto-ethnographer.com/your-ticket-abroad-course 🎙️ More from The Auto Ethnographer: https://www.auto-ethnographer.com Subscribe now!

    50 min

Descrizione

The Auto Ethnographer is a deep dive into the human experience of crossing cultures—what it feels like to live, work, lead, and belong in places far from home. Hosted by global executive and cultural storyteller John Jörn Stech, the podcast explores the realities of expatriate life, intercultural communication, and the messy, meaningful process of adapting to new norms, new languages, and new ways of seeing the world. John brings more than three decades of international experience across the United States, Germany, Egypt, Russia, Vietnam, and Thailand. His career in global leadership has placed him inside boardrooms, factories, classrooms, and communities on five continents—each move reshaping his understanding of identity, trust, collaboration, and what it truly means to work across cultures. While the show began with roots in the global automotive industry, its focus has evolved. Today, The Auto Ethnographer is a culture‑first exploration of international life, featuring voices from business, education, mobility, technology, the arts, and the broader expat and repat communities. This is a podcast for anyone navigating the complexities of global work: expats building careers abroad, professionals managing intercultural teams, digital nomads learning to belong in new places, and globally curious listeners who want to understand how culture shapes human behavior. Through candid storytelling and thoughtful conversation, the show reveals how people adapt, thrive, and occasionally stumble as they bridge cultural boundaries. What You’ll Hear – Conversations with expats, repats, immigrants, and locals who live and work between cultures – Stories of adaptation, culture shock, misunderstanding, humor, and personal growth – Insights into intercultural leadership, cross‑border collaboration, and global teamwork – Reflections on identity, belonging, and the emotional realities of living overseas – Occasional automotive stories—now framed through a cultural and human lens rather than a technical one Why “Auto Ethnography”? Inspired by the academic method of autoethnography, the podcast uses personal experience as a lens for understanding broader cultural truths. John and his guests explore how values, assumptions, communication styles, and social norms shape the way people work together across borders. These stories illuminate the invisible forces that influence trust, conflict, leadership, and connection in multicultural environments. Who This Podcast Is For – Expats, repats, and global professionals – Intercultural leaders and international managers – Students of global mobility, cross‑cultural psychology, and international business – Anyone fascinated by how humans adapt to new cultural landscapes About John Jörn StechJohn has spent his life navigating cultural transitions—leading teams, launching brands, and building bridges across borders in countries like the United States, Latin America, Russia, Egypt, Vietnam, and Thailand.  He is filled with curiosity about cultures and how they interact since he was a child born in Germany and immigrated to the USA at an early age. His journey is an ongoing experiment in adaptation, one he now shares with listeners through honest storytelling and globally informed insight. The Auto Ethnographer brings those experiences to you—one culture, one conversation, one story at a time.