Lead The Room

Lead The Room

Tired of the leadership statues quo? Ready to rip up the leadership handbook in search of approaches that will ACTUALLY build the team you know you need? It’s time for a leadership revolution that speaks your language and gets you fired up to lead like never before. We know EXACTLY how to lead differently and we're here to guide you every step off the way. Join Briony and Lyndsey every week as they share tips and advice you can put into practice TODAY and start transforming your team and coaching you from being a great mind to an AMAZING leader.

  1. 3 DAYS AGO

    Ep 72 - How to Stop Perfectionism Killing Your Team's Performance (Without Lowering Your Standards)

    Do you hold yourself and your team to high standards — but nothing ever feels quite good enough? You might be crossing the line from high standards into perfectionism. And while that sounds like a good thing, it can quietly destroy your team's momentum, innovation, and morale. In this episode of Lead the Room, Briony and Lyndsey unpack the perfectionism paradox — the trap that catches so many high-achieving, human-centred leaders. You want to prove your approach works. You care deeply about quality. But the result? Your team is paralysed, progress slows, and you've become the bottleneck. They share three practical, immediately actionable strategies to help you lead with genuinely high standards whilst ditching the perfectionism that's getting in the way: The Good Enough Framework — a simple one-page tool to define three quality levels (good enough, high quality, and exceptional) so your team always knows exactly what standard is expected and whenThe Progress Over Perfection Ritual — a weekly 10–15 minute team practice that celebrates what's moving forward (not just what's finished) and fundamentally shifts your team cultureThe Iteration Mindset Shift — how to change the language, expectations, and feedback culture around your work so version one doesn't have to be perfect — it just has to existThis episode is for you if you lead transformation or change work, feel like you're always the one slowing things down, or find yourself frustrated that your team keeps sitting on work instead of sharing it. Progress over perfection — always.

    30 min
  2. 7 APR

    Ep 71 - How to Turn Around a Broken Team in Your First 30 Days (Without Burning Out Trying)

    You walked in expecting a challenge. You didn't expect this. The toxic dynamics, the checked-out talent, the unspoken resentment — and the clock already ticking on your ability to prove yourself. If you've ever inherited a team that was more broken than anyone let on, this episode is going to feel very familiar. In this episode of Lead the Room, Briony and Lyndsey share exactly what to do in your first 30 days when you take on a struggling team — not the generic leadership advice, but the specific, honest, no-slide-decks-required approach that actually shifts things. Week 1 — The Listening Tour: why you need to resist fixing anything before you've done this, the specific questions to ask each team member one-to-one, and what to do with everything you hear. Weeks 2–3 — Quick Wins That Actually Matter: why most leaders choose the wrong quick wins (and how to choose ones that genuinely rebuild trust), plus how closing the "say-do gap" fast is the most powerful thing you can do early on. Week 4 — The Team Reset Conversation: how to draw a line in the sand without pretending the past didn't happen, how to co-create a team culture rather than impose one, and why consistency after this moment is everything. This isn't about being the heroic leader who swoops in and fixes everything. It's about being the leader who actually listens, follows through, and builds something real — together. Get our 15 minute team transformation guide here. Keywords: how to manage a difficult team, inheriting a broken team, new leader first 30 days, team transformation, toxic team culture, leadership podcast, psychological safety at work, how to rebuild team trust, human-centred leadership, women in leadership, people-first management, lead the room podcast, new manager advice, team turnaround

    34 min
  3. 31 MAR

    Ep 70 - How to Prove Your Leadership Style Actually Works (Without Saying "Trust Me")

    If you lead with empathy and a human-centred approach, you've probably been here: your results speak for themselves, your team is thriving — but you still can't quite silence the voice asking "but can you prove it?" In this episode of Lead the Room, Briony and Lyndsey tackle one of the biggest blind spots for values-led leaders: how to measure and evidence the impact of your leadership approach — in language that senior stakeholders actually care about. No spreadsheet expertise required. If you want more 15 minute team transformations, get our free guide here. In this episode, you'll learn: Time to Competence — how to track how quickly your team master new skills and use it to make a powerful business case for your coaching, psychological safety, and development-first culture. Problem Solving Speed — why psychologically safe teams catch problems earlier and resolve them faster, and exactly how to log and track this to show accountability and team autonomy in action. The Discretionary Effort Index — how to measure whether your team are genuinely engaged and going above and beyond, and why this metric directly correlates to the business outcomes your leadership cares about most. The best bit? All three metrics take less than 30 minutes a month to track. Whether you're a director juggling a large team transformation, a mid-level leader trying to buy credibility for your approach, or someone who knows their way works but is exhausted by the "show me the data" conversation — this episode is for you. Keywords: human-centred leadership, empathetic leadership, leadership metrics, team performance, psychological safety, leadership podcast, how to measure leadership impact, team transformation, women in leadership, leadership development, people-first leadership, lead the room podcast

    21 min
  4. 24 MAR

    Ep 69 - The Q1 Review That Actually Drives Q2 Success: A Team Leader's Playbook

    Are you a leader heading into Q2 feeling like Q1 just... happened to you? You're not alone — and this episode is your practical reset. If you want more practical advice to reset your team get our free 15 minute team transformations guide here. In this episode of Lead the Room, Briony and Lyndsey share three practical, time-efficient actions to help you close out Q1 with genuine insight and step into Q2 with intention, clarity, and a team that's actually improving. No more painful quarterly review meetings where everyone says what they think they should say. No more improvement plans that sit in a drawer and get forgotten. No more defaulting to the same ways of working just because nobody stopped to ask if they were actually working. In this episode you'll learn: How to run a team reflection session that generates real honesty (not just surface-level answers) — using a sticky note facilitation technique that gives every voice equal weightWhy framing your Q2 priorities as low-stakes experiments takes the pressure off and actually makes change more likely to stickThe five-component experiment plan you can build in under 15 minutesHow to use monthly 30-minute check-ins to keep improvement visible, measurable, and on track across the full quarterWhy democratic decision-making in your team review creates genuine ownership — and when to shape the shortlist as a leaderThis episode is for you if:You're a people-first leader trying to build a high-performing team without burning out. You lead with emotional intelligence and human-centred values — but you also want to be rigorous, data-driven, and results-focused. You want your team to thrive in Q2, and you want a system that's simple enough to actually use.

    29 min
  5. 17 MAR

    Ep 68 - Your Team Doesn't Need More Strategy—They Need These 3 Tactical Rituals Instead

    When a team is struggling to make progress, the classic leadership move is to call a strategy session. Bring in consultants. Rewrite the roadmap. But in this episode, Lyndsey and Briony make the case that this almost always misdiagnoses the real problem. Your team doesn't need more strategy. They need consistent daily rituals that turn the strategy you already have into actual results. This episode gives you three practical, tactical rituals you can implement with your team starting tomorrow — no away day, no consultants, nothing that takes more than 30 minutes. In this episode you'll learn: Why execution — not strategy — is the hardest part of transformation, and why most organisations get this backwardsHow to use a Daily Priority Reset to help every person on your team cut through the noise, avoid decision paralysis, and move one meaningful thing forward every single dayHow to run a Blocker Blitz — a weekly 30-minute team meeting with one rule: every problem that's raised gets solved or assigned before the meeting endsWhy Decision Deadlines are one of the most powerful tools for killing analysis paralysis — and how to implement them in a way that brings the team with you rather than imposing them top-downWhy most decisions are reversible, and why the cost of delayed decisions is almost always higher than the cost of an imperfect oneHow to build a culture of faster, more confident decision-making over timeThis episode is for you if: You're leading transformation or change programmes and momentum keeps stallingYour team has a solid strategy but somehow nothing is actually getting executedYou're stuck in a cycle of strategy sessions, planning days, and frameworks that don't translate to real progressYou want practical, low-effort rituals you can implement this week — not in three months after a change programme

    26 min
  6. 10 MAR

    Ep 67 - The Energy Audit: How to Identify What's Actually Draining Your Team's Performance

    Your team is working hard. Putting the hours in, showing up, doing all the things. So why aren't you getting the results you should be? Most organisations respond by reaching for more productivity training, better time management, or another round of process optimisation. In this episode, Lyndsey and Bryony are here to tell you that's not the answer — and it might actually be making things worse. The real problem is invisible. It's the daily energy drains nobody's tracking or talking about. The information buried across five different systems. The meeting nobody knows why they're attending. The constant context switching because priorities were never made clear. Individually they feel too small to mention. Collectively they're exhausting your team and killing your results. This week Lyndsey and Bryony introduce the energy audit — three practical habits to identify what's draining your team so you can strip it back and free up the focus they need to do their best work. Because most teams have around 30% of their time going into low or no value activity. And if you stopped it tomorrow? Nobody would even notice. What You'll Learn In This Episode: Habit 1 — The Energy Mapping Conversation A simple 15-minute conversation with each member of your team — built into an existing one-to-one so you're not adding yet another meeting. You're asking two very specific questions, because energy is different from challenge. Something can be hard and energising. Something can be easy and completely soul-destroying. The two questions to ask: What is giving you energy right now in your work?What is draining your energy?Don't try to fix anything in the moment — just listen, take notes, and look for the patterns. When you do this across your whole team, you'll almost always find multiple people are being drained by exactly the same thing. That's your data. That's where you start. Habit 2 — The Time vs Value Tracker Get your team to track their time for one week — every meeting, email, and task. Then sort everything into four buckets. The four categories: High value — directly contributes to your goalsMedium value — necessary but not directly contributingLow value — questionable whether it needs to happen at allNo value — if you stopped it tomorrow, what's the worst that would happen?One team discovered they were collectively spending 15 hours a week on status reports nobody was reading — a process that had simply never been questioned. Once you see the data, you cannot unsee it. And you finally have the evidence to stop things, not just add more. Habit 3 — The Energy Killers List A living document you create and maintain together as a team. Every time something drains your team's energy — big or small — it goes on the list. But this isn't a complaint list. Every item gets an action attached to it, even if that action is simply deciding to accept it for now and manage around it. How to use it: Add it as a standing item in your monthly retrospective or quarterly goal setting — no new meeting neededEncourage the whole team to contribute, not just the leaderCelebrate when you've tackled one — that's a win worth acknowledgingReview it regularly as energy drains change over timeThis is one of the most effective burnout prevention tools a leader can build into their team culture. It makes the invisible visible, gives people a shared language for what's not working, and turns individual frustrations into something you tackle together. Key Takeaway: This isn't about working harder or smarter. It's about protecting your team's energy so they can do the work that actually matters. Strip away the noise, stop the low-value stuff, and lead a team that's energised — not just busy.

    26 min
  7. 3 MAR

    Ep 66 - Leadership Dilemma: How to Build Team Accountability Without Becoming the Bad Guy

    You care deeply about your team. You've built real trust, genuine psychological safety, and a culture where people feel valued. But what happens when someone keeps missing deadlines, the quality of work slips, or one person's behaviour starts affecting everyone else? If you're stuck between addressing it and protecting what you've built — this episode is for you. Lyndsey and Bryony tackle the accountability paradox head-on: why the most human-centred leaders often struggle most with holding people to account, why avoiding difficult conversations is actually a sign of low psychological safety (not high), and how to have those conversations in a way that's direct, honest, and genuinely caring all at once. Because clarity is kind. And your team deserves a leader who's brave enough to tell them the truth. What You'll Learn In This Episode: Tip 1 — Co-Create Clear Agreements You can't hold people accountable to expectations they don't know exist. Most leaders assume they've been clear — but when you actually ask your team member what they think is expected of them, you often get a completely different answer. This tip is about having a structured conversation with each person on your team to co-create shared expectations together, rather than dictating from the top down. When people have a say in defining what success looks like, they're far more invested in achieving it. The three questions to work through together: What does success look like in your role over the next three months?What standards of quality and timeliness do we need to maintain — and what does "done" actually look like?How will we check in on progress, and what do we do if we're off track?That third question is particularly powerful — because it normalises the fact that things will sometimes go off track, and agrees upfront how you'll handle it together before you're ever in a high-stakes moment. Tip 2 — Radical Candor Check-Ins Once your agreements are in place, you need a regular rhythm for following up on them. This is where most leaders drop the ball — they set expectations, then wait until there's a crisis, or save feedback for a quarterly review when it's too late for anyone to course correct. Instead, use your existing one-to-ones to have real, honest conversations about how things are actually going — not just status updates. The questions to ask at every check-in: What's going well?Where are you struggling?What feedback do you have for me?Then share back what you're observing: what's working, what needs to shift. Give feedback in real time, when it's still relevant and actionable. And when something hasn't gone to plan, lead with curiosity rather than judgment — "I noticed this didn't include the data analysis we discussed. I know you're capable of that level of insight — what got in the way?" No blame. Just an open door. Tip 3 — The Situation, Behaviour, Impact Framework Even with clear agreements and regular check-ins, there will be moments when someone isn't meeting expectations. This framework gives you a calm, structured way to address it early — before it becomes a pattern — without coming in too hard or avoiding it altogether. How to use it: Situation — Anchor the conversation in a specific moment. "In yesterday's client call..." or "When the project deadline came up last week..." You're setting the scene, not making it about their character.Behaviour — Describe what you observed factually, without interpretation. "You arrived 15 minutes late and the presentation materials weren't ready." Not "you're unreliable" — that's your interpretation, not the facts.Impact — Connect the behaviour to a real consequence. "It meant the client had to wait, we lost credibility, and we didn't have time to cover the key points we'd prepared as a team."Question — Then open the door. "Help me understand what happened." Or: "What do you think needs to change so this doesn't happen again?"

    29 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

Tired of the leadership statues quo? Ready to rip up the leadership handbook in search of approaches that will ACTUALLY build the team you know you need? It’s time for a leadership revolution that speaks your language and gets you fired up to lead like never before. We know EXACTLY how to lead differently and we're here to guide you every step off the way. Join Briony and Lyndsey every week as they share tips and advice you can put into practice TODAY and start transforming your team and coaching you from being a great mind to an AMAZING leader.