Leadership Lyceum: A CEO's Virtual Mentor

Thomas B. Linquist

The Leadership Lyceum: A CEO's Virtual Mentor podcast series provides situational advice to a wide audience of leaders and boards of directors through conversations with those that have been there. The podcast brings unprecedented, one-on-one access to top, current and retired, CEOs and Directors of Boards and provides beneficial information and valuable insight on situational and topical issues that confront CEOs and Boards from those that have faced them before - often in dramatic circumstances. Consider it a "Virtual Mentor" for CEOs and other leaders, because let's face it – it's lonely at the top. There are basic leadership challenges common to all CEOs as well as specific situational circumstances that warrant attention in our series. The interview format delivers memoir, profile, perspective, and in a unique fashion - not only draws answers - but also brings fundamental insight. We hope that you will find merit in all the episodes and comment and contribute your own situations of interest. We'll do our best to cover them with those CEOs that have faced them.

  1. 11/12/2025

    Lyceum's Cybersecurity Series Part 1: "What You Don't Know CAN Hurt YOU"

    Lyceum's Cybersecurity Series Part 1: "What You Don't Know CAN Hurt You"   Welcome to Episode 30, Season 9 of A CEO's Virtual Mentor® In this opening installment of Lyceum's new Cybersecurity Series, A CEO's Virtual Mentor® convenes five board members and cybersecurity experts from the Lyceum Circle of Leaders® to confront one of the most elusive challenges in modern governance – understanding what you cannot see. As Stephen Hawking warned, "The greatest enemy of knowledge is not ignorance — it is the illusion of knowledge." That illusion, we learn, is the hidden trap of board cybersecurity oversight. Across four parts, our guests – Jorge Benitez, Brook Colangelo, Michael Crowe, Michael Kehs, and Wendy Thomas – illuminate how directors can move from passive awareness to active preparedness, transforming cybersecurity from a technical checklist into an enterprise discipline rooted in governance, visibility, and human judgment. The program examines why boards miss what matters most, how to see beneath the "hidden surface" of cyber risk, and how disciplined frameworks turn uncertainty into resilience. Through their collective insight, a new picture emerges: cybersecurity not as compliance, but as the continuous practice of foresight. Program Guide A CEO's Virtual Mentor® Episode 30 Lyceum's Cybersecurity Series Part 1: "What You Don't Know CAN Hurt You"   0:00 | Introduction Host Tom Linquist introduces Season 9 and Lyceum's special Cybersecurity Series — the first podcast project to draw on multiple members of the Lyceum Circle of Leaders®. He frames the series' purpose: to help boards confront cybersecurity not as a technical topic, but as a behavioral and governance issue — an invisible domain where the illusion of knowledge endangers oversight itself.   Part 1 — Why the Subject Is Important (4:00 – 16:30) Cybersecurity has evolved from a back-office function to a boardroom imperative. Jorge Benitez recalls establishing Accenture's early information-security practice and how cyber risk became a universal business concern. Mike Crowe contrasts threat motives across industries and stresses that "cybersecurity is everyone's responsibility." Brook Colangelo links cyber vigilance to corporate sustainability and shareholder trust. Michael Kehs reminds boards to get started early; that "by the time you hear the thunder, it's too late to build the ark." Wendy Thomas draws the parallel between today's need for cyber fluency and boards' earlier journey toward financial literacy.  Together, they establish the stakes: what boards don't know can — and will — hurt them.   Part 2 — Visibility (16:50 – 31:20) True oversight requires seeing what lies beneath the surface. Brook Colangelo describes forming a Technology and Cyber Committee and applying the NIST framework to benchmark maturity. Mike Crowe explains hiring "offensive" experts to test defenses before attackers do. Wendy Thomas introduces the streamlined Prevent–Detect–Respond (PDR) model, connecting it to board metrics such as mean time to detect and mean time to respond. She also warns that during crises, boards must remember: "There's no watching the game tape during the game." This segment translates technical language into governance visibility — turning blindness into inquiry.   Part 3 — Risk Management (31:36 – 39:50) Cybersecurity joins the top tier of every board's risk matrix. Mike Crowe situates cyber alongside geopolitical and climate risks. Tom Linquist introduces the "hidden surface problem" — the behavioral bias that limits directors to what is easily seen. Brook Colangelo reframes preparedness as competitive advantage: companies that prove digital trust win customers and revenue. Jorge Benitez observes that the most progressive boards now embed cyber within comprehensive risk frameworks, enabling all directors to engage.  This section bridges oversight and enterprise resilience, urging boards to govern the unseen.   Part 4 — Objectives of the Cybersecurity Series (40:18 – 44:58) The series concludes its first installment by looking ahead. Brook Colangelo highlights how global conflict and artificial intelligence have accelerated the pace and complexity of cyber risk. Wendy Thomas calls for a stronger community of boards that collectively raise the cost of attack. Jorge Benitez encourages continuous learning through peer forums such as the Lyceum Circle of Leaders®. Tom Linquist closes with an invitation to continue the series — a journey from illusion to insight, from defense to resilience.   Total Runtime: ≈ 45 minutes     We would like to express our special thanks to the clients of Lyceum Leadership Consulting that enable us to bring you this podcast.     Informative and Helpful Links   NIST's Cybersecurity Framework: https://www.nist.gov/cyberframework   CISA's Cybersecurity Incident & Vulnerability Response Playbooks: https://www.cisa.gov/sites/default/files/2024-08/Federal_Government_Cybersecurity_Incident_and_Vulnerability_Response_Playbooks_508C.pdf   Your host Thomas B. Linquist is the Founder and Managing Director of Lyceum Leadership Consulting and Lyceum Leadership Productions. Over his 25 years in management and leadership consulting he has served a wide array of corporate clients.  This includes leadership assessment and search for chief executive officers, chief financial officers, chief operating officers and directors of boards.  He holds an MBA from the University of Chicago and over his 35-year career has served in a variety of roles: as an engineer with Shell Oil Company, a banker with ABN AMRO Bank, and as treasurer was the youngest corporate officer in the 150+ year history at Peoples Energy Company in Chicago.  He is an expert on hiring and promotion decisions and leadership development.  Over the course of his search and advisory career, Tom has interviewed thousands of leaders and authored numerous articles exploring group decision-making under uncertainty, board effectiveness, and leadership development.   Join the Lyceum Circle of Leaders®  a community of forward-thinking leaders  dedicated to improving leadership through shared intelligence. Please spread the word among your fellow executives and board colleagues.   Program Disclaimer The only purpose of the podcast is to educate, inform and entertain. The information shared is based on the collection of experiences of each of the guests interviewed and should not be considered or substituted for professional advice. Guests who speak in this podcast express their own opinions, experience and conclusions, and neither The Leadership Lyceum LLC nor any company providing financial support endorses or opposes any particular content, recommendation or methodology discussed in this podcast. Follow Leadership Lyceum on: Our website: www.LeadershipLyceum.com LinkedIn: The Leadership Lyceum LLC Email us: info@LeadershipLyceum.com     This podcast Leadership Lyceum: A CEO's Virtual Mentor® has been a production of The Leadership Lyceum LLC. Copyright 2025. All rights reserved.

    45 min
  2. 10/29/2025

    "The Weight of Command: The Ehime Maru Tragedy and the Case for Transparency" with Admiral Thomas B Fargo

    "The Weight of Command: The Ehime Maru Tragedy and the Case for Transparency" with Admiral Thomas B Fargo   Welcome to Episode 29, Season 9 of A CEO's Virtual Mentor® In this compelling episode of Leadership Lyceum: A CEO's Virtual Mentor®, we are joined by a distinguished leader whose career has been defined by service, responsibility, and command at the highest levels of the United States Navy. Admiral Thomas B. Fargo served as a four-star admiral and commander of the United States Pacific Command, the largest unified command in the world, overseeing operations across half the globe. Across not only his military career, but also across his board leadership service, Admiral Fargo is known for his steady hand in times of crisis and moral clarity under pressure: qualities that are grounded in his deep commitment to accountability and transparency. This episode of A CEO's Virtual Mentor® entitled "The Weight of Command: The Ehime Maru Tragedy and the Case for Transparency" reveals those qualities under the pressure of deep crisis and human tragedy in the aftermath of the tragic collision of the USS Greeneville, a nuclear-powered submarine, and the Japanese fishery training vessel, the Ehime Maru off Oahu on February 9th, 2001, a tragedy that took the lives of nine Japanese citizens, including four high school students. As commander of the Pacific Fleet at the time, Admiral Fargo was responsible for the Navy's response. Our episode today takes us back almost 25 years ago to the incident and to the decisions in the aftermath. The episode is divided into five segments: 1.     The Incident: The story opens with a vivid recounting of the 2001 collision between the USS Greeneville, a U.S. Navy nuclear-powered submarine, and the Japanese training vessel Ehime Maru off Oahu. Admiral Fargo, then Commander of the Pacific Fleet, reflects on the moment he received the first report and the gravity of what unfolded—a tragedy that claimed nine lives and strained U.S.–Japan relations. The segment sets the stage for a crisis that would test not only naval command but also the moral fiber of leadership itself. 2.    The Ever-Elusive Facts: In every crisis, the first reports are wrong. Admiral Fargo recounts how the Navy struggled to uncover the truth amid incomplete, often misleading information—compounded by legal, diplomatic, and media pressures. Drawing parallels to the 1988 USS Vincennes - Iranian Airbus tragedy, this segment examines the tension between speed and accuracy in crisis communication, and how early missteps can shape public perception for years. 3.    The Investigation: With multiple options before him—a classified inquiry, internal settlement, court-martial, or a public court of inquiry—Admiral Fargo faced a defining choice. Guided by the principle that "some events cannot be delegated," he chose full transparency, rejecting secrecy even at the cost of institutional discomfort. This decision, rooted in lessons from the Navy's past, particularly the Tailhook scandal, set the tone for how the service would regain trust through openness. 4.    The Court of Inquiry: The rare and rigorous process unfolds. Three senior flag officers—an aviator, a submariner, and a surface warfare officer—are appointed, joined symbolically by a Japanese admiral to safeguard the interests of the victims' families. As the inquiry proceeds under intense public scrutiny, painful truths emerge: procedural lapses, haste under pressure, and breakdowns in communication. The court's findings affirm accountability while preserving fairness—showing that leadership's true test lies in how justice is pursued when tragedy strikes. 5.    Epilogue on Leadership in Reflection: In the closing segment, Admiral Fargo reflects on the enduring lessons of command—trusting one's instincts, fostering an environment where truth can be spoken freely, and upholding personal accountability even when law or policy might allow retreat. His story culminates in a powerful act of restitution: the unprecedented salvage of the Ehime Maru to recover the remains of the lost. Through this effort, Fargo demonstrated that the highest form of leadership lives not in procedure, but in conscience—in what Lord Moulton called "obedience to the unenforceable."   Program Guide A CEO's Virtual Mentor® Episode 29 "The Weight of Command: The Ehime Maru Tragedy and the Case for Transparency" with Admiral Thomas B Fargo 0:00              Introduction to the program and to our guest, Ret. Admiral Thomas B. Fargo, Commander of the United States Pacific Command. 3:16               Part 1: The Incident 22:06             Break 1 22:12             Part 2: The Ever-Elusive Facts 30:35             Break 2 31:06             Part 3: The Investigation 41:17               Break 3 41:48             Part 4: The Court of Inquiry  48:06             Break 4 – Intermediate Break  48:12              Part 4: The Court of Inquiry (continued)  54:13              Break 5  54:22             Part 5: Epilogue on Leadership in Reflection 1:04:27           Lyceum's Reflective Closing Comments   We would like to express our special thanks to the clients of Lyceum Leadership Consulting that enable us to bring you this podcast.   Links to Biographies of Guests Admiral Thomas B. Fargo Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_B._Fargo#:~:text=Admiral%20Thomas%20Boulton%20Fargo%20AO,officer%20to%20hold%20the%20position Your host Thomas B. Linquist is the Founder and Managing Director of Lyceum Leadership Consulting and Lyceum Leadership Productions. Over his 25 years in management and leadership consulting he has served a wide array of corporate clients.  This includes leadership assessment and search for chief executive officers, chief financial officers, chief operating officers and directors of boards.  He holds an MBA from the University of Chicago and over his 35-year career has served in a variety of roles: as an engineer with Shell Oil Company, a banker with ABN AMRO Bank, and as treasurer was the youngest corporate officer in the 150+ year history at Peoples Energy Company in Chicago.  He is an expert on hiring and promotion decisions and leadership development.  Over the course of his search and advisory career, Tom has interviewed thousands of leaders and authored numerous articles exploring group decision-making under uncertainty, board effectiveness, and leadership development. Join the Lyceum Circle of Leaders®  a community of forward-thinking leaders  dedicated to improving leadership through shared intelligence. Please spread the word among your fellow executives and board colleagues.   Program Disclaimer The only purpose of the podcast is to educate, inform and entertain. The information shared is based on the collection of experiences of each of the guests interviewed and should not be considered or substituted for professional advice. Guests who speak in this podcast express their own opinions, experience and conclusions, and neither The Leadership Lyceum LLC nor any company providing financial support endorses or opposes any particular content, recommendation or methodology discussed in this podcast. Follow Leadership Lyceum on: Our website: www.LeadershipLyceum.com LinkedIn: The Leadership Lyceum LLC Email us: info@LeadershipLyceum.com This podcast Leadership Lyceum: A CEO's Virtual Mentor® has been a production of The Leadership Lyceum LLC. Copyright 2025. All rights reserved.

    1h 8m
  3. 01/22/2025

    "Leading Explosive Growth" with Dan Bane, Retired President and CEO of Trader Joe's

    Welcome to Episode 28, Season 9 of A CEO's Virtual Mentor®  In this compelling episode of Leadership Lyceum: A CEO's Virtual Mentor, we are joined by Dan Bane, the retired CEO of Trader Joe's, to explore the remarkable journey of leading one of the most iconic brands in modern retail through a period of unprecedented growth. From 2001 to 2023, Trader Joe's expanded from 150 to 547 stores, maintaining its unique culture, customer-centric approach, and reputation for excellence. This conversation dives into the leadership strategies that guided this transformation, offering invaluable lessons for CEOs and board members navigating rapid growth.  The episode is divided into five insightful segments:  A Brief History of Trader Joe's: A look back at the company's origins under founder Joe Coulombe and its transition into a national retail powerhouse following its acquisition by Theo Albrecht.  Dan Bane's Leadership Journey: From his roots in accounting and retail to his role as CEO, Dan shares how his experiences shaped his approach to leadership and decision-making.  Managing Explosive Growth: Drawing on Steven Bragg's framework from his book Managing Explosive Corporate Growth, the discussion highlights how Dan balanced strategy, operational efficiency, and culture to navigate geographic expansion and product innovation.  Trader Joe's Seven Core Values: Dan reflects on the values he introduced as CEO, including integrity, a product-driven mindset, and a "wow" customer experience. These principles were pivotal in fostering accountability, innovation, and a scalable culture that remained true to Trader Joe's identity.  Lessons Learned: In the concluding segment, Dan shares parting insights on leadership, emphasizing the importance of talent development, customer connection, and a relentless focus on continuous improvement.  Program Guide A CEO's Virtual Mentor Episode 28 "Leading Explosive Growth" with Dan Bane, Retired President and CEO of Trader Joe's  0:00 Introduction to the program and to guest, Mr. Dan Bane, Retired President and CEO of Trader Joe's. 4:27 Part 1: A brief history of Trader Joe's 9:21 Break 1 9:36 Part 2: Dan Bane's experience leading to Trader Joe's 14:40 Break 2 15:02 Part 3: Explosive Growth and Key Management Considerations 22:05 Break 3 22:55 Part 4: Becoming CEO and the Trader Joe's seven core values formation 33:44 Break 4 43:57 Break 5 1:02:35 Break 6 1:03:02 Part 5: Managing explosive growth reprised, lessons learned, and parting thoughts 1:18:24 Closing comments  We would like to express our special thanks to the clients of Lyceum Leadership Consulting that enable us to bring you this podcast.  Informative and Helpful Links  Amazon.com: Managing Explosive Corporate Growth eBook : Bragg, Steven M.: Kindle Store         Your host Thomas B. Linquist is the Founder and Managing Director of Lyceum Leadership Consulting and Lyceum Leadership Productions. Over his 23 years in management and leadership consulting he has served a wide array of corporate clients.  This includes leadership assessment and search for chief executive officers, chief financial officers, chief operating officers and boards of directors.  He holds an MBA from the University of Chicago and over his 34-year career has served in a variety of roles: as an engineer with Shell Oil Company, a banker with ABN AMRO Bank, and as treasurer was the youngest corporate officer in the 150+ year history at Peoples Energy Company in Chicago.  He is an expert on hiring and promotion decisions and leadership development.  Over the course of his search career, he has interviewed thousands of leaders.  Join the Lyceum Circle of Leaders® a community of forward-thinking leaders dedicated to improving leadership through shared intelligence. Please spread the word among your fellow executives and board colleagues.  Program Disclaimer The only purpose of the podcast is to educate, inform and entertain. The information shared is based on the collection of experiences of each of the guests interviewed and should not be considered or substituted for professional advice. Guests who speak in this podcast express their own opinions, experience and conclusions, and neither The Leadership Lyceum LLC nor any company providing financial support endorses or opposes any particular content, recommendation or methodology discussed in this podcast.          This podcast Leadership Lyceum: A CEO's Virtual Mentor has been a production of The Leadership Lyceum LLC. Copyright 2025. All rights reserved.

    1h 21m
  4. 05/12/2023

    A Regulatory Primer for Board Members with Non Regulatory Backgrounds with Dr. Mark Jamison

    Welcome to Episode 27, Season 7 of A CEO's Virtual Mentor® Are you a new board member serving on a regulated company board, but from a non regulatory background? This episode is directed especially to newer board members and executives in utility companies regulated at the state and even federal levels.   My guest in this episode is Dr. Mark Jamison. Dr. Jamison is Director and Gerald Gunter Professor, Public Utility Research Center at the Warrington College of Business at the University of Florida in Gainesville. PURC is an internationally recognized academic center dedicated to research and to providing training in utility regulation and strategy to support effective utility policy, regulation, management, and leadership. PURC helps government and industry officials develop efficient utility infrastructure to better meet the needs of their customers. PURC's view is educated executives, employees, and board members, organizations benefit from better decision making and thus a more promising future.  Our discussion today is merely a survey of the history, development, structure, and process of utility regulation with advice on a few best practices in regulatory affairs posture and approach. Lyceum sees fitting coverage of the vast subject of regulation as well beyond this brief podcast. This is an appetizer.  For the main course - and to help you navigate more thoroughly through the changing regulatory landscape - please contact our guest Dr. Mark Jamison at the Public Utility Research Center.  For more about PURC, its ever-expanding body of research and its training courses, conferences and other events see the PURC webpage thought the Warrington College of Business at the University of Florida. See important hyperlinks in the program's album notes.    Program Guide   A CEO's Virtual Mentor Episode 27: A Regulatory Primer for Board Members with Non Regulatory Backgrounds  0:00     Introduction to the program and to guest, Dr. Mark Jamison  3:50     Part 1: The history of regulation 15:25   Break 1  15:45   Part 2: The structure of the regulatory commission  21:49   Break 2  22:09   Part 3: How does the regulator set prices?  30:01   Break 3  30:44   Part 4: Regulatory risk and strategies for dealing with risk  52:27   Closing comments We would like to express our special thanks to the clients of Lyceum Leadership Consulting that enable us to bring you this podcast.  Thanks for listening.  We can't improve without your feedback – write us through our website www.LeadershipLyceum.com and subscribe wherever you listen to your podcasts.    See you next time.  Informative and Helpful Links  ​PURC Webpage: https://warrington.ufl.edu/public-utility-research-center/   ​Links to Biographies of Guests: Mark A. Jamison ​Your host Thomas B. Linquist is the Founder and Managing Director of Lyceum Leadership Consulting and Lyceum Leadership Productions. Over his 18 years in management and leadership consulting he has served a wide array of corporate clients.  This includes leadership assessment and search for chief executive officers, chief financial officers, chief operating officers and boards of directors.  He holds an MBA from the University of Chicago and over his 32-year career has served in a variety of roles: as an engineer with Shell Oil Company, a banker with ABN AMRO Bank, and as treasurer was the youngest corporate officer in the 150+ year history at Peoples Energy Company in Chicago.  He is an expert on hiring and promotion decisions and leadership development.  Over the course of his search career, he has interviewed thousands of leaders. Program Disclaimer  The only purpose of the podcast is to educate, inform and entertain. The information shared is based on the collection of experiences of each of the guests interviewed and should not be considered or substituted for professional advice. Guests who speak in this podcast express their own opinions, experience and conclusions, and neither The Leadership Lyceum LLC nor any company providing financial support endorses or opposes any particular content, recommendation or methodology discussed in this podcast.  Follow Leadership Lyceum on:  Our website: www.LeadershipLyceum.com  LinkedIn: The Leadership Lyceum LLC  Email us: info@LeadershipLyceum.com  This podcast Leadership Lyceum: A CEO's Virtual Mentor has been a production of The Leadership Lyceum LLC. Copyright 2023. All rights reserved.

    54 min
  5. 03/12/2023

    The Energy Within Us. A wide-ranging discussion about the upbringing and developmental experiences of four pioneering corporate leaders

    Welcome to Episode 26, Season 7, of the Leadership Lyceum: A CEO's Virtual Mentor®. This episode coupled with the prior Episode 25 on Overcoming Homophily forms two episodes themed to span both Black History Month and Women's History Month. I'm joined in this program by four of five women who on May 1st, 2019, published together a collective autobiographical book titled The Energy Within Us. It is their stories across the arc of their lives from childhood environments and experiences that shaped them to, and through, their long careers in executive leadership roles in the energy industry. These women have a great deal in common. They're all dear friends. They're all accomplished executive leaders in the energy industry and their careers. They're all giving back by serving broader leadership roles in corporate and non-for-profit boardrooms and social service organizations. They all have unbounded generosity of spirit. And they all, as you will hear, exude the energy within themselves. The discursive style of our interview revealed a wealth of advice for current and future business leaders especially in the realm of diversity, equity, and inclusion. Topics covered include – role models, mentors and coaches, courage to challenge the status quo and hold leaders accountable, assumptions and misunderstandings, barriers to developing instrumental networks and receiving developmental feedback. Program Guide A CEO's Virtual Mentor Episode 26 The Energy Within Us A wide-ranging discussion about the upbringing and developmental experiences of four pioneering corporate leaders 0:00  Introduction to the program and to guests and authors Telisa Toliver, Carolyn Green, Joyce Hayes Giles, and Hilda Pinnix-Ragland. 2:54    Part 1: What motivated the authors to write their autobiographies? 15:04    Break 1 15:43    Part 2: Upbringing, Environment, and Foundational Experiences 15:49    Author Joyce Hayes Giles and segregated Mississippi 22:01    Background on Medgar Evers 24:00    Audio clip of speech of Medgar Evers 27:56    Audio clip of speech of Myrlie Evers Williams 31:35    Break 2 31:51    Author Hilda Pinnix-Ragland and the North Carolina farming community 36:49    Author Telisa Toliver and growing up in white communities in Oklahoma 43:08    Break 3 43:32    Part 3 Formative Decisions, Influencers, and Mentors 52:15    What is misunderstood about people? 56:02    Break 4 56:46    Part 4 Barriers to Professional Development: Forming Instrumental Networks and Critical Feedback and Coaching. 1:09:24    Break 5 1:09:42    Part 5: Conclusion and Closing Comments and Advice from the Authors 1:12:51    End of Program and Preview of Episode 27, a primer on the regulatory construct that regulated utilities operate within. We would like to express our special thanks to the clients of Lyceum Leadership Consulting that enable us to bring you this podcast.  Thanks for listening.  We can't improve without your feedback – write us through our website www.LeadershipLyceum.com and subscribe wherever you listen to your podcasts.  See you next time.   Informative and Helpful Links  Amazon Link to the book. The Energy Within Us  https://www.amazon.com/Energy-Within-Illuminating-Perspective-Trailblazers/dp/1945875615 Links to Biographies of Guests  Joyce Hayes Giles https://dpsfdn.org/about/board-and-staff/joyce-hayes-giles-2/  Carolyn Green https://www.ase.org/biography/carolyn-green Telisa Toliver  https://www.aabe.org/docs/pages/19/file/Toliver%20-%20Short%20Bio%202013.pdf Hilda Pinnix Ragland  https://www.aabe.org/docs/fck/file/Leadership%20Profile%20-%20Hilda%20Pinnix%20Ragland.DOC Your host Thomas B. Linquist is the Founder and Managing Director of Lyceum Leadership Consulting and Lyceum Leadership Productions. Over his 18 years in management and leadership consulting he has served a wide array of corporate clients.  This includes leadership assessment and search for chief executive officers, chief financial officers, chief operating officers and boards of directors.  He holds an MBA from the University of Chicago and over his 32-year career has served in a variety of roles: as an engineer with Shell Oil Company, a banker with ABN AMRO Bank, and as treasurer was the youngest corporate officer in the 150+ year history at Peoples Energy Company in Chicago.  He is an expert on hiring and promotion decisions and leadership development.  Over the course of his search career, he has interviewed thousands of leaders. Thanks for listening.  We can't improve without your feedback – write us through our website www.LeadershipLyceum.com and subscribe wherever you listen to your podcasts.  Please rate us and spread the word among your fellow executives and board colleagues. Program Disclaimer The only purpose of the podcast is to educate, inform and entertain. The information shared is based on the collection of experiences of each of the guests interviewed and should not be considered or substituted for professional advice. Guests who speak in this podcast express their own opinions, experience and conclusions, and neither The Leadership Lyceum LLC nor any company providing financial support endorses or opposes any particular content, recommendation or methodology discussed in this podcast.  Follow Leadership Lyceum on: Our website: www.LeadershipLyceum.com LinkedIn: The Leadership Lyceum LLC Twitter: @LeaderLyceum https://twitter.com/LeaderLyceum Email us: info@LeadershipLyceum.com Thanks for listening.  We can't improve without your feedback – write us through our website www.LeadershipLyceum.com and subscribe wherever you listen to your podcasts.  Please rate us and spread the word among your fellow executives and board colleagues.   This podcast Leadership Lyceum: A CEO's Virtual Mentor has been a production of The Leadership Lyceum LLC. Copyright 2023. All rights reserved.

    1h 15m
  6. 02/24/2021

    Why is Achieving Diversity So Hard? Overcoming Homophily and Our Own Human Nature with Sociologist James Cook

    Welcome to Episode 25, Season 6, of the Leadership Lyceum: A CEO's Virtual Mentor®. This is part one of two episodes aimed as a celebration of Black History Month. In August 2020, USA Today reported that 11% of the directors across the 50 largest companies in the S&P 100 are black. On the other hand, gender diversity on boards has shown better improvement over the last seven years. BoardEx just released data that revealed gender diversity on corporate boards in the US increased about 10% over the seven-year period from 2014 to 2020, that is from 19% to 28.8%, a year on year average growth rate of about 1.4%. France and Norway are at 44% and 39% respectively, but their growth rate is slower than the US. You see, they started from a higher percentage level in the first place. We agree with all the benefits of having diverse boards, but we think that a 1.4% growth rate is not even close to good enough. Since the 2017 founding of our sister company, Lyceum Leadership Consulting, we've placed diverse candidates in 24 out of 43 of our board and executive searches, or 56%. It's a track record we're proud of, but we can do better. If we assume the good intentions of everyone involved in board selection decisions to improve upon those numbers, then what is holding us all back? What is causing the stubborn persistence of diversity levels across the world? Lyceum Leadership Consulting thesis is that we are battling our own human nature. In my search work over the last decade and a half, I often observed that a missing link in creating boardroom diversity is often a lack of diversity in the professional networks of the board of directors or the nominating committee themselves. As often, candidates are identified and selected from these networks. In order to understand what causes a lack of network diversity to exist, it's instructive to understand sociology applied to these social networks. In this program, we examine ways of counteracting our own human nature to ultimately make significant improvements in boardroom and executive diversity. Joining me on the program is Associate Professor of Sociology, James M. Cook, from the University of Maine. One of Dr. Cook's areas of expertise is in the area of social network analysis. I discovered Professor Cook's work in my own research on this perplexing issue. I was especially intrigued and informed by an academic paper that he co-authored in 2001 called Birds of a Feather: Homophily in Social Networks.         Program Guide A CEO's Virtual Mentor Episode 25  Why is Achieving Diversity So Hard? Overcoming Homophily and Our Own Human Nature with Sociologist James Cook  0:00     Introduction to the program and Dr. James M. Cook, Associate Professor of Sociology, from the University of Maine. 4:26     Definition of Homophily 7:25     Homophily in the boardroom setting and the limitations of the board 11:20   Break 1 11:19   Social Capital: Bonding and Bridging 14:34   Break 2 14:47   Part 1 of the Framework for Overcoming Homophily: Finding people who are different 25:35   Break 3 26:19   Part 1 (continued): Finding, or being found, at the individual level 33:46   Break 4 34:29   Part 2 of the Framework for Overcoming Homophily: Uniting through the instability that bringing people who are different causes 40:24   Break 4 40:51   Part 3 of the Framework for Overcoming Homophily: Managing conflicts that are bound to arise. 44:15   Break 5 44:38   Conclusion: Intergroup relations and advice toward improvement in diversity outcomes 55:06   End of Program and Preview of Episode 26, part 2 of 2, in celebration of Black History Month   We would like to express our special thanks to the clients of Lyceum Leadership Consulting that enable us to bring you this podcast. Thanks for listening.  We can't improve without your feedback – write us through our website www.LeadershipLyceum.com and subscribe wherever you listen to your podcasts.  See you next time.   Informative and Helpful Links USA Today Article Biographies of Guests Dr. James Cook Dr. James Cook is currently an Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Maine at Augusta. His primary areas of interest in research and teaching are political organizations, social networks, social media, and the sociology of gender. That interest is reflected in the development of new courses at UMA in Social Networks and Analyzing Social Media and in community service (where his current projects are attempts to deepen student connections with the UMA Community Gardens civic engagement project and the Maine State Legislature). His present research interests include applications of social network and social identity theory to social media, the development and testing of a social network model of state legislators, and the application of workplace theories of glass ceilings and escalators to explain patterns of cooperation among legislators along and across lines of gender.  He is also engaged in research regarding the social network characteristics of publicly-communicating groups of sexual minorities. Dr. James Cook received a B.A. in Sociology from Oberlin College in 1993 and M.A. and Ph.D. in Sociology from the University of Arizona in 1996 and 2000, respectively.     Your host Thomas B. Linquist is the Founder and Managing Director of Lyceum Leadership Consulting and Lyceum Leadership Productions. Over his 16 years in management and leadership consulting he has served a wide array of corporate clients.  This includes leadership assessment and search for chief executive officers, chief financial officers, chief operating officers and boards of directors.  He holds an MBA from the University of Chicago and over his 30-year career has served in a variety of roles: as an engineer with Shell Oil Company, a banker with ABN AMRO Bank, and as treasurer was the youngest corporate officer in the 150+ year history at Peoples Energy Company in Chicago.  He is an expert on hiring and promotion decisions and leadership development.  Over the course of his search career, he has interviewed thousands of leaders. Thanks for listening.  We can't improve without your feedback – write us through our website www.LeadershipLyceum.com and subscribe wherever you listen to your podcasts.  Please rate us and spread the word among your fellow executives and board colleagues.   Program Disclaimer The only purpose of the podcast is to educate, inform and entertain. The information shared is based on the collection of experiences of each of the guests interviewed and should not be considered or substituted for professional advice. Guests who speak in this podcast express their own opinions, experience and conclusions, and neither The Leadership Lyceum LLC nor any company providing financial support endorses or opposes any particular content, recommendation or methodology discussed in this podcast.   Follow Leadership Lyceum on: Our website: www.LeadershipLyceum.com LinkedIn: The Leadership Lyceum LLC Twitter: @LeaderLyceum https://twitter.com/LeaderLyceum Email us: info@LeadershipLyceum.com   Thanks for listening.  We can't improve without your feedback – write us through our website www.LeadershipLyceum.com and subscribe wherever you listen to your podcasts.  Please rate us and spread the word among your fellow executives and board colleagues.   This podcast Leadership Lyceum: A CEO's Virtual Mentor has been a production of The Leadership Lyceum LLC. Copyright 2021. All rights reserved.

    58 min
  7. 12/18/2020

    Inspiring award-winning performances from your talent: Crossover applications to business leadership from the theatrical development process with Charles Newell, Artistic Director of Court Theatre in Chicago

    Inspiring award-winning performances from your talent: Crossover applications to business leadership from the theatrical development process with Charles Newell, Artistic Director of Court Theatre in Chicago A CEO's Virtual Mentor Episode 24   Welcome to Episode 24, Season 5, of the Leadership Lyceum: A CEO's Virtual Mentor®. I'm joined in the program today by Charles Newell, the Marilyn F. Vitale Artistic Director of the renowned and critically acclaimed Court Theatre in Chicago. This interview was recorded in the summer of 2019 as the Court Theatre's production of the play, The Adventures of Augie March, had completed its record-breaking performance run. We had intended to publish this episode early this year in 2020, but COVID hit and it seemed a little bold to put this out at the early stage of the pandemic. The world had other pressing items that deserved attention. But now, in the middle of the holiday season, we've been without live theater and entertainment for nine months, we thought this interview might be not only informative, but also soothing at this stage of the pandemic.   This interview is timeless and gets deep into a theatrical production's creative process as seen through the mind's eye of the director. In general, we, as an audience of entertainment, be it sports or the performing arts, are often spoiled with the perfection and professionalism of the finished product. But what is involved or required from a leadership perspective to develop and burnish the performance into the form to which we are also accustomed? What goes on in the business of theater has crossover applications to all business leaders. We'll cover a wide range of topics in today's program. We'll outline the organizational form of the Court Theatre, including its governance, funding and management structure. But the majority of our time will be spent stepping through the phases of the creation of a production from script selection to closing night.   Program Guide A CEO's Virtual Mentor Episode 24 Inspiring award-winning performances from your talent with Charles Newell, Artistic Director of Court Theatre in Chicago 0:00     Introduction to the program and Charles Newell, Artistic Director of the Court Theatre in Chicago 3:20     Court Theatre's history, governance structure, funding sources and unique structure with the University of Chicago. 5:09     Achieving high caliber of performances on a smaller budget than peers theater companies in Chicago 7:25     Unique mission and social-societal outcomes of Court Theatre in the realm of national theater. 10:39   Break 1 11:19   Phase 1 of the Theatrical Development Process: Finding and developing a script. 17:11   Break 2 17:27   Phase 2 of the Theatrical Development Process: Developing the look and feel of the production. Revealing the collaborative creative process. 25:01   Break 3 25:35   Phase 3 of the Theatrical Development Process: The Casting Process. Dealing with barriers and constraints. 32:45   Break 4 34:51   Phase 4 of the Theatrical Development Process: Production development, rehearsal, and refinement. Inspiring and motivating actors to perform at their best. 39:20   Break 5 39:46   Phase 5 of the Theatrical Development Process: The arc of production and performance evolution from opening night to closing night. Keeping a production evolving and improving in the absence of continuous rehearsals. 49:33   Break 6 50:03   Retrospective self-reflection on the evolution of a theater director. 55:06   Conclusion and coming attractions.   We would like to express our special thanks to the clients of Lyceum Leadership Consulting that enable us to bring you this podcast. Thanks for listening.  We can't improve without your feedback – write us through our website www.LeadershipLyceum.com and subscribe wherever you listen to your podcasts.  See you next time.   Informative and Helpful Links   https://www.courttheatre.org/ http://manualcinema.com/   Biographies of Guests Mr. Charles Newell Charles Newell is the Marilyn F. Vitale Artistic Director of Court Theatre. He was awarded the SDCF Zelda Fichandler Award, "which recognizes an outstanding director or choreographer who is transforming the regional arts landscape through singular creativity and artistry in theatre." Charlie has been Artistic Director at Court Theatre since 1994, where he has directed over 50 productions. He made his Chicago directorial debut in 1993 with The Triumph of Love, which won the Joseph Jefferson Award for Best Production. Charlie's productions of Man of La Mancha and Caroline, or Change have also won Best Production Jeffs. Other directorial highlights at Court include All My Sons, The Hard Problem,  Man in the Ring; One Man, Two Guvnors; Satchmo at the Waldorf; Agamemnon; The Secret Garden; Iphigenia in Aulis; M. Butterfly; The Misanthrope; Tartuffe; Proof; Angels in America; An Iliad; Porgy and Bess; Three Tall Women; Titus Andronicus; Arcadia; Uncle Vanya; Raisin; The Glass Menagerie; Travesties; Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?; The Invention of Love; and Hamlet. Charlie has also directed at Goodman Theatre (Rock 'n' Roll), Guthrie Theater (The History Cycle, Cymbeline), Arena Stage, John Houseman's The Acting Company (Staff Repertory Director), the California and Alabama Shakespeare Festivals, Juilliard, and New York University. He has served on the Board of TCG, as well as on several panels for the NEA. Opera directing credits include Marc Blitzstein's Regina (Lyric Opera), Rigoletto (Opera Theatre of St. Louis), Don Giovanni and The Jewel Box (Chicago Opera Theater), and Carousel (Glimmerglass). Charlie was the recipient of the 1992 TCG Alan Schneider Director Award, and has been nominated for 16 Joseph Jefferson Director Awards, winning four times. In 2012, Charlie was honored by the League of Chicago Theatres with its Artistic Achievement Award.   Your host Thomas B. Linquist is the Founder and Managing Director of Lyceum Leadership Consulting and Lyceum Leadership Productions. Over his 15 years in management and leadership consulting he has served a wide array of corporate clients.  This includes leadership assessment and search for chief executive officers, chief financial officers, chief operating officers and boards of directors.  He holds an MBA from the University of Chicago and over his 30-year career has served in a variety of roles: as an engineer with Shell Oil Company, a banker with ABN AMRO Bank, and as treasurer was the youngest corporate officer in the 150+ year history at Peoples Energy Company in Chicago.  He is an expert on hiring and promotion decisions and leadership development.  Over the course of his search career, he has interviewed thousands of leaders. Thanks for listening.  We can't improve without your feedback – write us through our website www.LeadershipLyceum.com and subscribe wherever you listen to your podcasts.  Please rate us and spread the word among your fellow executives and board colleagues.   Program Disclaimer The only purpose of the podcast is to educate, inform and entertain. The information shared is based on the collection of experiences of each of the guests interviewed and should not be considered or substituted for professional advice. Guests who speak in this podcast express their own opinions, experience and conclusions, and neither The Leadership Lyceum LLC nor any company providing financial support endorses or opposes any particular content, recommendation or methodology discussed in this podcast.   Follow Leadership Lyceum on: Our website: www.LeadershipLyceum.com LinkedIn: The Leadership Lyceum LLC Twitter: @LeaderLyceum https://twitter.com/LeaderLyceum Email us: info@LeadershipLyceum.com   Thanks for listening.  We can't improve without your feedback – write us through our website www.LeadershipLyceum.com and subscribe wherever you listen to your podcasts.  Please rate us and spread the word among your fellow executives and board colleagues.  This podcast Leadership Lyceum: A CEO's Virtual Mentor has been a production of The Leadership Lyceum LLC. Copyright 2020. All rights reserved.

    56 min
  8. 06/21/2019

    The Anatomy of a Private Equity Investment: from M&A roll-up, to IPO, and beyond with Advanced Disposal Services' Chairman and CEO Richard Burke

    "Service First, Safety Always" The Anatomy of a Private Equity Investment: from M&A roll-up, to IPO, and beyond with Advanced Disposal Services' Chairman and CEO Richard Burke A CEO's Virtual Mentor Episode 23  Welcome to episode 23 and the beginning of Season 4 of A CEO's Virtual Mentor. I'd like to express our special thanks to the clients of Lyceum Leadership Consulting that have enabled us to bring you this podcast, and to you, ladies and gentlemen, our devoted listenership, for your continued encouragement and programming suggestions. And let me mention that we cannot improve without your feedback and suggestions. Please take a moment and subscribe on iTunes or your favorite podcast platform, and rate us with your feedback. There are two main features on our program today. I. We occasionally feature a spot on the program called Famous Last Words. We will intersperse excerpts of a dramatic scene from the 1956 movie, "Patterns…of Power!", through the breaks in our program. Patterns' brilliant screenplay was written by Rod Serling of Twilight Zone fame. The Patterns script predated Twilight Zone and is considered by many as the finest piece of writing Rod Serling has ever done and brought him instant acclaim. We'll feature the dramatic scene between ruthless, cold, and calculating owner of the corporation Walter Ramsey, played by Everett Sloane, and youthful, charismatic and considerate industrial engineer, Fred Staples, played by Van Heflin. Ramsey is impressed with the performance of Fred Staples at a company Ramsey has recently acquired. Ramsey's grooming Staples to replace the struggling, but highly principled Bill Briggs, played by Ed Begley, as the second in command at the company. II. For our main event in the program, I'm joined by Richard Burke, Chairman and CEO of publicly-traded solid waste services company, Advanced Disposal Services.  We'll be discussing Richard's leadership in a company that delivers a service punch well above its $1.6 billion weight class. We'll cover its evolution from private equity backed roll-up of solid waste businesses through its IPO in October of 2016 and right up to just prior to the announcement on April 15, 2019, that Waste Management would purchase Advanced Disposal. Our interview covers a lot of ground and addresses an array of situation-specific business leadership topics, including: The economics of the solid waste business. A company's evolution from private equity ownership to IPO M&A and the "Four D's" behind a seller's motivation Corporate Reputation and Integrity Reputation Derived from Investors on the Path to an IPO Safety and Corporate Culture Post-IPO Board Composition Considerations  We would like to express our special thanks to the clients of Lyceum Leadership Consulting that enable us to bring you this podcast. Thanks for listening.  We can't improve without your feedback – write us through our website www.LeadershipLyceum.com and subscribe wherever you listen to your podcasts.  Informative and Helpful Links "Patterns…of Power!" (Full Movie) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UMnU4faUMUY   Program Guide Episode 23 "Service First, Safety Always" The Anatomy of a Private Equity Investment: from M&A roll-up, to IPO, and beyond with Advanced Disposal Services' Chairman and CEO Richard Burke A CEO's Virtual Mentor Episode 23  0:06     Introduction to Program 1:05     Introduction to Famous Last Words feature "Patterns…of Power!" 2:51     Interview with Richard Burke 11:02   Music Break 1 11:19   Patterns Scene 1 of 4    15:24   Music Break 2 15:43   Richard Burke on Landfill Economics 16:48   The Secondary Vertically Integrated Market 19:09   Geographic Adjacencies 21:28   The Seller's Consideration and "the Four D's" 23:03   Reputation Requirements for M&A 23:20   Music Break 3 23:26   Private Equity Interest and Approach in the Solid Waste Sector 27:13   Advantages of Funding/Partnering with Private Equity 28:48   Music Break 4 29:07   Patterns Scene 2 of 4    30:22   Music Break 5 30:40   Transactions that Formed ADS Today 32:47   Reputation Derived from Investors on the Path to an IPO 33:49   Assembling the Management Team During the Formative Transactions 35:12   Culture and "Service First, Safety Always" 38:49   Music Break 6 38:55   Patterns Scene 3 of 4    39:23   Music Break 7 39:36   Post-IPO Board Composition Considerations 44:56   Post-IPO Management Team Skills/Experience Considerations 46:43   Music Break 8 47:10   Richard Burke's Individual Leadership and Foundational Experiences. 52:22   Concluding Comments 52:59   Patterns Scene 4 of 4    Biographies of Guests Mr. Richard Burke Mr. Burke serves as Chief Executive Officer of Advanced Disposal. Prior to serving as CEO, he served as President of the company and was responsible for mergers and acquisitions, purchasing, risk management, human resources and strategic planning. He joined Advanced Disposal following the acquisition of Veolia Environmental Services Solid Waste in November 2012, where he was President and CEO of Veolia Environmental Services North America since 2007. Mr. Burke began his employment with Veolia in 1999 as Area Manager for the Southeast Wisconsin area and served as Regional Vice President for the Eastern and Southern markets until he was appointed Chief Executive Officer.  As CEO, Mr. Burke was responsible for leading Veolia Environmental Services in the U.S. and Canada, which included annual revenue of $2 billion, more than 200 locations and a team of 10,000 employees.  Prior to joining Veolia, he spent 12 years with Waste Management in a variety of leadership positions.  He currently serves on the Board of the Environmental Research and Education Foundation and in September 2017 was named to the Board of Estre Ambiental S.A., which is the largest waste management company in Brazil and Latin America by disposal capacity. Mr. Burke holds a bachelor's degree from Randolph Macon College.   Your host Thomas B. Linquist is the Founder and Managing Partner of Lyceum Leadership Consulting and Lyceum Leadership Productions. Over his 14 years in management and leadership consulting he has served a wide array of industrial clients.  This includes leadership assessment and search for chief executive officers, chief financial officers, chief operating officers and boards of directors.  He holds an MBA from the University of Chicago and over his 28-year career has served in a variety of roles: as an engineer with Shell Oil Company, a banker with ABN AMRO Bank, and as treasurer was the youngest corporate officer in the 150+ year history at Peoples Energy Company in Chicago.  He is an expert on hiring and promotion decisions and leadership development.  Over the course of his search career, he has interviewed thousands of leaders.  Thanks for listening.  We can't improve without your feedback – write us through our website www.LeadershipLyceum.com and subscribe wherever you listen to your podcasts.  Please rate us and spread the word among your fellow executives and board colleagues. Program Disclaimer The only purpose of the podcast is to educate, inform and entertain. The information shared is based on the collection of experiences of each of the guests interviewed and should not be considered or substituted for professional advice. Guests who speak in this podcast express their own opinions, experience and conclusions, and neither The Leadership Lyceum LLC nor any company providing financial support endorses or opposes any particular content, recommendation or methodology discussed in this podcast.   Follow Leadership Lyceum on: Our website: www.LeadershipLyceum.com LinkedIn: The Leadership Lyceum LLC Twitter: @LeaderLyceum https://twitter.com/LeaderLyceum Email us: info@LeadershipLyceum.com   Thanks for listening.  We can't improve without your feedback – write us through our website www.LeadershipLyceum.com and subscribe wherever you listen to your podcasts.  Please rate us and spread the word among your fellow executives and board colleagues.  This podcast Leadership Lyceum: A CEO's Virtual Mentor has been a production of The Leadership Lyceum LLC. Copyright 2019. All rights reserved.

    55 min
4.7
out of 5
12 Ratings

About

The Leadership Lyceum: A CEO's Virtual Mentor podcast series provides situational advice to a wide audience of leaders and boards of directors through conversations with those that have been there. The podcast brings unprecedented, one-on-one access to top, current and retired, CEOs and Directors of Boards and provides beneficial information and valuable insight on situational and topical issues that confront CEOs and Boards from those that have faced them before - often in dramatic circumstances. Consider it a "Virtual Mentor" for CEOs and other leaders, because let's face it – it's lonely at the top. There are basic leadership challenges common to all CEOs as well as specific situational circumstances that warrant attention in our series. The interview format delivers memoir, profile, perspective, and in a unique fashion - not only draws answers - but also brings fundamental insight. We hope that you will find merit in all the episodes and comment and contribute your own situations of interest. We'll do our best to cover them with those CEOs that have faced them.