The Culture Advantage

Michael Baran

Every organization has a culture, whether by design or by default. The real question is: does your culture give you an advantage… or hold you back? Hosted by Dr. Michael Baran, cultural anthropologist, speaker, author, and consultant with 30 years of experience, The Culture Advantage helps leaders, teams, and professionals navigate the hidden forces that shape workplace success. From everyday interactions to organizational systems, Dr. Baran uncovers and shares how culture drives engagement, retention, innovation, performance, and well-being. Each episode delivers practical strategies, compelling stories, and fresh insights to help you create a healthier, more inclusive, and higher-performing workplace. Whether you’re an executive, manager, or team member, you’ll gain the tools to transform your culture and unlock the full potential of your people. 👉 Subscribe and join the movement to make culture your competitive advantage.

  1. 11/25/2025

    Black Fatigue in 2025, with authors Mary-Frances Winters and Mareisha Winters Reese

    Black fatigue is not just about Black people being tired. It’s about the real psychological and physical costs of racism, inequity, and exclusion. This is a people issue, and also a business issue. Any organization that ignores Black fatigue is choosing higher burnout, turnover, and reputational risk over trust, innovation, and real performance. In this incredibly relevant and important episode, Dr. Michael Baran interviews two guests: (1) legendary trailblazer Mary-Frances Winters who coined the term Black Fatigue in her 2020 book of the same name, and (2) her daughter and business partner Mareisha Winters Reese who is collaborating with Mary-Frances to write the second edition of that book, to be released in June 2026. Michael and these guests unpack what Black Fatigue really is and how racism literally erodes the mind, body, and spirit across generations. Mary-Frances and Mareisha share what has changed in the forthcoming second edition of the book, including new chapters on AI, global Black experiences, and their perspective on the deliberate attempts to erase Black people, culture, and history. We also dig into the emotional weight of this political moment, the weaponizing of and co-opting of terms like DEI, “woke,” and Black Fatigue itself! We close with concrete ways to learn, act, and sustain resistance, including their upcoming companion workbook on healing Black Fatigue. Resources mentioned: Black Fatigue bookPreorder Black Fatigue second editionDocumentary, 13thPodcast, 1619Michael’s piece on Frozen II

    1h 4m
  2. 11/18/2025

    From Murder Cases to Music Legends: Ethical Documentary Filmmaking with Oscar-winning Producer Caroline Waterlow

    I often recommend documentaries as a good way for people to learn more about others who they might not have a lot of experience with. But not all documentaries are created equal. There are so many decisions involved in ethical and responsible storytelling.  In this behind-the-scenes episode, Dr. Michael Baran interviews Oscar, Emmy, and Peabody award-winning documentary film producer Caroline Waterlow. Caroline isbased in New York City and has been working in the documentary film industry for almost 30 years. She produced such award-winning documentaries as OJ: Made in America, STAX: Soulsville, U.S.A, Vow of Silence: The Assassination of Annie Mae, and so many more. In this episode, Michael and Caroline talk about a wide range of fascinating issues: (a) ethical representation in documentary filmmaking, (b) rapidly building a culture of inclusion and safety with project teams, (c) bias and inequities faced by women in this industry, (d) building trust with people, (e) fascinating behind the scenes details about the making of the documentaries, and so much more. She ends by giving us a teaser of her upcoming work, dealing with themes of sex, AIDS, body positivity, and public access TV in New York City.   Resources mentioned: Caroline Waterlow IMDb page OJ: Made in America on Netflix Stax: Soulville USA on HBO Vow of Silence: The Assassination of Annie Mae on Hulu Cameraperson on HBO Subject on Prime Video

    57 min
  3. 11/04/2025

    “I never leave the pizza boxes:” Ally Actions with Karen Catlin

    When you think of being an ally, what comes to mind? Are you thinking that being an ally means being respectful to everyone? Are you thinking about a scenario where someone is being bullied or insulted and you stand up for them or stand with them? While those are both important, they are not enough, if we really want to create cultures of more inclusion and safety for everyone.  In this action-oriented episode, Michael interviews highly acclaimed workplace influencer, speaker, and four-time author, Karen Catlin. Karen went from 25 years building software products and serving as a vice president of engineering at Adobe to now being one of the most widely-known thought leaders on the topic of allyship. In this episode, Karen answers questions that so many people have about allyship. She clarifies how allyship really means taking action and how allyship is essential for building workplaces where everyone thrives. She also shares some examples of ally actions that from her newsletter that goes out to 40,000 people every week, including the example from the title which is related to the common occurrence of men leaving “office housework” to women in workplaces. Along the way, she talks more her journey and her optimism about the ripple effect that ally actions can have for our workplaces and for the world. Resources mentioned: Karen’s TEDx talk on women in techThe Wake Up book by Michelle MiJung KimSign up for Karen’s NewsletterMore information about Karen’s books

    1h 1m
  4. 10/21/2025

    The Pro Tips about Pronouns: Understanding and Improving They/Them Use

    There’s a lot of misunderstanding about the use of gender-neutral pronouns they/them in the workplace and in the world. Many people in your organization or in your life, especially younger people, would be feeling a lot more inclusion if people used these pronouns correctly. In this episode, Michael Baran delves into the many ways that people are messing up – by ignoring people’s identities, by debating the grammar of it (or some other devil’s advocate position), by rolling eyes or pausing before using those pronouns, as if to communicate something about it not being “normal.” Michael also provides straightforward and actionable tips, for using the pronouns correctly and for sharing your pronouns as a simple act of allyship. Have you struggled to understand why people share pronouns or what it means to use they/them pronouns? Have you noticed people making others feel uncomfortable by not using their pronouns naturally? What is behind all of this, and what can we do about it? In this episode of The Culture Advantage, host Michael Baran explains multiple encounters with people messing up on they/them gender pronouns as he would mention that the co-author of his book used those gender-neutral pronouns. He started to wonder whether it was just really hard for people to make their brains do that work if they weren’t used to it. But then he describes a situation in which a swim team coach used gender neutral pronouns perfectly! And it wasn’t because they had a lot of practice; it was because they were announcing a big award and wanted to keep the winner a surprise.  Michael gives some immediately actionable tips that everyone can follow: (1) use they/them pronouns naturally, without any extra eye rolls or tone changes; (2) give context if you think people need it;(3) understand that this use of they/them as singular has been around since the 1300s, according to Merriam-Webster; (4) speak up, even if it doesn’t affect you directly; (5) understand that using the pronouns that people want to be called does not threaten your own worldview; (6) don’t debate with people or play devil’s advocate, as they have thought long and hard about their identity; and (7) know that you will mess up sometimes and that the key is correcting it and moving on. This episode will be useful for everyone, with tips that will be used both in and out of work. The lessons in the episode are especially important for those trying to build cultures of inclusion in their workplaces. Intentional attention to detail and to practice around these issues is vital to ensure that the many nonbinary people in your organization (and other LGBTQIA+ people as well) feel their best and can do their best at your organization.

    16 min
5
out of 5
24 Ratings

About

Every organization has a culture, whether by design or by default. The real question is: does your culture give you an advantage… or hold you back? Hosted by Dr. Michael Baran, cultural anthropologist, speaker, author, and consultant with 30 years of experience, The Culture Advantage helps leaders, teams, and professionals navigate the hidden forces that shape workplace success. From everyday interactions to organizational systems, Dr. Baran uncovers and shares how culture drives engagement, retention, innovation, performance, and well-being. Each episode delivers practical strategies, compelling stories, and fresh insights to help you create a healthier, more inclusive, and higher-performing workplace. Whether you’re an executive, manager, or team member, you’ll gain the tools to transform your culture and unlock the full potential of your people. 👉 Subscribe and join the movement to make culture your competitive advantage.