Live Without an Expiration Date

Rich Jones

Weekly podcast hosted by executive coach Rich Jones exploring the human side of career disruption, identity, and reinvention through honest solo reflections and guest conversations for those navigating change and redefining success. rjones0747.substack.com

  1. They Hired Someone Younger. Now What?

    5d ago

    They Hired Someone Younger. Now What?

    You didn’t get the job. Or the promotion. Or the project. And something felt off. The interviewer kept asking about your “comfort with new technology.” Or they mentioned the team is “really energetic.” Or you just noticed that everyone in the room looked like they graduated sometime after the release of the iPhone. You suspect ageism. Maybe you’re right. Maybe you’re not. Either way, you’re stuck sitting in that feeling — part anger, part self-doubt, part the distinct suspicion that your LinkedIn photo is doing you no favors. In this episode, Rich Jones gets into the reality of age discrimination in the workplace: what it actually looks like, how to tell the difference between ageism and just not being the right fit, and — most importantly — what you can actually do about it. Not the “stay positive and keep networking” advice. The real stuff. We talk about reframing your experience as an asset without sounding like you’re reading from a retirement brochure, how to modernize your professional presence without performing a personality transplant, and why the professionals who navigate this best aren’t the ones who pretend age doesn’t exist — they’re the ones who make it irrelevant. If you’re in your 40s, 50s, or 60s and you’ve felt the quiet sting of being passed over for someone who still thinks a mortgage is something that happens to other people — this episode is for you. Runtime: ~50 minutes Show: Live Without an Expiration Date Host: Rich Jones This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit rjones0747.substack.com

    33 min
  2. The Disruption Conversation

    Jun 29

    The Disruption Conversation

    There’s a moment in almost every job interview for someone in the second half of their career when the question arrives. Sometimes it’s direct: “Walk me through the gap on your resume.” Sometimes it’s softer: “Tell me about your most recent transition.” However it’s phrased, what the interviewer is really asking is: What happened to you? And are you okay? Most people are not prepared for this conversation — not because they don’t have an answer, but because the answer is loaded. The gap, the departure, the restructuring, the exit that was complicated — these things carry weight. And when that weight shows up in an interview room, it shows. Not always in the words. In everything around the words. In this episode, Rich Jones walks through how to handle this conversation honestly, professionally, and without tanking your candidacy before you ever get to the part where you’re actually impressive. This isn’t a word-choice episode. It starts where most career coaching advice doesn’t — with the reality that preparing your answer to this question is an emotional processing exercise first and a communications exercise second. If you haven’t made peace with what happened internally, no amount of careful phrasing is going to carry you across the finish line. Experienced interviewers have seen that performance. They know what it looks like. From there, Rich covers the five cardinal rules that apply regardless of your specific situation — including the one that trips up the most people (and it isn’t the obvious one). Then a practical three-part framework for building an answer that’s honest, grounded, and forward-facing — with a worked example you can actually model. The harder cases get direct attention: being managed out, owning a performance issue without tanking your candidacy, navigating health and caregiving gaps, and talking about an entrepreneurial venture that didn’t go the way you planned. These are the scenarios most career advice skips over. This episode doesn’t. Rich also covers what to do when the interviewer keeps pushing — follow-up questions, reference alignment, and how to hold a boundary professionally when the conversation goes further than it needs to. And he closes with five concrete preparation steps to do before you walk into any interview where this conversation is likely to come up. If you’re in a search — or you can see one on the horizon — this is the episode to have in your back pocket before you sit across from anyone. Topics covered: career disruption, job search, interview preparation, career gaps, layoffs, career transitions, second half of career, professional reinvention This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit rjones0747.substack.com

    47 min
  3. Redefining Success in the Second Half of your Career

    Jun 22

    Redefining Success in the Second Half of your Career

    You’ve been measuring success your whole career. The question nobody asked you — including you — is whether you chose the metrics. In this episode of Live Without an Expiration Date, Rich Jones takes on one of the most avoided conversations in the second half of a career: what success actually means once the ladder runs out of rungs. Not a motivational answer. Not a retirement-planning answer. A real one. The original definition of success — title, trajectory, compensation, position — wasn’t wrong. It was rational. And it served you. Until it didn’t. The problem isn’t that you chased those things. The problem is that most people never stop to ask whether the definition still fits once the context changes. In the second half of your career, the context has changed. Dramatically. Rich walks through why the second half plays by different rules, the five most common mistakes people make when they try to redefine success (including the ones that stop them before they even start), and a four-dimension framework for building a definition that actually reflects who you are — and where you want to go — in this chapter. This episode is for the person who’s still running on the original software. Who’s optimizing for a scoreboard they never consciously chose. Who has asked the quiet Tuesday question — “Is this it?” — and hasn’t answered it yet. In this episode: * Why the first-half definition of success made sense — and why it doesn’t anymore * The five mistakes people make when they try to redefine success (and how to avoid them) * Four dimensions of a second-half definition: Impact, Autonomy, Sustainability, Alignment * Five questions for the conversation you need to have with yourself * How to close the gap between the new definition and your current reality — without burning everything down * What it actually looks like when people get this right The scoreboard you’ve been watching? Someone else built it. This episode is about building your own. Live Without an Expiration Date is produced by Leading2Leadership LLC. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit rjones0747.substack.com

    47 min
  4. The Contribution Conversation

    Jun 15

    The Contribution Conversation

    There’s a conversation most experienced professionals never have. Not because no one would listen. Because most of us don’t know we’re allowed to have it. It’s not a performance review. It’s not a raise negotiation. It’s a direct, professional accounting of your value — what you bring, where it creates the most impact, and what the organization needs from you right now. In this episode, Rich Jones breaks down the contribution conversation — why experienced professionals avoid it, what’s actually at stake when they do, and exactly how to have it in the second half of your career. You’ll hear why seniority often makes people quieter about their own value, not louder. Why the gap between what you bring and what leadership perceives you to bring is one of the primary reasons talented, experienced professionals end up sidelined. And why waiting for someone else to raise the subject means you’ve already lost the frame. Rich walks through the three layers of senior professional contribution — technical expertise, pattern recognition, and relational capital — and why most people lead with the first and leave the other two invisible. He covers when to have the conversation, how to enter it depending on where you are, and the specific language and structure that makes it land. This isn’t about self-promotion. It’s about professional responsibility. If you’ve spent decades developing expertise, judgment, and relationships that are genuinely hard to replace — this episode is about making sure the people who need to know it, know it. Live Without an Expiration Date is for professionals navigating career disruption, reinvention, and relevance in the second half of their working lives. Hosted by Rich Jones. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit rjones0747.substack.com

    34 min
  5. The Waiting Room — How to Function When Layoffs Are Circling

    Jun 1

    The Waiting Room — How to Function When Layoffs Are Circling

    You’ve heard the rumors. The calendar invites went to certain people — and not you. The reorg came down written in that careful corporate language designed to say everything and nothing. And now you’re waiting. This episode is about that specific experience. Not the layoff itself — the suspended state before it. Where you’re still showing up, still doing the work, still maintaining the game face, while something underneath won’t stop running a threat scan. Rich covers what sustained uncertainty actually does to experienced professionals — the cognitive tax, the identity hit, the way it quietly erodes team relationships, and the physical toll that accumulates before you realize it’s there. He offers a two-track framework for functioning inside it: stabilization first, preparation in parallel — and why jumping straight to frantic activity tends to produce worse results than thinking clearly from a steadier place. He also goes somewhere most career coaches don’t: the harder question underneath the tactical one. What is this period actually telling you about your relationship to your work? Is what’s threatened something you want to protect — or something you’ve been holding onto out of habit? And for the experienced professionals carrying an extra layer of fear — not just “will I lose this job” but “will anyone want me at this level, at this stage” — Rich addresses it directly. The concern is real. Catastrophizing it isn’t useful. For anyone in the waiting room right now. And for anyone who’s been there and is still trying to make sense of what it meant. ~30 minutes. No pep talks. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit rjones0747.substack.com

    32 min
  6. Choosing to Step Away - Leaving as an Act of Leadership

    May 18

    Choosing to Step Away - Leaving as an Act of Leadership

    Most organizations don’t have a model for the leader who leaves on purpose. They have plenty of language for the ones who get pushed out — the restructuring, the performance conversation that went sideways, the long goodbye nobody wanted to have. But the leader who looks at the situation clearly, decides the time is right, and walks out the door with intention? That story rarely gets told the way it deserves. In this episode, we make the case that choosing to step away — done with clarity, honesty, and a genuine commitment to the transition — is one of the most underrecognized acts of leadership available to a senior executive. We talk about the signals that tell you the time might be now: contribution ceiling, energy drift, alignment erosion, and the moment you realize your presence has become a ceiling for someone on your team. We get into the identity trap that keeps most leaders in their chairs long past the point of contribution. And we walk through what a clean exit actually requires — not as a checklist, but as a set of principles that separate departures that serve everyone from the ones that quietly damage what you spent years building. This isn’t an episode about burnout. It’s not about being forced out. It’s about the leaders who earned the right to decide — and decided well. If you’re somewhere near that question right now, this one’s for you. Hosted by Rich Jones | Leading2Leadership LLC This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit rjones0747.substack.com

    30 min

About

Weekly podcast hosted by executive coach Rich Jones exploring the human side of career disruption, identity, and reinvention through honest solo reflections and guest conversations for those navigating change and redefining success. rjones0747.substack.com