The Global Business Insights Podcast with Dr Charlotte de Brabandt & Max Kent

Max Kent

The Global Business Insights Podcast with Dr Charlotte de Brabandt & Max Kent. Each week we will be publishing our new interviews featuring experts, thought leaders and global specialists giving their insights and knowledge on the business topics and subjects they work in. Series 8 focuses on hyper leadership with a growing focus on Max and Charlotte's books they both have coming into publishing soon.

  1. Weeds & Wild Growth – Managing the Unplanned

    9小时前

    Weeds & Wild Growth – Managing the Unplanned

    Every active organisation accumulates weeds — unnecessary tasks, outdated processes, small dysfunctions that appear without permission. The question isn't whether you'll have them. It's whether you'll manage them before they take over. In this episode, Max & Charlotte explore the difference between inevitable organisational mess and patterns that genuinely threaten system health. Not all weeds are equally dangerous — and not all "unplanned growth" is actually a problem. Max introduces four categories of weeds: harmless (small annoyances that don't affect outcomes), thirsty (tasks or people consuming attention without giving value back), warning (repeated errors signalling deeper issues), and invasive (patterns that will destabilise the whole system if left unchecked — chronic bullying, systemic under-resourcing, unethical practices). Max examines how quiet organisational narratives grow into cultural weeds. Stories like "We don't say no to clients" or "We don't challenge leadership" often start as coping strategies but eventually become unwritten rules that block healthy behaviour. Because they're rarely spoken aloud, they're almost impossible to challenge — until a leader deliberately surfaces them. He also explores wild growth as a signal, not just a problem. Side projects, informal networks and experiments that emerge without official permission can indicate where the system wants to evolve. Wise leaders don't automatically cut all wild growth — they observe it, learn from it, and choose what to cultivate intentionally. The episode highlights why early, proportionate responses prevent weeds becoming crises. A small process tweak, a direct conversation, or a boundary around scope can stop a problem long before drastic action is needed. But that requires regular, honest inspection of your calendar, culture and outcomes. Finally, Max examines the role of capacity in how weeds are experienced. The same minor issue will feel like an irritation in a well-resourced team and a disaster in an exhausted one. This is why tending the soil — protecting bandwidth, maintaining resilience — matters as much as pulling weeds. You'll come away with a practical question: What's a weed, what's a warning, and what's actually trying to grow?

    19 分钟
  2. Pruning Without Punishment – Intelligent Reduction

    7月2日

    Pruning Without Punishment – Intelligent Reduction

    Most organisations are drowning under commitments made for a different reality — and nobody has permission to let go. In this episode, Max & Charlotte explore "pruning" as a core leadership practice: the deliberate, strategic ending of work, projects, promises and emotional narratives that no longer serve where the organisation is heading. While most leaders are rewarded for adding — more features, more markets, more initiatives — few are trained in the art of intelligent reduction. Max explains why pruning isn't about harshness or failure — it's an act of protection. When you don't actively prune, old obligations quietly drain energy from what matters now. Teams suffocate under legacy expectations. Innovation can't breathe. Burnout becomes structural, not personal. He examines why organisations resist pruning even when overloaded: much of their identity is tied to growth through addition, and saying NO feels like shrinking. There's also political fear — ending something publicly can feel like admitting it was wrong to start. So instead, old commitments linger in the background, consuming time, attention and credibility. The episode highlights the hidden cost of legacy expectations — the promises, targets and habits that were set in a completely different context but never revisited. Leaders who don't actively question these inherit a to-do list written for someone else's reality. Max also explores the emotional narratives that require pruning: beliefs like "I must always be available", "Saying no makes me difficult" or "My value is measured only in output." These stories drive overwork, erode boundaries and prevent clarity. When you consciously retire them, healthier narratives can take root. Finally, he reframes pruning as a leadership responsibility: it's how you protect the system's health and create space for what actually matters. Without pruning, new ideas suffocate. With it, teams regain capacity to think, collaborate and innovate. You'll come away with a clear lens: What needs ending so that what matters can grow?

    17 分钟
  3. Watering What Matters – Focus, Energy & Attention

    6月25日

    Watering What Matters – Focus, Energy & Attention

    What gets your attention gets your energy — and what gets your energy grows. In this episode, Max & Charlotte explore the idea of “watering” as a leadership practice: where you direct your time, focus and attention determines what actually develops inside your organisation. While many leaders say they value strategy, development and long-term improvement, the reality is often very different — most energy ends up being poured into urgent issues, reactive conversations and short-term pressure cycles. Max explains how this pattern trains organisations to produce more of what they feed. If you consistently water crisis, you grow crisis. If you reward urgency, you create urgency. Over time, the system reflects behaviour, not intention. He also examines why leaders tend to water the wrong things during difficult seasons. Under pressure, energy naturally flows to the loudest voices and most immediate problems, but this often keeps teams stuck in survival mode. The challenge — and leadership responsibility — is to consciously redirect attention towards the quieter, foundational work that actually changes outcomes. The episode highlights the importance of presence as a form of nourishment. In high-pressure environments, genuine attention can stabilise performance far more effectively than additional tools or processes. Max also explores the difference between connection and intensity, and why strong relationships create resilience that constant pressure cannot.

    18 分钟

关于

The Global Business Insights Podcast with Dr Charlotte de Brabandt & Max Kent. Each week we will be publishing our new interviews featuring experts, thought leaders and global specialists giving their insights and knowledge on the business topics and subjects they work in. Series 8 focuses on hyper leadership with a growing focus on Max and Charlotte's books they both have coming into publishing soon.