EPISODE · Apr 30, 2026 · 53 MIN
How Scott Pulsipher Found His Fit as CEO of a 200,000-Student University
from Fit Happens: The Executive Search Podcast · host Jason Baumgarten
What does it really take to find the role you were built for — and lead it at scale?In this episode of Fit Happens, I sit down with Scott Pulsipher, CEO of Western Governors University, to explore how a former Amazon leader found the most meaningful fit of his career — and what it cost him to get there. Scott opens up about a brutal leadership feedback experience at Amazon that nearly broke his confidence, how that humbling moment became the foundation for his growth as a leader, and why attending a single WGU commencement convinced him this was the mission he'd been preparing for his entire career. We cover what Amazon's culture of customer obsession taught him, why he now hires for motivation over expertise, and what the future of education looks like in an AI-driven world.Key Takeaways:Brutal feedback, delivered well, can be the most important catalyst in a leader's developmentThe right fit isn't just about the role — it's about the mission, the context, and the momentCustomer obsession and process discipline are not opposites; they are multipliers of each otherStartup CEOs often centralize decision-making in ways that prevent scale — great leaders learn to delegate authority and accountability togetherHiring for expertise without weighting motivation and people skills produces only a fraction of the intended impactPotential, reasoning ability, and beginner's mind often matter more than prior experience at scaleExecutive search and hiring criteria that overweight past experience can systematically exclude the best candidatesTech fluency — particularly AI fluency — is becoming table stakes regardless of industry or career pathThe job-to-be-done framework applies to education decisions just as powerfully as to product strategyServing others is not a drain on a leader's energy — it is the fuelConnect with Jason: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasonbaumgarten/ Email the show here: fithappens.fm(00:00) - Introduction & episode theme (00:33) - Scott's welcome (00:44) - First job: bookkeeper at 14 (01:15) - Early career superpower: rapid learning (02:26) - Knowing the job to be done (03:07) - From Sterling Commerce to Amazon (05:00) - The leadership feedback program at Amazon (07:00) - Losing confidence — and rebuilding (07:52) - What brutal feedback taught Scott (08:30) - Seeking the right context to grow (10:10) - Becoming a steward, not a star (11:55) - Before WGU entered the picture (12:20) - Why a commencement changed everything (15:00) - Talent is universal — WGU's mission (16:00) - WGU explained for the uninitiated (16:12) - Competency-based education at scale (18:00) - 70,000 graduates a year — and counting (19:25) - Unlocking people's full potential (20:02) - The graduate counter on the wall (20:42) - Amazon's customer obsession lesson (21:30) - Student obsession as organizational north star (22:45) - Process as a scale enabler, not bureaucracy (24:11) - Startup CEOs and process problems (24:35) - Delegating decision-making authority (27:00) - Autonomy paired with accountability (28:10) - Flow states and leadership superpowers (28:53) - When Scott finds his flow (30:30) - Envisioning future state — the whiteboard moment (32:36) - When the leader must evolve with the org (33:28) - Board expectations: 40–50% on innovation (34:52) - Building the right team (35:31) - Shifting from expertise to motivation (38:40) - Experience vs. potential in hiring (39:12) - Why Scott himself wouldn't have passed traditional criteria (41:04) - Potential, beginner's mind, and fit (42:13) - What Scott chose to bring from Amazon (44:23) - Advice for parents on education and AI (44:51) - Job-to-be-done framework for education (48:00) - AI fluency as the new table stakes (49:15) - Speed round begins (49:28) - Leadership advice Scott thinks is actually harmful (50:33) - A skill he's changed his mind about (51:24) - The biggest surprise of being a CEO (51:58) - Book & TV recommendations (52:46) - Scott's go-to zone-out hobby (53:10) - Closing reflections
What this episode covers
What does it really take to find the role you were built for — and lead it at scale?In this episode of Fit Happens, I sit down with Scott Pulsipher, CEO of Western Governors University, to explore how a former Amazon leader found the most meaningful fit of his career — and what it cost him to get there. Scott opens up about a brutal leadership feedback experience at Amazon that nearly broke his confidence, how that humbling moment became the foundation for his growth as a leader, and why attending a single WGU commencement convinced him this was the mission he'd been preparing for his entire career. We cover what Amazon's culture of customer obsession taught him, why he now hires for motivation over expertise, and what the future of education looks like in an AI-driven world.Key Takeaways:Brutal feedback, delivered well, can be the most important catalyst in a leader's developmentThe right fit isn't just about the role — it's about the mission, the context, and the momentCustomer obsession and process discipline are not opposites; they are multipliers of each otherStartup CEOs often centralize decision-making in ways that prevent scale — great leaders learn to delegate authority and accountability togetherHiring for expertise without weighting motivation and people skills produces only a fraction of the intended impactPotential, reasoning ability, and beginner's mind often matter more than prior experience at scaleExecutive search and hiring criteria that overweight past experience can systematically exclude the best candidatesTech fluency — particularly AI fluency — is becoming table stakes regardless of industry or career pathThe job-to-be-done framework applies to education decisions just as powerfully as to product strategyServing others is not a drain on a leader's energy — it is the fuelConnect with Jason: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jasonbaumgarten/ Email the show here: fithappens.fm(00:00) - Introduction & episode theme (00:33) - Scott's welcome (00:44) - First job: bookkeeper at 14 (01:15) - Early career superpower: rapid learning (02:26) - Knowing the job to be done (03:07) - From Sterling Commerce to Amazon (05:00) - The leadership feedback program at Amazon (07:00) - Losing confidence — and rebuilding (07:52) - What brutal feedback taught Scott (08:30) - Seeking the right context to grow (10:10) - Becoming a steward, not a star (11:55) - Before WGU entered the picture (12:20) - Why a commencement changed everything (15:00) - Talent is universal — WGU's mission (16:00) - WGU explained for the uninitiated (16:12) - Competency-based education at scale (18:00) - 70,000 graduates a year — and counting (19:25) - Unlocking people's full potential (20:02) - The graduate counter on the wall (20:42) - Amazon's customer obsession lesson (21:30) - Student obsession as organizational north star (22:45) - Process as a scale enabler, not bureaucracy (24:11) - Startup CEOs and process problems (24:35) - Delegating decision-making authority (27:00) - Autonomy paired with accountability (28:10) - Flow states and leadership superpowers (28:53) - When Scott finds his flow (30:30) - Envisioning future state — the whiteboard moment (32:36) - When the leader must evolve with the org (33:28) - Board expectations: 40–50% on innovation (34:52) - Building the right team (35:31) - Shifting from expertise to motivation (38:40) - Experience vs. potential in hiring (39:12) - Why Scott himself wouldn't have passed traditional criteria (41:04) - Potential, beginner's mind, and fit (42:13) - What Scott chose to bring from Amazon (44:23) - Advice for parents on education and AI (44:51) - Job-to-be-done framework for education (48:00) - AI fluency as the new table stakes (49:15) - Speed round begins (49:28) - Leadership advice Scott thinks is actually harmful (50:33) - A skill he's changed his mind about (51:24) - The biggest surprise of being a CEO (51:58) - Book & TV recommendations (52:46) - Scott's go-to zone-out hobby (53:10) - Closing reflections
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How Scott Pulsipher Found His Fit as CEO of a 200,000-Student University
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