EPISODE · Nov 15, 2025 · 19 MIN
Making the implicit explicit - A conversation with Justin Wise
from Conversations For Relationship · host Andrew Wynne
Effective leadership often hinges on clarity — not just in strategy, but in communication. The concept of "making the implicit explicit" refers to a leader’s ability to surface assumptions, intentions, expectations, and unspoken norms that often remain beneath the surface in professional environments.In practice, this means:Clearly articulating what success looks like — rather than assuming others share the same vision.Naming tensions or ambiguities instead of allowing them to linger unaddressed.Voicing feedback, appreciation, or concerns directly and constructively.Aligning on roles, responsibilities, and decision-making authority, rather than relying on inference.When leaders make the implicit explicit, they build psychological safety, reduce confusion, accelerate trust, and foster more accountable, empowered teams. It’s a discipline that requires courage, presence, and intentionality — and it separates good leadership from great.Today I’m joined by Justin Wise — founder of The Third Space, a community dedicated to helping people reimagine the world through spiritual formation, wisdom practices, and deep conversation. Justin brings a rare combination of depth, clarity, and curiosity to the way he works with leaders and teams. In a noisy world, he helps people slow down, listen well, and attend to what really matters. I’m excited to explore what it means to lead — and live — from that kind of space.
What this episode covers
Effective leadership often hinges on clarity — not just in strategy, but in communication. The concept of "making the implicit explicit" refers to a leader’s ability to surface assumptions, intentions, expectations, and unspoken norms that often remain beneath the surface in professional environments.In practice, this means:Clearly articulating what success looks like — rather than assuming others share the same vision.Naming tensions or ambiguities instead of allowing them to linger unaddressed.Voicing feedback, appreciation, or concerns directly and constructively.Aligning on roles, responsibilities, and decision-making authority, rather than relying on inference.When leaders make the implicit explicit, they build psychological safety, reduce confusion, accelerate trust, and foster more accountable, empowered teams. It’s a discipline that requires courage, presence, and intentionality — and it separates good leadership from great.Today I’m joined by Justin Wise — founder of The Third Space, a community dedicated to helping people reimagine the world through spiritual formation, wisdom practices, and deep conversation. Justin brings a rare combination of depth, clarity, and curiosity to the way he works with leaders and teams. In a noisy world, he helps people slow down, listen well, and attend to what really matters. I’m excited to explore what it means to lead — and live — from that kind of space.
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Making the implicit explicit - A conversation with Justin Wise
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