PODCAST · business
The Resilient Organization
by Dr. Ashley Newcomb
The Resilient Organization helps leaders recognize and address the hidden patterns that quietly undermine performance, engagement, and culture. Each season focuses on a critical challenge to organizational resilience, offering practical insight to help leaders see clearly and respond effectively.
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6
How Systems Reinforce Silence (S1E7)
Send us Fan MailIf every person on your team decided today to stop telling you the truth — the quiet version, where people still show up and still do their jobs but stop surfacing what they actually know — how long would it take you to notice?For six episodes, we've traced organizational silence through the people it affects. Today, the frame widens. Because at some point, silence stops being a collection of individual decisions and becomes something else: structural. Embedded in policies, processes, reward systems, and unwritten rules. And once that happens, no individual leader — no matter how good — can fully overcome a system that's working against them.In this episode, Dr. Ashley Newcomb introduces a framework for understanding the three types of organizational silence: the Give-Up Silence, the Cover-Your-Back Silence, and the Protective Silence. Each one looks different. Each one feels different from the inside. And each one requires a different response from leadership.You cannot fix a system problem with an individual solution. And most organizational culture initiatives are individual solutions dressed up as system changes.🎧 Listen now and grab free resources at inspiredcoaching.net---Topics covered in this episode:Organizational silence | Structural silence | Defensive silence | Acquiescent silence | Prosocial silence | Organizational culture | Feedback systems | Leadership accountability | Organizational resilience | Psychological safety | Reward systems | Change management | Employee voice | Workplace culture | Organizational diagnostics
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5
The Over-Functioning Leader Problem (S1E6)
Send us Fan MailWe've spent the last four episodes inside the follower's experience. Today, the camera turns.Naomi was the kind of leader everyone wanted on their team — present, capable, genuinely caring, and always the first person in the room when something went wrong. Her results were strong. Her team performed. And something was quietly falling apart underneath all of it.In this episode, Dr. Ashley Newcomb introduces the over-functioning leader — the leader whose most well-intentioned habits are systematically dismantling the engagement, initiative, and ownership of the people around them. She also steps off-script to name something that doesn't get talked about enough: the specific ways that women in leadership, younger leaders, and leaders who fought hardest to earn their place can be most vulnerable to this pattern — and why that matters.Because the goal of leadership is not to be needed. The goal is to build something that doesn't depend entirely on your presence to function.🎧 Listen now and grab free resources at inspiredcoaching.net---Topics covered in this episode:Over-functioning leadership | Leadership blind spots | Employee autonomy | Organizational Cinderella Syndrome | Organizational Learned Helplessness | Women in leadership | Leadership development | Follower dependency | Organizational resilience | Psychological safety | Servant leadership | Manager vs. leader | Workplace culture | Employee empowerment | Leadership accountabilityKeywords:over-functioning leadership, leadership blind spots, employee autonomy, women in leadership, organizational resilience, follower dependency, Organizational Cinderella Syndrome, Organizational Learned Helplessness, servant leadership, leadership development, workplace culture, employee empowerment, Dr. Ashley Newcomb, The Resilient Organization podcast, Inspired Coaching and Leadership
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4
Suffocating Autonomy: Cinderella Syndrome in Your Organization (S1E5)
Send us Fan MailEpisode 5: Organizational Cinderella SyndromeIn our last episode, we followed Elena — a manager who stopped trying not because she gave up on her career, but because the system around her stopped responding to her effort. That is Organizational Learned Helplessness. Today we look at something different. Something subtler. What happens when a capable follower doesn't lose hope — but stops believing they are the one who is supposed to act on it.This is Marcus's story. Marcus was quietly excellent — the person everyone relied on, the one whose judgment was consistently good. And then he got a new director. One who stepped in on every decision, reworked every output, and diplomatically communicated the same message in every interaction: your judgment is not the standard here. Mine is.Over time, Marcus stopped acting autonomously. Not because he couldn't. But because the system had conditioned him — slowly, convincingly — to wait for someone else to lead the way.That is Organizational Cinderella Syndrome. And in this episode, Dr. Ashley Newcomb breaks down exactly what it is, where it comes from, and the three types of leaders who create it — often without realizing it.Because the goal of leadership is not to be needed. The goal is to build something that doesn't depend entirely on your presence to function.🎧 Listen now and grab free resources at inspiredcoaching.net---Topics covered in this episode:Organizational Cinderella Syndrome | Follower dependency | Employee autonomy | Over-functioning leadership | Toxic leadership | Leadership blind spots | Organizational resilience | Follower behavior | Psychological safety | Employee empowerment | Leadership development | Workplace culture | Manager vs. leader | Discretionary effort | Organizational silence
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3
Learned Helplessness at Work (S1E4)
Send us Fan MailWhat happens when a follower stops trying — not because they don't care, but because experience has taught them that trying doesn't change anything?In Episode 4 of The Resilient Organization, Dr. Ashley Newcomb introduces Elena — a mid-level manager who was once exactly the kind of employee every organization wants. Proactive. Invested. Always bringing something forward. And then, one unreturned effort at a time, she stopped.This episode goes deep on Organizational Learned Helplessness at the individual level — how it develops, why it's almost impossible to see from the outside, and what leaders can do today to begin reversing it before it becomes something harder to recover from.They aren't stuck because they lack talent or passion. They're paralyzed because they no longer believe they hold the power to change their own story.
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2
The Myth of the Drama-Free Workplace (S1E3)
Send us Fan MailWhat if the quietest team in your organization is also your most dangerous one?In this episode, Dr. Ashley Newcomb introduces Shannon and Bryson — members of an IT team that did everything right. They caught real problems, reported them through the right channels, and were professional every step of the way. And they were punished for it.What happened next didn't look like a crisis. It looked like compliance. And that's exactly what made it so costly.This episode is about the myth of the drama-free workplace — the dangerous assumption that low conflict means healthy culture. Because sometimes the teams that cause you the least trouble are the ones that have simply decided your organization isn't worth the fight anymore.Silence is not the absence of problems. It's the absence of voice.Topics covered in this episode: Employee disengagement | Organizational silence | Workplace culture | Team dysfunction | Leadership blind spots | Psychological safety | Employee trust | Follower behavior | Organizational resilience | Silent organizations | Espoused vs. enacted values | High-performing teams | Leadership accountability | Workplace communication | Employee retentionKeywords: organizational silence, quiet quitting, employee disengagement, workplace culture, leadership development, psychological safety, team disengagement, follower behavior, organizational resilience, silent organization, employee trust, leadership accountability, workplace communication, Dr. Ashley Newcomb, The Resilient Organization podcast, Inspired Coaching and Leadership
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1
When High Performers Stop Talking (S1E2)
Send us Fan MailWhat happens when your most reliable people stop going above and beyond—but don’t say a word?In this episode of The Resilient Organization, Dr. Ashley Newcomb explores how high performers quietly disengage after learning their effort no longer leads to meaningful outcomes. Through a real-world story, you’ll learn to recognize the early signs of hidden disengagement, understand what drives it, and identify practical ways to address it before your best people begin to withdraw—or walk away.Topics: leadership, employee engagement, high performers, workplace culture, leadership development, organizational resilience
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0
The Day Your Organization Went Quiet (S1E1)
Send us Fan MailYour organization may not be as healthy as it looks.In this episode, Dr. Ashley Newcomb explores what happens when employees stop speaking up - not loudly, but quietly. Introducing the concept of the Silent Organization, this episode helps leaders recognize the subtle shifts that often go unnoticed until it’s too late, and why silence may be the most dangerous signal your organization is sending.Topics: leadership, employee engagement, organizational culture, workplace communication, leadership development, organizational resilience
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
The Resilient Organization helps leaders recognize and address the hidden patterns that quietly undermine performance, engagement, and culture. Each season focuses on a critical challenge to organizational resilience, offering practical insight to help leaders see clearly and respond effectively.
HOSTED BY
Dr. Ashley Newcomb
CATEGORIES
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