Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast 247 Scott Mautz The Mentally Strong Leader

Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast #247 Scott Mautz The Mentally Strong Leader

Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast 247 Scott Mautz The Mentally Strong Leader

The Mentally Strong Leader

On this episode of the Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast, Craig Johns speaks with Scott Mautz about The Mentally Strong Leader, working with Procter & Gamble, and how we can lead effectively.

We also dive deeper into what made him focus on mental health for leaders, the six core mental muscles, and relating emotional intelligence with mental strength.

Scott Mautz – The Mentally Strong Leader

Scott Mautz is a Leadership & Organisational Performance Expert, former Vice President of Procter & Gamble and the author of Amazon best seller The Mentally Strong Leader. 

He has a Bachelor of Business Administration in Marketing from Binghamton University, and MBA’s in Marketing & Organizational Leadership from Indiana University His career includes 22 years at Procter & Gamble, columnist at Inc. Magazine, Faculty at Indiana University Kelley School of Business for Executive Education, and Leadership instructor on LinkedIn Learning. 

Scott Mautz talks about:

  • The love of discovery and wanting to be an archaeologist
  • Always being drawn to leadership & what made him a good leader
  • The consistencies in the leadership of Procter & Gamble 
  • Dealing with uncertainties
  • Evolving with technological advances
  • The importance of how you look in front of the camera
  • Tips for better online communication
  • What makes great leaders great
  • What drew him to focusing on mental health for leaders
  • The six core mental muscles
  • How does emotional intelligence line up with mental strength?
  • Resilience
  • What is confidence and why is it important
  • The messaging muscle
  • The Mentally Strong Leader

Tweets

“If you want to succeed at work and in life, you have to be able to productively regulate your emotions, your thoughts and your behaviors.” Scott Mautz talks about mental strength on the Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast.

“I think people want to feel seen. They want to feel heard. And maybe most importantly, they want to know that they’re not alone, and that’s becoming more and more of the leader’s job there to help with that.” Scott Mautz talks about empathy on the Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast.

“Your job as a leader is to create more leaders” Leadership by Scott Mautz on the Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast.

Resources Mentioned in this show:

Scott Mautz www.scottmautz.com
Scott Mautz Facebook
Scott Mautz LinkedIn
Scott Mautz Youtube
Scott Mautz Twitter
Scott Mautz Instagram
Craig Johns www.craigjohns.com.au
Craig Johns craig@nrg2perform.com
Craig Johns LinkedIn
Craig Johns Facebook
Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast
NRG2Perform www.nrg2perform.com

Book

The Mentally Strong Leader

Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast #230 Dr. Jane Foster Emotional Resilience

Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast #230 Dr. Jane Foster Emotional Resilience

Emotional Resilience

On this episode of the Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast, Craig Johns speaks with Dr. Jane Foster about emotional resilience, vulnerability in leadership and how to handle negative emotions.

We also dive deeper into learning to regulate and control emotions, reshaping perspectives, and changing the language used around emotions, stress and problems.

Dr. Jane Foster – Emotional Resilience

Dr. Jane Foster is the founder of Emotional Resilience, a dedicated researcher, and the author behind the recent publication, “It’s In Your Hands”. She holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Elementary Education and Teaching, a Masters Degree in Education & Learning Management from Central Queensland University, and a Ph.D. in Health Promotion and Education from the University of the Sunshine Coast.

Drawing from over four decades of global teaching experience, she intertwines her expertise in Chinese Medicine, Shiatsu, and yoga to empower individuals in taking charge of their emotional journey, helping them navigate through life’s challenges with grace. Her mission is to revolutionise our societal mindset, steering away from blame, criticism, and judgment towards fostering psychological well-being, life satisfaction, and resilience.

Dr. Jane Foster talks about:

  • Her big dream starting from outdoor education and experience with a bully
  • Desire for everyone to be able to take control of their own steering wheel from within.
  • Emotional Resilience
  • Emotions are not “good” or “bad”, they are either “rough” or “smooth”
  • Learning to regain control of negative emotions
  • The importance of developing emotional resilience
  • Language and framing is powerful
  • Focusing on taking responsibility for how you respond rather than blaming others
  • Leaders need to listen, be selectively vulnerable, and empower those around them
  • The factors that influence our behaviour
  • Taking responsibility for the way we respond
  • Asking good questions that make people reflect 
  • Coping mechanisms for learning to control emotions
  • Dopamine addiction from social media
  • Selective vulnerability for leaders
  • Changing the language used around emotions, stress, and problems 
  • Reshaping perspective and how people approach challenges

Tweets

“If you keep looking back at what you did, then you’re going to crash. That’s what so many people do when they’re coaching someone. It doesn’t mean ignoring the rearview mirror. It’s there to glance at and learn from, but not to focus on.” Dr. Jane Foster talks about moving forward on the Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast.

“At the moment, negative emotions are seen as bad and everyone’s picking people off those emotional roads and putting them on the smooth roads, thinking that they’re doing the right thing. But if you look at a pulse, it goes up and down, doesn’t it? To show you’re alive, what happens when it flatlines, you’re dead. Yet so many of us are trying to create a life that’s smooth and it’s actually unattainable. I wanted to create language that would change that. Instead of bad emotions, they’re rough, and rough has a purpose.” Emotional resilience and the role of negative emotions with Dr. Jane Foster on the Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast.

“That’s why it’s called selective vulnerability. It’s actually a thing that is a balance between oversharing and undersharing. It becomes in the middle, as you said, you share when it’s appropriate because as a leader, you had certain expectations from your team.” Dr. Jane Foster talks about vulnerability in leadership on the Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast.

Resources Mentioned in this show:

Dr. Jane Foster www.itsinyourhandsdrjanefoster.com
Dr. Jane Foster LinkedIn
Dr. Jane Foster LinkedIn
Dr. Jane Foster Instagram
Craig Johns www.craigjohns.com.au
Craig Johns craig@nrg2perform.com
Craig Johns LinkedIn
Craig Johns Facebook
Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast
NRG2Perform www.nrg2perform.com

BOOK

It’s in Your Hands – Your Steering Wheel Your Choice

Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast #207 Vanitha Choudhari Leadership Emotional Intelligence

Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast #207 Vanitha Choudhari Leadership Emotional Intelligence

Leadership Emotional Intelligence

On this episode of the Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast, Craig Johns speaks with Vanitha Choudhari about the importance of Leadership Emotional Intelligence, lessons learnt working at HSBC and connection in the workplace. 

We also dive deeper into the changes we experienced in the way we work throughout the years, the art of letting go, triple A awareness and how self-awareness helps us in becoming great leaders. 

Vanitha Choudhari  – Leadership Emotional Intelligence

Vanitha Choudhari is a leadership and behaviour change expert, the founder of Radical Edge Learning Consultants, and a Speakers Institute Corporate facilitator. With over 28 years of corporate and entrepreneurial experience, her influence spans continents, with her work celebrated not only in her home country, India but across many Asian nations and the UK.

She is the visionary behind GEMinU and a certified expert in personality assessments like Hogan and Genos Emotional Intelligence making her one of India’s first Genos-certified Emotional Intelligence Practitioners.. She is also a Business Mentor at Cherie Blair Foundation for Women (UK) and has been awarded the “Best Trainer” in APAC while working for HSBC.

Vanitha talks about:

  • Her parents’ influence on the way she works 
  • Being restless
  • Leadership Emotional Intelligence
  • How emotional intelligence affects the work you do
  • How technology contributed to leadership changing and evolving
  • COVID’s effect on the way we work now
  • The important skills people can utilize in order to stay connected to people
  • The boundaries between connecting to people to becoming too personal
  • The triple-A framework
  • Trust and acknowledgement
  • Can self-awareness prevent us from being totally present?
  • Responding vs. reacting
  • How to be grounded quickly and not be overwhelmed by any situation
  • The art of letting go

Tweets

“One of the biggest jobs of a leader is to inspire others. And if that’s not happening, then I don’t even think they should be qualifying as leaders because then you’re just a manager doing your transactional job and getting things done.” Vanitha Choudhari talks about being an inspiring leader on the Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast.

“Being aware of your emotion is not being emotional.” Emotional intelligence with Vanitha Choudhari on the Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast.

“When you are highly self-aware, you learn the technique of not reacting, but responding very, very, very well, especially being a leader.” Vanitha Choudhari speaks about self-awareness on the Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast.

Resources Mentioned in this show:

Vanitha Choudhari www.radicaledge.org
Vanitha Choudhari LinkedIn
Craig Johns www.craigjohns.com.au
Craig Johns craig@nrg2perform.com
Craig Johns LinkedIn
Craig Johns Facebook
Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast
NRG2Perform www.nrg2perform.com

Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast #171 Grant Herbert The People Builder

Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast #171 Grant Herbert The People Builder

The People Builder

On this episode of the Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast, Craig Johns speaks with Grant Herbert about The People Builder, emotional intelligence, parenthood and leadership, authenticity and living in a super VUCA world. 

We also delve into the power of vulnerability, neuroscience, a journey of imperfection, developing as a leader, emotional and social intelligence, and the performance trap.

Grant Herbert – The People Builder

Grant Herbert is an Emotional Intelligence Expert known as the People Builder, Executive Leadership Coach and Founder of People Builders Institute. He is a genuine down to earth human being with 5 amazing children, who loves helping people be their best authentic self.

With a background in neuroscience, positive psychology and social and emotional intelligence, he has a focus is on empowering today’s great technical managers to become exceptional leaders in a VUCA world. His career includes roles in the Australian Army, National Hire Group (Now Coates Hire) and Heatcraft Worldwide Refrigeration before becoming self employed in the Professional Development industry.  

Grant Herbert talked about:

  • How do we allow the past to shape the future
  • Lessons from parenthood into leadership
  • A super VUCA world
  • The power of vulnerability
  • Being left on a doorstep as a baby
  • The story we make up inside our head
  • The compounding effect of give meaning to life 
  • Unconditional love
  • The people builder
  • The performance trap
  • Work on your own identity
  • Start with self approval 
  • What could I do differently moving forward?
  • Reprogramming your mini me
  • Leaning into the voice inside your head
  • Getting leadership right is difficult
  • Emotional intelligence and social intelligence
  • Perform out of a position of self approval

Tweets:

“Performing is what you do. Your identity is who you believe you are and who you believe you aren’t.” Grant Herbert talks about identity on the Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast.

“Expose yourself and make mistakes. Mistakes can be your greatest teacher if you filter through your own self approval.” Turning mistakes into lessons with Grant Herbert on the Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast.

“Manage your response to it and manage your behavior, rather than manage your emotions.” Emotional and Social Intelligence with Grant Herbert on the Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast.

“Who I am didn’t change. What I do didn’t change. How I did it changed.” Gran Herbert on dealing with change on the Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast.

Resources Mentioned in this show:

Grant Herbert www.grantherbert.com
Grant Herbert LinkedIn
Grant Herbert YouTube
Grant Herbert Instagram
The People Builder Podcast
People Builders www.peoplebuilders.com.au
People Builders Institute www.peoplebuildersinstitute.com.au
Speakers Institute Corporate www.speakersinstitutecorporate.com
Craig Johns www.craigjohns.com.au
Craig Johns craig@nrg2perform.com
Craig Johns LinkedIn
Craig Johns Facebook
Inspiring Great Leaders Podcast
NRG2Perform www.nrg2perform.com