Episode 532: From LOLs to Leadership - Meme Your Way to Project Success
Categories:
PDUs: Power Skills
Categories: PDUs: Power Skills
|
Episode SummaryThis episode flips the script on traditional project management education by using memes to deliver real, applicable insights. Cornelius Fichtner selects seven past podcast interviews and distills their core lessons into memorable memes. Each meme acts as a springboard into deeper project truths, making this a visually rich episode that’s equal parts fun and functional. Topics span remote leadership, stakeholder communication, power skills, data literacy, and more. This creative format makes complex ideas stick and gives project managers simple reminders they can laugh at and learn from. Using the “Woman Yelling at a Cat” meme, we revisit Amire Amirmazaheri's advice on moving from tactical to strategic PMOs. Gene Wilder’s sarcasm helps us remember Rich Maltzman and Jim Stewart’s warning about pointless meetings. Bernie Sanders reminds us through Barbara Kephart’s lens that stakeholder feedback must be consistently pursued. The Distracted Boyfriend helps explain Kory Kogon’s tips for unofficial project managers juggling dual roles. Gru’s evil plan teaches why power skills are hard but essential, thanks to Neal Whitten. Morpheus breaks the myth that remote leadership is just Zoom logistics, highlighting Wayne Turmel’s guidance. Finally, Roll Safe reminds us through Marcus Glowasz that data literacy is the foundational skill before applying AI. (This interview was originally published on The Project Management Podcast.) |
Episode 531: From Pushback to Buy-In: Change Management that Actually Works
Categories:
Change Management
Categories: Change Management
|
Episode SummaryProject teams often finish on time and on budget only to face silent rejection from users. Change-management practitioner Mario González joins Cornelius Fichtner to map out the “adoption gap” and how to close it. Mario manages public-sector projects and brings fifteen years of leading agile transformations. He explains practical ways to detect early signs of low adoption, measure real usage with crisp KPIs, and listen for informal feedback that exposes hidden concerns. Listeners learn why classifying stakeholders as supporters, neutrals, or resistors creates clarity and how to move each group toward active buy-in. Mario outlines simple tactics that keep momentum strong: run quick user readiness surveys, pair training with hands-on workshops, and celebrate early wins that prove value. A lively section breaks down his stakeholder radar approach, which helps teams visualize shifting attitudes throughout the project. Late in the episode, Cornelius shares a two-button meme (“Engage stakeholders early” versus “Avoid awkward conversation until go-live”) and Mario explains why the first button always wins. The conversation closes with advice on sustaining support after launch. Mario urges project managers to track login trends, refresh training content, and keep feedback channels open so resistance cannot rebuild. The result is a practical checklist listeners can apply on their next change initiative. (This interview was originally published on The Project Management Podcast.) |
Episode 530: How Invisible Leaders Drive High-Performing Projects
Categories:
PDUs: Power Skills
Categories: PDUs: Power Skills
|
Episode SummaryFor many project managers, the urge to command every meeting and own every milestone feels natural. But veteran program manager Anisha Manvatkar proves that the most effective leaders often work in silence. In this conversation with Cornelius Fichtner she shares how “invisible leadership” unites purpose, communication, and AI-powered efficiency to deliver high-performing projects at Nvidia and beyond. Listeners hear why stepping out of the spotlight lets teams step up, how a clear “why” keeps momentum when priorities shift, and where AI can shoulder the busywork so people focus on innovation. Anisha breaks down six cornerstone skills: defining vision, speaking “Earth language,” validating plans, treating AI as a sidekick, empowering teams through stealth guidance, and nurturing a change-ready mindset. She offers concrete tactics such as mapping project objectives to a single executive OKR, opening meetings with questions instead of directives, running pre-mortems to surface hidden risks, and using large-language-model clustering to triage stakeholder feedback in minutes. Humor surfaces when Cornelius admits that "So many words..." was a succinct reply he recently received to a rather long email he sent out. (This interview was originally published on The Project Management Podcast.) |
Episode 529: Transform Project Leaderhip
Categories:
PDUs: Power Skills
Categories: PDUs: Power Skills
|
Episode SummaryGenocide survivor, educator, and leadership consultant Dr. Emad Rahim joins host Cornelius Fichtner to share the S.A.L.T. model—Survive, Adaptation, Love, Transformation—a framework he forged while rebuilding his life from the Khmer Rouge killing fields to the executive boardroom. Rahim explains why acknowledging a “survival state” is the first step toward meaningful change and how project managers can move beyond firefighting into strategic growth by embracing adaptation through value-based decisions. He highlights the critical role of supportive networks (“love”) in sustaining momentum and shows how transformation becomes attainable when leaders combine clear goals with short- and long-term wins. The discussion offers practical coaching advice and ethical insights that translate directly to project environments. Listeners learn to reframe risk, communicate with empathy, and cultivate resilience to navigate scope shifts, stakeholder conflict, and fast-changing markets. Rahim’s personal journey illustrates how empathy, integrity, and a focus on people drive high-performing teams, while his anecdotes—from coaching reluctant experts to managing virtual communication breakdowns—provide actionable techniques you can apply immediately. Whether you need fresh ideas for earning PDUs or a roadmap for turning adversity into project success, these lessons will strengthen your leadership toolkit. (This interview was originally published on The Project Management Podcast.) |
Episode 528: Emotionally Intelligent Team Leaderhip
Categories:
PDUs: Power Skills
Categories: PDUs: Power Skills
|
Episode SummaryProject managers know that clear schedules and smart strategies cannot guarantee success. Jackie Barretta, award-winning CIO and author of Primal Teams, shows how emotion sits at the heart of team performance and why leaders who understand this outpace those who ignore it. Drawing on twenty-five years in Fortune 500 IT leadership and consulting, Jackie explains how authentic emotional awareness activates sharper thinking, faster creativity, and stronger collaboration, turning ordinary groups into high-performance engines. Host Cornelius Fichtner guides a practical conversation that ranges from the “Stop, Breathe, Activate” technique for managing stress in real time to using spontaneous play to ignite innovation. Jackie shares ways to reduce fear, handle chronic negativity, and cultivate coherence—an energy state that boosts cognitive power for everyone in the room. You will hear stories of transforming “permanent complainers” into productive contributors, learn how mirror neurons help you sense hidden tension, and see why small changes in emotional habits ripple outward to clients and stakeholders. If you want to earn PDUs while gaining actionable insight on emotionally intelligent leadership, this interview delivers fresh tools you can apply on your next project. (This interview was originally published on The Project Management Podcast.) |





