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Firing on all Cylinders: The 8 Keys to Company Health
Leaders succeed when they work simultaneously from the inside out and the outside in. Mobilized Vision, Business Model, People Strategy and Development, Operations, Technology and Automation, Strategy, Leadership, and Culture that eight domains that set the table for performance breakthroughs and sustainable growth. This article unpacks each one, explains why cross-domain alignment matters, and introduces the Wendworks Organizational Health Assessment as a tool for measuring

Dr. David Macauley
16 min read


Corporate Mobility
Remote work untethered companies from their zip codes. In 2020 alone, Dropbox, Splunk, Palantir, Oracle, Tesla, and Apple expanded or moved operations to Austin, and Manhattan and Silicon Valley felt the pressure. When firms can pick up and move, relocation stops being a real estate decision and becomes a leadership one. Employees respond to three things: personal impact, compensation, and meaningful rationale. Cost savings alone won't earn the followership a move requires.

Dr. David Macauley
6 min read


Uncertainty and CEO Overconfidence
Overconfidence is not a personality flaw. It's a measurable business risk. University of Chicago Booth research found that less talented CEOs over-promise, under-listen, chase vanity projects, and abandon strategies the moment short-term results disappoint. In good times, rising tides hide a lot of leadership sins. Downturns wash them out into plain view. The good news: the habits that separate skilled CEOs from overconfident ones are learnable, if you are willing to see your

Dr. David Macauley
5 min read


Why Good Employees Go Rogue
Every leader eventually meets a dark knight: an employee who has internalized the mission so fully they appoint themselves judge, jury, and enforcer. 42% of workers have worked with one at some point in their careers. Dark knights often look like star performers — right up until their private enforcement starts eroding trust, driving turnover, and quietly undermining the culture they believe they are protecting. The remedy is not surveillance. It is organizational justice bui

Dr. David Macauley
4 min read


Moral Leadership in the Digital Age
Humans have been complaining about moral decay for 6,000 years, ancient Egyptian tombs contain the same warnings as today's op-ed pages. That's not a reason to dismiss the concern; it's a reason to take it seriously. As nearly half the US workforce moves online and technology compresses the distance between people, moral leadership has quietly become one of the most important skills a founder can develop. The question isn't whether your firm has a moral system. It's who is sh

Dr. David Macauley
4 min read


A Leader For All Seasons?
Every leader is a seasonal leader, whether they know it or not. Some seasons are for building, some for pruning, some for simply holding ground. The hardest part is refusing to wait out a downturn before you invest in yourself, the seeds you plant during uncertainty are the ones that make the next season count. Many of America's largest companies started in a recession because their founders understood what leadership really is: one part decision-making, one part sense-making

Dr. David Macauley
4 min read


Values-based leadership: show them what you are made of
When the ground shifts under a business leader's feet, the temptation is to look for new tactics. The best leaders look for something else first: their values. Carl Anderson's 1997 values-based leadership framework gives executives a disciplined way to identify their non-negotiable principles, translate them into values, and examine the leadership philosophy they are actually operating from, before the next hard decision lands.

Dr. David Macauley
5 min read


Business Cycles and Zero Sum Thinking
Economic downturns don't just shrink revenue, they quietly reshape how people think. Research across 51 countries and nearly 60,000 respondents shows downturns trigger zero-sum thinking: the belief that someone else has to lose for you to win. Collaboration collapses at exactly the moment leaders need it most. Here's how to name the pull, disarm it, and keep your team playing an infinite game.

Dr. David Macauley
6 min read


Before You Cut Staff: 4 Research-Backed Strategies for Surviving a Downturn
When revenue contracts, the default reflex is layoffs. But research from Harvard Business Review and the BCG Henderson Institute tells a different story: companies that prepared, tightened operations, protected cash, and invested for growth outperformed their peers by double digits coming out of the Great Recession, often without resorting to cuts. Here are the four strategies, and why cutting staff belongs last in the leadership toolkit, not first.

Dr. David Macauley
9 min read


Organizational Unlearning
Every leader talks about learning. Almost no one talks about unlearning — the willingness to stop doing what used to work but doesn't anymore. Two research studies from 2007 and 2016 spell out why unlearning is the capability that turns upheaval into creative destruction. Post-COVID gave every business a once-in-a-generation chance to see itself freshly. The real question: what are you ready to let go of?

Dr. David Macauley
2 min read
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