Episodes

  • #50 – The Dark Side of Strategic Questions: Why the Most Dangerous Move in a Negotiation Sounds Polite
    Jan 13 2026

    In most negotiations, questions are collaborative tools. They clarify priorities, surface constraints, and move conversations forward.

    This episode looks at what happens when they're used for something else.

    In the first 2026 episode of S4N, Gene examines how questioning shifts from exploration to influence – and why that shift is difficult to recognize in real time.

    Using examples from illegal gambling and reformed mobster Michael Franzese, the conversation shows how patient, well-timed questions can feel supportive while quietly doing more directional work. Nothing sounds aggressive. Nothing feels rushed. And yet, over the course of a conversation, options narrow, commitments harden, and exiting cleanly becomes more difficult.

    Rather than teaching new questioning techniques, we're honing your awareness: how to tell when a conversation is still collaborative, when it's becoming guided, and what changes once that line is crossed. These moments appear differently early in a career than they do later – but the underlying risk is the same.

    This episode is for anyone who's ever left a negotiation thinking, "I agreed to something before I realized I was deciding."

    Remember: negotiation is life.

    Mentioned in this episode:

    • Michael Franzese's YouTube channel
    • The West Point Way of Leadership by Larry R. Donnithorne
    Show More Show Less
    30 mins
  • #49 – The Art of the Meeting: How to Run Meetings That Actually Get Results
    Dec 9 2025

    Are your business meetings stalled, off-track, or simply not delivering results? Say goodbye to all that in 2026. In the last 2025 episode of S4N, Gene draws astonishing parallels between the missteps of world leaders in 1914 and the mistakes we still see in today's boardrooms, team huddles, and high-stakes negotiations.

    Using colorful stories from the infamous Sarajevo assassination and the global domino effect that ensued, you'll be confronted with the real-world consequences of unclear communication, rigid thinking, and poor meeting leadership. Gene decodes how a lack of message discipline and an over-reliance on tradition cost millions – and why these same pitfalls undermine modern businesses every day.

    You'll learn:

    • Why "this is how we've always done it" is the most dangerous phrase in business
    • How holding back – or over-sharing – key information can make or break your next big deal
    • The irreplaceable value of face-to-face encounters, even in a remote-first, digital world
    • Tactics to pinpoint who actually makes decisions in the room (and how to get them to move)
    • How to transform meetings from time-wasters into innovation engines

    Packed with examples, this episode arms you with tools for assertive leadership, adaptive negotiation, and meeting management that will resonate with CEOs, sales strategists, and project leaders navigating today's hybrid workplace.

    If you're ready to break the cycle of fruitless meetings and lead your team with clarity – and impact – don't miss these negotiation strategies forged in the crucible of world history. Listen in and reimagine how you prep, how you show up, and how you bring others to the table – so your meetings never miss the moment that matters most.

    Remember: negotiation is life.

    Mentioned in this episode:

    • Germany and the Next War by Friedrich von Bernhardi
    • The Great Illusion by Norman Angell
    • The Guns of August by Barbara W. Tuchman
    Show More Show Less
    50 mins
  • #48 – Mr. Hegseth, You're Wrong: What American History Really Teaches Business Leaders About Strength and Unity
    Nov 25 2025

    This week on S4N, Gene dives straight into one of the loudest leadership debates happening right now: is diversity a competitive advantage, or – as Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth recently claimed – "not our strength"?

    Gene doesn't just push back on Hegseth's idea. He brings historical receipts.

    Using one of the most powerful leadership case studies in American history, he breaks down how Abraham Lincoln built a wartime cabinet that should've collapsed under its own contradictions: rivals, skeptics, political opponents, and people who were openly hostile to his agenda. Instead of insulating himself with loyalists, Lincoln engineered productive friction – forcing tough arguments, sharper thinking, and better decisions when the stakes couldn't have been higher.

    And here's the part modern executives will actually use: Gene breaks down the mechanics behind why that approach worked – and how the same patterns show up in high-performing organizations today. How to encourage dissent without losing control. How to slow decisions just enough to get them right. How to turn conflict into momentum instead of gridlock.

    If you want a clear, historically grounded rebuttal to Hegseth's argument – and practical leadership and negotiation tactics you can apply immediately inside a boardroom, startup, or enterprise – this episode delivers the context, strategy, and actionable steps you won't hear anywhere else.

    Remember: negotiation is life.

    Mentioned in this episode:

    • Team of Rivals: The Political Genius of Abraham Lincoln by Doris Kearns Goodwin
    Show More Show Less
    43 mins
  • #47 – Why Deals Break: What Gaza's Ceasefire Teaches About Making Agreements Stick
    Nov 11 2025

    Why do some deals collapse almost as soon as the ink dries? This week on S4N, Gene cuts through the noise of the recent Gaza ceasefire, the Trump administration's role in shaping it, and the years of history that led up to the conflict, pulling out the hard negotiation truths every leader should know.

    Gene gets straight to the real failure points – credibility gaps, sloppy execution, and agreements that rely on pressure instead of real buy-in. How does this affect your business? The same traps that derail geopolitical deals are the ones that quietly sink corporate mergers, partnerships, and major internal initiatives.

    If you're responsible for high-stakes decisions, this episode will sharpen how you think about commitment, alignment, and what it actually takes to make a deal stick. It's a clear unvarnished look at why agreements fall apart – and how smart leaders prevent that.

    Remember: negotiation is life.

    Mentioned in this episode:

    • "Tomorrow Is Yesterday: Life, Death, and the Pursuit of Peace in Israel/Palestine" by Hussein Agha and Robert Malley
    • "#11 – Saving the Trouble(s): How to Handle Belligerent Negotiations, As Told By The Northern Ireland Conflict," the June 18, 2024 episode of Station 4 Negotiation
    • "How The Gaza Deal Got Done," the October 23, 2025 article for TIME Magazine by Eric Cortellessa
    Show More Show Less
    46 mins
  • #46 – Half Baked Promises: When Contracts Can't Protect Culture, As Told by Ben & Jerry's
    Oct 28 2025

    How do you protect what your company stands for – when that can't be written into a contract?

    This week, Gene dives into Ben & Jerry's Unilever deal – and Jerry's recent exit from the company – to unpack one of the toughest challenges in negotiation: defending values when profit and principle collide.

    From the ice cream brand's fight to preserve its social mission to the legal and strategic tools they tried to use to "hardwire" their culture into a corporate merger, this episode explores what happens when ideals hit the limits of a deal.

    If you've ever faced a negotiation where what matters most isn't on the balance sheet, this conversation will change the way you think about leverage, trust, and the true power – and limits – of a contract.

    Remember: negotiation is life.

    Mentioned in this episode:

    • Ice Cream Social: The Struggle for the Soul of Ben & Jerry's by Brad Edmondson
    • PennState's Berkey Creamery
    Show More Show Less
    41 mins
  • #45 – Pfizer vs. the White House: Inside the Deal That Changed Drug Pricing
    Oct 14 2025

    The recent drug-pricing clash between Pfizer and the Trump administration wasn't just another policy fight – it was a huge negotiation in US healthcare.

    This was a high-wire act: a pharmaceutical giant under intense political pressure, a White House eager for a headline win, and billions of dollars on the line. This week on S4N, Gene breaks down how Pfizer held its ground, built quiet alliances, and seized the exact moment the Trump administration started negotiating against itself. Most importantly, he explains the critical difference between power and influence — and when to use each.

    Pfizer's moves weren't luck – they were deliberate, and they offer a rare look into how power and influence operate when the stakes are national. Gene connects the dots between this negotiation and the kinds of decisions executives face every day: knowing when to hold, when to move, and how to shape the field before the other side does.

    For anyone who deals in high-stakes conversations – inside healthcare or out – this isn't just history. It's a list of strategies.

    Remember: negotiation is life.

    Mentioned in this episode:

    • The Best Care for Those with the Least: An Empowering Guide to Bridge the Socioeconomic Gap in Medical Care by Kristen Davis-Coelho, PhD
    • "Inside Pfizer's Drug-Pricing Deal With the Trump Administration", the October 2, 2025 Wall Street Journal article by Liz Essley Whyte, Jonathan D. Rockoff, and Peter Loftus
    Show More Show Less
    49 mins
  • #44 – Make The Problem Bigger: How to Break Out of a Negotiation Deadlock
    Sep 30 2025

    What if the key to breaking a business deal deadlock isn't narrowing the focus – but making the problem bigger?

    This week on S4N, Gene explores the counterintuitive strategy of "enlarging the problem," drawn from the book Swap: A Secret History of the New Cold War by Drew Hinshaw and Joe Parkinson. With stories from U.S. hostage negotiator Roger Carstens, Gene shows how widening the frame of a stalled conversation can unlock new options and shift outcomes – and gives you a step-by-step, seven-part military decision-making framework you can put to work in your own business challenges right away.

    If you're facing tough deals, complex team dynamics, or organizational gridlock, this episode offers a fresh way to create value and overcome stalemates.

    Remember: negotiation is life.

    Mentioned in this episode:

    • Swap: A Secret History of the New Cold War, the 2025 book by Drew Hinshaw and Joe Parkinson
    Show More Show Less
    39 mins
  • #43 – Trump, Trade & Transcontinental Growth: Negotiating International Expansion in a Closing America
    Sep 16 2025

    This week on S4N, Gene breaks down one of the most daring corporate maneuvers in recent memory: Nvidia's bold push into the Chinese tech market under the shadow of U.S. export controls.

    Through the lens of The Art of War and real-world strategy, Gene returns to our friend from episode 40, Jensen Huang, to explore how Huang played a complex, high-level game – while balancing political risk, regulatory firepower, and a negotiation counterpart unlike any other: Donald Trump.

    This episode offers a rare look at how high-stakes corporate negotiations unfold when global markets, national policy, and executive leadership intersect. From managing geopolitical constraints to navigating ethically murky territory, Gene examines the real-world challenges business leaders face when the path to growth is anything but straightforward.

    Whether you're guiding international expansion, negotiating sensitive deals, or making tough strategic calls, this is for you. Remember: negotiation is life.

    Mentioned in this episode:

    • "With Billions at Risk, Nvidia CEO Buys His Way Out of the Trade Battle", article in the August 11, 2025 edition of The Wall Street Journal by Lingling Wei, Raffaele Huang, and Amrith Ramkumar
    • The West Point Way of Leadership by Larry R. Donnithorne
    Show More Show Less
    33 mins