• Episode 179: Monastery to Boardroom: Randy Belham on What Buddhist Monks, Beauty Queens, and Hockey Players Can Teach Every Leader
    May 27 2026

    Most people know what they want. They can write it on a whiteboard, build a SMART goal around it, and explain it in a performance review. What they cannot do is say why it matters — and that gap, according to Randy Belham, is where every leadership failure quietly begins. Clarity is not a planning exercise. It is the inner work of understanding your values so thoroughly that your goals, your culture, and your daily behavior all point in the same direction. Without it, you can hit every target and still feel completely empty.

    Randy Belham is a life coach and serial entrepreneur who has founded six businesses, trained at Jay Shetty's coaching school, and spent three months in silence at a Buddhist monastery in Thailand. He has worked with a free-diving world record holder, two Miss Universe titleholders, and elite hockey coaches — and he will tell you the same principle runs through all of them: purpose outlasts talent, consistency beats motivation, and the most powerful word in any high performer's vocabulary is no. In this conversation with Dr. John Dentico, Randy unpacks the inner game that separates those who perform at the highest level from everyone who wanted to.

    0:00 Introduction and Welcome

    1:43 Randy's Origin Story and Early Influences

    2:50 The Information-to-Action Gap

    3:37 Why Clarity Is the Number One Leadership Blocker

    5:50 Values, Purpose, and the SMART Goals Blind Spot

    9:07 COVID's Mirror on Corporate Values

    12:03 What Separates Elite Performers from Everyone Else

    18:14 The Hidden Power of No

    21:18 Making the Case for Meditation in the Boardroom

    27:37 Contentment: The Third Option Beyond Happy and Sad

    30:29 The First Honest Conversation Before Any Dream Can Be Built

    34:00 Closing Reflections and Breaking the Cycle

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    39 mins
  • Episode 178: Stop Orbiting the Technology: Human-First, Structurally Sound, AI Where It Belongs with Anca Platon Trifan
    May 19 2026

    What does herding cows in communist Romania teach you about leading under pressure? Quite a lot, as it turns out. Anca Platon Trifan, AI strategist, five-time natural bodybuilding champion, and host of the Events Demystified podcast, built her leadership philosophy from the ground up, literally. After two decades running stadium-scale live events and mixing front-of-house for A-list celebrities, she watched COVID erase her entire calendar overnight. That disruption became the crucible for her Fit for Events framework, which holds that sustainable high performance is mental, physical, and emotional, not just operational.

    In this conversation, Anca and Dr. John Dentico unpack why AI fear is really fear of exposure, because AI strips away the buffers that have masked shallow thinking and broken processes for years. They explore the reframe from "human in the loop" to "human with AI in the loop," walk through Dr. Dentico's four levels of prompting, dissect the Klarna cautionary tale, and close on a shared conviction: the leaders who thrive aren't chasing the next tool, they're building the foresight and structural clarity to shape what comes next.

    00.00 — Welcome and Introduction

    02.01 — Growing Up Under Communism: Bread Lines and Borrowed Grit

    05.56 — Crossing the Atlantic: From Radio Mics to Live Event Production

    10.54 — How COVID Erased the Industry Overnight

    16.05 — What's Really Driving AI Fear in Organizations

    21.09 — AI Can't Fix What's Structurally Broken

    22.32 — Flipping the Telescope: Human With AI in the Loop

    28.12 — The Four Levels of Prompting

    29.01 — The Klarna Cautionary Tale

    35.31 — Setting Guardrails Before Something Breaks

    37.29 — Apple, Ollama, and the Rise of On-Device AI

    45.20 — Foresight Over Forecasting: Shaping the Future

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    49 mins
  • Episode 177: Your Leadership Playbook Just Called: It's Phoning in from 1955 and It Wants Its Paradigm Back with Dr Matt Chodkowski
    May 11 2026

    For 45 years, Dr. Matt Chodkowski has been quietly telling organizations to stop following the leader, and asking the one question they still can't answer: what if everything we know about leadership is built on an industrial-age framework that no longer works? Founding director of the Institute for Post-Industrial Leadership, Matt has taught leadership and organizational behavior across eight universities over a 35-year academic career while also serving as COO and board director. His LEAD program has reached more than 2,000 participants, and his recent article in Cadmus, the journal of the World Academy of Art and Science, makes a rigorous case for reconceptualizing leadership entirely.

    In this episode, Dr. John and Dr. Matt trace the roots of what Matt calls the "original ontological error," the ancient misattribution of leadership to the individual, and why it is still costing organizations dearly today. They explore the evolution from followers to collaborators, the true dividing line between leadership and management, why Gen Z is the canary in the coal mine exposing a decades-long toxic workplace culture, and how cognitive coaching produces the paradigm shift that behavioral training alone never could.

    00.00 — Welcome & Introduction

    01.57 — From Buffalo to the Boardroom: Matt's Origin Story

    06.01 — The Library Moment: Discovering Rost

    09.03 — What's Broken About the Industrial Model

    10.22 — The Original Ontological Error

    12.00 — From Followers to Collaborators

    14.28 — Leadership vs. Management: The Real Dividing Line

    19.00 — Doubt, Ambiguity & the Door to Collaboration

    22.48 — Gen Z: Canaries in the Coal Mine

    33.54 — The LEAD Program and the Light Bulb Moment

    41.03 — The Assumption That Makes Everyone Uncomfortable

    46.53 — The Future of Post-Industrial Leadership

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    51 mins
  • Episode 176: You're Not a Rubber Ball: Tissa Richards on Why Bounce-Back Resilience Is Holding Leaders Back
    Apr 27 2026

    Tissa Richards has a problem with the word resilience, specifically, the part where you're supposed to bounce back. In this episode, the TEDx and keynote speaker, CEO, and author of Rethinking Resilience makes a compelling case that the bounce-back model was borrowed from material science, designed for rubber balls and metal springs, not human beings navigating real organizational pressure. It puts leaders in a perpetual reactive crouch, strips them of agency, and quietly installs a victim mentality disguised as toughness. Her alternative, Intentional Resilience, reframes the whole equation: resilience as a trainable muscle, built deliberately, that converts pressure into clear decisions and measurable outcomes rather than just survival.

    The conversation gets sharper from there. Tissa and John dig into narrative ownership and why most leaders have buried their own story under operational noise. They tackle burnout as an organizational diagnosis, not a personal failing, and ask the harder question: when we train individuals to absorb dysfunction, are we simply giving broken systems permission to stay that way? Big ideas, zero fluff.

    0:00 — Welcome and Introduction to Tissa Richards

    1:58 — Growing Up in Canada and the Roots of a "Why Not?" Mindset

    2:57 — Why the Bounce-Back Model of Resilience Is Broken

    3:46 — Where the Definition Actually Came From — Material Science

    4:10 — Intentional Resilience: Building the Muscle Deliberately

    6:05 — Agency vs. Victim Mentality — Owning What Happens Through You

    12:46 — Grit Isn't Enough Without Accountability

    15:10 — Narrative Ownership: Losing Your Story in the Operational Grind

    16:49 — The "So What" Framework — Stop the Information Dump

    19:47 — Are We Training Leaders to Absorb a Broken System?

    23:12 — Burnout: Don't Take Things Off the Plate, Change the Plate

    32:36 — More Books, Bigger Stages, and a Strict No-A--hole Policy

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    36 mins
  • Episode 175: Principles Over Plans: A Security Expert's Unfiltered Guide to Leading Under Fire with Michael Gips
    Apr 21 2026
    What happens when the plan hits the wall, the clock is running, and nobody's reading the manual? For Michael Gips, that's not a hypothetical: it's Tuesday. With over 30 years navigating the intersection of security, risk, and leadership, Michael is Managing Director at Kroll, one of the world's foremost global risk advisory firms. He's a Certified Protection Professional, a Chartered Security Professional, and the author of It's Not In the Manual: Real World Leadership For Security and Risk Professionals, a title that, as Dr. John Dentico notes, may be the most honest thing anyone in leadership has said out loud in years. He also writes a monthly leadership column for Security Magazine. In this episode, Michael pulls back the curtain on what leadership actually looks like when the crisis doesn't follow the playbook, which, as it turns out, it never does. He shares the counterintuitive reframe that has defined his career: great security leaders aren't the "Department of No." They're the "Department of KNOW" know the people, know the processes, know the business deeply enough to be an indispensable partner, not just a gatekeeper. From the post-9/11 breakdown of public-private trust to the modern reality of perma-crisis (where a ransomware attack, a geopolitical flashpoint, and a natural disaster can land simultaneously), Michael maps the terrain of 21st-century security leadership with clarity, candor, and a wry humor that only comes from having survived enough chaos to find it funny in retrospect. He and Dr. Dentico also dig into one of the most under-discussed leadership questions of our time: what does it take to develop the next generation of leaders, not just the ones who already look the part? This is a conversation packed with hard-won insight, zero fluff, and the kind of grounded wisdom that doesn't come from a textbook. It comes from showing up in the room when things go sideways; and knowing what to do next. 0:00 Welcome & Introduction — Who Is Michael Gips? 1:55 From New Rochelle to Kroll: The Creative Roots of a Security Leader 4:00 When the Manual Runs Out — Leading on Principle, Not Plans 7:30 Mission Clarity: The One Sentence That Guides Every Decision 12:30 The Department of KNOW: From Gatekeeper to Strategic Partner 16:30 Building Influence Without Authority — Getting a Seat at the Table 17:30 Post-9/11 Lessons: When Public & Private Sectors Finally Started Talking 20:00 Perma-Crisis & Poly-Crisis: Welcome to the New Normal 23:00 Technology, Privacy & Geopolitics: Even Simple Problems Are Now Global 28:00 Developing the Next Generation: Leaders Who Grow Leaders 32:00 Leadership Is a Process, Not a Personality Type 36:00 Adaptive Leadership: Why One Size Never Fits All 40:00 Embracing Doubt — The Counterintuitive Key to Collaboration 43:00 The Ego Trap: Humility, Self-Awareness & the Ongoing Work of Leading 45:30 What's Next: Michael's Vision for His Second Book 47:00 Closing Thoughts & Farewell If you enjoy our podcasts please like, share and subscribe we genuinely appreciate your support.
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    49 mins
  • Episode 174: Scaling Humanity: Mastering AI Nuance to Accelerate Creative Workflows with Oleg Danyliuk
    Apr 13 2026

    In this episode, Dr. John Dentico sits down with Oleg Danyliuk to explore a transformative vision of Artificial Intelligence—one where technology acts as a powerful co-pilot rather than a replacement for human talent. Moving beyond the overwhelming hype and fears of job displacement, Oleg explains how AI is "collapsing" routine, repetitive tasks—the digital drudgery that often drains productivity. By automating these everyday workflows, professionals are liberated to focus on high-level strategy, complex logic, and creative problem-solving.

    The conversation highlights the growing necessity of mastering nuance; much like a new form of prompt engineering, success in this era depends on our ability to clearly describe processes and guide AI outputs to ensure accuracy and prevent hallucinations. Ultimately, the episode presents a compelling argument for "scaling human ability." As we integrate these intelligent tools into our workflows, the goal is not merely automation, but an evolution where technology amplifies our unique creative potential, allowing us to reach new heights of productivity while preserving the essential human element in business.

    01:01 Introduction to Oleg Danyliuk and His Mission

    01:54 Early Influences: From Ukraine to the World of Tech

    03:35 Why Human Connection remains Vital in Sales

    04:02 The Role of AI as a Co-Pilot for Sales Teams

    12:23 Using AI to Unlock and Express Creative Ideas

    12:45 Feeding the Nuance: How to Guide AI Outputs

    13:00 Accelerating Professional Content with Automation

    34:38 The Evolution of Duanex: From Staffing to Expertise

    35:01 Identifying Opportunities for Process Automation

    35:15 Scaling Companies While Preserving Their Humanity

    34:25 The Future Vision for Duanex and Insightful

    37:23 Final Reflections and Closing Remarks

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    40 mins
  • Episode 173: Chief Everything Officer: Why Brilliant Women Founders Burn Out in the Messy Middle with Lindsay White
    Apr 7 2026

    Lindsay White carries Alberta homesteader DNA, generations of powerful, independent women who earned the vote through partnership work, not permission. That matriarchy shaped everything about her 20+ year HR career, though she insists it's never been about HR. It's about the messy inflection point where brilliant female founders can no longer touch everything in their business yet still try, burning out as Chief Everything Officers because nobody taught them the operator-to-CEO transition.

    Her LPC Method, Lead, People, Culture, targets the strategic gap most women face: hiring too early, hiring wrong, hiring before understanding their zone of genius. Lindsay's devastating insight? Before bringing on that first person, founders must answer: What am I really good at? What do I love? What would I die happy never doing again? Then hire for the gaps, not the tasks. Her mission is becoming the go-to strategic partner for women scaling businesses, teaching them that leadership isn't about being the hero who saves everyone, but building teams that don't need saving. No fluff. No judgment. Just clear strategies and real talk from someone who knows the messy middle intimately.

    02:01 - Alberta Homesteader Matriarchy Legacy

    02:36 - Calgary Roots and Powerful Women

    03:19 - Never Really About HR

    03:36 - The Messy Inflection Point

    04:14 - Operator to CEO Transition

    04:41 - Chief Everything Officer Syndrome

    08:30 - The LPC Method Explained

    12:45 - Hiring Mistakes Female Founders Make

    18:20 - Stop Being the Hero

    22:15 - Code-Switching Cost in Leadership

    32:05 - Zone of Genius Before First Hire

    33:49 - Go-To Strategic Partner Mission

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    37 mins
  • Episode 172: Unpacking the Bag: Turning Invisible Weight into Inner Strength with Raul T. Pereyra
    Mar 30 2026

    In this deeply personal and transformative episode of the Throttle Up Leadership Podcast, host Dr. John Dentico welcomes Raul Pereyra, a first-generation Latino leadership coach with over 25 years of experience. Raul's approach to leadership is forged not in academia, but in the challenging environment of East LA, where he learned to navigate the "invisible weight" of growing up with an alcoholic father.

    The conversation centers on Raul's innovative "The Bag We Carry" framework, which helps leaders identify the Beliefs, Assumptions, and Guardians (like the inner critic) that often weigh them down and hinder growth. Raul and John dive into the psychology of behavioral change, discussing the importance of self-awareness, self-acceptance, and the courage to reframe past trauma into a "jet pack" for future success. From the "parable of the two arrows" to the pursuit of contentment over fleeting happiness, this episode offers a roadmap for leaders ready to do the hard work of internal growth to achieve external excellence.

    00:00 – Introduction to Raul Pereyra and his "Inside Out" coaching philosophy.

    02:12 – Growing up in East LA: Influences of family, immigrants, and trauma.

    04:10 – The turning point: Finding intellectual stimulation and a mentor who believed.

    06:07 – Unpacking the BAG: Beliefs, Assumptions, and Guardians.

    08:28 – The Inner Critic: Transitioning from a protective force to an acknowledged guide.

    11:42 – Jet Pack Thinking: Reframing self-doubt into a propelling force.

    14:02 – Thinking Fast vs. Thinking Slow: The neuroscience of behavior change.

    16:01 – The formula for change: Thoughts + Beliefs + Values = Behavior.

    18:51 – Moving from self-awareness to self-acceptance and ownership.

    20:56 – Progress through truth-telling: Breaking the victim mentality.

    22:48 – The Parable of the Two Arrows: Choosing healing over suffering.

    25:27 – The Achievement Trap: Why "keeping up with the Joneses" leads to misery.

    27:40 – Finding Contentment: Accepting humanity over the chase for perfection.

    31:48 – Reframing the past: Grateful that it happened for you, not to you.

    Raul is offering a free consultation. Contact him at ftplearning.com/tiny

    If you enjoy our podcasts please like, share and subscribe we genuinely appreciate your support.

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    39 mins