Organizational Sherlocks, a Business Psychology podcast

Organizational Sherlocks with Morgan Ashworth and Dr. Elizabeth Fleming
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Apr 3, 2026 • 32min

S3Ep11: The Truth About Generational Tension

What if generational tension at work is not really about age at all? In this episode, Morgan and Elizabeth explore what is really happening beneath the surface when younger and older professionals struggle to connect at work. They discuss why generations should not be treated like personalities, how context shapes workplace expectations, and why psychological safety, healthy conflict, and curiosity are essential for stronger teams.This conversation highlights how a 25-year-old and a 45-year-old may approach work differently, but can often create better ideas together than they would apart. From flexibility and meaning to communication and innovation, this episode reframes generational tension as something leaders, employees, and organizations can learn from rather than fear.
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Mar 28, 2026 • 36min

S3, Ep.10 - Leadership Myths That Hold New Managers Back: Why You Shouldn't be the Smartest Person in the Room

S3, Ep.10 - Leadership Myths That Hold New Managers Back: Why You Shouldn't be the Smartest Person in the RoomEpisode Summary:What makes someone a strong leader: technical expertise, or the ability to help others do their best work?In this episode of Organizational Sherlocks, Elizabeth Fleming and Morgan Ashworth challenge some of the most persistent myths about leadership, especially the idea that people leaders must always have the answers or fully understand every detail of their team’s work. They explore the transition from technical expert to effective leader and explain why leadership success depends more on trust, communication, sound judgment, and team development than on being the smartest person in the room.Using practical examples and organizational psychology insights, they break down what leaders should focus on instead: creating clarity, removing obstacles, asking better questions, empowering employees, and building teams that can operate without constant intervention.Whether you’re a first-time manager, a senior leader, an HR partner, or a consultant helping organizations develop talent, this conversation offers a useful reframe for what leadership really looks like in practice.Topics Covered:Leadership myths and misconceptionsThe shift from technical expert to people leaderWhy leaders do not need to know every step of the workTrust, delegation, and team empowermentHow strong leaders create clarity instead of controlLeadership development and readinessThe psychology behind identity, expertise, and authorityPractical strategies for building self-sufficient teamsSound Bites:“Trust is key to effective leadership.”“You don’t need to know every step.”“Having the answers isn’t the key.”“Your job is not to do the work better than everyone else. Your job is to create the conditions where other people can do their best work.”“Strong leaders prove their value by growing problem solvers.”Keywords:leadership, leadership myths, people leadership, management skills, new managers, leadership development, team empowerment, delegation, organizational psychology, trust in leadership, manager training, people management, leadership transition, employee development, organizational development
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Mar 20, 2026 • 49min

S3Ep9 - Beyond Luck: Data-Driven Approaches to Better Hiring Decisions

Is hiring really about luck, or do the best organizations create their own odds? In this episode, Elizabeth Fleming and Morgan Ashworth explore the common narrative of “lucky hires” and why relying on chance can be costly for organizations. They unpack the hidden risks of poor hiring decisions, including impacts on team performance, culture, and long-term business outcomes.Drawing from organizational psychology and real-world consulting experience, they also discuss how data-driven assessments, structured decision processes, and clearer definitions of role fit can help leaders make more confident, strategic talent decisions. Listeners will walk away with practical insights on how to reduce uncertainty in hiring and build systems that improve selection, onboarding, and long-term success.
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Mar 6, 2026 • 37min

S3, Ep.8 - Crisis Readiness Before the Crisis: The SPACE Framework + 30-Minute TRIAGE Huddle

Episode Description When disruption hits, teams don’t magically become calm, coordinated, and strategic; they revert to the systems and capacity they already have. That’s why crisis performance is mostly pre-crisis design.In this episode, we explore what crises do to the brain at work (attention narrows, working memory shrinks, tone gets misread, rumors fill information gaps) and what leaders can build now to keep people thinking clearly later. We walk through the proactive foundation of crisis readiness: capacity buffers, visible priorities, decision rights, psychological safety, and predictable communication. Then, we tie it all together with the SPACE framework and a drillable 30-minute TRIAGE huddle you can run quarterly. If your org is already over 100% capacity, we also cover tradeoff management: the Executive Kill List, one-in/one-out priorities, a 72-hour stability sprint, and setting a real capacity red line so “busy” doesn’t become a permanent risk state.Topics we cover:Why crisis outcomes are determined before the crisis (systems > heroics)The psychology of threat at work: narrowed focus, memory limits, rumor dynamicsSlack capacity: planning for 80–85%, protecting focus windows, building a Pause ListPriority visibility: one source of truth, WIP limits, and cross-training to avoid single points of failureAuthority clarity: role maps and decision rights so response doesn’t stallCommunication cadence: pre-written update templates that reduce panicPsychological safety as a crisis asset: getting bad news early, blameless retrosThe 30-minute TRIAGE huddle (Protect / Pause / Park / Pursue) for fast stabilizationWhat to do when you’re already overloaded: tradeoffs, thresholds, and bottleneck protectionSound bites:“Crisis performance is mostly pre-crisis design.”“If your org has no slack, your crisis plan is basically: panic faster.”“Transparency reduces rumors and misinformation.”“Cross-training prevents single points of failure.”“If people can’t tell you the truth on a normal Tuesday, they won’t tell you the truth during a crisis.”“Over 100% isn’t ‘busy.’ It’s a risk state.”Keywords:crisis management, crisis readiness, organizational resilience, proactive planning, psychological safety, crisis communication, leadership under pressure, change management, capacity planning, incident response, decision rights, role clarity, cross-training, rumor control, workforce resilience, operational continuity, SPACE framework, TRIAGE huddle, organizational design, people strategy
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Feb 27, 2026 • 46min

S3Ep7: Will AI Replace Your Job—or Upgrade It? Conversation with Matt Fleming

AI is moving fast at work—and the biggest question on everyone’s mind is: will it replace my job, or make my job better?In this episode, Elizabeth Fleming and Morgan Ashworth sit down with Matt Fleming (VP of Technology at Boyer and Associates) for a practical, no-hype conversation about what AI is actually doing inside organizations right now, and what it takes to implement it responsibly.You’ll hear real examples of how teams are using AI to improve workflows, how to approach training so people feel capable (not threatened), and why change management is the make-or-break factor in adoption.They also dig into the human side of AI at work—how to address job replacement fears, where ethics and data privacy risks show up, and what skills will matter most as AI becomes a normal part of everyday work.
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Feb 20, 2026 • 33min

S3, Ep.6 - Endurance + Precision Leadership: How to Reset Your Brain Between High-Stakes Moments

A play on the Olympics - the biathlon - becomes a leadership masterclass on switching between high-intensity execution and precision decision-making without letting stress hijack your accuracy. Elizabeth Fleming and Morgan Ashworth break down why the transition between “go mode” and “aim mode” is where leaders and teams make the most mistakes, and how a quick reset can protect performance in high-pressure moments. What you’ll learn (for every level of the org):Why leadership requires both endurance and precision—and how to switch between them on purposeHow stress can improve performance when it’s managed (and when it starts to sabotage decisions)Why the transition between tasks is the most error-prone moment, especially in fast-moving environmentsPractical reset strategies leaders can use immediately, including controlled breathing and pausing to recalibrateHow agendas and meeting structure reduce decision fatigue and improve judgment under pressureHow the Yerkes-Dodson theory helps you understand your “optimal stress zone” for better performanceSound bites you’ll hear:“It’s the transition between the two.”“Stress is not always a bad thing.”“Take a breath and reset yourself.”Whether you’re a manager juggling competing priorities, an executive making high-stakes calls, HR supporting sustainable performance, or an operations/strategy leader driving change, this episode gives you a clear metaphor and practical tools to lead with more calm, clarity, and consistency under pressure.Keywords: leadership, biathlon, context switching, stress management, performance, decision making, organizational psychology, precision, endurance, Yerkes-Dodson, meeting effectiveness, executive presence, reset routines
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Feb 13, 2026 • 31min

S3Ep5: The Hidden Layers of Communication Issues

In this episode of Organizational Sherlocks, Dr. Elizabeth Fleming and Morgan Ashworth delve into the complexities of communication within organizations. They explore how communication issues are often misidentified and rooted in structural problems, unclear roles, and lack of goal clarity. The conversation emphasizes the importance of systems theory, role clarity, and collaborative goal setting as essential components for effective communication and organizational success. The hosts provide practical insights and examples to help leaders design better communication frameworks that foster clarity and engagement among employees.
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Feb 6, 2026 • 28min

S3 Ep4 - Sales Is Everyone’s Job: The Organizational Psychology of Trust, Clarity & Buyer Behavior

Sales isn’t just a department—it’s a set of behaviors that show up in every role. In this episode, Morgan Ashworth and Dr. Elizabeth Fleming unpack the organizational psychology behind buyer-seller dynamics, why expertise reduces perceived risk, and how clarity builds trust faster than persuasion ever will. You’ll hear practical ways to communicate value, listen for what customers actually need, and use curiosity as a growth engine—whether you’re selling a product, an idea, or a change initiative.
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Jan 30, 2026 • 28min

S3 Ep3 - From Firefighting to Fixing Systems: Double-Loop Learning for Leaders & HR

Organizations don’t usually repeat mistakes because people don’t care—they repeat them because knowledge gets lost, context disappears, and outdated “best practices” go unchallenged. In this episode, Morgan Ashworth and Dr. Elizabeth Fleming unpack organizational memory and why knowledge sharing is a business-critical capability for employees, managers, HR, and leaders. You’ll learn how double-loop learning helps teams solve root causes (not just symptoms), how lean thinking applies far beyond manufacturing, and how building durable knowledge pathways creates a culture of continuous learning that improves efficiency, innovation, and employee development.
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Jan 23, 2026 • 31min

S3, Ep.2 - The Myth of Multitasking: How Context Switching Derails Productivity (and Change)

In this episode, Elizabeth Fleming and Morgan Ashworth break down why “multitasking” is often a myth and how rapid task switching increases cognitive load, drains mental energy, and lowers productivity. If you’re navigating organizational change, remote work complexity, or constant meeting cycles, context switching can quietly sabotage execution and adoption—even when everyone is working hard.What you’ll learn (for every level of the org):Why context switching creates mental fatigue and attention residueHow task jumping shows up in remote work and meeting-heavy culturesPractical task management strategies: time blocking, prioritizing, and finishing work in focused chunksWhy setting boundaries is really important—and how leaders can model itHow meeting preparation reduces in-the-moment switching and improves decisionsHow understanding team dynamics supports change management and autonomySound bites you’ll hear:“Is there really such thing as multitasking?”“Setting boundaries is really important.”“Hope for the best, prepare for the worst.”Whether you’re an employee trying to get your day back, a manager juggling priorities, HR supporting sustainable performance, or an executive driving change—this episode gives you a shared language and actionable tools to protect focus and improve outcomes.Keywords: multitasking, context switching, productivity, leadership, organizational development, change management, mental fatigue, task management, remote work, cognitive load

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