エピソード

  • Why Your Brain Fears Feedback (And What to Do About It)
    2026/04/22

    More than two thirds of people say they want more feedback. Fewer than a third feel they're actually getting it. What's getting in the way? Your brain (and your team's brain!) is wired to read feedback as a social threat. It can shake your sense of status, belonging, fairness, and certainty all at once. And if you walk in carrying the wrong energy, your body language transmits it before you open your mouth. Jess calls it "going in crispy" - and once you're crispy, you've already lost the room. In Part 1 of this Wired to Work series on feedback, Jess breaks down the neuroscience of why feedback is so hard to give and receive.. and how to set up the conditions that make it actually land.

    What's covered: Why more than two thirds of people want more feedback but fewer than a third feel they're getting it The SCARF model: why the brain treats feedback as a social threat Why "I don't have time for feedback" is really a value-versus-complexity problem How to normalize feedback before you ever sit down for a hard conversation Why going in "crispy" puts your team on defense before you've said a word Warm and direct: why vague kindness makes feedback land worse, not better If you lead people and you've ever avoided a feedback conversation you knew you should have had - this one's for you.

    Wired to Work with Jess Chapman. Watch or listen wherever you get your podcasts! ⁠https://www.wiredtowork.castos.com/

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    21 分
  • What Leaders Still Get Wrong About Burnout | Cherri Forsyth
    2026/04/16
    Burnout is often treated like an individual problem, but what if the real issue is the system people are working inside? In this episode of Wired to Work, Jess speaks with Cherri Forsyth about what burnout actually looks like, how it builds over time, and why recovery, not just resilience, has to be part of the conversation. They explore the difference between acute stress and chronic burnout, the warning signs leaders and teams often miss, and how workplace culture can quietly push people past capacity. It’s a grounded, practical conversation about performance, pressure, and what it really takes to build healthier, more sustainable workplaces. In this episode: • How burnout develops over time • The difference between stress and burnout • Why recovery matters as much as performance • What leaders miss when they tell people to just push through • How workplace culture can either fuel burnout or reduce it This conversation is for leaders, HR teams, and anyone trying to build a workplace where people can perform without running themselves into the ground. If you’ve ever wondered how to spot burnout earlier, support people better, or create a culture that values recovery as much as results, this one is for you. Wired to Work with Jess Chapman. Watch or listen wherever you get your podcasts! https://www.wiredtowork.castos.com/ Wired to Work is a Double Barrel Production Chapters
    • (00:00:00) - How to manage burnout effectively
    • (00:00:41) - Wired to Work: How to Manage Stress and Burnout
    • (00:02:01) - The signs of burnout
    • (00:08:13) - What is burnout and how can we manage it?
    • (00:10:20) - Understanding the need for resilience
    • (00:14:33) - Have We Lost Our Values? Burnout
    • (00:15:50) - What about work-life balance?
    • (00:19:17) - Bradley on burnout and the culture of the business
    • (00:27:43) - On Perimenopause and Leadership
    • (00:34:18) - Understanding the Emotions of Coaches
    • (00:39:13) - Self-Care and the Healthy Mind
    • (00:46:37) - The Neuroscience of Burnout
    • (00:49:04) - A Day in the Life With Sheri
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    50 分
  • Why Workplace Training FAILS : A Conversation with Meghan Morrison
    2026/04/08

    In this episode of Wired to Work, Jess Chapman sits down with strategic HR professional Meghan Morrison to unpack why workplace learning so often fails to create real change, and what it would take to make learning actually stick.

    They explore why sending someone to a workshop is not the same as helping them grow, why application matters more than attendance, and why learning has to be built into the way work happens rather than added on after the fact.

    You’ll hear:

    • why classroom training alone rarely changes behaviour

    • why application, reflection, and feedback matter more than binders and certificates

    • how leaders can make learning part of everyday work without spending a fortune

    • why mentorship, shadowing, and debriefing are often more powerful than formal courses

    • what the 70-20-10 model looks like in real life

    • how to help people take ownership of their growth instead of waiting to be “sent” to learn

    • why teams need space to ask questions, make mistakes, and reflect in real time

    This conversation is for leaders, HR teams, and anyone trying to build a workplace where people keep learning instead of just attending training.

    If you’ve ever wondered why development plans go nowhere, why training gets forgotten, or how to make learning part of culture, this one is for you.

    Wired to Work with Jess Chapman. Watch or listen whereever you get your podcasts! https://lnkd.in/ezzK9CVZ

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    57 分
  • REPLAY: How Leaders Build Better Workplace Relationships with Kate Franklin
    2026/04/05

    Most workplace “relationship problems” aren’t personality problems. They’re pressure problems.

    In this episode of Wired to Work, Jess Chapman sits down with leadership coach Kate Franklin to unpack why stress turns reasonable people into version-2.0 disasters.. and why “just be more resilient” is NOT the answer.

    You’ll hear:

    •Why chronic pressure makes behaviour worse (and normalizes it)

    •The real reason your boss relationship shapes your work more than your job description does

    •How to get useful feedback (up and down the hierarchy) without setting off a threat response

    •Two simple tools that cut through drama fast: “turn the complaint into a request” and the 15-minute rule (let it go or talk about it)

    •A practical check-in habit that lowers friction in five minutes

    If you’ve ever thought, “Is it them… or is it me?” — this one’s for you.

    ✉️ Get in touch at: contact@ethree.ca

    Follow us:

    Instagram - @ethreeconsulting

    LinkedIn - ethree-consulting | Neuroworks

    Website: https://www.ethree.ca | https://neuroworks.ca/

    HR Toolkit!: https://www.ethree.ca/hr-toolkit/

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    54 分
  • Why Smart Leaders Make Bad Choices (Under Pressure)
    2026/03/25

    Fight. Flight. Freeze. Flock.

    These are the four ways your brain responds to stress — and they show up at work more often than you think.

    In this episode of Wired to Work, Jess Chapman breaks down what’s actually happening when you react instead of respond — and why stress makes it harder to think clearly in the moment.

    This isn’t about personality or willpower. It’s about how the brain processes threat.

    Jess explains:

    • what’s happening in the brain when stress levels rise

    • why the amygdala triggers fast, emotional reactions

    • how the prefrontal cortex (“brain CEO”) gets disrupted

    • the four stress responses: fight, flight, freeze, and flock

    • why social threat at work feels as real as physical danger

    • how chronic stress increases reactivity and reduces reasoning

    She also shares four practical ways to handle these moments:

    • how to identify what’s triggering the reaction

    • how trust lowers emotional intensity

    • what to do when someone is reacting in real time

    • how to reduce uncertainty and create psychological safety

    If you’ve ever thought “Why did that escalate so quickly?” — or found yourself reacting in ways you didn’t intend — this episode will give you a clearer way to understand and manage those moments at work.

    Welcome to Wired to Work.

    ✉️ Get in touch at: contact@ethree.ca

    Follow us:

    Instagram - @ethreeconsulting

    LinkedIn - ethree-consulting | Neuroworks

    Website: https://www.ethree.ca | https://neuroworks.ca/

    HR Toolkit!: https://www.ethree.ca/hr-toolkit/

    Wired to Work is a Double Barrel Production

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    16 分
  • Why Meditation Isn’t Too Woo for Work | Tina Pomroy & Roz Mugford
    2026/03/20

    Most people still treat meditation like it’s too “woo woo” for work. That may be exactly why we’re missing its value.

    In this episode of Wired to Work, Jess Chapman sits down with meditation teachers Tina Pomroy of Going Om and Roz Mugford, producer of the show and founder of Double Barrel, to talk about what meditation actually is, what it isn’t, and why it may be far more relevant to work than most people think.

    They unpack:

    • the biggest misconceptions that stop people from trying meditation

    • why a busy mind doesn’t mean you’re doing it wrong

    • how meditation supports focus, emotional regulation, and stress management

    • what the research says about meditation and the brain

    • how meditation can help with reactivity, decision-making, and workplace conflict

    • simple ways to build mindfulness into the workday without making it weird

    This conversation is especially useful for leaders, teams, and skeptical high-achievers who assume meditation has nothing to do with performance.

    If you’ve ever thought, I don’t have time, I can’t meditate, or this isn’t really for work.. start here.

    Welcome to Wired to Work.

    ✉️ Get in touch at: contact@ethree.ca

    Follow us:

    Instagram - @ethreeconsulting

    LinkedIn - ethree-consulting | Neuroworks

    Website: https://www.ethree.ca | https://neuroworks.ca/

    HR Toolkit!: https://www.ethree.ca/hr-toolkit/

    Wired to Work is a Double Barrel Production

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    44 分
  • Why Bad Habits are So Hard to Break - The Neuroscience of Change
    2026/03/11

    Most leaders assume that if people know what to do, they’ll do it.

    But behaviour doesn’t change that way. Why? Because habits aren’t just a willpower problem. They’re a brain wiring problem.

    In this breakdown episode of Wired to Work, Jess Chapman unpacks neuroplasticity - the brain’s ability to strengthen, weaken, and reorganize connections based on what you do repeatedly. In practical terms, this episode explains why habits form so easily, why change feels harder than it should, and why knowing what to do still doesn’t always lead to better behaviour.

    Jess breaks down:

    • what “neurons that fire together, wire together” actually means

    • how repetition builds habits into neural pathways

    • why attention, timing, and emotion matter for learning

    • why stress makes behaviour change harder

    • why training without practice rarely sticks

    • how leaders and organizations can support change that actually lasts If you’ve ever wondered why people keep repeating the same patterns at work (including yourself!) this episode will change how you think about habits, learning, feedback, and behaviour change.

    Welcome to Wired to Work.

    ✉️ Get in touch at: contact@ethree.ca Follow us: Instagram - @ethreeconsulting LinkedIn - ethree-consulting | Neuroworks Website: https://www.ethree.ca | https://neuroworks.ca/ HR Toolkit!: https://www.ethree.ca/hr-toolkit/

    Chapters
    • (00:00:00) - Wired to Work: The Brain Framework
    • (00:00:55) - Neuroplasticity and the brain
    • (00:08:03) - How to Build a Connective Brain
    • (00:12:07) - Practice Is the Only Way to Get Better
    • (00:13:19) - How to Build a HABOR
    • (00:16:07) - E3CA: Working in the Workplace
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    17 分
  • How Leaders Build Better Workplace Relationships
    2026/03/04

    Most workplace “relationship problems” aren’t personality problems. They’re pressure problems.

    In this episode of Wired to Work, Jess Chapman sits down with leadership coach Kate Franklin to unpack why stress turns reasonable people into version-2.0 disasters.. and why “just be more resilient” is NOT the answer.

    You’ll hear:

    •Why chronic pressure makes behaviour worse (and normalizes it)

    •The real reason your boss relationship shapes your work more than your job description does

    •How to get useful feedback (up and down the hierarchy) without setting off a threat response

    •Two simple tools that cut through drama fast: “turn the complaint into a request” and the 15-minute rule (let it go or talk about it)

    •A practical check-in habit that lowers friction in five minutes

    If you’ve ever thought, “Is it them… or is it me?” — this one’s for you.

    ✉️ Get in touch at: contact@ethree.ca

    Follow us:

    Instagram - @ethreeconsulting

    LinkedIn - ethree-consulting | Neuroworks

    Website: https://www.ethree.ca | https://neuroworks.ca/

    HR Toolkit!: https://www.ethree.ca/hr-toolkit/

    Chapters
    • (00:00:00) - The culture of low-level behavior
    • (00:00:51) - Wired to Work: How to Build Relationships
    • (00:02:01) - Kate on The Business Coach Podcast
    • (00:04:44) - On Community and The Role of Work
    • (00:06:24) - Relationships in the Workplace
    • (00:11:45) - How to Prioritize Relational Skills
    • (00:18:16) - The Need to Engage at Work
    • (00:19:37) - The Importance of a Remote Team Meeting
    • (00:24:56) - What Do Leaders Need to Know to Be a Leader?
    • (00:25:26) - How to Deal with Bad Bosses
    • (00:30:25) - How to Give Feedback to Your Boss
    • (00:33:35) - How to Build Trust in the Team
    • (00:41:06) - How to Turn Your Complaint Into a Request
    • (00:43:52) - The Role of the Leader
    • (00:50:36) - Kate Franklin on Working Well With Your Team
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    54 分