
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Accountability has gotten a bad reputation. Too often it’s associated with blame, punishment, or compliance when it should be about ownership, growth, and shared responsibility. In this episode, Carl and Tiffany explore what it takes to build a healthy culture of accountability and why leaders play a critical role in shaping it.They discuss how unclear expectations, inconsistent feedback, and weak systems often create accountability problems long before performance issues emerge. Drawing on concepts from Radical Candor, they examine how leaders can balance caring personally with challenging directly, creating an environment where feedback is seen as support rather than criticism.The conversation also explores the connection between accountability and psychological safety, emphasizing the importance of addressing behaviors rather than personal characteristics, providing timely feedback, and intervening early when issues arise. Through practical examples and leadership lessons, Carl and Tiffany show how accountability is most effective when it is rooted in trust, clear expectations, and a genuine commitment to helping people succeed.
By Carl Damian RabunAccountability has gotten a bad reputation. Too often it’s associated with blame, punishment, or compliance when it should be about ownership, growth, and shared responsibility. In this episode, Carl and Tiffany explore what it takes to build a healthy culture of accountability and why leaders play a critical role in shaping it.They discuss how unclear expectations, inconsistent feedback, and weak systems often create accountability problems long before performance issues emerge. Drawing on concepts from Radical Candor, they examine how leaders can balance caring personally with challenging directly, creating an environment where feedback is seen as support rather than criticism.The conversation also explores the connection between accountability and psychological safety, emphasizing the importance of addressing behaviors rather than personal characteristics, providing timely feedback, and intervening early when issues arise. Through practical examples and leadership lessons, Carl and Tiffany show how accountability is most effective when it is rooted in trust, clear expectations, and a genuine commitment to helping people succeed.