In this episode, we host Tarek Kouddous, the Founder of Radical Empathy. Tarek shares stories from the time when he struggled to empathize with his colleagues while trying to bring about organizational change.
Tarek grew up in Cairo, Egypt and moved to Washington, DC in 2013 to attend George Washington University, studying political science and film. Upon graduating, he worked at a consulting firm as a federal emergency management consultant. After facing a behaviorally challenging year when his inflated self-importance stifled his self-awareness, Tarek departed from that role in November 2019 to self-explore and find himself. Tarek realized the necessity of emotional intelligence and safe places to optimize individual and group performance. During that challenging year, Tarek coped with the nightlife in search of purpose, neglecting boundaries of others. Tarek blamed the world for the pain of his world. Tarek is now compelled to activate the daylife and align people’s footprint and community identity. In April 2020, Tarek formed Radical Empathy as a placemaking startup that vitalizes people’s hyper-local sense of community belonging in both neighborhood and workhood. As Managing Director, Tarek is a space activator and place shaper who curates artwork, fabricates co-creative events, and facilitates organizational cohesion. Tarek prioritizes conviction, grit, and grace over competence, skill, and past performance. Tarek believes in therapy, both of a therapist and of pen to paper. Living through the 2011 Egyptian Revolution where he manned his civilian checkpoint from 8PM - 8AM daily, Tarek witnessed an uprising succeed and a revolution fail. Tarek is in favor of evolution to evoke change, rather than revolution to revolt against it. No matter the medium, Tarek is obsessed with storytelling and compelled to transform space into place.