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The Crown Princess Mette-Marit story has put one question back on the table: Why don’t leaders—and the people we look up to—just tell the truth early?
When something goes wrong, there’s a moment—right after it happens—where you decide what to say… or what to hold back.
Miss that moment, and the story starts running away from you.
In this episode, we look at why leaders avoid difficult conversations—and how delayed honesty quietly destroys trust. Because this isn’t just about royalty.
It shows up everywhere:
– leaders avoiding difficult conversations at work
– companies drip-feeding bad news
– people protecting themselves instead of telling it straight
And here’s the uncomfortable part:
We often judge hypocrisy more harshly than outright lies.
The Nugget:
That moment right after something goes wrong? That’s where your integrity lives.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Pellegrino Riccardi & Francois SibbaldThe Crown Princess Mette-Marit story has put one question back on the table: Why don’t leaders—and the people we look up to—just tell the truth early?
When something goes wrong, there’s a moment—right after it happens—where you decide what to say… or what to hold back.
Miss that moment, and the story starts running away from you.
In this episode, we look at why leaders avoid difficult conversations—and how delayed honesty quietly destroys trust. Because this isn’t just about royalty.
It shows up everywhere:
– leaders avoiding difficult conversations at work
– companies drip-feeding bad news
– people protecting themselves instead of telling it straight
And here’s the uncomfortable part:
We often judge hypocrisy more harshly than outright lies.
The Nugget:
That moment right after something goes wrong? That’s where your integrity lives.
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.