The Ideas

This is where we explore culture, leadership, and the systems that shape how work actually happens. In this collection, you’ll find stories from the field, ideas that challenge the status quo, and reflections on building more human, values-led workplaces. We don’t promise perfect answers. Just a commitment to keep asking better questions.

Jenny Richards Jenny Richards

The Machinery of Invisible Labor

This concluding essay in a fictional forensic series examines why system failure appeared sudden despite years of gradual degradation. Told from the perspective of an AI Chief Efficiency Officer, it shows how invisible labor sustained coordination and stability without ever entering formal metrics—leaving the system blind to its own dependence until that labor disappeared.

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Jenny Richards Jenny Richards

The Unmodeled Dependency

A fictional forensic analysis examining how an efficiency-first operating model relied on an unrecognized human dependency to delay failure. Told from the perspective of an AI Chief Efficiency Officer, the essay shows how stability was manually maintained by individuals absorbing ambiguity and coordination load—until that dependency exited and systemic fragility was exposed.

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Tanarra Schneider Tanarra Schneider

Quicksand - Resilience Part 2

Most leaders treat burnout as a resilience problem. It isn't. It's a clarity problem. When vision is murky and the goalposts keep moving, all the tenacity in the world just accelerates exhaustion. In Part 2 of our Resilience Series, we examine how Vision and Tenacity work together in healthy cultures—and how the absence of one turns the other into a weapon.

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Tanarra Schneider Tanarra Schneider

Stop Weaponizing Resilience, Start examining your culture

This article argues leaders often use “resilience” to dodge accountability, shifting blame onto individuals instead of fixing unhealthy systems. Drawing on the author’s 2022 culture review, it shows executives rejecting evidence of harm, targeting dissenters, and refusing to address toxic conditions. Resilience became framed as personal weakness rather than systemic failure. Using Jurie Rossouw’s PR6 model, the piece recasts resilience as a leadership duty. Its conclusion is blunt: build systems where resilience is possible, or keep asking employees to endure dysfunction.

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Jenny Richards Jenny Richards

Read the Room, Not the Brief. It's how I found the real culture culprits

This article argues that problems blamed on tools, scaling, or delivery often stem from leadership misalignment. Drawing on firsthand experience inside a travel technology company during early COVID, it shows how fragmented systems and confusing structures reflected deeper failures in trust, accountability, and executive cohesion. Process changes alone could not fix the culture. Real transformation required aligned leadership and shared accountability; without it, teams defaulted to self-protection.

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Jenny Richards Jenny Richards

The Call Always Comes Too Late

When the call finally comes, the promises are already impossible and the deadlines are already burning. This is what it takes to walk in cold, untangle the chaos, and deliver anyway.

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