The Frequency

This is the archive of The Frequency, Rebel 75’s monthly newsletter. Here we collect past issues—one idea at a time—on culture, leadership, and navigating change. Inside you’ll find stories from the field, provocations that challenge the status quo, and notes from the journey of building more human, values-led workplaces.

We don’t promise perfect answers. Just a commitment to keep asking better questions.

February 2026, Issue 1: Stop Weaponizing Resilience, Start examining your culture
Tanarra Schneider Tanarra Schneider

February 2026, Issue 1: Stop Weaponizing Resilience, Start examining your culture

This article challenges the way leaders use “resilience” as a shield against accountability, arguing that the term is often deployed to shift blame onto individuals instead of confronting unhealthy systems. Drawing on the author’s experience leading a culture and leadership review in 2022, it recounts how senior executives rejected root-cause findings about cultural harm and instead sought to identify dissenters, explicitly refusing to address toxic conditions. Resilience was reframed as a personal shortcoming rather than a systemic failure. The piece contrasts this with Jurie Rossouw’s PR6 model from Driven, which identifies six domains that enable resilience, and reframes them as leadership responsibilities rather than individual deficits. Ultimately, the article argues that organizations must choose: build systems that make resilience possible, or continue demanding that employees endure dysfunction longer.

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January 2026, Issue 2: Read the Room, Not the Brief. It's how I found the real culture culprits
Jenny Richards Jenny Richards

January 2026, Issue 2: Read the Room, Not the Brief. It's how I found the real culture culprits

This article explores how organizational breakdowns that look like tooling, scaling, or delivery problems are often rooted in leadership misalignment. Using firsthand experience inside a travel technology company during early COVID, it shows how official narratives and role transitions can obscure the reality of how work actually happens. Fragmented systems—like seven disconnected Jira instances—serve as visible symptoms of deeper fractures in trust, accountability, and executive cohesion. Through close observation of cross-functional dynamics, silence, avoidance, and power signals, the piece argues that culture cannot be repaired through process changes alone. Real transformation requires leadership alignment and shared accountability; without it, teams default to self-protection rather than collaboration.

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January 2026: Vision or Vice grip? When to choose clarity over certainty.</span>
Tanarra Schneider Tanarra Schneider

January 2026: Vision or Vice grip? When to choose clarity over certainty.

January’s Rebel 75 newsletter explores the difference between clarity and certainty in leadership and teamwork. Using a personal reflection on planning a multi-generation trip to Europe, the article argues that leaders don’t need perfect plans—they need a clear vision, shared priorities, and the flexibility to adapt. The issue also features an Art Corner reflection on bravery, a monthly Signal Check for team alignment, and a Tiny Rebellion prompt encouraging teams to clarify their most important commitments for the year.

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The Call Always Comes Too Late
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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