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Here is how to build an engaged team

Pushing Beyond the Obvious - Helping Entrepreneurs Succeed

Release Date: 01/06/2026

Here is Why You Are You Stuck in Middle Management According to India's Top Executive Coach show art Here is Why You Are You Stuck in Middle Management According to India's Top Executive Coach

Pushing Beyond the Obvious - Helping Entrepreneurs Succeed

Premise In this podcast episode, we host India's biggest and best Executive Coach Shital Kakkar Mehra. She has trained more than 1000 CxO's and more than 40000 leaders about how to develop their executive presence. We talk about how the we lead and what is expected from us shifts as we continue to grow in our careers and what makes us successful early in our career is no longer enough when we become managers (managing people) and it changes again, when we start leading managers and agains shifts when we start leading functions and organisations. Apart from all the technical skills and the...

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The Hidden Leadership Skill: Leading for Evolution show art The Hidden Leadership Skill: Leading for Evolution

Pushing Beyond the Obvious - Helping Entrepreneurs Succeed

Premise: Almost all leaders today lead in an environment that is ripe with disruptions and ever changing competitive landscape. The challenges of leading in this constantly evolving landscape are very different from that of leading in a stable environment where the current management practices are rooted in. So, if we have to succeed in this new world, we need to change the lens through which we view leadership and management practices. That begs the questions - where can we draw inspiration for the new way of leading. Thankfully, we don't need to look far. We can learn from . Leading an...

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The Bomber with No Guns: 3 Lessons in Strategy from a World War II Secret Weapon show art The Bomber with No Guns: 3 Lessons in Strategy from a World War II Secret Weapon

Pushing Beyond the Obvious - Helping Entrepreneurs Succeed

In this episode, I want to share a brilliant story written by one of my favorite marketers, Dave Trott, titled "Strategy is Sacrifice". The story takes us back to World War II. At the time, standard military strategy assumed that for a bomber to survive, it needed more armor, more guns, and a larger crew. Planes like the British Lancaster and the American B-17 were massive, heavy, and slow because they were weighed down by defenses. But Geoffrey de Havilland had a different idea—a creative strategy. He asked a simple question: What if the enemy couldn't catch you?. Instead of adding more...

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The Most Important Question You Can Ask Your Team: The Most Important Question You Can Ask Your Team: "Are You Okay?"

Pushing Beyond the Obvious - Helping Entrepreneurs Succeed

Welcome back to another episode of Pushing Beyond the Obvious. I recently read a blog post from the MIT Sloan Management Review titled "Your people are not all right," which highlights the immense overwhelm and stress employees are currently facing. This inspired me to talk about a critical responsibility we have as leaders: having a clear understanding of what is happening in our team members' lives, not to spy on them, but to genuinely ensure their wellbeing. In this video, I break down the subtle but vital differences between an average leader, a good leader, and a leader worth following....

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How to Be Remarkable And stand out from the crowd show art How to Be Remarkable And stand out from the crowd

Pushing Beyond the Obvious - Helping Entrepreneurs Succeed

Standing out starts with choosing to see, think, and act differently from the default, and then designing your work, relationships, and systems around that choice. This means intentionally questioning “how things are done here” and repeatedly experimenting with better ways that reflect who you are and what you care about.youtube​ Why being different matters Most environments quietly push people to conform, to not make waves, and to follow existing templates for success. If you obey those pressures blindly, you become invisible, even when you are talented and hardworking.youtube​ ...

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Here is how to build an engaged team show art Here is how to build an engaged team

Pushing Beyond the Obvious - Helping Entrepreneurs Succeed

Teams that are engaged perform better, collaborate more, and stay longer. I often talk about how employee engagement sits at the heart of every high-performing team. The real question is: how do leaders actually build it in day-to-day work? Hire for Attitude Before Skills Engagement starts much earlier than most people realise — right at the hiring stage. I believe that while skills can be developed over time, attitude is much harder to change. Hiring people who naturally align with the team’s values and energy creates a stronger foundation for engagement. At the same time, we need to...

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3 Ways to come up with Breakthrough Ideas show art 3 Ways to come up with Breakthrough Ideas

Pushing Beyond the Obvious - Helping Entrepreneurs Succeed

Premise:  In today's fast-paced world, every organization and leader feels the relentless pressure to innovate. We're taught to hunt for that game-changing idea, that single "Eureka!" moment that will redefine our market. But waiting for a random stroke of genius is an ineffective and stressful strategy. The myth of the lone visionary struck by a sudden, brilliant insight is just that—a myth. True innovation isn't about luck; it's about process. Generating breakthrough ideas can be a systematic, repeatable activity. By moving beyond passive inspiration and adopting active methods, you...

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The Confidence to be VISIBLE with Sheena Yap Chan show art The Confidence to be VISIBLE with Sheena Yap Chan

Pushing Beyond the Obvious - Helping Entrepreneurs Succeed

Introduction Confidence doesn’t always come naturally, especially when you grow up rarely seeing people like you represented in leadership, media, or success stories. In a world where visibility often determines opportunity, learning how to show up fully becomes essential. Sheena Yap Chan, a keynote speaker, leadership strategist, and author, shares powerful insights on confidence, identity, and visibility, particularly for Asian women navigating personal and professional spaces. Why Representation Matters More Than We Think? Growing up in Canada, Sheena often felt the absence of...

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Don’t Solve Problems. Develop Problem Solvers show art Don’t Solve Problems. Develop Problem Solvers

Pushing Beyond the Obvious - Helping Entrepreneurs Succeed

Premise The real job of a leader is not decision-making. It is decision capability-building and this can be done by creating better leaders from those that they lead. Bad leaders manage how work is being done, good leaders manage whether the work is being done and great leaders create capacity so that the work gets done. This is possible only when we are able to find ways to train them, to coach them and to get them ready for their journey as a leader. This requires us to give them additional responsibilities and create opportunities to lead as part of the day-to-day work. We can prepare...

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What Quentin Tarantino Can Teach Leaders About their Jobs show art What Quentin Tarantino Can Teach Leaders About their Jobs

Pushing Beyond the Obvious - Helping Entrepreneurs Succeed

In this short narration,  talks about the role of a director and it is a classic definition of what we need to do as leaders to become a leader worth following. Very early in his career, he asked  on what was the job of a director in the making of a movie and here is what he was told – “It is not your job to create your vision, it is your job to have a vision! And it is your job then to hire talented people who understand your vision. You articulate your vision to them. Then they take your vision and they create it. And with them creating it, you bring your inputs to...

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More Episodes

Teams that are engaged perform better, collaborate more, and stay longer. I often talk about how employee engagement sits at the heart of every high-performing team. The real question is: how do leaders actually build it in day-to-day work?

Hire for Attitude Before Skills

Engagement starts much earlier than most people realise — right at the hiring stage. I believe that while skills can be developed over time, attitude is much harder to change. Hiring people who naturally align with the team’s values and energy creates a stronger foundation for engagement.

At the same time, we need to understand the importance of acting quickly when a hire clearly isn’t the right fit. Delaying tough decisions doesn’t just affect performance; it quietly impacts team morale.

Compensation Is More Than Just Money

When people hear “compensation,” they usually think of salary. I would challenge leaders to think broader. True compensation includes financial, psychological, and emotional elements.

Feeling respected, trusted, and appreciated often matters just as much as pay. When employees feel valued as individuals, they’re far more likely to show up fully and stay engaged with their work.

Trust and Respect Come First

Psychological safety doesn’t appear overnight. As i always say, we have to be trusting, in order to be trusted. Leaders who genuinely respect different opinions and encourage open conversations create an environment where people feel safe to speak up.

When employees know their voices matter, engagement becomes natural rather than forced.

Upskilling as a Tool for Engagement

Training isn’t an expense — it’s an investment. I encourage you to find creative, cost-effective ways to help your teams build new skills. Learning keeps people motivated, confident, and future-ready.

Equally important is giving employees opportunities to apply what they learn. When learning turns into real impact, engagement grows organically.

Culture, Values, and the Power of Stories

A strong culture needs clarity. I believe storytelling helps bring values to life. Stories stick far better than policies.

Whether it’s a legendary customer-service moment or a small internal win, stories reinforce what the organization truly stands for and encourage others to act the same way.

Don’t Forget to Make Work Enjoyable

Engagement doesn’t mean constant seriousness. I believes that teams that laugh together tend to work better together. Small moments of fun, informal check-ins, and celebrating wins, even minor ones go a long way in strengthening team bonds.

Listening and Adapting to People’s Needs

Engagement is not one-size-fits-all. People go through different life phases, challenges, and priorities. It is important to listen closely and adapt our leadership styles accordingly.

Sometimes engagement looks like flexibility. Other times, it’s recognition or simply being heard. Leaders who pay attention create loyalty without forcing it.

Conclusion

Building an engaged team is an ongoing process. It requires intention, consistency, and genuine care for people. As I often point out, the principles are simple but applying them every day takes effort. Leaders who commit to trust, learning, and empathy don’t just build engaged teams; they build teams that last and perform the best.