The Intentional Workplace

The Intentional Workplace

por Jacob Stone and Maria Williams
Temporada 1
Season Finale: What actually makes a workplace intentional?
15 episodes. 15 conversations. 15 minutes each. And a lot of real talk about what actually shapes the workplace. When we started The Intentional Workplace Podcast, the goal was simple: Spend 15 minutes each week cutting through the noise and talking about what actually helps businesses build better environments for their people. Along the way, we’ve covered: Why people really leave (and why it’s usually not pay) How leaders unintentionally create burnout What makes meetings productive vs. organizational drag Why growth, clarity, and consistency matter more than perks And ultimately what separates intentional workplaces from reactive ones This final episode of the season brings it all full circle: What actually makes a workplace intentional? We’re incredibly grateful for everyone who has listened, shared, and been part of these conversations. And we’re just getting started. 🎙 Season 2 is on the way! Stay tuned to hear more about what Jacob Stone and Maria Williams will tackle next. To learn more about People Operations, Scaling Teams, or Auditing your Human Resource Processes please connect with us! Jacob Stone: JacobStone@WORQTAP.com www.worqtap.com Maria Williams: Maria.Williams@ScaleSmartHR.com www.scalesmarthr.com
Choose the Career, Not Just the Job
Most people don’t choose the wrong job. They evaluate it the wrong way. In Episode 14 of The Intentional Workplace Podcast, “Choose the Career, Not Just the Job,” Jacob Stone and Maria Williams shift the lens to the candidate side - and unpack why so many roles look right on paper but feel wrong in reality. Here’s the pattern we see over and over: Candidates optimize for title, salary, or speed instead of long-term fit Job descriptions are taken at face value instead of questioned Interviews become a performance instead of an evaluation The result? Nearly 30-40% of new hires leave within the first 90 days. But the best candidates do something differently. They don’t just answer questions. They diagnose the organization.They look for: How decisions actually get made What success really looks like (not just responsibilities) Whether a manager develops people or just manages tasks Because you’re not just choosing a job. You’re choosing a manager, a system, and an environment. And the wrong environment will always outweigh the right salary. In this episode, we break down how to evaluate opportunities more intentionally, and what questions actually reveal the truth behind the role.
How to Keep the Meat of the Meeting Without Over-Cooking It
Most meetings don’t fail because of time. They fail because nothing actually gets decided. Executives are spending nearly 23 hours a week in meetings - and yet 70% say those meetings are ineffective. That’s not a scheduling problem. It’s a decision-making problem. Too many meetings have: Too many voices Not enough ownership More discussion, but fewer decisions And over time, that doesn’t just waste time. It also shapes your culture. It tells your team that being busy matters more than being effective. In our latest episode of The Intentional Workplace Podcast, we break down how to keep the “meat of the meeting” - the conversations that actually matter - without over-processing decisions or burning people out. Good meetings don’t try to include everything. They protect space for what actually requires human judgment. A few practical ways to fix it: Start with the decision, not the agenda. If nothing will change after the meeting, don’t have it. Send context in advance. Meetings are for thinking, not reading slides out loud. Limit the room. Smaller groups = clearer accountability. End with ownership. If no one owns it, nothing moves. Audit recurring meetings. If it’s not adding value anymore, it shouldn’t exist. 🎙 In this episode, Jacob Stone and Maria Williams dive into the topic of meetings and how this can impact culture. If your calendar is full but progress feels slow…this one’s worth a listen! Fifteen minutes. Two experts. Intentional work. To learn more about People Operations, Scaling Teams, or Auditing your Human Resource Processes please connect with us! Jacob Stone: JacobStone@WORQTAP.com www.worqtap.com Maria Williams: Maria.Williams@ScaleSmartHR.com www.scalesmarthr.com
High Performer or Burnout Waiting to Happen
They’re your most reliable employee. The one who always delivers. The one you never have to worry about. …until you do. In this episode of The Intentional Workplace, we unpack the fine line between high performance and hidden burnout—and why the people you trust the most are often the ones at greatest risk. We explore how burnout shows up differently in top performers, the early signals most leaders miss, and how to create a culture where these conversations can actually happen. If you’re building a team and want to protect your best people before performance drops or turnover spikes, this episode will help you lead more intentionally. Fifteen minutes. Two experts. Intentional work. To learn more about People Operations, Scaling Teams, or Auditing your Human Resource Processes please connect with us! Jacob Stone: JacobStone@WORQTAP.com www.worqtap.com Maria Williams: Maria.Williams@ScaleSmartHR.com www.scalesmarthr.com
Grow Your People or Watch Them Go!
Most employees don’t leave because they’re unhappy, they leave because they’ve stopped growing. In this week’s episode of The Intentional Workplace Podcast, Maria Williams and Jacob Stone break down where growth opportunities fall apart: High performers get more responsibility, but not more development. There’s no clear “what’s next,” so people start looking elsewhere. Growth conversations happen too late. If you want to keep your best people, the focus has to shift. Stop rewarding output alone and start building capability. Make growth visible, not something employees have to ask for. Turn 1:1s into forward-looking development conversations. Here is one simple but powerful shift managers can make immediately:Turn your 1:1s from status updates into future-focused conversations. Ask your team members: What skills do you want to build next? What kind of problems do you want more exposure to? What would make this role feel like forward progress? Then actually act on it through stretch opportunities, visibility, and real ownership. Fifteen Minutes. Two Experts. Intentional Work. To learn more about People Operations, Scaling Teams, or Auditing your Human Resource Processes please connect with us! Jacob Stone: JacobStone@WORQTAP.com www.worqtap.com Maria Williams: Maria.Williams@ScaleSmartHR.com www.scalesmarthr.com
Why Job Descriptions Are Failing You
Most job descriptions aren't helping you hire better, they're hurting you. They're written like wish lists with too many responsibilities, unrealistic expectations and no clear priorities. The real problem is that they describe tasks, not impact. So, candidates are left guessing: What does success actually look like? What am I really responsible for? That's where misalignment (and turnover) starts. Improve your job descriptions by answering three things clearly: Why does this role exist? What outcomes does it own? What skills actually matter? Strong candidates aren't drawn to task lists, they're drawn to purpose and impact. Jacob Stone and Maria Williams break this down in the latest episode: Why Job Descriptions are Failing You. Check out the episode below, or you can stream it wherever you get your podcasts! Fifteen minutes. Two experts. Intentional work. To learn more about People Operations, Scaling Teams, or Auditing Your Human Resource Processes please connect with us! Jacob Stone: JacobStone@WORQTAP.com ww.worqtap.com Maria Williams: Maria.Williams@ScaleSmartHR.com www.scalesmarthr.com
The Multigenerational Workplace: From Friction to Strength
“Too old.” “Too young.” “Overqualified.” “Not enough experience.” At some point… what are we actually hiring for? In this episode of The Intentional Workplace, we take on one of the most overlooked hiring challenges: age bias—and how it quietly causes companies to miss out on exceptional talent. We break down how assumptions about both younger and more experienced candidates show up in the hiring process, why they persist, and what it’s really costing organizations trying to scale. If you’re building a team and want to make better, more intentional hiring decisions, this conversation will challenge how you evaluate talent—and help you refocus on what actually drives performance. Fifteen minutes. Two experts. Intentional work. To learn more about People Operations, Scaling Teams, or Auditing Your Human Resource Processes please connect with us! Jacob Stone: JacobStone@WORQTAP.com ww.worqtap.com Maria Williams: Maria.Williams@ScaleSmartHR.com www.scalesmarthr.com
Me and Not for Thee: Management Double Standards
In the latest The Intentional Workplace episode, Jacob Stone and Maria Williams discuss Management Double Standards - and how small inconsistencies in leadership behavior shape workplace culture. Most double standards don’t start intentionally. They show up in small moments: • Leaders encouraging work-life balance but sending late-night messages • Employees expected to own mistakes publicly while leaders explain theirs away • Policies applied strictly to staff, but flexibly to leadership Over time, these small inconsistencies send a clear message: the rules aren’t the same for everyone. And when that happens, something important begins to fade inside an organization - trust. Culture isn’t defined by the standards leaders set. It’s defined by the standards they consistently follow. 15 Minutes. 2 Experts. Intentional Work.
The Hidden Cost of Avoiding Hard Conversations
Most workplace problems don’t start big. They start small… and unaddressed. In the latest The Intentional Workplace podcast episode, Maria Williams and Jacob Stone discuss The Hidden Cost of Avoiding Hard Conversations, and what actually happens when leaders delay addressing issues. A few realities we see on teams all the time: Standards drop High performers disengage first Trust erodes Small issues snowball into bigger performance or culture problems The solution isn’t necessarily being tougher, it’s being earlier and clearer. A few leadership practices that make these conversations easier: ✔ Address behaviors, not personalities ✔ Give feedback while issues are still small ✔ Anchor conversations to shared team expectations ✔ Lead with curiosity, not assumptions Hard conversations done well don’t damage culture. Avoiding them does. 15 Minutes. 2 Experts. Intentional Work.
Values in Theory vs Values in Reality
“Integrity.” “Collaboration.” “People First.” They look great on a wall. But employees don’t experience values on a poster — they experience them in meetings, in feedback conversations, in who gets promoted, and in what behavior leadership actually tolerates. That’s the question we’re asking in this week’s episode: “Values in Theory vs. Values in Reality. Because employees know. They know when “transparency” only applies upward. They know when “accountability” skips leadership. They know when “people first” really means “performance first… unless it’s inconvenient.” In this episode, Maria and Jacob break down: How employees instantly know when values aren’t truly lived The subtle leadership behaviors that quietly contradict company culture What leaders can shift immediately to turn values from slogans into standards Here’s the uncomfortable truth: Culture isn’t what you declare. It’s what you consistently tolerate. If your values aren’t operationalized, they’re just branding.
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