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#523 David Liddle: What Keeps Managers Up at 11:59pm?
26 June 2026

#523 David Liddle: What Keeps Managers Up at 11:59pm?

21st Century Entrepreneurship

About

David Liddle is a conflict resolution expert, culture adviser, author, and founder who has spent 25 years helping organizations move from toxic teams and formal grievances toward healthier, higher-performing workplaces—and we spoke about why culture is not “words on a wall,” but the operating system behind scale, growth, and performance.

David explains that many workplace problems leaders lose sleep over are not really strategy or finance problems, but behavior problems: people not listening, not talking, not performing, or retreating into silos. His approach starts with simple human questions—“how do they feel and what do you need?”—and turns conflict into a chance for learning, repair, and better leadership. He argues that “culture is defined by our behaviors,” which means every word, policy, meeting, and difficult conversation is either building or damaging the workplace.

We also spoke about practical ways leaders can create better team climates: replacing blame-based HR processes with dialogue, using coaching conversations before conflict escalates, treating employees as consumers of leadership and systems, and preparing for difficult conversations before they happen. David shares a simple leadership message that helped one CEO rebuild trust across silos: “I see you, I hear you, I appreciate you, I understand you.”

For listeners, this is a concrete conversation about making culture intentional: how to listen better, handle conflict earlier, build trust faster, and create organizations where people can do their best work.

Key takeaways

    Culture changes through daily words, behaviors, and systems.Ask people how they feel and what they need.Treat conflict as a learning opportunity, not a threat.Replace blame-based HR with dialogue and coaching.Employees consume leadership, culture, systems, and process.Difficult conversations improve when leaders prepare intentionally.