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The way we work is fundamentally changing. New, hybrid workplaces, technological advances, and challenges in our global economy, are making it harder to keep up. Leaders are trying to navigate work-from-home arrangements, flexible schedules, cross-functional collaboration, and more. The ability for diverse teams to work together effectively and productively is more critical than ever.

The Five Behaviors can be your solution!

The Five Behaviors are based on Patrick Lencioni's best-selling book, "The Five Dysfunctions of a Team."
Our Five Behaviors Personal Development Profile provides personalized tips and recommendations for building trust, healthy conflict, commitment, peer-to-peer accountability, and a true spirit of shared results. Taking action based on what you'll learn will help unify your team, increase productivity, and create greater levels of satisfaction and fulfillment with your work.

In this virtual showcase, you will:

  • Receive a complimentary Personal Development Profile to identify your own team strengths and how you can personally demonstrate The Five Behaviors

  • Learn to leverage The Five Behaviors Model to unlock the power of teamwork at all levels of your organization

  • Preview The Five Behaviors Development Solution

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Speaker: Tricia Weinhold
Senior Brand Manager

Tricia has extensive experience in integrated marketing, brand, and communications strategy with an emphasis on digital marketing. Currently Wiley's Senior Brand Manager for The Five Behaviors, Tricia also led teams for HALO, a beloved juvenile brand. Her expertise, commitment and entrepreneurial mindset help her understand the needs of today's businesses.

I'd love to see you!

ou know how much I love assessments. The Five Behaviors Profile and team event is an engaging and objective way to identify your team's strengths while creating a plan to be a more cohesive team in 2022.

I totally get it. Our team is working through the challenges of a hybrid workplace, too. We're using the 5B principles to make sure we are ready to keep growing and serving you in the future.

I think you'll really like it! Even if you can't make the virtual session on December 8 at 3 PM EST, at least take advantage of this opportunity to get the FREE profile for yourself!

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Why NFL Coaches and Business Leaders Get Fired

5 Things That Get Head Coaches Fired (And Why Leaders Should Pay Attention)

January 19, 20264 min read

Wow! Can you believe the Buffalo Bills fired Head Coach Sean McDermott today?

Sure, some fans have been calling for change, but let’s agree: Sean McDermott was the best head coach this franchise has had since the Marv Levy era. He helped rebuild a broken organization, instilled a culture of teamwork and loyalty, and led the Bills to consistent playoff runs after decades of disappointment.

Culture matters. Buffalo isn’t just known for snow anymore. It’s known for Josh Allen and winning football.

But here’s the uncomfortable truth, both in football and in business:

Culture alone is not enough.

At the highest levels, leaders aren’t judged only by what they build. They’re judged by what they deliver when it matters most. Which brings us to the hard question:

Why do successful leaders still get fired?

Here's my take:

1. You Don’t Win the Game That Counts
Playoff appearances are meaningful. Championships are decisive.

At some point, effort, culture, and improvement stop being enough. Progress must turn into payoff because results matter. When the goal is clear, repeated near-misses eventually signal a leadership problem, not a performance dip.

If you’re hitting your annual KPI’s but not achieving the transformational goals or your organization’s ultimate mission, owners, boards, and stakeholders will start questioning your potential.

2. Inconsistency as Expectations Rise
Your organization performs well, but not reliably.

In a rebuild, inconsistency and situational lapses are tolerated and even expected. In a championship window, they are unacceptable. What once looked like momentum now feels unpredictable. And unpredictability at the top is unsettling.

What got you out of the basement isn’t likely to get you to the Super Bowl. Sustained wins require people, processes, and systems that create predictability, consistency, and accountability.

3. Failure to Pivot When the Philosophy Stops Working
Adjustments come too late, or not at all.

“Trust the process” and “everybody eats” were not clichés in Buffalo. They were powerful, unifying leadership philosophies. They created belief, stability, and a shared identity.

Until the competition increased.

Strong philosophies are essential. But when leaders cling to them as the world around them evolves, those philosophies quietly turn into rigidity.

Optimizing a system that’s no longer working is still failure, just slower. The best leaders know when to honor what worked, acknowledge what no longer does, and pivot decisively, not incrementally.

4. Over-Reliance on a Superstar
The Bills have talent. That’s not the debate.

Elite talent masks system weaknesses. The cape-wearing quarterback improvises, the rainmaker saves the quarter, the leader personally steps in to get the team across the finish line. When key players are sidelined, neutralized, or underutilized, gaps are exposed.

Great leaders don’t just accumulate talent. They deploy it effectively, adapt around limitations, and develop depth that can withstand adversity.

5. Avoiding Conflict Shows Up as Hesitation When It Matters
A strong culture sometimes avoids hard truths.

This pattern shows up more often than leaders like to admit.

You build a strong, loyal culture but avoid the hardest conversations: about roles, performance, needed change, etc. Avoided conflict doesn’t disappear. It resurfaces as conservative decisions, delayed calls, chaos on the field, and playing not to lose instead of playing to win.

Unaddressed tension becomes hesitation under pressure. And hesitation, at the highest level, is costly. Top leaders address conflict proactively, sensitively, and in a way that drives the desired end result.

The Quiet Reality No One Likes to Say Out Loud

When a team is built and paid to contend, consistent exits at the same stage of the journey look like you’ve reached your ceiling. This isn’t about being bad. It’s about growing expectations.

It’s the nature of leadership at the top.

Which is why this matters just as much for leaders as it does for football head coaches.

Want to stay in the game?

  1. Win the ultimate game.

  2. Build sustainable momentum.

  3. Know when it's time to pivot.

  4. Build bench strength.

  5. Address conflict head on.

Head Coaches Need Coaching, Especially the Successful Ones

When you’re leading a high-performing team or organization, the work isn’t about fixing what’s broken. It’s about recognizing what must evolve before someone else decides for you.

If you’re navigating that moment, let’s talk.

I work with leaders who are already successful AND want to stay that way. Go Bills! ♥️🦬💙

why leaders get firedwhy leaders leave companieswhy ceos get fired
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Amy A. Pearl

Amy Pearl is Work Ignited's Chief Optimizer, bringing strategic solutions and simple tools to your workplace.

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