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Frontline Leadership

Frontline Leadership

Written by: Christian Skierski
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About this listen

Frontline Leadership is a podcast for leaders who operate where decisions matter and consequences are real. Hosted by Christian Skierski, DBA, the show explores leadership, human performance, culture, and decision-making through the lens of real-world experience rather than theory alone.

Each episode offers concise reflections, practical insights, and thoughtful analysis drawn from military service, organizational leadership, and academic research. Topics include accountability, communication, trust, adaptability, and the often unseen dynamics that shape teams and institutions.

This is not motivational noise or recycled leadership slogans. It is a space for disciplined thinking, honest observation, and professional growth for leaders who want to lead with clarity, credibility, and purpose.

Frontline Leadership
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Episodes
  • Why Flawless Candidates Still Fail Executive Interviews
    Feb 7 2026

    Episode Title

    Why Flawless Candidates Still Fail Executive Interviews

    Episode Description

    Perfect résumés fail interviews every day. Not because the candidate lacks experience. Not because they say the wrong thing.

    They fail because executive readiness is not visible when it matters most.

    In this episode of Frontline Leadership, we unpack why highly qualified leaders lose momentum in executive interviews and how selection panels actually evaluate readiness in real time.

    At senior levels, interviews are not qualification checks. They are executive evaluations.

    This episode breaks down the visibility gap that causes strong candidates to miss selections and explains what decision makers are really listening for when the stakes are high.

    In This Episode, You’ll Learn

    • Why executive interviews are evaluations, not conversations • Why strong leaders still lose selections despite flawless records • What selection panels are listening for, even when they struggle to articulate it • The visibility gap between experience and executive readiness • Why collaboration language can unintentionally weaken confidence • The difference between activity and impact in interview answers • How executive judgment is evaluated under pressure

    The Three Executive Signals

    Problem Framing: Can you clearly explain what mattered, why it mattered, and what was at stake before describing the action?

    Decision Ownership: Can the panel hear the judgment call you personally owned and the tradeoffs you accepted?

    Outcome Clarity: Can the panel clearly hear what changed, what improved, and what endured because of your decision?

    When any of these is missing, readiness is assumed rather than demonstrated.

    Executive Visibility Self Check

    After any high-stakes interview or leadership conversation, ask yourself:

    1. Could they clearly hear how I framed the problem
    2. Could they clearly hear the decision I personally made
    3. Could they clearly hear the outcome that changed because of me

    If it was unclear to you, it was unclear to them.

    Who This Episode Is For

    • Senior leaders preparing for executive interviews • Candidates pursuing VP, Director, or C-suite roles • Military and civilian leaders operating at strategic levels • Professionals who are perfect on paper but struggle to close selections

    Closing Thought

    We do not select résumés. We select leaders under pressure.

    Executive readiness must be visible.

    Call to Action

    If this episode sharpened how you think about leadership evaluation, follow and subscribe to Frontline Leadership.

    This is where executive thinking becomes visible.

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    18 mins
  • Contrast Framing: The Space Between What We Say and What’s Heard
    Feb 2 2026

    Contrast Framing: The Space Between What We Say and What’s Heard

    You give the brief. You explain the decision. You answer the questions in the room.

    And then, days later, the follow-ups start.

    In this episode of Frontline Leadership, I explore a pattern that shows up quietly but consistently in leadership. Messages rarely fail in the moment. They fail later, in the questions that reveal how people actually understood what was said.

    Drawing on real leadership experiences and conversations with my children, this episode explores why clarity alone is often not enough. People do not evaluate messages in isolation. They compare them against prior experiences, assumptions, and unspoken alternatives. When leaders do not shape that comparison, misalignment fills the gap.

    We also connect these lived moments to well-established behavioral science, including research on anchoring, reference dependence, and loss aversion, to explain why decisions slow, trust erodes, and credibility is tested after the meeting ends.

    This episode is for leaders who want to understand what is really happening in the space between intention and interpretation.

    What This Episode Covers

    Why messages can feel clear in the room but unravel days later. How unspoken comparisons shape understanding. The hidden cost of misalignment on trust and decision speed. Why follow-up questions are often about framing, not facts. What leaders can do before the room empties to prevent rework later?

    Books Mentioned and Recommended

    Available through the Frontline Leadership Library

    These are books I regularly return to when thinking about communication, judgment, and leadership credibility. Each connects directly to the themes discussed in this episode.

    Thinking, Fast and Slow: A foundational look at how people actually think, decide, and misjudge. Essential for understanding why people rely on comparisons and mental shortcuts even when they believe they are being rational.

    Made to Stick explores why some messages survive after they leave the room while others dissolve. Highly practical for leaders who brief often and want their message to travel intact.

    Crucial Conversations Focused on moments where stakes are high, and misunderstandings carry real consequences. Especially useful when trust is already under pressure.

    Nudge: A clear explanation of how context and framing shape decisions without force. Helpful for leaders designing processes and communication environments.

    You can find all of these in the Frontline Leadership Library, where I share what I am reading and why it matters for real-world leadership, not theory alone.

    Continue the Conversation

    If this episode resonated, it probably means you have seen this pattern yourself. The brief felt clear. The decision was slowed anyway. The follow-up questions revealed something deeper.

    Follow Frontline Leadership for more reflections on communication, trust, and the leadership work that begins after the meeting ends.

    If you found this episode useful, consider sharing it with a leader who handles follow-ups.

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    18 mins
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