• Leadership Is a Guided Journey | #4
    May 6 2026

    Great leaders don’t push people — they guide them.

    In this episode of Tell Me More, Joel Worthington sits down with Zach Smith, founder of Anywhere.com, to explore a powerful leadership truth: leading a team is no different than guiding someone through a life-changing journey. Whether you’re building a business or planning a trip across the world, success comes down to trust, communication, and creating an experience people want to be part of.

    Zach shares how his company helps travelers move from anxiety to confidence by deeply understanding their desires and building trust at every step — and Joel connects those same principles directly to leadership inside organizations. When leaders act as guides instead of bosses, they unlock energy, engagement, and buy-in that most teams never reach.

    In this episode, you’ll learn:

    • Why leadership is about guiding people toward a destination, not managing tasks
    • How trust and psychological safety eliminate fear and unlock performance
    • Why asking better questions leads to stronger buy-in from your team
    • How great leaders “sell the journey” by casting a compelling vision
    • Why culture and experience drive referrals, retention, and engagement

    If you want your team to stop showing up for a paycheck and start showing up with passion, you have to create a journey worth following.

    Because when people see themselves in the vision, they don’t need to be pushed — they choose to go.

    Lean in — and tell me more.

    Connect with Joel:
    LinkedIn: Joel Worthington
    Instagram: @joelworthington

    Connect with Zach Smith:
    Website: Anywhere.com


    Show More Show Less
    54 mins
  • Trust Comes From Competence | #3
    Apr 29 2026

    People don’t follow titles — they follow competence.

    In this episode of Tell Me More, leadership consultant Joel Worthington sits down with real estate coach, speaker, and author Josh Cadillac to explore a powerful leadership truth: trust is built through competence. Whether you’re leading employees or influencing customers, people need to believe you know what you’re doing before they’re willing to follow your lead.

    Through stories from real estate, business leadership, and even ballroom dancing, Joel and Josh break down how expertise, empathy, and communication work together to build credibility. When leaders deeply understand their craft — and the people they serve — they create confidence, safety, and influence that drives results.

    In this episode, you’ll learn:

    • Why competence is one of the two pillars of trust in leadership
    • How great leaders influence people without forcing decisions
    • The difference between technical skill and soft-skill leadership
    • Why empathy and respect create stronger buy-in from teams and customers
    • How mastering your craft elevates every conversation you have

    If you want people to trust your leadership, start by proving you’re worthy of it.

    Because when leaders combine character, competence, and empathy, people don’t have to be pushed — they want to follow.

    Lean in — and tell me more.

    Connect with Joel:
    LinkedIn: Joel Worthington
    Instagram: @joelworthington

    Connect with Josh Cadillac:
    Podcast: Know Your Sh*t

    Show More Show Less
    42 mins
  • Belief Drives Behavior | #2
    Apr 22 2026

    Your team doesn’t act on strategy, they act on what they believe.

    In this episode of Tell Me More, leadership consultant Joel Worthington breaks down a foundational principle every high-performing leader must understand: belief is the basis for behavior. If your employees aren’t engaged, energized, or bought in, it’s not a motivation problem — it’s a belief problem.

    Joel unpacks the psychology behind self-efficacy, employee engagement, trust in leadership, and emotional buy-in — and shows you how to turn passive employees into passionate contributors. You’ll learn how belief fuels energy, how energy drives action, and how great leaders intentionally create belief in three critical areas: in themselves, in the leader, and in the mission.

    In this episode, you’ll discover:

    • Why employee engagement starts with belief, not bonuses
    • How to build trust through character and competence
    • Why storytelling is your most powerful leadership tool
    • How to present new initiatives so your team actually buys in
    • Why emotional connection must come before data and KPIs

    If you want more energy, more ownership, and better results from your team, stop leading with spreadsheets and start leading with belief.

    Because when belief goes up, passion rises.
    When passion rises, action follows.
    And when action follows, results compound.

    Lean in — and tell me more.

    Connect with Joel:
    LinkedIn: Joel Worthington
    Instagram: @joelworthington

    Show More Show Less
    28 mins
  • Why Your Team Has No Energy | #1
    Apr 15 2026

    Most leaders don’t have a strategy problem — they have an energy problem.

    In the very first episode of Tell Me More, host Joel Worthington breaks down what leadership actually requires and why so many teams feel disengaged, disconnected, and stuck in neutral. Drawing on decades of experience leading large organizations, Joel explains how communication, trust, and emotional alignment determine whether people show up motivated or just collect a paycheck.

    In this episode, you’ll learn:

    • Why leadership without followers isn’t leadership at all
    • How poor communication creates chaos — and great communication creates harmony
    • Why “Tell Me More” is the simplest phrase that unlocks trust, energy, and results

    If you’re ready to move your team from obligation to ownership, this conversation is where it starts. Pull up a seat — and tell me more.


    Connect with Joel:
    LinkedIn: Joel Worthington
    Instagram: @joelworthington

    Show More Show Less
    19 mins
  • Coming Soon...
    Apr 7 2026

    Subscibe and listen to the Tell Me More podcast. Launching April 16.

    Show More Show Less
    1 min