Blog

Essays on creative leadership,
culture, and the human side of work.

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Becoming

These are personal essays about growing up as a fostered, then adopted child — and about what that does to a person over the course of a life and career. The passivity you develop to survive. The shame that shows up uninvited in elevators and conference rooms decades later. The moment you finally recognize the bully pattern, in a boss, in a father, in yourself.

The most-read piece opens with a meat cleaver. My wife, coming down the hall. Me, curled under the covers at thirty years old, having just been fired and not yet told her. It’s not a comfortable essay. But by the end, it explains — more directly than anything else I’ve written — why I understand what happens to people when they’re made to feel small at work, and why that understanding is the foundation of everything I do professionally.

These essays aren’t separate from my advisory work. They are the source of it.

Advisory Notes

These are essays about the emotional realities of creative professional life — the anxiety of leadership, the psychology of negotiation, the particular ways creative people get in their own way, and the particular ways organizations let them down.

One of the most-read pieces, “Why Creative Firms Break Differently,” argues that creative firms don’t fail from bad strategy — they unravel from the inside, through fatigue, misalignment, and a gradual loss of trust no one can quite name. That piece captures what all of these essays are reaching toward.

I write from four decades of experience inside creative firms, but I write the way I talk: directly, without jargon, with stories. Each piece includes one of my own illustrations. If you work in a creative firm and ever feel like the game is rigged against you, this series is for you.

Nail It! A weekly note from Ted.

Business, Creative, Economy, Fast Company, Nail It Weekly, Sales 5 minute read

So-called personal branding is bull—. You’re a human not a product. Here’s how to maintain your humanity and successfully market your services.

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Nail It! A weekly note from Ted.

Business, Creative, Economy, Emotions, Fast Company, Nail It Weekly 6 minute read

Avoidance is everyone’s knee-jerk reaction when the going gets tough, but fighting it isn’t a remote work challenge — it’s a human one.

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Nail It! A weekly note from Ted.

Business, Creative, Fast Company, Nail It Weekly 5 minute read

If you’re searching for your next gig, pull out your resume and check how it answers this question: When did your passion for what you do really begin? A Trip Down Your Resume’s Memory Lane If your resume is like just about every one I’ve seen, you’ve got your career trajectory laid out from your…

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How to use empathy

Business, Creative, Emotions, Fast Company, Negotiation 4 minute read

Creative professionals sometimes get written off as too soft to negotiate. But they often have one powerful tool: empathy.

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Business, Fast Company, Virtuous Cycle 5 minute read

If you let business development fall to the side, follow these steps to jump start your recovery and win back lost business.

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Audience responses

Business, Fast Company 5 minute read

In the middle of a presentation, you can feel the audience’s attention slipping away. Take a moment to check your perceptions and then correct as needed.

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man reading cell phone on a rooftop

Business, Creative, Emotions, Fast Company 5 minute read

One of the biggest challenges for creative professionals is corporate culture. Here are three ways you can make your creativity work for you.

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New essays, every week.
With an illustration.

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Also available on Substack.

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You never cease to amaze me with your willingness to make your life an open book — especially the more hurtful parts. And I'm amazed by the lessons you draw from all of it.

— Larry Coffman, Publisher
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Your writing has revealed some very intimate, powerful lessons. You are a source of inspiration both professionally and, increasingly, on a personal level.

— Rick Gore
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We can discuss the ugly, uncomfortable truths while always circling back to what matters: the people, the underdogs, the work we get to do, and the magical existence we get to share as creatives.

— Sarah Eskandarpour
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I loved your article about how clients' emotions affect briefs. It's a huge part of the creative industry and it's always good to see somebody so knowledgeable write about it.

— Vuk Bojovic, JKR Account Director, Singapore