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Inclusion Lives in the Lines, Not the Margins
Most inclusion efforts I have seen fail for the same reason — the effort sits beside the organization's actual work rather than inside it. A strategic plan names inclusion as a priority, but fails to build structures that actualize that priority. A training series launches and few staff attend, because managers make it clear they do not value training. Meanwhile, the processes that determine who gets hired, who gets heard, who gets promoted, who gets funded, and who gets b

Shannon P. Bartlett
Apr 233 min read


Your Next Chapter Is Not a Blank Page
The career change narrative we celebrate almost always follows the same arc. Someone walks away from a stable career, endures uncertainty, and emerges transformed. The bigger the leap, the better the story. That story keeps more people stuck than free. When you believe a pivot must be total, the perceived risk expands until nothing feels possible. So you do nothing, and inertia wins. A Pivot Redirects. A Pivot Does Not Reinvent. A pivot redirects strategy based on new informa

Shannon P. Bartlett
Apr 212 min read


Inclusive Leadership Is Not a Personality Trait
Inclusive leadership gets treated as a disposition. Warm. Open. Good with people. That framing lets leaders believe inclusion is who they already are, which quietly removes any requirement to actually build the skill. Inclusion functions as a practice. The practice draws on a set of disciplines about how you listen, how you decide, how you design the rooms you run, and how you build accountability into the systems you oversee. Leaders who treat inclusion as a personality trai

Shannon P. Bartlett
Apr 212 min read


You Do Not Need More Confidence. You Need Better Information.
Think more positively. Reframe your mindset. Own your worth. Fake it until you make it. That advice lands as incomplete rather than wrong. For high-achieving professionals, especially women and people of color, the advice often misses the point entirely. Self-doubt does not always signal distortion; in fact, sometimes doubt reads a real situation accurately. The question turns on whether you know how to read the signal. The Confidence Trap Confidence lags action; you do not

Shannon P. Bartlett
Apr 192 min read


When Communities Lead, the Composition Grows Richer
Most organizations I work with believe they want community engagement. What they often seek, instead, is community endorsement of a plan they have already written. That distinction matters. The first builds durable partnership. The second builds resentment, attrition, and a track record communities remember long after organizations move on to their next strategic priority. I learned this lesson early as a civil rights litigator, where the people most affected by an outcome kn

Shannon P. Bartlett
Apr 192 min read


The Pieces Are There. The Composition Is Not.
Most organizations I work with do not struggle with strategy. They struggle with composition. The strategy exists. The people exist. The funding, the programs, the mission, the talent. All those elements sit inside the organization. What fails at the executive level often traces to how the elements relate to one another. Leadership moves in one direction while operations interprets the work another way. Stated values appear in the strategic plan but disappear in promotion dec

Shannon P. Bartlett
Apr 192 min read
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