Ep. 100: Rachael Bertrandt Crump - Global Leadership Perspectives
Count Me In®30 Marras 2020

Ep. 100: Rachael Bertrandt Crump - Global Leadership Perspectives

Contact Rachael Bertrandt Crump: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rachael-bertrandt-crump-cpa-cgma-303b057/

About Rachael Bertrandt Crump: https://www.insight.com/en_US/about/management/rachael-bertrandt.html

Leadership Article with Rachael: https://profilemagazine.com/2020/rachael-bertrandt-insight/

FULL EPISODE TRANSCRIPT:
Adam: (00:04)
Welcome back for the hundredth episode of Count Me In IMA's podcast about all things affecting the accounting and finance world. Once again, I'm your host Adam Larson, and I'm pleased to introduce the featured guest for today's episode Rachael Bertrandt Crump. Rachel is a Global Corporate Controller and Principal Accounting Officer for Insight, a leading provider of computer hardware, software cloud solutions, and IT services. In her conversation with Mitch, she discusses what it means to be a global leader, the importance of culture, and how to develop top leadership talent. Let's head over and listen to the full episode now.

Mitch: (00:44)
So our conversation today revolves around a leadership article that you wrote earlier this year about being a global leader, to kick off the conversation. Let's first start by getting your definition of a leader. You know, I'd really like to get an idea of who it is that you see as a leader or who can be a leader in the organization, and then particularly for this conversation, we're going to focus on global leadership and global organization. So what does all of that really mean to you? What does that look like?

Rachael: (01:12)
Sure. So to me, my definition of a leader is anyone or someone who's driven to influence a particular outcome. So really in any organization that can be anyone who has a passion or a drive, around a particular topic, or to achieve a particular outcome. So if everyone can be a leader, right, and an organization just isn't what we might do in our nine to five or how we interact during that work time. I'm a firm believer that, you know, we're training our future leaders, in all of our organizational units today, in our family units, and our schools and the volunteer work and everything we do. And those are, those are our future global leaders, global citizens. So it, it's almost most important that everyone who steps up to lead is their leading, where their passion drives them to. I think that the diversity and experience that everyone brings, is really what, what kind of brings out passion in someone. And, and that's what makes a good leader to me.

Mitch: (02:30)
Well, I really liked the fact that you brought up, you know, home in school particular. Just my personal background, I actually come from classroom teaching before I started this. I was working with students and coaching and, you know, I think a big part of that growth in an individual is the leadership that they see on a daily basis. So now from our perspective, you know, obviously more professionally, the organizational culture will certainly shape a leader as well. So I'm curious, you know, how exactly does that happen and can culture affect an individual's ability to be a leader, particularly globally?

Rachael: (03:12)
I absolutely believe that that culture, impacts leadership. I think it can propel leadership forward, kind of that Lightspeed, if you will, but I also think the wrong culture can stifle would be leaders. particularly if they have less direct leadership experience and they're looking to step into, you know, a leadership role, whether it's, you know, official or unofficial. They can lose confidence if the organization and the culture doesn't embrace diversity and experience. I think that, you know, maybe many decades ago, experience was measured mainly, based on jobs months, years, sorry, days, months, years in a job and now I think there's a lot more that defines experience based more than just on kind of the time in the seat or the time in the job and I think it's that, you know, that diversity of experience that really gets about how global organizations can be so effective today. Someone coming into the workforce today that, and I use myself as an example, you know, went to the same university in Wisconsin, got the same degree I did, you know, few decades ago. Their experiences actually entirely different than mine. Their context, how they learn the tools, the office tools with which they learned on, and that puts them at a different starting point than it did me, and that experience just because, you know, I've been in the workforce, then maybe I've learned my tools on the job. Doesn't put me, you know, necessarily at an advantage, from a leadership perspective over what their experience might have to offer. So I really think that that is, you know, important in our global organizations today, that we acknowledge the diversity in experience, and how people, how people achieve experience in what we define as experience, because I think that's what really takes, an organization to the next level. And culture has to embrace that, right? I mean, culture can be a whole other podcast, right. But, you know, culture really has to embrace diversity and to draw it out, to draw out your, your future leaders, because I mean, if we don't, if we don't train ourselves, train up ourselves, right, we're going to be in a, I think a world of hurt, we'll be at a disadvantage, as an organization.

Mitch: (06:01)
Well, you certainly make great points, and I think the one thing that I want to emphasize is, you know, there has been a shift in what someone's experience is, you know, you mentioned that the time piece of it, and I think a lot of businesses today are recognizing that certain skills certainly differentiate, applicants, regardless of, you know, how many years they have on the job, but to your other point, you know, culture, it certainly has existing barriers still when it comes to leadership development. And while, you know, there might be a shift in mindset as far as experience and skills and whatnot. What are some of the other barriers that you think are really affecting these organizations? And then what is hindering individuals from reaping some leadership development from their organization?

Rachael: (06:52)
So I tend to believe that that we ourselves and our unconscious bias is one of our biggest barriers to effective global leadership. We have to think bigger than our own, you know, kind of universe right in the moment. And that can be super fun, mindblowing, but it can also be a bit overwhelming. I also think desire and passion have to come naturally. I believe every human, you know, it, they have it for something in their life, but it, it they have to feel it and want it for it to come out, and kind of break through their own natural barrier. And then, you know, kind of along the same lines, we're, we're our own best advocate and our own worst enemy, maybe. But other barriers showing compassion and empathy and being vulnerable. So when you think of global leadership that the people that you are leading likely are, you know, very, diverse geographically, across many different regions. And, and so you're serving them as a leader and you're not in there, you know, you're not in their seat. You don't know your day to day in your region likely looks very different than their day to day in their region. And so really being vulnerable and having, that empathetic view for what they, you know, may be going through, I think really makes a difference as to whether you'll be an effective global leader or not.

Mitch: (08:33)
And...

Tämä jakso on lisätty Podme-palveluun avoimen RSS-syötteen kautta eikä se ole Podmen omaa tuotantoa. Siksi jakso saattaa sisältää mainontaa.

Jaksot(402)

Ep. 360: Soufyan Hamid - After the AI Wave: Why Human Storytelling Is the New Finance Superpower

Ep. 360: Soufyan Hamid - After the AI Wave: Why Human Storytelling Is the New Finance Superpower

Soufyan Hamid, founder of The Finance Circle, returns to Count Me In to share fresh insights on the evolving role of finance teams. His company specializes in training FP&A leaders and finance profess...

29 Kesä 32min

Ep. 359: Marina Ter Sargsyan - Unlocking Data Readiness for Small Business AI Success

Ep. 359: Marina Ter Sargsyan - Unlocking Data Readiness for Small Business AI Success

Join us for a lively conversation with Marina Ter Sargsyan, Founder and CFO of Crystal Books Consulting, whose 25-year journey spans Armenia to the U.S., banking to nonprofits, and tech transformation...

25 Kesä 34min

Ep. 358: Tala Khalifeh - Why Human Judgment Remains Essential in the AI Accounting Era

Ep. 358: Tala Khalifeh - Why Human Judgment Remains Essential in the AI Accounting Era

What does it really take to keep ethics at the forefront as AI changes the game in accounting? In this episode, Tala Khalifeh, Chief of Staff at STAXX and a leader for IMA Shared Interest Groups, join...

22 Kesä 27min

Ep. 357: Ali Hussain - Rethinking Finance Stacks in the Age of AI

Ep. 357: Ali Hussain - Rethinking Finance Stacks in the Age of AI

Join Adam Larson as he sits down with Ali Hussain, founder and CEO of Tabs, for a candid conversation about redefining the landscape of accounting and finance through AI-powered technology. Ali shares...

15 Kesä 33min

Ep 356: Rafeal Pinho - Driving Business Growth with a Strategic Finance Approach

Ep 356: Rafeal Pinho - Driving Business Growth with a Strategic Finance Approach

Ever wondered how an electrical engineer ends up as the CFO of a major company in Brazil? Join us for a candid conversation with Rafael Pinho, Co-Founder and CFO at TD Pine Advisors, as he shares his ...

8 Kesä 34min

Ep. 355: Katie Trowbridge - Fostering Belonging and Innovation in the Workplace

Ep. 355: Katie Trowbridge - Fostering Belonging and Innovation in the Workplace

Join us for an engaging and insightful chat with Katie Trowbridge, educator-turned-CEO and author of the latest leadership book, Lead Boldly Think Deeply. Katie shares her journey from the classroom t...

1 Kesä 46min

Ep. 354: Jennifer Pinder - Surviving Check and Wire Scams in a Digital World

Ep. 354: Jennifer Pinder - Surviving Check and Wire Scams in a Digital World

Get ready for a revealing conversation as Jennifer Pinder, Controller for Watchdog Real Estate Project Management, joins Adam Larson to share real-life stories of bank fraud in the small business worl...

28 Touko 31min

Ep. 353: Dr. Christiane Schroeter - Petite Practice to Powerful Presentations: Storytelling for Finance

Ep. 353: Dr. Christiane Schroeter - Petite Practice to Powerful Presentations: Storytelling for Finance

Looking to boost your confidence as a presenter and storyteller? In this engaging episode, Adam Larson welcomes Christiane Schroeter, Professor at Cal Poly State University, health economics doctorate...

25 Touko 28min

Suosittua kategoriassa Liike-elämä ja talous

sijotuskasti
psykopodiaa-podcast
rss-oivalluksia-rahasta-elamasta
mimmit-sijoittaa
rss-rahapodi
rss-karon-grilli
inderespodi
ostan-asuntoja-podcast
rahapuhetta
asuntoasiaa-paivakirjat
oppimisen-psykologia
rss-inderes
rss-sami-miettinen-neuvottelija
rss-rahamania
rss-porssipuhetta
hyva-paha-johtaminen
lakicast
rss-bisnesta-bebeja
rss-myynti-ei-ole-kirosana
rss-paasipodi