A Look At Red Hat's Culture: How They Use Open Leadership, Creating Meaning At Work, Dealing With Change, & Much More

A Look At Red Hat's Culture: How They Use Open Leadership, Creating Meaning At Work, Dealing With Change, & Much More

DeLisa Alexander is the Chief People Officer at Red Hat, a role she has held since March 2011. She is responsible for leading Red Hat's global Human Capital team, including Red Hat University College of Leadership and Management.

She joined Red Hat in 2001 and served in the office of General Counsel until 2006. In that role, DeLisa was responsible for equity and executive compensation and employment matters. Prior to Red Hat, she was associated with the law firm Kilpatrick Stockton where she focused on mergers, acquisitions, venture capital and licensing. DeLisa graduated with a BBA from James Madison University, holds an MBA from University of Baltimore, and earned her Juris Doctor from George Mason University.

Red Hat is a leading software company in the business of assembling open source components for the Linux operating system and related programs into a distribution package that can be ordered and implemented. They currently employ about 13,000 associates, with about 25% of the population working remotely. They have over 95 offices in 35 countries around the world.

Red Hat has been studying, implementing, and experimenting with a concept called open leadership and it has drastically changed how the company operates. They found that traditional, top down, hierarchical leadership did not work for their company and they knew they had to try something different.

What is open leadership? DeLisa says first of all, "They tend to have a growth mindset where they think everyone has something special to contribute. Everyone has something unique they can offer. And that a leader's role, whether it's a manager or a team lead or a technical lead their role is to act in an inclusive way. And a way that really brings out that individual's strengths and help them to contribute their unique talents."

Open leaders will also see untapped potential in all of their employees. They believe that everyone is capable of learning and growing, they understand that it is their role as a leader to create an atmosphere where employees can learn, grow, and stretch themselves.

Red Hat also believes that leaders don't necessarily have to be be managers of people. Anyone can be a leader. A leader is not defined by a title or position within the company, a leader is defined by their ability to influence others.

For organizations looking to implement the concept of open leadership DeLisa advises, "It's not a one size fits all. Open, is a continuum. So if you start from where you are and think about where you'd like to move, what I recommend always is understand the strengths of your organization, understand your organization's purpose, and really lean into the areas that are strengths for you that can help you to support that purpose more effectively by making some shifts. I always find that when you're trying to close a gap, it's much more difficult than leading into something that's your strength already."

What you will learn In This Episode:

  • How DeLisa went from the legal field to the HR space
  • Big trends DeLisa is paying attention to
  • DeLisa's view on Millennials
  • A look at the culture at Red Hat
  • How Red Hat used stories from their own employees to create their company's mission statement
  • What open leadership is

Links from the episode:

Avsnitt(1180)

Mark Zuckerberg Is Building a Digital Clone of Himself for His Employees

Mark Zuckerberg Is Building a Digital Clone of Himself for His Employees

April 14, 2026: The Stanford AI Index shows generative AI has hit 53% global adoption — faster than any technology in history — but also reveals a 50-point gap between expert optimism and public fear ...

14 Apr 54min

Maintaining "Humanness" in a Technology & AI Driven Workplace - w/ Ally Financial CHRO Kathie Patterson

Maintaining "Humanness" in a Technology & AI Driven Workplace - w/ Ally Financial CHRO Kathie Patterson

Companies today are rushing to build an AI strategy, but they often forget to create a human strategy to match it. As technology takes over daily tasks, keeping the human element alive at work is a hu...

13 Apr 47min

80% of People Trust AI Even When It's Wrong And It's Making Them Feel Smarter

80% of People Trust AI Even When It's Wrong And It's Making Them Feel Smarter

April 10, 2026: Andreessen Horowitz just released hard data showing nearly a third of the Fortune 500 has live AI deployments — and the pattern underneath reveals exactly which jobs and functions are ...

10 Apr 42min

Meta Launched a New AI Model and Employees Are Being Ranked by How Much AI They Use

Meta Launched a New AI Model and Employees Are Being Ranked by How Much AI They Use

April 9, 2026: Meta had a big week. The company launched Muse Spark, its first model from a completely rebuilt AI team, framing it as the opening move toward personal superintelligence. And internally...

9 Apr 40min

Employees Sabotage AI, Claude Cyber Warfare, and Google's Lie Machine

Employees Sabotage AI, Claude Cyber Warfare, and Google's Lie Machine

April 8, 2026: A major new survey finds that 44% of Gen Z workers admit to actively sabotaging their company's AI rollout — and the real story isn't what you think. Second, Anthropic just announced Pr...

8 Apr 32min

Altman Wants a New Deal, Goldman Conflicting Jobs Reports, and Why "No AI" Is Becoming a Selling Point

Altman Wants a New Deal, Goldman Conflicting Jobs Reports, and Why "No AI" Is Becoming a Selling Point

April 7, 2026: Sam Altman published a 13-page blueprint this week arguing capitalism won't survive superintelligence — and proposing robot taxes, a public wealth fund, and a 4-day workweek. Goldman Sa...

7 Apr 37min

How Newell Brands Is Operationalizing a High-Performance Culture in the Middle of AI Disruption (CHRO Tracy Platt)

How Newell Brands Is Operationalizing a High-Performance Culture in the Middle of AI Disruption (CHRO Tracy Platt)

Preparing a global team for a world that changes by the minute can feel like a race against time, especially when 80% of jobs face major shifts by 2030. In this episode, we tackle the challenge of tur...

6 Apr 56min

Stanford Just Proved 87% of All Economic Growth Came From Replacing Humans — And AI Is About to Do It Again, Just Slower Than You Think

Stanford Just Proved 87% of All Economic Growth Came From Replacing Humans — And AI Is About to Do It Again, Just Slower Than You Think

April 3, 2026: Two major academic papers dropped today alongside fresh labor market data, and together they paint the clearest picture yet of what AI will actually do to the economy and to work. Stanf...

3 Apr 45min

Populärt inom Business & ekonomi

framgangspodden
varvet
badfluence
rss-jossan-nina
rss-svart-marknad
svd-tech-brief
rss-borsens-finest
uppgang-och-fall
bathina-en-podcast
rss-dagen-med-di
rss-kort-lang-analyspodden-fran-di
rss-inga-dumma-fragor-om-pengar
avanzapodden
lastbilspodden
fill-or-kill
borsmorgon
24fragor
tabberaset
rikatillsammans-om-privatekonomi-rikedom-i-livet
montrosepodden