The Manager's Compass
Name what's happening.
Choose your route.
Every management challenge is a terrain condition — not a personal failure.
The Manager's Compass maps the friction you're navigating and gives you the Terrain Survey to locate where you actually are. Each post names what the system is doing, what it signals, and one clear move forward.
Find your map first
Why Most Leadership Development Keeps You Lost (And What Actually Works)
You've taken the assessments. Read the books. Hired the coach. But you still feel like you're performing leadership instead of practicing it. Here's what I've learned after 25 years: The leadership development industry has been solving the wrong problem. We've been asking "What should leaders do?" when we should ask "Who are you when you lead?" There are five distinct navigation pathways—Heart, Support, Purpose, Together, Precision—and understanding yours changes everything.
How to Fire Someone: The Step-by-Step Guide for Managers
Termination conversations are one of the hardest responsibilities of management. Most managers delay, over-explain, or let guilt turn a necessary conversation into something cruel. The problem isn't that you care—it's that no one taught you how to do this with clarity. Here's your step-by-step guide to conducting termination conversations that preserve dignity for everyone involved.
The Halloween Costume I Almost Missed: Why This Company Exists
Halloween night, early '90s. I couldn't leave my shift, so the babysitter brought my son to the restaurant so I could see his costume for five minutes before going back to work. That's what "making it work" looked like when you're a single mom running a restaurant, living in survival mode, being told you're not leadership material. Here's why I started The Manager's Mind Mapping Company—and why no manager should have to lead without a map.
Leadership Cartography: The Discipline That Emerged Into Existence Over a Lifetime of Following the Trail
As a child, I spent hours exploring maps with my fingertips. I would trace topographical lines and imagine myself traveling through elevations I'd never actually walk. In May 2024, I created an image of the mapmaker's room—not knowing why, just knowing I needed to see it. Eighteen months later, I finally named what I'd been building my entire life: Leadership Cartography™.

