Jeff Robinson, Executive Leadership Coach at Foundational Leadership LLC, brings more than 25 years of experience working with leaders across industries to this conversation on the People Solve Problems podcast. With a background in organizational leadership and development, Jeff is known for his practical, easygoing approach to helping people understand what it actually takes to lead well. The conversation centers on his new book, Leadership SUCCESS: Expand Your Presence, Build Trust, and Increase Your Influence, and the ideas inside it that he returns to again and again in his coaching work.
Jeff opens by reframing what confidence actually means. It has very little to do with how much you know, he explains. Confidence is really about knowing you can handle whatever comes at you. He points out that most people, when they think back through their careers and their lives, have already survived everything that has challenged them. That track record is the foundation. The most trusted leaders are the ones who can look at a new problem and break it down calmly, whether or not they have faced that exact situation before, because they have learned to trust their own ability to figure things out.
Building that confidence, Jeff notes, requires understanding where a person is starting from. Leadership development is not one size fits all. Some people arrive with natural confidence built from experiences completely outside of business, whether from military service, a farming background, or simply a life that demanded adaptability. Others need to build from the ground up, developing their intuition, managing their inner critic, and learning to listen to the right internal voice. The goal is always to identify the gap between where someone is and where they need to be, and then build from there.
One of the most important capabilities Jeff works to develop in leaders is the ability to stay calm under pressure. He is direct about this: if a leader loses composure, the people around them will follow. Staying calm is not passive. Jeff teaches people to recognize the physical signals that precede stress, such as tunnel vision or heat rising in the body, and to interrupt those signals before they take hold. One technique he returns to is asking yourself questions when stress begins to build. Doing so prompts the brain to shift out of fight-or-flight mode and back into the clear thinking needed to actually solve the problem at hand.
Jeff’s coaching philosophy reflects the same kind of adaptability he teaches. He describes coaching as holding up a mirror, asking questions that help people see what they could not see on their own. But he also breaks conventional coaching rules when needed, shifting into mentoring or direct problem discussion when a person needs that first, then bringing them back into a coaching conversation. He adjusts his approach entirely based on the individual, from brand-new leaders who need concrete behavioral guidance to experienced executives ready for deeper reflection.
For new leaders specifically, Jeff identifies the most common mistake as assuming the role requires a sudden transformation. They are still the same person they were the day before, and the most important thing they can do is focus on relationships and on maintaining the respect of the people around them. Respect, he says, is what causes people to start following you. You may not be able to build on it right away, but you cannot afford to lose it.
The conversation closes with Jeff describing Leadership SUCCESS as a practical framework drawn from his most common coaching experiences, targeted at mid to high-level leaders who are stuck and looking for a clear path forward. The book is available in all formats on Amazon.
Connect with Jeff Robinson and explore his work:
Website: http://www.foundations4.com
LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/jeff-w-robinson
Book on Amazon: amzn.to/3MSvbij
