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Timestamps are as accurate as they can be but may be slightly off. We encourage you to listen to the full context.
This comprehensive webinar features Hala Taha and Patrick Lencioni diving deep into the Working Genius framework, a revolutionary tool designed to help professionals understand what energizes versus drains them at work. (02:12) The session explores how burnout isn't about overwork but rather about working in misalignment with your natural strengths and preferences. (21:20) Through interactive activities, assessments, and real-world examples, participants learn about the six types of working genius and discover practical strategies for optimizing their work and team dynamics.
Hala is the host of Young and Profiting, a top 100 podcast, and CEO of Yap Media, an award-winning social media and podcast agency. She's also the founder of the Yap Media Podcast Network, which includes over 40 business and self-improvement podcasts featuring influencers like Jenna Kutcher and Neil Patel. (03:13) She's recognized as one of the biggest influencers on LinkedIn and has grown her company from a volunteer team to 60 employees.
Patrick is a bestselling author, founder of The Table Group, and creator of the Working Genius model. He's the author of "The Five Dysfunctions of a Team" and one of the most influential business thought leaders in the world. (12:16) He founded his company 28 years ago and has been working with organizations on the human side of business, helping companies build healthy organizational cultures and optimize team dynamics.
The root cause of burnout isn't working too many hours or having too much stress - it's spending time in work that drains your energy rather than energizes you. (21:20) This misalignment between your role and your natural wiring creates the Sunday scaries, procrastination, and feelings of frustration even when you love your job and coworkers. The solution isn't necessarily working less, but working more in areas that give you energy while minimizing time spent on tasks that drain you. This insight is particularly relevant for younger workers who have less control over their work assignments but can still find ways to incorporate their genius zones into their roles.
Everyone has exactly two working geniuses out of six types: Wonder (asking questions), Invention (creating solutions), Discernment (making good judgments), Galvanizing (rallying people), Enablement (supporting others), and Tenacity (finishing tasks). (30:29) Your geniuses are the work that gives you joy and energy - you could do it all day without getting tired. Your competencies are areas where you're capable but not energized, and your frustrations are work that drains you quickly. Understanding this framework helps you recognize why certain tasks feel effortless while others feel like climbing uphill, even when you're skilled at both.
Every project follows a natural workflow from Wonder to Tenacity, and teams missing certain geniuses will struggle in predictable ways. (67:57) Missing Wonder means no clear vision, missing Galvanizing creates no momentum, and missing Tenacity means nothing gets finished. The most common gap in organizations is in the activation stage (Discernment and Galvanizing) - teams have lots of ideas and can execute, but struggle with deciding which ideas to pursue and getting people excited about them. Understanding these gaps helps leaders hire strategically and restructure teams for better performance.
Certain genius combinations naturally butt heads: Inventors want to explore new ideas while Tenacity wants to finish current work, Wonder asks questions while Galvanizing pushes for action, and Discernment gives honest feedback while Enablement seeks harmony. (114:58) Recognizing these natural friction points helps teams communicate better and set expectations. For example, Inventors can label their ideas as "sketches" rather than final solutions, and Wonder can ask their questions before execution starts rather than during implementation.
Rather than trying to eliminate all draining tasks, focus on adding more genius time to your schedule and managing frustrating work through three strategies: containing it (batching, time-boxing), sharing it (delegating, partnering), or redesigning it (simplifying, automating). (85:25) Even entry-level employees can negotiate for more genius work by understanding their strengths and having conversations with managers about role alignment. The goal isn't perfection but optimization - getting more energy from your work than you put into it.