Listen

Description

Summary

How many staffing leaders are actually satisfied with their tech stack—not just tolerating it, but genuinely getting what they were promised? In this episode of Highly Adaptive, Jeff Pelliccio and Erin MacKenzie welcome Leanne Courtney of Achieve With Tech to diagnose why that demo excitement so often turns to regret within six months.

Leanne brings a refreshingly direct perspective shaped by years helping organizations untangle duplicative tools and misaligned expectations. The conversation opens with an unexpected detour through Australian wildlife facts (including why 97% of koalas have chlamydia and the tragic origin of Leanne's Segway fears), before diving into the real problem: most organizations let vendors tell their story instead of building their own first.

The trio unpacks why ROI has become a meaningless buzzword without baseline metrics, how one client discovered they had four different tools doing the same thing, and why "change management" should really be called "user enablement management." Leanne introduces her Stop, Adapt, Adopt framework—a practical methodology for breaking the cycle of tech disappointment that treats technology decisions like building Tetris blocks rather than eating an entire cake.

Whether you're drowning in analysis paralysis or wondering why your team won't use the expensive software you just implemented, this episode provides the mirror-holding questions and concrete steps to make your next technology decision stick.


Key Takeaways
Sponsors

Allied Insight — The Preferred Marketing Partner of Staffing and Consulting Businesses Before your next tech investment, make sure your story is clear. Allied Insight helps staffing leaders build the strategic foundation that makes technology decisions stick—because the best demo in the world can't fix misaligned expectations.

All Things Staffing — Expert Resources for the Staffing Community Your hub for frameworks that cut through the noise. All Things Staffing delivers the practical insights that help leaders stop reacting and start building technology strategies with intention.