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Excellence doesn’t live in a slide deck; it shows up when the stakes are high and the ground is unfamiliar. That’s why we invited Mark Monteil, who left a successful manufacturing career to lead in New Caledonia’s mining sector, to unpack what changes when your decisions echo for years and people’s safety depends on your culture. The story starts with a courageous pivot: trading autopilot for responsibility. From there, it turns into a field guide for leaders who want to build trust in complex, high‑risk environments.

We dig into the practices that travel across industries, clear standards, daily discipline, and going to the field, while recognizing what must be translated to local context. Mark explains why the first step in transformation isn’t optimization but reconnection: introducing yourself to tribes, unions, and mayors; honoring ceremonies; and listening before fixing. He reframes emotional intelligence as hard protection, the difference between near‑miss and catastrophe, and shares prompts that surface unspoken risks. You’ll hear how psychological safety, humility, and systems thinking create the conditions for continuous improvement that actually lasts.

Along the way, we talk about avoiding the trap of labels. Rather than launching another program, Mark embodies timeless principles without the baggage of acronyms. We explore the tension between quarterly results and culture that compounds over years, and we map a path that blends quick wins with long‑term trust. Mark also opens up about the personal routines, meditation, running, and intentional presence that help him slow down, adjust speed, and bring people with him.

If you’re ready to lead closer to reality, fill your calendar with field time, and choose courage over comfort, this conversation is your cue. Subscribe, share with a colleague who needs the nudge, and leave a review with the one behavior you’ll change this week.

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