Episodios

  • Your Team Doesn't Need a Boss, They Need a Human with Selena Rezvani
    Nov 13 2025

    Your Team Doesn't Need a Boss, They Need a Human with Selena Rezvani

    In this episode of The WorkWell Podcast™, Jen Fisher speaks with Selena Rezvani, Wall Street Journal bestselling author and Forbes-named premier expert on standing up for yourself at work. Selena returns to the podcast to discuss her latest book, "Quick Leadership: Build Trust, Navigate Change, and Cultivate Unstoppable Teams." Drawing from her personal experience losing her workaholic father at age 13 and years of coaching leaders behind closed doors, Selena shares practical, actionable strategies for becoming the kind of leader people want to follow—without sacrificing your humanity or health.


    Episode Highlights:

    • The shocking statistic: Your manager influences your mental health on par with your spouse—more than your doctor or therapist (UKG research)
    • Trust killers in leadership: Why over-promising on small things destroys credibility and what "being impeccable with your word" really means
    • The "Shit Umbrella" concept: How great leaders shield their teams from chaos, unrealistic pressure, and distractions from above
    • Urgency culture: How to recognize when anxiety is being passed like a baton and why marking emails as "urgent" is eroding workplace trust
    • The difference between boss and leader: Why giving away power creates unstoppable teams instead of diminishing your authority
    • "Ask three before you answer": A practical technique to build autonomy and critical thinking in your team members
    • Re-engaging disengaged employees: Why viewing lost spark as temporary (not permanent) changes everything

    Quotable Moments:

    "People don't want this stoic pillar of a leader—they want a human." - Selena Rezvani

    "Your questions are expected, not tolerated." - Selena Rezvani


    Resources:
    Book: "Quick Leadership: Build Trust, Navigate Change, and Cultivate Unstoppable Teams" by Selena Rezvani

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    48 m
  • Why Nobody Talks About Being a Caregiver at Work (& What It's Costing Us) with Jennifer Levin
    Oct 30 2025

    Why Nobody Talks About Being a Caregiver at Work (& What It's Costing Us) with Jennifer Levin

    In this deeply personal episode of The WorkWell Podcast™, Jen Fisher speaks with Jennifer Levin, television writer, journalist, and founder of Caregiver Collective, about her powerful book "Generation Care: The New Culture of Caregiving." While we're in meetings and hitting deadlines, millions of workers are simultaneously managing something most colleagues know nothing about—caring for aging or chronically ill family members. Jennifer became a caregiver at 32 when her father was diagnosed with a rare degenerative illness, and what she discovered changed everything about how we should think about work, support, and what it means to show up.


    Episode Highlights:

    • What makes millennial and Gen X caregiving different—and why "you don't have other responsibilities" is a dangerous assumption
    • Why most young caregivers don't identify as caregivers—and what that silence costs them
    • The role reversal nobody prepares you for: becoming your parent's parent
    • Why our culture doesn't value family care as strong social capital—and the discrimination that follows
    • The real cost to companies: employees leaving not because they want to, but because unpaid leave forces impossible choices
    • Signs a team member might be struggling with caregiving (even if they haven't said anything)
    • Ambiguous loss: grieving the person who's still here and the life you thought you'd have
    • Why guilt is the one word every caregiver mentions, no matter what aspect of care they're discussing
    • How to create a culture of care awareness without requiring people to sacrifice their careers
    • The "waiting for the other shoe to drop" reality—and why caregiving emergencies don't follow a schedule

    Quotable Moments:

    "People will question your decisions all the time when you're a caregiver. But the person you're caring for wouldn't want you to give up on yourself either." - Jennifer Levin

    Resources:

    This episode of The WorkWell Podcast™ is made possible by Lyra Health, a premier global workforce mental health solution. Learn more at Lyrahealth.com/workwell.


    Jennifer's Book: "Generation Care: The New Culture of Caregiving" by Jennifer Levin


    Join the Caregiver Collective: A national online support group for caregivers who feel younger than expected in this role

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    44 m
  • The Power of Mattering: From Invisible to Invaluable with Zach Mercurio
    Oct 9 2025

    In this episode of The WorkWell Podcast™, Jen Fisher speaks with Zach Mercurio, author of "The Power of Mattering: How Leaders Can Create a Culture of Significance." Despite billions invested in engagement programs and wellbeing initiatives, employees are more disengaged than ever—and the problem isn't what most leaders think. This conversation reveals why mattering can't be addressed through programs and perks, and what leaders must do differently at the interaction level to help people feel truly seen, valued, and significant.


    Episode Highlights:

    • Why engagement is at its lowest point in a decade despite $2 billion invested in programs
    • The difference between mattering, belonging, and inclusion—and why mattering is what's missing
    • How we've lost the skills to care for each other after 25 years of digital communication
    • The "sprinkler issues" that silently kill motivation and create learned helplessness
    • Why high performers and frontline workers are most at risk of feeling invisible
    • The three practices that help people feel significant: noticing, affirming, and showing they're needed
    • Why you can't give effective feedback to someone who doesn't first feel that they matter to you
    • How showing others they matter actually regenerates your own sense of significance

    Quotable Moment

    "You don't show people that they matter in spite of their low performance. You show people that they matter so that you can regenerate their energy and confidence to perform well." - Zach Mercurio


    Lyra Lens:

    Sarah Haggerty, Clinical Psychologist and Neuroscientist at Lyra Health, explores the practical skills managers need to notice when someone's struggling and how to check in appropriately. She also breaks down the concept of "10% more depth" in workplace relationships.


    Resources:

    This episode of The WorkWell Podcast™ is made possible by Lyra Health, a premier global workforce mental health solution. Learn more at Lyrahealth.com/workwell.

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    58 m
  • The Devil Emails at Midnight: From Bad Boss to Better Leader with Mita Mallick
    Sep 25 2025

    In this episode of The WorkWell Podcast™, Jen Fisher speaks with Mita Mallick, leadership expert and author of "The Devil Emails at Midnight: What Good Leaders Can Learn from Bad Bosses." Mita shares powerful stories from her own experiences with toxic leadership and reveals how she learned to recognize—and address—her own bad boss behaviors.


    Episode Highlights:

    • The origin story behind the provocative title and how a flooded childhood home led to discovering a "burn book" of bad bosses
    • 13 types of toxic bosses including "The Sheriff" who refused to learn her name and renamed her "Mohammed," and "Medusa" who ruled through fear and public humiliation
    • The three moments when bad boss behavior emerges: external marketplace stress, absorbing behaviors from your own bad boss, and personal life catastrophes
    • Why bad bosses aren't born, they're made and how grief, trauma, and unprocessed emotions show up in leadership
    • The midnight email phenomenon and why normalizing around-the-clock work expectations is unsustainable and counterproductive
    • How fear-based leadership drives short-term results but destroys long-term productivity through turnover, disengagement, and organizational damage
    • The shame and power dynamics that keep people trapped in toxic workplace relationships
    • Self-reflection strategies for recognizing your own bad boss behaviors including career journaling and asking for coaching (not feedback)
    • The importance of vulnerability in leadership and creating psychological safety for teams to discuss grief, personal struggles, and workplace challenges


    Quotable Moments:

    "Names were given to us by someone who had big hopes and dreams for us. Let that sit in. That's who someone named you. And so think about the promise of what your life is to be. And someone can't respect you by saying your name correctly." - Mita Mallick


    "Your culture becomes defined by the worst behavior you tolerate." - Mita Mallick


    Resources:

    • Book: Order "The Devil Emails at Midnight: What Good Leaders Can Learn from Bad Bosses" by Mita Mallick
    • Available at Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and local independent bookstores
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    47 m
  • Feelings Aren't the Enemy (Your Avoidance Is) with Dr. Marc Brackett
    Sep 15 2025

    In this episode of The WorkWell Podcast™, Jen Fisher and special co-host Dr. Joe Grasso from Lyra Health speak with Dr. Marc Brackett, founding director of the Yale Center for Emotional Intelligence and Professor in the Child Study Center at Yale School of Medicine. Dr. Brackett's bestselling book "Permission to Feel" has revolutionized how we think about emotions in schools and workplaces, and his new book "Dealing With Feeling" challenges us to stop running from our emotional lives and start actually living them.


    Episode Highlights:

    • Why there's no such thing as a "bad emotion" and how all feelings are simply data
    • The difference between being an "emotion scientist" versus an "emotion judge"
    • How toxic masculinity teaches men to disconnect from their emotions, perpetuating cycles of loneliness and isolation
    • Why "being emotional" doesn't mean you're weak—it means you're human
    • The Meta Moment: A four-step process for healthy emotion regulation in high-pressure situations
    • How to have difficult conversations at work without avoiding or attacking
    • Why bringing your whole self to work includes bringing your emotions
    • Practical strategies for managers to create emotionally intelligent team cultures
    • The importance of checking in with your emotions before they leak into unrelated situations

    Quotable Moments:

    "Emotional intelligence... is not emotional reactivity. Emotions are on a continuum. There's a little bit of anger, which is annoyance, and there's a lot of anger, which is enraged." - Dr. Marc Brackett

    "Just because you're feeling strong emotions doesn't mean you're not capable. Doesn't mean you're not strong. Life is about emotions." - Dr. Marc Brackett

    Resources:

    Free app: "How We Feel" (available on iOS and Android) - A mood tracking tool developed by Dr. Brackett to help build emotional vocabulary


    This episode of The WorkWell Podcast™ is made possible by Lyra Health, a premier global workforce mental health solution. Learn more at Lyrahealth.com/workwell.

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    49 m
  • Your Job Doesn't Actually Suck (Here's How to Make It Meaningful) with Tamara Myles
    Aug 14 2025

    In this eye-opening episode of The WorkWell Podcast™, Jen Fisher sits down with researcher Tamara Myles, who studied over 2,000 workers across 25 industries and discovered this: your job doesn't actually suck—you just haven't unlocked its potential yet.

    Forget "follow your passion." Tamara reveals the real science behind work that matters, including why a hairstylist who sees herself as a "day maker" literally saved a client's life, and how a simple 40-second interaction can transform your entire workplace experience. Whether you're flipping burgers or running boardrooms, this conversation will change how you think about Monday mornings forever.

    Episode Highlights:

    • Debunking meaningful work myths: Why it's less about what you do and more about how you experience what you do
    • The crucial difference between purpose and meaning: Why mission-driven nonprofits still struggle with burnout
    • The Three C's framework: Community, Contribution, and Challenge as the building blocks of meaningful work
    • The 40-second connection rule: How micro-moments build workplace belonging
    • The power of recognition: Why one weekly "thank you" cuts burnout and disengagement in half
    • On stage, backstage, and after the show: A framework for meaningful appreciation
    • The goldfish principle: Why humans are "indeterminate growers" shaped by their environment
    • Burnout vs. bore-out: The surprising ways people disengage from work

    Quotable Moment:

    "Meaningful work is less about what you do and more about how you experience what you do—and every job can, and should be meaningful." - Tamara Myles
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    47 m
  • Meet Your Mind’s Dysfunctional Family (And How to Make Peace with Them) with Britt Frank
    Jun 19 2025

    Meet Your Mind’s Dysfunctional Family (And How to Make peace with Them) with Britt Frank

    In this episode of The WorkWell Podcast™, Jen Fisher speaks with Britt Frank, licensed neuropsychotherapist, keynote speaker, and author of "The Science of Stuck: Breaking Through Inertia to Find Your Path Forward" and "Align Your Mind: Tame Your Inner Critic and Make Peace with Your Shadow Using the Power of Parts Work." Britt's research-based approach combines neuroscience, trauma therapy, and humor to help people understand why they do what they do—and more importantly, how to change it.

    Episode Highlights:

    • The difference between "gas pedal stuckness" (workaholism/burnout) and "brake pedal stuckness" (procrastination)
    • How anxiety functions as your mind's "check engine light" signaling underlying problems
    • Why there's no such thing as self-sabotage—and what's really happening instead
    • Understanding "parts work" and how your mind contains multiple inner voices and characters
    • How to transform your inner critic from enemy to ally through dialogue, not silence
    • Why asking "why" keeps you stuck while asking "how" and "what" creates momentum
    • Practical strategies for leaders to recognize which "parts" of their team members are activated
    • The difference between professional success and professional fulfillment
    • How to shift from reactive parts brain to your "inner CEO" in workplace situations

    Quotable Moment:

    "All behaviors, even suboptimal ones, even bad ones, are doing a job and they're serving a function." - Britt Frank

    Lyra Lens:

    In this segment, Dr. Joe Grasso, VP of Workforce Transformation at Lyra Health, explores how high achievers with their "foot always on the gas" can create (and reveal) systemic organizational problems. He discusses values-based working, moving from blame to curiosity when addressing performance issues, and how managers can shift from treating individual behavior problems to addressing systemic workplace challenges.

    Resources:

    This episode of The WorkWell Podcast™ is made possible by Lyra Health, a premier global workforce mental health solution. Learn more at Lyrahealth.com/workwell.

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    57 m
  • Mind the (Future) Gap: Preparing for What's Next in Mental Health (Live from Lyra Breakthrough)
    May 29 2025

    Mind the (Future) Gap: Preparing for What's Next in Mental Health

    Special Live Episode from Lyra Breakthrough 2025


    In this special live episode of The WorkWell Podcast™, recorded at the Lyra Breakthrough Conference, Jen Fisher hosts a dynamic panel discussion exploring how AI, shifting demographics, and evolving expectations are reshaping mental health support in the workplace.


    Panel Experts:

    • Dr. Tom Insel - Former Director of the National Institute of Mental Health and visionary behind the bold statement that "AI is to mental health what DNA was to cancer"
    • Briana Duffy - Market President at Carelon Behavioral Health, witnessing mental health become a mainstream conversation across generations
    • Dr. Alethea Varra - Senior Vice President of Clinical Care at Lyra Health, pioneering the integration of technology and clinical excellence in modern mental healthcare delivery

    Episode Highlights:

    • Why AI represents a transformational force in mental healthcare, offering precision in diagnosis and treatment like never before
    • The critical difference between AI as a "GPS system" versus autonomous "Waymo" therapy - and why we're not ready for the latter
    • How predictive algorithms can identify individuals at risk for self-harm up to five months in advance
    • The challenge of responsible AI implementation: why human oversight is essential to prevent dangerous "drift" in AI responses
    • Young people now listing "been in therapy" as a requirement on dating profiles - and what this means for workplace expectations
    • Why 70% of students prefer community-based care over traditional one-on-one therapy
    • The generational divide: younger workers prioritizing mental health support versus older workers' "tough it out" mentality - and how to leverage both perspectives
    • The shift from "mental health" to "mental fitness" - expanding the conversation beyond crisis care to preventative wellness
    • Value-based care revolution: paying for outcomes and results rather than time spent
    • Real ROI data: 30% reduction in overall healthcare spend for engaged members in sophisticated care programs

    Quotable Moments:

    "AI is like the number one use of therapy. Is that a good thing or a bad thing? I put this into a timeline where I think about how we did navigation... we had these paper maps to go on a trip, and now we use GPS. The question is, are we ready for Waymo?" - Dr. Tom Insel

    "My job as a therapist so very often is to sit down with a human in front of me and to tell them something that is actually not going to make them happy. Generative AI tends to drift, and we've seen examples of that." - Dr. Alethea Varra

    "If this (therapy requirements in dating apps) is the new mainstream norm in the dating world... it's not going to look materially different in the workplace." - Briana Duffy


    Resources:

    This special live episode of The WorkWell Podcast™ is made possible by Lyra Health, a premier global workforce mental health solution trusted by leading companies like Starbucks, Morgan Stanley, Lululemon, and Zoom. Lyra provides personalized care to over 17 million people with fast access to evidence-based providers and tools that deliver proven results.

    Learn more at Lyrahealth.com/workwell.

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    47 m