『Building YOUniversity』のカバーアート

Building YOUniversity

Building YOUniversity

著者: Tim Lansford
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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Building Youniversity is a leadership and business podcast for builders, real estate professionals, and leaders who want practical tools—not theory—to lead better, decide faster, and build stronger teams.


Hosted by Tim Lansford, a builder, real estate professional, and leadership educator, the show explores what it really takes to grow as a leader in high-pressure, real-world environments. Each episode blends leadership development, decision-making, mindset, accountability, and operational clarity—grounded in experience from construction, business ownership, and entrepreneurship.


This is not motivational fluff. It’s real conversation, real lessons, and real application—designed to help you build yourself with the same intention you bring to building projects, companies, and careers.


If you’re ready to strengthen your leadership foundation, sharpen your thinking, and construct a better version of yourself, welcome to Building Youniversity.

© 2026 Building YOUniversity
マネジメント・リーダーシップ リーダーシップ 出世 就職活動 経済学
エピソード
  • What If Your Biggest Leadership Gap Is Relationships? A Discussion with Dr. Posey.
    2026/04/14

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    Most leadership advice tells you to move faster, think bigger, and push harder. We’re taking a different road: the one where character, humility, and relationships decide whether your team actually follows you when it counts. I’m Tim Lansford, and I sit down with Dr. Posey, a seasoned pastor and mentor who’s led people through conflict, change, and the kind of real-life pressure you can’t solve with a spreadsheet.

    We talk about how leaders are formed, from his early pre-med years to decades in ministry, and why hands-on work matters. Mission trips, nonprofit build projects, and even tearing down a house became unexpected training grounds for practical skills, safe tool use, and confidence. If you’re in construction leadership, real estate leadership, or business management, you’ll recognize the same pattern: people grow when we let them learn in the field, not just in theory.

    Then we get blunt about what leaders need to unlearn. Dr. Posey shares the lesson he learned late: focusing on the “business” side while underinvesting in relationships costs you trust and momentum. We dig into mentoring, motivation, the Five Love Languages as a leadership tool, and the discipline of honest self-evaluation, including getting feedback from others. We also close with rapid-fire questions, dad jokes, and a quick look at his national parks journey.

    If you want practical leadership development with real stories and clear takeaways, listen now, subscribe, share it with a leader on your team, and leave a review.

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    46 分
  • Why Employees Avoid Ownership And How Leaders Fix It
    2026/04/07

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    “Why am I the only one who has to catch the details?” If you’ve ever said that, you’re not alone and you’re not crazy. But the hard truth is that weak employee ownership is often a leadership and system problem, not a character problem. When initiative gets second-guessed, when decisions get reversed, or when the only thing that gets attention is what went wrong, people learn a simple lesson: waiting is safer than owning.

    I walk through the leadership signals that quietly create dependency, especially in construction management, real estate teams, and fast-moving small businesses where the leader is used to solving everything. We talk about how a “helpful” rescue habit turns you into the bottleneck, why busy employees can still avoid accountability, and what ownership actually looks like in day-to-day behavior: anticipating issues, communicating early, bringing solutions, and closing the loop.

    You’ll also hear practical coaching language you can use immediately, including questions that push responsibility back where it belongs without being harsh. And we get honest about fit: some people need clarity and confidence, while others may not belong in a role that demands initiative.

    If you want a culture of ownership, accountability, and better decision making, press play. Subscribe, share with a leader who needs this, and leave a review with the leadership habit you’re going to change next.

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    17 分
  • The Accountability Gap That Weakens Teams
    2026/04/02

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    One teammate gets corrected. Another gets protected. That single pattern can unravel trust faster than a bad strategy or a talent gap, and most leaders don’t see the bill until morale, energy, and performance start sliding. I dig into what I call the accountability gap: the painful space between the standards we talk about and the standards we actually enforce. When that gap stays open, dependable people quietly take notes, effort drops to the minimum, and “culture” becomes nothing more than whatever we tolerate.

    I break down why leaders avoid accountability even when they care. Sometimes we delay because we don’t want conflict, we hope the issue fixes itself, or we try to be understanding. But waiting turns simple, factual feedback into an emotional confrontation that should’ve happened weeks earlier. And when the team sees consequences depend on politics, tenure, or who’s close to ownership, performance stops being the main issue and trust becomes the real problem.

    You’ll walk away with practical leadership tools to close the gap without becoming harsh: treating accountability as alignment, defining ownership with clear behaviors, addressing issues early while they’re still clean, making feedback normal instead of dramatic, and taking an honest look at how our own habits train the team. If you lead in construction, real estate, or any business where execution and teamwork matter, this will sharpen your standards and strengthen your culture. Subscribe, share this with a leader who needs it, and leave a review with the one standard you’re ready to enforce.

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    16 分
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