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Brief Summary
In this energizing and deeply human episode of The Homefront, Jeff Dudan sits down with MaryBeth Hyland—values expert, bestselling author, and culture consultant—to explore how values shape the workplace, leadership, and personal identity. From work addiction recovery to building a business rooted in authenticity, MaryBeth offers clear, actionable frameworks for shedding old identities, operationalizing values, and living a life aligned with purpose.
Key Takeaways
- Values aren’t soft—they’re operational. MaryBeth emphasizes that values can be measured, implemented, and tracked just like any business KPI.
- Culture starts with the founder’s identity. Organizations—especially small teams—mirror the energy, behaviors, and authenticity of their leaders.
- Shedding is part of scaling. Letting go of old identities, toxic habits, and approval-seeking is essential to becoming a purpose-driven leader.
- Workplace norms must be intentional. Culture is either created by design or by default—and gossip, burnout, and resentment fill the gaps.
- Create value promises, not just value posters. MaryBeth teaches how to translate abstract values into tangible behaviors using her "value promises" framework.
- Values show up in your energy. When you feel drained, you’re likely out of alignment; when you feel alive, your values are fully engaged.
Featured Quote
“We are all walking, talking, living, breathing sets of values. But most people never take the time to figure out what theirs actually are.”
TRANSCRIPT
Meet MaryBeth Hyland: Culture Expert, Values Whisperer, and Founder of SparkVision
Jeff Dudan (00:01.501)
Welcome everybody. I am Jeff Duden and we are on the home front. As always, this podcast is brought to you by home front brands. Homefront brands is simply building the world's most responsible franchise platform, encouraging entrepreneurs to take action, to transform their lives, impact communities and enhance the lives of those they care the most about all the while delivering enterprise level solutions to local business owners out there on the home front where it counts. So if this sounds like you check us out at homefront brands.
Tom today and start your next chapter of greatness building your dynasty on the home front. I will be looking for you right here. And today I am so excited to have Marybeth Highland with us today who is an expert on values and valued for us forward organizations. A lot to unpack today with Marybeth. Welcome.
MaryBeth Hyland (00:53.538)
Thank you so much for having me here with you and with your wonderful community, Jeff.
Jeff Dudan (00:58.641)
Oh, thank you so much. So Mary Beth is a leading consultant on how to create a thriving workplace culture. She successfully led culture change efforts across nearly every industry. She's a published thought leader in the Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, and New York Times, just to name a few. You can catch her interviews on how to reduce stress at work on ABC, CBS, and NBC. When she's not a guest on podcast, she can be found on horseback in the mountains of Idaho.
Wrangling cattle on her quest to become a cowgirl Please welcome Marybeth Highland. Hello
MaryBeth Hyland (01:36.622)
Hello.
Jeff Dudan (01:38.733)
So excited to have you on. I, it's when I've been going over your content and watching your other podcast, I felt like I was listening to myself. Uh, we share so many of the same thoughts about the importance of building values forward organizations, uh, human centered, uh, company building and all of the things that really help people thrive and survive in this fast paced world we live in. So we're very excited to unpack that.
Would you mind introducing yourself and sharing a little bit about your background, how you grew up and those types of things?
From International School to Nonprofit Consulting: MaryBeth’s Early Journey
MaryBeth Hyland (02:13.47)
Yeah, I'm delighted too. And I'm so looking forward to this conversation too, more and more by each minute that goes on. So I was born, going all the way back, I was born in Washington, DC. So I grew up in the city and I had a really unique experience where I got to go to international school for my first language being Spanish. And so I grew up in a community where
Most people didn't look like me. We were speaking Spanish regularly at home and at school. And then we moved to the suburbs and it was like, wait, what's going on here? A huge shift. And so primarily then growing up in Baltimore County outside of Washington, DC in Maryland, it really changed my lens. And I think that was really the beginning of
understanding values, even though I obviously didn't have the language for it as a kid, but just noticing the extreme differences in value systems in different communities and different places where you are. And so I got my degree, fast forward a whole bunch of years, I got my degree in social work and my master's in nonprofit management. And I went out into the world thinking like, I
going to change the world. I'm going to save the world one person at a time. You know, I was very much driven by the human experience, very much driven by human connection, feeling safety and belonging in spaces. And I can articulate that now. I couldn't articulate it then. Back then, it was just like, I like people, you know, I like
doing good things. And so I didn't realize how much I was driven deeply by values like authenticity and connection and sense of belonging until in more recent years. And so my last role before I started my business, I was working for the largest nonprofit in the world and here at the local chapter, talk about franchises. So.
Inside United Way: Franchise-Like Success and the Birth of SparkVision
MaryBeth Hyland (04:24.67)
It was United Way, which is a global organization. It's essentially run like a franchise. And so it was an experience where my local chapter, I was running the Young Professionals Program, and it became the global best practice model. So the people would call the headquarters of United Way and say, how do we get young people involved in our programming? And they would say, oh, you need to talk to Mary Beth. So I became a consultant, quote unquote.
for the system very quickly when I was very young. So I was in my twenties at that point. I didn't understand how I was deemed this great innovator and doing all these amazing things because for me, it was just the human way. It just was the normal way to engage human beings. But the program that I was running quadrupled in membership and had over 7,000 members when I left. And so it was this experience where everyone's like,
What's the secret sauce? How do you do this? How do you get young people to care about philanthropy and volunteerism and advocacy? And I just said, well, you just like talk to them and you listen for what they're interested in and you make the connections and you empower them based on what motivates them and you give them a meaningful role in the process of doing that. And I'm telling you, Jeff, people were talking to me and looking at me like,
where'd you come up with this? This is such an amazing process. And for me, it was like, my heart? You know, like, where did I come up with this? I just considered what would I want? Like, what is the human experience and how do we get people to be invested? And again, I didn't know this then, but I know now it was through shared values, right? It was through understanding what are the shared values amongst us and how can we recreate a culture that honors and protects those values.
and empowers people into being their most authentic and powerful selves by giving them the opportunities to step into alignment with them. So when it came time for me to think about what was my next chapter, what am I gonna do next? I started my business almost eight years ago.
From “Millennial Whisperer” to Purpose-Driven Entrepreneur
MaryBeth Hyland (06:36.198)
everybody saw me as a fundraiser. Everybody saw me as a, well, the Millennial Whisperer was my nickname. And I'm like, it was like funny, but also it was like, eh, this is not really a Millennial thing. It's a human thing. This is working because they're humans, not because we're the same age. And so when I started my business, it was this experience of, well, what do people know me for? And what is something that people really want? And at the time, eight years ago,
Millennials were a hot topic and people were like, I don't know what to do about these people. Like, I don't know how to manage these folks in the workplace. I don't know how to get them empowered. And so while it wasn't what I knew I was here to do from a like, I'm stepping fully into my purpose and doing that purpose work, it was the thing that got me in the door to have the bigger conversation. So it's like, oh, you want help with your working across the generations in your culture? Great.
How about we start by learning how similar we are through shared values versus creating something specific for people of different ages? How can we really go in that direction? And so I was very fortunate when I stepped out on my own that in my community, I had a really great reputation. And so I was able to pretty seamlessly move into the consulting and coaching space. And then it was just a matter of shedding, right? So it was like,
doing all the things that I did to make an impact, make a difference, use my gifts and have an income. And then I got to like, okay, wait a minute, why did I leave the corporate? Even though it was a nonprofit, it was very much in the corporate space. I was going into corporations all the time to do this work. I was like, wait, I thought I left this space to not be doing this, right? Just doing the things that other people wanted of me versus what I was here to do. And so I would say in the last...
five years, it has been a process of just a micro pivot here, a shedding there, a stepping into a new opportunity here. And as of this past year, we've done a full shift in our business. So we have shifted out of doing corporate work in the way that you just were describing in, you know, going and doing these culture shifts. And now I'm working with coaches and consultants who are doing that work.
MaryBeth Hyland (08:59.478)
So kind of more like train the trainer in, how can I make more of an exponential impact with my time and energy? I can work with more people who are doing that work and so that they can offer that work into the world with their clients. So it's been a really powerful and exciting time, but as you know, you know, without having a business, every time you make a pivot, it's a very exciting and can be very daunting experience. And so we're in the beginning phases of that and I'm very happy to say it's been extremely rewarding.
Jeff Dudan (09:29.405)
Well, that is an incredible story. And what I love the most about it is the simplicity and the fundamental common sense that just occurred to you, because we can make things overly complicated, right? Now, so basically what you discovered was, as long as people know where they stand, they're usually okay. So let's find out what do we have in common?
What do we care about that's the same? What matters to you and what matters to you and where's the alignment across those things? Because when the third person walks into the room, that's when politics starts. Everybody comes in, they come in carrying full baggage, right? So I come to a new workplace, I've got how I grew up, I've got my family, I've got my education, I've got what part of the country I came from. I might have some politics tucked into the bag there.
And then what did I learn about? What were the cultural and workplace norms at where I came from? So people come into it and now it's our job, right? To basically negotiate the commonalities through people so that people will work together and that people can see, because we need diversity. Like we have to have diversity in all things in the workplace, skill sets, age brackets, race, talents, all education levels. Because there's a variety of jobs. We can't just...
hire people that look just like us because we just, we would row the boat in a circle because we're all the same, which was a big learning for me from my early career. So, if that's true and we need all this diversity, how do we find the common threads that are gonna allow the team to be high performing, high trust, care about one another? It's no different than coaching a small, I did, I coached over 30 seasons of my kids sports and I-
We had three sets of values that we had. We had player rules, we had coaching commitment and parent expectations. And we had five to seven values in each one. And that was where we started with. And we fundamentally agreed on like what our relationship was gonna be with one another and what mattered the most and what at the top of the house, we will all be the best we can be on the last day of the season. So we had a destination to go to and this is how we're gonna do it.
MaryBeth Hyland (11:36.566)
Beautiful.
Jeff Dudan (11:51.705)
It didn't matter what offense we ran or what defense we ran because I just took whatever we had from a talent perspective and I put a system in that worked for them. So that wasn't the secret. The secret was the cultural alignment that we were able to get so that parents wouldn't, you know, they wouldn't, they wouldn't kill the culture on the way home in the car because they were included. You know, and if, yeah, I mean, if you say, give me your kids and don't talk to me and don't talk to them or we want every parent to participate. I'll teach you what you need to know.
MaryBeth Hyland (12:12.658)
Love that.
Jeff Dudan (12:21.213)
I don't care if it's keeping the clock on the sideline or substitutions or whatever, and made them part of the overall experience. So I get very, you know, I've just talked right now more than I usually talk on any podcast because I'm so excited about your work and what you do. And I'm such a believer that this is the hard stuff. This is the tangible stuff that creates really high performing organizations that people really enjoy being a part of.
MaryBeth Hyland (12:50.422)
Yeah, I love that you frame it that way. This is the hard stuff, this is the tangible stuff, because most people think this is the soft stuff, this is the intangible stuff, right? Most people think when you're talking about values, it's some airy, fairy, nice idea, woo woo. They think it's just some exercise you're required to do. And I say most people, not all people, but the folks who get it.
Jeff Dudan (13:00.015)
Exactly.
MaryBeth Hyland (13:18.438)
It's like, no, this is real, this is meaningful, this is tangible, this is operationalizable. There are so many ways that we can measure this and hold ourselves lovingly accountable in the process of doing that.
Jeff Dudan (13:26.153)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (13:35.517)
Many of our listeners are peers to me in the franchise industry. They're a little younger than me in their career and they have their first franchise business or they're franchisees that are going into their first entrepreneurial experience. And you said something and I also picked it up in some of your material was shed who you aren't. And I found that to be so insightful. Will you care to explain what you mean by that?
What It Means to “Shed Who You Aren’t” as a Leader
MaryBeth Hyland (14:03.506)
Oh my gosh, how much time do we have Jeff? It's like, it is such a pain.
Jeff Dudan (14:05.853)
You all we I've got two and a half hours. You want to you want to make this my first long format podcast? We can do that. Three hours.
MaryBeth Hyland (14:15.494)
Yeah, because it's such a process, right? It's easy to say, oh, just shed what you aren't. It's really hard to actually do that in real life. And so to give a little bit of a background of what does that even mean in the first place. Between the, by the time we turn seven, the majority of our programming is inside of us. It happens through how we were domesticated by the people who raised us. That's just how it works. That's how it works.
And so in those seven years, we start to create beliefs, values, programs, identities of what is right and what is wrong. Attitudes, right? Yep, exactly. So many other things. And it becomes this thing where we are some, we are somebody who is acting the way that we
Jeff Dudan (14:57.341)
Attitudes? Mm-hmm.
MaryBeth Hyland (15:14.182)
need to in order to receive love, right? So it's like, oh, well, if I do that, my mom doesn't like that, or if I do this, my dad doesn't like that, or if I don't go for soccer this year, my dad's gonna be so disappointed in me, or whatever. So we start, we do things and we make choices to receive love. This is just how all humans work. It's not unique to me. And so as you grow up,
Most people have never taken the time to go back to understand what is that programming, what are those beliefs, and have an experience of understanding what is actually me and what was just programmed into me that I thought I had to be. That's where the shedding begins. And so my personal journey in the shedding came from my last job before I started SparkVision, my company now, I was top of my game.
I was getting global accolades. I was, I just told you it was best practice for the world that people I was consulting, record breaking amounts of money coming in. I was winning all the awards, you know, all the things that you could possibly put on a list of a successful person. I had those things, but inside I was dying. I was miserable. I was...
to a place where I literally did not have an identity outside of my work. And it got to a point where one morning, I rolled over in bed and my husband said, it's so good to see you. And I was just like, what are you talking about? He's like, well, every time that I get up for work, which at the time he was working in finance, so he was up four or five o'clock every day. He's like, by the time I get up, you're either already on your way to work or you've passed out on the couch working
I literally didn't know how to operate if I wasn't working. That is what gave me all of my identity. That's what gave me purpose. That's what gave me meaning. And so that's when I realized I didn't even have any self-awareness around the intensity of this situation I was in. And so I started to go to therapy and my therapist within three sessions actually clinically diagnosed me with a work addiction. I didn't even know that was real. I just thought I was successful, committed.
MaryBeth Hyland (17:33.87)
It's very different when you're addicted to work, how people respond to you, right? They're like, wow, look at her go. And so that was the beginning of my shedding process, was understanding this identity that I had created for myself was completely based off of the way I received love from my father, completely. It had nothing to do with the way I received love from myself.
Jeff Dudan (17:56.201)
It was approval.
Jeff Dudan (18:01.353)
So was it approval? Was it admiration? Was it respect? What specifically was it that you were seeking from your dad?
MaryBeth Hyland (18:05.719)
Yup.
MaryBeth Hyland (18:10.654)
approval, respect, belonging, worthiness, enoughness, feeling like, is this enough? Am I enough now? Will this make me enough now? Is this good enough? That was really, you know, the biggest play that was in my head was, well, if I do this, then am I a success? Because...
Jeff Dudan (18:16.029)
Mm.
MaryBeth Hyland (18:35.038)
My dad was the kind of person who was very, very disappointed in me when I didn't continue my path as an orthodontist. I went on to social work. So boy, could that be a bigger jump from orthodontistry because I wasn't going to make the money that he wanted me to be making and I wasn't going to be seen in the same way, social status wise in that way. It was when I got to college that I started to say like,
but I can't do that. My brain doesn't work that way. That's not how I show up. So that was probably the beginning of the shedding process, but without having any true skills, any tools, I had never gone to any therapy or coaching or training around mindset or understanding how you become who you are. I was really just operating from fear and unworthiness and hoping that somebody would validate me enough.
that those things would go away, not realizing that the only person who could do that was myself. And so that is where the shedding happens. That is what the shedding is about. Letting go of the old identities that were put onto you because you thought they had to and being able to let them go and say, well, what do I get to? What am I born to? What makes me feel the most alive? And who cares what anybody else thinks?
Jeff Dudan (19:41.748)
Yeah.
MaryBeth Hyland (20:05.833)
And that's a hard process, particularly if you're a people pleaser.
Jeff Dudan (20:11.621)
It is. I can relate those times in your life when you get into a moment where you begin to believe that somebody that is very close to you, their love is not unconditional.
MaryBeth Hyland (20:30.23)
Right, conditional love.
Jeff Dudan (20:33.933)
Very difficult, very difficult place. As it related to your transition from a very successful internal consultant to moving into more of an entrepreneurial role, what are the types of things that you decided you had to shed there?
Leaving a Toxic Culture: What to Take with You (and What to Leave Behind)
MaryBeth Hyland (20:51.13)
Mm, great question. Well, the first was the environment that I was coming from was just incredibly toxic, incredibly toxic. So when I say that, I mean things like gossip was the number one form of, whether or not you were in the inner circle. There was just constant backstabbing and...
It was ironic because people think, oh, when you work in the nonprofit sector, everybody's so nice and doing this great work in the world. And it was like, Ooh, there was a lot of stuff going on there. And so I, that stuff weighs on you, right? It actually seeps into you that kind of being in that kind of container for, I was there for, I think with five or so years, it seeps into your day to day norms and you start like rationalizing this kind of behavior.
Right, and so the first thing that I had to shed were the toxic norms around expectations of what it meant to be healthy on a day to day, of how I engage with myself and how I engaged with my clients or my prospective clients and knowing that I wasn't going to lead conversations or create some weird type of trust by talking down about other people. You know, that's the weird thing that we do as humans.
And so the shedding really was like, what am I, this is actually one of the best exercises anyone can do when they're leaving someplace, whether you're physically leaving a home, a building, a office, or a job, like a transition in career, what are you gonna leave there and what are you gonna take with you? And so I really sat down and I said, what am I leaving at my old job and what am I gonna take with me? Because there's tons of beautiful things I wanna take with me. But...
It's one thing to do an exercise and write it down. It's another thing when you start to notice, oh, I just went back into that toxic norm that I'm used to. What's my next choice and how can I leave that behind today? So it's really a powerful thing to consider that you have a choice in the matter, right? That you can actually choose what you take with you and what you leave behind.
Jeff Dudan (22:50.213)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (23:01.693)
That's powerful. So let's talk about the workplace today. And I'm interested in your perspective as somebody that's been so dialed into workplace culture and all of your work being around positive change and alignment thereof. How has the workplace changed today versus eight years ago when you first started your business? And what kind of challenges do we...
Do we have inside of that?
How the Pandemic Changed Culture Work (and What’s Still Missing)
MaryBeth Hyland (23:34.59)
I mean, another one is like, well, hello, pandemic. I mean, it is not the same. It is such a different world. And you know that everyone listening knows that. It's one of these experiences of when I first started, the big conversation that I was having, at least in my work was about how do we get people connected across the generations? How do we increase engagement? How do we...
Jeff Dudan (23:38.268)
Right?
MaryBeth Hyland (24:03.054)
get to a place where we have higher retention, still very like timely conversations. I don't think that'll ever change. I think those will be pretty consistent. But then when the pandemic hit, it really changed my work. So I was very much the kind of person where people would say things before like, you can do your work, but we don't need all the mindfulness stuff. You know, just get straight to.
just get straight to the exercises. You don't need to, we don't need like rounding practices and stress relief. And so it was very interesting because I learned to stop asking for permission to do the thing that I knew was necessary. But then when the pandemic hit, all those people said, hey, we need you to come do the stress relief. We need you to come do the wellbeing. We need you to come do the values work in the way you wanna do it, because we realize.
We have no clue on how to take care of ourselves and how to take care of our people in an upside down world. And guess what? It also means they didn't know how to do it in a right side up world, right? It just wasn't, it wasn't, didn't seem like it was necessary or a requirement. And so it was a really powerful shift in people moving from.
me sort of telling them and enrolling them in why this was a good investment into people saying, I know this is a good investment and I need you to be the one to deliver it. And so now I would say coming out of the pandemic and going back into whatever you want to call this, I'm not even going to say normal because there's no such thing of that anymore. Whatever phase we're in now, post pandemic transitioning still.
The conversation is still there around mental health and wellbeing. That is definitely continued on. Not as much of people putting money behind it. People were willing to put money behind it in the pandemic. Now there's a lot of people saying, oh, well, it's nice to have. So it's kind of gone back to a certain extent from my personal experience, right? I think there's a lot more talk. I think there's a lot more awareness. I think there's a lot more programming for that kind of a thing.
MaryBeth Hyland (26:18.946)
But there is less action being taken from a follow through and a embodiment of it being a part of the cultural norms versus a box checker of, oh yeah, we had a mental health workshop, we're good.
Knowing, Owning, and Living Your Values as a Business Owner
Jeff Dudan (26:32.753)
Got it. So I'd like to make sure that we spend a good bit of time on values. And so much of your work is around values. We are, in any organization that I get involved with, the first work we do is really around values. What are the values? What are the values that?
How are they reflected in the customer promise that we make? How are they turned internally to govern the decisions and the relationships that are within the four walls of the business? And I just have found it, the better we are at using and incorporating our values into our business, the more powerful a tool it becomes. Because we are absolutely tribal.
And you know what I'm really surprised about is that potential employees don't ask more about culture and values during the internet. They're in the interview process. I'm shocked by that because the first question we ask that I ask when I do a final interview with somebody or wherever I am in the process is which one of our values resonates the most with you and why? Because I want to get into that conversation. I want to give them an opportunity for them to show me who they are.
MaryBeth Hyland (27:33.217)
now.
Jeff Dudan (27:51.217)
what matters the most to them. And it always takes the conversation away from the mechanics of what the company is and what we do to who they are as a person, which is what we're really interested in, is are you going to value the experience that you have with this company? Are you gonna lean into it? Are you gonna leverage it? Are you gonna make yourself and those around you better? Are you gonna be a great teammate? Are you interested? And what's your level of energy that you wanna...
you know, you want to bring to it. And all of that stuff just comes pouring out when you ask that values question and they say, no, it's that one. And this is why. And then they tell you a story about where they came from or how they've used that in the past. And it just, to me, it's the most powerful tool to really get a connection quickly and early. Your work around it talks a lot about alignment, knowing, owning and living the values. Can you share a little bit about
how you go into an organization or how you coach your coaches to go into an organization and where do you start to determine if the values are right or if not how do you determine what they might need to be?
How to Audit Your Company Values with One Simple Survey
MaryBeth Hyland (29:04.278)
Yeah, great question. And I totally agree with you on the hiring process. It's such a missed opportunity. I actually write about it in my book, Permission to be Human. I say like, it's straight up unfair and unkind to not have a values conversation. If you truly care about them in your organization, if you really wanna live by them, because...
It's not that we have to have the exact same definition of that value, but we have to care about it because values are intrinsic motivators, meaning they come from inside. It's not like dangling a bonus on the outside and then you care about innovation or authenticity or connection or whatever the value may be. It's like, no, the reward comes because it feels good. It motivates you when you experience it. That's what's so powerful about values is that they are intrinsically motivated.
So when it comes to going into a company, companies are usually in one of a few places, either they already have values, so somewhere along the way they define values, they don't have them at all, or they're in a process of transitioning their values, they know that they're not the right ones. And so the process obviously depends on where they are in identifying or not having identified and whether or not they want them updated.
But if they already have their values, whether they want them updated or not, the first thing I always do is start talking to their people about how are they lived. So we do a combination of qualitative and quantitative analysis. So it typically starts with a survey and it's so simple. Anybody here who wants to do it, go for it. This is something that I encourage people to use. You don't need to hire me to do it.
First, you take your value, so you say a value of, let's say collaboration, and then you ask three questions around that value. How often does your organization live in alignment with this value? Then how often does your team or your department, right, depending on how big the organization is, live in alignment with this value? And then three, how often do you live in alignment with this value? I always use the same structure for the questions because it's very eye-opening.
MaryBeth Hyland (31:15.042)
particularly when 90% of the organization believes that they as individuals are living it, but they believe that only 10% of the company is living it, right? So it's like, so then we get to have this big conversation of well, who's working here? And it becomes a very eye-opening experience around self-awareness, around how culture is created, how norms are created, where are we holding each other and ourselves accountable to these values?
Jeff Dudan (31:24.745)
Perhaps, of course.
Identifying Culture Keepers: Using Values to Elevate Team Leaders
MaryBeth Hyland (31:44.47)
What are the stories about it? And so typically it starts with the survey and then going into conversations with people about, okay, so those value that was the most out of alignment was this value, let's talk about it. Where do you think there are opportunities? What do you think are some proven practices that could be lifted up and have more of them happening throughout the organization that we don't have to reinvent the wheel here? That's one of the most powerful things about this values work is that there are people living the values.
what I call them culture keepers. And so when you start to identify, that's another question that I typically as a bonus, who in this organization lives these values regularly? So then I start to get to see like, oh, Jeff is on every single one of these. I'm gonna have some conversations with Jeff about what he's doing to create this experience that people are identifying him. And instead of me coming up with some new fancy thing that they're gonna implement, we asked Jeff.
How are you implementing it? And how can you train other people to do their version of that implementation? So that's if they already have values. If they don't have values, then I typically go into a multi-day retreat experience with them. And the first day is helping the individuals that work there uncover their own core values separate from the organization, just about them as human beings. And then because I have fancy dancy,
you know, it's surveyed tools and I can track what everybody's answers are in our database. I can say, oh, well, the majority of people here had these five core values. Why don't we start the conversation by showing them the top 10 that everybody shares? So right, going back to that intrinsically motivated piece, right? We're not telling people what they should care about. They're telling us what they care about. And then we sort of do a Venn diagram of...
All right, this is what people care about. This is what we do with this organization. What is in the middle that are the shared values that are intrinsically motivating our people already, at least the majority of them, or their aspirational values, meaning they want to embody those values, and they would love to be in trainings and held accountable to being more in alignment with them. And then we go through the process from there of naming them, being able to clearly define them.
From Buzzwords to Behavior: Creating Actionable Value Promises
MaryBeth Hyland (34:09.614)
If you just say our value is innovation, what does that mean? My definition of innovation could be very different than yours, could be very different than your listeners. So get really clear on that. And then we go through a process that I call value promises, which is actually creating essentially a code of conduct based on the values that is then used as the tools for things like one-on-ones, things like...
Jeff Dudan (34:27.191)
Mm.
MaryBeth Hyland (34:34.49)
annual reviews, things like onboarding, things like interview processes. You ask people about, are they actually behaving in this way? You ask them to have a personal self-assessment, but also have feedback from others in that process because as you said, it's not a thing that just gets written down and goes and lives somewhere else. It is a hard, tangible thing that you can operationalize when you do more than just
Oh, we did a retreat. Now we have the words on a poster and now we're all set. It's like, no, there's another step here. And there's a wonderful opportunity to have a better quality of life as an individual, let alone a collective community of people working towards the same mission and vision through those values.
Jeff Dudan (35:22.653)
I got it. So I've got a couple of, a couple of questions. I'll, I'll say the first one and then we'll park it and we'll go back to it. Cause I want to unpack this code of conduct a little bit. Uh, but the first one's going to be, so how many times do you go through this and then manage and you complete the exercise and then management really doesn't get behind it, so it doesn't, it doesn't take. Right. So I would assume that if management's hired you to do it and they're investing in it, that they, they are vested in it. But sometimes.
Sometimes they might not be, right? Because they really have, you have to live your values and it has to be incorporated into your decision-making process. So I'm interested if you have any thoughts about like what kind of companies typically, or what size of companies are typically more adaptable to your work. But what I wanna really get into first is this code of conduct. So one of our values is accountability.
MaryBeth Hyland (35:54.155)
Yeah.
MaryBeth Hyland (36:12.78)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (36:20.077)
And our description of that is we do more than is expected by our own will and our own choice. So I kind of sneak in this definition of discretionary effort, meaning I will do more, and I will do more than is expected, and it's always gonna be at my own discretion, right? The effort that I give, anything above the minimum that I need to keep my job is discretionary.
Because if I'm going to be an A++ player, I could probably keep my job at a B minus. So that difference there, which I think is core to great teams and fundamental excellence, is that discretionary effort. So I snuck the definition in there under accountability because it kind of relates. But if you're building a code of conduct around that, what are the types of things that would be in that code of conduct related to a value like accountability?
MaryBeth Hyland (37:18.53)
So I frame them as promises. Not everybody needs to frame them that way, but I've found that when you think of the idea of a promise, people know whether a promise is kept or whether it's broken. And so it creates, yeah, so it creates different energy associated to it. You can call it a code of conduct if that's better for the organization at hand, but we call it value promises. And so it would be statements of promises. So we promise to, or I promise to,
Jeff Dudan (37:29.994)
Promises are sacred.
MaryBeth Hyland (37:47.742)
And so for what you just described, like I promised to communicate above and beyond when things are going well and when they're not, right? I'm making this up on the spot, right? But it would be a series of specific behaviors that you want people to actually implement. And depending on how many values, how many values does your organization have?
Jeff Dudan (38:02.869)
Sure.
Jeff Dudan (38:16.073)
five.
MaryBeth Hyland (38:17.182)
Okay, so I would start one promise for each one, build up from there after those have been mastered. So get super clear on how do you want people to behave if it says that essentially like above and beyond, right? Well, what does that mean? Does that mean that I'm ahead of my deadlines? Does that mean that I'm communicating in a certain way?
Does that mean that I'm showing up physically in a certain way? And so the way that I go about that process is we break people up into groups based on whether or not that value is one of their intrinsic motivators. They have a shared definition at that point of like what the team has decided, what that value means. And it says, okay, what is one behavior that if we did this one behavior really well.
we would be living this value most of the time, right? Giving into the human factor, right? We gotta give ourselves permission to be human. That's why I named my book, Permission to be Human, because it's not a set in, forget it. It's a ongoing thing. Every single day we make mistakes. We're not always the most accountable in the way that we would in our best selves. And so the idea there is, what is a specific tangible?
You either did it or you didn't do it. It's not a lofty idea. So it could be something specific like we promise to ensure that all deadlines are met and when anything is running behind, we over communicate so that our team members are aware and on the same page.
Jeff Dudan (40:03.933)
Got it. Or for accountability, I'm thinking, we promise to show up on time prepared and be present. Something like that.
MaryBeth Hyland (40:11.458)
There you go. Something that simple so that you could literally, when you have a meeting, look around the room and say, are we on time? Are we prepared? Are we present? And you can literally start to integrate that into your norms. And so it would be the type of thing, Jeff, if you said that's what I wanna do, I would encourage you at the top of the meeting and at the end of the meeting, you check in and say, how did we do with our accountability today?
Jeff Dudan (40:31.349)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (40:42.281)
We had an executive that's no longer with us that showed up for every executive meeting with a plate of spaghetti in his left hand, a cell phone in his right hand, and a laptop on the table in front of him. And he was just going back and forth between these three things. And I was like, you know, what's the purpose? We're not, why even be here? You know, so, and he's not.
MaryBeth Hyland (41:07.462)
There you go, right? There you go. Well, that says something too, right? I mean, I can't tell you how many times I was working either as a consultant in a company where accountability was a value or within a company where I was a team member and they would have specific policies like no cell phones allowed during meetings, but yet every single one of the executives was on their cell phones the whole time. But if I pulled my cell phone out, I would have had it come up in my one-on-one.
Jeff Dudan (41:08.377)
There you go. Live in our values.
Jeff Dudan (41:30.171)
Right.
MaryBeth Hyland (41:33.91)
because I was being like looked at in a different way. And so that's really key in this conversation about values is that everyone is held accountable to the process, not just the worker bees, but also the powers that be because otherwise values become a joke and they become something that people really resent and they think is messed up because why can't I be on a phone when this guy can have his phone laptop
dinner out every time we're together, right? Like this doesn't make any sense. And it happens so often. So much of what I experienced when I was doing culture consulting work was really around people feeling like, well, it's not a real value because they just expect us to do it, but nobody in charge actually does anything when it comes to this.
Jeff Dudan (42:24.434)
Oh, yeah, two classes of expectations. Yeah.
MaryBeth Hyland (42:27.79)
Exactly. And a perfect way to put it, classes, right? It just feels like, why is this expected of me, but it's not going to be held accountable anywhere else.
Jeff Dudan (42:37.277)
Well, I'll tell you what, I've said many times, if you want to maintain an excellent reputation in the industry, in whatever industry you're in, it's going to cost you money. At some point, you in business, you are up against a decision that is going to have one financial outcome. Or on the other hand, you can honor your values, honor your reputation, do the right thing.
If you know what the one thing I like to say is if you know what the right thing to do is, and you almost always do, do that. Now, sometimes that costs you a little bit of money because maybe you made a mistake. You think you can wiggle out of it, but if your values are accountability and your employees see you making decisions saying, well, I'm going to slide the values under the rug just for this little minute in this situation, then that's the behavior that they will emulate.
And you will erode the quality of your organization. You'll erode your reputation in the industry. Well, those people will screw you if they can, you know? So, you know, make sure you get a really good contract. And I have found that people, at least in our industry, and we're not high influence industry. I mean, you know, franchising is so interesting because you don't have a thousand employees. You've got a hundred families with 10 employees. So it's a big, it's a huge.
exercise in relationship and influence and you know being judged by your intent because you know you're trying to you're trying to help them you know pull levers to improve their business a little bit and you know they have to trust you to be able to do the things that the numbers and the you know that the
Jeff Dudan (44:32.281)
relationship piece of it. And I'll tell you what, man, you, and said to one is said to all. So if you are talking to one franchisee and you do something that is so counter culture, it's so counter promise, it's so counter values, everybody will know by the time the sun comes up the next day. And so it's really incumbent upon us here.
MaryBeth Hyland (44:55.191)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (45:00.245)
to make sure that we are very communicative about what expectations are and whether it be time-based things. We return all calls before sunset. And even if you don't have an answer, don't snap off emails if you're not sure. You got to because any what's that?
MaryBeth Hyland (45:20.268)
That's a value promise. We return all phone calls before sunset.
Jeff Dudan (45:24.517)
Absolutely, absolutely. And I guess depending on what time zone you're in, that's reasonable or not. So that's incredible stuff. And I think very actionable for people that are out there building teams and building businesses. So I thank you for that. I wanna ask you about a couple of things. I've got the outline of your book here and I just went through and some things really jumped out at me and I'd love for you to expand on. So.
MaryBeth Hyland (45:30.683)
Yeah.
I Honor My Past to Align My Future: Healing, Awareness, and Personal Values
Jeff Dudan (45:52.473)
In chapter four, knowing your personal values, you say, I honor my past to align my future. What does that mean?
MaryBeth Hyland (46:00.418)
Yeah, yeah, well we talked about it a little bit in the shedding conversation, right? Of like, you know, you need to honor the journey that you've been on in order to step forward with intention on where you're headed, right? Because your values are shaped by your life experiences and some values are gonna stick with you from the time you knew they existed to the time you were ready to transition.
Jeff Dudan (46:05.233)
All right, okay.
MaryBeth Hyland (46:27.866)
And so now it's the kind of thing that you get to choose. If you have this awareness, maybe you're listening to this podcast and you're like, oh, I've never considered my values. This is something I wanna get curious about. Well, one of the things I would recommend is you go backwards first. You look back because you may or may not choose to take from what was back with you moving forward. Continuing that concept of you don't have to take it all with you.
So one of the most powerful exercises that somebody can do is mapping out the highs and lows, the milestone moments of their journey, whether that's as a business owner or as just a human in general, right? You can choose what lens you take and what filter you would take in looking at that and starting to see, oh my gosh, the highs were because my core value of, fill in the blank, was there.
And the lows were because that value was being violated. I never even realized that. And I gotta tell you, Jeff, that is one of the most powerful illuminations that I do for people when we go through these kinds of exercises. They had no idea how present their values are all the time everywhere, no matter what, right? Like as humans, we are walking, talking, living, breathing sets of values, and so is your company because humans make up the company.
but the majority of us have never even considered outside of sort of like the standard, like, oh yeah, I care about my family and I care about, you know, wellness, health. You know, a lot of people will say those kinds of things, but they haven't actually invested the energy in going backwards to understand why do I care about that so much? And do I care about that so much in the past because I actually care?
or because I was programmed to believe I was supposed to care about it. So when we go through this, I actually have, for anybody interested, I have a free core values quiz that gives you a profile. You can get your core values, your aspirational values, and learn more about yourself in the process. It's corevaluesquiz.com. And so when you go through that and you start looking at those values, you could even say,
MaryBeth Hyland (48:45.35)
Oh, well, look at this. I'm driven by things. I'm saying that my core values are these things, but people, when they see them often on the list, they'll go, but I don't want to be. I don't want to actually be driven by that. And so you can then start to identify, oh, well, maybe it is a core value of mine right now, but it was a programmed core value versus an authentic core value. And how can I shed that or evolve?
Jeff Dudan (48:57.791)
Yeah.
Jeff Dudan (49:06.545)
Mm-hmm.
MaryBeth Hyland (49:11.586)
so that it is my, what is true for me versus what I thought I had to do.
How Leaders Shape Culture by Being Themselves
Jeff Dudan (49:16.881)
Well, that's a segue to something that I really want to ask you. So many of our business owners are going to have between 5 and 25 employees. And what I have found in operating many companies of that size myself over my life is that the authenticity for who I am as the owner or founder or whatever you call it,
really impacts and influences the way that the company operates. I mean, it is just, you know, I, I've had many experiences here lately where people have said, you know, I really like this here. It's very low politics. People just get worked on. Everybody's helpful. And, you know, some things. And I said, well, because that's the only kind of company that, that I'm going to run. You know, and, and here's some of the things we do to encourage that. Right. And here's, here's how we.
MaryBeth Hyland (49:52.226)
Oh yeah.
Jeff Dudan (50:17.277)
that manifests, it's because of some of these beliefs and some of these actions, and this is how we do things. But at the end of the day, you can only be who you're not for so long. So you could read a management book and you could say, well, I'm gonna do this, but it's always gonna have the leader or the founders fingerprints on it.
it's always going to have just a little bit of their spin on it. And you can see that in organizations. I mean, when you deal with an organization for a year and then you finally meet the owner or the founder, and you're like, oh, I get it now. This is exactly this company has taken on the persona of who's leading it. And sure, probably many of the companies that you consult with are
they're kind of past that point. I mean, there are thousands of employees or many hundreds of employees, but truth be known, Chick-fil-A, Southwest Airlines, these companies that have done exceptionally well for many, many years still maintain the persona of the people that founded them and what was important to them. I mean, at some point you would think on Southwest Airlines that they would take the mic from those people and tell them to stop telling jokes.
But they don't and it's great, you know, but they don't because, and you know, Herb Keller has been dead for a while. So it's like, you know, what experience can you share to let people that are starting their businesses or in these small, fast growing businesses like we have here at Homefront Brands to incorporate who they are into the culture that they're building.
MaryBeth Hyland (51:35.988)
I know.
MaryBeth Hyland (52:00.926)
Yeah, I love that question. Because the key words that you said is who they are. Not who they think there should be or who they are supposed to be, right? Who they actually are. Because as soon as you start building your leadership based on a persona that is not yours, like you said.
Jeff Dudan (52:14.418)
That's right.
MaryBeth Hyland (52:21.514)
you're literally gonna have health issues. It's going to get to a point where you are just so disconnected between your mind, body, and spirit that your body is gonna start to break down on you. And so it's an experience where the first step is, who do you wanna be? How do you wanna lead? Who do you want to show up as? And what kind of energy do you wanna bring with you in every space that you enter? And so this is...
Jeff Dudan (52:21.621)
It's unsustainable.
MaryBeth Hyland (52:50.43)
always recommend this because I think sometimes it's like a jumping over yourself, but it is a good starting place if you want a little Kickstarter. So a lot of times people say, who do you look up to? Right? Like who are the people that you look up to that you want to embody those qualities, not because they don't exist inside of you, but because they do exist inside of you when you want them to be more visible. Right? So
you know, oh, I love maybe of core values humor. And it's what you're building off of like telling jokes. Like I'm gonna start every meeting with a joke or somebody is gonna be able to tell a joke at some point throughout the day as a part of our cultural norms. It's really getting clear on what is the most important quality of what I can bring that's authentically me because as you said, we know when it's not, we feel it, we just, it's just the kind of thing that.
We are all made of energy and we are constantly reading other people's energy, whether we realize it or not. And we can tell when somebody is faking it or somebody is doing something because they think they have to do it. So get clear on like, what would make me intrinsically motivated? What would get me excited to experience? And how can I bring that forward in my leadership style to empower others to do the same? Because the best way anybody can ever embody or instill a value,
in somebody else, you know, is through watching their leader do it, right? Experiencing the person in charge embody it, being able to see it in real life. I did a whole research study on values across the generations, many, many moons ago. And it was an experience where the majority of people were like, it's not because somebody sat me down and told me how to do it. It's because I watched them. It's because I was just around them. And I said, oh, I want to emulate that in my version of it.
What's my version of that? So I would encourage whoever's listening and is thinking, how can I lead more authentically? Consider what is the core value inside of you that makes you feel the most alive, that gives you the most energy, that when you experience it, you're like, yes, this was a great day.
MaryBeth Hyland (55:06.762)
Because that is how values work. When you are in alignment with your values, you are receiving energy, energy is coming to you, and when you're out of alignment, or at worst, violating your values, you are drained. You are having the energy sucked out of you. So when you feel like you're coming alive, it's because your values are present, they're in action. And when you feel like you're being sucked dry, it's because they're not. So think about when is the last time you felt you were coming the most alive?
and what value was being activated in that process, and how can I now intentionally lead with that value? And I will say, as a bonus for anybody listening, if anybody wants additional support, I'm super active on LinkedIn. Comment on any single one of my posts, or send me a private message and say, I really wanna know what I can do more when it comes to this.
and I will be happy to give you a first step if you're struggling in that process because sometimes that's what it is. It's just the first baby step of feeling like you have permission to do it. Again, hence the name permission to be human. You have the permission, you have it right now. And the scariest part is just the stories you're telling yourself in your head about what it means or what it doesn't mean. And so one of my favorite quotes is E.E. Cummings, which is, it takes courage to grow up and become who you really are.
And that's what it is when you live your values. It's who you really are.
Jeff Dudan (56:30.689)
That is such a great lesson that you just shared, and I think so impactful for people that are trying to shed things to become something else. I've always said that you can live many lives within a single life, and that you need to, because that's how progress happens. And we move forward from phase to phase to phase, and then you observe people around you. Sometimes they get stuck in a phase.
And then that's the way they kind of finish out. And, you know, but we're constantly evolving. I mean, we live a long time now as people. We live a lot longer than we used to. There is so much opportunity to build on your experiences and your knowledge and your life. And, but there has to be intentionality around developing yourself. And I mean, Maxwell talks about the leadership lid. You have to, you know, the more that
MaryBeth Hyland (57:09.895)
Oh yeah.
Jeff Dudan (57:28.661)
creation that you want to do in this world and the more fulfillment that you're looking for out of that creation The the higher up your lid needs to be to let people You know start their dreams inside of the dream that you've started So I really appreciate what you said there I don't want to get off this podcast though with asking you what of what horses have meant to you in your life because we Share a passion for horses and I saw it
MaryBeth Hyland (57:54.413)
Yes!
Jeff Dudan (57:55.757)
And I don't know, I don't see the cowgirl hat on, but tell me about it. What's going on with the horses?
Horses, Healing, and Homesteading: MaryBeth’s Return to the Ranch
MaryBeth Hyland (57:58.838)
I know!
MaryBeth Hyland (58:02.654)
Yeah, so when I was really, really little, I went out to my uncle's ranch in Idaho where he was a cowboy by profession. And so that's when I first got turned on to this idea of, I was living in Washington, DC, as you heard me share. So it was like, what? What is this? Like on this hundred acre ranch off the grid with these beautiful animals. And that was the beginning of just having a fascination with horses as I got older, I started to ride them. But...
I broke my tailbone and so I thought I can't ride anymore. That's not gonna be a part of my life. It was just a story I told myself. I stopped riding 20 years ago. And so there was a experience where I was out on my uncle's ranch, which my mom inherited and I will eventually be the next caregiver of the property. I was out by myself and it's a hundred acres. So...
If you're on a branch alone and you hear voices, it is a scary thing. Most people out there then get their shotgun. I didn't do that. I got my binoculars instead, and I scanned the mountainside and I saw this amazing cattle woman moving a herd of cows across our property and into the mountains, and something happened inside of me, my whole body. Talk about your values, like showing up.
I had this zinging buzzing happening where I was like, I need to know her, I have to do that with her. I don't know what this is, but I need this in my life. Hadn't even thought about it since I was a little kid. And then the next year I had the chance to meet her and I asked her, her name's Cheyenne. I said, Cheyenne, could I like be a pretend cowgirl and follow you around one day? And she looked at me square in the face and said, no, you cannot pretend. You can come and you can work and you can learn.
and I will teach you the ways of how we take care of animals out here and how we use the land from a sacred space. And that was, I'd say five years ago now, and I really got reconnected. I now train horses and work with horses here in Baltimore. We just got a tiny home on our ranch in Idaho, so we live between literally a row house in Baltimore City where there's a bar on the other side of our wall.
Jeff Dudan (59:52.053)
Mm.
MaryBeth Hyland (01:00:18.398)
and a tiny home, a 200 square foot tiny home on 100 acre ranch, totally off the grid where we are working with the land. My husband and I are on a quest to become homesetters. Cheyenne and I are gonna be building a retreat center where horses will be involved. And I just had my first equine therapy experience at Miraval Retreat Center in Tucson, Arizona last September. And now this is like the most exciting thing for me.
the woman in charge of the program, Lucinda, she has designed a three day equine experience based on my book, Permission to be Human. So I'm finally braiding in all of these random parts of me, right, all of these seemingly random things that make up my value system and offering them out to the folks who are interested in this work because not everybody wants to get on the back of a horse.
Not everybody wants to engage in horses that way, but there's so much medicine that they hold inside of them. I know you know this, Jeff. Just their power and their presence and what they help us to see within ourselves, the way that they're a mirror into ourselves is so incredibly powerful that I cannot wait to now have this as a part of my business and not just my passion project on the side.
Jeff Dudan (01:01:17.557)
Yes.
Jeff Dudan (01:01:37.169)
What a beautiful alignment of all the things that matter most to you. Yes. Well, I think that's a great place to head towards. Let's head towards the barn with this podcast. So I'm going to ask you, I'm going to give you a second to think about it, that if you had one sentence to make an impact in someone's life, if you have a go to, what that would be. But are you ready for that now? Or you can tell us how to. All right, let's go.
MaryBeth Hyland (01:01:42.178)
Thank you.
One Sentence to Change Your Life: “You Have Permission to Be Human”
MaryBeth Hyland (01:02:00.974)
See ya.
I'm ready for that.
Jeff Dudan (01:02:07.508)
Hit it.
MaryBeth Hyland (01:02:07.55)
You have permission to be human.
Jeff Dudan (01:02:09.833)
There you go. Awesome. So how can people reach out to you? You've mentioned LinkedIn, you've got your book. How can you instruct people to get connected with you and your work?
MaryBeth Hyland (01:02:23.186)
Yeah, my book is, Permission to Be Human, The Conscious Leader's Guide to Creating a Values-Driven Culture. So you can learn a lot. And really my intention of the book is to give you a play-by-play on how to do this work in your own business. So if this turned you on today, there's a step-by-step guide for you right there. I am super active on LinkedIn, Marybeth Highland. Please connect with me. I would love to continue the conversation.
And of course our core values quiz. If you want to go through a process to start to uncover your own core values, you can check that out at corevaluesquiz.com.
Jeff Dudan (01:03:01.561)
Marybeth Hyland, thank you. You are amazing. Thank you for investing this time with us today.
MaryBeth Hyland (01:03:09.39)
Thank you, Jeff.
Jeff Dudan (01:03:10.617)
You're welcome. And again, this podcast is brought to you by Homefront Brands, simply building the world's most responsible franchise platform, all the while delivering enterprise level solutions to local business owners out there on the homefront where it counts, Idaho included. So if this sounds like you, check us out at homefrontbrands.com today and start your next chapter of greatness, building your dynasty on the homefront. I will be here looking for you.
MaryBeth Hyland (01:03:26.87)
Thank you.
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