Episode

252: How Authenticity Elevates Leadership Storytelling

Podcast
Innovation Storytellers
Published
Apr 7, 2026
Duration seconds
2322
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https://innovationstorytellers.com/podcasts/
Audio
https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/innovationstorytellers/2026_Storytellers_252.mp3?dest-id=2720171
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Markdown
/podcast/innovation-storytellers-3701797/252-how-authenticity-elevates-leadership-storytelling.md

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Summary

How do you tell a story that people actually believe, trust, and remember long after the meeting ends? In this episode of the Innovation Storytellers Show, I sit down with Neal Foard, Founder of Storyfire, to explore what separates a good idea from one that truly lands. Neal brings decades of experience from the world of advertising, where he created campaigns for brands like Budweiser, Lexus, and Sony, and shares how storytelling is never just about the words you say. It is about the experience you create, the signals you send, and the way you make people feel before, during, and after every interaction. Our conversation moves beyond the traditional storytelling frameworks and into something far more human. Neal challenges the idea that leaders need to position themselves as heroes, arguing instead that credibility is built through humility, generosity, and the ability to elevate others. We also unpack the role of authenticity in leadership, especially at a time when executives are being asked to communicate complex, often uncomfortable narratives about AI, change, and the future of work. What stood out most is Neal's belief that storytelling is not a moment; it is a continuous presence. From the way you prepare a room to the follow-up message you send afterward, every detail contributes to the story people tell themselves about you. And in a world shaped by automation and digital interactions, that human layer has never been more valuable. So as you think about your next presentation, your next pitch, or even your next internal conversation, ask yourself this: What story are you really telling when no one is listening to your words?