Episode
412 The Power of Vulnerability with Becca Pearce
- Published
- Apr 16, 2026
- Duration seconds
- 1985
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Summary
Reflections from host Sarah Olivieri ... What Vulnerability Actually Has to Do With Change I had a conversation with Becca Pearce recently — executive coach, former nonprofit CEO, brain tumor survivor, author of You Don't Have to Achieve to Be Loved — and one thing she said has been sitting with me since. She was walking through the ten realizations in her book, and she said this: vulnerability is the key to making change because if you're not vulnerable, there will be no change. That's not a soft observation. It's a description of a mechanism. And the more I think about it in the context of nonprofit leadership specifically, the more I think most leaders are trying to create change without doing the thing that actually makes change possible. The Real Reason Change Stalls When nonprofit leaders tell me they're stuck, the conversation usually starts with the usual suspects: Not enough funding Not enough staff Too many competing priorities And yes, those are real. But they're rarely the root of the problem. What I see more often is this: leaders are operating inside a set of assumptions they've never questioned. About what success looks like. About what their role requires of them. About what good leadership is supposed to feel like. And those assumptions — most of them inherited, not chosen — are doing a lot of quiet damage. When your actions are out of alignment with what you actually value, everything gets harder. Not because you're doing things wrong, but because you're measuring yourself against a standard that was never yours to begin with. Becca put it plainly: "You're probably living somebody else's definition of success." That's true for individuals. It's also true for organizations. The Nonprofit Version of This Problem Here's what I see happen in nonprofits sp…