Cracking the Greatness Code in Professional Services | Alan Guarino | 720
Leveraging Thought Leadership · 2026-06-25 · 22 min
Substance score
44 / 100
Five dimensions, 20 points each
What our scoring noted
Our reviewer’s read on each dimension, with quotes from the episode.
Insight Density
There are a handful of usable ideas (visibility vs. exposure, 'find a way to be impressive' as the top-1% common thread, leadership-quality-crisis as a book origin story) but the episode is heavily padded with meta-commentary on authenticity, meandering anecdotes, and mutual affirmation. Novel claims per minute is low for a 22-minute episode.
the people that end up in the top 1% of those industries have actually one thing in common... They find a way to be impressive
there's a fine line between visibility and exposure
Originality
The visibility-vs-exposure framing and the reframe of 'impressive' as the unifying top-1% trait are mildly interesting, but the rest recycles standard professional-services wisdom — authenticity, lifelong learning, networking as a force multiplier — without adding a contrarian or first-principles angle.
a leadership style that people want is the right style
it's like asking a plumber why they should actually go to the supply store occasionally
Guest Caliber
Guarino is a genuine senior practitioner — Vice Chairman at the world's largest executive search and leadership advisory firm with real C-suite and board exposure — not a career podcast guest. However, the transcript reveals relatively little of the proprietary knowledge that caliber would suggest he holds.
I spend most of my time, to be fair, for your, for your audience to have context at the CEO level, the direct reports into the CEO and the level below them
Corn Ferry develops thousands of leaders around the world. That's a big part of what we do
Specificity & Evidence
A few concrete anchors exist (salary range of $700K–$30M, Wiley 2007 publication, Korn Ferry's scale) but no named case studies, no outcome data, no specific placement metrics, and the guest explicitly declines to name the 'incredible leaders' he references. The episode is largely anecdote-level.
Making anywhere from no, you know, 700,000 bucks a year to upwards of 20 and 30 million
I wrote a book called Smart is Not Enough, published by Wiley back in 07
Conversational Craft
The host lands one genuine pushback ('that sounds like the gripes of middle management') and redirects the guest productively a few times with 'stay there,' but too often finishes the guest's sentences, asks multi-part softballs, and the conversation drifts into mutual affirmation about authenticity without extracting deeper specifics.
But stay there a minute, though, because if I were to just sort of look at what you just said as a transcript and say, give me the context of what this gentleman's talking about, I would typically think, oh, that sounds like the gripes of middle management
But stay there on the Juice
Conversation analysis
Computed from the transcript - who did the talking, and the verbal tics along the way.
Filler words
Episode notes
What does it look like when someone making $10 million a year calls you and says, "Get me out of here"? For Alan Guarino , Vice Chairman of CEO and Board Services at Korn Ferry , it happens more than you'd think — and it's exactly what pushed him to write The Greatness Code: The Formula Behind Unstoppable Success . Alan has spent decades at the intersection of executive search, C-suite coaching, and talent strategy. He's seen it all: brilliant people in toxic environments, leaders who suck the oxygen out of every room, and — on the other end of the spectrum — a rare few whose leadership style is genuinely awe-inspiring. That range of experience is precisely what gives him the standing to write about greatness, and it's what makes this conversation so grounded. Peter and Alan start with a question that doesn't get asked enough: why would someone at Alan's level — running a globally dominant practice, advising Fortune 500 boards — invest serious time in writing a book and building a public voice? The answer is practical and principled at once.
Full transcript
22 minTranscribed and scored by The B2B Podcast Index.
Foreign. Welcome, welcome. This is Peter Winick. I'm the founder and CEO at Thought Leadership Leverage, and you're joining us on the podcast today, which is Leveraging Thought Leadership Today. My guest. I'm excited about this one. This is going to be interesting, is Alan Guarino. He is the vice Chairman and of CEO and Board Services at Korn Ferry. He's a graduate of West Point. He is the author of the Greatness Code, the Formula behind Unstoppable Success, and he's done a bunch of other interesting things. So welcome aboard today. Alan, how are you? Peter? I'm fine. Thanks for having me. Great to be here. So I want to talk a little bit about sort of the why for you. Right? So you're a busy guy, you're in a busy role dealing with boards and the things that you do at Korn Ferry to get people placed at the top of the house across the world. So I'm going to guess you weren't sitting around one day saying, I have so much time on my hands, what could I do to fill it with? Right. Like, why did you decide to sort of dive into thought leadership? Write the books, do the speaking, do the things that you do as a thought leader? Well, I actually feel like thought leadership has to really be part of the day job. And, you know, I wrote a book called Smart is Not Enough, published by Wiley back in 07, and I thought I'd write a book every few years. That was 17 years ago. But along that 17 years, I've published quite a lot. But I never had anything that I was passionate enough about that required 60,000 words other than Smart is not Enough. So I did a lot of white papers and various other thought leadership. But the book Greatness Code, the formula behind unstoppable Success, actually came from what I do every day. And while we do fill jobs, that's about a third of my day. Okay. The other two thirds is helping executives execute their strategies through optimizing their people in various ways, from coaching to, you know, top team effectiveness, compensation, performance management, all that stuff. And yes, we fill jobs, too. And, and we're the biggest in the world. But. But stay, stay there for a second. So you've got, you know, when people come at this space, it's like the blind man and the elephant. Everybody's got their perspective, right? So you could have a leader that's been leading and had a stellar career for 30 years and saying, okay, this is the world according to me. And it worked. When I was at Company X, you could have the academic that says, well, and I've studied this for years and this is what I think. I'm biased as a consultant, but I love being, you know, sort of in the arena working with lots of different people in lots of different situations and scenarios. Which is kind of a parallel to your world. Absolutely. The book happened pretty much because of that perspective. Peter. The reason I got passionate about it and had 60,000 words is because I think we have a crisis today in the quality of leadership. And Corn Ferry develops thousands of leaders around the world. That's a big part of what we do. But there's millions out there. And so I started over the last half decade getting a lot of inbound from very senior people to mid level people saying, you got to get me out of here. I hate this place. And the, the common theme. And I'll, I'll. And these are smart. I just want to give the context. These are people at the top of the house game, right? Making anywhere from no, you know, 700,000 bucks a year to upwards of 20 and 30 million. Okay? So they've got the brass ring and then some. So from the external, everybody looking in saying, well, they've got it, they've got it all right. And then inside they're telling you, get me the hell out out of here, Alan. I'm miserable, right? And very often what they'll first say is, you know, I'd like to know how things, how's the market? And the first thing I say to them after I finally got sensitized to this, I came up with a thesis. These calls were generated by basically, look, I'm, I'm, I've lived a very simple life when it comes to how I think about things. Yes, I try to stay very black and very white and I try to make things very universal. So bottom line was, my thesis was people are calling me because they work for a horrible boss. And by the way, that could be a CEO who has an issue with their board chair. So it goes all the way. And so bottom line is, the first thing I would say to them is, so when you wake up in the morning, you know, are you excited to go to work? This is before they've told me I hate, hate it. They call me and say, I know the answer. The answer is going to be if they're truthful. Well, kind of. That's why I'm calling you, because I hate this. You got to get out of here. And then from there I started to move forward through why. And then it came to my boss is Tone deaf. My boss is toxic. My boss sucks the oxygen out of the room. And by the way, you know, there takes two to tango, and there's always two sides to the story, but this is an epidemic. And I have. So stay there a minute, though, because if I were to just sort of look at what you just said as a transcript and say, give me the context of what this gentleman's talking about, I would typically think, oh, that sounds like the gripes of middle management. You know, we don't. Blah, blah, blah. Right. Like, that's kind of the stuff that you hear at middle management. And then you say, well, maybe they should be more miserable because they have less agency, they have less control, they have more to report to. But it's, it's, it's kind of alarming when it's coming from the top of the house. I mean, these are the people that are setting the strategy, setting the direction, have everything there is to offer in life at the top of their game. And they're miserable, too, for the same reasons. Right. It's people reasons. Exactly. I spend most of my time, to be fair, for your, for your audience to have context at the CEO level, the direct reports into the CEO and the level below them. So let's call that C minus 2. Okay, so these are people who are late 30s to the top of their game, you know, mid-50s, you know, hitting their peaks. And they're in environments increasingly more abundant where they are working for people that suck the oxygen out of the room. Right, right. And that's what motivated me to write the book. I said, look, we can't. We can't. We don't have the scope and we don't have the, you know, there aren't enough enlightened clients that are going to have every leader trained by us. There's millions of people. So I said, I need to arm people with a formula who are in tough environments to stay on the on track and achieve their personal greatness. And that staying on track sometimes requires failing forward, pivoting a bunch of other things that are covered in the book. And by the way, the good news for the book is if you're in a great environment, you had an awesome boss, and I've got a couple of clients right now that I think are case studies in some of the best leadership I've seen in my entire life. Also happening. Quite a con, quite a quoted dichotomy. Right. Toxic leaders in high abundance and some incredible leaders that are just blowing me away with what they're accomplishing. I Won't mention their names, but if they're listening, you have them probably know who I'm talking about. And so if you're in one of those environments, that's even, that's even better because my formula is going to give you, you know, rocket fuel. Right. So how much of your thinking, your thought leadership? Because if I think about sort of the archeology of your thinking, I'm imagining there's some foundational things that go back to West Point. Yeah. Everything I think ultimately goes back to being raised by an immigrant dad and being first generation in a very wonderful working class family. Yep. And knowing that there was an opportunity to go after this thing in those days called the American Dream. Yeah. And you could do whatever you set your mind to. And from that foundation, you know, you go on the journey and you take the punches and you zig and you zag and you get beat and you win and ultimately you end up where you are. And West Point was probably the most, the most significant institutional step from leaving the neighborhood and ultimately getting on to what was a professional track. Right, sure, sure. Love that. Talk a little bit about, you know, there's, there's, you had to find something to double down on for the book. So that's, that's the greatness code. Right. Give me a sense of, from a business standpoint. And I think professional services and the corn fairies of the world get this more than most, the value of the time that you invest in that, in terms of differentiating yourself to your clients, getting their attention, you know, and, and I mean, you can't necessarily say, and that yields X dollars a year, but how does that get people to think about you and, and Korn Ferry a little bit differently relative to maybe competitors? Well, any of these things, whether you're on TV at morning, you know, business broadcasting, or talking with people like yourself, or writing a book, it's all about branding at its core. But you have to have the content. You know, there's an old, there's an old army captain who told me, you know, he said, lieutenant Garino, there's a fine line between visibility and exposure. And so if you, if you go ahead and venture into going on morning TV for business, talking to people like Peter Winick on a podcast, writing a book published by Wiley, you know, if, if you don't have the content, don't do it because it's exposure, it's not visibility. If, if I, if I was unsure whether you have anything to say now that I heard what you have to say, I'm like, oh, okay, no need to call that guy. But I'm. I'm going the other way with you saying, okay, when people, you know, you. You. You sort of fast forwarded through. Oh, yeah, I did a bunch of white papers. I would imagine you've done dozens of those sort of things over the years. Right. And those more short form, topical, something going on today, and that's thought leadership in a big way. Right. So when it comes to you, they know that you have a point of view, you have a way of thinking. Right. I think that's really what it. Because, you know, generally speaking, there's lots of people that do what you do. There's lots of people that do what everybody does. Right. But when somebody comes to you, they kind of have a sense of, well, this is what Alan's about. And that's why I want him. I want to work with him because I admire his values. I admire the way he thinks. He's thoughtful, he's smart. Based on what he's written and what I've read, he gets my situation. That's kind of where I'm going. And that puts you at the front of the line, or at least you're. You're spot on, Peter. You know, I talk to people, and now at this point in my life, I have, you know, the honor to do some mentoring. Right. And one of the things I landed on probably 20 years ago, and it's actually what I used as my own strategy, and that was at the end of the day, when you're in professional services, and I don't care whether that's a lawyer, an investment banker for that accountant. Right? Yeah. What I realized was the people that end up in the top 1% of those industries have actually one thing in common. Now, this is my secret sauce. I don't tell too many people. Here I am putting it on podcast. But what I tell the folks I mentor is you have to do one thing very, very quickly, because every one of these people that is a top 1 percenter does this. And by the way, if I put them all in a room, they would be an eclectic group of people that you would say have nothing in common other than that they're driven. And here's what they do, and it goes right to what you're asking. They find a way to be impressive. Yeah. And if one finds a way to be impressive, authentically, people conclude what you just said. I want to work with Peter. But stay there a minute, because I've seen sort of two versions of that. Those that are Trying to be impressive to a fault. And it's really all, look at me, look at me. Ego, ego, ego, ego. You know, whatever that repels. It attracts some people. But by and large, people can. Can sort of sift through that. We've all seen that. The, you know, sort of the rock star keynote or the blowhard or the whatever, whatever. I think it's the other side of that, right. The. The ones that are. That are doing it and going, I want to be around that person. Right. I want to learn from that person. I admire that person. But they're not saying it right. There you go. Yeah. So it. So I talked to you about the what, which is you must find a way to be impressive. You just beautifully outlined the wrong way to do it. Yeah. So there's. Then you got to get into the how. And that's where I say, you can't do it the way Peter does it. You got to do it the way you do it, or you're not authentic. And by the way, there's a reason people end up in the top 1%, or let's even be more liberal. The top 5%. Sure. They actually have the Juice, and it's very different, you know, and so there's 95% of people that will aspire to do it, who won't be able to. That doesn't make them bad people, but if that's what they're aspiring. But stay there on the Juice. So I was listening the other day to it, a podcast, and they were interviewing Jeffrey Katzenberg, Right. So clearly at the top 1% of his game. Right. And part of what he was saying on this is, listen, when people work for me, there was an expectation, and it wasn't for everybody, you know, and it was, we're going to be here Saturdays. I'm going to call you at all crazy hours of the day and night. And I get it. If that's not for you, that's cool. But then you're not for me. Right. Like, so. So if you. If you need work, life balance, if you need this, that and the other thing, I get that. I understand that. I appreciate it, respect it. I don't accommodate that. That's the way we roll. Right. And I'm not saying everybody has. Has to have that, but you do say they have the Juice. And I would say that there. There are sacrifices that those make. And I think you're also dealing with folks on the other side of that saying, okay, now is a bit of a different time. Right. Oh, it's a very different time. You know, that leadership style is, is obsolete. Actually, now, I say that with a caveat and I'll just use an example, like a SEAL Team 6, right? There are environments where that leadership style is needed. It works, and the people that are there want it. A leadership style that people want is the right style. However, let's talk about reality. The norm is that people are looking for very different things from their leaders than they were a generation ago, and for good reason. Yeah, that's right. That's right. Cool. So I want to go down a different path for, for a moment. Most people, when it comes to thought leadership, particularly at the organizational level, think rationally, logically and linearly. Right. Here's an idea that I want to put out in a, in an article, a white paper, hbrp, whatever the case may be. So I'm going to do the following. I'm going to do the research, I'm going to write it, maybe I get some help along the way, whatever. Then I'm going to publish it. And then rainbows and unicorns, right? Like good stuff's going to happen. I think there's a better way, which is during the process of creating high quality thought leadership, interviewing others that look like the people that you're trying to get to read it and deliver to you. The rainbows and unicorn. So it's easy for someone like you to say, hey, I'm writing an article on X or I'm writing a book on Y or whatever. Can I grab 20 minutes of your time? Because I want to get your take on this issue today because I admire the way you think and all that. Oh, and by the way, I'm talking to people like this, that and the other one that reignites a relationship. Right. Because your business, one could argue, placement could be considered transactional. That piece of the business. So how do you keep the relationship going when there's not a need? Well, it's stuff like this. You stay connected through thought leadership. You're able to flex your muscle without saying, hey, look at me, look how smart I am. It's pretty clear. Like, wow, it's really cool that you're researching this piece, thinking about this piece, because that is something that we're all thinking about today. Yeah. Oh, for sure. You know, so. But again, authenticity is everything people know if you're gaming them. So, sure. I've always gone out of my way and quite frankly, probably probably been beat a few times because I didn't want to be too forward or presumptuous in pushing the relationship Further, and I'll give you context because people who know me will go, oh my God, that's not possible because I am pretty lean forward. Okay. I'm self aware enough to know that I can be too lean forward. But even with that, I lean back a lot because quite frankly, I'll give you an example. Like when I'm doing a lot of work with a client and it's a very committed partnership, there's still other work to be done at that company, of course, that we should and could be doing, but I don't want to overreach. And then sometimes they'll bring in a competitor to do that particular work and I'll say to myself, man, they don't do it as well as we do. I blew it. We. I'm not doing the client a service. But overreach. Overreach is subjective. Your definition of overreach might be different than mine. Right? So. But that goes back to the authentic. Yeah. Being self critical and not wanting to be too grabby. But anyway, that's another. But isn't that an extension of the authentic? I think it is. Yeah. Right. Yeah, exactly. So. And your authentic's different than mine, is different than the next person's. Right. So I, I like the idea of authenticity because I think sometimes people take on a role, whatever that means. Right. Like, hey, now I'm an author, so I'm gonna act like what I think an author acts like. Well, that doesn't. Like, no, you're still. You, you just wrote a book, right? Like you're, you know. Exactly. Yeah, very cool. What would you, what advice would you give? You said you're doing some mentoring now to someone on the trajectory that you've, you've been on maybe 15, 20 years ago, saying, hey, you know, I know I'm in professional services, I'm doing really well. I haven't really embraced thought leadership yet. Convince me why I should in an authentic way. Well, I'll do it in a bit of a smart ass way. If they've listened to the first. If they listen to this podcast up until this moment and they ask that question, yeah, listen to it again. You want to find an alternative career. The reason, the reason is for all the things you, you know, brilliantly brought out in the conversation. First of all, lifelong learning is essential. I, I was so lucky. I landed in capital markets as a headhunter early on, and the part of capital markets I landed on was disruptive financial tech before people knew the term fintech in the mid-90s. And I landed there like most entrepreneurs, by accident because a client landed in my lap. And in those days, if you had a checkbook and you had a reasonably good business, you were qualified to be my client. Sure. I bootstrapped a company as a startup with my wife anyway, so by landing in Fintech, it was a blessing because if I had to spend my career doing recruitment for investment bankers, and I have great friends that are bankers and there's a very admirable field and we cover that beautifully in our firm. But I'm listen, I'm probably ADD before the days when it was diagnosable. I know I'm just like, I've been diagnosed for that. So I need to be moving into new and different. So I landed in Fintech, which brought me to electronic trading before we had electronified the equities markets. And so as a result I got deeply into studying that because at the core I'm an engineer. So bottom line is I landed in the right place. So the first piece of advice I give them is make sure you're doing something you can really get passionate about, that you have a strong, massive intellectual curiosity for and study it really hard. Right, right. That's that. So from that study, naturally you're going to want to document it, you're going to want to share it, you're going to want to put forth hypotheses and, and points of view and, and, and get it out there and take a position. So it's like asking a, you know, it's like asking a plumber why they should actually go to the supply store occasionally and walk through the aisles and pick out the stuff themselves instead of sending one of their helpers. Right. It's part of the job. I like that analogy. Right, because the, the, the plumber that got their license 25 years ago and never went to the supply store on their own is missing new tools, new ways of thinking, conversations you have like all that stuff. Right. And therefore their tools aren't as sharp, if you will, in terms of their ability to be the best plumber they can be. Love that. This has been great. I appreciate your time and your thoughtfulness and your authenticity. Alan, thank you for sharing some time today. Thanks for having me on, Peter. I appreciate it and I hope greatness Code helps those folks that are in those tough environments. Because it's a journey. If you look at the COVID of the book, it's a pathway through the woods. The strong trees on the left and the right. Yeah, we didn't cover it, but those strong trees represent the other part of the formula which is that key group of people around you, mentors, friends, people that are there to speak well of you when you're not in the room. That network of people gets you the full distance. If you all you bring to work is your ability and your tenacity and your your stamina, courage, resilience and passion, you'll get far but you won't get the full distance without that network of people around you to be helpful. Yeah. And that will never change. Right. Regardless of AI and tech and all the things we're dealing with today might be more important. Yeah, I believe that. Good stuff. Thank you. Good to talk to you today. Thank you Peter. To learn more about Thought Leadership leverage, please visit our website@thoughtleadershipleverage.com to reach me directly feel free to email me@peteroughtleadershipleverage.com and please subscribe to Leveraging Thought Leadership on itunes or your favorite podcast app to get your weekly episode automatically.