Podcast appearances and mentions of eric baldwin

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Best podcasts about eric baldwin

Latest podcast episodes about eric baldwin

Monday Moms
Milestones: June 18, 2024

Monday Moms

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2024 3:44


Eric Baldwin of Glen Allen and Falynn Jackson of Henrico were named to the spring 2024 dean's list at Mercer University in Macon, Ga. *** The following local students were named to the spring 2024 president's list at Shenandoah University in Winchester, Va.: Madeline Berkle, Clara Chenault, Peter Marshall and Jackson Smith, of Glen Allen; and Chelsea Goode, of Henrico. To qualify for the president's list, students must earn a semester grade point average of 3.90 or higher. *** The following local students were named to the spring 2024 dean's honor roll at the University of Mississippi: Abigail Campbell, Rebecca...Article LinkSupport the Show.

Monday Moms
Milestones: Jan. 9, 2024

Monday Moms

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2024 2:32


Eric Baldwin of Glen Allen was named to the fall 2023 president's list at Mercer University in Macon, Ga. Baldwin is a sophomore in the College of Professional Advancement. *** The following students were named to the fall 2023 dean's list at Belmont University in Nashville, Tenn.: Victoria Hughes, of Glen Allen; and Emily Geanious, Charlotte Harrison, Graham Powell and William Whitaker, of Henrico. To qualify for the dean's list, students must earn a grade point average of 3.5 for the semester. *** Erin Clancy of Glen Allen and Timothy Dillard of Henrico were named to the fall 2023 dean's...Article LinkSupport the show

The Builder's Journey
EP246: Eric Baldwin - "The Genuine Article" R.I.P.

The Builder's Journey

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2023 76:55


  To Natalie & Rudy, so sorry for your loss.  Your Father was incredibly proud you!  He never missed an opportunity to brag about your accomplishments, awards and what good people you turned out to be.  Please forgive me if this is inappropriate timing but I would like to share some Stories about Eric, via a podcast episode published yesterday (PODCAST: “The Builder's Journey” EP246: Eric Baldwin “The Genuine Article” R.I.P.)  No podcast conversation could prepare me for this level of sadness and sense of loss. Eric, you will be sorely missed and never forgotten. Thank you for making me a better person and see you on the other side!  Alex Mintling PS>If anyone knows how to or would like to forward this conversation, please feel free! Thanks!  "Somewhere Over the Rainbow" - Israel "IZ" Kamakawiwoole   National Suicide Prevention Lifeline . . . 988 https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org/   Colorado Crisis Services & Peer Support 1-844-493-8255 https://coloradocrisisservices.org/ Hope Center Eagle River Valley 970-306-4673 https://www.yourhopecenter.org/  SpeakUp-ReachOut https://www.speakupreachout.org/ 970-632-3858 www.TheBuildersJourney.com Alex K. Mintling Instagram: Alex_Mintling Plumb Kendall Solutions Alex@PlumbKendall.com www.RemodelVail.com Music Provided by our proud sponsor: Plumb Kendall Solutions www.RemodelVail.com Music Sourced from www.Pond5.com  

Terry Meiners
The debate continues over plans for the old Baptist Hospital site

Terry Meiners

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2023 7:26


Shannon Musselman and Eric Baldwin discuss the proposed plans for the site of the old Baptist Hospital and the opportunity for the public to voice their opinion at a meeting of the Land Development and Transportation Committee...

Davelle Morrison
Investing In Meaford, Ontario - Patrick Egan (Realtor) & Eric Baldwin (Investor)

Davelle Morrison

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2022 30:55


In this episode, Patrick Egan (Realtor) and Eric Baldwin (Investor) dive into what it's like to live and invest in Meaford, Ontario.

Principled
S8E1 | How can boards assess corporate culture and improve oversight?

Principled

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2022 25:41


What you'll learn in this podcast episode What is top of mind with board directors when they think about corporate culture, ethics, and compliance? How can leaders best assess culture in the companies they oversee? In the season 8 premiere of the Principled Podcast, LRN Director of Advisory Services Emily Miner is joined by Dr. Marsha Ershaghi Hames and Dr. Eric Baldwin at Tapestry Networks to discuss how board members can improve oversight. Listen in as the group shares insights from Tapestry Networks and LRN's joint report Assessing Corporate Culture: A Practical Guide to Improving Board Oversight, which draws from a working group of nearly 40 directors and executives representing over 60 public companies. Principled Podcast Show Notes [0:29] - Emily welcomes listeners to this episode with Marsha and Eric of Tapestry Networks.  [1:46] - A discussion on the recently published report, “Assessing Corporate Culture: A Practical Guide to Improving Board Oversight.” [6:14] - Why the report offers a practical framework and what needs it seeks to address. [9:59] - The key findings or pillars of the report. [15:22] - How the report helps leaders answer “How?” questions. [20:30] - What is the potential broader impact of the report?   Featured guest: Dr. Eric Baldwin Eric Baldwin is a principal at Tapestry Networks, working with teams in the firm's corporate governance and financial services practices. Prior to coming to Tapestry, he served for several years as a research associate at Harvard Business School (HBS), where he collaborated with faculty on a variety of research and writing projects covering topics ranging from organizational culture and change management to corporate strategy and healthcare policy. Prior to his time at HBS, Eric taught in the religious studies departments at Franklin & Marshall College and Boston University, while earlier in his career he served in engineering and operations roles at ON Technology Corporation, a software development firm based in greater Boston.  Eric holds a PhD in religious studies from Boston University and a BA in history from the College of William and Mary.   Featured guest: Dr. Marsha Ershaghi Hames Dr. Marsha Ershaghi Hames is a partner with Tapestry Networks and a leader of our corporate governance practice. She advises non-executive directors, C-suite executives, and in-house counsel on issues related to governance, culture transformation, board leadership, and stakeholder engagement. Prior to joining Tapestry, Marsha was a managing director of strategy and development at LRN, Inc. a global governance, risk and compliance firm. She specialized in the alignment of leaders and organizations for effective corporate governance and organizational culture transformation. Her view is that compliance is no longer merely a legal matter but a strategic and reputational priority.  Marsha has been interviewed and cited by the media including CNBC, CNN, Ethisphere, HR Magazine, Compliance Week, The FCPA Report, Entrepreneur.com, Chief Learning Officer, ATD Talent & Development, Corporate Counsel Magazine, the Society of Corporate Compliance and Ethics and more. She hosted the Principled Podcast, profiling the stories of some of the top transformational leaders in business. Marsha serves as an expert fellow on USC's Neely Center for Ethical Leadership and Decision Making and on the advisory boards of LMH Strategies, Inc. an integrative supply chain advisory firm and Compliance.ai, a regulatory change management firm. Marsha holds an Ed.D. and MA from Pepperdine University. Her research was on the role of ethical leadership as an enabler of organizational culture change. Her BA is from the University of Southern California. She is a certified compliance and ethics professional.   Featured Host: Emily Miner Emily Miner is the Director of Advisory Services at LRN's Ethics & Compliance Advisory practice. She counsels executive leadership teams on how to actively shape and manage their ethical culture through deep quantitative and qualitative understanding and engagement. A skilled facilitator, Emily emphasizes co-creative, bottom-up, and data-driven approaches to foster ethical behavior and inform program strategy. Emily has led engagements with organizations in the healthcare, technology, manufacturing, energy, professional services, and education industries. Emily co-leads LRN's ongoing flagship research on E&C program effectiveness and is a thought leader in the areas of organizational culture, leadership, and E&C program impact. Prior to joining LRN, Emily applied her behavioral science expertise in the environmental sustainability sector, working with non-profits and several New England municipalities; facilitated earth science research in academia; and contributed to drafting and advancing international climate policy goals. Emily has a Master of Public Administration in Environmental Science and Policy from Columbia University and graduated summa cum laude from the University of Florida with a degree in Anthropology.     Principled Podcast Transcript Intro: Welcome to the Principled Podcast brought to you by LRN. The Principled Podcast brings together the collective wisdom on ethics, business and compliance, transformative stories of leadership and inspiring workplace culture. Listen in to discover valuable strategies from our community of business leaders and workplace change makers. Emily Miner: What is top of mind with board directors when they think about corporate culture, ethics and compliance? How can leaders best assess culture in the companies they oversee? Hi, and welcome to another episode of LRN's Principled Podcast. I'm your host, Emily Miner, director of advisory at LRN. And today I'm joined by Dr. Marsha Ershaghi Hames and Dr. Eric Baldwin partner and principal respectively at Tapestry Networks. We're going to be talking about corporate culture and how board members can improve oversight. Marsha and Eric have just collaborated with us at LRN on a report entitled, "Assessing Corporate Culture: A practical guide to improving board oversight." The report presents insights from a working group of nearly 40 directors and executives representing over 60 public companies, including some of the largest companies in the world: Cigna, Sony, McKesson, Lockheed Martin, CDW, Coca-Cola, Excel Energy and Palo Alto Networks included. Marsha, Eric, thanks for joining me on the Principled Podcast today. Marsha Ershaghi Hames: It's great to be here. Eric Baldwin: Thanks for having us, Emily. Emily Miner: Okay, so let's jump right in. This report, a guide really, assessing corporate culture is the result of working group sessions of the ethics, culture and compliance network. Marsha, let me start with you. What is the ECCN, who are its members, and how did it come to be? Marsha Ershaghi Hames: Sure. Great. We're happy to continue to share the Ethics Culture Compliance Network progress. This network was founded in the summer of 2020. I mean, it was during the thick of a pandemic. Companies were spiraling. It was just a lot of crisis management and companies were starting to take a real reflective step back. They were assessing where do we need to look? How do we need to assess our planning for longer term future? And the conversation emerged initially, Emily, as a forum. It was a safe space to convene. Public company directors and senior executives, namely chief ethics and compliance officers, to really start exploring values, corporate culture and the role of ethical decision making in business. Emily, if I can highlight just a few key aspects that the stakeholders of ECCN started to really prioritize over the last two years, number one, the need for boards and executive teams to align and articulate culture so that management feels supported. Number two, to address the challenge of getting ethics and culture on board agendas and to really promote directors going deeper with management, we're going to get to shortly. Number three, ECCN stakeholders have continued to really want a forum to share peer to peer examples, pragmatic examples of the need for better communication and greater transparency between the CECO, the broader management team and the board. Emily Miner: Thanks, Marsha. Having sat in on some of these sessions, I know that those specific examples that you just alluded to, those were among some of the most powerful conversation prompts. So I think that the members got a lot of value out of that. I certainly know I did. And so this report builds on a report that we, Tapestry Networks and LRN, collaborated on last year, activating culture and ethics from the boardroom, which was a really insightful temperature check on board's attitudes about culture. Eric, can you talk about that project and how it led to this latest one? Eric Baldwin: Sure. With the last year's activating culture report, we had set out to understand the realities facing boards and their oversight of ethics and culture. What were their key concerns, the challenges they face, current practices. So to get at that, we interviewed 40 directors who occupied about 80 seats on public company boards with the aim of getting a really broad view of board oversight of ethics and culture. What we found was a pretty diverse range of practices across boards, in terms of what kinds of information they were receiving, their engagement with their management teams, including how often they heard from their chief ethics and compliance officer, a range of assignments of committee responsibilities and really it's just a variability and how much attention the issues get from boards. We also found a real lack of comfort among directors. So directors recognize the importance of culture and the risks associated with ethical lapses or with unhealthy cultures, but recognize that their ability to oversee culture doesn't have the level of clarity and rigor that you find in other aspects of board oversight, like say financial reporting. So there's a real gap between the seriousness of the risk associated with culture and the importance of culture on the one hand and director's sense of their ability, or lack of ability, frankly, to effectively oversee that set of issues. So given that, it seemed crucial to start to develop some board-level tools and practices that could help directors make their oversight of ethics and culture more robust. Emily Miner: Thanks, Eric. I know that this latest report traces its roots back to those earlier insights that you were just describing and the need for a practical framework that board members could adopt. Tell us why this framework and the specific needs it seeks to address. Marsha Ershaghi Hames: Yeah. So maybe I'll take that one. So to Eric's point, we have conversations with 40 directors in 2021 and coming out of it, it was the spirit of action. How can we now take action? So the consensus was, we want a simple, practical framework to start to advance a conversation, just get the conversation started. Think of it like a simple roadmap. How can we take this into the boardroom? How can we start to connect with management with simple prompts, questions. Help us organize our thoughts about how to activate and get the conversation started. Then, another goal was the input was we want to have a peer-reviewed framework. We don't want a treatise. We don't want a commission study by a third party. We want to be a part of driving the frame for what we think will have the greatest impact, both within board rooms and for the boards to explore directly with management. Emily Miner: You've talked a little bit about the approach to developing the framework, talking to the 40 directors and the peer-to-peer nature of it. What else about the approach of how the framework was developed, do you think contributes to the power of what it ultimately offers to boards and management teams? Eric Baldwin: Yeah, I can jump in here. As Marsha noted, we really wanted this to be as useful and practical for boards as possible so we thought it was really important that it'd be grounded in the experience of directors. We knew that there was a lot of good practice already going on in boardrooms. So if we could tap into that collective knowledge and pull that together, it could be really valuable. So the way we went about that was to recruit and convene a working group of about 12 to 15 members, 10 of whom were sitting public company directors. Several of those directors are current or former chief ethics and compliance officers so they've got deep experience in that space that they bring into the boardroom. We also included a couple of sitting senior ethics and compliance executives who report into boards on these matters on a regular basis to bring their perspective, as well as our colleagues from LRN, who brought their expertise in culture measurement. So, we brought the group together several times for virtual discussions, for peer exchange, to really surface the challenges and gaps that they're experiencing, to share and vet existing practices and tools and identify some key insights and good practices that are already going on. So out of that, our team developed a draft framework, which we shared then with a larger group of about 40 directors and ethics and compliance executives to pressure test our recommendations and get additional feedback before publishing the piece this summer. So I think what really gives it its power is that it's grounded in the experience of the boardroom, it's peer developed and peer vetted and rooted in the efforts of directors and practitioners. Emily Miner: Yeah. Thank you, Eric. And just to underline something that both you and Marsha shared, I think something that's so compelling about it in terms of being grounded in that experience is, as you mentioned, many of those directors are current or former chief ethics and compliance officers. So being able to hear from people that have worn both of those hats or are wearing both of those hats, I think is so powerful. So let's keep on talking about the framework. What are the key findings or pillars? I know that there are five pillars of the framework and I'd love for you to expand upon those five pillars for us. Eric Baldwin: Yeah. I'm happy to try to do that. There's a lot of insights there, so I'll try to be brief. As you mentioned, there are five key themes here, and we see them not so much as a series of steps, but more as sets of interlocking practices or that can mutually reinforce each other. So briefly, the first is really just to make ethics and culture a priority. We've heard from directors that culture and ethics often don't get enough time and attention in the boardroom. They get pushed to the bottom of crowded board agendas. So a key step is simply just to ensure that they get priority on the agenda, that they get enough time and attention. It's really crucial. We heard that boards communicate to management that culture and ethics are priorities, which they can do by pushing for information, asking questions, following up, probing. Management needs to know that ethics and culture are board priorities. The second is for boards to take a look at their own culture. Boards have their own internal cultures and the culture of the board influences the culture of the organizations. They sort of set the tone from the top. But directors tell us that boards don't often examine their own cultures in a rigorous way. So it's really important for boards as one member put it, to take a hard look at their own culture. In this, it's especially important for boards to assess their openness and transparency and the level of trust, both among the directors and between the board and the management team, and especially their willingness to hear difficult news and how the board responds to bad news or to hard truths. A key element we heard of ethical culture is trust and transparency and to foster an environment where bad news travels fast. That starts with the board and the board's willingness to hear bad news. The third is the challenge of being able to articulate the elements of culture and really to describe and articulate the culture you're aiming at, what you want to see in your corporate culture. The challenge here is that culture can be a very fuzzy and abstract concept. It's implicit, it's unspoken rules and norms, and that makes it really hard to measure and assess. So anything boards and management teams can do to make discussions of culture more concrete and precise will really help. This can mean breaking down ethical culture into various components, things like trust, willingness to speak out, fairness, organizational justice, so that boards and management teams have a clear answer to the question, "When we talk about culture, what exactly are we talking about?" A key insight here was the importance for boards to be active partners with their management teams in defining and articulating the attributes of a desired ethical culture, rather than just sort of hearing them from management. Contributors told us that the process of defining what a good culture looks like by fostering a robust and structured discussion of culture is as important as the outcome. So boards need to be involved in those discussions early, rather than just the management team coming to them and saying, "Here's what we think our culture should look like." The fourth is really about the tools that they use to measure and monitor culture. This is all about information and data and how it comes to the board. There's a pretty common range of data and information sources that boards depend on and there's plenty of data. But the key is for boards to get that information presented to them in the right way so that it has enough context that it can really make sense to them. So one key issue for boards we found is to push their management teams to report to them in such a way that insights from a range of data sources are integrated into a coherent picture or narrative. So survey data or data from culture surveys is overlaid with safety data, turnover data, and cost of hotline for example. Boards are really looking for a more integrated view from their management teams. Anything that will help generate a narrative or surface patterns that help boards know where they need to follow up and probe and potentially allocate more resources is really helpful. Then finally is the issue of establishing clear communication lines. There's a lot of information relevant to culture that comes from a lot of different functional areas bearing on ethics and culture. So boards need to push their management teams to be able to develop a holistic view and really ask the question who, if anyone, in the management team owns culture and owns reporting on it and can give a really coherent and holistic view of culture. The same goes for the board. At the board level, different committees on the board, get reporting from different management teams and information can become siloed. So the key question is how can boards overcome that tendency and make sure that the entire board is getting a full picture of culture. Emily Miner: Thanks, Eric, you did a great job of covering a lot of detail, very succinctly so I appreciate that. You framed a lot of those pillars in the form of a question: so how can boards do this, how can boards and management team collect the right data and interpret it together and break down those silos, et cetera, so I want to go into those hows a little bit because we call it a practical guide. So how does that manifest? How can this guide, I'll call it a guide and not a report, how can this guide help boards in their oversight of culture? Marsha Ershaghi Hames: Yeah, so Emily, maybe I'll jump in on that one. So to Eric's point as he went through these five key pillars and big insights or meta themes that jumped out, each pillar is supported with countless examples, practical scenarios, and we've even lifted up some direct quotes that came from all of the contributors. So part of this is practically speaking, we want to help agitate that curiosity from the directors. We want to encourage them, look behind the numbers, start asking some of those uncomfortable questions. We wanted to give them, when you talk about sort of manifesting, how do we give directors a simple roadmap or framework to go into, to start within their own boardrooms, and then to look at opportunities to connect and communicate with management, to build that bridge, to forge an ongoing dialogue. So this is not an overnight put your hero cape on. This is to start to create essentially more of that accountability partnership, a dialogue between management and the board and framing it in these five buckets. So it's, step one, are we even prioritizing this? So that can be a series of conversations. Step two, have we aligned as a board and management team? Have we been engaged as a part of articulating and assessing and understanding what is that desired culture? Are we as a board reflecting? So as Eric was going through these, it's you need to have a roadmap essentially to start agitating some of that dialogue. We wanted these pillars to become levers to begin that process to engage with management. Emily Miner: I love the way that you are framing this as agitating the dialogue. There's such a great mental, descriptive image. So thank you for that, Marsha. I know that one of the features of the report or the guide to help agitate that dialogue is a series of questions that can serve as a starting point for this dialogue with management teams and within boards. Can you share some of those compelling prompts? Eric Baldwin: Yeah, I'd be happy to give some examples. I think questions for boards are really a key tool in their tool belt. One of the things that boards are expected to do is offer a credible challenge to management, and it's really through asking questions that they do that. So we did include a number of questions, I think they're probably more than two dozen appended to the end of the report. I will not read anything like all of them at this point, but I'll give you a couple of examples of some of the questions that we include in the report. Again, many of them line up with some of the key buckets that we identified above. One would be just to ask yourselves as boards, have we identified the cultural attributes and behaviors that align with our stated values and our purpose? How can we effectively articulate the culture we're trying to achieve? This in turn would guide management's efforts to measure culture. Another question for the board to reflect on is, does our culture, that is the board's culture, encourage management to share those difficult truths with us? How open to debate and disagreement is our board? Then we also include some questions that boards can ask their management teams. One is to simply ask, to what extent can you provide the board with an integrated view that incorporates information from a range of sources of data into a single picture for us? How can you give us an integrated view of culture? Then another question for management is, are you able to communicate directly to the board when necessary? Do you feel you have the necessary independence to bring issues and questions to the board? So those are just a few examples of a number of questions that we've included in this report. Emily Miner: Thank you. I think that's another feature of the practicality of this. I mean, boards can in some sense sort of lift these questions up and apply them in their own contexts. So recently LRN's Ty Francis, our chief advisory officer had a conversation with Tom Fox, who I think we all know as the voice of compliance and founder of the Compliance Podcast Network. Tom called this report prescient more than once and cited both recent statements of Lisa Monaco, deputy attorney general, and rulings of the Delaware Supreme Court about the need for boards to take a more active role in monitoring and measurement. So with those statements, that context, occurring around the same time as the release of this guide, what do you see is the potential broader impact of the guide, the framework with the five pillars, the practical examples and discussion prompts? What do you see as the potential impact of that? Marsha Ershaghi Hames: So maybe I'll take the lead here and, Eric, if you want to share any other thoughts ... But if we take a step back, this came up in ... so we had a summit, Emily, that you, of course participated in, where we brought together all of the Ethics Culture Compliance Network contributors, not only of the report, but other key stakeholders. It was interesting, a few people pointed to this and they said that if you look at the foundations of corporate scandals over the last few decades, there's a pattern that points to the failure to speak up and a correlating fear of retaliation. So it's that notion of someone always knows what's going on. Right? So when you look at the statements of Lisa Monaco and the Delaware Supreme Court about boards taking a more active role, you have to take a step back and look at what is the role that boards can play to encourage and drive a culture that is more transparent and more open. How can a board activate open dialogue? How can a board establish a more transparent tone. We know, there's enough research around this, that culture's fundamental to business and tone at the top matters. I could even say, and Emily, you and I have collaborated, full disclosure, over years in my consulting days. I saw this. I can just draw anecdotally that in 22 years of consulting, I would come across so many compliance executives who just felt like, "Hey, is my company going to make the investment in my team, and are they going to prioritize culture?" CECOs, they're under a lot of pressure to operate as a resource, enforce policy, developed policy. They're regarded as the primary architects of culture, but oftentimes we're also labeled as a cost center. So some of this stuff has been coming out as you know, Emily and Eric, and our conversations around like, "Are we leading on this or are we in a reactive mode?" So I would say in terms the broader impact of this framework, it's the notion of how can we be proactive? How can we put a framework and a roadmap in front of the board to agitate the curiosity, to ask for more data behind the numbers and to empower boards and management teams to get the conversation started. To Eric's point, it's like, is it a toolbox? Is it a tool set? Well, yes, it is. It's been pressure tested by peers. It was developed by peers. They're trying it in their own boardrooms. Some of these stakeholders are current or former chief ethics and compliance officers so there's an appreciative inquiry of the tensions on both sides of the table. So in my opinion, I really forecast that this is going to have a catalyzing impact on the industry. Eric, I don't know, thoughts on your end too. Eric Baldwin: No, I would just say, I think one of our hopes here is that as directors bring this into the boardroom and, Emily, you're right to point out that it does seem like the expectations for boards in oversight in this area are going nowhere but up. It is our hope that this is a tool that helps them meet those heightened expectations. But also that it's only a starting point, that boards will use the tools in this framework to get the conversation started and come back to us with further recommendations of what would be additionally helpful to assist them in their oversight here. Emily Miner: Well, I, for one look forward to following along and participating and seeing what the impact is and how this framework is used and what the feedback is from those that use it. Marsha, Eric, it has been such a delight speaking with you today about the genesis of this report and all of the insights assembled from such a stellar working group. We're out of time for today. But for those listening, if you're interested in learning more about the report, the framework, et cetera, please look at the link in the podcast description. My name is Emily Miner, and I want to thank you all for listening to the Principled Podcast by LRN. Outro:  We hope you enjoyed this episode. The Principled Podcast is brought to you by LRN. At LRN our mission is to inspire principled performance in global organizations by helping them foster winning ethical cultures rooted in sustainable values. Please visit us at lrn.com to learn more. And if you enjoyed this episode, subscribe to our podcasts on Apple Podcasts, Stitcher, Google Podcasts, or wherever you listen. And don't forget to leave us a review.  

Bagley Talks to an Important Person

Eric Baldwin, the former Executive Creative Director of Wieden+Kennedy Portland, and the creative director who helped resurrect brands like Old Spice and KFC, shares how he used art direction to create some of the world's most iconic campaigns. Watch the Podcast: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OJ6beIz2EUc Creative Megamachine Website: https://schoolofastonishingpursuits.com/ Eric Baldwin's Website: https://genericbaldman.com/

The Builder's Journey
EP170: Eric Baldwin: Unfiltered & Unapologetic

The Builder's Journey

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2022 73:17


Is "toxic masculinity" helping or hurting our society?  Listen in to longtime friends and you be the judge. Colorado Tree Services: https://www.linkedin.com/in/eric-baldwin-a8109346?original_referer=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.google.com%2F National Suicide Prevention Lifeline . . . 988 https://suicidepreventionlifeline.org/   Colorado Crisis Services & Peer Support 1-844-493-8255 https://coloradocrisisservices.org/   Hope Center Eagle River Valley 970-306-4673 https://www.yourhopecenter.org/  SpeakUp-ReachOut https://www.speakupreachout.org/ 970-632-3858   www.TheBuildersJourney.com Alex K. Mintling 970-390-9755 Plumb Kendall Solutions Alex@PlumbKendall.com www.RemodelVail.com Music Provided by our proud sponsor: Plumb Kendall Solutions www.RemodelVail.com Music Sourced from www.Pond5.com        

Terry Meiners
The Urban Govt Building in Paristown is being developed and residents are being asked for input

Terry Meiners

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2022 8:09


Shannon Musselman and Eric Baldwin represent the residents of Paristown Point and discuss an upcoming meeting that is open to the public ahead of the development Urban Government Building. Residents are encouraged to attend the meeting and get info/voice their opinion on the development. Listen for details...

PokerFraudAlert - Druff & Friends
Poker Fraud Alert Radio - 12/04/2020 - The GG Hoedown

PokerFraudAlert - Druff & Friends

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2020 426:40


(Topic starts at 0:29:10 mark): Dan Bilzerian signs as GGPoker ambassador, immediately gets into hot water after calling Vanessa Kade a "hoe".... (1:27:15): Update: Daily Mail claims Tony Hsieh accidentally died after passing out while doing nitrous oxide whippets.... (2:17:10): Update: Cheating Cubans CAUGHT at Dallas-area cardroom, thanks to PFA listener.... (2:25:55): 2+2 strangles own forum with obnoxious, persistent ad at bottom of screen.... (2:54:21): Former employee of armored car company pulls of $1.7 million burglary in broad daylight without using any weapons.... (3:06:17): Seth Palansky leaves WSOP for Conscious Gaming.... (4:00:42): Eric Baldwin gets stiffed by wsop.com after his satellite win doesn't match posted payout.... (4:34:59): Anna Antimony makes staking impropriety claim against former PFA guest Clayton Jiang.... (4:58:43): Pennsylvania online slots revenue dwarfs online poker revenue, making future of legalized online poker look questionable.... (5:08:57): Record COVID-19 death, new case numbers cause major concern for months leading up to vaccine in US.... (5:46:52): Vaccine will cause major (but temporary) side effects in some -- will this be a problem?.... (6:03:51): Druff has to decide if he gets a colonoscopy in January during likely peak in COVID cases.... (6:24:56): Editorial: When voter fraud (and non-fraud) claims and common sense don't match up

PokerFraudAlert - Druff & Friends
Poker Fraud Alert Radio - 12/04/2020 - The GG Hoedown

PokerFraudAlert - Druff & Friends

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2020


(Topic starts at 0:31:50 mark): Dan Bilzerian signs as GGPoker ambassador, immediately gets into hot water after calling Vanessa Kade a "hoe".... (1:29:52): Update: Daily Mail claims Tony Hsieh accidentally died after passing out while doing nitrous oxide whippets.... (2:19:50): Update: Cheating Cubans CAUGHT at Dallas-area cardroom, thanks to PFA listener.... (2:28:35): 2+2 strangles own forum with obnoxious, persistent ad at bottom of screen.... (2:57:01): Former employee of armored car company pulls of $1.7 million burglary in broad daylight without using any weapons.... (3:08:57): Seth Palansky leaves WSOP for Conscious Gaming.... (4:03:22): Eric Baldwin gets stiffed by wsop.com after his satellite win doesn't match posted payout.... (4:37:39): Anna Antimony makes staking impropriety claim against former PFA guest Clayton Jiang.... (5:01:03): Pennsylvania online slots revenue dwarfs online poker revenue, making future of legalized online poker look questionable.... (5:11:17): Record COVID-19 death, new case numbers cause major concern for months leading up to vaccine in US.... (5:49:32): Vaccine will cause major (but temporary) side effects in some -- will this be a problem?.... (6:06:31): Druff has to decide if he gets a colonoscopy in January during likely peak in COVID cases.... (6:27:16): Editorial: When voter fraud (and non-fraud) claims and common sense don't match up

PokerNews Podcast
PokerNews Podcast: Thirst Lounge Squad

PokerNews Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2019 72:26


Sarah Herring and Jeff Platt are together again for another episode of the PokerNews Podcast.  They discuss the top stories in the poker world, and leading off on the list, the sale of the Rio to a New York-based real estate company. What does that mean for the World Series of Poker? Plus, a full WCOOP recap, what stood out during the popular PokerStars series? And it's another win for Vegas tournament crusher Eric Baldwin.  Then, Kasey Mills and Adam Neal from the Thirst Lounge team joins Sarah for a wide-ranging conversation on what the new-look squad plans to bring to the table in the future. 

Fearless - The Art of Creative Leadership with Charles Day
Ep 91: Eric Baldwin of Wieden + Kennedy Portland on Honesty

Fearless - The Art of Creative Leadership with Charles Day

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2019 64:08


"The Boy Scout". I first interviewed Eric Baldwin two years ago when he and his new partner Jason Bagley came on the show, 6 months  after they had been named to run Wieden + Kennedy Portland. I wanted to talk to him this time about what he’s learned about leadership two years later with two agency of the year titles under their belt as well as being named Fast Company’s most innovative marketing company of the year and just this week being named agency of the year by the One Show. We’ve worked together closely over those two years and Eric Baldwin is one of the most honest people I know. But even he lies. Which in his case is particularly surprising.  Because Eric is a Boy Scout. Literally.

Fearless - The Art of Creative Leadership with Charles Day

"The Boy Scout". A 15 minute edited highlight of our full-length conversation. I first interviewed Eric Baldwin two years ago when he and his new partner Jason Bagley came on the show, 6 months after they had been named to run Wieden + Kennedy Portland. I wanted to talk to him this time about what he's learned about leadership two years later with two agency of the year titles under their belt as well as being named Fast Company's most innovative marketing company of the year and just this week being named agency of the year by the One Show. We've worked together closely over those two years and Eric Baldwin is one of the most honest people I know. But even he lies. Which in his case is particularly surprising.  Because Eric is a Boy Scout. Literally.

fast company boy scouts one show because eric eric baldwin
Fearless - The Art of Creative Leadership with Charles Day
Ep 88: Neal Arthur and Karl Lieberman of W+K New York on Clearing The Path To Creativity

Fearless - The Art of Creative Leadership with Charles Day

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2019 63:47


"The Removal Men".    If you’re interested in unlocking creativity in the people around you then Wieden + Kennedy is a real-time case study. Like all great creative companies, it is three-dimensional, and no two sides look the same. Understanding how and why it works means looking at it from several angles.   In earlier episodes, I’ve talked to Colleen DeCourcy, who has a global perspective; Eric Baldwin and Jason Bagley, who had just taken over the leadership of Wieden in Portland; and Jesse Johnson and George Felix, about how the agency/client relationship works when Wieden is at its best.  This episode is a conversation with Neal Arthur and Karl Lieberman, who run W+K New York.   They came together just over three years ago, following a long period of uncertainty in the leadership of that office. Since joining forces, they have provided focus, consistency, care and hope. They also have clear expectations of themselves and those around them.

Poker Stories
Poker Stories: Matthew Waxman

Poker Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2019 90:25


Matt Waxman learned the game in high school, but really got his career going in 2009 when he final tabled a $5,000 no-limit hold'em event at the World Series of Poker. The Parkland, Florida native won a WSOP Circuit ring the next year in Atlantic City, and followed that up with his biggest score to date, taking down the World Poker Tour Grand Prix de Paris for just over $720,000. Waxman nearly won the Festa al Lago Classic the next year, and in 2013, he won his first WSOP bracelet, banking $305,000 for topping a $1,000 no-limit hold'em event. Waxman had a deep run in the 2014 WSOP main event, and just last year, he picked up his second WPT title, pocketing $463,000 at the WPT Tournament of Champions. In total, the 34-year-old has more than $4.1 million in live tournament earnings to go along with millions more won online. Highlights from this interview include being a resident of the world, flipping noodles for profit, being on the middle school basketball team with Alex Jacob, poker on the boat, playing among the ashtrays, the benefit of ignorance, being British at the tables, catching cheats, going broke, blinding out of an FTOPS win, having parents unimpressed by six-figure scores, a WPT championship in France, being a millionaire and feeling empty, a seven-hour heads-up match with Eric Baldwin, bad news from home a world away, pushing time shares, hearing 'water' in his ear, and dealing with stabbed TVs and the police.

Fearless - The Art of Creative Leadership with Charles Day
Ep 66: George Felix of KFC & Jesse Johnson of Wieden + Kennedy on Collaborative Problem-Solving

Fearless - The Art of Creative Leadership with Charles Day

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2018 51:57


'The Servant Leaders'. In 2018, KFC was named marketer of the year. Wieden + Kennedy were named agency of the year. And their partnership produced the Campaign of the year. Their partnership is driving business results and changing culture. It’s also the embodiment of the Wieden + Kennedy philosophy that Jason Bagley and Eric Baldwin described in our podcast last year - a philosophy they describe as ‘branded everything’. George Felix and Jesse Johnson are the two people at the heart of this very modern creative partnership.

Poker Central Podcast Network
Ep. 92 Getting Bold with Baldy

Poker Central Podcast Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2018 80:18


Eric ‘Basebaldy' Baldwin is one of the most consistent and dedicated poker pros out there, and last week he won his second career gold bracelet. Baldwin joins the show to talk about his family life, the passing of his father, the ups and downs of being a pro, and why the average skill level in live poker is heavily overstated. 2:18 – What sticks out to Eric Baldwin about winning his second career WSOP bracelet, and Brent Hanks missing his best friend's wedding. 5:50 – Reliving Baldwin's bracelet win, how it compares to other wins and how it fits into his career as a professional? 9:25 – Baldwin wanted to square up a $10,000 fantasy sports debt, and somehow turned it into a six-figure win? How did he pull that off? 11:48 – The California Story: Brent Hanks and Eric Baldwin road-tripping their way into a big score and lots of drinks. 14:50 – Degen stories from Brent Hanks and Eric Baldwin. 21:55 – Is Remko going to party with Post Malone? 27:50 – High stakes fantasy sports! 34:45 – Eric Baldwin's professional approach, risk-averse style and how that's changing. 44:45 – The family life, and how he combines it with professional poker. 48:56 – The lowest point of Baldwin's career, how to grow past it and how the memory of his father lives on, and how he came up in the game and how he parents supported him throughout of it. 57:00 – Is the growth of the average skill in poker overstated, and how much value is there still in being a live-poker grinder? 1:04:50 – The style of play that makes Eric Baldwin into a top player that has consistently won for many years. 1:09:15 – Paying attention at the table, picking up on little things, and how every player sees every situation differently, making poker the most fascinating games in the world. 1:13:45 – Using and absorbing the information gathered in live events, and how even the best online players struggle to adjust to the live game. Watch Eric Baldwin and other top players play live on PokerGO more than 100 days of the year. Subscribe right now and get ready for unrivaled coverage of the 2018 WSOP Main Event. In addition to that, PokerGO offers an extensive on-demand library that includes every single episode of Poker After Dark, the Super High Roller Bowl, and Poker Masters.

Poker Stories
Poker Stories: Eric Baldwin

Poker Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2018 61:02


Eric Baldwin burst onto the live tournament scene in 2009, making 17 final tables en route to a World Series of Poker bracelet and the Card Player Player of the Year award. He followed up that campaign with the largest score of his career, earning seven figures for finishing runner-up to David Williams in the 2010 World Poker Tour Championship. In the years since, Baldwin has remained remarkably consistent despite cutting back on his travel schedule, notching a six-figure score nearly every year of his career. In 2017, Baldwin won both the Wynn Classic and Venetian DeepStack Extravaganza main event. To date, he has racked up nearly $5.5 million in live tournament earnings. Highlights from this interview include nicknames for 12-year-olds, majoring in baseball, winning a collegiate national title, having paralysis by analysis, multi-tabling to win POY, playing cash for the kids, staying motivated for the second million, running bad at swaps, calculating the beer EV of a craps game, haggling for a good deal on a six-figure car, poker commentary from T.J. Cloutier, scooping cream cheese in a truck, and a love for Paul Goldschmidt.

Fearless - The Art of Creative Leadership with Charles Day
Ep 14: Jason Bagley and Eric Baldwin - In 5

Fearless - The Art of Creative Leadership with Charles Day

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2017 5:43


A five minute edited highlight of our full conversation.

bagley eric baldwin
Fearless - The Art of Creative Leadership with Charles Day
Ep 14: Eric Baldwin & Jason Bagley of Wieden + Kennedy on Championing Creativity

Fearless - The Art of Creative Leadership with Charles Day

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 21, 2017 56:09


"The New Leaders."   To be a successful creative leader, you need to be able to celebrate an environment that revels in the chaos of original thinking and behavior, and from that produce the reliable performance required of any business.   And sometimes, it requires doing that when your only experience of leading an actual business is none at all. When your success has been based on your capacity to break all the rules and change the expectations.   One day you’re throwing tea into the Harbour. The next you’re sitting on a throne with a crown on your head. At that point, the fact that it’s heavy is not your greatest  problem. Your greatest problem is the fact that everyone is staring at you expectantly.   Jason Bagley and Eric Baldwin, are the ECD’s of Wieden + Kennedy, Portland. As creative partners, they were responsible for one of the most iconic advertising campaigns of the last decade - Old Spice’s, "the man your man could smell like. Between them, they have almost 25 years of experience at the agency.   I spoke to them about what makes Wieden + Kennedy a relentless creative force, about how they're leading the Portland office through its own transformation and about the adjustments they have had to make now that they have become the leaders. For more information: Wieden+Kennedy www.FearlessCreativeLeadership.com  

MCCC ON THE AIR
ON THE AIR Archive with Eric Baldwin

MCCC ON THE AIR

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2014 15:00


From the ON THE AIR Archives series. Dr. Karen Stout chats with student Eric Baldwin This program was originally broadcast on 3/17/02 Montgomery County Community College On The Air

archive eric baldwin
The Bernard Lee Poker Show
The Ultimate Poker Show 10-04-09

The Bernard Lee Poker Show

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2009 64:44


The Ultimate Poker Show is at the 2009 Aruba Poker Classic.  Listen as P0ker H0 and Annie Duke check in along with Low Chicago, Eric Baldwin, Joe Sebok and more live on Rounders Radio!

annie duke eric baldwin joe sebok ultimate poker