

Fearless Creative Leadership
Charles Day
We talk to leaders of the world's most disruptive companies about how they are jumping into the fire, crossing the chasm and blowing up the status quo. Leaders who've mastered the art of turning the impossible into the profitable.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Dec 12, 2025 • 50min
Ep 286: Andrés Ordóñez of McCann - "The Impactful Leader"
What impact are you having? In this episode of Fearless Creative Leadership, Charles Day speaks with Andrés Ordóñez, newly appointed Global Chief Creative Officer of McCann. When this conversation was recorded, Andrés didn't yet know his future — which makes this a rare portrait of a leader reflecting not on a title, but on who he is. Across a deeply personal conversation, Andrés describes the forces that shaped him: a childhood surrounded by creativity, a mother whose illness forged his sense of responsibility, and a career built on connection, curiosity, and generosity. He talks about leading with humanity, navigating the upheaval of AI, and the responsibility that comes with carrying the torch for thousands of people across a global organization. This is a conversation about impact — the kind you have on work, on people, and on the world. 00:00 — Opening: The Impactful Leader Charles introduces the theme: leadership as responsibility and impact. 03:00 — Andrés's Creative Origin Story Family, Colombia, motorcycles, and the early spark of advertising. 07:00 — Childhood, Parents, and Identity Emotional bonds, choosing to live with his mother, and lessons that shaped him. 12:00 — Becoming a Caregiver at 18 Responsibility, work ethic, and how caring for his mother changed him. 16:30 — Defining Leadership & Creativity Connecting people, solving problems, the spark of creativity. 22:00 — AI: Partner, Tool, and Test of Humanity The future of creativity, trust, and why machines can't feel goosebumps. 28:30 — The Business Model of the Future Time, efficiency, and rethinking how creative value is measured. 32:00 — Casting People & Building Culture Human connection, belonging, and why team energy matters more than résumés. 37:45 — Responsibility Without Control Leading collaboratively while carrying the weight of outcomes. 41:00 — The "And" Philosophy Why mixing magic and logic changes everything. 46:00 — Change, Uncertainty, and the IPG–Omnicom Merger How Andrés holds ambiguity and stays grounded. 50:00 — Fear, Evolution, and Personal Growth The dangers of fear, staying curious, and the need to evolve. 54:00 — Defining Success Helping others realize their dreams — and the power of not putting yourself first. 59:00 — Closing Reflections Legacy, hope, and carrying the torch for ot

Dec 5, 2025 • 1h 9min
Ep 285: Ace of Hearts - "The Alive Leaders"
How alive do you feel as a leader? In this episode of Fearless Creative Leadership, Charles Day sits down in London with the newly announced founders of Ace of Hearts — Rick Brim, Martin Beverly, and Polly McMorrow — for their first recorded conversation as partners. Over the past seven months, Charles has interviewed them individually while they prepared to build something of their own. Now, you'll hear what happens when belief meets reality. They discuss why they started the company, the chemistry that binds them, what they're learning about themselves, and how creativity must be valued differently if the industry is going to survive disruption — including AI. This is a rare, unpolished look at the emotional and practical journey of starting a business. It reveals how fun, fear, optimism, and ambition shape founding teams — and why starting a company may be the most alive a leader ever feels. 00:00 — Opening: How alive do you feel? Welcome, framing creativity as the only scalable advantage. 01:03 — Introducing Ace of Hearts A glimpse into aliveness, excitement, and possibility. 03:30 — Why start a company now? Martin on timing, intuition, and the pull of founding. 07:30 — What founders want to find out about themselves Uncertainty, relearning, and stepping into the unknown. 12:00 — What kind of business are they building? Pride, impact, fun, culture — and why it matters. 15:00 — How thinking has evolved over the past months Confidence, experimentation, redefining where they play. 19:30 — The future of creativity and value exchange Human creativity, AI, commercial models, risk-taking. 24:00 — From clients to partners Trust, alignment, value creation — and saying no. 31:30 — What they're truly good at Finding the soul of brands — and owning it. 45:00 — The name revealed: Ace of Hearts Meaning, emotion, optimism, and brand potential. 52:00 — Closing and next steps Looking ahead — meeting at Cannes and bonus episodes.

Nov 14, 2025 • 54min
Ep 284: Patricia Corsi of Kimberly-Clark - "The 'Make Mistakes' Leader"
How do you react when people make mistakes? Patricia Corsi is the Chief Growth Officer of Kimberly-Clark. Patricia has been named one of the Top 50 Most Influential CMOs of the World by Forbes in 2024 and 2025. She has very clear beliefs about how to unlock creativity and innovation in her business, and the kind of leadership that requires. Creativity and innovation are unpredictable. They demand uncertainty and depend on failure. Failure is how we learn and without it, creativity dies. Modern society isn't good on failure. We look for likes and follows and success, defined across as many metrics as possible. Childhood is a celebration of attendance, not attempt. Break the rules, and punishment ensues. Conform, and be confirmed as a trusted member of society. The world is unstable. Politics is unpredictable. Technology is rampant. We can no longer believe our own eyes. Or ears. When we can no longer rely on our senses, those attributes that helped us survive the last 3,000 years, it's not a surprise that avoiding mistakes has become the currency of choice for many businesses. Plan and execute. A sea of grey in a world looking for hope. Leadership is the single greatest opportunity most of us will have to make a difference. I've said that before. Today, it's truer than ever. It comes with a responsibility which is to decide what that difference is. If you measure it in titles and awards, I promise you will be soon forgotten. Your name on a plaque at the bottom of a recycling bin or a landfill. But if you measure the difference you make in terms of how you react when people make mistakes, you will have established the foundations on which their creativity is unlocked. And that opens the door to ideas that no one has ever thought of before and to businesses that no one has ever seen. So, how do you react when people make mistakes? And what might you do differently?

Oct 3, 2025 • 30min
Ep 283: David Rolfe of WPP - "The Producer"
Are you creating trust? David Rolfe is the Head of Production at WPP. When David and I debated last year, whether one person could someday make a Super Bowl ad, it felt like a provocation. This year, we both agreed it's an inevitability. Which brings with it a bigger question. How will we tell the difference between what's real and what's synthetic? And will it matter? And that's the moment when trust becomes everything. Trust in the makers, when we can no longer believe our own eyes. Trust in the curators that they'll tell us what we're looking at. And trust that technology can expand what's possible without stripping away the humanity that makes creativity matter. Trust is the fuel of the human journey, the thing we yearn for as we search for our tribe, for where we belong. And trust is the new currency. As Scott Galloway wrote in a recent newsletter, the Next Big Crisis in Confidence will come from our inability to distinguish human Intent. In a world optimized for optics, trust is the next scarce resource. And that's why trust is one of the 13 dimensions that we measure with our FORM Creativity Diagnostic. Why it shows up as a cornerstone of so many of the world's most innovative and creative companies. Because without trust, creativity shuts down. People won't share fragile ideas. They won't take risks, and they won't challenge the status quo. But when trust exists between leaders and teams, between companies and their audiences, then creativity is unleashed. It becomes safer to experiment, easier to collaborate, and becomes possible to build the kind of culture where bold ideas thrive. David Rolfe has always been one of the most thoughtful voices on production. Trust him when he tells you that we are barely scratching the surface of what is possible. And then make sure that you know whether trust is the currency at the heart of your organization. Or what you need to do to make sure that it is.

Sep 15, 2025 • 41min
Ep 282: Phil Thomas of Informa Festivals - "The Connector"
How connected do your people feel? Phil Thomas is the Chief Creative Officer of Informa Festivals. They're the company that owns Cannes Lions. And Phil has recently been named as Chairman of Comic Relief. One of the things that I've learned hosting this podcast is that the most powerful leaders rarely get remembered for their titles. They're remembered for how they made people feel. In this conversation with Phil, what stood out most weren't his achievements. It was his perspective on making people feel connected. As you'll hear, when you emphasize connection in your leadership, kindness, challenges, accomplishments, language shapes the culture, and the trust that follows becomes invaluable currency that maximizes creativity. Connection is also one of the 13 conditions that's measured by FORM, the creativity diagnostic that I've been developing. Because in every organization that I've studied, when people feel seen, heard, and respected, creativity is unlocked and businesses grow faster. And, memorably, this conversation with Phil is a reminder that connection isn't a soft skill, it's the foundation of creative leadership and the impact that that leadership leaves behind. How connected do your people feel to your organization? Do they feel seen, heard, and respected?

May 27, 2025 • 55min
Ep 281: Neil Waller of Whalar Group - "The 'This' Leader"
What's the 'this' in your business? Neil Waller is the Co-Founder and Co-CEO of Whalar Group. They're a global creator company. Whalar have done as much as anyone, and more than most, to catalyze the creator economy. And as you'll hear, it was inspired by a conversation with and an unforgettable provocation from Sir John Hegarty. But behind their success lies a characteristic that I find is often underappreciated and therefore in short supply, among most creative leaders. Commitment. I've mentioned before on this podcast that we've developed a diagnostic tool that can tell, is your company deliberately unlocking creativity or just hoping that it shows up? One of the gaps that shows up over and over again is a leader's commitment to the company's goals. Companies and leaders say one thing and then often do another. But when you find leaders that are truly committed to building a business that delivers world class creative thinking and answers, then how fast they can do that suddenly becomes an incredibly valuable conversation To create is to learn. And the faster we can do both, the better your business and the world becomes. So what's the 'this' in your business? And how committed are you to making it happen?

Apr 18, 2025 • 53min
Ep 280: Jill Cress of H&R Block - "The Invested Leader"
Jill Cress is the Chief Marketing and Experience Officer for H&R Block. She also serves on the board of the AdCouncil, and she's been recognized on Forbes' list of the World's 50 Most Influential CMOs. Before H&R Block, Jill spent 20 years at MasterCard. Now, a leader who spends most of their professional life working in financial institutions could easily build their success around the study of data, but the foundations of Jill's leadership are based on the most valuable investments of all. Delivering results has always been table stakes when you're stepping into a leadership position, and money will and should sit squarely on that table as one essential definition of success. But enduring financial success is a consequence of your willingness to take your eyes off the financial prize and fix them squarely on your most valuable assets: The people that work for you. And what matters to them are two things. First, that they matter. And second, that what they're doing makes a difference. During our conversation, I talked to Jill about the creativity diagnostic tool that we've developed. It measures when leaders are creating the conditions that maximize the creativity of their people. One of the critical insights that shows up time and time again is that the very best leaders are fully invested in creating a culture that ensures that everyone feels seen and heard and respected. Now, this investment carries personal risk, because it can make you as the leader feel vulnerable, and it is time consuming. But the ROI is through the roof. So what are you investing in?

Mar 21, 2025 • 54min
Ep 279: Lisa Fischer - "The Background Leader"
When do you stop and take a breath? If you've listened to Luther Vandross or Tina Turner, or Sting, or Chaka Khan, or Teddy Pendergrass, or Roberta Flack, then you've heard Lisa Fischer sing. If you went to a Rolling Stones concert between 1989 and 2015, you saw Lisa as the band's lead female singer join Mick Jagger on stage. If you've seen her in person, as I've been fortunate to have done so twice, or if you've seen her on YouTube, take over the stage from Tina Turner during It's Only Rock and Roll, or the clips of her on stage with Mick Jagger, you already understand the extraordinary talent that she is linked to. Both of those are in the show notes. And if you've watched 20 Feet from Stardom, then you already know that Lisa is one of the greatest background singers that the world has ever heard. For most of us, those 20 feet might as well be the length of a trip to Mars. For Lisa, who won a Grammy in 1991 and then decided not to take center stage, those 20 feet were a choice. A choice that brings her joy. Lisa is a rare spirit who's had enormous influence and impact. If you see her perform, you're left with a belief that she has a direct connection with your soul. In those moments, she is alive in ways that stretch our understanding of what the word means. Leadership at its heart is the ability to unlock the potential of others, to make them feel more connected. The very best leaders do that by helping us to understand ourselves better, by helping us feel what we had never felt before. Lisa is proof that you don't have to stand center stage to do that. You just have to be honest with yourself about where you get your energy from, and then let that energy flow.

Mar 7, 2025 • 33min
Ep 278: Shu Hung of AKQA - "The Quiet Leader"
Do you welcome the sounds of silence? Shu Hung is the Global Chief Creative Officer of AKQA. In a complicated world, Shu has learned that knowing who you are is the foundation on which leadership success is built. Please come as you are. There is such profound truth in that request, and such enormous challenge. We spend so much of our lives wondering if we measure up, if we're doing things the right way, if we have approval from the right people. And the energy that's required in all of that self doubt is not just exhausting, but it denies us access to the instincts, the consciousness, the confidence that creativity thrives on. Life is a journey that at the end will only be judged by the one person that matters, you. And the sooner we discover who we are, the sooner we can discover what we're capable of. Please come as you are. Words to live by.

Feb 28, 2025 • 40min
Ep 277: Nicole Parlapiano of Tubi - "The Open Communicator"
What should we expect from you? Nicole Parlapiano is the Chief Marketing Officer at Tubi. When she arrived two and a half years ago, Tubi was an eight year old business that had no brand recognition. Today, with the help of their ad agency, Mischief, the streaming service has 97 million active monthly users, up from 20 million in 2019. Leading a challenger brand works best when you're willing to move fast and break things. And if you want the people that work for you to act with the same confidence, then they have to know who you are. Reaching a senior leadership position takes a wide range of skills and talent. It requires managing down and up, reacting and adapting. And in the process, we learn a lot about ourselves and when we're at our best. That's information that will be helpful to others. And yet, for many reasons, I think, most leaders don't share it. So, take a moment, and write down three things that you expect of the people that work for you. Then write down three things that they can expect from you. Tomorrow morning, share them. You'll be surprised, I think, at the confidence it gives them, and you.


