Episode 46
In this deeply personal and transformative episode of Straight Talking Sustainability, host Emma Burlow sits down with Tamsin Acheson, a life coach and leadership development expert, to tackle one of the most uncomfortable questions facing experienced professionals: Why is it so hard to claim our expertise, even after decades in our field?
Emma opens up about her own struggles with the dreaded elevator pitch and self-promotion, sharing the visceral discomfort she feels when trying to articulate her value after 30 years in sustainability. What starts as a conversation about professional presentation quickly evolves into a fascinating exploration of how we define expertise in the modern world.
Tamsin brings her unique perspective as someone who works with mid-life high achievers navigating career transitions and helps leaders balance people, planet, and profit in their organizations. Through their candid dialogue, she reveals how our outdated notions of expertise (rooted in academic credentials and institutional validation) are holding us back in a world where applied knowledge and lived experience now carry more weight than ever.
This episode challenges the fundamental assumptions about what makes someone an expert, exploring how the digital age has shifted the definition from external validation to practical application. Emma and Tamsin dive deep into the psychological barriers that prevent accomplished professionals from stepping into their authority, from childhood conditioning to the fear of appearing arrogant.
In this professional development and mindset episode, you'll discover:
Key Professional Development Moments:
(06:55) The elevator pitch trap: "Are you sure that's what an elevator pitch is for? Are we really supposed to get our entire experience, life history, and the worth we can create for other people into an elevator pitch that is less than 60 seconds?"
(11:03) Old world thinking vs. new reality: "The traditional old world thinking in terms of the word expert... being that more academic model or that more guild or trade skill mastery... I was brought up with the model that an expert is externally validated."
(15:44) The modern expert redefined: "The modern view of an expert is... essentially an expert is now the person who knows most in a room of people who know less... it's applied over the theoretical, which is what you just said."
(27:23) Reframing expertise as service: "Who loses out when you don't allow yourself to be seen as the expert that you are? So what are you subtracting from the world?... Maybe we need to look at claiming expertise, not as an act of self-promotion, but as an act of service."
(32:51) The wisdom paradox: "The more you know, the more you see the gaps in your knowledge... you move beyond black and white thinking, and you start to see all of the gray areas. Now, how can I position myself as an expert if I haven't got the answers to the gray areas? Well, you're an expert because you can see the gray areas."
(41:27) The AI leveling field: "Everyone's goin
Published on 1 day, 2 hours ago
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