Season 3 Episode 13
What if leadership wasn’t about grinding yourself down to nothing, but about building something greater—with others—through compassion?
In this powerful episode, we sit down with Cal Riley, a combat-tested U.S. Army officer turned entrepreneur, EOS Implementer, and author of Entrepreneurial Compassion: An Entrepreneur’s Journey Through Suicide, Combat, and the Discovery of Compassionate Leadership. Cal shares his deeply personal and professional journey—one that moves from war zones to boardrooms, from burnout to breakthrough, and from unbearable grief to a renewed mission to lead with heart.
We talk candidly about Cal’s return from deployment, the weight of inheriting a struggling family business, and what it looked like to work 90+ hour weeks while feeling like everything was crumbling. But it was also during this time that Cal discovered the Entrepreneurial Operating System (EOS), and with it, a framework that helped him install a leadership team, reclaim his time, and rebuild the business—and himself—from the inside out. Cal opens up about the loss of his brother to suicide, and how that trauma became a turning point—not only in his life, but in how he leads, coaches, and writes.
We discuss how his book was written in honor of Suicide Prevention Month, and why he believes compassionate leadership isn’t just a “nice-to-have,” but a business imperative—one that builds trust, improves performance, and saves lives. From his combat experience to coaching billion-dollar companies and husband-wife teams alike, Cal brings a raw, honest voice to the leadership conversation we all need to be having.
This is an episode for anyone who’s tired of white-knuckling it through leadership, for anyone who’s questioned their ability to keep going, and for everyone who believes that how we treat people matters.
Whether you’re a founder, manager, teammate, or just trying to hold it together in your own life—this conversation is a reminder that you don’t have to do it alone. That strength can coexist with softness. That performance can be fueled by purpose. And that maybe… our best leadership doesn’t come from pretending to have it all together, but from having the courage to lead with compassion anyway.
Buy Cal's book, Entrepreneurial Compassion, here!
Published on 1 month, 1 week ago
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