- Leadership First Mindset
- Operational Clarity
- Capability
- Empowerment
- Impact
Greg Hoffman is the creator of Performance Through People, a leadership development system he built over more than 25 years as a senior executive in global manufacturing, financial services, and autonomous technology, with roles at companies that include General Electric and Whirlpool. He has served as both a Chief Legal Officer and a Chief Transformation Officer, and he has turned what he learned in those roles into a framework any leader can use. His book, Performance Through People, came out in June 2026 and gives leaders a practical roadmap for building the conditions where high performance becomes repeatable.
Across his career Greg led legal, compliance, privacy, and cybersecurity teams through fast growth and heavy change, including a turnaround of the legal function at a $31 billion financial services company that became the proof of concept for his approach. He writes and speaks about the gap between clarity and capability, why trust is what closes it, and how leaders build performance through their people. He holds a JD, a Master of Science in Economics from Purdue, and an MBA from Kelley School of Business.
- Your vulnerability program is costing more, but reducing less risk. Teams are chasing CVSS scores, patch SLAs are slipping, and leadership still lacks clear visibility into what’s truly critical.Throwing more tools at the problem is not the answer.At the Vulnerability Management Virtual Cybersecurity Summit on July 29th, learn how to align vulnerability management to real business risk, improve efficiency, and make smarter investment decisions.Security Weekly listeners can register for free at https://securityweekly.com/vulnmanagement using the promo code: CSS26-SW
Matt Alderman
- IBM study finds executives struggle with AI sovereignty
IBM has published a global study on AI sovereignty among large organisations, finding that most surveyed executives struggle to control or fully understand their AI dependencies.
Based on responses from 1,000 senior executives, the research found that 71% would find it difficult to switch their primary AI vendor or model. It also found that 68% said meeting data residency and sovereignty requirements across different geographies was challenging.
- What the New Quantum Executive Orders Mean for Business Leaders
On June 22, 2026, President Donald J. Trump signed two executive orders that aim to accelerate U.S. leadership in quantum computing and secure the nation against advanced cryptographic attacks. These executive orders, which are backed by $2 billion in federal funding, not only accelerate innovation but also reset expectations.
- As cyber risk evolves, the insurance industry tightens guardrails
C-suite executives are concerned about resilience, but claims are increasingly tied to strict underwriting standards.
- What I Learned About Burnout the Hard Way (and How to Actually Fix it)
I spent years in law enforcement watching good people leave the profession. It wasn’t because they stopped caring about the mission of the organizations, but because the weight of the work and perceived lack of support eventually became too much to carry. The burnout didn’t happen dramatically, but quietly and slowly over time. By the time it was obvious to colleagues, the damage of that burnout was already done.
- Great Leaders Question Philosophical Assumptions
Business leaders increasingly face decisions that are not just technical or financial but deeply philosophical. Questions about what a company is for, what counts as reliable knowledge, and what responsibilities organizations owe customers, employees, and society now shape strategy as much as markets or technology. Yet most executives have never been trained to think explicitly about these issues. Developing philosophical proficiency can help leaders surface the hidden assumptions that guide their choices. By examining the nature of their business, clarifying how evidence and expertise are evaluated, and defining the ethical commitments they are willing to defend even under pressure, leaders can make decisions with greater consistency and credibility. Companies that do this well build clearer identities, stronger decision processes, and more resilient cultures. Over time leaders must also cultivate practical wisdom, the judgment that comes from testing ideas against real situations. Organizations that practice this reflection adapt faster and lead.
- Mentorship Matters
The power of mentorship is a well-known secret weapon to boost both career development and talent retention within organizations. The knowledge shared and long-lasting connections built within these mentor-mentee relationships is crucial for growth within all industries, not just in security.








