Sophia Kristjansson, CEO, Lexicon Lens, co-author "Lives Lost and Leadership Found"
Your World of Creativity
Mark Stinson
5.0 • 45 Ratings
🗓️ 2 March 2026
⏱️ 30 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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Summary
Today we’re joined by Sophia Kristjansson, Founder and CEO of Lexicon Lens, a boutique consulting firm that helps leaders close the persistent gap between strategy and execution—so plans don’t just look good on paper, they actually turn into results.
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sophiakristjansson/
With more than 25 years of experience guiding organizations through growth, change, and transformation, Sophia works closely with leadership teams to restore clarity, align people and process, and build traction when momentum starts to stall. She also teaches graduate courses in business strategy and organizational transformation at the University of Denver
She’s a contributing author to Lives Lost and Leadership Found, edited by Ian Ziskin—who joined us a few episodes back.
- Why Strategy Fails at the Finish Line
- Sophia, many organizations have smart strategies—but struggle with execution. From your experience, where do things most often break down between intention and action?
- Closing the Strategy–Execution Gap
- At Lexicon Lens, your work centers on alignment, collaboration, and leadership development. What are the first signs you look for that tell you a team is losing traction—and how do you help them regain momentum? Sophia shares these six signs:
- Misaligned success signals – Leaders focus on the wrong metrics, missing what truly indicates performance or risk.
- Organizational silos – Limited cross-functional visibility creates blind spots that hide emerging problems.
- Communication mistaken for clarity – Sending emails or memos is assumed to solve issues, without ensuring understanding or follow-through.
- Execution problems misdiagnosed – Symptoms are addressed instead of root causes, leading to recurring issues.
- Outdated mental models – Leaders rely on old assumptions and ways of thinking without realizing they no longer fit current realities.
- Human risk ignored – The people impact (capacity, morale, alignment, burnout) is not surfaced or discussed openly.
- These six signals indicate leaders may not be seeing the real problem. Bringing leaders together to surface these blind spots enables shared understanding, innovation, and collaboration—often prompting the realization that the issue isn’t execution alone, but perception and alignment.
- Turning Ideas into Action in Complex Environments
- Leaders today are navigating constant change, competing priorities, and growing complexity. What practical frameworks or habits help leaders move from analysis paralysis to decisive action?
- Lessons from “Lives Lost and Leadership Found”
- You contributed to Lives Lost and Leadership Found, a book that explores how personal loss and reflection can deepen leadership capacity. How did that experience shape—or reinforce—your perspective on leadership, resilience, and execution?
- Teaching the Next Generation of Leaders
- You teach graduate students in business strategy and organizational transformation. What do you see emerging leaders getting right—and where do they most need to develop skills to lead effectively in today’s organizations?
For leaders listening right now who feel stuck between a clear vision and uneven execution—what’s one small, meaningful step they can take this week to move forward?
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Unlocking your world of creativity with best-selling author and brand innovator Mark Stinson. |
| 0:08.0 | This episode is brought to you by White Cloud Coffee Loasters, where every bean tells a story of adventure. |
| 0:15.0 | Visit white cloud coffee.com and use the code creativity. |
| 0:20.0 | Welcome back, friends, to our podcast, your world of creativity. |
| 0:24.3 | And I think about that definition of creativity as we get going here. And I recall a mentor who told |
| 0:30.4 | me once that pure creativity is coming up with the idea, but innovation is executing the idea and bringing it to life. |
| 0:40.4 | And I think that's part of the conversation today. |
| 0:42.7 | We're going to be talking about how leaders in all sorts of creative fields can close that gap |
| 0:48.8 | between ideas and strategy and true execution and bringing our ideas to life and getting the results. |
| 0:56.7 | And my guest is Sophia Christensen. |
| 0:59.3 | She's the founder and CEO of Lexicon Lens. |
| 1:02.2 | Sophia, welcome to the show. |
| 1:04.4 | It's a delight to be here. |
| 1:06.4 | With all your experience, Sophia, in guiding organizations, I read here great words like growth and change |
| 1:12.8 | and transformation, clarity, alignment. All of these certainly what we're looking to do. You do this with |
| 1:20.3 | companies, you coach us, you teach graduate courses, in fact. I think about why strategy often fails. You have all these great ideas. You go |
| 1:30.9 | right up to the finish line and you say, this is a struggle. Why do you think so many organizations |
| 1:37.1 | with even smart people and smart strategies do struggle with this execution piece? |
| 1:43.3 | That's a great question. |
| 1:44.9 | And I get this question quite a bit because I think people are looking through the real reason |
| 1:49.7 | why their strategies can fall short. |
| 1:53.3 | And the statistics behind strategy and execution and meeting our goals are not good with 70 to 80 percent, maybe even higher |
... |
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