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TV Expert Interviews / Leadership / Jun 7, 2026 / Posted by Greg Hoover / 2

Leadership Without a Title: How to Lead Anyway (video)

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Episode Type Expert Insight Interview
Guest Greg Hoover, Author, Consultant & Former C-Level Executive, Third Star
Guest Website thirdstar.net
Listen View on Sales POP! Podcast Page

Leadership rarely arrives with a title attached. Greg Hoover, author of Lead Anyway and a former CEO across the global mobility industry, argues that title-bound leadership has disempowered teams and bottlenecked entire organizations.

His approach centers on three habits any employee can build today — be intentional, be decisive, and execute with discipline. The result drives better decisions, faster careers, and healthier company cultures.

Key Insights

1. Here is what you need to know about leading without a title.

Hoover believes leadership is a daily choice, not a role granted by an org chart. Title-based authority bottlenecks decisions and trains employees to wait for permission. He compares it to spotting a fire — the leader does not wait for the truck; they grab a hose. Acting first, even imperfectly, separates the people who advance from those who stall.

2. Here is what you need to know about decisive action.

Decisiveness fuels promotions and protects momentum. Hesitation costs companies opportunities, and habitual indecision signals a lack of ownership. Hoover coaches employees to gather their best rationale, choose a direction, and move. Managers must reward decisive action — even when calls occasionally miss — because the long-term gains far outweigh isolated mistakes.

3. Here is what you need to know about simplicity in communication.

Hoover runs a modified telephone game in his workshops. Long chains with long messages distort. Three people passing a three-word message arrive intact. The lesson scales directly to business — trim the layers, trim the words. He applies an 80/20 mindset, preferring 80 percent execution every time over perfection chased through complexity and exceptions.

4. Here is what you need to know about catching people doing things right.

Most managers excel at flagging mistakes and skip past good work without comment. Hoover calls that imbalance a leadership failure. Strong communication carries both clarity and completeness — telling people what is expected and recognizing them when they deliver. He also rejects the vague firing meeting, insisting reviews must give people a real chance to improve.

5. Here is what you need to know about mentoring the next layer.

Facing a wave of senior retirements, Hoover gathered eight to ten high-potential employees for monthly conversations and stretch projects. Every member of that group eventually promoted, with several rising to CEO, CFO, and president roles. He argues mentorship is not complex programming — it is a 30-minute weekly conversation about the business and the person’s future.

Pull Quotes

“The person that leads anyway, if there’s a fire, they don’t wait for the fire truck to show up. They start looking for a hose.” — Greg Hoover

“In the absence of information, people will make up the rest. And it’s never good.” — Greg Hoover

“Nobody wakes up and goes to work this morning hoping they’re going to suck or screw up on a great scale.” — Greg Hoover

“I’d much rather that we’re executing at an 80% level 100% of the time and getting it right than I would that we’re spending all of our time hoping to squeeze out that last 15 or 20% and be perfect.” — Greg Hoover

Leadership Without a Title: Key Statistics from Third Star

Statistic Detail
40+ years Greg Hoover’s leadership experience across higher education, transportation, logistics, technology, and motorsports
30 years Time spent in the global mobility and relocation industry
8–10 employees Size of the high-potential mentorship group Hoover built at Atlas Van Lines — every member promoted
5 times Repetitions a clear message needs before it is fully absorbed by a team
80% / 100% Hoover’s preferred execution ratio — 80 percent quality achieved 100 percent of the time
5% / 10% / 20% Pay-cut tiers (staff / mid-managers / executives) Atlas used in 2008 to avoid layoffs

Related Resources

Our Host

John is the Amazon bestselling author of Winning the Battle for Sales: Lessons on Closing Every Deal from the World’s Greatest Military Victories and Social Upheaval: How to Win at Social Selling. A globally acknowledged Sales & Marketing thought leader, speaker, and strategist, he has conducted over 1500 video interviews of thought leaders for Sales POP! online sales magazine & YouTube Channel and for audio podcast channels where Sales POP! is rated in the top 2% of most popular shows out of 3,320,580 podcasts globally, ranked by Listen Score. He is CSMO at Coevera. In his spare time, John is an avid Martial Artist.

About Author

Greg L. Hoover is a leadership speaker, author, consultant, and former C-Level executive who helps people realize they don’t need a title, position, or permission to make a difference. His message challenges the idea that leadership belongs only to those “in charge,” showing how ordinary individuals can have an extraordinary impact wherever they are.

Greg’s career spans more than four decades across industries including higher education, transportation, logistics, technology, and motorsports. Over thirty of those years were spent in the global mobility and relocation industry, where he served in senior leadership roles for more than two decades. His executive experience includes serving as Chief Executive Officer of Bekins Van Lines and A. Arnold Relocation; Chief Operating Officer of New World Van Lines; and President, Chief Marketing Officer, and Chief Operating Officer of Atlas Van Lines and Atlas World Group.

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