Trigger Strategy is now Tentacles Podcast By Tom Kerwin and Corissa Nunn cover art

Trigger Strategy is now Tentacles

Trigger Strategy is now Tentacles

By: Tom Kerwin and Corissa Nunn
Listen for free

About this listen

We’re Tom and Corissa from Crown & Reach.


With over 100 episodes, our podcast is the best bad podcast out there. By which we mean: raw, unfiltered, unedited conversations. We talk about strategy, sense-making, and the blurry edges between work and all the other stuff. Because sometimes feeling your way through the fog – with limbs outstretched – is the only way to move forward.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Tom Kerwin and Corissa Nunn
Economics Leadership Management Management & Leadership
Episodes
  • 105: We've rebranded... Trigger Strategy is now Tentacles by Crown & Reach
    Jun 7 2025

    Hands up, who else loves a spot of brand-flavoured navel-gazing?


    Two years ago we picked the company name Trigger Strategy Group in a last-minute scramble for our first client project. The name has, shall we say, one or two issues. (On the upside, it was a perfect example of Hard Test Easy Life: if you can make something work despite its flaws, you know you might be onto something.) But it was about time we gave things some proper thought.


    • How naming a company in 20 minutes can haunt you for 2 years
    • The surprising violence baked into “trigger strategy” (thanks, game theory)
    • The difference between command, control, and cephalopods
    • What bees, psychiatric hospitals, and chatGPT have in common


    In short, our company is now called Crown & Reach, and our podcast is called Tentacles.


    Why? To find out, you'll have to listen...


    References:


    • Hard Test Easy Life https://triggerstrategy.substack.com/p/stop-polishing-turd-products-with
    • Innovation Tactics Pip Deck https://pipdecks.com/products/innovation-tactics
    • Dave Kang's Octopus Life https://davekang.substack.com/
    • Taylorism - Frederick Taylor’s scientific management model
    • Coherent Heterogeneity, a concept from complexity thinking https://cynefin.io/wiki/Common_fallacies
    • Children of Time by Adrian Tchaikovsky
    • Other Minds by Peter Godfrey-Smith
    • Crown & Reach Website https://crownandreach.com/


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show more Show less
    24 mins
  • 104: Snakes in a cave, or why biases aren't bugs
    May 18 2025

    In which we sit in the garden, roast gently in the sun, and talk about cognitive biases, Panglossian optimism, Russian roulette, snakes on planes, and why most design is... fine actually. A very one-take kind of episode. Leaf-in-coffee energy throughout.


    • Confirmation bias affects individuals. But if you want to harm an entire organisation, you need validation.
    • You can be right, they can be right, or (more likely) you’re both missing something and a third way exists.
    • Heuristics are usually good. It’s when you step into a new context that they betray you.
    • Change start with acceptance. Weirdly, that’s when things can shift.
    • Almost everything on our shelves is poorly designed in some way ... and yet it’s still there.


    Links, Ideas, and People Referenced


    • Gary Klein – firefighter heuristic/pattern recognition story – more at https://youtu.be/QKpMLYwLRR4?si=8ie9txFbL__Q88gI
    • Daniel Kahneman – cognitive biases, focusing illusion
    • Nora Bateson – snake instinct, context-specific intuition
    • XKCD’s "10,000" Comic – https://xkcd.com/1053/
    • Taylor Pearson on Ergodicity – https://taylorpearson.me/ergodicity/
    • Prisoner's Dilemma – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prisoner%27s_dilemma
    • Candide by Voltaire – Dr. Pangloss and "all for the best" satire
    • Gary’s Economics (YouTube) – https://www.youtube.com/@garyseconomics
    • Oliver Burkeman – stress, lateness, perspective
    • 10–10–10 Rule – “Will I care in 10 minutes, 10 months, 10 years?”




    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show more Show less
    35 mins
  • 103: Competence, control, and consequences
    May 10 2025

    You were hired to fix it. You did! Customers are happier. The company made millions. Your reward? They shut it all down.


    We sit on a garden bench and talk about those times when you feel like you're being punished for doing your job well.


    It turns out you can't mostly change a narrative with data. Your choices are power, influence, or acceptance.


    We share real stories, reflect on past mistakes, and explore safer (?) ways to inspire change when truth-telling gets you sidelined. Along the way: multiverse mapping, toddler psychology, and why the best performing landing pages often don't stay live.


    Books & Articles:

    • Stealing the Corner Office by Brendan Reid
    • Power: Why Some People Have It—and Others Don’t by Jeffrey Pfeffer
    • Why Design is Hard by Scott Berkun
    • Why Your Org Doesn’t Want Optimization to Succeed by Andrew Anderson
    • How to Win Friends and Influence People by Dale Carnegie
    • Ramit Sethi’s framing: “If someone is succeeding doing something that looks stupid… what do they know that I don’t?”

    Frameworks & Tools:

    • “Show the thing to change the thing” – concept from John Willshire
    • Wardley Mapping
    • Multiverse Mapping (Trigger Strategy Substack)
    • Play the hand you're dealt – "Don't start with what you want people to do. Start with what people want to do." – Dave Trott

    Character References:

    • Wormtongue and Gandalf (Lord of the Rings) – models of influence


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show more Show less
    35 mins
adbl_web_global_use_to_activate_webcro805_stickypopup
No reviews yet