Favourite Positions
Work has changed and so should the way we think about it. Favourite Positions explores modern careers, leadership and human skills so you can move forward with intention and confidence.
Hosted by Alex Young, the podcast brings honest, thoughtful conversations with founders and leaders who are reshaping how work works. From practical career insight to big ideas about purpose and growth, each episode helps you think differently about your next step, whether you’re early in your career, switching paths or leading others.
Favourite Positions is part of a broader platform supporting people and organisations to build careers they love and workplaces that empower them. With no fluff, real-world tools and a community of people who value clarity and curiosity, this is your go-to space for inspiring stories and practical guidance.
Favourite Positions
The 5 Biggest Lessons From My MBA (And They're Not What You'd Expect)
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The Position Papers (3/3) | Favourite Positions Podcast
What if the most valuable lessons from business school aren’t the frameworks you learn, but the assumptions they quietly dismantle?
In this final episode of The Position Papers mini-series, Alexandra Young reflects on five core MBA subjects — finance, macroeconomics, marketing, innovation and strategy — and the perspective shifts each one created in her day-to-day leadership. Rather than theory, this episode explores how concepts like opportunity cost, behavioural decision-making, external forces and organisational readiness change how we diagnose problems, make commitments and lead change at work.
Across five short stories, this episode reframes common career instincts — saying yes, pushing ideas, attributing outcomes, staying in motion — and offers practical ways to think more strategically in complex environments.
In this episode
- Opportunity cost and the hidden trade-offs behind every yes
- How external conditions shape performance outcomes
- Why human decisions are rarely rational
- The role of organisational readiness in innovation
- Strategy as focus, commitment and translation into action
Research referenced
- Frederick, Novemsky, Wang, Dhar & Nowlis (2009). Opportunity Cost Neglect. Journal of Consumer Research.
- Shows people make poorer decisions when opportunity costs are not made explicit.
- Kahneman, D. (2011). Thinking, Fast and Slow.
- Foundational research demonstrating systematic biases and non-rational decision-making.
- Thaler, R. & Sunstein, C. (2008). Nudge.
- Evidence that defaults and choice architecture strongly influence behaviour.
- BCG (2024). Most Innovative Companies Report.
- Found 83% of firms rank innovation as a priority, but only 3% are ready to deliver.
- Case literature on organisational readiness and timing (e.g., technology adoption cycles).
- Shows innovation success depends on environmental and organisational conditions.
About The Position Papers
The Position Papers is a three-part Favourite Positions mini-series on business school, confidence and growth, recorded during Alex’s MBA alongside full-time leadership. Each episode explores how ambition, identity and modern work intersect in practice.
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