Strong leadership is born not from control, but from authentic community and the cultivation of people and teams. Nathan Hatch, former president of Wake Forest University and esteemed historian, joins Mark Labberton to reflect on the nature of transformative leadership. Drawing from his decades of experience at Notre Dame and Wake Forest—and from his new book, The Gift of Transformative Leaders—Hatch explores how leaders cultivate thriving institutions through humility, vision, and empowerment. Hatch shares his personal journey from growing up in a Presbyterian home to leading major universities, while reflecting on the comomunity, character, instincts, and freedom required for lasting institutional impact.
Episode Highlights
"Organizations aren't self-generating—you bet on people, not on strategy."
"Organizations are best served when you have a team of like-minded people, each using their own strengths."
"Leadership has to flow out of who you are authentically—you can't try to be someone else."
"If you have exceptional people, it takes management of a different form—it's collaboration."
"Leadership is not about control but about strength: hiring strong people is harder, but it's transformative."
"People read your real meanings, not your words—authenticity is the heart of leadership."
Dr. Nathan O. Hatch is President Emeritus of Wake Forest University and one of America’s leading scholars of religion and higher education. Prior to his presidency at Wake Forest (2005–2021), Hatch served as provost at the University of Notre Dame. His groundbreaking scholarship in American religious history includes The Democratization of American Christianity, and his latest book is The Gift of Transformative Leaders. Hatch is a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and continues to speak and write on leadership, higher education, and culture.
Show Notes
Raised in a Christian home; son of a Presbyterian minister and teacher
Influenced early by history teacher and work experiences in Cabrini Green, Chicago
Studied at Wheaton College, Washington University in St. Louis, and Johns Hopkins University
Became an unlikely but successful historian at the University of Notre Dame
Leadership philosophy shaped by early experiences with supportive professional teams and deep community and friendship
How did the past come to change and create the world we live in?
Transitioned from historian to administrator, balancing scholarship and administration
Provost at Notre Dame: emphasized empowering faculty through development and resources
President at Wake Forest: built strong leadership teams, expanded institutional vision
Reflections on Father Theodore Hesburgh’s visionary leadership at Notre Dame
“Organizations aren’t self-generating. … [it takes] a vision and leader.”
"Leadership must be authentic; it must come out of who you are."
The transformative impact of great leadership teams over hierarchical control
Importance of raising institutional aspirations and empowering individuals to flourish
"Hiring strong people makes the leader stronger, not weaker."
Nathan Hatch’s book, The Gift of Transformative Leaders
Profiles 13 leaders who exemplify commitment, character, and institution-building
Focus on people-centric leadership: authenticity, humility, vision
Leaders described as radiating positivity, cultivating others, and advancing institutional missions
Catholic and Protestant institutional differences in faith expression
Creating inclusive religious life in pluralistic academic communities
Investing in character education through initiatives like Wake Forest's scholarship programs
Building culture: "Noticing people, investing in them, seeing their potential."
“How do we help young people live their life?”
Identifying and empowering exceptional talent
Embracing unconventional hiring practices
Building thriving, collaborative, life-giving teams
Cultivating environments where people pursue a common good
Navigating faculty-administration relationships with authenticity and transparency
Facing organizational financial challenges without losing people-first priorities
Leadership in contexts with limited resources: raising people’s potential
Authenticity and empathy are foundational to leadership
Humility and commitment to the common good are non-negotiable
Leaders must genuinely invest in the flourishing of others
Institutions are transformed not by structures alone but by transformative people
Production Credits
Conversing is produced and distributed in partnership with Comment Magazine and Fuller Seminary.
Podden och tillhörande omslagsbild på den här sidan tillhör
Comment + Fuller Seminary. Innehållet i podden är skapat av Comment + Fuller Seminary och inte av,
eller tillsammans med, Poddtoppen.