Episode 13: When Success Stops Working

Purpose Drift, the Self-Awareness Gap, and Governance Risk in Family Enterprise

Dan Deeble, founder of Lost Ball Consulting, joins the StoryLens Podcast to examine how purpose drift creates governance risk inside family enterprises, and what leaders and families can do to close the gap between financial structure and operational alignment. The conversation covers the neuroscience of purpose, the structural cost of "nice" cultures inside family enterprises, and why the self-awareness gap is one of the most underestimated continuity risks in multi-generational wealth.

GUEST INFORMATION:

Dan Deeble, Founder, Lost Ball Consulting

 

Dan Deeble is the founder of Lost Ball Consulting and creator of the Five Voices framework, which is used by family enterprises, business-owning families, and executive teams to close the self-awareness gap that drives governance breakdown. His work addresses the behavioral and relational dynamics, including purpose drift, communication avoidance, and leadership blind spots, that financial planning frameworks do not reach. He works with founders and family systems at the point where the plan is in place but alignment is not. You can connect with Dan on LinkedIn or reach out to him directly at dan.deeble@lostballconsulting.com

EPISODE HIGHLIGHTS:

 

[00:01:15]: The Lost Ball Metaphor

 

Dan explains how “lost ball” represents something you own but do not possess: your potential, purpose, or performance that’s stuck in a family enterprise context.

 

Key quote: “Lost, literally the Webster’s definition is something that you own, but that’s not in your possession.”

[00:05:47]: Coachability as a Precondition

 

The work of closing the self-awareness gap requires willingness to be vulnerable and receive feedback, particularly in family systems where feedback is structurally difficult to generate internally.

 

Key quote: “This works if you’re willing to work. And all we need is coachability.”


[00:11:27]: The Power of Story in Governance

 

How sharing personal stories creates connection and breaks down organizational barriers inside family enterprises, and why this is a governance tool, and not just a relationship exercise.

 

Key quote: “Once you learn someone’s story, it’s impossible to not love them.”


[00:13:59]: Best and Brutal Exercise

 

A practical tool for teams and family systems to share their top 5 best and most difficult personal and professional moments in a structured format. Designed to accelerate trust and surface the relational data that governance frameworks do not capture.

 

Key quote: “We’re offering each other invitations for more later.”

[00:14:37]: The Neuroscience of Purpose

 

Dr. Vic Strecher’s research (University of Michigan) on what happens neurologically when leaders can name their purpose, and what the numbers mean for family enterprise governance.

 

Key quote: “Your resiliency, if you can know and name your purpose, your resiliency goes up by 54%.”

 

Data: Resilience +54% · Life fulfillment +60% · Inclusive decision-making +400% (Dr. Vic Strecher, University of Michigan)

[00:19:30]: Clear Is Kind

 

The distinction between “nice” and honest communication in families and family enterprises, and why the cultural preference for harmony is often a governance liability.

 

Key quote: “There’s a big difference between being nice and honest.”


[00:21:22]: The Self-Awareness Reality Check

 

Harvard Business Review research on the gap between how self-aware leaders believe themselves to be and how self-aware they actually are, and why this gap is structural in family enterprise.

 

Key quote: “What’s it like to be on the other side of you… and it is never what we think.”

 

Data: 95% of leaders believe they are self-aware; fewer than 15% demonstrate it in practice. (Harvard Business Review)

[00:26:46]: When the Work Moves Beyond the Office

 

How purpose-driven alignment work affects not just professional decision-making but also family relationships and the relational infrastructure underneath the governance structure.

 

Key quote: “We’ll know this is working when whoever is in your house starts saying whatever that lost ball thingy is that you’re doing, would you just keep doing that?”


[00:32:37]: Integration vs. Fragmentation

 

StoryOne’s framework for measuring alignment across the multiple disciplines that define a family’s full picture, and what integration actually looks like in practice.

 

Key quote: “On a scale of A to F… if things are integrated or aligned, it’s like, oh my gosh, your golf swing is like so pure.”

 

WHY THIS CONVERSATION IS ON THE STORYLENS PODCAST

 

At StoryOne, we believe alignment, across leadership, family, and purpose, is a precondition for the governance structures we build with clients. The best estate plan in the world underperforms if the family system underneath it is not aligned. That’s the work this episode names.

RESOURCES MENTIONED:

  • Giant Worldwide: Platform powering Lost Ball Consulting’s assessments and tools 
  • Five Voices Assessment: Tool for understanding personality tendencies, blind spots, and stress responses 
  • Dr. Vic Strecher: University of Michigan researcher on purpose and neuroscience 
  • Simon Sinek: Referenced for insights on purpose separating easy from right actions 
  • Brené  Brown: “Clear is kind” philosophy on honest communication 
  • Harvard Business Review: Self-awareness research (95% / 15% gap in leadership self-assessment) 
  • J.P. Morgan 2026 Global Family Office Report: 333 single family offices, 30 countries, average net worth $1.6 billion 

KEY TAKEAWAYS:

 

  • Purpose has measurable neurological benefits: resilience +54%, life fulfillment +60%, inclusive decision-making +400% (Dr. Vic Strecher, University of Michigan) 
  • 86% of family offices lack a clear succession plan for key decision-makers; 41% of business-owning families rank internal conflict as a top-three continuity risk (J.P. Morgan 2026) 
  • The self-awareness gap is structural in family enterprise: 95% believe they are self-aware, fewer than 15% demonstrate it (Harvard Business Review) 
  • Moving from “nice” to honest in family communication is a governance imperative; avoidance compounds into succession risk over time 
  • Integration across leadership, family, and purpose is a precondition for financial architecture to function as designed

Check out more episodes from the StoryLens Podcast.

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