What Highly Effective Leaders Know That No Algorithm Can Replicate.

Rick DeJarnette helps leaders develop what AI cannot: the clarity, courage, and resilience that define exceptional leadership.

Rick DeJarnette is an executive coach, keynote speaker, and Executive in Residence at the University of Richmond. As the founder of Verdant Leadership Group, he has spent more than two decades working alongside senior leaders navigating complex challenges.

Rick holds an MBA from the University of Colorado and a leadership coaching certification from Georgetown University’s Institute for Transformational Leadership. He is a PCC-certified coach (MCC pending) with the International Coaching Federation. His approach draws on the discipline of organizational effectiveness and the craft of storytelling, developed through years of working behind the scenes with leaders managing crises, driving culture change, and steering large-scale transformation. His aim is consistent: to give audiences insight grounded in research and real-world experience that they can put to use immediately.

Rick’s perspective on leadership is shaped by more than professional practice. A certified mountain guide who founded his own guiding company, Rick was awarded the North Face Live Your Dream Grant to climb the Diamond on Longs Peak, which is one of the most consequential and technically demanding big-walls in North America. A serious climbing accident that followed several years later became an unexpected teacher. What that recovery revealed about resilience - that it is built gradually, through deliberate choice amidst sustained adversity rather than singular moments of triumph - is something he had long studied. Living it gave the research a different weight, and it now runs through everything he brings to the stage.

His keynotes draws on organizational research, executive experience, and personal insight. As artificial intelligence reshapes how organizations operate, Rick examines what that shift means for the distinctly human capacities, including judgment, courage, connection, and resilience, and why enhancing and honing those capabilities are among the most consequential investments leaders can make right now.

Topics Include:

  • As AI systems take on more of what organizations do, a legitimate question for leaders is what changes, what remains, and what becomes more important.

    Drawing on organizational research and his work coaching leaders through significant transitions, Rick examines the distinctly human capacities, including judgment, courage, connection, and resilience, and makes the case for treating their development as a strategic priority rather than a soft skill afterthought.

    Best for: Leadership conferences, corporate retreats, technology and innovation summits.

  • “Fail fast” is well-intentioned advice that often glosses over one of leadership’s central tensions: how to pursue bold action while preserving the reliability that keeps systems safe. In technical climbing, this tension is resolved through a disciplined distinction between “yes fall” situations, where pushing to the point of failure is safe and instructive, and “no fall” situations, where the risks are unacceptable.

    Rick applies that framework to organizational decision-making, offering leaders a more precise approach to risk than most conventional guidance allows. The goal is not to increase or decrease risk tolerance, but to design for the distinction deliberately.

    Best for: Strategy and innovation teams, senior leadership, organizations navigating AI adoption or significant transformation

  • Research consistently shows that organizations outperform their peers not because of strategy alone, but because of the depth of leadership running through them.

    Rick draws on executive coaching practice and organizational research to examine what it actually takes to develop other leaders, not through programs or frameworks alone, but through the intentional, day-to-day choices that shape how people grow. Audiences leave with a clear-eyed, practical approach to building leadership capacity at every level of their organization.

    Best for: Professional development conferences, HR and talent leadership, organizations focused on succession and growth.

  • Research on adult development shows that leaders facing the same challenge (e.g., resistance, ambiguity, a test of their authority) often respond very differently, and that the difference is rarely a matter of competence. It reflects the underlying pattern by which each leader makes sense of the situation.

    Rick draws on that research and on executive coaching practice to examine why “who am I becoming as a leader?” is often a more productive question than “what should I do?” - and how that shift in framing tends to produce more durable growth.

    Best for: Leadership development programs, executive teams, professional development conferences.

  • In environments shaped by information overload, rapid change, and institutional uncertainty, a leader’s ability to remain grounded and bring clarity to others has measurable consequences for decision quality, team performance, and organizational trust. Presence erodes under anxiety, distraction, and fragmentation and its absence is felt by the people who look to leaders for direction.

    Rick examines what presence looks like under pressure, why it functions as a strategic capacity rather than a personal quality, and how it can be deliberately developed.

    Best for: Senior leadership teams, high-pressure industries (healthcare, finance, government), leadership conferences.

  • Under sustained pressure, efficiency becomes a reasonable default. It also carries a risk: an exclusive focus on short-term optimization can quietly become a strategy of playing not to lose.

    Drawing on organizational research and leadership examples from periods of significant systemic change, Rick examines the leadership posture required to protect near-term performance while building long-term capability — and makes the case that how leaders allocate resources and efficiency gains, particularly in the age of AI, is itself a strategic statement.

    Best for: C-suite and senior leadership, strategy conferences, organizations undergoing AI-driven transformation.

  • Compassion in leadership is often framed as a counterweight to performance. Research on organizational effectiveness suggests a more nuanced relationship. Leaders who maintain self-stability under pressure, who hold accountability and human complexity in the same frame, tend to strengthen both trust and results over time.

    Rick draws on executive coaching practice and research on emotional regulation to examine compassion not as a temperament but as a learnable discipline: the capacity to remain grounded in who you are, even when what is happening is difficult, disorienting, or outside your control.

    Best for: Healthcare, education, government, and mission-driven organizations; leadership development programs.

  • Real-World Credibility: Rick has coached leaders navigating some of the most demanding roles.

  • Beyond Thinking, Doing: Founded three companies; 18 years spent serving 40+ clients.

  • Dynamic & Engaging: Blends practical wisdom with authentic stories and humor that sticks.

  • Tailored for You: Every keynote is customized for your audience and outcomes, with an emphasis on practical application.

  • Professional Partner: Easy to work with, responsive, and fully invested in making your event a success.

  • Experienced: Described as “authentic,” “compelling,” and “actionable” by audiences.

Inspiration | Insight | Impact