For a recent episode of Revenue Mavericks, I sat down with Jennifer Brannigan, Chief Revenue Officer at Korn Ferry. What stood out wasn't just her decade at LinkedIn or her track record leading large sales organizations—it was the through-line behind it all: a service-oriented upbringing, the courage to bet on herself, and a leadership style built entirely around listening.
Jennifer grew up on the south side of Chicago—blue collar, tight-knit, and deeply community-oriented. Her dad was a homicide detective. Her mom worked as a physical therapist at a school. The neighborhood had a gravitational pull: most people stayed, and that felt like enough.
Then her grandparents took her into Manhattan.
Suits. Briefcases. Big shiny buildings. The energy of New York City hit her like a jolt—and something shifted. She didn't have the language for it yet, but she understood instinctively that the world was bigger than what she'd been shown.
That single exposure became a north star. Years later, she moved to New York, met her husband there, and had two of her kids in that city.
The lesson she carries from that moment: you can't be what you can't see. Exposing young people to different environments, different professions, different ways of living—that's how you give them something to aim at.
Jennifer studied psychology in college, then spent nearly a decade in HR and human capital management—including GE's prestigious HR Leadership Development Program. She was successful, growing, working in that big tall building she'd always imagined.
But something wasn't right.
So she made the kind of decision that terrifies most people: she walked away from a defined career path to start over in sales. Title step-down. Pay cut. No clear trajectory.
She did it anyway—because she was partnering with a sales leader at NBC Universal on an acquisition integration and saw something in that world she wanted to be part of. She asked to make the move. Her manager's response stuck with her: as long as you're passionate, motivated, and going to work hard, you can do anything.
That pivot set off a chain reaction that took her from NBC Universal to LinkedIn, where she eventually led sales and success for Glint, to her current role as CRO at Korn Ferry.
Looking back on her late-twenties self making that call, she said: "I can't believe I had that presence at that age to make that decision. But I'm so grateful that I did."
The principle behind it: play the long game. If you're doing something you're passionate about, the title and the money will catch up.
When I asked Jennifer what framework drives her results as a sales leader, her answer was immediate: get as close to your people as possible, and never stop learning from them.
She calls them Teach Me sessions.
Whenever Jennifer joins a new company or takes on a new role, she opens her calendar to anyone on the team who has something to teach her. The ask is simple: grab an hour and come talk to me about whatever is most top of mind for you—what you've been sitting on, what you think I need to know, what will help you be successful.
The results are remarkable. Patterns emerge quickly. You learn what people are passionate about, what's been frustrating them, and where the real opportunities are—information that never surfaces in onboarding decks or executive briefings.
She pairs this with quarterly listening sessions: optional, open-door conversations where her only job is to hear what's going on. No agenda. No fixes required in the moment. Just genuine presence.
The payoff is twofold. Internally, it builds trust and camaraderie with the team. Externally, it earns her the right to represent her people at the executive table, in board meetings, and in front of customers—because she actually knows what they're experiencing.
As she put it: "If you can show the team that you're listening, that you're hearing them, and that you are moving those blockers—they will run through walls for you."
Jennifer's career isn't built on a proprietary methodology or a complex operational framework. It's built on something harder to teach: self-awareness, service, and the discipline to keep listening even when you're the one in charge.
Bet on your passion even when the path isn't clear. Invest in your people before you need anything from them. And never stop treating leadership as an act of service.
The sales leaders who internalize this will build teams that are genuinely motivated—not just to hit their numbers, but to succeed for each other and for the people leading them.
Listen to the full conversation here.