Day 9 of 25: Applications of the iCORE™ Framework
Connect
By the time Oprah Winfrey entered television, the talk show format was already established. The structure worked, the audiences were there, and the playbook was familiar. But something about it felt distant. Conversations stayed controlled, and most hosts kept things moving along a comfortable, predictable path.
What Oprah recognized was that people weren’t looking for more polish. They were looking for something real.
She leaned into conversations in a way that felt human. She asked the questions people were actually thinking about and shared parts of her own story, even when it was uncomfortable. That willingness to be open changed how people experienced the show. It stopped feeling like something to watch and started feeling like something to trust.
That trust became the foundation for everything that followed. It is what gave her voice weight beyond television. When she recommended a book or a product, people didn’t just notice, they responded. Her influence grew because the relationship with her audience was genuine.
In business, connection is often treated like a byproduct of doing things well. But the strongest growth tends to come from building trust first and letting everything else extend from there. People can tell when something is real, and they remember it.
That is what we are exploring throughout this podcast series on business history and iCORE™.
