In this episode, Paul Tedesco shares a compelling journey from marine engineering to executive leadership in facilities management. Starting his career at sea, Paul reflects on the demanding realities of working in ship engine rooms, where problem-solving, resilience, and accountability are non-negotiable. Those early experiences shaped his disciplined, methodical approach to leadership and continue to influence how he operates today. His transition to land-based roles wasn’t easy, but it opened the door to opportunities across power plants, life sciences, and large-scale facilities operations.
A major theme throughout the conversation is the importance of trust, communication, and adaptability in complex environments. Paul highlights the challenges of managing 24/7 manufacturing facilities, building cross-functional relationships, and delivering critical infrastructure upgrades without disrupting operations. He also emphasizes the value of responsiveness, strong networks, especially through Mass Maritime, and maintaining a positive, solutions-oriented mindset. Ultimately, Paul’s story is one of continuous learning, showing up every day, and doing the work to earn trust and drive impact.
Takeaways:
- Build trust before you try to drive change: In high-stakes environments, especially 24/7 operations, change doesn’t happen without trust. Paul spent months building relationships across departments before implementing major infrastructure updates. Take the time to communicate, align, and prove reliability—trust is what unlocks progress.
- Responsiveness is a leadership superpower: Paul prides himself on answering emails, calls, and requests quickly—even if he doesn’t have a full answer yet. Consistent communication builds credibility and keeps teams moving forward, especially in fast-paced, service-driven roles.
- Learn how to manage different personalities: From ship crews to corporate teams, Paul emphasizes that every workplace has challenging personalities. Strong leaders adapt their approach, stay composed, and find ways to motivate people without escalating conflict.
- Your network can shape your entire career: Paul’s transitions—from power plants to life sciences to real estate—were all influenced by connections from Mass Maritime. Invest in relationships early and maintain them; you never know which connection will open your next door.
- Embrace discomfort and career pivots: Leaving a nearly vested career at sea wasn’t easy, but Paul recognized when it was time for a change. Growth often requires stepping into uncertainty—trust your instincts when it’s time to pivot.
- Stay organized and on top of your work: Paul’s methodical, detail-oriented approach—shaped by his time in marine engineering—helps him stay ahead. Being proactive, structured, and disciplined ensures nothing falls through the cracks in complex roles.
- Bring the right attitude to work every day: Technical skills matter, but mindset and personality are just as important. Showing up positive, professional, and team-oriented makes collaboration easier and elevates the entire workplace.
Quote of the Show:
- “Almost every day is a good lesson learned—every day is a different challenge.”
Links:
- LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paul-tedesco-786901a3/
- Website: https://www.are.com/