Our Favourite Beth Practices - with Kate Taylor- Camp Code #164

Let me be perfectly clear…

When Beth “Topaz” Allison isn’t in the room, you feel it. So this week on Camp Code, we did what made the most sense: we turned the episode into a tribute—surfacing the Beth practices that have quietly (and not so quietly) shaped how so many of us lead.

Emerging is a clear picture of Beth’s core philosophy: start with people, lead with intention, and build everything from the end backward. From empowering staff to develop judgment rather than dependence, to using tools like the Four S’s to filter decisions through safety, stewardship, self-esteem, and service, Beth’s influence shows up in how camps think—not just what they do. Her insistence on front loading learning, naming the “why” before the “what,” and reverse-engineering training from the final feeling or outcome makes learning stick and gives staff confidence in the moment, not just during training.

Just as powerful is how Beth leads behind the scenes. Whether it’s building metaphor-rich training experiences, creating shared language through personality frameworks, or choosing presence over perfection by sitting down at meals and genuinely connecting, her leadership is rooted in relationship. She models clarity without cruelty (“let me be perfectly clear”), care without coddling, and consistency without rigidity. At her core, Beth is a connector—someone who sees people, names what matters, and reminds us that when leadership is intentional, the impact lasts far beyond the season.

Best Practice for Leadership Training

From Ruby (and Beth of course),

This Beth practice centers on clarity as an act of care. By intentionally using the phrase “let me be perfectly clear,” Beth signals to staff that what follows is the true takeaway—the headline they need to remember. It’s a teaching tool that reduces confusion, reinforces expectations, and protects both people and camp, especially when stakes are high. Whether clarifying safety boundaries or consequences, Beth models that being direct isn’t about being harsh; it’s about preventing misunderstandings that can cost someone their job or put others at risk. Paired with warmth, restraint, and a well-timed stern face, this approach shows how clear communication—used sparingly and intentionally—builds trust and accountability.

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RE-RELEASE: Best Interview Practices - Camp Code #19