If you had a dinner planned for a particular set of guests, I think you would ensure the food is to their liking. You know — perhaps they are from a primal eating lifestyle which means no grains, no dairy, no gluten, etc.
Keeping that in mind you go and buy a platter of food at the local grocer to feed them that night. I am confident you would make sure each of the pieces of food on the platter were in line with the primal eating lifestyle—it’s only right.
Now–say you setup a website to serve tips on gardening for your visitors—you wouldn’t create content on say “tips on making your favorite mix drinks” to have at home.
Both of these require you to check the ingredients whether serving up a dish for a dinner or content for your website visitors.
The same goes for hiring speakers to speak to a team. You have to check the ingredients of the speaker’s experience and their talk. Say you bring them in to talk to executive leaders who lead big teams — the work lifestyle of the speaker has to be in line with the work lifestyle of your team. You would not bring a monk to talk to a team of executives who can’t afford to live in solitude to build the mindset of a monk — because… well frankly, the business would fail miserably. Leaders need to show up.
Check the ingredients and know which ones are palatable for your audience.