The latest episode of the Nomad Futurist Podcast features Dr. Casey Eldringhoff, in conversation with co-hosts Nabeel Mahmood and Phillip Koblence, and it’s a powerful exploration of leadership, resilience, and humanity in mission-critical infrastructure.
From the U.S. Navy’s nuclear power program to senior leadership at QTS Data Centers, Eldringhoff’s journey is defined by technical excellence, courage, and an unwavering commitment to people. But it was not one that began with encouragement, but rather with a challenge.
At the start of her career, she was told she didn’t belong in the Navy’s nuclear program simply because she was a woman. For many, that kind of doubt might have closed a door. For her, it lit a fire. Instead of backing down, she chose to prove that determination outpaces bias every time:
“They told me I couldn’t do it ’cause I was a girl, which meant I’m gonna do it.”
She went on to become one of the first women to reenter the program, setting a new standard for what leadership looks like in high-stakes environments. That defining chapter forged her belief that real leadership demands both excellence and bravery.
What sets her apart today is her rare fusion of technical mastery and deep emotional intelligence. While advancing her engineering career, she also pursued studies in psychology and ministry, strengthening her ability to lead not just systems, but people:
“I just always try to use my superpower for good and not evil.”
That combination of engineering rigor and emotional intelligence now informs how she leads high-performing teams in high-pressure data center environments, where operational excellence must coexist with empathy, trust, and clarity.
A central theme of the episode is retention and mentorship for women in STEM and data centers. Drawing on her doctoral research into women’s mentorship and retention, Casey challenges organizations to move beyond recruitment metrics:
“We can recruit and recruit and recruit, and we can have really great talent acquisition numbers. But if we’re not doing the right things to keep them, did it really matter that we recruited them?”
She offers actionable insight into building mentorship ecosystems, fostering belonging, and creating workplace cultures where women — and all professionals — can stay, grow, and lead.
This conversation also dives into the realities of operational “frenzy,” leadership during crisis, foster parenting during COVID, and Casey’s vision for a more inclusive, resilient future for the digital infrastructure industry.
If you’re passionate about data centers, resilient leadership, or cultivating workplaces where people genuinely thrive, this episode is one you won’t want to miss. Listen in for an honest, energizing conversation with Dr. Casey Eldringhoff and be sure to connect with her on LinkedIn to keep the dialogue going.