Episodes

  • The Shopify Expert’s Blueprint: From Fundamentals to Radical Growth
    Sep 16 2025
    In this episode of Becoming Radical, Michael Gaizutis sits down with Kurt Elster—host of The Unofficial Shopify Podcast and one of the most trusted independent Shopify experts in the world. With over 500 episodes under his belt and a career working with some of the most successful Shopify brands, Kurt has built his reputation on cutting through the noise and focusing on what really drives growth.From navigation mistakes that kill conversions to the overlooked power of newsletters, Kurt lays out a no-fluff, fundamentals-first approach for entrepreneurs who want to thrive in e-commerce. He shares lessons from running his agency, building a leading Shopify podcast, and helping brands increase their average order value with small but radical tweaks.Together, Michael and Kurt explore what separates stores that scale from those that stall, the future of headless commerce and AI agents, and why storytelling and copywriting remain timeless drivers of trust and differentiation.If you’re building a brand in 2025—or wondering how to radically improve your Shopify store—this conversation is a masterclass you don’t want to miss. Key Takeaways The two fundamentals every e-commerce brand must master: a strong product and the discipline to stay focused.Most Shopify stores fail on the basics—like navigation and product pages—before chasing shiny tools and apps.Small tweaks, like adding a “best value” badge, can boost average order value by 10% without more traffic.Copywriting still outperforms design changes—focus on clarity, legibility, and customer-focused messaging.Balancing automation with personalization is essential—customers can smell generic AI content.Podcasting consistency built Kurt’s brand: 500+ weekly episodes over 10 years.The future of Shopify includes AI-driven catalog search, global cart, and cleaner product taxonomies.Bootstrap founders should start simple: build a newsletter to stay top of mind.In This Episode [00:51] What separates successful Shopify stores from those that stall[04:10] Common mistakes brands make with navigation and product pages[08:39] The fundamentals of a high-converting product page in 2025[12:15] Why copywriting changes beat design tweaks[15:42] How one small badge boosted AOV by 10%[19:11] Balancing automation, AI, and personalization[22:34] The art of storytelling in e-commerce[26:18] Kurt’s process for working with brands[30:45] The origins and growth of The Unofficial Shopify Podcast[34:09] Shopify apps Kurt swears by (and why less is more)[38:42] Headless commerce and the Shopify horizon[43:27] E-commerce in the next 3–5 years[47:11] How AI and Shopify’s catalog API will reshape shopping[52:03] What Kurt would do differently starting from scratch[55:14] His advice to bootstrap founders launching in 2025[58:21] Where to find Kurt Elster onlineOur GuestKurt Elster is a senior e-commerce strategist and host of The Unofficial Shopify Podcast. Recognized as one of the most trusted independent Shopify experts, Kurt has advised hundreds of brands and produced over 500 podcast episodes exploring the world of Shopify, conversion optimization, and digital entrepreneurship.Notable Quotes [02:12] “Anyone can build a beautiful store. But if you don’t have focus and a good product, it won’t work.” — Kurt Elster[25:36] “Hold up a mirror for your customer—help them see themselves in your product.” — Kurt Elster[31:29] “The key to podcast success is consistency. We’ve published every Tuesday, unrelentingly, for 10 years.” — Kurt Elster[54:45] “Start a newsletter. Just being in someone’s inbox keeps you top of mind.” — Kurt ElsterResources and LinksKurt ElsterWebsiteThe Unofficial Shopify PodcastLinkedInTwitter/XMichael GaizutisLinkedInWebsiteBecoming Radical LinkedInInstagramFacebook Twitter
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    38 mins
  • When Machines and People Team Up: Lessons from Apollo to AI
    Sep 9 2025
    In this episode of Becoming Radical, Michael Gaizutis chats with David Mindell, a technologist, historian, entrepreneur, and co-founder of Humatics. David’s career has taken him from deep-sea robotics to MIT research and groundbreaking industrial innovation, and he’s got some fascinating insights on how precision navigation, human–robot collaboration, and bold investment choices are shaping the future of work.If you’re a technologist, founder, or leader trying to navigate the next industrial revolution, this episode will challenge the way you think about innovation and show why it’s industry, not just apps, that’s going to define the future. Key Takeaways Young engineers often overlook the intelligence embedded in human labor, a mistake companies cannot afford.Robots should complement workers, not replace them, creating worker-friendly AI and automation.Adoption is as critical as invention, scaling robotics requires trust and process innovation.Manufacturing and industrial work are powerful drivers of social change.Process innovation is just as transformative as product innovation, often more so.In This Episode [00:26] Introduction David Mindell[01:08] Humatics and spatial intelligence[03:15] Investment focus: transforming US industry[04:41] Industrial tech adoption and Silicon Valley’s software focus[06:05] Origins and inspiration for Humatics[07:26] Human-machine collaboration: Apollo program lessons[09:37] Defining spatial intelligence[10:49] Indoor positioning and subway applications[11:17] Rethinking autonomy and human-machine teaming[13:15] Real-world constraints and Waymo example[14:26] Collaborative robotics in industry[15:04] Designing worker-friendly AI and embedded intelligence[20:06] Training engineers for real-world context[21:14] Transition from academia to entrepreneurship[23:10] Evolving company leadership and founder transition[25:12] Commercializing deep tech and robotics adoption[30:22] Process innovation vs. product innovationOur GuestDavid Mindell is a technologist, historian, entrepreneur, and professor at MIT. He is co-founder and chairman of Humatics, a pioneer in high-precision navigation systems for robots and industrial environments, and co-founder of Unless, a venture firm investing in companies transforming U.S. industry. His latest book, The New Lunar Society, explores how industry, ethics, and innovation intersect to shape the next industrial revolution.Notable Quotes [03:34] “Less than 1% of venture capital in this country goes into industrial companies... we're all in a place where actually both parties in Washington agree we need to revitalize US Industry for a number of different reasons.” — David Mindell[11:50] “Every robot is made by people, right? So there's human intention built into the architecture, built into the software, built into which sensors are chosen depending on the task and the environment.” — David Mindell[24:02 “The statistics are that when founders step aside voluntarily, the companies overall do much better than when the founders are forced out.” — David Mindell[27:44] “I'm prepared for the idea that there is a moment when all of a sudden it'll seem like robots start popping up everywhere. Like we'll cross some usability threshold and then it'll kind of break free.” — David Mindell[28:29] “I do hope that you see a much more kind of fluid collaboration of robots and human environments instead of the kind of awkward, clunky things we see today. But that's hard.” — David Mindell[30:37] “We're very good in this country at product innovation. We've really dropped the ball on process innovation and that's really where the important stuff happens.”— David MindellResources and LinksDavid MindellLinkedInUnlessHumaticsBook: The New Lunar Society: An Enlightenment Guide to the Next Industrial RevolutionMichael GaizutisLinkedInWebsiteBecoming Radical LinkedInInstagramFacebook Twitter
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    35 mins
  • Unlocking the Magic of Customer Experience with Shep Hyken
    Sep 2 2025
    In this episode of Becoming Radical, Michael Gaizutis sits down with Shep Hyken, world-renowned customer experience expert, keynote speaker, and Chief Amazement Officer of Shepard Presentations. Together, they dive into what it really takes to create unforgettable customer experiences, experiences that turn customers into loyal fans.Shep shares his journey from a 12-year-old magician writing thank you notes to becoming one of the leading voices in customer service strategy. He unpacks the philosophy of “moments of magic” versus “moments of misery,” why consistency is the true key to amazement, and how culture, not just initiatives, defines a company’s long-term success.They also explore how AI is reshaping customer support, where automation and personalization meet, and why the best brands find a balance between digital tools and the human touch. Along the way, Shep drops practical insights for leaders, startup founders, and enterprise executives alike on building companies that last by obsessing over the customer.Whether you are a founder, CX leader, or builder chasing radical growth, this episode will inspire you to rethink how you serve the people who matter most, your customers. Key Takeaways Customer service is not a department, it is a philosophy woven into company culture.Consistency, not over the top gestures, is what makes customers say “I’ll be back.”Leaders must defend and model company culture from the top down.Training is not something you did, it is something you do continuously.Mapping every customer touchpoint reveals where magic or misery happens.AI is improving fast, but personalization and human empathy remain irreplaceable.Companies that blend automation with humanity avoid becoming commodities.The future of customer experience is about balance: digital efficiency plus human trust.In This Episode [00:02] Introduction to Becoming Radical[05:00] Defining “amazement” and moments of magic[08:34] Why customer service training must be ongoing[10:14] Shifting from reactive to proactive customer experience[13:52] Real life stories of radical customer care[20:00] Retail brilliance and lessons from a jewelry store owner[30:00] The duality of automation and humanity[31:35] What CEOs must understand: defending culture as job #1[32:27] Where to find Shep and his resourcesOur GuestShep Hyken is a globally recognized customer service and experience expert, New York Times bestselling author, and Chief Amazement Officer at Shepard Presentations. With over 40 years of experience, Shep helps companies of all sizes, from startups to Fortune 500s, create customer loyalty through consistent, memorable experiences. His philosophy: treat employees as well as you want customers treated, and amazement will follow.Notable Quotes [01:16] “Have you ever walked away from a business and thought, wow, that was amazing? That's what I help my clients achieve.” — Shep Hyken[06:38] “If you want to be seen as amazing, just do what people expect all the time. It's not that difficult.” — Shep Hyken[30:30] “The companies that are going to really survive are the ones that are able to say, we're going to give you all the digital automation, AI type of support and an experience you want. But guess what, we're human too.” — Shep Hyken[32:12] “I defend the culture. That is the most important thing I do.” — Shep HykenResources and LinksShep HykenWebsiteYouTubeArticles and PodcastMichael GaizutisLinkedInWebsiteBecoming Radical LinkedInInstagramFacebook Twitter
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    37 mins
  • Profit Sharing That Actually Works: Rob Gallaher on Building Teams That Think Like Owners
    Aug 26 2025
    In this episode of Becoming Radical, host Michael Gaizutis sits down with Rob Gallaher—entrepreneur, business leader, and author of Profit Sharing—to explore what it really means to build a business where everyone wins. Rob shares how fear of repeating the burnout-filled legacy of traditional business ownership led him to transform his companies through a powerful, human-centered model: profit sharing.Rob breaks down how this model works, why it radically shifts team culture, and how it helped him scale without sacrificing family, freedom, or financial sanity. The conversation touches on everything from leadership mindset shifts and avoiding founder burnout to operational systems, accountability, and practical steps for building profit-sharing systems that actually work.Key TakeawaysProfit Sharing Isn’t a Perk—It’s a Strategy: Rob explains why monthly, meaningful profit sharing transforms behavior, culture, and bottom-line results far beyond traditional bonuses.Think Like a Team, Not a Boss: Shifting from “boss and employee” to “leader and team member” builds trust, motivation, and shared responsibility for growth and quality.Retention Through Ownership: When employees think and act like owners, businesses not only grow—they become resilient and more profitable over time.Small Business, Big Impact: Profit sharing isn’t just for big corporations. Even a flower shop with three employees can win with this model.Leadership Starts with You: Rob argues that effective, authentic leadership—rooted in integrity and accountability—is the foundation for profit-sharing success.In This Episode[00:02] – Welcome to Becoming Radical [00:26] – Meet Rob Gallaher: Author of Profit Sharing [01:00] – Fear of burnout and broken business models [03:10] – What profit sharing actually means [05:25] – From 80-hour weeks to empowering a team [08:45] – The mindset shift leaders must make [11:40] – Real-world case study: Truck repair shop triples profit [15:32] – Why cost control is just as powerful as revenue [17:58] – Empowering every role—not just sales [20:14] – What owners miss by keeping all the profit [23:30] – The power of shared success in team culture [26:45] – Can small businesses do this? (Yes!) [29:30] – Reverse profit sharing: Passing savings to customers [32:00] – How profit sharing boosts retention and recruitment [35:15] – Getting started: Practical steps and key tools [38:40] – What every CEO must adopt from Profit Sharing [41:15] – Where to find Rob Gallaher and his new courseOur GuestRob Gallaher is a serial entrepreneur, business coach, and author of Profit Sharing, a book and framework designed to help business owners scale with integrity, teamwork, and shared success. From plumbing companies and car washes to construction and retail, Rob has helped organizations across industries implement systems that reward their teams—and make businesses more profitable and sustainable in the process.He is also the founder of Profit X, a platform and course designed to walk leaders through the practical steps of building a profit-sharing system that works at any size.Notable Quotes“Profit sharing is not just about money—it's about ownership, trust, and building a business that doesn’t break you.” – Rob Gallaher “If you can change someone’s monthly financial needle, you’ll change their daily behavior.” – Rob Gallaher “The most powerful shift happens when employees stop thinking like workers and start thinking like owners.” – Rob Gallaher “Don’t build a company that makes money but costs you your marriage, your health, or your kids.” – Rob Gallaher “You want your team to see every dollar as partly their dollar—that’s where the magic starts.” – Rob GallaherResources and LinksRob Gallaher – LinkedIn Profit X – Website Profit Sharing – Book on Amazon Becoming RadicalMichael Gaizutis – LinkedIn Becoming Radical – LinkedIn Becoming Radical – Instagram Becoming Radical – Facebook Becoming Radical – Twitter
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    36 mins
  • Why AI Won’t Replace Private Equity, It’ll Make It Ruthlessly Efficient
    Aug 19 2025
    In this episode of Becoming Radical, Michael Gaizutis sits down with Rolan Reichel, co-founder of Moic.co, to talk about how AI is changing the private equity world and why mid-cap companies valued between $400 million and $1.5 billion are right in the middle of it all.Rolan shares how his journey from tech entrepreneur to growth strategist led him to create Moic.co. The company helps private equity firms do more than just buy companies and hope they grow. Instead, they build real AI-powered workflows that unlock value quickly and in a way you can measure.They discuss what is broken in the old private equity model and why mid-sized companies often get left behind in digital transformation. Rolan also explains how partnerships with companies like Microsoft help Moic.co move fast by using tools like the Power Platform to build smart workflows that actually work across different portfolio companies.Rolan gets real about startup culture, how to scale without burning out, and the surprising role creativity plays in high-pressure business. Key Takeaways The old private equity playbook cut costs and ride market growth no longer delivers.AI can unlock real value during the hold period, especially in mid-cap companies.Mid-sized firms are behind on AI adoption, making them prime for transformation.Success comes from aligning AI with business goals, not chasing the latest tools.Moic.co focuses on practical AI deployment using systems teams already know, like Microsoft.Strategic partnerships with firms like SAP and Microsoft accelerate growth and trust.Durable, product-first companies will outlast the noise in today’s AI boom.In This Episode [00:02] Introduction to Becoming Radical[07:06] The evolution of growth marketing inside PE[10:14] Building AI workflows for mid-cap companies[17:05] Creativity as a strategic habit[19:07] Hidden talents and staying grounded[20:19] What’s next: AI hardware and personal agents[23:00] Moic.co’s North Star and vision for 2028[24:32] Where to find Rolan and Moic.coOur GuestRolan Reichel is a seasoned entrepreneur and digital strategist with over 20 years of experience across tech, media, and marketing. He is the co-founder of Moic.co, a platform helping private equity firms unlock scalable value creation through tailored AI deployment. Rolan’s career spans public market exits, global partnerships, and deep experience in growth strategy—anchored by a product-first mindset and an obsession with impact at scale.Notable Quotes [02:37] “The thing about MOIC is it's the ability to bring this artificial intelligence to specifically private equity firms... AI is going to have a massive effect.” — Rolan Reichel[03:50] “Our thesis has been a vertical SaaS application... We're not just deploying AI, but we're actually doing it in a way that's got the right business mapping.” — Rolan Reichel[05:37] “The old playbook, I believe, is being disrupted... There's a lot more competition within sectors.” — Rolan Reichel[17:22] “Creativity is important... I block out two hours of my day. Monday, Wednesday, Friday, 11 to 1. There's no meeting phone in focus mode.” — Rolan Reichel[23:04] “We would like to be the number one recognized brand company, trusted brand for AI deployment with private equity firms.” — Rolan ReichelResources and LinksRolan ReichelMoic.coLinkedInXInstagramMichael GaizutisLinkedInWebsiteBecoming Radical LinkedInInstagramFacebook Twitter
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    30 mins
  • The Zero-Click Future: How Customer Behavior is Rewriting Digital Strategy
    Aug 12 2025
    In this episode of Becoming Radical, host Michael Gaizutis speaks with Tim Peter, a veteran digital strategy consultant, about what really drives digital transformation. Tim challenges the idea that technology alone leads to success, highlighting instead the importance of adapting to changing customer behaviors, like the rise of zero-click searches.He shares lessons from decades in the industry, including insights from the pandemic’s impact on e-commerce. According to Tim, long-term strategy requires a clear “North Star,” but companies must also stay flexible enough to pivot when needed.The conversation explores the role of AI in marketing, where Tim stresses the need to balance efficiency with effectiveness. He warns against chasing shiny new tools and urges businesses to prioritize human connection, using technology to support not replace it.For brands working with tight budgets, Tim outlines three key pillars of growth: content that sells around the clock, a frictionless customer experience, and building trust through smart use of data.The episode wraps with a look ahead, where “the brand is the prompt” in an AI-driven, zero-click world. Key Takeaways Digital Transformation Isn’t About Tech, It’s Business Reinvention: Legacy brands must ask: “If we started today, what kind of company would we build?”Customer Behavior > Shiny Tools: Success hinges on adapting to behavior shifts, just like Google overtook AltaVista by aligning with what users actually wanted.Zero-Click Is Already Here: With 70% of searches ending without a click, brands must reduce CAC through content, PR, and brand-driven discovery.Strategy = North Star + Flexibility: Define your destination, but stay agile. Sometimes, survival (not scale) is the smartest move.3 Growth Levers for Lean Teams Invest in: Content to sell and support 24/7, customer experience that adds value and removes friction and data that earns trust and reduces ad dependencyBe the Brand AI Recommends: As search evolves, your brand is the prompt. Build familiarity and trust before the algorithm chooses for the customer.In This Episode [00:02] Introduction to Becoming Radical[05:34] AI and customer experience[07:24] The zero-click world and brand experience[09:14] Balancing long-term strategy with rapid innovation[15:37] E-commerce trends: The zero-click world[21:23] MVP vs. BVP: Product development philosophy[22:46] Post-pandemic customer behavior and expectations[25:01] Adding value and customer experience[32:40] Agility and perfect practice[37:25] Closing and where to find Tim PeterOur GuestTim Peter is a digital strategy expert and the founder of Tim Peter & Associates. With a career spanning over 20 years, he’s helped companies in e-commerce, B2B, and hospitality adapt to customer expectations and lead through technology. Notable Quotes [02:15] “Digital transformation is business transformation for companies that precede the Googles of the world. They are saying, "If we were to start our company today, what kind of company would we be building?” – Tim Peter[07:35] “We're living in an increasingly zero click world. Customers are getting the answers to their questions and maybe not visiting your website or clicking your app.” – Tim Peter[19:05] “Your job isn't to rank, your job is to be seen. Your job is to be relevant.” – Tim Peter[19:21] “The brand is the prompt. You want to get to a place where our devices and our agents know what we need.” – Tim Peter[34:48] “AI won't take your job, but smart people who use AI will.” – Tim PeterResources and LinksTim PeterWebsiteLinkedInBook: Digital Reset: Driving Marketing & Customer Acquisition Beyond Big TechMichael GaizutisLinkedInWebsiteBecoming Radical LinkedInInstagramFacebook Twitter
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    40 mins
  • The $82 Billion Problem: How Beauty Genome is Disrupting Skincare Waste
    Aug 5 2025
    In this episode of Becoming Radical, host Michael Gaizutis speaks with Sarah Rinehart, CEO and co-founder of Beauty Genome, a tech-powered platform that uses AI and genomics to deliver truly personalized skincare recommendations. With nearly two decades of experience across salons, editorial makeup, and medical aesthetics, Sarah brings both depth and clarity to a conversation many consumers have been waiting for: why is skincare still so confusing?Sarah explains how Beauty Genome creates product recommendations that are evidence-based, product agnostic, and tailored to each person’s unique needs. They explore the overwhelming landscape of marketing buzzwords, the lack of true innovation in skincare, and how consumers are ready for transparency and trust, two things the industry often lacks.The conversation also touches on the challenges of launching a tech startup as a female founder, building ethical AI, and what it takes to keep the user at the center of product design. Sarah’s vision is not just about smarter technology; it is about empowering people to understand and care for their skin in a way that feels honest, inclusive, and grounded in science.It is a thoughtful look at where beauty is headed and why it needs a radical shift. Key Takeaways Skincare is Broken. Consumers waste billions on products that don’t work. Beauty Genome aims to fix that with personalization and product transparency.Innovation Drought. Skincare hasn’t significantly evolved since 2015, most brands just recycle trends. That’s changing with new ingredient data and biotech.Your Skin is Contextual. From your environment to your sleep and stress levels, everything affects your skin, so the app adapts to you.Ethical AI + Data Privacy First. Sarah’s team treats your data like HIPAA-level information and explores blockchain tokenization for user-owned data sharing.Raising as a Female Founder Is Hard. Despite technical and industry credibility, funding remains a major challenge but Sarah is not slowing down.In This Episode [00:02] Introduction to Becoming Radical [05:51] How Beauty Genome uses genomics & AI [09:49] Potential for partnerships & early detection [11:07] Balancing genetic data & user experience [14:32] Role of ethical AI & data privacy in beauty tech [24:11] Empowering consumers with knowledge [25:03]Future of beauty & wellness (5-year outlook)[26:48] What’s next for Beauty Genome & bold bets [27:38] Physical expansion & experiential pods [30:17] Manifesting big ideas & overcoming barriers [31:35] Closing & where to find Beauty Genome Our GuestSarah Rinehart is the CEO and co-founder of Beauty Genome, a groundbreaking beauty-tech startup using AI and genomics to personalize skincare. With nearly 20 years of experience in salons, medical aesthetics, and editorial beauty including work with MAC Cosmetics, Sarah brings deep industry insight. Notable Quotes [02:31] “If anybody should know what to use on their skin, it's me. And I can't even do it. So I can only imagine how insane it must be for your average person.” – Sara Rinehart[03:16] “People spend like $82 billion every single year on products that they end up crashing or just never using. And so I'm just like, that's got to stop in this economy.” – Sara Rinehart[04:21] “People really haven't innovated skincare since like 2015. And for the most part, brands are just kind of going around trend cycling.” – Sara Rinehart[09:01] “I feel like a lot of the skincare marketing is moving towards this like scientific big words. Like people don't know what exosomes are.” – Sara Rinehart[25:03] “I think people are going to really gravitate towards brands that are really transparent and really aligned with whatever the individual consumer's ethics are.” – Sara RinehartResources and LinksSara RinehartBeauty GenomeLinkedInLinktreeMichael GaizutisLinkedInWebsiteBecoming Radical LinkedInInstagramFacebook Twitter
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    34 mins
  • Rewiring the Food System: How Helios AI Is Tackling Climate and Supply Chain Chaos
    Jul 29 2025
    In this episode of Becoming Radical, Michael Gaizutis sits down with Francisco Martin-Rayo, the founder of Helios AI, to talk about something we don’t often think about: how our food actually gets to us… and what happens when climate change and outdated tech threaten that process.Francisco brings a wild mix of experience: he's been in tech, imported avocados (yes, really), and even worked in management consulting. But what really pushed him to start Helios was a pair of bold questions: What if we could predict agricultural disruptions before they happen? And what if we gave that power not just to big corporations, but to everyone?They dive into how Helios is using explainable AI to help companies from small operations to giants like Libby’s make smarter supply chain and procurement decisions. This one’s for founders, builders, and anyone thinking about the real-world impact of AI not in some far-off future, but right now, in the systems that feed us. Key Takeaways Climate Is Already Disrupting Agriculture: Food systems are fragile and Helios uses AI to help companies predict disruptions and act early.Explainable AI Builds Trust: Transparent models are critical in legacy industries like agriculture where decisions affect billions in contracts.The Middle Class of Work Is Disappearing: AI is replacing repetitive jobs, leaving extremes low-wage manual labor and high-skill creative/strategic work.Faster Data, Better Decisions: Platforms like Helios democratize insights that were once available only to Fortune 100 firms.Real Impact Over Vanity Features: Users don’t always want dashboards, they want timely insights in their inbox.Climate Adaptation Needs Product Innovation: New crops, new procurement strategies, and faster feedback loops are vital.Build With, Not For: The future belongs to tools that respect the user’s workflow and time.In This Episode [01:12] From avocados to AI: why Helios exists[06:33] Balancing innovation with trust and transparency[12:00] Case study: how Helios saved Libby’s 15% on mandarins[15:10] Lessons from a $2B SAP failure[21:15] What’s working in precision agriculture and what isn’t[25:36] Sales cycles, VC alignment, and patient capital[27:57] Where to find Helios and get startedOur GuestFrancisco Martin-Rayo is a technologist, entrepreneur, and systems thinker committed to transforming how we predict and respond to climate and supply chain volatility. He is the founder and CEO of Helios AI, a platform offering explainable AI to empower better, faster, and more transparent procurement decisions in agriculture and beyond.With a background that spans tech, consulting (BCG), and international trade, Francisco brings a radical perspective to how AI can build more resilient economies—from global brands to overlooked regions like Malawi.Notable Quotes [02:39] “If you're gonna have to put 80 hours a week towards something, at least try and enjoy it. There's gotta be something more meaningful to drive you.” – Francisco [03:56] “Technology is changing dramatically. Not just artificial intelligence, but the price of compute is basically nothing. You have more satellites than ever before, which means you can get more real-time data than ever before.” – Francisco[17:05] “I have such admiration for farmers. It's this business where if everything is perfect, you make a couple of percentage points in margin. And if anything goes wrong, you don't make any money.” – Francisco[20:56] “Change is inevitable. You have to embrace it and you have to ride it. You have to think what comes next futuristically.” – Francisco [24:05] “We have the best commodity price forecast in the industry. We're 40 to 120% better. We can go out to three years. And that has made just an incredible difference.” – Francisco Resources and LinksFrancisco Martin-RayoHelios AILinkedInMichael GaizutisLinkedInWebsiteBecoming Radical LinkedInInstagramFacebook Twitter
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    31 mins