• The Psychology of Money by Morgan Housel | with guest Luke Tobin
    May 4 2026

    What if building massive wealth had nothing to do with your IQ and everything to do with your behavior? The Psychology of Money by Morgan Housel proves that managing cash is a soft skill, not a math problem. This book isn't just for stock investors; it is mandatory reading for founders of all types because your relationship with risk, runway, and your own ego will literally make or break your business.

    Joining me to unpack the three biggest lessons from this book is Luke Tobin. Over the last 15 years, Luke has built, scaled, and successfully exited three different companies. Today, he sits on the other side of the table as the founder of Tobin Capital and Unusual Group, where he's invested in over 40 high-growth businesses.

    In this episode, we dive into why simply surviving is your ultimate growth strategy, how to control your behavior to stop chasing trends, and the invisible difference between getting rich and staying wealthy.

    Key Takeaways & Timestamps

    00:00 – Introducing The Psychology of Money and why financial success is about behavior, not intelligence.

    02:16 – The Power of Compounding: Why 95% of Warren Buffett's wealth came after his 65th birthday, and why the math of compounding feels so unnatural to the human brain.

    03:03 – Survival as a Strategy: Why simply staying in the game through the hard times is the ultimate competitive advantage for a founder.

    05:01 – Mission over Money: How Luke screens founders to ensure they are building to solve a problem rather than just trying to get rich quick.

    12:46 – The story of the janitor who died with $8 million versus the bankrupt finance exec—and why finance is the only industry where this can happen.

    16:51 – The "Reflection Week": How taking a full week off grid to build an annual investment thesis protects Luke from chasing "shiny object" trends like AI hype.

    22:01 – Wealth is What You Don't See: The critical difference between being "rich" (buying the $100k car) and being "wealthy" (keeping the $100k to ensure business runway and personal freedom).

    23:02 – Invisible Metrics: Why you should stop optimizing for hyper-growth and start optimizing for profit, stability, and customer retention.

    Get the book here

    📚The Psychology of Money by Morgan Housel

    Mentioned in the episode
    • Tobin Capital: Luke's investment firm.
    • Unusual Group: Luke's venture builder and investment group.
    • Succeed: Luke's newly launched brokerage.
    • The Lean Startup by Eric Ries: Referenced briefly at the end of the episode regarding problem-solving methodologies.

    Luke Tobin, Founder of Tobin Capital & Unusual Group

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    32 mins
  • Built to Sell by John Warrillow | with guest Martin Harper
    Apr 27 2026

    If your business relies entirely on you to function, you haven't built a company—you've built a job. Built to Sell by John Warrillow is the ultimate playbook for escaping the "owner's trap." It reveals exactly how to stop selling your personal time and start building a valuable, scalable asset that thrives without you.

    Joining me today to unpack this playbook is Martin. With nearly 20 years of hands-on experience launching and scaling multiple companies, Martin is the co-founder of Quickfire Digital. His agency specializes in helping brands build and optimize their Shopify stores across Europe, North America, and the Middle East, scaling to over $3 million in revenue.

    In this episode, we explore why niching down is the secret to scaling up, how to transition from a service-based mindset to a productized offering, and why preparing your business to be sold is the best strategic move you can make—even if you never plan to leave.

    Key Takeaways & Timestamps

    00:00 – Introducing Built to Sell

    02:36 – Specialize in One Thing: Why Martin merged three different businesses and made the hard pivot to exclusively focus on Shopify e-commerce.

    04:46 – The Power of Saying "No": The difficulty of turning down paying clients when their requests fall outside your niche.

    10:15 – Build a Strong Management Team: Why founders must stop trying to do everything and focus on hiring leaders who are better at the day-to-day functions.

    15:02 – Objective Appraisals: A common management trap—why you must base promotions on objective KPIs rather than an employee's "emotional testimony" or stress levels.

    19:54 – Motivational Maps: How Martin uses specific frameworks to uncover what truly drives his team (money, expertise, meaning, or power) to align goals and prevent internal conflict.

    24:38 – The Saleable Mindset: Why creating an autonomous, fully documented business gives you the ultimate freedom to step into a visionary role or successfully exit.

    Get the book here

    📚Built to Sell by John Warrillow

    Mentioned in the episode
    • Quickfire Digital: Martin's specialized Shopify e-commerce agency.
    • Motivational Maps: The framework Martin uses to understand and map his team's underlying incentives.

    Martin Harper, Co-Founder of Quickfire Digital

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    Want to get in touch? Whether you want to suggest a guest, sponsor the show, leave some feedback or just get in touch to tell me what you're working on, here's the link for you: https://forms.gle/NHGL9ftFRhu4cKFLA

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    34 mins
  • The Daily Stoic by Ryan Holiday and Stephen Hanselman | with guest Nitin Sharma
    Apr 20 2026

    Building a business will test every part of you—your patience, your discipline, and your ability to handle absolute chaos. The Daily Stoic by Ryan Holiday and Stephen Hanselman channels over two centuries of ancient wisdom from thinkers like Marcus Aurelius and Seneca into sharp, daily meditations for modern life. It won't give you the answers to your business problems, but it will completely change how you face them.

    Joining me to unpack it is someone who actively lives these ideas: Nitin Sharma. Nitin is a serial entrepreneur in the recruitment tech space, the founder of rectools.io, and the host of the highly successful RecTalk podcast.

    In this episode, Nitin shares the raw story of his previous agency's collapse and how Stoicism helped him navigate the fallout. We explore why true discipline doesn't always mean 5 AM ice baths, how to let go of the "capitalist circus," and why remembering your own mortality is the ultimate clarifier for founders.

    Key Takeaways & Timestamps

    00:00 – Introducing The Daily Stoic

    01:22 Control the Controllables: Why you must stop wasting energy on the economy, the market, or the actions of others.

    03:54Navigating Business Failure: Nitin shares the story of his agency's collapse and how he used Stoicism to let go of the anger toward his former business partner.

    08:03Discipline Over Emotion

    10:00The Anti-Hustle Discipline: Why true discipline doesn't have to mean grinding 24/7.

    16:03The Social Media Test: How to use doom-scrolling on TikTok as a daily training ground for practicing discipline over your emotions.

    22:03The 10-Year Business Reality: 80% of businesses won't make it to 10 years, but your reputation will last forever.

    Get the book here

    📚The Daily Stoic by Ryan Holiday and Stephen Hanselman

    Mentioned in the episode
    • rectools.io: Nitin's whole-of-market directory for the recruitment supply chain.
    • RecTalk: Nitin's YouTube-first podcast helping recruiters scale smarter.

    Nitin Sharma, Founder of rectools.io & Host of RecTalk

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    Want to get in touch? Whether you want to suggest a guest, sponsor the show, leave some feedback or just get in touch to tell me what you're working on, here's the link for you: https://forms.gle/NHGL9ftFRhu4cKFLA

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    29 mins
  • Leadership Strategy and Tactics by Jocko Willink | with guest Chris Morrow
    Apr 13 2026

    If your startup feels like a daily fire drill, this is the battlefield-tested playbook you need to stop reacting, step back, and get your team to actually want to follow you.

    Jocko Willink isn't an academic theorist. He is a retired Navy SEAL commander who took high-stakes, life-or-death combat situations and translated them into practical, no-nonsense tactics for the business battlefield.

    Joining me today is Chris Morrow. Chris is the founder and managing director of DigiTalent, a fast-growing AI and machine learning recruitment agency. Chris has navigated the 24/7 chaos of scaling a global, fully distributed startup, and he uses Jocko's exact strategies to keep his team aligned across different time zones.

    In this episode, we unpack why stepping away from a crisis is often the best way to solve it, why taking the blame is your ultimate superpower as a founder, and the secret to building a high-agency team through decentralized command.

    Key Takeaways & Timestamps

    00:00 – Introducing Leadership Strategy and Tactics

    02:02 – Detach to Gain Perspective

    06:53 – Extreme Ownership: Why there are no bad teams, only bad leaders—and why taking the blame is a founder's ultimate superpower.

    09:53 – Ownership is Contagious

    15:38 – Build Trust Before You Need It

    21:22 – Decentralized Command: The stark difference between WWI command-and-control and agile strategy—and why the person closest to the problem must be the one making the decision.

    25:39 – Three actionable steps to apply Jocko's battlefield tactics to your startup tomorrow.

    Get the book here

    📚Leadership Strategy and Tactics by Jocko Willink

    Mentioned in the episode
    • DigiTalent: Chris's global AI and machine learning recruitment agency.
    • Lumo: The AI readiness advisory firm Chris partners with.
    • Thinking, Fast and Slow by Daniel Kahneman: The psychology behind why stepping back shifts you out of panic-driven "System 1" thinking.
    • Turn the Ship Around! by L. David Marquet: Another brilliant military-to-business book highlighting the power of pushing decision-making down the chain of command.

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    Want to get in touch? Whether you want to suggest a guest, sponsor the show, leave some feedback or just get in touch to tell me what you're working on, here's the link for you: https://forms.gle/NHGL9ftFRhu4cKFLA

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    28 mins
  • Let Your Life Speak by Parker Palmer | with guest Jerry Colonna
    Apr 7 2026

    If you walk through the business section of a bookstore, you will see countless books on ROI, scaling, and operational systems. But you won't see many books that actually teach you how to be a good leader.

    Let Your Life Speak by Parker Palmer isn't a traditional business book—it's a modern touchstone for authentic leadership. Palmer's life's work centers on helping people align their inner truth with their outer lives, even in the highest-stakes leadership roles.

    Joining me to unpack this incredible book is Jerry Colonna. Jerry is the CEO and co-founder of Reboot.io, and the author of Reboot and Reunion. As a former venture capitalist turned executive coach, Jerry is legendary in the startup world for guiding leaders through "radical self-inquiry."

    In this episode, we explore why true leadership begins with an inner understanding of our own demons, why people follow leaders they believe in (not the ones with all the answers), and how to cultivate a community that actually heals.

    Key Takeaways & Timestamps

    00:00 – Introducing Let Your Life Speak

    02:22 – Leadership Begins Within: True leadership requires radical self-inquiry and the courage to confront your own shadow side.

    04:17 – Leading from the Heart: The most powerful motivations for starting and running a business are entirely emotional, not logical.

    06:33 – The Inner Journey is Hard: Society trains us to value outcomes and metrics, fundamentally disconnecting us from our authentic motivations.

    10:54 – Vulnerability as a Superpower

    12:41 – Struggle Well, Not Succeed Well: Attaching your self-worth solely to business outcomes will ultimately destroy your resilience when failure inevitably happens.

    14:02 – Community Heals: Individual growth is impossible in isolation, and the best businesses function as communities that hold each other accountable.

    15:28 – The Quaker Clearness Committee

    Get the book here

    📚Let Your Life Speak by Parker Palmer

    Mentioned in the episode
    • Reboot.io: Jerry's executive coaching company and leadership boot camps.
    • Reboot by Jerry Colonna: Jerry's first book on leadership and the art of growing up.
    • Reunion by Jerry Colonna: Jerry's latest book on leadership and belonging.
    • Carl Jung: Mentioned for his psychological framework around the "shadow side."

    Jerry Colonna, CEO of Reboot.io, Executive Coach & Author

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    Want to get in touch? Whether you want to suggest a guest, sponsor the show, leave some feedback or just get in touch to tell me what you're working on, here's the link for you: https://forms.gle/NHGL9ftFRhu4cKFLA

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    24 mins
  • Poor Charlie's Almanack by Charlie Munger | with guest Eric Jorgenson
    Mar 30 2026

    Charlie Munger was Warren Buffett's right-hand man and the architect behind the Berkshire Hathaway empire. But his definitive book, Poor Charlie's Almanack, is not an investing guide. It is a masterclass in human psychology, decision-making, and avoiding stupidity.

    Joining me to unpack these exact mental tools is Eric Jorgenson. Eric is the CEO of Scribe Media and the mastermind behind The Almanack of Naval Ravikant and the highly anticipated The Book of Elon. As a deep tech investor and host of the Smart Friends podcast, Eric knows exactly how to distill complex genius into actionable advice.

    In this episode, we cover how to build better mental models, why avoiding the "multiply by zero" trap is crucial for founders, and why the acquisition of wisdom isn't just a life hack—it's a moral duty.

    Key Takeaways & Timestamps

    00:00 - Introducing Poor Charlie's Almanack and why it's the ultimate guide to decision-making.

    02:32 – The Latticework of Worldly Wisdom: Why you need mental models across multiple disciplines.

    05:23 – The Power of Incentives: The famous FedEx shift-work example and why you should never think about anything else when you can be thinking about improving incentives.

    06:25 – Multiplying by Zero: The critical mental model for failure avoidance.

    09:11 – Models > Hacks: Why mental models compound over decades, whereas "hacks" have a short, unreliable shelf life.

    14:10 – The Ultimate Moat: How the creation of proprietary knowledge is what truly drives mega-cap companies like SpaceX.

    16:57 – The Seamless Web of Deserved Trust: Why trust isn't a warm, fuzzy feeling, but rather the ultimate economic force that drops friction and costs to zero.

    18:47 – No Good Deal with a Bad Person: Why Warren Buffett wires billions without a contract, and why you should walk away from bad actors immediately.

    27:43 – Deserve What You Want: The simplest framework for success

    Get the book here

    📚Poor Charlie's Almanack by Charlie Munger

    Mentioned in the episode
    • The Almanack of Naval Ravikant: Eric's previous book (covered in Episode 1 of this podcast).
    • The Book of Elon: Eric's newest book.
    • The Beginning of Infinity by David Deutsch: Recommended reading on how humans create new knowledge.
    • Scribe Media: Eric's company that helps entrepreneurs write, publish, and market their books.
    • Smart Friends: Eric's podcast.

    Eric Jorgenson, CEO of Scribe Media & Author

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    Want to get in touch? Whether you want to suggest a guest, sponsor the show, leave some feedback or just get in touch to tell me what you're working on, here's the link for you: https://forms.gle/NHGL9ftFRhu4cKFLA

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    32 mins
  • High Output Management by Andy Grove | with guest Tom Hunt
    Mar 23 2026

    If you look at the bookshelves of the world's most successful CEOs, you will almost always find a copy of High Output Management by Andy Grove.

    Grove was the CEO of Intel. He treated management as an engineering problem, focusing entirely on leverage and maximizing production. But how do you apply theories from the 1980s to a fully remote business today?

    To help me explore that, I am joined by Tom Hunt. Tom is the founder of Fame, a B2B podcast agency he bootstrapped with zero funding to $4.5 million in annual recurring revenue.

    To achieve that growth, Tom had to stop being a marketer and start being a manager. In this episode, we break down exactly how he used Grove's framework to do it. We cover why your output is actually your team's output, why meetings are highly effective tools, and the art of true delegation.

    Key Takeaways & Timestamps

    00:00 - Introducing High Output Management and how it shaped modern business.

    02:03 - The Manager's Output: Your output is strictly the total output of everyone you manage, not your individual contributor work.

    05:54 - High Leverage P&L: Powerful, high-level overview to properly guide your team's focus.

    06:56 - Meetings are the Work: Meetings are not interruptions to your day but rather the exact places where management happens.

    07:56 - The 7 Types of Communication

    10:40 - The Remote Meeting Cadence: A strict and predictable schedule of check-ins keeps a distributed team perfectly aligned.

    18:20 - Task Relevant Maturity (TRM): Adjust your management style from highly structured to completely hands-off based entirely on an employee's maturity in a specific task.

    23:24 - The Written Agenda Rule: Requiring a written agenda before any ad hoc meeting will eliminate those time-wasting, unstructured calls.

    25:51 - Ban Private DMs: Moving all non-sensitive communication into public Slack channels allows you to naturally monitor the health of your company.

    Get the book here

    📚High Output Management by Andy Grove

    Mentioned in the episode
    1. Fame (fame.so): Tom's B2B podcast agency.
    2. EOS (Entrepreneurial Operating System): The framework Tom uses for his leadership meetings.
    3. High Output Management with Rich Willan: Our previous episode covering three completely different lessons from this exact same book.

    Tom Hunt, Founder of Fame


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    Want to get in touch? Whether you want to suggest a guest, sponsor the show, leave some feedback or just get in touch to tell me what you're working on, here's the link for you: https://forms.gle/NHGL9ftFRhu4cKFLA

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    30 mins
  • Eat That Frog! by Brian Tracy | with guest CJ Bilangino
    Mar 16 2026

    Stop confusing being busy with being productive.

    The ability to concentrate single-mindedly on your most important task, do it well, and finish it completely is the key to success. But how do you actually execute that when you are drowning in a sea of emails, Slack messages, and daily fires?

    Joining me to share his exact productivity playbook is CJ Bilangino, CEO of Gorilla Commerce. CJ has led finance and operations teams at multiple high-growth startups and relies on the frameworks in Eat That Frog to manage his energy, prioritize tasks, and lead his teams.

    Today, we discuss why checking your email first thing in the morning is destroying your momentum, how to ruthlessly apply the 80/20 rule to your to-do list, and why planning your day the night before is the ultimate productivity hack.

    Key Takeaways & Timestamps

    00:00 – Introducing Eat That Frog and the Mark Twain quote that inspired the book's famous title.

    02:25 – Tackle Your Biggest Task First: Why your "frog" is the hardest, most important task—and the one you are most likely to procrastinate on.

    03:55 – Stop Hiding in Your Inbox: CJ explains why he wakes up at 4:35 AM to do 45 minutes of deep work before he ever opens his email.

    06:11 – Prioritize Ruthlessly (The 80/20 Rule): 20% of your activities will account for 80% of your results. How to identify the vital few and ignore the trivial many.

    09:31 – The Championship Framework: How to use the process of elimination to find the least amount of "moves" required to hit your annual goals.

    12:31 – Plan Every Day in Advance: Why every 1 minute spent planning saves 10 minutes of execution time.

    15:05 – The ABCDE Method: How to categorize your tasks.

    16:20 – Digital vs. Analog: Why CJ uses an app for long-term tracking but relies on pen and paper for his daily task list to force ultimate accountability.

    Get the book here

    📚Eat That Frog! by Brian Tracy

    Mentioned in the episode
    1. Todoist. The simple digital task manager CJ uses to track his annual, quarterly, and weekly business goals.
    2. Deep Work by Cal Newport. A highly recommended companion read to help you protect your morning "frog eating" time from distractions.
    3. Atomic Habits by James Clear. The definitive guide to making your evening planning routine an automatic, frictionless habit.

    CJ Bilangino, CEO of Gorilla Commerce


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    Want to get in touch? Whether you want to suggest a guest, sponsor the show, leave some feedback or just get in touch to tell me what you're working on, here's the link for you: https://forms.gle/NHGL9ftFRhu4cKFLA

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    24 mins