• MedTech Success Explained with 6 founders - The Triangle of value, The Team, and The Story That Gets Funded
    May 4 2026

    What if your MedTech solves a real problem, shows great data… and still never gets used?


    🔍 What You’ll Learn:

    Most STEM professionals focus on building something that works.

    But in MedTech, success is decided by something far less obvious, whether your product fits into a complex system of people, incentives, and decisions.


    In this episode, Angelique pulls together insights from six founders who are all solving very different problems, from oxygen delivery to diagnostics, implants, and digital health.

    What emerges is a clear pattern of what actually moves a product forward, and what quietly blocks it.


    By the end of this episode, you will:

    • Learn how the triangle of value shapes every MedTech decision, clinical outcome, convenience, and cost

    • Understand why different stakeholders want different things, and how that creates friction in adoption

    • Discover what it really takes to build the right team and tell a story that gets funded


    This is where you stop thinking like a scientist solving a problem, and start thinking like someone building something that will actually be used.


    Press play to see how six founders navigated the reality of MedTech, and what you can apply to your own path.


    🧠 About the Guest:

    In this solo episode, Angelique Greco distils lessons from conversations with six MedTech founders across devices, diagnostics, and digital health.

    Through their stories, she breaks down the patterns behind products that move forward, and those that stall, showing how success is shaped by the system, not just the science.


    📌 Episode Highlights:

    00:00 Why great MedTech can fail despite strong science

    02:00 The triangle of value explained: outcome, convenience, cost

    04:00 ShanShan Wang: one product, three conflicting definitions of value

    07:30 Dharmica Mistry: you are not building for the patient

    10:00 Anushi Rajapaksa: what changes when you build for the end user

    13:00 Ida Tin: creating a new category to be understood

    16:00 Ben Wright: when incentives block adoption

    21:00 Why the team is the real risk investors look at

    24:00 The myth of the scientist-CEO and what actually works

    26:00 Venture studios and alternative ways to build a company

    30:00 Maryam Parviz: building a team that complements you

    34:00 Why storytelling is not optional in MedTech

    39:00 Creating a market when none exists

    43:00 Final recap: triangle, team, and story



    🔗 Resources Mentioned:

    • Mimetic MedTech Foundry

    • Roam Technologies

    • BCAL Diagnostics

    • Misty

    • Clue

    • Xeloda

    • SDIP Innovations


    🎧 Quick fire chat episode:

    https://shows.acast.com/multiple-hats/episodes/69ad4b747036d73902764808


    🤔 Reflection Time:

    1. If your work succeeds technically, what could still stop it from being used?
    2. Who are the real decision-makers in your space, and what do they optimise for?
    3. Are you building something that works, or something that fits?



    Want to craft a career story that opens doors?

    I help STEMM professionals speak with clarity, confidence, and purpose and show up as thought leaders —so the right opportunities find you.

    📬 Let’s connect: angeliquegreco.com.au | LinkedIn


    ⭐️ Help More People Reinvent Their Careers

    If you enjoyed this episode, please:

    • ✅ Leave a quick ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify 🙏
    • ♻️ Share it with a friend who's questioning their path in STEM

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    44 mins
  • Firechat on the mindset shifts, skills, and trade-offs no one tells you about building beyond the lab with Ben Wright co-founder of Mimetic foundry
    Apr 13 2026

    What if the thing holding your career back isn’t your skills, but the beliefs you keep repeating?


    🔍 What You’ll Learn:

    Most STEM professionals don’t lack capability. They lack translation.

    This short fire chat cuts straight through the common beliefs that keep people stuck in roles that don’t reflect what they’re actually capable of doing.

    • Why “I’m just a scientist” is a dangerous story to keep telling yourself
    • What working smart actually looks like when time and money are on the line
    • How to define what “good enough” is, so you stop waiting and start moving

    This is the shift from technical expert to someone who can shape opportunities, not just respond to them.



    If you’re tired of waiting until you feel “ready,” play this episode and challenge the beliefs keeping you stuck.


    🧠 About the Guest:

    Ben Wright is a MedTech investor and operator who works with clinicians and scientists to build real companies, not just ideas.

    As co-founder of Mimetic MedTech Foundry, he helps translate research into viable businesses by bringing in the right skills, structure, and strategy early on.

    His perspective is grounded in reality, what actually works when money, time, and risk are involved.


    📌 Episode Highlights:

    00:00 The beliefs that quietly hold STEM professionals back

    01:30 What a venture studio actually does differently

    03:30 Why “I’m just a scientist” limits your career

    04:30 The two key skills scientists need outside the lab: storytelling and customer understanding

    05:50 What working smart actually means in startups

    06:40 Why “perfect” is the wrong goal in the real world

    07:40 How to define what’s good enough to move forward

    08:30 The real cost of starting something, time, relationships, and risk

    10:00 Why clarity on your path matters more than jumping into a startup


    🔗 Resources Mentioned:

    • 🎧 Full Interview with Ben Wright https://shows.acast.com/multiple-hats/episodes/69ce18e3057b5949959db955
    • (Deep dive into MedTech, strategy, and why great technologies fail)
    • Mimetic MedTech Foundry


    🤔 Reflection Time:

    1. What belief about your role or identity is quietly keeping you playing small?
    2. Where are you waiting for “perfect” when “good enough” would already move you forward?
    3. If you looked at your career like a system, what skill or gap would you fill next instead of pushing harder?



    Want to craft a career story that opens doors?

    I help STEMM professionals speak with clarity, confidence, and purpose and show up as thought leaders —so the right opportunities find you.

    📬 Let’s connect: angeliquegreco.com.au | LinkedIn


    ⭐️ Help More People Reinvent Their Careers

    If you enjoyed this episode, please:

    • ✅ Leave a quick ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify 🙏
    • ♻️ Share it with a friend who's questioning their path in STEM

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    12 mins
  • Why Great MedTech Fails, and What It Really Takes to Build a Company That Works with Ben Wright, co-foudner of Mimetic Foundry
    Apr 6 2026

    Why do some of the most brilliant medical technologies never reach patients, even when the science works?


    🔍 What You’ll Learn:

    If you’ve ever thought “build a great technology and the rest will follow,” this episode will challenge that fast. Because in healthcare, the system decides what survives, not just the science.

    This conversation breaks down what actually makes or kills a MedTech company, and what you need to understand if you want to move from technical expertise to real-world impact.

    • Why clinical workflow, incentives, and reimbursement matter more than your innovation
    • The “value triangle” every MedTech product must satisfy to survive
    • How to stop trying to be everything in a startup, and build the right team early

    This is where a STEM career shifts from “doing the work” to understanding how the system works, and how to influence it.



    If you want to think like a strategist, not just a scientist, play this episode and start seeing where great ideas actually fail.


    🧠 About the Guest:

    Ben Wright is a MedTech investor, advisor, and co-founder of Mimetic MedTech Foundry.

    He started in biological sciences and hand transplant research, then moved into the business side after seeing firsthand that great technology alone doesn’t guarantee success.

    Today, he works at the intersection of science, clinical practice, and business, helping turn early-stage ideas into viable companies by building the right structure around them.


    📌 Episode Highlights:

    00:00 Why great medical technologies fail despite strong science

    03:00 From researcher to startup builder, the first reality check

    06:30 Why accelerators don’t prepare founders for real MedTech timelines

    10:00 Should scientific founders be CEOs?

    14:00 The “value triangle”: clinical outcome, convenience, cost

    18:00 The oral chemotherapy example, when incentives block better care

    21:00 Why human behavior and workflow kill adoption

    24:00 When better tech loses to incumbent business models

    28:00 True disruption, and why it’s harder than you think

    33:00 Why Australia struggles to fund MedTech innovation

    38:00 What a venture studio actually does differently

    46:00 A real MedTech failure story, and what it teaches about risk


    🔗 Resources Mentioned:

    • 🎧 Quick Fire Chat with Ben Wright
    • https://shows.acast.com/multiple-hats/episodes/69ad4b747036d73902764808
    • Mimetic MedTech Foundry

    🤔 Reflection Time:

    1. Where are you focusing only on the “technology” in your work, and ignoring the system it needs to fit into?
    2. If you stepped back, what part of your work is actually about influence, not execution?
    3. What would change if you stopped trying to do everything yourself and built around your strengths instead?


    This episode is a reality check.

    Not to discourage you, but to show you where the real leverage is.


    Want to craft a career story that opens doors?

    I help STEMM professionals speak with clarity, confidence, and purpose and show up as thought leaders —so the right opportunities find you.

    📬 Let’s connect: angeliquegreco.com.au | LinkedIn


    ⭐️ Help More People Reinvent Their Careers

    If you enjoyed this episode, please:

    • ✅ Leave a quick ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify 🙏
    • ♻️ Share it with a friend who's questioning their path in STEM

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    50 mins
  • Building support network in STEM, leadership leaps and big career pivots as a Boeing aerospatial engineer with Cassie Leonard
    Mar 23 2026

    Building Your STEM Safety Net: Cassie Leonard on Being the Only Woman Engineer at Boeing and Leaving Corporate to Coach and Publish


    The episode of Multiple Hats, released for International Women’s Day 2024, revisits a recorded interview with aeronautical engineer Cassie Leonard, who spent 16 years at Boeing after entering a 35-man team as the only woman. Cassie describes her path from aerospace study at UCLA to persistence in applying to Boeing, early intimidation, and career growth through frequent internal “bounces” that stretched her technically and as a leader, supported by an organic network of mentors and advocates. She recounts a difficult double-stretch role during her mother’s stage-four brain cancer diagnosis and how her network helped her recover by finding a new position. Cassie explains leaving Boeing methodically to focus on developing early leaders and supporting STEM parents, self-publishing her book STEM Mum, starting Elm Coaching and Publishing, learning marketing, redefining success beyond paycheck, and aiming to amplify underrepresented voices in STEM.


    00:00 Only Woman at Boeing

    01:41 Meet Cassie Leonard

    03:29 Engineering Roots and Role Models

    04:38 What Aerospace Engineers Do

    06:30 Culture Shock in Engineering Classes

    08:14 Landing Boeing Through Persistence

    09:55 Finding Your Voice on the Team

    11:23 Career Growth in Two Dimensions

    14:44 Support Networks as Safety Nets

    17:38 When Life Forces a Reset

    21:07 Why She Left After 16 Years

    22:50 Motherhood in a Male Workplace

    27:13 Building a Methodical Exit Plan

    29:18 From Pro Bono Coaching to Business

    30:50 Yoga Detour and Finding a Niche

    32:54 Marketing Through Community and Boards

    34:11 Book Framework Origins

    35:00 Science Mindset Coaching

    37:12 Whole Life Career Stories

    37:54 Holistic Planning YOLO

    39:39 Writing Editing Timeline

    40:26 Self Publishing Elm Press

    42:32 Money Mindset Metrics

    46:36 Building Business Systems

    48:07 Pricing Coaching Services

    50:10 Marketing Website Authenticity

    54:31 Targeted Volunteering Myths

    56:53 Presenteeism Performance Debate

    01:01:39 Redefining Work Life Balance

    01:04:02 No Going Back

    01:04:23 Inspiration Book Song

    01:05:28 Final Takeaways Village


    Want to craft a career story that opens doors?

    I help STEMM professionals speak with clarity, confidence, and purpose and show up as thought leaders —so the right opportunities find you.

    📬 Let’s connect: angeliquegreco.com.au | LinkedIn


    ⭐️ Help More People Reinvent Their Careers

    If you enjoyed this episode, please:

    • ✅ Leave a quick ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify 🙏
    • ♻️ Share it with a friend who's questioning their path in STEM

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    1 hr and 8 mins
  • Why Women Leave STEM, How to Spot Burnout, and Advocate for Real Change- Beyond the Pipeline with Belinda Di Bartolo, Jessica Borger and Cassie Leonard
    Mar 16 2026

    Beyond the Pipeline: Why Women Leave STEM, How to Spot Burnout, and Advocate for Real Change

    This episode will put words on what many women in STEM feel but have not articulated.


    The podcast episode critiques performative International Women’s Day gestures and focuses on lived experiences behind why women leave STEM, featuring three co-authors of the collaborative book Beyond the Pipeline: Cassie Leonard, Associate Professor Jessica Borger, and Dr. Belinda Bartolo.

    The 3 authors represent 3 paths within the STEM sector, pivoting and staying to change the system from within.



    Host Angelique shares her own career pivots and ongoing struggles with high expectations and fatigue, while the guests describe identity shifts, loss of joy, and turning points that led them to stay and advocate within systems or pivot into new paths.

    They discuss systemic drivers of attrition—burnout, feeling undervalued/imposter syndrome, and bias—illustrating bias through examples tied to motherhood and career interruptions, as well as bias toward non-parents.

    The conversation covers boundaries, redefining success, portfolio careers, four types of burnout, and advocacy that is collective and non-performative, including allies’ roles and examples of media-driven national-level change during the pandemic.


    00:00 IWD Hype vs Reality

    01:16 Meet the Authors

    01:44 Host Story and Stakes

    03:22 Jess Finds Her Voice

    06:04 Filters and Advocacy

    07:30 Belinda Loses the Joy

    11:25 Cassie Pressured Out

    14:07 Boundaries and Glass Balls

    18:34 Portfolio Careers in STEM

    21:15 Why Women Leave STEM

    23:29 Bias Stories and Language

    29:03 Motherhood And Imposter Syndrome

    30:45 Fixing Parental Leave Systems

    32:34 Bias Against Childfree Workers

    34:21 Finding The Right Workplace Fit

    36:13 Career Visibility For Students

    37:20 Four Types Of Burnout

    42:01 Breaking The Busy Culture

    43:56 Advocacy Without Performative Gestures

    47:22 Allies Speaking Up Effectively

    50:16 Pandemic Anger To National Change

    52:38 How Media Advocacy Snowballed

    53:37 Final Takeaways


    Want to craft a career story that opens doors?

    I help STEMM professionals speak with clarity, confidence, and purpose and show up as thought leaders —so the right opportunities find you.

    📬 Let’s connect: angeliquegreco.com.au | LinkedIn


    ⭐️ Help More People Reinvent Their Careers

    If you enjoyed this episode, please:

    • ✅ Leave a quick ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify 🙏
    • ♻️ Share it with a friend who's questioning their path in STEM

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    54 mins
  • "Thriving in STEM: Rethinking Career Pathways for Women with Cassie Leonard
    Mar 9 2026

    Beyond the Leaky Pipeline: Redefining Success and Keeping Women in STEM with Cassie Leonard


    The episode of Multiple Hats, hosted by Angelique, addresses why women leave STEM,.

    Citing a global survey where 50% leave due to burnout and lack of support, 40% for greater fulfillment, and 30% because of bias in career advancement, the authors of beyond the pipeline argue that the real challenge is retention rather than recruitment.

    The host introduces a three-episode series on the “leaky pipeline” with authors of Beyond the Pipeline, a collaborative book carrying insights from 25 women in STEM worldwide and grounded in lived experience.

    Guest Cassie Leonard, an aerospace engineer who left a senior management role at Boeing, discusses her identity shift in decoupling self-worth from paycheck and title, her FIRE-based financial choices, and how the book rejects the outdated pipeline metaphor in favor of a Rubik’s-cube model of complex, non-linear careers, organizing chapters around values/thriving, drivers of attrition, and solutions, and building an ongoing community via LinkedIn and Slack.


    00:00 Why Women Leave STEM

    00:46 Beyond Cupcakes Real Support

    01:24 Series And Guest Preview

    03:25 Meet Cassie Leonard

    03:50 Why Write Beyond Pipeline

    05:15 Rethinking Leaky Pipeline

    06:54 Leaving Boeing Identity Shift

    09:05 Redefining Success And Money

    12:29 How 25 Authors Wrote Together

    16:56 From Pipeline To Rubiks Cube

    18:48 Community And Book Tour

    20:01 Biggest Attrition Factor Bias

    21:26 Ideal Worker Parent Paradox

    24:17 Closing Takeaways Next Episode


    Want to craft a career story that opens doors?

    I help STEMM professionals speak with clarity, confidence, and purpose and show up as thought leaders —so the right opportunities find you.

    📬 Let’s connect: angeliquegreco.com.au | LinkedIn


    ⭐️ Help More People Reinvent Their Careers

    If you enjoyed this episode, please:

    • ✅ Leave a quick ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify 🙏
    • ♻️ Share it with a friend who's questioning their path in STEM

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    26 mins
  • STEM Careers Feel Too Narrow? How to Create Breadth Without Blowing Up Your Job, Quick Win from the interview with OnQ Recruitment
    Mar 2 2026


    Why job descriptions are narrow by design, and how to read between the lines to shape a bigger role.

    This is my takeaway episode from my interview with Catherine O’Mahony, the founder of OnQ Recruitment (Recruitment in Life Sciences).



    If you are delivering well but still feel boxed in, is the problem really you, or the way roles are designed?

    Either way there are ways to expand!


    🔍 What You’ll Learn:

    This Quick Win episode is for STEM professionals who are no longer struggling with competence, but with scope. You know how to do the job. You meet the criteria. Yet the work feels too narrow, and the frustration keeps growing.

    In this episode, you will learn:

    • Why job descriptions are written narrowly, and why that does not automatically mean the role will stay narrow
    • How ownership, vision, and visibility change what is possible inside a role
    • When to shape breadth where you are, when to change environments, and when entrepreneurship becomes the right answer


    Action:

    Press play if you want a practical way to stop fighting job descriptions and start using them as an entry point instead of a ceiling.


    🧠 About the Guest:

    Catherine O’Mahony is the CEO and founder of OnQ Recruitment. With over 25 years hiring across the life sciences, Catherine brings a hiring-side view on why roles are designed the way they are, where flexibility really exists, and how careers actually move forward in real organisations.

    This Quick Win episode is drawn from the full-length Multiple Hats conversation with Catherine, where we go deeper into beyond-the-box careers, hiring risk, salary transparency, advocates, and entrepreneurship.


    📌 Episode Highlights:

    00:00 When competence is no longer the problem

    01:30 Why job descriptions optimise for delivery, not vision

    03:00 Ownership, why your career is not your line manager’s job

    05:30 Vision and visibility, seeing opportunities and being seen

    08:30 Advocates vs mentors, who actually opens doors

    11:30 Reading between the lines of narrow job descriptions

    14:00 De-risking yourself, depth first, breadth second

    17:00 Where breadth is structurally possible, small vs big companies

    21:30 Portfolio careers and not asking one job to meet every need

    24:00 When entrepreneurship becomes the answer

    29:00 The real signal behind feeling boxed in


    🔗 Resources Mentioned:

    • Full interview episode with Catherine O’Mahony on Multiple Hats
    • OnQ Recruitment Salary Survey – https://www.onqrecruitment.com.au

    🤔 Reflection Time:

    1. Where do you currently feel boxed in, and what capability of yours is going unused?
    2. Are you waiting for permission to grow, or actively shaping visibility and advocates?
    3. If this role cannot stretch further, is the next move redesigning it, changing environment, or building something of your own?



    Want to craft a career story that opens doors?

    I help STEMM professionals speak with clarity, confidence, and purpose and show up as thought leaders —so the right opportunities find you.

    📬 Let’s connect: angeliquegreco.com.au | LinkedIn


    ⭐️ Help More People Reinvent Their Careers

    If you enjoyed this episode, please:

    • ✅ Leave a quick ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify 🙏
    • ♻️ Share it with a friend who's questioning their path in STEM

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    Not Yet Known
  • STEM Self-Limiting Beliefs Holding You Back, Transferable Skills, Done vs Perfect, and Taking the First Step, Fire Chat with Catherine O’Mahony
    Feb 23 2026

    A rapid-fire reality check on why STEM professionals stay stuck, and how to move anyway


    What if the real thing holding your STEM career back is not your skills, but the story you keep telling yourself?


    🔍 What You’ll Learn:

    This short Fire Chat is for STEM professionals who know they have more range than their current role allows, but keep hitting the same mental brakes. In a fast, no-fluff format, we tackle the beliefs that quietly stall momentum.

    You will learn:

    • Why “I’m just a scientist” is one of the most limiting stories STEM professionals repeat, and what actually transfers across roles and industries
    • How to tell when perfection matters, and when it is just procrastination in disguise
    • Why waiting until you have more time, money, or certainty is still a decision, and often the riskiest one


    Action:

    Press play if you want a sharp reset on how to stop overthinking and start moving with what you already have.


    🧠 About the Guest:

    Catherine O’Mahony is the CEO and founder of OnQ Recruitment. With 25 years of experience hiring across the life sciences, Catherine has seen firsthand why capable STEM professionals underestimate their value, and what actually helps people break out of narrow career lanes.


    📌 Episode Highlights:

    00:00 The self-limiting beliefs STEM professionals carry

    01:10 Why science skills transfer further than you think

    02:40 Analytical thinking, process discipline, and communication as hidden strengths

    03:30 Working smart vs working hard, and when to stop doing everything yourself

    04:40 Done vs perfect, how to judge what “good enough” really means

    05:30 Will your work speak for itself, or do you need to advocate?

    06:40 The first step, de-risking action and why inaction is still a choice


    🔗 Resources Mentioned:

    • OnQ Recruitment – https://www.onqrecruitment.com.au
    • Full interview episode with Catherine O’Mahony on Multiple Hats

    🤔 Reflection Time:

    1. Which excuse do you default to most often, time, money, skill, or certainty?
    2. Where are you aiming for perfect when acceptable would be enough to move forward?
    3. If not acting is still a decision, what is that decision costing you right now?



    Want to craft a career story that opens doors?

    I help STEMM professionals speak with clarity, confidence, and purpose and show up as thought leaders —so the right opportunities find you.

    📬 Let’s connect: angeliquegreco.com.au | LinkedIn


    ⭐️ Help More People Reinvent Their Careers

    If you enjoyed this episode, please:

    • ✅ Leave a quick ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify 🙏
    • ♻️ Share it with a friend who's questioning their path in STEM

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show More Show Less
    8 mins