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Growth Hacking Culture

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The Growth Hacking Culture Podcast is a series of insightful interviews with prominent experts on mindsets, skills and mental resources to grow individually, lead motivated teams and create human-centric work cultures. These episodes are about...

Location:

United States

Description:

The Growth Hacking Culture Podcast is a series of insightful interviews with prominent experts on mindsets, skills and mental resources to grow individually, lead motivated teams and create human-centric work cultures. These episodes are about thought provoking ideas to scale up and growth hack human-centric and performing work cultures. Hosted by Ivan Palomino.

Language:

English

Contact:

+971562242460


Episodes
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The Communication Gap Nobody Talks About: How to Lead and Be Heard Across Every Generation

4/28/2026
There's a conversation happening in most organizations that nobody is having out loud. Experienced professionals going quiet in meetings. Younger leaders assuming everyone speaks the same language. Messages that land perfectly with one part of the team and completely miss another. And somewhere in the middle, a slow leak of engagement, trust, and performance that shows up on the bottom line long before anyone names the cause. Lee Caraher has spent decades at this exact intersection. As a CEO, author, and one of the clearest voices on multigenerational leadership, she's watched the same communication breakdowns play out across industries, company sizes, and cultures — and she knows exactly where they start. It starts with an assumption. The belief that because you said it, everyone understood it the same way. That "end of day" means the same thing to a 55-year-old as it does to a 28-year-old. That appreciation looks the same for everyone. That experienced professionals will keep raising their hands forever, even when nobody seems to be listening. In this conversation with Ivan Palomino, Lee gets into the specific habits, blind spots, and mindset shifts that determine whether a multigenerational team performs or quietly falls apart. In this episode: staying relevant after 50 This one is for the leader managing a team that spans 30 years of lived experience. And for the experienced professional wondering whether the organization still has room for what they bring. Connect with Lee Caraher: leecaraher.com | double-forte.com Books: Millennials and Management | The Boomerang Principle 📘 Ivan Palomino is launching his new book: Expired? The Science of Staying Indispensable in a World Obsessed with New → https://www.ivanpalomino.net/expired-book-ivan-palomino The Growth Hacking Culture is a top 5% global podcast hosted by Ivan Palomino, exploring the human side of leadership and workplace performance.

Duration:00:54:43

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Your Meeting Starts Before You Walk In — Master Presence with Amy Reczek

4/21/2026
You've done the work. Hit the targets. Delivered consistently. And yet somehow, when the promotion conversation happens, your name isn't the first one that comes up. It's not about performance. It's about presence. And most of us were never taught the difference. Amy Reczek has spent years helping professionals bridge that gap — not with grand gestures or personal branding frameworks, but with something far more accessible: the small moments most of us are sleepwalking through every day. The elevator ride where your phone is out and the CEO steps in. The conference lobby where you're staring at your badge instead of the room. The flight where you have twenty minutes next to someone who could change everything — and you spend it on autopilot. These aren't missed opportunities by accident. They're missed opportunities by habit. In this conversation, Amy walks us through what she calls the in-between moments — the hallway exchanges, the lunch lines, the thirty seconds before a meeting officially starts — and shows how tiny, intentional shifts in those moments build the kind of credibility and visibility that formal performance reviews simply don't capture. She talks about trading "I-framing" for "U-framing." About replacing rehearsed small talk with genuine curiosity. About how asking "tell me more" opens more doors than any elevator pitch ever will. And about why introverts don't need to become extroverts to lead — they just need a toolkit that works with their energy rather than against it. What makes this conversation genuinely useful is how human it stays throughout. The advice stretches across cultures and personalities — it works for the quiet Swiss executive as much as it does for the naturally gregarious colleague who just needs a little more direction. Amy isn't selling a script. She's offering a way of showing up that feels like you, just more intentional. By the end, you'll start seeing your workplace differently. Not as a series of formal meetings and scheduled interactions — but as a continuous stream of small moments where presence, curiosity, and the willingness to actually listen can quietly change the arc of a career. If you're tired of waiting to be noticed for work you're already doing — this one is for you. Connect with Amy Reczek: Amy's book Connect to Close Her website https://www.amyreczek.com/ About the Host - Ivan Palomino: Ivan Palomino is writing a book. It's called Expired? — and it's about what it actually takes to stay relevant in a world that keeps moving the goalposts. If that question keeps you up at night, you might want to be among the first to hear about it. → ivanpalomino.net/expired-book-ivan-palomino

Duration:00:52:09

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Lisa Woodruff on How to Manage "Invisible Work" and Reclaim Your Mental Clarity

4/15/2026
In the modern corporate world, we have been sold a lie that if we just find the right app or work an hour longer, we will finally catch up. For many of us, work feels less like a ladder and more like quicksand—the more we struggle, the deeper we sink into a pile of invisible work that never makes it into the official job description. In this episode, we sit down with Lisa Woodruff, founder of Organize 365 and author of Escaping Quicksand. Lisa has spent her career deconstructing the science of productivity and executive function to help people reclaim their most valuable asset: mental clarity. We dive into why your current organizing isn't working, how to build systems that actually protect your weekend, and what it really takes to stay organized as you move from being an individual contributor to a legacy leader. Lisa also explains the heavy "invisible workload" often carried by women, who frequently manage a 30- to 50-hour-a-week household job in addition to their professional roles. In this episode, we discuss: Stop reacting to the "bing" of the next notification and start building systems that respect your cognitive resources and your life outside the office. Get a copy of Lisa's latest book here https://organize365.com/escapingquicksand/ Connect with Lisa https://www.linkedin.com/in/lisawoodruff/

Duration:00:47:31

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Working Parents Have the Highest Burnout Rates in Your Company. Here's What to Do About It | Rosina McAlpine

4/12/2026
Every HR leader knows the numbers. Absenteeism. Turnover. Declining performance. What most won't say out loud is who's driving them. Working parents. Not because they're less committed. Not because they can't handle pressure. But because we built the modern workplace for a reality that stopped existing decades ago — and nobody has had the courage to redesign it. Dr. Rosina McAlpine has spent over a decade working with hundreds of organizations and hundreds of thousands of working parents on exactly this problem. As CEO of Win Win Parenting and a former university researcher in work-family integration, Dr. Rosina McAlpine doesn't deal in feel-good programs and tick-box policies. She deals in data, systems change, and the kind of practical frameworks that actually move the needle. In this conversation with Ivan Palomino, Dr. Rosina McAlpine breaks down why the "leave your personal life at the door" model is now a business liability, what a genuinely family-friendly organization looks like beyond the branding, and how HR leaders can build the business case in numbers a CFO will respect. If you're an HR professional, a people leader, or an executive who suspects your organization is losing more than it realizes — this episode is your starting point. In this episode: Connect with Dr. Rosina McAlpine: winwinparenting.com | drrosina.com Growth Hacking Culture is a top 5% global podcast hosted by Ivan Palomino, exploring the human side of leadership and workplace performance.

Duration:00:47:21

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The Neuroscience of Company Culture: How Stress, Psychological Safety and Brain Science Drive (or Kill) Organizational Performance

4/5/2026
Most organizations are investing billions in leadership development, resilience training, and mindfulness programs — and burnout rates keep climbing. The problem isn't the intervention. It's that they're treating symptoms while the culture keeps producing the damage. In this episode of the Growth Hacking Culture Podcast, Ivan Palomino speaks with Dr. Irena O'Brien — cognitive neuroscientist and founder of The Neuroscience School — about what brain science actually tells us about workplace culture, stress, and organizational performance. Dr. Irena cuts through the corporate wellness theatre to deliver what the research really says: culture is not a soft layer on top of performance. It is one of the key conditions the brain uses to calculate threat, cost, effort, and possibility. And when that culture is chaotic, punitive, or overloaded — your people's brains are spending more of the day managing biological cost than doing the work you hired them for. In this episode you will discover: → The most dangerous neuroscience myth running loose in corporate culture right now → Why insight and awareness training don't create behavioral change — and what does → What psychological unsafe environments do to the prefrontal cortex over time → The concept of allostasis and why every CEO should understand it before making culture decisions → Why high performers burn out faster — and what the data says about culture vs. compensation as a driver of turnover → The 6-hour cognitive limit and how decision fatigue silently degrades your organization's judgment → Why working from home improved productivity for many — and what that tells us about energy and autonomy → How to organize work around your brain's actual energy peaks Free resource from Dr. Irena O'Brien: Applied Neuroscience Starter Kit — built specifically for this episode's audience: 👉 https://loveneuroscience.com/culture 🌐 Listen to her podcast, The Neuroscience of Coaching https://neuroscienceschool.com/podcasts/ About the host: Ivan Palomino https://simplyhuman.substack.com/https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/growth-hacking-culture/id1610439533https://www.ivanpalomino.net/blog-ivan-palominohttps://x.com/ivanpalominohttps://www.instagram.com/ivanpalomino.official/

Duration:00:36:01

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Why Talent Won't Save You | Evan Marks on the Mental Edge Every Leader Needs

3/30/2026
Most leaders are wired to push harder when things get tough. Evan Marks spent 25 years on Wall Street doing exactly that — until a panic attack stopped him cold at 46. What he built after that experience became M1 Performance Group, and a coaching philosophy that's now used by top executives, athletes, and traders around the world. His core argument: talent is table stakes. What actually separates the best from the rest is what happens in your head when everything goes sideways. In this conversation, Evan and Ivan get into the real stuff — the 35,000 decisions your brain processes daily, why "controlling your emotions" is the wrong goal, how to find composure when the pressure never lets up, and what regret has to do with any of it. No hacks. No toxic positivity. Just a honest conversation about what elite performance actually looks like from the inside. Evan's book The Quiet Edge drops soon. Find him at m1performancegroup.com And don't forget to listen to his latest TedTalk What if Your Worst Day Could Change the World Growth Hacking Culture is a top 5% global podcast hosted by Ivan Palomino, exploring the human side of leadership and workplace culture.

Duration:00:50:26

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Fredrik Haren on The Curiosity Architecture: Designing a Brain That Thrives at Work

3/23/2026
Have you ever felt like your brain is on "auto-pilot"? You sit in the same chair, stare at the same screen, and follow the same routines until your office feels like a "sensory desert". Biologically, we are wired for discovery, yet the modern workplace often trades that natural curiosity for pure efficiency. In this episode, I’m joined by the "Creativity Explorer" himself, Fredrik Haren. Fredrik has traveled to over 75 countries to interview the world's most inventive minds, and he’s here to help us build what he calls the "Curiosity Architecture". We aren't just talking about "brainstorming" fluff. We’re diving into the real tactics—from the "50-Meter Rule" used by Swiss illustrators to the way an identical twin uses AI to "brainstorm with themselves". If you've ever felt that curiosity at work is an "admission of incompetence," this conversation will help you flip the script and turn "not knowing" into your greatest professional asset. 🎙️ In this episode, we explore: The 50-Meter Rule: Why turning around every 50 meters helps you see "twice as much forest"—and how to apply that to your desk. Micro-Rituals for the Office: Why simply shifting your chair 25 degrees can trick your brain out of a "biologically stuck" state. The Art of "Fractaling": How to find world-class ideas by diving deep into your own supply chain or the lives of your customers. Bypassing the Amygdala: How leaders can design meetings that signal "safety to play" rather than just "safety to comply". The "What Do You Think?" Rule: A life-changing tip for raising creative children and leading more innovative teams. 🕒 Timestamps: 00:00 – Why the modern office is a "Sensory Desert". 05:40 – The 50-Meter Rule: A ritual for seeing what others miss. 12:10 – The "Dopamine Trick": Breaking out of auto-pilot. 17:35 – Digital vs. Tactile: Why your brain needs physical artifacts. 23:15 – What is "Fractaling"? Finding the hidden value in your work. 30:10 – Designing "Safe" Meetings: Getting the best from your team. 35:30 – Questions > Answers: Rewiring the corporate reward system. 45:50 – AI as your "Digital Twin": Scaling your own curiosity. 52:40 – Final Thoughts: One small change to make to your desk today. 🔗 Connect with Fredrik Haren: Website: FredrikHaren.com Book: The World of Creativity About the host: Ivan Palomino https://simplyhuman.substack.com/SpotifyApple podcasthttps://www.ivanpalomino.net/blog-ivan-palominohttps://x.com/ivanpalomino_https://www.instagram.com/ivanpalomino.official/

Duration:00:54:00

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The Habit Factor: Transform Corporate Values into Daily Actions with Christoph Merrill

3/18/2026
In this episode of Growth Hacking Culture, we dive deep into The Habit Factor—the scientific bridge between stated company values and actual employee behavior. Our guest, Christoph Merrill (The Habit Freak), argues that most culture initiatives fail because they rely on inspiration rather than habit formation. When the pressure of the corporate world hits, people don't fall back on mission statements; they fall back on their habitual defaults. If you want to transform your organization, you have to stop "managing" culture and start "hacking" habits. In this episode, we deconstruct: The Habit Loop in Business: How to identify the cues and rewards that drive current (and often counter-productive) office behaviors. Why Willpower is a Corporate Myth: Why even the most dedicated employees struggle with culture change without a habit-based system. Identity-Based Habit Formation: Moving your team from "following rules" to "embodying the brand" through consistent, repeatable actions. The 92-Day Habit Rule: Why short-term "culture workshops" don't work and the timeline required for a new habit to become the organizational default. The Zappos Model: Real-world examples of how habit-driven identity creates a self-sustaining high-performance culture. Whether you are an HR leader, a CEO, or a manager looking to improve team dynamics, this conversation provides a tactical blueprint for using habit science to drive measurable cultural transformation. Connect with Christoph Merrill: Want to learn more about mastering your defaults or bringing habit-based transformation to your team? Connect with "The Habit Freak" here: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/christophmerrill/ Website: https://www.christophmerrill.com/ Show Notes & Timestamps 00:00 – The problem with "Values on Walls." 05:30 – Christoph Merrill’s journey into habit science. 11:15 – Why willpower fails in a corporate environment. 17:40 – Designing a "Default Operating System" for your team. 25:20 – The 92-Day Rule: Moving from initiative to instinct. 33:10 – Maintaining cultural integrity during high-stress periods. 42:05 – Practical first steps for "Culture Hacking" your department.

Duration:01:02:03

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Human-Centric AI Leadership: Paul Gibbons on the "Great Collisions" of Agency & Algorithms

3/12/2026
How do we lead with soul in a world run by code? In this episode, we explore the concept of Human-Centric AI Leadership with renowned strategist Paul Gibbons. We dive deep into his framework of the "Great Collisions"—the friction points where human agency, empathy, and algorithmic decision-making meet in the modern workplace. Paul discusses why the rise of AI doesn't mean the end of human influence, but rather a call to strengthen our uniquely human capabilities. If you are a leader or professional trying to navigate the shift toward automation without losing the "human touch," this conversation provides the ethical and practical roadmap you need. Key Takeaways: The Agency Collision: How to maintain professional autonomy when algorithms begin to suggest—or make—decisions for us. The Empathy Gap: Why artificial intelligence can simulate empathy but never truly replicate the human connection required for effective leadership. Navigating the Great Collisions: Practical steps for integrating AI into your workflow while protecting employee morale and agency. The Future of Management: Why "Human-Centric AI Leadership" is the most critical skill set for the next decade. Episode Highlights [00:00] – Introduction: Defining Human-Centric AI Leadership. [05:30] – What are the "Great Collisions" at work? [12:15] – Why Human Agency is the antidote to "Algorithmic Anxiety." [20:45] – Empathy vs. Simulation: Can AI truly understand human needs? [28:10] – The Ethics of Automation: Avoiding the "Black Box" leadership trap. [37:50] – Case Studies: Successes and failures in the collision of humans and tech. [48:20] – Actionable advice for leaders navigating the next 5 years of AI. References: Adaptive Adoption™BRAINS BODIES MINDS (The Great Collisions, Volume I): Think Bigger Think Better Newsletter

Duration:01:04:42

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Stop Leading, Start Being: The Provocative Path to Authentic Authority with Will Steel

3/5/2026
The world is full of exhausted leaders who have been conditioned to believe that leadership is a performance—a set of KPIs to hit and a professional mask to wear. But what if the very act of trying to lead is what is stopping you from being effective? In this episode of the Growth Hacking Culture podcast, we sit down with Will Steel, a former RAF pilot and executive coach who argues that your leadership genius is already within you, buried under a lifetime of social conditioning. We explore the ontological approach to leadership: focusing on the nature of being rather than just doing. Will shares powerful stories from his time in the Royal Air Force and his work across the globe, illustrating how stripping away internal "noise" and limiting beliefs allows your natural authority to emerge. If you are tired of the corporate mask and ready to lead with radical presence, this conversation is for you. 🕒 Timestamps: 0:00 – Why the world is full of exhausted leaders 4:15 – The Leadership Paradox: Why "doing" isn't enough 9:30 – Lessons from the RAF: Failing the officer course to find your voice 14:50 – Breaking the Persona: Stripping away the "Professional Mask" 20:10 – Leadership as Subtraction: Removing internal blocks 26:45 – Radical Presence: Learning to truly listen and be "gotten" 32:20 – The Goth Phase & The Rock Climber: How we create our identities 38:05 – Managing High-Stakes Pressure: Boards, teams, and internal noise 44:15 – Ontological Coaching vs. Traditional Training 49:30 – Real-World Transformation: Will’s story of radical reconciliation 56:00 – Final Thoughts and Resources ✅ Micro-Actions for Authentic Leadership: To move from "doing" leadership to "being" a leader, try these small shifts this week: Catch the "Monkey Mind": When in a meeting, notice when you start thinking about what to say next instead of listening. Intentionally return your focus to the person speaking. Practice Subtraction: Identify one "professional mask" or behavior you use to look smart or capable. Try to interact once today without using it. The "Who Am I" Inquiry: Reflect on your job title. Remind yourself that the title is what you do, not who you are. Admit a Blind Spot: If you lose presence or get defensive, simply say: "I’m sorry, I wasn't listening/I got defensive. Can you say that again?" Notice how it increases trust. Connect with Will Steel: Website: https://willsteel.com/ Book: Free to Lead - https://a.co/d/0iNwsQ4i

Duration:00:57:46

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How to Use AI for Innovation and Creative Problem Solving with Andy Sitison

2/26/2026
Stop using AI just to move faster—start using it to think bigger. In this episode, we sit down with Andy Sitison, CTO of Share More Stories, to explore the shift from AI as a productivity tool to AI as a cognitive catalyst. Most companies use AI to automate tedious tasks, but the real competitive advantage lies in using it to break through human cognitive biases like functional fixedness. We dive into the neuroscience of creativity, discussing how AI mimics "associative activation" to help humans synthesize disparate ideas into breakthrough solutions. Andy explains how to distinguish between AI-generated novelty and true, human-led innovation, and why businesses must protect their "brand soul" in an era of algorithmic sameness. Whether you are a CEO, an entrepreneur, or a creative professional, this conversation will change how you view the boundary between human intuition and machine intelligence. Key Topics Covered: The Science of Insight: How AI mimics the brain’s ability to connect unrelated dots. Breaking the "Status Quo": Using AI to bypass the mental habits that block innovation. Novelty vs. Innovation: Why "new" isn't always "better" for your bottom line. The Risk of Cognitive Atrophy: How to stay sharp while delegating implementation to machines. Predicting Unmet Needs: Using customer stories to find problems they haven't voiced yet. Connect with our Guest: Andy Sitison on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andy-sitison/ About Andy: As the CTO of Share More Stories, Andy has spent over a decade developing AI solutions for Employee Experience (EX), Customer Experience (CX), and market research. About the host: Ivan Palomino https://simplyhuman.substack.com/SpotifyApple podcasthttps://www.ivanpalomino.net/blog-ivan-palominohttps://x.com/ivanpalomino_https://www.instagram.com/ivanpalomino.official/

Duration:00:49:24

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The ROI of Belonging: Using Neuroscience to Unlock Team Productivity with Andrea D. Carter

2/21/2026
Is "Culture Fit" actually sabotaging your bottom line? In this episode, Ivan sits down with neuroscience-based researcher Andrea Carter, founder of the Belonging First methodology. We dive into the biological reality of high-performing teams and why traditional EDI metrics often miss the mark. Learn why "masking" at work causes the prefrontal cortex to shut down and how shifting your focus from "fit" to "belonging" can lead to a 56% increase in job performance and a 50% drop in turnover risk. Key Takeaways: The Biology of Inclusion: How social survival mechanisms in the brain override logic and creativity. Beyond the "Soft Side" of HR: Why belonging is a hard metric for ROI and organizational health. Measuring What Matters: An introduction to the 5 key indicators of belonging. Diverse Teams vs. Innovative Teams: Why diversity alone doesn't guarantee performance—and what’s missing. Resources Mentioned: Andrea’s Assessment Tool: belongingfirst.com Substack: andreadcarter.substack.com LinkedIn: Andrea D Carter Notable Quotes: "When an employee feels they have to mask their true self to fit in, their brain's prefrontal cortex... literally shuts down to prioritize social survival." About the host: Ivan Palomino https://simplyhuman.substack.com/SpotifyApple podcasthttps://www.ivanpalomino.net/blog-ivan-palominohttps://x.com/ivanpalomino_https://www.instagram.com/ivanpalomino.official/

Duration:01:02:38

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Linda M. Perry on Upstream Causes, Downstream Results: The Science of "Why" at Work

2/15/2026
In this episode of Growth Hacking Culture, host Ivan Palomino sits down with Linda M. Perry, a renowned leadership and execution strategist, to explore why high-performing teams suddenly lose momentum. If you are seeing a drop in productivity or a rise in "quiet quitting," the problem likely isn't your software or your systems—it's a Meaning Gap. Linda uses her unique background as a former federal criminal defense attorney to diagnose the "upstream" psychological blocks that prevent "downstream" execution. She introduces the WHY Operating System™, a framework designed to help leaders understand the biological and neurological drivers that determine how an employee interacts with their work. Learn how to stop treating symptoms and start addressing the fundamental human need for belonging and agency to turn your team into a self-leading, goal-crushing powerhouse. Key Discussion Points: The Science of "Stuckness": Why feeling "stuck" is actually a biological stress response triggered when an employee's core needs for belonging and mattering are not met. The Three Execution Gaps: A deep dive into the Clarity Gap (not seeing the connection), the Agency Gap (having no control), and the Values Gap (misalignment with company mission). The 9 Whys of Leadership: Understanding how different "Whys"—such as Trust, Better Way, or Contribute—dictate how individuals process information and make decisions. Subconscious Roadblocks: How "Shadow Beliefs" formed in early childhood drive 95% of adult leadership decisions and how to debug these internal "system bugs". Upstream vs. Downstream Management: Why shifting your focus to upstream psychological causes leads to automated downstream revenue and growth results. The "Self-Leading" Team: Practical steps to foster agency so your team can execute at peak performance without constant founder intervention. Episode Chapters: [00:00] – Why talented teams hit the 40% goal plateau. [04:20] – The "Meaning Gap": The existential hunger for purpose in the modern workplace. [09:15] – From Criminal Law to Corporate Strategy: Diagnosing human nature. [14:45] – Deep Dive: Clarity, Agency, and the Values Gaps. [21:10] – The WHY Assessment: Discovering your team's unique operating system. [27:50] – Rewiring the Brain: How to overcome limiting "Shadow Beliefs". [33:30] – Scaling without the Founder: The secret to self-executing teams. [39:15] – Final Advice: How to start the journey toward radical self-awareness. About Our Guest: Linda M. Perry is a master of the "Psychology of Execution." After 17 years as a criminal defense attorney, she transitioned into business strategy to help executives and founders solve the human problems that stall revenue. She is a certified WHY Institute professional and a leading voice in human-centric leadership. Connect with Linda: Official Website: lindamperry.com LinkedIn: Linda M. Perry About the host: Ivan Palomino https://simplyhuman.substack.com/https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/growth-hacking-culture/id1610439533https://www.ivanpalomino.net/blog-ivan-palominohttps://x.com/ivanpalomino_https://www.instagram.com/ivanpalomino.official/

Duration:00:44:00

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The Connection ROI: Why Feeling "Seen and Heard" Boosts Profits by 38% with Jonathan Thorp

2/10/2026
Are your employees truly engaged, or are they part of the 70% just "plotting along" until the end of the day? In this episode of the Growth Hacking Culture Podcast, we dive into a "five-alarm fire" for business leaders: the massive disconnect in the modern hybrid workplace. Joining us is Dr. Jonathan Thorp, researcher and founder of Quantum Connections, to discuss why the fundamental supervisor-employee relationship is the most undervalued asset in business. We move past the "soft skill" clichés to look at validated data proving that fully connected workforces are 38% more profitable. Key Topics Discussed: The Disengagement Crisis: Why 7 out of 10 employees are currently disengaged and the hidden costs to your productivity. The Seen and Heard Framework: Moving beyond "feel-good" factors to measurable relational metrics. Why Performance Reviews Fail: The "heritage processes" that actually prevent honest connection between managers and teams. Psychological Safety vs. Comfort: Why a healthy culture isn't a "land of pillows," but a place where it is safe to fail and take risks. The 3 Layers of Culture: How to align what your company claims to be with what your employees actually believe. Episode Timestamps: 00:00 – Tackling the 70% disengagement rate in the modern workforce. 08:15 – The ROI of Connection: Why "seen and heard" teams outperform the competition. 15:30 – High-Tech vs. High-Touch: Why AI can’t mirror human validation. 22:45 – The 3 Layers of Culture: Aspirational, Actual, and Beliefs. 31:10 – Redesigning the performance review for real-time dialogue. 38:50 – Practical tools for leaders: Mirroring and making "appointments". Resources Mentioned: 🔗 Measure Your Workplace Connection: Net Connected Score 👤 Connect with Dr. Jonathan Thorp: LinkedIn 🌐 Learn More: Quantum Connections This episode is brought to you by Experts Suisses- Swiss Excellence at Your Service. https://simplyhuman.substack.com/https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/growth-hacking-culture/id1610439533https://www.ivanpalomino.net/blog-ivan-palominohttps://x.com/ivanpalomino_https://www.instagram.com/ivanpalomino.official/

Duration:00:44:38

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The Analytical Manager’s Guide to Leadership with Dalmo Cirne

2/7/2026
Why do highly talented engineers and technical experts often struggle when promoted to management? In this episode, we sit down with Dalmo Cirne, author of "The 4 Streams of Leadership," to deconstruct the "management bug" that many analytical minds face. Moving from a world of logic and technical precision into a world of constant change and human demand requires a total "refactor" of your professional identity. Dalmo shares his 4 Streams Framework, designed specifically for technical leaders to move from frustrated specialists to overachieving managers. In this episode, you will learn: The 4 Streams of Leadership: How to balance the "Reservoir" (self-management), "Downstream" (teams/operations), "Upstream" (senior management), and "Sidestream" (peers). Building High-Performance Teams: Why you need a strategic balance of Visionaries, Implementers, and Closers to cross the finish line. Upstream Communication: How to create an "interface" for non-technical upper management using objective metrics and the "4-slide strategy." The Problem with Metrics: Understanding Goodhart’s Law—why a measure ceases to be a good measure the moment it becomes a target. Sustainable Productivity: How to maintain a steady velocity and avoid the "burnout rollercoaster" through effective backlog management. About the Guest: Dalmo Cirne is a veteran tech leader with over 20 years of experience in startups and large corporations. He specializes in helping technical experts master the "creative craft" of management by applying objective criteria to the human elements of business. Detailed Timestamps: 0:00 – Intro: Why technical precision alone fails in leadership. 2:38 – The "Baptism by Fire": Dalmo’s move from Engineer to Leader. 5:10 – Why analytical minds try to model human interaction (and fail). 10:32 – Deep Dive: The 4 Streams of Leadership framework. 13:14 – Process vs. Explanatory Knowledge: Understanding the "Why." 19:35 – The Reservoir: The importance of self-management and self-awareness. 22:15 – The Identity Shift: Moving to a "foreign land" where skills change. 28:45 – Team Construction: Balancing Visionaries, Implementers, and Closers. 37:18 – Productivity Velocity: Avoiding the "Burnout Rollercoaster." 40:02 – Upstream Flow: Communicating technical data to non-technical bosses. 42:50 – Goodhart’s Law: Why sticking to the wrong metrics kills progress. 45:15 – The "4-Slide" Status Report: Effective communication tips. 47:40 – Redefining Success: Working smarter through a ready backlog. Connect with Dalmo Cirne: 🌐 Website: dalmocirne.com or on LinkedIn

Duration:00:48:27

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Bionic Branding: How to Build and Protect Corporate Trust in the Age of AI with Gal Borenstein

2/3/2026
Navigating Digital Transformation in the modern landscape requires more than just processing power; it demands a resilient Human Infrastructure to safeguard your brand’s most valuable asset: trust. In this episode, Ivan Palomino is joined by Gal Borenstein, CEO of The Borenstein Group and author of Don't Believe the Hype, to explore the "Bionic Branding" framework. As corporations race to integrate generative AI, many are falling into a "reputation gap" where efficiency comes at the cost of authenticity. Gal explains why AI currently lacks the "common sense" of leadership and how a "Bionic" approach—pairing machine speed with human oversight—is the only way to scale without breaking the corporate soul. Whether you are dealing with "AI slop" or trying to maintain a premium narrative, this 57-minute deep dive provides the strategic roadmap for the AI era. Key Takeaways The Trust Millisecond: Decades of brand equity can be dismantled in a single millisecond by unmonitored AI hallucinations or cold, automated "Dear Empty" errors. Options vs. Decisions: While AI excels at generating high-speed options and data analysis, it lacks the moral agency and cognitive experience required for final executive decision-making. The 98% Accuracy Trap: In the corporate world, a 2% failure rate in AI can lead to a 100% loss in client trust; leaders must identify where "almost right" is a liability. Controlling the Narrative: If a company does not proactively manage its digital story, AI-driven scrapers and competitors will define the brand narrative for them. Internal Trust Index: Protecting a brand starts internally; executives must measure and align internal trust before scaling external AI operations. Connect with Gal on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/galborensteinexecutiveprofile/ and ask him for a copy of his latest book Gal's website https://www.borensteingroup.com/ Episode Timestamps 4:22 – Why AI is currently failing the "leadership" test. 9:15 – The "Dear Empty" error: How automation ruins credibility. 13:40 – Why AI can provide options, but never make real decisions. 18:55 – The 98% Accuracy Trap: When "almost right" is a disaster. 23:12 – The #1 mistake: Automating without a core purpose. 28:45 – Emotional IQ: The human skill AI can’t mimic in the boardroom. 33:20 – The Guardian Digital Trust Framework™ explained. 38:10 – How to measure your company’s internal "Trust Index". 43:55 – Why your narrative is being hijacked by unmonitored algorithms. 49:05 – The Bionic Executive: Steve Austin's lessons for AI leaders. 54:30 – How to control your brand's story before your competitors do. Episode Resources The GUARDIAN Digital Trust Framework™: A methodology for measuring and protecting brand equity. Bionic Branding: The strategy of balancing machine speed with human judgment. Don’t Believe the Hype: Gal Borenstein’s guide to trust in the AI cycle. The Trust Index: A benchmark for internal alignment and authenticity. Quote of the Episode "AI can give you speed, but only a human can give you a promise." — Gal Borenstein If you found these insights on Bionic Branding valuable, please subscribe to the podcast and leave a review on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Your feedback helps us bring more world-class strategists to the show. This episode is brought to you by Experts Suisses. https://simplyhuman.substack.com/https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/growth-hacking-culture/id1610439533https://www.ivanpalomino.net/blog-ivan-palominohttps://x.com/ivanpalomino_https://www.instagram.com/ivanpalomino.official/

Duration:00:57:30

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How to Lead Through the Fog: Communicating Uncertainty with Salvatore Manzi

1/27/2026
When navigating organizational change, communicating uncertainty effectively is the most critical skill a leader can possess. While many leaders' first instinct is to wait for "all the facts" before speaking, silence during a transition can be dangerous. Neuroscience reveals that the human brain treats ambiguity as a physical threat, triggering a "survival mode" that stifles creativity and fuels the "rumor mill". In this episode, we sit down with Salvatore Manzi, author of Clear and Compelling, to dismantle the myth that leaders must have complete data before engaging their teams. Sakvatore introduces his "Uncertainty Framework," a tactical four-step roadmap designed to restore psychological safety when the destination is still moving. We explore why clarity is more valuable than certainty, how to use the "Lighthouse Method" for consistent updates, and the "Pilot’s Secret" for explaining decision-making processes rather than promising impossible outcomes. Whether you are leading through a merger, a reorganization, or a shifting market, this conversation provides the executive toolkit needed to command a room when the data is incomplete. Key Takeaways The Stress of Silence: Research indicates that uncertainty is actually more stressful to the human brain than knowing a negative outcome is certain. Survival vs. Collaboration: When leaders are silent, employees' brains switch to self-preservation, causing collaboration and productivity to drop significantly. The 4-Step Framework: Leaders should follow a specific sequence: 1) State the obvious (what is and isn't known), 2) Take a stand (commit to a belief), 3) Invite participation (give the team a role), and 4) Connect to the big picture. The Lighthouse Method: Trust is built through predictability; frequent, brief "pulses" of information are more effective than infrequent, dense updates during a crisis. Transparency in Process: Instead of making hollow promises, leaders should explain the how behind their decision-making to build trust without risking broken commitments later. Episode Resources Clear and Compelling: The book by Salvatore Manzi outlining communication strategies for leaders. Nature Communications Study: Research cited regarding the brain's heightened stress response to uncertainty. The Uncertainty Framework: The tactical 4-step roadmap for leading through the fog. Salvatore Manzi on LinkedIn "If you're walking through the fog, it's more important to have a torch than it is to actually know the destination. A leadership who speaks in times of uncertainty is that torch." — Salvatore Manzi Thank you for listening to this episode on the art of leadership communication. If you found these insights valuable, please subscribe to the podcast and leave a review on your preferred platform to help other leaders discover these strategies. For more tactical advice and to download the frameworks discussed today, be sure to visit the resources listed in these show notes. This episode is brought to you by Experts Suisses. https://simplyhuman.substack.com/https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/growth-hacking-culture/id1610439533https://www.ivanpalomino.net/blog-ivan-palominohttps://x.com/ivanpalomino_https://www.instagram.com/ivanpalomino.official/

Duration:00:28:44

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AI vs. Bureaucracy: How to Lead at Formula 1 Speed with Nikki Barua

1/22/2026
Is your organization trying to drive at Formula 1 speeds using a horse-and-carriage engine? In this episode, we dive into the "Speed Paradox" of AI leadership and why buying the latest technology is useless if your corporate culture is built on layers of bureaucracy. Corporate structures are often designed for safety and consensus, but the AI era demands non-linear speed and workforce autonomy. Nikki Barua, CEO of Flipwork, joins Ivan Palomino to explain why the "Command and Control" model is now a recipe for disaster. You will learn: The Navy SEAL Framework: How to shift from massive "armies" to mission-oriented, agile teams. Autonomy with Guardrails: The psychological and structural shift needed to empower employees without creating chaos. The 90-Day Sprint: A tactical approach to "People Squared" productivity that doubles capacity without increasing headcount. 00:00 – The Speed Paradox: Why corporate engines are failing. 06:45 – Agility vs. Speed: Why "Better Brakes" allow you to drive faster. 12:30 – Beyond KPIs: Using the "Anti-Vision" to ensure project success. 19:20 – The "Painted Picture" strategy for team motivation. 26:40 – The Diamond Organization: Navigating the future of entry-level work. 33:42 – The Meta-Skill of Unlearning: Shedding old corporate habits. Featured Guest: Nikki Barua Nikki Barua is the CEO of Flipwork and a leading voice on workforce transformation. She helps organizations navigate the intersection of human psychology and exponential technology. Connect with Nikki: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nikkibarua/ Visit Flipwork: https://www.flipwork.ai/ Beyond Barriers: How to Unlock Your Limitless Potential This episode is brought to you by Experts Suisses. https://simplyhuman.substack.com/ https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/growth-hacking-culture/id1610439533 https://www.ivanpalomino.net/blog-ivan-palominohttps://x.com/ivanpalomino_https://www.instagram.com/ivanpalomino.official/

Duration:00:38:45

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Can AI Make You More Human? Scaling Empathy in Leadership with Ben Perreau

1/18/2026
Nearly 75% of employees identify their manager as the primary source of workplace stress. In this deep-dive discussion, we explore how AI help for leadership is transitioning from a futuristic concept to a "bionic enhancement" for the modern executive. Host Ivan Palomino sits down with Ben Perreau, the founder of Parafoil, to discuss the "Empathy Mirror"—a radical approach to management that uses technology to reflect our own communication habits back to us. The conversation challenges the traditional "trial by fire" mentorship model, suggesting that leadership today requires the same level of instrumentation as a modern aircraft cockpit. By leveraging psycholinguistics, Perreau explains how we can analyze the "Human OS" to bridge the gap between corporate efficiency and genuine human connection. We discuss the danger of "average" insights from general AI, the critical role of middle management in shaping culture, and why the most effective leadership technology focuses on the person before the professional. Whether you are leading a small team or a global organization, this episode provides a blueprint for using technology to reclaim your human intuition. Key Takeaways The Instrumentation of Leadership: Modern leadership is too complex to be managed by "feel" alone; leaders need digital "flight instruments" to understand team dynamics in real-time. The "Average" Trap: Relying on general-purpose AI (like standard LLMs) risks sanitizing leadership into a "median" output, whereas specialized AI helps preserve a leader’s unique, authentic voice. Never Delegate Understanding: While AI can synthesize data, a leader must never outsource the actual understanding of their people to a machine—technology should assist, not replace, intuition. The Middle Management Engine: Culture isn't just modeled at the C-Suite; it lives and breathes in the daily interactions of middle managers, who carry the heaviest emotional burden of the organization. Intrinsic Motivation vs. Training: Effective leadership growth happens when a manager wants to become a better person for their own sake, not just because of a corporate HR mandate. Episode Resources Parafoil.co: Ben Perreau’s leadership intelligence platform. The Eames Principle: The design philosophy of Charles and Ray Eames regarding the "delegation of understanding." Psycholinguistics: The study of the relationships between linguistic behavior and psychological processes. The "Human OS": The concept of human behavior and communication as a foundational operating system. Quote of the Episode "We have been told for decades that leadership is an art... but the old model is breaking. We don't need AI to replace the manager; we need it to act as a bionic enhancement—a mirror that shows us how we truly listen." — Ben Perreau If you found value in this exploration of the future of leadership, please subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Spotify. Leaving a review helps other innovative leaders find these conversations. For more insights on human-centric leadership, visit our website and join our community of practitioners. This episode is sponsored by Experts Suisses (Swiss Excellence at Your Service)

Duration:00:43:13

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How to Build Human Infrastructure for Digital Transformation with Barbara Wittmann

1/11/2026
In an era where technology evolves at the speed of light, many organizations find their Digital Transformation efforts stalled by a neglected component: Human Infrastructure. While billions are poured into software patches and AI integrations, the "Human OS"—the cognitive and cultural framework of the workforce—often remains trapped in a legacy state. This episode features a deep dive with Barbara Wittmann, CEO of the Digital Wisdom Collective, into why technical implementation is only 20% of the success equation. Host Ivan Palomino and Barbara explore the "Stone Age Brain" paradox, where 21st-century tools are wielded by a biological operating system wired for physical threat rather than digital complexity. They discuss the critical need for "Third Spaces" in corporate environments—areas where experimentation is safe and failure is viewed as a prerequisite for growth. Whether you are a senior executive or a middle manager feeling like a "victim" of top-down strategy, this conversation provides a roadmap for shifting from digital literacy to digital wisdom. Learn why the next competitive advantage isn't the AI you buy, but the human capacity you cultivate to use it. Key Takeaways Mindset Over Machines: True digital transformation requires an 80% focus on people and mindset, with only 20% allocated to the actual technology. The "Human OS" Upgrade: Organizations must move beyond teaching technical skills (digital literacy) to fostering "Digital Wisdom," which involves adaptability, awareness, and cognitive growth. Embrace the "Co-Working Buddy": Instead of fearing AI as a replacement, leaders should frame it as a co-working partner, allowing employees to delegate routine tasks and focus on high-value human connection. Cultivate "Third Spaces": Innovation thrives when leaders create "gardens" or test environments where teams can play, fail, and iterate without the fear of losing their bonuses. Empower the Middle: Change ripples outward from middle management; empowering these leaders to move from "victims of strategy" to "owners of transformation" is vital for organizational health. Episode Resources The Human OS: A concept describing the biological and cognitive "operating system" of humans that must be upgraded to match modern technology. Human Infrastructure: The foundational layer of culture, psychological safety, and adaptability required to support digital tools. Digital Wisdom Collective: The organization led by Barbara Wittmann focused on shifting corporate focus from tech to human potential. Digital Literacy vs. Digital Wisdom: The distinction between knowing how to use a tool and having the wisdom to integrate it meaningfully into work. Quote of the Episode "21st-century software cannot run on a Stone Age brain. To survive the digital age, we don’t just need better tools; we need better human infrastructure." — Barbara Wittmann How to reach out to Barbara Wittmann? Her website https://www.digitalwisdomcollective.com/ Her newsletter https://digitalwisdomcollective.substack.com/ If you found value in this discussion on the intersection of humanity and technology, please subscribe to the show and leave a review on your favorite podcast platform. Your feedback helps us bring more innovative ideas to leaders worldwide.

Duration:00:49:03