Podcast Notes Playlist: Business

Podcast Notes

We take notes on the best podcasts so you don't have to. Subscribe to this playlist in your podcast app to automatically get all the episodes we've taken notes for along with the notes themselves! The latest for the tag BUSINESS

  1. Morgan Housel: Wealth is What You Have Minus What You Want

    JAN 25

    Morgan Housel: Wealth is What You Have Minus What You Want

    Knowledge Project Key Takeaways  All wealth is what you have minus what you want. It is way easier to manage the second part of this statement; you can double your income, but it is probably easier to reduce what you want by half  The lack of contentment is the seed of progress A good proxy for the health of a country: Can a 28-year-old buy a house?Helping your kids buy a house when they’re 30 will give them a much greater boost in life compared to giving them $1m when you die, and they’re 70 “Passive income” doesn’t exist, and people are attracted to the idea of it because it sounds as though you can make money without doing real work Instead of getting angry about inflation, accept that it’s always going to be there and make decisions accordingly – i.e, save earned income in index funds for 10+ yearsSurvival is the key to achieving outperformance in the stock market; if you get average returns over 30 years, you’re going to outperform essentially any other strategy Read the full notes @ podcastnotes.orgMorgan Housel breaks down the exact framework he uses to build wealth, minimize financial stress, and buy freedom. While most financial advice focuses on how to get rich, Morgan explains why the skills needed to stay rich are completely different. You will learn why "boring" investing beats complex strategies, how to avoid the social traps that destroy wealth, and the specific equation for finding contentment. Morgan Housel is a partner at Collaborative Fund and the bestselling author of The Psychology of Money. Enjoy! ----- Approximate Timestamps: (00:00) Trailer/Introduction (00:58) What Drives You? (04:50) What Can Money Do For Us? (07:22) Happiness vs. Satisfaction (11:45) Becoming Financially Independent (14:40) Survival and Contrast (20:16) Ad Break (21:05) Investing: Can You Beat the Market? (22:32) When Is The Right Time To Buy a House? (26:45) Housing Affordability and Equity (28:39) Step by Step Investing (35:08) Eras of Life and Spending In Those Eras (43:50) Raising Kids With Money (48:46) Social Media: Expectations and Comparison (55:46) Lessons From the Vanderbilts (01:01:21) Learning From Others Spending Habits (01:07:51) Lessons From History: Depressions, Panics, Downturns (01:11:40) Net Worth in Cash (01:14:20) Passive Income and Financial Independence (01:25:58) Massive Success: Doing It All Again (01:32:27) What Should You Optimize For? (01:38:24) What Do You Splurge On? (01:40:38) What Can History Teach Us About Inflation? (01:47:46) Index Funds Allocation (01:53:36) What Is Success For You? ----- This episode of the Knowledge Project is for informational purposes only. The views and opinions expressed by Shane Parrish or our guests are solely their own. Nothing in this conversation should be considered investment advice, financial guidance, or a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Always do your own due diligence or consult with a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions. It's time to listen and learn. ----- Psychology of Money: https://geni.us/my3K Morgan Housel X: https://x.com/morganhousel Website: https://www.morganhousel.com/ ----- Upgrade: Get a hand edited transcripts and ad free experiences along with my thoughts and reflections at the end of every conversation. Learn more @ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠fs.blog/membership⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ ------ Newsletter: The Brain Food newsletter delivers actionable insights and thoughtful ideas every Sunday. It takes 5 minutes to read, and it’s completely free. Learn more and sign up at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠fs.blog/newsletter⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠------ Follow Shane Parrish: X: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://x.com/shaneparrish⁠ Insta: ⁠https://www.instagram.com/farnamstreet/⁠ LinkedIn: ⁠https://www.linkedin.com/in/shane-parrish-050a2183/⁠ ------ Thank you to the sponsors for this episode: Granola AI, The AI notepad for people in back-to-back meetings: https://www.granola.ai/shane Check out the Granola Notes here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    1h 58m
  2. 10 contrarian leadership truths every leader needs to hear | Matt MacInnis (Rippling)

    JAN 14

    10 contrarian leadership truths every leader needs to hear | Matt MacInnis (Rippling)

    Lenny's Podcast: Product | Growth | Career ✓ Claim Key Takeaways Deliberately understaff projects: Constraints force creativity and prevent bloat from politics and bureaucracyYou’ve gone too far when teams can’t ship basic functionalityThe sweet spot is uncomfortable but productive tensionGood teams get tired; great teams run in the red constantly and destroy good teams in that momentHigh alpha, low beta framework: Evaluate people and processes on upside potential (alpha) versus volatility (beta)Prioritize high alpha opportunities even with higher betaProcesses exist solely to lower beta but suppress alpha as a trade-offThe nuanced dance is decreasing volatility where needed (like payroll) without killing upside in innovation areasKnow when to quit your startup: If you’re not certain you have product-market fit, you don’t have itCompanies that hit big do so quickly; the “never quit” mentality is VC propaganda designed to extract value from founders, not protect themPivot twice or three times maximum, typically by year fourYou’re running an experiment to see if the universe has binding receptors for your product. If not, move on… Leadership means fighting entropy relentlesslyTeams naturally optimize for local comfort and disorderExecutives must demand 99% energy levels daily, or the system decaysTop performers don’t get 10% more rewards; they get 10-100xBeing “chill” accomplishes nothingWithholding negative feedback is selfish because you prioritize your comfort over making teammates and the company better Read the full notes @ podcastnotes.orgMatt MacInnis is the chief product officer and former longtime COO at Rippling, a unified workforce management platform valued at over $16 billion. We discuss: 1. Why “extraordinary results demand extraordinary efforts” 2. Why you should deliberately understaff projects, and how to know when you’ve gone too far 3. Matt’s transition from COO to CPO and what surprised him about leading product 4. The “high alpha, low beta” framework for evaluating people, processes, and products 5. When founders should quit their startups (hint: much earlier than VCs want you to) 6. How to fight entropy in your organization through relentless energy and intensity — Brought to you by: Google Gemini—Your everyday AI assistant: https://ai.dev/ Datadog—Now home to Eppo, the leading experimentation and feature flagging platform: https://www.datadoghq.com/lenny GoFundMe Giving Funds—Make year-end giving easy: http://gofundme.com/lenny — Transcript: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com/p/10-contrarian-leadership-truths — My biggest takeaways (for paid newsletter subscribers): https://www.lennysnewsletter.com/i/181916584/my-biggest-takeaways-from-this-conversation — Where to find Matt MacInnis: • X: https://x.com/stanine • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/macinnis • Email: macinnis@rippling.com — Where to find Lenny: • Newsletter: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com • X: https://twitter.com/lennysan • LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lennyrachitsky/ — In this episode, we cover: (00:00) Introduction to Matt MacInnis and Rippling (04:38) The importance of extraordinary efforts (08:37) The challenges and rewards of relentless effort (10:11) Your job as a leader is to preserve intensity (12:39) You learn far more from success than failure (16:34) Transitioning to chief product officer (19:54) Fixing product management at Rippling (25:27) The “high alpha, low beta” framework (28:55) The PQL framework (35:16) Hiring frameworks and team dynamics (36:52) A helpful interview tactic (40:00) Leading as a COO vs. a CPO (42:34) The reality of product-market fit (46:38) The problem with venture capital (49:29) When founders should quit their startups (41:48) The immutable market (54:13) Lessons from Notion’s success (57:43) Investment strategies and narrative violations (01:00:42) The power of compounding, power law, and entropy (01:07:02) Maintaining intensity and fighting entropy (01:11:33) The importance of feedback and escalations (01:14:31) Rippling’s vision and success (01:17:48) AI’s impact on SaaS and business software (01:23:42) AI corner (01:26:23) Final thoughts and lightning round — Referenced: • Rippling: https://www.rippling.com • Sunil Raman on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sunilraman • Dan Gill on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dangill • Carvana: https://www.carvana.com • Brian Chesky’s new playbook: https://www.lennysnewsletter.com/p/brian-cheskys-contrarian-approach • Parker Conrad on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/parkerconrad • Inkling: https://www.inkling.com • Akshay Kothari on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/akothari • Notion: https://www.notion.com • Conway’s law: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conway%27s_law • Seeking Alpha: https://seekingalpha.com • Dennis Rodman’s website: https://dennisrodman.com • Dancing pickle emoji: https://slackmojis.com/emojis/456-dancing_pickle • Pickle Rick: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pickle_Rick • SPOTAK: The Six Traits I Look for When I’m Hiring: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/spotak-six-traits-look-m-181335267.html • Geoff Lewis on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/geofflewis1 • Zenefits: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TriNet_Zenefits • New banking records prove Deel paid thief who stole trade secrets from Rippling: https://www.rippling.com/blog/new-banking-records-prove-deel-paid-thief-who-stole-trade-secrets-from-rippling • Workday: https://www.workday.com • Matic robots: https://maticrobots.com • Wall-E: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0910970 • Conviction: https://www.conviction.com • Mike Vernal on X: https://x.com/mvernal • Sarah Guo on X: https://x.com/saranormous • No Priors: https://linktr.ee/nopriors • Gemini: https://gemini.google.com • ChatGPT: https://chatgpt.com • Claude: https://claude.ai • Bryan Schreier on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bryanschreier • Heated Rivalry on HBO Max: https://www.hbomax.com/shows/heated-rivalry/50cd4e99-04ee-427b-a3b4-da721ed05d9c • Fellow coffee maker: https://fellowproducts.com/products/aiden-precision-coffee-maker — Recommended books: • Pale Blue Dot: A Vision of the Human Future in Space: https://www.amazon.com/Pale-Blue-Dot-Vision-Future/dp/0345376595 • Conscious Business: How to Build Value Through Values: https://www.amazon.com/Conscious-Business-Build-through-Values/dp/1622032020 • Thinking in Systems: https://www.amazon.com/Thinking-Systems-Donella-H-Meadows/dp/1603580557 • The Effective Executive: The Definitive Guide to Getting the Right Things Done: https://www.amazon.com/Effective-Executive-Definitive-Harperbusiness-Essentials/dp/0060833459 — Production and marketing by https://penname.co/. For inquiries about sponsoring the podcast, email podcast@lennyrachitsky.com. — Lenny may be an investor in the companies discussed. To hear more, visit www.lennysnewsletter.com

    1h 36m
  3. John Mackey, Whole Foods Market

    JAN 8

    John Mackey, Whole Foods Market

    David Senra Key Takeaways  Acquisition strategy as a competitive moatWhole Foods scaled to 550 stores by acquiring roughly 25 regional natural food markets early, inheriting their geographical-intellectual capital and local teams while competitors dismissed them as “hippies selling to hippies.”This allowed systematic expansion into new territories with established infrastructure rather than cold-starting each marketDifferentiation during competitor distractionWhile traditional grocers fixated on competing with Walmart on price (a losing battle), Mackey deliberately moved opposite by competing on quality and serviceThe market leader’s dominance actually created Whole Foods’ opportunity by forcing everyone else to play the wrong gameFounder-VC timeline misalignment as an existential riskA warning to entrepreneurs: Venture capitalists operate on 7-year return windows while builders think in decadesVCs are “hitchhikers with credit cards” who will try to accelerate growth artificially to pull forward exits, often destroying businesses that need patient capitalHis core advice: never surrender control to VCs regardless of their promisesThe forgiveness ceremony as a leadership toolAfter firing his own father from the board (necessary for company progression) and experiencing permanent regret from his final alienated conversation with his dying mother, Mackey now practices explicit “ceremonies of forgiveness” with key relationshipsSpeaking the words aloud and mutual exchange creates measurable relationship transformation that compounds over timePassion as a reality distortion fieldEntrepreneurs are “panhandlers for dreams” whose infectious belief systems recruit others into their visionThe most successful cult brands (Apple, Tesla, and early Whole Foods) are built by enthusiasts first, not marketing departmentsPhil Knight’sShoe Dog exemplifies this: evangelism for running itself created Nike, just as Mackey’s evangelism for healthy living created Whole FoodsRead the full notes @ podcastnotes.orgJohn Mackey is the co-founder of Whole Foods Market, where he also served as the company's CEO for 44 years (1980–2022). More recently, Mackey is the co-founder of Love.Life, a wellness company focused on a holistic approach to health. He is an entrepreneur, author and advocate for conscious capitalism who spent over four decades building the natural foods industry. Under his leadership, Whole Foods grew from a single store in Austin, Texas, in 1980 to the world's largest natural and organic foods retailer, with over 500 stores across North America and the United Kingdom before its acquisition by Amazon in 2017 for $13.7 billion. After dropping out of the University of Texas at Austin, Mackey opened SaferWay Natural Foods in 1978 with Renee Lawson Hardy. He merged SaferWay with Clarksville Natural Grocery in 1980 to create Whole Foods Market. He became known for pioneering high-quality natural foods retail, championing stakeholder-oriented business philosophy and popularizing the concept of conscious capitalism. His accomplishments include building Whole Foods into a Fortune 500 company, co-founding the Conscious Capitalism movement with Raj Sisodia, serving as CEO of Whole Foods for 44 years until his retirement in 2022, co-authoring "Conscious Capitalism: Liberating the Heroic Spirit of Business" in 2013 and "The Whole Foods Diet" in 2017 and launching Love.Life in 2023 to focus on longevity and integrative medicine. Episode show notes: https://www.davidsenra.com/episode/john-mackey Made possible by Ramp: ⁠https://ramp.com Function Health: https://functionhealth.com/senra Eight Sleep: https://eightsleep.com/senra Chapters (00:00:00) Fanatical Entrepreneurs: Why Work Feels Like Play (00:02:18) The Missionary vs. Mercenary Co-Founder Conflict (00:06:16) The Shirtless Hitchhiking Hippie and Johnny Rockefeller (00:08:12) Entrepreneur Confidence: Solving Puzzles and Cracking the Code (00:10:19) Flying Under the Radar: How Supermarkets Ignored Whole Foods (00:10:52) Venture Capitalists Are Hitchhikers With Credit Cards (00:14:03) Builder Entrepreneurs vs. Serial Entrepreneurs (00:16:31) Time Is the Only Filter I Trust (00:20:52) How Walmart Accidentally Fueled Whole Foods' Success (00:24:01) The Jaw-Drop Effect: When Customers First Walked In (00:27:17) Growth Through Acquisition: Building Geographic Platforms (00:29:19) Secret Allies: The Natural Foods Network (00:33:17) Mrs. Gooch's and the Revelation of Scale (00:34:52) Missionaries Sharing Financial Statements and Building Friendships (00:38:10) Never Competing Head-On With Friends (00:41:22) Going Public and Creating Liquidity for the Network (00:42:00) Continuous Learning: The Michael Dell Principle (00:44:10) Steve Jobs and Spotting Markets With Second-Rate Products (00:46:50) The Joy of Watching Team Members Become Millionaires (00:48:09) Capitalism: The Greatest Thing Humans Ever Invented (00:55:59) Cult Brands Are Built by Evangelists (00:58:01) Passion Is Infectious: The Reality Distortion Field (01:00:08) From Busboy to CEO: The Resume of an Entrepreneur (01:02:57) Learning From Near-Death Experiences (01:04:05) Money Means Freedom: Early Work Ethic (01:05:25) Shoe Dog as the Benchmark: Belief Is Irresistible (01:09:16) Documenting Time: Why Chronology Matters in Memoirs (01:11:14) Rockefeller, Bezos, and Musk: The Master Strategists (01:14:39) Using Doubt as Fuel: The Slow Burn of Proving People Wrong (01:20:04) Daniel Ek and Having No Ceilings (01:23:09) How His Father Shaped His Ambition (01:25:52) Firing His Father From the Board: The Hardest Decision (01:28:01) His Mother's Deathbed Wish and Lasting Regret (01:34:47) The Ceremony of Forgiveness (01:36:17) MDMA Therapy and Breathwork: Accessing Deeper Consciousness (01:38:54) The Entrepreneurial Journey as a Spiritual Journey (01:40:45) Conclusion Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    1h 41m
  4. JAN 7

    The Life of Jesus

    Founders ✓ Claim Intro Master Communicator: Jesus revolutionized teaching by combining memorable maxims with vivid storytelling and imagery.His ability to create mental pictures through metaphor and analogy made his lessons stickEffective teachings must use narratives so they are memorableRadical Love Philosophy: Jesus taught a universalist approach centered on “philanthropia” (love all mankind)His core message was simple yet revolutionary: love God completely, love your neighbor as yourself, and even love your enemies. This represented a dramatic shift from tribal thinking to universal human fellowshipInner Revolution Over External Change: Jesus emphasized that changing the world begins with self-transformationThe real revolution is internal: conquering prejudice, anger, and self-love while cultivating humility, gentleness, and genuine compassionThose who transform themselves inevitably transform the world around themMission-First Leadership: When launching his ministry, Jesus prioritized recruiting committed followersHe chose 12 apostles and demanded complete dedication to the missionThis principle applies today: the first critical step in any endeavor is assembling the right team of people fully committed to your visionThreat to Power Structures: Jesus’s teachings directly challenged both religious and political authorities of his time, ultimately leading to his executionHis message of universal love, humility, and service threatened those who relied on hierarchical power and tribal divisions to maintain controlRead the full notes @ podcastnotes.orgThe Life of Jesus as told in the book Jesus: A Biography of a Believer by Paul Johnson. This episode was originally published on Christmas Eve 2023.

    35 min
  5. JAN 7

    Top 10 Lessons from 2025

    How to Take Over the World Key Takeaways  Master clear, rapid communicationVision without articulation is uselessStrip messages to their essence: simple, clear, quickWhether written or spoken, eliminate complexity that slows understanding and executionCommit fully or don’t start; half-measures failMake extreme decisions fast with 70% of the desired informationThe Romans either destroyed or conquered cities completely or rebuilt them as Roman strongholdsClarity enables speed; being slow costs more than being wrongKnow precisely what you want: 95% of people drift through life without defining their goalsKnowing your exact objective is magnetic and separates leaders from followersYou cannot guide others toward a destination you haven’t identifiedCombine solitude with collaboration: Breakthrough thinking requires extended periods alone for ideas to developOnce formed, bring others in to executeNewton’s genius stemmed from deliberate isolation for deep thoughtPush beyond comfortable limits; going slightly too far reveals your true capacityAim impossibly high, then negotiate down to still get what you wantedCapture every idea immediately in a “waste book” with low standards to maintain creative momentum Read the full notes @ podcastnotes.orgIn this episode of How to Take Over the World, I do something a little different. Instead of breaking down one life, I share my top 10 leadership lessons drawn from every episode I released in 2025. 00:00 Introduction and Overview 02:19 Communicate Clearly at Scale 06:17 Define Your Myth 10:12 Seize Your Moment 13:28 Be Alone to Think, Collaborate to Build 16:33 Antis Inspiration 18:58 Make Extreme Decisions Quickly 24:31 Decision-Making Frameworks 28:06 Going a Little Too Far 31:20 The Power of Knowing What You Want 34:58 Being Competitively Playful --- Sponsors:⁠ David Senra Podcast ⁠⁠Zashi Wallet⁠⁠ Speechify⁠ The Classical Society Premium Version

    38 min
  6. Bernie Marcus: The Home Depot Story [Outliers]

    12/21/2025

    Bernie Marcus: The Home Depot Story [Outliers]

    Knowledge Project Intro Sixteen lessons learned from Bernie Marcus, the outlier: Bad money is worse than no money.Outcome over ego.Every customer is on loan.Bureaucracy is a fungus.Pitchers need Catchers.Promotions are an addiction; low prices are a discipline.It’s not a value until it costs you money.Win-Win or walk away.Hire people better than you.The best information isn’t in a spreadsheet; it’s in the customer walking out empty-handed.Invisible benefits often outweigh visible costs.The one-man show doesn’t scale.Instincts beat spreadsheets.The money is the scorecard, not the motivator.You’re never as smart as you think you are.Sometimes the company outgrows the people.Home Depot’s “Customer Bill of Rights” – the six things a customer wants to pay for: 1. The right assortment2. The right quantities3. The right price4. Associates on the sales floor who want to take care of customers5. Associates who have been properly trained in product knowledgeCulture isn’t what you say, it’s what you repeatedly do Read the full notes @ podcastnotes.orgBernie Marcus is the co-founder and former CEO of Home Depot.  This is how he built a culture of ownership, kept going when everyone turned him down, nearly lost it all, and created one of the most successful retailers in history.  ----- Approximate Timestamps: (00:00) Introduction (02:00) Part 1: An Accidental Miracle (09:29) Part 2: A Golden Horseshoe Kick (25:49) Part 3: Building From Nothing (38:53) Part 4: Orange Everywhere (49:40) Part 5: The Legacy (54:17) Lessons ----- Upgrade: Get a hand edited transcripts and ad free experiences along with my thoughts and reflections at the end of every conversation. Learn more @ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠fs.blog/membership⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠------Newsletter: The Brain Food newsletter delivers actionable insights and thoughtful ideas every Sunday. It takes 5 minutes to read, and it’s completely free. Learn more and sign up at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠fs.blog/newsletter⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠------ Follow Shane Parrish:X: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://x.com/shaneparrish Insta: https://www.instagram.com/farnamstreet/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/shane-parrish-050a2183/ ------ Thank you to the sponsors for this episode: .tech domains: Nothing says tech like being on .tech⁠⁠ https://get.tech/⁠ reMarkable: Get your paper tablet at ⁠https://www.reMarkable.com⁠ today ----- Sources: Marcus, Bernie, and Arthur Blank. Built from Scratch: How a Couple of Regular Guys Grew The Home Depot from Nothing to $30 Billion. New York: Crown Business, 1999. Best Practice Institute. "Bernie Marcus Interview." YouTube video. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KNP0YYDi1FY. ----- This episode is for informational purposes only. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

    1h 1m
  7. Mark Rober: Feeling Stuck in a Rut? Use THIS Simple 3- Step Method Engineers Use to FINALLY Turn Your Ideas Into Reality!

    12/15/2025

    Mark Rober: Feeling Stuck in a Rut? Use THIS Simple 3- Step Method Engineers Use to FINALLY Turn Your Ideas Into Reality!

    On Purpose with Jay Shetty Key Takeaways  Engineering Thinking FrameworkEmbrace failure as discovery, foster insatiable curiosity, and iterate relentlessly The core principle: break things, test repeatedly, and view each failure as eliminating one wrong approachIf you can dream it, you can build it through iterative experimentation.Naive Optimism + Strategic ExecutionTurn ideas into action by combining an optimistic vision with a practical breakdown: define your end goal, decompose it into simple steps, identify knowledge gaps, and test incrementallyTransform fear into curiosity through hands-on building and reflection on lessons learned, rather than ego protection The Immersion Weekend Method: Dedicate 48 hours of complete immersion to explore new fascinations – consume every book, video, and resource available. This intensive sprint reveals whether something deserves permanent schedule integration and helps you fall in love with the process of incremental masteryDual-Track Success ModelAvoid binary thinking: maintain steady employment while pursuing passion projects during nights and weekends until they gain tractionThe most successful ventures pair a 10x visionary thinker with a logistics master (Jobs + Napoleon model), preventing burnout by keeping founders focused on their core love rather than pure managementContent that resonates triggers five core emotions: Adventure, humor, negativity, inspiration, or surprise More broadly: control only what’s in your sphere of influence, commit to “hell yes” decisions exclusively, and recognize that outcomes revert to the mean Things are never as extreme as they appear in the moment.Read the full notes @ podcastnotes.orgWhat idea have you been sitting on lately? What’s been holding you back from starting? Today, Jay sits down with engineer, innovator, and YouTube creator Mark Rober to explore the unexpected life experiences that shaped one of the internet’s most beloved minds. Mark shares the childhood moments that ignited his passion for building, breaking, and understanding how the world works, moments nurtured by a mother whose love, imagination, and encouragement helped lay the foundation for his life’s mission. He reflects on how her influence continues to ripple outward, inspiring millions of young people who learn, explore, and dream through his work today. Jay and Mark explore the mindset that carried Mark from NASA engineer to innovative educator, unpacking what it really means to “think like an engineer:” experiment boldly, embrace failure, and treat every setback as an opportunity to learn. They follow Mark’s unusual pivots, from designing Mars rover hardware to crafting Halloween costumes, to ultimately shaping a career that blends curiosity, storytelling, science, and play. Together they reveal the deeper lessons behind Mark’s most viral experiments: why creativity thrives when we stay childlike, how passion reveals itself through repetition, and why the most meaningful work grows from genuine excitement rather than algorithms or expectations. In this interview, you'll learn: How to Think Like an Engineer How to Stay Curious as an Adult How to Follow Your Passion Practically How to Build Ideas That Actually Work How to Find Creativity in Everyday Life How to Recognize Your Real Calling How to Inspire Others Through Your Work Keep following the questions that excite you, keep trying the things that scare you, and keep believing that you’re capable of far more than you realize. Your next breakthrough might be just one experiment, or one brave attempt away. With Love and Gratitude, Jay Shetty Join over 750,000 people to receive my most transformative wisdom directly in your inbox every single week with my free newsletter. Subscribe here.  Check out our Apple subscription to unlock bonus content of On Purpose! https://lnk.to/JayShettyPodcast  What We Discuss: 00:00 Intro 01:16 Were You Always Creative? 04:02 Understanding the Real Impact of Your Life 06:55 What It Really Takes to Work at NASA 09:49 Learning to Think Like an Engineer 11:22 How Rovers Are Tested for Mars 12:20 Searching for Life Beyond Earth 13:24 Follow What You Truly Love Doing 16:11 If You Can Imagine It, You Can Build It 17:22 Practical Wisdom from a Lifelong Tinkerer 20:57 The Pivot from NASA to Apple 23:34 Turning Ideas into Actionable Success 24:45 What is the Engineering Design Process? 28:28 Why Embracing Failure Matters 29:57 Relearning Trust and Finding Love Again 34:56 The Power of Immersion Weekends 36:45 Making Learning Engaging Through Creativity 40:29 Why Mastery Is Worth Pursuing 41:40 Balancing Business with True Creativity 44:51 How Communication Shapes Great Storytelling 47:40 Two Common Mistakes Creators Make 52:30 Staying True to Your Creative Style 54:04 The Importance of Focusing on One Passion 56:44 The Hidden Failures Behind Viral Success 59:35 Giving Kids Room to Be Creative 01:04:30 Curiosity as the Root of Creativity 01:06:07 Inside a Real Creative Process 01:08:45 Where Do You Get Your Big Ideas? 01:11:46 The Mind-Bending Question of Life in the Universe 01:16:02 The Promise and Peril of Rapid AI Growth 01:19:56 Focusing on What You Can Truly Influence  01:24:57 Mark on Final Five Episode Resources: Mark Rober | X Mark Rober | Instagram Mark Rober | Facebook Mark Rober | LinkedIn Mark Rober | TikTok Mark Rober | YouTube See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

    1h 31m
  8. 12/14/2025

    if you didn't make progress in 2025, listen to the first 10 minutes

    My First Million Key Takeaways Check out the episode pageRead the full notes @ podcastnotes.orgGet Sam's guide to turn ChatGPT into your life coach: https://clickhubspot.com/hdp Episode 773: Sam Parr ( ⁠https://x.com/theSamParr⁠ ) and Shaan Puri ( ⁠https://x.com/ShaanVP⁠ ) talk about the systems you need to hit your goals, Shaan’s new unpaid side hustle, and how to be a better communicator.  — Show Notes: (0:00) 5-year journaling (2:09) The power of a good system (8;21) The power of reminders (10:38) Shaan's new career path (16:27) the 3 things that matter (27:38) high-standards (32:45) How to craft an earworms (42:42) giving back better (46:11) The voice in your head (50:26) Shaan talks to a ChatGPT coach about money (1:00:01) “VIdeo is the native tongue of the internet” — Check Out Shaan's Stuff: • Shaan's weekly email - https://www.shaanpuri.com  • Visit https://www.somewhere.com/mfm to hire worldwide talent like Shaan and get $500 off for being an MFM listener. Hire developers, assistants, marketing pros, sales teams and more for 80% less than US equivalents. • Mercury - Need a bank for your company? Go check out Mercury (mercury.com). Shaan uses it for all of his companies! Mercury is a financial technology company, not an FDIC-insured bank. Banking services provided by Choice Financial Group, Column, N.A., and Evolve Bank & Trust, Members FDIC — Check Out Sam's Stuff: • Hampton - https://www.joinhampton.com/ • Ideation Bootcamp - https://www.ideationbootcamp.co/ • Copy That - https://copythat.com • Hampton Wealth Survey - https://joinhampton.com/wealth • Sam’s List - http://samslist.co/ My First Million is a HubSpot Original Podcast // Brought to you by HubSpot Media // Production by Arie Desormeaux // Editing by Ezra Bakker Trupiano //

    1h 16m
5
out of 5
3 Ratings

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We take notes on the best podcasts so you don't have to. Subscribe to this playlist in your podcast app to automatically get all the episodes we've taken notes for along with the notes themselves! The latest for the tag BUSINESS