Per My Last Breakdown: "Unqualified" opinions on business, revenue, leadership, and life.

Stephanie Kingslien and Mindee Peterson

Mindee Peterson and Stephanie Kingslien are here to prove that surviving high-pressure careers, raising teenagers, and actually keeping sales and marketing aligned still somehow doesn't make you "qualified" to have opinions. So fine — they're leaning into it. "Per My Last Breakdown" is real talk on business, revenue, leadership, and life. Every episode comes in three parts: real business talk, real personal chaos, and one completely unhinged "unqualified" opinion.

Episodes

  1. 4d ago

    The Death of the Funnel: Why Sales and Marketing Are Becoming One in the AI Era

    In this episode, Mindee and Stephanie dive headfirst into the beautiful chaos that AI is unleashing on sales and marketing—and let’s just say, the old playbook might be headed for retirement. What starts as a conversation about a thought-provoking article quickly turns into a candid debate about whether sales and marketing are becoming more important to each other than ever before. Their verdict? Absolutely. As buyers increasingly show up having already researched products, compared vendors, checked pricing, and formed opinions long before speaking to a human, the traditional handoff between marketing and sales is starting to feel a little outdated. The two unpack how today’s customer journey looks far less like a funnel and far more like a choose-your-own-adventure story powered by AI, search engines, online communities, and large language models. Along the way, they share equal parts excitement and anxiety about trying to reach prospects in a world where cold calls get screened by AI, inboxes are overflowing, and everyone seems to be chasing the latest “game-changing” sales tool. The conversation also explores a surprising shift in digital visibility: what a company says about itself may matter less than what everyone else is saying. From vendor websites and customer reviews to Reddit discussions and other third-party sources, AI is increasingly pulling information from places that marketers don’t fully control. That realization sparks a lively discussion about credibility, reputation, and why organizations need to think beyond their own websites. One of the biggest takeaways is the growing belief that sales and marketing can no longer operate in separate lanes. The hosts argue that both teams must work together to answer buyer questions earlier, provide transparency around pricing and services, and create the kind of content modern customers are actively searching for. Their unofficial new department name? “Smarketing.” Equal parts strategy session, reality check, and friendly banter, this episode captures what many business leaders are feeling right now: AI is changing the rules fast, nobody has all the answers, but the organizations willing to adapt—and collaborate—will be best positioned for what comes next.

    18 min

About

Mindee Peterson and Stephanie Kingslien are here to prove that surviving high-pressure careers, raising teenagers, and actually keeping sales and marketing aligned still somehow doesn't make you "qualified" to have opinions. So fine — they're leaning into it. "Per My Last Breakdown" is real talk on business, revenue, leadership, and life. Every episode comes in three parts: real business talk, real personal chaos, and one completely unhinged "unqualified" opinion.