Harry Handles It

Harry

Join Harry Nalbandyan, host and personal injury trial lawyer at Levin & Nalbandyan LLP, on a journey through the complexities of the legal world and beyond. With years of experience and a passion for helping others navigate legal issues, Harry brings a unique blend of expertise, insight, and wit to each episode.

  1. Jun 18

    Operating Your Law Firm Like a Military Battalion with John Berry

    Key Takeaways The Transition from Practice to Business: Moving a law firm away from relying entirely on a single, charismatic personality requires structured systems and defined leadership roles.The Military Battalion Structure: Building out a firm with practice group commanders and platoon leaders clarifies accountability and enables efficient remote operations across multiple states.Brutal Honesty via After Action Reviews: Implementing post-trial debriefs with zero attribution or retribution helps teams learn from failures quickly without damaging partner egos.Cross-Examining Tech and Marketing Vendors: Attorneys must apply their courtroom cross-examination skills to vendors to protect themselves from low-quality lead generation and non-functional software.True Integrity Defined: In high-level leadership, integrity goes beyond basic honesty; it means doing exactly what you promised to do, exactly when you promised to do it.Resourcefulness Over Resources: Legal leadership requires absolute agility when a plan fails because courtroom timelines, budgets, and evidence are rarely perfect.Protecting Attorney Time: Isolating lawyers from administrative burdens allows them to focus purely on developing the high-level arguments that win cases."Harry Handles It" is a podcast hosted by Harry Nalbandyan. Each episode explores how top-tier performers navigate pressure, build discipline, and execute at a high level in business and life. Follow the show for direct conversations about performance, leadership, and intentional growth.

    24 min
  2. Jun 11

    From 9/11 Pro Bono to AI Integration: A Masterclass in Modern Trial Law

    Key Takeaways Jury Selection as Deselection: Successful trial advocacy relies on exposing conflicts with prospective jurors' core beliefs so they voluntarily deselect themselves, rather than trying to change their minds. The Survival Narrative: Juries reject standard victim narratives or complaining; instead, they respond to stories of resilience, effort, and fighting through catastrophic injuries. The Corporate Threat: Major corporations like Uber are aggressively financing tort reform initiatives in New York and California to limit individual rights and block courtroom access. AI as a Digital Employee: Advanced AI integration acts as an efficient digital team member, instantly parsing large medical datasets and running simulated focus groups during active trials. Private Equity Reality: Institutional capital has influenced the legal landscape for over fifteen years, but the current vertical move toward firm ownership will sharply intensify case aggregation competition. Pro Bono and Collaboration: Despite intense market competition, true legal advocacy requires widespread collaboration among plaintiff attorneys to maximize case value and support community initiatives, such as the 9/11 Victims Compensation Fund. "Harry Handles It" is a podcast hosted by Harry Nalbandyan. Each episode explores how top-tier performers navigate pressure, build discipline, and execute at a high level in business and life. Follow the show for direct conversations about performance, leadership, and intentional growth.

    24 min
  3. Mar 24

    Harry Handles It: Episode 38 with David Kolbe

    Most hiring decisions focus on experience, intelligence, or personality, but even when all three look right on paper, teams still struggle with execution, communication, and alignment. In this episode of Harry Handles It, Harry Nalbandyan sits down with David Kolbe to break down the missing piece that most organizations overlook: how people actually take action. The conversation centers around the Kolbe Index and its focus on the conative part of the mind, which measures instinctive strengths and the natural way individuals approach problem solving and execution.  David explains why understanding how someone operates is just as important as what they know or how they behave. The discussion highlights how misalignment in these instinctive strengths often leads to friction inside teams, especially as organizations scale and leaders attempt to move faster than their teams can execute. The episode also explores how leaders can use these insights to improve hiring, team structure, and communication. Rather than forcing individuals to operate outside their natural strengths, the focus shifts toward placing people in roles where they can perform at their highest level while building systems that account for differences in how work gets done. The conversation covers: The difference between cognitive, affective, and conative strengths How the Kolbe Index measures instinctive ways of taking action Why execution breakdowns often come from misalignment, not capability The four action modes: fact finder, follow through, quick start, and implementer How leaders can reduce friction by aligning roles with natural strengths Why diverse thinking styles create stronger teams and better outcomes How communication changes when leaders understand how people operateThis episode is for founders, executives, and operators who are responsible for building teams, hiring effectively, and improving execution across their organization. "Harry Handles It" is a podcast hosted by Harry Nalbandyan. Each episode explores how top-tier performers navigate pressure, build discipline, and execute at a high level in business and life. Follow the show for direct conversations about performance, leadership, and intentional growth.

    34 min
  4. Mar 17

    Harry Handles It: Episode 37 with Eric Olson

    Many founders start businesses because they are great at the craft. Far fewer understand how to build the systems, people, and culture required to scale that craft into a sustainable company. In this episode of Harry Handles It, Harry Nalbandyan sits down with Eric Olson, founder and CEO of Olson Superior Plumbing, to discuss the real journey behind building a service business from the ground up. Eric started alone in the field answering his own phones, scheduling jobs, and learning the operational side of business through constant trial and error. Over time, those lessons evolved into a scalable company supported by internal training programs, behavioral hiring frameworks, and a culture designed to prioritize people and long term customer relationships. Eric explains how Olson Superior Plumbing developed its own training academy, Olson Superior University, to bring new talent into the trades and teach both technical and interpersonal skills. The conversation explores why many companies struggle to grow when founders fail to separate craftsmanship from business infrastructure, and how leadership systems can transform a small operation into a structured organization. The conversation covers: The leadership shift required to move from technician to business ownerWhy hiring for character matters more than hiring for technical skillsHow behavioral interviews reveal real decision making patternsThe development of Olson Superior University and its hands on training modelThe early compensation mistake that created major operational challengesHow empathy and communication training improves customer serviceWhy trades businesses can remain resilient during economic uncertaintyThis episode is for founders, operators, and business leaders responsible for building teams, developing culture, and sustaining growth over the long term. For anyone navigating the transition from doing the work to leading the organization behind the work, Eric Olson’s experience offers a practical perspective on scaling a company while keeping people at the center of the business. "Harry Handles It" is a podcast hosted by Harry Nalbandyan. Each episode explores how top-tier performers navigate pressure, build discipline, and execute at a high level in business and life. Follow the show for direct conversations about performance, leadership, and intentional growth.

    28 min
  5. Mar 10

    Harry Handles It: Episode 36 with Robin Kencel

    Successful careers do not always stay fulfilling. Many leaders eventually reach a moment when the work still looks successful from the outside, but the energy behind it has disappeared. In this episode of Harry Handles It, Harry Nalbandyan sits down with Robin Kencel to discuss what reinvention actually looks like for high performers who refuse to stay stuck. Robin explains why curiosity is often the earliest signal that a career is reaching its natural end, how leaders can recognize when fulfillment has faded, and why reinvention rarely requires burning down what you have already built. Instead, she shares the strategic approach that allowed her to pivot industries while maintaining stability and momentum. The discussion also explores the internal challenges behind major life transitions. Identity, reputation, financial responsibility, and fear of judgment all shape the decisions people make when considering a new direction. Robin outlines the mindset shifts that allow leaders to move toward something meaningful rather than simply walking away from something familiar. The conversation covers: The framework for changing careers without abandoning stabilityWhy curiosity is often the first signal that it is time for a new directionHow contingency planning helps leaders navigate unexpected setbacksThe role mindset plays in turning disruption into opportunityWhy mentorship and habits compound over decades of growthHow leaders redefine success as their priorities evolveThis episode is for founders, executives, and professionals who have achieved success but sense that their next chapter may look different from the one they originally planned. If you have ever wondered how high performers reinvent themselves without losing momentum, this conversation offers a practical perspective on navigating change with intention. "Harry Handles It" is a podcast hosted by Harry Nalbandyan. Each episode explores how top-tier performers navigate pressure, build discipline, and execute at a high level in business and life. Follow the show for direct conversations about performance, leadership, and intentional growth.

    26 min

About

Join Harry Nalbandyan, host and personal injury trial lawyer at Levin & Nalbandyan LLP, on a journey through the complexities of the legal world and beyond. With years of experience and a passion for helping others navigate legal issues, Harry brings a unique blend of expertise, insight, and wit to each episode.