Life's a Pitch with Jared Gibson

Jared Gibson

Life's a Pitch is a podcast where founders and executives drop the polish and get real. No filters, no perfect stories. Just raw conversations about the chaos of building companies, the struggles that come with it, and the messy life that happens outside of work. It is part therapy, part comedy, and part truth serum with curveballs, sarcasm, and plenty of laughs. Because life is not balanced, work is not polished, and honestly… Life's a Pitch.

  1. 21. SEO, Entrepreneurship & Scaling a Digital Marketing Agency | Mark Bealin

    3d ago

    21. SEO, Entrepreneurship & Scaling a Digital Marketing Agency | Mark Bealin

    SEO is dead. At least that's what people have been saying for the last decade. Yet companies still need leads, Google still dominates search, and businesses are still trying to figure out how AI is changing the way customers find them online. In this episode of Life's a Pitch, Jared Gibson sits down with Mark Bealin, founder of SearchLab, one of Chicago's leading digital marketing agencies. Under Mark's leadership, SearchLab has earned multiple national awards, landed on the Inc. 5000 list four consecutive years, and become a recognized leader in SEO, paid search, and digital marketing. The conversation dives into the evolution of search marketing, how AI and large language models are impacting SEO, and what business owners are getting wrong about digital visibility today. We also cover: ▪️ Building SearchLab from scratch ▪️ Finding a niche and becoming known for it ▪️ The future of SEO in an AI-driven world ▪️ Google, Gemini, and the changing search experience ▪️ Entrepreneurship, leadership, and scaling an agency ▪️ The role EO has played in Mark's personal and professional growth ▪️ Managing multiple priorities as a founder, dad, coach, and community leader ▪️ The loneliness of entrepreneurship Mark also shares lessons learned from growing a business through uncertainty, dealing with imposter syndrome, and balancing work with the things that matter most outside the office. Key Takeaways ✅ Why SEO isn't dead despite what people say ✅ How AI is changing search and digital marketing ✅ The power of niching down in business ✅ Lessons from scaling an award-winning agency ✅ Why entrepreneurship can feel lonely ✅ The importance of building a life outside of work Connect with Mark Bealin LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/markbealin/  SearchLab: https://www.searchlabdigital.com  This episode is powered by Outworks. Outworks helps founders and executives build trust, authority, and audience through executive-led content systems that actually drive business results. Learn more at https://www.outworks.io

    39 min
  2. May 21

    19: AI, Automation & the Future of Chiropractic Care | Sherjan Husainie

    Healthcare is filled with friction, paperwork, insurance headaches, and outdated systems. Sherjan Husainie looked at chiropractic care and asked a different question: What if you rebuilt the entire experience from scratch? In this episode of Life's a Pitch, Jared Gibson sits down with Sherjan Husainie, founder of KIRO, a fast-growing chiropractic company using automation, software, hospitality, and operational efficiency to modernize the chiropractic industry. KIRO operates membership-only, fully automated chiropractic studios where software powers nearly everything outside of the doctors themselves. What makes the story even more interesting is that Sherjan isn't a chiropractor. He started in aerospace engineering, became a VP at Morgan Stanley in tech investment banking across Asia, worked at Capital G (Google's late-stage investment arm), built and failed multiple startups, then walked away to build what he calls his "final company." The conversation dives into: ▪️ How KIRO is disrupting the traditional chiropractic business model ▪️ Why they eliminated insurance and simplified healthcare pricing ▪️ How AI, automation, and software improve operational efficiency ▪️ The obsession with customer experience and hospitality ▪️ Scaling a healthcare startup across New York City ▪️ Hiring, culture, and building high-performance teams ▪️ What founders learn after failed startups and career pivots ▪️ Why simplicity is often harder than complexity in business Sherjan also breaks down the realities of scaling physical healthcare locations, why quality control matters more than speed, and how KIRO plans to expand nationally while maintaining consistency across every studio. The episode also covers entrepreneurship, routines, discipline, New York City culture, consumer psychology, growth strategy, and the mindset required to survive while building a generational company. Key Takeaways: ✅ How KIRO is modernizing chiropractic care with automation and software ✅ Why removing insurance simplified the customer experience ✅ How founders scale physical businesses while protecting quality ✅ The role AI and engineering play in healthcare operations ✅ Why startup failures helped shape a stronger company ✅ The importance of customer obsession in building a brand Connect with Sherjan Husainie Guest LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/sherjan/  Website: https://www.getkiro.com This episode is powered by Outworks. Outworks helps B2B companies build real, repeatable executive content engines through founder-led strategy, tight systems, and AI-powered content infrastructure designed to scale without losing authenticity. Learn more at https://www.outworks.io

    35 min
  3. May 13

    18. Interviewing Steve Jobs & Bill Gates, AI's Impact on Content, and Why Great Stories Matter | Rob Kelly

    AI is changing content, hiring, marketing, and business faster than most people can keep up with. But long before AI became the conversation, Rob Kelly was already obsessed with storytelling, technology, and building companies around content that actually matters. In this episode of Life's a Pitch, Jared Gibson sits down with Rob Kelly, a three-time CEO and founder. Rob is currently the creator CEO of Media and the Machine, a newsletter and podcast exploring the intersection of AI & Content. The conversation starts with Rob's early journalism career, where he hustled his way into interviews with Steve Jobs, Bill Gates, and Andy Grove, including a surreal inbound phone call directly from Steve Jobs while he was building NeXT after leaving Apple. From there, the episode dives deep into: ▪️ Why AI is fundamentally changing content and agency work ▪️ The fear, optimism, and uncertainty surrounding AI adoption ▪️ How businesses should think about AI without overreacting ▪️ Why "AI plus humans" will outperform pure automation ▪️ The evolution of recruiting technology and job descriptions ▪️ How founders adapt when AI commoditizes part of their business ▪️ Why storytelling still matters more than ever Rob also shares the philosophy behind his documentary newsletter Daily Doc, his obsession with great nonfiction storytelling, and why some of the best stories in life are the ones you truly "can't make up." The episode also covers entrepreneurship, parenting, music, The Grateful Dead, creativity, content strategy, and the importance of leaving things better than you found them. Key Takeaways: ✅ What it was like interviewing Steve Jobs and Bill Gates early in their careers ✅ Why AI is disrupting agencies, content, and recruiting ✅ How founders should think about adapting instead of panicking ✅ The future of AI-powered content creation ✅ Why storytelling and human creativity still matter ✅ The mindset entrepreneurs need during massive technology shifts Connect with Rob Kelly Guest LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/robkelly/ Podcast: Media and the Machine Company: https://www.ongig.com Newsletter: DailyDoc.com  This episode is powered by Outworks. Outworks helps B2B companies build real, repeatable executive content engines through founder-led strategy, tight systems, and AI-powered content infrastructure designed to scale without losing authenticity. Learn more at https://www.outworks.io

    46 min
  4. May 6

    Episode 17: COBRA, Health Insurance Confusion, AI in Benefits, and Building When | Andy Hamilton

    Most companies spend a tremendous amount of time thinking about how to recruit, onboard, and retain employees. Very few spend enough time thinking about what happens when people leave. In this episode of Life's a Pitch, Jared Gibson sits down with Andy Hamilton, CEO and co-founder of When, a digital health platform helping employees navigate health insurance transitions during major life events while reducing costs for employers. Andy previously founded and scaled multiple technology companies, including ApartmentJet, which was acquired by Expedia Group. The conversation dives into the broken reality of COBRA, why healthcare decisions become overwhelming during layoffs or career transitions, and how Andy's own experience during the COVID pandemic inspired him to build When alongside his co-founders. Andy explains how most employers unintentionally create a terrible offboarding experience by treating exiting employees as "someone else's problem," despite the fact that former employees often remain on company health plans through COBRA and can dramatically increase healthcare costs. They also unpack: ▪️ Why healthcare shopping is confusing for almost everyone ▪️ How AI and concierge support work together during high-stakes decisions ▪️ The hidden costs employers overlook after layoffs and offboarding ▪️ What founders learn after raising venture capital and scaling teams ▪️ The challenge of transitioning from founder-led sales to a professional revenue organization ▪️ Why startups constantly rewrite their messaging while figuring out product-market fit ▪️ The emotional rollercoaster of entrepreneurship and learning not to get too high or too low The episode also touches on parenting, entrepreneurship, weather obsession, tennis, Claude AI, Depeche Mode, and how a founder's personal pain often becomes the foundation for building something meaningful. Key Takeaways: ✅ Why COBRA and health insurance transitions are broken for employees ✅ How employers can reduce healthcare costs through better offboarding ✅ Where AI actually helps in healthcare navigation and where humans still matter ✅ Why founder-led sales eventually needs to evolve ✅ The importance of discovery and messaging in early-stage startups ✅ How entrepreneurs learn to manage constant highs and lows Connect with Andy Hamilton Guest LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andyhamilton/  Website: https://www.4when.com  Email: andy@4when.com  This episode is powered by Outworks. Outworks helps B2B companies build real, repeatable executive content engines through founder-led strategy, tight systems, and AI-powered content infrastructure designed to scale without losing authenticity. Learn more at https://www.outworks.io

    35 min
  5. Apr 29

    16. From Homeless to Founder | Building Luster, AI Sales Enablement & Revenue Growth | Christina Brady

    You hear a lot of people talk about building resilient teams and great sales processes. Very few have lived the kind of resilience it actually takes to build something from nothing. In this episode of Life's a Pitch, Jared Gibson sits down with Christina Brady, Founder of Luster, an AI-driven platform helping sales teams improve performance, eliminate revenue leaks, and make better decisions before deals go sideways. Christina shares her unconventional path into entrepreneurship, from navigating early life trauma and homelessness to becoming a sales leader and ultimately building a company designed to fix the exact problems she faced in the field. The conversation dives into the reality of sales leadership, why traditional enablement often fails, and how predictive AI is changing the way teams train, coach, and close deals. They unpack what it really means to lead without a safety net, how time and regret shape decision-making, and why most companies are reacting to problems too late instead of preventing them. The episode also explores: ▪️ How early life adversity shaped Christina's mindset as a founder ▪️ Why sales enablement is broken and treated like a cost center ▪️ The difference between reactive coaching and predictive enablement ▪️ How AI can identify revenue risk before deals are lost ▪️ The pressure and loneliness that comes with fundraising and building a team ▪️ Why great leaders hire experts and actually listen to them The conversation closes with reflections on time, purpose, and why everything in life, good or bad, has to mean something. Key Takeaways: ✅ Why resilience isn't built in business, it's built before it ✅ How predictive AI is changing sales performance and coaching ✅ The hidden cost of poor sales enablement on revenue ✅ Why founders face a different kind of pressure and loneliness ✅ How to identify and fix revenue leaks before they happen ✅ Why time is the most important resource in business and life Connect with Christina Brady: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/christinapbrady/  Email: christina@luster.ai  Website: https://www.luster.ai This episode is powered by Outworks. Outworks helps B2B companies build real, repeatable executive content engines through founder-led strategy, tight systems, and AI-powered content infrastructure designed to scale without losing authenticity. Learn more at https://www.outworks.io

    49 min
  6. Apr 23

    15. AI Time Tracking & Productivity Systems | How Rize Hit #1 on Product Hunt | Macgill Davis

    Everyone thinks they're productive. Very few actually measure it. In this episode of Life's a Pitch, Jared Gibson sits down with Macgill Davis, founder of Rize.io, an AI-powered time tracking platform helping individuals and teams understand how they actually spend their time. Mac shares the real story behind launching Rize and hitting #1 on Product Hunt, including the months of groundwork that most people never see. From building early demand with a waitlist to validating ideas before writing a single line of code, this is a masterclass in how to launch the right way. The conversation dives into Mac's journey from startups to Twitter and back into building again, along with what he learned working alongside some of the best engineers in Silicon Valley. They also unpack how AI is changing the way companies operate and why time tracking, when done right, is becoming a critical layer for understanding productivity, profitability, and real ROI across teams. The episode also explores: ▪️ Why time tracking systems fail and how automation changes everything ▪️ How to measure whether AI tools are actually improving team performance ▪️ The rise of "Head of AI" and what that means for organizations ▪️ Why being "busy" is often a sign of inefficiency ▪️ How great founders think about building products and validating ideas The conversation closes with insights on entrepreneurship, consistency, and why success is less about big moments and more about showing up every single day. Key Takeaways: ✅ How Rize validated demand before building the product ✅ Why AI-powered time tracking is becoming essential for modern teams ✅ The real way to measure productivity and workflow efficiency ✅ How companies should think about AI implementation and ROI ✅ Why consistency beats motivation in entrepreneurship ✅ How to turn time data into better business decisions Connect with Macgill Davis: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/macgill-davis/ Website: https://rize.io This episode is powered by Outworks. Outworks helps B2B companies build real, repeatable executive content engines through founder-led strategy, tight systems, and AI-powered content infrastructure designed to scale without losing authenticity. Learn more at https://www.outworks.io

    35 min
  7. Apr 15

    14. From Garage to 10M+ Books Distributed | Building Bernie's Book Bank & Purpose-Driven Business | Brian Floriani

    A lot of people talk about impact. Very few actually build their life around it. In this episode of Life's a Pitch, Jared Gibson sits down with Brian Floriani, entrepreneur, founder of Bernie's Book Bank, and co-founder of Buku Branded. Brian shares the story behind launching Bernie's Book Bank out of his garage after a life-changing personal loss, and how it has grown into an organization that has distributed tens of millions of books to children in under-resourced communities. The conversation goes deeper than the origin story. Brian breaks down how his mindset shifted from chasing success to choosing significance, and why that decision changed everything about how he approaches business, relationships, and life. They also unpack how Buku Branded was built as a purpose-driven company that redirects marketing dollars toward literacy, creating a model where business growth and impact are directly connected. The episode also explores: ▪️ The real story behind starting Bernie's Book Bank ▪️ Why book ownership is critical to childhood literacy ▪️ The difference between success and significance ▪️ Why "networking" is the wrong way to build relationships ▪️ The power of giving first without an agenda ▪️ Early sales lessons and overcoming call reluctance ▪️ How purpose-driven businesses can scale impact The conversation closes with reflections on legacy, relationships, and the idea that the only thing you leave behind is the impact you make on others. Key Takeaways: ✅ Why significance matters more than success ✅ How one decision can completely change your life's direction ✅ The importance of literacy in long-term outcomes ✅ Why giving first creates stronger relationships ✅ How to think about business as a vehicle for impact ✅ What most people get wrong about networking and sales Connect with Brian Floriani: Guest LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brianfloriani/ Email: brian@bukubranded.com  Bernie's Book Bank: https://www.berniesbookbank.org Buku Branded: https://www.bukubranded.com This episode is powered by Outworks. Outworks helps B2B companies build real, repeatable executive content engines through executive-led strategy, tight systems, and AI-powered content infrastructure designed to scale without losing authenticity. Learn more at https://www.outworks.io

    38 min
5
out of 5
5 Ratings

About

Life's a Pitch is a podcast where founders and executives drop the polish and get real. No filters, no perfect stories. Just raw conversations about the chaos of building companies, the struggles that come with it, and the messy life that happens outside of work. It is part therapy, part comedy, and part truth serum with curveballs, sarcasm, and plenty of laughs. Because life is not balanced, work is not polished, and honestly… Life's a Pitch.