Business Book Club

Sam Brown

This podcast is for winners. Top founders join Sam Brown to discuss the most powerful insights from the world's best business books.

  1. 1D AGO

    Eat That Frog! by Brian Tracy | with guest CJ Bilangino

    Stop confusing being busy with being productive. The ability to concentrate single-mindedly on your most important task, do it well, and finish it completely is the key to success. But how do you actually execute that when you are drowning in a sea of emails, Slack messages, and daily fires? Joining me to share his exact productivity playbook is CJ Bilangino, CEO of Gorilla Commerce. CJ has led finance and operations teams at multiple high-growth startups and relies on the frameworks in Eat That Frog to manage his energy, prioritize tasks, and lead his teams. Today, we discuss why checking your email first thing in the morning is destroying your momentum, how to ruthlessly apply the 80/20 rule to your to-do list, and why planning your day the night before is the ultimate productivity hack. Key Takeaways & Timestamps00:00 – Introducing Eat That Frog and the Mark Twain quote that inspired the book's famous title. 02:25 – Tackle Your Biggest Task First: Why your "frog" is the hardest, most important task—and the one you are most likely to procrastinate on. 03:55 – Stop Hiding in Your Inbox: CJ explains why he wakes up at 4:35 AM to do 45 minutes of deep work before he ever opens his email. 06:11 – Prioritize Ruthlessly (The 80/20 Rule): 20% of your activities will account for 80% of your results. How to identify the vital few and ignore the trivial many. 09:31 – The Championship Framework: How to use the process of elimination to find the least amount of "moves" required to hit your annual goals. 12:31 – Plan Every Day in Advance: Why every 1 minute spent planning saves 10 minutes of execution time. 15:05 – The ABCDE Method: How to categorize your tasks. 16:20 – Digital vs. Analog: Why CJ uses an app for long-term tracking but relies on pen and paper for his daily task list to force ultimate accountability. Get the book here📚Eat That Frog! by Brian Tracy Mentioned in the episodeTodoist. The simple digital task manager CJ uses to track his annual, quarterly, and weekly business goals.Deep Work by Cal Newport. A highly recommended companion read to help you protect your morning "frog eating" time from distractions.Atomic Habits by James Clear. The definitive guide to making your evening planning routine an automatic, frictionless habit. CJ Bilangino, CEO of Gorilla Commerce Follow Sam on LinkedIn Want to get in touch? Whether you want to suggest a guest, sponsor the show, leave some feedback or just get in touch to tell me what you're working on, here's the link for you: https://forms.gle/NHGL9ftFRhu4cKFLA

    24 min
  2. MAR 9

    The Hard Thing About Hard Things by Ben Horowitz | with guest Dr. Minshad Ali Ansari

    With over a million copies sold, Ben Horowitz’s The Hard Thing About Hard Things is considered the definitive manual for startup founders facing impossible decisions. It is the raw, unfiltered story of how to run a company when absolutely nothing is going according to plan. Joining me today is Dr. Minshad, CEO and founder of Bionema Group, a UK-based ag-tech company working on biological solutions to replace toxic chemical pesticides. Coming from an academic background, Dr. Minshad bootstrapped his company from scratch and faced over 50 VC rejections before finding his footing. Today, we discuss why there is no playbook for the truly hard things in business, the critical differences between a "Peacetime CEO" and a "Wartime CEO," and why you must hire for exceptional strength rather than a lack of weakness. Key Takeaways & Timestamps00:00 – Introducing The Hard Thing About Hard Things and Ben Horowitz's journey from near-bankruptcy to a $1.6 billion exit. 02:57 – No Playbook for Hard Things: Why the most difficult skill in business is managing your own psychology, and how Dr. Minshad persisted through 50+ investor rejections. 06:47 – Be the Wartime CEO: The difference between leading in a booming market (Peacetime) versus fighting for your company's survival (Wartime). 08:08 – The Academic to Entrepreneur Pipeline: Why deep-tech investors are looking for a specific co-founder dynamic: one deeply technical academic paired with a commercial business mind. 13:28 – Hire for Strength, Not Lack of Weaknesses: Why settling for a "safe" hire is a disaster, and why a spectacular candidate is worth 10x more than a solid one. 16:48 – The "No Money" Excuse: Dr. Minshad's hard truth for founders: If you don't have the money to hire the right people, you don't have a business. 18:06 – Culture is the CEO's Job: Why you can never outsource company culture to a third-party or a new hire. Get the book here📚The Hard Thing About Hard Things by Ben Horowitz Mentioned in the episodeBionema Group: Dr. Minshad's award-winning biocontrol technology company, leading the charge to replace chemical pesticides with nature-based alternatives.Andreessen Horowitz (a16z): Ben Horowitz's venture capital firm. Their blog and podcast are goldmines for deep-tech and software founders navigating scale. Dr. Minshad, CEO & Founder of Bionema Group Follow Sam on LinkedIn Want to get in touch? Whether you want to suggest a guest, sponsor the show, leave some feedback or just get in touch to tell me what you're working on, here's the link for you: https://forms.gle/NHGL9ftFRhu4cKFLA

    27 min
  3. MAR 2

    The 5 Dysfunctions of a Team by Patrick Lencioni | with guest Alisa Cohn

    Even smart, well-funded executive teams fail. Patrick Lencioni's masterpiece, The 5 Dysfunctions of a Team, exposes the silent killers of company growth and provides a practical framework to turn a group of capable individuals into a truly cohesive unit. Joining me to unpack this framework is Alisa Cohn, an award-winning executive coach who was named the #1 Startup Coach in the world and has worked with C-suites at Venmo, Etsy, Microsoft, and Google. Today, Alisa breaks down why your department is not your most important team, how to build vulnerability-based trust, and why self-awareness is the ultimate cheat code for leadership. Key Takeaways & Timestamps00:00 – Introducing The 5 Dysfunctions of a Team and the silent killers of company growth. 02:00 – The 5 Dysfunctions Framework: Alisa breaks down the hierarchy of team success: Trust drives Conflict, Conflict drives Commitment, Commitment drives Accountability, and Accountability drives Results. You cannot skip a step. 04:37 – Diagnosing Your Team: Why a lack of accountability is often just a symptom of a team that hasn't learned how to have productive conflict. 07:11 – The "First Team" Concept: Why the CMO's most important team is not the marketing department. It is the executive team. 09:20 – The Cost of Loyalty: How prioritizing your specific department over the executive team leads directly to toxic politics, silos, and blame. 14:24 – Self-Awareness as a Cheat Code: Why managing your ego and acting in service of the company is the hardest—but most necessary—leadership skill. 16:03 – The "Working With Me" Document: How creating a 1-to-2 page personal operating manual builds vulnerability-based trust. 16:59 – The 360 Feedback Loop: How to gather actionable behavioral feedback from the people above you, below you, and beside you. Get the book here📚The 5 Dysfunctions of a Team by Patrick Lencioni Mentioned in the episodeFrom Start-up to Grown-up: Alisa Cohn's book, featuring 14 specific scripts to help you navigate delicate and difficult conversations.The "Working With Me" Document: Atlassian's excellent free template and guide for creating a personal user manual.The 360 Feedback Model: A comprehensive breakdown of how to run these reviews from the Center for Creative Leadership. Alisa Cohn, Executive Coach & Author Podcast & Book: From Start-up to Grown-up Follow Sam on LinkedIn Want to get in touch? Whether you want to suggest a guest, sponsor the show, leave some feedback or just get in touch to tell me what you're working on, here's the link for you: https://forms.gle/NHGL9ftFRhu4cKFLA

    23 min
  4. FEB 23

    Profit First by Mike Michalowicz | with guest Sabrina Chevannes

    If you are tired of looking at your bank account and wondering where all that top-line revenue went, this episode is for you. Mike Michalowicz built and sold multiple million-dollar companies before writing Profit First, a system now used by over 600,000 businesses to grow leaner and more profitable. Joining me to unpack these principles is Sabrina Chevannes, founder of the award-winning No BS Agency and the n0bs.com community for ambitious entrepreneurs. As an international chess master and competitive poker player, Sabrina knows strategy, risk, and how to win. Today, we discuss how to use human psychology to stop overspending, how to audit your business to find hidden cash bleeds, and the specific bank account structure Sabrina uses to guarantee a profit every single month. Key Takeaways & Timestamps00:00 – Introducing Profit First and why top-line revenue is a vanity metric. 02:09 – The Formula Flip: Why changing your accounting from (Revenue - Expenses = Profit) to (Revenue - Profit = Expenses) changes everything. 05:26 – The Software Audit: How Sabrina saved tens of thousands of pounds by cutting "essential" subscriptions and zombie software. 08:42 – Parkinson's Law of Money: Why your business expenses will always expand to consume the exact amount of cash sitting in your operating account. 12:09 – The "Pocket" System: The exact 4-account bank structure (Profit, Tax, Owner's Pay, Opex) to protect your money from yourself. 15:09 – Building the Habit: Why you need to schedule your financial transfers on the 10th and 25th of the month as a non-negotiable meeting. 18:04 – The 1% Rule: Why starting with just 1% allocated to profit builds the psychological momentum you need to scale. 20:33 – The No BS Community: Sabrina explains why she built a community for founders tired of transactional networking events. 24:47 – The Bryan Johnson Method: What the world's most regimented biohacker can teach you about removing financial temptation from your business. Get the book here📚 Profit First by Mike Michalowicz Mentioned in the episoden0bs.com: Sabrina’s members club for ambitious founders.Starling and Revolut: The challenger banks used to easily set up financial "pockets."Atomic Habits: The book by James Clear on building habits that stick. Sabrina Chevannes, Founder of No BS Agency & Community Follow Sam on LinkedIn Want to get in touch? Whether you want to suggest a guest, sponsor the show, leave some feedback or just get in touch to tell me what you're working on, here's the link for you: https://forms.gle/NHGL9ftFRhu4cKFLA

    29 min
  5. FEB 16

    Poor Charlie's Almanack by Charlie Munger | with guest Alex Melia

    Who is Charlie Munger? Warren Buffett called him "our generation's Benjamin Franklin." Bill Gates hailed him as "one of the sharpest minds in business." As Buffett's right hand at Berkshire Hathaway for 45 years, Munger helped achieve staggering 19.8% annual returns—double what the S&P 500 achieved in the same period. In this episode, we dive into his legacy: Poor Charlie's Almanack. Joining me is Alex Melia, founder of Swoosh English, to unpack the wit and wisdom of the man who popularized "mental models" and the art of "sit on your ass investing." We discuss why patience is the ultimate competitive advantage, how to avoid "charismatic" fraudsters, and why the best way to get what you want in life is to deserve what you want. Key Takeaways & Timestamps00:00 – Introducing Charlie Munger and his impact on modern investing. 02:53 – Patience + Discipline = Success: Why the big money is not in the buying and selling, but in the waiting. 03:43 – "Sit On Your Ass Investing": Alex explains how Munger’s contrarian approach helps him weather business storms (like losing US contracts overnight). 06:57 – The Crypto Trap: Alex shares his personal story of ignoring Munger’s advice, following the herd into crypto, and learning a hard lesson about "fads." 10:41 – Be a Lifelong Learner: Why Munger, at age 99, was still the most curious person in the room (and why he asked more questions than he answered). 14:35 – The Multidisciplinary Approach: How reading outside your field (e.g., Range) gives you a competitive edge. 17:27 – Reputation & Trust: "It takes 20 years to build a reputation and five minutes to ruin it." 20:15 – The Red Flag Story: Alex reveals how he lost a fortune to a "charismatic" partner because he ignored the red flags of integrity. Get the book here📚 Poor Charlie's Almanack by Charlie Munger Mentioned in the episodeStripe Press Edition: The accessible, beautifully designed edition Alex recommends over the vintage copies.Range by David Epstein: The perfect companion read for applying the "Generalist" strategy.Berkshire Hathaway Shareholder Letters: Decades of free wisdom and the raw data for "sit on your ass investing."Swoosh English: Alex's platform helping medical professionals pass high-stakes English exams. Alex Melia, Founder of Swoosh English Follow Sam on LinkedIn Want to get in touch? Whether you want to suggest a guest, sponsor the show, leave some feedback or just get in touch to tell me what you're working on, here's the link for you: https://forms.gle/NHGL9ftFRhu4cKFLA

    27 min
  6. FEB 9

    Thinking in Bets by Annie Duke | with guest Jordan Staab

    Most founders treat business decisions like chess, assuming that if they make the right move, they'll get the right outcome. But business isn't chess; it's poker. You can make the perfect decision and still lose. You can make a terrible decision and get lucky. Joining me to unpack this superb book is Jordan Staab, CEO of BetterFinances.org. Jordan is a serial entrepreneur who has raised over $200 million for VCs and led ventures worth over $30 million. In this episode, Jordan explains how to separate your results from your decision quality, why saying "I'm 100% sure" is destroying your strategy, and how to build a truth-seeking inner circle to vet your bets. Key Takeaways & Timestamps00:00 – Thinking in Bets - why business is like poker, not chess 02:13 – Separate Outcome from Decision: Why a good outcome doesn't mean you made a good decision (and vice versa). 04:20 – The 50/80 Rule: How much data do you need before acting? Jordan explains his framework for balancing speed vs. confidence. 05:46 – The "iPhone Fingerprint" Analogy: Why you never have perfect information and how to gather just enough data to map the problem. 06:40 – Think in Probabilities, Not Absolutes: Jordan shares the "80% Question" he asks his team when creating financial projections. 09:24 – Climbing the Wrong Mountain: How to use decision trees to avoid backing your business into a corner. 11:27 – Standardize Your Decision Process: Why a problem well-defined is half-solved, and how to create a simple template for evaluating new ideas. 14:39 – Resulting is a Trap: The danger of judging the quality of a decision solely by its outcome (e.g., winning with a 7-2 offsuit in poker). 19:17 – The "Weddings & Funerals" Knowledge Gap: Why you need a truth-seeking inner circle to sanity-check your decisions in areas where you lack expertise. Get the book here📚 Thinking in Bets by Annie Duke Mentioned in the episodeBetterFinances.org: Jordan’s financial literacy platform.Amazon’s PR/FAQ: A famous example of a standardized decision-making document. Jordan Staab, CEO of BetterFinances.org Follow Sam on LinkedIn Want to get in touch? Whether you want to suggest a guest, sponsor the show, leave some feedback or just get in touch to tell me what you're working on, here's the link for you: https://forms.gle/NHGL9ftFRhu4cKFLA

    28 min
  7. FEB 2

    Rocket Fuel by Gino Wickman & Mark C. Winters | with guest Jodie Imam

    Do you know anything about James Couzens or Roy Disney? Probably not. But you know their partners: Henry Ford and Walt Disney. Walt Disney dreamed up the characters; Roy made the numbers work. Henry Ford revolutionized the car industry; James Couzens implemented the systems to scale it. This is the core concept of Rocket Fuel: The relationship between a Visionary (the dreamer) and an Integrator (the executor). When this duo works, it is rocket fuel for a business. When it doesn’t, it’s chaos. Joining me to unpack this is Jodie Imam, Co-founder and CEO of Tractor Ventures. Jodie explains how reading this book saved her working relationship with her co-founder, why they changed their job titles because of it, and how implementing the "Level 10 Meeting" completely transformed their team's culture and performance. Key Takeaways & Timestamps00:00 – Introducing Rocket Fuel and the concept of the Visionary/Integrator duo. 02:28 – Know Your Strengths: Why Jodie and her co-founder were stepping on each other's toes until they realized one was a Visionary and one was an Integrator. 04:44 – The Visionary/Integrator Test: How taking the official assessment brought clarity to their roles. 05:59 – Changing Titles: Why Jodie became "CEO" and her co-founder became "Head of Capital" to reflect their actual zones of genius—and why the team applauded the move. 07:43 – Structure Creates Flexibility (The 90-Day Scorecard): How giving every employee a single key metric enabled a 4-day workweek and flexible hours without sacrificing performance. 13:14 – The Level 10 Meeting: The 90-minute weekly meeting agenda that builds trust and solves problems before they hit the P&L. 16:12 – Rating the Meeting: Why every meeting must end with a rating out of 10 (and why you aren't allowed to choose "7"). 22:16 – Tractor Ventures: Jodie explains their unique "non-dilutive" funding model for founders who want to build "tractors," not just "rockets." Get the book here📚 Rocket Fuel by Gino Wickman & Mark C. Winters Mentioned in the episodeTractor Ventures: Jodie’s alternative funding firm for founders.Visionary/Integrator Assessment: The official test mentioned in the book.EOS (Entrepreneurial Operating System): The broader system Rocket Fuel is part of. Jodie Imam, Co-Founder & CEO of Tractor Ventures Follow Sam on LinkedIn Want to get in touch? Whether you want to suggest a guest, sponsor the show, leave some feedback or just get in touch to tell me what you're working on, here's the link for you: https://forms.gle/NHGL9ftFRhu4cKFLA

    26 min
  8. JAN 26

    How to Get Rich by Felix Dennis | with guest Alex Bodini

    Unlike most business books, How to Get Rich doesn't sugarcoat the sacrifices, the ego, or the sheer obsession required to build wealth. The late Felix Dennis—founder of Maxim magazine was one of Britain's richest self-made men. As he wrote How to Get Rich, he sat on a goldmine of hard-won lessons. He explains how wealth is really made and why most people will never do what it takes. Joining me to unpack this unfiltered playbook is Alex Bodini, CEO and co-founder of Spin Group. Alex has built a global social media agency of 80+ people while launching multiple ventures like Acid Running and Janji Europe. For Alex, it’s never been about perfection but about momentum, learning, and loving the ride. Key Takeaways & Timestamps00:00 – Introducing How to Get Rich by Felix Dennis. 02:40 – Don't Listen to Jeremiahs: Why "wantrepreneurs" project their fears onto you. 06:40 – The Information Diet 09:23 – "Overhead Walks on Two Legs”: The dangerous trap of hiring too fast and buying fancy offices. 12:28 – Rules of Thumb: The "7% Rule”. 13:56 – Diversify Your Baskets (After Success): 15:21 – The Regret Minimization Framework: How to make decisions today that your 80-year-old self will thank you for. Get the book here📚How to Get Rich by Felix Dennis Mentioned in the episodeSpin Group: Alex’s Social Media AgencyAcid Running: One of Alex’s side venturesJanji Europe: Another venture in Alex’s portfolio Alex Bodini, Co-Founder of Spin Group Follow Sam on LinkedIn Want to get in touch? Whether you want to suggest a guest, sponsor the show, leave some feedback or just get in touch to tell me what you're working on, here's the link for you: https://forms.gle/NHGL9ftFRhu4cKFLA

    23 min

About

This podcast is for winners. Top founders join Sam Brown to discuss the most powerful insights from the world's best business books.

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