• Bobby Mascia on From Family Business to Exit Strategy: Building an Exit-Ready Leadership System
    Jun 28 2026
    Episode Overview In this episode, Michael D. Levitt sits down with Bobby Mascia, wealth advisor, author of Unchained, and founder of the Exit Ready Institute. The conversation explores what most business owners avoid: planning for the end of their business journey. This is not about selling your company. It is about building a business that is transferable, scalable, and not dependent on you. The Real Problem: Most Businesses Are Not Built to Exit Most entrepreneurs believe they will “figure it out later.” That is a mistake. Bobby highlights a critical reality: Business owners delay exit planningThey tie identity to the businessThey create operational dependency on themselves The result: They cannot step awayThey cannot scale effectivelyThey reduce the long-term value of their business An exit-ready business is not about leaving. It is about freedom and optionality. The Trigger: Personal Experience Drives Strategic Clarity Bobby’s journey was shaped by two pivotal experiences: Leaving Wall Street to join a family-run Dunkin’ Donuts businessNavigating the emotional and operational complexity of family dynamicsExperiencing his father’s terminal illness These moments exposed a gap most leaders ignore: Businesses are rarely prepared for transition, whether planned or unexpected This insight led to the creation of: His book: UnchainedThe Exit Ready Institute The $80 Trillion Shift Leaders Cannot Ignore We are entering one of the largest wealth transfers in history. Key implications: Baby boomers are exiting businesses at scaleBuyers are becoming more selectiveAI is reshaping how value is assessed If your business: Depends on youLacks systemsHas unclear leadership structure …it becomes less valuable in this new market. The PATH Framework for Exit Readiness Bobby introduces a practical framework leaders can apply immediately: P – Purpose Define why the business exists beyond you Clarify long-term vision and impact A – Accelerate Drive growth through scalable systems Remove bottlenecks and founder dependency T – Tighten Optimize operations, financials, and processes Increase efficiency and predictability H – Harvest Prepare to extract value Financially and personally This is not a linear process. It is a leadership operating system. The Hidden Risk: Founder Dependency One of the most overlooked issues in leadership: The business cannot function without the founderDecision-making is centralizedTeams wait instead of act Michael calls this out directly: If your business needs you for every decision, it is not a business. It is a job. Exit readiness forces leaders to: Decentralize authorityBuild leadership capacityCreate operational clarity Why Most Leaders Struggle to Step Away The challenge is not financial. It is psychological. Common barriers: Loss of identity after exitFear of irrelevanceAddiction to being needed Many entrepreneurs: Avoid vacationsStay in constant motionNever test business independence Exit readiness requires: Personal transition planningRedefining purpose beyond the business Rethinking Leadership: Build for Transferability An exit-ready business is: System-driven, not personality-drivenScalable without constant oversightValuable to external buyers This aligns directly with a Leadership Operating System: Clear decision frameworksDefined roles and accountabilityOperational rhythm that runs without friction Presentation and Influence: Driving Action, Not Information Bobby and Michael both emphasize: Good leadership communication does not just inform. It changes behavior. Effective leaders: Create emotional connectionChallenge assumptionsDrive decisions This applies internally and externally. Key Takeaways for Leaders Build your business as if you will exit, even if you never doRemove yourself as the bottleneckSystematize decision-makingPrepare for both financial and identity transitionsTreat exit readiness as a growth strategy, not an end-state Action Steps Audit your business dependencyWhat breaks if you step away for 30 days? Identify bottlenecks Where do decisions stall without you? Document core systems Sales, operations, delivery, finance Develop leadership layers Who can operate without your input? Define your personal “after” What does life look like beyond the business? Guest Links Book: Unchained by Bobby Masciahttps://grwealthplan.com/LinkedIn: (https://www.linkedin.com/in/rmascia/) If you want to build a business that runs without you, scales without friction, and creates long-term value, you need more than strategy. You need a system. Book your Leadership Operating System review: https://BreakfastLeadership.com/LeadershipOS
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    33 mins
  • Deep Dive: The Heart of Leadership
    Jun 26 2026

    Episode Overview In this episode, we explore the alarming surge in cardiac care demand and its direct link to systemic leadership stress. Featuring insights from Michael D. Levitt, Founder and Chief Burnout Officer of Breakfast Leadership, we move beyond the idea of "bad luck" to examine how broken organizational systems are literally breaking the hearts of executives.

    Key Highlights & Statistics
    • The Cardiac Surge: Demand for outpatient cardiology procedures is projected to increase by 25% over the next decade, while the industry itself is growing at a 4% compound annual rate.
    • A Workforce Crisis: Cardiovascular disease claims a life every 33 seconds in the U.S.. Crucially, one in five cardiovascular deaths occurs in adults younger than 65—working-age leaders who are often high-performing until the moment of a health crisis.
    • The Physician Shortage: While demand spikes, the Association of American Medical Colleges projects a shortfall of over 7,000 cardiologists by 2034.
    • Physiology of Stress: Chronic workplace stress is not just a "feeling." It triggers a physiological chain reaction: Elevated cortisol leads to chronic inflammation, which accelerates cardiovascular disease.
    The "Leadership OS" Failure

    Michael Levitt shares his personal journey of surviving a 2009 cardiac event and the 369 days of "worst-case scenarios" that followed. He argues that you "cannot meditate your way out of a broken system" and identifies three structural pillars that, when missing, create toxic stress:

    1. Decision Clarity: Without it, leaders operate in permanent ambiguity, causing sustained cortisol elevation.
    2. Operational Rhythm: A lack of rhythm means the nervous system never fully recovers between demands.
    3. Culture Infrastructure: Broken culture forces individuals to absorb systemic dysfunction rather than the system holding it.
    Actionable Solutions for Executives and HR

    To prevent leadership health events from becoming business continuity crises, organizations must make three structural commitments:

    • Measure Stress Drivers: Track decision fatigue, role ambiguity, and "always-on" communication norms.
    • Design for Recovery: Treat recovery as a prerequisite for performance, not a reward for it.
    • Preventive Investment: View leadership health as a business continuity issue; it is cheaper to protect a leader than to replace one.
    Featured Resources
    • Book: 369 Days: How To Survive The Worst Year Of Your Life by Michael D. Levitt.
    • Organization: Breakfast Leadership Network – Specializing in burnout prevention and leadership strategy.
    • Featured Practice: San Diego Cardiac Center – A model for specialized, patient-centered cardiovascular care.
    • Tool: Schedule a Leadership Diagnostic to identify structural stress points in your organization.
    The Bottom Line

    "Your leadership system either protects the people inside it, or it quietly depletes them. There is no neutral position".

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    21 mins
  • AI The Real Story About Adoption In Companies: With Tony Falco
    Jun 22 2026
    Episode Summary

    In this episode of the Breakfast Leadership Show, I sit down with Tony Falco to explore the real story behind AI adoption in organizations—and it’s probably not what you think. We dig into how companies are rushing into AI without fully understanding their own workflows, and why that approach can create more problems than it solves. Tony brings decades of experience in internet technology to the conversation, giving a grounded perspective on where AI actually delivers value.

    We also get into the human side of technology—how curiosity, play, and experimentation are becoming essential skills in today’s AI-driven world. Along the way, we unpack how data is reshaping decision-making, exposing inefficiencies, and even challenging traditional corporate hierarchies. If you’ve been wondering how AI fits into leadership, operations, and innovation, this conversation will give you plenty to think about.

    Key Highlights
    • The evolution of internet technology and how it set the stage for today’s AI boom
    • Why understanding workflows is critical before implementing AI solutions
    • How AI is empowering individuals to uncover insights hidden in massive datasets
    • The risks of rushing AI adoption without clear processes or strategy
    • How data-driven insights can expose inefficiencies and organizational bottlenecks
    • The role of curiosity and experimentation in navigating new technologies
    • Challenges organizations face when multiple departments adopt AI independently
    Links & Resources
    • hydrolix.io (Tony Falco’s company focused on log data and AI-driven workflows)

    If you enjoyed this episode, make sure to follow the Breakfast Leadership Show, leave a rating and review, and share it with someone who’s navigating the world of leadership and innovation.

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    24 mins
  • Deep Dive: The Execution Gap Leaders Are Facing with AI Deployment
    Jun 19 2026

    Today's Deep Dive is from the Breakfast Leadership Newsbrief from June 2026 that highlights a critical execution gap currently paralyzing corporate leadership. Data suggests a massive decline in CEO confidence, as many organizations find themselves fundamentally unable to fulfill their own digital transformation agendas. While artificial intelligence adoption has become nearly universal, a significant lack of governance frameworks and strategic clarity has led to diminishing returns and potential legal liabilities. Furthermore, the report identifies employee burnout as a major operational risk, driven more by the cognitive strain of complex systems than by mere workload volume. Ultimately, these sources argue that the most successful modern firms are those focusing on simplifying workflows rather than simply adding new technological tools.

    Schedule your Leadership Diagnostic, to see how ready you are for AI.

    https://www.breakfastleadership.com/executivediagnostic

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    21 mins
  • Decentralized Finance Made Simple: Earn Passive Income Without Trading with Vadim Voss
    Jun 17 2026

    Vadim Voss, founder of Next Level DeFi, joins the Breakfast Leadership Show to share how everyday people can put their money to work through decentralized finance without trading, without chart-watching, and without being a tech expert. His mission is to help one million people break free from a banking system that was never built to serve them.

    What You Will Learn

    • Why a savings account earning 2 to 3 percent is quietly losing you money
    • What liquidity mining is and why it puts you on the "house side" of crypto trading
    • How stablecoins like USDT allow you to earn 20 to 30 percent annually with minimal risk
    • Why DeFi positions can be insured for as little as $30 per month per $10,000 deployed
    • How Vadim's students manage their positions in just 5 to 10 minutes per week
    • Why diversification across real estate, gold, stocks, and DeFi is the smart path forward

    Key Insights

    Vadim built Next Level DeFi after losing the majority of a $6 million fortune to unreliable foreign banks. Rather than retreat from finance, he learned decentralized systems inside and out and now teaches total beginners how to become the infrastructure that crypto traders rely on. His students are not speculating on the next hot coin. They are providing liquidity to decentralized exchanges and collecting fees the way Robinhood collects trading fees, except those fees flow back to them.

    The stablecoin liquidity mining strategy Vadim teaches is designed for people who want consistent, predictable monthly income in U.S. dollars without exposure to volatile assets. Since stablecoins are always pegged to $1, the principal does not fluctuate. Returns in the 20 to 30 percent range significantly outperform any traditional bank product, and the addition of smart contract insurance from platforms like Nexus Mutual makes the position arguably safer than a standard FDIC-insured deposit in terms of the user's control and transparency.

    Michael and Vadim both reinforce that education is the true entry point. Just as Warren Buffett observed that those who do not learn to make money while they sleep will work until they die, both host and guest emphasize that passive income is not a luxury for the wealthy. It is a learnable skill available to anyone willing to invest the time to understand it.

    Guest Bio

    Vadim Voss is the founder of Next Level DeFi, a platform dedicated to helping everyday people generate passive income through decentralized finance. An NYU graduate who built and lost a $6 million fortune through international business ventures across Lithuania, Moscow, and Kyiv, Vadim turned adversity into expertise. With over 14 years of experience in crypto and DeFi, he specializes in teaching total beginners how to deploy capital using liquidity mining strategies on platforms like Uniswap. His mission is to help one million people escape the traditional banking system.

    Free Resource for Listeners

    Vadim has put together an exclusive bundle for Breakfast Leadership Show listeners called the DeFi Income Blueprint, available free at:

    nextleveldefi.com/leadership

    The bundle includes:

    • A DeFi Income Calculator that forecasts your monthly and annual returns based on your capital and risk appetite
    • The Uniswap Ultimate Playbook, a 27-page step-by-step guide to deploying capital on Uniswap. This is the same playbook provided to Vadim's $3,000 coaching clients.

    Connect with Vadim Voss Website: nextleveldefi.com Free Bundle: https://nextleveldefi.com/leadership

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    26 mins
  • Beyond the Plan: Why Smart Organizations Still Fail, with Dr. Kyle Harkema
    Jun 15 2026

    Most organizations do not fail at strategy because the strategy is wrong. They fail because the organization never learns to behave as if the strategy is real. That is the central argument

    Dr. Kyle Harkema makes in his book Strategic Clarity. He is the creator of the Strategic Orientation Index (SOI™), a diagnostic tool that functions like an organizational MRI, revealing the hidden misalignment between what an organization says it will do and how it actually behaves day to day.

    In this conversation with Michael D. Levitt of Breakfast Leadership Network, Dr. Harkema explains why strategic drift is rarely dramatic, what the SOI™ measures, and how the three-part framework of think, listen, and act exposes exactly where execution breaks down inside even well-run organizations.

    Key Topics Covered Why strategy fails quietly. Strategic failure begins with small, easy-to-dismiss signals: the same decision recycled through multiple meetings, departments generating friction, customers noting a decline in responsiveness, or competitors gaining ground one step at a time. Individually, none of those signals is a crisis.

    Collectively, they signal drift, and organizations that catch the pattern early are the ones that survive disruption. The Monday Morning Test. If employee behaviors have not changed by Monday morning following a Friday strategy rollout, you have produced a plan, not an executable strategy. Strategy must live in decisions and priorities, not slide decks and town hall speeches.

    The Strategic Orientation Index (SOI™). The SOI™ evaluates three dimensions: how an organization thinks, listens, and acts. Most organizations are strong in one or two areas and significantly weaker in the third.

    Dr. Harkema shares a case study of an innovation-focused company with excellent thinking and acting but almost no process for collecting customer insight before making product decisions. The diagnosis was not an innovation problem. It was a listening problem. The Ford Taurus lesson. When Ford abandoned the Taurus, then the number one selling car in the world, for the retro Ford 500 name, the sales collapse was predictable and preventable.

    The organization thought carefully and acted decisively. It did not listen. The Taurus name was eventually restored, but the market position never recovered. Listening is not a soft skill. It is a strategic competency.

    Notable Quotes:

    "If your employees' behaviors don't change on Monday morning for a strategy that you rolled out on Friday, you have a plan, not an executable strategy." - Dr. Kyle Harkema "Strategy lives in behavior. It has to." - Dr. Kyle Harkema "When organizations aren't living and breathing the strategic plan, it limits the impact they cause." - Michael D. Levitt, Breakfast Leadership Network

    https://kylejharkema.com

    https://kmccontrols.com

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    26 mins
  • From Chemistry Lab to Corner Office: Scott Bening on Entrepreneurship, Integrity, and Reinventing Life After Business
    Jun 15 2026

    What happens when a chemist accidentally becomes an entrepreneur — and then has to figure out who he is after he sells the company he built? Scott Bening, author of "Formulating Solutions" and the newly released "The Back Nine," joins the podcast to share a career story that is equal parts unexpected and instructive.

    Scott grew up in Buffalo, New York, earned his degrees from St. Lawrence University and UIC Chicago, and spent just nine months in a laboratory before pivoting into technical sales. That pivot — combining deep scientific knowledge with a learned ability to sell — became the foundation for everything that followed, including leading MonoSol, a manufacturer of water-soluble films with an exclusive supply relationship with Procter & Gamble, and ultimately selling the company to a Japanese acquirer.

    In this episode, Scott and Michael explore the underrated power of a technical background in sales, the role that journaling played in Scott's first book, and why integrity and relationship-building are not soft concepts but core business drivers. Scott also shares what he learned from a book tour in Japan, where his first book resonated far beyond the audience he originally anticipated.

    The conversation then turns to "The Back Nine" — Scott's candid guide for baby boomers navigating retirement, finding new purpose, and staying mentally engaged after decades of professional identity. Scott speaks openly about his work mentoring university students and business professionals in transition, and why so few high-achieving people plan seriously for the chapter of life after work.

    Whether you are building a company, preparing to exit one, or simply trying to lead a more intentional career, this episode delivers hard-won perspective from someone who has done it all and chosen to write it down.

    Books: Author of "Formulating Solutions" and "The Back Nine"

    Website: https://www.mbs2.org/

    Topics covered: Technical sales, entrepreneurship, MonoSol, water-soluble films, Procter & Gamble, career transitions, mentorship, retirement planning, book writing, integrity in business, life after ownership

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    31 mins
  • Executive Intelligence Brief For Sunday June 14, 2026:
    Jun 14 2026

    Current economic growth is being driven by a highly concentrated group of AI-focused companies, yet a significant governance gap threatens the sustainability of this expansion.

    Organizations are deploying autonomous AI agents at a pace that far exceeds their internal oversight and decision-making frameworks, leading to a high projected failure rate for these initiatives. This friction is most visible in middle management, where leaders are currently overwhelmed by extreme workloads and excessive responsibilities.

    To address these vulnerabilities, firms must stop treating technical and organizational issues as separate problems. Instead, they should pursue an integrated redesign that simultaneously clarifies AI ownership and reduces the operational burden on their human workforce.

    Over the next few months, success will depend on aligning agentic capabilities with a robust, sustainable management structure.

    Schedule your AI readiness assessment today!

    https://www.breakfastleadership.com/executivediagnostic

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    2 mins