• Spirit Airlines, Scenario Planning, and the Difference Between Luck and Preparation
    Jun 26 2026

    When Spirit Airlines abruptly shut down, competing airlines were forced to respond almost immediately. In this episode, Tom and Mary examine how carriers such as United, Southwest, Delta, and JetBlue reacted in ways that were remarkably consistent with their positioning and target customers. The discussion explores what those responses reveal about strategy, competitive preparedness, and the value of scenario planning.

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    19 mins
  • Before You Price Your Next Innovation, Ask These Three Words
    Jun 15 2026

    A $7 bag of Doritos sparked a broader discussion about one of the most common pricing mistakes in business. In this episode, Mary and Tom explore why customers often define competitors and alternatives differently than companies do, and how that gap can lead to pricing and commercialization challenges. The conversation highlights a simple question that can improve strategic decision-making across industries: Compared to what?

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    14 mins
  • When Competitors Become Partners: Rethinking How Markets Are Won
    May 14 2026

    In this episode, the team explores how companies like Nvidia are redefining competition by partnering with competitors to build full ecosystem solutions. Rather than fighting for share within existing categories, they are expanding the market itself by helping customers succeed end-to-end. The discussion highlights how B2B companies can identify when co-opetition makes sense and how to apply it strategically to unlock growth.

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    14 mins
  • Why Paramount Beat Netflix: The Strategic Power of Playing the Game Forward
    Apr 24 2026

    In this episode, the team breaks down the surprising outcome of the Warner Bros. Discovery bidding war and why Netflix—despite a strong strategic position—didn't win. What began as a logical, best-fit decision quickly shifted as Paramount reframed the deal around certainty and risk. The conversation explores how strategy evolves through competitor moves, stakeholder priorities, and external pressures, and why most teams underestimate these dynamics.

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    16 mins
  • Growth Starts with Subtraction: Rationalizing Your Portfolio to Win
    Mar 13 2026

    In this episode, the team explores why growth in B2B doesn't always come from adding more products, brands, or acquisitions — it often comes from trimming. From product lines to brand names, organizations tend to hold onto legacy assets long after their strategic value fades. The group unpacks how to think more objectively about what to double down on, what to maintain, and what to let go — and why rationalization is less about cost-cutting and more about disciplined growth.

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    20 mins
  • What B2B Technical Leaders Can Learn from Ring's Super Bowl Misstep
    Feb 27 2026

    In this episode, Mary and Tom unpack the backlash surrounding Ring's Super Bowl ad for its new "Search Party" feature — a tool designed to help locate lost dogs through Ring cameras. On the surface, the idea felt like a winner: people love dogs, and technology that helps reunite pets with owners sounds inherently positive. But the reaction exposed deeper issues around privacy, positioning, and cultural sensitivity. The discussion explores how technically impressive products can stumble when companies assume a "slam dunk" and skip critical commercial disciplines.

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    13 mins
  • How AI is Rewriting the B2B Growth Funnel
    Feb 6 2026

    Search, as most B2B marketers learned it, is no longer the center of gravity. In this episode, the team explores how AI-driven answer engines are changing the way buyers discover, evaluate, and narrow options — often before a salesperson or website ever enters the picture. What starts as a conversation about SEO quickly becomes a strategic discussion about needs-based segmentation, decision logic, and what it really takes to be recommended when AI is acting on a buyer's behalf.

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    22 mins
  • Why Generational Labels Fail — and What Segmentation Gets Right
    Jan 23 2026

    In this episode, Mary, Tom, and Sean are joined by special guest Ginny Ertl, a change management and leadership development expert, to explore why generational labels fall short as a way to understand how people actually behave at work. What starts as a discussion about Gen Z, Millennials, Gen X, and Boomers quickly moves past age-based assumptions and into a more useful lens: segmentation. Drawing on needs-based thinking, the group examines why motivations, behaviors, and values explain far more than birth year — whether you're trying to understand employees, leaders, or customers.

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    20 mins