Wired to Thrive cover art

Wired to Thrive

Wired to Thrive

By: Marc Hoffman and Marcus Soutra
Listen for free

About this listen

Raising a family and building a business can unlock extraordinary creativity, resilience, and insight especially when your brain works differently.


Each week on Wired to Thrive, Marc Hoffman and Marcus Soutra share real stories, honest conversations, and practical tools for navigating fatherhood, entrepreneurship, and life with a neurodivergent mind, alongside guests who are thriving in their own way.


This show is for parents and entrepreneurs who are building bold futures and big dreams all while embracing a brain that was never meant to fit the mold.

Copyright 2026 | All Rights Reserved
Parenting & Families Relationships
Episodes
  • Welcome to Wired to Thrive: Marc Hoffman’s Journey from Academic Struggle to Entrepreneurial Strength
    Feb 2 2026
    In the premiere episode of Wired to Thrive, host Marc Hoffman shares the personal story behind the podcast and the mission driving it forward. From early academic struggles and feeling out of place in traditional classrooms to building a successful career as an entrepreneur and nonprofit leader, Marc reflects on how understanding his neurodivergent wiring transformed his life. He opens up about the impact of supportive mentors, the challenges of parenting a child with similar learning differences, and how tools like technology and AI can bridge cognitive gaps. More than a launch episode, this conversation sets the tone for a judgment-free community where neurodivergent parents and entrepreneurs can find practical advice, encouragement, and proof that thriving in the real world often looks different than succeeding in school.In this episode, Marc and Doug discuss:Marc’s early struggles in school, including feeling like an outcast and navigating academic trauma as a neurodivergent student The inspiration behind Wired to Thrive and the mission to create a safe, judgment-free space for neurodivergent parents and entrepreneurs How understanding his cognitive profile, strong verbal skills, and weaker working memory shaped Marc’s entrepreneurial path Why the traditional school system doesn’t always reward neurodivergent strengths and how the real world often does How technology and AI can serve as a practical support tool, especially for challenges like working memory Key Takeaways: Struggling in school does not define intelligence or future success. Marc’s story highlights how the conditions of learning matter just as much as ability, and how different environments unlock different strengths.Neurodivergent entrepreneurs often excel by identifying their strengths and building teams around their weaknesses. Marc learned to lean into his verbal strengths while surrounding himself with strong processors and detail-oriented collaborators.Asking for help is not a weakness; it’s a strategy. Marc emphasizes that seeking mentors, allies, and expert advice is a defining trait among successful dyslexic and ADHD entrepreneurs.Technology can be a powerful equalizer. Marc describes AI as “an artificial working memory,” helping bridge cognitive gaps and enabling him to process and organize information more effectively.Success in the real world requires mastery of one meaningful strength, not perfection across every subject. This shift in mindset offers hope to students and parents navigating academic challenges.“The way to a fulfilling life is to be reflective, to try many different things, and that a life well lived is understanding that your failures will bring you to prosperity.” - Marc HoffmanConnect with Marc Hoffman:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/marchoffman55/Website: https://www.marchoffman.net/Book: Positive Mindset, Self-Awareness, Perseverance- A Success Guide to Thrive with Learning Differences/ADHDFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/marchoffmanLdAdvocateShow notes by Podcastologist: Francine PobleteAudio production by Turnkey Podcast Productions. You're the expert. Your podcast will prove it.
    Show More Show Less
    19 mins
No reviews yet