Hitmakers, Season 2

If a finance podcast married a culture podcast, you would get the Season 2 of Hitmakers. Each episode reveals the new logic that driving multiples, margins, and advantages before they appear on balance sheets. Over the course of this season, my co-host Lee Maschmeyer, the co-founder of transformation consultancy Collins, and I decode how cultural forces create market value: why Hermès is worth more than Ford, a far larger company; why Nvidia hired its first community manager; why collaborations became a staple of business; why merch is often more desirable than a brand’s core offering; and how cultural capital creates financial capital. <br/><br/><a href="https://andjelicaaa.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast">andjelicaaa.substack.com</a>

Everybody is talking about world-building, nobody is doing it

Everyone knows what the Magic Kingdom is. And yet almost no brand in history has been able to replicate anything like it.Because world-building sounds simple. It isn’t.There are product worlds born from the thing itself. Merchandise worlds built through collections. Aesthetic worlds defined by a visual language. Fan worlds powered by community.And each one behaves differently.The mistake is treating world-building as a single strategy.Where you begin—product, fandom, or aesthetics—determines the physics of the world you can build: its growth logic, its commercial engine, and the operating model required to sustain it.Today, we map those worlds—and the companies that build them well.Welcome to Season 2 of Hitmakers—the show that tracks how culture moves margins, multiples, and market cap. Get full access to The Sociology of Business at andjelicaaa.substack.com/subscribe

12-17
01:13:11

Trend Makers vs. Taste Makers

Why does Louis Vuitton cycle through creative directors like fashion seasons—is that a weakness or a strategy?And how can Hermès go 42 years without launching a single new product yet be worth more than the entire LVMH group?Because one behaves like a trendmaker.The other behaves like a tastemaker.Is one better? That depends on what you believe creates value.In this episode, we’re exploring that tension. Get full access to The Sociology of Business at andjelicaaa.substack.com/subscribe

12-10
01:04:28

Episode 3

Why do brands collaborate with each other?What differentiates a good collaboration from a bad one?Have we reached collaboration fatigue?And, what is next for collaborations?Today, we reveal how to elevate collaborations from tactics to strategies. We put collaborations in context of IP, world-building, fandoms, and a brand’s cultural expansion and market growth.Listen on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or YouTube. Get full access to The Sociology of Business at andjelicaaa.substack.com/subscribe

11-26
55:43

Live with Ana Andjelic

Get full access to The Sociology of Business at andjelicaaa.substack.com/subscribe

11-07
06:25

Episode 2

Why are AI brands opening cafés?Why does MiuMiu have a book club?Why does A24, a movie studio, have a membership club, a publishing arm, and now its own theater and bar?It’s not random.It’s a new operating model.And the best CMOs already know it.They’re not running marketing departments.They’re running production studios — orchestrating content, products, experiences, and collaborators like a showrunner builds a world.Today, we unpack why every business is now show business, why the modern CMO isn’t a marketer, but a showrunner, and what are the hidden formulas behind these operations.Welcome to the Season 2 of Hitmakers — the show that tracks how culture moves margins, multiples, and market cap.Find Hitmakers on Spotify, YouTube, or Apple podcasts. Get full access to The Sociology of Business at andjelicaaa.substack.com/subscribe

11-05
58:26

Live with Ana Andjelic

Get full access to The Sociology of Business at andjelicaaa.substack.com/subscribe

10-31
06:01

Episode 1

In the first episode of the Season 2 of Hitmakers, my co-host Lee Maschmeyer, co-founder of a transformation consultancy Collins, and I look at moments where cultural capital turns into financial capital. We break down why Labubu is still printing money — long after most thought its hype had peaked; why Hailey Bieber’s Rhode became a $600 million brand almost overnight; and why bootleg Gucci is hotter business than Gucci itself. Get full access to The Sociology of Business at andjelicaaa.substack.com/subscribe

10-22
53:48

Live with Ana Andjelic

Get full access to The Sociology of Business at andjelicaaa.substack.com/subscribe

10-16
28:43

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