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We Fixed It, You're Welcome
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Description
Armchair quarterbacking isn’t just for sports anymore. We’re taking the same approach to companies: what would you do in their shoes? Each episode, our lively panel will debate a new issue ripped from the headlines involving a different well-known company. Between our instincts, experiences, and unsolicited opinions, we may just come up with gold. At the end, we’ll critique ourselves and see how we did. If we fixed it, you’re welcome! Season 3 launched January 20, 2026. Subscribe to the podcast so you don't miss a single episode!
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Are too many people being promoted into leadership roles? As a result, are companies becoming too top heavy? If we’ve created a system that values managers over executers, is this a recipe for disaster?
In this episode, we’re joined by Ron Hetrick, Principal Economist at Lightcast and one of the most influential labor economists in the country. Together, we unpack one of the most important questions facing today’s labor market: whether modern organizations are overloaded with managers and what that means for productivity, hiring, layoffs, and career paths. Drawing on decades of labor market research and macro workforce data, Ron explains why middle managers are often the first cut during layoffs, how that decision can negatively impact companies, and why a contributor-based evaluation might be a better approach. This dynamic conversation digs into provocative questions we’re all asking, challenges assumptions, and poses some very real solutions about improving our collective thinking about the labor force.
In This Episode, We Cover
● Why organizations naturally accumulate management layers over time
● The hidden risk of promoting top performers into leadership roles
● How layoffs disproportionately affect middle managers
● The mismatch between workforce expectations and available leadership roles
● Why companies reward management more than execution
● The growing importance of Individual Contributor career paths
● How interest rates and capital costs influence layoffs
● The long term consequences of overhiring during economic spikes
● Why forecasting failures create workforce instability
● How companies can rethink compensation structures to retain expertise
● The role AI may play in reshaping management structures
● Why trades and technical careers are becoming more attractive again
Key Insight from Ron Hetrick
One of the biggest workforce challenges today is not simply too many managers. It is a system that rewards leadership titles more than execution excellence.
If organizations want stability, they must create career ladders where experts can grow inancially without being pushed into management roles if it creates misalignment.
As Ron explains during the episode:
The farther your role is from creating revenue or protecting margin, the harder it becomes to justify during restructuring.
About the Guest: Ron Hetrick
Ron Hetrick is a leading labor economist and Principal Economist at Lightcast. He previously worked at the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and advises Fortune 100 companies, policymakers, and workforce strategists.
He is also the author of:
● Demographic Drought
● Who’s Going to Do the Work
● The Rising Storm (contributor)
● Fault Lines (co-author)
Ron is widely recognized for translating workforce data into practical strategic insight for organizations navigating talent shortages and economic change.
Connect with Ron on LinkedIn:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/ronlhetrick/
Discussion Highlights
Some standout takeaways from this episode:
✔ Promotions are often used as retention tools rather than structural necessities
✔ Middle management roles expand fastest during economic growth cycles
✔ Overhiring during temporary demand spikes leads directly to layoffs later
✔ Organizations rarely forecast workforce demand accurately
✔ Execution roles are often undervalued compared to leadership titles
✔ Skilled experts need compensation parity with managers
✔ Career ladders must evolve beyond title based advancement
Our Panel
● Aaron Wolpoff – Host and Marketing panelist
● Melissa Eaton – Operations and C/X panelist
● Chino Nnadi – People, Talent and Culture panelist
● Ron Hetrick (Guest) - Labor economist and Principal Economist at Lightcast.
Subscribe for more deep dives where we fix big business problems with fresh perspectives.
• Website – www.wefixeditpod.com
• Follow us on:
Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/wefixeditpod
LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/wefixeditpod
YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@WeFixedItPod
If you liked this episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with your friends!
Keep listening to find out how we fix companies and put them back better than we found them.
Disclaimer
A quick disclaimer. We are going into this somewhat cold and nothing we say should be onstrued as legal advice, financial advice or anything that would get us in trouble. These are our views and opinions. We're here to ask the kinds of questions everyone's thinking, have an engaging conversation and maybe come to some conclusions that we feel are worth exploring.
By the end, if we fixed it, you're welcome. All trademarks, IP and brand elements discussed are property of their respective owners.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Space exploration used to be reserved for governments and elite astronauts only. Today, commercial launches, private space stations, and civilian missions are raising questions about opening up space travel and making access more widely available.
In this episode, global space policy executive Christopher Hearsey joins the conversation to explore the future of commercial spaceflight, the role of private companies, and whether humanity is entering a new era where space truly becomes accessible to everyone.
From billionaire tourism headlines to satellite infrastructure that powers everyday life on Earth, this discussion separates myth from reality and explains what space tourism and space commercialization actually means for society.
What You’ll Learn in This Episode
Why space is no longer just for astronauts and governments
How private companies like SpaceX and Blue Origin are accelerating the push for space travel
The legal reality behind the Outer Space Treaty and ownership in space
The economics of space tourism and why costs are still high
How satellites already power GPS, banking, communications, and security systems
Whether governments or private companies should lead the next phase of exploration
About Christopher Hearsey
Christopher Hearsey is a global space executive and founder of OSA Consulting, specializing in commercial space policy and regulatory strategy.
He previously worked at the U.S. State Department and helped support implementation of the National Space Policy. He also co-founded the Space Court Foundation, which promotes global education around space law and governance.
Learn more:
https://www.linkedin.com/in/hearsey/
Our Panel
Aaron Wolpoff – Host and Marketing panelist
Melissa Eaton – Operations and C/X panelist
Chino Nnadi – People, Talent and Culture panelist
Christopher Hearsey - Guest and global space executive
Subscribe for more deep dives where we fix big business problems with fresh perspectives.
• Website – www.wefixeditpod.com
• Follow us on:
Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/wefixeditpod
LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/wefixeditpod
YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@WeFixedItPod
If you liked this episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with your friends!
Keep listening to find out how we fix companies and put them back better than we found them.
Disclaimer
A quick disclaimer. We are going into this somewhat cold and nothing we say should be construed as legal advice, financial advice or anything that would get us in trouble. These are our views and opinions. We're here to ask the kinds of questions everyone's thinking, have an engaging conversation and maybe come to some conclusions that we feel are worth exploring. By the end, if we fixed it, you're welcome. All trademarks, IP and brand elements discussed are property of their respective owners.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Target is dropping prices on more than 3,000 items to win back shoppers. But can price cuts alone win back customer trust and brand loyalty?
In this episode, our panel analyzes Target’s plan to address declining foot traffic, shrinking sales, and boycotts. We explore whether these price discounts are a short term marketing tactic or part of a deeper brand reset, and whether we think they will work.
From customer sentiment to operations complexity and employee impact, this conversation breaks down what Target can do to hold onto relevance in a crowded retail landscape, and to win back customers who feel Target is no longer for them.
Key Takeaways
Discounts increase traffic temporarily but do not rebuild loyalty alone
Target risks losing differentiation if it competes purely on price
Brand trust requires transparency and consistency
Employees and customers both need clarity on the company’s direction
A strong narrative must support any pricing strategy
Our Panel
Aaron Wolpoff – Host and Marketing panelist
Melissa Eaton – Operations and C/X panelist
Chino Nnadi – People, Talent and Culture panelist
Subscribe for more deep dives where we fix big business problems with fresh perspectives.
• Website – www.wefixeditpod.com
• Follow us on:
Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/wefixeditpod
LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/wefixeditpod
YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@WeFixedItPod
If you liked this episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with your friends!
Keep listening to find out how we fix companies and put them back better than we found them.
Disclaimer
A quick disclaimer. We are going into this somewhat cold and nothing we say should be construed as legal advice, financial advice or anything that would get us in trouble. These are our views and opinions. We're here to ask the kinds of questions everyone's thinking, have an engaging conversation and maybe come to some conclusions that we feel are worth exploring. By the end, if we fixed it, you're welcome. All trademarks, IP and brand elements discussed are property of their respective owners.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode, our panel explores a troubling trend in today’s job market: companies that exist to exploit job seekers. The reality of today’s job market? Ongoing layoffs and exponentially more candidates than open jobs. As a result, many people are opening their wallets to paid recruiters, coaches, career accelerators, and “job connector platforms” that promise hidden opportunities for a steep monthly fee.
It’s all so confusing: which of these services provide legitimate help? Which ones are just middlemen that prey on the unemployed? How can job seekers steer clear of the ones motivated by greed that don’t provide any real value?
Throughout this timely conversation, our panel discusses how the modern job search landscape has changed, why so many questionable services have emerged, and how candidates can protect themselves. We also share practical advice on identifying ethical recruiters, avoiding scams, and navigating the job market with confidence and strategy.
The episode ultimately builds to an upsetting realization: instead of job seekers being treated as the customer, many systems now treat them as a product to be monetized. With this in mind, our panel explains how workers can start to shift the power dynamic by building authentic relationships, verifying credibility, and trusting their instincts when evaluating job search services.
👥 Get to know our panel:
Aaron Wolpoff – Host & Panelist / Marketing Background
Melissa Eaton – Panelist / Operations & CX Background
Chino Nnadi – Panelist / People, Culture & Corporate Recruitment Background, founder of Like Cappuccino recruitment agency
Key Takeaways
Most legitimate recruiters never charge candidates for job placement.
Many “job search services” profit from fear and uncertainty.
Always research the credibility of coaches, recruiters, or platforms.
Trust your instincts when evaluating job opportunities or programs.
Networking and direct connections remain the most effective path to new opportunities.
Subscribe for more deep dives where we fix big business problems with fresh perspectives.
• Website – www.wefixeditpod.com
• Follow us on:
Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/wefixeditpod
LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/wefixeditpod
YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@WeFixedItPod
If you liked this episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with your friends!
Keep listening to find out how we fix companies and put them back better than we found them.
Disclaimer
A quick disclaimer. We are going into this somewhat cold and nothing we say should be construed as legal advice, financial advice or anything that would get us in trouble. These are our views and opinions. We're here to ask the kinds of questions everyone's thinking. Have an engaging conversation and maybe come to some conclusions that we feel are worth exploring. By the end, if we fixed it, you're welcome. All trademarks, IP and brand elements discussed are property of their respective owners.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Southwest Airlines is financially strong. Record revenues. Stock price near multi-year highs.
Yet longtime customers are walking away angry.
In this episode, we unpack the growing tension between Wall Street performance and customer loyalty at Southwest Airlines. Host Aaron Wolpoff sits down with brand strategist Rene Huey-Lipton, founder of The Dame Collective and former strategy lead on Southwest during its golden years.
The question at the center of the conversation:
How can a brand be winning financially while simultaneously losing its best customers?
From controversial assigned seating to unpopular baggage fees to the triggering “Boarding Royale” Super Bowl campaign, we analyze how strategic shifts have taken the most beloved airline identity in America off course for many consumers.
What We Cover
1️⃣ The Core Problem: Financial Success vs Brand Equity
Southwest reported record revenue, yet load factors are declining
Loyal flyers publicly declaring they are leaving
The emotional equity of “We’re all in this together” is eroding
The danger of extracting more revenue per customer while shrinking the customer base
Rene explains how this mirrors classic Wall Street optimization: maximize short-term revenue, risk long-term brand health.
2️⃣ The Boarding Royale Backfire
Southwest’s Super Bowl ad mocked its former open seating model.
Instead of feeling like a self-aware evolution, customers felt:
Belittled
Gaslit
Reduced to the punchline
Rene breaks down why making your most loyal customers the joke is a strategic miscalculation.
3️⃣ Hierarchy Changes Behavior
Referencing research from Harvard Business School and the University of Toronto, Rene highlights how:
Class distinctions increase conflict
Introducing hierarchy shifts employee roles from hosts to referees
Southwest’s once-democratic seating model helped create community
When tiered seating and baggage fees entered the picture, the cultural dynamic shifted.
4️⃣ Internal Culture Risk
Southwest’s frontline employees have historically been its greatest asset:
Humor
Warmth
Human connection
But layoffs, operational constraints, and policy changes are altering that culture.
The episode explores whether internal friction could accelerate brand decline faster than customer dissatisfaction alone.
5️⃣ What Should Southwest Do?
Rene proposes a bold alternative:
A Dual-Brand Strategy
Modeled after Qantas and Jetstar:
Preserve Southwest as a high-trust, economy-focused domestic brand
Launch a separate premium or long-haul sub-brand
Protect the emotional equity instead of diluting it
Other ideas discussed:
Restore fee transparency
Recommit to “Bags Fly Free”
Monetize passenger engagement through paid brand research partnerships
Re-empower employees as ambassadors rather than enforcers
Subscribe for more deep dives where we fix big business problems with fresh perspectives.
Rene Huey-Lipton
https://www.linkedin.com/in/hueylipton/
• Website – www.wefixeditpod.com
• Follow us on:
Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/wefixeditpod
LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/wefixeditpod
YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@WeFixedItPod
If you liked this episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with your friends!
Keep listening to find out how we fix companies and put them back better than we found them.
Disclaimer
A quick disclaimer. We are going into this somewhat cold and nothing we say should be construed as legal advice, financial advice or anything that would get us in trouble. These are our views and opinions. We're here to ask the kinds of questions everyone's thinking. Have an engaging conversation and maybe come to some conclusions that we feel are worth exploring. By the end, if we fixed it, you're welcome. All trademarks, IP and brand elements discussed are property of their respective owners.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
For generations, a bite of a Reese’s Peanut Butter Cup meant one thing:
Milk chocolate. Real peanut butter. That unmistakable taste. Now, many loyal fans say something is different.
In this episode, we sit down with Brad Reese, grandson of H. B. Reese and self-appointed “Protector of Reese’s Brand Integrity,” to unpack a controversy that has caught the world’s attention.
Brad and others are upset about the current quality of Reese’s products under Hershey’s control, pointing to a shift in taste and either proven or alleged ingredient swaps.
Emotions are high - people love Reese’s. They want real answers.
This isn’t just about candy.
It’s about trust, heritage, and a beloved company at a cultural tension point with its best customers.
What Sparked the Controversy?
Brad published an open letter to Hershey’s on LinkedIn calling out what he and many consumers observed:
Certain varieties no longer list milk chocolate
Some now use “chocolate candy,” “chocolatey coating,” or compound coating
Peanut butter replaced in some products with “peanut butter creme”
Ingredient changes implemented quietly, without announcement
While The Hershey Company has publicly stated that core ingredients have not changed, consumers began comparing labels and conducting side-by-side taste tests online.
The consumer pushback and Hershey’s response quickly went viral, drawing attention from major media outlets and even commentary from MrBeast while promoting his own line of Feastibles.
A Powerful Quote from Brad
“They’re stooping for pennies and passing up dollars.”
Subscribe for more deep dives where we fix big business problems with fresh perspectives.
Brad Reese
https://www.linkedin.com/in/bradreesecom/
• Website – www.wefixeditpod.com
• Follow us on:
Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/wefixeditpod
LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/wefixeditpod
YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@WeFixedItPod
If you liked this episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with your friends!
Keep listening to find out how we fix companies and put them back better than we found them.
Disclaimer
A quick disclaimer. We are going into this somewhat cold and nothing we say should be construed as legal advice, financial advice or anything that would get us in trouble. These are our views and opinions. We're here to ask the kinds of questions everyone's thinking. Have an engaging conversation and maybe come to some conclusions that we feel are worth exploring. By the end, if we fixed it, you're welcome. All trademarks, IP and brand elements discussed are property of their respective owners.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Tipping used to be simple: good service meant leaving something extra. These days, tips seem like mandatory surcharges, and customers are fed up. In this episode, Aaron and Melissa unpack the growing cultural frustration around “tipflation” and why it’s becoming an increasing pressure point for all involved. We debate who really bears the cost in today’s hospitality economy and look at this from all sides.
Joining us is expert restaurant consultant Mark Moeller, founder of the consulting firm The Recipe of Success, who brings over four decades of experience in restaurant operations and turnaround.
Together with Mark, we examine rising labor costs, the psychology of paying, fee transparency, and how to make practices around tipping more sustainable and digestible.
Practical Takeaways
For Consumers:
● Consider tipping after service is complete
● Speak with management before leaving damaging reviews
● Recognize tipping is tied to systemic wage structures
For Operators:
● Prioritize price and fee transparency
● Use POS data to fairly allocate tip pools
● Invest in training to justify value perception
● Avoid arbitrary surcharges that erode trust
The “Fix” (At Least for Now)
The group proposes:
● Transparent pricing models
● Reduced reliance on hidden fees
● Introduce enticing customer rewards that reinforce tipping behavior
● Continual experimentation with patience and grace on all sides
● Industry-wide creativity and collaboration
There is no overnight solution. But thoughtful policy adjustments, communication, and empathy between operators, staff, and customers may reduce friction.
Guest Spotlight
Mark Moeller
Founder, The Recipe of Success National restaurant consulting firm specializing in operations, training, and financial analysis
Website: recipeofsuccess.com
Enjoyed the Episode?
Instead of tipping the hosts, leave a five-star review on your favorite podcast platform. And if you're listening from a restaurant or coffee shop, consider showing appreciation to the team serving you.
Subscribe for more deep dives where we fix big business problems with fresh perspectives.
Mark Moeller
https://www.linkedin.com/in/therecipeofsuccess/
Mark's website: https://recipeofsuccess.com
• Website – www.wefixeditpod.com
• Follow us on:
Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/wefixeditpod
LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/wefixeditpod
YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@WeFixedItPod
If you liked this episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with your friends!
Keep listening to find out how we fix companies and put them back better than we found them.
Disclaimer
A quick disclaimer. We are going into this somewhat cold and nothing we say should be construed as legal advice, financial advice or anything that would get us in trouble. These are our views and opinions. We're here to ask the kinds of questions everyone's thinking, have an engaging conversation and maybe come to some conclusions that we feel are worth exploring.
By the end, if we fixed it, you're welcome. All trademarks, IP and brand elements discussed are property of their respective owners.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Research suggests that 30–50% of today’s work tasks could technically be automated. And yet most of us feel busier than ever.
So what’s going on?
In this episode, we sit down with author, AI strategist, and business coach Steve Ferman to unpack the “automation irony”: the more tools and systems we add, the less time we seem to get back. Instead of blaming the technology, we dig into the real blockers—governance gaps, cultural resistance, change management failures, rising expectations, and leadership blind spots that prevent automation from delivering the relief it promises.
This isn’t an anti-AI episode. It’s a pro-leadership one.
About Our Guest
Steve Ferman is a tech executive, AI strategist, and certified Scaling Up business coach with over 40 years of experience building, scaling, buying, and selling technology companies. Learn more: https://4pillarcoach.com
Key Topics & Takeaways
Why automation isn’t a tech problem — it’s an operations problem
AI sprawl and shadow AI inside organizations
The danger of implementing tools without governance or guardrails
Why efficiency gains often lead to raised quotas, not reduced workload
The “walled garden trap” and siloed automation efforts
How automation quietly shifts burden upstream and creates hidden burnout
Why layoffs blamed on AI increase fear and stall adoption
The cultural gap between automation promise and employee experience
The need for executive alignment before tool selection
Why adoption requires enablement, not just software licenses
The Core Insight
Automation is not failing.
Leadership strategy is.
Companies often start with the solution — buying the newest AI tool — instead of identifying the operational bottlenecks they actually need to solve. Without executive buy-in, guardrails, and employee engagement, automation simply becomes another layer of work.
And when time is saved?
Organizations often fill it immediately with more output expectations, reinforcing the productivity paradox instead of relieving it.
Strategic Fixes Proposed
1️⃣ Start with Operations, Not Software
AI should solve clearly defined operational friction, not chase trends. Diagnose before you deploy.
2️⃣ Build Governance Early
Create AI councils, guardrails, usage policies, and clear expectations. Avoid AI sprawl.
3️⃣ Ask Employees First
“What are two tasks you hate doing?”
Automate those first to build trust and momentum.
4️⃣ Protect Reclaimed Time
Hard-code reclaimed hours into the operating model.
Allocate portions to:
Innovation
Upskilling
Strategic thinking
Reduced workload
5️⃣ Redefine Productivity
More output is not always better output.
Innovation, morale, and long-term sustainability matter.
6️⃣ Treat AI Like a New Colleague
Onboard it. Train around it. Clarify when human judgment overrides automation.
7️⃣ Keep Humans in the Loop
AI lacks empathy, emotional intelligence, and true reasoning.
The human element remains essential.
Who This Episode Is For
Executives implementing AI initiatives
HR and People & Culture leaders
Founders and startup operators
Technology and operations leaders
Anyone feeling busier despite automation
The Big Question This Episode Answers
Is automation actually freeing us, or are we just running faster on the same wheel?
Final Take
Automation can absolutely give us time back.
But only if leaders resist the temptation to immediately reinvest every reclaimed minute into higher output expectations.
The real opportunity isn’t just efficiency.
It’s reinvention.
If done right, automation shifts work from execution to strategy, from repetition to creativity, from burnout to innovation.
But that shift requires intentional leadership, cultural clarity, and guardrails.
Otherwise, we're stuck with the burden of knowing we'll never catch up, no matter how many time-saving tools we add.
Subscribe for more deep dives where we fix big business problems with fresh perspectives.
Steve Ferman: https://www.linkedin.com/company/4-pillar-coach/
• Website – www.wefixeditpod.com
• Follow us on:
Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/wefixeditpod
LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/wefixeditpod
YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@WeFixedItPod
If you liked this episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with your friends!
Keep listening to find out how we fix companies and put them back better than we found them.
Disclaimer
A quick disclaimer. We are going into this somewhat cold and nothing we say should be construed as legal advice, financial advice or anything that would get us in trouble. These are our views and opinions. We're here to ask the kinds of questions everyone's thinking. Have an engaging conversation and maybe come to some conclusions that we feel are worth exploring. By the end, if we fixed it, you're welcome. All trademarks, IP and brand elements discussed are property of their respective owners.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
This year, companies spent $8–10 million for a single 30-second Super Bowl commercial, before production, celebrity fees, and amplification even begin. It’s one of the biggest marketing bets any company can make, and one of the few remaining moments of true mass, real-time cultural attention.
In this episode, the panel tackles the real question behind the hype:
Do Super Bowl commercials actually work, or are brands gambling millions on a flashy coin flip?
To answer this question, we're joined by featured guests and ad agency experts Anaka Kobzev (main episode and included post-show) and Amelea Renshaw (post-show) who have both been instrumental in shaping Super Bowl campaigns, among other things:
- Anaka has led global communications for legendary agencies like McCann and TBWA and is Founder and Principal of Through Line Advisory, helping brands to elevate their visibility through strategic communications and content.
- Amelea is Head of Strategy at Lucky Generals NY, spearheading brand positioning, award-winning creative campaigns, and comms thinking for brands such as Universal (with a 2026 ad spot), Ally, Google, Peloton, Pinterest, and Girls Who Code.
Recorded in two parts, the episode opens with a pre-game breakdown, where the panel evaluates the economics, risks, and strategic rationale behind Super Bowl advertising. After the game, the conversation continues with a bonus after-show, analyzing what actually aired, which ads cut through, which ones missed, and what patterns emerged across categories like AI, finance, health, food and beverage.
With perspectives from brand strategy, communications leadership, and deep agency experience, the group goes beyond “Was it funny?” and instead evaluates ROI, readiness, cultural fit, and long-term brand impact.
Key Topics & Takeaways
Why Super Bowl ads now cost 2–3× more than a decade ago
The difference between awareness, engagement, and actual business impact
When Super Bowl ads amplify strength vs expose weakness
Why creative misalignment can erase millions in value
The danger of confusing celebrity recognition with brand recall
How layoffs, market timing, and internal morale affect ad perception
Why some brands win with one ad and others disappear entirely
The rise of AI, health, and fintech themes in this year’s game
How pre-game leaks and post-game amplification now matter as much as game night
Strategic Frameworks Discussed
Readiness Test: If your operations can’t handle the spike, don’t buy the spot
Lifecycle Fit: Super Bowl ads work best at inflection points, not desperation moments
Creative Discipline: Entertainment alone is not strategy
Before / During / After: The ad is the spark, not the fire
Internal Alignment: Employees must understand the “why,” not just see the spend
Cultural Context: Tone matters as much as message
Who This Episode Is For
CMOs and brand leaders
Marketing and communications executives
Agency strategists and creatives
Founders considering big-budget awareness plays
Anyone curious why some Super Bowl ads become legendary and others become memes
The Big Question This Episode Answers
Is a Super Bowl commercial a smart investment or a very expensive ego play?
Final Take
Super Bowl commercials can work, but only when the entire business is ready to support the moment. Without operational strength, creative clarity, and strategic intent, the biggest stage in advertising doesn’t save brands, it exposes them.
The real win isn’t airtime.
It’s alignment, execution, and what happens after the confetti settles.
Main Panel
Aaron Wolpoff
Melissa Eaton
Chino Nnadi
Anaka Kobzev (Special Guest)
Anaka's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/anakakobzev/
Bonus After-Show Panel
(Post-game analysis only)
Aaron Wolpoff
Melissa Eaton
Anaka Kobzev (Special Guest)
Amelea Renshaw (Special Guest)
Amelea's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/amelearenshaw/
Subscribe for more deep dives where we fix big business problems with fresh perspectives.
• Website – www.wefixeditpod.com
• Follow us on:
Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/wefixeditpod
LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/wefixeditpod
YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@WeFixedItPod
If you liked this episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with your friends!
Keep listening to find out how we fix companies and put them back better than we found them.
Disclaimer
A quick disclaimer. We are going into this somewhat cold and nothing we say should be construed as legal advice, financial advice or anything that would get us in trouble. These are our views and opinions. We're here to ask the kinds of questions everyone's thinking, have an engaging conversation, and maybe come to some conclusions that we feel are worth exploring. By the end, if we fixed it, you're welcome. All trademarks, IP and brand elements discussed are property of their respective owners.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Pinterest was once the quiet corner of the internet. A place for inspiration, planning, and imagination. No shouting. No doom-scrolling. No constant pressure to buy. That version of Pinterest is now under threat.
In this episode, we unpack The Pinterest Paradox. Can a platform built on slow inspiration successfully pivot to fast commerce without breaking user trust? Pinterest is laying off staff, cutting costs, investing heavily in AI, and pushing aggressively into e-commerce. With TikTok Shop, Amazon, and Instagram all competing for attention and dollars, Pinterest is betting that inspiration should lead directly to purchase.
Joined by Leon Lin, former Head of Discovery Product at Pinterest and current CEO of 1stCollab, we go inside how Pinterest’s algorithms actually worked and why monetization is harder than it looks.
We explore:
Browsing vs buying and where Pinterest truly belongs
When monetization feels helpful vs exploitative
Why affiliate links and sponsored content can break authenticity
How timing and intent matter more than ad volume
Why small and local businesses are Pinterest’s biggest opportunity
Inspo Mode vs Shop Mode as a potential product fix
How Pinterest can evolve without losing its soul
This is not an anti-commerce conversation. Pinterest is a business. But the real question is whether platforms can monetize without alienating the very users who made them valuable in the first place.
If Pinterest gets this right, it doesn’t just become another shopping app.
It becomes the most trusted bridge between imagination and action.
Subscribe for more deep dives where we fix big business problems with fresh perspectives.
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If you liked this episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with your friends!
Keep listening to find out how we fix companies and put them back better than we found them.
Disclaimer
A quick disclaimer. We are going into this somewhat cold and nothing we say should be construed as legal advice, financial advice or anything that would get us in trouble. These are our views and opinions. We're here to ask the kinds of questions everyone's thinking. Have an engaging conversation and maybe come to some conclusions that we feel are worth exploring. By the end, if we fixed it, you're welcome. All trademarks, IP and brand elements discussed are property of their respective owners.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
LEGO built one of the most iconic brands in history by standing for children, creativity, and open-ended play. But in recent years, a major shift has taken hold. The company is increasingly chasing adult fans with premium, expensive, highly detailed sets, licensed IP, and collector-focused experiences.
In this episode, the panel is joined by toy industry veteran Leo Battersby to examine whether LEGO’s pivot toward adults is a smart growth strategy or a dangerous drift away from the very thing that made the brand legendary.
The conversation explores the deep tension between imagination vs instruction, open-ended creativity vs rigid build-by-numbers kits, and long-term cultural pipeline vs short-term revenue growth. With declining birth rates, rising screen time, and changing childhood behavior, LEGO is navigating a radically different world than the one it helped shape.
The group debates whether LEGO is slowly turning from a system of play into a premium model-building brand and what that means for future generations of builders.
Key Topics & Takeaways
Why adult collectors now make up ~25–30% of the toy market
How LEGO’s “Adults Welcome” strategy and 18+ sets changed the brand
The shift from imaginative play to instruction-following construction
Why modern LEGO sets leave less room for creative reinterpretation
The impact of screens, media, and IP on how kids play today
Declining birth rates and what that means for toy company pipelines
The difference between “paint by numbers” and a blank canvas
Why nostalgia is powerful but not a long-term growth strategy
How LEGO risks losing the next generation of builders
The hidden danger of optimizing only for adult money
The Strategic Tension
Is LEGO still teaching kids how to imagine… or mostly teaching them how to follow instructions?
The panel argues that LEGO is not wrong to pursue adults and licensed IP. The real risk is over-indexing on precision, perfection, and display pieces at the cost of the messy, experimental, imaginative play that originally made LEGO magical.
The Big Fix Proposed
A “LEGO for Life” ecosystem, including:
A subscription-based building journey that grows with the child
An “Anything Box” starter kit with no instructions, just imagination
Age-and-stage based kits that evolve from free play → STEM → advanced builds
A community layer where kids and families share creations and challenges
A “Pass the Brick” system for reused bricks to improve accessibility
Clear separation between:
Kid-first creative play LEGO
Adult premium collectible LEGO
The goal:
Use adult profits to subsidize kid-first innovation and rebuild the long-term pipeline of LEGO fans.
The Big Question This Episode Answers
Is LEGO building the future of imagination, or just really expensive shelf art?
Final Take
LEGO doesn’t have an adult problem.
It has a pipeline problem.
The brand must protect the emotional and creative experiences that make people become adult LEGO fans in the first place, or the nostalgia engine eventually runs dry.
Panel
Aaron Wolpoff
Melissa Eaton
Chino Nnadi
Guest
Leo Battersby Former Mattel executive and co-founder of Mattel Creations, the adult collectibles business that scaled from zero to $110M. Currently founder of Midnight Rally Club and VP of Brand Creative at Fluid Logic.
Subscribe for more deep dives where we fix big business problems with fresh perspectives.
• Website – www.wefixeditpod.com
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If you liked this episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with your friends!
Keep listening to find out how we fix companies and put them back better than we found them.
Disclaimer
A quick disclaimer. We are going into this somewhat cold and nothing we say should be construed as legal advice, financial advice or anything that would get us in trouble. These are our views and opinions. We're here to ask the kinds of questions everyone's thinking. Have an engaging conversation and maybe come to some conclusions that we feel are worth exploring. By the end, if we fixed it, you're welcome. All trademarks, IP and brand elements discussed are property of their respective owners.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Season 3 kicks off with a timely and culture-shifting question: Is Dry January actually good for business, or is it a self-inflicted economic slowdown?
Every January, millions of people across the U.S. and the world voluntarily press pause on alcohol. What started as a small UK health initiative has become a global behavioral shift, with nearly 1 in 5 adults now participating and overall alcohol consumption at its lowest level in nearly 90 years.
But this is not just a personal wellness trend. It’s a market disruption.
In this episode, our panel explores how Dry January impacts bars, restaurants, beverage brands, corporate culture, and consumer behavior. We break down whether this movement is just a temporary reset that snaps back in February or a signal of a much deeper shift toward mindful consumption, wellness, and long-term habit change.
From inventory planning and staffing challenges to the rise of non-alcoholic beverages, sober-curious culture, and experience-driven hospitality, the conversation reframes Dry January as not just a month, but a strategic testing ground for the future of food, beverage, and social culture.
Key Topics & Takeaways
Why alcohol consumption is at a 90-year low and what that signals
Is Dry January a meaningful reset or just behavioral whiplash?
The business impact of 20% of customers disappearing for a month
How Gen Z and wellness culture are reshaping social drinking norms
Why “mindful consumption” is becoming mainstream
The rise of non-alcoholic, zero-proof, and better-for-you beverages
How bars and restaurants should rethink menus, experiences, and inventory
Using January as an R&D lab instead of a dead month
Corporate culture, team bonding, and moving beyond “happy hour culture”
The danger of over-indexing on one month instead of building evergreen options
Strategic Business Ideas Explored
Treating Dry January as a season, not a stunt
Designing non-alcoholic experiences that feel premium, not like an afterthought
Using January to test new menus, pairings, formats, and partnerships
Diversifying revenue beyond alcohol without alienating core customers
Reframing internal culture toward wellness, inclusion, and balance
Building experiences around activities, not just drinking
Avoiding the January 1st / January 30th consumer behavior whiplash
Who This Episode Is For
Consumer brand marketers and strategists
Operators dealing with seasonality and demand swings
HR and culture leaders rethinking workplace social norms
Food & beverage brand leaders
Bar, restaurant, and hospitality owners
Anyone interested in how wellness trends reshape entire industries
The Big Question This Episode Answers
Is Dry January something businesses should fight, ignore, or design for?
Final Take
Dry January is not the problem.
Ignoring the long-term shift in consumer behavior is.
Subscribe for more deep dives where we fix big business problems with fresh perspectives.
• Website – www.wefixeditpod.com
• Follow us on:
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YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@WeFixedItPod
If you liked this episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with your friends!
Keep listening to find out how we fix companies and put them back better than we found them.
Disclaimer
A quick disclaimer. We are going into this somewhat cold and nothing we say should be construed as legal advice, financial advice or anything that would get us in trouble. These are our views and opinions. We're here to ask the kinds of questions everyone's thinking. Have an engaging conversation and maybe come to some conclusions that we feel are worth exploring. By the end, if we fixed it, you're welcome. All trademarks, IP and brand elements discussed are property of their respective owners.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this special episode of We Fixed It, You’re Welcome, the team welcomes back financial expert Lukas Sundahl to put real numbers behind our hypothetical business fixes.
What’s the actual value of “fixing” a struggling company?
Lukas analyzes three big names—Southwest Airlines, Party City, and Jaguar—and shows how our proposed strategies could have meant millions in revenue, survival, and long-term brand strength.
Expect insights on:
Why Southwest’s baggage fees could still work without killing loyalty?
How Party City could have survived with community-driven retail?
What Jaguar missed in its EV pivot and how to reclaim brand trust?
This episode blends strategy + financial modeling, proving that fixing companies isn’t just theory—it’s measurable impact.
Listen, learn, and maybe rethink how YOU approach business pivots.
We dive deep into the real numbers behind our “fixes.” With returning guest Lukas Sundahl (CFO, financial strategist, LinkedIn thought leader), we analyze three case studies:
Southwest Airlines: Would baggage fees really alienate customers? Or could they generate $350M–$450M while keeping loyalty intact?
Party City: How localized inventory and community tie-ins might have saved them from bankruptcy—potentially adding $43M–$130M in value.
Jaguar: The pitfalls of abandoning brand heritage in the EV race—and how aligning EVs with Jaguar’s legacy could mean $35M–$179M in gains.
Chapters
0:00 – Welcome to We Fixed It, You’re Welcome
1:20 – Meet our guest: Lukas Sundahl
2:40 – How we quantify “fixes”
4:20 – Case Study 1: Southwest Airlines
8:00 – Case Study 2: Party City
14:40 – Case Study 3: Jaguar
18:20 – The power of the pivot
23:00 – Why grounding fixes in real companies works
25:45 – Closing thoughts & where to find Lukas
Key Themes:
The financial impact of strategic pivots
Brand loyalty vs revenue growth
The “power of the pivot” in corporate turnarounds
Why storytelling + numbers matter in fixing companies
Key Pull Quote
“The numbers—whether worst or best case—prove the power of the pivot. Even small strategic shifts could have meant hundreds of millions in value.” – Lukas Sundahl
Subscribe for more deep dives where we fix big business problems with fresh perspectives.
Links:
• Website - www.wefixeditpod.com
• Follow us on:
Instagram: @wefixeditpod
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/wefixeditpod
YouTube: @wefixeditpod
If you liked this episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with your friends! Keep listening to find out how we fix companies and put them back better than we found them.
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Jaguar’s EV rebrand was meant to redefine the luxury car brand — but instead, it sparked massive backlash, confused loyal customers, and even led to their CEO stepping down. In this episode, we break down exactly what went wrong with Jaguar’s electric vehicle strategy, why their marketing campaign failed, and how they can fix their brand without losing their iconic heritage.
Discover the key lessons every business can learn from Jaguar’s rebranding mistake, the reality of competing in the EV market, and the blueprint to reconnect with loyal buyers while attracting a new generation.
📌 Topics Covered:
Jaguar EV rebrand failure explained
Why the marketing campaign missed the mark
The danger of abandoning brand heritage
How to merge tradition with EV innovation
Strategies to win back luxury car buyers
If you’re interested in brand strategy, luxury cars, electric vehicles, or marketing case studies, this breakdown is a must-watch.
https://wefixeditpod.com/
A quick disclaimer. We are going into this somewhat cold and nothing we say should be construed as legal advice, financial advice or anything that would get us in trouble. These are our views and opinions. We're here to ask the kinds of questions everyone's thinking. Have an engaging conversation and maybe come to some conclusions that we feel are worth exploring. By the end, if we fixed it, you're welcome. All trademarks, IP and brand elements discussed are property of their respective owners.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode of "We Fixed It, You're Welcome" the hosts tackle American Eagle's controversial ad campaign featuring Sydney Sweeney. Marketing expert Lola Bakare joins to dissect the brand's misstep, exploring the importance of inclusive marketing and authentic consumer engagement. The discussion delves into the risks of shock marketing, the power of Gen Z consumers, and the need for diverse voices in decision-making processes. The panel offers strategic advice for American Eagle to regain trust, emphasizing accountability, employee engagement, and aligning actions with stated values. This episode challenges conventional marketing approaches and provides insights on navigating brand crises in the age of cancel culture.
https://wefixeditpod.com/
A quick disclaimer. We are going into this somewhat cold and nothing we say should be construed as legal advice, financial advice or anything that would get us in trouble. These are our views and opinions. We're here to ask the kinds of questions everyone's thinking. Have an engaging conversation and maybe come to some conclusions that we feel are worth exploring. By the end, if we fixed it, you're welcome. All trademarks, IP and brand elements discussed are property of their respective owners.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode, our panelists discuss crowd-sourced fixes that were submitted to our show, an end-of-season tradition. We talk about various companies that are top of mind for our episode contributors, focusing on loyalty programs and customer experiences. We explore the implications of changes in loyalty programs like Carnival's, emphasizing the importance of communication and customer engagement. The conversation also touches on innovative ideas for Amazon's delivery services and Uber's potential loyalty tiers, highlighting the need for personalization and enhanced customer experiences. The episode wraps up with reflections on the season and gratitude towards listeners.
Takeaways
The holiday season is a time for reflection and engagement with listeners.
Crowd-sourced fixes provide valuable insights into customer expectations.
Effective communication is crucial when changing loyalty programs.
Phased approaches can ease customer transitions during program changes.
Personalization in loyalty programs can enhance customer satisfaction.
Delaying shipping for registries can address space and timing issues for customers.
Innovative delivery solutions can improve customer convenience.
Uber's loyalty program could benefit from tiered rewards and personalization.
Partnerships with local businesses can enhance service offerings.
The importance of accountability and corporate responsibility in customer relations.
Chapters
00:00 Holiday Traditions and Listener Engagement
00:59 Crowd-Sourced Fix: Carnival Rewards Program
14:10 Crowd-Sourced Fix: Amazon Baby Registries
23:09 Exploring Loyalty Programs and Customer Expectations
23:35 Rethinking Postal Services: Innovative Partnerships
31:12 Amazon's Delivery Ambitions: A New Era for Logistics
35:20 Uber Loyalty Programs: Enhancing Customer Experience
Subscribe for more deep dives where we fix big business problems with fresh perspectives.
• Website – www.wefixeditpod.com
• Follow us on:
Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/wefixeditpod
LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/wefixeditpod
YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@WeFixedItPod
If you liked this episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with your friends!
Keep listening to find out how we fix companies and put them back better than we found them.
Disclaimer
A quick disclaimer. We are going into this somewhat cold and nothing we say should be construed as legal advice, financial advice or anything that would get us in trouble. These are our views and opinions. We're here to ask the kinds of questions everyone's thinking. Have an engaging conversation and maybe come to some conclusions that we feel are worth exploring. By the end, if we fixed it, you're welcome. All trademarks, IP and brand elements discussed are property of their respective owners.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A beloved American brand finds itself in boiling hot water after a senior executive at Campbell’s is secretly recorded making racist remarks, mocking customers, disparaging the company’s products, and boasting about substance use at work. The recording goes public, the executive is fired, and Campbell’s stock hits a 52-week low. But the real question is not whether the executive deserved to go, it’s what this incident reveals about leadership, culture, and accountability inside the organization.
In this episode, our panel is joined by brand growth advisor Javier Farfan (NFL, New Balance, PepsiCo, McDonald's, Anheuser Busch) to unpack what happens when private behavior becomes public, how quickly trust can erode, and why firing one executive is rarely enough to fix a systemic problem. The discussion explores the internal cultural damage, the external brand risk, and the opportunity Campbell’s now has to reset its values, reconnect with consumers, and rebuild trust from the inside out.
Rather than debating whether the scandal will blow over, the conversation focuses on what meaningful recovery actually looks like and what brands must do when values, leadership behavior, and public perception collide.
Key Topics & Takeaways
Why this incident may be more than a single “bad apple”
How lower-level employees can change the balance of power inside companies
The internal ripple effects of executive misconduct on morale and quality
Psychological safety, retaliation, and why employees stop speaking up
Culture as a system, not a slogan on the wall
The difference between cosmetic fixes and structural change
Why silence and minimal PR responses no longer work
How consumer trust, nostalgia, and brand legacy can be rebuilt
Turning a crisis into a catalyst for reinvention
Strategic Fixes Explored
Isolating the incident without denying systemic responsibility
Holding executives to higher character and integrity standards
Making leadership behavior measurable, not theoretical
Reinforcing internal accountability and psychological safety
Re-centering the brand around community, care, and accessibility
Leveraging nostalgia and emotional connection without being performative
Using crisis moments as opportunities for product and brand evolution
Who This Episode Is For
Brand, marketing, and communications leaders
Executives and people managers
HR and culture leaders
Crisis management and PR professionals
Anyone interested in how power, culture, and trust intersect inside large organizations
Disclaimer
A quick disclaimer. We are going into this somewhat cold and nothing we say should be construed as legal advice, financial advice or anything that would get us in trouble. These are our views and opinions. We're here to ask the kinds of questions everyone's thinking. Have an engaging conversation and maybe come to some conclusions that we feel are worth exploring. By the end, if we fixed it, you're welcome. All trademarks, IP and brand elements discussed are property of their respective owners.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Some movies and products flop so badly they become infamous. Others become instant classics. But then there are the ones in the middle. The ones with hype that launch and then disappear without a trace. No cultural impact. No lasting impression. Just a collective… “meh.”
This episode examines that dangerous middle ground we’re calling a culture shrug and why, for companies and creators, it can be worse than outright failure.
Aaron, Melissa, and Qadira explore why projects that check every box still vanish instantly, how companies misread cultural signals, and what it really takes to make something with staying power in an era where trends can shift on a dime.
What we cover
• What a “culture shrug” is and why it can be more painful than a flop
• Why effort, budget, and talent don’t guarantee cultural relevance
• How movies, brands, and products fail when they aim for everyone
• What happens when creativity gets diluted by committees
• Why companies often misunderstand what audiences actually want
• The timing problem between culture speed and corporate speed
• How nostalgia, remakes, and algorithms fail to ignite connection
• The danger of creative teams being shielded from real cultural insight
• Why safety ideas can be instantly forgettable
• Why younger audiences don’t react the way companies assume
• The power of niche enthusiasm and true believers
• How internal culture determines whether bold ideas survive
THE FIX: How to Avoid the Culture Shrug
1. Start with “So what?”
If you cannot answer it clearly, the idea is not ready.
2. Treat data as input, not instruction
Algorithms reveal behavior, not soul, and never the “why now.”
3. Test, but don’t sand down the edges
Over testing destroys personality and guts.
4. Put a trusted tastemaker in charge of final decisions
Not a tyrant, not a committee — a clear, culturally aware leader.
5. Build emotional stickiness
If people don’t feel it, they won’t remember it.
6. Re-evaluate cultural resonance throughout long development cycles
Eighteen months is a lifetime in cultural terms.
7. Find and nurture your early believer community
They amplify when the project finally launches.
8. Leave room for weirdness
The unexpected idea might be the one culture remembers.
9. Conduct a pre mortem
Write the “if this flopped, here’s why” memo before you build.
10. Add delight
Great creative work has soul, not just structure.
Subscribe for more deep dives where we fix big business problems with fresh perspectives.
• Website – www.wefixeditpod.com
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If you liked this episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with your friends!
Keep listening to find out how we fix companies and put them back better than we found them.
See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Wendy’s was once the fresh, honest, slightly rebellious burger chain. Today it’s stuck between fast food giants on one side and premium burger rivals on the other. Prices match McDonald’s, but the brand isn’t perceived as a value leader. Quality is decent, but not elevated enough to compete with Five Guys or Shake Shack.
So what is Wendy’s now?
We sit down with Paul Tuscano, former Chief Digital Officer at KFC US, the man behind their massive digital reinvention. He shares insights from decades in QSR, hospitality, and customer experience to break down why Wendy’s is struggling and how to fix it.
What we cover
• Why Wendy’s lost its lane
• Whether Project Fresh will work
• The strengths and weaknesses of the Wendy’s menu
• How loyalty, kiosks, personalization, and AI can change QSR
• Why Wendy’s social media works, but the stores don’t reflect it
• Why legacy brands need clarity and simplicity
• How to make Dave Thomas relevant to Gen Z
• Why culture and franchise alignment matter more than new tech
• How Chick fil A wins with consistency, not complexity
• A step by step strategy to rebuild Wendy’s
This episode is a must watch for anyone interested in branding, food, marketing, digital transformation, or turning around legacy companies.
Guest: Paul Tuscano Former Chief Digital Officer, KFC US LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paultuscano/
Subscribe for more deep dives where we fix big business problems with fresh perspectives.
• Website – www.wefixeditpod.com
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This episode explores one of the biggest questions of our time: are robots replacing humans or helping us reach our full potential?
We sit with Dr. Aadeel Akhtar, the visionary CEO of Psyonic, whose bionic hand technology is restoring touch for amputees and powering next generation robotics at NASA, Amazon, Google, Mercedes, Meta, and more.
Topics include
• Are robots a threat or an opportunity
• Why most robot replacement headlines are exaggerated
• How bionic hands are restoring real human lives
• The business responsibility behind automation
• How companies can prepare their workforce
• Why kids accept humanoid robots faster than adults
• How robotics and AI create new careers
• Why the future is humans plus robots, not humans versus robots
This is a human centered, optimistic, grounded, and deeply personal discussion that reframes the future of work.
Subscribe for more deep dives where we fix big business problems with fresh perspectives.
• Website – www.wefixeditpod.com
• Follow us on:
Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/wefixeditpod
LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/company/wefixeditpod
YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@WeFixedItPod
If you liked this episode, don’t forget to subscribe, leave a review, and share it with your friends!
Keep listening to find out how we fix companies and put them back better than we found them.
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