Episodios

  • How Can Family Businesses Grow and Transition Successfully with Jonathan GOldhill
    Jan 5 2026
    Mark Osborne welcomes Jonathan Goldhill, business coach, author, and expert in guiding family-owned companies through growth and transition. With decades of experience working alongside entrepreneurs and family businesses, Jonathan has developed a proven approach to helping organizations professionalize operations, clarify leadership roles, and build sustainable enterprise value. His coaching emphasizes the unique challenges faced by family businesses, where personal relationships and generational dynamics often intersect with strategic decision-making. In this episode, Jonathan shares how clear vision, defined roles, and effective communication create the foundation for both family and non-family businesses to thrive. He outlines strategies for professionalizing operations, facilitating leadership transitions, and ensuring that entrepreneurs can scale their companies while preparing for long-term sustainability. Quotes: "Just because no one's fighting doesn't mean that you're aligned." "Fake harmony kills progress." "The things that your family avoids talking about will eventually tear your business apart." "You've got to build your business as if you're going to sell it." "Think about removing yourself so that you're dispensable — that makes the business more valuable." Takeaways: ● Family businesses face unique challenges that require clarity in vision, roles, and communication. ● Professionalizing operations is essential for scaling and sustaining growth beyond the founder's leadership. ● Leadership transitions in family-owned companies demand planning to balance family dynamics with business needs. ● Building enterprise value ensures that businesses are not only profitable today but positioned for future success. ● Effective coaching helps entrepreneurs navigate growth while preparing their companies for generational continuity or eventual transition. Conclusion: Jonathan Goldhill's insights highlight the importance of treating family businesses with both strategic rigor and sensitivity to personal dynamics. By focusing on vision, communication, and professionalized operations, entrepreneurs can build resilient organizations that achieve sustainable growth and create lasting enterprise value. His approach offers a roadmap for family-owned companies to evolve, transition smoothly, and thrive across generations. Links Mentioned: Website: Goldhill Group: https://www.thegoldhillgroup.com/ Book: Trapped in the Family Business: https://a.co/d/cTvxJxi 11 Uncomfortable Truths Every Family Business Must Face and How to Overcome Them: https://www.thegoldhillgroup.com/11-uncomfortable-truths-every-family-business-must-face-and-how-to-overcome-them/ Guest Links: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jonathangoldhill/?hl=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jonathangoldhill-businesscoach/
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    28 m
  • How Can Family Businesses Plan Early to Improve Sales Potential with Pete Becchina
    Jan 5 2026
    Mark Osborne welcomes Pete Becchina, a Certified Exit Planning Advisor, to explore sustainable growth and successful business exits in family-owned companies. With deep expertise in guiding owners through every phase from launch to exit, Pete brings clarity to the complex process of transition planning. He highlights the common mistakes business owners make when preparing for exits and underscores the importance of proper planning and preparation to maximize enterprise value. In this episode, Pete shares practical insights on business valuation, succession planning, and partnership dynamics, while emphasizing the payoff of early planning. His approach helps family business owners avoid pitfalls, strengthen operations, and position their companies for smoother transitions and higher sales potential. Quotes: "A successful exit doesn't start at the finish line—it starts the day you open your doors." "Family businesses thrive when succession is planned, not improvised." "Valuation isn't just a number; it's a reflection of how well you've prepared." "The biggest mistake owners make is waiting too long to plan their exit." "Early preparation turns transition from a crisis into an opportunity." Takeaways: Exit planning is a long-term process—owners who start early achieve stronger outcomes. Common mistakes include neglecting valuation, delaying succession planning, and overlooking partnership dynamics. Proper planning improves sales potential, reduces risk, and creates more attractive opportunities for buyers. Succession planning ensures continuity and stability, especially in family-owned businesses. Sustainable growth requires balancing day-to-day operations with long-term transition strategies. Conclusion: Pete Becchina's insights reinforce those successful exits don't happen by chance—they are the result of intentional, early planning. By addressing valuation, succession, and partnership challenges proactively, family business owners can build sustainable growth, protect their legacy, and maximize the value of their eventual transition. Links Mentioned: Website: Niclan Consulting: https://niclanconsulting.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/petebecchina/?hl=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peter-becchina-exp/
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    29 m
  • Why Are Clear KPIs Essential for Exit Success with Gary Hallett
    Dec 21 2025
    Mark Osborne welcomes Gary Hallett, co-founder of Gateway Business Advisors and Strategic Business Valuations, to discuss how business owners can better understand, protect, and optimize the value of their companies. Gary shares how his own early experiences buying and selling a business without valuation knowledge led him into business brokerage and exit planning, and why most owners are unprepared for what will likely be the biggest financial transition of their lives. He explains the gap between what owners think their business is worth and what the market will pay, the importance of treating a business as an asset rather than just an income source, and how early preparation can dramatically increase value. Gary also highlights the factors that drive sell ability, the common pitfalls that kill deals, and why exit planning is simply good business planning long before a sale. Quotes: "And all of their decision-making and thought process is around a business as an income generator; they very rarely think of it as an asset." "It's not easy, but it's not as difficult as a lot of people believe to improve the value of your business, doubling and sometimes tripling that." "The more the owner can step out of the business and work on it instead of in it, the more valuable that's going to be." "But the weeds are where value lives." "If you're not growing 10 points, you're falling behind in your market." Takeaways: Many owners focus on income instead of treating their company as an asset, which leads to big surprises when it's time to sell. Qualitative factors like owner dependence, recurring revenue, differentiation, and customer satisfaction can dramatically raise or lower valuation multiples. You don't need to double revenue to double value; steady growth with better margins and efficiency can produce exponential increases in enterprise value. Accurate financials, proper accounting, and knowing customer-level profitability are essential for making smart decisions and attracting serious buyers. Unmanaged risks such as customer concentration, weak marketing data, poor HR practices, and missing legal documents can derail a sale or reduce value significantly. Conclusion: Gary reinforces that exit planning is really just good business planning: it forces owners to think like asset managers, clean up their financials, reduce dependence on the founder, build recurring and diversified revenue, and address risk before a buyer ever shows up. By starting early—often three to five years before a desired exit—owners can turn what might have been an unsellable or undervalued company into a well-prepared, high-value asset that supports their retirement goals instead of leaving them disappointed. Links Mentioned: Website Gateway Business Advisors: https://www.gatewaybusinessadvisors.com/ Guest Links: Email: Gary@gatewaybusinessadvisors.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/garyhallett/
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    34 m
  • What Drives Success in Niche Market Ownership with Vince Barbarie
    Dec 14 2025
    In this episode of the B2B Growth Blueprint Podcast, host Mark Osborne interviews T. Vincent "Vince" Barbarie, Senior Director of Engineering at IPD and CTO of Industrial Digital Solutions. Vince shares his journey from a kid who loved taking things apart to a leader overseeing engineering, product development, technical support, and warranty for heavy-duty diesel and natural gas components, while also running an automotive media brand, Daily Turismo. He talks about blending deep engineering roots with creativity, communication, and people leadership, and how his experience at both large corporations and small founder-led companies has shaped his approach. Vince and Mark explore how legacy, conservative B2B companies can stay relevant in what often look like boring, commodity markets. Vince explains how "halo products," bold storytelling (like blowing up cylinder liners on a firing range), and thoughtful design can make industrial equipment exciting and differentiated. They dig into the importance of owning a niche, avoiding price-only competition, building cross-functional alignment between engineering, marketing, sales, and operations, and creating a culture where leaders welcome honest feedback instead of surrounding themselves with yes-men. Quotes: "Even in a commodity space, you can make things exciting—if you decide you're going to own the niche." "We shot and blew up diesel engine liners to prove our point… it was absolutely a blast." "If your sales guys are selling on price, that's the fastest way to stop making money." "I'm not looking for someone to replace the old role—I'm looking for the next generation who can automate the button-pressing and build what's next." "The problem wasn't the strategy… it was that everyone around him was a yes-man." "You have to trust your generals. You can't reach $100 million trying to approve every pencil." Takeaways: Blending engineering depth with creativity allows industrial companies to tell stories that win attention. Founder-led companies must shift from total control to trusting empowered leaders as they scale. Halo products and dramatic demonstrations can elevate entire product lines in commodity markets. People—not specs—make buying decisions, even in heavy engineering spaces. Owning your niche prevents your sales team from being dragged into destructive price wars. Cross-functional communication ensures everyone can articulate real competitive advantages. Cultures that welcome honest feedback outperform those built around yes-men. Hire for the next generation of capability, not a replica of the past employee. Big-company experience can modernize smaller, founder-led organizations. Understanding the full value chain clarifies who actually makes buying decisions. Conclusion: This episode showcases how innovation, storytelling, and culture can transform slow-moving B2B companies into category leaders. Vince demonstrates that with the right mix of creativity, technical rigor, and leadership, even diesel engine parts can become the foundation of memorable marketing, stronger teams, and long-term growth. His insights offer a clear roadmap for founders and leaders navigating scale, modernization, and competitive differentiation. Links Mentioned: Website IPD (Industrial Parts Depot, LLC): https://www.ipdparts.com/ Guest Links: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/vincent-barbarie-9675961/
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    34 m
  • What Makes a Business Truly Sellable with Alejandra Santos
    Dec 14 2025
    Alejandra Santos, founder of Into the Next and host of the Scale to Exit Podcast, joins host Mark Osborne on the B2B Growth Blueprint podcast to share how 17 years of experience in finance, operations, and strategic growth shaped her mission to help business owners scale lean and exit smart. With a background spanning CPG, tech, e-commerce, professional services, M&A, and CFO consulting, Alejandra explains why most businesses never achieve the exit they dream of—and how mindset, predictability, and operational clarity play a crucial role in creating a sellable asset. She breaks down the differences between VC-backed startups and bootstrap business owners, why so many businesses grow chaotically instead of strategically, and how an exit strategy is a good business strategy. Alejandra also reveals the tools she uses to help companies move from chaos to clarity—including financial modeling, forecasting, transferability systems, and her proprietary Scale & Exit Readiness Index. Quotes: "We are on a mission to bridge the gap between a business and a sellable asset." "Only 20% ever get the exit of their dreams—and 80% regret the exit they get." "If you're asking people for money, you need to have an exit strategy." "The things that make a business sellable are the same things that give owners more freedom." "How do you make yourself more replaceable? How do you make an employee replaceable?" "People think top-line revenue means exit-ready. No—100% the opposite." "Start thinking not about selling your business, but how to create more freedom for yourself." Takeaways: Exit planning is a smart business strategy that provides owners with clarity, freedom, and long-term value. VC-backed and bootstrap businesses experience growth differently and require different mindsets and tools. Predictability—of cash flow, revenue, and operations—is critical for both scaling and selling a business. Transferability of skills and processes reduces dependency on key people and increases enterprise value. Recurring revenue drives stability and valuation—chasing new customers every month creates chaos. Businesses often confuse revenue growth with value creation; sustainable systems and diversification matter more. A clear long-term financial target helps align leadership and create a measurable roadmap to a successful exit. Conclusion: Alejandra Santos's journey underscores that creating a sellable, scalable business is rooted in clarity, predictability, and strategic foresight—not just revenue growth. By building repeatable systems, documenting processes, strengthening financial visibility, and aligning leadership around a long-term value goal, business owners can reduce chaos, increase freedom, and position themselves for the exit—and the life—they truly want. Alejandra's mission is not just about selling businesses, but about helping owners build enterprises that create legacy and long-lasting wealth. Links Mentioned: Website: Into the Next – https://intothenext.com Guest Links: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidlbweiss Email: alejandra@intothenext.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thealejandrasantos/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/385833208579320/user/684872850/
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    31 m
  • How Does the MEDICC Framework Improve Sales with David Weiss
    Dec 7 2025
    David Weiss, chief services officer at MEDDICC and longtime sales leader, joins host Mark Osborne on the B2B Growth Blueprint podcast to share how two decades in technology, consulting, and professional services shaped his mission to help the sales community sell better. With experience at ADP, Outreach, Seismic, The Sales Collective, and as founder of DealDoc, David explains how MEDDICC gives revenue teams a common language to evaluate deals objectively, identify gaps, and run repeatable plays that drive consistent results. He breaks down why sales is ultimately change management, where buyers must see value outweighing risk before moving from their current state to a better future state. David also reveals the biggest pitfalls he sees in early-stage companies transitioning out of founder-led selling, and why sustained behavior coaching, not one-time training, is the only path to lasting performance improvement. Quotes: "My purpose in living is to help the sales community sell better." "MEDDICC is not just letters on a slide; it is the building blocks of every deal you work." "Stop focusing on training and start focusing on behavior change, observation, and reinforcement." "You did not hire someone because they suck; you hired them because you saw something in them." "Chance favors the prepared mind; in sales, we create our own luck through preparation and process." Takeaways: MEDDICC creates a shared language that exposes deal risk and drives predictable execution. Founder-led selling only scales when everything is documented and turned into a repeatable system. Hiring big company stars fails without brand, process, and realistic expectations. Behavior change requires long-term coaching, not one week of training. Strong discovery and preparation come from mastering small, coachable skills. Conclusion: David Weiss's journey highlights that modern selling relies on discipline, documentation, and behavior change rather than charisma or isolated training events. By embracing MEDDICC, building clear systems, and coaching to measurable behaviors, leaders can transform both individual sellers and entire revenue organizations into consistently high performing teams. Links Mentioned: Website: Meddicc - https://meddicc.com/ Guest Links: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidlbweiss
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    32 m
  • How Can Small Businesses Increase Their Value Before Selling with Brent Stringer
    Dec 7 2025
    Brent Stringer, owner of Exit Factor Indiana, discusses his diverse career in public accounting, leadership, and Exit Planning. He highlights the unique challenges small business owners face, such as overdependence on the owner and unrealistic valuation expectations. Stringer emphasizes the importance of preparing businesses for sale, suggesting a realistic timeline of 10 months and the need for documented processes. He notes a trend of younger business owners embracing Exit Planning earlier. Stringer's approach focuses on creating value for clients, often small businesses, to help them sell faster and for more. He can be reached at brent.stringer@exitfactor.com or through his website. Quotes: "There's not a business there, there's a job." "Exit planning is just good business." "If it's really dependent on me, then it's not as much of a business as it is a job." "Younger business owners are more open to Exit Planning and willing to do that earlier." "Documenting processes can sometimes actually be low hanging fruit." "We want to make our clients' businesses the best they can possibly be." Takeaways: Building a business independent of the owner is essential for a successful exit. Many owners overestimate business value—realistic valuation is key. Preparation and documentation speed up and increase the value of business sales. Exit planning should start early, not just before a sale. Standard operating procedures (SOPs) both improve operations and attract buyers. Exit Planning is valuable for business resilience against both expected and unexpected events. Conclusion: Thoughtful exit planning is a vital part of smart business strategy, not just an end-of-the-road step. By preparing early, reducing owner dependence, and documenting key processes, business owners can increase their business's value, resilience, and overall satisfaction—while also being ready for whatever opportunities or challenges may arise. Links Mentioned: Website: exitfactor.com Guest Links: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/brent-stringer-2a84a018/ Email: brent.stringer@exitfactor.com
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    29 m
  • How Can Productizing Services Drive Scalable Growth for Modern Businesses Ryan Carraciolo
    Dec 1 2025
    Ryan Caracciolo is the founder and CEO of Striventa, a business growth agency focused on helping companies move beyond isolated tactics to achieve sustainable momentum. With over a decade of experience, Ryan has built a reputation for merging strategy, smart systems, and relentless execution to help healthcare, real estate, and service-based businesses grow with measurable ROI. In this episode, Ryan joins host Mark Osborne to discuss the evolution of marketing and sales alignment, the power of productizing services, and how his high-performance website platform, Hyperdrive WP, is transforming the way businesses approach web development. He also explores the future of SEO and AI's impact on search, revealing why strong foundations and data-driven execution will always win. Quotes: "We started Striventa by striving to invent. All good ideas have a little bit of genius and a little bit of goof." "Marketing and sales should be held to the same return on investment. Give yourselves to the data." "Business needs to be agile. Owners do not want another ninety to one hundred twenty-day rebuild." "Just by a lateral transfer to our framework, we index about ten to fifteen percent more keywords in the first three to four weeks." "Websites are becoming more valuable. Those engines still need a foundation to crawl and trust." "Do not put a toe in every channel. Own one, build an ROI model around it, then stack." "If you want to A/B test twenty thousand, you cannot do ten and ten. You need twenty and twenty, or the test is not real." Takeaways: Sustainable growth comes from strong foundations that align marketing, sales, and execution around shared data. Hyperdrive WP enables faster, scalable websites that index better and convert more efficiently. Productizing proven services allows agencies to deliver consistency and measurable ROI at scale. Focusing on bottom-funnel intent produces more qualified leads in an AI-driven search landscape. True testing and optimization require real budgets and disciplined commitment to accuracy. Businesses should dominate one marketing channel before expanding into others. Serving first and providing genuine value builds stronger, longer-term customer relationships. Conclusion: Ryan Caracciolo's insights highlight the future of modern growth strategy: unify teams, simplify execution, and productize what works. By building agile, performance-driven systems, businesses can achieve real momentum in an era where AI and constant change challenge traditional models. His approach blends pragmatism with precision—reminding founders and marketers that long-term success comes from doing the fundamentals exceptionally well. Links Mentioned: Website: HyperdriveWP - https://www.hyperdrivewp.com/ Agency: Striventa - https://striventa.com/ Guest Links: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ryan-caracciolo-4374a456/
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    27 m
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