How I Grew This: Real Stories of Digital Growth Podcast Por Branch arte de portada

How I Grew This: Real Stories of Digital Growth

How I Grew This: Real Stories of Digital Growth

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How I Grew This is a podcast hosted by Amanda Vandiver and Adam Landis exploring the real stories behind digital growth. Each episode features candid conversations with leaders in marketing, product, and tech about how they built, scaled, and navigated challenges in an ever-changing digital landscape. From breakthrough strategies to hard-earned lessons, guests share what actually worked—and what didn’t—along the way.2026 Branch Metrics Desarrollo Personal Economía Gestión Gestión y Liderazgo Marketing Marketing y Ventas Éxito Personal
Episodios
  • Building Through Every Ad Tech Era: AI, Attribution, and What’s Next with Ionut Ciobotaru
    Mar 19 2026
    What if the future of performance marketing wasn't about controlling every detail, but about measuring what matters and experimenting beyond the obvious channels? In this episode of How I Grew This, Amanda and Adam sit down with Ionut Ciobotaru, CEO and Co-founder of Hypd.ai, to explore why measurement is the foundation of marketing success, how AI agents are reshaping advertiser workflows, and the untapped channels that savvy marketers should be exploring next. From building PubNative into an ad tech powerhouse to launching a pretzel bakery in Berlin, Ionut shares hard-won lessons about pivoting, scaling, and knowing when to double down. Whether you're optimizing a single channel or managing complex multi-platform campaigns, this conversation is packed with strategic insights to help you allocate your budget smarter and stay ahead of the curve. Tune in to discover why your next competitive advantage might lie in channels you haven't considered yet. What You’ll Learn: How to identify and capitalize on emerging technology wavesWhy pivoting your core product based on market realities is essential for survivalThe "international advantage" of digital-native businessesHow to structure acquisitions and integrations for maximum valueWhy measurement and attribution must come before experimentation in performance marketingHow AI agents will unlock access to fragmented, non-programmatic channels About the Guest(s): Ionut Ciobotaru is a serial entrepreneur and AI-driven performance marketing innovator, currently building Hypd.ai, an AI agent platform designed to streamline marketing operations across multiple advertising channels. With a distinguished career spanning mobile ad tech, programmatic advertising, and strategic business scaling, Ionut co-founded PubNative—a native mobile ad network that was acquired by MGI (now Verve Group)—where he served as Co-CEO overseeing significant M&A integration and product development. In this episode, Ionut shares hard-won insights on building successful ad tech ventures, navigating complex acquisitions, and leveraging AI to solve real-world challenges facing modern performance marketers. His deep expertise in channel innovation, measurement attribution, and emerging advertising platforms provides actionable strategies for entrepreneurs and marketers looking to stay ahead in an increasingly fragmented digital landscape. Whether discussing the evolution from mobile-first advertising to today's omnichannel environment, or the future of AI-powered marketing automation, Ionut's perspective offers invaluable guidance for those seeking to drive measurable business growth. If you enjoyed this episode, make sure to subscribe, rate, and review it on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube Podcasts. Instructions on how to do this are here. Episode Highlights: [00:01:06] Recognize Technology Inflection Points Before the Market Saturates - Ionut's early career demonstrates the power of identifying emerging tech waves—he moved from web to mobile specifically because he recognized the iPhone represented a fundamental shift in how users would access digital experiences. Rather than starting his mobile venture in Romania where the infrastructure didn't support it, he strategically relocated to Berlin to position himself at the center of mobile innovation. This insight reveals that successful founders don't just follow trends; they **position themselves geographically and professionally where new technologies are being adopted first**. For performance marketers and entrepreneurs, this means **continuously scanning the horizon for the next wave** before it becomes obvious to everyone else. The timing advantage of being early allows you to build expertise, relationships, and credibility that compound over years. Ionut's entire career—from native ads to AI agents—reflects this principle of finding emerging channels before they become commoditized. [00:05:11] Pivot Your Product When Market Forces Demand It, Not When Your Vision Says Otherwise - PubNative began as a native-only ad network designed to replace banner ads, yet by the time Ionut sold the company, it had pivoted to selling primarily banners and programmatic formats—the exact formats he originally opposed. Rather than viewing this as failure, Ionut explains that **sometimes you cannot push against the market itself as a single company**, and larger advertisers demanded standardization across channels. This teaches a crucial lesson: **your founding thesis matters less than your ability to serve what customers actually need**. Large brands wanted consistency, so PubNative adapted rather than die on principle. For performance marketers building products or services, this means **staying obsessed with solving real customer problems** rather than being married to your original feature set. The companies that survive are those flexible enough to follow customer demand while maintaining their core mission of creating value. ...
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    35 m
  • AI won’t replace your artists, but it will free them to create more with Jen Taylor
    Mar 5 2026
    What if AI could actually amplify human creativity instead of replacing it? In this episode, Amanda and Adam chat with Jen Taylor, Director of AI Strategy and Integration at Capacity Interactive, about how arts and culture organizations can adopt AI thoughtfully and strategically. From building ethical frameworks and training teams to unlocking practical use cases that drive real business results, Jen shares how to position AI as a thought partner rather than a shortcut—and why keeping humans in the loop is essential to avoiding "AI slop." Whether you're a marketer looking to level up your strategy or an arts administrator curious about where AI actually fits into your workflow, this conversation is packed with actionable insights on how to use these tools to work smarter, not just faster. What You’ll Learn: How to position AI as a thought partner for strategy, not just a workflow optimizer—unlocking deeper thinking on target audiences, messaging, and campaign refinementThe three-phase adoption framework: establish clear organizational policies, invest in training and prompting literacy, then identify business outcomes tied to measurable resultsWhy ethics matter differently in arts organizations: address ownership concerns, environmental impact, and imitation risks by making active, intentional choices about tool useHow to build consistency across departments using branded AI tools that understand your voice, style, and mission without sacrificing human oversightThe "human-driven AI" principle: keep humans in every loop—from prompting strategy through verification—to avoid "AI slop" and ensure quality outputHow to use AI for audience insights and personalization by testing messaging across multiple audience segments, then letting AI surface unexpected audience opportunities About the Guest(s): Jen Taylor is Director of AI Strategy and Integration at Capacity Interactive, bringing over 15 years of experience building and engaging audiences across streaming and digital platforms. With a background in theater marketing and digital audience growth at A&E Networks—where she managed strategy for both ad-supported and subscription streaming businesses—Taylor has become a leading voice in helping arts and culture organizations adopt AI responsibly. In this episode, she shares practical strategies for arts administrators looking to leverage AI for operational efficiency while preserving human creativity and artistic integrity. Her work bridges the gap between cutting-edge technology and the arts community, offering actionable frameworks for organizations seeking to enhance their marketing and administrative workflows without compromising their values. If you enjoyed this episode, make sure to subscribe, rate, and review it on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube Podcasts. Instructions on how to do this are here. Episode Highlights: [00:20:14] Use AI to Elevate Strategy, Not Just Speed Up Tasks - Jen Taylor emphasizes that while AI excels at automating repetitive tasks, its real power lies in serving as a thought partner for strategic thinking. Many organizations get excited about efficiency gains, but miss the opportunity to use AI for deeper strategic work like audience analysis and campaign refinement. The distinction between "making a plan" and "making a strategy" is critical—AI can help you move beyond constant tactical execution into thoughtful, intentional strategy development. Ask AI to stress-test your plans, identify misalignments with specific audiences, and explore angles you might have missed. This approach transforms AI from a time-saving tool into a strategic advisor that elevates your entire marketing function. [00:07:11] Implement a Three-Phase AI Adoption Framework - Rather than rushing to use AI tools, Jen recommends a structured, phased approach: establish clear organizational policy first, invest in training and prompt literacy second, then identify business outcomes tied to specific results. Many arts organizations worry about ethics and values alignment, so beginning with policy ensures AI adoption stays true to your mission. The nuance matters deeply—approving ChatGPT is just the start; you must then decide what features and capabilities team members can actually use. Following this framework prevents scattered adoption and ensures your organization gains consistent, measurable value from AI investments. [00:12:26] Address AI Ethics Head-On by Making Active, Intentional Choices - Jen identifies three critical ethics concerns for arts organizations: ownership and fair compensation for artists whose work trained AI models, environmental impact from computational demands, and the risk of imitation and copyright violation. Rather than paralysis, she advocates for making deliberate choices that mitigate these risks. For example, opening a new chat when changing topics reduces computational load, and applying the same ethical standard you'd use offline—don't ask AI to ...
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    34 m
  • Personalization vs. Privacy: How Healthcare Marketers Can Win Both with Saul Marquez
    Feb 19 2026
    What if your health tech marketing strategy is actually holding you back from growth? In this episode, Amanda and Adam sit down with Saul Marquez, founder and CEO of Outcomes Rocket, to explore why most health care companies are missing critical strategy before tactics, how to navigate HIPAA without fear while personalizing your marketing, and the key opportunities in influencer marketing and AI integration that your competitors are sleeping on. Whether you're a health tech founder, marketer, or growth leader, this conversation is packed with actionable frameworks—from the three D's of marketing (discover, define, deliver) to leveraging custom GPTs for team alignment—to help you cut through the noise and focus on execution in 2026. Tune in to uncover why strategy comes first, always, and how the convergence of health tech and medical device playbooks is creating unprecedented opportunities.What You’ll Learn:The "Three D Framework" (Discover, Define, Deliver)How to leverage micro-influencers (10K–50K followers) in B2B health careWhy "tactics are the noise you hear before the war is lost"How to implement a custom GPT as your team's "source of truth"The convergence of health tech and medical device marketing playbooksWhy HIPAA compliance fears are overblownThe 2026 execution imperativeAbout the Guest(s):Saul Marquez is the Founder and CEO of Outcomes Rocket, a healthcare-exclusive marketing, media, and advisory firm specializing in helping health tech and medical device companies accelerate growth. With over 20 years of experience in the medical device industry—including a tenure as Vice President at Medtronic and field experience as a medical device representative—Marquez brings deep operational and market insights to healthcare marketing strategy. A prolific podcast host with over 2,000 episodes across multiple shows, he has interviewed hundreds of healthcare leaders and identified critical market trends at the intersection of health tech and medical device innovation. In this episode, Marquez shares his proprietary three-D framework (Discover, Define, Deliver) for healthcare marketing success, explores the convergence of health tech and medtech, and provides actionable guidance on leveraging AI as a strategic tool rather than a distraction. His insights on regulatory compliance, personalization within HIPAA constraints, and the future of healthcare marketing make this conversation essential listening for health tech professionals, CMOs, and entrepreneurs looking to execute with precision in an increasingly complex market.If you enjoyed this episode, make sure to subscribe, rate, and review it on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and YouTube Podcasts. Instructions on how to do this are here.Episode Highlights:[00:16:14] Apply the Three D Framework: Discover, Define, Deliver - Saul's proprietary Three D Framework provides a simple yet comprehensive structure for building effective health care marketing programs that eliminate decision paralysis. The **Discover phase** involves asking hard questions about your goals, target audiences, key metrics, and overall go-to-market strategy, ensuring alignment on what success looks like. In the **Define phase**, you crystallize your go-to-market strategy, establish frameworks and roadmaps, and set KPIs that will measure success or failure throughout your campaign. The **Deliver phase** encompasses executing tactics across three buckets—owned, earned, and paid media—with the advantage that your earlier discovery and definition work eliminates wasteful noise and focuses spending. Once you've delivered and gathered data, you iterate continuously based on KPI performance, doubling down on what works and adjusting what doesn't. For health care companies struggling with fragmented marketing efforts, this framework provides the clarity needed to move from scattered activity to coordinated, measurable growth.[00:19:35] Micro-Influencers (10K–50K Followers) Represent an Underutilized B2B Health Care Opportunity - Saul identifies that B2B health care marketing is "asleep at the wheel" on influencer marketing, particularly leveraging micro-influencers in the 10,000 to 50,000 follower range across platforms like LinkedIn. These niche creators show higher willingness to collaborate with brands, deliver more targeted audiences, and produce measurable impact that often exceeds traditional email or paid advertising methods. Health care marketers can identify relevant micro-influencers by using ChatGPT to search for niche voices in their specialty—whether that's cardiology, orthopedics, or health tech innovation—and approaching them directly with collaboration proposals. Measurement of influencer campaigns can focus on brand awareness (site visits, click-through rates) or mid-to-bottom funnel metrics (conversions from qualified personas), depending on your campaign goals. Since most health care companies haven't yet systematized influencer outreach, first movers in ...
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    36 m
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