Pivot or persist - podcast episode cover

Pivot or persist

Jun 23, 202516 min
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Episode description

I was scrolling through industry reports when I hit a wall of doom and gloom—biotech is supposedly crashing, consolidation is coming, and firms are going under left and right. Sound familiar? Here's the problem: one scary research report had me (and my client) questioning everything we thought we knew about our target market. But here's what's worse—most consultants let these third-party predictions completely derail their strategy, abandon profitable niches, and chase the next "hot" industry based on headlines designed to grab clicks, not guide business decisions. The solution? I'll show you exactly how to read market research like a seasoned strategist, separate signal from noise, and actually use "bad news" data to sharpen your positioning and create more opportunities than your competitors who are running scared.

  • The one-study trap: Why smart consultants are making million-dollar pivots based on single data points (and how to avoid this costly mistake)

  • The bias breakdown: How to spot hidden agendas in third-party research and why your firsthand client conversations trump any industry report

  • Recession-proof thinking: Why disruption and market contraction might actually be the best thing for your consulting business (real example included)

  • The confirmation bias spiral: How to intentionally research opposing viewpoints before your brain tricks you into finding only doom-and-gloom evidence

    • Data as rocket fuel: The exact framework for turning "bad news" research into powerful content, outreach topics, and client conversation starters
    • Volume vs. relevance: Why broad industry trends might be completely irrelevant to your specific buyer's daily reality
    • The prediction trap: Why being skeptical of confident forecasters could save your business strategy (especially after the last few years)
    • Good data, bad data, neutral data: How to read market intelligence without emotional reactions clouding your strategic judgment
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