January 2026

Episode #572 - The Transformation Economy: Third interview with Joe Pine

We’re joined by Joe Pine on January 31, just days before the release of his long-awaited new book, The Transformation Economy (February 4, 2026). For longtime listeners, this conversation will feel both familiar and bracingly new. Familiar because we have spent the last two years exploring, applying, and occasionally interrogating the very ideas Joe now brings together in this book. New because Joe pushes the argument further and with more precision than ever before.

Building on his seminal work on experiences, Joe makes the case that economic value has moved decisively into a new domain: transformations. Not experiences staged for customers, but transformations designed with them—where the explicit aim is lasting change in who the customer is or what they are capable of becoming. That shift, Joe argues, carries profound implications not just for strategy, but for accountability, pricing, and purpose.

This episode is not a book report. It’s a rigorous conversation between fellow travelers who share a vocabulary but are still very much in productive tension. We explore where transformation fits (and doesn’t) in real organizations, why so many firms mistake motivation for method, and why treating transformation as optional is itself a category error.

If you’ve been following our ongoing work on transformation, this episode serves as both a capstone and a catalyst. If you’re new to the idea, consider this your initiation—fair warning: once you see the economy this way, it’s rather difficult to unsee it.

SHOW NOTES

Segment one

  • From Joe Pine at the start of the show: From the agrarian economy to the industrial economy to the service economy to the experience economy. Now consumers want transformative experiences.

  • “Customization is the antidote to commoditization.” —Joe Pine

  • “All transformation is identity change. […] Transformations last through time.” —Joe Pine

  • “Commodity goods and services are time well saved. Experience is time well spent. Transformation is time well invested.” —Joe Pine

Segment two

Segment three

  • Fun fact: Joe Pine used to travel with a gumball machine. Why? When a kid puts a quarter in a gumball machine, the transaction is seldom about the actual gumball so much as it is about watching the colored candy spin down and around the machine until it comes out at the bottom.

  • Why invest in your employees? Because they are just going to leave as they get better, right? The retort to that line of thinking is, “Well, why keep employees that aren’t getting better?”

  • What is one of the data points that tells Joe the transition to the Transformation Economy is working? “I know of hundreds of companies today that charge for outcomes. There should be thousands, tens of thousands.” —Joe Pine

  • Are there any sectors of the economy where there are not likely to be a transformation? “Every time I did that with experiences, someone would correct me.” —Joe Pine

Segment four

  • There is much more context to this quote but here is a snippet to trigger your curiosity: “Abraham Maslow got it wrong. He had, at the top of his pyramid, the self actualization, finding the meaning in life, transcendence…..When meaning is at the bottom of the pyramid.” —Joe Pine

  • A big THANK YOU to Joe Pine for joining us today. The Transformation Economy will be out in 4 days! You can pre-order it now and also check out Joe’s substack at this link https://transformationsbook.substack.com/ 

  • Also check out Strategic Horizons at https://strategichorizons.com/integration/ 

Bonus Content is Available As Well

Did you know that each week after our live show, Ron and Ed take to the microphone for a bonus show? Typically, this bonus show is an extension of the live show topic (sometimes even with the same guest) and a few other pieces of news, current events, or things that have caught our attention.

Click the “FANATIC” image to learn more about pricing and member benefits. 

Episode #571 - Best Books of 2025

It’s time again for our annual Best Books episode, where we sift through a year’s worth of reading (and in some cases listening) and surface the works that actually mattered. Not necessarily the buzziest, the newest, or the most performatively “important,” but the books that made us pause, argue back, reread passages, and rethink assumptions we thought were settled.

As is our custom, we don’t just name titles and move on. We talk about why these books stuck: the questions they asked, the frameworks they offered, and the quiet ways they reshaped how we see the world of business, economics, culture, and human behavior. Some selections clarified things; others productively complicated them. All earned a place in the conversation.

If you’re looking for a thoughtful recap of the ideas that animated our year—or you’re hunting for your next great read—this episode is equal parts reflection, recommendation, and mild intellectual provocation. Consider it our annual reading ledger, balanced not in pages consumed, but in insight accrued.

SHOW NOTES

Segment one:

  • Number 5 best book of the year from Ron: Skunk Works: A Personal Memoir of My Years at Lockheed by Ben Rich https://amzn.to/49ClJrX  

  • Number 5 best book of the year from Ed: Against Empathy: The Case for Rational Compassion – How Emotion Undermines Morality, Justice, and Good Policy by Paul Bloom https://amzn.to/3LQVF3c  

  • Number 4 best book of the year from Ed: The Tyranny of Clichés: How Liberals Cheat in the War of Ideas by Jonah Goldberg https://amzn.to/4qwfoEm  

  • Number 4 best book of the year from Ron: SYSTEMANTICS. THE SYSTEMS BIBLE by John Gall https://amzn.to/45mLbPK 

Segment two:

  • Number 3 best book of the year from Ron: Slow Productivity: The Lost Art of Accomplishment Without Burnout Hardcover by Cal Newport https://amzn.to/3NzoLEM  

  • Number 3 best book of the year from Ed: The Habit of Being: Letters of Flannery O'Connor by Flannery O'Connor https://amzn.to/3NIYhk8  

  • Number 2 best book of the year from Ron: Taking Religion Seriously by Charles Murray https://amzn.to/4qGY0wT

Segment three:

  • Also the number 2 best book of the year from Ron (yes, he picked two number twos): The Immortal Mind: A Neurosurgeon’s Case for the Existence of the Soul by Michael Egnor and Denyse O'Leary https://amzn.to/4pWnjd1 

  • Number 2 best book of the year from Ed: The Age of Entanglement by Louisa Gilder https://amzn.to/4pTQWLS 

Segment four:

  • Number 1 best book of the year from Ed: The Golden Thread: A History of the Western Tradition, Volume I: The Ancient World and Christendom by James Hankins and Allen C. Guelzo https://amzn.to/3NzMUuW  

  • Number 1 best book of the year from Ron: The Way of Medicine: Ethics and the Healing Profession (Notre Dame Studies in Medical Ethics and Bioethics) by Farr Curlin and Christopher Tollefsen https://amzn.to/4a8zejc 

Bonus Content is Available As Well

Did you know that each week after our live show, Ron and Ed take to the microphone for a bonus show? Typically, this bonus show is an extension of the live show topic (sometimes even with the same guest) and a few other pieces of news, current events, or things that have caught our attention.

Click the “FANATIC” image to learn more about pricing and member benefits. 

Episode #570 - From Leo XIII to AI: Ethics Applied for a New Era: Interview with Father Vincent DeRosa

Join Ron and Ed as they sit down with Father Vincent DeRosa for an eye-opening conversation on the enduring relevance of Catholic social teaching in today’s rapidly evolving business landscape. Together, they dive deep into Rerum Novarum, Pope Leo XIII’s seminal encyclical on the rights and duties of capital and labor—exploring its connections to the foundational principles of the free market and contemporary business ethics.

Drawing parallels between the disruptive forces of the Industrial Revolution and the modern AI transformation, the discussion considers how timeless ethical considerations can guide the challenges and opportunities facing businesses today. Discover how the Church’s teachings can provide insight on worker rights, social responsibility, and the delicate balance between innovation and human dignity in the age of artificial intelligence.

Whether you’re a business leader, professional, or curious thinker, this episode offers a thoughtful exploration of the intersection between faith, philosophy, and enterprise, only on The Soul of Enterprise.

SHOW NOTES

Segment one

Segment two

Segment three

  • Father Vincent mentioned Alexis de Tocqueville’s “Democracy in America”. More here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democracy_in_America 

  • From Google: Subsidiarity in Catholic Social Teaching (CST) is the principle that decisions and responsibilities should be handled by the smallest, lowest, or least centralized competent authority (like families or local communities) rather than a higher, more distant one, with larger entities only intervening to support and coordinate, not to dominate or replace 

  • What is the connection of the current Pope taking Leo IV compared to Pope Leo XIII? Father Vincent went through a GREAT response today in segment three.

  • Also from the Rerum Novarum, employers are morally bound to respect workers as persons, not treat them as tools for profit. See §20: https://www.vatican.va/content/leo-xiii/en/encyclicals/documents/hf_l-xiii_enc_15051891_rerum-novarum.html#Duties_of_Employers

Segment four

• A big THANK YOU to Father Vincent DeRosa for joining us today! If you are curious, take the time to dig into Rerum Novarum, an encyclical of Pope Leo XIII https://www.vatican.va/content/leo-xiii/en/encyclicals/documents/hf_l-xiii_enc_15051891_rerum-novarum.html 

Bonus Content is Available As Well

Did you know that each week after our live show, Ron and Ed take to the microphone for a bonus show? Typically, this bonus show is an extension of the live show topic (sometimes even with the same guest) and a few other pieces of news, current events, or things that have caught our attention.

Click the “FANATIC” image to learn more about pricing and member benefits. 

Episode #569 - 2025: The Year in Review

In this annual tradition, Ed and Ron look back on 2025, unpacking the year's most impactful trends, business transformations, and economic shifts. From breakthroughs in AI to evolving tax regulations and the latest developments in technology, they reflect on the standout themes that defined this year. Tune in as they explore what these changes mean for the future, the insights gained along the way, and the lessons learned. Perfect for listeners who want to capture the essence of 2025's business landscape in one insightful episode.

SHOW NOTES

Segment one

Going through people we lost in 2025: 

Segment two

Segment three

Segment four

  • 2025 “predictions” and how we did: Ron — Homelessness will receive more media coverage with Trump in office

  • 2025 “predictions” and how we did: Ron — US and world economies would continue to diverge in 2025 

  • 2025 “predictions” and how we did: Ron — Trump will stop subsidizing wind power

  • 2025 “predictions” and how we did: Ed — AI will remain a hot topic and gain momentum

  • 2025 “predictions” and how we did: Ed — Joe Biden would not be the nominee for the Democrats

  • 2025 “predictions” and how we did: Ed — Bitcoin would break $100k for the year and end at $60k

Bonus Content is Available As Well

Did you know that each week after our live show, Ron and Ed take to the microphone for a bonus show? Typically, this bonus show is an extension of the live show topic (sometimes even with the same guest) and a few other pieces of news, current events, or things that have caught our attention.

Click the “FANATIC” image to learn more about pricing and member benefits.