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We depart from the standard format agian to welcome world champion rower Matthew Guerrieri to the show. Matt won gold in the "lead sled", the paired coxed boat, at the world championships in Zagreb, Croatia. We delve into this alluring sport and an unusual injury essentially only seen in rowing.
A large part of marketing is about driving growth, but what good is scaling any business without the right processes to navigate that expansion? That's why a growth mindset, rooted in prioritization and adaptability, is a must. Our guest, Matthew Guerrieri, Chief Marketing Officer at Medical Guardian, has risen through the ranks of marketing not only by his entrepreneurial prowess, but because he is consistently adapting to change. He stopped by our show to discuss: His regime of staying focused, on task and growing his skills alongside company growth Why marketing professionals have leverage when moving into leadership roles Development of Medical Guardian's smartwatch for seniors and the specifics of the rollout Keep connected with us by subscribing on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or anywhere you get podcasts. Check out our website at Taylor.com
On this episode of the Built Better podcast, we're diving deeper into the aging in place demographic by featuring a leader in the medical alert & home services industry, Medical Guardian. Matthew Guerrieri, CMO of Medical Guardian & Philadelphia Business Journal 40 under 40 nominee, expands on how you should think about personas differently, how to build visual stories for them, the ability to pivot your company strategy based on new technology, and ensuring you stay true to your mission state through the times.
There are few musical moments more well-worn than the first four notes of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony. But in this short, we find out that Beethoven might have made a last-ditch effort to keep his music from ever feeling familiar, to keep pushing his listeners to a kind of psychological limit. Big thanks to our Brooklyn Philharmonic musicians: Deborah Buck and Suzy Perelman on violin, Arash Amini on cello, and Ah Ling Neu on viola. And check out The First Four Notes, Matthew Guerrieri's book on Beethoven's Fifth. Support Radiolab today at Radiolab.org/donate.
In what’s definitely our most niche episode so far, Emma introduces Darius to the life and work of twentieth-century Australian composer Percy Aldridge Grainger, a folksong collector, failed innovator, and all-round extremely unusual (and highly problematic) person. Links: Rainer Linz on Grainger’s composition machines, Philip Eames' quantitative study of Grainger's harmonic development, Matthew Guerrieri on navigating Grainger's reprehensible beliefs alongside his music. Content warnings: racism, some discussion of incest, BDSM, and suicide... Percy Grainger, everyone. -- Too Much Not Enough This is a podcast about the obsessions of two very intense people. toomuchnotenough.site Emma: emmawinston.me @deer_ful Darius: tinysubversions.com @tinysubversions
In the second of a two-part program that first aired on August 7, 2013, Andrew Patner talks with music critic and Chicago-area native Matthew Guerrieri about his acclaimed book, The First Four Notes: Beethoven's Fifth and the Human Imagination [...]
In part one of a two-part program which first aired on July 29, 2013, Andrew Patner talks with music critic and Chicago-area native Matthew Guerrieri about his acclaimed book, The First Four Notes: Beethoven's Fifth and the Human Imagination.   [...]