Livestream Today: Building Supercompanies
Plus, who gets to live forever?
Today at 1:30 p.m. ET, I’m going live with my friend, business partner, and CEO of Section, Greg Shove. The topic? Building Supercompanies.
Greg defines a Supercompany as one that transforms AI adoption into business value faster and better than competitors, consequently attracting the best capital, talent, and customers.
Join me and Greg for a discussion on why CEOs should aspire for their business to be a Supercompany (and the playbook to make that happen), plus how employees at all stages of their career can accelerate their own trajectory by becoming superleaders at these organizations.
Prof G+ subscribers get access to the livestream (and replay). Register below.
The Longevity Economy is Built for the Rich
Our latest Prof G+ Deep Dive dropped yesterday. This week, we tackled the longevity economy. Two truths and a lie: I’ve used peptides, PRP injections, and hormone replacement therapy to extend my own personal healthspan.
Watch now for the answer, plus my thoughts on GLP-1s, wellness influencers, and the collapse of institutional trust in medicine. Want even more? I go deep with the ultimate longevity guru, Andrew Huberman, this week on Huberman Lab.
Our weekly Deep Dives are designed to get you smarter on the topics dominating the zeitgeist, including the economics of falling birth rates, how billionaires buy political influence, and why storytelling is now the most valuable skill in tech. Have a topic you think warrants a Prof G+ Deep Dive? Pitch it to us in the comments.
I’ll see you this afternoon on the Building Supercompanies livestream.
Life is so rich,
Scott




So we’ve subscribed to all the channels, supported the advertisers, book tours, etc and now we need to pay to listen live?
Thanks for the discussion. I heard parallels between the 'AI transformation' of companies and society and how digital transformation impacted companies and society. I wonder if the frameworks, scope, and strategies for digital transformation are still relevant or if AI is categorically different? Remember when their were only Chief Information Officers and the shift to Chief Technology Officers?