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The Business of Shaping Future Minds
Setting Your Brain Free to Create, Innovate and Critically Think
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23. What Taylor Swift, Nirvana & Vera Lynn Tells Us About Leadership
25:14||Season 3, Ep. 23What do Anti-Hero, Smells Like Teen Spirit and We’ll Meet Again have in common?They reflect what the human brain needed at different moments in history.In this episode, Soraya and Tracy explore the neuroscience behind the 40-year cultural swing - a pendulum pattern where societies move between collective safety and individual expression, belonging and autonomy.When one need dominates for too long, the system recalibrates. Culture corrects. Leadership expectations shift.Using music as a lens, they unpack how:Wartime lyrics soothed threat responses and reinforced collective resilienceThe rebellious 60s and 70s reflected identity formation and psychological safetyThe 80s amplified reward circuitry around status and achievementPost-crisis eras revived emotional honesty and connectionToday’s tension signals a messy overlap of agency and belongingThey also explore why our brains quickly detect obvious AI, and how pattern recognition shapes trust.If leadership feels unsettled, it may not be chaos. It may be neurobiology.Listen now and ask: what is this moment asking of your leadership?
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22. ‘Good Enough’ Is Killing Real Creativity
47:29||Season 3, Ep. 22In this episode of Brainy, we’re joined by “Small Paul” Copeland - Executive Creative Director, filmmaker, former stand-up comedian, DJ, and lifelong creative thinker.Paul has spent over a decade working in China, led global creative teams, and won a 48-hour film competition, but what makes this conversation powerful isn’t the résumé.It’s the warning.In a world increasingly driven by AI, algorithms and data, “good enough” is quietly replacing original thinking.We explore:Why creatives don’t solve problems by staring at them - they look somewhere else.Why data can tell you what people did, but not why.How AI is accelerating production — but risking originality.Why leadership should be flat, open, and ego-free.And how playing the room (whether as a DJ, comedian or director) is the ultimate leadership skill.This is a conversation about attention, innovation, reinvention, and the courage to resist mediocrity.Because when “good enough” becomes acceptable, real creativity disappears.
21. The New Rules of Work: Inclusivity, Identity & Instant Feedback
34:30||Season 3, Ep. 21In this episode of Brainy Podcasts, we dive into The New Rules of Work with Jason Mannix, HR lead for the Brighton Pier Group and founder of Mannix Consultancy.Together, we explore what today’s workforce is telling us loud and clear:• Inclusivity isn’t an initiative — it’s a daily behaviour.• Identity shapes how people show up, connect, and feel safe.• Instant feedback isn’t entitlement — it’s the new operating system.From Gen Z’s expectations to the rise of workplace anxiety, from brain-friendly onboarding to AI freeing leaders to actually lead - this episode pulls apart the shifts redefining work, leadership, and culture.If you want to understand what people need now (not 10 years ago), how to genuinely support diverse identities, and why feedback is the glue holding modern teams together… this one’s for you.
20. Brains, Burnout and Bullsh*t
41:32||Season 3, Ep. 20In this powerful episode, Soraya and Tracy take a brutally honest look at modern work and leadership - what’s thriving, what’s breaking, and what we’re still pretending is working.From the neuroscience of burnout and decision fatigue to the role of trust, reflection, and psychological safety, they explore how to stop the burnout cycle before it starts.Soraya and Tracy discuss why brain capital is now an economic asset, how hybrid intelligence (human + AI) can fuel creativity rather than drain it, and why joy, curiosity, and emotional awareness are essential to sustainable performance.
19. The Human Brain in the Age of AI
37:11||Season 3, Ep. 19AI is racing ahead faster than the industrial revolution, but our brains haven’t had a software update in over 200,000 years.In this episode, Soraya and Tracy explore how artificial intelligence is already transforming the way we think, work, and lead, and what that means for the human brain. From reduced cognitive load and boosted productivity to the hidden risks of burnout and creativity loss, they unpack how leaders can build an AI strategy that protects brain capital and human potential.Expect a lively, thought-provoking conversation that bridges neuroscience and leadership; challenging you to ask not just how AI fits into your business, but how it’s shaping your people.Because the future of work isn’t just powered by technology - it’s human powered!Is Your Business Brain Ready for AI? Take The FREE Diagnostic Here
18. The Four-Day Week Experiment: What Science Tells Us
46:20||Season 3, Ep. 18Could a shorter working week make us more productive, less stressed, and better at our jobs? In this episode, we’re joined by Dr Charlotte Rae - neuroscientist, lecturer, and Co-Lead of the Sussex Four-Day Week project - to unpack what the science really says about work, wellbeing, and performance.From national and public-sector trials to live research with UK businesses, Charlotte shares what happens when companies trade hours for outcomes. The results may surprise you: productivity doesn’t drop, revenue holds steady, and talent retention gets stronger. For leaders navigating hybrid models and shifting employee expectations, the four-day week could be more than a perk - it might be the future of work itself.Tune in as we explore the evidence, the challenges, and the cultural shifts needed to make shorter weeks work in the real world.
17. Vibrators, Google Maps & AI
40:53||Season 3, Ep. 17This episode takes a wildly creative turn as we’re joined by Adam Hill - founder, executive creative director, and unapologetic disruptor. From purple Christmas trees to provocations about vibrators and artificial intelligence, Adam challenges us to reimagine creativity not as a job title, but as a way of seeing the world.We explore why true creativity starts at zero, why discomfort is essential for breakthrough thinking, and how AI can help us get to better ideas faster—but never replace what makes us human. Along the way, we unpack the impact of education, confidence, leadership, and culture on our ability to think differently and make space for bold, uncomfortable ideas.This isn’t just a conversation - it’s an invitation to unbox your brain, question everything, and trust your creative instincts (even if they make people uncomfortable). Whether you’re a strategist, student, or someone who’s forgotten how creative they really are, this one will stay with you.