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Christopher Lochhead Follow Your Different™

Christopher Lochhead Follow Your Different™

By: Christopher Lochhead
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Christopher Lochhead | Follow Your Different is pioneer in real dialogue podcasts. “The best business podcast” – Podcast Magazine “The worst business podcast” – Neil Pearlberg© 2022 Christopher Lochhead Follow Your Different™ Podcast Economics Social Sciences
Episodes
  • 427 The California Government Wants Your Assets | Different
    Apr 8 2026

    On this episode of Christopher Lochhead: Follow Your Different, let us talk about California.

    California is considering something that has never existed in American history: a tax not on what you earn, but on what you own. The proposed Billionaire Tax Act would impose a 5% levy on the total net worth of any California resident worth over $1 billion. But calling it a billionaire tax is misleading, because the consequences reach far beyond the ultra-wealthy.

    This proposal carries buried constitutional changes, economic risks, and a framework that could eventually touch small business owners, family farmers, solo consultants, and startup founders across the state and potentially the nation. So today, let us dive deeper into the topic.

    You’re listening to Christopher Lochhead: Follow Your Different. We are the real dialogue podcast for people with a different mind. So get your mind in a different place, and hey ho, let’s go.

    What This Tax Actually Is

    Sacramento is framing this as a simple, one-time fix targeting the ultra-rich. The reality is far more complicated. This is an asset seizure tax, a government mechanism to reach into what people have already built and extract a percentage of it annually.

    Most billionaires do not hold 5% of their net worth in cash. That means the state would effectively be forcing asset liquidations just to satisfy the tax bill. That is not a technicality. That is a fundamental shift in how government relates to private wealth.

    Who Really Gets Hit

    The Hoover Institution ran over 71 economic simulations and found that California ends up poorer under this proposal. Six publicly confirmed billionaires, including Larry Page, Sergey Brin, and Peter Thiel, have already announced departures. An attorney representing just four clients collectively worth over $600 billion confirmed their quiet relocations as well.

    When billionaires leave, they take their income taxes with them permanently. The state’s own Legislative Analyst’s Office projects ongoing decreases in income tax revenues of hundreds of millions of dollars per year as a direct result of this proposal.

    The Constitutional Trap Nobody Is Talking About

    This is where the proposal becomes genuinely alarming for everyone, not just billionaires. The tax requires a constitutional amendment that removes existing protections against taxing intangible personal property, including stocks, private equity stakes, and intellectual capital.

    That constitutional change does not expire. Once it exists, future legislators and ballot initiatives can lower the threshold, expand the scope, and reach further down the economic ladder without needing to clear the same legal barrier again. The Hoover Institution has described it plainly as constitutional infrastructure for future wealth taxes. California has done this before with Prop 19, which was sold as protection for seniors but quietly eliminated inheritance protections for family farms and small business properties. The playbook is the same: appealing villain, clean bumper sticker, buried consequences.

    To hear more from Christopher and his thoughts on the new tax, download and listen to this episode. Want to read more Different from Christopher Lochhead? Join his newsletter today!

    We hope you enjoyed this episode of Christopher Lochhead: Follow Your Different™! Christopher loves hearing from his listeners. Feel free to email him, connect on Facebook, X (formerly Twitter), Instagram, and subscribe on Apple Podcast / Spotify!

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    38 mins
  • Knowledge is Not Power Anymore: Creation Is Your New Superpower
    Apr 1 2026
    On this episode of Christopher Lochhead: Follow Your Different, Christopher Lochhead moves over to the guest chair and answer our questions about AI, Creator Capitalists, and the future of work. At the AI and Copilot Summit in San Diego, Christopher Lochhead had a conversation that resonated far beyond a typical business keynote. Speaking to hundreds of executives, he challenged the dominant narrative around artificial intelligence. Instead of focusing on fear, disruption, and job loss, he reframed AI as the greatest creative unlock in human history. His message was not about survival in an automated world, but about reinvention. At the heart of his perspective is a shift from knowledge work to creation. As AI makes both knowledge and execution increasingly accessible, the real question is no longer what we know or how efficiently we work. The question becomes what we choose to create and how we differentiate ourselves in a world flooded with sameness. You’re listening to Christopher Lochhead: Follow Your Different. We are the real dialogue podcast for people with a different mind. So get your mind in a different place, and hey ho, let’s go. The End of Knowledge Work as We Know It For decades, careers were built on the idea that knowledge is power. Professionals were valued for what they knew and how effectively they could apply that knowledge. This model defined the rise of the knowledge worker, where expertise and execution were the foundation of economic value. AI is dismantling that foundation. With tools that can generate insights and execute tasks instantly, both knowledge and execution are becoming commoditized. As a result, roles centered on repeating known processes are rapidly losing relevance. This shift is not just technological. It is existential, forcing individuals and organizations to rethink what truly creates value in the modern economy. From Fear to Opportunity in the Age of AI Much of the public conversation around AI is driven by fear, particularly the fear of job loss. Lochhead acknowledges these concerns but argues that they overshadow a more important truth. Every major technological leap has created entirely new categories of work, even as it disrupted old ones. AI is no different, but the pace is unprecedented. Instead of focusing solely on what might disappear, there is a need to explore what becomes possible. The real opportunity lies in recognizing that AI expands human capability. It enables individuals to build, experiment, and innovate at a scale that was previously unimaginable, opening doors for entirely new career paths. The Rise of the Creator Capitalist In a world where execution is automated and knowledge is abundant, creation becomes the ultimate differentiator. Lochhead introduces the concept of the creator capitalist, someone who leverages their unique perspective, skills, and experiences to produce meaningful value. This is not about following passion alone, but about identifying one’s distinct strengths and applying them in ways that matter. The creator capitalist mindset also reframes personal assets. Relationships, reputation, expertise, and financial resources become forms of capital that can be combined and amplified through AI. Those who learn to connect their individuality with scalable tools will define the future of work, while those who cling to outdated models risk being left behind. Links Want to catch more episode of the AI Agent & Copilot Podcast? You can check them out here: Presented by Cloud Wars | AI Agent and Copilot Podcast | John Siefert LinkedIn | Cloud Wars LinkedIn We hope you enjoyed this episode of Christopher Lochhead: Follow Your Different™! Christopher loves hearing from his listeners. Feel free to email him, connect on Facebook, X (formerly Twitter), Instagram, and subscribe on Apple Podcast / Spotify!
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    23 mins
  • 425 The Category Creation Formula: Why Most Business Strategy is a Trap with Kevin Maney & Mike Damphousse
    Mar 11 2026
    In a world flooded with content and incremental business strategies, standing out is more than a competitive advantage, it’s a necessity. Legendary Category Designers Kevin Maney and Mike Damphousse joined Christopher Lochhead on this week’s episode of Christopher Lochhead: Follow Your Different to dive into their latest thinking on category creation formula and the evolving marketplace. Having helped shape the category design movement with their previous work on “Play Bigger,” Kevin Maney and Mike Damphousse now bring ten years of new insights, tools, and experiences to the table. Their journey reveals the potential for entrepreneurs and established leaders to move from simply competing in existing markets to creating new market categories entirely. You’re listening to Christopher Lochhead: Follow Your Different. We are the real dialogue podcast for people with a different mind. So get your mind in a different place, and hey ho, let’s go. The Category Creation Formula: Context, Missing, Innovation A central development in Kevin Maney and Mike Damphousse’s new book, “The Category Creation Formula,” is a straightforward equation: context plus missing plus innovation equals a new market category. This reframing shifts the conversation away from finding conventional “problems” and instead asks, “Given the changing context, what’s missing for your target audience?” This subtle change is game-changing. By looking at how context—like technology shifts, societal changes, or policy moves—creates new gaps, innovators can identify true market opportunities. The missing is not just a problem, but an unmet need that, when matched with the right innovation, creates something genuinely new. From Incremental Competition to Defining New Possibilities Traditional business thinking focuses on being better than the competition. Maney and Damphousse challenge this status quo with their method, which helps companies discover and fill what’s missing in the marketplace, rather than simply outperform existing players. Through hundreds of client projects, they have observed that when teams deeply engage with the formula, they often experience breakthrough clarity. This clarity leads to designing not only new products but building entirely new categories—transforming strategy meetings into the birthplace of the next Uber or LinkedIn Sales Solutions. The emotional impact on entrepreneurs is real, often marking a visionary moment that aligns teams, sharpens belief, and sets the trajectory toward category leadership. AI and the Future: Accelerating Category Creation Artificial Intelligence is not just the latest innovation but a foundational change in context, similar to electricity’s impact more than a century ago. For category designers, AI accelerates both the identification of what’s missing and the speed at which innovations reach the market. As AI makes knowledge and execution close to free, what now matters is human insight: judgment about what new needs are emerging and how to fill those with breakthrough solutions. With the adjacent possible expanding, individuals and small teams can create billion-dollar outcomes, making category design skills more critical than ever. Maney and Damphousse’s formula provides a framework to navigate this shift, empowering creators to define the future rather than react to it. To hear more from Kevin Maney and Mike Damphousse on their thoughts about the Category Creation Formula and how it can help your business, download and listen to this episode. Bio Kevin Maney Kevin Maney is a bestselling author and award-winning columnist. He’s also the co-founder of Category Design Advisors where he helps companies create and dominate new market categories. He has been writing about technology for 30 years, has interviewed most of the tech pioneers you can name, and brings broad and deep context to Category Design conversations. He is co-author of the book Play Bigger, and has been an A-list writer and thinker about technology for 25 years. His other books include The Two-Second Advantage (a 2011 New York Times best seller), Trade-Off: Why Some Things Catch On and Others Don’t, and The Maverick and His Machine: Thomas Watson Sr. and the Making of IBM. Kevin wrote a regular column for Newsweek, and has been a contributor to Fortune, The Atlantic, Fast Company and ABC News, among other media outlets. He was a contributing editor at Conde Nast Portfolio and for 22 years, Kevin was a columnist, editor and reporter at USA Today. Mike Damphousse Mike Damphousse is a Category Designer, Investor, and Founder/Partner at Category Design Advisors. He brings over three decades of experience as a company founder, CEO, CMO, and startup advisor, with a track record in building and scaling B2B software companies. Mike was the founder and CEO/CMO of Green Leads, which was acquired by Next 15 (LON:NFC), and served as CMO of Asteria, which IPO’d on the ...
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    1 hr and 7 mins
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