エピソード

  • The Constraint Is the Point
    2026/03/28

    A few weeks ago I built an app on a ski lift. People liked the novelty of it. I've been worried ever since that the novelty was the whole takeaway — and that the actual point got lost in the thumbnail.


    So this episode is the correction. It's not about ski lifts. It's about what becomes possible when you give yourself a hard constraint and stop waiting for better conditions.


    I walk through the full Ideoloop build journey — starting in Google AI Studio, hitting walls, moving to VS Code, landing in Claude Code, making real progress, and then breaking the whole codebase in a way I thought was unrecoverable. Two versions out of sync on two different computers. I fixed it. And what I learned in that process is the whole point.


    What's covered:

    • Why the greatest breakthroughs come from one or two ingredients, not a thousand
    • The Ideoloop build journey from Google AI Studio to Claude Code
    • What breaking my own codebase taught me that no tutorial ever could
    • How the 72-hour rule connects to the philosophy of constraints
    • Why your clients — and probably you — have too many ingredients and not enough focus
    • What it actually means to build something in a Petri dish

    This one's more philosophical than most. I wanted to know if you're into that side of the show. Leave a comment and tell me.


    🔍 Take the Founder's Blind Spot Finder → https://tally.so/r/obeOlx
    📅 Book a Clarity Session → https://patrickrife.com/clarity-session
    📧 Subscribe to the newsletter → https://newsletter.patrickrife.com/
    🎙️ Listen to the podcast → https://podcast.patrickrife.com/

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    16 分
  • The Morning After: What Shipping IdeoLoop Actually Felt Like
    2026/03/21

    You shipped the thing. Now what?


    That's the question this episode actually answers — not the version where you pop champagne and watch signups roll in, but the real one. The one where you're staring at crickets, second-guessing everything you built, and trying to figure out if any of that feedback from people who love you actually means anything.


    Patrick breaks down what "launch" actually meant for IdeoLoop — and why his definition was probably different from yours. More importantly, he gets into what comes after: how to read real signal from early users, why your friends' feedback might be the most dangerous data you have, and what doubt actually looks like when you let it get in your head for two weeks.


    What's covered:

    • Why "launch" means something different than most people think
    • The barrier to entry is dropping — and that changes everything about what shipping actually accomplishes
    • How to get clean feedback when everyone in your life wants you to succeed
    • Signal vs. noise: the one thing users come back for (and how to find it)
    • What the cricket moment actually taught him
    • Why doubt doesn't go away — and why that's not a problem

    🔍 Take the Founder's Blind Spot Finder → https://tally.so/r/obeOlx
    📅 Book a Clarity Session → https://patrickrife.com/clarity-session
    📧 Subscribe to the newsletter → https://newsletter.patrickrife.com/
    🎙️ Listen to the podcast → https://podcast.patrickrife.com/

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    25 分
  • Ideoloop Is Here: How I Built a Tool to Stop Founders from Losing Their Voice
    2026/03/07

    There's a version of you that knows exactly what you want to say. You've got the expertise, the experience, the ideas. But the moment you sit down to write, it evaporates. The blank page wins again. This episode is about why that happens — and the tool I built to fix it.


    I'm officially pulling back the curtain on Ideoloop (Ideoloop.ai), my first solo technical build. It's an AI-powered content creation partner that interviews you, learns your voice, and generates content from the conversation — LinkedIn posts, threads, blog starts, social graphics — all from a three or four minute exchange. No blank page. No compromise.


    In this episode I cover: the seed of an idea that's been growing for years, what happened when I chased engagement metrics and lost my own voice, why talking about what you know is fundamentally different from writing about it, how Ideoloop works and what's coming next, and why building community matters now more than ever.


    If you've ever felt that pull between sounding like yourself and building something that actually grows — this one's for you.

    • Try Ideoloop -> Ideoloop.ai

    • 🔍 Take the Founder's Blind Spot Finder → https://tally.so/r/obeOlx
    • 📅 Book a Clarity Session → https://patrickrife.com/clarity-session
    • 📧 Subscribe to the newsletter → https://newsletter.patrickrife.com/
    • 🎙️ Listen to the podcast → https://podcast.patrickrife.com/
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    23 分
  • I Built an App on a Ski Lift
    2026/02/28

    What happens when you give yourself a hard constraint — build something, only while riding a chairlift, only on your phone, done by the time you press the button to start the car?

    That's exactly what Patrick did two weeks ago at Ski Liberty in Pennsylvania. And it worked.


    This episode is less of a how-to and more of a provocation. Patrick walks through the ski lift build — a LinkedIn activity tracker and lightweight CRM — and makes the case that the biggest thing standing between you and building something is the story you're telling yourself about needing more time, more prep, and more perfect conditions.


    What's covered:

    • The LinkedIn VA reporting problem that sparked the idea
    • How a bathroom stall at a ski resort became the starting point for the first prompt
    • Why tools like Lovable, Whisper Flow, and Claude are changing what's possible in short windows
    • The difference between a good idea and a working thing — and why starting is the only bridge
    • Why interstitial minutes (car rides, pickup lines, treadmills) are where the reps actually happen
    • What Builder Fridays and Baltimore Creators are really about

    This one is short by design. Go listen. Then go build something.


    🔍 Take the Founder's Blind Spot Finder → https://tally.so/r/obeOlx
    📅 Book a Clarity Session → https://patrickrife.com/clarity-session
    📧 Subscribe to the newsletter → https://newsletter.patrickrife.com/
    🎙️ Listen to the podcast → https://podcast.patrickrife.com/

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    16 分
  • Balancing the Practical and the Aspirational
    2026/02/20

    Most founders live in one of two places — lost in the idea, or drowning in the execution. Patrick gets honest about the tension he lives in every day: the pull of the aspirational versus the weight of the practical.


    In this episode, recorded from home, he breaks down how over-indexing on enthusiasm leads to overcommitment, why he's made peace with doing too much, and how he thinks about ebb and flow as a feature of building — not a bug.


    This one's personal. And if you're someone who can't stop coming up with ideas, it'll hit.


    What we cover:

    • Why Patrick buys domains he never builds (and why he's okay with that)
    • The real cost of enthusiasm without operational thinking
    • How to use the ebb to make the flow more manageable
    • Why Ground Control is a holding company, a lab, and a consulting practice all at once
    • Making peace with your nature instead of fighting it

    🔍 Take the Founder's Blind Spot Finder → https://tally.so/r/obeOlx

    📅 Book a Clarity Session → https://patrickrife.com/clarity-session

    📧 Subscribe to the newsletter → https://newsletter.patrickrife.com/

    🎙️ Listen to the podcast → https://podcast.patrickrife.com/

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    13 分
  • Baltimore Creators Is Back: Introducing Builder Fridays
    2026/02/13

    Baltimore Creators is coming back.

    Version 2 starts with one thing: Builder Fridays — a monthly, builder-first working session in Baltimore.

    How it works

    • 10:00 AM – 3:00 PM: Co-working (focused building time — bring your laptop, your project, your problems)
    • 3:00 PM – 5:00 PM: Main session (formats rotate: demos, deep dives, experiments, and more)
    • Full day runs 10:00 AM – 5:00 PM
    This is for people who are actually building — especially anyone who’s felt like typical startup networking doesn’t create real follow-through. It’s intentionally not transactional and not designed for prospecting.

    Call to action
    Join the list at https://baltimorecreators.com (https://baltimorecreators.com/) (tickets/presale coming soon).
    If you know someone in Baltimore who would thrive in this room, send them the link.


    Links

    • Baltimore Creators: https://baltimorecreators.com (https://baltimorecreators.com/)

    ---

    🔍 Find Your Blind Spot: https://patrickrife.com/blind-spot-finder
    💼 Work With Me: https://patrickrife.com
    📰 Weekly Newsletter: https://newsletter.patrickrife.com

    ---

    About Ground Control:
    We help founders close the strategy-execution gap. Through 1:1 consulting, we deliver both the clarity and the implementation—so insights actually become traction.

    Based in Baltimore. Building in public.

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    34 分
  • Why I Punted This Episode Last Week (And What I Learned From It)
    2026/02/06

    Last week I punted the podcast and newsletter. Not because I ran out of things to say, but because something more important showed up.

    This episode is about that decision—about when breaking your plan is actually the right strategic move.


    I spent five days learning Moltbot, a new AI tool that felt intimidating. But I knew if I didn't dive in, the distraction would be worse than the deviation.

    Three months ago, opening a terminal felt completely foreign. Now I'm provisioning AI agents.

    The building blocks stack. Each one makes the next one easier.

    What we cover:

    • When to break your own commitments
    • How curiosity-driven learning compounds
    • Why context switching kills progress
    • The 80/20 truth: solutions are singular, not myriad
    • Defending capacity while serving multiple clients

    Helping founders bridge the gap between strategic insights and tactical execution.

    Newsletter: https://newsletter.patrickrife.com/
    Website: patrickrife.com
    LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/patrick-rife/
    X: @PatrickRife

    🔍 Find Your Blind Spot: https://patrickrife.com/blind-spot-finder
    💼 Work With Me: https://patrickrife.com
    📰 Weekly Newsletter: https://newsletter.patrickrife.com

    Based in Baltimore. Building in public.

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    25 分
  • Building the Blind Spot Finder: When Soul Met Systems
    2026/01/23

    In this episode of the Ground Control Podcast, Patrick Rife discusses the launch of his Blind Spot Finder tool, which aims to help solopreneurs identify and address their blind spots. He shares insights on the challenges faced by individuals working alone, the importance of clarity and orientation in achieving goals, and the value of presence in conversations. Patrick emphasizes the need for self-discovery and growth, transforming challenges into opportunities, and iterating on experiences to improve outcomes. He concludes with thoughts on future developments for the Blind Spot Finder and the importance of community feedback.

    Takeaways

    • The Blind Spot Finder was created to help solopreneurs identify their blind spots.
    • Many solopreneurs struggle with a lack of perspective on their work.
    • Clarity and orientation are crucial for moving forward effectively.
    • Complexity often hides the real work that needs to be done.
    • It's important to have conviction in your strategies to execute them successfully.
    • The Blind Spot Finder is a simple questionnaire to surface obstacles.
    • Presence in conversations enhances understanding and clarity.
    • Transforming challenges into opportunities can lead to growth.
    • Self-discovery is a key part of the entrepreneurial journey.
    • Feedback from the community is essential for improvement.


    Website: www.patrickrife.com
    Blind Spot Finder: https://tally.so/r/obeOlx

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    29 分