Founders Journey Podcast
Peter Shankman on building around a different brain We sat down with Peter Shankman to explore how he built his life around an ADHD brain, not against it. Early on, he shares what it felt like to grow up in New York City without language for neurodiversity. Because of that, school often felt hard, confusing, and limiting. Still, he found creative outlets, leaned into writing, and kept moving toward work that matched how he thinks. The ADHD advantage in work and life This episode shows how ADHD entrepreneurship can look practical, disciplined, and deeply intentional. Peter explains how he fills his calendar on purpose, because too much open time can lead him in the wrong direction. He also breaks down the systems that keep him focused, from early workouts to simple wardrobe choices. As a result, ADHD entrepreneurship becomes less about chaos and more about structure that actually works. How Peter Shankman turned connection into opportunity Peter walks us through the path from AOL to launching a PR firm, then creating HARO from a simple habit of helping reporters. Rather than waiting for perfect conditions, he kept testing ideas and learning through action. That mindset shaped his view of risk, failure, and momentum. So when he talks about ADHD entrepreneurship, he ties it to calculated risk, repeated effort, and staying humble enough to keep learning. Lessons from failure family and focus We also get into the habits that helped Peter protect his health, his attention, and his role as a father. He speaks openly about dopamine, addiction, exercise, therapy, and why social media can become a serious problem. Then he explains why he never breaks promises to his daughter, even when work pulls him across the world. That part gives ADHD entrepreneurship a human center, because success means very little without trust and presence. What Peter Shankman wants founders to remember Near the end, Peter shares direct advice for younger founders. Try things early, accept failure, and stop wasting energy on other people’s opinions. He argues that failure teaches faster than easy wins ever could. In that sense, ADHD entrepreneurship becomes a lesson in self-awareness, consistency, and building an environment that fits your brain. We think this conversation offers a clear look at what happens when someone stops forcing a traditional path and starts designing one that works. More From Peter Shankman https://www.shankman.com/ Chapters 00:00 Intro and Peter Shankman background 01:26 Growing up in New York with ADHD 03:10 First media jobs and the AOL newsroom 04:07 Starting a PR firm during the internet boom 05:50 How HARO started and why it took off 06:48 ADHD dopamine habits and daily structure 17:08 Managing focus with routines and movement 21:38 Selling HARO to PR Newswire 23:35 Faster Than Normal and neurodiversity 32:59 Parenting promises and entrepreneurial life
33 episoder
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