Omslagafbeelding van de show Innovate or Evaporate with Toph Day

Innovate or Evaporate with Toph Day

Podcast door Elevate Ventures

Engels

Business

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Over Innovate or Evaporate with Toph Day

Explore the relentless pace of change and the innovators who drive it. Each episode, we dive deep into the world of cutting-edge ideas, breakthrough technologies, and fearless pioneers who are pushing the boundaries of what’s possible.

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42 afleveringen

aflevering Dave Neff on Leading the 500 Festival and Building Trust artwork

Dave Neff on Leading the 500 Festival and Building Trust

In this episode of Innovate or Evaporate, host Toph Day sits down with Dave Neff, CEO of the 500 Festival, to explore how relationships, trust, and innovation shape one of Indiana’s most iconic civic traditions. Dave shares his journey from the Indiana Pacers to EDGE Mentoring, the Boilermaker Alliance, and now the 500 Festival, revealing how leadership, mentorship, and community engagement create lasting impact. He also breaks down the full scope of what the 500 Festival actually produces: the Indianapolis Mini Marathon, which drew more than 33,000 participants this year including an 11-year-old who set a half marathon world record, the Indy 500 Parade presented by Lucas Oil, Kids Day on Monument Circle, a STEM-based education program reaching one-third of all Indiana fourth graders, and a 2,500-person volunteer corps with members who have served for decades. Neff also addresses what he calls the loneliness epidemic among men in their 30s and 40s, the case for Indianapolis embracing the "Speed City" identity, and why feedback is the most underrated tool for anyone trying to lead or innovate. Dave is also the host of Talent Scout, a podcast on the IBJ Media podcast network.

20 mei 2026 - 50 min
aflevering Ed Carpenter on Building ECR and Racing the Indy 500 at 45 artwork

Ed Carpenter on Building ECR and Racing the Indy 500 at 45

Ed Carpenter has spent more than two decades competing in the Indianapolis 500 while simultaneously running the team that fields his car. The owner-driver of Ed Carpenter Racing discusses what it takes to survive and compete as an independent team in a sport increasingly dominated by manufacturer programs and private equity. Carpenter traces his path from quarter midgets at age 8 to three Indy 500 pole positions, reflecting on the pivotal moments that shaped his career, including his 2003 Freedom 100 victory at Indianapolis Motor Speedway and the decision to co-found ECR in 2012. He breaks down how the team operates with roughly 60 people, six engineers per car, and more than 100 sensors generating real-time telemetry data during every race. The conversation also covers IndyCar's new charter system and what it means for team valuations and long-term stability, the evolution of driver safety technology from SAFER barrier walls to windscreens, the role Chevrolet plays as a technical partner, and why Carpenter believes pit stop athleticism is now as important as car setup. Carpenter also reflects on the sport's broader growth, including a 44 percent increase in television viewership since moving to Fox. Follow Ed Carpenter Racing at ecrind.com and on social media at ECRIndy. #IndyCar #Indy500 #IndyCarPodcast

13 mei 2026 - 55 min
aflevering Mark Miles on the Indy 500, Roger Penske, and Building Big artwork

Mark Miles on the Indy 500, Roger Penske, and Building Big

Mark Miles, President and CEO of Penske Entertainment Corp., built a career out of pulling off events that other cities couldn't. From negotiating with Fidel Castro to land Cuba's athletes at the 1987 Pan American Games to restructuring global television rights for the ATP Tour to chairing Indianapolis's 2012 Super Bowl bid, Miles has spent four decades turning civic ambition into international spectacle. Miles traces the through line of his career: a restless curiosity that led him from Senate campaigns alongside Mitch Daniels and Dick Lugar to the boardrooms of professional sports. He explains what made Indianapolis's volunteer-driven model for major events unlike anything else in the country, why fragmented television rights were strangling professional tennis, and how a billion-dollar rights deal with a sports marketing agency nearly collapsed into bankruptcy before a letter of credit saved the day. The conversation turns to the Indianapolis Motor Speedway and IndyCar, where Miles describes working alongside Roger Penske and the obsessive attention to detail that defines Penske's leadership style, from restroom paint schemes to full-scale styrofoam mockups of a yacht's interior. Miles also addresses how the sport is building community, both physically in the infield and digitally among fans who argue, connect, and pass traditions across generations. His advice for anyone preparing for a high-stakes negotiation: walk in more prepared than anyone else in the room, think as big as the idea can realistically go, and never accept the first framing of a problem. #IndyCar #Indy500 #InnovateOrEvaporate 0:00 Introduction and Guest Background 2:05 From College to Political Campaigns 6:45 Building Relationships Through Campaigns 8:10 Landing the Pan American Games 13:45 Negotiating with Fidel Castro 18:30 Lessons from the Castro Meetings 21:00 Running the Indianapolis Tennis Tournament 23:30 Restructuring the ATP Tour's TV Rights 27:00 Indianapolis and the Super Bowl Bid 30:45 The Indianapolis Volunteer Model 36:30 Joining Penske Entertainment and IndyCar 40:00 Fan Experience at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway 44:30 Roger Penske's Attention to Detail 48:30 Rapid Fire Questions

29 apr 2026 - 51 min
aflevering Mariah Ivey on Storytelling, Trust, and Keeping Culture Alive artwork

Mariah Ivey on Storytelling, Trust, and Keeping Culture Alive

Mariah Ivey, Director of Programs & Artistic Development, Madam Walker Legacy Center, and Founder of That Peace Open Mic, has spent her career building stages where none existed. Honored with a "Keeper of Culture" mural in Indianapolis by visual artist Ashley Nora in partnership with GangGang, Ivey speaks with host Toph Day about what it actually takes to earn that designation. The conversation covers Ivey's five pillars of storytelling, including urgency, relevancy, creative rigor, personal connection, and impact, and how those principles apply far beyond poetry into marketing, product development, and community building. Ivey draws on her experience curating art spaces for the Jordan Brand during the 2025 WNBA All-Star weekend in Indianapolis, performing at TEDx, and founding That Peace Open Mic to argue that authenticity cannot be packaged with the right language alone. It has to be lived off stage before it works on stage. She challenges leaders across industries to stop moving transactionally and instead "move at the speed of relationships," a phrase that cuts to the heart of why so many community initiatives stall. She also makes the case that vulnerability is not a liability in leadership but a skill, one best practiced by getting into more art spaces. Ivey's latest work appears in the fall issue of genesis: a literature and art magazine at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis.

15 apr 2026 - 54 min
aflevering How Innovation Became Core to Running an NBA Team with Mel Raines and Joey Graziano of Pacers Sports & Entertainment artwork

How Innovation Became Core to Running an NBA Team with Mel Raines and Joey Graziano of Pacers Sports & Entertainment

Pacers Sports & Entertainment is building far more than a basketball team. Under CEO Mel Raines and Chief Commercial Officer Joey Graziano, the organization is reimagining what a modern franchise can be: part sports business, part real estate developer, part performance company, part media brand, and part civic engine. In this conversation, Toph Day sits down with Raines and Graziano to explore how PS&E is helping reshape downtown Indianapolis through the ongoing evolution of Gainbridge Fieldhouse, a planned Ritz-Carlton, a Live Nation music venue, and a new Fever Performance Center designed to be the biggest and best purpose-built performance center for female athletes in the world. They also discuss why the old definition of a “small market” is breaking down, how data and digital reach are changing the economics of sports, and why the Indiana Fever’s audience has become one of the most geographically diverse fan bases in professional basketball, with fans from all 50 states and 44 countries attending games last year. Along the way, Raines reflects on her path from the White House back to Indiana, while Graziano shares how he left a legal career to help rebuild a startup and ultimately help lead one of the most ambitious franchise transformations in sports. From mixed-use development and women’s sports to global brand building, the NBA bubble, and the future of fan experience, this episode is a look at the innovative, multidimensional work it now takes to run a franchise at the highest level.

1 apr 2026 - 1 h 1 min
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