The Rebuilding Venezuela Podcast

What Strategic Planning Looks Like on Day Zero — Inside Venezuela, Right Now

41 min · 24. mars 2026
episode What Strategic Planning Looks Like on Day Zero — Inside Venezuela, Right Now cover

Beskrivelse

EPISODE 3 — WHAT STRATEGIC PLANNING LOOKS LIKE ON DAY ZERO: INSIDE VENEZUELA, RIGHT NOW Venezuela is not a future opportunity. It is a present one. PdVSA is signing contracts with American companies every single day. Chevron, ExxonMobil, and Baker Hughes are already on the ground. The FBI has opened a physical office in Caracas. The diplomatic infrastructure is not forming — it has formed. And yet most U.S. companies are still watching from the sidelines, waiting for certainty that will never arrive on their terms. In Episode 3, Alex Miranda and Ignacio sit down with Jose Bracho — a Venezuelan-born, U.S.-educated business professional and advisor who is physically on the ground in Venezuela right now. Jose brings over 25 years of financial and business management experience across both markets, deep relationships across business, legal, and diplomatic circles, and a rare, real-time view into the contracts, conversations, and company movements forming today. This episode delivers what the first two set up: a practical, step-by-step framework for what engaging Venezuela actually looks like — from someone who is there. The companies that win won't be the ones with the most capital. They'll be the ones with the right relationships, the right local intelligence, and the discipline to move before the window closes.

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til å kommentere

Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av The Rebuilding Venezuela Podcast sitt community!

Prøv gratis

Prøv gratis i 14 dager

99 kr / Måned etter prøveperioden. · Avslutt når som helst.

  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Gratis podkaster

Alle episoder

4 Episoder

episode The Entrepreneurial Wave — Building the Businesses Venezuela Needs But Doesn't Have Yet cover

The Entrepreneurial Wave — Building the Businesses Venezuela Needs But Doesn't Have Yet

Most conversations about Venezuela focus on multinationals re-entering the market. This episode takes a different angle. What about the businesses that don't exist yet? The services, platforms, and technology solutions the rest of the world takes for granted — but Venezuela has been cut off from for over a decade. When a market reopens after years of economic isolation, there's a massive gap in business infrastructure. Fintech. SaaS. Cloud services. Digital payments. AI-powered tools. E-commerce. Venezuela missed all of it. And that gap is exactly where the entrepreneurial opportunity lives. In this episode, Alex Miranda sit down with Amaury Loaiza — Venezuelan-American tech entrepreneur, founder & CEO of NextGo, and veteran of companies like ExxonMobil, IBM, Cisco, HP Enterprise, and Carnival Corporation — to break down what's missing, what's possible, and how entrepreneurs can begin positioning today.

8. april 202629 min
episode What Strategic Planning Looks Like on Day Zero — Inside Venezuela, Right Now cover

What Strategic Planning Looks Like on Day Zero — Inside Venezuela, Right Now

EPISODE 3 — WHAT STRATEGIC PLANNING LOOKS LIKE ON DAY ZERO: INSIDE VENEZUELA, RIGHT NOW Venezuela is not a future opportunity. It is a present one. PdVSA is signing contracts with American companies every single day. Chevron, ExxonMobil, and Baker Hughes are already on the ground. The FBI has opened a physical office in Caracas. The diplomatic infrastructure is not forming — it has formed. And yet most U.S. companies are still watching from the sidelines, waiting for certainty that will never arrive on their terms. In Episode 3, Alex Miranda and Ignacio sit down with Jose Bracho — a Venezuelan-born, U.S.-educated business professional and advisor who is physically on the ground in Venezuela right now. Jose brings over 25 years of financial and business management experience across both markets, deep relationships across business, legal, and diplomatic circles, and a rare, real-time view into the contracts, conversations, and company movements forming today. This episode delivers what the first two set up: a practical, step-by-step framework for what engaging Venezuela actually looks like — from someone who is there. The companies that win won't be the ones with the most capital. They'll be the ones with the right relationships, the right local intelligence, and the discipline to move before the window closes.

24. mars 202641 min
episode Phase 1: The Industries Already Positioning for Venezuela’s Reopening cover

Phase 1: The Industries Already Positioning for Venezuela’s Reopening

Rebuilding a country doesn't happen all at once. It happens in phases. In Episode 2, Alex and Ignacio break down Phase 1 of Venezuela's economic reopening — the industries that move first, why they move first, and what smart companies are already doing to position before the market fully opens. From oil and gas to engineering, logistics, and industrial construction — the operating system of Venezuela's economy is beginning to activate. And the companies that understand the sequence will have a significant advantage over those waiting for certainty. The key insight of this episode: you don't have to send a team to Venezuela to begin positioning. You can start hiring talent there now. Capital moves fast. Talent moves slower. The time to prepare is before the rush begins.

19. mars 202623 min
episode First Movers Advantage in Venezuela — Positioning Before the Rebuild Accelerates cover

First Movers Advantage in Venezuela — Positioning Before the Rebuild Accelerates

Venezuela is entering a new phase — and the companies that win will not be the ones who wait for certainty. They will be the ones who position early. In this first episode, Alex Miranda (U.S.) and Ignacio (Venezuela) break down First Movers Advantage and explain why smart companies are already preparing for the reopening of the Venezuelan market — through talent, relationships, and strategic positioning. Because when markets reopen, capital moves fast — but talent moves slower. And the companies that think about workforce strategy first will have the advantage. 🎧 In this episode • What First Movers Advantage really means • Early signals coming from Venezuela • Why talent will become the biggest bottleneck • What smart companies should be doing now 🔔 Subscribe for future episodes We break down the business opportunities, market signals, and talent strategy behind Venezuela’s rebuilding.

14. mars 202626 min