In this engaging episode, Dr. Kirk Adams sits down with Paolo Gaudiano (https://www.linkedin.com/in/pgaudiano/), Founder & Chief Scientist at Aleria (https://www.aleria.tech/) to unpack how measuring day-to-day workplace experiences, rather than headcounts or vague culture scores, translates inclusion into business outcomes. Gaudiano traces his path from computational neuroscience and complexity modeling to a 2015 “lightbulb moment” that led him to build simulations and tools showing how inclusion lifts productivity and retention, and how focusing on diversity alone can spark backlash. He outlines the premise of his 2024 book Measuring Inclusion: Higher Profits and Happier People, Without Guesswork or Backlash, and makes the practical case for aligning inclusion with financial performance rather than sentiment.
Leave a CommentMonth: August 2025
Dr. Kirk Adams previews his August 28, 2025 Supercharge Your Bottom Line Through Disability Inclusion webinar with Paolo Gaudiano, revealing data-driven disability ROI.
Leave a CommentHere Dr. Kirk Adams lays out a plain case: move clinical-grade hearing from the clinic to the home and you remove the bottlenecks that keep people from hearing the moments that matter. He frames the unmet need, 1.5 billion people worldwide, high costs, too many devices in drawers, and explains why Doppler’s at-home platform is different: clinical-grade hearing aids in three styles paired with Jenn, a handheld tablet that tunes in five to ten minutes, saves up to eight profiles, and is backed by accessories, 24/7 chat, and extended phone support. Pricing is simple ($199 down + $29/month after a trial, with worn-out devices replaced for subscribers), and the model is built for stickiness where life happens, at home, at work, on the go.
Leave a CommentHere, Dr. Kirk Adams makes the case that the world’s largest overlooked market is the disability community, and that innovation built for disabled users becomes better for everyone. He profiles Rich and Brittany Palmer, operators with lived experience who run Adaptation Ventures, a member-driven angel network that closes the earliest funding gap for accessibility-focused startups. Their model is disciplined and practical: quarterly pitch meetings, collaborative diligence, and leading checks around $250K at pre-seed/seed, targeting roughly four investment opportunities for review by members per quarter. The thesis is crisp, “make the big stuff smaller; make the expensive stuff cheaper”, and the demand signals are clear: aging populations, chronic conditions, and mainstream preference for frictionless products.
Leave a CommentHere, Dr. Kirk Adams reframes a noisy DEI debate into a performance system—merit through inclusion—and explains why he is partnering with DIRC25 twice: Innovative Impact for diagnostics, implementation roadmaps, and accountable cadence; and his Dr. Kirk Adams channels for storytelling and connections that accelerate adoption. He argues that inclusion is the process you tune while diversity is the outcome you get, with supervisors as force multipliers and accessible tools and meeting practices as non-negotiables. He positions DIRC25—one-day, virtual on October 30, 2025—as a high-signal research-to-operations bridge, with recorded sessions for evergreen enablement and a cross-sector audience built for practical uptake.
Leave a CommentIn this engaging episode, Dr. Kirk Adams sits down with Rich and Brittany Palmer — Managing Partners of Adaptation Ventures — to trace the personal and entrepreneurial paths that led them to launch an angel, member-based fund focused on disability innovation. Brittany, a bilateral below-elbow amputee, shares how early prosthetics, supportive parents, and careers spanning environmental law and global consulting shaped her founder lens; when she built Beeyonder, a live virtual-tour startup for people with limited mobility, she ran into investors who mislabeled the opportunity as “niche,” a pattern she later saw across disability-tech. Rich recounts a winding route from RPI to Wall Street to startups, a life-threatening brain aneurysm at 28, and a reset at Babson that culminated in building and exiting an AI-for-philanthropy company — followed by leading one of the nation’s largest angel groups and testifying to Congress about early-stage capital.
1 CommentHere, Dr. Kirk Adams argues that inclusion fails when it treats people as single-issue categories. Disability cuts across every identity, and his doctoral research shows how outcomes diverge within the same disability: legally blind white men with some usable vision earn the most, while totally blind Black women earn the least—evidence of a systemic design flaw that can be fixed.
Leave a CommentIn this engaging episode, Dr. Kirk Adams sits down with Megan Connolly Haupt, founder of the New York – based nonprofit consultancy Inclusive Saratoga. Reuniting after their days in the Lighthouse for the Blind network, the pair trace Megan’s winding road from Carnegie Hall intern and Jesuit Volunteer Corps case manager on L.A.’s Skid Row to corporate-social-responsibility pioneer (she launched the CSRwire news service 23 years ago), craft-beer marketer, and now disability-inclusion entrepreneur. Launched in February 2025, Inclusive Saratoga helps hospitality venues, music halls, breweries, and museums turn accessibility into a competitive edge, offering everything from staff training and sensory kits to service-animal protocols – while an in-house line of ‘inclusive’ apparel underwrites the mission.
Leave a CommentIn this engaging episode, Dr. Kirk Adams sits down with disability advocate, outdoor enthusiast, and “The Blind Chick” podcast host Penn Street. Penn recounts the dramatic origins of her blindness—two rattlesnake bites at age nine triggered Stevens-Johnson syndrome, leaving her with severe burns, lasting eye damage, and years of surgeries. Growing up as the ninth of ten siblings, she credits a rugged childhood, supportive teachers, and the Lion s Clubs with building her resilience. A move to Colorado opened doors to better medical care and the mountains she loves; later, climber Erik Weihenmayer’s example convinced her she could still scale rock walls, raft the Grand Canyon, and teach adaptive outdoor skills to other blind adventurers.
Leave a CommentIn this engaging episode, Dr. Kirk Adams sits down with Seattle-based runner and social-impact professional Ixchel Lemus Bromley. The conversation traces her journey from Costa Rica to Pennsylvania and on to the Pacific Northwest, culminating in a college-age diagnosis of retinitis pigmentosa that reshaped her sense of identity and mobility. Bromley explains how guided running restored the “true freedom” she once felt on solo runs, using hand- or waist-tethers and vivid verbal cues to replace anxiety with trust and exhilaration. Determined to share that liberation with others, she founded Free 2 Fly, a Sunday-morning adaptive running club now evolving into a nonprofit that pairs blind and low-vision athletes with sighted guides and is gearing up for its first 5K event.
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