Episode Details
Back to EpisodesPatrick Sweeney on Rowing, Building Companies, and Closing the Belief Gap
Season 2025
Episode 18
Published 2 months, 1 week ago
Description
Starting a company feels like eating glass for breakfast. Every morning. Olympic rowing hopeful turned five-time founder Patrick Sweeney sits down with Joe De Sena to break down exactly what it takes to cross the belief gap that kills most startups before they ever gain traction. Patrick went from setting rowing records at UNH to finishing second at the Olympic Trials in the single scull, then carried that same pain tolerance straight into building and exiting technology companies. He explains how the OODA loop, a military fighter pilot doctrine, can replace startup chaos with a weekly cadence. Patrick also unpacks why 95% of top CEOs admit to impostor syndrome and how shared belief maps prevent the illusion of alignment that tears founding teams apart. Things You Will Learn:
- Build a shared belief map that exposes hidden misalignment before it breaks your team.
- Run weekly OODA loop stand-ups that replace startup chaos with structured cadence.
- Apply the belief gap framework to test hypotheses, track market-product fit, and know when to hit the kill switch.
- OODA Loop Stand-Up: A 30-minute weekly cadence to observe, orient, decide, and act so founders stop reacting and start executing.
- Shared Belief Map: A team alignment exercise that surfaces hidden disagreements between cofounders and forces clarity on core beliefs versus testable hypotheses.
- Belief Gap Framework: A model for tracking internal believers (employees, partners) and external believers (customers, investors) to measure whether your startup is crossing from conviction to traction.
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