Humans of Martech podcast

206: The people who keep you standing (50 Operators share the systems that keep them happy, part 2)

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Pressure at work rarely stays contained within the job. It spills into family life, friendships, and daily relationships. I asked 50 operators how they stay happy while managing responsibility at work and at home.

This 3 part series – titled “50 Operators share the systems that keep them happy” explores each of these layers through the lived experience of operators who feel the same pressure you probably feel right now.

Today we continue with part 2: connection, the relationships that recharge you and keep you standing when the work would otherwise knock you sideways.

We’ll hear from 17 people and we’ll cover:

  • (00:00) - Teaser
  • (02:00) - In This Episode
  • (04:30) - Eric Holland: Limiting Slack and Prioritizing Family Time
  • (05:33) - Meg Gowell: Shared Family Routines
  • (08:31) - David Joosten: Filtering Reactive Work So Time Stays With Family
  • (10:30) - Aboli Gangreddiwar: Designing Work to Enable Family Travel
  • (12:01) - Kevin White: Separating Career Drive From Family Identity
  • (13:42) - Joshua Kanter: Daily Family Rituals
  • (18:07) - Gab Bujold: Daily Check-Ins With a Trusted Work Partner
  • (22:30) - Anna Leary: Treating Workload Stress as a Shared Problem
  • (24:31) - Angela Rueda: Shared Problem Solving Conversations
  • (26:50) - Blair Bendel: Using In Person Conversations to Stay Grounded
  • (29:28) - Matthew Castino: Work Satisfaction Correlates Strongly With Team Relationships
  • (33:17) - Aditi Uppal: Connection as a Feedback Loop
  • (35:48) - Alison Albeck Lindland: One Social System Across Work and Life
  • (37:34) - Rajeev Nair: Human Bonds Absorb Pressure Before Burnout
  • (40:12) - Chris O’Neil: Filtering Work Through People and Problems That Matter
  • (42:24) - Rebecca Corliss: Creativity as a Shared Emotional Outlet
  • (44:24) - Moni Oloyede: Teaching as a Living Relationship
  • (45:50) - Outro

Connection starts with who you protect time for. Our first guest begins there, shaping his work around people who refill him and drawing hard lines around anything that steals those moments away.

Eric Holland: Limiting Slack and Prioritizing Family Time

First up is Eric Holland, a fractional PMM based in Pennsylvania, and the co-host of the We’re not Marketers Podcast. He’s also a dad and runs a retail apparel startup.

Eric shapes his happiness around people before tasks. He pares his work down to projects shared with colleagues he enjoys being around, and that choice changes the texture of his days. Conversations feel easier. Meetings end with momentum instead of fatigue. You can hear a quiet confidence in how he describes work that feels relational rather than transactional.

Family anchors that perspective in a very physical way. Nearly every weekend, from late November through Christmas, belongs to his ten-month-old son. These are not abstract intentions. They are mornings that smell like coffee and pine needles, afternoons on cold sidewalks, and evenings defined by routine rather than inboxes. Time with his son creates emotional weight that carries into the workweek and keeps priorities visible when deadlines start to blur.

Eric also draws a firm boundary around digital proximity. Slack does not live on his phone, and that decision protects the moments where connection needs full attention. The habit most people recognize, checking messages during dinner or while holding a child, never has a chance to form. Presence becomes simpler when tools stay in their place.

The system he describes comes together through a few concrete moves that many people quietly avoid:

He limits work to collaborators who feel generous with energy.
He reserves weekends for repeated family rituals that mark time.
He removes communication tools from personal spaces where they dilute focus.

Eric captures the point with a line that carries practical weight.

“Delete Slack off your phone.”

That sentence signals care for the relationships that actually hold you upright. Attention stays where your body is, and connection grows from that consistency.

Key takeaway: Strong connections protect long-term happiness at work. Choose collaborators who give energy, protect repeated time with family and friends, and keep work tools out of moments that deserve your full presence.

Meg Gowell: Shared Family Routines

Next up is Meg Gowell, Head of Marketing at Elly and former Director of Growth Marketing at Typeform and Appcues. She’s also a mom of 3.

Remote work compresses everything into the same physical space. Meetings happen steps away from the kitchen. Notifications follow you into the evening. Meg treats that compression as something that requires active design. She and her husband both work remotely, so separation never happens by accident. It happens because they decide when work stops and family time starts, and they repeat that decision every day.

That discipline shows up in how she leads at Typeform. An international team creates constant overlap and constant absence at the same time. Someone is always offline. Someone is always mid-day. Ideas surface at inconvenient hours. Meg sends messages when they are top of mind, and she pairs them with clear expectations about response time. People answer when they are working. Evenings stay intact. That clarity removes the quiet pressure that turns collaboration tools into stress machines.

Connection at home runs on small rituals that happen often. Family dinner stays protected. Phones stay off the table. Conversation has shape, which keeps it from drifting back to work. One simple routine anchors the evening.

Each person shares a positive moment from their day.
Each person shares a hard moment.
Everyone gets space to talk without interruption.

“We have a game we play called Popsicle and Poopsicle where each person says a positive thing from their day and a negative thing from their day.”

The table sounds different when everyone is present. You hear voices instead of keyboards. You notice moods. Kids learn that their experiences matter. Adults slow their breathing without realizing it. Work fades because attention has somewhere better to land.

These habits teach through repetition. Kids learn priorities by watching how time is protected. Teams learn boundaries by watching how leaders behave. Meg models presence through behavior rather than explanation. She sits down. She listens. She disconnects. Those signals travel further than any policy ever could.

Career decisions follow the same logic. Meg focused on the life she wanted to live and then shaped work around it. Dinner with her kids mattered. Time away mattered. Flexibility mattered. That perspective runs against an industry that rewards visibility and constant availability. Many people chase recognition and wonder why their days feel thin. Meg invested in connection and built everything else around it.

Key takeaway: Connection grows when time is defended on purpose. Protect shared moments, set expectations clearly, and let daily behavior show people where your attention truly belongs.

David Joosten: Filtering Reactive Work So Time Stays With Family

Next up is David Joosten, Co-Founder and President at GrowthLoop and the co-author of ‘First-Party Data Activation’. He’s also a dad of 3.

Connection shows up here through restraint. David talks about time as something that gets crowded fast, especially once you step into leadership roles where every problem arrives wearing the same urgent expression. Days fill with requests, escalations, and thoughtful edge cases that sound responsible in isolation. Taken together, they quietly displace the people ...

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