Benjamin Bargetzi — Neuroscience for Mental Resilience & Focus in a Disrupted Age I Leadership and Decision Making in a Post-AI World I Neuroscientist & Psychologist, Ex-Google, WEF & Amazon I Humanitarian Tech Founder I Top-Ranked Speaker
Neuroscience for Mental Resilience & Focus in a Disrupted Age I Leadership and Decision Making in a Post-AI World I Neuroscientist & Psychologist, Ex-Google, WEF & Amazon I Humanitarian Tech Founder I Top-Ranked Speaker
Benjamin Bargetzi ranks #42 of 14,983 LinkedIn creators in Growth Marketing, and is a standout voice in Switzerland. They have 92.3K followers and published 20 posts in the last 30 days at a 1.8% average engagement rate.
- 92.3K followers
- 20 posts / 30d
- 1.8% avg engagement
- — follower growth / 30d
The roast
Benjamin Bargetzi claims his startup MindGuard builds cognitive resilience for soldiers in active war zones, which is a bold choice for a guy whose primary combat experience is getting his LinkedIn comments to engage at a lower rate than a funeral home’s newsletter.
About Benjamin
As a neuroscientist and psychologist having worked on artificial intelligences, today I focus on one question:How can we build mental resilience for leadership under pressure?The shift in the AI age is fundamental, societies and organizations are sliding into a crisis mode, as do our brains. How can we use the merits of intelligence and neuroscience to protect our mind and leadership from fragilizing, and build resilience?I’ve worked across neuroscience, on artificial intelligences (Google/Amazon), and in global leadership environments (incl. WEF).Today I combine all these dots to impact mental resilience in societies and organizations.I am Founder & CEO of MindGuard a humanitarian project, building the the first human-centered, AI-supported psychological resilience ecosystem for soldiers in the Ukraine.And I share the insights of my work not only here: My keynotes are e.g. on:- Resilient Leadership, Focus & Decision-Making Under Pressure- Neuroscience and Mindsets - Cognitive Sovereignty in the fort the AI Age (protecting attention, reducing decision fatigue)- Mental Resilience for societies under disruptionIf you’re shaping policy, corporates, institutions, teams: let’s connect.
Highlights
- Top 1% in Switzerland — Ranked #1 of 276 creators
- Big Audience — 92,332 followers · top 1%
- High Impact — 1,673 avg engagements per post · top 1%
- Consistent Creator — 20 posts in 30d · top 5%
Recent posts
New York. Two weeks. Fundraising for MindGuard. Rooms full of people thinking about resilience, AI, mental health, and the future of human performance under pressure. And across every conversation, the same gap keeps appearing: Most people pour everything into their job. Almost no one works on the mind that runs it. Your job sharpens a skill. Working on yourself rewires the system that decides when that skill shows up, and how well, under how much pressure. Skills are the output. Your defaults are the operating system underneath them. The brain runs on prediction. It repeats what it ha
602 reactions · 174 comments · 26 reposts
During my flight to New York, looking out the window amused at the disparity of our plane’s speed and the slow-moving clouds, I thought back to a keynote last year inside the Sauber Factory in Switzerland, the technological nerve center of Formula 1. At Sauber Formula 1 cars are designed, built, and serviced. The Sauber Factory says everything in motor sports. I was invited to speak at a a closed-room gathering of 40 C-level leaders from across Europe. We all know, in Formula 1, the decisions of a millisecond decide races. In leadership, decisions of milliseconds decide markets. That is t
95 reactions · 96 comments · 4 reposts
Self-doubt is a trained reflex. Your brain rehearsed it so many times it now sounds like wisdom. Watch a six-year-old describe their future. Astronaut. Footballer. President. Sometimes all three in one breath, without flinching. Their brain simply hasn't built the threat model yet. Every time you reached for something and got laughed at, ignored, or rejected, your brain logged it. It learned that ambition carries a cost, and it started flagging the next big idea as danger before you could say it out loud. What feels like instinct is an old prediction, trained by your past and aimed at y
1.8K reactions · 259 comments · 127 reposts