From Isolation to Hustle – Grit Personified – Mad Mind Studios

Promotional graphic for the podcast "An Agency Story." The text reads: “New Episode: From Isolation to Hustle – Grit Personified” “An Agency Story” “Hosted by Russel Dubree” “With Guest Omid Mousaei” “Founder of Mad Mind Studios” The background features a stylized image of a vintage radio. In the bottom left corner is a headshot of Omid Mousaei, smiling and wearing a light green shirt.
What drives someone to walk into businesses cold with nothing but a flyer and a vision? For Omid Mousaei, it wasn’t ambition. It was necessity. In this episode of An Agency Story, the founder of Mad Mind Studios reveals how surviving as a young immigrant shaped his relentless approach to business and why embracing discomfort has been his most powerful creative tool.

Company: Mad Mind Studios

Guests: Omid Mousaei

Year Started: 2008

Employees: 11-25

Omid Mousaei built his with nothing but a promise to himself and his family that he would figure it out. In the latest episode, Omid shares how he went from a teenager who didn’t speak a word of English to leading a full-service creative agency in Los Angeles.This story is a lesson in what happens when you lean into uncertainty, ditch the templates, and create value that actually connects.

You can listen to this episode of An Agency Story on your favorite podcast app:

 

Listen on Spotify

Episode Summary

Omid Mousaei is the founder of Mad Mind Studios, a branding and web design agency based in Los Angeles. With over 15 years in business, he’s built a reputation for producing bold creative backed by strategic thinking. But his path wasn’t conventional.

Episode Highlights:

  • Why Omid ditched templates early on and how that shaped his agency’s identity
  • How his immigrant experience created a mindset of resourcefulness and action
  • The role of design as utility, not art
  • Why strategy, not AI, is what still matters most

Key Takeaways and Lessons

The Power of a ‘Have To’ Mindset
When there’s no fallback plan, your only option is to make it work. Omid’s “no backup plan” mentality didn’t just push him forward, it defined his business decisions. This kind of pressure can be a catalyst for resourcefulness, risk-taking, and long-term conviction.

Design Is Only as Good as Its Impact
Omid rethinks traditional design as more than aesthetic…it’s a tool for solving real problems. A brochure that lands in the trash is just clutter. A flyer that sparks action? That’s value. His advice: stop creating for approval, and start creating for outcomes.

Team Building Isn’t About Filling Seats
Hiring wasn’t about replacing hours for Omid, it was about extending capability. His first hires were people who could do what he couldn’t, especially in packaging and development. His growth came not from scaling fast, but from choosing the right people to add expertise and trust.

AI Can’t Replace Strategy
Omid welcomes AI but doesn’t confuse it for creative thinking. While it can save time, it can’t position your brand, make emotional connections, or challenge assumptions. For agencies, the real opportunity is integrating AI into a human-led strategy, not using it as a crutch.

Never Get Comfortable
Even as his business matured, Omid stayed in “startup mode”, not by necessity, but by choice. He credits constant discomfort as the fuel for new ideas and the reason his agency remains creatively relevant in an industry that quickly stagnates.

 

Enjoyed this episode?

Subscribe to An Agency Story on your favorite podcast app for more real stories from agency owners. Loved what you heard? Leave a review or share this episode with someone building their agency from the ground up.

Listen to other episodes like this one…