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A roundup of shows driving career growth across business, finance, and culture.
The podcast landscape has never had more voices, but finding the ones that actually move the needle takes more than scrolling a top charts list. For Latino professionals navigating corporate America, building companies, or simply trying to stay sharp, the right show can function as a mentor, a mirror, and a masterclass all at once.
Here are five podcasts worth adding to your rotation right now.
The Latino Majority
Host: Pedro A. Guerrero
Listen on: Spotify | Apple | TLM
Pedro A. Guerrero, publisher of Hispanic Executive, built The Latino Majority on a straightforward premise: the stories of Latino leaders deserve the same platform and rigor that mainstream business media gives everyone else. Six seasons in, the podcast has delivered on that promise.
Past guests include then-Vice President Kamala Harris, who joined the show to discuss the role of Latino communities in shaping the future of the country; Carla Vernón, the Princeton alum who built her brand at General Mills before stepping into broader executive leadership; David Ortiz, who turned a Hall of Fame baseball career into a portfolio of business ventures. Every episode ends with the same question: what is the title of the story of Latinos in America today? The answers are as varied as the guests themselves.
Corporate Cafecito
Hosts: Nallely Suárez Gass & Carlos Butler Vale
Listen on: Spotify | Apple
Corporate Cafecito is the podcast for the professional who was the first in their family to navigate corporate America, and who has felt the weight of that distinction every day since. Founded in 2022 by Nallely Suárez Gass, a first-generation college graduate and strategist with more than two decades of corporate experience.
The format is conversational and grounded, think of it as the candid debrief you wished you could have with a senior mentor who actually understands where you come from. Topics range from navigating office politics without losing yourself, to the real cost of burnout, to how AI is reshaping the job market for Latine professionals.
Yo Quiero Dinero
Host: Jannese Torres
Listen on: Spotify | Apple
Jannese Torres started Yo Quiero Dinero after getting fired at 25 and realizing that the personal finance advice she was finding online was not built for someone with her background. The podcast she built in response, now more than 300 episodes in, has become the go-to English-language personal finance platform for Latinas.
Torres covers the full range: investing, entrepreneurship, passive income, and the psychological relationship with money that shapes every financial decision. For Latino professionals at any income level, Yo Quiero Dinero offers something rare: financial fluency without condescension.
A La Latina
Hosts: Claudia Romo Edelman & Cynthia Kleinbaum Milner
Listen on: Spotify | Apple
The statistics that launched A La Latina are still striking: Latinas represent 9% of the U.S. population but hold just 2% of senior executive roles. Claudia Romo Edelman, founder of the We Are All Human Foundation and a former senior leader at UNICEF, the World Economic Forum, and the United Nations, built this podcast to close that gap one conversation at a time.
A La Latina brings in some of the most senior Latinas in Fortune 500 companies for detailed, no-platitude conversations about how they got there and what they’ve learned. Co-host Cynthia Kleinbaum Milner, an executive with more than two decades of experience in fintech and retail, brings her own leadership lens to each episode.
If you’re navigating the upper floors of corporate America, or building toward them, this is essential listening.
How I Built This (Bonus Pick)
Host: Guy Raz
Listen on: Spotify | Apple
How I Built This is not a Latino podcast. But for any professional who leads, builds, or aspires to do either, it belongs in the rotation. Guy Raz has spent nearly a decade interviewing the founders of the world’s most recognized brands about how they actually built them, not the polished version, but the doubt, the near-failure, the single decision that changed everything.
The lessons are universal. The application is personal.