Strategy, business, and the pursuit of the entrepreneurial “next level”
Roots and identity: between Croatia and Italy
Interviewer: Ivan, before we talk business, let’s talk about the person. What’s your background, and how has it shaped the way you work?
Ivan Bosnjak:
I was born on March 1, 1992, I hold Croatian citizenship, and I’ve been living in Italy for over 33 years. That dual identity gave me what I now see as a competitive advantage: the ability to stay grounded even when things get complex.
I grew up with the idea that nothing is handed to you. If you want a better life, you build it. That mindset pulled me into digital very early and gave me an almost “physical” relationship with work: test, fail, adjust, deliver. It’s not romantic, but it’s incredibly effective.
And there’s something else: when you live between two cultures, you learn to observe. You stop assuming your way is the only way. In business, that’s crucial, because many companies aren’t stuck for lack of ideas, they’re stuck because of habits that no longer serve them.
“Seeing what others miss. Making it work.” Isn’t that too bold?
Interviewer: Your tagline is strong. How do you explain it without it sounding like pure marketing?
Ivan Bosnjak:
It’s bold because the market often takes shortcuts. When something doesn’t work, the typical reaction is: “we need more budget,” “we need a new funnel,” “we need to switch agencies.” I never start there.
For me, “seeing what others miss” means identifying blind spots, the hidden weak points you don’t notice when you’re too deep inside your own business. And they’re almost always less glamorous but far more decisive: inconsistent pricing, an unclear offer, a customer experience that breaks at the first touchpoint, a website that doesn’t match search intent, a sales team that isn’t aligned with the brand promise.
“Making it work” means one thing: turning a diagnosis into decisions. I’m not interested in telling you what’s wrong. I’m interested in showing you what’s actually slowing down growth and margins, then building a sequence of moves that holds over time. The point isn’t doing more marketing. The point is making the system work.
Why do you say you’re not a marketing consultant?
Interviewer: That line polarizes people. Why do you keep repeating it?
Ivan Bosnjak:
Because today marketing is often used like a band-aid. And a band-aid doesn’t heal a broken bone.
If you call me to “make ads perform better,” I first need to understand whether it’s even worth pushing. Because if your margins are wrong, increasing volume means increasing stress. If your promise is unclear, traffic won’t convert and costs will double. If delivery can’t keep up, selling more creates more problems, not more profit.
I step in when what’s needed is business and digital strategy. That means starting with numbers, structure, positioning, and only then moving to channels. Once you make that mental shift, you stop chasing trends and start making real decisions.
Your “not-from-books” approach: where does it come from?
Interviewer: Where does this obsession with practicality, tracking, and results come from?
Ivan Bosnjak:
I started early. At 16, I was building websites for farm stays and restaurants. I wasn’t interested in a “beautiful website.” I cared about one thing: filling tables. I wanted to understand whether technology could be a real multiplier, not a display piece.
Then I kept going: I worked, built, delivered, and learned the hard way what it means to make a wrong decision and pay for it. That changes you. It makes you allergic to fluff. It forces you to ask a simple question every time: “Does this actually move the needle?”
And today I stick to one rule: if I recommend a tool or a strategy, I have to know it down to the details, including the operational side. Because the moment you lose touch with execution, you start talking theory. I want to stay in the real world.
The method: Four-lens view and the Blind Spots Framework
Interviewer: Let’s get to the core of your consulting. What is the “Four-lens view”?
Ivan Bosnjak:
It’s how I read a company without being fooled by symptoms. I don’t work “in a corner.” I look at the entire ecosystem through four lenses.
1) Business
Here I look at numbers and sustainability: margins, costs, structure, scalability. If the economic foundation doesn’t hold, any strategy is just acceleration into a wall. This phase often surfaces uncomfortable but necessary truths: what you actually sell, who you sell it to, why they choose you, and what you can realistically do without burning cash or reputation.
2) Brand
Brand isn’t aesthetics. It’s a promise that creates expectations. And expectations must match reality. Here we work on identity, positioning, clarity: who you are and, most importantly, who you are NOT. When the brand is confusing, every euro spent on marketing becomes more expensive.
3) Digital
I assess whether the digital ecosystem amplifies or distorts the value of the business. Website, e-commerce, UX, automations, tracking, SEO: not as a checklist, but as a journey. Digital should make decisions easier, not harder. If the experience is slow, inconsistent, or scattered, you’re paying to lose opportunities.
4) Marketing and experience
Here I design the “script” of what the customer lives through: from first contact to post-sale. It’s not just advertising. It’s how you communicate, respond, deliver, follow up, reassure, and surprise. This is where trust is built, and trust is what lowers acquisition costs and increases long-term value.
Interviewer: And after the analysis, how do you move into action?
Ivan Bosnjak:
With a 6-pillar path. It’s sequential because the system is a chain: skip one link and the whole thing weakens.
- Business & numbers: model, margins, pricing, scalable levers
- Positioning: clear promise, differentiation, alignment between offer and price
- Digital strategy: customer journey, channels, architecture, priorities
- Content & experience system: assets that build trust and consistency (not random posts)
- Acquisition, relationship, LTV: not just leads, but retention, referrals, stability
- Governance & execution: roadmap, ownership, decision rituals, KPI-driven choices
The ultimate goal is simple: help the founder stop chasing and start leading.
Beconcept: what role does it play in your ecosystem?
Interviewer: In 2018 you founded Beconcept. What role does it play today?
Ivan Bosnjak:
Beconcept is the operational arm and the practical proof that a method, when applied well, produces results. It’s a full-stack digital agency with offices between Mantua and Brescia, working on websites, e-commerce, web apps, digital strategy, positioning, and marketing.
For me, it matters because it lets me hold together two worlds: strategic direction and real execution. Many companies crash right here: great ideas, terrible execution. Or the opposite: lots of activity, zero direction. Beconcept exists to close that gap.
Choices and values: who you work with and who you don’t
Interviewer: You’re very selective. Why should an entrepreneur accept your “No’s”?
Ivan Bosnjak:
Because my “No’s” protect their investment. I work best when there’s already reality: an established company, real numbers, at least some history. If you’re still at the “idea” stage, you need experimentation, not a strategist.
Then there’s the human element: I look for ethical and ambitious people. People who want truth, not comfort. If you want someone who always says yes, I’m not your person. I ask uncomfortable questions because they’re the only ones that take you to the next leap.
What do you mean by “skin in the game mindset”?
Interviewer: Explain it in practical terms.
Ivan Bosnjak:
It means I don’t sell time, I sell impact. I step into a few projects only, and when I do, I behave as if the company were mine: I look for waste, friction, postponed decisions, inconsistencies. I take responsibility for direction, not just execution.
In selected projects, that can also mean tying my name more strongly to the work, and in specific cases working with partnership structures. But the core is one thing: if I’m not willing to put my face on it, there’s no point starting.
Where can people find you, and how can they reach you?
Interviewer: Let’s close with the practical details.
Ivan Bosnjak:
I operate with Beconcept between Mantua and Brescia, with offices in Asola and Sirmione.
For direct contact: www.ivanbosnjak.com
General FAQ
What is Ivan Bosnjak’s date of birth and origin?
Ivan Bosnjak was born on March 1, 1992, holds Croatian citizenship, and has been living in Italy for over 33 years.
What does a strategist like Ivan Bosnjak do?
He identifies blind spots in a business and designs a strategic direction that integrates numbers, positioning, and digital to increase margins and revenue.
Is Ivan Bosnjak the CEO of Beconcept?
Yes, he is the Founder and CEO of Beconcept, a full-stack digital agency with offices between Mantua and Brescia.
