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Founder Stories

Most startup podcasts are about the 1% of founders who build unicorns. This isn't that.  Founder Stories is a podcast for experienced corporate professionals who are seriously considering starting their own business — and want to hear from people who've actually done it. Hosted by James Green, Co-Founder and General Partner of DQ Ventures, each episode digs into the parts most founders gloss over. The financial reality. The risk to your family. The moments you question the decision. The reasons you'd still do it again.  If you're thinking about whether to leave the corporate world to build your own business, listen to this before you quit.

Publisher-supplied feed metadata · PodParley refreshed Jun 11, 2026 · Source feed

  1. 3

    How Deep Customer Knowledge Builds HR SaaS

    Caroline Sandqvist spent 15 years in HR before building CLVR Benefits — and her biggest advantage was simple: she was the customer she was building for.In this Founder Stories episode, James Green talks with Caroline about why understanding your customer that deeply changes everything. Because she'd lived the problem — employees who couldn't tailor benefits to their life stage, payroll teams drowning in cross-border admin — she knew exactly what to build and what mattered. Her "user interviews" started as conversations in her own HR network.They cover why being close to the problem is an unfair advantage, why a tech co-founder won't speed you up, and why selling comes before building. Find out more about Clvr Benefits or connect with Caroline on LinkedInTopics: Entrepreneurship, Corporate Exit, Customer Discovery, $10M Business, Leadership, Founder Journey, Startup, SaaS.Watch this episode on DQventures YouTube ChannelThinking about leaving your corporate job to start your own business?  Apply to DQventuresFollow James Green on LinkedIn Follow DQventures on LinkedIn

  2. 2

    A Failed Idea Built the Business He Quit Corporate For

    A 35-year career at Ford took Anoop Chaudhuri from the factory floor to Chief People Officer across four continents. Then he tried building his own venture — while still employed.In this Founder Stories episode, James Green and Anoop unpack common issues founders face when launching new businesses, illustrated by Anoop's first startup idea - My Hero In Me (which failed validation) and the consulting business he subsequently built, which allowed him to quit his corporate career.  Anoop has never considered My Hero In Me a failure — because he tested it before betting his career, and stayed employed throughout.An honest conversation on corporate exit, managing risk, and the founder journey for experienced professionals.Topics: Entrepreneurship · Corporate Exit · Leadership · Founder Journey · StartupKey Moments0:00 — Intro: a founder story that didn't go to plan, and why that's the point2:00 — From the Ford factory floor to Chief People Officer: 35 years across four continents9:00 — The origin of My Hero In Me and the gap Anoop saw13:00 — Why HR teams don't buy: pivoting from B2B SaaS to a bottom-up app19:00 — The R-rate experiment: 0.25 to 0.5, and the decision to park it22:00 — Was it failure? Why Anoop never saw it that way — and why he didn't quit32:00 — Validating excitement against what paying customers actually think38:00 — Leaving corporate on his own terms: planning runway, managing risk43:00 — The empty inbox: business development as a learned skill46:00 — "The first person you sell to is yourself"47:00 — Repeatability and referrals: how the lessons compounded into a real business50:00 — Niching down when your instinct is to stay a generalist54:00 — Anoop's pitch: clarity, care and commercial performanceWatch this episode on DQventures YouTube ChannelThinking about leaving your corporate job to start your own business?  Apply to DQventuresFollow James Green on LinkedIn Follow DQventures on LinkedIn

  3. 1

    Rachel Built a B2C Marketplace Without Raising a Dollar

    Rachel Crampton never dreamed of being an entrepreneur, but she built a B2C tech platform without raising a dollar from investors and while still working full-time.In this episode of Founder Stories, host James Green sits down with Rachel, founder of Juurnee, a marketplace connecting long-haul travellers with companions who will fly cheaply or freely in exchange for helping out on the journey.For senior professionals who have spotted a real problem in their industry but cannot afford to gamble their career on it, this is what de-risked entrepreneurship looks like.00:00  -  The viral Facebook post02:30 — Meet Rachel: a flight with three kids under four that started a business05:00 — Why incubators wouldn't work: the quit-your-job problem08:00 — Finding DQventures and what changed10:30 — Why B2C is hard, and how Rachel cleared that bar12:15 — Why she chose revenue over raising money14:30 — The pivot: from commission to lifetime subscriptions16:30 — The Google Sheet MVP that taught her the business20:00 — From manual service to real tech platform22:30 — How a Channel 7 feature broke her Slack26:30 — Choosing the right developer on a real budget (meet Toby at Blue Mongoose)34:30 — The biggest learning: an MBA on steroids36:30 — Would she do it all again?37:30 — Outro and where to find more episodesFind out more about JuurneeFollow Rachel on LinkedInWatch this episode on DQventures YouTube ChannelThinking about leaving your corporate job to start your own business?  Apply to DQventuresFollow James Green on LinkedIn Follow DQventures on LinkedIn

  4. 0

    The Risk of Starting a Business vs The Risk of Never Trying

    Rob Bryson left a 20-year career to build a recruitment agency in Asia.  He still earns less than he did before he made the leap, and he still wouldn't change it for a second.If you're a senior professional toying with the idea of going out on your own, this is the conversation you don't hear on startup podcasts.In Episode 01 of Founder Stories, James Green, co-founder and General Partner at DQventures sits down with Rob Bryson, founder of WeNetwork.  WeNetwork is a recruitment business now operating across seven countries in Asia Pacific and was DQventures first portfolio company. Rob spent over two decades in senior roles at Michael Page and Robert Walters, transforming Robert Walters' Indonesia business into a 50-person, multi-million dollar operation. Then, at the peak of his corporate career, he resigned.This episode is for experienced corporate professionals — VPs, directors, country leads — who feel the pull of entrepreneurship but are worried about the risk.  Rob and James cover the stuff most entrepreneurship podcasts skip: timing (it's never right), the financial reality of leaving a high salary, the risk to your family and your relationship and why 45-year-old founders outperform 25-year-olds.Rob is candid about the moments he questioned the decision, the bad hires, the loneliness of running a service business, and what no one tells you before you resign.  He's equally candid on why he'd do the same thing all over again and what his journey has taught him about what it really takes to build a multi-million dollar business.0:00 — "I remember shaking when I resigned"2:30 — For experienced professionals thinking about quitting corporate4:00 — Why timing is never right to start a business8:00 — The real financial risk of building a startup12:00 — Why startups won't make you rich (and what will)16:00 — Are you actually cut out for entrepreneurship?21:00 — The risk to your family no one talks about24:00 — Why experienced founders outperform young ones28:00 — An honest review of working with DQventuresFind out more about WeNetworkFollow Rob on LinkedInWatch this episode on DQventures YouTube ChannelThinking about leaving your corporate job to start your own business?  Apply to DQventuresFollow James Green on LinkedIn Follow DQventures on LinkedIn

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Most startup podcasts are about the 1% of founders who build unicorns. This isn't that.  Founder Stories is a podcast for experienced corporate professionals who are seriously considering starting their own business — and want to hear from people who've actually done it. Hosted by James Green, Co-Founder and General Partner of DQ Ventures, each episode digs into the parts most founders gloss over. The financial reality. The risk to your family. The moments you question the decision. The reasons you'd still do it again.  If you're thinking about whether to leave the corporate world to build your own business, listen to this before you quit.

HOSTED BY

DQventures

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Founder Stories have?

Founder Stories currently has 4 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Founder Stories about?

Most startup podcasts are about the 1% of founders who build unicorns. This isn't that.  Founder Stories is a podcast for experienced corporate professionals who are seriously considering starting their own business — and want to hear from people who've actually done it. Hosted by James Green,...

How often does Founder Stories release new episodes?

Founder Stories has 4 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Founder Stories?

You can listen to Founder Stories on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts Founder Stories?

Founder Stories is created and hosted by DQventures.
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