Sounds of Eclat podcast artwork

PODCAST · business

Sounds of Eclat

Every person has a story they've never told in public.Not the polished version from a panel. Not the LinkedIn post. The real one. The decision made at the wrong moment, the feedback that stung, the habit that held everything together when nothing else did.At Eclat, we've had the privilege of sitting alongside some of Melbourne's most interesting people for the past three years. In our spaces, over coffee, between meetings. We've heard things that deserved a wider audience.This is us finally giving them one.The Sounds of Eclat is a conversation series hosted by Nick Maxwell and Lauren Blackwood. Each episode, we sit down with a founder, leader, athlete, creative, or operator and ask them to think out loud about what it actually takes to build something that lasts. Not the highlight reel. The substance underneath it.What you won't find here: hype, jargon, or easy answers.What you will find: people who've made hard decisions, learned from the w

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  1. 5

    Peter Lenton - The Identity Question

    A tip from Mick Turner. A quietly confident kid from Geelong. Thirty years of player management from the inside.Peter Lenton has been inside AFL player management for long enough to have watched it transform entirely and to have formed very clear views about what's been gained and what's been lost in that transformation. His current stable includes Zak Butters and Jack Ginnivan. His career started with a referral to a kid nobody else was chasing: Nick Maxwell.IN THIS EPISODEHow a tip from the late Mick Turner started a three-decade relationship with Nick Maxwell and the humble family that made it straightforward Why an accounting background became his point of difference attracting the players who could think past the bright lights The shift over 20 years in parental influence over player decisions Gambling, mental health and social media as the defining challenges for today's AFL players and knowing when to refer rather than fix The 'street fighters' versus the top-10 draft picks why players who've had to earn it tend to handle both the career and the end of it better The industry problem nobody wants to fix: agents signing kids too early, giving them everything, and leaving them with nothing when the dream doesn't arrive

  2. 4

    Samantha Freidon - Nothing That Felt Like Me

    A science degree. A brand agency. A personal health diagnosis. And an entirely new business born from a mobility aid store visit that left her cold.Samantha Freidon built Milkshake Creative on the somewhat unconventional foundation of a science degree nobody thought she'd ever use. The test-and-learn rigour of the scientific method, it turns out, is exactly the discipline most brand-building is missing. But it's Wayfarer her assistive technology startup, born from a personal health diagnosis at 27 and a morning spent in a mobility aid store finding nothing that felt like her that gives this conversation its second, deeper dimension. Mobility aids need to go through the same transformation glasses did. She intends to be the one who makes that happen.IN THIS EPISODEHow a 'loving redundancy ultimatum' from her now-fiancé pushed her to launch Milkshake Creative and how a science background became her biggest point of difference A personal health diagnosis at 27 that began stealing her mobility and the moment in a mobility aid store that sparked Wayfarer Why mobility aids need to go through the same shift glasses did: from medical equipment to a genuine category with choice and agency Two surprises about running a business she wasn't ready for sales and numbers and the shift from hiding to asking every question The brand strategy frustration she can't shake: a PDF that gathers digital dust rather than a belief that lives through the business Wayfarer's vision convertible systems, jewellery-inspired bracing, and a community for people who believe their disability is the least interesting thing about them

  3. 3

    Christian Welch - What Excellence Costs

    163 NRL games. Three season-ending injuries. One very clear sense of perspective.Christian Welch captained the Melbourne Storm, represented Queensland in State of Origin, and spent years in the company of some of the greatest players the game has produced. He sat down with us still processing the end of his career the bittersweet feeling of watching his mates in a Grand Final without him, the relief in his body, and the slow, dawning appreciation of what he was actually part of. This is a conversation about excellence what makes it, what it costs, and what it looks like from the inside. It's also about what happens after, and why Christian is as motivated now, as a first-year business analyst at Collingwood, as he ever was pulling on a Storm jersey.IN THIS EPISODEThe bittersweet reality of retiring while your team almost wins a premiership and finally being able to appreciate a 163-game career Two ACLs, a ruptured Achilles, and the perspective shift that came from sitting in hospital waiting rooms Nine years volunteering with Camp Quality and why he doesn't frame it as charity What made Cameron Smith, Billy Slater and Cooper Cronk exceptional and how the best players being the hardest workers shapes a whole culture Craig Bellamy's brilliance: the tradie work program, the unglamorous roles, and 20-plus years of staying flexible enough to evolve His passion for helping athletes build purpose before retirement and why the identity question matters more than the money

  4. 2

    Andrea McKenna - Slow Down

    Andrea McKenna didn't come from accounting she came from marketing, from operations, from a belief that how a firm makes people feel matters just as much as what it delivers. That outsider perspective is exactly how she and her husband Shane turned a dining table in Hawthorn East into a 60-person professional services firm without a business plan and without a blueprint. In this conversation, Andrea is direct and thoughtful on what it actually takes to build something real: the seasons of a life that made the myth of work-life balance irrelevant, the discipline of stepping back from thought before making a decision, and the hard-won clarity that comes from 21 years of building alongside your partner in every sense of the word.IN THIS EPISODEBuilding Aintree Group from two people on a dining table to a 60-person firm and why calling it 'the Group' from day one was a deliberate act of vision The early challenge of having a business manager caught between two founders who didn't always agree Why she abandoned work-life balance for a 'life in seasons' philosophy and what that actually looks like in practice How to get honest feedback as a senior leader, when almost no one gives it to you directly Knowing when to fire a client and why protecting your team sometimes means walking away from the fee Her advice to young people: slow down, find older and wiser voices, and stop measuring yourself against everyone else's timeline

  5. 1

    Tobias Raper - Buying Back Time

    A Brit in Melbourne. A matchmaker for knowledge. And a very clear view on what time is actually worth.Toby Raper built Networks X on a simple but precise premise: the right expert for a private equity firm asking about AI today is a completely different person to the right expert six months ago. Static databases miss that. Custom sourcing doesn't. He's refreshingly honest about what the early days of building a business actually feel like the cash flow shock of working with institutions that pay slowly, the unexpected anxiety that comes when things finally start going well, and the harder lesson of learning to be comfortable with stillness when your instinct is to keep moving. His motivation has shifted completely. Time, he says, is the most valuable resource there is and he's finally in a position to protect it.IN THIS EPISODEHow Networks X works as a matchmaker for knowledge and why custom sourcing beats a static expert database every time The two things nobody tells you when you start a business: cash flow timing and the anxiety of finally slowing down Leading with empathy across a global team why lifting from underneath beats pulling from above Early feedback about being too emotionally expressive and the self-awareness it took to stop neutralising himself The shift from chasing leaderboards in London to watching a 22-year-old realise they're going to be okay Victoria's productivity problem the red tape that makes it harder, not easier, to grow and hire locally

  6. 0

    The Sounds of Eclat

    Every person has a story they've never told in public.Not the polished version from a panel. Not the LinkedIn post. The real one. The decision made at the wrong moment, the feedback that stung, the habit that held everything together when nothing else did.At Eclat, we've had the privilege of sitting alongside some of Melbourne's most interesting people for the past three years. In our spaces, over coffee, between meetings. We've heard things that deserved a wider audience.This is us finally giving them one.The Sounds of Eclat is a conversation series hosted by Nick Maxwell and Lauren Blackwood. Each episode, we sit down with a founder, leader, athlete, creative, or operator and ask them to think out loud about what it actually takes to build something that lasts. Not the highlight reel. The substance underneath it.What you won't find here: hype, jargon, or easy answers.What you will find: people who've made hard decisions, learned from the wrong ones, and kept going anyway. Each one candid about the part of the journey that rarely makes the press release.This is The Sounds of Eclat.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Every person has a story they've never told in public.Not the polished version from a panel. Not the LinkedIn post. The real one. The decision made at the wrong moment, the feedback that stung, the habit that held everything together when nothing else did.At Eclat, we've had the privilege of sitting alongside some of Melbourne's most interesting people for the past three years. In our spaces, over coffee, between meetings. We've heard things that deserved a wider audience.This is us finally giving them one.The Sounds of Eclat is a conversation series hosted by Nick Maxwell and Lauren Blackwood. Each episode, we sit down with a founder, leader, athlete, creative, or operator and ask them to think out loud about what it actually takes to build something that lasts. Not the highlight reel. The substance underneath it.What you won't find here: hype, jargon, or easy answers.What you will find: people who've made hard decisions, learned from the w

HOSTED BY

Eclat

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Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Sounds of Eclat have?

Sounds of Eclat currently has 6 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Sounds of Eclat about?

Every person has a story they've never told in public.Not the polished version from a panel. Not the LinkedIn post. The real one. The decision made at the wrong moment, the feedback that stung, the habit that held everything together when nothing else did.At Eclat, we've had the privilege of...

How often does Sounds of Eclat release new episodes?

Sounds of Eclat has 6 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Sounds of Eclat?

You can listen to Sounds of Eclat 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 Sounds of Eclat?

Sounds of Eclat is created and hosted by Eclat.
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