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PODCAST · business

Founders Journey Podcast

Welcome to Founders Journey, a podcast that explores the lives that shape remarkable builders. Each episode features a personal conversation with an entrepreneur who shares early dreams, first jobs, key turning points, lessons from setbacks, and the steady wins that shaped their path. If you want real stories about what forms a founder and what fuels a relentless drive to build, this podcast offers it each week.

  1. 28

    Shuvam Bhaumik on Immigrant Roots Career Risk and Real World Skills

    We sat down with Shuvam Bhaumik to trace the early forces that shaped his career path. He grew up in Brooklyn between Borough Park and Bay Ridge. So, he learned to adapt early. At first, he lived inside a largely Hasidic Jewish neighborhood. Later, he moved into a more mixed part of Brooklyn. Because of that shift, he saw how culture, community, and identity can shape a person. He also shared how his parents came from India, moved through Libya, and built a life in New York. They didn’t frame their story as struggle. Instead, they saw America as an upgrade. That view shaped how he thinks about gratitude, work, and a steady career path.How Bhaumik found directionSchool didn’t grab him in the usual way, yet curiosity always did. He said he liked learning, but not the way schools taught it. Then golf changed his career path in an unexpected way. A high school teacher pulled him onto the golf team, and that opened a door. Soon after, a business class called Virtual Enterprise changed how he saw work. He learned that business could offer more than a standard job. He could create, lead, sell, and think for himself. That mattered. He earned a golf scholarship to Long Island University, but the experience felt rigid. So, he started questioning whether that career path still fit. Eventually, a CEO in finance offered him a chance to work. He took it, even though the move came with risk, tension, and family fallout.What Shuvam learned at workOnce he entered finance, the classroom gave way to real experience. He learned sales, cold calling, product knowledge, and how to read people. As a result, his career path became practical and self-directed. He moved from New York to the Boston area and kept building in wealth management. He later joined Morgan Stanley, yet he realized the big corporate structure limited his voice. Meanwhile, golf kept opening relationships and opportunities. That led him toward a family office role with an international client. Throughout the conversation, one theme stayed clear. Grades matter, but only to a point. He argued that schools should teach conflict resolution, communication, and sales with more urgency. Those skills shape a stronger career path because they prepare people for real work. That final point gives this episode its edge. We’re not just talking about jobs. We’re talking about judgment, resilience, and how people build a useful career path over time.Chapters00:00 Why GPA matters less than real world skills00:01:13 Growing up in Borough Park and Bay Ridge00:09:13 Immigrant parents and the move from India00:16:30 What neighbors and community used to mean00:23:17 School struggles and an early suspension story00:27:20 How golf changed his future in high school00:31:32 The business class that shaped his direction00:39:30 Golf scholarship lessons and leaving college00:48:02 When his parents learned he left school00:55:43 Why schools should teach sales and conflict skills

  2. 27

    Howard Lim on Dyslexia Design and Building Businesses That Last

    Howard Lim takes us back to Santa Barbara, where he grew up with eight siblings after being born in Manitoba. He describes a loud, active home, yet he also explains how shy he felt as a kid. School often bored him. However, art gave him focus early. At five, finger painting showed him a path. Soon, teachers noticed his unusual sense of perspective and pushed his work forward. That early gift shaped his identity, and it also started his habit of creative problem solving.Lessons Howard Carried ForwardAs the conversation moves into school and college, Howard explains how dyslexia affected the way he learned. For years, he thought something was wrong. Later, he discovered that the same wiring also sharpened his creativity. That insight changed how he viewed himself. Instead of forcing himself into a narrow system, he learned to trust creative problem solving. He also shares a key moment with his parents. His mother wanted stability. His father said, “Do what you love.” That support pushed him toward design, and then toward Cal Poly, where he got serious about his work.Risk Builds RangeWe also get into surfing, free climbing, and the drive to test limits. Howard connects those experiences to entrepreneurship in a direct way. For him, both require practice, instinct, and commitment under pressure. He says hesitation can ruin the moment, whether you’re on a wave or building a company. That mindset runs through the entire episode. He keeps pushing to see what’s possible, not to impress others, but to prove it to himself. As a result, creative problem solving becomes less of a tactic and more of a personal standard.Building Brands the Howard WayFrom there, Howard walks through his early career, his move into advanced computer based design, and the launch of How Studios, now How Creative. He explains how he saw potential in the Macintosh long before most companies understood it. Then he used that edge to help create work tied to DVDs, motion graphics, the web, and major brand systems. He didn’t become an entrepreneur because it sounded exciting. Instead, he saw broken systems and believed he could build better ones. That belief came from creative problem solving, and it stayed central as his company grew.Systems That Make Growth RealThe final stretch shifts into AI, pricing, failure, and why most businesses stall. Howard argues that many founders focus too much on revenue and not enough on business design. He talks about systems, repeat business, brand clarity, and the need to build something that doesn’t depend on the founder forever. He also explains how AI fits into that work. In his view, great tools still need skilled direction. So the real advantage comes from strong thinking, clear language, and creative problem solving. By the end, this episode offers a grounded lesson in resilience, structure, and long term growth.More From Howard Limhttps://www.howcreative.com/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/howcreative/ Chapters00:00 Opening story and intentional choices01:12 Growing up with eight siblings04:13 Art became Howard’s early outlet07:05 Dyslexia changed how he learned11:35 Choosing design over safer careers17:48 Early agency work and starting out29:45 Surfing risk and entrepreneurship39:14 Building with tech before others did45:26 AI as the next major shift53:08 Failure systems and why businesses stall

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    Michelle Marks on Building a Creative Business With Sales and Staying Power

    We sit down with Michelle Marks to trace the path from Los Angeles to New York. She shares a childhood shaped by freedom, creativity, and strong working parents. That early independence mattered. It taught her to solve problems, trust herself, and keep moving. You’ll hear how art school gave her direction, but also demanded real discipline. That foundation shaped her entrepreneur mindset. It also showed her that talent matters less without effort.From design training to business ownership with MichelleMichelle explains how she entered the design world with a narrow skill set and a clear goal. She didn’t chase vague ambition. Instead, she followed work that felt exciting and specific. After college, she moved to New York, took the job available, and learned fast. That choice opened the next door.Then the dot com era created a bigger turning point. She and two colleagues saw a bad direction ahead, so they acted. They launched their firm with client support, low overhead, and strong timing. Their entrepreneur mindset came from action, not theory. They didn’t wait for certainty. They built with what they had.Why Marks believes sales is part of the jobA major lesson in this episode centers on sales. Michelle says great work alone won’t make the phone ring. That realization changed her role in the company and pushed her into business development. She learned by trying, adjusting, and trying again. So this part of the conversation feels especially useful for founders.Her approach isn’t loud or forced. It’s consultative, direct, and grounded in expertise. That entrepreneur mindset helped her turn creative skill into steady business. It also helped her build trust instead of chasing quick wins.Values, family, and the long gameMichelle also talks about motherhood, leadership, and twenty five years with partners. That part stands out because it stays practical. She explains how shared values made hard decisions easier and kept conflict low. Meanwhile, family shaped how she structured her time and chose her role. She wanted flexibility, but she also wanted responsibility.That balance runs through the whole episode. Her entrepreneur mindset includes learning, adapting, and staying present. In the end, her advice is simple and strong. Don’t wait until you know everything. Start, learn, and let each experience sharpen your entrepreneur mindset.More From Michelle Markshttps://www.ideasonpurpose.com/about/people/michelle-m-marks/Chapters00:00 Welcome and Michelle Marks introduction04:10 Growing up in Los Angeles and early independence08:45 Creative interests and the first pull toward art13:20 Mentors teachers and learning discipline18:35 Choosing art school and building a work ethic24:10 Moving to New York and taking the first job30:40 Leaving agency life to start her own business39:15 Why sales matters for creative entrepreneurs47:05 Motherhood leadership and balancing priorities55:20 Partnership values AI and advice for founders

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    Kevin Siskar on Founder Support Work Ethic and Building Through Loss

    We sat down with Kevin Siskar to trace the experiences that shaped how he leads. He grew up in Buffalo, started working young, and learned through real jobs. He mowed lawns, washed dishes, scrubbed toilets, and bartended. Those roles showed him different sides of society early. They also built the work ethic he still values today.He also spent years as a volunteer fireman and EMT. That service gave him a direct way to help people. However, it also pushed him to ask a bigger question. How could he create impact beyond one call at a time? That question later became the foundation of his view on founder support.What shaped Kevin’s view of trustKevin talked openly about loss, family, and the shift that came after his father died in college. That moment changed how he saw time, ambition, and responsibility. As a result, he started thinking more seriously about meaning and scale. He wanted his work to matter, and he wanted to help people in a larger way.That thinking led him toward startups and venture capital. He became fascinated by founders who build products for thousands or millions of users. So instead of solving one problem alone, he focused on founder support as a way to help more people indirectly. He also shared how empathy, trust, and strong relationships shaped his decisions. Those values appear throughout his story, from childhood through company building.Lessons we took from Siskar’s founder playbookOne of the strongest lessons in this episode is that founders need deep contact with the problem. Kevin believes founder market fit comes before product market fit. In other words, the founder needs firsthand knowledge before handing work off. He argues that early sales, feedback loops, and customer conversations can’t be outsourced too soon.We also explored his path through Founder Institute, startup operations, investing, and building his current company. Along the way, he kept returning to the same idea. Great work starts with curiosity, resilience, and founder support. He explained why fundraising is often a network problem, not only a pitch problem. That insight shaped the product he builds now.Practical lessons on failure and persistenceThis conversation also stands out because it stays practical. Kevin shares what failure teaches, why other founders matter, and how to stay grounded when the pressure builds. He talks about balancing work with family, making time for dinner, and teaching his kids simple business lessons. Because of that, this episode isn’t only about startups. It’s about character, perspective, and the habits that make founder support meaningful over time.By the end, we came away with a clear message. Build with purpose, learn from hard moments, and understand the systems around you. Then use that knowledge to serve people well. That’s the version of founder support Kevin keeps chasing, and it’s the thread that ties this whole conversation together.More from Kevinhttps://www.Siskar.cohttps://www.linkedin.com/in/kevinsiskar/Chapters00:00 Why Kevin chose startups to create wider impact01:16 Growing up in Buffalo and starting work young08:52 Catholic school trust empathy and character12:25 Sports teamwork and lessons from competition18:49 Firefighting EMT work and helping people27:27 College loss and the search for bigger impact29:34 Discovering venture capital and startup media39:10 Founder Institute startup investing and scale43:29 Building a fundraising platform through warm intros55:00 Advice on founders community family and time

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    How Ravi Vinayak Built a Global Distribution Career After Science

    We sat down with Ravi Vinayak to trace a career that changed shape many times. He grew up in Mumbai, studied chemistry, and moved to Canada for a PhD. Along the way, he learned how discipline, education, and persistence could create options. Yet he also saw that career growth rarely follows a straight line. That perspective shaped his later work in global distribution.Why Dr Ravi Vinayak Left the LabRavi spent years in research, publishing papers and building technical depth. Then he chose a different path. He moved from R&D into marketing, sales, and business development. That shift gave him a broader view of how companies grow. It also prepared him for work in global distribution by combining science knowledge with commercial judgment.What Ravi learned from starting overHis next chapter started after a layoff. Instead of returning to the lab, he built a consulting business. He used his contacts in Japan, Korea, and other markets to help companies enter the United States. He chose retainer agreements because they created steady income. That decision shows how global distribution often depends on structure, trust, and patience.A health setback that changed Ravi Vinayak againLater, Ravi faced serious knee pain after years of running. He tried several options before a chiropractor used cold laser treatment. The relief pushed him to study the technology and share it overseas. He trained as a laser technician, brought the device to India, and helped people understand the treatment. That work became another lesson in global distribution and partner selection.Building the right partnerships with RaviToday, Ravi focuses on connecting companies with the right channel and distribution partners across many countries. He explained that early failures taught him to choose partners more carefully. He also shared how running helped lower stress, clear his mind, and support consistent work. Above all, this conversation shows that global distribution is really about judgment, relationships, and steady execution.Ravi also reflects on ambition, failure, and work life balance. He urges younger founders to stay brave, keep their goals clear, and keep moving after setbacks. His story gives a practical look at career reinvention, not theory. We think you’ll come away with useful lessons on decision making, resilience, and long term growth from a life built across science and business.More from Dr. Ravi Vinayakhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/rvinayak/https://www.ventac-partners.com/ Chapters00:00 Welcome to Ravi Vinayak's journey 01:12 Growing up in Mumbai and family values 06:39 Why Ravi chose chemistry in college 13:03 Moving to Canada for a chemistry PhD 16:28 Postdocs at ICI and Caltech 20:29 From R&D to business development 23:17 Layoff lessons and consulting launch 32:17 Knee pain and cold laser discovery 41:24 How Ravi finds global channel partners 47:03 Advice on failure ambition and balance

  6. 23

    Andy Cwik on Self Education Risk and the Real Founder Journey

    Andy Cwik starts with a small town upbringing and a constant pull toward independence. His parents wanted stability and benefits, yet he felt boxed in by large companies. That tension shaped his choices early and stayed with him for years. As a result, this founder journey begins with confusion, friction, and a strong instinct to build a different path.How Andy Cwik learned through work and setbacksHe talks through college, dropping out, and later returning to study computer science at night. He also explains how early exposure to computers sparked his curiosity, even before he knew where it could lead. That founder journey gains momentum when he enters smaller teams, solves practical problems, and starts seeing startups from the inside. Then failure sharpens his thinking. He describes losing money in an early business and later reframing that loss as education instead of defeat. That shift matters because it turns pain into a useful lesson.What Andy sees in entrepreneurship nowLater, Andy Cwik explains how Founders Institute helped him understand the gap between an idea and a real company. He learned from mentors, repeated exposure, and constant feedback. Because of that, the founder journey becomes less about guessing and more about pattern recognition. He also shares how his later startup thinking evolved around data silos, discovery, and the challenge of building products people will actually adopt. Even so, he stays realistic. He knows building the product isn't always the hardest part. Getting traction often is.A practical view of risk learning and growthThis conversation stands out because Andy doesn't romanticize failure. Instead, he treats it as part of the work. He argues that people grow by trying hard things and surviving the misses. That idea gives the founder journey its core lesson. Risk tolerance can grow. Perspective can improve. Experience can replace fear. He also makes a strong case for self-education. Books, videos, mentors, and history all matter. In the end, the founder journey here isn't about shortcuts. It's about learning faster, thinking clearly, and staying in motion long enough to understand the game.More From Andyhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/andy-cwikhttps://x.com/andrewcwikhttps://hubub.me Chapters00:00 Why big companies never fit01:05 Growing up in small town Illinois09:54 School boredom and late diagnosis13:26 College confusion and career direction17:34 Commodore 64 and computer science28:00 Startup lessons and Founders Institute37:00 Why failure can be paid education41:09 Data silos and the super app idea50:17 How entrepreneurs should view failure59:10 Best books and self education advice

  7. 22

    How John Bucher Turned Storytelling Into a Career in Film

    John Bucher grew up in East Texas with limited resources and a narrow view of success. Every Friday, his family rented ten movies for ten dollars. As a result, he unknowingly trained for a future in storytelling. However, he never imagined that film or television could become a career.At first, success looked like a job at the local tire factory. He believed that path would lead to a car, marriage, and a house. Yet even then, small moments hinted at something bigger.A Sixth Grade Interview That Changed Buchers DirectionIn sixth grade, John interviewed the owner of a local newspaper. Consequently, that assignment turned into a six year role taking sports scores. Later, he even handled obituaries.He planned to study journalism. However, a veteran editor warned him not to enter the newspaper business. Therefore, John walked away from his original plan and started over.John Bucher and the Accidental Film CareerAfter high school, John pursued music. He later enrolled in a recording arts program. Instead, he discovered the program focused on television and film. Although embarrassed, he stayed.Within weeks, he realized he had talent in film production. That mistake launched his career in entertainment. He completed both a bachelors and masters degree in film and television production.Early Entrepreneurship Lessons from Buchers Record LabelWhile freelancing in video, John launched a record label at nineteen. He opened a business account and committed to the idea. However, he never produced a single record.Although the venture failed, it taught him resilience. As a result, he started a video production side business. Soon after, he launched a book publishing company. That company still operates today.Building an Ecosystem Around Storytelling with John BucherOver time, John stopped thinking in job titles. Instead, he built an ecosystem centered on storytelling. He taught at colleges for stability while running multiple ventures.He learned to sell expertise rather than time. Therefore, he leveraged contractors to expand capacity. In addition, he adopted a habit of quitting something every week. This practice kept his ecosystem clear and focused.The Hero Journey and Following Your BlistersJohn later pursued a PhD in mythology and depth psychology. Through that process, he deepened his understanding of the Hero Journey. Eventually, he became Executive Director of the Joseph Campbell Foundation.He explains that following your bliss means committing to the hardest meaningful work. Moreover, he emphasizes showing up daily. In the end, entrepreneurship requires consistency more than inspiration.If you want to understand how storytelling shapes business and life, this conversation delivers practical insight.More From John Bucherhttps://www.tellingabetterstory.comChapters00:00 Growing Up in East Texas and Video Stores 05:09 Early Dreams of the Tire Factory Path 11:39 Sixth Grade Newspaper Interview Breakthrough 19:17 Discovering Film by Accident in College 23:08 First Failed Record Label Business 25:55 Launching a Book Publishing Company 33:58 Selling Expertise Instead of Time 40:31 Building a Business Ecosystem Model 46:33 The Hero Journey Explained for Entrepreneurs 52:24 Why Showing Up Daily Builds Success

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    Redefining Success and Finding Passion in Business with Skip Cohen

    We sit down with Skip Cohen to unpack his journey from Ohio to leadership in photography. He grew up in Painesville, Ohio, just east of Cleveland. His childhood centered on independence, responsibility, and strong family values. Kids stayed outside until the streetlights came on. Doors stayed unlocked.However, his biggest lesson is not about photography. It is about defining success. Early in life, many people measure success by income and growth. As you get older, that definition changes. He believes success means waking up excited about the day ahead. That shift in thinking shaped every decision he made.Early Lessons That Shaped Skip CohenIn high school, he stayed active in student leadership and extracurriculars. Yet he struggled academically when classes did not interest him. He entered Miami University without a clear direction. Eventually, repeated academic probation led to dismissal.However, that failure became a turning point. Instead of retreating, he moved to Boston in 1970. He joined Polaroid at 2.89 per hour. He started in research and development. Although chemistry was not his passion, business and people were.Building Experience Through PolaroidOver 17 and a half years, he advanced through multiple leadership roles. He moved into personnel, customer service, and international management. Those years gave him deep exposure to business operations and marketing.Moreover, international assignments forced independence and accountability. There was no internet. Communication was limited. Therefore, preparation and confidence mattered. Those experiences built long term leadership skills.Leadership in Professional PhotographyIn 1987, a cold call changed his direction. He stepped into a leadership role within the professional photography world. That position connected him with respected photographers and industry veterans.However, titles never defined him. Relationships did. He focused on community, education, and contribution. He believed in giving back to the photographers who supported the industry. That philosophy shaped his leadership style.Passion Versus MoneyThroughout the conversation, he returns to motivation. First define what success means to you. Then align your work with that definition. Many creatives chase money and lose joy. As a result, burnout follows.He explains that you cannot create meaningful work if your heart is not in it. Passion fuels consistency. Consistency builds skill. Skill creates long term opportunity.Starting Over at SixtyIn 2009, at age 60, he made a bold move. He left a six figure leadership role during a difficult economy. Many people questioned the decision. However, he refused to stay where his values did not align.He launched his own educational platform focused on business and marketing guidance. His mission centered on helping photographers strengthen their foundations. Therefore, he shifted from executive leadership to mentorship and education.The Real Takeaway from Skip CohenHis story proves that failure does not define your future. College dismissal did not stop him. Career transitions did not limit him. Instead, clarity about success guided every move.If you feel stuck, revisit your definition of success. Align your work with what motivates you. Build long term fulfillment over short term validation.More From Skip Cohenhttps://skipcohenuniversity.comChapters00:00 Growing Up in Painesville Ohio05:12 Academic Struggles and College Dismissal10:24 Moving to Boston and Joining Polaroid18:40 Climbing the Ranks in Business Leadership26:15 Cold Call That Changed His Career32:30 Defining Success Beyond Money38:45 Passion Versus Profit in Creative Work45:20 Leaving a Six Figure Role at Sixty52:10 Building an Educational Platform58:30 Lessons on Motivation and Fulfillment

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    How Ralph Marucci Turned Sales Grit Into Leadership Growth

    Ralph Marucci grew up in Brooklyn in a disciplined household. His grandfather survived the Great Depression and fought in World War II . That resilience shaped his family values.His father worked as a New York City police officer . Structure and accountability defined Ralph’s early years. However, his mother balanced that intensity with empathy and care . As a result, he developed both discipline and emotional awareness.Competition and Character With Ralph at the CenterSports played a central role in his childhood . He spent entire days playing roller hockey and other games across Brooklyn . Consequently, competition became part of his identity.That competitive drive later fueled his approach to business. He learned early that effort and repetition create results. Moreover, sports taught him how to manage pressure and stay focused.Ralph Marucci on Education and Long Term ThinkingRalph attended Xavier High School, a rigorous Jesuit school in Manhattan . Academic discipline mattered deeply in his household . His father insisted that he finish what he started.Although he initially resisted attending Brooklyn College, that decision shaped his future . There, he met both his wife and future business partner . Therefore, what felt like a compromise became a defining turning point.Early Sales Lessons From Ralph MarucciAt 16, Ralph reflected on what he truly enjoyed . He entered nightlife promotion because it aligned with his strengths in marketing and connection .Soon after, he stepped into sales at a water technology startup . He excelled quickly and recruited friends to join him . As a result, he began building teams before fully realizing it.Partnership Lessons and Hard Truths for RalphRalph helped launch a new water business with close friends . However, he later learned he had no legal ownership . That moment forced a difficult reset.Instead of staying stuck, he returned to finish his degree . He then pursued an opportunity in medical device sales . This shift marked a new level of professional growth.Ralph Marucci on Practice and Professional StandardsIn medical sales, Ralph entered a culture driven by preparation . Leaders emphasized practice and constant refinement . Consequently, he sharpened both skill and confidence.He also experienced a major personal transition. In one year, he got engaged, married, finished his degree, started a new job, moved out, and became a father . Therefore, responsibility replaced distraction.Throughout this episode, we explore discipline, competition, risk, and resilience. Ralph shows how early structure, creative ambition, and hard lessons can shape long term leadership.More From Ralph Maruccihttps://www.linkedin.com/in/ralphmarucci/https://www.hydr8.us/Chapters00:00 Growing Up in Brooklyn and Family Influence 05:12 Sports and Competition in Early Life 10:35 Education at Xavier and Academic Discipline 16:45 Why Brooklyn College Changed Everything 22:30 Nightlife Promotion and Early Sales Skills 29:10 Launching a Water Startup at 22 36:45 Partnership Conflict and Hard Business Lessons 43:20 Returning to College and Career Reset 50:15 Entering Medical Device Sales 57:40 Leadership, Practice, and Personal Growth

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    Building Resilient Growth Strategy with Paula Skaper

    Paula Skaper begins with her early years in Northern Ireland during the Troubles . However, her parents chose Canada for greater stability and opportunity . That decision shaped her outlook on risk and resilience.She describes growing up in multiple provinces as mines opened and closed . As a result, she learned early that security can shift without warning. That lesson later influenced how she built and protected her business.Education, Journalism, and a Shift Toward BusinessPaula Skaper excelled academically and paid her way through university . Initially, she planned to become a journalist because she believed in the power of story and change .Yet she combined business studies with broadcast journalism training . That blend of communication and strategy later became her competitive edge.Discovering Digital Before It Was MainstreamWhile working in publishing, Paula Skaper explored how the internet would reshape media . She launched an internet publishing division as digital began transforming industries .Soon after, she led major digital initiatives, including early online banking projects . Therefore, she gained direct experience with enterprise strategy and executive leadership.Choosing Entrepreneurship on Her TermsIn January 2000, Paula Skaper resigned and invested her savings into launching her own firm . She built the company from a single computer at home .Early clients included major corporations where she advised and built internal digital capability . Consequently, she developed credibility at the executive level.Hard Lessons That Shaped Paula Skaper’s LeadershipA failed client relationship left her exposed financially and owing contractors significant funds . However, she treated it as a turning point rather than defeat.She restructured future contracts and protected her company from similar risk . Eventually, that discipline positioned her for stronger growth opportunities.Building Systems That Outlast the FounderAfter her son was born, Paula Skaper realized her business relied too heavily on her presence . As a result, she shifted from contractors to employees and built operational structure .She emphasizes that growth requires aligned engines across leadership, operations, revenue, and technology . Moreover, she encourages founders to align around customer obsession to find their profit sweet spot .Throughout the episode, she reinforces one idea. Every founder faces painful mistakes. However, those lessons often create the discipline that leads to long term success .More From Paula Skaperhttps://paulaskaper.com/https://www.linkedin.com/in/paulaskaper/https://www.instagram.com/paulaskaper/ Chapters00:00 Early life in Northern Ireland 05:15 Growing up in Canada and identity 16:00 High school, ambition, and journalism goals 27:50 Discovering the internet and digital strategy 34:43 Starting a company in 2000 41:00 Landing major corporate clients 49:17 Financial failure and hard lessons 55:56 Turning setbacks into opportunity 01:05:28 Writing a book for founders 01:07:22 Growth architecture and business engines

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    Turning Adversity Into Discipline and Legacy with Paul Melella Jr

    Paul Melella Jr grew up in a tight Italian family in New York. He faced bullying at a young age. That experience pushed him into martial arts. He trained in secret and gained confidence. One moment changed everything. He stood up to his bully and shifted his identity. That challenge became a lifelong gift.From Martial Arts Student to InstructorPaul started teaching martial arts as a teenager. He struggled in school and never fit the traditional academic model. Teachers doubted his future. His parents never did. Their belief became his foundation. He learned leadership early by guiding younger students. Martial arts became his structure and direction.Trouble, Trial, and a Turning PointAs a teenager, Paul fell in with the wrong crowd. He faced arrest and a long trial. That season forced reflection and growth. He moved to Florida to reset his life. After the trial ended, he returned home to help his younger brother. That decision changed his path.Building a Business With Paul Melella JrPaul took over a struggling martial arts school with almost no students. He had no capital. His father bartered electrical work to help him acquire the business. Paul immersed himself in personal development. He studied Napoleon Hill and Tony Robbins. He trained under Bob Proctor. He applied mindset principles inside his martial arts curriculum. The school grew into a seven figure business. He later scaled into multiple locations using a whole life cash value strategy.Inside Tools Before Outside StrategyPaul believes clarity drives results. He teaches clients to define exact measurable outcomes. Vague goals lead nowhere. He focuses on internal beliefs before external tactics. Without aligned thinking, strategies fail. He helps clients uncover limiting paradigms. He reframes them with empowering beliefs. That shift fuels consistent action.Legacy, Faith, and FamilyPaul ties achievement to deeper drivers. He asks why until emotion surfaces. For many, the core reason is family, legacy, or faith. He lives by raising standards daily. He models discipline for his children. He believes success means stewardship of time and talent. He sees every challenge as preparation for growth.This conversation explores resilience, mindset, entrepreneurship, and intentional leadership. Paul shares practical frameworks you can apply immediately. If you want clarity and stronger standards, this episode delivers.More From Paul Melella Jrhttps://www.amazon.com/Books-Paul-Melella-Jr/s?rh=n%3A283155%2Cp_27%3APaul%2BMelella%2BJr.https://www.linkedin.com/in/paul-melella-jr-9a74a673/https://www.facebook.com/PaulMelella/https://www.instagram.com/officialpaulmelella/ Episode Chapters00:00 Childhood Bullying and Martial Arts Start06:58 Confidence and Predator Mindset Explained12:17 School Struggles and Being Counted Out23:57 Arrest Trial and Life Reset in Florida29:32 Buying a Failing Martial Arts School31:27 Think and Grow Rich Impact33:15 Using Whole Life Insurance to Scale41:40 Clarity and Goal Setting Framework49:29 Breaking Limiting Beliefs Process53:44 Family Faith and Legacy Drivers

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    Park Howell on using storytelling to lead with clarity and build trust

    In this episode, we sit down with Park Howell to explore how storytelling became his framework for leading teams, growing businesses, and navigating personal change. Through stories from his early life and career, Park shares how he moved from advertising executive to storytelling educator, building a unique path by making meaning from experience.Park Howell and the Influence of Early WorkPark learned the value of storytelling and communication through labor and music. Growing up working for his father’s industrial park, he developed a strong sense of discipline. Those early lessons helped him understand systems, process, and effort. Music taught him rhythm, structure, and timing—skills he later brought into marketing and leadership.Finding a Path Through CuriosityIn college, Park pursued communications not because of a defined plan, but because it combined his interest in people and creativity. He worked at a television station and a resort in Arizona, taking what he could from each job. His curiosity about how people connect kept guiding him toward storytelling, even before he had a name for it.Park Howell on Launching His Own AgencyPark co-founded an agency with only one client and a lot of ambition. He and his partner learned by doing—hiring, firing, budgeting, and building. He reflects on the growing pains that came with sudden expansion, client churn, and scaling leadership. A big lesson: success without clarity often leads to confusion and burnout.The Turning Point That Led to StorytellingAfter a painful lawsuit and business fallout, Park reevaluated his approach. He discovered Joseph Campbell’s Hero’s Journey and realized he could bring storytelling into brand strategy. From there, he developed his Story Cycle System to help businesses clarify their messaging. It became his new direction, one rooted in empathy and structure.Teaching Story as a Business ToolPark began teaching storytelling at Arizona State University. Through this experience, he realized how deeply story shapes perception, behavior, and trust. He’s now trained countless leaders to use storytelling frameworks to unify teams, sell ideas, and lead through complexity. His mission is to make story tangible—not just inspiring, but useful.Park Howell’s Advice for Creative LeadersPark offers advice to entrepreneurs feeling lost in noise. He urges leaders to stop chasing tactics and instead anchor their work in a clear story. He explains why stories help people remember, trust, and take action. Story isn’t fluff—it’s a precision tool for making ideas stick and visions clear.More From Park Howellhttps://businessofstory.comhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/parkhowell/Chapters00:00 Park Howell’s early life and first jobs04:42 What music taught him about structure10:08 Getting into communication and early career15:50 Launching his first agency with one client22:12 Lessons from growth and leadership challenges30:05 The lawsuit that changed his business direction35:40 Discovering the Hero’s Journey and story structure42:15 Building the Story Cycle System49:30 Teaching storytelling to business leaders54:45 Advice for entrepreneurs facing confusion

  14. 15

    How David Kidder Helps Founders Build Ideas That Actually Work

    David Kidder on How Founders Think DifferentlyDavid Kidder explains what separates successful founders from the rest. It’s not polish or presentation. It’s the way they think. They focus on deep customer problems. They challenge assumptions early. They care more about traction than applause. David shares how many people build ideas based on false signals. He helps them shift their mindset from belief to evidence.Choosing the Right Idea from the StartMost people never pressure test their idea. They fall in love with the concept and skip the hard questions. David breaks down how to assess if an idea is worth building before investing time and money. He talks through specific ways to validate early. He also explains how to know when to kill an idea and why that decision often unlocks the next, better one.What Truth and Courage Look Like in a StartupDavid sees truth as the foundation of all meaningful progress. Founders need the discipline to see things as they are, not as they wish them to be. But truth alone isn’t enough. It takes courage to act on it. Courage to make hard calls, to shift strategy, and to let go of what no longer serves the mission. David explains how avoiding these moments slows down the entire business.Focus and Scaling with IntentToo many startups confuse growth with scale. David shares why scaling begins with subtraction. The most successful companies simplify. They eliminate distractions. They solve one problem for one customer in one market until they win it. He explains how this level of focus builds leverage, which makes real scale possible.Why Most Founders StallDavid has worked with thousands of founders across different stages. The patterns are clear. The ones who stall avoid discomfort. They chase shortcuts. They try to be right instead of learning fast. They surround themselves with agreement instead of truth. David explains how to break those patterns with better questions, faster feedback loops, and a mindset built for iteration.What a Scalable Venture Really Looks LikeDavid outlines the signals that make a venture fundable. It starts with proprietary insight—something no one else sees. It continues with unfair advantages, whether in access, distribution, or execution. And it ends with traction that reflects truth. He warns against chasing growth without a core insight that holds it together.Final Advice From David KidderDavid encourages founders to detach from ideas and attach to problems. He recommends building in public, asking better questions, and killing what doesn’t work faster. The best builders act like scientists. They run small tests, collect signals, and let the data shape the next step. He leaves listeners with a reminder that belief without evidence is a liability. Progress comes from learning, not proving.More From David Kidderhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/davidskidder/ https://www.davidskidder.com/

  15. 14

    How Peter Hopwood Helps Leaders Speak With More Clarity and Confidence

    Peter Hopwood on the Power of First ImpressionsPeter Hopwood explains why first impressions matter more than most people realize. Whether you're pitching an idea or leading a team, how you come across in the first few seconds sets the tone. He breaks down how confidence, posture, and vocal energy can make or break trust instantly.What Hopwood Learned From His Own Speaking JourneyPeter didn’t grow up a confident speaker. He worked in radio and television before becoming a global coach. Over time, he studied how people respond to tone, pace, and storytelling. He explains how his career evolved by saying yes to things before he felt ready. That openness became one of his greatest tools for growth.Why Clarity in Communication WinsClear communication beats complex messaging every time. Peter shares examples of how leaders often overcomplicate their message in an effort to sound smarter. He helps them strip it back and get to the point. He also shares practical tips to tighten a message without losing meaning.Helping Leaders Step Into Their AuthorityPeter works with executives, founders, and speakers to elevate how they present themselves. He focuses on helping people embrace presence and take ownership of the room. It’s not about performance—it’s about being real while still leading the space.Peter on the Mistakes Leaders MakeLeaders often try to memorize everything, which disconnects them from their audience. Peter explains why trust comes from presence, not perfection. He shares how tension in the voice or hesitation in delivery signals doubt. The key is to practice until your message feels natural—not scripted.What Peter Hopwood Teaches About StorytellingPeter believes every great communicator is a great storyteller. But storytelling doesn’t mean telling long, dramatic tales. It’s about anchoring ideas in moments people remember. He explains how to use contrast, timing, and silence to make a message stick.Final Advice From Peter HopwoodPeter encourages listeners to record themselves and watch it back. Most people avoid this, but it’s the fastest way to grow. He reminds us that your voice, body language, and energy all carry your message. If those aren't aligned, people won’t believe your words.More From Peter Hopwoodhttps://peter-hopwood.comhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/peterhopwoodpublicspeaking/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wwJeLW_o3Ns

  16. 13

    How Cam Roberts grew a thriving pavement business

    Cam Roberts on learning without a blueprintCam Roberts grew up in a quiet town in northern British Columbia with no real exposure to entrepreneurship. His early years were filled with snow forts, basic jobs, and the kind of hands-on learning you only get from being thrown into unfamiliar tasks. In high school, Cam chose to homeschool to speed through a system he didn’t connect with. That early decision-making confidence carried into the rest of his life.How Roberts used blue-collar work to build business instinctsCam’s first jobs weren’t glamorous, but they taught him how to think on his feet. From stacking core samples at a geology facility to doing untrained maintenance work in a shopping mall, he built his skills through trial, error, and curiosity. He followed tradesmen around job sites and learned by watching. Over five years, he turned from a rookie into someone comfortable with tools, systems, and solving problems fast.The moment Cam changed courseIn 2018, Cam nearly lost two fingers and part of his thumb in a table saw accident. The injury led to five weeks off work, which became the unexpected turning point in his career. With time on his hands and a clear memory of a bad local contractor, Cam started building a parking lot striping business from his kitchen table. He made the website, ordered flyers, called equipment suppliers, and landed his first job before he had the gear.What you can learn from 2am paint jobs and thin marginsWorking nights and weekends, Cam built up a client base. He quit his day job in 2019 and grew quickly. The work was seasonal, so every decision carried weight. Covid arrived in 2020, but instead of slowing down, his business grew. Isolated outdoor work continued, and commercial lots still needed service. Cam added snow removal, hired more staff, and expanded services year after year.How Cam Roberts built a second business through podcastingA business coach nudged Cam to start a podcast. Stripe It Like It’s Hot began as a niche media experiment but quickly opened doors. Cam started coaching small service businesses in the asphalt industry. Speaking gigs followed. Today, he runs both a pavement services company and a training business, helping others grow from scrappy starts into sustainable operations.Growth, failure, and staying in the gameCam doesn’t shy away from failure. In 2022, he came within minutes of losing his company. He sat in a parking lot, swiping his phone, waiting for a large overdue payment to hit. It arrived just in time. Since then, he's learned how to manage cash flow, scale smartly, and never rely on one client. His message to others is simple: read books, focus on learning, and stay in the game. You can only fail if you quit.More From Cam Robertshttps://stripeitpodcast.simplecast.comhttps://stripeit.ca

  17. 12

    How David Decker Built Wealth Over 40 Years in Real Estate

    A Young David Decker Finds His PathDavid Decker shares how growing up in northwest Indiana shaped his values. From delivering newspapers at age nine to painting houses and mowing lawns, he learned self-reliance early. His parents led by example—both hardworking and ambitious, with his mom becoming a vice president in the 1950s and his dad investing in rental properties on the side. David’s exposure to real estate through his father planted a seed that grew into a lifelong pursuit.Decker’s Early Jobs and MindsetAs a teen, David wasn’t handed anything. Fast food chains weren’t even accepting applications because so many people were trying to get in. That scarcity pushed him to knock on doors, offering to shovel snow or rake leaves. By age 12, he was already building his own service business. These experiences taught him to be bold, persistent, and self-starting—traits that shaped his approach in real estate later on.David Decker on College and Career ShiftsDavid attended Indiana University, earning a finance degree. Even then, real estate remained on his mind, but the path wasn’t clear. He started out at General Electric but found the corporate world didn’t suit him. After two and a half years, he met a real estate broker by chance and jumped into real estate full-time.How David Learned the Real Estate GameDavid didn’t have outside funding or flashy opportunities. He started small with a four-unit building and scaled from there, using creative deal structures like seller financing and 1031 exchanges. He describes taking property commissions in the form of real estate and leveraging every opportunity to buy when others wouldn't. His approach was slow and steady, focused on long-term wealth instead of quick wins.Real Estate RealitiesDavid highlights how the game has changed. Today’s investors face different challenges: higher barriers to entry, competition from institutional buyers, and a lack of affordable starter properties. He calls out the need for systemic change—standardized building codes, better housing policy, and government innovation to promote affordable construction.Building Over TimeBy consistently reinvesting profits, David scaled from a four-unit to owning over 2200 units. His journey proves that real estate, when approached with patience and discipline, can offer financial independence for regular people. He emphasizes that the model is not for everyone and comes with risks, but the long-term reward is worth it.David Decker’s Advice for the Next GenerationDavid encourages aspiring entrepreneurs to focus on problem-solving, not gimmicks. Whether it’s through real estate or another business, start with a clear plan to solve someone's problem. Real estate worked for him, but the broader lesson is to commit, stay consistent, and be creative with what’s available.More From David Deckerhttps://www.davidjdecker.com

  18. 11

    Why Scott Miller Believes Success Comes Down to Consistency & Action

    Scott Miller on Growing Up and GritScott Miller shares how growing up with three older brothers in a small Midwest town shaped his outlook. With limited resources and a father who worked constantly, Scott learned early that no one was coming to help. That mindset followed him into adulthood. Even in college, he didn’t know what he wanted, but he knew he had to earn his way.Taking Risks and Finding PurposeScott spent years jumping between careers—bartending, recruiting, and sales. Each role taught him something new, but none gave him lasting fulfillment. He eventually realized the only way to move forward was to take risks. He stopped looking for the perfect job and instead focused on the next right step.Scott Miller on Shifting MindsetsInstead of chasing motivation, Scott developed discipline. He talks about learning that action builds momentum. Even if you don’t feel ready, doing the work creates progress. He shares how daily habits, journaling, and reading shaped his mindset over time.Breaking Out of the Employee MentalityScott explains how hard it can be to shift from an employee mindset to an ownership mindset. He didn’t grow up around entrepreneurs. He had to figure out the rules of the game on his own. It took him years to rewire how he thought about time, money, and control.What Scott Miller Learned From CoachingThrough coaching others, Scott gained perspective on what holds most people back. It’s usually not lack of knowledge. It’s fear and avoidance. He explains how he helps people create clarity, face discomfort, and build accountability. Progress rarely looks glamorous, but it always requires action.The Power of Consistency According to Scott MillerScott drives home one central idea: consistency beats intensity. Flashy results may inspire, but slow, repeatable habits sustain real change. He shares how small actions, done daily, create momentum that builds over time.Advice for Anyone Feeling StuckScott encourages listeners to stop overthinking and start taking steps. Most people wait for certainty, but growth comes from movement. He reminds us that discomfort is not a sign to stop—it’s often a sign you’re on the right track.More From Scott Millerhttps://masterofsales.comhttps://www.facebook.com/Scott1258/

  19. 10

    Finding clarity through discipline with Anthony Espo

    Growing Up Hustling in Brooklyn Anthony Espo shares how growing up in Bay Ridge shaped his early mindset around work, independence, and hustle. He talks about his mother’s example as a relentless businesswoman, running a bike shop while raising three kids on her own. From delivering newspapers at ten years old to cutting friends’ hair in his basement, Anthony learned to earn early. That drive stayed with him as he hustled through high school selling sneakers, jewelry, and electronics.Early Lessons That Shaped Espo's PathAnthony reflects on how sports and street competition built his mindset. He highlights how physical conditioning and mental grit translated into everyday life. He explains the importance of competition, but also the need to balance it—especially for kids. He shares how he avoids becoming the “fitness dad” who pushes too hard, instead creating a family culture rooted in sustainable health habits and open communication.When Anthony Espo Took Over the Family BusinessAs a young adult, Anthony stepped in to run his mother’s bike shop when she became ill. That experience forced him to mature fast. He talks about juggling that with his side hustles and how it sparked deeper self-reflection. After her passing, Anthony began asking himself bigger questions about his identity and direction. That turning point helped fuel the start of what would become his long-term path in health and fitness.Espo’s Pivot into Health and CommunityWhat began as teaching free bootcamps in the park turned into a business built on community impact. Anthony discusses how these early workouts led to the founding of Badass Academy—a group fitness facility focused entirely on classes. At the time, this model was unusual, but Anthony trusted the power of connection and consistency. He shares how he created systems to help others while continuing to evolve his own habits.The Resilience Behind Anthony’s GrowthAnthony recounts the challenging years of building Badass Academy. From software failures to financial setbacks, and eventually surviving a nine-month COVID shutdown, he explains how gratitude, structure, and daily health routines helped him stay grounded. He breaks down how journaling, breathing, and morning and evening gratitude help him manage stress and stay clear on his goals.The Legacy Espo is Building NowAnthony now runs a successful gym and has published a self-help book titled “WAHOOS in Life” (We All Have Our Own Shit). His son even followed in his footsteps by publishing a book of his own. Anthony talks about teaching by example, investing in his staff, and continuously refining what it means to lead. His message is simple: time matters more than money, and growth starts with showing up for yourself first.More From Anthony Espohttps://www.amazon.com/Wahoos-Life-Anthony-Esposito/dp/B0BNJ3KRJ9https://badassacademy.comhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/anthony-espo-45aba3169/ https://www.instagram.com/badassacademyhttps://www.goodreads.com/book/show/74372986-wahoos-in-lifeMentioned book: The Way of the Peaceful Warrior by Dan Millman

  20. 9

    How Kison Patel turned setbacks into strategy and built a business

    Finding Opportunity in Unlikely PlacesKison Patel shares how growing up in a small Nebraska motel shaped his work ethic from an early age. Raised by immigrant parents who ran a roadside motel, Kison learned to handle real estate, operations, and customer service by the time he was a teenager. He opens up about his earliest hustles, like selling cigarettes at school to buy better clothes, and how those scrappy beginnings taught him to think like an entrepreneur long before he ever started a company.After struggling through high school and ultimately being dismissed from college, Kison describes the intense pressure immigrant children often feel to succeed academically. But without a degree, he found alternative paths to grow—first working low-wage jobs, then moving into real estate and business brokerage. Kison explains how being rejected by traditional paths pushed him toward entrepreneurship, where he could write his own rules and focus on practical skills instead of credentials.Kison reflects on his early experiments with online businesses and the harsh reality of having 200 websites blacklisted overnight. Despite setbacks, he saw potential in using technology to scale a business that could support mergers and acquisitions. He shares how he bootstrapped his way to founding a fintech company that would eventually grow to 50 employees and nearly $10 million in revenue. Along the way, he learned to lead, sell, and adapt without formal training—just a relentless drive to figure things out.In the second half of the conversation, Kison explains the insight that sparked the creation of his current business. He realized that most M&A tools were built for sellers, leaving buyers stuck with outdated systems that didn’t support integration. By building a lifecycle management platform for the buy side, Kison helped improve execution and accountability in multi-million dollar acquisitions. He outlines why better planning and collaboration between teams leads to stronger results after deals close.Throughout the episode, Kison offers practical advice for anyone navigating entrepreneurship without traditional credentials. He emphasizes the importance of learning to endure discomfort, focusing deeply on one area, and being open to unglamorous businesses with strong fundamentals. For those looking to acquire small businesses, he recommends identifying overlooked sectors, learning the industry well, and building credibility with owners before trying to close a deal.https://www.linkedin.com/in/kisonpatel/https://www.mascience.com/How Kison Patel Navigated Failure Without a DegreeThe Turning Point in Kison Patel’s JourneyBuilding Software to Fix M&A ExecutionKison Patel’s Advice for Aspiring EntrepreneursMore From Kison Patel

  21. 8

    How Henning Schwinum Thinks About Sales Leadership Growth and Career Building

    Henning Schwinum’s journey started in Cologne, Germany, and took a pivotal turn when he joined a student exchange program in North Carolina. That early experience shaped his perspective and taught him to reason independently. He discusses how this mindset helped him see the world in nuanced ways and fostered a deep interest in understanding the “why” behind decisions. This outlook has guided his entire career, from chemical sales to entrepreneurship.Henning Schwinum on Embracing Change and Taking RisksAfter completing a unique three-year apprenticeship instead of college, Henning worked at Bayer for 15 years. He shares what it was like working in a legacy corporation, adapting to digital shifts like e-business, and eventually leaving the company to join a startup as employee number seven. Henning talks about the challenges of building a European arm for a US startup in a conservative, slow-moving industry and what it took to survive years of minimal progress before finding success.Navigating Growth and Staying Flexible According to HenningHenning discusses the realities of startup life, highlighting the 0 to 1 and 1 to 5 million dollar revenue phases and what kind of leadership each stage requires. He emphasizes the importance of finding the right people for specific phases and reflects on how he transitioned from sales leader in Europe to global sales and marketing lead. His story illustrates how trust and adaptability play key roles in long-term growth.Schwinum’s Take on Career Longevity and Sales EvolutionHenning dives into modern career paths, contrasting long stints in traditional industries with faster turnover in tech and SaaS. He outlines how motivations like money and remote work impact job changes. He also highlights how valuable networking can be when thoughtfully built over time. Henning gives clear advice on building meaningful professional relationships early and often.Solving Sales Challenges with Fractional LeadershipHenning breaks down what fractional sales leadership looks like and who it’s really for. He explains how vendor experience gaps in small to mid-size businesses can be filled with the right executive support. Henning shares how he matches experienced leaders with specific challenges and offers clear insight into how founder-led sales teams can scale smarter and faster with part-time leadership.The Role of Content and Connection in Henning's StrategyLinkedIn plays a major role in Henning’s growth strategy. He explains how he started networking late in his career and what shifted his mindset. Henning believes valuable content builds credibility over time, especially for professionals who want to demonstrate expertise to decision-makers. He also details the early strategies he used to build a meaningful network and reach the right clients.Looking AheadHenning shares details about the book he’s writing focused on how companies and executives can make fractional roles work. He talks about the power of matching the right skills with the right challenges and why it’s more than just a staffing solution. He closes by reflecting on what he’d do differently and the lessons he’s still learning from every experience.More From Henning Schwinumhttps://useshiny.com https://www.linkedin.com/in/hschwinum

  22. 7

    Self Awareness and Team Building Unlocks Entrepreneurial Growth

    Richie Romero opens up about his early life, growing up in Queens, and how television shaped his moral compass more than traditional family dynamics. He shares how pain—physical, emotional, and financial—became his greatest teacher. From enduring chronic health issues to watching his family struggle financially, Richie details how these experiences helped him develop deep empathy, resilience, and a clear sense of purpose. He emphasizes that clarity comes not from comfort but from confronting discomfort head-on and doing deep personal work.Mentorship, Denial, and PurposeThroughout the conversation, Richie dives into his search for mentorship and his journey through self-denial. He shares how years of internal conflict and personal setbacks forced him to reframe his goals and values. His early drive for fame and acceptance led him to nightlife, but it was only through reflection that he recognized the real source of that ambition. His goal today is much more focused—help others discover their own superpowers and support each other to build together, rather than suffer alone.Richie Romero on Rebuilding the Dream Through CollaborationRichie challenges the idea of solo success. He argues that wearing 20 hats no longer works in the modern world. Instead, he advocates for alignment, collaboration, and identifying complementary talents. He shares how he secretly built a 5400 square foot incubator not for ego, but to gather others with aligned values who can build and dream together. He frames entrepreneurship as a team sport, urging people to build real relationships and align on shared visions.Modern Nightlife and DisconnectionReflecting on his decades in nightlife, Richie describes how the scene has shifted from in-person connection to isolation and spectacle. Where clubs once fostered discovery, music, and community, today's landscape is saturated with noise, distraction, and performative social media. He believes the root of many problems is that people are disconnected from themselves and others. His answer is to rebuild environments where people come together authentically to create, live, and support one another.Richie Romero on Practical Entrepreneurship and Collective WisdomRichie also dives into the practical side of entrepreneurship. He discusses the importance of checks and balances, understanding money, and how lack of financial education affects people across generations. His focus now is on reducing the cost of failure by surrounding emerging builders with experienced, values-driven collaborators. Rather than chasing buzzwords or trends, Richie insists that people need to find purpose, embrace failure early, and build businesses rooted in trust and teamwork.More From Richie Romerohttps://www.moldrelief.nethttps://www.linkedin.com/in/rchie-romero-144627244

  23. 6

    How Jack Krupey Turned Real Estate Failures into Lifelong Investment Skills

    In this episode of the Founders Journey podcast, we sit down with Jack Krupey to trace the winding path that took him from a small town in New Jersey to building a real estate investment career shaped by resilience, experimentation, and adaptability.We start by learning about Jack’s early years growing up in Jackson, New Jersey. He shares how witnessing his parents’ financial struggles inspired his early drive to succeed and shaped his relationship with money. As a tech-savvy teen who loved computers and the internet, Jack pursued a degree in information technology at Rochester Institute of Technology. But his journey quickly shifted after graduating during the dot-com crash of 2001, leading to early career challenges and a pivotal redirection toward real estate.Jack discusses the first sparks of his entrepreneurial journey, including launching an automated rent payment business with his college roommate. That experience taught him hard lessons about bootstrapping and business modeling. But it was a spontaneous trip to Las Vegas and a timely airport bookstore purchase that ultimately led him to pursue real estate investing seriously. Within a year, Jack had creatively acquired multiple rental properties with little to no money down—kicking off what would become a long-term investment mindset.The conversation then moves into Jack’s real estate journey through the 2008 financial crisis. He reflects on building a property management company, raising capital, and eventually having to wind down the business amid market turmoil. Rather than give up, Jack relocated to New York City, took time off to teach English in Korea, and landed a role with a Wall Street firm handling distressed mortgages—gaining exposure to large-scale investment strategy and note purchasing.Jack explains what non-performing loans are, how hedge funds evaluate them, and how this work connected him with major private equity players. That connection eventually led to co-investing in $100 million+ deals and being partially acquired by a Wall Street fund. While the financial upside was significant, Jack reflects on the cultural mismatch between entrepreneurial flexibility and Wall Street grind culture—ultimately leading him to step away in 2019.He wrapped up that chapter by pursuing an executive MBA from Kellogg, with global exposure that included time in Hong Kong. Today, Jack emphasizes his desire for passive income, control over his time, and meaningful work aligned with his values. He shares how he's adjusted his strategies to avoid burnout, find balance, and approach business with long-term thinking.This episode offers valuable lessons in resilience, recognizing opportunity, knowing when to pivot, and staying true to your goals—whether you're just starting out or deep into your entrepreneurial path.More From Jack Krupey:https://jkrupey.com

  24. 5

    How Aron Myers Rebuilt His Life Through Leadership and Found His Path as a Coach

    In this episode of Founders Journey, we sit down with Aron Myers, who opens up about his unconventional path from a childhood marked by adversity to becoming a leadership coach and entrepreneur. Aron shares how growing up in East New York with parents struggling with addiction and his time in the foster care system shaped his understanding of resilience, focus, and determination. This conversation highlights how his early experiences with ADHD, special education, and lack of academic confidence became foundational to the mindset he brings to coaching and leadership today.We explore Aron's early academic struggles and his breakthrough moments in middle school, when the support of a key mentor helped him see his own potential. He discusses how structure, routines, and self-awareness played critical roles in managing his attention and improving his performance in school, eventually leading to his acceptance into a Catholic high school and later college.During college, Aron pursued law and interned at top firms, but he soon realized that the lifestyle and ethos of the legal profession didn’t align with his purpose. This pivotal realization led him to shift to social sciences, drawn by his personal experiences in the foster care system and his growing desire to help others. His time working with mentally handicapped adults profoundly reshaped his perspective on empathy, humanity, and service.The conversation then moves into Aron's professional trajectory in social services. He details his rise through the ranks, from volunteer to executive director, managing multimillion-dollar budgets and overseeing complex programs supporting vulnerable youth. Despite achieving success in the nonprofit space, Aron recognized he had reached a plateau financially and professionally. This turning point catalyzed his move into entrepreneurship.Aron shares the mindset shift required to move from being an executive to an entrepreneur, and why stepping away from constant crisis management to create something on his own terms was essential. He discusses the importance of knowing your niche, learning from failure, and pricing your value appropriately without letting fear dictate your worth. He also offers practical strategies for early-stage entrepreneurs: start with what brings you joy, figure out how to monetize it, and build slow, deliberate partnerships.The episode closes with advice on influence, leadership, and exit strategies. Aron breaks down the difference between being passionate about your product versus being passionate about entrepreneurship. Whether you want to build one business or several, he makes the case for creating systems that allow your work to scale and eventually run without you.Personal history can inform professional clarity and how emotional intelligence, strategic thinking, and service can form the core of a successful business model.More From Aron Myershttps://www.linkedin.com/in/aron-myers-341a5a4

  25. 4

    Lane Campbell on how early curiosity and risk tolerance shape business success

    In this episode of the Founders Journey podcast, we sit down with Lane Campbell to explore the role that persistence, hands-on learning, and unconventional thinking have played in his entrepreneurial journey. Lane shares personal stories that highlight the mindset and experiences that helped him evolve from a curious kid dismantling electronics to a founder launching complex software and services companies across different industries.We begin with Lane’s childhood and the influence of his family. Growing up in a household that encouraged curiosity, Lane was exposed to both engineering and entrepreneurship early. His grandfather worked in nuclear power and started an HVAC business, while another grandfather built a successful apparel company. These dual influences sparked Lane’s early interest in taking things apart and understanding how they work.By the age of 11, Lane was already tearing down and reassembling computers with no formal guidance, driven by nothing more than persistence and raw curiosity. He explains how that habit of self-learning extended into his professional life and became a key trait in how he approached business challenges. Lane’s tolerance for risk and ability to stay calm in high-pressure situations turned out to be pivotal assets, especially in environments that lacked structure.He reflects on his school years, where traditional education systems failed to engage him. Structured authority didn't appeal to Lane, who preferred learning by doing and needed to deeply understand things before accepting them. In contrast, his sister thrived in academic environments. That contrast helps frame how Lane carved out his own path by leaning into what worked best for him instead of following expectations.Lane recounts how he started fixing computers and setting up networks in high school, eventually turning that into a tech services business. By college, he was customizing networks, building hardware, and finding ways around university IT limitations. These weren’t just side projects but early signs of a mindset oriented toward solving problems in real time with limited resources.After college, Lane dove fully into entrepreneurship. He moved to Chicago during the Great Recession and co-founded a business in the midst of economic uncertainty. That decision was driven by necessity and instinct, and he learned quickly the importance of choosing partners wisely. Lane shares what he’s learned about building partnerships, dealing with disappointment, and the difference between value creators and value extractors in business.Throughout the conversation, Lane emphasizes transparency, accountability, and ethical decision-making. He explains how unmet expectations in partnerships are often the root of conflict and offers clear strategies to avoid those pitfalls. He also gives a candid look at working in challenging environments, including dealing with unethical partners and helping uncover fraud in past ventures.The episode closes with a look at Lane’s current projects, including building software for DMV systems, launching private equity support platforms, and helping small businesses secure government contracts through AI-powered tools. He also shares insights on the skills every entrepreneur should have, from understanding sales and cash flow to solving real problems people are willing to pay to fix.Whether you're early in your entrepreneurial journey or deep into running a business, this episode offers a grounded perspective on what it actually takes to build something sustainable. Lane doesn’t glamorize entrepreneurship. He lays it out plainly: it’s messy, it’s hard, and most people won’t make it. But if you’re the kind of person who thrives when everything is uncertain and the pressure is high, you might be wired for it.For more from Lane Campbell visit www.lanecampbell.com

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Welcome to Founders Journey, a podcast that explores the lives that shape remarkable builders. Each episode features a personal conversation with an entrepreneur who shares early dreams, first jobs, key turning points, lessons from setbacks, and the steady wins that shaped their path. If you want real stories about what forms a founder and what fuels a relentless drive to build, this podcast offers it each week.

HOSTED BY

Jimmy Douloumbakas

Frequently Asked Questions

How many episodes does Founders Journey Podcast have?

Founders Journey Podcast currently has 25 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is Founders Journey Podcast about?

Welcome to Founders Journey, a podcast that explores the lives that shape remarkable builders. Each episode features a personal conversation with an entrepreneur who shares early dreams, first jobs, key turning points, lessons from setbacks, and the steady wins that shaped their path. If you want...

How often does Founders Journey Podcast release new episodes?

Founders Journey Podcast has 25 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to Founders Journey Podcast?

You can listen to Founders Journey Podcast 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 Founders Journey Podcast?

Founders Journey Podcast is created and hosted by Jimmy Douloumbakas.
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