Foundr Magazine Podcast | Learn From Successful Founders & Proven Entrepreneurs, The Ultimate Startup Podcast For Business

  • Autor: Vários
  • Narrador: Vários
  • Editora: Podcast
  • Duração: 497:57:36
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Informações:

Sinopse

We interview hard to reach entrepreneurs. (Seth Godin, Tim Ferriss, Tony Robbins, Barbara Corcoran, Daymond John & many more).Unlike most podcast interview series Nathan Chan literally started from knowing nothing. He was just an average guy working in a 9-5 job he utterly hated. He knew nothing about entrepreneurship, nothing about startups, nothing about marketing, and nothing about online or how to build a business. So from launching Foundr Magazine he's gone out and spoken to some of the most successful entrepreneurs and founders in the world in the world to find out exactly what it takes to become a successful entrepreneur, so YOU can learn from them.Why this podcast? Because we're asking the same questions you want to know as an entrepreneur on their journey to building an extremely successful business. We're on the front-lines facing the daily battles you are. How do I get more customers? How do I scale my business? I want to start a business, but just don't know where to start? How did this person get millions of customers and make millions of dollars and have a such a massive impact on the world?Some of these entrepreneurs are very well known, and some not known at all and thats the cool part! Here we will share with you our best interviews from Foundr magazine showcasing this persons processes, failures, critical lessons learnt and actionable strategies showing YOU how to build a successful business. This is NOT your AVERAGE everyday entrepreneurship podcast.

Episódios

  • 652: IM8 Founder: What It REALLY Takes to Build a $200M Supplement Brand

    16/04/2026 Duração: 01h09s

    Danny Yeung went from selling baseball cards at age 12 to scaling Ubuy-Ibuy to nearly a million a month in revenue in just six months before Groupon acquired it in 2010. Then during Covid, he launched a PCR testing operation that processed 28 million tests and generated over $800 million in revenue across three years. He listed the company on the Nasdaq at a billion-dollar valuation—then watched it crash to $40 million within 18 months. Instead of giving up, he bet the entire company's future on launching IM8, a consumer supplement brand co-founded with David Beckham that scaled from zero to nearly $10 million a month in just over a year. In this interview, the co-founder of IM8 breaks down how he processed 40,000 PCR tests daily with a 2,000-person operation running 24/7, why he pivoted from Covid testing to launching a premium supplement brand, and the brutal $500,000 lesson he learned trying to unlock ad spend too quickly on Meta without the right infrastructure in place. What you'll learn i

  • 651: From 7 Years In Recruitment To $60K In 6 Months Selling Mouth Tape

    15/04/2026 Duração: 29min

    Michael Forshaw read a book, taped his mouth shut every night for a year, and then built a business out of it — launching Breath Sleep Tape from idea to live store in just ten weeks. A recruiter by trade with zero experience in e-commerce, digital marketing, or product development, Michael turned a personal obsession with nasal breathing into a brand that hit $60,000 in its first six months. The product? A sleep tape designed to keep your mouth closed at night — something that sounds strange until you realise an estimated 70% of people breathe through their mouths while they sleep. In this episode, Michael gets real about what it took to get there — an $8-10K first production run, the customer objection that completely changed his product design, and why two years in he deliberately pulled back on paid ads to focus on something more sustainable. What you'll learn in this interview: How reading a single book sparked a product idea — and the one-year personal experiment that confirmed it was worth bu

  • 650: The Lie About Social Media Growth (And What Actually Works in 2026)

    13/04/2026 Duração: 10min

    Most founders are still treating social media as a vanity channel — a place for likes, views, and followers. And here's the tough truth: if your social media isn't converting into customers, subscribers, or owned audience, you're building on rented land. And that's incredibly risky. I talked to a founder today who's been building his business for a couple of years. He's got Facebook ads running, active social media channels — but he doesn't have a large email list. And that's a massive problem. Because algorithms change, platforms evolve, and accounts get deleted overnight. I've lost a lot of money relying on these platforms back in the day, and I've seen it happen to some of the smartest creators I know. In this episode, I break down why social media should no longer be just about organic reach, how to measure performance properly, and why tools like ManyChat and strong CTAs are essential for e-commerce brands in 2026. Here's what you'll take away: • Why Instagram's new affiliate tagging feature chang

  • 649: We Had 3 Weeks Left… This Saved My $35M/Year Company

    09/04/2026 Duração: 50min

    Christina Stembel built Farmgirl Flowers into a $55 million bootstrapped business by 2021, betting on simplicity, direct-to-consumer, and zero VC money. Then as Covid vaccines became widely available, sales crashed 50% overnight. To save the business, she had just 36 hours to test a radical pivot or go bankrupt in three weeks. She took out a $3.5 million loan, white boarded new distribution models for two days straight, ran a fake scenario on the website for 36 hours, and prayed sales wouldn't drop more than 12%. They dropped 11.6%. The company survived—but Christina's philosophy completely changed. In this raw and honest conversation, the founder of Farmgirl Flowers is back on the Foundr Podcast to break down why she turned down acquisition offers because the industry multiples were insulting, her controversial pivot from chasing $100 million to optimizing for double-digit profit and slow growth, and the brutal lesson she learned hiring an entire C-suite because "that's what you're supposed to do"—then

  • 648: (Solo) Why the Best Brands Create Moments, Not Just Products

    06/04/2026 Duração: 07min

    The brands that win don't just deliver products. They create moments. And once you see this pattern, you start noticing it everywhere. I recently came across a concept from one of our course instructors, Camille Moore, called the overflow effect. It's simple but incredibly powerful, and it highlights a key truth about building brands in 2026: most e-commerce founders focus heavily on the product, the price, the ads, and the website all important but they overlook the experience. More specifically, the surprise and delight of how you make people feel. In this episode, I break down why this works so well and how you can apply it to your own brand to create moments that people remember, talk about, and come back for. Here's what you'll take away: The overflow effect explained: why a burger chain's "extra fries" strategy creates surprise, delight, and generosity How the law of reciprocity works: when you give more than expected, people naturally want to give something back (reviews, word of mout

  • 647: I Started a Jewelry Brand With $25K and the WRONG Business Model | Noura Sakkijha

    02/04/2026 Duração: 46min

    Noura Sakkijha is a third generation jeweler who realized the entire fine jewelry industry was fundamentally broken—built on the outdated idea that men buy diamonds for women, not that women buy the diamonds themselves. In 2013, she launched Mejuri with a radical mission: create fine jewelry for women to buy for themselves. What started as a crowdsourcing platform quickly pivoted after just one year when sales didn't materialize. Over 11 years, Mejuri has sold 6.5 million pieces of jewelry and is now expanding globally. In this interview, the founder and CEO of Mejuri breaks down why she completely pivoted the business model after realizing there was no product-market fit, the brutal 2021 lesson about hiring ahead of growth that forced her to revise her entire approach to team building, and why she now refuses to hire until the team feels real pain. What you'll learn in this interview: • Why Noura pivoted from a crowdsourcing platform to direct-to-consumer after one year • How she started Mejuri with a

  • 646: How Jesse Built A $450K/Year Brand Whilst Still Working in the Mines

    01/04/2026 Duração: 31min

    Most people with a full-time job, 14-hour shifts, and zero business experience don't start a brand — Jesse did, and he's closing in on half a million dollars a year to prove it. After 16 years working in the mining industry, Jesse knew the gear handed to workers on site was genuinely not fit for purpose. So he did something about it, building Wolf Workwear — durable, functional workwear for heavy industries — one hour at a time between fly-in, fly-out shifts. He still hasn't quit his day job. He's doing it anyway. In this episode, Jesse gets brutally honest about what those first two and a half years actually looked like — overspending $40-50K on a launch, building 4,000 Instagram followers who had zero intention of buying anything, and the UGC pivot that changed everything overnight. What you'll learn in this interview: Why 4,000 followers didn't translate to sales — and the critical difference between an engaged audience and a buying one How Jesse validated his product idea by handing samples

  • 645: (Solo) Why Your Email List Is Your Most Valuable Asset in 2026

    30/03/2026 Duração: 09min

    Email marketing doesn't sound flashy. It's not the newest channel, not the trendiest platform, and it definitely doesn't get the same attention as TikTok, Instagram, or Meta ads. But that's exactly why it's so powerful. Here's the truth: while most founders are chasing reach on social media, the smartest ones are quietly building something much more valuable — an owned audience they can reach directly, not through an algorithm or platform. It's not rented. It's a relationship they control. And in a world where social platforms change constantly, this kind of ownership is incredibly valuable for your brand. In this episode, I share the lesson I learned early on at Foundr that changed everything — and why your email list, even if it's small, is one of the most powerful assets you can build in 2026. Here's what you'll take away: The story of how I learned the power of email from a mentor who asked, "How many names do you have on your list?" Why an email list isn't just about names — it's about the

  • 644: This FBI Negotiation Trick Gets People to Say YES (By Saying NO) | Chris Voss

    26/03/2026 Duração: 52min

    Chris Voss spent decades as the FBI's lead international kidnapping negotiator, where a single wrong word could cost someone's life. After talking down armed bank robbers and negotiating with terrorists, he discovered something critical: the rational bargaining models taught in business schools don't just fail—they're dangerous. Compromise is guaranteed lose-lose. Win-win deals are often code for "I'm picking your pocket." And everything you've been taught about getting to yes is actually destroying your leverage and costing you millions without you even realizing it. In this interview, the former FBI negotiator and author of Never Split the Difference breaks down why forcing someone to say "no" is more powerful than chasing a yes, the exact calibrated questions that make aggressive counterparts solve your problems for you, and how to spot the verbal and tonal cues that reveal when someone is lying or hiding critical deal information. What you'll learn in this interview: • Why compromise is gua

  • 643: (Solo) Why Profitable Businesses Still Fail (And How to Avoid It)

    23/03/2026 Duração: 12min

    Most founders think if their company is profitable on paper, they're safe. But here's the truth I learned the hard way: businesses don't fail because they're unprofitable. They fail because they run out of cash. I had a really good run for about 6-7 years at Foundr before I ever faced a serious cash crunch. And when it hit, it was terrifying — that feeling when you don't know if you're going to make payroll is something I'll never forget. You can have strong revenue, good margins, be growing, and technically be profitable — but if the timing of when cash comes in and goes out isn't managed correctly, you can find yourself in serious trouble. In this episode, I break down why cash flow is the number one thing founders need to obsess over, and the practical moves you can make to manage it better before it becomes a crisis. Here's what you'll take away: • Why revenue is exciting but cash flow is what keeps your business alive — the timing gap can suffocate you • How e-commerce founders experience cash pre

  • 642: I Quit My 15 Year Career To Build a Jewelry Business — and Hit $400,000 in My First Year

    19/03/2026 Duração: 59min

    Rosie Collins had a Christmas epiphany about baby shower gifts—every present focused on the baby, never the mom. That single observation turned into Deja Marc, a multimillion-dollar personalized jewelry brand that captures fingerprints, handwriting, and meaningful moments in elegant, timeless pieces. Within a year, she hit $400,000 in revenue while working full time. The secret? An engraving fairy she never actually met who packed orders while Rosie was at work, and an obsessive focus on mastering the craft before outsourcing anything. In this interview, the founder of Deja Marc breaks down how she built this customer-obsessed brand without burning out, why she tracks MER (marketing efficiency ratio) over ROAS as her primary metric, and her counterintuitive take on Black Friday promotions—why doing 40 hours instead of two weeks can deliver the same results without destroying your team or margins. What you'll learn in this interview: How a Christmas epiphany about baby shower gifts sparked a multimil

  • 641: How Konnie Built A $60K/Month Swimwear Brand In 18 Months — Without Quitting Her Day Job

    18/03/2026 Duração: 38min

    Most people spot a gap in the market and do nothing — Konnie Tsimiklis spotted one, had zero fashion experience, and built a brand around it anyway. A management consultant by trade, Konnie spent decades avoiding swimming pools because no swimwear on the market made her feel like herself. So she created her own — Unity Cove, Australia's first gender-inclusive swimwear brand — and hit $27,000 in sales in her first three months without spending a cent on ads. In this episode, Konnie holds nothing back about what it really costs to bring a physical product to life — the $20K+ first production run, selling out on Black Friday and going three months without stock, and the single TikTok she filmed before launch that still drives the majority of her revenue today. What you'll learn in this interview: How one unscripted TikTok with no call-to-action generated 1,000 waitlist signups and became her highest-performing ad The real cost of launching a physical product — and why the "start with $500" advice doesn

  • 640: (Solo) Why Community Beats Followers in 2026

    16/03/2026 Duração: 07min

    Followers are easier to get than ever. But here's what most founders don't realize: genuine community and real relationships are becoming significantly more valuable. At Foundr, we've built an audience of over 5 million followers across social channels. We started growing that audience when organic reach was strong and content traveled far. But the landscape has completely changed. Content is faster, AI can generate posts in minutes, and attention is more fragmented than ever. And what I'm noticing is this: in a world where content can be replicated, real connection is what actually stands out. In this episode, I break down the shift happening across e-commerce and brand building — and why doubling down on community is the move for 2026 and beyond. Here's what you'll take away: The difference between an audience and a community — and why one scrolls while the other buys, engages, and advocates Why followers don't mean dollars: connection and loyalty are what actually grow a brand long-term

  • 639: From $60K in Debt to ICONIC $100M Fashion Label | Rebecca Minkoff

    12/03/2026 Duração: 57min

    Rebecca Minkoff arrived in New York City at 18 with no money, no degree, and a low-paid internship that paid $3 an hour. She lived in a relative's playroom just to make it work. Twenty-one years later, she's built a globally recognized fashion empire and become one of the most influential voices in the fashion and entrepreneurial world. But the journey from handing out postcards in Union Square to building a $100 million brand wasn't linear—it was filled with $60,000 in credit card debt, strategic pivots, and bold reinventions. In this interview, the founder and creative director of Rebecca Minkoff breaks down how she went from consignment sales in the East Village to building a licensing empire with 16 partners, why she joined The Real Housewives of New York as a strategic business move, and the exact moment she realized she needed to pivot from vertical integration to a licensing model to survive. What you'll learn in this interview: • How Rebecca survived on $3/hour while building her first c

  • TRAILER: Little Empires — A Foundr Original Series

    11/03/2026 Duração: 03min

    You've heard from the best in the business — Mark Cuban, Alex Hormozi, Emma Grede. Their stories are incredible. But sometimes, you need to hear from someone who's exactly where you are right now. Little Empires is a brand new series from the Foundr team, shining a spotlight on the builders inside our own community. These are Foundr students who are in the trenches — taking action, learning the hard lessons, and building their businesses in real time. No million-dollar investor checks. No built-in audiences. Just real founders, real journeys, and the honest, unfiltered realities of building something from the ground up. Because the truth is, some of the greatest businesses start small. With an idea. A side hustle. A late night after your day job. Or that one moment you finally decide to bet on yourself. Every big empire starts small — and this is where their story begins. Little Empires is proudly produced by the Foundr team as part of our mission to democratise entrepreneurial education and suppor

  • 638: (Solo) How I'd Launch an Ecom Brand in 2026 with $10K and Zero Followers

    09/03/2026 Duração: 08min

    If you're just getting started with e-commerce and you're wondering how to actually scale with limited cash and no audience, this episode is for you. I get asked this all the time: "Nathan, how do I get started when I only have a small budget?" Here's the truth: most founders tattoo their business idea to their arm. They fall in love with the brand, the product, the vision — and they hold on even when the unit economics don't work. But after launching Healthish to $1 million a year at close to 40% net margins, and helping thousands of DTC brands inside Foundr, I know exactly what works. In this episode, I break down the exact playbook I'd use if I were starting a brand new e-commerce business tomorrow with no audience and just a $10,000 budget. This is strategic, tactical, and based on what I've done and what I've seen work inside the Foundr ecosystem. Here's what you'll take away: Why high-margin products are non-negotiable — aim for 70-80% gross margin, lightweight, easy to ship How to alloc

  • 637: How One Decision Separates a $1 Million Business From a $250 Million One | Leila Hormozi

    06/03/2026 Duração: 58min

    Leila Hormozi went from six arrests in 18 months to building a portfolio generating over $250 million in annual revenue by age 30. What makes her story fascinating isn't just the rags-to-riches narrative—it's her unflinching honesty about the messy middle, her unconventional approach to leadership, and how she scales companies with ruthless precision while maintaining her humanity. Alongside her husband Alex, Leila has become one of the most respected operators in the business world, and in this conversation, she holds nothing back. In this interview, the co-founder of Acquisitions.com breaks down the exact moment her father's words saved her life and sparked a complete transformation, why pain—not discipline—is the real driver of massive change, and her framework for hiring and building lean, high-performing teams that punch way above their weight. What you'll learn in this interview: • The exact moment Leila's father's words sparked her complete transformation • Why pain, not discipline, is th

  • 636: (Solo) The Facebook Ads Metrics That Actually Matter When Scaling

    02/03/2026 Duração: 10min

    Most founders think scaling Facebook ads is about finding one winning ad and spending more behind it. But that's not how it works — especially not anymore. Here's the truth: the brands that scale obsess over the numbers. Not just ROAS. Not just conversion rate. And definitely not just the data inside Facebook Ads Manager. They understand the full picture — from traffic to creative to business economics. And after watching Nick Shackelford scale a brand from $20K/day to $250K/day in ad spend in just 45 days, I know exactly which metrics separate the operators from the marketers. In this episode, I break down the core metrics you need to watch like a hawk if you want to scale profitably. This is what we teach inside Foundr Operators, and it's the difference between burning cash and building a real, scalable business. Here's what you'll take away: The three buckets of metrics every operator tracks: traffic, creative & conversion, and business & profit Why CPM, CTR, and CPC are your leading indicato

  • 635: The Meta Ads System Working in 2026 | Nick Shackelford

    27/02/2026 Duração: 52min

    Nick Shackelford has spent hundreds of millions of dollars profitably on Meta ads and grown Structured from zero to $76 million in revenue in under three years. And he's here to tell you this clearly: Meta isn't broken. Most founders are just reading the wrong signals. In this interview, the co-founder of Structured Agency and partner at BREZ breaks down what actually matters in 2026. From why testing more ads is often making performance worse to the exact point when Meta advertising stops being a media buying problem and becomes a business model problem, this is the operator's playbook for Meta ads from someone managing millions in spend across real accounts right now. Nick also reveals the new community he's building with Foundr to help founders master the numbers and build marketing strength in-house. What you'll learn in this interview: • Why the 2019-2021 Meta playbook is actively hurting performance in 2026 • Which metrics are misleading founders and how to read the right signals • How Me

  • 634: (Solo) My Current AI Stack (and How It’s Helping Us Move 10x Faster at Foundr)

    23/02/2026 Duração: 11min

    Most founders are either ignoring AI or drowning in it. But here's what I've learned after 13 years of building Foundr: AI isn't a shortcut to success — it's a tool. And when used right, it's like upgrading from a horse to a car. You make the same journey, but a lot faster. I've always run Foundr lean. At one point we had 80-90 people and it was a disaster — bloated, slow, misaligned. Now we move fast, we collaborate fast, and we scale without heavy layers of management. And AI is a massive part of how we're maintaining that speed. In this episode, I walk you through my current AI tool stack — the exact tools I use daily, what I use them for, and why. This is tactical, specific, and designed to help you operate leaner without burning out or bloating your team. Here's what you'll take away: Why Manus AI is my new favorite tool for building decks, analyzing data, and writing copy (miles ahead of ChatGPT) How I use Notion AI as my second brain to structure my day, summarize projects, and keep me

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