Founder's Story

IBH Media
Founder's Story
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  • Founder's Story

    Bootstrap or Raise VC? Here's the Math From a $150M Founder | Ep. 406 with Tal Lev-Ami Co-Founder and Chief Technology Officer at Cloudinary

    10.06.2026 | 28 Min.
    Daniel and Tal trace Tal’s origin story from writing code in elementary school to building Cloudinary with two co founders over decades of friendship. Tal explains why bootstrapping forced discipline and protected culture, how Cloudinary grew product led before “PLG” was a label, and what it means for employees when option value rises without constant dilution from new funding rounds. The conversation then pivots into the AI era, where Tal is actively experimenting with AI assisted coding systems, and where he predicts both huge opportunity and a much bigger roller coaster for founders.

    Key Discussion Points

    Tal shares that computers felt like a creative superpower because he could imagine something and make it real, and that drive never left him.

    He explains how the act of building changed from BASIC and Pascal to orchestrating AI agents, but the core satisfaction is still creation.

    Tal breaks down why bootstrapping is harder than fundraising, because you must earn revenue fast, spend with discipline, and grow at a pace that preserves culture.

    He explains the upside of founder control, the board remains the founders, allowing them to design the company’s path, values, and hiring standards.

    Tal describes a hidden employee benefit of bootstrapping, option value can grow with revenue without the repeated dilution and preference complexity of venture rounds.

    He shares a hard learned go to market lesson, moving too far upmarket too quickly lowered win rates and created lottery quarters, forcing a return to a healthier range before expanding again.

    Tal explains why the barrier to starting companies keeps dropping, first cloud enabled Cloudinary, now AI agents enable coding, marketing, and selling, making “zero person companies” plausible.

    He pushes back on the idea that everything becomes a race to zero price, arguing that enterprise grade reliability, compliance, and the cost of mistakes create a durable moat.

    Tal describes the co founder operating system that kept them together for 30 years, weekly conversations, honest venting, and deep understanding of when to push and when to back off.

    He closes with a grounded view on entrepreneurship, it is a little crazy, rules keep changing, and not everyone should be a founder, but impact is possible as an employee too.

    Takeaways

    Bootstrapping is a strategy, not a flex, it buys control and cultural consistency, but demands early revenue and relentless discipline.

    AI will make building cheaper and faster, but it will also make competition faster, and real moats will come from reliability, trust, and execution in complex environments.

    If you go upmarket too soon, you can trap yourself in “lottery quarters,” so watch win rate as closely as deal size.

    Three co founders can be a strength because it creates a balancing mechanism, especially when conflict or pressure rises.

    The future may reduce scarcity, but humans will still need purpose, meaning, and a way to feel impactful, even if robots do more of the work.

    Closing Thoughts

    Tal Lev-Ami is a rare blend of builder and long game operator, someone who scaled without losing the craft and then returned to hands on creation through AI. This episode is a reminder that the best companies endure because they earn trust, not because they raise the biggest round. In an era where anyone can ship fast, Tal’s message lands hard: the real edge is building something that keeps working when the stakes are high.

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  • Founder's Story

    The Career Rule That Took Him From Bagger to 3-Time CIO | Ep. 405 with Harrison Allen Lewis Founding Partner at Jacob Meadow Associates

    08.06.2026 | 36 Min.
    Daniel and Harrison Allen Lewis break down why the best leadership lessons often come from terrible management, and why clarity beats charisma in modern organizations. Harrison explains his operating model for transformation: define the outcome, anchor a strategy to that outcome, then build a plan that the business can own. They also explore career leverage, mentorship, fear as a signal, and why great CIO work is less about tools and more about aligning people, incentives, and accountability.

    Key Discussion Points

    Harrison shares the grocery store story that stuck with him: he thought he was trusted with the keys, then learned later it was an escape during a bomb threat, which taught him accountability the hard way.

    Daniel and Harrison discuss why many companies promote or place people without matching strengths, and why the better approach is doing change with people, not to people.

    Harrison explains the transformation chain: outcome first, then strategy, then plan, and why starting with a plan creates chaos.

    They unpack differentiation in the AI era, where tools are everywhere, and the edge is understanding value, willingness to pay, and the unique properties of your tools.

    Harrison calls out silos as a major failure point, where people show up as their function instead of as business owners solving a shared problem.

    He shares his worst CIO moments: being asked to execute a doomed plan, or being the new leader who tells the uncomfortable truth and becomes the most hated person for a month.

    Harrison describes the loneliness of leadership and how he leaned on reciprocal mentors and peers as a sounding board.

    He argues EQ will matter more, but AI can increase effective IQ by offloading minutiae into a knowledge base so leaders can operate at a higher level.

    Harrison closes with his butterfly effect story: a Kroger manager handing him an application changed everything, and his father’s rule became his compass: say yes unless you have a good reason to say no, and fear is not a reason.

    Takeaways

    The best leaders are transparent and candid, and they treat people as capable adults who can handle the truth.

    If your plan is not anchored in strategy and your strategy is not anchored in outcome, your transformation is already failing.

    Silos destroy momentum, and alignment happens when teams solve one business problem together instead of defending their department badge.

    Fear is often a signal that an opportunity is real, and saying yes can create the career path you never could have planned.

    In the AI era, differentiation comes from value creation and tool mastery, not from having access to the same software everyone else has.

    Closing Thoughts

    This episode is a masterclass in practical leadership, the kind built in stores, boardrooms, and crisis moments, not in slogans. Harrison Lewis shows that transformation is not a tech upgrade, it is a human alignment problem anchored in outcome, strategy, and accountability. If you are leading change right now, this conversation will give you a cleaner playbook and a better mindset for the hard days.

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  • Founder's Story

    Anastasia Soare Built a $3 Billion Empire. Started With No English. No Money. | Ep. 404

    02.06.2026 | 42 Min.
    Daniel and Anastasia Soare start with Romania, identity, and the immigrant experience, then trace her journey from arriving in the US in 1989 to building one of the most globally recognized beauty brands in the world. Anastasia explains how she went from an esthetician job to renting one room and one chair in Beverly Hills, betting on an overlooked idea: eyebrows. She shares why curiosity and mastery mattered more than “manifesting,” how trust built her celebrity relationships, and why she sees ABH as a legacy she will never stop building, alongside her daughter.

    Key Discussion Points

    Anastasia shares how hard the first six months in LA were, crying daily because she left family, community, and certainty behind and arrived with no language or security. 

    She explains how life under communism trained her for entrepreneurship, constant problem solving, adapting daily, and finding solutions without expecting help. 

    Anastasia describes why she chose brows, using art, architecture, and the golden ratio to create a repeatable technique that made faces look balanced and lifted. 

    She recalls being told she was crazy by her husband, landlord, and community, but her mindset was simple: what do I have to lose if I believe in this. 

    The Oprah moment in 1998 became the turning point, her “Oscar moment,” because Oprah understood the concept and broadcast it to the world before social media existed. 

    She explains how celebrity relationships grew over decades, including working with Jennifer Lopez from early in her career, and why trust is everything at that level. 

    Anastasia shares her partnership with private equity in 2018, then reveals she personally invested $225M to maintain majority control when the firm exited after COVID disruption. 

    She describes ABH as pure legacy, saying she will never “retire,” because innovation and building products with her daughter is her purpose. 

    She explains product innovation as a loop of consumer insight, social signals, and chemistry advances, sharing how formulas like brow pomade became possible only when labs could make them waterproof. 

    Anastasia credits her daughter for pushing ABH onto Instagram in 2012 to educate customers digitally and reduce constant travel, which later fueled massive growth in retail.

    Takeaways

    Immigrant grit is transferable, the same mindset that helped Anastasia survive scarcity became the mindset that helped her build a brand under pressure. 

    You do not need a huge dream to start, you need obsession with mastering one craft, and for Anastasia that craft was brows. 

    Success is easier to achieve than to maintain, and long term winners keep working like rent is due even after the brand is iconic. 

    If you want to win as a founder, leave ego behind, ask questions, admit what you do not know, and learn directly from customers. 

    Legacy is a decision, and Anastasia’s $225M reinvestment shows how founders protect what they built when outside capital priorities shift.

    Closing Thoughts

    Anastasia Soare’s story is proof that category creation starts with conviction before the market agrees. She did not follow a trend, she created one, then defended it with craft, discipline, and decades of trust. This episode is a reminder that the American Dream is not a vibe, it is endurance, humility, and the willingness to bet on yourself twice, even after you’ve already “won.”

    Episode Sponsor:

    Thank you to our amazing sponsor, Shopify, who has changed my life. Sign up for your one-dollar-per-month trial today at SHOPIFY.com/foundersstory

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  • Founder's Story

    Spencer Pratt Wins LA Mayor and Other Shocking Predictions From Famous Psychic | Ep. 403 with Craig Hamilton-Parker

    28.05.2026 | 39 Min.
    Daniel and Guest Host Nadja interview Craig Hamilton-Parker about how he developed his psychic practice, how he distinguishes intuition from opinion, and why he believes prediction is about probability, not destiny. Craig shares a bold call on the Los Angeles mayor race, then zooms out to discuss broader global tensions and what he sees as an approaching “pressure window” in the coming years. They also explore AI, consciousness, and Craig’s belief that periods of instability can trigger deeper questions about meaning and identity.

    Key Discussion Points

    Craig explains his background and how his work evolved from early experiences into public-facing predictions, plus the responsibility that comes with making specific calls. 

    He shares his prediction that Spencer Pratt will be the next LA mayor, and the conversation examines why “off-script” authenticity can outperform traditional political playbooks. 

    Craig outlines how he thinks about major world events as shifting probability paths, emphasizing that timing can be difficult and outcomes can change with collective decisions. 

    They discuss current geopolitical flashpoints and Craig’s view of a heightened risk period that could peak around 2028, while still leaving room for de-escalation and course correction. 

    On AI, Craig takes a tool-based view, arguing that it can amplify or destabilize humanity depending on how people use it, and he believes human meaning-making still matters most.

    Takeaways

    Predictions, in Craig’s view, are probability maps, not fate, and the most constructive stance is preparation without fatalism. 

    People respond emotionally during uncertainty, which is why authentic, unpolished voices can rise fast in politics and media. 

    If you consume prediction content, keep discernment: treat it as one input, not a replacement for decision-making and personal responsibility. 

    AI may accelerate output and misinformation at the same time, making verification, calm thinking, and trusted relationships even more valuable.

    Closing Thoughts

    This episode is less about “believing or not believing” and more about how humans seek certainty in chaotic times. Craig Hamilton-Parker leaves listeners with a challenge: stay curious, stay grounded, and don’t outsource your agency to fear—whether it comes from news cycles, algorithms, or predictions.

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  • Founder's Story

    Built a $34M Company on One Lesson From Her Dad at 7 | Ep. 401 with Kate Monroe

    25.05.2026 | 27 Min.
    Kate Monroe went from Marine Corps veteran to 8-figure CEO, actress, mother, and one of the most relentless entrepreneurs you'll ever hear from. But the lesson that shaped her life did not come from business school. It came from her dad when she was 7 years old.

    In this episode of Founder's Story, Daniel Robbins sits down with Kate Monroe to talk about how she scaled her company from $750,000 to nearly $34 million in sales in just three years, why she believes success starts with a decision, and how one childhood lesson taught her to handle pressure, problems, and pain without letting them ruin everything else.

    Kate shares the difference between being a "makeup bag person" and a "toolbox person," a simple mindset shift that helped her compartmentalize challenges, build a veteran-owned company, run for Congress, step into film, and launch Studio Mint.

    This is a conversation about grit, discipline, ambition, and what it really takes to keep going when most people would quit.

    In this episode, we cover:

    The lesson Kate learned from her dad at 7 years old

    How she scaled from $750K to nearly $34M in sales

    Why "decided" became one of the most important words in her life

    How she writes a full book in just 14 hours

    Why being the face of your brand can change everything

    The mindset behind outworking the competition

    Her move into acting, movies, vertical shorts, and Studio Mint

    Why she believes social media has made people more disconnected

    The difference between starting something and actually finishing it

    Follow Kate Monroe: Instagram / Socials: @KateMonroeCEO Website: KateMonroeCEO.com

    Subscribe to Founder's Story for more conversations with founders, creators, leaders, and entrepreneurs building extraordinary lives.

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Über Founder's Story
"Founder's Story" by IBH Media isn't a business show. It's the conversation founders don't get to have anywhere else. Think 60 Minutes, but for entrepreneurs. We sit down with the most interesting people in business and go past the highlight reel, past the pitch, past the polished version they give every other podcast. We go into the mud with them. The 2 a.m. doubts. The bet that almost ended everything. The moment they wanted to quit and didn't. You'll hear from household names like Gary V, Codie Sanchez, Rob Dyrdek, and Tom Bilyeu, and just as often from founders you've never heard of who are building something the world needs to know about. Either way, the goal is the same: a real conversation that makes you laugh, makes you think, and sometimes catches you off guard with how much it makes you feel. This is where the story behind the success finally gets told. This is "Founder's Story."
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