Founder's Story

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Founder's Story
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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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  • Founder's Story

    AI Made MVPs Instant. So Why Are Most Startups Still Losing | Ep. 401 with Eric Ries

    22.05.2026 | 31 Min.
    Daniel and Eric Ries explore the collision of Lean Startup thinking with the AI era, why “anyone with a credit card” can now access world class tools, and why that democratization also creates brutal competition. Eric argues fatalism about AI is dangerous because we still have agency, but only if we build civic infrastructure and accountability. The conversation then pivots into Incorruptible, where Eric documents a 200 year pattern: mission driven companies discover a better way to build, then still get ruined at the peak of success through bureaucracy, extraction, and misaligned incentives.

    Key Discussion Points

    Eric says AI is an extension of macro trends he’s written about for decades: access to the means of production is now cheap and global, which makes entrepreneurship more open than ever. 

    He challenges the assumption that making one step faster makes the whole process easier, because entrepreneurship is adversarial and competitors and incumbents get the same acceleration. 

    Eric explains why he’s skeptical of fully unsupervised agents for mission critical work: reliability breaks down as tasks encounter out of distribution scenarios, so humans-in-the-loop matter. 

    He introduces Incorruptible and the idea that governance is a design problem, not a vibes problem, describing companies being “surgically deboned” as they grow and optimize for extraction over value. 

    Eric breaks the “double mystery”: if mission driven capitalism is more profitable, why do companies still get ruined, yet a few outliers like Patagonia and Costco resist the pattern. 

    He argues it’s “always too early until it’s too late” to protect mission, and recommends structural moves like writing purpose into the corporate charter and designing boards and protections early. 

    They discuss alternative liquidity and longevity structures beyond a classic exit, including foundations, ESOPs, employee ownership trusts, and purpose trusts, citing examples like Eileen Fisher and Patagonia. 

    Eric reframes the word “exit” as part of the problem and shares research suggesting many founders regret selling one year later, questioning what success is for if it destroys what mattered.

    Takeaways

    AI makes building easier, but it also makes everyone faster, so the advantage comes from judgment, focus, and designing systems that can outlearn competition. 

    If you want to protect mission, you have to encode it structurally, not just culturally, because the gap between stated purpose and actual incentives will eventually swallow the company. 

    “Exit” is not the only path to liquidity, and founders can design for longevity with structures like ESOPs, purpose trusts, and foundation ownership. 

    Agentic AI is powerful when humans stay the driver, but dangerous when accountability is impossible and reliability becomes probabilistic. 

    The earlier you build protections, the easier they are, because governance becomes exponentially harder to change once scale and incentives lock in.

    Closing Thoughts

    Eric Ries helped define how modern startups ship products, but this episode shows he’s now focused on something deeper: how great companies survive success without betraying their purpose. In an AI era where building is cheap and truth is noisy, the real edge becomes institutional design, clarity of mission, and the courage to structure a business that outlives you without losing its soul.

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  • Founder's Story

    Doctors Missed His Son's Disease for 20 Years | Ep. 400 with Chuck Knueve

    20.05.2026 | 23 Min.
    Daniel Robbins interviews Chuck Knueve about watching his son suffer for decades while the healthcare system searched for answers. Chuck breaks down why Cushing’s disease is so difficult to diagnose, what he believes is broken in the process, and how earlier testing could prevent irreversible harm. He also shares why he wrote the book during COVID, how he learned to write at 73 by joining writing guilds, and why he structured the story through his son’s point of view to show what families live with at home, not just what doctors see in clinics.

    Key Discussion Points

    Chuck explains that diagnosis often takes years because Cushing’s hides behind common symptoms, and his son’s case took over twenty years. 

    He argues the issue is not one person, but the diagnostic process and guidelines, especially testing not happening soon enough. 

    Chuck shares the early red flags he wishes had triggered action sooner, including the “buffalo hump,” “moon face,” and abdominal stretch marks appearing together. 

    He emphasizes the importance of finding an endocrinologist who specializes in Cushing’s disease, ideally at a university or teaching hospital. 

    Chuck describes the moment he committed to writing the book, a family Zoom call during COVID where his siblings challenged him to start. 

    He explains why he added jingles: not to be cute, but to create memory triggers that help people recognize the pattern months or years later.

    Takeaways

    Rare diseases can hide in plain sight, and persistent multi-symptom patterns deserve early testing, not years of waiting. 

    Parents and patients often have to advocate harder than they think, including pushing for specialist care when the path stalls. 

    Even when the disease is corrected, delayed diagnosis can mean permanent damage, which is why time is the real enemy. 

    Writing can become advocacy, and Chuck’s goal is simple: make the next family’s journey shorter than his son’s.

    Closing Thoughts

    This episode is a reminder that medical systems can miss what families live with every day, and that a single story can change awareness faster than a guideline update. Chuck Knueve turned decades of pain into a practical tool for earlier recognition and better outcomes. If you suspect something is off and you keep hearing “wait and see,” this conversation will push you to ask better questions and keep going.

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  • Founder's Story

    He Built a $130M Company That Changes How You Sound | Ep. 399 with Shawn Zhang CTO and Co-Founder of Sanas

    18.05.2026 | 38 Min.
    Daniel Robbins interviews Shawn Zhang, CTO and co-founder of Sanas, about the future of education, AI, and communication, and how a single unfair workplace experience turned into a generational company. Shawn explains why the real value of college is people, not lectures, and why the best startups start with real pain, not cool tech. He tells the origin story of Sanas, how they navigated public criticism about “erasing” identity, and why the company’s mission is the opposite: to help people be understood and evaluated on their talent, not their accent.

    Key Discussion Points

    Shawn explains why COVID “broke” the college experience, and why the real value of Stanford was the people and the intellectual Disneyland effect, not the homework.
    He shares how he and his co-founders stopped chasing “cool solutions” and instead focused on finding a real problem that people felt deeply enough to pay to solve.
    The Sanas origin story comes from a friend in Nicaragua whose call center customers complained about his accent, hurting his performance scores, pay, and mental health.
    Shawn describes the backlash period when Sanas was accused of “whitewashing voices,” and why messages from immigrants who felt held back reinforced the mission.
    Daniel reads Sanas growth stats, $121M raised and $62M revenue in two years, and Shawn shares how gratitude and determination rise with momentum, not ease.
    Shawn talks about the founder skill of exposing unknown unknowns by being vulnerable with mentors and peers, because the internet rarely reveals what you’re doing wrong.
    They discuss Gen Z ambition, purpose-driven work, and the danger of social media’s highlight reels creating disillusionment for young builders.
    Shawn explains why Silicon Valley matters less for fundraising and more for density of honest conversations with builders who help you see blind spots.
    He uses rock climbing to describe scaling: early mistakes are painless, but as you climb higher the fall gets real, and pressure becomes part of the thrill.
    On AI and engineering, Shawn argues AI will empower builders, but taste, reliability, and craftsmanship matter more, and junior plus senior engineers should work closer together, not be replaced.

    Takeaways

    A great startup starts with real pain, not a clever demo, because pain creates urgency, willingness to pay, and long-term demand.
    If your product sits in a moral debate, listen closest to the people living the problem, not the people reacting to headlines.
    The fastest way to grow is to surface unknown unknowns early through mentors, peers, and real-world conversations, not public posturing.
    AI will not eliminate engineers, it will raise the bar for quality, and the differentiator becomes taste, systems, and production reliability.
    Social media can distort reality for founders, so staying grounded in real relationships and honest feedback loops is a competitive advantage.

    Closing Thoughts

    Shawn Zhang’s story is a reminder that inclusion is not a slogan, it is a product decision that changes someone’s daily life. Sanas exists because one person’s accent was treated like a flaw instead of a story, and Shawn turned that into a platform built to bridge understanding. In an AI era, this episode argues something unexpected: the more technology grows, the more human connection, empathy, and real communication become the ultimate edge.

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  • Founder's Story

    How Trauma Built KIND to a $5B Exit | Ep. 398 with Daniel Lubetzky Founder of KIND Snacks

    15.05.2026 | 43 Min.
    Daniel Robbins interviews Daniel Lubetzky on what shaped his obsession with bridging divides and building mission driven brands. Daniel explains how his father’s Holocaust survival created a survival instinct that later became entrepreneurship, and how early failures taught him the reps he needed before KIND. They dive into the psychology of founders, separating self worth from the pursuit of excellence, and the hidden ingredient behind KIND’s rise: a product people loved and a culture with ownership, transparency, and no politics.

    Key Discussion Points

    Daniel Lubetzky explains why he believes kindness itself has not changed, but social media anonymity has weakened eye to eye human connection and made dehumanization easier.
    He shares how he approaches Shark Tank with empathy first, letting founders pitch uninterrupted, then asking tough questions, because trying is already a win and failure is part of the odds.
    Daniel talks about his ADHD mind, constant idea streams, and why early formative experiences, like magic and language learning, became business skills later.
    He reveals a deeply personal driver: as a child of a Holocaust survivor, he learned languages and skills as a survival instinct so he would be useful, not expendable.
    On KIND’s rocket ship, he credits the right product at the right time, a brand that stood for something real, and a culture where everyone acted like an owner with high transparency.
    Daniel explains the “AND” mindset, most people think in OR, but breakthroughs come from rejecting false tradeoffs and designing for both sides of the equation.
    He warns that raising kids in comfort can kill the fire to build, and argues we must teach agency and protagonist thinking, not rigid victim or oppressor labels.
    Daniel shares what scares him most: toxic polarization, dehumanization, and algorithms that profit from division, which is why he champions the Builders movement.
    He gives a simple Builder framework: curiosity, compassion, creativity, and courage, and defines builders as people who unite rather than divide.
    He closes with a key founder lesson: separate your self worth from your quest to be great, because the pursuit can be ruthless if it becomes your identity.

    Takeaways

    Trying is winning, because each venture increases your odds and builds your skill, even when the first attempts fail.
    KIND’s success was not only marketing, it was product obsession, relentless hustle, and a culture built on ownership and transparency.
    If you want to build something new, stop copying existing categories and look for the unsolved problem behind a false OR, then design an AND.
    Your mindset must protect your mental health: separate self worth from performance so failure becomes feedback, not identity collapse.
    The most important choice in a polarized world is whether you become a builder or a destroyer, and the builder tools are the four Cs.

    Closing Thoughts

    This episode is a masterclass in founder psychology and modern leadership, delivered by someone who built a category defining brand while staying obsessed with humanity. Daniel Lubetzky’s story proves that fear can either consume you or drive you to create safety, purpose, and impact. His final challenge is simple: choose to build, practice the four Cs, and never let your quest for greatness turn into self hatred.

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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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