Founder's Story

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Founder's Story
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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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  • Founder's Story

    "AI Isn't Under Control": The Founder Solving a $20 Trillion Problem | Ep. 397 with Brandon Card CEO of Terzo AI

    13.05.2026 | 31 Min.
    Daniel Robbins interviews Brandon Card, the CEO of Terzo AI, about the hidden financial chaos inside enterprise contracts and why AI is the only scalable way to fix it. Brandon explains how Terzo helps companies treat contracts like financial assets, not legal documents, extracting obligations and commitments with 99.9% accuracy through a hybrid model of AI plus trained human review. They also discuss why Terzo started by selling into Fortune 100 instead of SMB, how early customer pain shaped product-market fit, and why Brandon is equally focused on building community and mental health resilience as he is on revenue.

    Key Discussion Points

    Brandon explains the origin of the name Terzo, inspired by “third” in Italian and the idea of managing third-party relationships, plus the “Oracle effect” of a timeless name beyond one product.
    He recounts incorporating the company on March 13, 2020, then watching airports go empty as COVID hit, building on Zoom 18 hours a day through chaos and loss.
    Brandon describes the pain he lived at Microsoft: customers managing $50B supplier spend with no tools, contracts lost, and manual PowerPoint decks built from screenshots to summarize global agreements.
    He argues CLM systems were built by lawyers for drafting, not for procurement and finance workflows, leaving a massive gap no one understood until recently.
    Brandon shares the early breakthrough: realizing contracts are 300–400 pages long and signed by the thousands, making human-only review mathematically impossible.
    Terzo’s key differentiation is accuracy through humans-in-the-loop, because LLMs can miss financial context across related documents and even turn $1M into $3M in naive extraction.
    He explains why they started enterprise-first, taking on SOC, GDPR, and security onboarding to win Fortune 100 master service agreements rather than “credit card swipe SaaS.”
    Brandon shares his view on AI safety: he believes models behave like they have a “mind of their own,” and that even builders struggle to govern or fully control them.
    The conversation turns to mental health and community, with Brandon advocating in-person connection, events, and digital detox as the antidote to a cyborg-like, always-online world.

    Takeaways

    The best startup ideas come from living the problem daily, because real enterprise pain creates urgency, budget, and durable demand.
    If you are dealing with financial reporting, audits, or compliance, you cannot accept 94% accuracy, which is why human review plus AI QA is the path to trust.
    Unsexy infrastructure wins long term, because databases and contract systems become foundational layers that everything else depends on.
    Starting with Fortune 100 is hard, but once you pass their vendor gatekeeping, you build defensibility and a moat that smaller competitors struggle to cross.
    AI can support mental health through journaling and low-friction venting, but humans still need real community, nature, and offline connection to stay balanced.

    Closing Thoughts

    Brandon Card’s story is a blueprint for enterprise founders: pick a problem that is mathematically impossible to solve manually, build a system that produces trusted data, and commit to the hard path of selling into the biggest customers first. This episode also lands a deeper message: the future is not only about building powerful AI, it is about keeping humans strong enough to live with it. Terzo is building contract intelligence, but Brandon is also building a culture of community, resilience, and long-term thinking.

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  • Founder's Story

    The CEO Who Predicted Bitcoin, AI, and What's Coming Next | Ep. 396 with Sam Tabar CEO of Bit Digital (BTBT) and White Fiber (WYFI)

    11.05.2026 | 32 Min.
    Daniel Robbins interviews Sam Tabar on building conviction early, reinventing repeatedly, and taking theses into the public markets. Sam explains how witnessing the shift from analog to digital in the 1990s trained his pattern recognition, why Bitcoin threatened existing power structures by being “money from the people,” and why Ethereum’s smart contracts can disintermediate banks and even lawyers. The episode also explores AI’s impact on society, the risk of homogenized culture, and why Sam believes the biggest danger is not job loss but surveillance and control.

    Key Discussion Points

    Sam shares his origin story, raised by a car-mechanic father and a tarot-card-reader mother, feeling the sting of scarcity early and using it as motivation to create security for loved ones.
    He explains his “pattern recognition” muscle, seeing the internet transform society and feeling the same cognitive break when he first used ChatGPT.
    Sam frames Bitcoin as the first true global currency: weightless, borderless, decentralized, and resistant to inflation and state control.
    He addresses Bitcoin’s early illicit uses by comparing it to the early internet, arguing the tech is not defined by its earliest adopters.
    Sam describes Ethereum as “Bitcoin 2.0,” where smart contracts are programmable “if-then” agreements that can replace middlemen in payments and contracting.
    He uses the NFT boom as proof of blockchain scalability, noting that at one point NFT transaction volume exceeded Visa without the system breaking, even if valuations collapsed later.
    Sam reflects on reinvention, saying you sometimes have to “kill the person you thought you were,” leaving law despite social pressure for stability and following interest into finance and tech.
    He shares the key AI worry: not job replacement, but governments and surveillance platforms using AI to reduce individual freedom.
    On the upside, Sam believes AI will remove menial work and free humans to use imagination and creativity, if society protects liberty.

    Takeaways

    Growing up around scarcity can create a powerful drive, but the long game is using money as a tool to protect people you love, not as an identity.
    Bitcoin is a thesis on sovereignty: money that cannot be printed, paused, or controlled like fiat, and that changes everything.
    Ethereum’s programmable money is about disintermediation: fewer fees, fewer gatekeepers, and faster settlement than legacy rails.
    The next winners will be infrastructure builders, because AI’s growth is bottlenecked by compute, power, data centers, and the plumbing behind the scenes.
    The biggest risk of AI is centralization and control, so founders should care about governance and freedom as much as capability.

    Closing Thoughts

    Sam Tabar’s story is about conviction under ridicule and the courage to reinvent before the market forces you to. This episode connects three waves—internet, crypto, and AI—through one lens: technology reshapes society when it breaks old power structures and creates new ones. The opportunity is enormous, but Sam’s warning is clear: if we chase efficiency without protecting freedom, we may build the most productive world in history and lose the thing that makes it worth living.

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  • Founder's Story

    They Already Wrote My Obituary. I'm 87 and Not Done Yet | Ep. 395 with Maury Povich

    08.05.2026 | 39 Min.
    Daniel Robbins interviews Maury Povich about how a local news journalist became a national TV icon, the real production machine behind Maury, and what it was like competing in the early talk show wars of the 1990s. Maury explains how the show verified stories like a newsroom, how paternity, lie detectors, and out of control teen themes became mainstream, and why the tabloid talk era directly spawned today’s reality TV ecosystem. The conversation widens into modern media, AI deepfakes, grief, money, marriage, and what Maury believes matters most now.

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    Key Discussion Points

    Maury explains that being recognized for “you are the father” is a badge of honor, because it means the show became part of culture and people truly watched.
    He shares how his producing teams operated like a newsroom, checking stories and vetting guests, and says in 31 years they were never faked on air.
    Maury describes the early days when his show and Jerry Springer started tame, then shifted after Rikki Lake proved a younger audience could be captured, forcing everyone to evolve.
    He says the 1990s talk show era sparked modern reality TV, connecting the thread to Housewives, Kardashians, and today’s cable reality landscape.
    Maury reacts to AI misinformation, including a viral deepfake featuring his show that was so convincing his sister called to ask if it was real.
    He opens up about his marriage to Connie Chung, saying she is funnier than people expect, and shares their rule: take work seriously, never take yourselves seriously.
    Maury reflects on comedians as truth tellers, comparing different comedic styles and explaining why his podcast guests increasingly include comics.
    He shares why Montana is his reset, valuing silence, space, and solitude, and why golf reveals every morsel of a person’s character in 18 holes.
    Maury discusses money insecurity and why he takes Social Security proudly because he remembers paying into it when he had almost nothing.
    He tells the story of his brother David, the lifelong hero dynamic between them, and why his father’s generation never taught them how to grieve.
    Maury reveals the surreal moment the New York Times began drafting his obituary years in advance and refused to show it to him.
    For his unlimited possibility moment, Maury credits Rupert Murdoch bringing him to New York to host A Current Affair, which launched everything that followed.

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Über Founder's Story
Founder’s Story” by IBH Media isn’t just a show—it’s a mission. We spotlight extraordinary, iconic, and undiscovered entrepreneurs who’ve built, scaled, and led with purpose. From tech titans to tenacious underdogs, every episode dives deep into the resilience, creativity, and grit that define true leadership.You’ll hear from household names like Gary V, Codie Sanchez, Rob Dyrdek, and Tom Bilyeu—but just as often, you’ll meet the unheard founders doing remarkable things the world needs to know.This is where raw conversations meet real impact. This is Founder’s Story—where the heart of entrepreneurship beats. Get more leads and grow your business. Go to https://www.pipedrive.com/founders and get started with a 30 day free trial.
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