Founder's Story

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Founder's Story
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  • Founder's Story

    From Rock Bottom to 2 Exits and a New Brand Built on Discipline | Ep. 392 with Michael Chernow Founder of Kreatures of Habit

    27.04.2026 | 24 Min.
    Daniel opens by recalling meeting Michael Chernow at Expo West and being struck by his willingness to go back to the grind, personally handing out bars and connecting with people one by one. Michael explains that human connection is his superpower and that word of mouth starts when the founder is the first person to hand you the product and tell the story. From there, the conversation turns into Michael’s life arc: addiction, rock bottom, recovery, and the mindset that helped him build, exit, and start again without losing himself.

    Key Discussion Points

    Michael explains why he still hits the floor at events, because connecting with people at scale is both his strength and his favorite marketing channel.
    He shares the core lesson from addiction and recovery: the only thing you must do perfectly is get back up.
    Michael describes his first exit moment, seeing seven figures hit his account, then choosing grounded purchases and helping his mom feel secure.
    He breaks down why “Creatures of Habit” is a philosophy, how tiny daily choices define your life, and why starting the day strong changes the whole day.
    Michael explains his founder mindset: every business is hard, soul and culture matter, and the difference between good and great entrepreneurs is how they handle adversity.
    He shares why personal brand is a “fail proof” asset that fuels every business, even when the market changes or companies fail.

    Takeaways

    Word of mouth is strongest when the founder delivers the first story, because people remember the human who gave it to them.
    If life knocks you down, success is not avoiding failure, it is mastering the comeback.
    Habits are identity, and the smallest daily choices shape your health, relationships, and business outcomes over time.
    Soul beats spreadsheets, because culture and conviction can carry you through what data cannot predict.
    A personal brand compounds forever, and when built right it becomes leverage across every product, partnership, and opportunity.

    Closing Thoughts

    Michael Chernow’s story is the blueprint for founders who feel like they are at war every day, because he has lived the real version of rock bottom and still chose to stand up again. This episode is a reminder that exits do not define you, habits do, and that the most powerful “marketing” is still one human making another human feel seen. If you want to win long term, Michael’s advice is simple: build better habits and keep getting back up.

    If you’re onboarding, documenting SOPs, or constantly re-explaining the same tools, try Scribe.
    Book a personalized demo at scribe.how/founders.

    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
  • Founder's Story

    The Dark Side of Building a Healthcare System That Works | Ep. 391 with Harry DiFrancesco Founder & CEO of Carda Health

    24.04.2026 | 20 Min.
    Daniel opens with a personal reflection on how health crises destroy families financially and emotionally, then Harry DiFrancesco explains why he built Carda Health after watching his father struggle to access prescribed rehab after a major heart event. Harry breaks down the structural issue: the system pays for interventions after people get sick, but underinvests in the lifestyle and behavior change programs that prevent repeat hospitalizations. The conversation moves through AI hype versus real value, why access is the true bottleneck, how Carda reached an NPS of 89, and what it feels like to nearly run out of money and still keep building.

    Key Discussion Points

    Harry shares the origin story: his dad’s heart disease, his father being unable to get to prescribed rehab, and Harry becoming his sole caregiver.
    They unpack the core system failure: we reward sick care, but it is hard to access the prevention and follow on care that actually restores health.
    Harry argues AI is most promising in drug discovery, but the bigger U.S. problem is care access, where appointments take longer now than a decade ago.
    A stunning stat drives the mission: roughly 90% of heart patients and 95% of lung patients do not access the rehab they are entitled to.
    Harry gives a grounded take on GLP-1s: many patients stop within a year, weight often returns, muscle can be lost, and lifestyle programs must be paired for durable outcomes.
    They connect entrepreneurship to ultra endurance, with Harry explaining the emotional lows of a 100 mile race mirror startup survival.
    Harry shares Carda’s “why”: patient wins like helping an 80+ year old WWII veteran get healthy enough to return to France after heart disease.
    They break down the Humana partnership, why payers care about preventing expensive readmissions, and how Carda’s NPS and home based convenience drive member satisfaction.
    Harry explains how they earned NPS 89: obsessive convenience, tech setup support for older patients, and continuity of care where the same clinician stays with the patient.

    Takeaways

    Prevention fails in America because access fails, and AI helps most when it removes friction and frees clinicians to focus on high leverage conversations.
    Behavior change is the missing “infrastructure,” and without it, even breakthrough drugs like GLP-1s can lead to worse long term outcomes.
    Cardiac and pulmonary rehab is a massive market failure today, and virtual first delivery can turn entitled care into real care.
    NPS is earned through relationships, not apps: continuity with one clinician plus real human support builds trust and adherence.
    The founder journey is endurance, and the win is not the funding round, it is the patient who gets their life back.

    Closing Thoughts

    Harry’s story is a reminder that the biggest healthcare breakthroughs are often not new drugs, but new delivery models that make proven care actually reachable. Carda Health is betting on the combination that matters most: human clinicians supported by AI, not replaced by it. If you care about longevity, family, and freedom, this episode makes the case that prevention is not a slogan, it is a system that has to be built.

    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
  • Founder's Story

    The Elon Musk Playbook, Space Mining, and the Next Wave Nobody Sees Yet | Ep. 390 with Eric Jorgenson CEO of Scribe Media

    20.04.2026 | 24 Min.
    Eric Jorgenson, CEO of Scribe, explains why he chose Elon Musk as a subject, arguing Elon is singular in taking max risk on civilization scale problems and repeatedly pulling off what looks impossible. He breaks down his approach to writing as curation, building a “mosaic” from hundreds of sources so the reader feels like Elon is directly mentoring them. Daniel and Eric also discuss polarization, the next tech frontiers in biology and space, and why Scribe exists to remove gatekeepers and help more people publish books that outlive them.

    Key Discussion Points

    Eric explains he wrote the Elon book because Elon is a one of one entrepreneur who takes extreme risk to solve massive human problems.
    He shares his “curate, not write” method, stitching together everything Elon has said publicly into a smooth, mentor like reading experience.
    Eric says the biggest surprise was how central purpose is to Elon’s decision making, talent attraction, and willingness to endure public and financial risk.
    He talks about polarization and why we need to separate political noise from what we can genuinely learn from a person’s craft and lived experience.
    Eric explains why he’d bet on nanotech, biology, and the AI plus CRISPR wave as the next “get rich while solving real problems” frontier.
    They dive into space economics, asteroid mining, and why Eric believes we’ll have metal from space on Earth in about a decade.
    Eric explains why books are “Lindy,” why print still matters, and why publishing is being democratized as gatekeepers lose relevance.
    He shares the Scribe turnaround story: being a customer caught in bankruptcy, helping behind the scenes, then becoming CEO after the assets were rebuilt.
    Eric describes his “unlimited possibility” moment: publishing the Almanack of Naval Ravikant, which became proof of exceptional ability and changed his life trajectory.

    Takeaways

    Purpose is leverage, because it helps you take risks other people won’t, attracts elite talent, and creates resilience through pain and uncertainty.
    A book can be a “lighthouse” that gathers your people, changes your opportunities, and becomes an asset that precedes you for decades.
    The future economy is bigger than Earth, and the raw materials of the solar system make space industrialization a long term inevitability.
    Traditional publishing is a 150 year old model built for a world that no longer exists, and modern authors can keep control while still producing world class work.
    If you’re going to do a book, do it right, because it can outlive you and compound into everything you do next.

    Closing Thoughts

    Eric’s message is both simple and challenging: stop waiting for permission and build something that lasts. Whether it’s a book, a company, or a new technology wave, the people who win are the ones who stay amazed by what’s possible and keep dragging “impossible” into “done.” If you’ve been thinking about writing a book, this episode makes the case that you’re only one great book away from changing your life.

    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
  • Founder's Story

    Why Most Celebrity Brands Fail and How I Built High Level Science Instead | Ep. 389 with Ashley Parker Angel Co-founder of High Level Science

    17.04.2026 | 28 Min.
    Ashley Parker Angel Co-founder of High Level Science opens up about the highs of becoming famous overnight and the hidden downside no one trains you for. He describes how entertainment can wrap your identity around external validation, how contracts and industry politics can leave artists far less wealthy than the public assumes, and why he reached a point where he wanted real control over his life. From there, he shares his health transformation, his obsession with learning what actually works, and the decision to build a medical grade supplement company with credibility at the center, not hype.

    Key Discussion Points

    Ashley breaks down the benefits of fame, including instant recognition, doors opening fast, and surreal moments like performing at Madison Square Garden.
    He explains the dark side, including being taken advantage of through contracts, manipulation behind the scenes, and the psychological crash when attention fades.
    He shares the turning point where he realized he had no control, felt burned out from living out of a suitcase, and chose stability through Broadway’s grind of eight shows a week.
    Ashley tells the story of being excommunicated from the Jehovah’s Witness community at 17, losing his support system, and how that rejection built a level of resilience that makes business stress feel smaller.
    He reveals why he built High Level Science from the ground up instead of licensing his name, and why partnering with Dr. David Rizik was about credibility, science, and long term trust.
    Ashley explains the GNC full circle moment, from getting rejected for a job at 15 to cold calling the CEO and landing in over 1,000 stores with the “Making the Brand” tour.

    Takeaways

    Fame is a performance amplifier, not a life plan, and without ownership of the business side, the money and control often go to everyone else.
    If your identity depends on external success, losing momentum can feel like losing yourself, so resilience requires building an internal foundation that survives the spotlight.
    Obsession can be an advantage when it is aimed at mastery, because excellence comes from leaving it all on the mat, not coasting on reputation.
    The celebrity brand era is shifting, and trust now comes from real expertise, real results, and partners with undeniable credibility.
    The biggest unlock is mindset training, because Ashley’s “unlimited possibility” moment started with belief before the evidence showed up.

    Closing Thoughts

    Ashley Parker Angel’s story is a reminder that success can be loud on the outside and fragile on the inside if you do not own your identity and your health. This episode is about turning pain into resilience, turning attention into a platform, and turning a health wake up call into a real business built on science. If you are chasing the next win, Ashley offers a better question: are you building something you actually control and something that lasts beyond the spotlight.

    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
  • Founder's Story

    David Grutman: From Bartender to Miami’s Nightlife King | Ep. 338

    13.04.2026 | 18 Min.
    Daniel talks with David Grutman about the real mechanics of influence: not clout chasing, but doing the work to make people feel taken care of at a level they never expected. David explains how he made Miami “stick” for celebrities and founders by curating unforgettable trips, why hospitality is a game of obsessive details, and how social media turned nightlife into an instant feedback loop that makes the job ten times harder. They also unpack his investing approach, his mindset around fear and pressure, and the message of his book Take It Personal: if a bartender can build an empire, you can too.

    Key Discussion Points

    David explains his early strategy was simple: get influential people to Miami, then control the full experience so they fell in love with the city.
    He breaks down his “value add” philosophy, saying it is not about keeping score, it is about serving because the act itself is the reward.
    David shares how to add value to people who “have everything,” by spotting the one thing they do not have access to or are not even thinking about.
    He reveals that hospitality excellence is built on micro details, from lighting and music to table flow, empty glasses, and service pacing.
    They talk virality, including the iconic “beef case” and the over the top royal cart that creates instant FOMO and turns dinner into content.
    David explains why social media made hospitality harder, because there is no lag time anymore and the market demands a hit every night.
    He shares what scares him most, waking up to nightly sales reports and seeing red, because in hospitality anything can change the next day.
    David talks about building global expansion through years long relationships and only partnering with people who fill gaps and align on goals.
    He explains why he wrote Take It Personal, turning a five year FIU course into a blueprint for the next generation of entrepreneurs.

    Takeaways

    If you want powerful relationships, stop asking when it “evens out” and focus on becoming the person who adds value by default.
    Being great at hospitality is not vibes, it is systems and details, spotting every pinch point before the guest ever feels it.
    Viral moments are engineered, and the best operators design photogenic, shareable experiences that make the whole room turn their heads.
    If you want to open a restaurant or nightclub, do not skip the journey, learn every role first because the reps build judgment.
    Trust is earned fast but lost forever, and David’s rule is simple: trust people until they give you a reason not to, then it is over.

    Closing Thoughts

    David Grutman’s story is the long game in action: relationships, repetition, and relentless attention to detail. Take It Personal is his proof that influence is built, not inherited, and that the “fun business” is still one of the most stressful businesses in the world. The real surprise is what matters most to him now: being a great father and husband, and building something his daughters can surpass.

    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

    Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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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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