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Founder's Story

IBH Media
Founder's Story
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  • Founder's Story

    How to Keep Key Leaders Without Raising Salaries (And Why It Can Profit the Company) | Ep. 322 with Bob Nienaber Founder and CEO of BenefitRFP

    12.03.2026 | 25 Min.
    Daniel Robbins interviews Bob Nienaber, the Founder and CEO of BenefitRFP, about how founders should think about retirement planning, executive compensation, and retention strategies as a company scales. Bob explains the mechanics and intent behind executive benefit platforms, why qualified plans are restrictive for highly compensated employees, and how governance ready incentive structures can align leadership without increasing fixed compensation.

    Key Discussion Points:
    Bob says the first retirement priority is maximizing every available benefit and corporate match using pre tax dollars and letting time do the compounding. He explains that many people fail at retirement not because they did not save, but because they do not plan distributions and taxes, including state tax differences and long retirement time horizons. He breaks down why nonqualified plans allow companies to design retention and incentive programs for a small group of key people even at smaller revenue levels if losing them would be high risk. He also warns against phantom stock as “cheap” compensation, arguing that unfunded promises destroy trust and can become extremely expensive later.

    Takeaways:
    Bob’s core message is that taxes are the biggest silent cost in both personal wealth and company compensation, and structuring plans correctly can change everything. Retention is often cheaper than replacement, and he emphasizes that losing a one hundred thousand dollar employee can cost roughly three times that to replace. He claims properly designed and funded benefit plans can create profit for the company, not just cost, by reducing turnover and improving alignment. On exits, Bob says the one guarantee is that what you think will happen rarely happens exactly that way, so sellers must protect themselves and enforce buyer obligations.

    Closing Thoughts:
    This Founder’s Story conversation reframes executive benefits as strategy, not paperwork, especially for founders who want to keep key people without simply writing bigger checks. Bob Nienaber leaves listeners with a clear challenge: stop treating retirement and executive comp as an afterthought, because the decisions you make now compound for decades.

    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 $1M Shark Tank Surge and the Product Test That Changed Everything | Ep. 321 with Wombi Rose Co-Founder and CEO of Lovepop

    09.03.2026 | 26 Min.
    Daniel Robbins interviews Wombi Rose about building Lovepop, the company that revolutionized greeting cards with Slicegami, a fusion of kirigami and ship design software. The conversation covers Lovepop’s mission to create one billion magical moments, how customer driven testing validated demand early, what Shark Tank really feels like from inside the doors, and how Lovepop is adapting its product and subscription strategy for a world craving real connection.

    Key Discussion Points:
    Wombi explains that Lovepop began as pure fascination with intricate paper art discovered on a business school trip to Vietnam, long before it felt like a business. A key early moment came when a woman in Boston immediately said she would give the card to her mother on the anniversary of her father’s passing, proving the product was about emotion, not paper. He describes the scrappy early sales days, including making envelopes on the spot at a market and selling seventeen hundred dollars in one day, which signaled undeniable demand. Wombi then recounts Shark Tank nerves turning into calm once he saw the Sharks, landing a deal with Kevin, and experiencing the surge of seven and a half million viewers, thirty three thousand site visitors, and about one million dollars in sales after airing.

    Takeaways:
    This episode reinforces that the fastest way to validate a business is to test with real customers in real environments before building everything else. Wombi’s story shows how a single customer insight can redefine a product into a mission, turning greeting cards into a vehicle for connection in a loneliness crisis. He also highlights how scaling requires personal evolution, shifting from being right, to influencing, to listening, to ultimately empowering others to make decisions. Lovepop’s StashPass subscription is a direct response to what their best customers already do, keep a stash at home, and it helps both customers and the company build consistency.

    Closing Thoughts:
    Founder’s Story captures a rare kind of founder who blends engineering discipline with emotional intelligence and mission. Wombi Rose leaves listeners with a powerful idea that in an AI heavy world, the real advantage may be helping humans stay meaningfully connected, one magical moment at a time.

    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

    Stephen Fishbach: The Truth About Reality TV (It’s Real, But Not What You Think) | Ep. 320 with Stephen Fishbach Best Selling Author of Escape!

    06.03.2026 | 26 Min.
    Daniel Robbins interviews Stephen Fishbach about the psychology of reality TV, the real lived intensity of Survivor, and the behind the scenes craft of producers who turn real life into a compelling story arc. Stephen also shares how he strategically leveraged his reality TV identity into writing, using that world as the bridge to a literary career through his novel Escape!

    Key Discussion Points:
    Stephen explains that many jungle reality contestants are not chasing fame as much as they are chasing a confrontation with the wilderness and a chance to find themselves. He describes reality producers as people who can see where a scene begins and ends, shaping real moments into structured narratives. He shares how Survivor feels like sudden freedom inside a game, but also becomes emotionally brutal because lying, betraying, and voting people out carries real weight. Stephen breaks down how he leveraged his Survivor platform into writing, and how Escape! explores the tension between lived reality and the story someone else is crafting about you.

    Takeaways:
    Reality TV reveals group psychology fast, including how tribes preserve moral innocence by making one person the scapegoat for the chaos the game forces on everyone. The hardest part is often not being voted out, but voting someone else out while knowing what the money represents for their life. Stephen’s creative lesson is to write from the world only you truly know, then use that as the bridge to where you want to go next. Escape! is his way of taking the reality TV identity and turning it into a deeper story about control, image, and meaning in a social media age.

    Closing Thoughts:
    This Founder’s Story episode is funny, honest, and unexpectedly deep because it treats reality TV like a real study of human behavior instead of a guilty pleasure. Stephen Fishbach leaves listeners with a sharper understanding of what’s real, what’s shaped, and why the need to “escape” your life can show up in the strangest places.

    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 Future of Space and Startups: Where Smart Investors Are Betting Next | Ep 319 with Jake Chapman Managing Director of Marque Ventures

    04.03.2026 | 23 Min.
    Daniel Robbins interviews Jake Chapman about how Marque Ventures invests in early stage companies advancing U.S. national security and Western values. Jake shares how his work moved from private investing into rethinking venture activity inside the Department of War and back out again into building a private firm designed to fund the future of defense, dual use, and strategic technologies.

    Key Discussion Points:
    Jake explains that national security investing requires founders and investors to think like futurists and “skate to where the puck is going,” not just fund what is being used in today’s conflicts. He shares why the U.S. acquisition system is more predictable than many people assume, making defense spending and future capability needs easier to map than consumer behavior. He also breaks down why defense founders need someone on the team with direct military or procurement experience and why talking to the end user early is critical. The conversation expands into space, where Jake argues that space infrastructure is becoming economically and strategically essential, with the long term possibility of a true in space economy and even the need to defend assets beyond Earth.

    Takeaways:
    A major takeaway from the episode is that great defense founders are usually mission driven and deeply engaged with the real world problems they want to solve. Jake makes clear that VCs are not only evaluating the business, but the founder’s passion, thoughtfulness, and ability to answer hard questions under pressure. He also highlights that some of the biggest mistakes in pitching come from dismissing competitors, lacking energy, or building a product without understanding how the actual customer will use it. More broadly, the episode shows that national security innovation is no longer a government only game, but a rapidly evolving startup space where private builders, veterans, and frontier tech founders can shape the future.

    Closing Thoughts:
    This Founder’s Story episode captures just how wide the lens has become for modern venture capital, stretching from defense procurement and battlefield tools to space commerce and even questions about aliens. Jake Chapman leaves listeners with a strong sense that the future will belong to founders who understand both technology and the geopolitical environment their products will enter.

    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

    He Helps Executives Go From Good to Great and His First Move Is Radical | Ep. 318 with Steven Lovett Founder/CEO of Principled Consulting Services

    03.03.2026 | 28 Min.
    Daniel Robbins interviews Steven Lovett about what separates good executives from great ones and why many leaders get stuck optimizing a business model they should be redesigning. Steven shares how his work with C-suite teams and boards focuses on helping leaders shift from reactive, short term thinking into strategic intelligence that prepares organizations for market change, innovation, and long term growth.

    Key Discussion Points:
    Steven says the real issue for most leaders is the gap between where they are and where they know they need to be. He uses the idea of deleting everything from a calendar as a way to force leaders to question how work actually gets done. He explains that many organizations reward stewardship of legacy instead of controlled experimentation. He also argues that alignment starts with shared decision making principles, not just shared goals.

    Takeaways:
    Efficiency alone does not create strategic advantage if the underlying model is outdated. Great leaders challenge assumptions, rebuild decision systems, and create incentives that reward thoughtful risk taking. The episode also makes clear that communication improves when people get on the same side of the table and solve the real problem together.

    Closing Thoughts:
    This Founder’s Story episode is a sharp reminder that strategy is not about squeezing more out of the current system, but about having the courage to rethink the system itself. Steven Lovett leaves listeners with a powerful challenge: if you want a different future, you may need to stop perfecting the present and start rebuilding it.

    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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