Founder's Story

IBH Media
Founder's Story
Neueste Episode

322 Episoden

  • Founder's Story

    Mark Manson: The Subtle Art of Building a 20 Million Copy Empire | Ep. 337

    10.04.2026 | 47 Min.
    Daniel and Mark Manson go behind the scenes of modern internet fame, content creation, and the psychological cost of being online. Mark shares how he went from blogging in the early backlink era to viral Facebook articles, to traditional media deals, and then back to building a full scale media company. Along the way, they talk about why social platforms can be both magical and toxic, how to stop feeding the algorithm what upsets you, and why your purpose is really about choosing what to ignore.

    Key Discussion Points

    Mark explains why emotional reactivity online is often an algorithm problem, and why you have to take responsibility for what you train your feed to show you.
    He breaks down his three career phases, from early blogging and viral growth to traditional media disappointment, then building a modern creator led media company.
    They talk about the two kinds of authority online: credential authority and “learn with me” authority, and why both are colliding in today’s creator economy.
    Mark shares his purpose: helping people clarify and prioritize their values, and cut out the noise to “give better fcks.”
    They debate AI companions and AI psychosis, and why Mark thinks the scary edge cases are real but statistically rare compared to other modern risks.
    Mark talks about why software is so brutally slow and expensive compared to media, and why creator owned products and equity partnerships are the next big wave.

    Takeaways

    If content makes you angry, debating it can train the algorithm to feed you more of it, so the fastest win is ruthless feed curation and non engagement.
    Online hate scales with impact, so the skill is scar tissue: stop reading, stop arguing, and treat a small percent of negativity as inevitable “defect rate.”
    The defining challenge of this era is not finding opportunities, it is pruning distractions and choosing what to stop caring about.
    Creators are becoming mini media companies, and the real leverage comes from building a team that repurposes one “seed” idea into many formats daily.
    Traditional media can be slow and misaligned, while owning a product or equity aligned partnership can turn content into long term compounding value.

    Closing Thoughts

    Mark Manson’s message is simple but brutal: your life gets better when you get ruthless about what you let in. In a world of endless noise, the new superpower is values based focus and deliberate subtraction. If you want peace, it starts with choosing better fcks and deleting the rest.

    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

    She Built the Well-Being Strategy for the CIA. Here Is What Every Company Is Missing | Ep. 336 with Dr. Jennifer Posa

    06.04.2026 | 36 Min.
    Daniel Robbins sits down with Dr. Jennifer Posa to unpack the real drivers of peak performance, burnout, and culture in elite organizations. Dr. Posa explains that wellbeing is a holistic system that includes emotional regulation, social connection, financial health, psychological safety, and the policies and processes that shape daily work. She shares why the best leaders empower others with confidence, why the top of the org determines whether wellbeing becomes real strategy, and how companies can stop treating wellbeing like a soft perk and start using it as a measurable advantage.

    Key Discussion Points

    Dr. Posa explains she cares deeply about wellbeing because of her own career experiences and because she wants future workplaces to be safe and supportive for her three daughters.
    She argues the future is not human versus machine, but human plus machine, and the winners will map the relationship between technology and people with new skills and new metrics.
    She breaks down what makes elite leaders: self awareness and humility, plus a bias for action paired with strong judgment and the ability to filter noise from real signals.
    Dr. Posa clarifies the biggest misconception: wellbeing is not just going to the gym, it is a holistic system and it directly predicts performance, safety, trust, retention, and results.
    She shares a leadership moment from Johnson & Johnson where a VP empowered her to represent the team in a critical meeting during COVID, proving belief and trust scale leadership.
    She discusses how psychological safety prevents costly failures by enabling people to raise concerns early, especially in high stakes environments like healthcare and national security.
    She introduces a practical framework leaders can use to understand motivation and fit, using Ikigai style questions to learn what employees love, do well, and want to be paid for.

    Takeaways

    Wellbeing is not a perk, it is the operating system of performance, and culture problems usually come from process and leadership design, not individual weakness.
    The best leaders scale by believing in people beyond what they believe in themselves, then giving them real responsibility with real backing.
    If there is no psychological safety, teams hide risk until it becomes damage, so trust is not optional in high performance environments.
    You cannot fix burnout with hacks if the root cause is structural, like unfair policies, broken performance systems, or leaders who do not invest in relationships.
    Human relationships will matter even more as AI grows, because trust, accountability, and collaboration determine whether technology gets used correctly.

    Closing Thoughts

    Dr. Jennifer Posa makes the case that wellbeing is the hardest, most practical leadership work, because it determines whether people can think clearly, speak up, and perform under pressure. This episode is a reminder that culture is not vibes, it is systems, relationships, and leadership behavior repeated daily. If you want a resilient company, start where the impact is biggest: the leader, the team, and the environment you create every day.

    Great businesses are built by great people. If you’re serious about finding the right ones, check out ZipRecruiter and try it for free today.

    Limited Time Offer – Get Huel today with my exclusive offer of 15% OFF online with my code FOUNDER at huel.com/founder. New Customers Only. Thank you to Huel for partnering and supporting our show!

    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

    What Are You Running From? David Begnaud on Truth, Trauma, and the Oprah Interview | Ep 335 with David Begnaud Founder & CEO of Do Good Crew

    02.04.2026 | 32 Min.
    Daniel Robbins interviews David Begnaud about the person who believed in him, the pain he carried growing up, and the moment he finally felt safe enough to be fully seen. David tells the story of his English teacher Josette Surratt, who redirected his life into speech and debate and gave him a nonjudgmental space to be vulnerable. He explains why disaster reporting eventually felt empty, how Puerto Rico pushed him to cross the line from reporting into helping, and why Do Good Crew exists to use modern algorithms for hope instead of rage.

    Key Discussion Points

    David shares how his high school teacher saw his voice and asked him “what are you running from,” opening the door to healing from shame, Tourette’s, and growing up gay.
    He explains he only felt ready to come out publicly after a major career win, believing success gave him “permission” that people would not abandon him once he told the truth.
    David reflects on disaster coverage and why compartmentalizing worked until it didn’t, because reporting pain without being able to change the outcome became a growing internal conflict.
    He describes how Puerto Rico changed his approach, including using social platforms to both report and mobilize help, and how that led to the creation of Do Good Crew with CBS as an experiment.
    David argues trust is the new currency in an AI world, and that the stories that win now are the vulnerable ones that include the hard parts, not just the polished highlight reel.

    Takeaways

    One honest question from the right person can unlock years of suppressed pain and give someone permission to become who they really are.
    Career success can become a bridge to personal freedom, because winning in one arena can create safety to reveal what you have hidden.
    In a world flooded with AI content, real human vulnerability is becoming the differentiator that earns attention and respect.
    If you want to go viral, tell the story you are tempted to edit, because the struggle is what people actually recognize as truth.
    Respect scales further than likability, and building for respect is the long game when the internet is optimizing for cheap approval.

    Closing Thoughts

    This episode is a reminder that stories do not just entertain, they can change lives when they carry truth and a clear call to action. David Begnaud is proving you can evolve beyond traditional journalism without abandoning integrity, and that the future of media might belong to people who use trust and humanity as the product. If you’ve ever felt like you are running from your own story, this conversation will hit hard.

    Great businesses are built by great people. If you’re serious about finding the right ones, check out ZipRecruiter and try it for free today.

    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 Payments Were Broken and How One Founder Fixed It | Ep. 334 with Thomas Aronica Founder and CEO of Biller Genie

    01.04.2026 | 19 Min.
    Daniel Robbins interviews Thomas Aronica, the Founder and CEO of Biller Genie, on what it takes to build a fintech product inside an old industry and survive the cashflow chaos that almost breaks founders. Thomas explains how his early payments career began before smartphones, how he kept seeing the same pain point across industries, and how Biller Genie evolved from “free software to drive payments” into a SaaS platform partners could distribute. They also explore how AI will reshape SaaS, why resilience matters more than vibe coded prototypes, and what keeps entrepreneurs coming back even after the near-collapse moments.

    Key Discussion Points

    Thomas explains he entered payments before iPhones, watching the industry evolve from “knuckle busters” to portals and workflow automation, but noticing core frictions stayed the same.
    He describes the original problem: businesses had to process a payment and then pay someone to manually input it into QuickBooks, because integrations were unreliable or “janky.”
    A turning point came when a small property manager friend said “if I had that in QuickBooks, that would be awesome,” sparking the realization to build a software-agnostic solution.
    Thomas shares the second major pivot: after early traction, PNC Bank told them they loved the product but would not sell it under a tiny brand, which forced Biller Genie to decouple payments and become a true SaaS platform.
    The conversation goes into founder whiplash, including attempting a friends-and-family round in early 2020, then watching it evaporate when portfolios dropped overnight.
    Thomas recounts being hours away from layoffs and unable to pay people on Monday until an investment hit around 3:30, a moment the team never saw.

    Takeaways

    The best fintech products often come from repeated exposure to the same pain across industries, not from a “one day I woke up” idea.
    Giving software away can create fast adoption, but the real leverage is turning the product into a SaaS layer that partners can distribute at scale.
    AI will enable micro tools and fast prototypes, but resilience and real product experience will separate “cool demo” from “business-critical platform.”
    Entrepreneurship is whack-a-mole, and the people who last are wired for constant uncertainty and constant rebuilding, even when they swear “ninety days from now it’ll be better.”

    Closing Thoughts

    This episode is a real founder story in the truest sense: product-market pain, a pivot forced by reality, and the near-miss moments nobody posts about. Thomas Aronica shows that in fintech, the moat is not just features, it is surviving long enough to build something that partners and customers can actually trust.

    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 Tried Hundreds of Jobs So You Don’t Waste 10 Years in the Wrong One | Ep. 333 with Gabriel DeSanti Content Creator & Founder of Staj

    31.03.2026 | 27 Min.
    Daniel Robbins sits down with Gabriel DeSanti to explore what happens when content creation becomes a real career engine and a real impact engine. Gabriel explains how he finds jobs through simple DMs, why the series highlights unsung workers more than it highlights him, and how international episodes changed his perspective on poverty, environmental damage, and craft. He also shares the business reality of being a creator, where most revenue comes from brand partnerships, and why he’s building Staj as the next chapter: a job shadowing marketplace that helps people try industries in real life, not just read about them online.

    Key Discussion Points

    Gabriel describes his most extreme episode, decluttering a hoarding apartment with millions of roaches, wearing a hazmat suit, goggles, and a respirator while roaches fell on his head.
    He explains the show is narrated through the worker’s story, designed to give pride to people doing difficult jobs every day, not just to entertain.
    Gabriel shares his long runway to “overnight success,” starting with gaming videos at thirteen, then years working for YouTubers across thirty countries, before finding his own voice.
    He breaks down how he lands episodes, usually by searching for workers already comfortable on camera and sending a cold DM to set up a shoot.
    A standout moment comes from the Philippines, where a basket weaver named Jocelyn inspired massive audience support that helped buy out her inventory and materially improve her family’s life.
    Gabriel explains creator income realities, where only a small percentage clear six figures, and short form creators rely heavily on brand deals because platform payouts are small.
    He introduces Staj, a job shadowing marketplace inspired by his trade school rotations, designed to help people test a career path through real experiences.

    Takeaways

    Some of the hardest jobs are invisible, and the quickest way to build empathy is to step into someone else’s work for one day and feel what they feel.
    Finding your creator voice often starts with imitation, but traction comes when the content becomes uniquely you, rooted in your real interests and lived experiences.
    Brand deal income is seasonal, and creators who do not budget for slower months risk panicking and quitting right before the flywheel kicks in.
    The best creator businesses do not chase random products, they solve the exact problem the audience keeps asking about, which is why Staj maps directly to Gabriel’s core content.
    Delusional optimism is an edge, because most people quit during the long stretch when nothing works, but the ones who keep going eventually compound skill, audience, and opportunity.

    Closing Thoughts

    This episode is a reminder that careers are not chosen in one moment, they are tested, iterated, and built through lived experience. Gabriel DeSanti is turning that idea into a movement by making jobs visible, human, and accessible, and by building Staj to give people a shortcut to clarity. If you feel stuck, this conversation might be the push to try something real before you commit another year to the wrong path.

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

Weitere Firmengründung Podcasts

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.
Podcast-Website

Höre Founder's Story, CEO Frameworks und viele andere Podcasts aus aller Welt mit der radio.de-App

Hol dir die kostenlose radio.de App

  • Sender und Podcasts favorisieren
  • Streamen via Wifi oder Bluetooth
  • Unterstützt Carplay & Android Auto
  • viele weitere App Funktionen

Founder's Story: Zugehörige Podcasts

Rechtliches
Social
v8.8.6| © 2007-2026 radio.de GmbH
Generated: 4/11/2026 - 8:28:36 AM