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The $2.8B Brand Builder Explains Why Your Marketing Is Failing | Ep 311 with Bill Harper Co-Founder of BrandBossHQ

In this episode, Daniel sits down with Bill Harper, Co-founder of BrandBossHQ, to explore why storytelling sits at the center of brand growth and differentiation. Bill shares how his work through BrandBossHQ has helped hundreds of companies clarify positioning, create emotional relevance, and transform attention into measurable revenue. The conversation unpacks practical frameworks founders can apply to build memorable brands, leverage edutainment, and navigate emerging tools like AI without losing strategic originality. Key Discussion Points: Bill Harper explains that story is the foundation of how people relate to brands and that emotional relevance must come before features or benefits. He shares that customers are always trying to achieve something or avoid something, making pain driven messaging especially powerful for attention and conversion. Bill challenges the idea of boring industries by showing how insurance brands differentiate purely through narrative positioning rather than product differences. He outlines a framework for founders to identify one core brand idea, communicate how their solution improves customer circumstances, and structure messaging across the marketing funnel. The conversation also explores edutainment, comedic content, experimentation inspired by Steve Jobs, and the role of AI as a tool for efficiency rather than strategic thinking. Takeaways: A story that triggers emotion earns attention, then features earn trust. Relevance means telling a story your customer recognizes as their own. People buy in two modes, achieving something or avoiding something. Pain avoidance messaging often outperforms pleasure based messaging. A brand is expectation, and expectation is built through consistency. Pick one idea your brand stands for, then repeat it relentlessly. Top of funnel content should excite, not explain. Specs come later. Edutainment is a competitive advantage, even in boring industries. AI can speed up execution, but it cannot replace strategy and judgment. Entrepreneurship is empowering, but it comes with pressure and trade offs. Closing Thoughts: Bill’s core message is simple and ruthless. If you do not earn attention through story, you lose. This episode is a reminder that the brands people remember are not the most innovative. They are the most emotionally relevant, most consistent, and most entertaining while solving real problems. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

27:45 100 views Published about 2 months ago

$0 to $100M Without Funding: The 22-Year Game No One Talks About | Ep 310 with Karan Yaramada Founder of Jade Global and Kanverse.ai

In this episode, Karan Yaramada—Founder and CEO of Jade Global—offers a candid, CEO-level perspective on one of the most critical decisions leaders face when scaling their businesses: whether to pursue organic growth or acquisition-driven growth. Drawing from his experience building Jade Global into a global technology and services firm, Karan breaks down the strategic trade-offs between growing from within and accelerating expansion through M&A. The conversation explores when organic growth builds stronger culture, customer trust, and long-term resilience—and when acquisitions can unlock new capabilities, markets, and speed to scale. Karan shares real-world lessons on aligning growth strategy with company purpose, leadership readiness, and operational maturity, as well as common pitfalls leaders overlook when chasing rapid expansion. Designed for founders, CEOs, and growth-minded executives, this episode provides practical frameworks, decision criteria, and leadership insights to help listeners choose the right growth path—or combination of paths—at each stage of their company’s journey. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

26:23 180 views Published about 2 months ago

The Dating App Rewriting the Rules of Love | Ep 309 with Sergio Giles Founder of Date Draft

Sergio Giles joins Founder’s Story to discuss why so many people are frustrated with traditional dating apps and how Date Draft introduces a new sports-inspired model to online dating. Drawing from his NFL fandom, Sergio reframes dating as “drafting,” “scouting,” and even “trading,” creating a more interactive, gamified experience that moves beyond endless swiping and repetitive chats. Key Discussion Points:Sergio shares how his own experiences on dating apps revealed a major flaw: users don’t meaningfully interact until after matching, and burnout quickly sets in. That insight led to the creation of the “Trade Room,” a feature that allows users to trade matches and act as matchmakers, adding a social layer to dating. The app assigns members to different “rounds” based on interests and education, using an algorithm to create compatibility tiers. Sergio also discusses the psychological tightrope of building a dating product, balancing innovation with responsibility while avoiding features that could create negativity or defamation. Takeaways:Date Draft positions itself not just as another dating app, but as a new social experience that blends gaming psychology with matchmaking. Sergio believes the future of dating apps must be more interactive, more fun, and less repetitive to reduce ghosting and swipe fatigue. Instead of just asking users to swipe and start over repeatedly, the Trade Room gives them new ways to connect and re-engage. His long-term vision is simple but bold: to be known as the app that changed how people date online. Closing Thoughts:Sergio’s journey highlights how founder insight often comes from personal frustration and pattern recognition. By studying user behavior and reimagining dating through the lens of sports drafts and trades, he’s betting that connection improves when interaction feels dynamic rather than transactional. Whether Date Draft becomes the “fantasy football of dating” or something even bigger, it’s a bold attempt to rewrite the playbook on modern love. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

16:21 110 views Published about 2 months ago

From Wall Street to Homelessness: How He Rebuilt Everything & Deployed $250M | Ep 308 with Frank Scarso Founder of Avanza Capital Holdings

Frank Scarso shares the deeply personal story behind his fall from Wall Street, his battle with addiction, and the three years he was estranged from his wife and children. He reveals how a single moment of clarity sparked his recovery, leading him to build Avanza Capital, an alternative lending platform that has deployed over $250 million to small businesses across 48 states. The episode explores resilience, leadership, private credit, and what it truly means to rebuild your life from nothing. Key Discussion Points:Frank explains that his motivation to rebuild wasn’t money or status, it was simply wanting to “go home” and fix what he had broken with his family. He discusses why entrepreneurship became his path forward after Wall Street, and how Avanza grew from “little drips and drabs” into a national lender focused on speed, service, and human connection in an industry often criticized for being transactional. The conversation dives into the risks and realities of merchant cash advances, why banks overlook small businesses, and how alternative lending fills that gap in hours instead of months. Frank also reflects on how sobriety transformed his leadership style from aggressive and “guns blazing” to empathetic, hands-on, and grounded in mentorship and service. Takeaways:Family can be the most powerful driver of reinvention. Frank’s story highlights the importance of mentorship, surrounding yourself with smarter people, setting attainable short-term goals, and understanding risk before taking on capital. He emphasizes that funding is a tool, not a crutch, and that discipline, caution, and hard work are critical for small business survival. Above all, resilience, humility, and service define long-term success more than any financial metric. Closing Thoughts:Frank’s journey proves that rock bottom is not the end—it can be the beginning. From living on the street to leading a nine-figure lending platform, his story is a reminder that redemption is possible, leadership evolves through adversity, and sometimes one sentence can change the trajectory of generations. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

21:33 88 views Published 2 months ago

The Attorney CEO: How I’m Saving A 54-Year-Old Legacy Brand | Ep. 307 with Mina Haque CEO of Tony Roma

Mina Haque shares her unconventional path from running her own law firm to leading one of the most iconic restaurant brands in the world. The conversation explores how entrepreneurial problem-solving prepared her to transform a legacy company, how nostalgia and modernization can coexist, and why resilience matters more than virality in today’s economy. Key Discussion Points Mina explains how being an entrepreneur trained her to operate without a playbook, constantly solving problems and building from scratch, skills she now applies in leading Tony Roma’s global transformation. She discusses the privilege and responsibility of stewarding a 54-year-old brand that spans five continents, balancing nostalgia with modernization through smaller footprints, delivery channels, and digital engagement. At Davos, she introduced the concept of neuroplasticity to frame change as a catalyst for growth, arguing that leaders must design adaptable environments where teams can rewire and learn. She also reflects on unlearning purely mechanical legal thinking to embrace the human and relational side of franchising and long-term partnerships. Takeaways Transferable skills from entrepreneurship, especially problem-solving and adaptability, are powerful assets in corporate leadership. Legacy brands win through resilience, not just rapid growth or social media virality. Modernizing does not mean abandoning identity; it means evolving the delivery while protecting the core story. Change requires leaders to understand both neuroscience and culture, creating systems that support adaptation rather than resist it. Continuous learning, from Davos panels to conversations with younger generations, is a leadership discipline. Closing Thoughts Mina Haque’s leadership philosophy blends law, entrepreneurship, neuroscience, and global brand strategy. Her mission is not just to grow Tony Roma’s, but to position it as a resilient brand built for the next fifty-four years. This episode is a masterclass in adaptability, legacy thinking, and leading through transformation in an unpredictable world. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

19:29 93 views Published 2 months ago

From Law Firm Founder to Global CEO: The Unlearning That Changed Everything | Ep. 307 with Mina Haque CEO of Tony Roma

Mina Haque shares her unconventional path from running her own law firm to leading one of the most iconic restaurant brands in the world. The conversation explores how entrepreneurial problem-solving prepared her to transform a legacy company, how nostalgia and modernization can coexist, and why resilience matters more than virality in today’s economy. Key Discussion Points Mina explains how being an entrepreneur trained her to operate without a playbook, constantly solving problems and building from scratch, skills she now applies in leading Tony Roma’s global transformation. She discusses the privilege and responsibility of stewarding a 54-year-old brand that spans five continents, balancing nostalgia with modernization through smaller footprints, delivery channels, and digital engagement. At Davos, she introduced the concept of neuroplasticity to frame change as a catalyst for growth, arguing that leaders must design adaptable environments where teams can rewire and learn. She also reflects on unlearning purely mechanical legal thinking to embrace the human and relational side of franchising and long-term partnerships. Takeaways Transferable skills from entrepreneurship, especially problem-solving and adaptability, are powerful assets in corporate leadership. Legacy brands win through resilience, not just rapid growth or social media virality. Modernizing does not mean abandoning identity; it means evolving the delivery while protecting the core story. Change requires leaders to understand both neuroscience and culture, creating systems that support adaptation rather than resist it. Continuous learning, from Davos panels to conversations with younger generations, is a leadership discipline. Closing Thoughts Mina Haque’s leadership philosophy blends law, entrepreneurship, neuroscience, and global brand strategy. Her mission is not just to grow Tony Roma’s, but to position it as a resilient brand built for the next fifty-four years. This episode is a masterclass in adaptability, legacy thinking, and leading through transformation in an unpredictable world. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

19:29 82 views Published 2 months ago

The Dark Side of Selling Your Company No One Warns You About | Ep 306 with Sunaina Sinha Haldea

Sunaina Sinha Haldea joins Founder’s Story to challenge the dominant startup narrative that the ultimate goal of entrepreneurship is a clean, lucrative exit. Drawing from multiple acquisitions, board experience, and decades advising founders and investors, she explains why businesses must be built to last—not just to sell—and why exits often bring unexpected grief, identity shifts, and psychological challenges founders rarely anticipate. Key Discussion Points Sunaina explains that engineering a successful exit requires holding two opposing truths at once: building a company as if it will last decades, while quietly preparing for the right moment to hand it over to the next steward. She warns against founders obsessing over exit checklists or valuation targets, noting that market cycles change and businesses built only for sale often collapse when conditions shift. The conversation also explores how SaaS, AI disruption, and venture pressure have intensified the risks of chasing growth without profitability or durability. Beyond strategy, Sunaina dives into the emotional reality of exits, describing them as a form of grief and identity loss that must be consciously acknowledged rather than ignored. She introduces the concept of “upper limit theory,” explaining why many founders unconsciously sabotage themselves after success and why mindset work, coaching, and learning to sit with discomfort are essential for navigating life after liquidity. Takeaways Founders should build businesses with real profitability, strong unit economics, and lasting value—even if the goal is an eventual exit. Fixating on a specific dollar amount can trap founders in a “deferred life plan” that drains resilience when challenges arise. Successful exits require emotional preparation, not just financial readiness, and the work doesn’t stop once the deal closes. True longevity—personal and professional—comes from aligning intrinsic purpose with disciplined execution. Closing Thoughts This episode reframes exits not as an endpoint, but as a transition that demands maturity, self-awareness, and intentional growth. Sunaina’s perspective offers founders a rare, honest look at what happens after success—and why building something that lasts may be the most powerful exit strategy of all. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

30:44 100 views Published 2 months ago

The Sense That Controls Your Emotions—And Why Tech Is Finally Hacking It | Ep 305 with Siddhartha Kunti Founder of Studio SK

Daniel interviews Siddhartha Kunti on Founder’s Story to explore whether scent can become a digital medium, like sound or video. Siddhartha shares the moment that sparked his shift from AI surgical planning into olfactory innovation, why smell is uniquely tied to emotion and memory, and what it could unlock in healthcare, education, wellness, and immersive consumer experiences. Key Discussion Points:Siddhartha explains how a Japan distillery tour triggered his obsession with decoding flavor and aroma using AI pattern recognition, leading him to analyze hundreds of beverages and massive molecular datasets. He breaks down why smell has taken so long to digitize, pointing to its complexity, the millions of molecules involved, and the human variability in perception shaped by culture, environment, and biology. He discusses the idea of building an “LLM for scent” by combining molecular data with subjective human labeling across global populations. The conversation expands into real world implications, from COVID’s impact on mental health through smell loss, to Alzheimer’s detection through body odor changes, to scent driven therapy like recreating a loved one’s smell in everyday life. Takeaways:Smell is treated as the forgotten sense in education, yet it silently drives memory, emotion, appetite, attraction, and wellbeing. Digitizing scent requires both objective chemistry and subjective human experience, making AI essential for identifying patterns at scale. The next wave of consumer and healthcare innovation may include scent enhanced experiences in retail, gaming, wellness, and hospitals, not just entertainment. Siddhartha’s work argues that the future of technology is not only smarter, but more human and sensory. Closing Thoughts:This episode reframes scent as a frontier technology, not a novelty, and highlights why the most powerful innovations often start as ideas that sound ridiculous until they suddenly become obvious. Siddhartha’s journey is a reminder that entrepreneurship is sometimes about giving a language to something humanity has always felt, but never fully understood. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

22:28 120 views Published 2 months ago

She Found His Notebook After He Died—What Was Inside Changed Everything | Ep 304 with Jo Ann Brechtel

Jo Ann Brechtel joins Founder’s Story to share the story behind A Messenger of the Light, a book born from profound loss and an unexpected discovery. She explains how, after her son Warren’s sudden death, she found a notebook filled with his artwork, dated and signed pieces, and personal spiritual writings that expressed his belief in “the light within us.” Jo Ann describes turning grief into purpose by compiling his words and art into a book meant to bring hope, faith, and strength to others. Key Discussion Points:Jo Ann recounts receiving the shocking notice of Warren’s death and traveling to California to close his apartment, where she discovered his notebooks of art and handwritten reflections. She shares how Warren’s creativity showed up early, from gazing at Christmas lights as a toddler to making stage shows and films, then later working at KTLA and dreaming of creating stories that help others. The episode explores how writing the book became therapeutic, helping her process grief and preserve Warren’s legacy for his friends, colleagues, and future readers. Jo Ann also reflects on learning new sides of her son, especially the depth of his faith, his devotion to prayer, and his belief that obstacles are meant to be removed, not feared. Takeaways:Jo Ann’s message is that grief can become a bridge to meaning when you give it somewhere to go, and for her, that place was the page. She encourages anyone experiencing loss, darkness, or self doubt to write, because putting words to pain can turn memories into strength. Warren’s philosophy throughout the episode centers on perseverance: you are not at fault for failing, but you lose when you stop trying. Above all, the “light” is portrayed as something we carry within us, and when we live in a way that makes others feel seen, safe, or happy, we are already doing something that matters. Closing Thoughts:This conversation is a portrait of love, legacy, and resilience through faith. Jo Ann’s book keeps Warren’s spirit present through his art and words, and her hope is that readers will feel uplifted, motivated, and reminded that even in darkness, the light within you can be called on and shared with others. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

21:08 97 views Published 2 months ago

Why Selling Your Business Feels Like Grief | Ep 303 with Sunaina Sinha Haldea

In this episode of Founder’s Story, Sunaina Sinha Haldea breaks down what founders need to think about years before an exit is even possible. From building businesses that can survive cycles and disruption to navigating the emotional grief that comes after selling, this conversation explores exits as both a financial and deeply human transition. Key Discussion Points:Sunaina explains why engineering a business purely to sell is dangerous, and why founders must instead build companies designed to last for decades. She walks through how acquirers actually think, including the metrics that matter, the difference between venture and private equity capital, and why profitability questions always come due. The conversation also dives into the emotional side of exits, reframing selling as a form of grief and a real identity shift that founders must consciously process. Sunaina introduces “upper limit theory,” explaining why many successful exits lead to self-sabotage if founders do not recalibrate their mindset and sense of self-worth. Takeaways:Building to last is the most reliable path to a successful exit. Chasing a specific exit number often creates a fragile business and a deferred life plan. Founders must prepare not only financially, but psychologically, for what comes after selling. Sustainable businesses attract buyers naturally, while resilient founders invest in mindset, purpose, and long-term impact beyond money. Closing Thoughts:This episode challenges the idea that exits are the ultimate goal of entrepreneurship. Sunaina’s perspective reframes success as building enduring value while staying grounded through massive transitions in wealth, identity, and purpose. For founders thinking about exits, this conversation offers clarity, realism, and uncommon wisdom. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

30:44 120 views Published 2 months ago

Why Applying for Jobs Is a Waste of Time (And What Actually Works Instead) | Ep 301 with Julia Arpag Founder of Aligned Recruitment

Julia Arpag, the founder of Aligned Recruitment, joins Founder’s Story to explain how hiring actually works behind the scenes in today’s AI-driven job market. She shares why most resumes disappear into a black hole, how recruiters and founders really find talent, and why networking, LinkedIn optimization, and human connection still outperform every automated system. Key Discussion Points Julia argues that most people should stop applying for jobs entirely and instead focus on relationships, manual outreach, and visibility. She breaks down exactly how recruiters search LinkedIn, what makes a profile instantly compelling, and why candidates must clearly communicate their value instead of hiding behind vague titles. The conversation also explores how AI has increased noise in both hiring and sales, making authentic human skills more valuable than ever. Takeaways Jobs are not disappearing, but the path to landing them has changed dramatically. Candidates who rely on resumes and automated applications are losing, while those who optimize their LinkedIn presence, prepare their personal “brag book,” and build real connections continue to win. Julia emphasizes that AI is a tool, not a shortcut, and the future belongs to adaptable, human-first professionals who know how to sell themselves with clarity and confidence. Closing Thoughts This episode offers a reality check for anyone frustrated with today’s job market. Julia Arpag’s insights reveal that despite all the noise around AI, hiring still comes down to people, relationships, and clarity. For job seekers and founders alike, the message is simple: stop chasing systems and start showing up where real decisions are made. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

23:35 170 views Published 3 months ago

Why Most Companies Die After Hitting $1M Revenue | Ep 300 with Yarin Gaon Founder of Fractional Partners

Yarin Gaon joins Founder’s Story to explain why the leap from $1M to $10M is where most companies stall or die. He unpacks the “adolescence stage” of business, where founders must decide what they are actually scaling, and why the hustle logic that got you to traction stops working once you have a team, multiple revenue streams, and limited capital. Key Discussion Points:Yarin explains that founders hit $1–2M and assume they have “made it,” but after replacing the founder’s role, most of these businesses are still not attractive to sophisticated buyers. The real danger comes when founders try to scale everything: more products, more customer types, more revenue streams, without choosing a clear direction. He argues the missing ingredient is clarity, not tactics, and that most “tactical problems” like rising CAC or churn are symptoms of upstream strategy decisions that were never made. His solution is a planning system modeled on private equity, built around creating simple one page sources of truth for strategy, finances, and operations. Takeaways:Yarin’s core message is that growth should start with subtraction. Before adding new offers or segments, founders should identify where profit actually comes from, because sales and profit are not the same thing. He also reframes success metrics, saying revenue is too generic to guide decisions and founders need a sharper metric tied to what they are truly building. For founders aiming for a life changing exit, he explains that private equity typically starts paying attention around $2M EBITDA, which often means building a $10M to $20M revenue business depending on margins. Closing Thoughts:This episode is a wake up call for founders who feel stuck after early traction. Yarin shows that the path to scale is not more hustle, it is more clarity, better filters, and the discipline to say no. He also shares his free Clarity Playbook and why he believes planning is the highest leverage work a founder can do before scaling what they have built. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

32:49 150 views Published 3 months ago

The Testosterone Myth That’s Costing Men Years of Their Lives | Ep 299 with Shalin Shah CEO of Marius Pharmaceuticals

Shalin Shah joins Founder’s Story to explain why declining testosterone levels represent a global health crisis and how outdated myths, regulations, and delivery methods have held back effective treatment. He shares the science behind testosterone as a core metabolic hormone, the FDA approval of KYZATREX, and why oral therapy marks a paradigm shift in how men (and women) can age healthier, longer lives. Key Discussion Points:Shalin explains how testosterone sits at the foundation of metabolic health, influencing the brain, heart, muscle, bone, and even cellular energy. He breaks down the biggest myths around testosterone, including fears about heart attacks and prostate cancer, and explains why modern clinical data has disproven them. The conversation also explores why injections fail to match the body’s natural hormone rhythm and how oral therapy better mirrors daily physiology. Finally, Shalin discusses why consumer-driven healthcare and telemedicine are accelerating access to testing and treatment. Takeaways:This episode reframes testosterone replacement therapy as a legitimate, evidence-backed medical intervention rather than a stigmatized shortcut. Shalin emphasizes that testing is the first step, education is critical, and hormonal health must be layered on top of sleep, diet, stress management, and exercise. His core message is clear: testosterone therapy isn’t about chasing youth, it’s about restoring health, vitality, and longevity. Closing Thoughts:Shalin Shah’s perspective challenges decades of misinformation and positions testosterone as one of the most powerful biomarkers of overall health. This conversation invites listeners to rethink aging, advocate for better testing, and consider how modern medicine can help add life to years, not just years to life. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

21:23 150 views Published 3 months ago

The Recovery Expert Who Danced In R. Kelly's Video: 'What If I'd Been Near Him?' | Ep 294 with Amanda Marino Founder of Next Level Recovery Associates

Amanda Marino shares her journey from child runway model and hip hop music video dancer to addiction, recovery, and ultimately founding Next Level Recovery Associates, a global concierge recovery service helping individuals and families navigate addiction, mental health, and trauma with privacy and care. Key Discussion Points Amanda Marino reflects on the contrast between early fame in the entertainment industry and the darker realities that followed, including sexualization, childhood trauma, and substance abuse. She shares how becoming a mother forced her to confront addiction, sobriety, and the identity shift that came with recovery, grief, and physical changes. The conversation explores her transition from performer to recovery professional, including her work on Intervention and why authenticity and boundaries matter when helping people in crisis. Amanda also explains how COVID accelerated both mental health challenges globally and the growth of Next Level Recovery Associates, built on customized, private, and service-driven care. Takeaways Amanda’s story shows that recovery is not a straight line and success without healing is unsustainable. True resilience comes from sitting with pain rather than bypassing it. Entrepreneurship, especially in service-based businesses, thrives when it solves a real and urgent need rather than a personal desire. Healing personal trauma can unlock the ability to help others at scale, and legacy is built not through fame but through integrity, presence, and impact on family and community. Closing Thoughts This episode is a reminder that transformation doesn’t erase the past. It integrates it. Amanda Marino’s journey proves that when healing becomes the mission, business success can follow in ways that are deeper, more meaningful, and far more enduring than fame alone. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

17:15 190 views Published 4 months ago

From Music Video Dancer to Recovery CEO: The Dark Side of Early Fame | Ep 294 with Amanda Marino Founder of Next Level Recovery Associates

Amanda Marino shares her journey from child runway model and hip hop music video dancer to addiction, recovery, and ultimately founding Next Level Recovery Associates, a global concierge recovery service helping individuals and families navigate addiction, mental health, and trauma with privacy and care. Key Discussion Points Amanda Marino reflects on the contrast between early fame in the entertainment industry and the darker realities that followed, including sexualization, childhood trauma, and substance abuse. She shares how becoming a mother forced her to confront addiction, sobriety, and the identity shift that came with recovery, grief, and physical changes. The conversation explores her transition from performer to recovery professional, including her work on Intervention and why authenticity and boundaries matter when helping people in crisis. Amanda also explains how COVID accelerated both mental health challenges globally and the growth of Next Level Recovery Associates, built on customized, private, and service-driven care. Takeaways Amanda’s story shows that recovery is not a straight line and success without healing is unsustainable. True resilience comes from sitting with pain rather than bypassing it. Entrepreneurship, especially in service-based businesses, thrives when it solves a real and urgent need rather than a personal desire. Healing personal trauma can unlock the ability to help others at scale, and legacy is built not through fame but through integrity, presence, and impact on family and community. Closing Thoughts This episode is a reminder that transformation doesn’t erase the past. It integrates it. Amanda Marino’s journey proves that when healing becomes the mission, business success can follow in ways that are deeper, more meaningful, and far more enduring than fame alone. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

17:15 170 views Published 4 months ago

The Talent Manager: 'Gen Z Doesn't Know Brad Pitt—But They Know Every TikToker' | Ep. 293 with Devain Doolaramani Founder of Friends In Reality

Devain Doolaramani shares how Friends In Reality evolved into a next-generation digital talent management company, representing elite creators like Brooke Monk while helping creators transition from brand deals to long-term, scalable businesses. Drawing from years inside the creator economy, he explains why digital creators have replaced traditional celebrities in the eyes of younger audiences and how that shift is reshaping marketing, commerce, and influence. Key Discussion Points Devane breaks down how celebrity has shifted from red carpets to phone screens, explaining why Gen Z recognizes TikTokers and YouTubers more than traditional actors. He shares why creators don’t need massive followings to launch successful products—only a deeply connected core audience—and why trust is built through engagement, not fame. The conversation explores the two-year process of building Brooke Monk’s upcoming product, emphasizing quality, storytelling, and patience over rushed launches. Devane also reveals how creators should think like operators, not influencers, expanding beyond platforms into real businesses. He closes by explaining why LinkedIn has become an unexpected but powerful channel for creators to build credibility, partnerships, and long-term value. Takeaways Creators are businesses, not just personalities. Trust and community drive sales more than audience size. The best creator brands come from products creators genuinely use. Digital talent has surpassed traditional celebrities in influence for younger generations. Long-term success comes from thinking beyond platforms and building real companies. Closing Thoughts This episode highlights a quiet but massive shift happening in real time: creators are no longer just marketing tools—they’re founders, operators, and brand builders. As Devane shows, the future belongs to those who treat influence as infrastructure, not attention, and who build with intention rather than chasing quick wins. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

15:09 240 views Published 4 months ago

The Manager Behind Brooke Monk: 'We Spent 2 Years Building Her Product—Here's Why'| Ep. 293 with Devain Doolaramani Founder of Friends In Reality

Devain Doolaramani shares how Friends In Reality evolved into a next-generation digital talent management company, representing elite creators like Brooke Monk while helping creators transition from brand deals to long-term, scalable businesses. Drawing from years inside the creator economy, he explains why digital creators have replaced traditional celebrities in the eyes of younger audiences and how that shift is reshaping marketing, commerce, and influence. Key Discussion Points Devane breaks down how celebrity has shifted from red carpets to phone screens, explaining why Gen Z recognizes TikTokers and YouTubers more than traditional actors. He shares why creators don’t need massive followings to launch successful products—only a deeply connected core audience—and why trust is built through engagement, not fame. The conversation explores the two-year process of building Brooke Monk’s upcoming product, emphasizing quality, storytelling, and patience over rushed launches. Devane also reveals how creators should think like operators, not influencers, expanding beyond platforms into real businesses. He closes by explaining why LinkedIn has become an unexpected but powerful channel for creators to build credibility, partnerships, and long-term value. Takeaways Creators are businesses, not just personalities. Trust and community drive sales more than audience size. The best creator brands come from products creators genuinely use. Digital talent has surpassed traditional celebrities in influence for younger generations. Long-term success comes from thinking beyond platforms and building real companies. Closing Thoughts This episode highlights a quiet but massive shift happening in real time: creators are no longer just marketing tools—they’re founders, operators, and brand builders. As Devane shows, the future belongs to those who treat influence as infrastructure, not attention, and who build with intention rather than chasing quick wins. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

15:09 470 views Published 4 months ago

The Stanford Professor Who Uses Hypnosis Over Medication: '15% Less Stress In 10 Minutes' | Ep 292 with Dr. David Spiegel

In this episode of Founder’s Story, Daniel sits down with Stanford’s Dr. David Spiegel to unpack hypnosis with a level of clarity most people have never heard. Dr. Spiegel explains why hypnosis is not a loss of control, but an increase in control, and walks through the three core components that make it work. They explore how hypnosis differs from meditation, how it can help with stress and insomnia in real time, and the brain science that shows what changes during hypnosis. Dr. Spiegel also shares the origin story that made him commit his career to hypnosis, including a first patient experience that worked so fast it shocked an entire hospital. Key Discussion Points: Daniel and Dr. Spiegel unpack the biggest misconception about hypnosis, explaining why it is not a loss of control but a way to enhance it through focused attention, dissociation, and the ability to try being different. Dr. Spiegel contrasts hypnosis with meditation, highlighting why hypnosis works faster for people with racing minds and high stress. They explore how hypnosis can help break habits by focusing on what you are for rather than what you are fighting against, including real-world examples with smoking, stress, and eating behaviors. The conversation also dives into sleep, showing how calming the body first can quiet the mind and interrupt anxiety loops. Dr. Spiegel closes by explaining the brain science behind hypnosis, including how it turns down the internal alarm system and restores a sense of control. Takeaways: Hypnosis is not mind control, it is a trainable skill for better self control. The three pillars are focused attention, dissociation from unhelpful sensations and thoughts, and the ability to try being different by quieting rigid self narratives. For habit change, focus on what you are for, not what you are against, and use intermittent positive reinforcement by making choices that create immediate self respect rather than deprivation. For stress and sleep, start from the body up, calm the fight or flight response, and create distance from your worries by placing them on an imaginary screen. Brain imaging supports these experiences by showing reduced threat signaling and increased executive control during hypnosis. Closing Thoughts: This episode reframes hypnosis as a practical tool you can use in minutes, especially when stress is peaking and your mind feels impossible to quiet. Dr. Spiegel’s approach makes the science accessible, the techniques usable, and the impact feel immediate. If you have ever struggled with sleep, anxiety, pain, or habits, this conversation offers a way to regain control using a skill your brain already has. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

23:24 280 views Published 4 months ago

Why Every Major Bank Still Uses 1965 Technology: The Trading 'Rails' Revolution That Changes Everything | Ep 291 with Peter Ashton CEO of Veyra Holdings

In this Founder's Story conversation, Peter Ashton breaks down the science, strategy, and soul behind Veyra—a trading platform designed to close the wealth gap by giving everyday people the same predictive tools that have been exclusive to Wall Street's elite for decades. Through personal stories of transition, loss, discovery, and a bold vision for 2026, Peter reveals why the future of trading isn't about chasing algorithms—it's about understanding the mathematical laws that govern markets. Key Discussion Points: Peter distinguishes mathematical intelligence from AI—while AI predicts based on patterns, mathematical intelligence uses unchanging laws to compress data and project market outcomes with remarkable accuracy. He discovered a NASA scientist who modified 1980s aerospace missile identification systems for trading, and after initially losing money, learned traders simply want automation or clear buy/sell signals. Veyra's unconventional structure includes 9-10 co-founders (including a CEO who raised $130 billion) united by making "the unwealthy wealthy," and six months in they've built a distribution network of 550,000 subscribers positioning them for billion-dollar valuation with just 15-20,000 customers at $499/month. Peter reveals all major financial firms still run on 1965 infrastructure, creating massive opportunity for Veyra's modern "rails" built for algorithmic trading. Takeaways: Mathematical intelligence operates on unchanging laws rather than probabilities, offering higher accuracy than pattern-based AI. The most powerful technology isn't always new—1980s NASA systems become more relevant with modern computing power. Strategic partnerships and distribution channels accelerate growth faster than traditional lead generation when targeting underserved markets. The simplest products win: complexity is the enemy of adoption when people just want clear signals or full automation. Closing Thoughts: Peter Ashton proves revolutionary disruption doesn't require brand new technology—it's about reimagining proven systems for different markets. With nine co-founders who spent careers making the rich richer now united to make the unwealthy wealthy, Veyra represents a fundamental shift toward democratized wealth-building tools. As AI competition intensifies, focusing on mathematical foundations rather than trendy algorithms may prove prescient. The question isn't whether the technology works—it's whether people will embrace institutional-level trading intelligence now available at their fingertips. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

18:00 330 views Published 4 months ago

He’s Not Replacing Humans with AI—He’s Teaching It to Care | Ep. 277 with Sunil Raina Founder of Cerebree

In this episode of Founder’s Story, Daniel Robbins sits down with Sunil Raina, a visionary technologist and founder of CereBree, a cognitive infrastructure platform designed to reshape how humans and machines coexist. Sunil reveals how his team is building AI systems rooted in emotional intelligence—technology designed to augment human ability, not replace it. Together, they explore the delicate balance between empathy and efficiency, and what it really means to create a “conscious” AI. Key Discussion Points Sunil begins by addressing one of AI’s biggest misconceptions: that it’s here to eliminate human jobs. He explains how CereBree’s mission is to unify fragmented systems—work, learning, and well-being—into one seamless layer of orchestration that simplifies life, not complicates it. He dives into the idea of AI as a personal concierge—a digital companion that learns your habits, anticipates your needs, and offers actionable help, from reminding you to rest after poor sleep to automating daily tasks across travel, healthcare, and personal development. Sunil also explores the ethics of empathy-driven AI: “It’s not about asking, ‘How are you feeling?’ It’s about saying, ‘Here’s what can make you feel better.’” Drawing from decades of emotional intelligence data, he shares how CereBree is building AI capable of sensing human sentiment and offering meaningful, compassionate responses—starting with groundbreaking applications for autism therapy and caregiver support. Finally, the conversation turns personal as Daniel and Sunil discuss the entrepreneurial chaos of chasing too many problems. Sunil’s advice? “The difference between insanity and genius is measured by success. Focus, resilience, and vision—that’s how you build the future.” Takeaways AI’s future isn’t about automation—it’s about amplification. True progress lies in systems that understand human context, emotion, and purpose. Compassion, empathy, and health must anchor every innovation. As Sunil reminds us, the goal isn’t to create smarter machines, but wiser societies. Closing Thoughts This conversation is a rare glimpse into the mind of a founder shaping the moral and emotional backbone of AI’s next era. Sunil Raina reminds us that the future belongs not to the cold efficiency of machines, but to the warmth of intelligence built with humanity in mind. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

17:38 190 views Published 5 months ago