Built to Sell Radio

John Warrillow
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Sep 11, 2020 • 1h 2min

Ep 252 Alex Rink - How to Sell Your Business To A Competitor

Alex Rink built 360pi, a software application that provided online retailers with competitive pricing information. 360pi grew into a multi-million-dollar company with 40 employees when Rink began hearing his business might be worth as much as 3-6 times revenue.
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Sep 4, 2020 • 1h 1min

Ep 251 Jonathan Evans - Sociopaths & Imposters: How To Sell Your Baby To A Giant

Jonathan Evans was an air ambulance helicopter pilot when he started to think about how drones could safely navigate the sky around him. Commercial pilots had rules of the sky, but there were no guidelines for drones despite companies from Amazon to Walmart beginning to experiment with using drones.
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Aug 28, 2020 • 42min

Ep 250 - What 250 Owners Have to Say About Selling Your Business

It's a big week at Built to Sell Radio as we celebrate our 250th episode. That's 250 entrepreneurs, founders, CEOs, and owners who have shared their stories and their time over the last 5 years. To mark the event, Built to Sell Radio's producer, Shawn McDonald, takes over the mic to highlight insights from some of the most talked-about, most popular, and most memorable episodes from the course of the show.
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Aug 21, 2020 • 1h 18min

Ep 249 Aric Bandy - 9 Lessons From An Acquisition Offer Gone Wrong

Back in 2007, Aric Bandy saw Google investing heavily to compete with Amazon Web Services (AWS) and so decided to pivot his company, Agosto. Instead of offering general IT consulting, Bandy focused on helping clients move their businesses online using something Alphabet calls the Google Cloud Platform.
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Aug 14, 2020 • 52min

Ep 248 David Yaffe - 5 Lessons from growing a startup to a 9-figure exit in 2 years

David Yaffe, an entrepreneur, shares insights on growing a startup to a 9-figure exit in 2 years, including creating an identity graph for publishers, determining equity slices, building a strategic data asset, employee protection and incentives, and the decision to accept the offer.
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Aug 7, 2020 • 58min

Built to Sell: Intel

The format for Built to Sell Radio typically features our host, John Warrillow, interviewing an owner who has recently sold their business. This week, we're going to try something different. Today's episode features John's analysis of four of the exits we've featured on the show. John will break down his key takeaways and transferable lessons.
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Jul 31, 2020 • 53min

Ep 247 Matt Schmeltz - Turning a $2M Business Into a 9-figure Windfall in 3 Years

When Matt Schmeltz and his partners acquired CloudCraze, it was a simple software application helping businesses that use Salesforce.com manage their customer relationships. CloudCraze generated $2 million in annual recurring revenue, but Schmeltz & Co. figured it could do much more.
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Jul 24, 2020 • 1h 26min

Ep 246 Ashok Vasudevan - Exit Like a Tycoon Without Losing Your Soul

In 1995, with just $5,000 in start-up capital, Ashok Vasudevan launched Tasty Bite offering ready-to-eat Indian entrees to American consumers. Twenty-five years later, Tasty Bite is America's largest brand of prepared Indian food sold everywhere, from Walmart to Whole Foods. In 2017, Vasudevan announced he had sold the company to Mars, which has a portfolio of beloved brands including everything from Uncle Ben's to Skittles.
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Jul 17, 2020 • 1h 1min

Ep 245 Peter Demangos - The Tech Start-Up vs. The Bootstrap Lifestyle

Peter Demangos has started two businesses in the Human Resources sector. One was a bootstrapped insurance brokerage where they sold employee benefits programs to large clients. The other was an HR software company called Collage, where Demangos and his co-founders raised $3.5 million of investment capital and sold three years later for $15 million.
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Jul 10, 2020 • 55min

Ep 244 Debbie King - 3 Ways to Untangle Yourself from Your Business

Debbie King was running on a treadmill so familiar to service company owners. Her company, Association Analytics, helped associations make sense of their member data, and she was wasting time on proposals that often did not get accepted. Then, when King did win a project, she was creating a custom solution for every job that required her to hire senior-level staff and personally get involved in client work. The model put a cap on her business, and when she reached 20 employees, she decided it was time to get out.

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