• Michelle Walshe: The Summer That Nearly Broke Our €50M Business
    Feb 16 2026

    Michelle Walsh joins Business Builders for a grounded, honest conversation about scaling a family business, navigating relentless growth, and learning the hard lessons that only come from being in the arena.

    From unexpectedly stepping into a food manufacturing business straight off a flight home, to helping grow RibWorld from €7 million to nearly €50 million in turnover, Michelle shares what it really takes to lead through expansion, crisis, and eventual exit. Over nine intense years, she helped build a 250-person operation supplying major supermarkets across Ireland, the UK, and Germany — all while learning first-hand how easy it is to lose control when growth outpaces structure.

    Rather than glamorising scale, Michelle reflects on the summer that nearly broke the business — when booming demand exposed weak controls, poor management information, and the cost of avoiding the “hard stuff.” That experience reshaped how she thinks about leadership, information, delegation, and strategic planning.

    The conversation moves through succession in family businesses, the emotional complexity of selling a company built over generations, the stress of private equity due diligence during Covid, and the personal toll of running a high-pressure operation in a volatile industry.

    Now working with founder-led and family businesses, Michelle brings that lived experience into advisory — helping business owners step out of operational firefighting, build real management teams, and regain control of the numbers that actually drive profit.

    This episode is a practical and deeply human look at what scaling really demands — and why facing the hard decisions early can save you years of pain later.

    🎧 In this episode, you’ll learn:

    – Why rapid growth can quietly destroy profitability
    – The hidden risk of not having real management information
    – How founders become the bottleneck in their own business
    – Why building a management team is harder than scaling revenue
    – The emotional and financial realities of selling a family business
    – What private equity due diligence actually looks like
    – Why gross margin by customer matters more than revenue
    – The danger of overconfidence in leadership
    – How to step out of day-to-day firefighting and think strategically
    – The importance of facing the “hard stuff” before it becomes a crisis

    ⏱️ Timestamps

    00:00 – The summer that changed everything
    02:10 – Michelle’s advisory work with family businesses
    09:30 – Growing RibWorld from €7m to €50m
    13:15 – Moving factories and scaling under pressure
    29:00 – Losing control during peak demand
    31:00 – Installing systems that track profit daily
    32:20 – Why founders default to operational firefighting
    38:50 – What do you actually want from your business?
    46:06 – Why the family decided to sell
    49:30 – The emotional aftermath of the sale
    52:17 – Private equity, Covid, and extreme due diligence
    56:34 – Why meat is a brutally competitive industry
    1:14:05 – The two biggest problems in SMEs
    1:19:21 – Michelle’s biggest personal leadership lesson

    🎧 Listen now on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube.
    👇 Full episode link in the comments.

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    1 Std. und 24 Min.
  • Dying With Your Best Work Inside You: Philip McKernan on Success, Meaning, and Regret
    Feb 9 2026

    Philip McKernan joins Business Builders for a powerful conversation about success, identity, money, and the quiet cost of living a life that isn’t fully aligned with who you are.

    Rather than framing success as growth, scale, or financial achievement, Philip challenges the idea that more money or momentum will ever resolve a deeper sense of unease. Drawing on his work with entrepreneurs, athletes, and leaders around the world — as well as his own experience of losing everything — he explores why so many people reach impressive milestones yet still feel unfulfilled, restless, or disconnected.

    The conversation moves through identity, failure, purpose, and self-awareness, examining how entrepreneurs often over-identify with achievement, postpone meaningful work, and build lives around what they want to avoid rather than what they truly want. Philip also reflects on the role of money, environment, and fear in shaping our decisions — and why most people never bring their greatest work into the world.

    This episode is a deeply human look at entrepreneurship as a personal journey — not just a commercial one — and an invitation to stop betraying yourself in the pursuit of success.

    🎧 In this episode, you’ll learn:
    – Why most people think they want success but actually want meaning
    – The hidden cost of not changing when things are “going well”
    – How founders over-identify with achievement
    – Why money can never fix a misaligned life
    – How fear keeps people from their real work
    – Why failure can be the doorway to purpose
    – The importance of self-relationship for entrepreneurs
    – Why environment and place shape creativity and clarity
    – How to stop postponing the work that actually matters

    ⏱️ Timestamps

    00:00 – Why entrepreneurs neglect their relationship with themselves
    02:00 – Crisis, crossroads, and waking up too late
    03:18 – Getting ahead of the conversation before regret sets in
    03:35 – Why success isn’t what people actually want
    04:54 – Dying with your best work still inside you
    05:28 – Losing everything and letting go of chasing money
    08:10 – The therapy moment that changed everything
    10:14 – Discovering how much emotion we store in the body
    14:25 – How our life story quietly shapes our decisions
    15:20 – Building a life around what you don’t want
    16:47 – The real estate crash and starting again from zero
    21:12 – Why busyness can’t outrun truth
    25:14 – The cost of not changing
    30:31 – Our dysfunctional relationship with money
    37:13 – Why protecting lifestyle blocks real purpose
    40:48 – The “three mountains” of life and work
    43:13 – Burning the ships and committing fully
    45:56 – Why everything Philip chased was a chase
    50:13 – Success, ego, and the Irish relationship with ambition
    55:12 – Why most people never bring their gifts into the world

    🎧 Listen now on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube.
    👇 Full episode link in the comments.

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    1 Std. und 14 Min.
  • The Winner Effect: Neuroscientist Ian Robertson on How Confidence Works
    Feb 2 2026

    Neuroscientist and psychologist Ian Robertson joins Business Builders to unpack what confidence really is, how it shapes success, and why it can quietly turn against the very people it helps elevate.

    Ian is Emeritus Professor at Trinity College, Dublin and author of two best-selling books:

    How Confidence Works: the new science of self-belief. Penguin

    The Winner Effect: the science of success and how to use it. Bloomsbury

    Rather than treating confidence as optimism or self-belief, Ian explains it as a brain-based mechanism; one that drives action, motivation, mood, influence, and decision-making. Drawing on neuroscience, psychology, sport, leadership, and real-world examples, he shows how confidence compounds through small wins, why it’s essential for navigating uncertainty, and how it can distort judgment as success accumulates.

    The conversation also explores the dark side of confidence: how overconfidence becomes addictive, why it mirrors the effects of power on the brain, and how leaders, founders, and public figures can lose self-awareness as dopamine, status, and success reinforce one another. Ian draws a sharp distinction between intrinsic goals, wanting to be good at what you do, and extrinsic goals like money, status, and beating competitors, explaining why one builds resilience while the other undermines judgment and mental health.

    This episode is a deep, practical look at confidence as a tool, one that can build extraordinary momentum if used well, and cause serious damage if misunderstood.

    🎧 In this episode, you’ll learn:
    – What confidence actually is (and what it isn’t)
    – Why confidence drives action despite uncertainty
    – How the “winner effect” compounds success
    – Why manifesting big goals can backfire
    – How intrinsic vs extrinsic goals shape motivation
    – Why overconfidence distorts judgment and risk perception
    – How power and success affect the brain
    – Why failure is a better teacher than success
    – How confidence shapes leadership, parenting, and aging

    ⏱️ Timestamps

    00:00 – What confidence really is
    01:30 – Confidence vs self-esteem and optimism
    03:50 – Confidence as a self-fulfilling prophecy
    05:10 – The winner effect and compounding success
    06:40 – Why confidence creates widening gaps over time
    07:05 – Why big fantasy goals often fail
    08:45 – Intrinsic vs extrinsic motivation
    10:00 – Confidence as the bridge across uncertainty
    11:20 – Confidence vs anxiety
    12:30 – Confidence as a natural antidepressant
    13:55 – Why confidence increases influence and persuasion
    15:00 – When confidence becomes dangerous
    16:40 – Overconfidence, luck, and distorted self-belief
    18:00 – Power, narcissism, and loss of self-awareness
    19:30 – Why extrinsic success becomes addictive
    20:00 – The limits of “manifesting”
    21:00 – Olympic failure and rebuilding confidence through process
    23:20 – Why Ian became fascinated by confidence
    24:30 – Why confidence matters so much in childhood
    26:00 – Anxiety, avoidance, and learning
    27:40 – Parenting, risk, and emotional robustness
    29:40 – Why failure builds better founders
    31:00 – Experience, learning, and explaining complex ideas
    32:45 – Self-awa

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    53 Min.
  • How Sam Moffett Built a Global Business from Rural Ireland (Moffett Automation)
    Jan 26 2026

    Sam Moffett, founder of Moffett Automation, shares what it really takes to build a world-class, high-stakes business where failure simply isn’t an option . From growing up inside a family manufacturing company in rural Ireland to delivering fully automated warehouse systems for some of the world’s biggest operators.

    Sam explains the fundamental shift from selling products to selling outcomes, and why, in his world, customers don’t care about features - they care about certainty. When a warehouse goes down, the cost can be millions per day, and that reality shapes everything from how Moffett Automation sells, builds, installs, and supports its systems.

    The conversation explores the pressures of scaling a complex technology business, the early pain of winning trust as a young founder, and the responsibility that comes with having your name above the door. Sam talks candidly about projects that didn’t go to plan, why honesty matters more than short-term wins, and how standing by customers, especially when things go wrong, became a defining principle of the company.

    We also dig into the human side of growth: balancing a global business with family life, the personal cost of constant travel, and why Sam is determined to scale without losing control, quality, or values.

    🎧 In this episode, you’ll learn:
    – Why selling solutions beats selling products
    – What it means to build systems where failure isn’t an option
    – How trust and responsibility shape long-term customer relationships
    – The challenges of scaling complex technology from a rural base
    – Why honesty can cost you in the short term — but pays off over time
    – How Sam balances global growth with family life and personal values

    ⏱️ Chapters

    00:00 — Introduction
    02:10 — What Moffett Automation actually does
    05:00 — Selling outcomes, not products
    11:00 — The pressure of building systems that can’t fail
    14:30 — Early mistakes, hard lessons & earning trust
    21:00 — Scaling without losing control or quality
    27:45 — Honesty, integrity & walking away from bad deals
    33:00 — Leadership, competitiveness & decision-making
    40:00 — Motorsport, mindset & performance under pressure
    48:15 — Recognition, credibility & Entrepreneur of the Year
    55:45 — Family, balance & the personal cost of growth

    Whether you’re building a technology company, scaling a high-risk operation, or leading a business where trust is everything, this episode offers grounded, hard-earned insight into what sustainable growth really demands.

    🎧 Listen now on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube.
    👇 Full episode link in the comments.

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    59 Min.
  • From the Tools to the Top: How Tim Sparsis Built a Scalable Attic Business
    Jan 19 2026

    Tim Sparsis, founder of The Attic Company, shares an honest account of what it really takes to grow a trade business from the ground up — from arriving in Ireland with an old van and borrowed money to building a company that now delivers hundreds of projects every year.

    Tim talks openly about the early days of doing everything himself, the fear of hiring when cash was tight, and the moment he realised that staying “on the tools” was holding the business back. He explains why scaling meant going backwards to go forwards, how systems and people unlocked growth, and why letting go was the hardest — but most important — leadership shift he made.

    The conversation also explores the human side of building a business: mental health, burnout, and the role running and fitness play in helping Tim switch off, think clearly, and build something sustainable over the long term.

    🎧 In this episode, you’ll learn:
    – How Tim moved from doing everything himself to leading a scalable business
    – Why most founders think they can’t afford their next hire — and why that mindset holds them back
    – What “going backwards to go forwards” really looks like in practice
    – How systems and operations enable growth in a trade business
    – Why stepping away from the tools was the turning point
    – The importance of balance, mental health, and sustainability as a founder

    Whether you’re building a trade business, scaling a service company, or navigating the transition from operator to leader, this episode offers practical, hard-earned insights into what sustainable growth really requires.

    🎧 Listen now on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube.
    👇 Full episode link in the comments.

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    53 Min.
  • What Is ‘Enough’? Pádraig O'Céidigh's Lessons from a Life in Business (Aer Arann)
    Jan 12 2026

    Business leader and entrepreneur Pádraig O’Céidigh shares a deeply reflective conversation on success, stress, and the question most people never stop to ask: what is enough?

    Drawing on decades of experience in business and life, Pádraig speaks candidly about decision-making under pressure, the hidden cost of ambition, and why many of the richest people he knows are not happy. He introduces the idea of a personal “safe harbour” — a way of making life and business decisions that prioritise perspective, values, and long-term wellbeing over constant growth.

    This is not a hustle story. It’s a conversation about wisdom, restraint, and learning to recognise when more is no longer better.

    🎧 In this episode, you’ll learn:
    – Why financial success doesn’t guarantee happiness
    – What Pádraig means by asking “what is enough?”
    – How stress and ambition can quietly take over your life
    – A practical framework for making difficult decisions
    – Why perspective matters more than momentum
    – How life experience reshapes how you define success

    Whether you’re a business builder, leader, or simply someone questioning the pace and pressure of modern work, this episode offers a rare, grounded perspective on success — and what it should actually serve.

    🎧 Listen now on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube.
    👇 Full episode link in the comments.

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    1 Std. und 25 Min.
  • From Zero Customers to a €200m Business: Nick Keegan’s Startup Story (Mail Metrics)
    Jan 5 2026

    Mail Metrics co-founder Nick Keegan shares a raw and revealing account of what it really takes to survive the early years of a startup — from three years with no customers to building one of Ireland’s largest customer communications businesses through bold pivots and high-risk acquisitions.

    Nick speaks candidly about the naïve mistakes made at the start, burning through investor capital, letting staff go, and being months from running out of cash — before a single RFP became the lifeline that changed everything. He also explains how stumbling into a regulated, enterprise-grade business model unlocked long-term growth, and why learning by doing was the only way forward.

    🎧 In this episode, you’ll learn:
    – What it’s like to build a startup with zero customers for years
    – Why building before talking to customers nearly killed the business
    – How one tender became a turning point
    – The reality of enterprise sales and long growth cycles
    – Why Nick used acquisitions to scale faster than organic growth
    – The personal and psychological toll of the early survival years

    Whether you’re a founder, operator, or investor, this episode offers a rare, honest look at the gap between startup mythology and startup reality — and what it really takes to get through it.

    🎧 Listen now on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube.
    👇 Full episode link in the comments.

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    1 Std. und 8 Min.
  • What Nobody Tells You About Growing a Company with Tom Rowan (Rowan Engineering)
    Dec 15 2025

    Tom Rowan, founder of Rowan Engineering, shares a grounded and refreshingly honest account of how he built a forensic engineering and environmental consultancy from one customer and no grand plan into a 30-person business working with insurers, public bodies, and major Irish organisations.

    Rather than chasing hype or overnight success, Tom explains how his ambition evolved gradually — from simply replacing his salary, to hitting €250k, then €1 million, and beyond. Along the way, he reflects on leadership, culture, setbacks, and why values like integrity, professionalism, and balance matter more as a business grows.

    🎧 In this episode, you’ll learn:
    – How Rowan Engineering grew one step at a time
    – Why ambition changes as a business scales
    – The reality of hiring when there’s no money in the bank
    – How to build a values-led culture without ego
    – Why slow, deliberate growth often wins

    Whether you’re running a small business, thinking about scaling, or questioning what growth should actually look like, this episode offers a calm, thoughtful perspective from someone who’s lived it.

    🎧 Listen now on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or YouTube.

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    49 Min.