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Innovator Insights

Innovator Insights

Hosted by Innovator Insights

Episodes

41

Latest episode

Jun 2026

Language

EN

About the show

This podcast celebrates the visionaries, the risk-takers, and the disruptors who are shaping the future of consumer product innovation and e-commerce. We love to spotlight consumer product entrepreneurs, e-commerce titans, and sustainability champions to share their insights and expertise. Think you'd be a great guest on our show? Apply at https://podcast.gembah.com/podcast-guest-home-page.

Listen to episodes

41 recent
June 12, 202628 min

41 - From Ski Bum to American Knife Maker: How Morgan Keenan Built Cudaway by Hand

What does it take to build a premium, made-in-America knife brand entirely by hand — no overseas factory, no marketing budget, no AI? In this episode of Innovator Insights, we sit down with Morgan Keenan, founder of Cudaway and co-founder of the fast-growing CPG brand Empress of Ghee, to hear how he did exactly that.We cover:His winding path from a cross-country dirt-bike trip to head knife maker to launching Cudaway in 2020Bootstrapping the brand one 20-knife batch at a time, tested and sold at farmers marketsThe craft and minimalist design philosophy behind the flagship Sanrok 7The realities of scaling a manufacturing business and managing cash flowWhy he sees AI as a powerful tool but a dangerous crutch for foundersHow Empress of Ghee grew from a single farmers-market batch into 29 retailers in just over a year

May 28, 202640 min

40 - From Wine Totes to Sold-Out Kickstarter: Sarah Wustefeld's Grandir Bags Journey

How do you go from carrying wine totes to soccer practice to hitting your Kickstarter goal in six hours? In this episode of Innovator Insights, host Henrik Johansson talks with Sarah Wustefeld, co-founder of Grandir Bags, about the twelve months she and her co-founder Kate spent turning a real, lived-in mom problem into a fully launched consumer product brand.Sarah opens up about leaving her VP role in enterprise sales to bootstrap Grandir with Kate (her closest friend and Kappa Kappa Gamma sister), the methodical customer discovery process that surfaced 17 recurring pain points from 340 women, and the messy, real, authentically-shared brand-building that powered their Kickstarter launch — and continues to drive their growth today.In this conversation, we cover:How Sarah and Kate went from "we need this bag" to a launched product in roughly a yearThe 340-woman customer discovery process — text messages, LinkedIn DMs, and 35 in-person "tote talks"Why they chose Vietnam over China and India as their manufacturing base, and the "military-grade" spec they wouldn't compromise onThe "starter kit" Sarah recommends to any new consumer product founder: GoDaddy, Canva, Fiverr, Gembah, and KickstarterHow they hit their Kickstarter funding goal in six hours by sharing the real, behind-the-scenes brand journeyThe guerrilla marketing playbook that landed them a viral collab with Sean Riley (Dude Wipes) and a winery partnership where Grandir is now the official wine club bagSarah's hard-won lessons on the post-corporate identity crisis and finding mentors (Notre Dame's Irish Angels, Glenn Argenbright at Quake Capital) who actually move you forwardWhy Sarah and Kate refuse to run Grandir like a traditional startup — and how 2:30 school pickups are a feature, not a bugWhether you're at the idea stage, deep in customer discovery, or wrestling with whether to leave a corporate job for your own brand, this episode is full of grounded, practical insight from a founder still in the thick of building.

April 30, 202633 min

39 - How Controlling Oxygen Could Change Food, Blood & Waste Forever

What if the real reason food spoils so fast, and even blood storage is limited, comes down to something simple: oxygen?In this episode of Innovator Insights, Henrik Johansson speaks with Bruce Roesner, founder of Green Life Tech, about how controlling oxygen exposure could extend the life of everything from fresh produce to blood.Bruce explains how his work in RFID technology led to a broader discovery: oxygen is a key driver of decay in organic materials. That insight evolved into a platform that can extend shelf life by 3–5x in food systems, while also showing promising results in medical applications like blood preservation.The conversation also explores the reality behind food waste, why most groceries are already partway through their usable life before you buy them, and how simple supply chain delays have massive downstream effects.Finally, Bruce shares what it takes to build deep-tech hardware, raise capital through repeated rejection, and why persistence matters more than perfect timing.Key themes: oxygen control, food waste, shelf life extension, blood preservation, persistence in entrepreneurship

March 18, 202631 min

38 - From Code to Compassion: Building Moja Tu and Changing Lives with Kathy Kempff

In this episode of Innovator Insights, Kathy Kempff shares how a single trip to Kenya transformed her perspective on purpose, philanthropy, and education. Inspired by the story of a young girl who simply wanted the chance to learn, Kathy founded Moja Tu, a nonprofit providing one-to-one educational scholarships that empower children to break the cycle of poverty.Kathy opens up about the lessons she has learned building technology-enabled startups, scaling nonprofit programs, and creating a sponsor experience that goes far beyond traditional donations. From video calls and personalized letters to immersive sponsor trips, Moja Tu connects people in the U.S. with students in Kenya in ways that create lasting relationships and tangible impact.She also discusses the power of alumni giving back, innovative approaches to fundraising, and why understanding the human side of every organization, whether nonprofit or for-profit, is key to meaningful change.Whether you are passionate about entrepreneurship, education, or making a difference, Kathy's journey is a reminder that even one connection can create exponential impact.🎧 Listen to hear how Moja Tu turns sponsorship into lifelong relationships, changing lives on both sides of the globe.

March 12, 202631 min

37 - From Plow Disc to Product Empire: Griff Jaggard's FireDisc Journey

Griff Jaggard, co-founder and CEO of FireDisc Cookers, joins us to share how a gifted plow disc and a few buddy trips turned into a nationally distributed portable outdoor cooking brand.Griff talks about starting with no consumer product experience, landing their first retail deal with Buc-ee's, building a product tough enough to stop a .357 Magnum, and learning from the founders of YETI.He also gets real about the impact of tariffs on small businesses, the shift to direct-to-consumer, building a passionate customer community on Facebook, and why the best advice he can give founders is: don't go at it alone, and don't quit.

February 26, 202638 min

36 - High-Five Energy: From Impossible Moments to Billion-Dollar Lessons with Jeffrey Chernick & Alex Gitter

How do you turn a personal hack into a philosophy that shapes entrepreneurship and land insights from 18 founders along the way? Jeffrey Chernick and Alex Gitter, co-authors of High Five Energy, didn’t just write a book, they distilled years of founder wisdom into 33 actionable insights. In this episode, they reveal the unfiltered truth about what it takes to succeed as an entrepreneur, from impossible moments that seem like luck to the unconventional “high-five” method that helped them manifest goals and navigate setbacks. In this episode, we coverHigh-Five Energy: How a simple physical gesture became a grounding tool to connect intention with action and unlock real-world results, from apartment leases to major business deals. The Founder Flow: Why every entrepreneur is “one conversation away” from life-changing opportunities and how knowing who to pitch matters more than pitching everyone. Impossible Moments and Serendipity:True stories of founders running out of money, facing tariffs, and almost losing everything yet somehow finding a breakthrough. Creative Problem-Solving:How thinking differently and iterating relentlessly, whether building a book or launching a startup, creates a competitive edge. Lessons from the Legends:Insights from iconic founders across industries showing that the path to impact is rarely linear and often full of unexpected pivots. Tune in for a masterclass on resilience, creativity, and turning intention into action the High Five Energy way.

February 16, 202637 min

35 - From Kitchen Table Idea to "Shoes for RVs": Devon Wilson's Journey with RV Snap Pads

What happens when a father-son conversation at the kitchen table resurfaces an old invention and accidentally creates an entirely new product category?In this episode of Innovator Insights, Henrik Johansson sits down with Devon Wilson, Founder and CEO of RV Snap Pads, a Calgary-based company that makes what Devon calls "shoes for your RV." These snap-on pads, made from recycled semi-truck tires, provide grip, stability, and protection for RV leveling systems, replacing the old solution of wood blocks and loose plastic.Devon shares how the idea started with his father, one of the original inventors of the iconic orange leveling blocks that RVers have used for over 30 years. After a rough experience that pushed the family out of that original venture, a kitchen table conversation reignited the idea, and Devon ran with it. The first prototype was built on a shoestring budget just to see if, as Devon puts it, "anybody quite frankly gave a damn."They did. Feedback from early RV owner groups was overwhelmingly positive, revealing unexpected benefits like vibration dampening that stabilized entire motorhomes. From there, Devon built the product line almost entirely by listening to customers, adding new SKUs only when waitlists hit critical mass.But the road hasn't been smooth. Devon is candid about cycling through six or seven contract manufacturers, the whiplash of COVID-era demand they couldn't fulfill, over-correcting with too much inventory, and the constant tension between growth and operational stability. Now, with two strong manufacturing partners and nearly 6 million pounds of recycled rubber kept out of landfills, the company is finally ready to hit the gas, with big-box retail conversations on the horizon.Whether you're bootstrapping a physical product, navigating supply chain chaos, or wondering how to build a brand that customers genuinely love (they have a customer on their seventh set of Snap Pads), this episode is packed with real-world lessons on resilience, customer obsession, and knowing when to push forward versus when to stabilize.

January 29, 202651 min

34 - Bootstrapping to $180M: Maxed Credit Cards, SEO Hacks, and The "Dishwasher Moment" with Mathias Ihlenfeld

How do you go from selling 13 bikes in year one to building a global brand with over $180 million in revenue?Mathias Ihlenfeld, founder of Woom Bikes, didn’t start with a massive VC check. He started with a side hustle while working as a consultant, building the business at night and on weekends. In this episode, Matthias reveals the unvarnished truth about scaling a physical product company—from the terrifying cash flow crunches that left him unable to fix his own dishwasher, to the "zero to one" SEO marketing hack that exploded his sales.In this episode, we cover:The Side Hustle Strategy: How Matthias managed a consulting career by day and built a global bike brand by night to extend his runway.The "Dishwasher Moment": The reality of 300% YoY growth, where revenue is high but cash is gone—leading to maxed-out credit cards and liquidated retirement funds.The SEO Growth Hack: How Matthias went from 13 sales to 1,500 by reverse-engineering what "concerned parents" typed into Google.Brand vs. Amazon: Why avoiding Amazon early on and focusing on fanatical customer service (including founder cell phone calls) created a "love brand".Navigating Risk: Lessons from a product recall and why entrepreneurs should "over engineer" safety compliance.Tune in for a masterclass on bootstrapping, resilience, and customer obsession.

January 15, 202658 min

33 - Mission Over Money: How Kevin Broderick Built a Global Safety Brand and Exited After 15 Years

What does it take to turn a scientific concern into a household name?Join us as we sit down with Kevin Broderick, the entrepreneur behind Think Baby and Think Sport. Raised in a household of scientists and inventors, Kevin combined his background in biophysics and epidemiology with a passion for entrepreneurship to solve a massive consumer problem: toxic chemicals in everyday products.In this episode, we discuss:The Power of Experience: Why a mentor advised Kevin to work at startups, mid-sized firms, and major corporations like Dell before launching his own enterprise.The "Little Black Book": Kevin’s method of recording every idea, from digitized bathtubs to parachutes for planes, and how it shaped his thinking.Mission-Driven Growth: How focusing on the safety mission—specifically creating BPA-free baby bottles—accidentally led to building a great company.Guerilla Sales Tactics: The "West Coast Tour" where Kevin and his head of sales drove from San Diego to Vancouver, averaging 6 to 10 meetings a day to get products on shelves.Navigating the Exit: Why Kevin chose a lower acquisition offer to ensure his brand’s mission and product safety remained intact under new ownership.The Next Frontier: Kevin’s current work with Trixie (sustainable, waterless beauty) and Atomico (vitamin-infused water with a STEM-education focus)."We were on a mission... we weren't going to worry about building a great company or selling it down the road... if we stayed focused on the mission, we might accidentally build a great company."

January 1, 202638 min

32 - He Built a Circular Economy Business 23 Years Before It Was Cool

What does it take to build a profitable, purpose-driven company without venture capital?In this episode of Innovator Insights, Henrik Johansson sits down with Dan Dicker, Founder & CEO of Circular, to unpack a 23-year journey of building a design-led business rooted in sustainability, long before the circular economy became mainstream.Dan shares how his background at Dyson shaped his approach to product design, why dyslexia became a hidden entrepreneurial advantage, and how Circular grew organically from a backyard shed into a global leader in reusable and returnable drinkware.You’ll also hear a deep dive into Circular’s Tap & Reuse system, an RFID-powered platform designed to eliminate single-use cups by making reuse seamless, habit-forming, and measurable. From consumer psychology to return-rate data, Dan explains why systems, not guilt, drive real behavior change.Key themes covered:Why organic growth beat venture funding for CircularDesigning products from waste materials, before it was trendyHow constraints fuel innovationThe psychology behind reuse vs. depositsBuilding technology around physical products to unlock scaleWhy failure isn’t just acceptable, it’s essentialIf you care about product innovation, sustainability, or building a business that lasts, this episode is packed with insight.If you care about product innovation, sustainability, or building a business that lasts, this episode is packed with insight.

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