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Founders

#393 The Marketing Genius of the Michelin Brothers

Founders

David Senra

Steve Jobs, Founders, James Dyson, Company Builders, Technology, Henry Ford, Elon Musk, Business Professional Biography, How I Built This, The History Of Entrepreneurship, Jim Clark, Entrepreneurship, Entrepreneurs, History, Founder, Business Autobiography, Jeff Bezos, Entrepreneur, Biography, Biographies Of Entrepreneurs, Biographies, Business, Business Biography

4.8 • 1.5K Ratings

🗓️ 3 July 2025

⏱️ 55 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Your family asks you to take over a failing factory in a remote part of France. This “family business” comes with a stack of unpaid bills, a small team of workers who haven’t been paid in months, and a banker refusing to extend any more credit. You cut every unprofitable product and go all in on making rubber tires. You have no experience and don’t know a single thing about rubber manufacturing. You have a genius insight that selling tires is a waste of time and instead you should create the conditions for your product’s success. You organize the entire company around this core loop: encourage more driving → which leads to more movement → more movement leads to more wear → more wear leads to more tire sales. A simple and beautiful organizing principle emerges: a tire company will prosper if people travel more, so let’s help them do that. You make promiscuous use of the press. You write columns advertising the joys of the new activity of driving. You draw the maps, create the routes, and build thousands of road signs across France. All for free. Why? Because better signage means longer trips, more driving, and more tires sold. You publish the Michelin Guide — a free travel book with locations of hotels, restaurants, mechanics, and sites to see. You create the Michelin stars which become the global gold standard in fine dining and help people travel far for great food.  You stimulate demand through spectacle. You sponsor races, airshows, and contests with cash prizes. You make smart bets early so by the time cars appear in large numbers you already own the roads. You create the most successful company mascot of all time and create a family dynasty that lasts 100 years. You're not one person, but two. André and Édouard Michelin, two brothers and one of the greatest cofounder teams in history. This episode is what I learned from reading Michelin: A Century of Secrets by Alain Germain and The Michelin Men: Driving an Empire by Herbert Lottman. ------ Ramp gives you everything you need to control spend, watch your costs, and optimize your financial operations —all on a single platform. Make history's greatest entrepreneurs proud by going to Ramp and learning how they can help your business control your costs and save time and money. ----- Automate compliance, security, and trust with Vanta. Vanta helps you win trust, close deals, and stay secure—faster and with less effort. Find out how increased security leads to more customers by going to Vanta. Tell them David from Founders sent you and you'll get $1000 off. ----- Join my free email newsletter to get my top 10 highlights from every book ----

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

The Michelin brothers have to be one of the best co-founder teams that I've ever read about.

0:03.3

So one brother made the product and the other brother sold the product.

0:06.9

And they did their respective jobs better than anybody else in the world.

0:11.3

Andre Michelin may be the greatest marketer of all time.

0:14.0

And his brother, Edward, is one of the greatest industrialists of all time.

0:18.2

In fact, Edward would give the following speech to his employees

0:21.5

counseling, says little streams make big rivers. A single minute lost each hour adds up to eight

0:28.0

in a day, 2,400 minutes in a year. That's 40 hours per worker. If our factory employees 20,000

0:35.3

workers and each loses that minute per hour, that is the

0:38.3

equivalent of 333 years of work lost.

0:42.9

The best founders in history were all looking for ways to save both time and money.

0:48.0

The Michelin brothers were no different.

0:49.8

In fact, there's a line in one of their biographies that says saving both time and money

0:53.8

was one of the

0:54.6

principal concerns of the chiefs. That is how I know that if they were alive today, they'd be

1:00.6

running Michelin on Ramp. Ramp is the presenting sponsor of this podcast, and Ramp is a guaranteed

1:06.1

time and money saver. Ramp gives your business easy to use corporate cards for your entire team,

1:11.4

automated expense reporting, and cost control. Michelin was one of the fastest growing and most

1:16.0

innovative companies in the world in their day. Many of the fastest growing and most innovative

1:20.9

companies in the world today are running their business on Ramp. Why? Because one of the reasons

1:25.8

is because Ramp has the most talented technical team in their industry. Becoming an engineer at Ramp. Why? Because one of the reasons is because Ramp has the most talented technical team

1:28.5

in their industry. Becoming an engineer at Ramp is nearly impossible. In the last 12 months,

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