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Afford Anything | Make Smart Money Choices

[E] The Myths We Believed About Startups [GREATEST HITS]

Afford Anything | Make Smart Money Choices

Paula Pant | Cumulus Podcast Network

Business, Investing, Entrepreneurship

4.73.6K Ratings

🗓️ 26 December 2025

⏱️ 45 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

#675: Welcome to Greatest Hits Week – five days, five episodes from our vault, spelling out F-I-I-R-E. Today’s letter E stands for Entrepreneurship. This episode originally aired in September 2018, at a moment when startup culture was loud, venture capital was abundant, and entrepreneurship was often framed as something that involves outside investors and rapid growth. ____ In this episode, we rewind the clock to 2018. Remember what entrepreneurship was supposed to look like back then? Build a startup. Raise capital. Scale fast. Get rich. That was the dominant story. But our guest, Rand Fishkin, told a different story – a story about founder burnout, debt, and the downside of startup culture. Rand, the founder of Moz, shares how he and his mother accumulated nearly half a million dollars in debt while running an early services business. He talks about what it felt like to face creditors, negotiate settlements, and keep going under intense financial pressure. From there, we move into one of the most misunderstood ideas in entrepreneurship: the difference between service businesses and product businesses. Rand breaks down the trade-offs. Services generate income faster. Product businesses rely on outside capital. And founders often earn far less than people expect. That leads to a deeper conversation about incentives. Once venture capital enters the picture, priorities shift. Profits matter less. Growth matters more — and it affects both the business and your personal finances. High revenue does not automatically translate into personal wealth. We also talk about the side of entrepreneurship that rarely makes the highlight reels: Loneliness. Anxiety. Depression. And the relief that comes from realizing that even the most successful founders often feel lost while they’re building. This conversation feels less like startup advice and more like a long-term framework for thinking clearly about risk, money, and meaning. If you’ve ever questioned whether entrepreneurship automatically leads to financial freedom, this episode offers a grounded and very honest answer. Timestamps Note: Timestamps will vary on individual listening devices based on dynamic advertising run times. The provided timestamps are approximate and may be several minutes off due to changing ad lengths. (00:00) Facing creditors and repayment negotiations (08:50) How a services business really works (11:40) From consulting to software (15:00) Services vs. product businesses (12:20) Why high revenue doesn’t mean personal wealth (25:05) Venture capital incentives (27:50) Founder salaries and financial reality (30:40) Startup mythology vs. lived experience (33:20) Loneliness and mental health (36:15) Founder strengths and weaknesses (39:50) Feedback and self-awareness (42:30) Designing a business that fits your life Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

Merry Christmas, happy holidays.

0:03.0

Today is Friday, December 26, boxing day to all those who celebrate.

0:08.7

Today we are airing episode five of five in our special five-part series on F-I-I-R-E.

0:16.7

So every day this week, we have aired an episode from The Greatest Hits Vault.

0:22.0

What does that mean?

0:22.9

It means we reached into the archives to find some of our favorite episodes, our greatest

0:29.2

hits around the theme of F-E-I-R-E.

0:33.1

So on Monday, we did the letter F, financial psychology.

0:36.5

On Tuesday, we aired an episode around the first letter I, increasing your income.

0:41.2

Wednesday was the second letter I investing.

0:43.5

Thursday was the letter R, real estate.

0:46.0

And today we are sharing with you the letter E entrepreneurship by replaying this interview.

0:52.9

This originally aired in September 2018. And it's an

0:57.5

interview with an incredibly impressive entrepreneur named Rand Fishkin. Rand is a college dropout

1:03.8

who spent his early 20s spiraling into a lot of debt. He tried to grow a marketing company,

1:10.5

but he funded it in the worst possible way.

1:13.9

He leased expensive office space. He hired very expensive contractors. He rented booths at conferences,

1:20.1

and he paid for everything with a series of credit cards. He ballooned his debt up to $150,000,

1:27.1

and then he couldn't make the minimum payments and defaulted.

1:30.3

And with late fees and penalties, his debt swelled to over $500,000, $500,000 in credit card debt.

1:39.9

And no, he did not declare bankruptcy.

1:43.4

He stayed the course.

...

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