218: Slow Growth and Risk Aversion Wins the Entrepreneurial Race, With Aytekin Tank of JotForm

218: Slow Growth and Risk Aversion Wins the Entrepreneurial Race, With Aytekin Tank of JotForm

“It took me 10 years [to create my own business], because I didn’t have the courage to start. But I still had this belief that one day I would start it.” Fortunately for Aytekin Tank and 3.7 million happy users, he ultimately did start that business—JotForm, a profitable online form builder that houses 12 million forms; integrates with Paypal, Salesforce, and Dropbox; and spans two continents. It took Tank a decade to build that business, but he couldn't care less. In an entrepreneurial climate where rapid growth and risk-taking are worn as badges of honor, Tank considers his slow growth the reason for his strong company culture and long-term success. Concerned that your wariness or risk aversion hinders your ability to become an entrepreneur? Listen in and get inspired by Tank’s journey. Anything is possible if you just take the plunge and then keep moving forward—no matter the pace. Key Takeaways How Tank has been able to grow consistently even though he started with zero management experience The friendly company culture Tank built and why it has become so successful Why Tank believes his slow and steady approach to growth has led to so much success Tank’s three steps to slow and sustainable growth

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638: (Solo) How I'd Launch an Ecom Brand in 2026 with $10K and Zero Followers

638: (Solo) How I'd Launch an Ecom Brand in 2026 with $10K and Zero Followers

If you're just getting started with e-commerce and you're wondering how to actually scale with limited cash and no audience, this episode is for you. I get asked this all the time: "Nathan, how do I g...

9 Maalis 8min

637: How One Decision Separates a $1 Million Business From a $250 Million One | Leila Hormozi

637: How One Decision Separates a $1 Million Business From a $250 Million One | Leila Hormozi

Leila Hormozi went from six arrests in 18 months to building a portfolio generating over $250 million in annual revenue by age 30. What makes her story fascinating isn't just the rags-to-riches narr...

6 Maalis 58min

636: (Solo) The Facebook Ads Metrics That Actually Matter When Scaling

636: (Solo) The Facebook Ads Metrics That Actually Matter When Scaling

Most founders think scaling Facebook ads is about finding one winning ad and spending more behind it. But that's not how it works — especially not anymore. Here's the truth: the brands that scale o...

2 Maalis 10min

635: The Meta Ads System Working in 2026 | Nick Shackelford

635: The Meta Ads System Working in 2026 | Nick Shackelford

Nick Shackelford has spent hundreds of millions of dollars profitably on Meta ads and grown Structured from zero to $76 million in revenue in under three years. And he's here to tell you this clearl...

27 Helmi 52min

634: (Solo) My Current AI Stack (and How It’s Helping Us Move 10x Faster at Foundr)

634: (Solo) My Current AI Stack (and How It’s Helping Us Move 10x Faster at Foundr)

Most founders are either ignoring AI or drowning in it. But here's what I've learned after 13 years of building Foundr: AI isn't a shortcut to success — it's a tool. And when used right, it's like upg...

23 Helmi 11min

633: We Built a $42M Business by Reinventing Coffee | Purity Coffee

633: We Built a $42M Business by Reinventing Coffee | Purity Coffee

Amber and Andrew Salisbury turned a marriage argument about coffee into an eight-figure health food empire. After Andrew couldn't find a single coffee brand that prioritized health over marketing, t...

20 Helmi 50min

632: (Solo) Why In-Person Still Wins (Even in a Remote World)

632: (Solo) Why In-Person Still Wins (Even in a Remote World)

We've glorified remote work — the flexibility, the efficiency, the freedom to work from anywhere. And don't get me wrong, I love it too. But here's what we've lost in translation: humans are wired for...

16 Helmi 6min

631: He Built a $125M Brain Food Brand With Just 10 People | Will Nitze

631: He Built a $125M Brain Food Brand With Just 10 People | Will Nitze

Will Nitze went from selling Linsanity T-shirts in his college dorm to building IQ Bar into a $125 million brain food empire—with just a team of ten people. No bloated headcount. No burning through ...

12 Helmi 53min

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