253: How Refinery29 Defied Critics and Became a Digital Media Pioneer, With Co-Founders Christene Barberich and Piera Gelardi

253: How Refinery29 Defied Critics and Became a Digital Media Pioneer, With Co-Founders Christene Barberich and Piera Gelardi

“I think about how little we knew, but how—I believe—how courageous we were,” says Christene Barberich, reflecting on the early days of Refinery29. Before she and co-founder Piera Gelardi were the women at the helm of one of the fastest-growing digital media companies in the world, they were new entrepreneurs working tirelessly on a vision (first sketched on a napkin) that outsiders failed to understand. The Refinery29 founding team formed in 2004, and in those early days (before Twitter had even launched), people struggled to grasp even the concept of digital media. The co-founders’ pitches were met with skepticism. “We would go talk to people, and they would act like we were trying to sell them a carpet or something,” Gelardi says. “They thought it was a scam.” Potential advertisers and brand partners also didn’t think customers would ever want to buy something online. “I just remember thinking, like, ‘I don’t think that’s true,’” Barberich says. That skepticism gave them an advantage, though: It gave Refinery29 the freedom to operate and experiment without the pressure of competition. Today, Refinery29 has an international audience of 550 million and has earned multiple distinctions, including Webby awards and Inc. 500 list mentions. Key Takeaways How the two met and influenced each other’s decision to go all in on Refinery29 The early days at Refinery29 when wireframes were hand-drawn The freedom of operating under the radar when digital media was still the Wild West The critics who doubted the business model and thought it was a scam What they lose sleep over How they approach content creation What they look for when hiring The advice they would give to entrepreneurs who want to use content to grow their businesses How they define quality content

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654: The Hoodie That SAVED Their Business ($5M in 2 Years) | Boys Lie

654: The Hoodie That SAVED Their Business ($5M in 2 Years) | Boys Lie

Tori Robinson and Leah O'Malley launched Boys Lie as a cosmetics brand with 16+ SKUs and generated $250,000 in revenue in year one—against $250,000 in debt. But they discovered customers only wanted...

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653: (Solo) Why Community Is the Most Undervalued Asset in E-Commerce Right Now

653: (Solo) Why Community Is the Most Undervalued Asset in E-Commerce Right Now

Most e-commerce founders treat influencer marketing and community like two separate strategies — two separate budgets, two separate teams. But that split is exactly why so many brands hit a ceiling th...

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652: IM8 Founder: What It REALLY Takes to Build a $200M Supplement Brand

652: IM8 Founder: What It REALLY Takes to Build a $200M Supplement Brand

Danny Yeung went from selling baseball cards at age 12 to scaling Ubuy-Ibuy to nearly a million a month in revenue in just six months before Groupon acquired it in 2010. Then during Covid, he launch...

16 Apr 1h 2min

651: From 7 Years In Recruitment To $60K In 6 Months Selling Mouth Tape

651: From 7 Years In Recruitment To $60K In 6 Months Selling Mouth Tape

Michael Forshaw read a book, taped his mouth shut every night for a year, and then built a business out of it — launching Breath Sleep Tape from idea to live store in just ten weeks. A recruiter by...

15 Apr 30min

650: The Lie About Social Media Growth (And What Actually Works in 2026)

650: The Lie About Social Media Growth (And What Actually Works in 2026)

Most founders are still treating social media as a vanity channel — a place for likes, views, and followers. And here's the tough truth: if your social media isn't converting into customers, subscribe...

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649: We Had 3 Weeks Left… This Saved My $35M/Year Company

649: We Had 3 Weeks Left… This Saved My $35M/Year Company

Christina Stembel built Farmgirl Flowers into a $55 million bootstrapped business by 2021, betting on simplicity, direct-to-consumer, and zero VC money. Then as Covid vaccines became widely availabl...

9 Apr 52min

648: (Solo) Why the Best Brands Create Moments, Not Just Products

648: (Solo) Why the Best Brands Create Moments, Not Just Products

The brands that win don't just deliver products. They create moments. And once you see this pattern, you start noticing it everywhere. I recently came across a concept from one of our course instru...

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647: I Started a Jewelry Brand With $25K and the WRONG Business Model | Noura Sakkijha

647: I Started a Jewelry Brand With $25K and the WRONG Business Model | Noura Sakkijha

Noura Sakkijha is a third generation jeweler who realized the entire fine jewelry industry was fundamentally broken—built on the outdated idea that men buy diamonds for women, not that women buy the d...

2 Apr 48min

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