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<title>The Price</title>
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<description>Entrepreneurs describe the real-life choices they are making to realize their start-up dreams. Hear from founders as they answer the ultimate question - is it worth the price?  Hosted by Drew Adams.</description>
<pubDate>Wed, 22 Apr 2026 10:19:36 +0000</pubDate>
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<title>Karly Pavlinac - CEO of WAAM - Creating Access to the World's Best Celebrity Trainers for $19 / month</title>
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<description>   Imagine getting to work out with trainers that train some of the most well-known athletes and performers in the world from the comfort of your own home for $19 a month.  My guest today - Karly Pavlinac - is building a platform called WAAM that allows everyday people to subscribe to workouts conducted by the world’s best celebrity trainers.  She has a growing list of users asking for access to her apps beta, an interface for her trainers to upload new classes as well as business model that is working and ½ million dollars in startup funding.   But road has not been easy.  From sleeping on a mattress in her parents living room, to having a substantial loan of money to fund the first version of her app stolen by a disreputable app development company, if there is one aspect of Karly’s story that stands out its perseverance.  Keep listening to hear the story of Karly and WAAM on The Price.   </description>
<pubDate>Mon, 18 May 2020 19:24:18 +0000</pubDate>
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<title>Don Shin - CEO of CrossComm on The Most Common Pitfalls Startups Experience When Building an App or Platform</title>
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<description>   Don Shin is the CEO of CrossComm, an app development studio applying some of the most cutting edge technologies to the business problems of its' customers.    In this episode we discuss augmented reality, virtual reality, AI, Bitcoin and market opportunities these technologies open up.  Additionally, Don describes   the most common pitfalls that startups experience when building out an app or technology platform.  So if you are developing an app or looking to innovate your product or service, check out this episode with Don Shin, the CEO of CrossComm   </description>
<pubDate>Mon, 04 May 2020 14:07:03 +0000</pubDate>
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<title>Eli Sheets, Founder of IdeaBlock - Using Blockchain to Protect Intellectual Property Rights</title>
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<description>     “Any four of the big pieces of intellectual property that you can get traditionally -- patents, trademarks ... copyrights and trade secrets -- the common thread that runs through all four of those is  time  . If you're first at any of those four, eventually you're going to win against third parties.       If you beat them, right? If you're the first one to think of the idea or the first one to publish the idea in terms of patents, you're going to win in the United States and in the world, and in a lot of cases.  Having a technology available to us that can prove this time, that's freely available and is able to be integrated and used as a kind of an undeniable proof of time, that's crowdsourced, essentially, is pretty powerful.”  - Eli Sheet, Idea Block       Eli Sheets is the founder of IdeaBlock, an innovative new technology platform that leverages the power of blockchain to provide immutable and provable timestamps for intellectual property. Essentially, IdeaBlock's customers can prove when they...</description>
<pubDate>Mon, 30 Mar 2020 20:17:24 +0000</pubDate>
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<title>Eli Sheets, Founder of IdeaBlock - Using Blockchain to Protect Intellectual Property Rights</title>
<link>https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/theprice/The_Price_EP10_Eli_Sheets_v2.mp3?dest-id=756606</link>
<description>     “Any four of the big pieces of intellectual property that you can get traditionally -- patents, trademarks ... copyrights and trade secrets -- the common thread that runs through all four of those is  time  . If you're first at any of those four, eventually you're going to win against third parties.       If you beat them, right? If you're the first one to think of the idea or the first one to publish the idea in terms of patents, you're going to win in the United States and in the world, and in a lot of cases.  Having a technology available to us that can prove this time, that's freely available and is able to be integrated and used as a kind of an undeniable proof of time, that's crowdsourced, essentially, is pretty powerful.”  - Eli Sheet, Idea Block       Eli Sheets is the founder of IdeaBlock, an innovative new technology platform that leverages the power of blockchain to provide immutable and provable timestamps for intellectual property. Essentially, IdeaBlock's customers can prove when they...</description>
<pubDate>Mon, 30 Mar 2020 20:17:24 +0000</pubDate>
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<title>Ep 8: Joe Colopy, Co-founder and CEO of Bronto sold for $200M in 2015</title>
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<description>     Back in early 2000’s, Joe Colopy left his job to build a software product - without funding or without even a firm idea of what to build. The first attempts was not going anywhere and the clock was ticking.  But then with his wife three months pregnant, and his back against the wall, he stripped down his product and focused in on something one of his customers said was useful. That hint of something eventually became Bronto Software, that Joe grew along with his co-founder Chaz Felix from pre-revenue to an exit of $200M dollars, all done without taking on debt of venture funding.       In this episode we talk about Joe’s upbringing, how he founded his company, found his first customers, partnered up with his co-founder, as well as how and why he sold the company and what it like to be on the other side.     </description>
<pubDate>Thu, 09 Jan 2020 07:13:47 +0000</pubDate>
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<title>Joe Colopy, Co-founder and CEO of Bronto sold for $200M in 2015</title>
<link>https://traffic.libsyn.com/secure/theprice/ep8-final-edited.mp3?dest-id=756606</link>
<description>     Back in early 2000’s, Joe Colopy left his job to build a software product - without funding or without even a firm idea of what to build. The first attempts was not going anywhere and the clock was ticking.  But then with his wife three months pregnant, and his back against the wall, he stripped down his product and focused in on something one of his customers said was useful. That hint of something eventually became Bronto Software, that Joe grew along with his co-founder Chaz Felix from pre-revenue to an exit of $200M dollars, all done without taking on debt of venture funding.       In this episode we talk about Joe’s upbringing, how he founded his company, found his first customers, partnered up with his co-founder, as well as how and why he sold the company and what it like to be on the other side.     </description>
<pubDate>Thu, 09 Jan 2020 07:13:47 +0000</pubDate>
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<title>Ep 7: Mark Johnson - Founder of Hotel Chatter, Jaunted and Vegas Chatter which was sold to CondeNast</title>
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<description>   Today I talk to Mark Johnson, is an entrepreneur, and an investor and a creator.       Back in the early 2000s, Mark started writing reviews for hotels. When he saw it start to gain traffic, he started to think this might be something he would do.  Over the course of 10 years Mark turned that idea into a business with over 40 content creators. Run out of the attic of his house, Mark bootstrapped that content business into a company eventually sold to Conde Nast.  I talk with Mark about what it was like to build and exit that business.     But before we get into all that we spend time talking about Mark’s newest project Foodboro and what its like to build a service from scratch (again)!  We also talk about the pitfalls of angel investing and Mark describes what its like to be a limited partner in a venture fund.       This episode of full of fun stories and take aways.  Check it out.   </description>
<pubDate>Mon, 09 Sep 2019 17:50:50 +0000</pubDate>
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<title>Mark Johnson - Founder of Hotel Chatter, Jaunted and Vegas Chatter which was sold to CondeNast</title>
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<description>   Today I talk to Mark Johnson, is an entrepreneur, and an investor and a creator.       Back in the early 2000s, Mark started writing reviews for hotels. When he saw it start to gain traffic, he started to think this might be something he would do.  Over the course of 10 years Mark turned that idea into a business with over 40 content creators. Run out of the attic of his house, Mark bootstrapped that content business into a company eventually sold to Conde Nast.  I talk with Mark about what it was like to build and exit that business.     But before we get into all that we spend time talking about Mark’s newest project Foodboro and what its like to build a service from scratch (again)!  We also talk about the pitfalls of angel investing and Mark describes what its like to be a limited partner in a venture fund.       This episode of full of fun stories and take aways.  Check it out.   </description>
<pubDate>Mon, 09 Sep 2019 17:50:50 +0000</pubDate>
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<title>Ep 6: James Avery - CEO of Adzerk, ad serving platform earning +$5M a year</title>
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<description>  In this episode, I talk to James Avery founder and CEO of  Adzerk  about how he turned a small ad network doing 1 thousand dollars a month in revenue into an ad platform doing over 5 million a year.   Adzerk's platform helps other companies  use apis to build ad servers  .  James talks about the different ways he priced the product and how unexpected invitation to stick around in a meeting at a customer’s office led him realize his key product differentiator and helped formulate the product strategy.   Also, James describes his company as “seed-strapped”.  To find out more about what that means, listen on!  </description>
<pubDate>Mon, 22 Apr 2019 17:44:53 +0000</pubDate>
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<title>James Avery - CEO of Adzerk, ad serving platform earning +$5M a year</title>
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<description>  In this episode, I talk to James Avery founder and CEO of  Adzerk  about how he turned a small ad network doing 1 thousand dollars a month in revenue into an ad platform doing over 5 million a year.   Adzerk's platform helps other companies  use apis to build ad servers  .  James talks about the different ways he priced the product and how unexpected invitation to stick around in a meeting at a customer’s office led him realize his key product differentiator and helped formulate the product strategy.   Also, James describes his company as “seed-strapped”.  To find out more about what that means, listen on!  </description>
<pubDate>Mon, 22 Apr 2019 17:44:53 +0000</pubDate>
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