Start-up marketing stories: The Marketing Hustle

Lottie Unwin

Introducing The Maternity Hustle This is the podcast you didn’t know you needed. Honest conversations about marketing, working life and motherhood - and the juggle of trying to do all three well. Every fortnight, I sit down with founders and brand leaders to uncover the real stories behind brand building, ambition and startup life, while navigating one of the biggest life changes there is. This is about surviving and thriving at work - without pretending the parenting juggle isn’t real. Episodes drop every fortnight 🎙️

  1. 21H AGO

    She submitted an MBA paper while being induced - Jo Wong, CEO and Founder - Ep 74

    This episode's guest is Jo Wong - a commercial leader turned founder whose career spans Estée Lauder, People Care Planet Care, and now a consultancy supporting Black women to access capital and grow their businesses. But this conversation isn’t just about career success. It’s about what happens when life stacks everything at once, and you still have to keep going. Jo found out she was pregnant just days after being accepted onto an Executive MBA. What followed was a period of intense challenge: navigating pregnancy without ADHD medication, completing her MBA while raising a newborn, experiencing postpartum anxiety, and facing redundancy while on maternity leave. But this isn't a story isn’t about burnout. It’s about resilience. Jo reframes motherhood not as something that slows you down, but as something that fundamentally changes your capacity as a leader, as a person, and as someone navigating ambition. We talk about the “marathon of resilience” that starts long before the baby arrives, the pressure women feel to prove themselves, and the moment when success shifts from titles and recognition to something much more personal. We also dive into: Why motherhood can make you a stronger leader (not a less ambitious one) What it really looks like to do an MBA with a baby ADHD, pregnancy and postpartum and how neurodiversity shows up in motherhood The reality of postnatal anxiety and why it’s often misunderstood Why you need to “get your pink back” after having a baby How to set boundaries that actually hold between work and life Building community as an expat mum Redefining success beyond titles, pay and external validation This is a conversation about identity, ambition, and learning how to hold multiple versions of yourself at once - without losing who you are.

    58 min
  2. FEB 4

    Getting Pregnant Was Her Best Leadership Decision - Amelia Christie-Miller, founder of Bold Bean Co - Ep 73

    This episode The Maternity Hustle is called “Getting Pregnant Was Her Best Leadership Decision” and we’re thrilled to be joined by Amelia Christie-Miller, founder of Bold Bean Co. Amelia was  around six weeks away from her due date and deep in the most intense version of “the messy middle”. Amelia was at that very specific founder crossroads: the business was growing, big brand moments were landing (including a major book launch and PR push), and she’d just made her biggest hire yet - a new Marketing Director -  right as she was preparing to step back for maternity leave. Terrifying? Yes. Also potentially the best thing she could have done for the business. In this conversation, we go beyond the surface-level “how are you feeling?” and get into the operational and emotional reality of pregnancy as a founder: the transition period before the baby arrives, why coming off Slack and email matters, how to set escalation points so you can truly switch off, and the pressure women feel to perform ambition while becoming a mum. Amelia shares why she wants to take 3–4 months out (and prove that founders don’t have to be on investor calls two weeks postpartum), how pregnancy has already changed the way she leads, and why she’s intentionally building maximum self-compassion into her plan -  so she doesn’t trap herself in promises she might not be able (or want) to keep. We also talk about how moving to Barcelona changed everything: boundaries, pace, childcare infrastructure, and the cultural difference of living somewhere where families are actually supported. It’s a sharp contrast to the UK, where even high-performing founders still feel the financial pressure of childcare -  and where the lack of structural support quietly shapes women’s career decisions years before they ever have kids. Finally, we get into Bold Bean itself: what it looks like to scale a brand that’s grown through organic PR and community magic, why the next stage may require changing gears (without losing the soul), and how stepping away can create the vacuum that lets a team thrive. We cover: Planning maternity leave as a founder: the “wind-down” before birth and the return-to-work transition Hiring a Marketing Director right before mat leave (and why it might be the best forcing function) The “power woman” pressure vs the reality of what you actually want Identity, ambition, judgement, and modelling what’s permissible for your team UK vs Spain: maternity cover, childcare costs, and the culture of family support Scaling Bold Bean beyond early adopters while protecting the magic The most underrated advice: “There’s never a good time” + “Good enough is good enough” If you’re a founder, marketer, or ambitious woman thinking about kids -  or already navigating it - this episode will feel like someone finally said the quiet part out loud. 🎙️ New episodes every fortnight.

    1h 2m
  3. JAN 21

    Pregnant, Fundraising and Running a Startup with Luna Daily CEO Katy Cottam - Ep 72

    Luna Daily CEO & co-founder Katy Cottam joins The Maternity Hustle to talk about fundraising while pregnant, building a maternity plan A/B/C, and why you don’t need to apologise for a life stage that can actually make you a better founder. Expect real talk on gender politics, returning to work, and the systems that make stepping back possible. Welcome to our first interview in this season of The Maternity Hustle - a series about marketing, working life and motherhood, and the real juggle in the messy middle. This week, Lottie is joined by Katy Cottam, CEO & co-founder of Luna Daily, the women’s body care brand tackling taboo categories (and one that got Lottie through pregnancy and early motherhood). Katy shares what it’s really like to navigate pregnancy as a founder in growth mode - from the fear of telling investors and team, to choosing transparency anyway, and discovering that the response can be far more positive than the doom-and-gloom narrative suggests. They also get into the operational reality: how you plan for time away when you can’t truly plan for birth, recovery, or what you’ll want to do on the other side - and how maternity can fast-track the hires and structure your business needed anyway. The conversation goes deeper into the stuff founders don’t say out loud: fertility anxiety, imposter syndrome building a maternity range before becoming a mum, the gender politics of who “gets” to take time off, and why “maternity leave” is a misleading phrase when the job is 24/7. It’s funny, honest, practical - and ultimately a rallying cry to own the moment, build the plan, and come back stronger. We also dive into: Telling investors you’re pregnant mid-fundraise (and why transparency can build trust) The “plan A/B/C” approach for founders who can’t predict recovery or capacity How maternity can force the business to grow up: roles, responsibilities, and stepping back Why buying for the mum matters (and why the support drop-off happens after the first few weeks) Gender roles, breastfeeding, and the reality of shared parental leave in the UK Writing parental leave policies in a startup: what’s possible vs what’s right Practical advice: process mapping, under-promising, and setting yourself up to return well

    1h 3m
  4. JAN 7

    The Marketing Mindset That Makes You a Better Mum - Ep 71

    Motherhood is a hot mess of love, guilt, change and tiny decisions… and it turns out an “agile marketing mindset” might be one of the most useful tools you’ve got. In this episode, Anna from Sticky Beak flips the script and interviews you on cognitive load, mum guilt, identity shifts, and why building a village matters more than perfect routines This episode kicks off a slightly different kind of series: not just marketing, but marketing, working life, and motherhood - the real juggle in the messy middle. Joined by Anna from Stickybeak.co, we unpack what the early weeks of parenting actually feel like: the speed of change, the identity whiplash, the guilt of not loving every second, and the relief that comes with finally getting small pockets of time back. We’ll explore how motherhood reshapes behaviour in surprising ways - from “one hand scrolling, one hand feeding” to becoming an online grocery shopper whose basket is basically a locked favourites list (and what that means for brands trying to break into a closed circle).  Our conversation explores the emotional and practical reality of cognitive load: why your brain feels like mush, why things drop, and why it doesn’t mean you’re failing - it means you’re carrying a lot. The big through-line is this: the skills that make you a brilliant marketer (curiosity, testing, learning fast, asking questions, adapting) can make you a more confident parent too.  And equally, parenting teaches you resilience, decision-making and self-trust in a way work rarely does. It’s an honest, funny, reassuring conversation about building systems without losing softness - and remembering you don’t need to do everything, you just need to do what’s right right now. We also dive into: The guilt spiral: wanting to be present and wanting to work -  and why both can be true How cognitive load shows up in real life  “Testing the edges”: micro-experiments that help you grow confidence week by week Why “martyrdom” shows up in parenting and marketing, and how to share the load Community as survival: your village, your partnership, and the permission to engage in your own way “Oxygen mask first”: checking in with yourself so you can show up calmer for everyone

    47 min
  5. 10/08/2025

    Inside Oddbox: The CMO Who Helped a Purpose-Driven Brand Become a Growth Machine - Ep 68

    Oddbox has rescued over 60 million kilos of wonky fruit and veg, but their real story is one of brand, mission and heart. Former CMO Gaston Tourn reveals how Oddbox scaled purpose without losing soul and why doing good doesn’t mean growing slow. Welcome to the Marketing Hustle - a podcast about the real work behind building bold brands. We go behind the scenes with founders and marketing leaders to hear honest, unfiltered stories of what actually drives growth and cuts through the noise to build something that lasts. In this episode, Gaston Tourn, former CMO of Oddbox, takes us inside one of the UK’s most beloved mission-led brands. From scrappy startup to national household name, Oddbox didn’t just sell boxes of veg - they sold a movement against food waste. Gaston opens up about the realities of growing a purpose-driven brand: how to scale a mission, stay authentic and make sustainability commercially powerful. He also shares lessons on leadership, creativity and what it really means to be a marketer who wants to make a difference. Expect insights on: How Oddbox built a brand that people root for (pun intended) Turning mission into measurable impact The emotional side of leadership in fast-growth teams What purpose-led marketing looks like in the age of AI It’s inspiring, practical and surprisingly honest - a must-listen for anyone building a brand that wants to do good and do well.

    1h 9m
  6. 09/24/2025

    How Butternut Box Went From Startup to Europe’s #2 Pet Food Brand - Ep 67

    Butternut Box is on track to become Europe’s #2 pet food brand, but still feels like a “secret discovery brand.” Interim Brand & Creative Director Sarah Keegan reveals how she’s using her mat leave cover to reset the brand platform, overhaul design and prepare Butternut for its next decade. Welcome to the Marketing Hustle - a podcast about the real work behind building bold brands. We go behind the scenes with founders and marketing leaders to hear honest, unfiltered stories of what actually drives growth and cuts through the noise to build something that lasts. Today’s guest is Sarah Keegan, Interim Brand & Creative Director at Butternut Box - the DTC pet food brand that’s quietly become Europe’s leading fresh dog food provider and is on track to become the second largest pet food brand across the continent. Sarah stepped into her maternity cover role with a reputation for thriving in transition moments and she hasn’t wasted a second. Instead of just “holding the fort,” she’s set about putting the foundations in place for Butternut’s next 10 years: a new visual identity, a brand platform, a creative agency pitch and a sharper positioning that matches the business’s true scale. In this conversation, Sarah opens up about: Why Butternut’s perception as a “small challenger” no longer matches reality The difference between fighting against something (kibble) and standing for something bigger (the love of dogs) How to break down silos between brand and performance with small, everyday rituals Why events, referrals and ambassadors are still central to Butternut’s growth story The commercial rigour and cultural rituals that make Butternut tick We also dive into Sarah’s career across three very different challenger brands (OVO Energy, Vertical Aerospace, Butternut Box) and why the best marketing work happens when you’re brave enough to fight for the bold ideas. This episode is packed with lessons on scaling challenger brands into decade-defining category leaders.

    44 min

About

Introducing The Maternity Hustle This is the podcast you didn’t know you needed. Honest conversations about marketing, working life and motherhood - and the juggle of trying to do all three well. Every fortnight, I sit down with founders and brand leaders to uncover the real stories behind brand building, ambition and startup life, while navigating one of the biggest life changes there is. This is about surviving and thriving at work - without pretending the parenting juggle isn’t real. Episodes drop every fortnight 🎙️