50 episodes

First Act shares the origin tales and inspirational stories of Australia’s most innovative business owners and personalities. Hosted by Kochie’s Business Builders’ editors Cec Busby and Adam Bub, these frank conversations deliver a deep dive into the genesis of success. Cec, Adam and their guests unpack the motivations that fired up their journeys and explore the road travelled to reach their goals.

First Act Kochie's Business Builders

    • Business

First Act shares the origin tales and inspirational stories of Australia’s most innovative business owners and personalities. Hosted by Kochie’s Business Builders’ editors Cec Busby and Adam Bub, these frank conversations deliver a deep dive into the genesis of success. Cec, Adam and their guests unpack the motivations that fired up their journeys and explore the road travelled to reach their goals.

    Season 3 - First Act

    Season 3 - First Act

    First Act is back with a brand new season, kicking off on Friday 14 June.

    Each week, Kochie’s Business Builders editors and co-hosts Cec Busby and Adam Bub talk with some of Australia’s most innovative business owners and personalities and share their inspirational stories and origin tales.

    So subscribe now for the new season of First Act. Because every story has a beginning.
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    • 30 sec
    A royal workout: How Cameron Falloon is transforming fitness empires

    A royal workout: How Cameron Falloon is transforming fitness empires

    Cameron Falloon is passionate about fitness. He’s spent decades helping elite athletes, the rich and famous and everyday Aussies meet their fitness goals to be the best they can be. He is the founder of Body Fit Training - the fastest-growing fitness franchise in Australia - with over 240 locations opened across the globe. Plus he’s the former head fitness coach of the Geelong Cats, the Western Bulldogs and was the high performance coach of Port Adelaide Power for a time. At the ripe old age of 24, he was the personal trainer of perhaps the world’s most famous woman - Princess Diana.
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    • 44 min
    Secrets of a serial entrepreneur: How Scratch’s Mike Halligan became a dog food mogul

    Secrets of a serial entrepreneur: How Scratch’s Mike Halligan became a dog food mogul

    Melbourne entrepreneur Mike Halligan is a bit of an overachiever. He’s mastered the worlds of eCommerce, marketing, blogging, apps and subscription services – all driven by his desire to find solutions to consumer problems and build brands accordingly.

    Some of his pet projects have taken off, others haven’t. Right now, he’s the co-founder of a howling multi-million dollar success: Scratch, Australia’s fastest-growing direct-to-consumer dog food company. On this episode of First Act, Mike speaks honestly about the lessons he’s learned that any startup founder or budding entrepreneur will lean in to hear.
    Episode notes
    In this episode, Mike shares:

    2:58 – Growing up in an entrepreneurial family

    5:31 – Lessons learned from launching a business as a teen

    9:30 – The benefits of studying entrepreneurship

    11:10 – Building a successful marketing firm at age 19 – Engage Marketing

    15:25 – Jumping on the early blog designing bandwagon – The Blog Designers

    18:50 – Evolution into eCommerce and building online stores – Online Store Guys

    21:55 – The power of eCommerce to scale a business

    24:30 – Launching one of the first health tech apps – BodyWise

    30:05 – Advice for people wanting to launch an app today

    33:05 – The birth of Scratch subscription pet food service

    36:45 – The benefits of a subscription model for business efficiency

    44:20 – Reigniting the spark for business after failure


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    • 43 min
    Sauce it to 'em: Manu Feildel's journey from chef to entrepreneur

    Sauce it to 'em: Manu Feildel's journey from chef to entrepreneur

    He’s one of the most recognisable faces on Australian TV thanks to My Kitchen Rules, but that’s only one part of the Manu Feildel story. Coming from a family of French foodies, Manu caught the cooking bug working as a teenage apprentice in his dad’s restaurant in Brittany. Armed with natural talent and joie de vivre, Manu embarked upon a career working in some of the finest French restaurants in London before making the move to Australia.
    From the highs of heading up hatted restaurants to the heartbreak of closing much-loved venues, Manu’s learned the hard lessons of hospitality firsthand. In this frank, funny and fascinating First Act, Manu shares the secrets of surviving fine dining, navigating TV fame and the challenges of getting a brand into supermarkets (The Sauce By Manu is his latest).
    Episode notes:
    In this episode, Manu unpacks:

    2:00 – The most overrated food trend

    4:00 – Manu’s family foodie history + early days in the food industry

    7:00 – Lessons learned from working in hospitality

    9:30 – From France to London – Manu’s early career moves

    12:00 – Differences between Australian vs European food industries

    13:51 – Making a fresh start in Australia – early successes and failures

    16:50 – Hardest lessons learned from business challenges

    20:00 – Breaking through depression after business failure

    22:45 – Upsides and downsides to starring on My Kitchen Rules


    25:45 – Learning to be a public figure

    27:50 – From representing brands to building his own – By Manu

    30:10 – The long journey from idea to supermarket shelves

    36:30 – Why the switch from TV chef to supermarket brand?

    38:15 – La Botanique – going into business with wife, Clarissa

    40:45 – Crowdfunding to expand the By Manu team and brand


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    • 42 min
    What Lisa Cox wants you to know about disability and disrupting expectations

    What Lisa Cox wants you to know about disability and disrupting expectations

    Lisa Cox has a no-BS approach to life. Her ability to cut through fluff has been key to her success as an internationally respected disability advocate, award-winning author, business consultant and media professional.

    It hasn’t been an easy ride. At just 24, Lisa suffered a brain haemorrhage caused by an infection. Three weeks in a coma, two months on life support and dozens of operations and procedures later, Lisa had to rebuild her life, living with a brain injury. Dealing with such a curveball presented Lisa with a second chance. Now, she’s renowned as one of Australia’s most powerful voices for representation, diversity and inclusion for people living with disabilities.

    Episode notes:In this episode, Lisa unpacks:

    2:39 – Making a career out of communicating

    6:25 – Disrupting expectations of people with disabilities

    9:30 – Fighting back after a sudden, debilitating illness at age 24

    12:00 – Disability is more than socially good – it’s good for business

    15:29 – Why disability representation matters in media, marketing and advertising

    17:35 – Virtue signalling – businesses MUST do better than once a year

    22:32 – The problem with the ‘positive inspo’ space

    25:44 – Challenges with social attitudes towards people with disability

    30:10 – Tiers of prejudice – invisible vs visible disability

    34:00 – Understanding what employees with disabilities need

    36:12 – The importance of consulting with people with lived experience

    39:45 – Support and self-care as a disability advocate

    41:30 – Supporting small business owners with disabilities 


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    • 44 min
    Put the zing in it: Refugee-turned-entrepreneur Yarrie Bangura's tonic for success

    Put the zing in it: Refugee-turned-entrepreneur Yarrie Bangura's tonic for success

    Warning: This episode of First Act deals with trauma and may be potentially distressing for some listeners.
    Yarrie Bangura is a survivor. At the age of eight years old, her family fled the civil war in Sierra Leone and migrated to Australia as refugees. While the painful memories live on, Yarrie has found a way to celebrate the positive parts of growing up in her West African village.
    Inspired by a natural recipe made by her aunty and grandmother, Yarrie created Aunty’s Ginger Tonic. Now a successful entrepreneur living in Sydney, Yarrie has captured the vibrant spirit of Africa and is passionate about giving back to her adopted homeland of Australia.
    Episode notes:
    In this episode, Yarrie talks about:

    Life in Sierra Leone and the conflict that caused Yarrie’s family to flee (4m)

    Starting new life in Australia as a teen - coping with trauma + learning a new language (9m30s)

    Yarrie’s mother’s inspiring entrepreneurial survival skills (16m30s)

    The family inspiration and product development behind Aunty’s Ginger Tonic (19m25s)

    Expanding from markets to supermarket shelves (27m30s)

    Building a business support network to help you reach success (31m45s)

    Next steps: Expanding the Aunty’s Ginger Tonic flavour range (36m45s)


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    • 40 min

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