Default Profitable

Matt Nettleton

Are you an aspiring entrepreneur or a seasoned business owner looking to sharpen your skills and grow your business? The Default Profitable podcast delivers powerful lessons from real bootstrapped business owners who have navigated the ups and downs of starting, running, and scaling their ventures. Join Matt Nettleton and tap into a wealth of knowledge and firsthand experiences, learn to avoid common pitfalls, and stay ahead of industry trends. Whether you’re launching your first venture or optimizing an established one, each episode provides actionable insights and fosters a community of support, helping you achieve sustained, profitable success.

  1. -1 J

    Ep178 The Cabinet That Looked Like a Casket: Chris Boots on Building CJ Boots Casket Company

    Chris Boots was building a custom pantry cabinet at his wife's uncle's shop in 1999 when he looked at the top sitting on the cart and thought it kind of looked like a casket. He'd always wanted his own business. He didn't know what business. That cabinet was the seed. He spent nights on the bed flipping through funeral trade magazines while his wife asked what on earth he was doing. He joined the Casket and Funeral Supply Association — he'd later become its president. He bought a CNC router he didn't know how to operate and was halfway through training in Atlanta before he asked the instructor what the machine actually looked like. Chris walked into the casket industry right as cremation rates climbed from 20% to 70% and the number of casket companies collapsed from hundreds to fifteen. He built CJ Boots Casket Company anyway, going after the high-end Marcellus niche that conglomerate buyouts had cut off from independent funeral homes. Twenty-one years later he sold it, ran it through COVID for the new owners, tried Florida real estate, and landed in commercial insurance after a chance conversation on Lido Beach with a guy who happened to insure the same trade association Chris used to run. His advice for day one of any new business: understand cash flow before anything else. His motto for the rest of it: don't be afraid to go out on a limb, because that's where the fruit is. Learn more about Chris Boots and his commercial insurance practice at https://www.funeralprofessionalsins.com/. Listen to more Indianapolis Business Leaders at https://defaultprofitable.com or subscribe to Default Profitable on your favorite podcast platform.

    25 min
  2. 28 AVR.

    Ep177 The Parking Lot Decision: David and Christina Reynolds of Reynolds Electric

    David Reynolds and his sister Christina Reynolds-Grisby spent more than 25 years at the same electrical contracting company. The plan was always to buy it. They'd consulted with the bank, drawn up the legal work, and lined up the transfer of ownership. The morning the deal was supposed to close in 2023, they walked in and got introduced to the new owners. A private equity firm had bought it out from under them. They decided to start Reynolds Electric standing in the parking lot that same morning. Three years later, they're a residential and light commercial electrical contractor in Indianapolis, an authorized Generac and Kohler dealer, with techs in the field and an office staff behind them. In this conversation, David and Christina get into what 25 years as employees doesn't prepare you for. Picking a business structure. Finding a CPA. Building a brand from scratch. Christina spent six months on the van wrap. Her hair wasn't right, the shoes weren't sitting where she wanted them, the caricature head kept changing size. Her advice for any new founder is progress over perfection. She'll be the first to admit she didn't take it. The takeaway Matt pulls out of the episode comes in two parts. Start it sooner than you think you want to. And if you're negotiating a business takeover with somebody you've trusted for two and a half decades, get it in writing anyway. Learn more about David Reynolds, Christina Reynolds-Grisby, and Reynolds Electric at https://powerbyreynolds.com. Listen to more Indianapolis Business Leaders at https://defaultprofitable.com or subscribe to Default Profitable on your favorite podcast platform.

    27 min
  3. 17 MARS

    Ep173 The Hidden Startup Killer – Lessons from a Former E-com Founder Turned CFO with Nate Littlewood

    Host Matt Nettleton sits down with Nate Littlewood of Future Ready CFO, a former Wall Street investment banker who built (and exited) his own e-commerce business before becoming the go-to fractional CFO for consumer product and online brands. Nate pulls back the curtain on why so many founders stay in denial or overwhelm when it comes to their finances, how he uses historical numbers to help entrepreneurs confidently plan and scale without burnout, and the mindset shift that separates stressful businesses from predictably profitable ones. Whether you’re an aspiring founder still hunting product-market fit or already running a seven-figure brand, you’ll walk away with clarity on when (and why) to bring in real financial expertise, the critical role of unit economics before scaling, and why doubling down on your actual strengths can be the most impactful decision you make as an entrepreneur. Learn more about Nate Littlewood and Future Ready CFO at https://futurereadycfo.com. Listen to more Indianapolis Business Leaders at https://defaultprofitable.com or subscribe to Default Profitable on your favorite podcast platform. Takeaways Founders often live in financial denial because the numbers tell a different story than the one they want to believe about their mission-driven business. Understanding unit economics and building a basic cash flow forecast is enough financial work for early-stage founders still searching for product-market fit. You cannot finance your way out of a bad product—product-market fit must come before hiring a fractional CFO or heavy financial modeling. Historical financials are the foundation for future planning; clean books today unlock better strategic decisions tomorrow. Many founders struggle most with customer-facing skills like marketing and sales, not the numbers side of the business. Realizing your customers see your “impactful” product as a novelty gift can be demoralizing and signal it’s time to pivot. Every business is either product-push (build it and find buyers) or customer-pull (solve problems for a specific audience)—knowing which you are changes your entire growth playbook. Bringing finances from an afterthought to a strategic co-pilot dramatically reduces founder stress and accelerates profitable growth. Focus on the one or two things you’re exceptionally good at and enjoy; outsource or avoid the rest to create more impact and legacy. Chapters 00:00 Welcome to Default Profitable and Introducing Nate Littlewood 00:46 Nate’s Journey: Wall Street to E-commerce Founder to Fractional CFO 03:05 Why Nate Left High-Finance for Entrepreneurship and Purpose 05:32 Surprises of Running an E-commerce Business Despite Finance Background 08:02 The Demoralizing Moment: Realizing Customers Saw Products as Stocking Stuffers 10:48 Navigating the COVID Boom and Eventual Exit from E-commerce 12:09 The Founder Financial Spectrum: Denial → Overwhelm → Intrigue → Enlightenment 16:00 Using Past Numbers to Shape Future Strategy (Not Just Tax Compliance) 17:27 When to Hire a Fractional CFO – The Product-Market Fit Threshold 21:26 Product-Push vs Customer-Pull: Which Type of Business Are You? 23:58 How to Connect with Nate and Access Free Resources

    25 min
  4. 10 MARS

    Ep172 Why Financial Discipline Matters More Than Talent: Ryan Schwartz on Bootstrapping a Sustainable Window Business

    Ryan Schwartz shares the unfiltered story of building Fenster Components—a niche manufacturer of wood window repair parts and replacement sashes—into a 25-year, nationwide, almost-entirely-online business that helps homeowners avoid costly full-window replacements. From spotting an opportunity in rotting clad-wood windows during his warranty job days, to surviving the 2008 housing crash, selling off service/install sides to focus on manufacturing, and shifting to e-commerce in 2013, Ryan delivers grounded lessons on profitability, perseverance, and why “being good at the work” is very different from running a profitable company. Listeners walk away with clarity on managing cash flow like your life depends on it, adapting to generational shifts in teams, the real weight of being responsible for people’s livelihoods, and why smart financial habits early on matter more than most founders admit. Learn more about Ryan Schwartz and Fenster Components at https://fensterusa.com   Listen to more Indianapolis Business Leaders at https://defaultprofitable.com or subscribe to Default Profitable on your favorite podcast platform. Takeaways Managing people—both employees and difficult customers—remains one of the hardest, never-ending parts of owning a business.   Being skilled at your craft does not automatically mean you will be skilled at running a profitable, sustainable business.   Early financial discipline (living below your means even in good years) is the single biggest regret many long-term founders carry.   Generational differences in what makes employees feel valued have shifted dramatically—today’s teams often want experiences, camaraderie, and flexibility more than traditional perks.   Perseverance through ugly economic storms separates businesses that survive 25 years from those that don’t.   Niche focus combined with solving a painful, underserved problem (expensive full-window replacements) can create lasting competitive advantage with little direct competition.   Transitioning from service/install to pure manufacturing and online sales can unlock scalability and dramatically reduce day-to-day chaos. Owning a business means you are personally responsible for your team’s livelihoods—treat that duty with the seriousness it deserves.   No matter how many hard lessons you learn, the challenges never disappear; they simply change shape over time. Chapters 00:00 Welcome & Podcast Intro   00:34 Meeting Ryan & Quick Personal Background   01:54 Fenster Components – What They Actually Make   04:21 Solving the Rotten Sash Problem for Homeowners   05:14 The Origin Story – From College Entrepreneur to Warranty Wake-Up Call   07:34 Launching in 2000 & Early Window Repair Growth   09:46 Surviving 2008, Buying a Shop, Splitting the Company in 2012   11:38 Going All-In on Manufacturing & Online Sales (2013 Pivot)   14:58 Hardest Ongoing Lesson: Managing People & Generational Shifts   19:29 Blunt Advice for Anyone Thinking About Quitting Their Job to Start a Business   23:52 What 2026 Ryan Would Tell 2001 Ryan the Night Before Launch   27:48 Where to Learn More & Wrap-Up

    29 min
  5. 3 MARS

    Ep171 Thomas Cox: Football to Finance —Building Multiple Revenue Streams & Mastering Money

    In this episode of the Default Profitable Podcast, host Matt Nettleton interviews Thomas Cox, who shares his journey from coaching college football to becoming a successful entrepreneur in the food and finance industries. Thomas discusses the importance of having multiple revenue streams, the concept of infinite banking, and his passion for educating others about personal finance. He emphasizes the significance of giving back and setting financial goals that focus on generosity rather than just income. The conversation also touches on the challenges of the insurance business and the importance of networking and building relationships in achieving success. Learn more about Thomas Cox and Cox Capital at https://www.linkedin.com/in/thomascoxco. Listen to more Indianapolis Business Leaders at https://defaultprofitable.com or subscribe to Default Profitable on your favorite podcast platform. Takeaways Thomas Cox transitioned from coaching college football to entrepreneurship. He emphasizes the need for multiple revenue streams in business. People often lack understanding of personal finance and money management. The concept of infinite banking is crucial for financial growth. Setting giving goals can be more fulfilling than income goals. Networking and building relationships are key to business success. Understanding the logistics of the insurance business is essential. Meeting with clients regularly is vital for success in finance. Inflows and outflows are necessary for a thriving business. Education and resources are important for understanding infinite banking. Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Thomas Cox and His Journey 03:01 Transitioning to Finance and Infinite Banking 06:44 The Importance of Financial Education 10:00 Understanding High W2 Earners and Business Ownership 11:32 Key Strategies for Success in Business 13:39 The Flow of Life: Inflows and Outflows in Business

    21 min
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13 notes

À propos

Are you an aspiring entrepreneur or a seasoned business owner looking to sharpen your skills and grow your business? The Default Profitable podcast delivers powerful lessons from real bootstrapped business owners who have navigated the ups and downs of starting, running, and scaling their ventures. Join Matt Nettleton and tap into a wealth of knowledge and firsthand experiences, learn to avoid common pitfalls, and stay ahead of industry trends. Whether you’re launching your first venture or optimizing an established one, each episode provides actionable insights and fosters a community of support, helping you achieve sustained, profitable success.

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