1 hr 3 min

Fabrice Grinda on growing Zingy into a $200 million business Venture Voice – interviews with entrepreneurs

    • Entrepreneurship

Fabrice Grinda is one of the world’s leading Internet entrepreneurs and investors, with over 150 exits on 500 angel investments. When I first interviewed him for this podcast, way back in 2005, the then-31-year-old French native was in the process of packing up his office at Zingy, the mobile media start-up he’d founded in 2000. After growing Zingy to $200 million in revenue, Fabrice had sold the company for $80 million in 2004. Eighteen months later, he was stepping down as CEO and looking ahead to his next adventure.

At the time we spoke, Broadband, iTunes and podcasting were all new, and Fabrice saw it as “the beginning of a hundred year revolution.” He recognized that there were going to be huge opportunities ahead for the entrepreneurs who were willing to take the risks and go all in on a big idea. And as Fabrice’s story shows, you don’t have to be the one who comes up with the groundbreaking product to become a wildly successful entrepreneur.


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If you enjoy the podcast, would you please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes? It takes less than a minute and helps us continue to attract the entrepreneurs you want to hear and learn from.

For show notes, past guests and transcripts, visit venturevoice.com

Sign up for the Venture Voice email newsletter at venturevoice.substack.com/welcome

Follow and connect on social:
On Twitter: twitter.com/gregory
On Instagram: instagram.com/gregory
On YouTube: youtube.com/c/GregoryGalant
On LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/galant/

Learn more about Muck Rack at muckrack.com and The Shorty Awards at shortyawards.com

Fabrice Grinda is one of the world’s leading Internet entrepreneurs and investors, with over 150 exits on 500 angel investments. When I first interviewed him for this podcast, way back in 2005, the then-31-year-old French native was in the process of packing up his office at Zingy, the mobile media start-up he’d founded in 2000. After growing Zingy to $200 million in revenue, Fabrice had sold the company for $80 million in 2004. Eighteen months later, he was stepping down as CEO and looking ahead to his next adventure.

At the time we spoke, Broadband, iTunes and podcasting were all new, and Fabrice saw it as “the beginning of a hundred year revolution.” He recognized that there were going to be huge opportunities ahead for the entrepreneurs who were willing to take the risks and go all in on a big idea. And as Fabrice’s story shows, you don’t have to be the one who comes up with the groundbreaking product to become a wildly successful entrepreneur.


***

If you enjoy the podcast, would you please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes? It takes less than a minute and helps us continue to attract the entrepreneurs you want to hear and learn from.

For show notes, past guests and transcripts, visit venturevoice.com

Sign up for the Venture Voice email newsletter at venturevoice.substack.com/welcome

Follow and connect on social:
On Twitter: twitter.com/gregory
On Instagram: instagram.com/gregory
On YouTube: youtube.com/c/GregoryGalant
On LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/galant/

Learn more about Muck Rack at muckrack.com and The Shorty Awards at shortyawards.com

1 hr 3 min