Fayl Tales

Loveth Ochayi

Behind every startup success story is a trail of mistakes, pivots, broken plans and brilliant comebacks. Fayl Tales is the podcast where entrepreneurs, founders, investors and early employees share the real side of building something new - the failures that shaped them, the lessons they learned the hard way, and the resilience it takes to keep going. Hosted by Loveth, each episode dives into the raw, funny and honest moments most business stories leave out - so you can learn faster, fail smarter, and feel less alone on your own journey. Follow the show for weekly conversations that prove: failure isn’t the end, it’s part of the story.

  1. قبل يوم واحد

    googled it, didn't exist, so she built it

    Hey Crew! Imagine you've spent years building a company around live events. You just cracked your first million dollar year, you're training the Eventbrite team in Nashville, you're about to partner with one of the biggest ticketing platforms in the world. Then Friday the 13th of March 2020 hits and every single client calls to cancel and ask for their deposits back. That's where Nina McMahon was when COVID landed. What she did next is the part worth talking about. Oh, and she accidentally invented the whole product in 2013 because Wi-Fi at events kept breaking and she told a client "we'll just bring the internet" before confirming that was actually possible. We cover: - The Friday the 13th phone call that broke everything and what happened in the weeks after - How they accidentally invented portable Wi-Fi from a two-meter prototype that needed a truck to move - Tripling revenue through COVID without a playbook - Getting a cease and desist from Fox Media six events in (and why it was the best thing that ever happened to them) - Powering a SpaceX launch without knowing it was SpaceX until the GPS said Cape Canaveral - Why their company motto is "don't work with dicks" and how long it took to actually listen to it ANNOUNCEMENT I've just launched our very own Fayl Tales substack!! If you love a good story, especially one from the trenches, with the ups, pivots and figuring it out, then search Fayl Tales on substack! Follow Fayl Tales on all platforms @fayltales Follow Loveth on LinkedIn and Instagram @lovethochayi Follow Nina and Pop-Up Wi-Fi at popupwifi.com YouTube Chapters: 0:00 the teaser 1:21 friday the 13th, every client cancelled, and what dissociation actually feels like 3:22 pivoting in under a month and why COVID was their volkswagen moment 6:08 why the industry refused to trust remote networks (until jimmy fallon had no choice) 8:35 accidentally inventing pop-up wifi because venue internet kept breaking 16:14 scaling without a sales team, a love letter to producers, and a cease and desist from fox 30:47 coachella, taylor swift in lake tahoe, and going all in on the US market 38:44 hardware advice, the "don't work with dicks" rule, and trusting your gut #fayltales #startuppodcast #hardwarestartup #femalefounder #founderstory Follow us on all platforms! Instagram ~ @fayltales Tiktok ~ @fayltales  LinkedIn ~ @fayltales

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  2. ٦ أبريل

    Too Lazy to Do It Himself. So He Built a Company ~ Haobo Zhang

    Hey Crew! Haobo Zhang is 20 years old. He has a full scholarship to study biomedicine at University of Melbourne, 30,000 users on his AI platform, and a very public goal to build a unicorn by 25. He's also on a leave of absence from that scholarship, which is basically just a polite way of saying he dropped out. He's been building since he was 14, and not for the reasons you'd think. It started because he wanted money to buy video games. He wrote novels, sold them online, then hired someone else to write them because he didn't want to do it himself. At 15, he was running a YouTube creator agency while pretending to be an adult because he knew no one would take him seriously. His dad was signing the Shopify forms on his behalf. Now he's building Polarbear, an AI study tool for students, with 1,300 daily active users and a raise coming. But the most interesting thing about Haobo isn't the product. It's his philosophy. He calls himself lazy. And he thinks that's exactly why he's been able to build so much. We get into: - Why being lazy might actually be the founder superpower nobody talks about - How a random Antler hackathon accidentally created Polarbear - Why he markets to students instead of parents and why it works every time - Building a content machine without being a natural content creator - The reality of being 20 and building, the rent anxiety, the sleepless nights, calling 20 parents a day just to cover expenses - What he's had to sacrifice to get here - The unicorn by 25 goal and whether he actually believes it If this one hit, subscribe to Fayl Tales wherever you listen and follow Haobo on LinkedIn. His journey is very much worth watching in real time. Follow us on all platforms! Instagram ~ @fayltales Tiktok ~ @fayltales  LinkedIn ~ @fayltales

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  3. ٣٠ مارس

    Millie Marconi Left $100K on the Table Because a LinkedIn Post Changed Everything

    Hey Crew! Millie Marconi has been building for 9 years. In that whole time she's had exactly one real job, and it only lasted a couple of months. She's the kind of founder who doesn't wait for permission, which is exactly why this episode hit different. We get into the LinkedIn post that nearly broke her (and ended up building her next company), how she walked away from $100K in revenue because the vision was bigger, and the AI product she built back in 2019 that she dropped, the one that basically became Heidi Health. Millie's current company is TestFeed, a synthetic audience platform for B2B market research. The industry is a $140B one, 70% of it is going synthetic by 2028, and she's already got 3000 people on the waitlist. She just pulled the B2C product and is going all in on enterprise. Raise is coming. But beyond the startup stuff, we talk about building as a neurodivergent person, what it means to be a dark horse, and the Italian grandfather who crossed the world with nothing and became a horse trainer. That part will get you. We cover: - The accidental origin story of TestFeed (a LinkedIn post gone very wrong) - Killing a $100K revenue product to go after something bigger - What synthetic audiences actually are and why B2B is the play - The AI note taker she built in 2019 (before the space blew up) - Her grandfather and the "build with what you've got" mentality #fayltales #founderlife #startuppodcast #buildinginpublic #startupstory  Follow us on all platforms! Instagram ~ @fayltales Tiktok ~ @fayltales  LinkedIn ~ @fayltales

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  4. ٢٣ مارس

    He Bet His Life Savings on Limoncello and Its Working ~ Stefan Di Benedetto

    Hey Crew! Picture this. You win world's best liquor. You're in Qantas first class lounges. You're in over 500 venues across the country. And you got here by betting every dollar you had on a family limoncello recipe. That's Stefan Di Benedetto's story. Stefan is the founder of Solbevi, the world's first limoncello spritz in a can, born from an Italian family tradition and $300k of his own savings. He quit construction, watched three capital raises collapse at the last minute, ran out of stock before the Formula One, and kept going anyway. We cover: The Saturday afternoon that sparked the world's first limoncello spritz in a canHow he landed Dan Murphy's 9 days after launching by guessing a category manager's emailThree capital raises. Three last minute collapses.The Formula One stock disaster. He ignored his gut and paid for it.How a conversation with a stranger on a Qantas flight led to his cans being served in first class loungesHis fiancée's breaking point after two years of never seeing him and what finally changedWhy his advice to new founders is "don't do it" (and then the real answer underneath that)One of the most entertaining and honest episodes we've had on the show. Stefan is the kind of founder who just makes you want to back yourself. Check out Solbevi and follow Stefan on Instagram. Subscribe to Fayl Tales on YouTube and Buzzsprout, and follow us @fayltales everywhere. Follow us on all platforms! Instagram ~ @fayltales Tiktok ~ @fayltales  LinkedIn ~ @fayltales

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  5. ١٦ مارس

    She Quit Corporate, Bought a Vineyard, and Built an AI Company in Tasmania ~ Fiona Turner

    Hey Crew! Picture this: you walk away from a successful corporate tech career, buy a vineyard in Tasmania with your partner, and dream about the simple life. Then the vineyard goes haywire, you're burning through money, and you can't get anyone to come help. Most people sell up. Fiona Turner built an AI company instead. Fiona is the co-founder and CEO of Bitwise Agronomy — an AI platform now operating in 10 countries, with 3 petabytes of berry data (for context, ChatGPT was trained on 1), 89% revenue growth this year, and $5 million raised. All from Launceston, Tasmania. We get into: How a broken vineyard became a $5M AI companyThe pivot from wine to berries and why vineyards just wouldn't payBuilding drone swarms, vine rovers, and sensor networks from scratch with a kids robotics clubRaising capital as a female founder when only 4% of Aussie startup funding goes to womenHaving a baby mid-capital raise while Silicon Valley Bank collapsed (her daughter flew 50 flights in her first year of life)What it actually takes to become the Google of forecastingOne of the most honest, unfiltered conversations we've had on the show. Follow Fiona on LinkedIn and check out Bitwise Agronomy. Subscribe to Fayl Tales on YouTube and Buzzsprout, and follow us @fayltales — fayltales.com #fayltales #femalefounder #agtech #startupaustralia #founderjourneyFollow us on all platforms! Instagram ~ @fayltales Tiktok ~ @fayltales  LinkedIn ~ @fayltales

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  6. ٩ مارس

    "I Was Beyond Poor" ~ Megan Luttrell on Building Aussie Founders Club From Nothing

    Hey Crew! Ok so this one hit different. Megan Luttrell has built Aussie Founders Club into a community of thousands of founders, runs Kairos Recruitment, just launched People Stack, won Victorian Ecosystem Hero of the Year, and landed a $200K grant from Launch Vic. But her first year? She was broke. Like properly broke. She got her partner to pay her to clean their own house just to have an extra 80 bucks a week. She borrowed money from her uncle. She tried a bunch of ideas that went absolutely nowhere. And the wild part is she didn't even think she deserved the Ecosystem Hero award. She literally told people not to nominate her yet. They did anyway. And when they called her name, she had her camera out recording someone else because she was so sure it wasn't going to be her. We get into the stuff nobody talks about when it comes to hiring in startups. Why most founders completely skip thinking about who they are as an employer before they start recruiting. Why culture fit is actually code for hiring people exactly like you. And why your first hires are the most make-or-break decisions you'll ever make. We cover: Why your first startup hires will either 10x your business or tank itThe difference between culture fit and culture contributionHow Aussie Founders Club went from a meetup with a 7-word name to thousands of membersWhy she spent her broke year building community instead of just chasing revenueThe compounding effect of showing up when nobody's watchingHer first startup experience where the CEO was allegedly high on the job and everyone quit on the same dayIf you're hiring, building a community, or just trying to figure out what the hell you're doing as a founder, this one's for you. Follow us on all platforms! Instagram ~ @fayltales Tiktok ~ @fayltales  LinkedIn ~ @fayltales

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حول

Behind every startup success story is a trail of mistakes, pivots, broken plans and brilliant comebacks. Fayl Tales is the podcast where entrepreneurs, founders, investors and early employees share the real side of building something new - the failures that shaped them, the lessons they learned the hard way, and the resilience it takes to keep going. Hosted by Loveth, each episode dives into the raw, funny and honest moments most business stories leave out - so you can learn faster, fail smarter, and feel less alone on your own journey. Follow the show for weekly conversations that prove: failure isn’t the end, it’s part of the story.