The Entrepreneur Experiment

Gary Fox

Discover how world-class entrepreneurs, elite thinkers, and peak performers master success in business, body, and brain. Every week, I sit down with extraordinary people to explore how they build thriving businesses, maintain peak physical health, and cultivate sharp, resilient minds. Together, we’ll discover the habits, systems, and experiments they use to create their unique formulas for success. Join me as you learn how to build like a founder, train like an athlete, and think like an artist—so we can all find our formula for success. This isn’t just a podcast; it’s a blueprint for a new kind of founder—one who balances ambition with wellness, hard work with mental fitness, and success with purpose.

  1. 14h ago ·  Video

    EE508 - Niall McGarry: Joe.ie, Fabric Social, and Selling to the World's Biggest Ad Agency

    In this episode of The Entrepreneur Experiment, Gary Fox sits down with Niall McGarry, the founder of Joe.ie, Her.ie and Fabric Social, fresh from one of the most significant Irish founder exits of the year. After building Joe into one of Ireland and the UK’s best-known digital media brands, Niall started Fabric Social in the aftermath of the pandemic. What began in Ireland in 2021 became a UK-focused social-first creative agency that grew from roughly €2 million to almost €16 million in revenue and from 20 to 120 people in just 24 months, before being acquired by Publicis Groupe UK. This conversation is a deep dive into how Niall spotted the shift from follower-based social media to interest-based, trend-led vertical video, and how Fabric helped major brands like Curry’s and Subway show up with personality, speed and cultural relevance online. Niall also opens up about why he moved his family to the UK to crack the market, the difference between building a media company and an agency, how to know when it is the right time to sell, and why founders need obsession without becoming emotionally trapped by the business. If you are building a company, trying to understand modern social, or thinking about what it really takes to create and exit a business, this episode is packed with lessons. Show Notes In this episode, we cover: 🚀 How Niall built Fabric Social from 2021 to its acquisition by Publicis Groupe UK 📈 Growing revenue from roughly €2 million to almost €16 million in 24 months 👥 Scaling the team from 20 to 120 people during Fabric’s biggest growth phase 📱 Why TikTok, Instagram Reels and YouTube Shorts changed the game for brands 🧠 The shift from follower-based social to interest-based algorithms 🔥 Why brands now need “platform specificity” instead of one personality everywhere 💬 Fabric’s approach to “community nourishment” and comment-led brand building 🛒 The Curry’s and Subway social media case studies that helped put Fabric on the map 🎯 Why Niall hired “mavericks” who understood meme culture, trends and tone of voice 🌍 Why moving to the UK was critical to building a bigger business 🏙️ Why Irish founders should not overlook London and the UK market 💰 How recurring agency revenue made Fabric a more attractive acquisition target 🧾 The difference between building a media business and building an agency ⏱️ Why the best time to sell may be when every metric is pointing upwards ⚖️ Why your business is not your baby, and why emotional detachment matters 🔑 The role of obsession, timing and problem selection in founder success “You need to create a degree of separation quite quickly and you need to keep clinical and controlled about it.” - Niall McGarry *Our Sponsors * Nostra: https://bit.ly/nostra26 Azure: https://bit.ly/azure26  Follow The Entrepreneur Experiment: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/entrepreneurexperiment/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@entrepreneurexperiment Links & Resources Fabric Social – Niall McGarry’s social-first creative agency, working with brands including Currys, Subway, Ocado and Sky: https://fabricsocial.com/ Publicis Groupe UK acquisition announcement – Publicis Groupe UK announced the acquisition of Fabric Social in April 2026: https://www.publicisgroupeuk.com/news-and-views/news/publicis-groupe-uk-acquires-fabric-social-to-create-powerhouse-pr-social-and-influencer-offering/ Niall McGarry on LinkedIn – Founder of Fabric Social and previous founder of Joe.ie / Joe Media: https://www.linkedin.com/in/niallmcgarry/

    1h 35m
  2. Jun 25 ·  Video

    Recipe for Success: How Food Brands Break Through | TikTok, Retail & Margins

    In this special episode of The Entrepreneur Experiment, Gary Fox sits down with three of Ireland’s most exciting food and drink founders for a live “Recipe for Success” masterclass, brought to you with the Local Enterprise Offices and the National Enterprise Awards. Gary is joined by Denise Buckley of Sugar Plum Sweetery, Pat Falvey of Blarney Brewing Company and Active Brewing Company, and Ian O’Rourke of RYSE Chocolate to unpack what it really takes to build a food or drink brand in Ireland today. From viral TikTok moments and 900% growth to getting onto retail shelves, managing margins, building customer feedback loops, and staying agile beside global competitors, this conversation is packed with practical lessons for anyone building a product-led business. Denise shares how Sugar Plum Sweetery went from testing a viral Dubai chocolate bar with just nine moulds to making thousands of bars a day. Pat reveals how belief, vision and speed helped him move from property into brewing, including his ambition to build a sustainable Irish beer brand. Ian explains why early founders should “do things that don’t scale”, and how grassroots relationships with retailers can become one of your most valuable sources of data. If you are building a food, drink, retail or consumer brand, this episode is a tactical playbook on testing fast, backing yourself, getting close to your customer, and staying in the game long enough for momentum to arrive. 🎧 Show Notes In this episode, we cover: 🔥 The “recipe for success” behind three standout Irish food and drink brands 🍫 How Sugar Plum Sweetery turned the Dubai chocolate trend into 900% growth 📈 Why Denise believes attention to detail, obsession and customer relevance drive brand momentum 🚀 How a test batch of nine chocolate bars became thousands of bars a day 📲 Why TikTok Shop became a powerful commercial channel for Sugar Plum Sweetery 🏪 The plan to expand Sugar Plum Sweetery into 10 physical stores over three years 🍺 How Pat Falvey went from 20 years in property to owning a brewery three weeks after a chance lunch 💡 Why belief, vision and the ability to embrace change are essential founder traits 🏉 The thinking behind Active Brewing Company and functional non-alcoholic beer ⚡ How Ian O’Rourke is building RYSE Chocolate as a new “chocolate energy” category 🛒 Why getting into retail is only the first challenge — and why shelf position, rate of sale and relationships matter 📊 How small brands can use local store managers and independent retailers as real-time market research 🎯 Why “do things that don’t scale” is still one of the most powerful startup lessons 💰 The importance of understanding margin before scaling any food or drink brand 🤝 How Local Enterprise Offices helped the founders with grants, feasibility studies, machinery, brand development and connections 🌱 Why Irish brands can compete with global giants by being faster, more personal and more agile 📚 The books Ian recommends for early-stage founders: The Lean Startup and Feel the Fear and Do It Anyway 🧠 The final advice each founder would give to someone thinking about starting their own business Links & Resources Sugar Plum Sweetery: https://sugarplumsweetery.ie/ Blarney Brewing Company: https://www.blarneybrewing.ie/ RYSE Chocolate: https://rysechocolate.com/ Local Enterprise Offices: https://www.localenterprise.ie/ National Enterprise Awards: https://www.localenterprise.ie/awards/2026-finalists/

    1h 10m
  3. Jun 18 ·  Video

    EE504: Sean Noble, Hyrox Elite 15: The Pain, Science and Obsession Behind the Rise

    In this episode of The Entrepreneur Experiment, Gary Fox sits down with Sean Noble, one of Ireland’s fastest-rising HYROX athletes, currently ranked among the top competitors in the world. A qualified solicitor who walked away from the traditional career path to go all-in as a full-time athlete, Sean’s story is one of grief, obsession, discipline and reinvention. After a devastating knee injury ended his football ambitions, he spiralled into drinking, weight gain and depression — before discovering fitness as a way back. What began as a means of escape became a new identity. From his first HYROX event in 2023 to winning major races, signing with MyProtein and Puma, and competing on the Elite 15 stage, Sean reveals the mindset, training structure and personal pain that have driven his rapid rise. This is a conversation about going all-in, rebuilding yourself from rock bottom, and what it really takes to compete at the very edge of human performance. The conversation took place at Wellfest, Dublin, as part of the new WellMan Stage. *Our Sponsors * Nostra: https://bit.ly/nostra26 Azure: https://bit.ly/azure26  Follow The Entrepreneur Experiment: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/entrepreneurexperiment/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@entrepreneurexperiment 🎧 Show Notes In this episode, we cover: 🔥 How a career-ending football injury changed Sean’s life 🧠 The mental toll of losing sport at 22 💔 How grief after his father’s death became part of his driving force 🏋️‍♂️ Why fitness became his “medicine” 🚀 Going from his first HYROX event in 2023 to the Elite 15 ⚖️ The decision to leave law behind and become a full-time athlete 📈 Why HYROX is one of the fastest-growing sports in the world 🧪 The science of lactate threshold, smart training and avoiding burnout 🥇 What it takes to train 28 hours per week at an elite level 🇮🇪 The pride of representing Ireland on the world stage 💬 Standout Quote “Fitness for me was my medicine. That was my why.” — Sean

    55 min
  4. EE502 - How He Turned 173 Salon Conversations Into a Startup That Raised €4.9M | Conor Moules

    May 28

    EE502 - How He Turned 173 Salon Conversations Into a Startup That Raised €4.9M | Conor Moules

    In this episode of The Entrepreneur Experiment, Gary Fox sits down with Conor Moules, founder and CEO of Barespace, the company building a true operating system for hair and beauty salons. Conor’s journey is anything but traditional. He left school at 16 to become a hairdresser, moved to Australia during the recession, found his way into door-to-door sales, then business intelligence, location intelligence, and eventually the Irish startup world through Bamboo. After helping turn Bamboo around during Covid, Conor used that hard-earned reputation to unlock the next chapter: Barespace. What started as a deep understanding of salon life has become a fast-growing software company solving one of the industry’s biggest problems: salon owners are expected to be creative experts, managers, marketers, employers, finance teams and operators - all while still working on the floor. Barespace was built to change that. In this conversation, Conor shares how he and co-founder Glenn Baker profiled 173 salons, raised €750,000 from the very customers they wanted to serve, and went on to raise almost €4.9 million in total. This is a story about resilience, customer obsession, reputation, and what happens when you build with the industry, not just for it. Show Notes In this episode, we cover: 🔥 Why Conor left school at 16 and started out as a hairdresser in Peter Mark 💬 The unexpected lessons hairdressing taught him about listening, trust and human connection 🇦🇺 Moving to Australia during the recession and finding his feet in door-to-door sales 📊 How business intelligence and location data opened his eyes to the power of systems 🚀 The chance meeting with Luke Mackey that brought Conor into Bamboo 🧱 Why rebuilding Bamboo during Covid became the proving ground for Barespace 💡 The problem Conor and Glenn saw inside hair and beauty salons ✂️ Why salon owners are often expected to run the business and be the best person on the floor 🧾 How marketplaces can damage salon margins and weaken customer ownership 🔍 Why they profiled 173 salons before building the product 💰 How Barespace raised €750,000 from salon owners when traditional fundraising wasn’t working 📈 Processing €4.7 million in turnover in year one and growing from there 🧠 Why Conor believes founders need to ask for help earlier 🌙 The role of visualisation, daydreaming and belief in building a company 🔑 Why reputation, patience and obsession can become a founder’s greatest assets Pull Quote “The mission was never to get rich out of Bamboo. It was to unlock the gates to be able to walk in with Barespace.” - Conor Moules Links & Resources Barespace — the operating system for salons and barbers: barespace.io (https://barespace.io/) Enterprise Ireland — mentioned as part of the Barespace funding journey: enterprise-ireland.com (https://www.enterprise-ireland.com/en/) *Our Sponsors * Nostra: https://bit.ly/nostra26 Azure: https://bit.ly/azure26  Follow The Entrepreneur Experiment: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/entrepreneurexperiment/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@entrepreneurexperiment

    1h 33m
5
out of 5
7 Ratings

About

Discover how world-class entrepreneurs, elite thinkers, and peak performers master success in business, body, and brain. Every week, I sit down with extraordinary people to explore how they build thriving businesses, maintain peak physical health, and cultivate sharp, resilient minds. Together, we’ll discover the habits, systems, and experiments they use to create their unique formulas for success. Join me as you learn how to build like a founder, train like an athlete, and think like an artist—so we can all find our formula for success. This isn’t just a podcast; it’s a blueprint for a new kind of founder—one who balances ambition with wellness, hard work with mental fitness, and success with purpose.

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