Episodes
-
Most people never start because they want something.
Simon Squibb says that is the problem. Wanting is not enough. You have to need it.
In this Founder Classic episode of Screw It Just DO It, Simon explains the single mindset shift that has driven every successful business he has built, invested in, or watched succeed. Turn your want into a need. And once you have done that, learn the three things that will multiply your luck: take more risk, know your destination, and never stop.
Simon went from homeless at 15 to building and selling his agency Fluid to PwC. He has invested in 76 businesses. He has 23 million followers. And he believes that entrepreneurs, not politicians, are the ones who will fix the world.
This is a tight, single-lesson episode. One idea. Applied properly, it changes everything.
Key Takeaways
• How to turn a want into a need and why it changes your behaviour immediately
• The three-part formula for luck: risk, destination, and persistence
• Why leaning into fear is a superpower, not a weakness
• Why the harder I work, the luckier I get is actually not true
🎧 Don’t miss a moment of entrepreneurial insight. Subscribe to Screw It Just DO It wherever you get your podcasts.
🏟️ Join us at the Festival of Entrepreneurs, November 3–4 at NEC Birmingham
👉https://www.festivalofentrepreneurs.co.uk
-
Steven Mendel built ManyPets from an idea into one of Europe's leading pet insurance businesses. But this episode isn't about insurance. It's about finally backing yourself. After years building successful businesses inside large organisations, one conversation with his wife changed everything. She gave him one year.
In this episode, Steven discusses:
Why he left corporate.
The conversation that changed everything.
The three times ManyPets nearly failed.
Why becoming a unicorn didn't matter.
Building an irresistible employer.
Starting again with Lateral.
Why it's never too late to reinvent yourself.
🎧 This episode is powered by Molten Ventures, a leading European venture capital firm backing ambitious founders from seed through growth. 👉 Find out more at moltenventures.com
🎟️ Join us at the Festival of Entrepreneurs, November 3–4 at NEC Birmingham 👉 www.festivalofentrepreneurs.co.uk
-
Missing episodes?
-
Jim Cregan was a labourer. He was hosting festival stages dressed as a mermaid. He had no idea what he was doing or where he was going.
Then he went to Australia, walked into a petrol station hungover, and found a ready-to-drink iced coffee.
That was the moment.
In this Founder Classic episode of Screw It Just DO It, Jim tells the complete story of how a single product in a petrol station in Australia changed everything. From writing a delusional email to Farmers Union from his hotmail account, to returning to the UK with Suze and launching Jimmy’s Iced Coffee, to the moment he nearly crashed his car watching a stranger choose Jimmy’s off a supermarket shelf.
This is the real SIJDI moment. Not a strategy, not a business plan. Just a feeling that grabbed him by the horns and would not let go.
Key Takeaways
• How a hangover in Australia became the seed of a £10M+ business
• Why Jim and Suze started without a plan and built it anyway
• What kept them going when nothing was working
• The power of seeing someone choose your product over everyone else’s
🎧 Don’t miss a moment of entrepreneurial insight. Subscribe to Screw It Just DO It wherever you get your podcasts.
🏟️ Join us at the Festival of Entrepreneurs, November 3–4 at NEC Birmingham
👉 www.festivalofentrepreneurs.co.uk
-
Alla Ouvarova didn't have experience in food.
She didn't have investors lining up.
She didn't even have an existing category to enter.
Alongside co-founder Anna, she launched Two Chicks and created the liquid egg white category in the UK from scratch.
In this episode of Screw It Just DO It, Alla shares:
- Why everyone rejected their idea
- Starting with £25k instead of £250k
- Creating a category nobody understood
- Nearly losing everything overnight
- Building confidence through action
- Selling a majority stake after 20 years
A brilliant conversation about resilience, confidence and backing yourself before everyone else does.
🎧 Listen to the full episode of Screw It Just DO It
🎟️ Join us at the Festival of Entrepreneurs, November 3-4 at NEC Birmingham
👉 www.festivalofentrepreneurs.co.uk
-
Tommy Kelly spent years in the Royal Marines operating in some of the harshest environments on earth.
But one lesson carried into business: Do hard things.
This became a conversation around discomfort, resilience, burnout and learning to keep moving when life gets difficult.
In this Bite-Sized episode of Screw It Just DO It, Tommy talks about the Arctic exercise that nearly broke his unit, the moment he artificially created chaos to force himself out of the Marines, and the Monday morning he walked into the office and told his co-founder he was done.
Key Takeaways
• Why doing hard things is the most practical form of resilience training
• What the Arctic night from hell taught Tommy about keeping going
• The screw it just do it moment — artificially creating chaos by leaving the Marines
• The burnout no one talks about: 12 years of compounding pressure
• Why being on the right path matters more than being at the destination
🎧 This episode is powered by WorldFirst, specialists in international business payments. If your business pays overseas suppliers or receives payments from abroad, those transaction fees can quickly add up. As a Screw It Just DO It listener, you can get 50 international transactions completely fee free for 60 days.
👉 Create a free account and claim the offer at worldfirst.com/screwit
🎧 Don't miss a moment of entrepreneurial insight. Subscribe to Screw It Just DO It wherever you get your podcasts.
🎟️ Join us at the Festival of Entrepreneurs, November 3–4 at NEC Birmingham. Two days of real conversations, practical insight, and founder-led growth.
👉 www.festivalofentrepreneurs.co.uk
-
Simon Woodroffe left school at 16. He got arrested at 19. He built stages for rock bands, sold TV rights, and spent decades figuring out how the world worked.
Then at 47, with no restaurant experience, he put his entire life savings on the line and opened Yo! Sushi.
It changed everything.
In this episode of Screw It Just DO It, Simon and Alex talk about what it actually means to risk it all, why he believes it is never too late to start, how he negotiated a 1% royalty that made him more than everything else combined, and what 50 years of doing things differently has actually taught him.
We also get into his new autobiography, Yo, Man!, Dragons’ Den, Yotel, and why the unconventional path is often the only one worth taking.
Key Takeaways
• Why starting later in life can be an advantage, not a limitation
• How Simon built a £1 million opening using £200k and a lot of pulled favours
• The 1% royalty he negotiated that outlasted everything else
• Why megalomaniac control at the start is the right strategy
🎧 This episode is powered by WorldFirst, specialists in international business payments. If your business pays overseas suppliers or receives payments from abroad, those transaction fees can quickly add up.
As a Screw It Just DO It listener, you can get 50 international transactions completely fee free for 60 days.
👉 Create a free account and claim the offer at worldfirst.com/screwit
🎧 Listen to the full episode of Screw It Just DO It
🎟️ Join us at the Festival of Entrepreneurs, November 3–4 at NEC Birmingham
👉 www.festivalofentrepreneurs.co.uk
-
This episode was recorded when Huel was four years old and doing £14 million in revenue.
You are listening to it knowing what it eventually became.
Julian Hearn started Huel with a simple goal: find 1,000 people willing to pay £45 a month for a nutritionally complete food. Half a million pounds a year. A lifestyle business he could run three days a week.
When they hit £750,000 in year one, he knew that plan was gone.
In this Bite-Sized episode of Screw It Just DO It, Julian talks about the early Huel story: the initial product order of £5,000 of stock, the PR that arrived in the first month without asking for it, the customers who started defending the brand online before Julian even had a team, and why he never wrote a proper business plan for any of it.
He also talks about hiring, culture, direct-to-consumer, and why the biggest risk in any product business is manufacturing — not the market.
Key Takeaways
- Why Huel started as a lifestyle business and when Julian realised it was not going to be one
- The 1,000 fans model and why it is the right way to start anything
- Why execution beats business plans, and what Julian did instead
- How building direct-to-consumer gave Huel a weapon that retail-first competitors never had
🎧 This episode is powered by WorldFirst, specialists in international business payments. If your business pays overseas suppliers or receives payments from abroad, those transaction fees can quickly add up. As a Screw It Just DO It listener, you can get 50 international transactions completely fee free for 60 days.
👉 Create a free account and claim the offer at worldfirst.com/screwit
🎧 Don't miss a moment of entrepreneurial insight. Subscribe to Screw It Just DO It wherever you get your podcasts.
🎟️ Join us at the Festival of Entrepreneurs, November 3-4 at NEC Birmingham
👉 www.festivalofentrepreneurs.co.uk
-
Joe Woodward had what most people would call a dream job. Chief Marketing Officer for the Rajasthan Royals in Mumbai. Ten years building things in sport, music and entertainment. Then the pandemic hit, the rug came out from under him, and he moved home.
He sat down to update his CV. He immediately got frustrated.
That frustration became Vizzy — a platform built to replace the 500-year-old document Leonardo da Vinci invented, and give people a genuinely human way to show who they are. Not bullet points and PDFs. Not job titles and logos. Who they actually are.
In this episode of Screw It Just DO It, Joe tells the full story. The flip chart moment with his sister Jess and her husband Chris. The investor conversation with Robert Dodds, Simon Fuller's business partner, that ended with four words: 'That's the idea. I'll back it tomorrow.' The cold start launch. The Instagram DM from a stranger who said Vizzy had just landed them their dream job. And the lesson from Burberry, Louis Vuitton, EY and Tiffany that the future of hiring is not about getting more applicants — it's about getting fewer, better ones.
Key Takeaways
- Why the flip chart moment changed everything — and what that looked like in practice
- How Joe went from zero to Burberry and Louis Vuitton without a hiring background
- Why the best founders are still personally obsessed with hiring at £2 billion
- What Vizzy taught Joe about the difference between instinct and overthinking
🎧 This episode is powered by WorldFirst, specialists in international business payments. If your business pays overseas suppliers or receives payments from abroad, those transaction fees can quickly add up. As a Screw It Just DO It listener, you can get 50 international transactions completely fee free for 60 days.
👉 Create a free account and claim the offer at worldfirst.com/screwit
🎧 Listen to the full episode of Screw It Just DO It
🎟️ Join us at the Festival of Entrepreneurs, November 3-4 at NEC Birmingham
👉 www.festivalofentrepreneurs.co.uk
-
Raj Thiruchelvarajah was running a health and fitness business when his co-founder sent him a document that changed everything. It was an idea about wearable blood flow restriction technology. Within months, Raj had shut down his original company and gone all-in on Hydro.
In this Bite-Sized episode of Screw It Just DO It, Raj explains the exact moment he knew they had to pivot — the internal disagreements, the decisive call he had to make as CEO, and why April 2022 was the turning point that blew the business up.
From Leeds Rhinos to Newcastle United, Leicester Tigers and the Washington Commanders, Hydro is now embedded across 80+ elite sports teams globally. This is the story of how focus — not funding — made that possible.
Key Takeaways
• Why trying to serve every customer nearly killed the business
• How one decisive pivot to pro sports transformed growth
• The screw it just do it moment that started it all
• Why experience matters more than age in founding a startup
🎧 This episode is powered by WorldFirst, specialists in international business payments. If your business pays overseas suppliers or receives payments from abroad, those transaction fees can quickly add up. As a Screw It Just DO It listener, you can get 50 international transactions completely fee free for 60 days.
👉 Create a free account and claim the offer at worldfirst.com/screwit
🎧 Don't miss a moment of entrepreneurial insight. Subscribe to Screw It Just DO It wherever you get your podcasts.
🎟️ Join us at the Festival of Entrepreneurs, November 3–4 at NEC Birmingham
👉 www.festivalofentrepreneurs.co.uk
Two days of real conversations, practical insight, and founder-led growth.
👉 www.festivalofentrepreneurs.co.uk
-
For 20 years Dominic Day knew exactly who he was.
Professional rugby player. Wales international. Saracens. Bath.
Then it stopped.
No changing room. No match day. No structure. Just questions.
Who am I now? Dad? Founder? Ex-player?
In this conversation Dom talks about what it actually feels like when 20 years of identity ends overnight, what the transition from elite sport into business is really like, and why the best opportunities in his life — playing in Japan, moving to Bath, starting FourFive with George Kruis — have always been on the other side of fear.
Key Takeaways:
- Why Dom was wildly unprepared for retirement despite every club having a support system
- The identity question he is still working through years after leaving rugby
- The 30-year regret test he uses for every major decision
- What it actually felt like when three orders came through on a website they'd only just switched on
- Why balancing fatherhood and building FourFive is the hardest thing he has ever had to do
🎧 This episode is powered by WorldFirst, specialists in international business payments. If your business pays overseas suppliers or receives payments from abroad, those transaction fees can quickly add up. As a Screw It Just DO It listener, you can get 50 international transactions completely fee free for 60 days.
👉 Create a free account and claim the offer at worldfirst.com/screwit
🎧 Listen to the full episode of Screw It Just DO It
🎟️ Join us at the Festival of Entrepreneurs, November 3-4 at NEC Birmingham
👉 www.festivalofentrepreneurs.co.uk
-
Daniel Priestley started every one of his businesses on a credit card.
No investor deck. No grant. No seed round. A mentor he shadowed, a sales muscle he built from scratch, and a clear-eyed read of where the economy was heading.
In this Bite-Sized episode of Screw It Just DO It, I ask Daniel the one question that cuts to the heart of every founder journey: what was the single thing you needed to go from where you were to where you are now?
His answer is not what most people expect. And the framework he uses to explain why enterprise has become the only factor of production that matters in the digital age is one of the clearest things I have heard on this show.
If you are stuck waiting for the right moment, the right funding, or the right connection, this is the episode that reframes all of it.
Key Takeaways
- Why working for a founder beats any formal business education
- How a credit card became the launchpad for a multi-million pound business
- Why sales is not optional, it is the foundation
- What the shift from the industrial age to the digital age actually means for founders right now
🎧 This episode is powered by WorldFirst, specialists in international business payments. If your business pays overseas suppliers or receives payments from abroad, those transaction fees can quickly add up. As a Screw It Just DO It listener, you can get 50 international transactions completely fee free for 60 days.
👉 Create a free account and claim the offer at worldfirst.com/screwit
🎧 Don't miss a moment of entrepreneurial insight. Subscribe to Screw It Just DO It wherever you get your podcasts.
🔥 If you're serious about growing your business, join us at the Festival of Entrepreneurs, 3-4 November 2026 at the NEC Birmingham. Two days of real conversations, practical insight, and founder-led growth.
👉 www.festivalofentrepreneurs.co.uk
-
Danielle Close didn’t just launch another skincare brand.
After working with Charlotte Tilbury and seeing how little the beauty industry was doing around sustainability, she launched My Skin Feels — creating skincare from fermented food waste.
What happened next surprised everyone.
Customers started reporting major improvements in eczema, sensitive skin and skin conditions completely by accident.
Turning down a £250K investmentBuilding a startup completely aloneBurnout and founder mental healthThe hidden stress of scaling a businessDragon’s Den behind-the-scenesBuilding skincare from food wasteHow intuition shaped major business decisions
In this episode Danielle shares:One of the most honest founder conversations we've had on SIJDI.
#Entrepreneurship #Startup #Skincare #FounderStory #MentalHealth #BusinessGrowth -
Leroy Kincaide has lived about five lives already.
Undertaker at 17. Professional wrestler. WWE SmackDown. Writer. Director.
But this episode isn't really about any of those things.
It's about what happens when you see mortality up close at a young age — and how that one experience changes the way you view every decision you'll ever make.
In this Bite-Sized episode of Screw It Just DO It, Leroy talks about working as an undertaker at 17 and the perspective it gave him on time, instinct, and purpose. He shares the moment he walked into WWE — unannounced — and just knocked the door. And he explains why he ignored years of doubt to make his debut feature film for £27,000, which went on to be picked up by Samuel Goldwyn and land on Hulu.
This is a conversation about listening to the voice that tells you where you're supposed to go. And the cost of ignoring it.
Key Takeaways
• Why working as an undertaker at 17 changed Leroy's relationship with time forever
• The inner calling that wouldn't go away — from wrestler to filmmaker
• The screw it just do it moment at WWE SmackDown
• Why he did the pitch of his life on the same day he lost his grandmother
• The difference between being happy and being content
🎧 This episode is powered by WorldFirst, specialists in international business payments. If your business pays overseas suppliers or receives payments from abroad, those transaction fees can quickly add up. As a Screw It Just DO It listener, you can get 50 international transactions completely fee free for 60 days.
👉 Create a free account and claim the offer at worldfirst.com/screwit
🎧 Don't miss a moment of entrepreneurial insight. Subscribe to Screw It Just DO It wherever you get your podcasts.
🎟️ Join us at the Festival of Entrepreneurs, November 3–4 at NEC Birmingham. Two days of real conversations, practical insight, and founder-led growth.
👉 www.festivalofentrepreneurs.co.uk
-
Roei Samuel built his first company at 21. Real Sport was a content creation toolkit for the sports industry — working with the Premier League, NBA and NFL — before being acquired by Gfinity in 2018. Then came the identity crisis. The "who am I now?" moment that every founder dreads.
What followed was Connected: a fractional talent marketplace that has grown from zero to 7,000 customers in just over four years, raised $20 million, and is now operating across five global cities.
In this episode of Screw It Just DO It, Roei breaks down the exact moment AI became Connected's biggest growth driver — and why it wasn't just productivity that changed, but the entire labour market. He shares why he spoke to 100 people before building anything, how he's generated 7–8 figures from LinkedIn without spending a penny, and why product is no longer the moat for modern founders.
Key Takeaways
• Why AI is driving both productivity gains and mass corporate layoffs — and how Connected benefits from both
• How to validate a startup idea by speaking to 100 people before building
• Why distribution and attention now matter more than product
• The identity crisis every founder faces after an exit
• How weekly therapy has made Roei a better CEO
🎧 This episode is powered by WorldFirst, specialists in international business payments. If your business pays overseas suppliers or receives payments from abroad, those transaction fees can quickly add up. As a Screw It Just DO It listener, you can get 50 international transactions completely fee free for 60 days.
👉 Create a free account and claim the offer at worldfirst.com/screwit
🎧 Listen to the full episode of Screw It Just DO It
🎟️ Join us at the Festival of Entrepreneurs, November 3–4 at NEC Birmingham. Two days of real conversations, practical insight, and founder-led growth.
👉 www.festivalofentrepreneurs.co.uk
-
Eugene Amo-Dadzie has been fast his whole life. He knew it. His teachers knew it. His parents knew it.
He just never actually tried.
From the age of nine, Eugene was the fastest kid in the school. He grew up watching Usain Bolt and dreamed of the track. But running was always just a hobby — something to enjoy, never something to pursue. His parents pushed academics. His culture valued qualifications. And somewhere along the way, Eugene made a quiet peace with never finding out how good he actually was.
For years he was the guy who said: if I had tried, I could have done it.
Then, at 26, standing beside an athletics track in Woodford, his best friend turned to him and said: think you could put a pair of spikes on and beat these guys?
In this Bite-Sized episode of Screw It Just DO It, Eugene tells the story of what happened when he finally said yes. A debut season that ended with a torn hamstring. A British Championship silver medal. A sub-10-second 100 metres. And a semi-final at the World Athletics Championships — where he lined up against the Olympic champion, the World champion, and the Commonwealth champion in the same race.
All of it starting at 26. All of it built around a full-time accounting career, a wife, a daughter, and a job he loves.
Key Takeaways
- Why Eugene spent years believing in his talent without ever testing it — and what finally changed
- What the Parable of the Talents taught him about buried potential
- How to handle a setback that arrives before you have even properly started
- What it takes to balance elite sport with a full-time career, a family, and faith
🎧 This episode is powered by WorldFirst, specialists in international business payments. If your business pays overseas suppliers or receives payments from abroad, those transaction fees can quickly add up. As a Screw It Just DO It listener, you can get 50 international transactions completely fee free for 60 days.
👉 Create a free account and claim the offer at worldfirst.com/screwit
🎧 Listen to the full episode of Screw It Just DO It
🎟️ Join us at the Festival of Entrepreneurs, November 3-4 at NEC Birmingham
👉 www.festivalofentrepreneurs.co.uk
-
Carly Meyers was a professional West End dancer. An injury ended her career with no plan B.
That same no-plan-B mentality drove her from Apple business specialist to digital course builder to one of the most practical voices on AI implementation for founders in the UK.
In this episode of Screw It Just DO It, I sit down with Carly to talk about why most founders are getting AI completely wrong, why tools without infrastructure create more problems than they solve, and how her Simplify, Automate, Amplify framework helps founders compete at scale without a large team.
We get into speed to lead, the opportunity quadrant, and why the founders who do not adapt now will find themselves looking up at competitors they did not even know existed.
Key Takeaways
• Why choosing tools over infrastructure is the number one AI mistake founders make
• The Simplify, Automate, Amplify framework explained step by step
• How AI levels the playing field for a team of one
• What happens to founders who wait
🎧 This episode is powered by WorldFirst, specialists in international business payments. If your business pays overseas suppliers or receives payments from abroad, those transaction fees can quickly add up.
As a Screw It Just DO It listener, you can get 50 international transactions completely fee free for 60 days.
👉 Create a free account and claim the offer at worldfirst.com/screwit
🎧 Listen to the full episode of Screw It Just DO It
🎟️ Join us at the Festival of Entrepreneurs, November 3–4 at NEC Birmingham
👉 www.festivalofentrepreneurs.co.uk
-
If you're buying or selling internationally, there's a good chance you're losing money - without realising it.
In this episode, Lawrence Bennett (UK Country Manager of WorldFirst) breaks down the hidden costs most founders overlook when scaling globally.
We cover:
- Why "convenience" is costing you margin
- The double conversion trap
- How FX impacts your bottom line
- What founders should actually be doing instead
If you're scaling internationally, this is something you need to understand early.
NOTE:
The views expressed in this podcast are those of the speakers and are provided for general informational purposes only. Nothing in this episode constitutes financial advice, investment advice, tax advice, or a recommendation to enter into any financial transaction.
Foreign exchange (FX) products, including forward contracts, involve risk. You should seek independent professional advice before entering into any FX transaction.
World First UK Limited is a UK registered limited company with company number 05022388 and is authorized by the Financial Conduct Authority ("FCA") as an Electronic Money Institution under the Electronic Money Regulations 2011 with FCA Firm Reference number 900508.
WORLDFIRST WEBSITE 👉 https://www.worldfirst.com/?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=screw_it_just_do_it&utm_content=lawrence_interview
🎧 This episode is powered by WorldFirst, specialists in international business payments. If your business pays overseas suppliers or receives payments from abroad, those transaction fees can quickly add up. As a Screw It Just DO It listener, you can get 50 international transactions completely fee free for 60 days.
👉 Create a free account and claim the offer at worldfirst.com/screwit
🎧 Listen to the full episode of Screw It Just DO It
🎟️ Join us at the Festival of Entrepreneurs, November 3-4 at NEC Birmingham
👉 www.festivalofentrepreneurs.co.uk
-
Kirk Miller spent five years as a plumber who hated every day of it.
He was in shape. He had the body. He looked like he had it together. Internally, he was miserable.
In 2010, he won the Men's Health cover model competition and used that moment as the proof he needed to jump. He quit with five hours of personal training booked, no car, and a borrowed work van to get around Coventry. As long as he could pay his bills, eat, and keep a roof over his head, he was going.
Twenty years later, Kirk runs Built To Last, a six-pillar performance coaching system used by founders, CEOs, and high-net-worth entrepreneurs who want to stop treating their health as an afterthought and start building it as a competitive advantage.
In this episode of Screw It Just DO It, Kirk and Alex unpack why the systems that worked in your twenties will not carry you through building a business, why willpower is not a strategy, and what two decades of coaching high performers has taught Kirk about the real cost of founders ignoring their health.
Key Takeaways:
- Why most founders are using outdated health systems built for a life they no longer live
- The three non-negotiables to schedule every week before anything else
- Why your state drives your decisions and what that costs you in business
- The difference between emotional confidence and the confidence tied to your bank balance
- What the most emotionally content and consistently wealthy entrepreneurs Kirk coaches all have in common
🎧 This episode is powered by WorldFirst, specialists in international business payments. If your business pays overseas suppliers or receives payments from abroad, those transaction fees can quickly add up. As a Screw It Just DO It listener, you can get 50 international transactions completely fee free for 60 days.
👉 Create a free account and claim the offer at worldfirst.com/screwit
🎧 Listen to the full episode of Screw It Just DO It
🎟️ Join us at the Festival of Entrepreneurs, November 3-4 at NEC Birmingham
👉 www.festivalofentrepreneurs.co.uk
-
Thousands of people were already building their own version.
No brand. No product. No one selling to them.
She saw it… and decided to build anyway.
In this Bite-Sized episode of Screw It Just DO It, Laura Fullerton talks about the Screw It Just DO It moment that led her to build a hardware and software business from scratch, why fundraising nearly broke her last year, and the one thing she believes every founder gets wrong before they get it right.
We also get into what it actually costs to build a company, why quitting is not even an option for a certain type of founder, and why your network is the only asset that compounds in the same way as your ambition.
Key Takeaways:
Why markets often exist before businesses do
The importance of noticing behaviour, not ideas
What early-stage building actually demands mentally
Why network becomes leverage under pressure
🎧 This episode is powered by WorldFirst, specialists in international business payments. If your business pays overseas suppliers or receives payments from abroad, those transaction fees can quickly add up.
As a Screw It Just DO It listener, you can get 50 international transactions completely fee free for 60 days.
👉 Create a free account and claim the offer at worldfirst.com/screwit
🎧 Don’t miss a moment of entrepreneurial insight. Subscribe to Screw It Just DO It wherever you get your podcasts.
🎟️ Join us at the Festival of Entrepreneurs, November 3–4 at NEC Birmingham
👉 www.festivalofentrepreneurs.co.uk
-
Dr Guy Sandleowsky spent six years becoming a vet. He was seeing 20 to 30 pets a day. He was heading toward a specialist surgery career. And he chose to walk away.
Not because it was not working. Because it was not enough. He wanted to help hundreds of thousands of animals, not dozens. And he believed a business could get him there.
In this episode of Screw It Just DO It, Guy explains how he left a clinical career everyone around him supported to do an MBA no one thought he needed, how he co-founded Omni using novel proteins to address a dog health crisis most owners do not know exists, and what happened when he and his co-founder walked into Dragons' Den with a dog that immediately ate six portions and was sick on camera.
Key Takeaways:
- Why the moment that almost stopped him was not failure but fear of wasted sacrifice
- How 91% approval from raw-meat-feeding dog owners proved the product before a single ad was spent
- What Stephen Bartlett and Deborah Meaden actually said when the cameras stopped rolling
- Why Guy has refused to hide who he is despite losing investment deals because of it
- The practical advice for anyone sitting on a business idea while still in a job
🎧 This episode is powered by WorldFirst, specialists in international business payments. If your business pays overseas suppliers or receives payments from abroad, those transaction fees can quickly add up. As a Screw It Just DO It listener, you can get 50 international transactions completely fee free for 60 days.
👉 Create a free account and claim the offer at worldfirst.com/screwit
🎧 Don't miss a moment of entrepreneurial insight. Subscribe to Screw It Just DO It wherever you get your podcasts.
🔥 If you're serious about growing your business, join us at the Festival of Entrepreneurs, 3-4 November 2026 at the NEC Birmingham.
👉 Subscribe now and be part of the movement.
- Show more