From Lemonade to $10m in Fitness Products with Paul Jackson
Manage episode 414319468 series 3178749
Paul Jackson from Animalhouse Fitness discusses Monkey Feet, which allows users to lift dumbbells with their feet. He talks about the other products they sell, their team structure, and their approach to outsourcing.
Paul shares his entrepreneurial journey, starting from selling lemonade as a child to working at an engineering firm and running his own clothing company, The Stoke Company. He highlights the lessons learned from these experiences and how they have influenced his work at Animalhouse Fitness.
The conversation explores the importance of taking risks, learning from failures, and having the grit to persevere in entrepreneurship. It emphasizes the need to get your reps in, try different business ideas, and learn from each experience. Luck and opportunity play a role in success, but preparation and taking advantage of opportunities are equally important.
The conversation also touches on the prototyping stage and the value of customer feedback. Starting a business as a side hustle and gradually transitioning to full-time is a common approach. The conversation concludes with a discussion on the challenges of scaling a business and the need to delegate and remove bottlenecks.
Takeaways
- Animal House Fitness is a company that sells fitness products, with their main product being Monkey Feet, which allows users to lift dumbbells with their feet.
- They have a small team and outsource various tasks to agencies, such as email marketing, Google ads, influencer seeding, and bookkeeping.
- Paul Jackson's entrepreneurial journey started with selling lemonade as a child and progressed to working at an engineering firm and running his own clothing company, The Stoke Company.
- Lessons learned from previous ventures, such as product design, branding, and social media marketing, have influenced Paul's work at Animal House Fitness.
- The trend of manufacturing returning to the US is slowly emerging, but there are still challenges such as language barriers and cash flow constraints that make outsourcing to China more viable for many businesses. Take risks and try different business ideas to find success.
- Learn from failures and use those learnings to improve future ventures.
- Luck and opportunity are important, but preparation and taking advantage of opportunities are equally crucial.
- Prototype and gather customer feedback to refine your product or service.
- Starting a business as a side hustle allows for gradual growth and transition to full-time.
- Delegating and removing bottlenecks are essential for scaling a business.
Resources
25 episodes