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From Rap Battles to Boardrooms: The Road to 2 Grammys and 15 Investments - Djo Moupondo

23 min · 5 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio From Rap Battles to Boardrooms: The Road to 2 Grammys and 15 Investments - Djo Moupondo

Descripción

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2555398/fan_mail/new] Djo Moupondo shares his journey from rapper to entrepreneur, investor, and business builder across multiple continents. Starting in the music industry, Djo learned early lessons about creativity, conviction, and spotting talent, skills that would later help him build businesses, invest in founders, and contribute to Grammy-winning success as a music publisher. Throughout the conversation, Djo reflects on the realities of entrepreneurship, including the moments when he questioned whether the path was worth it. Despite the challenges, he always found himself drawn back to the freedom, creativity, and problem-solving that entrepreneurship offers. He discusses why he still believes in trust, intuition, and the power of a handshake, and why many of his best decisions began with a gut feeling rather than a spreadsheet. Djo also shares why Harvard Business School's OPM [https://www.exed.hbs.edu/owner-president-management] program became one of the best investments of his life, giving him ownership-focused frameworks, a global community of entrepreneurs, and a deeper understanding of ecosystem thinking. One of his biggest insights came from studying how companies like Disney create powerful networks where every part strengthens the whole, a concept he now applies across his investments and ventures. The conversation explores the importance of lifelong learning, staying humble regardless of success, and focusing on what truly matters. From rap battles to boardrooms, Djo's story is ultimately about recognizing potential - in people, businesses, and yourself - and having the courage to act on it before the rest of the world sees it. Here are the Top 10 Takeaways from the conversation: 1. The greatest opportunities come from seeing potential before it becomes obvious to everyone else. 2. Trust your intuition, but build it through years of experience and observation. 3. The best entrepreneurs fall in love with a vision long before the market validates it. 4. Entrepreneurship is ultimately the art of solving problems that others avoid. 5. Periods of doubt are normal, but they shouldn't distract you from what you're built to do. 6. There is no work-life balance. There is only life, and your job is to prioritize it intentionally. 7. Being fully present matters more than trying to perfectly divide your time. 8. The strongest businesses are ecosystems where every part creates value for the others. 9. The moment you stop learning is the moment your growth begins to slow. 10. Long-term success depends as much on your relationships and choices in life as it does on your work. Books: * The Alchemist [https://a.co/d/0802kOVZ]

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episode Building With Family: Our Greatest Competitive Advantage - Minh Wilson artwork

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episode From Rap Battles to Boardrooms: The Road to 2 Grammys and 15 Investments - Djo Moupondo artwork

From Rap Battles to Boardrooms: The Road to 2 Grammys and 15 Investments - Djo Moupondo

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2555398/fan_mail/new] Djo Moupondo shares his journey from rapper to entrepreneur, investor, and business builder across multiple continents. Starting in the music industry, Djo learned early lessons about creativity, conviction, and spotting talent, skills that would later help him build businesses, invest in founders, and contribute to Grammy-winning success as a music publisher. Throughout the conversation, Djo reflects on the realities of entrepreneurship, including the moments when he questioned whether the path was worth it. Despite the challenges, he always found himself drawn back to the freedom, creativity, and problem-solving that entrepreneurship offers. He discusses why he still believes in trust, intuition, and the power of a handshake, and why many of his best decisions began with a gut feeling rather than a spreadsheet. Djo also shares why Harvard Business School's OPM [https://www.exed.hbs.edu/owner-president-management] program became one of the best investments of his life, giving him ownership-focused frameworks, a global community of entrepreneurs, and a deeper understanding of ecosystem thinking. One of his biggest insights came from studying how companies like Disney create powerful networks where every part strengthens the whole, a concept he now applies across his investments and ventures. The conversation explores the importance of lifelong learning, staying humble regardless of success, and focusing on what truly matters. From rap battles to boardrooms, Djo's story is ultimately about recognizing potential - in people, businesses, and yourself - and having the courage to act on it before the rest of the world sees it. Here are the Top 10 Takeaways from the conversation: 1. The greatest opportunities come from seeing potential before it becomes obvious to everyone else. 2. Trust your intuition, but build it through years of experience and observation. 3. The best entrepreneurs fall in love with a vision long before the market validates it. 4. Entrepreneurship is ultimately the art of solving problems that others avoid. 5. Periods of doubt are normal, but they shouldn't distract you from what you're built to do. 6. There is no work-life balance. There is only life, and your job is to prioritize it intentionally. 7. Being fully present matters more than trying to perfectly divide your time. 8. The strongest businesses are ecosystems where every part creates value for the others. 9. The moment you stop learning is the moment your growth begins to slow. 10. Long-term success depends as much on your relationships and choices in life as it does on your work. Books: * The Alchemist [https://a.co/d/0802kOVZ]

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