How He Built a $8M BORING Business I’d Never Heard Of
David Heacock sits down with David Wu, founder of Joy Displays, to unpack how he went from $20,000 in savings to building an $8 million profitable business with just nine employees.
This is a conversation about far more than the money. It is about apprenticeship, timing, survival, and what happens when a founder reaches the point where staying small is no longer enough to reach the life or business they say they want.
David Wu spent four years learning the trade show booth industry before launching Joy Displays in 2019. He started with no backup plan, burned through cash early, and then got hit with a brutal twist of timing: just as the business was gaining traction and his wife joined full time, COVID shut down trade shows almost overnight. Orders disappeared, customers canceled, and survival became the only objective. The business pivoted into plexiglass during the pandemic, then eventually returned to its core trade show booth business as the market recovered.
Today, Joy Displays has grown into an $8 million revenue business with a very small team and more than $1 million in annual profit. But this episode is really about the next stage. What do you do when you have a successful, cash-generating business, but know that the habits that got you here are not the same habits that will get you where you say you want to go?
David and David talk through the tension between comfort and ambition, the psychology of staying small, the fear of taking on more complexity, and the difference between building a good lifestyle business versus building a larger long-term asset. They also discuss vertical integration, manufacturing, hiring, modeling risk before making capital investments, and why so many entrepreneurs misjudge the risks of investing in themselves.
This episode is for anyone who has built something real and now feels stuck between protecting what they have and betting on what they could become. It is also a sharp reminder that experience matters, that survival often requires painful pivots, and that real growth usually demands a higher tolerance for responsibility.
Topics covered include:
* Going from $20,000 in savings to $8 million in profitable revenue
* Starting a business in an industry you already understand
* Surviving COVID by pivoting into plexiglass
* Building a lean business with a very small team
* The tradeoff between comfort and ambition
* Why vertical integration may be the next step
* How to think about capital allocation and risk
* Hiring to solve problems you do not yet understand
* The difference between a lifestyle business and a scalable asset
* Why founders need a reason bigger than money