Founders Journey Podcast

Shuvam Bhaumik on Immigrant Roots Career Risk and Real World Skills

2 h 4 min · 1 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Shuvam Bhaumik on Immigrant Roots Career Risk and Real World Skills

Descripción

We sat down with Shuvam Bhaumik to trace the early forces that shaped his career path. He grew up in Brooklyn between Borough Park and Bay Ridge. So, he learned to adapt early. At first, he lived inside a largely Hasidic Jewish neighborhood. Later, he moved into a more mixed part of Brooklyn. Because of that shift, he saw how culture, community, and identity can shape a person. He also shared how his parents came from India, moved through Libya, and built a life in New York. They didn’t frame their story as struggle. Instead, they saw America as an upgrade. That view shaped how he thinks about gratitude, work, and a steady career path. How Bhaumik found direction School didn’t grab him in the usual way, yet curiosity always did. He said he liked learning, but not the way schools taught it. Then golf changed his career path in an unexpected way. A high school teacher pulled him onto the golf team, and that opened a door. Soon after, a business class called Virtual Enterprise changed how he saw work. He learned that business could offer more than a standard job. He could create, lead, sell, and think for himself. That mattered. He earned a golf scholarship to Long Island University, but the experience felt rigid. So, he started questioning whether that career path still fit. Eventually, a CEO in finance offered him a chance to work. He took it, even though the move came with risk, tension, and family fallout. What Shuvam learned at work Once he entered finance, the classroom gave way to real experience. He learned sales, cold calling, product knowledge, and how to read people. As a result, his career path became practical and self-directed. He moved from New York to the Boston area and kept building in wealth management. He later joined Morgan Stanley, yet he realized the big corporate structure limited his voice. Meanwhile, golf kept opening relationships and opportunities. That led him toward a family office role with an international client. Throughout the conversation, one theme stayed clear. Grades matter, but only to a point. He argued that schools should teach conflict resolution, communication, and sales with more urgency. Those skills shape a stronger career path because they prepare people for real work. That final point gives this episode its edge. We’re not just talking about jobs. We’re talking about judgment, resilience, and how people build a useful career path over time. Chapters 00:00 Why GPA matters less than real world skills 00:01:13 Growing up in Borough Park and Bay Ridge 00:09:13 Immigrant parents and the move from India 00:16:30 What neighbors and community used to mean 00:23:17 School struggles and an early suspension story 00:27:20 How golf changed his future in high school 00:31:32 The business class that shaped his direction 00:39:30 Golf scholarship lessons and leaving college 00:48:02 When his parents learned he left school 00:55:43 Why schools should teach sales and conflict skills

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29 episodios

episode Kobi Simmat on Wealth Creation Delegation and Business Ownership artwork

Kobi Simmat on Wealth Creation Delegation and Business Ownership

Kobi grew up in Sydney around national parks, beaches, boats, and building sites. So, work never sat in a separate box from life. His father ran an architecture and construction business, and the family often joined site visits on weekends and holidays. That early exposure shaped how he saw business, responsibility, and momentum. He didn’t describe entrepreneurship as glamorous. Instead, he saw it as a path to a more active and intentional life. That view frames the whole conversation around wealth creation. Why Kobi Simmat values ownership He explains that many people wait to feel inspired before they move. However, he believes people can learn to become passionate through action. He also argues that earning years are limited, so building resources for your family can’t stay optional. That idea drives his view of wealth creation. He talks openly about family roles, duty, and the need to prepare the next generation. As a result, this episode becomes less about status and more about stewardship. Kobi also shares how school never fit the way he learned. He showed up, paid attention, and still struggled in a traditional classroom. Then everything changed in technical college, where discussion replaced rote repetition. From there, he became a top student and found a learning style that worked. So, one of the clearest lessons here is simple. You still need education, but you must learn how to learn. The lesson Kobi Simmat would pass on Later, he walks through the business he built in construction consulting. His company helped contractors meet government standards in safety, quality, environment, and risk. The model created recurring revenue, long client retention, and a clear service structure. Yet the deeper lesson isn’t only about systems. It’s about leaving the technician role before it traps you. That shift matters because wealth creation gets harder when the owner stays buried in delivery. He tells a great story about finding a book in an airport called How to Grow Your Business by Taking Three Months Off. That idea pushed him to document work, delegate tasks, and step away. Then he actually left for South America for three months. Even during the global financial crisis, the business kept moving because the team had ownership. So, the episode turns delegation into a practical tool for wealth creation, not a soft leadership idea. By the end, Kobi makes a strong distinction between being a technician, a coach, and a shareholder. He believes too many founders stay attached to being the best operator. However, real progress starts when they train others, let people make small mistakes, and think like owners. That transition is central to wealth creation because it creates space, leverage, and long term value. We also hear how he brought forward years of earnings by selling his company, and why that sale fit his larger plan for family wealth, learning, and responsibility. Chapters 00:00 The book that changed how he ran business 00:00:57 Meet Kobi Simmat from Australia 00:02:31 Growing up with an entrepreneur father 00:05:21 Why work shaped every family holiday 00:10:07 His 5 AM routine and drive to keep moving 00:12:14 Why founders must build family wealth early 00:24:18 How he teaches business books to his son 00:26:05 Why school failed and discussion helped him learn 00:33:02 Choosing construction and business ownership 00:46:01 How delegation helped him take three months off

28 de may de 20261 h 39 min
episode Jonathan Aberman on Resilience Creativity and Building Through Change artwork

Jonathan Aberman on Resilience Creativity and Building Through Change

We sat down with Jonathan Aberman to trace the roots of his entrepreneurial mindset. He shares how an unstructured childhood in Philadelphia shaped the way he thinks, creates, and adapts. That early freedom became the foundation for entrepreneurial resilience. He also reflects on growing up in a multicultural city, around artists, small business owners, and family instability. Because of that mix, he learned to read people, handle ambiguity, and keep moving. Those lessons still define his entrepreneurial resilience today. Aberman on real resilience Johnathan challenges the idea that comfort builds capable people. Instead, he argues that resilience comes from adversity, friction, and the need to solve problems without a script. So this part of the conversation turns entrepreneurial resilience into something practical for parents, educators, and founders. He talks about school, creativity, and why too much structure can limit independent thinking. Then he explains why many young people struggle with setbacks, even when they have talent. However, he also believes that resilience can be taught through expectations, accountability, and real experience. What Johnathan learned by building Later, we move into his career, from law and banking to venture capital and company building. He explains the push and pull that led him away from prestige and toward ownership. That shift reveals how entrepreneurial resilience grows when people choose autonomy over comfort. He also breaks down how he evaluates founders, why self awareness matters, and what he looks for before backing an idea. For him, great businesses rarely start polished. Instead, they evolve through small wins, honest feedback, and teams that can adapt under pressure. The episode also explores AI, originality, and the risk of becoming passive in a world built for convenience. Johnathan argues that tools can help, yet they can also flatten thinking. So the people who stand out will pair technology with judgment, toughness, and entrepreneurial resilience. This conversation offers a sharp look at creativity, purpose, investing, and the mindset behind building anything meaningful. We think it will resonate with founders, operators, parents, and anyone facing a hard pivot. It’s a thoughtful reminder that growth starts when comfort ends. Chapters 00:00 Podcast intro and episode setup 01:08 Jonathan Aberman on growing up in Philadelphia 07:28 Family business roots and early entrepreneurial exposure 09:12 Creativity school and an unstructured childhood 12:39 Why kids need grit and less overprotection 18:05 AI originality and the future of human value 22:23 First jobs autonomy and learning to work early 27:27 Leaving law to build an entrepreneurial life 44:18 How dealmakers manage ambiguity and momentum 50:52 What investors really look for in founders

21 de may de 20261 h 13 min
episode Allen Kopelman on transparent pricing sales and building through hard work artwork

Allen Kopelman on transparent pricing sales and building through hard work

We sat down with Allen Kopelman to trace a path shaped by family business, restaurant kitchens, and long-term entrepreneurship. Early on, he grew up around clothing stores, factory work, and old-school retail. As a result, he learned cash handling, customer service, and negotiation before adulthood. That background still shapes how he sees transparent pricing today. He explains how his parents influenced his work ethic and judgment. His mother showed him how to negotiate. Meanwhile, his father taught him to treat every job like it belongs to your family. That lesson stayed with him through every chapter. It also became the basis for his view of transparent pricing. From kitchens to business ownership with Allen Before payments, Allen built a serious career in hospitality. He worked in restaurants, entered culinary training, and moved through demanding hotel kitchens. Then he became an executive chef before age thirty. Along the way, he learned menu costing, purchasing, operations, and how to stay calm under pressure. Later, he opened his own restaurant in Boca Raton. However, the next chapter arrived when promises from employers stopped matching reality. That pushed him to explore merchant services. Because he already knew the pain points of processing payments, he saw the business clearly. He didn’t want confusing terms or surprise changes. Instead, he wanted transparent pricing that owners could actually understand. Allen Kopelman on sales trust and long term resilience Allen also makes a strong case for sales as a core business skill. He says entrepreneurs can’t avoid it. You need to speak clearly, build trust, and ask for business directly. He credits Dale Carnegie with helping him find his voice. That growth helped him lead, present, and sell with more confidence. He also shares what 25 years in payments taught him. Partnerships matter. Reputation matters. And fairness matters most when problems show up. He wants clients to know the fees, the options, and the risks before they sign. That commitment to transparent pricing reflects how he wants to be treated himself. Toward the end, he gives practical advice for younger entrepreneurs. Keep overhead low. Learn sales early. Build real skills that solve real problems. Also, stay organized and show up ready to work. He believes hard work still gets noticed, especially when it comes with consistency. In the end, this conversation comes back to transparent pricing, useful skills, and a mindset built for the long run. More from Allen Kopelman https://allenkopelman.com/ Chapters 00:00 Welcome to Founders Journey 01:07 Allen Kopelman on growing up in family business 03:56 How credit card processing worked in retail 07:15 Moving to Atlanta and learning new trades 12:45 Bad student strong business instincts 18:11 Inflation wages and today’s cost pressures 25:28 Entering hospitality and chef training 33:19 Why Allen left restaurants for payments 39:00 Sales trust and transparent pricing 51:56 Advice for young entrepreneurs today

14 de may de 202657 min
episode Darren Tompkins on military service business growth and better balance artwork

Darren Tompkins on military service business growth and better balance

We sit down with Darren Tompkins to trace the path from Salem, Virginia, to military service, college, and business ownership. He talks about growing up with financial strain, a painful divorce, and the pressure that shaped his early years. Yet he also explains how sports, movies, comics, and music gave him structure and relief. That context matters, because it laid the groundwork for his entrepreneur mindset. What Darren learned from service Darren walks us through his Army years, including deployments, ROTC, and the leadership pressure that came with returning to school later than most classmates. He explains why military life taught him discipline, but also why it didn’t answer every long term question. Instead, it gave him a stronger view of responsibility, mentorship, and risk. As a result, his entrepreneur mindset grew from real experience, not theory. Tompkins on work that fits real life After college, Darren moved through hard jobs, technical work, and oil and gas before he found recruiting. He shares why he hated working for the wrong people, even when the pay was strong. Then he explains how he built a lean company around relationships, lower overhead, and a virtual team. That approach reflects his entrepreneur mindset, because he wanted freedom, better service, and more control over his time. Lessons from failure and leadership This conversation also gets practical. Darren talks about hiring mistakes, slow decisions, and the cost of keeping the wrong person too long. He makes a clear point that failure matters more when it teaches you what to fix next. In other words, his entrepreneur mindset depends on action, honest review, and the willingness to adjust fast. Building a balanced life with Darren We also get into family, fitness, and creative work. Darren shares how he structures his days around his kids, school drop offs, team calls, service work, and time for writing. He wants success, but he also wants balance, community, and room for creativity. That’s why his entrepreneur mindset goes beyond revenue and focuses on a life he actually wants to live. You’ll hear lessons on resilience, leadership, delegation, physical health, and staying useful as life changes. Moreover, Darren makes a strong case for treating people well, whether they’re clients, employees, or virtual professionals. By the end, you’ll understand how he connects service, work, and family into one clear path. If you’re building something of your own, this episode offers a grounded look at what lasts. More from Darren Tompkins LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/darren-tompkins-21b86814/ Website: https://vaderreyrecruiting.com/ Chapters 00:00 Welcome and Darren Tompkins intro 05:25 Family life divorce and early hardship 09:02 School struggles and choosing the Army 13:08 Pop culture values and identity 18:48 Sports leadership and confidence 23:28 Military service ROTC and mentorship 32:18 Early career and move to Houston 34:07 Why Darren became an entrepreneur 37:39 Building a lean recruiting business 46:57 Routine fitness failure and life lessons

7 de may de 20261 h 1 min
episode Shuvam Bhaumik on Immigrant Roots Career Risk and Real World Skills artwork

Shuvam Bhaumik on Immigrant Roots Career Risk and Real World Skills

We sat down with Shuvam Bhaumik to trace the early forces that shaped his career path. He grew up in Brooklyn between Borough Park and Bay Ridge. So, he learned to adapt early. At first, he lived inside a largely Hasidic Jewish neighborhood. Later, he moved into a more mixed part of Brooklyn. Because of that shift, he saw how culture, community, and identity can shape a person. He also shared how his parents came from India, moved through Libya, and built a life in New York. They didn’t frame their story as struggle. Instead, they saw America as an upgrade. That view shaped how he thinks about gratitude, work, and a steady career path. How Bhaumik found direction School didn’t grab him in the usual way, yet curiosity always did. He said he liked learning, but not the way schools taught it. Then golf changed his career path in an unexpected way. A high school teacher pulled him onto the golf team, and that opened a door. Soon after, a business class called Virtual Enterprise changed how he saw work. He learned that business could offer more than a standard job. He could create, lead, sell, and think for himself. That mattered. He earned a golf scholarship to Long Island University, but the experience felt rigid. So, he started questioning whether that career path still fit. Eventually, a CEO in finance offered him a chance to work. He took it, even though the move came with risk, tension, and family fallout. What Shuvam learned at work Once he entered finance, the classroom gave way to real experience. He learned sales, cold calling, product knowledge, and how to read people. As a result, his career path became practical and self-directed. He moved from New York to the Boston area and kept building in wealth management. He later joined Morgan Stanley, yet he realized the big corporate structure limited his voice. Meanwhile, golf kept opening relationships and opportunities. That led him toward a family office role with an international client. Throughout the conversation, one theme stayed clear. Grades matter, but only to a point. He argued that schools should teach conflict resolution, communication, and sales with more urgency. Those skills shape a stronger career path because they prepare people for real work. That final point gives this episode its edge. We’re not just talking about jobs. We’re talking about judgment, resilience, and how people build a useful career path over time. Chapters 00:00 Why GPA matters less than real world skills 00:01:13 Growing up in Borough Park and Bay Ridge 00:09:13 Immigrant parents and the move from India 00:16:30 What neighbors and community used to mean 00:23:17 School struggles and an early suspension story 00:27:20 How golf changed his future in high school 00:31:32 The business class that shaped his direction 00:39:30 Golf scholarship lessons and leaving college 00:48:02 When his parents learned he left school 00:55:43 Why schools should teach sales and conflict skills

1 de may de 20262 h 4 min