The B Team Podcast

Best of B Team: Corporate Exit Strategy: Creating a Community Woodworking Shop

11 min · 2 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio Best of B Team: Corporate Exit Strategy: Creating a Community Woodworking Shop

Descripción

Not having access to the right tools kills the desire to build things. As more people look for physical hobbies to step away from their screens, the high cost and massive space required for a personal shop stop them dead in their tracks. We sit down with Charley Preston from The Workbench Collective to discuss how he is solving this exact problem by building a shared community maker space right here in Northwest Arkansas. We get into the logistics of starting a membership based woodshop and making the difficult leap from white collar corporate life back to a true trade. The conversation covers navigating liability waivers, structuring classes for adults versus kids, and transitioning a homeschool side project into a physical brick and mortar business. Charley explains his core philosophy that allowing people to take managed risks with power tools builds a level of confidence that carries over into every other aspect of their daily lives. Running a community space brings significant challenges regarding overhead costs and managing varying customer expectations. Keeping adults on track when they show up with highly complex Pinterest ideas is much harder than teaching straightforward skills to children. You will walk away from this conversation with a clear understanding of how to pivot a business model when the local market demands something slightly different than your original vision. If you care about local business development, community building, and hands on craftsmanship, you will get a lot from this episode. Make sure to subscribe to the channel and share this video with anyone interested in creating physical products or escaping the corporate grind. What is a hands on skill you have always wanted to learn but never had the space to practice? -- Chapters: 0:00 Welcome and Bourbon Introduction 1:07 Escaping Corporate Life 2:39 Launching a Homeschool Side Hustle 5:17 Relocating to Arkansas 7:53 Custom Gifts and Community Building 9:15 Evolving the Shared Woodshop Model -- Join us every Thursday at 10 AM for all things Bentonville, Business and Bourbon! Join the community: Instagram: @thebteampod Facebook: @The B Team Podcast  TikTok: @bteampod https://www.bteampodcast.com/

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132 episodios

episode Best of B Team: Corporate Exit Strategy: Creating a Community Woodworking Shop artwork

Best of B Team: Corporate Exit Strategy: Creating a Community Woodworking Shop

Not having access to the right tools kills the desire to build things. As more people look for physical hobbies to step away from their screens, the high cost and massive space required for a personal shop stop them dead in their tracks. We sit down with Charley Preston from The Workbench Collective to discuss how he is solving this exact problem by building a shared community maker space right here in Northwest Arkansas. We get into the logistics of starting a membership based woodshop and making the difficult leap from white collar corporate life back to a true trade. The conversation covers navigating liability waivers, structuring classes for adults versus kids, and transitioning a homeschool side project into a physical brick and mortar business. Charley explains his core philosophy that allowing people to take managed risks with power tools builds a level of confidence that carries over into every other aspect of their daily lives. Running a community space brings significant challenges regarding overhead costs and managing varying customer expectations. Keeping adults on track when they show up with highly complex Pinterest ideas is much harder than teaching straightforward skills to children. You will walk away from this conversation with a clear understanding of how to pivot a business model when the local market demands something slightly different than your original vision. If you care about local business development, community building, and hands on craftsmanship, you will get a lot from this episode. Make sure to subscribe to the channel and share this video with anyone interested in creating physical products or escaping the corporate grind. What is a hands on skill you have always wanted to learn but never had the space to practice? -- Chapters: 0:00 Welcome and Bourbon Introduction 1:07 Escaping Corporate Life 2:39 Launching a Homeschool Side Hustle 5:17 Relocating to Arkansas 7:53 Custom Gifts and Community Building 9:15 Evolving the Shared Woodshop Model -- Join us every Thursday at 10 AM for all things Bentonville, Business and Bourbon! Join the community: Instagram: @thebteampod Facebook: @The B Team Podcast  TikTok: @bteampod https://www.bteampodcast.com/

2 de jul de 202611 min
episode Ep. 110 - Pure Gelato Mastery: Bringing Paris to Northwest Arkansas artwork

Ep. 110 - Pure Gelato Mastery: Bringing Paris to Northwest Arkansas

Bringing a high-profile international brand to Northwest Arkansas requires more than just capital; it demands an obsessive focus on product integrity, standard operating procedures, and local market education. In this episode, we sit down with Sofia Foyo, the entrepreneur behind the newly opened Amorino Gelato in Rogers, Arkansas, to uncover what it takes to launch a globally recognized brand in a rapidly expanding culinary market. We get into the swervy transition from a career in finance with Ernst and Young to the daily realities of frontline hospitality ownership. Sofia Foyo walks us through the tactical substance of managing supply chain logistics for raw ingredients imported straight from Europe, the precise technical differences between churning standard ice cream and dense, low-overrun gelato, and the structural challenge of establishing a premium "third space" in a high-traffic retail development like the Pinnacle Promenade. We also break down the brand’s signature artistic presentation, seasonal flavor rotations like litchi rose, and why managing global quality standards leaves zero room for corner-cutting. The hard reality of retail food service is that luxury presentation requires exhausting logistical scaffolding. Behind the beautiful rose-shaped cones and handcrafted macarons lies the constant management of deep-freeze shipping chains, razor-thin labor shifts, and the administrative burden of back-office payroll. Viewers will walk away with a clear blueprint of how international franchise models execute market adaptation, a gritty reminder that owners must be willing to log shifts behind the counter themselves, and a system for evaluating premium franchise concepts. If you care about local business scaling, hospitality supply chains, and intentional community development, you’ll get a lot from this conversation. Subscribe to the channel and share this episode with an aspiring founder who needs a dose of operational reality. What is the biggest operational hurdle you think you would face when transitioning from a corporate career to brick-and-mortar hospitality? Let us know in the comments.

25 de jun de 202651 min
episode Best of B Team: Married Partners: Surviving Business with Your Spouse artwork

Best of B Team: Married Partners: Surviving Business with Your Spouse

Customer expectations dictate the survival of any local restaurant. Right now, retaining loyal staff and managing daily operations are the biggest hurdles for hospitality owners looking to stay afloat. Todd and Nickki Golden join us to share their direct insights from over three decades of building successful culinary staples. We get into the exact mechanics of operating a lasting restaurant brand. The conversation covers the logistics of interactive cooking demonstrations, the strategies for keeping an executive chef on payroll for 25 years, and the process of converting an abandoned commercial building into a thriving new location. Todd and Nickki also explain their core philosophy of working directly on the floor with their team to build the kind of loyalty that money alone cannot buy. Running a demanding operation with your spouse means the work talk never actually ends. It follows you home during the evening commute and sits with you on vacation while paying a mortgage for furniture you never see. You will walk away with a clear understanding of how to manage off menu customer requests while maintaining profit margins and why scaling a business requires giving up the idea of a traditional schedule. If you care about staff retention, hospitality logistics, and family business dynamics, you will get a lot from this. Make sure to subscribe to the podcast and share this episode with someone building their own local operation. What is the toughest customer expectation you have had to manage in your own business?

18 de jun de 20269 min
episode Ep. 109 - Stop Biohacking: Simple Tweaks For Real Health Results artwork

Ep. 109 - Stop Biohacking: Simple Tweaks For Real Health Results

The wellness industry loves to push standard PDF diet plans and overnight magic pills, but generalized advice leaves desperate people exhausted and stuck. When the standard medical framework offers few answers for chronic, complex issues, it is easy to assume you have hit a dead end. We sit down with Brynn Davello, a certified functional nutritional therapy practitioner and GAPS practitioner, to break down why true systemic healing requires a completely tailored blueprint rather than a generic routine. We get into the specific tactical shifts required to address chronic issues like autoimmune conditions, fertility struggles, and neurodevelopmental processing differences. Brynn shares her firsthand experience utilizing restrictive elimination protocols to manage severe symptoms, transitioning her family and clients away from highly processed options to dense whole foods. We dive into the concrete connection between blood sugar regulation and daily behavioral shifts, looking specifically at how metabolic crisis impacts focus and energy. You will learn the exact biological limitations of modern wellness trends, including how peptides function under the hood and why they fail long-term without baseline systemic changes. The process of restoring your health requires confronting a few irritating logistics, from learning how to properly source whole foods at the grocery store to tracking your exact intake with an honest food and mood journal. True recovery is built on highly personalized, compounding daily victories rather than intense lifestyle overhauls that you secretly hate. Viewer value comes from understanding that what builds massive energy for someone else might be causing inflammation in your own gut. If you care about metabolic health, long-term vitality, and actionable holistic nutrition, you’ll get a lot from this conversation. Subscribe and share to help us get these strategies to more founders and families looking for answers. Let us know in the comments: What is the single biggest habit shift you have made that actually improved your daily energy?

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episode Best of B Team: Serving the Streets: Turning the Barber Chair Into a Sanctuary artwork

Best of B Team: Serving the Streets: Turning the Barber Chair Into a Sanctuary

Humble beginnings are not an excuse to stay small; they are the foundation for long term business growth. In an economy where industries pivot overnight and competition can blind you to your own progress, staying focused on your lane is the ultimate advantage. Hosts Josh Saffron and Pat Mars sit down with Mike Shelton to dissect his path from working out of the back of a house to establishing a respected business presence. We get into the specific tactical decisions it takes to survive when the market shifts beneath your feet. The discussion covers scaling up from a backyard setup to a busy commercial location, navigating the sudden government shutdowns of 2020, and the shift from selling physical CDs on tour to learning professional barbering. Mike Shelton shares his unique philosophy that the customer chooses the business based on the vibe and relationship rather than proximity, rendering standard local rivalries completely irrelevant. Stepping away from a 15 year career with no college degree to build a completely new enterprise requires serious grit and a willingness to learn from scratch. Real success means adjusting to technological shifts like the death of physical media, enduring tight financial realities, and choosing to serve your community daily. True operators understand that treating people with genuine respect in a shared space will outperform aggressive marketing tactics every single time.

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