Build It. They’ll Come.
by Helen Dalley
July 20, 2020 5:00 am
Candid interviews with successful Self-starters. On Build It. They’ll Come, you’ll hear from some amazing Australian entrepreneurs who bet big to build great businesses. Journalist Helen Dalley interviews business innovators and visionaries on how they turned their lightbulb idea into a viable, sustainable enterprise. This podcast is about the human face behind taking a simple idea and turning it into a business or movement. It’s the beating heart behind what it takes to build an empire, from concept to execution, and how they actually achieve it. Fuelled by blind faith and hard slog, how they transform their dream idea into concrete reality. Canva co-founder Cameron Adams reveals how the Canva teams pulled out all stops in the past 12 months to fuel massive growth, leaping from serving individuals’ design needs, to servicing much larger corporates’ needs, and how that’s paying off. While much of Canva’s product is still free, Canva Pro team has launched a new tool giving paying customers access to some 60 million different photos and illustrations, up from just 5 million available previously. Cameron also reveals how translating their online offering into more than 100 languages has fed strong growth in non-English speaking markets, like Brazil and Russia. He talks about the lessons he learned at Google working on a secretive project with the legendary Lars Rasmussen, that he brought to Canva; and how his net worth is a “real opportunity” to help the world, going towards needy projects, rather than simply buying “more stuff”. The entrepreneurial journey of this home-grown emerging business leader is both humble and inspiring, and well worth a listen.
Recent Episodes
Online design co. Canva’s Cameron Adams focuses on fixing problems for customers, not on monetary returns Canva’s achieved; & how founders/staff try to live their stated corporate Value “to be a force for good”, through Canva philanthropy.
4 years agoCanva Co-founder Cameron Adams on building the online design tool company, becoming a billionaire with Canva’s recent $8.7billion valuation & the extraordinary challenges growing from 3 to 1,000 employees in less than 8yrs.
4 years agoFlight Centre co-founder 'Skroo' Turner, on being the accidental entrepreneur, dumping his professional career at 24, to start cheap double-decker bus tours through Europe to Afghanistan, mainly to have fun. It became his 1st business empire.
4 years agoFlight Centre co-founder & CEO Graham "Skroo" Turner on shifting into survival mode, to battle the Covid19 crisis decimating the travel sector. How tough decisions averted a catastrophe for the global empire he built 38 yrs ago & how it survives.
4 years agoCarman's Muesli CEO and food entrepreneur Carolyn Creswell on spending $1,000 to buy 1/2share of a tiny mum & dad muesli business about to fold and building it into a global brand selling 54 different product lines.
4 years agoFour Pillars craft Gin entrepreneur Stuart Gregor & co-founders, sold the 1st batch of 250 bottles of their Yarra Valley-based gin on crowdfunder Pozible in 2013, selling out in 3 days. HOW they transformed it into a Gin "gold mine" within 6 years.
4 years agoCOVID-19 SPECIAL, from Piacenza, Northern Italy, one of the world's worst hit regions, young Dr Daniela Petraglia on these heart-breaking, stressful past 9 weeks trying to save patients in the grip of virus onslaught, and why Italy's official death number
4 years agoCOVID-19 SPECIAL, child infectious diseases specialist Professor David Isaacs, on the risks facing Australia as we ease lockdown, & HOW we might just avoid a major 2nd wave of infections.
4 years agoCOVID-19 SPECIAL, Grey Innovation's Jefferson Harcourt, on the massive Aussie manufacturing effort to build right here in Australia vital Ventilators to help patients fight the Covid-19 battle, & build up our National Medical Stockpile
5 years agoCOVID-19 SPECIAL, from the USA, the Covid-19 global epicentre, Dr Anna O'Kelly on how young doctors like her on the frontline are experiencing the enormous challenges of working in the hastily established "surge" ICU, at one of Boston's busiest hospitals,
5 years ago