Podcast appearances and mentions of eve sleep

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Best podcasts about eve sleep

Latest podcast episodes about eve sleep

SoothingPod - Sleep Story for Grown Ups
Adam and Eve | Sleep Story for Grown Ups | Bible stories | Edutainment

SoothingPod - Sleep Story for Grown Ups

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2024 41:32


Drift off to a peaceful night's sleep with this retelling of the classic Biblical tale of Adam and Eve and The Garden of Eden. This edutainment bedtime story will gently lull you into sleep. 

Are you Sitting Uncomfortably? with Gemma Greaves
Cheryl Calverley - The Hustler With A Heart

Are you Sitting Uncomfortably? with Gemma Greaves

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2023 43:18


Cheryl Calverley is a marketing and business powerhouse.  She cut her teeth in Unilever, working on some of the UK's most iconic brands and went on to lead marketing roles in Birdseye and the AA. Never one to shy away from a challenge, Cheryl took the leap to general management as Chief Executive of Eve Sleep in May 2020.  With a passion to help others, Cheryl is now co-founder of her own start up, The Den, a first-of-its-kind social club giving teenagers a real life alternative to screens. In this episode of Are You Sitting Uncomfortably? host Gemma Greaves and Cheryl explore making uncomfortable leadership decisions, not conforming to business stereotypes, and why she wants teenagers to have real connections in a digital world.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Management Today's Leadership Lessons
How to lead a failing business

Management Today's Leadership Lessons

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2023 40:51


Cheryl Calverley was the CEO of Eve Sleep when it went into administration in October. In this episode, she gives a frank account of how she steered the business through its eight month decline, the key lessons she learnt along the way and how she coped with the heavy personal toll of failure. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The WARC Podcast
WARC talks putting theory into practice

The WARC Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2023 48:58


This week WARC talks putting theory into practice with Cheryl Calverley, former CEO at Eve Sleep and Tom Roach, VP of Brand Strategy at Jellyfish. There's no shortage of theory - but how do marketers take that theory and turn it into marketing plans, budget allocation and creative choices? Stay up-to-date with the latest marketing and advertising news with our free daily newsletter.

Secret Leaders
How 7 interviews changed my life - our 200th episode, with Dan Murray-Serter

Secret Leaders

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2022 58:06


This is Secret Leader's 200th episode! Over the last 5 years we've featured over 50 unicorn leaders and household names such as Monzo, Slack, Duolingo, Brewdog, Lastminute.com. In today's episode host Dan Murray-Serter takes listeners through the interviews that have had the biggest impact on him. Guests include host of Diary of a CEO, entrepreneur, and angel investor, Steven Bartlett; Co-Founder of Little Moons Vivien Wong on how they went viral during the pandemic; Eve Sleep Kuba Wieczorek on what it cost being one of the fastest UK companies to IPO ever; and Jo Malone talking about how leaving her company after her recovery from cancer was the biggest mistake of her life.  Listen to the full episodes here: Steven Bartlett, host of ‘Diary of a CEO' and entrepreneur  Lemonade Co-Founder Daniel Schreiber  Little Moons Co-Founder Vivien Wong Eve Sleep Co-Founder Kuba Wieczorek Fiverr Co-Founder Micha Kauffman  Trinny Woodall, Founder of Trinny London Jo Malone, Founder of Jo Malone innit :P Dan reflects on what those interviews have taught him: How to stay consistently true to your path and mission statement whilst not believing your own bullshit with Founder and Host of ‘Diary of a CEO' Steven Bartlett How to redefine an archaic industry by tapping into consumer psychology with Lemonade Founder Daniel Schreiber  How to handle the challenges of surprise growth in hard times with Vivien Wong from Little Moons The pitfalls of hypergrowth when you put the scaling your business ahead of your mental health (everything can fall like a house of cards),with Eve Sleep's Kuba Wieczorek How to avoid obsessing over the wrong things, with Fiverr Co-Founder Micha Kauffman  How to stay humble, be vulnerable and start again with Trinny Woodall How to build resilience and not be a victim of your greatest regrets, with Jo Malone    We'd love your feedback hello@secretleaders.com Sponsor links: evelyn.com/secretleaders oto.com/power (get 20% off with code secret) vorboss.com/secretleaders vanta.com/secretleaders

Wax Lyrical
Episode 2: PEOPLE - episode 2

Wax Lyrical

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2022 34:36


One of the main challenges you'll face as you scale your business is attracting and retaining the best people.  And that's the subject for episode two of our Scale Up Playbook. Wax/On's Mark Runacus and Harry Neale are joined by founders and leaders who generously share their own fascinating experiences of the people side of growing a business. We discuss your leadership role and your skills; how to make your strategy understandable and accessible by everyone in the company; support networks and mentors; making those big important senior hires; team-building and team-work; diversity and inclusion; and the vital ingredients of the very best scale-up culture.  Thanks to our podcast guests from Eve Sleep, Virgin Media O2, Bread and Jam, Double Dutch, Fitbakes, RealWork, Lucky Saint, Waken, YuLife, and Horseplay Ventures. +++++   Talk to us podcast@wearewaxon.com +++++ Leave us your review on iTunes. And please subscribe. +++++ www.wearewaxon.com   

Christmas Ambiences | White Noise | ASMR & Relaxation
Christmas Eve Sleep Ambience | Soft Holiday Music | Night Before Christmas

Christmas Ambiences | White Noise | ASMR & Relaxation

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2021 60:01


Sleep like a charm with this cozy and warming Christmas ambience. This soundscape comes with a crackling charcoal burning sound, and soft holiday jazz music in the background, carefully toned down to create a suitable environment for a deep, Christmas Eve sleep! Happy Holidays!

Marketing Week
This Much I Learned: Eve's Cheryl Calverley on her year as CEO

Marketing Week

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2021 16:37


In the latest episode of Marketing Week's podcast series, Eve Sleep's Cheryl Calverley discusses her year as CEO, what skills marketers need if they want to reach the top role and why building a culture of forgiveness is essential.

TIME FOR A RESET
TFAR - Episode 28 - What happens when you’re both CEO and CMO and you break marketing?

TIME FOR A RESET

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2021 45:34


In this episode, Paul chats to Cheryl Calverley, who last year was promoted from CMO at EveSleep to CEO (whilst retaining the CMO position). Cheryl has a strong background in business transformation having spent more than 15 years in marketing roles in companies like Unilever and AA and shares how her board level roles at the AA and EveSleep meant she was well versed in commercial, preparing her well for the elevation to CEO. Cheryl articulates beautifully how no business is entirely driven by one factor but are instead complex ecosystems, and why it is key to look at the whole mix and the intricacies of the market and the consumer and how they interact. Cheryl candidly shares how EveSleep came to a cross roads with more competition which led to marketing spend being paused and a questioning of everything from product to price and customer experience . She also tells listeners how competition is healthy in order to grow a new category and why it is better to be second in market. Lastly, the CEO of EveSleep shares why data is a huge differentiator in identifying where to be more effective, not just efficient. Lastly, as she looks forward, Cheryl tell us how experiential ecommerce and content marketing will increasingly come in to play as Eve Sleep looks to broaden in to a wellness brand.

Secret Leaders
After his startup IPOd in record time everything fell apart, with Eve Sleep co-founder Kuba Wieczorek

Secret Leaders

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2021 46:30


Founders dream of being early to market, garnering flattering press, watching their product fly off the shelves and IPOing in record time. For Kuba Wieczorek, Co-Founder and former Chief Marketing Officer of Eve Sleep, the dream became a reality. And then the wheels came off.Kuba founded DTC mattress company Eve Sleep in 2015 with his cousin Jas, and they quickly started experiencing explosive growth. Within just two years they’d raised £35 million and were valued at £140 million. To top it off, they IPOd in record breaking time. It was the stuff of fairytales. But the fairytale wasn’t to last. “About six months after Jas left I hit rock bottom as well. You know, really rock bottom, I realised that it was either my health and my family, or staying at Eve, so I made the right choice. I resigned.”In today’s episode, Kuba shares his journey with Eve, the effect it had on him and his mental health, and what he will do differently in the future. “I’ll be stronger with myself and not be seduced by crazy growth and money and promises of IPO and riches and all of that stuff. Authenticity, be authentic. If you know who you are, and you know the brand you're building, just stick to that.”We chat about:The meteoric rise of eve SleepThe fastest ever British retail floatThe toll of eve on his mental healthKnow what you’re buildingWant to receive our podcast on a weekly basis? Subscribe to our newsletter!

In The WORD Podcast
Did Eve Sleep With The Snake In The Garden???

In The WORD Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2021 40:04


In this podcast episode we answer the question: Did Eve Sleep With The Snake In The Garden? While doing so we also touch on some similarities between certain Scriptures and  what happened to Eve in the garden.

Wax Lyrical
Episode 54: Eve Sleep with Cheryl Calverley and Caroline Smith, on getting better sleep, sustainability, making the move from CMO to CEO, and creative in-housing.

Wax Lyrical

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2020 48:08


Wax/On’s Ben Hooper and Mark Runacus are joined by Eve Sleep CEO Cheryl Calverley and Creative Director Caroline Smith. Cheryl explains why it’s important that Eve Sleep is perceived as more than a mattress business and becomes a sleep wellness brand. Caroline tells us how in-housing works at Eve Sleep; and Cheryl talks about making the transition from CMO to CEO. Plus we unveil some new category insight from our friends at Human Theory and ask how a brand like Eve Sleep can authentically play a role in us getting better sleep, and what Eve Sleep is doing to become more sustainable. Favourite TV ads: https://youtu.be/ResTqd7LN8g https://youtu.be/JzBqc91C-Ig +++++ Talk to us podcast@wearewaxon.com +++++ Leave us your review on iTunes. And please subscribe. +++++ www.wearewaxon.com +++++ KEEP WELL AND STAY SAFE

More Than Mothering Podcast
Episode 27: Sleep and Mental Health with Angela from Nurture Eve Sleep

More Than Mothering Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 22, 2020 32:46


Angela is a sleep coach helping families getting more sleep without sleep training. We talk about how understanding child development and attachment can help families make decisions that feel natural and intuitive. We also touch on some of the societal issues and the need for better information and support. https://www.instagram.com/nurtureevesleep/ https://nurtureevesleep.com  Download Transcription

Dog 'n'  Bone
Calverley 'n' Smith

Dog 'n' Bone

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 30, 2020 36:38


On the latest episode of the Dog 'n' Bone, we speak to Cheryl Calverley, CEO of Eve Sleep, and Luke Smith, CEO and co-founder of digital marketing agency Croud. The pair discuss Cheryl's move from CMO to CEO, the nature of D2C marketing - and of course - their most embarrassing moments in business.

Ignoring The Ordinary | A podcast from Wiser with Tom Pattison
Ignoring the Ordinary | eve sleep, David Otton

Ignoring The Ordinary | A podcast from Wiser with Tom Pattison

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2019 32:49


This week, we sit down with David Otton, Head of Creative at eve sleep, a brand that has revolutionised the mattress market in the space of just five years. We talk about how to cause disruption in a crowded marketplace, sleep’s evolving role in today’s culture and what it means to develop content in the age of instant access. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/ignoringtheordinary/message

Retail Ramble
100th episode – an omnishambles celebration - Retail Ramble from Essential Retail - Episode 100

Retail Ramble

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2019 35:26


Essential Retail brings to you the 100th episode of the Retail Ramble with two very special guests: Cheryl Calverly, CMO at Eve Sleep, and Craig Crawford, former VP at Burberry. Along with regular host, Caroline Baldwin, they discuss the annoying buzzwords circulating the retail technology industry. Ever heard of “hindsighting”? Nope, us neither, until today… Got something you want to tell us about the Podcast? Want to join us? You can get in touch on Twitter via twitter.com/essretail, or directly with Caroline at twitter.com/cl_baldwin

Retail Ramble
Interview with Eve Sleep CEO & CMO - Retail Ramble from Essential Retail - Episode 90

Retail Ramble

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2019 19:40


Essential Retail chats with Eve Sleep’s new CEO and CMO to learn about the new strategic vision for the company and how it plans to use technology and marketing to stand out in a crowded market. Got something you want to tell us about the Podcast? Want to join us? You can get in touch on Twitter via twitter.com/essretail, or directly with Caroline at twitter.com/cl_baldwin

Start-up stories
"Raw Intellectual Horsepower" Luke Hakes

Start-up stories

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2019 37:41


In this weeks Invested Investor, podcast, we are pleased to introduce, former scientist, Luke Hakes. An accomplished deep technologies investor with numerous successes under his belt, including Magic Pony and Eve Sleep, to name just a couple. Luke is happy to talk to us about some of the failures he has experienced too, and gives us his practical advise on people, timing and gaining the right investors.  Luke is a talented, Invested investor and partner in Octopus Ventures, Chairman of the University of Manchester’s commercialisation company, UMI3, Director of The University of Manchester Global Leadership Board and an angel investor specialising in the AI and Genetics space.

2X eCommerce Podcast
SE3 EP53: Eve Sleep Grew 10X in 2-Years w/ Co-Founder Jas Bagniewski

2X eCommerce Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2018 53:04


Eve Sleep (formally Eve Mattress), is currently the UK’s #1 direct-to-consumer mattress and bedroom product brand. It was founded in October 2014 by Jas Bagniewski along with 4 other co-founders, James Fryer, Kuba Wieczorek, Felix Lobkowicz, Abid Ismail. Over Jas’ tenure as CEO, Eve Sleep 10X'd sales between 2015 to 2017 their revenue growing from £2.8M to £28M (US$3.8-$38).  This episode aims to flesh out exactly how they managed to grow a physical product brand so rapidly.    4 KEY FACTORS OF GROWTH   1: Strong brand and marketing in the UK - digital first, AdWords, Facebook, Retargeting and then offline display ads and eventually TV. 2: Internationalisation. We rolled out to a bunch of new markets in 2017, and we're in 15 markets now 3: New product development and non-mattress sales, which grew a lot - sleep-related products such as pillows and sheets and Bagniewski said 12% of sales now come from repeat customers. 4: Offline Retail distribution deals   Revenue growth: 2015 - £2.8M  2016 - £12M 2017 - £28M   ----------- SPONSORS: This episode is brought to you by: Klaviyo, the game-changing email automation tool specifically built for scaling eCommerce businesses. Klaviyo Boston Ecommerce Event Between September 13-14th, Boston, Massachusetts, is going to EXPLODE with eCommerce Marketing Insights. Klaviyo Boston is coming up in September — and it's the largest in-person gathering EVER of the Klaviyo community! With two days and more than 30 practical, substantive sessions to choose from, it's the no-fluff, no-BS ecommerce marketing conference you can't afford to miss. Get your ticket at klaviyo.com/boston  

Notorious Hustlers's Podcast
Episode 5: Jas Bagniewski – Underground Caves To The Best Selling Product On Groupon Ever

Notorious Hustlers's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2018 46:46


Jas was at Rocket Internet, and set up a few companies. He sold City Deal to Groupon and ran Zolando which was the biggest ecommerce company to come out of Europe. Groupon was focussed on services, so Jas decided to look at high margin products that could be sourced locally and they done a mattress deal on Groupon. From idea to launch, they made a website, went to a few manufacturers. One of the manufacturers said they are biggest and can handle 20,000+ mattresses. They put the deal live and sold 6,000 mattresses on the first day! They then went back to the manufacturers and told them they had secured 6,000 orders that need to be delivered in one month.  They worked with a company in Blackburn who ended up digging tunnels at the back of their office to keep the production going because neighbours had complained and closed down the office.  How did you launch 3 companies while working full time? The companies that Jas launched were actually for Rocket Internet. Their initial idea for Europe was to launch a few companies and eBay seemed the most interesting. They went to eBay and said they want to take it to Europe, eBay didn’t think Europe would be interested in ecommerce, so the Samwer brothers built a mini eBay themselves and 100 days later they sold it for 50 milion. They also sold the company Jamster and City Deal. How did you go from idea to launching on Groupon in a space of just two weeks! Jas was quite lucky to have three people working with him. All three focussed on different areas, Jas focussed on building websites, another person focussed on sourcing the product and the last person focussed on logistics, delivery, customer service, etc.  Broadly speaking, Marketing, Web/Product Management and Fund Raising are the three areas you need to focus on when launching a product on Groupon.  Millions of things get sold on Groupon, how did you know what would work? A guy contacted him from Groupon, that was from a Groupon store on Phoenix and identified that selling mattresses was so popular it crashed it site, so it was luck of the draw, they expected to sell 50–100, but sold 6,000. How did you iterate the product for those 6,000 mattresses?  At the time Jas missed his train and he had 15 minutes to make a decision, so he sat on quite a few mattresses and chose the one which was within his price range and ordered those! Since then, they’ve gone through multiple iterations and when someone called and told us they wanted to return the product they used that research top optimise a mattress that would work well for people. As they expanded, they got product specialists and mattress experts and told them they wanted it to be cooler, and bouncier, they done all this research while selling on Groupon. By this time they had sold over 75,000 mattresses and had a very good idea of what works.  At what point where you ready to leave the corporate world to go off on your own? Jas always wanted to eventually leave, he left the Samwer brothers multiple times and failed every time and they took him back every time. There’s about 40,000 people now but at the time there was only about 30 people, so in the beginning they gave him an equity stake to go out and build a company in Poland. The more Jas did it, the more he realised he wanted to run his own company.  When you failed, what were your lessons from these failures? It’s really important to hire good people. Initially they hired young people because they were confident enough to tell these guys what to do, but eventually you realise all the knowledge is coming from you. At Eve Sleep now, they have people who are incredible and just get on with it from a variety of backgrounds once you explain to them what the strategy is.  Raising a lot of money. They raised very aggressively until they got to 57m, this gives you some buffer and allows you to take some risk because you’ve got room for error.  As someone who’s very experienced in raising money, what did you learn throughout this process and what’s the best way to raise funding? Honestly, you just got to keep on doing it. The more you do it, the better you get. You’ll get a lot of push back so you’ll hear a lot of rejection and so you’ve just got to be very thick skinned.  One of the Samwer brothers, introduced them to most of the VCs in London which really helped. However it’s about building something big, don’t get caught on the small details, focus on what the vision is and where you can take mattresses.  What did you learn from these brothers that were clearly very influential in your life? Jas worked on an internet company and he had no idea where to start. They mentioned to him that he needed to him think big but focus small, what’s the next things you need to do. Think in tiny steps and add up. Work harder than anybody else. Not in terms of sitting in front of a computer, but think from the perspective of never giving up and taking a no for an answer.  On a personal level, where do you get that drive from? Jas really enjoys the process, with a market cap at 150m it’s great but that wasn’t the goal from the outset. He just loves the process, proving people wrong, but doesn’t enjoy things just because they are successful and it’s for these reasons that he enjoyed the ones that failed just as much as he enjoyed the ones that succeeded.  Your focussed changed from Sales to actually doing branding, how did that transition happen? Kuba Wieczore was about to setup a branding agency. They wanted to build something more substantial, so he jumped on board as one of the main co-founders.  How do you keep people interested in just one product? It’s about inspiring customers when they first come across your product because it’s a onetime purchase. They do now have 15 products on the website and they intend to keep adding more as the years go by.  What was your drive to keep your mattress simple as opposed to making iterations and launching pocket sprung, memory foam etc.? When they launched on Groupon they only launched one time of mattress. It was difficult to explain to customers what “soft” or “firm”. As they started talking with customers, they realised that if they offer a 100 day trial customers can decide for themselves if the product if right for them so they made it instrumental to their marketing. It’s like when you go to a hotel room, you don’t ask about the type of bed, you just expect a comfortable bed and that’s what Eve is. What are the key elements of creating a distinctive brand? A point of view. So many mattresses out there, they got stuck on there that’s interesting. Every great day starts the night before. No sleep brand talks about being awake. Simple, catchy message and making something interesting. How do you deal with copycat brands that start cropping up?  Guys in the US done some clever PR things that Eve could do, some of their competitors could go into retail stores and do things in a better way than them, but they been doing so much longer with more markets and products.  Eve Sleep is more of a leader in the market because they’ve been doing it longer than everybody else so they ensure they keep current by being creative.  How do you keep innovating as a company and as a brand to stay at the forefront of the industry? Although they hired people, none of the leadership are from the Mattress Industry. They bring the best from amazing companies from all around the UK and just fuse together the best of what everybody brings.  One day they had an investor who said they’ve never invested in a company without seeing their offices, so they rented an office for one day and got a lot of friends to sit with their laptops on the desks. They then had the investor meeting which was about 10 minutes at which point they tried on the mattress and sat on it — this is a real story about being creative and that’s what the branding and the mattress brings.  How do you do things differently? It’s hard, there’s a few boring things they would have done differently i.e. perhaps not launch in certain markets too fast, didn’t take the restrictions of other markets too seriously etc. However when you look around there’s a lot to be grateful for. You work with your buddies and cousins, and you have an amazing company with people you love and a market cap at £150m, it’s hard to think of the failures. There’s a few boring things like a poor accounting software, but that’s insignificant.  By the time they launched Eve, they knew exactly what to do to make it a success because they had already experienced a lot of the failures prior to launching Eve.  How did you convince investors without having a brand, offices, and email lists etc.? How did you convey to them you’re a serious company?  The whole process from idea to launch took about 5 months and they had an incredible team which made them seem credible because they knew the category really well. Their first round of funding was at £600k, which was pretty small for a VC. They were very lean initially and Jas lived off the money he made from selling mattresses. However, what investors want to see is some traction. A lot of the £600k went into marketing, tech and IT but as they started seeing press and traction, they started investing more money in the later rounds.  They didn’t raise money until they were really confident that it would work? They were a money machine from day one by making £2m so they didn’t feel the need to go to investors. This time he just had an amazing brand and he felt so confident that he knew exactly what he was doing, and so much so that they said well if it doesn’t work we should just give up. Everything was aligned to perfection. When you did the Marketing Strategies initially, how did you promote to market? Was it key words or growth hacking strategies? When they first went to market they got a bit of press because they raised funding. Their product was for the consumer market so it generated more interested. The next 3–4 months they focussed on Google Ads and keyword bidding which Jas had done while at Rocket Internet. As they grew, they focussed on Facebook Ads and had an agency to help with that, and as they grew very big they tried TV and Underground, but it’s very expensive so if you do it, ensure you have a financial buffer to iterate and fail like A/B testing.  Press: funding round, it got a bit of interest, google ads, keyword bidding, 3–4  What‘s our advice for going into business with friends and family? When it’s good, it’s great, but when it’s bad it’s a disaster. Jas and Kuba think very similarly despite coming from different backgrounds. They have completely different skills but think along the same lines. There’s not a right solution for this. Two of Jas’s friends left Eve Sleep, but they still remained good friends. A lot of nasty things were said and done but you need to remember your friends and family above all else.  Did you have any formal process in place to catch up with each other?  Not really, we’re family so there’s no formal process. You’ve got to be thick skinned and comfortable with what people say about you. It requires you to have humility and when you’re wrong the ability to say sorry. It’s okay to disagree with each other but because of how busy they both are there’s no formalities in place because family trumps business.  How did you deal with naysayers and those saying your ideas won’t work? Honestly, it came from years and years being in the game. After a while it doesn’t affect you anymore. If people are wrong then that’s great, and if people are right then that’s fine too. In the beginning you’ll remember all those that said you won’t be successful, but later on you’ll see those exact same people either switch or continue to say those things so you realise it doesn’t really matter what anybody thinks.  With your mattresses you went to market without a product, would you recommend this strategy? It doesn’t matter because with each batch they sent it was iterated from the last. The first was good enough but they made changes as they went along, and now they have some of the best reviews in the country How to manage control and still without overseeing too heavily what people are doing? The 6–7 direct reports have constant communication with Jas and they are discussing things all day. Initially Jas used to micro manage, but now he tried not to interfere. The people he’s working with are some of the best in the industry and they’ve earned the ability to be able to be left with what they need to do because they’ve proven and delivered time and time again. Remember the goal is not to be in control because you don’t need to. Overtime you’ll get the balance right. How did you cope mentally during the difficult time? Even when the business wasn’t doing well, Jas loved every moment of it. As part of his morning routine he’d go for a surf in California at 6am before the kids got up. This was his way of coping, but also that he surrounded himself with friends and family that even in the worst of times things didn’t seem too bad.  How did you embed you vision and culture in people? Jas chose people that were a lot more sociable than him including James and Kuba. These guys were a lot more fun! Jas mentions that he’s approachable but he likes to focus and let people who are more sociable take control in places that are the their strengths. He’s seen companies with good cultures thrive and those that don’t have good cultures tend to fall apart very quickly.  What advice would you have for a company that’s looking to scale as quickly as Eve Sleep? Start funding rounds asap. Once you get the money in, raise even more money even if you don’t need to. Investors have the ability to sense desperation and you always want to be in a position where you don’t need it because this energy comes across.  Hire the best people. 

VOOM Podcast
Disruptive products with Blaze and Eve Sleep

VOOM Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2018 51:03


In this episode Nikki Bedi meets two entrepreneurs who’ve brought innovation to existing markets. Emily Brooke describes her journey as the founder of Blaze – a challenger brand in the world of cycling – whose invention, the Laserlight aims to make every bike safer. She’s joined by Jas Bagniewski, who has turned the mattress into a £140million pound valued company, at Eve Sleep. Plus as this years VOOM competition begins, we hear from previous winner Toby McCarney of Macrebur with his top tips for entrants. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

products disruptive voom eve sleep nikki bedi emily brooke
Blinkist Podcast - Interviews | Personal Development | Productivity | Business | Psychology
BONUS: A How-To Sleep Talk with Max Kirsten, the Sleep Coach to the Stars

Blinkist Podcast - Interviews | Personal Development | Productivity | Business | Psychology

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2016 39:20


In this special bonus edition of the Blinkist Podcast, we talk to sleep specialist Max Kirsten. Max is a hypnotherapist and a sleep coach, and he’s worked with stars like Adele and Ewan McGregor. In the podcast, Max and Ben delve into topics like the right position for optimal sleep, how one even becomes a sleep specialist, the problems some of his most difficult patients experience, and much more. This is a perfect follow-up to the first sleep-themed episode, which featured Arianna Huffington speaking about her new book The Sleep Revolution, and how we’re killing ourselves with bad sleep hygiene. Some linkage: - Also to receive your FREE Better Sleep MP3 Download and find out more about Max Kirsten visit www.thesleepcoach.co.uk - We also want to give a shoutout to Eve Sleep, who sent us a Mattress so we could build our own little nap station, which we covered in the Blinkist Magazine, here: http://blnk.st/29WJPBE - Subscribe to Blinkist Radio on iTunes here: http://blnk.st/28JBVIY - That excellent intro and outro music you heard is by Nico Guiang. You can find more of it on Soundcloud [@niceaux] and Facebook [www.facebook.com/niceaux]. - If you have any feedback about the podcast, or just want to say hi to Ben, email him at podcast@blinkist.com