『The Entrepreneurs』のカバーアート

The Entrepreneurs

The Entrepreneurs

著者: Stuart McNish
無料で聴く

A new show and online series, set to change the way we see and appreciate the women and men who drive our economy.


Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Oh Boy Productions
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  • 06 | How Hugh Loomans built Sylvite
    2026/06/25

    When the United States attacked Iran in April of 2026, Hugh Loomans was already making plans to reroute agricultural supplies head to his Hamilton, Ontario-based company, Sylvite. Staying on top of global events and responding quickly has been key to Hugh’s success as an entrepreneur.


    When Russia attacked Ukraine, Hugh pivoted the same way he did when the Soviet Union collapsed in the 1980s. As an independent supplier of agricultural nutrients and equipment, Sylivte is competing for the market at home in Ontario, Quebec, and in eastern states of the US.


    It’s a highly competitive market with major international players vying to elbow him out of the way. Hugh says, “There have been so many nights at 3 am where I’m pacing the floor, trying to figure out how to make the seemingly impossible work.”


    He’s succeeded! For more than 40 years, Hugh and Sylvite have innovated in sourcing products, packaging them in ways that meet the needs of customers, adding transportation services to his company to lower costs and, in doing so, spawning new divisions of the company.


    Hugh Loomans has met the challenges of the ag sector with the same determination his customers – farmers – do everyday, because just like farming, the ag supply business changes from minute to minute.


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    The Entrepreneurs is a show that features the imaginative, innovative drivers of our economy. For more, see our website at www.theentrepreneurs.ca.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    18 分
  • 05 | How Connor Curran built Local Laundry
    2026/06/08

    Connor Curran’s entrepreneurial journey is a master class in starting a business with nothing, nada, zip, zilch – other than gumption. Determined to be the master of his working destiny, Connor moved to Sweden to clear his head and study entrepreneurism.


    He searched the web for instructions on how to set up a T-shirt company and simply started. No business plan, no money, no product. Why T-shirts? “They are the lemonade stand of today!” says Connor. Print-on-demand means you can design and market your product at no cost and if someone buys it, “that’s the biggest dopamine hit; that’s the fuel that keeps you going,” he says.


    Bit by bit, Connor walks us through the process he followed to build a business, build up a cash reserve, go from print-on-demand to amassing inventory, and refining his marketing strategy – a strategy the White House validated and ignited his sales.


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    The Entrepreneurs is a show that features the imaginative, innovative drivers of our economy. For more, see our website at www.theentrepreneurs.ca.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    続きを読む 一部表示
    9 分
  • 04 | How Allen Eaves built STEMCELL Technologies
    2026/05/27

    Terry Fox worked his way down the rocky shoreline of Newfoundland just outside the city limits of St John’s and dipped his artificial leg in the Atlantic Ocean. He bottled water that lapped at the shore and turned west on his Marathon of Hope – a marathon that brought attention to fighting cancer through research.


    That was on April 12, 1980. Little did Allen and Connie Eaves know that Terry’s crusade to defeat cancer would change their lives. A year after Terry’s heroic marathon ended because his cancer had returned, Allen and Connie came to Vancouver to establish the Terry Fox Research Lab.


    And little did they know that the chain of events that would unfold and lead to the creation of a world renowned biotechnology company, STEMCELL Technologies. Allen and Connie’s story unfolded in a manner that becomes apparent only by looking back.


    The Research Lab was always short of funds for further studies and equipment and supplies. So Allen developed a research related product that the Terry Fox lab needed and he sold the excess to other labs. That product was a hit, so much so that a competitor undercut their price and drove them out of that market. With a researcher’s mindset Allen looked for other products to fill the funding gap for the lab. What he created is still a staple of the company’s business today.


    It’s important to note, he was also the Head of Oncology and Hematology at Vancouver General Hospital where he and a colleague engineered the practice of isolating healthy bone marrow in patients with leukemia. They killed off the unhealthy cells, fostered the regrowth of the healthy cells and transplanted them back to the patient – a procedure that VGH sold to health authorities across Canada, netting the hospital large sums of money.


    When Allen was 54 years of age, the Terry Fox Research Lab told him he had to spin off the company that was developing, producing, and selling products. So he did, working off the side of his desk and, in cooperation with the Lab, STEMCELL Technologies was established


    When Allen turned 65, he was told it was time to retire. The very next day, he was working full-time at STEMCELL, which had grown to more than 50 staff. Today, the company employs more than 2,500 people and sells its products and equipment globally.


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    The Entrepreneurs is a show that features the imaginative, innovative drivers of our economy. For more, see our website at www.theentrepreneurs.ca.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    23 分
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