『What I learned in business (that didn't kill me!)』のカバーアート

What I learned in business (that didn't kill me!)

What I learned in business (that didn't kill me!)

著者: James H Stewart
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Have you ever wondered why some businesses go broke and others are successful? Have you ever wondered why some leaders rise to the top in difficult situations?


For 40 years I was a corporate undertaker. I buried businesses that failed and helped save those where there was still a pulse.


I was parachuted into some of corporate Australia’s biggest financial crisis, insolvencies and turnaround environments. I have been in Board rooms, Court rooms and on shop floors when all seems lost (and sometimes it was).


Over decades at the coal face of business (often in the most difficult circumstances), I have seen & heard stories that delighted and inspired me, as well as those which serve as a guide of the path not to take.


I also spent years in leadership roles at Ferrier Hodgson and KPMG Australia where I sat on the Board and was the National Consumer and Retail leader.


The purpose of What I learned about Business (that didn’t kill me!) is to share the stories behind some of the world's most interesting business situations, how they unfolded, how my guests dealt with them, and how those experiences changed them and the way they do business.


I hope that my podcast entertains and engages listeners who want to know more about the worlds great business leaders and the lessons that didn’t kill them…….

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

James H Stewart
マネジメント マネジメント・リーダーシップ 個人的成功 経済学 自己啓発
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  • Kim McDonnell: The Social Enterprise Entrepreneur
    2026/05/25

    Have you ever wanted to be part of a Social Enterprise? What about building a business that does good for the community - at scale?


    Kim McDonnell — founder of Thankful, Thankful4Farmers, and Saveful, and winner of the 2025 Women in Digital Champion of Change Award, has done just that (and more)!


    Kim shares her remarkable journey from growing up in the remote mining town of Mount Isa, in outback QLD to building and selling a successful digital marketing agency, before making the bold decision to walk away from corporate success, sell literally everything she and her family owned and dedicate her life to solving some of the world’s biggest social and environmental challenges.


    We unpack:

    • The moment Kim realised commercial success alone wasn’t enough to fulfill her
    • Why she sold everything to pursue a social enterprise mission
    • The founding story behind Thankful and the science of gratitude
    • Moving her family to New York City to pursue global impact
    • Speaking at the United Nations during General Assembly week
    • The creation of Thankful4Farmers with celebrity chef Matt Moran
    • Why food waste is one of the world’s biggest hidden environmental problems
    • How Saveful is using technology and behavioural psychology to help families save money and reduce waste
    • The realities of startup life, resilience, capital raising, and purpose-driven leadership

    This is a powerful conversation about courage, values, behavioural change, and building businesses that aim to leave the world better than they found it.


    🎧 Connect with the Show

    Follow What I Learned in Business (That Didn’t Kill Me!) on your favourite podcast platform.

    Connect with James Stewart on LinkedIn for more insights on leadership, governance, restructuring, entrepreneurship and business transformation.

    Instagram:

    @whatilearnedinbusiness

    YouTube:

    What I Learned in Business YouTube Channel

    Website:

    James H Stewart


    ⚠️ Disclaimer

    This podcast is intended for general informational and entertainment purposes only. The views expressed by guests are their own and do not constitute financial, legal, investment, environmental, or professional advice. Listeners should obtain independent advice relevant to their own circumstances before making any decisions based on the content of this episode.

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

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    51 分
  • Tom Krulis: Godfreys. Petstock. Cheap as Chips.
    2026/05/18

    How a Holocaust survival story shaped a family legacy and inspired a serial retail investor to keep striving for success.


    In this deeply personal discussion, James H Stewart sits down with retailer, investor, former lawyer and long-time friend, Tom Krulis for a conversation that goes far beyond business.


    Tom opens up about his family’s extraordinary journey, including the posthumous publication of his father Steven’s book, The Boy with the Suitcase, the enduring legacy of growing up as the son of a Holocaust survivor, and how those experiences shaped his values, leadership style, and appetite for risk.


    James and Tom reflect on their shared experiences travelling through Rwanda, exploring one of the most remarkable national turnarounds of modern times following the Rwandan Genocide, and then rise of antisemitism in Australia what business leaders can learn from resilience, reconciliation, and rebuilding.


    From there, the conversation shifts to Tom’s remarkable business career—from leaving law at Freehills, to helping drive the success of Godfreys Group through multiple ownership cycles, becoming an early investor in Petstock before its billion-dollar transaction with Woolworths Group, and navigating the recent collapse of value retailer, Cheap as Chips.


    This is a conversation about:

    • Legacy, family and values
    • The lived experience of modern antisemitism in Australia
    • Building, scaling and exiting retail businesses
    • Private equity, public markets and investor discipline
    • Why some businesses survive… and others don’t


    A raw, honest and deeply human conversation with a man who has seen both extraordinary success… and the reality of loss.



    ⚠️ Disclaimer

    This podcast is intended for general information, education and discussion purposes only. The views, opinions, experiences and recollections expressed by the host and guest are their own at the time of recording and do not necessarily reflect the views of any current or former employers, investee companies, portfolio companies, shareholders, directors, employees, advisers, governments, regulators, or other stakeholders.

    This episode may include discussion of historical events, personal experiences, commercial transactions, business successes and failures, industry trends, legal and regulatory matters, and current social issues. Any references to companies, transactions, valuations, ownership structures, restructurings, administrations, market conditions, or investment outcomes are based on publicly available information, personal recollection, or opinion, and should not be relied upon as financial, legal, investment, tax, governance, or other professional advice.Where specific individuals, businesses, transactions or events are discussed—including current or former businesses—listeners should be aware that circumstances may have changed since the time of recording, and not all perspectives or stakeholders may be represented.


    Listeners should conduct their own independent enquiries and seek appropriate professional advice before making any business, investment, legal, governance or personal decisions arising from matters discussed in this episode.

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

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    50 分
  • Sally Bruce: The Social Impact Banker
    2026/05/11

    The Banking Royal Commission was the reset needed for the Australian banking industry and demanded by the community.


    Sally Bruce's first hand experience at Macquarie Bank, National Australia Bank, AMP bank, gave her a unique insight into some of Australia's largest financial institutions, the important role than they play in the community and what can go wrong when the institution gets in its own way.


    From rural Queensland, Sally is a straight shooter who calls it as she sees it and gives a unique insight into some of the more turbulent times in Australian banking. Her career pivot to technology scale up, Culture Amp, reframed her thinking around business and opened her eyes into a world of global technology and workplace culture.


    Sal is also a dedicated believer in the power of social impact, both personally and in business, and has been involved in community organisations for decades, including opening her home to refugees from around the globe.


    Over a career spanning more than three decades, Sally:

    • Ran her first P&L at just 21 years of age
    • Led major corporate workouts and restructurings
    • Helped transform Australia’s mortgage landscape
    • Served as CEO during the turmoil of the Banking Royal Commission
    • Pivoted from traditional banking into global technology leadership
    • Sat on boards spanning banking, the arts, and women’s leadership
    • Opened her family home to skilled refugees rebuilding their lives in Australia


    In this candid and deeply personal conversation, Sally shares:

    • How growing up in rural Queensland shaped her leadership philosophy
    • What Macquarie Bank taught her about performance under pressure
    • How customer-first thinking transformed mortgage banking at National Australia Bank
    • Her unfiltered reflections on the Australian Banking Royal Commission
    • What she learned moving from old-economy banking to high-growth tech at Culture Amp
    • Why she believes social mobility, education and opportunity matter more than ever


    This is a conversation about ambition, reinvention, resilience, humility — and what truly matters when the titles no longer define you.




    Disclaimer

    This podcast is intended for general information, education and entertainment purposes only. The views, opinions and recollections expressed by the host and guest are their own, based on personal experience and publicly available information at the time of recording, and do not necessarily reflect the views of any past or present employer, board, shareholder, government agency, regulator, client or affiliated organisation. Nothing discussed in this episode constitutes financial, investment, banking, legal, tax, governance, employment or other professional advice. Listeners should obtain independent professional advice before acting on any information discussed.

    This episode may include discussion of historical events, organisations, regulatory processes, personal experiences and leadership decisions which are discussed in good faith for educational and commentary purposes. Any references to third parties are made on the basis of publicly available information or personal recollection and should not be taken as findings of fact or criticism of any individual or organisation.

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

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    57 分
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