Owner's Roundtable – Détails, épisodes et analyse

Détails du podcast

Informations techniques et générales issues du flux RSS du podcast.

Owner's Roundtable

Owner's Roundtable

Jeff McLarty

Business & Entrepreneuriat
Éducation

Fréquence : 1 épisode/19j. Total Éps: 7

Transistor
Every successful business has a story that didn’t make it into the press release. Join host Jeff McLarty as he sits down with business owners who’ve been in the trenches—building, scaling, failing, and fighting their way to success. Each episode of Owner’s Roundtable dives deep into the moments that matter: the decisions that changed everything, the failures that taught the hardest lessons, and the operational strategies that actually moved the needle. This isn’t about inspiration—it’s about implementation. It’s about learning from people who’ve already made the mistakes so you don’t have to.
Site
RSS
Apple

Classements récents

Dernières positions dans les classements Apple Podcasts et Spotify.

Apple Podcasts

  • 🇨🇦 Canada - management

    17/03/2026
    #63
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - management

    23/02/2026
    #78
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - management

    22/02/2026
    #43
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - management

    20/02/2026
    #91
  • 🇨🇦 Canada - management

    19/02/2026
    #37

Spotify

    Aucun classement récent disponible



Qualité et score du flux RSS

Évaluation technique de la qualité et de la structure du flux RSS.

See all
Qualité du flux RSS
À améliorer

Score global : 69%


Historique des publications

Répartition mensuelle des publications d'épisodes au fil des années.

Episodes published by month in

Derniers épisodes publiés

Liste des épisodes récents, avec titres, durées et descriptions.

See all

From Lab to Leadership: Scaling a Deep-Tech Business with Jack Nicholas of Qdot Technology

Épisode 4

lundi 16 février 2026Durée 31:14


What does it take to turn world-class academic research into a real, revenue-generating company? In this episode of Owner’s Roundtable, Jeff McLarty sits down with Jack Nicholas, Co-Founder and CTO of Qdot Technology, to unpack his journey from Oxford University’s labs to the front lines of clean aviation.

Jack shares how his Ph.D. research in cooling nuclear fusion reactors became the foundation for a deep-tech startup tackling one of aviation’s hardest problems: thermal management for zero-emissions flight. Along the way, he opens up about the realities of spinning a company out of a university, the costly mistake of leading with technology instead of customer problems, and why he ultimately stepped aside as CEO to put the right leader in place.

This is a candid conversation about the long timelines of deep tech, raising capital in tougher markets, navigating VC relationships, and why finding the right people may be the hardest and most important challenge of all. 

What You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • The hidden challenges of spinning a company out of a top university
  • Why starting with “great technology” instead of a clear problem can slow growth
  • When founders should step out of the CEO role
  • How investor expectations have shifted from vision to early revenue
  • Practical advice for raising capital and pitching VCs
  • Why recruitment is harder (and more critical) than most founders expect

About Jack Nicholas


Jack Nicholas is the Co-Founder and CTO of Qdot Technology, a deep-tech company advancing thermal management solutions for clean aviation. He earned his Ph.D. in Engineering Science at the University of Oxford, where his research focused on cooling technologies for nuclear fusion reactors. After completing his doctorate, Jack led the design of a £1M industrial test facility for next-generation gas turbine materials in collaboration with aerospace partners. Today, he applies that expertise to solving the thermal challenges standing in the way of zero-emissions flight.


Looking for Tools & Support Growing and Managing Your Business?


Book a free consultation today: https://calendly.com/jmclarty-focalpointcoaching/30min



Contact Jeff McLarty: 

Contact Jack Nicholas: 

Turning Scrap into Scale & Spotting Opportunity with Tyson Christiansen

Épisode 3

lundi 16 février 2026Durée 18:20

What if the thing everyone else throws away is the foundation of your next business?


In this episode of Owner’s Roundtable, Jeff McLarty sits down with Tyson Christiansen, founder of Maverick Metal, to unpack a gritty, real-world entrepreneurial journey built on follow-through, sales grit, and the ability to see value where others see waste.


Tyson’s path didn’t start with a polished plan. It started at a tire shop, then behind the counter of a scrapyard, where he unknowingly received one of the best entrepreneurship educations possible. By helping others turn scrap into income, Tyson learned how businesses really work, how middlemen get cut out, and why execution always beats perfection. That early experience led to the creation of Maverick Metal, where Tyson began buying and selling oilfield pipe, eventually realizing that the real opportunity wasn’t brokering, but manufacturing.


This episode is a masterclass in doing the work, trusting momentum over certainty, and building something durable by moving forward before everything is figured out. If you’ve ever waited for the “perfect plan” before starting, this conversation will challenge you to just get going.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode:

  • Why brokering businesses are fragile and how to escape the middleman trap
  • Why perfection is the enemy of completion
  • How differentiation protects margins in manufacturing
  • Why customers don’t care about price; they care about value
  • The role of fear, urgency, and sales volume in business survival
  • How making the calls beats waiting for the phone to ring
  • Why having the right partner at home can be a massive competitive advantage


About Tyson Christiansen

Tyson Christiansen is the founder of Maverick Metal, a manufacturing and materials company focused on repurposing end-of-life oilfield pipe into durable, high-value livestock fencing products. With a background rooted in sales, scrap recovery, and industrial brokering, Tyson built Maverick Metal by identifying overlooked opportunities and executing relentlessly. Known for confidence action and follow-through, Tyson has grown his business across borders, operating in both Canada and the United States, while continuing to scale manufacturing capacity and material sourcing.

Looking for Tools & Support Growing and Managing Your Business?

 

Contact Jeff McLarty


Contact Tyson Christiansen


Cash Flow, Ego, and the Real Cost of Scaling with Tara Proskiw

Épisode 2

lundi 16 février 2026Durée 41:43

What happens when you go from “I can manage this place” to “I’m responsible for everything”?


In this episode of Owner’s Roundtable, Jeff McLarty sits down with Tara Proskiw, owner of Towne & Countree Kitchens, Towne Renovations, and Redl Edmonton, for an unfiltered conversation about the hidden pressure of ownership. The conversation moves through everything owners in a scaling cycle dread: cash flow stress, leadership blind spots, scaling too fast, and the isolation that comes with being the person holding the keys.


From learning financial statements the hard way to building boundaries that protect your health (and your marriage), Tara shares what she wishes every new owner knew before signing the paperwork.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • Why Tara runs multiple brands instead of one umbrella company
  • How vendor take-backs and market uncertainty can crush cash flow
  • The hard truth about keeping the wrong people in the wrong seats
  • Why scaling can make you “grow broke” (even with more revenue)
  • The mindset shift from “manager” to “owner” and the ego shock that comes with it
  • How Tara sets boundaries to reduce stress (including “no work talk after 7pm”)
  • Why avoiding the financials is a trap and how to face the mirror
  • How to identify bad-fit customers and confidently say “we’re not for you”
  • Two books that helped Tara reframe progress and build better habits
  • Why every entrepreneur needs a safe place to talk (coach, therapy, peer group)


About Tara Proskiw

Tara Proskiw is an Edmonton-based entrepreneur with over 17 years in cabinetry and countertops and a reputation for building businesses that actually work operationally, financially, and culturally. As the owner of Towne & Countree Kitchens, Towne Renovations, and Redl Edmonton, she is known for spotting gaps in the market, building smart systems, and bringing clarity to industries where chaos is often the norm.

Tara believes leadership is about energy, accountability, and empowering people to do great work without burning out. Outside the business, she gives back through Glenora Rotary and South Edmonton Rotary, while continuing to challenge the idea that home renovations have to be stressful. Direct, thoughtful, and values-driven, Tara brings both edge and heart to everything she builds.


Resources discussed in this episode:


Looking for Tools & Support Growing and Managing Your Business?


Book a free consultation today: https://calendly.com/jmclarty-focalpointcoaching/30min



Contact Jeff McLarty: 


Contact Tara Proskiw: 

From Y2K to AI: Scaling Through Chaos with Rafael Krug of Zero-Defect

Épisode 1

lundi 16 février 2026Durée 37:57


What does it take to build a business that survives economic collapse, a global pandemic, and a literal flood?

In this episode of Owner’s Roundtable, Jeff McLarty sits down with Rafael Krug, founder of Zero-Defect, one of Brazil’s leading software quality assurance firms. They unpack a two-decade entrepreneurial journey that spans continents, and more than a few hard resets.


From fixing Y2K bugs in Brazilian banks to scaling into a 70-person QA firm, navigating the 2008 financial crisis, surviving COVID shutdowns, and then rebuilding after catastrophic flooding in Porto Alegre, Rafael’s story is a wonder of resilience, adaptability, and long-term vision. 

Now based in Canada and loving the Canadian business landscape, Rafael shares why he chose to rebuild yet again, but this time with a global, product-driven future in mind.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • How a Y2K internship led to a lifelong career in software quality assurance
  • How HP became Zero-Defect’s first major client
  • The real challenges behind scaling from 3 people to 70
  • What it’s like to lose half your company during an economic collapse
  • How COVID forced a full operational reset
  • What happens when your entire office is submerged under two meters of floodwater
  • Why Rafael believes people — not infrastructure — are the real asset
  • Key differences between doing business in Brazil vs. Canada
  • Why Zero-Defect is shifting from a services model to product-led growth
  • Advice for entrepreneurs facing setbacks that feel impossible to recover from


About Rafael Krug

Rafael Krug is the founder of Zero-Defect, a software quality assurance company specializing in functional, performance, security, and automated testing. Founded in Brazil in 2004, Zero-Defect grew into one of the country’s leading QA firms, supporting mission-critical systems for enterprise clients.

Now based in Edmonton, Canada, Rafael is leading Zero-Defect’s expansion into North America while launching AI-driven testing tools designed to modernize how software quality is delivered globally.


Resources discussed in this episode:


Looking for Tools & Support Growing and Managing Your Business?


Book a free consultation today: https://calendly.com/jmclarty-focalpointcoaching/30min


Contact Jeff McLarty: 

Contact Rafael Krug: 

Trailer: Owner's Roundtable

lundi 24 novembre 2025Durée 01:16

Every successful business has a story that never made the press release: messy beginnings, painful mistakes, near collapses, and game-changing decisions that shaped the journey. In Owner’s Roundtable, host Jeff McLarty has real conversations with real business owners who’ve built, scaled, stumbled, and fought their way forward.

This podcast isn’t about polished highlight reels or corporate marketing stories. It’s about lessons learned the hard way from builders who’ve been in the arena. It shows why stories from the trenches really matter and gives us a seat at the table with operators who tell us how it really works.

About Host Jeff McLarty:


Jeff is a seasoned entrepreneur with diverse experience working in and with organisations both large and small, family businesses, mid-sized corporations, not-for-profits and governments. He has worked with leaders in aerospace, AI, manufacturing, IT, and construction just to name a few.


His own journey to the owner's table has covered a diverse range of work and ownership experiences, including working in the trades, sales, financial planning, Deputy Director of a museum, and as an Executive Director of a major not-for-profit before becoming an owner/operator of a family business in retail. He also has extensive volunteer experience, which he credits with developing the broad skill set he needed to begin operating a business at a relatively young age (35). Together with his wife and business partner Stephanie, they scaled a small family-owned business into a multi-segment tourism and food services operation with 25 staff and a province-wide reputation.


Following the sale of the retail side of the operations, Jeff and his family moved to Edmonton, Alberta, where he began contract work for a UK-based aerospace startup, eventually serving as interim COO. He is currently a consulting partner in several venture startups and works as an Executive Coach and Business Trainer. 

 Jeff is passionate about the journey to entrepreneurship and what it takes to keep a seat at the Owners Round Table, Listen in as he explores with fellow founders, how they earned their seats and share the wisdom of years spent building a business in the hopes that you can learn from their tough experiences. 



Looking for Tools & Support Growing and Managing Your Business.


Book a free consultation today: https://calendly.com/jmclarty-focalpointcoaching/30min


Contact Jeff McLarty: 

Building Smarter Tech: Transparency & Trust with Rea Hailley

Épisode 6

lundi 16 mars 2026Durée 35:33


What happens when you start a business in an industry you were never planning to enter?


In this episode of Owner’s Roundtable, Jeff McLarty sits down with Rea Hailley, co-founder of New Idea Machine, to unpack the unfiltered realities of entrepreneurship, building in the tech ecosystem, and why many founders unknowingly walk into expensive software mistakes.


Rea’s journey into entrepreneurship was anything but planned. A casual conversation on a dog walk turned into the launch of a software development company built around one mission: helping founders avoid the costly pitfalls of custom tech development.


From navigating the overwhelming world of tech stacks to confronting the emotional highs and lows of building a company, Rea shares the lessons she’s learned while growing a business in one of the most complex industries for non-technical founders. This conversation explores the unromantic side of entrepreneurship, why founders need to ask better questions before building software, and how transparency can reshape the relationship between developers and business owners.


If you’re thinking about launching a tech product, this episode delivers practical insight from someone who’s learning the game in real time.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode

  • Why many founders lose thousands of dollars hiring the wrong developers
  • The hidden risks of relying too heavily on off-the-shelf software tools
  • When it actually makes sense to build custom software
  • The problem with overloading your business with too many tech tools
  • Why entrepreneurship is far harder and more consuming than most people expect
  • The importance of validating your business idea before building anything
  • How founders can protect themselves from bad contracts and development traps
  • Why delegating early can accelerate business growth
  • The difference between building a prototype and building secure, scalable software
  • The power of community within Alberta’s growing innovation ecosystem

About Rea Hailley

Rea Hailley is the co-founder of New Idea Machine, a software development agency focused on helping founders and business owners build smarter digital products. With a background in business and experience as a Merchant Success Manager at Shopify, Rea combines entrepreneurial insight with a commitment to transparency in an industry that often feels difficult to navigate.


Beyond her work with New Idea Machine, Rea is also a host on the Leaders, Innovators and Bold Ideas (LIBI) podcast, where she interviews entrepreneurs, innovators, and founders from Alberta’s growing tech ecosystem. Her mission is simple: help founders build better products by giving them the knowledge they need before writing a single line of code.

Resources discussed in this episode:


Looking for Tools & Support Growing and Managing Your Business?


Book a free consultation today: https://calendly.com/jmclarty-focalpointcoaching/30min



Contact Jeff McLarty: 


Contact Rea Hailley: 

From Shop Floor to Franchise Success: Trevor Jones on Systems, Scaling & Selling

Épisode 5

lundi 2 mars 2026Durée 35:47

What happens when you build a business so tightly organized it runs with less stress—then one day you sell it and realize you don’t know who you are without it?


In this episode of Owner’s Roundtable, Jeff sits down with Trevor Jones, former co-owner of Badlands Collision Group and now Corporate Director + Head of Training / Franchise Success at Driven Brands. Trevor shares his path from fixing cars in high school to buying the very shop he worked in, scaling into a three-location operation, and eventually selling his half to his partner.

Along the way, they dig into what makes partnerships succeed (and fail), why simple systems beat “big shiny” strategies, what franchising is really like from both sides, and the emotional whiplash of exiting a business you’ve identified with for 24 years.

What You’ll Learn in This Episode:

  • How Trevor went from technician to manager to owner by buying the shop he ran
  • The two biggest stress points of buying a business: financing + partnership structure
  • Why Trevor recommends a shotgun clause in partnership agreements
  • How to avoid resentment: aligning expectations and having uncomfortable conversations early
  • Why systems reduce emotion (and make growth possible)
  • The power of small operational fixes (like the legendary broom system)
  • The surprise nobody warns you about: the identity crash after selling your business
  • Trevor’s biggest lesson from ownership: relationships are the real business

About Trevor Jones

Trevor Jones is the former co-owner of Badlands Collision Group, which grew from a single location into a three-store operator. After selling his ownership stake, Trevor transitioned into corporate leadership and is now a Corporate Director and Head of Training / Director of Franchise Success at Driven Brands, helping franchisees improve operations through education, training, and process.


Looking for Tools & Support Growing and Managing Your Business?


Book a free consultation today: https://calendly.com/jmclarty-focalpointcoaching/30min


Contact Jeff McLarty: 

Contact Trevor Jones: 


Podcasts Similaires Basées sur le Contenu

Découvrez des podcasts liées à Owner's Roundtable. Explorez des podcasts avec des thèmes, sujets, et formats similaires. Ces similarités sont calculées grâce à des données tangibles, pas d'extrapolations !
Chatter that Matters
Speaking Municipally
Collisions YYC
The Founder Mindset
Build Your SaaS
Millennial 911
Leadership Perspectives
Life on the Prairies
This Morning
The Librarian Linkover
© My Podcast Data