Explore every episode of the podcast Femme & Fortune
| Title | Pub. Date | Duration | |
|---|---|---|---|
| From Medicine to Millions: The NHS Doctor Who Built Her Own Empire | 02 Jun 2026 | 00:57:14 | |
From medicine to millions - Dr Ifeoma Ejikeme on building wealth through expertise Dr Ifeoma Ejikeme didn't follow the traditional path. She trained as a doctor, studied business management at Imperial College London, completed a fellowship at Columbia University, and then walked away from surgery to build something that didn't exist yet. Today she is the founder and medical director of Adonia Medical Clinic, a premium aesthetics and skin health clinic that has won Best Clinic London six times in six years. She holds two medical patents, has performed over 30,000 procedures, and has built multiple revenue streams from a single area of expertise, including brand partnerships, consultancy, and her own LED skincare device. In this episode, Ayesha and Ifeoma get into the conversations that don't happen enough. How high earners fail to build real wealth. Why being of service is the foundation of financial success. How to identify your gift and turn it into income. And why perfectionism is the enemy of progress. If you are a professional woman who is earning well but not yet building the wealth to match, this episode will change how you think about money. Topics covered: building wealth as a doctor, turning expertise into a business, multiple income streams, investing for women, aesthetic medicine, female entrepreneurship, skin health, wealth mindset, financial freedom, Black women in business, women and investing UK | |||
| Why Your Salary Will Never Build Wealth (And What Actually Will) | Charlotte Baroukh | 26 May 2026 | 01:04:41 | |
Charlotte Baroukh is a chartered accountant and tax expert at Pie, the UK's first free tax app. She has built one of the most engaged finance communities on Instagram, breaking down the tax rules that most people were never taught.In this episode, Charlotte and Ayesha get into why your salary will never be enough to build real wealth, the tax mistakes that are costing self-employed women thousands, and why equity ownership changes everything.They also get honest about the realities of corporate life, the politics nobody warns you about, what it actually means to go part time after having children, and why bigger doesn't always mean better.In this episode:Why significant wealth comes from ownership, not salaryThe number one mistake sole traders make with their moneyHow to legally reduce your tax bill at any income levelPensions, ISAs and the basics that nobody taught usFiscal drag - what it is and why it matters to youWhy Charlotte left Deloitte and never looked back.Charlotte Baroukh on Instagram: @tax.queen.cJoin Wealth Circles: https://ayeshaofori.com/membership/Follow Ayesha on Instagram: @ayesh.ofori | |||
| She Earned More, Paid For Everything & Lost Half In The Divorce - Here's What She'd Do Differently | 19 May 2026 | 00:54:42 | |
What happens when you give up everything for love and it still isn't enough? In this episode of Femme & Fortune, Ayesha sits down with Nathalie Lethbridge, a powerhouse who built an extraordinary career across three continents, rose to senior management at Disney, advised corporations on multi-million pound deals and still found herself starting over financially in her 50s. Nathalie opens up about the moments that changed everything: being told she wasn't worthy of an LSE education because she was a girl, leaving behind a VP career for love, surviving a brain tumour with two children under three, and walking away from a 25-year marriage with far less than she'd built. But this isn't a story about loss. It's a story about what happens when you finally stop letting other people define your worth, financially & otherwise.In this episode we cover:Why high-earning women are still getting financially left behind in divorce. What nobody tells you about UK divorce law & your pension. The financial mistakes Nathalie wishes she'd avoided earlier Why compound interest wasn't explained to her but was explained to her brothers How she rebuilt her mindset around money, success & independence Why fear of failure is the biggest thing standing between you & your potential This episode is for you if: You're a high-achieving woman who has never quite got to grips with your own finances. If you've ever prioritised everyone else's financial security over your own, or if you're starting over & wondering where to begin, this one is essential listening. Nathalie Lethbridge is an international business adviser working at the forefront of tech, innovation & the cultural & creative sectors. #FemmeAndFortune #WomenAndMoney #FinancialIndependence #WomenInBusiness #DivorceAndMoney #FinancialLiteracy #WomenEmpowerment #MoneyMindset #FemaleFounders #startingover | |||
| Investor Reveals the Secrets to Picking Startup Winners | Yvonne Bajela | 12 May 2026 | 01:10:16 | |
Most people read picture books at age 8. Yvonne Bajela was reading the Financial Times.Growing up on a council estate in Mitcham, South London, Yvonne's father made sure of that. That early conditioning set her on a path to Goldman Sachs, strategy consulting, her own startup, and eventually a decade-long career in venture capital at some of Europe's most respected funds, including Local Globe.Now she's backing herself. She's raising her own VC fund and betting on the founders she believes will reshape entire industries.In this episode we get into:What VCs are actually looking for in founders (and why obsession matters more than experience)Why 7 out of 10 startups go to zero and how to find the one that doesn'tThe real reason women are underrepresented in startup investing and what needs to changeHow to start angel investing even if you're not a professional investorWhy Yvonne backed Marshmallow when two founders with zero insurance experience walked into a WeWork officeThe power of household diversification when building wealth as a coupleWhether you're curious about startup investing, thinking about backing founders, or want to understand how venture capital actually works in the UK, this episode is for you.If you found this useful, subscribe and follow Femme and Fortune on Instagram for more conversations about women and wealth. | |||
| She Started Nails Inc at 23 With ÂŁ250K. Years Later She Sold It for ÂŁ30M | Thea Green | 05 May 2026 | 01:03:58 | |
What does it actually take to build a 30 million business and then sell it? In this episode of Femme & Fortune, Ayesha Ofori sits down with Thea Green MBE, founder of Nails Inc, to talk about the journey from starting a company at 23 with 250K to selling it to private equity in 2024. Thea was working as a fashion editor, earning 11K a year in London, when she spotted a gap no one else was seeing. What followed was not a fast rise. It was decades of building, scaling, nearly breaking, and figuring out how to make money in an industry that looked glamorous but ran on razor-thin margins. They talk about why the early years were so much harder than Thea expected, how she raised investment, the pressure that came with it, scaling into Sephora and major global retailers, building a business while raising a family, and what it was really like to finally sell. This is the version of the story founders rarely tell. Femme & Fortune is a podcast about how women really build wealth, the decisions, the trade-offs, and the conversations we are not having enough of. New episodes every week. Subscribe so you do not miss one. Key topics: building a business, female founders, wealth building, entrepreneurship UK, scaling a brand, founder journey, selling a business, work life balance, women in business | |||
| How Vivien Wong Built Little Moons Into a Global Brand | 28 Apr 2026 | 00:59:15 | |
In this episode of Femme & Fortune, Ayesha Ofori sits down with Vivien Wong, co founder of Little Moons, the mochi ice cream brand that went from a homemade idea to a global business.Vivien shares how she started with a simple ice cream machine at home while still working in finance, and how she turned that into one of the UKâs most recognisable food brands.This is not a âperfect planâ story. It is about resourcefulness, problem solving, and building slowly over time.We cover:⢠Growing up in a family business and how it shaped her mindset⢠Why she didnât need a completely original idea to win⢠Building Little Moons without outside funding for over a decade⢠Landing Yo! Sushi as a first major customer⢠The reality of scaling a business from small batches to ÂŁ10m+ revenue⢠What it felt like to finally take money off the table⢠Why making money is not the same as building wealth⢠How she learned to invest after her exit⢠The biggest mistakes women make when building wealthThis episode is a real look at what it actually takes to build something meaningful and profitable over time.âđŹ What stood out most to you from Vivienâs story?đ Subscribe for more conversations on money, mindset and building real wealthâAbout Vivien WongVivien Wong is the co founder of Little Moons, a global mochi ice cream brand stocked in major retailers and restaurants worldwide. She built the business from scratch with her brother, scaling it over 15+ years before bringing in private equity investment.About Ayesha OforiAyesha Ofori is a former Goldman Sachs Executive Director and the founder of Propelle. She has managed over ÂŁ500m for ultra high net worth clients and now focuses on helping women build wealth with confidence.â#FemmeAndFortune #LittleMoons #Entrepreneurship #WomenInBusiness #BuildingWealth | |||
| From Scholarship Student to Wealth Builder: How Lamide Did It | 21 Apr 2026 | 00:57:10 | |
In this episode of Femme & Fortune, Ayesha Ofori sits down with Lamide Elizabeth, former investment banker turned founder, investor and creator of Building Wealth Without Borders.Lamide didnât follow a traditional path.She grew up in Hackney, got herself into private school on a scholarship, went on to LSE, and started her career in investment banking. But early on, she realised something most people miss.A high salary doesnât mean youâre building wealth.In this conversation, she breaks down the decisions that changed everything. From questioning the corporate path, to building assets, investing in property, and using social media to create real income and opportunity.They talk about:Why salary alone wonât make you wealthyThe difference between income and assetsHow she got into property in her early 20sWhy living at home can accelerate wealth buildingThe biggest mistake women make when it comes to investingAnd what building wealth actually looks like behind the scenesThis isnât a conversation about outcomes.Itâs about how it really happens.âAbout Ayesha Ofori:Ayesha is a former Investment Banker and Private Wealth Adviser who managed over ÂŁ500m for ultra high net worth clients. She now focuses on helping women build wealth through better decisions, access and strategy.âSubscribe for more conversations on how women actually build wealth.#FemmeAndFortune #WealthBuilding #WomenAndMoney #Investing #PropertyInvesting | |||
| How Maxine Laceby Built a ÂŁ42M Beauty Empire in Her 50s | 14 Apr 2026 | 01:18:51 | |
Maxine Laceby didnât grow up around business.She grew up on a council estate, left school at 16, and built her career in a completely different world before ever thinking about starting something of her own.She didnât start Absolute Collagen until her 50s.No background in beauty.No experience building a company.Today, itâs a ÂŁ42M brand.In this episode of Femme & Fortune, she sits down with Ayesha Ofori, a former investment banker, to talk about how it actually happened.Not just the outcome.But everything that led up to it.Her upbringing.The early parts of her career.What pushed her to start later in life.And then what came next.The mistakes.The moments she nearly didnât do it.The decisions she had to make when there wasnât a clear path.Because building something like this isnât a straight line.And itâs not just about what you achieve.Itâs about how you think, how you handle uncertainty, and how you keep going when it would be easier not to.----------Femme & Fortune is a podcast about how women build wealth.Not just what they achieve.But how they get there.đ Subscribe for more conversations like this. | |||