Introduction

The Get Bizee podcast features real entrepreneurs talking about what it actually takes to build a business — the decisions that worked, the ones that didn't, and everything in between. If you're starting a business or figuring out your next move, these conversations give you something a how-to guide can't: perspective from people who've been there.

Real stories, not highlight reels

The Get Bizee podcast doesn't edit out the hard parts. Guests talk about what actually happened — the slow starts, the wrong hires, the moments they almost quit. That honesty is what makes the conversations worth your time.

Most business content focuses on the outcome. This podcast focuses on the process. You hear how entrepreneurs thought through problems in real time, not just how things turned out. That's the part that's actually useful when you're in the middle of something difficult.

Guests from every kind of business

The podcast features entrepreneurs from a wide range of industries — retail, services, tech, food, creative work, and more. That variety matters because the challenges of running a business don't look the same in every field.

Whether you're starting a product-based business or a service business, you'll find guests whose situations are close enough to yours to be useful. The specifics differ. The underlying decisions — pricing, customers, growth, cash flow — come up again and again.

Honest conversations about failure

Failure comes up in almost every episode — not as a cautionary tale, but as part of the story. Guests talk about businesses that didn't work, partnerships that fell apart, and bets that didn't pay off. Hearing how people recovered is more instructive than hearing how they succeeded.

Most entrepreneurs don't talk about failure publicly until they're far enough past it to frame it as a lesson. The Get Bizee podcast gets guests to talk about it while the memory is still sharp. That's a different kind of conversation.

The decisions behind the business

Every episode gets into the decisions that shaped the business — when to quit a job, when to take on a partner, when to raise prices, when to walk away from a customer. These are the calls that don't have a clear right answer, and hearing how other entrepreneurs made them is genuinely useful.

The podcast treats decision-making as a skill, not a talent. Guests explain their reasoning, not just their results. That framing helps you think through your own decisions more clearly.

What it actually costs to start

Money comes up early in most episodes. Guests talk about how they funded their businesses — personal savings, loans, investors, revenue from day one — and what they wish they'd known about cash flow before they started.

The conversations are specific. Guests name numbers, describe mistakes, and explain what they'd do differently with their finances. That specificity is rare in business content, and it's one of the reasons the podcast is worth listening to before you start spending money.

Hiring, firing, and building a team

Team-building is one of the hardest parts of running a business, and it comes up in nearly every episode. Guests talk about their first hires, the ones that didn't work out, and how they figured out what kind of people they actually needed.

The conversations cover both sides — the excitement of bringing someone on and the difficulty of letting someone go. Neither gets glossed over. If you're thinking about your first hire, these episodes will help you think through it more carefully.

Pivoting when the plan stops working

Several episodes focus on the moment a business had to change direction — a market that shifted, a product that didn't sell, a customer base that disappeared. Guests talk about how they recognized the problem and what they did about it.

Pivoting is one of those things that sounds straightforward in retrospect and feels impossible in the moment. Hearing how other entrepreneurs navigated it — what they held onto and what they let go — gives you a better mental model for when you face something similar.

The mental side of entrepreneurship

The podcast doesn't skip the emotional weight of running a business. Guests talk about stress, self-doubt, burnout, and the pressure of being responsible for other people's livelihoods. These conversations are honest in a way that most business content isn't.

Entrepreneurship is often presented as exciting and empowering — and it is. But it's also isolating and exhausting at times. Hearing other entrepreneurs name that experience out loud is useful. It helps you recognize what you're going through and know you're not the only one.

Lessons you can use right now

Every episode ends with something actionable. Guests share the one thing they'd tell someone starting out, the mistake they'd avoid, or the habit that made the biggest difference. These aren't generic tips — they're specific to the guest's experience and grounded in what actually happened.

The best episodes leave you with 2 or 3 things you want to think about or try. That's the standard the podcast holds itself to: not just interesting, but useful.

Where to listen

The Get Bizee podcast is available on all major podcast platforms. You can find it on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and anywhere else you listen. New episodes are released regularly.

If you're not sure where to start, look for episodes that match where you are right now — early-stage, growing, or figuring out a specific problem. The episode descriptions will tell you enough to know if it's relevant to your situation.

Start listening

The Get Bizee podcast is one part of a broader set of resources for entrepreneurs who are starting or building a business. If you're ready to take the next step beyond listening — forming an LLC, getting your business registered, or figuring out what structure makes sense — we can help with that too.

Find the podcast wherever you listen, or explore the rest of the Start a Business section to get into the practical side of getting your business off the ground.

FAQ

What is the Get Bizee podcast about?

The Get Bizee podcast features candid interviews with entrepreneurs about what it takes to build a business. Episodes cover real decisions, honest accounts of failure and recovery, team-building, finances, and the mental side of running a business. The goal is to give listeners perspective from people who've actually done it — not just the polished version of the story.

Who is the Get Bizee podcast for?

The podcast is for anyone thinking about starting a business or already running one. Episodes are useful at any stage — whether you're still exploring the idea, in the middle of your first year, or trying to figure out a specific problem. The guests come from a wide range of industries, so there's usually something relevant regardless of what kind of business you're building.

How often are new episodes released?

New episodes are released regularly. Check the podcast feed on your preferred platform for the latest schedule. Most platforms let you subscribe so new episodes download automatically when they're available.

Where can I listen to the Get Bizee podcast?

The Get Bizee podcast is available on all major podcast platforms, including Spotify and Apple Podcasts. Search for "Get Bizee" on whichever platform you use. You can also find links to current episodes on the Bizee website.

Can I be a guest on the Get Bizee podcast?

It depends. The podcast features entrepreneurs with stories that are relevant to the audience — real experiences building a business, navigating challenges, and making hard decisions. If you think your story fits, reach out through the Bizee website for more information on how to get in touch with the team.