PodcastsRank #30214
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ENTREPRENEURISM

EntrepreneurshipPodcastsBusinessEN-USshanghai,-china
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What makes a successful entrepreneur? It’s certainly not just about spotting opportunities. The entrepreneurial journey is full of tensions that must be managed. The most successful master the balance between vision and execution, short-term demands and long-term goals, opportunities and distractions. ENTREPRENEURISM unpacks what separates great entrepreneurs from the rest, mining the entrepreneurial journey for practical insights. Hosted by CEO coach Scott Pollack, this podcast brings you candid conversations, bold ideas, and actionable strategies from entrepreneurs who have built thriving ventures. Ready to unlock your full potential? This is the show for you.
Top 60.4% by pitch volume (Rank #30214 of 50,000)Data updated Feb 10, 2026

Key Facts

Publishes
N/A
Episodes
20
Founded
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Category
Entrepreneurship
Number of listeners
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Canonical: https://podpitch.com/podcasts/entrepreneurism
Reply rate: 35%+

Latest Episodes

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Crossing the River by Feeling the Stones: How Roberta Lipson Built Premium Healthcare in China

Sat Jan 24 2026

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Roberta Lipson (李碧菁) walks us through a rare founder story: spotting a gap in China’s healthcare market, persuading stakeholders that a foreign-invested hospital could work, and then financing the first facility through an early-stage IPO that many would have advised against. We explore the practical realities of building trust—first with top doctors, then with patients—how a mission-driven culture becomes operational, and why the “right” capital market for a business like hers is the one closest to its patients. Timestamped Show Notes (key topics & takeaways)[00:00] Teaser — Catching the moment: why the early IPO mattered and what “conventional wisdom” would have missed.[00:40] Show Intro (no summary)[02:12] Welcome & framing — Roberta’s arc: China, healthcare, and building something that didn’t exist yet.[03:29] Early fascination with China — From studying Chinese history/language to deciding she wanted to “do things,” not just study them.[05:07] Landing in Beijing — The trading-company job that became a platform for opportunity exploration.[05:33] First entrepreneurial wedge — Importing U.S. medical equipment into Chinese hospitals; learning the market from the inside.[06:15] Founding the company (1981/82) — Building a business by sourcing relevant technology and convincing U.S. firms China could be a real customer.[07:46] Insight from hospital floors — Seeing both the “beautiful things” and the systemic gaps: overcrowding, underpaid doctors, limited tools.[08:22] The unmet customer need — Watching expats leave China for care and realizing a local solution could be built.[09:00] Creating the category with regulators — No clear rulebook: “crossing the river by feeling the stones.”[09:56] The winning narrative — Healthcare as part of China’s ability to attract foreign investment and experts (alongside education).[10:23] The capital panic — Approval seemed close, but where would the funding come from? No usable capital markets in China then.[10:54] The “mini IPO” (1994) — Why going public early unlocked the first hospital—and first-mover advantage.[11:13] The first hospital — Small beginnings: 26 beds, 11 doctors, ~60 nurses; initially almost 100% expat clientele.[12:40] Market evolution — Over time, the patient base shifts heavily local; growth across major eastern cities.[14:33] Founding partnership — Why complementary skills and shared values with Elyse Silverberg mattered (and still did years later).[17:24] Operating rules for China — Persistence + legality: don’t “take no” easily, but treat compliance as essential.[18:43] Mission as a management system — “In the heart” culture: hiring for belief, not just capability—especially in healthcare.[21:07] Founder struggles — Financing/valuation challenges and the difficulty of communicating the real value proposition to U.S. investors.[21:48] Privatization lessons — The shift from distant shareholders to hands-on investors; what changes operationally when investors are “in your life.”[23:09] Back to public markets (2019) and re-privatizing (2021) — Why “the right” public market should be near patients.[24:20] The personal trade-offs — Work–life balance, raising kids while scaling, and the role of an unusually supportive partner at home.[26:46] Frugality vs. professionalism — Early scrappiness, then learning when to invest (“spend money to make money”).[28:04] Digitalization, AI, and automation — Why the organization made the bet—and why she’s glad they did.[29:11] Trust-building playbook — Start with doctors (credibility), then deliver exceptional patient experiences (childbirth as an early trust engine).[32:00] Quick Fire — Books, habits, tools, and founder advice.[35:32] Show Outro (no summary)Quick Fire Recommendations Books (Roberta): The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down — Anne FadimanGod’s Hotel — Victoria SweetTransforming Health Care: The Virginia Mason Medical Center’s Story — Charles Kenney Apps/Tools (Roberta): Feishu (飞书 / Lark)ChatGPT Habit (Roberta): Exercise (when she does it, her day goes much better)Checking in with family (husband/children) Advice (Roberta): Follow your heart; don’t be discouraged; don’t take “no” for an answer.

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Roberta Lipson (李碧菁) walks us through a rare founder story: spotting a gap in China’s healthcare market, persuading stakeholders that a foreign-invested hospital could work, and then financing the first facility through an early-stage IPO that many would have advised against. We explore the practical realities of building trust—first with top doctors, then with patients—how a mission-driven culture becomes operational, and why the “right” capital market for a business like hers is the one closest to its patients. Timestamped Show Notes (key topics & takeaways)[00:00] Teaser — Catching the moment: why the early IPO mattered and what “conventional wisdom” would have missed.[00:40] Show Intro (no summary)[02:12] Welcome & framing — Roberta’s arc: China, healthcare, and building something that didn’t exist yet.[03:29] Early fascination with China — From studying Chinese history/language to deciding she wanted to “do things,” not just study them.[05:07] Landing in Beijing — The trading-company job that became a platform for opportunity exploration.[05:33] First entrepreneurial wedge — Importing U.S. medical equipment into Chinese hospitals; learning the market from the inside.[06:15] Founding the company (1981/82) — Building a business by sourcing relevant technology and convincing U.S. firms China could be a real customer.[07:46] Insight from hospital floors — Seeing both the “beautiful things” and the systemic gaps: overcrowding, underpaid doctors, limited tools.[08:22] The unmet customer need — Watching expats leave China for care and realizing a local solution could be built.[09:00] Creating the category with regulators — No clear rulebook: “crossing the river by feeling the stones.”[09:56] The winning narrative — Healthcare as part of China’s ability to attract foreign investment and experts (alongside education).[10:23] The capital panic — Approval seemed close, but where would the funding come from? No usable capital markets in China then.[10:54] The “mini IPO” (1994) — Why going public early unlocked the first hospital—and first-mover advantage.[11:13] The first hospital — Small beginnings: 26 beds, 11 doctors, ~60 nurses; initially almost 100% expat clientele.[12:40] Market evolution — Over time, the patient base shifts heavily local; growth across major eastern cities.[14:33] Founding partnership — Why complementary skills and shared values with Elyse Silverberg mattered (and still did years later).[17:24] Operating rules for China — Persistence + legality: don’t “take no” easily, but treat compliance as essential.[18:43] Mission as a management system — “In the heart” culture: hiring for belief, not just capability—especially in healthcare.[21:07] Founder struggles — Financing/valuation challenges and the difficulty of communicating the real value proposition to U.S. investors.[21:48] Privatization lessons — The shift from distant shareholders to hands-on investors; what changes operationally when investors are “in your life.”[23:09] Back to public markets (2019) and re-privatizing (2021) — Why “the right” public market should be near patients.[24:20] The personal trade-offs — Work–life balance, raising kids while scaling, and the role of an unusually supportive partner at home.[26:46] Frugality vs. professionalism — Early scrappiness, then learning when to invest (“spend money to make money”).[28:04] Digitalization, AI, and automation — Why the organization made the bet—and why she’s glad they did.[29:11] Trust-building playbook — Start with doctors (credibility), then deliver exceptional patient experiences (childbirth as an early trust engine).[32:00] Quick Fire — Books, habits, tools, and founder advice.[35:32] Show Outro (no summary)Quick Fire Recommendations Books (Roberta): The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down — Anne FadimanGod’s Hotel — Victoria SweetTransforming Health Care: The Virginia Mason Medical Center’s Story — Charles Kenney Apps/Tools (Roberta): Feishu (飞书 / Lark)ChatGPT Habit (Roberta): Exercise (when she does it, her day goes much better)Checking in with family (husband/children) Advice (Roberta): Follow your heart; don’t be discouraged; don’t take “no” for an answer.

Key Metrics

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Pitches sent
11
From PodPitch users
Rank
#30214
Top 60.4% by pitch volume (Rank #30214 of 50,000)
Average rating
N/A
Ratings count may be unavailable
Reviews
N/A
Written reviews (when available)
Publish cadence
N/A
Episode count
20
Data updated
Feb 10, 2026
Social followers
151

Public Snapshot

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Country
Shanghai, China
Language
EN-US
Language (ISO)
Release cadence
N/A
Latest episode date
Sat Jan 24 2026

Audience & Outreach (Public)

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Audience range
Private
Hidden on public pages
Reply rate band
35%+
Public band
Response time band
1–2 weeks
Public band
Replies received
1–5
Public band

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Presence & Signals

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Social followers
151
Contact available
Yes
Masked on public pages
Sponsors detected
Private
Hidden on public pages
Guest format
Private
Hidden on public pages

Social links

No public profiles listed.

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Monthly listeners49,360
Reply rate18.2%
Avg response4.1 days
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Frequently Asked Questions About ENTREPRENEURISM

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What is ENTREPRENEURISM about?

What makes a successful entrepreneur? It’s certainly not just about spotting opportunities. The entrepreneurial journey is full of tensions that must be managed. The most successful master the balance between vision and execution, short-term demands and long-term goals, opportunities and distractions. ENTREPRENEURISM unpacks what separates great entrepreneurs from the rest, mining the entrepreneurial journey for practical insights. Hosted by CEO coach Scott Pollack, this podcast brings you candid conversations, bold ideas, and actionable strategies from entrepreneurs who have built thriving ventures. Ready to unlock your full potential? This is the show for you.

How often does ENTREPRENEURISM publish new episodes?

ENTREPRENEURISM publishes on a variable schedule.

How many listeners does ENTREPRENEURISM get?

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