PodcastsRank #34601
Artwork for Failing to Success

Failing to Success

EntrepreneurshipPodcastsBusinessEducationSelf-ImprovementENunited-states
5 / 5
True stories of entrepreneurs making mistakes and overcoming obstacles on their path to success. Join us as we sit down to hear their real life experiences of triumph over adversity.Our host Chad Kaleky interviews our guests to learn about their journey. From Tech Startups to Small Businesses to Fortune 500 Companies, we’ll hear firsthand how they overcame their failures in entrepreneurship and life. Business Inquiries: chad@ftspod.com
Top 69.2% by pitch volume (Rank #34601 of 50,000)Data updated Feb 10, 2026

Key Facts

Publishes
N/A
Episodes
300
Founded
N/A
Category
Entrepreneurship
Number of listeners
Private
Hidden on public pages

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Public snapshot
Audience: Under 4K / month
Canonical: https://podpitch.com/podcasts/failing-to-success
Reply rate: 10–20%

Latest Episodes

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$5 Million in Promotional Products

Tue Nov 18 2025

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Company Stats:Revenue: $5 millionEmployees: ~30Founded: 2015 Podcast Highlights:✅ Ink’d Stores scales by shifting from a local retail swag shop to building on-demand company stores that manage and fulfill employee merch with no upfront cost. ✅ Jay emphasizes that action beats ideas. Cold calling, local events, and relentless experimentation are how you take a business from zero to one. ✅ The company wins in a $28B promotional products industry by focusing on corporate clients, service, and niche execution, not by trying to be “the Amazon of swag.” Episode Summary:In this episode, Jay Sapovits, President of Ink’d Stores, walks through the journey of pivoting from a fitness business into a thriving promotional products company. He explains how the company started as a physical retail swag shop and evolved into a B2B provider specializing in on-demand company stores for corporate clients. Operating in the $28 billion promotional products industry, Ink’d now generates around $5 million in revenue with just under 30 employees and celebrates its 10-year anniversary. Jay dives into why reaching $1 million in revenue is statistically rare—only about 1% of U.S. businesses ever hit that milestone—and why entrepreneurs shouldn’t get distracted by unicorn headlines. Instead, he focuses on consistent, gritty execution: chamber networking, cold calling, knocking on doors, and even standing outside in a penguin costume to get attention in the early days. He shares how mugs, classic branded merch staples, still rank among the top gifts thanks to their low cost and high perceived value, and compares the industry to pizza: tons of local players can thrive simultaneously because demand is so broad. The conversation also covers Ink’d’s major pivot from a walk-in retail model to hosting internal company swag stores that employees can order from on demand. Jay talks about “zero to one” mindset, surrounding yourself with strong people, and letting go of control so the business can scale. His main message to new founders: take shots constantly, analyze what happens, refine, and keep shooting—because every “no” gets you closer to a “yes,” and momentum only comes from action. Notable Questions We Asked:Q: Why did you pivot from a fitness company into promotional products? A: Jay realized the original fitness product didn’t have the velocity he hoped for but learned how to decorate complex materials like PVC, plastics, and foam. That expertise led him to ask, “How do we decorate more things people actually want?”—which became the basis for Ink’d’s pivot into branded merchandise. Q: Is there a specific industry or niche Ink’d focuses on for promotional products? A: Ink’d primarily serves corporate clients of all sizes, rather than teams, schools, or leagues. The business model, service style, and systems are all optimized around recurring B2B relationships and ongoing company swag needs. Q: Are mugs still a strong promotional product in today’s market? A: Yes. Jay says mugs remain a massive category—low cost, high perceived value, and always present on someone’s desk. They consistently rank in the top promotional gifts because they’re practical, visible, and customizable. Q: Why is hitting $1 million in revenue such a big milestone for small businesses? A: Jay notes that only about 1% of U.S. businesses ever reach $1 million in revenue, pointing out that most local studios, vape shops, and boutiques never hit that mark. It’s a hard threshold to cross, which is why founders shouldn’t be jaded...

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Company Stats:Revenue: $5 millionEmployees: ~30Founded: 2015 Podcast Highlights:✅ Ink’d Stores scales by shifting from a local retail swag shop to building on-demand company stores that manage and fulfill employee merch with no upfront cost. ✅ Jay emphasizes that action beats ideas. Cold calling, local events, and relentless experimentation are how you take a business from zero to one. ✅ The company wins in a $28B promotional products industry by focusing on corporate clients, service, and niche execution, not by trying to be “the Amazon of swag.” Episode Summary:In this episode, Jay Sapovits, President of Ink’d Stores, walks through the journey of pivoting from a fitness business into a thriving promotional products company. He explains how the company started as a physical retail swag shop and evolved into a B2B provider specializing in on-demand company stores for corporate clients. Operating in the $28 billion promotional products industry, Ink’d now generates around $5 million in revenue with just under 30 employees and celebrates its 10-year anniversary. Jay dives into why reaching $1 million in revenue is statistically rare—only about 1% of U.S. businesses ever hit that milestone—and why entrepreneurs shouldn’t get distracted by unicorn headlines. Instead, he focuses on consistent, gritty execution: chamber networking, cold calling, knocking on doors, and even standing outside in a penguin costume to get attention in the early days. He shares how mugs, classic branded merch staples, still rank among the top gifts thanks to their low cost and high perceived value, and compares the industry to pizza: tons of local players can thrive simultaneously because demand is so broad. The conversation also covers Ink’d’s major pivot from a walk-in retail model to hosting internal company swag stores that employees can order from on demand. Jay talks about “zero to one” mindset, surrounding yourself with strong people, and letting go of control so the business can scale. His main message to new founders: take shots constantly, analyze what happens, refine, and keep shooting—because every “no” gets you closer to a “yes,” and momentum only comes from action. Notable Questions We Asked:Q: Why did you pivot from a fitness company into promotional products? A: Jay realized the original fitness product didn’t have the velocity he hoped for but learned how to decorate complex materials like PVC, plastics, and foam. That expertise led him to ask, “How do we decorate more things people actually want?”—which became the basis for Ink’d’s pivot into branded merchandise. Q: Is there a specific industry or niche Ink’d focuses on for promotional products? A: Ink’d primarily serves corporate clients of all sizes, rather than teams, schools, or leagues. The business model, service style, and systems are all optimized around recurring B2B relationships and ongoing company swag needs. Q: Are mugs still a strong promotional product in today’s market? A: Yes. Jay says mugs remain a massive category—low cost, high perceived value, and always present on someone’s desk. They consistently rank in the top promotional gifts because they’re practical, visible, and customizable. Q: Why is hitting $1 million in revenue such a big milestone for small businesses? A: Jay notes that only about 1% of U.S. businesses ever reach $1 million in revenue, pointing out that most local studios, vape shops, and boutiques never hit that mark. It’s a hard threshold to cross, which is why founders shouldn’t be jaded...

Key Metrics

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Pitches sent
9
From PodPitch users
Rank
#34601
Top 69.2% by pitch volume (Rank #34601 of 50,000)
Average rating
5.0
Ratings count may be unavailable
Reviews
13
Written reviews (when available)
Publish cadence
N/A
Episode count
300
Data updated
Feb 10, 2026
Social followers
92.6K

Public Snapshot

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Country
United States
Language
English
Language (ISO)
Release cadence
N/A
Latest episode date
Tue Nov 18 2025

Audience & Outreach (Public)

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Audience range
Under 4K / month
Public band
Reply rate band
10–20%
Public band
Response time band
1–2 weeks
Public band
Replies received
21–50
Public band

Public ranges are rounded for privacy. Unlock the full report for exact values.

Presence & Signals

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Social followers
92.6K
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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Audience & Growth
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Monthly listeners49,360
Reply rate18.2%
Avg response4.1 days
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Sponsor mentionsLikely
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5 / 5
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Frequently Asked Questions About Failing to Success

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What is Failing to Success about?

True stories of entrepreneurs making mistakes and overcoming obstacles on their path to success. Join us as we sit down to hear their real life experiences of triumph over adversity.Our host Chad Kaleky interviews our guests to learn about their journey. From Tech Startups to Small Businesses to Fortune 500 Companies, we’ll hear firsthand how they overcame their failures in entrepreneurship and life. Business Inquiries: chad@ftspod.com

How often does Failing to Success publish new episodes?

Failing to Success publishes on a variable schedule.

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