『Receipts by OpStart』のカバーアート

Receipts by OpStart

Receipts by OpStart

著者: Paul Anthony
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今ならプレミアムプランが3カ月 月額99円

2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

Receipts is a podcast from OpStart about the financial side of building a startup — the part most founders only talk about in private. Each episode digs into the real numbers behind the build: burn rate, runway, R&D credits, fundraising scars, the first real CFO conversation. The decisions that worked, the ones that didn't, and what the spreadsheets actually said when things got hard. Made for founders pre-seed through Series C — the ones doing the work, not posting about it. No spin, no recycled LinkedIn wisdom. Just candid conversations with founders, operators, and the finance pros keeping the back office in order so the rest of the company can grow. If you've ever wondered what the journey really costs, Receipts is the paper trail. Presented by OpStart, the finance team behind the build.Copyright 2026 Paul Anthony
エピソード
  • Building a Music Town: How Juke is Reviving Live Music One City at a Time
    2026/05/04

    Griff Eaton, founder of Juke, joins Paul Anthony for OpStart's first in-person interview to unpack how a frustrated night at the Livery in Benton Harbor turned into a venture-backed platform now reshaping live music in cities across the country. Griff walks through the three barriers that kill the simple act of tipping a local artist (no cash, awkward walk to the stage, no idea what songs they actually play) and the PowerPoint-and-paper-printouts prototype he ran with the Justin Stoblin band to prove people would pay if those frictions disappeared.

    From there the conversation moves through a real founder's gauntlet: relaunching after COVID killed his first wedge, winning Notre Dame's McCloskey New Venture Competition for $50K, getting the call from Tim Connors, joining Platform Venture Studio, and going upmarket with Kids Bop's Live Nation tour, Wembley, Red Rocks, and a surreal Zoom with Matchbox Twenty during the Barbie bump. Griff is candid about what didn't work, why chasing huge tours wasn't a sustainable channel for Juke, and how he and the team came back to the original problem with a sharper lens.

    The result is "Music Town," Juke's city-partnership model where economic development teams, venues, and local artists plug into a single platform, with QR codes routing every show in a city to one place. Griff and Paul close on the lessons every first-time founder needs: when to pivot, when to commit, why fun is a real competitive advantage, and how to keep building when the easy answers are gone.

    In this episode, you'll learn:

    ● The three barriers that block live-music tipping and song requests, and why removing them changes the economics for local artists

    ● How Griff validated the idea with a PowerPoint slideshow, paper song lists, and a TV he carried in from his living room

    ● What winning the McCloskey New Venture Competition actually unlocked beyond the prize money

    ● Why joining Platform Venture Studio reshaped Juke's go-to-market and what founders should weigh before going the studio route

    ● What stadium tours with Kids Bop and conversations with Matchbox Twenty taught Griff about scale, timing, and creative production

    ● Why Juke pivoted back to local venues and built the "Music Town" city-partnership model

    ● The case Griff makes for keeping fun at the center of an early-stage company, and why it compounds

    Connect:

    ● OpStart: https://www.opstart.co

    ● Paul Anthony on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/paul-anthony-8a256087/

    ● Griff Eaton on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/griffin-juke/

    ● Juke: https://juke.band/search

    Hashtags:

    #OpStart #Juke #LiveMusic #StartupPodcast #FounderStory #MusicTown #SouthBend #Elkhart #VentureStudio #SmallBusiness #StartupLife #LocalMusic #Entrepreneurship #MusicTech #FoundersJourney

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