The Field Guide by BizMarketing
The Field Guide by BizMarketing

The Field Guide by BizMarketing

Peter Wilson

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Episodes

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Stories of people doing business and life well. We explore what it means and what it takes to do business and life well. I’m your host, Peter Wilson. If you’re like me, you’re intrigued by stories of common people who have achieved uncommon success in business and life. Join me as I interview fascinating people about how they got started, their successes and failures, their habits and routines, and what inspires them.

Recent Episodes

The 3 Things Killing Your Small Business - And It's Not Marketing
APR 12, 2026
The 3 Things Killing Your Small Business - And It's Not Marketing
You can have a great marketing strategy and still watch your business slowly fall apart. Business coach Steve Pitcairn has spent 20 years working with small business owners across the country, and he sees the same three problems over and over again: time, team, and money. Not a lack of leads. Not a weak brand. The stuff that happens after the phone rings. In this episode, Steve joins host Peter Wilson to break down why so many businesses plateau or quietly collapse even when revenue is growing, and what to do about it.Steve and Peter get into the real reasons owners stay stuck working 80-hour weeks long after they should have stepped back, why loyalty to the wrong employees can quietly hold a business hostage, and how a business owner can show $500,000 in profit on paper while hemorrhaging cash. These are not abstract concepts. Steve pulls from actual client situations, including a security company he helped scale from $750,000 to $38 million, to show what the path forward actually looks like when an owner decides to stop being the bottleneck in their own company.Get business help from Steve at Clear Vision Business Services:If your business has outgrown the way you are currently running it, this conversation is a practical starting point. Steve is offering a free consultation for listeners who want to take a closer look at where their business stands. Contact Steve at [email protected] Phone: (731) 426-2952Get marketing help from BizMarketing:Schedule a free consultation: https://bizmarketing.com/contact-bizmarketingExplore our marketing plans: https://bizmarketing.com/plans/Get in touch: [email protected]
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37 MIN
Marketing That Stands Out and Sells with John Dwyer
APR 1, 2026
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35 MIN
How fatcork Built a Direct-to-Consumer Champagne Business
MAR 3, 2026
How fatcork Built a Direct-to-Consumer Champagne Business
In this episode of The Field Guide, Peter Wilson sits down with Brian Maletis, founder of fatcork, a Seattle-based company that imports small-producer champagne directly from France and sells it to customers across the United States.Brian shares the story behind fatcork and how a career that started in the family wine distribution business eventually led him to launch his own company focused entirely on grower champagne. From harvesting grapes in Italy to working in the wine industry in New York City and ultimately starting fatcork in Seattle, Brian explains the path that led him to build a direct-to-consumer champagne business. Peter and Brian discuss the challenges of starting and sustaining a niche business, how the traditional wine distribution system works, and why fatcork takes a different approach by controlling the process from the grower’s cave in France to the customer’s doorstep.They also talk about the realities of entrepreneurship, the long timeline required to build a business, and why Brian believes champagne should be opened not just for celebrations—but to create them.Show NotesGuestBrian Maletis Founder, fatcorkWhat fatcork DoesImports small-production champagne from growers in the Champagne region of FranceStores and distributes it from a temperature-controlled champagne cave in SeattleShips directly to consumers across the United States fatcorkTopics CoveredThe fatcork Business ModelImporting champagne directly from small producersOperating as importer, distributor, and retailerShipping champagne directly to consumers across the U.S.Brian’s Path Into the Wine BusinessGrowing up in a family wine distribution business in PortlandEarly experience delivering beer and wine to stores and restaurantsA formative harvest experience in ItalyLearning the wine industry while working in New YorkDiscovering Grower ChampagneMoving to Seattle and entering the world of small-producer champagneUnderstanding the difference between major champagne houses and grower producersWhy Brian focused his business entirely on grower champagneStarting fatcorkCompleting the Executive MBA program at the University of WashingtonWriting the business plan that became fatcorkLaunching the company in 2010Lessons From 16+ Years in BusinessThe reality behind building a niche businessWhy entrepreneurship is harder than it often appearsThe importance of persistence and long-term commitmentChampagne and Everyday MomentsWhy champagne doesn’t have to be reserved for special occasionsThe idea of opening a bottle to create a special momentKey TakeawayBuilding a successful niche business often means committing to a very specific idea and staying with it for years. Brian’s experience with fatcork shows how focusing on a unique product—in this case, grower champagne—can create a differentiated business in a crowded market.Resourcesfatcork https://fatcork.comPodcastThe Field Guide Practical marketing and leadership insights for business owners, hosted by Peter Wilson of BizMarketing.
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42 MIN