Not Taking Money Off the Table Can Cost You Everything - Ra’anan Cohen - Bringg & MobileMax (#95)
APR 14, 202655 MIN
Not Taking Money Off the Table Can Cost You Everything - Ra’anan Cohen - Bringg & MobileMax (#95)
APR 14, 202655 MIN
Description
<p><b>What really happens when you bet it all on your company & end up with nothing?</b><br /></p><p>Ra'anan Cohen, Author & Founder of MobileMax and Bringg, pulls back the curtain on what most founders never talk about going from IPO to broke, rebuilding from zero, and finally selling at a $1 billion unicorn valuation with the scars to prove it.</p><p><br />In this conversation, he shares why he turned down $10M in stock at a public company and lived to regret it, how he secretly rebuilt himself while the whole industry thought he was already rich, and what changed at Bringg that made him finally know when to pull the plug.</p><p><br />If you're building something and trying to figure out when to hold and when to fold, this episode is for you.</p><p><br /><b>Takeaways:</b></p><ul><li><b>Build the Team First, Everything Else Second:</b> The single biggest factor in both MobileMax and Bringg was team. Ra'anan implemented a strict no-asshole policy at Bringg not just hiring for talent, but for personality, attitude, and the ability to endure a long, grinding journey.</li><li><b>Know When to Take the Money:</b> Turning down $10M in stock from institutional investors during MobileMax's IPO when the company was worth $100M cost Ra'anan everything. He walked away from Bringg at $1B because the 8-year scar from MobileMax kicked in.</li><li><b>Fake It Till You Make It Has a Dark Side:</b> After MobileMax collapsed, Ra'anan went to startup meetups while secretly broke and struggling watching everyone else perform success. He later learned everyone was doing the same thing. His book, <i>Confessions of a Unicorn Founder</i>, exists specifically to break this culture open.</li><li><b>Secondary Is a Founder's Right, Not a Weakness:</b> Old-school investors want founders "hungry." Ra'anan disagrees. Taking secondary closes the open loops in your brain the daily stress about going to zero and actually frees founders to dream bigger and swing harder, not less.</li></ul><p><br /><b>Quote of the Show:</b></p><p><i>"People like to say startup is like a roller coaster. I think this is very misleading. In the startup life as a founder, 90, 95% of the time I'm in crisis mode. It's not a roller coaster it's a marathon."</i> - Ra'anan Cohen, Author & Founder of MobileMax & Bringg</p><p><br /><b>Links:</b></p><ul><li>Book: <i>Confessions of a Unicorn Founder</i> - available on Amazon</li><li>LinkedIn: <a rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow" href="https://www.linkedin.com/in/raananc/" target="_blank">https://www.linkedin.com/in/raananc/</a></li><li>Website: <a rel="noopener noreferrer nofollow" href="http://www.raanancohen.com" target="_blank"><b>www.raanancohen.com</b></a></li></ul><p><br /><b>Chapters:</b></p><p>00:00 – Intro: From IPO to zero to unicorn Ra'anan's full arc</p><p>01:22 – The one thing that had the biggest impact: team building</p><p>06:00 – The no-asshole policy and how to hire for attitude</p><p>08:50 – Framing hard weeks as progress the "great week" mantra</p><p>13:48 – MobileMax: the IPO, the $10M phone call, and saying no</p><p>16:32 – Why Ra'anan didn't sell a single stock and what it cost him</p><p>18:54 – When the iPhone reshaped mobile and MobileMax spiraled</p><p>25:05 – Broke and "the guy who made it" faking it at startup meetups</p><p>32:14 – The personal cost: family, presence, and the founder's obsession</p><p>34:13 – How a late pizza sparked the idea for Bringg</p><p>36:39 – Bringg's rise: customers, unicorn valuation, and pulling the plug</p><p>38:35 – Secondary, investor philosophies, and closing the open loop</p><p>45:26 – Fairness for founders: why secondary isn't just smart, it's right</p><p>50:15 – Writing <i>Confessions of a Unicorn Founder</i> and what comes next</p><p>52:02 – The one piece of advice Ra'anan would give his younger self</p><hr />