My Worst Investment Ever Podcast

Jon Ostenson – I Built a Million-Dollar Business That Never Made a Profit


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BIO: Jon is the Founder and CEO of FranBridge Consulting, a 2-time Inc. 5000 company, and he is a top 1% franchise consultant.

STORY: Jon co-founded a marketing and call-center business that appeared successful on the surface, growing to millions in revenue and dozens of employees. However, excessive customization and an inability to charge prices that matched rising costs meant the business never became sustainably profitable.

LEARNING: Profitability is oxygen. Knowing when to admit you’re wrong matters just as much as knowing how to start.

“Humble yourself and admit when you’re wrong, course correct, and pivot.”Jon Ostenson

Guest profile

Jon Ostenson is the Founder and CEO of FranBridge Consulting, a 2-time Inc. 5000 company, and he is a top 1% franchise consultant. Jon is also the author of the bestselling book, Non-Food Franchising. Jon draws on his experience as a former Inc. 500 Franchise President and Multi-Brand Franchisee in helping his clients select their franchise investments.

Worst investment ever

Leaving the corporate world felt like freedom. After years of structure, predictability, and steady paychecks, you finally get to build something of your own. That was precisely where Jon found himself: grateful for his corporate experience, energized by the idea of business ownership, and eager to prove he could create something meaningful on his own terms.

A promising partnership and a compelling business vision

Shortly after leaving corporate life, Jon partnered with a colleague to launch a marketing and sales company. He owned 60 percent of the business and ran day-to-day operations, while his partner held the remaining 40 percent.

The vision was compelling. The company would help franchise businesses grow by handling their marketing, answering inbound calls through an in-house call center, and booking appointments directly for clients. The promise was simple: make the phones ring and convert those calls into revenue.

Early momentum and the illusion of success

At first, it worked. The business grew quickly, attracting a strong leadership team and building a culture Jon was proud of. With around 35 employees and annual revenues of $3 million to $4 million, the company appeared successful from the outside. The team was energized, clients were signing on, and the pace was exciting.

When growth didn’t translate into profit

But beneath the surface, there was a quiet, persistent problem.

The business wasn’t profitable.

Despite all the effort, the long hours, and the constant tweaking, the company hovered around breakeven. Some months it lost money. Others it barely scraped by. Payroll was always looming, and profitability felt just out of reach. Jon tried adjusting pricing, shifting emphasis between marketing and call center services, and introducing new technology to increase value.

But every fix only delayed the inevitable question he didn’t want to answer: What if the model itself was broken?

The hidden cost of customization and complexity

The core issue turned out to be customization. The business was designed to scale by serving franchise systems with repeatable processes. Instead, each franchisee insisted their market was different, their staff was unique, and their customers required special handling. Wanting to please early clients and drive revenue, Jon said yes. Again and again.

Over time, the company became highly customized, operationally complex, and increasingly expensive to run. Pricing no longer matched costs. The more the business grew, the harder it became to make money. What looked like top-line success was masking a model that couldn’t sustain itself.

The hard decision to walk away with integrity

Eventually, Jon made the difficult decision to wind down the business. There was no dramatic exit or acquisition, but there was integrity. The team helped place employees in new roles and transitioned clients responsibly. Still, it was a painful experience.

The failure wasn’t just financial; it was an ego hit. This was Jon’s first true experience of business ownership, and letting it go meant admitting that the original idea wasn’t as strong as he believed.

Lessons learned
  1. The biggest lesson came from contrast. After running his own startup without a proven product-market fit, Jon developed a deep appreciation for franchising. Unlike a startup built on assumptions, franchises offer historical data, real performance benchmarks, and access to owners who have already walked the path. You can see results before you ever invest.
  2. There were personal lessons, too. Knowing when to admit you’re wrong matters just as much as knowing how to start. Humility, course correction, and the willingness to pivot are not weaknesses in entrepreneurship; they’re survival skills.
  3. Profitability, Jon learned, is oxygen. A business that can’t consistently operate in the black eventually suffocates, no matter how exciting the vision or how talented the team.

Andrew’s takeaways
  1. One of the most important disciplines for any business owner is accurately closing the books each month. That means reviewing not just the profit and loss statement, but also the balance sheet. If your accountant can’t do that, it’s time for a new one. Monthly financial clarity allows you to identify problems early, before they become fatal.
  2. Another insight comes from scale. Based on analysis of tens of thousands of companies globally, Andrew points to $7.5 million in annual revenue as a critical threshold. Below that level, it’s tough to afford the management talent and infrastructure required to run a scalable business. If you can’t get there efficiently, it may be time to rethink the model.
  3. Finally, complexity is the silent killer. Businesses naturally drift toward offering more products, more services, and more custom solutions. Every added layer increases costs and erodes margins. Only disciplined leadership can stop complexity from overwhelming profitability.

Actionable advice

If you’re building a business, be honest about whether you’re chasing revenue or building something scalable. Early customization can help you survive, but staying there too long can trap you in a low-margin cycle that’s hard to escape.

Focus on creating profitable top-line growth, not just growth for its own sake. Learn to say no, even when opportunities feel exciting. And remember: there is no perfect time to start a business. The best way to learn is to get in the game early, without betting everything, and build experience that you can compound over time.

Jon’s recommendations

Jon recommends starting with education and proven frameworks. He offers a free downloadable copy of his book, Non-Food Franchising, in a concise 90-page guide. The book has received strong feedback and provides practical insights for anyone considering business ownership.

Listeners can download the PDF or audio version by visiting FranBridgeConsulting.com and sharing their email address. Those who prefer a physical copy can purchase it on Amazon, with all proceeds supporting Hope International.

No.1 goal for the next 12 months

Jon’s goal for the next 12 months is to grow passive income across multiple asset classes, including franchising. His goal is to build sustainable revenue streams that create freedom across all areas of life: faith, family, fitness, finances, and future ventures.

Passive income, for Jon, isn’t just about money. It’s about capacity—the ability to choose how you spend your time and energy.

Parting words

“There’s never a good time to start a business. Get off the couch, dip your toe in the water, read our book, get in the game, and start thinking about it.”Jon Ostenson

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Connect with Jon Ostenson
  1. LinkedIn
  2. Twitter
  3. Facebook
  4. YouTube
  5. Book
  6. Website

Andrew’s books
  1. How to Start Building Your Wealth Investing in the Stock Market
  2. My Worst Investment Ever
  3. 9 Valuation Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
  4. Transform Your Business with Dr.Deming’s 14 Points

Andrew’s online programs
  1. Valuation Master Class
  2. The Become a Better Investor Community
  3. How to Start Building Your Wealth Investing in the Stock Market
  4. Finance Made Ridiculously Simple
  5. FVMR Investing: Quantamental Investing Across the World
  6. Become a Great Presenter and Increase Your Influence
  7. Transform Your Business with Dr. Deming’s 14 Points
  8. Achieve Your Goals

Connect with Andrew Stotz:
  1. astotz.com
  2. LinkedIn
  3. Facebook
  4. Instagram
  5. Threads
  6. X
  7. YouTube
  8. My Worst Investment Ever Podcast

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My Worst Investment Ever PodcastBy Andrew Stotz

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