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When you grow up as Manny Stul's son, everyone's watching to see if you'll live up to the name. His father built Moose Toys from the ground up, became the first Australian to claim Ernst & Young's World Entrepreneur of the Year award, and amassed a billionaire's fortune. That's a heavy shadow to stand in.
But Jon Stul didn't come to Shark Tank riding his father's legacy. He came to forge his own. The weight of expectation was real—part from the investors grilling him, part from the question mark hanging over his head: "Will he be a repeat success or just coasting on family connections?"
That's the fork in the road every kid of a titan faces. You can lean on what came before, or you can lean into what's possible ahead. Jon chose the latter. He brought a product, a strategy, and the determination to build something that would be unmistakably his.
Here's the truth most people miss: having Manny Stul as your father doesn't guarantee anything. It opens a door, sure. But walking through it, making your own moves, proving yourself in the arena—that's entirely on you. Legacy is only as strong as the person carrying it forward.
That's what Jon understood when he stepped onto that Shark Tank stage. The real inheritance isn't money or recognition. It's the blueprint for how to think and act like a builder. Everything else? You've got to earn it yourself.