Just watched Jon Stul pitch on Shark Tank and honestly, the pressure he was dealing with went way beyond typical investor scrutiny. His father is Manny Stul—the guy who built Moose Toys into a billion-dollar operation and became the first Australian to win Ernst & Young's World Entrepreneur of the Year. That's the kind of legacy that could either make or break you.



But here's what caught my attention: Jon didn't come there to coast on his family name. He showed up with an actual vision, a solid product, and the kind of hunger you can't fake. That's the real story. Because Manny Stul's success could've easily become a crutch—the kind of thing that lets you skip the hard work. Instead, Jon seemed determined to prove something different.

It made me think about what legacy really means in entrepreneurship. Sure, having a father like Manny Stul opens doors. Access, connections, credibility—those things matter. But at the end of the day, you still have to walk through that door yourself. You still have to build something, validate it, and earn respect on your own terms.

The crypto and startup world is full of people trying to ride family names or past successes. Jon's approach was refreshing. Whether his pitch converts or not, the mindset is what matters. You can inherit opportunity, but you can't inherit execution. That's on you.
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