Clicky

  • Login
  • Register
  • Submit Your Content
  • Contact Us
Monday, November 10, 2025
World Tribune
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Food
Submit
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Food
No Result
View All Result
World Tribune
No Result
View All Result

Ring’s founder went from shoveling horse stalls to selling to Amazon for $1.15 billion and says work-life balance is a myth

November 10, 2025
in Business
Reading Time: 3 mins read
A A
Ring’s founder went from shoveling horse stalls to selling to Amazon for .15 billion and says work-life balance is a myth
0
SHARES
ShareShareShareShareShare

Ring’s founder went from shoveling horse stalls to selling to Amazon for $1.15 billion and says work-life balance is a myth

Shark Tank is known for turning scrappy ideas into multimillion-dollar household brands, such as Scrub Daddy, Bombas, and BeatBox.

READ ALSO

Trump pardons Giuliani, Mark Meadows, others involved in effort to block 2020 election result, DOJ official says

Senate moves to end shutdown as Bernie Sanders says Democrats voting with GOP made ‘horrific mistake’

But one of the show’s biggest misses came when a startup called Doorbot walked onto the set. The video doorbell walked away without an investment, but a few years later, under a new name—Ring—it became a billion-dollar success story found on the doorsteps across the country.

But according to its founder, Jamie Siminoff, the company’s rise wasn’t the product of luck or a single breakthrough—it was built on relentless work.

“‘Work-life balance’ was a phrase and a goal, not a reality,” wrote Siminoff in his new book out today: Ding Dong: How Ring Went from Shark Tank Reject to Everyone’s Front Door.

Speaking with Fortune ahead of the book launch, the now 49-year-old said in his early days as an entrepreneur, he spent nearly every waking moment working—or worrying—about the company. His biggest sacrifice? A good night’s rest. 

“I just didn’t sleep. I mean as crazy as it is, I really didn’t sleep more than a few hours a night, and I couldn’t, and even if I wanted to sleep, I couldn’t sleep,” Siminoff told Fortune.

And while Siminoff admitted it was “not good” and may have even affected his decision-making—it’s the reality many founders must deal with if they are committed to staying afloat.

“I wouldn’t recommend it to anyone, but I do think you do it and you just get through it,” he added.

Even as Ring began to take off, the pace only accelerated. By 2017, when Ring was generating millions in sales and valued at over $1 billion, Siminoff had logged nearly 200 travel days in just 10 months, constantly bouncing between time zones and investor meetings. He would make an exception, though, to seek out family balance. He even took his five-year-old son Ollie on the road with him—including a trip to China to visit a factory.

Starting the grind from the bottom—all the way up to multimillionaire 

While Siminoff’s all-in approach at Ring might sound like an unsustainable sprint, that work ethic has been part of him since the beginning. 

Growing up in New Jersey, he spent his summers and weekends taking on odd jobs—painting houses, bellhopping at a hotel, and even shoveling horse stalls from neighbors’ barns on his way to school: “I was always hustling,” he said in his book.

“I’m a hustler and a grinder, and I just don’t stop,” Siminoff told Fortune. “I think I learned as a kid that if you want money, you work and you just keep working. You keep doing it, you keep going.”

As a student at Babson University, he kept that same hustle alive. He and a friend plastered posters around campus advertising their services: 

“For $10 an hour we would do anything, Taskrabbit before Taskrabbit,” he wrote. “When the job was particularly unpleasant, we’d find local high schoolers to take on the job for $8 an hour and pocket the difference.

That entrepreneurship streak eventually led to Doorbot—which he founded in 2012 in his garage with a team of engineers. In 2018, Amazon acquired the company for $1.15 billion.

Siminoff joined Amazon—back at the helm as Ring’s leader—earlier this year.

Grind over glamour

From a bird’s eye view, it’s easy to look at Ring—and its ubiquity across neighborhoods—and feel inspired to chase entrepreneurship.

But Siminoff warns against mistaking success for all-encompassing glamour.

“Not every day is glamorous,” he told Fortune. “I think that’s the problem with entrepreneurship today… it’s become now so normalized that I think it has a glamor to it, and the reality is, it’s hard.”

Even as Ring grew into a company generating millions, Siminoff said there were countless moments when it nearly all fell apart. What kept him going wasn’t the money—it was the mission to keep neighborhoods safer.

“If you think you’re doing something that’s in some way benefiting people, society, the environment, whatever—it’s a lot easier to wake up at 6 a.m. and go do it, because at least even failure is that you try to do something good.”

Credit: Source link

ShareTweetSendSharePin
Previous Post

Filipinos Reel From Destruction Left by Super Typhoon Fung-wong

Next Post

Northern lights could be visible in 15 states this week

Related Posts

Trump pardons Giuliani, Mark Meadows, others involved in effort to block 2020 election result, DOJ official says
Business

Trump pardons Giuliani, Mark Meadows, others involved in effort to block 2020 election result, DOJ official says

November 10, 2025
Senate moves to end shutdown as Bernie Sanders says Democrats voting with GOP made ‘horrific mistake’
Business

Senate moves to end shutdown as Bernie Sanders says Democrats voting with GOP made ‘horrific mistake’

November 10, 2025
Stock market today: Dow futures jump as shutdown nears end on Dem ‘surrender’
Business

Stock market today: Dow futures jump as shutdown nears end on Dem ‘surrender’

November 10, 2025
Donald Trump booed as Commanders-Lions football game
Business

Donald Trump booed as Commanders-Lions football game

November 10, 2025
These GOP states would suffer the biggest blows if Affordable Care Act subsidies expire
Business

These GOP states would suffer the biggest blows if Affordable Care Act subsidies expire

November 10, 2025
Trump floats ,000 tariff ‘dividend’ that Bessent says could come via tax cuts already on the books
Business

Trump floats $2,000 tariff ‘dividend’ that Bessent says could come via tax cuts already on the books

November 9, 2025
Next Post
Northern lights could be visible in 15 states this week

Northern lights could be visible in 15 states this week

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

What's New Here!

Reddit sues Perplexity for scraping of posts, expanding user data battle with AI industry

Reddit sues Perplexity for scraping of posts, expanding user data battle with AI industry

October 23, 2025
See the hip-drop tackle that got Commanders’ Frankie Luvu suspended

See the hip-drop tackle that got Commanders’ Frankie Luvu suspended

November 4, 2025
The best early deals on Apple, Shark, Lego and other gear, plus what to expect during the sale

The best early deals on Apple, Shark, Lego and other gear, plus what to expect during the sale

November 1, 2025
Why Your Digital Transformation Is Really a Legacy System Integration Problem

Why Your Digital Transformation Is Really a Legacy System Integration Problem

November 5, 2025
Nearly half of U.S. adults aren’t confident they could find a good job

Nearly half of U.S. adults aren’t confident they could find a good job

October 19, 2025
This battery-powered Ring doorbell is on sale for  right now

This battery-powered Ring doorbell is on sale for $50 right now

October 15, 2025
Boox updates popular Palma E Ink device with color and 5G connectivity

Boox updates popular Palma E Ink device with color and 5G connectivity

October 23, 2025

About

World Tribune is an online news portal that shares the latest news on world, business, health, tech, sports, and related topics.

Follow us

Recent Posts

  • Northern lights could be visible in 15 states this week
  • Ring’s founder went from shoveling horse stalls to selling to Amazon for $1.15 billion and says work-life balance is a myth
  • Filipinos Reel From Destruction Left by Super Typhoon Fung-wong
  • The Logitech MX Master 4 comes with haptic feedback, less rubber and the same general shape

Newslatter

Loading
  • Submit Your Content
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • DMCA

© 2024 World Tribune - All Rights Reserved!

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Sports
  • Health
  • Food

© 2024 World Tribune - All Rights Reserved!

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password? Sign Up

Create New Account!

Fill the forms below to register

All fields are required. Log In

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In