In this episode, I’m joined by Bennett Maxwell, founder of Dirty Dough—the cookie company that’s not only disrupting the dessert space, but also taking on billion-dollar competitors in the process. What started as a side hustle quickly turned into a national brand—and a legal battle with industry giant Crumbl.
But Bennett’s story isn’t just about cookies or courtrooms. It’s about resilience, purpose, and the deeper meaning behind entrepreneurship. From building a wildly successful Franchise system to launching his own podcast, Deeper Than Dough, Bennett’s journey is packed with lessons in grit, Growth, and going against the grain.
If you’ve ever felt reluctant to take the leap—or wondered how far your values can take you in business—this conversation is one you won’t want to miss.
Dirty Dough
https://dirtydoughcookies.com
Mike Konrad entered the electronics manufacturing industry in 1985. Four decades later, he continues to dedicate his career to advancing reliability within the industry. In 1992, he founded Aqueous Technologies, an equipment manufacturer serving the electronics sector. Becoming an entrepreneur was never part of his plan, he simply had a passion for a product he designed. When his employer declined to build it, he realized the only way forward was to create it himself.
Mike entered business with strong technical skills but no business acumen. His early assets were ego, passion, arrogance, ignorance, and above all, a poor assessment of risk. Ironically, those traits proved useful in the beginning, ignorance really was bliss. But as his company grew, Mike recognized that those same traits could lead to its downfall. To survive, he had to transform himself, developing business acumen, adopting sustainable strategies, and evolving from reckless enthusiasm into purposeful leadership.
Today, with 40 years of industry experience, Mike shares both his technical expertise and his entrepreneurial journey, offering lessons from personal and professional growth, the near-misses that almost derailed him, and the strategies that carried him forward. He is also a strong advocate of “conscious marketing”, moving beyond traditional chest-thumping advertising toward education-driven authority building. By offering value through knowledge rather than hype, Mike helps organizations connect with a new generation of decision-makers who prefer independent research over bold claims.