Episode Details
Back to EpisodesBuilding How Brian Duncanson Helped Turn a Napkin Idea Into Spartan Race
Season 2026
Episode 24
Published 4 weeks ago
Description
Spartan Race started as an idea written on a napkin during a financial crisis. No business plan. Limited money. No guarantee any of it would work. Brian Duncanson, one of the original architects behind Spartan, sits down with Joe De Sena to walk through the real origin story: a meeting in Hartford in December 2009, the decision to fire before aiming, and a ragtag team that turned mud and barbed wire into a global brand operating in 45 countries. They break down the Fenway Stadium gamble Joe did not want to take, the pandemic pivot that forced DECA into a box, and why the strongest ideas at Spartan came when resources were thinnest. Brian also introduces his book, Becoming Spartan: Leveraging Friction to Forge, Scale, and Outlast, and explains what seventeen years of building under pressure taught him about action, constraint, and the 1% daily grind. Things You Will Learn:
- Why the strongest business innovations at Spartan came from resource constraints rather than abundance.
- The fire-ready-aim approach that turned a napkin sketch into a global endurance brand during a financial crisis.
- What breaking a massive goal into checkpoint-sized commitments does for focus, execution, and follow-through.
- Two Bike Math: When you lose a resource, the team that adapts fastest wins. Constraint forces innovation you would never find in comfort.
- Fire Ready Aim: Stop planning. Launch small. Test in the market. Adjust under pressure. The plan improves only after contact with reality.
- Checkpoint Navigation: Break the hundred-mile goal into five-mile segments. Solve the first one. Then move to the next. Momentum compounds.
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