Updated
Updated · Forbes · Jul 2
9 Founders Turn Personal Crises Into Businesses, From 200-Client Brain Training to Six-Figure Skincare
Updated
Updated · Forbes · Jul 2

9 Founders Turn Personal Crises Into Businesses, From 200-Client Brain Training to Six-Figure Skincare

2 articles · Updated · Forbes · Jul 2

Summary

  • Nine founders were profiled for building companies directly from personal crises, from suicide loss and war disruption to infertility, burnout and a child’s cancer treatment.
  • Several ventures grew by solving the founders’ own unmet needs first: Mariela Hunter turned her recovery into Cognitive OS and used it with 200 founders and executives, while Georgina Tang’s YNNY became a six-figure skincare business.
  • The stories also show businesses forged under acute pressure—Alyona Mysko rebuilt Fuelfinance after Russia’s 2022 invasion wiped out half its revenue overnight, and Kevin Leyes created LeyesX after losing nearly $150,000 to online scams.
  • Across the cases, the common pattern was demand emerging once others recognized the same gap, whether in mental health support, reproductive health information, grief policies or nutrition guidance during treatment.

Insights

Can turning personal trauma into a startup truly heal, or does it just create a new cycle of founder burnout?
What systemic societal failures are exposed when impactful innovations are born from personal crises?
As grief costs businesses billions, why are corporate bereavement policies lagging so far behind human need?