tiktok analytics
Last Year02/21/25 - 02/21/26
Comparable Performance:
followers
60K
impressions
1.28M
likes
114K
comments
595
posts
59
engagement
8.96%
emv
$54.7K
Avg. per post
21.6K

Key Metrics

Distributions

Top Content

Steve Jobs’ big bet on Pixar
210K
26.1K
77
4mo ago
founderspodcast
Steve Jobs’ big bet on Pixar
Practice, practice, practice. From episode 301: The Biography of Tiger Woods.
125K
17.5K
43
11mo ago
founderspodcast
Practice, practice, practice. From episode 301: The Biography of Tiger Woods.
What Elon learned from toys. From episode 399 “How Elon Works”
88.3K
4.29K
24
3mo ago
founderspodcast
What Elon learned from toys. From episode 399 “How Elon Works”
The insane competitive drive of Michael Jordan. The book "Winning" by Tim Grover (Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant's trainer) highlights the relentless drive, discipline, and unyielding standards of champions like Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant, showing that true greatness comes from an obsessive focus on improvement, fundamentals, and self-belief. The book emphasizes that winning demands total commitment, mental toughness, and the willingness to push yourself and others beyond comfort, with no shortcuts or excuses allowed. I read the book and made an episode on what Jordan and Kobe had in common. Learn directly from Jordan and Kobe by listening to episode 340!
78.6K
11.9K
95
9mo ago
founderspodcast
The insane competitive drive of Michael Jordan. The book "Winning" by Tim Grover (Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant's trainer) highlights the relentless drive, discipline, and unyielding standards of champions like Michael Jordan and Kobe Bryant, showing that true greatness comes from an obsessive focus on improvement, fundamentals, and self-belief. The book emphasizes that winning demands total commitment, mental toughness, and the willingness to push yourself and others beyond comfort, with no shortcuts or excuses allowed. I read the book and made an episode on what Jordan and Kobe had in common. Learn directly from Jordan and Kobe by listening to episode 340!
Picasso averaged 1 new piece of artwork every day of his life from age 20 until his death at 91. He created something new, every day, for 71 years.
77.7K
3.78K
30
8mo ago
founderspodcast
Picasso averaged 1 new piece of artwork every day of his life from age 20 until his death at 91. He created something new, every day, for 71 years.
James Cameron has a terminator-like work ethic. James is a flat out genius who is obsessed with doing difficult things. I believe the episode I made about him is the best Founders episode. The 15 minute intro is insane!
56K
3.73K
18
8mo ago
founderspodcast
James Cameron has a terminator-like work ethic. James is a flat out genius who is obsessed with doing difficult things. I believe the episode I made about him is the best Founders episode. The 15 minute intro is insane!
Jensen goes to school on everybody. From “How Jensen Works”. Episode 403.
52.5K
3.52K
23
4mo ago
founderspodcast
Jensen goes to school on everybody. From “How Jensen Works”. Episode 403.
Quit jumping around and focus. Jeff Bezos had a profound understanding of the power that comes from identifying and relentlessly applying a handful of core principles throughout an organization. Bezos encoded his operating philosophy into Amazon's DNA from the very beginning, creating what he called a "unity of purpose" that could scale across the entire company. To read Jeff Bezos's shareholder letters is to get a crash course in running a high-growth internet business from someone who mastered it before any of the playbooks were written. And you can learn the main lessons from his shareholder letters by listening to episode 388.
44.4K
4.76K
17
8mo ago
founderspodcast
Quit jumping around and focus. Jeff Bezos had a profound understanding of the power that comes from identifying and relentlessly applying a handful of core principles throughout an organization. Bezos encoded his operating philosophy into Amazon's DNA from the very beginning, creating what he called a "unity of purpose" that could scale across the entire company. To read Jeff Bezos's shareholder letters is to get a crash course in running a high-growth internet business from someone who mastered it before any of the playbooks were written. And you can learn the main lessons from his shareholder letters by listening to episode 388.
1. Find an activity you love to do 2. Build a business around that. 3. Never stop.
38.9K
2.64K
8
9mo ago
founderspodcast
1. Find an activity you love to do 2. Build a business around that. 3. Never stop.
The relentless work ethic of Bob Dylan. Clip from episode 259 about the autobiography of Bob Dylan. #bobdylan
36.3K
4.05K
21
6mo ago
founderspodcast
The relentless work ethic of Bob Dylan. Clip from episode 259 about the autobiography of Bob Dylan. #bobdylan
The simple genius of Novak Djokovic: “I can carry on playing at this level because I like hitting the tennis ball.” People that have a love for the activity itself are hard to beat. Listen to episode 392. Michele Ferrero is a great example of this concept. Ferrero showed up every day for 70 years because he loved the activity itself.
26.9K
2.28K
10
8mo ago
founderspodcast
The simple genius of Novak Djokovic: “I can carry on playing at this level because I like hitting the tennis ball.” People that have a love for the activity itself are hard to beat. Listen to episode 392. Michele Ferrero is a great example of this concept. Ferrero showed up every day for 70 years because he loved the activity itself.
Jensen runs the company the way he does because he believes that Nvidia's worst enemy is not the competition, but itself. The worst enemy is the complacency that grips any successful company. Clip from episode 403 "How Jensen Works"
24.2K
2.08K
18
3mo ago
founderspodcast
Jensen runs the company the way he does because he believes that Nvidia's worst enemy is not the competition, but itself. The worst enemy is the complacency that grips any successful company. Clip from episode 403 "How Jensen Works"
When he’s 41 he quits his job and starts his first company. And puts all of his money in it.  To not go into debt there were no dividend payments until 1999.  All the profits flowed back into expansion.  “We are advancing constantly.” As the brand got more and more popular he got assaulted with all of these offers. We can make:  Red Bull gummy bears  Red Bull underwear  Red Bull perfume  He said no to every single one. He puts all of his energy behind one arrow.  He had a “burn the boats” mentality. He was aiming for fun and durability over everything else.  He said: “If things had gone wrong I’d be sleeping under a bridge today.”  From the episode “Red Bull’s Billionaire Manaiac Founder”
23.9K
1.88K
10
2mo ago
founderspodcast
When he’s 41 he quits his job and starts his first company. And puts all of his money in it. To not go into debt there were no dividend payments until 1999. All the profits flowed back into expansion. “We are advancing constantly.” As the brand got more and more popular he got assaulted with all of these offers. We can make: Red Bull gummy bears Red Bull underwear Red Bull perfume He said no to every single one. He puts all of his energy behind one arrow. He had a “burn the boats” mentality. He was aiming for fun and durability over everything else. He said: “If things had gone wrong I’d be sleeping under a bridge today.” From the episode “Red Bull’s Billionaire Manaiac Founder”
Rockefeller believed it was wise to hire talented people as found, not as needed. He built a company of founders.
23.8K
1.46K
7
10mo ago
founderspodcast
Rockefeller believed it was wise to hire talented people as found, not as needed. He built a company of founders.
Larry Ellison and Rafael Nadal on winning (and fighting) "While he was playing tennis with his friend Rafael Nadal, the Spanish tennis champion, Nadal asked how Larry had made his life such a success. Larry launched into a long philosophical musing about how innovation in technology is quite often based on finding errors in conventional wisdom, and when you find an error you have to have the courage take a different approach even when everyone else says you're wrong. Then Larry abruptly stopped himself. "Forget everything I just said. The answer is simple. I never give up." Earlier, Nadal had said something that made a deep impression on Larry. When asked if he loved winning, Nadal shook his head and replied, "No, I love the fight. If you fight hard the winning will come." Larry loved the fight. #entrepreneur #founder #business
23.7K
1.99K
7
8mo ago
founderspodcast
Larry Ellison and Rafael Nadal on winning (and fighting) "While he was playing tennis with his friend Rafael Nadal, the Spanish tennis champion, Nadal asked how Larry had made his life such a success. Larry launched into a long philosophical musing about how innovation in technology is quite often based on finding errors in conventional wisdom, and when you find an error you have to have the courage take a different approach even when everyone else says you're wrong. Then Larry abruptly stopped himself. "Forget everything I just said. The answer is simple. I never give up." Earlier, Nadal had said something that made a deep impression on Larry. When asked if he loved winning, Nadal shook his head and replied, "No, I love the fight. If you fight hard the winning will come." Larry loved the fight. #entrepreneur #founder #business
Excellence is the capacity to take pain: "I made a new prototype every day for more than 1000 days. While it is easy, of course, for me to celebrate my doggedness now and say that it is all you need to succeed, the truth is that it demoralized me terribly. I would crawl into the house every night covered in dust after a long day, exhausted and depressed because that day's cyclone had not worked. There were times when I thought it would never work, that I would keep on making cyclone after cyclone, never going forwards, never going backwards, until I died. Perseverance is not cheap." From episode 400: The Stubborn Genius of James Dyson
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5mo ago
founderspodcast
Excellence is the capacity to take pain: "I made a new prototype every day for more than 1000 days. While it is easy, of course, for me to celebrate my doggedness now and say that it is all you need to succeed, the truth is that it demoralized me terribly. I would crawl into the house every night covered in dust after a long day, exhausted and depressed because that day's cyclone had not worked. There were times when I thought it would never work, that I would keep on making cyclone after cyclone, never going forwards, never going backwards, until I died. Perseverance is not cheap." From episode 400: The Stubborn Genius of James Dyson
You can’t keep the great ones down: On Walt Disney and Enzo Ferrari
20.6K
1.71K
8
7mo ago
founderspodcast
You can’t keep the great ones down: On Walt Disney and Enzo Ferrari
“We don’t choose our passions. Our passions choose us.” —Jeff Bezos. From episode 385 on Michael Dell’s remarkable autobiography.
18.9K
739
4
9mo ago
founderspodcast
“We don’t choose our passions. Our passions choose us.” —Jeff Bezos. From episode 385 on Michael Dell’s remarkable autobiography.
Obsess over customers. Relentlessly. 23 years of Jeff Bezos’s Shareholder Letters covered in 80 minutes on episode 388!
18.8K
1.17K
10
9mo ago
founderspodcast
Obsess over customers. Relentlessly. 23 years of Jeff Bezos’s Shareholder Letters covered in 80 minutes on episode 388!
How Elon Works. Episode 399.  This episode covers the insanely valuable company-building principles of Elon Musk—and nothing else. I spent well over 60 hours reading (and rereading) the biography of ⁠Elon Musk written by Walter Isaacson⁠.  I then spent several days editing down 40 pages of notes from the book. I deleted everything that was not about How Elon Works.   This episode focuses exclusively on the ideas Elon used to build his companies and his truly singular career. There is no one else like him — living or dead.
14.6K
937
11
5mo ago
founderspodcast
How Elon Works. Episode 399. This episode covers the insanely valuable company-building principles of Elon Musk—and nothing else. I spent well over 60 hours reading (and rereading) the biography of ⁠Elon Musk written by Walter Isaacson⁠. I then spent several days editing down 40 pages of notes from the book. I deleted everything that was not about How Elon Works. This episode focuses exclusively on the ideas Elon used to build his companies and his truly singular career. There is no one else like him — living or dead.

Founders (@founderspodcast) TikTok Stats & Analytics

Founders (@founderspodcast) has 60K TikTok followers with a 8.96% engagement rate over the past 12 months. Across 59 videos, Founders received 114K total likes and 1.28M views, averaging 1.93K likes per video. This page tracks Founders's performance metrics, top content, and engagement trends — updated daily.

Founders (@founderspodcast) TikTok Analytics FAQ

How many TikTok followers does Founders have?+
Founders (@founderspodcast) has 60K TikTok followers as of February 2026.
What is Founders's TikTok engagement rate?+
Founders's TikTok engagement rate is 8.96% over the last 12 months, based on 59 videos.
How many likes does Founders get on TikTok?+
Founders received 114K total likes across 59 videos in the last year, averaging 1.93K likes per video.
How many TikTok views does Founders get?+
Founders's TikTok content generated 1.28M total views over the last 12 months.