Business Builders

John Teeling: The Man Who Helped Revive Irish Whiskey

Conor Kearney

Use Left/Right to seek, Home/End to jump to start or end. Hold shift to jump forward or backward.

0:00 | 1:22:50

John Teeling joins Business Builders for a candid, wide-ranging conversation about risk, resilience, and the 20-year bet that helped revive Irish whiskey. 

When John entered the industry in the 1980s, Irish whiskey had fallen to under 2% of the global market. Consolidated into a struggling monopoly and written off by many, it looked like a declining category. 

Instead of walking away, he built. 

From buying a shuttered chemical plant in Dundalk and installing second-hand pot stills, to navigating bank loan recalls, political pressure, and years without meaningful profit, John explains what it really took to build Cooley Distillery; and why the payoff took nearly two decades. 

But this episode goes far beyond whiskey. 

John shares lessons from decades in mining, resources, and investing, where high risk doesn’t mean high reward, but high probability of loss. He breaks down the difference between risk and uncertainty, why “the Euro is an orphan,” and why unsophisticated investors should never be in speculative markets. 

This is a conversation about long-term conviction, imposter syndrome, stubborn belief, and building businesses that outlast downturns. 

At 80 years old, John reflects on endurance, energy, family, legacy, and what it really means to take responsibility when you persuade others to back your vision.

🎧 In this episode, you’ll learn:

- Why Irish whiskey collapsed - and how it came back
- What it takes to break a monopoly
- The difference between risk and uncertainty
- Why high risk usually means high loss
- How to build a distillery from scratch
- What investors get wrong about speculative markets
- The psychological cost of entrepreneurship
- Why you don’t need to love the product to build the business
- How patience compounds over decades
- What most founders misunderstand about conviction

⏱️ Timestamps

00:00 - Why banks shouldn’t accept uncertainty
 01:23 - Growing up in Dublin and early responsibility
 17:06 - The £1 million target by 40
 24:18 - “A euro is an orphan”
 33:10 - How mining companies are really funded
 46:30 - The failed takeover of Irish Distillers
 58:15 - Buying a plant “for bottles”
 01:00:14 - “I sold women’s knickers…”
 01:02:17 - 20 years before real profit
 01:08:18 - “The value of a half-built hole is zero”
 01:13:16 - Energy, longevity and playing rugby at 60