Book Teaser

What do you do when the company you built finally succeeds — and you realise it almost cost you what matters most?

David Fink grew up on a small Danish farm, learning stewardship from a blind grandfather and generosity from a hardworking single mother, who once sent him to school with bright-red beetroot bread. Years later, with a young family and almost no money, he moved to Norway to chase a quiet conviction: that LED light could solve real, life-dependent problems on ships in the dark, stormy North Sea.

What followed was 15 years of building Luminell — breakthrough products, painful recalls, partnerships that unravelled, moments of liquidity so tight that payroll hung by a thread, and the slow realization that the hardest part of founding a company isn’t the market. It’s the pride, fear and identity tangled up in it.

This short book is not a success manual. It is the honest account of how a marriage was stretched to its limit, how a founder had to learn — again and again — to open his hands, and how the same faith that started as a flicker became the only steady compass when everything else failed.

Raw diary pages, quiet farm memories, and unglamorous business lessons are woven together into a gentle but unflinching reflection on grace, surrender, and what it actually means to build something that lasts. If you’ve ever wondered what happens on the other side of the startup story — after the funding, the growth, the exit — this little book is for you.

David Fink is the founder of Luminell, acquired by Glamox in 2021. He lives in Norway with his wife Heidi and their children, still convinced that the brightest light usually comes from ordinary people willing to shine and to let go.