Confessions Of A Female Founder is the latest in Meghan's flurry of output after her much-criticised Netflix lifestyle series With Love, Meghan and her new brand As Ever. But her latest business venture has already been criticised by some British outlets who reviewed the podcast show.
The Telegraph gave the series two stars out of five and branded it "insane".
The outlet's Chris Bennion said the podcast is "an inane stream of mindless aphorisms" and criticised it for being full of "journeys of self-love and validation, discussions of bottling your essence, and great handfuls of mutual adoration."
Meanwhile, The Guardian's Rachel Aroesti also gave the show two stars out of five, saying it is "stomach-turning" and "a bit much".
She said: "Sitting in a podcast studio talking to wealthy women who worship her is clearly far more Meghan’s scene than enduring the remorselessly vicious press and strange, alienating traditions of these shores."
Elsewhere, the Times's James Marriott gave the podcast series one star out of five, saying it is full of Meghan's "self love", adding that "it’s a research exercise for her new app. Meghan, after all, is a world expert in self-love."
Earlier today while announcing the launch, Meghan issued a new message on her social media, saying: "Being an entrepreneur can start young. (By the way, all these years later and I’m still selling cookies!)"
Some fans appeared to like the first episode of Confessions of a Female Founder, with one user writing on X: "I thoroughly enjoyed the 1st episode of Megan’s podcast."
Another one said: "I enjoyed it. Good to see women supporting and caring for other women." A third one added: "loved it [heart emojis]."