Acquired - Sessions: David Senra (Founders Podcast)
Episode Date: March 29, 2023ACQ Sessions returns with David Senra of the Founders Podcast. David is one of our very favorite people in the world — it’s impossible to spend an hour (or 3!) with him and not come away ...inspired to go take over the world. This conversation is an “extended, IRL version” of monthly calls that we do together where we share stories, swap life and podcast advice, and just genuinely enjoy sharing time with someone who shares our outlook and enthusiasm for the history of entrepreneurship. Pull up a chair, grab a beverage (or energy drink in David’s case) and join us!Links:Go subscribe to Founders! Some of our favorite episodes: Bernard Arnault, Brunello Cucinelli, Edwin Land, Kobe BryantSponsors:ServiceNow: https://bit.ly/acqsnaiagentsHuntress: https://bit.ly/acqhuntressVanta: https://bit.ly/acquiredvantaMore Acquired!:Get email updates with hints on next episode and follow-ups from recent episodesJoin the SlackSubscribe to ACQ2Merch Store!Topics:Note: Acquired hosts and guests may hold assets discussed in this episode. This podcast is not investment advice, and is intended for informational and entertainment purposes only. You should do your own research and make your own independent decisions when considering any financial transactions.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I found this guy who tweeted something a couple days ago whenever it was hilarious.
He goes, most people's alarm clock is David Goggins telling them to wake up and get after it.
My alarm clock is David Senra yelling at me telling me to be like Edwin Land.
I was like, alright, repetition works. Welcome to this special episode of Acquired, the podcast about great technology companies
and the stories and playbooks behind them. I'm Ben Gilbert.
I'm David Rosenthal.
And we are your hosts. Today's episode is our next installment of Acquired Sessions,
a video format on YouTube that we started playing with last year. Our guest today is David Senra of
the Founders Podcast. David is quite possibly the only person we know who is more obsessed than us
with business history and the lessons that great founders teach us. David, David Senra, that is, has read hundreds
of founder biographies and done deep episodes on them all. I don't know that I'm at hundreds yet,
me, David, but I'm definitely in dozens. I aspire to be at hundreds, but David Senra is just one of
our closest podcaster friends and friends period out there. His show is awesome. Here on this episode, we had him out
to my living room here in San Francisco, and we had just a awesome, really fun, multi-multi-hour
conversation, just like the ones that he and I have scheduled every month on Zoom when the mics
are off. And it was super organic, super unstructured. We covered a ton of ground, including that I think two nights before we recorded,
David was just coming up from LA
where he had dinner with Charlie Munger.
And so we spent a lot of time talking about that.
Charlie's influence on David,
his and Warren's influence on all three of us,
a bunch of thoughts on advice generally.
And as you can imagine,
David just sprinkled dozens and dozens of historical examples and founder stories throughout the episode.
It is crazy. Every time someone's making a point, he'll dive in. This is just like that
thing Edwin Land said that one time. Or David Ogilvie or Coco Chanel or who have you.
David is definitely close with the eminent dead. I will say after editing this episode, I had one enormous takeaway.
David Senra is really, really into podcasting.
So get fired up to meet him on his level.
All right, quick things.
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should be with really no editorial from us. So help us direct the next episode. Join the Slack.
It is one of the only places on the
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Now, on to Acquired Sessions.
So, David, do you want to tell us
who you had dinner with the other night?
I had a three-hour dinner with Charlie Munger.
That is awesome.
Where I could ask him any questions that you want.
Well, first of all all I guess we should back
up it's like there's a reason that he's so admired right by so many people but for for me particularly
um you get to meet a lot of really interesting people because of the work that we do right
and so that's like a a blessing and something that I know we've had conversations in the past
that we deeply appreciate but Charlie's a different level for me. Like, I literally think of him like the wise grandfather I never had.
You know, I've met all kinds of people.
I don't really get, like, nervous or starstruck.
I was legitimately, like, shaking the day before.
I was like, I cannot believe.
I didn't want to tell that many people because, like, there's no way this is going to happen.
Like, I won't believe it until it actually happens.
We do very similar work, right, where it's like, how many people have spent six, seven years, tens of thousands of hours
reading hundreds of books about the history of entrepreneurship and investing and then
not only reading it, taking notes on it, making a podcast.
Us and Charlie and Warren.
Yeah.
And so the reason I bring that up is because you think about all the different companies
and founders you guys have studied, all the different companies and founders that I've
studied, all the different companies and founders that I've studied. And even amongst the rarest group of people, Charlie still stands out.
And the crazy thing is, he's 99.
And so I get there, and we start off in his library, which is the best place for me that you could possibly see.
Set the stage more.
How big is the library?
How many books are we talking about?
So one of his family members was there, too.
And she's like, oh, this is nothing.
This is the front room.
Wait till you see the back.
Yeah, so it's similar to the room we're in.
Very similar size.
And floor-to-ceiling shelves.
And so I'm with a small group of friends. In fact, mutual friends for us.
The people that set this up for us, or for me, was Andrew Wilkinson and Chris from the founders of friends. In fact, mutual friends for us. The people that set this up for us, or for me,
was Andrew Wilkinson and Chris from the founders of Tiny,
who are mutual friends.
And so we're sitting there,
and there's actually a funny thing where it starts off,
and they know both Warren and Charlie.
They've talked to them before.
So they go right into it, and then I'm sitting there,
and I had this whole list of probably 25 questions.
I was going to ask if you prepared in advance.
I know you did.
I never got the chance to open my phone.
Because I was just sitting there.
I was like, I'm looking at him.
And he's very close, maybe a little bit further from me than where Ben was.
That would feel super disrespectful to take out my phone.
That too.
And I had read every single book on Charlie.
I watched all of his videos.
I have studied this guy forever. And so every time he had said, hey, read this book, I go and every single book on Charlie. I watched all of his videos. I have studied this guy forever.
And so every time he had said, hey, read this book, I go and read the book.
And then I see a bunch of the books that he has recommended behind him.
So people are like, oh, was he as you expected?
They say, hey, be careful.
Don't meet your heroes, right?
He was unbelievably gracious.
I was like, hey, Charlie, do you mind if I take a look at your bookshelf?
Right?
He's just like, do whatever you want.
Just unbelievably polite.
Still like biting intellect, ferocious intelligence.
At 99.
At 99.
So we were talking earlier downstairs where the scary thing about Charlie is, I remember asking a question about Henry Kaiser this guy that was
super famous when Charlie was younger he built like 100 companies built the Hoover Dam like he
was as famous in his time as like Elon Musk is today right but no one knows who he is and I was
asking questions about Charlie in the book and his recall is just insane so the point where I asked
him I go how do you know all this Charlie he goes I knew his partner and then he starts telling
stories about being knowing like
having a relationship with henry kaiser's business partner and then all these three hours of just
unbelievable stories and then i go charlie like how do you remember all this stuff like do you
write like you take notes you reread the books over and over again he's like nope and all i
could think i was like imagine wow that guy's mind in 99 is still so sharp.
I had brought a gift for him because he talks about Rockefeller all the time.
I bought him this special edition, centennial edition version of Henry Flagler's biography.
Oh, Flagler.
So I live in Miami.
The guy, Les Sandiford, I think is the author of that book.
He is good friends with, there's only like one local bookshop in Miami called Books and Books.
And so Les is a local author who's good friends with the owner of that bookstore.
So they did a, you can't get this book anywhere else.
It's a special edition book.
Because Flagler moved to Florida later in life.
After the Standard Oil thing.
Yeah, yeah.
He's got a fascinating story.
We can talk about that.
Where he was unbelievably wealthy because of Standard Oil.
He's 50, 60, 70 years old when he's doing this.
And he's just like, oh, what am I going to do now?
I'll build an entire state.
When he gets to Miami, Miami is a little less than 500 people living in a swamp.
Because you can't live there.
There was no AC at the time.
And so then he builds the world's first railroad connecting over for connecting uh the florida keys he just
essentially like you read that book and you're like oh humans have no limits other than the ones
we put on ourselves and so that's what flagler does he just stretches it and he does some terrible
things too where it's like yeah wanted to find a way to divorce his wife so he literally moves to
another state because you couldn't be divorced in new york bribes the the the government of florida
they create the flagler law which allows him to get a divorce.
Then he does that, like, I think a few times.
I think he's, like, in his 70s.
He marries, like, a 30-year-old.
Like, so it's not all good.
But that guy's like, oh, your rules don't apply to me.
Like, I will build whatever I want.
He built infrastructure, hotels, everything else.
This is, like, one of the things that I keep learning from Founders Podcast.
And I'm curious if you do it intentionally or if you try not to do it. But every single time, I'm like, oh, people aren't perfect. None of your heroes are perfect. And do you find yourself like... Because we run on Acquired a lot. We're like, it's not as fun to tell stories about terrible people. And so you don't want to show someone's negative side as much because it doesn't
like it's just it well we like we fall in love with them too right when we're doing right and
you're like wow they're the most extraordinary person on this one axis to ever live and we we
should talk about how they're a flawed person in many ways but it's not fun to dwell on like you
kind of want to like move through that and be like yep yep they were flawed here's the next amazing
thing that they did like how do you handle that?
Like, you know how a normal biography is written, right? It's like way too much family history.
Like I want to know some family history. I don't want five generations back. Stop. Like,
I don't want to know the origination of their last name. I don't need that. I want to know like-
And you're like the most qualified person in the world to critique a biography
writing style at this point. So-
So why we're reading it is like, everyone wants to know the climb, right? It's like, how did you, you guys, I just went through your entire, to get
part of the prep for Charlie is listening to all of your Berkshire episodes, right? Where you guys
do a fantastic job on this. Cause like the first two is like the young Charlie, the young Warren.
So I would literally, and I've done this forever. It's like, I don't, when you think of Warren
Buffett or Ben Franklin or George Washington or anybody that's super famous, when we see them,
it's like, oh, who's the Ben Franklin on the $100 bill, right?
Or who's Washington on the dollar bill?
Or who's Buffett at the meeting in Omaha?
It's like, no, no, that's the guy that is enjoying the fruits of the person that actually built the empire.
I go and stare at pictures like a freak of young Charlie Munger when he was like 38 or young Warren Buffett, right?
They were like us. They looked us they were young people once yeah in in uh in our Berkshire series the first did we end
the first episode without even getting to Berkshire yet I think we might have a partnership
you mentioned on the Walmart episode where it's like everybody says oh Sam Walton didn't start
Walmart is 44 yeah but he was doing 25 years of practice and learning and he wasn't just sitting
on his ass.
Starting a bunch of stuff that looked an awful lot like Walmart.
Yes, learning from that.
And so the...
Which is totally, like, I mean, aside, but we have no agenda here.
That is, like, I think both an advantage that, like, we have, all three of us,
and, like, kind of a secret that we have,
which is that, like, we did Walmart because we wanted to do Amazon.
And so we were like, how do we do Amazon? Right. We got to do Walmart first.
People want this. Like this is the right way to study things. I think I'm glad you brought that up because I think this is why people get a lot of value. And I don't want it to make us about,
Hey, this is an acquired founder show. The reason that some of the people in our audiences are the
most successful people in the world. They're all reading biographies. They're all studying the
history of, uh, of business. I told you guys a few weeks ago,
I was very lucky to have a two-hour,
one-on-one lunch with Sam Zell
that I didn't think was possible.
What I realized in that conversation is like,
you don't make,
you don't, Sam Zell sold his company
for almost $40 billion, right?
$38 billion, whatever it was.
It's like, you don't build a company,
sell for $40 billion,
and then learn all this.
It's like he was doing this since he was young.
We were talking in his autobiography.
I think my favorite episode of your podcast is the Kobe Bryant episode.
Because this is what these guys are doing.
They're like Kobe Bryant.
They're watching game tape.
They're watching game tape.
They're working on the fundamentals from the time they're 12 through the time they die.
They don't stop.
I think that's what we're listening to Acquired and Founders is.
You're watching game tape of history's greatest entrepreneurs.
Sam did this when he was younger.
But this ties together where Bill Gurley had a fantastic quote about this, a tweet about this,
when all that crypto was going crazy and the run-up and people were getting rich.
And he's like, one thing I don't like, and I'm paraphrasing because i don't i wasn't expecting to talk about this he's like i don't like the these young the younger people denigrating the people
that came before them yeah and he's like he made the point that none of the none of history's
greatest entrepreneurs and investors did that they had the opposite perspective all of them
had idols you just made the point you can't understand jeff bezos until you study sam walton
you can't understand sam walton so you understand J.C. Penney and Sol Price and all these guys.
And even their contemporaries.
Like the point that Walton always made was, I don't think my competitors are stupid.
I want to go shop my competitors and get all of their very best insights and then bring them into my store.
Yeah, 100%.
They're learning machines.
Yeah.
And so you get to Charlie's, tying this all back to this, you get to Charlie's bookshelf and it's just biographies I've never even heard of.
And I do this for a living. I do it for a living. I was like, what is this book?
And then I started looking. I was like, oh, I'm just taking picture after picture after picture.
I was like, I'm ordering every single one. So we're talking about this idea that like, that
the way to get truth is to weave together the tapestry of all of history's stories of
things that are adjacent to understand like how this opportunity to start some business
came to be. And you always have to like, all history is revisionist and all history is biased.
And so I think one of the hardest things about making an acquired episode is figuring out like
when we're looking at a source, like someone giving an industry talk who works at a company
or like a biographer who chose to dedicate, you know, two years of their life to
writing this book after working at Newsweek and covering the sector forever is like trying to
mentally account for and discount from whatever bias and perspective they're coming in with to
create whatever the source material is that we're using to then incorporate into our version of
here's how this thing happened, is that's like i think it's
the hardest part about what we do and i'm curious if you ever think about that i think about all the
time because people are like oh like survivorship bias or vision is history and everything else it's
like here's the problem like we humans don't see things as they are we see them as we are so like
we could have this super long conversation between the three of us right now then go into the room
and write down you know what just occurred and every single version is going to be different because it's viewed through
all of our experience the way we think the the words we use and so what i'm looking at is like
when i'm reading about sam walton right it's just like uh the the story we both hit on all the
podcasts because i've done a bunch of podcasts on sam too where it's like the guy's pissed off he's
like driving from store to store and he's like mountain roads taking forever so he buys the plane
and he realizes like,
oh, this is a massive advantage
because I'm doing something my competitors aren't, right?
I'm flying over and you guys mentioned it too,
which I thought was hilarious.
Sideways.
And then he just lands.
He's like, who owns that?
Let me land.
And then he buys for action.
So he's like, we're going to negotiate right now.
I want to buy it from you.
And so my point is like, okay, yes, that most likely occurred.
But what is the idea behind that?
It's you can have an advantage by doing something your competitors are not doing, right?
And this ties together what you just said.
It's like they all learn from somebody else.
When we're reading these books and listening to these podcasts, it's like, what's the idea I can use in my life?
We're not building the next Walmart.
There's no way if we read Titan that we could tell, did this actually happen?
Right.
I don't know, but I'm looking for the ideas behind it.
Not, oh, I'm going to verify for every single word in this book. this actually happen? Right. I don't know, but I'm looking for the ideas behind it.
I'm going to verify for every single word in this book.
That's ridiculous.
Right.
And the truth is always, it is always the case that a clean narrative is grafted onto a fact pattern.
And it's like, okay, well, what I care about is the lessons I can learn from the clean narrative,
not does the fact pattern, if you had all the facts in totality did it necessarily mean that it you know this was premeditated it's like whether it's premeditated
or not yeah you know the facts are the facts and like maybe i can duplicate in a different realm
for what we do i mean on a i think on acquired more than you but especially because you will
do multiple episodes of different books on the same people and multiple episodes on the same
book yeah and multiple episodes on the same book. Yeah. And multiple episodes on the same book.
Right.
Your format is better.
We're doing a narrative weave.
So like,
you know,
we're shooting the moon a little bit more in this respect.
Like your format lends itself to,
so if anyone is listening,
like founders is more about,
Hey,
I just read this book and I want to tell you what I learned from this book.
And it's always biography.
And like,
sometimes you'll do five different biographies on Edwin Land.
And like, if Acquired was going to do Polaroid, we would do Polaroid.
The episode would be Polaroid.
Maybe it would be like Polaroid part one and part two,
or like maybe at some point we'd have like someone on to like talk about the story,
you know, in addition to our one canonical episode.
But like, we would be shooting the moon on like,
let's make sure that we get the Polaroid story as right.
It's almost like, how do we find the correct average
of all of the other stories to create the canonical version?
I wasn't expecting to quote Bill Gurley
two times early so far, but he-
Is that you know this is gonna be a good episode.
That fantastic talk he gave,
which to me is the best talk for entrepreneurs and investors on YouTube.
It's called Running Down a Dream, How to Survive and Thrive in a Career You Love.
And he says this.
Listen, in the age of the internet, you don't have to be the smartest person.
Charlie Munger, after talking to him, whatever mind that dude has, I don't have that.
And I'm cool with that.
I could not imagine trying to compete against that guy 40 years ago.
He would destroy me.
He's got a super mind that I don't have. But what Bill says is, you don't have to be the smartest person, but you can
collect the most information, and he holds you to a high standard in that talk. Bill's like, listen,
in the age of the internet, all the information you possibly need is right at your fingertips.
You have no excuse not to do this. And so he the example of if you you you want to be a domain
expert in whatever you're doing like within two years of intense study if you're doing that and
you're focused on it's like you're going to get to the point where like you know more than maybe
anybody else and so that's my whole thing was like when you talk to you've never met a founder
an entrepreneur that's like kind of into entrepreneurship it's like no it's our lives
yeah so of course the reason why so many of them
listen to both of our shows, right?
It's because they're building machines
where they literally can turn knowledge into profit, right?
I've become close friends with the guy through the podcast.
He's a young kid.
And I don't mean to call him a kid.
He's not a kid.
But he's a lot younger than I am.
And he's like 28 years old.
And we were on the phone the other day
because he had a very serious offer for a
company he owns like 95% of and they were gonna um they were gonna give him 100 million dollars
right he winds up saying no to it but the point is like when you talk to him um you know he's
listened to all the episodes it's read like 60 of the books he'll text me a picture of like he
won't even tell me what the book and i'm like i'm pretty sure i read that like he's like oh yeah
it's from this episode it's like oh why what if he finds one idea in a book, one idea in a podcast, and it gives a 10% improvement on his company? It's a
$10 million idea. Yeah. We were talking about this earlier. This dinner that you have, it sounds like
Charlie is just a very curiosity-driven machine. But we know there's lots of folks that have
regular dinners and have groups of people, often geographically dispersed.
Why do they do it?
Why is it worth their time, their money, their effort?
It's that.
They get one idea.
The leverage that they can get on that is astronomical.
Charlie tells a story.
He's like, yeah, I made $400 million from reading Barron's for 50 years.
And you're like, what the?
What are you talking about, Charlie?
And Charlie's like, well.
And how do you quantify that?
Because he does.
So he goes, I read.
This isn't something he said at dinner.
I've heard him say it publicly.
He's like, I read Barron's all the time for 50 years.
I found one idea that I can act on.
I made $50 million on that deal.
And then I took that 50 million
and I gave it to Lee Liu.
Is that the?
Oh, yeah, yeah.
In Seattle.
I gave that 50 million to Lee Liu
and Lee Liu turned it into $400 million.
That's how I made $400 million from reading Barron's.
Wow.
And listen, I'm not, and this is another thing where I feel like everybody's like,
oh, this time is different.
This is new.
It's like human nature has never changed.
It will never change.
This time is not different.
You're just experiencing, the difference is if you don't study the history of the people
that came before you, you're just ignorant and making mistakes that people already saw
in the past.
Learning from history is a form of leverage.
He has billions and billions of years of
collectives like human history.
This guy spent 70 years and there's thousands
of them. And like Sam
Walton's book, how many people
spent 50 years in one industry,
in the retail industry, and he distilled it down
to the most important. And then you
could read it in a week and then you could listen to acquires episodes you can listen to david's episodes on
sam okay that's good in addition to that so the question is then do you have 90 of sam's wisdom
or do you have 0.1 of sam's wisdom after there's no way you have 90 right because like the time
right the instincts i was just re-watching Peter Thiel's talk at Y Combinator.
He says, competitions for losers.
Oh, yeah.
And he goes, one thing that we do in Silicon Valley is we overrate, overvalue growth rates and undervalue durability.
And he's like, that doesn't make sense for a technology company because all your profits, the vast majority of profits are 20 years in the future.
And so if you're trying to optimize for growth and that over-optimization can cause your company to go out of business,
you're never going to collect that.
You optimize for durability first, dummy.
Like, that's to me, like, my interpretation of what he's saying, right?
Yeah, so you're going to get, you know, 1%, probably.
Maybe 5%.
But that's still enormous leverage.
Because you read it in five hours, and he took 50 years to accumulate everything.
And it's Sam Walton's wisdom.
And it's what you do with the idea. I know've talked about this before but like what was what was the
moment where you're like i'm gonna i'm gonna start this podcast like it's crazy right what you do you
you talk to a microphone yourself every week yeah um my friend not that i think you're crazy
oh i definitely am you are but no i definitely am nuts for sure um and that's gonna be like we
could talk about um did you guys read
Jeff Bezos'
last shareholder letter
before he
yeah
one of the best lines
he has
is at the end
he's like
differentiation
is survival
and so
they think about that
like how hard
they say
let's say somebody says
damn I love what
Ben and Dave are doing
I'm going to do
the exact same thing
they can jump in
and try to do that
right
but you have
six years of experience
you have
600 hours out there you have to counter position against us yeah or address a different audience
or exactly which by the way they definitely should every time i talk to somebody who
wants to i i without i'm always like you absolutely should do this yeah and you will
even if you never succeed in terms of any like numerical success or like you will succeed because
you are learning like so being a nut job and completely crazy is, I think, makes you harder to compete with.
And it's also, we're going to go all over the map here, but it's impossible not to be that.
Like think about how seeped you guys are in the same information that I am,
where it always says, oh, you're the sum of your five friends or whatever, right?
Well, it's also like what you, you're the sum of your podcasts you listen to and the books you read. Oh, it's your five friends, including your parasocial relationships.
And so now what happens is like, you mentioned, dude, you only read like one book about him,
you'll go crazy. And so what happens is when I'm really interested in somebody, I listen to Bill
Gurley. Again, I just take advice from people who are smarter than me. Bill said, go collect
everything you can. Okay, good. I'll do that. These are simple ideas.
And so I'll find somebody that's
interesting. I'll read everything about them. And so with Charlie,
I have like a little Charlie Munger
on my shoulder. I have a little Steve Jobs, a little
Edwin Land, a little David Ogilvie, Estee Lauder,
Coco Chanel, all these people that have been
heroes of mine. James Dyson. And so
now I'm presented with a situation like, what would they
do? And you have, if you read
and spend, and absorb everything that's out there about these these people like you'll have an idea of like how they
would respond did you guys ever read Ken Kosienda's book creative selection about that oh that's
shocking did you guys he worked on the original human interface for the iPhone so he made the
the keyboard for when it was still that Purple or something. The keyboard. He made
Safari before the iPhone. He has this
excellent book that I've read like three times called
Creative Selection. I think
How Apple Designed Products in the Golden Age
of Steve Jobs might be the subtitle.
But he talked about that because he
demoed to Steve, right? And
you're not going to describe it to him. You're going to
demo and you're going to hand it to him. And so they
iterate, you guys already know this.
They iterate through a series of demos.
And it's based on Steve's taste.
Like he is not, oh, let's talk about this.
Like, nope, do this, do this, that.
And so Ken has a great line in the book where he's like, demoing for Steve is like asking questions to the Oracle Delphi.
Except the Oracle Delphi would like respond with a riddle.
And he's like, no, no, Steve was unbelievably, like crystal clear.
You understood him.
Out of every single person I've ever studied, Steve Jobs is by far the clearest thinker I have ever come across.
Like he's just gifted at that.
Charlie is like the Oracle and it's crystal clear.
You are not, like you are going to understand what he's, the idea he's trying to get into your brain for sure.
But my point being is like all of the people that we study they don't denigrate the past they steve jobs the reason i'm so obsessed
with edwin land i read in a biography when steve was like 20 in his 20s edwin land is in like 70s
he goes and meets edwin land and he goes visiting edwin land was like visiting a shrine he's like
he is my hero more people should try to be like. And then you guys made the point in that, you know,
Jeff Bezos took a lot of ideas from Sam.
Who took a bunch of ideas from Sony too?
Steve and Jeff.
So you always find these people where you're like,
oh, I thought this was a Steve Jobs idea.
No.
It's an Akio Morita idea.
Yeah.
Or an Edwin Land idea.
Like when we used to watch the presentations that Steve would give where he's like, oh, we're building at the intersection of technology and liberal arts.
He put it up on screen.
He ripped that off wholesale.
Edwin Land said that exact word.
But that's the point.
It's like you're never going to find anybody gets to the top of their profession without doing the work, like studying the people that came before them and learning from them and admiring them.
This is a good like sort of personal pivot and it's like i've never asked you in all the
hours we spent it's crazy this is the first time we've met in person yeah like we spent hours and
hours and hours on zoom uh how did you like decide that this is what you were going to do with your
time on this planet and like how did what led to this okay so i you know our mutual friend jeremy from
formerly of tiny um i just spent like a bunch of hours with him he was in town in one sentence
he like he psychoanalyzed me better than anybody else ever has he goes you didn't have any mentors
growing up so you like you have then you took it to like this extreme and he said it more much more
eloquently than i am but he's like you don't have any mentors so i view your career as like the
psychopathic uh search for like mentors that can help you you know and so like to answer questions
like i don't want to go into too much detail here but uh like i've only had one habit my whole life
and that was reading i was reading for as long as i can remember uh my mom passed away from breast
cancer a couple years ago and she we didn't have a lot of money.
Long story, but I was the first person,
not only to graduate college, but high school in my family.
I came from a family, unfortunately, both sides of the family,
no education, a lot of just bad habits.
So I identify a lot with what Charlie Munger says
because he essentially observes bad behavior
and then tries to do the opposite, right?
So I was just, let me give you an example.
I was just up in Canada, actually at an event Andrew Wilkinson was hosting for a bunch of
entrepreneurs, me, Shane Parrish from the Knowledge Project, and Farnam Street was up
there, Ben Wilson from How to Take Over the World, and we were doing this panel together.
And Shane's the moderator, and we don't know what we're going to talk about beforehand.
And so Shane asked the question, it's like, oh, what did you learn most from your upbringing or something like that, right?
And I go, I learned not to do cocaine and to graduate high school.
So that kind of thing, right?
And so there's just a bunch of anti-models.
I thought about this as I was walking through the tenderloin this morning in San Francisco.
And I was like, I should do this walk with my daughter as the best.
Like, hey, this is why you don't do drugs.
Like, this is the perfect example.
Like, you observe bad behavior, and then you do the opposite.
So long story short, I've always been obsessed with reading.
Like, one of the best things my mom ever did was,
even if we didn't have money for books,
she would take me to the bookstore and just sit there.
Like, you know, bookstores are so cool because they just let you read.
No one comes here and is like, hey, you've been reading for an hour.
Like, you've got to get out of here, you know, and just read and read and read.
Was there anybody who, like, introduced you to reading and books?
Or you just, like, there was just something about you.
Sounds like it's mom.
Yeah, but no, she wasn't a big reader.
The only thing she read was the Bible.
There was no books in the house when I was younger, ever.
So how did you be like i can't take
me to the bookstore i can't answer that all i can say is like my wife knows has known me for 15 years
and her thing what she says is she like likes my family and gets along with them but she goes how
did that come from that it's like it sounds like you have a classic like you're the one who made
it out story sam hinky our mutual friend actually gave me the way to think about this.
And it's called The Founder of Your Family, right?
And it's the person that, like, and I used to call them, and it was a terrible name, but generational inflection points.
Because you'd read this in a biography where you have, like, generation after generation of just not good things happening.
And then one person just says, it stops now.
That's what Rockefeller did.
Rockefeller.
I always think of Sam Bronfman, the guy that did Seagram's.
Oh, yeah.
And he's in Canada growing up.
Their parents had lost so much money,
they think they were Jewish,
and they had to escape from persecution in Russia.
I can't remember where they came from.
But they go, and they have to start all over,
and they're in Canada, and there's no heating, and they came from. But they go and they have to start all over and they're in Canada and there's no heating
and they're freezing.
So he has this psychopathic drive to change
but that stays with you forever.
So once he builds this massive company
and literally changes the trajectory
of all of his descendants
and his daughter's an adult
and she tells a story in the book
where Sam is sitting there in like a mansion
next to a fire, like shivering,
thinking about how embarrassing it was
to have to go to school with tighter clothing.
And I was like, that guy's never gonna go back to that
and he never loses it.
So I've just always been a reader.
That's the only thing I've ever,
like the only one unbroken habit I've always had.
And so I just had this idea, like I was obsessed with podcasts forever i was obsessed with audio
before there's such thing as a podcast um like i would listen to talk radio when i was a kid
and at that time you know it's it's not like there's no on-demand anything you would listen
sports talk radio politics talk radio it's embarrassing there was like this woman that
used to be on at night people would write in like advice for love, their love life.
And I'd listen to that.
Just the idea of like, there's all this information.
Oh man, I used to listen to Coast to Coast AM with Art Bell.
Do you ever listen to this?
Like it's when all the other radio programming sort of expires.
And then you enter the like one in the morning AM radio stuff.
And it was like, you know, aliens and like tons of paranormal stuff.
But it was like, if you listen, like, you the, the Cavs game ends, I'm from Cleveland. And so like, then you listen to like
the sports post game and then it goes into like the politics hour. And if you still can't fall
asleep, then you're into like aliens. And it's like four hours of that stuff.
Do you have a radio in your bedroom?
Oh yeah. Yeah. I'd be able to, I don't, I imagine my parents probably came and turned it off,
but like would leave it on while I fell asleep every night.
And then remember, like, I remember, so you have the jump up from that.
And then the AM radio stations would then start streaming to your browser, internet.
It still wasn't on demand.
So if you're not listening at three o'clock or 12, like you miss it.
And then once I saw-
Wasn't this what Mark Cuban's company was?
His was like broadcasting audio for sports games though, I think.
I don't actually know.
It's kind of funny.
It's like an era of-
It's broadcast.com, right?
Yeah. Yeah. And it was competitive with RealPlayer,. I don't actually know. It's kind of funny. It's like an era of the... It's broadcast.com, right? Yeah.
Yeah.
And it was competitive with RealPlayer, which also wasn't on demand.
That was just streamed radio.
No, the first on demand was...
The first time I saw this, I was like, this is insane.
Especially for people that are learning machines using Charlies, where it's like, I can go
to...
Even today.
They did it.
You can go to any podcast player, type in whatever you want to learn about, and then you can hear somebody that's
usually spent hundreds of hours teaching you about this stuff. You can also find intellectual,
high quality content more easily now, because all content, because there were a limited number of
channels and a limited number of time slots, everything had to be produced for the lowest common denominator.
And now you can opt into your niche
and find the highest quality content in that niche.
Yep.
And like the only way to do that before was books.
Like there wasn't an audio way to, there wasn't content.
There wasn't niche audio content broadly available.
And there aren't like several million authors out there.
Right.
But there's several million podcasters.
Right.
But you made a good, I think you were getting to a good point.
It's like, because the business model didn't support that.
And so now.
And there was no distribution.
And now with podcasting, it's like, you guys, you know, I'm sure, I think like 50, I don't
ever look at analytics, but I think last time I looked, it was like 50% of my audience was
in the United States, but then everywhere.
And so I was doing, the early days of Founders, I was just, I remember it all changed because
I couldn't figure out the business model. So you would do like affiliate, you know, at that time, I remember
when I first started, you went through a bunch of business models. Yeah. So when I first started,
they're like, Hey, you contact like the few podcast advertising networks there were back then,
you know, cause you guys started your show in 2016, right? 15, 15. Okay. So I started in 2016
and you contact me like, yeah, we can do ads for your show.
You need like 25,000 downloads an episode.
And at the time, I'm like, I'll never get there.
Obviously, we've skyrocketed past that.
But that's impossible.
That's like as many people as in a basketball arena.
Oh, when you start visualizing the audience, it's like, oh, two and a half NFL stadiums show up for every Acquired episode.
That's an insane.
Yes.
But do you guys think about that?
Only in adding to the pressure in a good way.
Like, it's a good motivator.
I never think about it.
Really?
You know what I think about it?
How my show's set up is why I say,
you and I, and I...
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I like how you treat the audience
as, like, the person you're...
It's one person.
So, like, one...
And I've done this forever.
It's like... It's funny. I you're it's one person so like one and i've done this forever it's like i it's funny i remember it's one of my friends that we were met up one day and i was like
man i think i'm gonna try to make like a business around the fact that i read so much and he's like
and he called me like a year like six months ago a year ago he's like i can't believe you did that
because he's like i thought you were the dumbest thing i ever heard but i just picture him when i
started it's like oh the whole idea behind the show was like what if you got to meet up once a
week with your friend that reads a lot and he just tells you the stuff that he read that week
like interesting ideas and so i was even cross your mind to like try and convince him to do the
podcast with you or somebody else or you're always just like no i'm gonna so one thing one thing we
don't have like a bunch of prepared stuff but one thing us three talked about is like hey why don't
we talk about like who was your influence on why you do what you do? And so I feel the greatest podcaster
of all time is Dan Carlin from Hardcore History. That's like my, I think he's like, I can't believe
what that guy does, right? You and him are like the only successful monologue podcasters. Like,
I think it's the hardest thing to do in this medium.
And I can't, I mean,
everyone else either has a guest on or a co-host.
Yeah.
Well, there's another guy that was,
so I took Dan Carlin,
I was obsessed with him.
I've listened to all his episodes.
For like years,
you talked about falling asleep.
I did that too.
But I fell asleep to Dan Carlin.
So I'd over and over and over again to now where I listen to him,
I'm like, it's like, it's like- Pavlovian.
Yeah. I was like, no, don't wake me up. It's not nighttime, bro. Wake up. But there was
another one that a friend of mine put me on. There's this comedian named Bill Burr. He
does the Monday morning podcast. He used to do it every Monday. Now he does, I think,
Monday and Thursdays, right? He is one of the first podcasters. When he was podcasting his first episodes, at the time, he would call into a number and record, right?
And then there was a service that would transform that recording from your phone into an MP3 that you could publish.
You could download and put on your iPod.
This is way before, like, anything.
It's so wild how things have changed.
I mean, you know, we're here now in this recording
setup that we have here you know with thousands of dollars of gear and like yeah we start i remember
when we first started i don't think you let me do this but i was like well why don't we just talk at
the computer and like set up quick time dude when i listen back to our first few episodes like pixar
and i'm like we it sounds like we were just talking at the computer yeah we basically were
yeah that's that's when people
were like
I have a lot of
psychos that
they're like
I start on number one
I go all the way through
I was like
oh like
please don't
if you're gonna
if you're gonna do
like
go in the opposite order
this is one of the things
I wanted to talk about
I used to
cause that way
at least by the time
you get to one
you like
you're a fan
but if you
if you start at one
you're like
oh these guys just suck
yeah but like that it's almost like um there's great pleasure in hearing something that you
think is excellent and fully baked and like uh especially when it's been long running you're
like oh this has always been immaculate and perfect and then you get to go see some of the
early work and you're like oh it's so you're And then you get to go see some of the early work and you're like, oh, it's so rough.
You want the early Charlie.
I can see where the magic was,
even though they didn't know yet.
It's the same thing you see in the books
that you're reading, though.
Like Sam Walton, when you tell the story
where his landlord screws him over
and he goes, I'm not whipped.
I found this store.
I'll do it again, right?
And it's like, yes, Walmart is a huge success.
You guys made the point that there was a great point where it's like,
you're never going to think 25 years in the future when there's watermelons
and donkey crap on the ground that this is going to be the richest family in the world, right?
And the most standardized form of retail.
Yeah.
And so you see, like, oh, that same guy that became the richest person in the world,
that his now family has a rich family or whatever, it's like he's imperfect, too, just like I am.
And so that is the only benefit of listening to an early acquired or early founder is, like, oh, you see the improvement.
Just like in the books, you see the improvement.
Well, it's fun, too.
Like, I like going back and listening to some of your old episodes.
I get to, like, see your journey, you know?
Like, I'm proud of you.
But I've been thinking about that i was thinking
about ahead of our conversation here like i used to say all the time people like oh i go back i
listen to the early episodes like no don't it's so embarrassing i actually think like we always
want to be embarrassed by our last episode we've just constantly kept like raising every episode
like we try and just notch it up because we keep picturing the stadium and we're like that's that's the like that's why i think about the stadium because i
think about the like the pressure of like we got to do better next time than we did this time and
it's not just filled with like you know seattle's nfl fans it's filled with like hundreds of
thousands of the smartest people that and this gets to like the psyche like the deep insecurities
that at least i have of like i I want to impress those people. I want
those people to think I'm smart. And so I have to produce something unbelievably worthwhile of
their time. And the minute that I don't, I'm like literally walking out in front of an NFL stadium
full of people that I want to impress. And like, I didn't used to have that pressure, but like once
we found content market fit for Acquired with like people that I've always thought highly of,
that is the driver now.
There were a couple years where we kind of drifted.
There wasn't that pressure to keep amping the bar.
Right. It's like the 2017
era. I think you're
never going to be embarrassed about your
latest episode at the time we're making this is LVMH.
You're never going to be embarrassed about that. That was excellent.
It doesn't mean you can't
keep improving 10 years from now.
No, I look back and I think, yes, that's certainly an episode,
I don't know how you feel, but that I'm proud of.
But at the time, we didn't know that was going to be a super popular episode.
Yeah, that was totally unpredictable.
It's our, because we haven't shared this publicly yet,
it's our number one episode by a huge margin. 40,000 more people have listened to that episode
than the next highest, which was amazon.com. I probably could have told you, actually,
I was like, David, no one's going to listen to Amazon because everyone already knows this story,
which was super wrong. But I either thought like, no one will listen to this one or like,
this will be our most successful episode with LVMH even after we
recorded it I was like
or after we edited it because we had to
edit a lot of stuff
this is how much we didn't know
but it's not like our best
ever but apparently it's our best ever
I think it might be my favorite episode of yours and I heard from a ton of other
people how much they liked it
well thank you
but to the conversation
like there's a bunch of stuff that we could have done better in that episode like a whole bunch
so i do this all the time where like i'll go back and listen to old episodes because people like
that's weird you know so no new podcast is like no this is a tool that's how you're better this
is a new footage no we didn't even try to get better it's like i was like oh i haven't read
that book in like two years i'll just listen to my episode on it and it like services it's a tool
for me that's how i know it's good for other people right and so i was like, oh, I haven't read that book in like two years. I'll just listen to my episode on it. And it's a tool for me. That's how I know it's good for other people, right?
And so I was like, and then I'll listen to it.
I'm like, oh, wow, I forgot that.
I need to keep that idea in my mind.
But I'll hear myself like, oh, you said that in two paragraphs.
That could have been one paragraph.
Cut that part.
That doesn't make sense.
And so, yeah, I understand the improvement.
But what I'm saying is your quality is already super high.
Like it can increase and get better.
Don't get me wrong.
But like you're never going to be embarrassed.
You're just like, oh, I could probably do it 20%, and get better don't get me wrong but like you're never going to be embarrassed you're just like oh i could probably do it 20 30 better which is still excellent from the the like
the level you're at so the way that we edit is our editor takes the first pass and he's unbelievably
good and we're so lucky to have him and then he sends us a rough cut i upload it to descript and
then we listen like and read while we're listening, word for word, sentence for
sentence, and try to cut every unnecessary sentence. And we end up pulling out 20-ish
minutes of just fluff. It's just like, okay, we could have been tighter in that point. Is there
a way to get tighter in it without re-recording it? And I think that has dramatically contributed
to episode quality, because by the time we ship it, neither of us feel that there are extraneous sentences.
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So I don't know if I'm like that.
You're still a one-man show, right?
I do everything. No one touches anything. Everything. Soup to nuts. I'm like that. You're still a one-man show, right? I do everything.
No one touches anything.
Everything.
Soup to nuts.
I'm going to ask you a question, but I also think this is a perfect point to how we became friends and why I'm putting this out on my feed.
And you're going to be the first non-David Senra voices that I've ever heard on Founders.
And I only agree to do it with you guys,
is because this goes back to why I want to be surrounded with, first of all, people that have interest, super smart people, but also people that have positive some thinking, right? Patrick
has this gigantic, successful show, Invest Like the Best. He's got Colossus Podcast Network.
His fund is called Positive Some, and that's how he acts. I joined his network, this is like months later and
they're like, hey, we have
editors, whatever.
He has this empire over there.
And resources, he's like, what do you want?
And I was like, I just
want you to amplify my audience and then connect me with
first rate advertisers.
I think Acquired is
a luxury podcast. Maybe not
luxury, premium. We've got to go over the distinction there.
But like, we're saying, no, no, this is like, we're trying to set the bar here.
But anyways, he's like, hey, do you want editors?
Do you want any of this stuff?
I was like, no.
I don't want, no one gets to touch my stuff.
Like, people think, oh, like, do they tell you what books to read?
And like, no, Patrick liked my show.
And he's just like, why would I tell you?
Like, just whatever you're doing, just do it to more people now. And so, to answer your question, no, Patrick liked my show. And he's just like, why would I tell you? Like, just whatever you're doing, just do it to more people now.
And so to answer your question, no.
Like, I pick the books.
I record them.
I edit.
I'm still a one-person show.
I don't know if that'll happen forever.
But I do think the fact that I just spend so much time with the material gets it in my brain.
But the reason that, like, I want to talk about the role you guys played in that.
Where we were getting on Zoom.
And for, like, the background here is, like is like you know we had known of each other i talked to ben a long time ago because he was running this this private podcast this is like years ago um and so anyways
we're like they're you're that's also funny to think back like all the dead ends that we went
like we went down a ton of them you went down a ton you're about to talk about some of them like
there's so many dead ends but they're in the the books, too. Yeah, but they're in the books.
That's exactly it.
Remember when we changed the name of the show to Adapting?
Oh, my God.
That was a dead end.
That was on me.
I didn't know this.
Tell the story.
COVID happened, and we were like, no one wants to hear these stories of extreme capitalism.
We're like the X Games of capitalism.
And this is a moment where like, everyone is hurting, zero business.
And like, this isn't that the stock market trough too,
where you're just like, wow, like, you know,
all businesses are going to go under.
No one's ever going to have jobs again.
This is, you know, this is scary.
And so we were like, well, like,
what story should we tell?
How about businesses that are adapting
to make it through this tough time
and to like show how serious we were about it.
We changed the name of the show.
It was like our three least listened to episodes
covering pretty amazing stories,
but we just branded it wrong.
Totally.
Canlis is the most interesting restaurant story
you could ever hear about.
We did Intel.
That's the only time we've ever done Intel.
That's the only time we've done Intel.
But because it was adapting, it was stupid.
So stupid.
But there's no way to learn rather than screw up.
Do you want to know the first name of founders?
You know, like in your RSS feed, you can change the name, right?
But you can't change the link.
It will still say.
So you look at it from mine, and it's Autotelic.
The worst name.
Autotelic comes from this book called Flow.
How do you even spell that?
A-U-T-O-T-E-L-I-C.
Maybe.
I don't know.
I can't spell.
I can't spell, pronounce. I have no grammar. So you read so much.i-c maybe i don't know i can't spell for i can't spell pronounce i have no
grammar so i'd be like you read so much i was like i don't pay attention to that stuff is that
the mihi yes the guide yes it's it is an activity that you do for the sake of itself going back to
your questions like why like i just love to read i'm gonna do this if no one listens like that's
how i know i'm gonna win because it's like people like, Oh, would you do it for free? It's like,
I,
no,
no,
I paid to do this.
Like a long time,
a long time.
Like I literally said,
I'm going to quit and I'm going to,
I have the savings.
I have a wife and a baby or a daughter to support.
Now I have a son,
a wife,
a daughter and a son.
And I was like,
I bet you,
I just put trust in myself.
It's just like,
I'm going to,
if I focus on this seven days a week,
I'll figure out the business model.
I know,
like, I don't think I'll ever get rich from it,
but I will at least pay my bills, right?
And so like every month I'm like, oh, less money there.
And like, so I paid to do it.
So the idea where like, you know, again, people get,
I think Steve Jobs talks about this,
like the older he gets, he said something like
the older he gets, the more he realizes
why people do things matters.
And so he's always asking those questions.
Like I always say, it's like, how do you know that you found what you love to do?
And people are like, oh, because I wouldn't sell my company.
It's like, okay, there's another level.
It's like, how much would you have had to pay Steve Jobs to stop working at Apple?
The answer is, he wouldn't take all the money in the world.
How much would you have to pay Charlie Monroe?
A lot of people tried to stop
steve johnson working at apple yeah but like think about that like the idea is like he's not doing it
for money he's in a different game he's doing it for the sake of itself and so i went through a
bunch of different names uh history's greatest men history's greatest like history all these
terrible names and i just started narrowing it more and more and more to like founders and i was
like oh that's perfect.
There is a question.
Because you weren't even, like, you weren't coming from the tech world.
You weren't, like, this wasn't content marketing.
No, no.
This was, like, you know.
No, it was just, like, the idea I had known about, like, Warren Buffett, Elon Musk, and all these other people.
And I remember you had Kevin Rose on your show a long time ago.
So you guys remember his.
Again, not that long ago. Maybe a year,
year and a half? Yeah.
It's just time flies. Because it was post...
It was during COVID.
He was pretty much already fully
Web 3 by the time we...
So do you guys remember Foundation?
Yeah. It was like one of the first high
quality...
Imagine if he would have stuck with that show.
You know what I mean? It would have been a monster.
It's like the only episodes that ever came out was like, here's me interviewing Elon
Musk.
Here's me interviewing Sam Altman.
Here's me.
And these people, and also before they became icons of our time.
That's it.
Elon had the model.
That was the only thing.
He was just about to release the Model S.
He had the Roadster.
No, no.
They were in the factory, because I watched it all the time.
They were in the factory building the Model S.
That's right.
So I don't know if you could buy it yet, but it was like coming or whatever.
And Elon looks way younger and like, you know.
And then in 2015, Tim Ferriss, I was a big fan of his podcast.
I read like, you know, 4-Hour Workweek.
I remember the way I discovered it.
Dude, 4-Hour Body changed my life.
Did it?
Yeah.
With the slow carb?
Yep, slow carb diet.
I did that too.
Slow carb diet, cold showers. Like I did. And the funniest thing is like, this is like this whole cold punch
thing that's like becoming a thing now. I'm like, was nobody like reading Tim Ferriss in 2011?
Like that was a huge part of, yeah. Well, it goes back. It's just only our demographic was. Yeah.
Actually that, that made me think of something. Let me interrupt this story. Cause I think it's
really important. You're like, Oh, is anybody going to listen to our, like no one's going to
listen to our Amazon episode they already know it
and so this is something that like engineering becomes the most successful are you gonna quote
ogilvy yes yes i've listened to enough founders to know yeah because it's like this is so key that
people don't understand it's like you're not advertising to standing army you're advertising
to moving parade and so like i will literally get on calls with like media company founders
that are like selling ads or like building companies. And I'm like, oh yeah, you must've
read Ogilvy. They're like, what? And I was like, these are not new lessons. Like if, and again,
this comes from the humility to realize, hey, Warren Buffett's smarter than me. So if that dude
in his shareholder letters is saying, uh, David Ogilvy is a genius. I'm like, wait a minute,
this dude, how many businesses has Warren Buffett looked at at that point?
How many founders and managers has he looked at when he's like, this dude's a genius?
Yeah.
This is not rocket science, guys.
Just go and like, let's search David Ogilvie on Amazon.
Five books?
Good.
Order them all.
These days, it's search David Ogilvie in your podcast player of choice.
Yeah.
I went to three.
Wait, but explain the standing army versus. So you're not advertising to standing army. You're advertising podcast player of choice. I went to three. Wait, but explain the Standing Army versus.
So you're not advertising to Standing Army.
You're advertising to Moving Parade.
But what happens is like even when you put on the Sequoia episode, right?
Me and David went on a hike in Stanford.
And I was like, dude, you have this crazy back catalog.
Every single day, you have more people following your podcast feed than you had the day before.
I was like, because I knew this because i was a subscription podcast right recount briefly your
business model journey so i'll give you a shorter breakdown because like i went through so many of
them i just put a hard paywall listen the first 30 minutes you want to listen to all of them um
then you pay right and it converted this is when we had that chat that you're talking about we got
to go back to that we're like dude you're doing it wrong you're doing it wrong yeah because there's been
times like this one where we're like what the hell are you doing but there's been other times
where you come to us and you're like do you know how good your sequoia episodes were and like the
fact that you have four times the audience that you have now and none of the 75 of those people
have ever heard the sequoia episode what are you doing doing? And so you guys, we had this hike. This is an old-givy idea. Remember, not my idea.
I don't...
Everything has already been done, guys.
I'm speaking to the people listening, not you. You obviously know this.
It's already been done. Just go see.
Hey, that person's smart. He learned from 40-year career.
You're not going to... The idea is you're not going to pick up
on an idea you can use as silly. So I told
David... I was thinking about this.
There's some cases
where it's not true.
But I think most truly iconic, world-changing businesses and founders, they stand on the shoulders of giants, but they have one or multiple things that is novel that they come up with.
It's the combination of these ideas.
Like Sam Walton taking Sol Price's ideas and his competitor's ideas and like, hey, what about,
you guys are kind of ignoring
these like 4,000 person communities.
I'm pretty sure
like the thesis behind Walmart
is like,
will they just drive
far distances
just to save money?
Right.
The answer is yes.
Right, right, right.
Five hours.
But that isn't a novel idea.
Yeah, exactly.
That's the whole thing.
It's combining like
one big novel idea with a bunch of other things that you guys combined david ogre's idea by republishing your
sakura podcast and then you text me you're like oh my god like the downloads are crazy yeah and
because the vast majority because you're not podcasting to a standing army you're podcasting
to a moving parade and so i had known this because through my experimentation, I would take an old episode that I had done, do a preview, throw it up,
and you'd get conversions every time because it was new to them. And that was like, so Ogilvy,
I credit Ogilvy for that idea. That's an idea he got from Claude Hopkins and Albert Lasker,
who were building advertising businesses 50 years before him.
Is this a scientific advertising?
Yes.
Yeah. Also a good Founders episode.
He's excellent.
That
book, Scientific Advertising, sold
8 or 10 million copies. They kept it
in Albert Lasker. So Claude Hopkins
worked for Albert Lasker.
Albert Lasker thought the book was so good, he
stored it in a vault.
He built... Because it was like the
secrets of the industry, right? Like, don't publish this
because we don't want this getting out.
I learned that because in Ogilvy and Advertising,
at the very end of the book, David's like,
here, these are the six giants that I learned from.
So I was like, okay, well then I'm going to Google search.
Who's, like, I'm going to read the book.
This is not rocket science, again.
So then he's like, oh, Albert Lasker made more money
than anybody else in the history of the advertising business.
I was like, hold up.
What?
How?
Also, none of us know this guy's name. Yeah. And so then you realize it's like, he says in the history of the advertising business. I was like, hold up. What? How? Also, none of us know this guy's name.
Yeah.
And so then you realize it's like, he says in the book,
he's like, his estate outside of Chicago was so big,
he had 40 full-time employees.
I'm like, what?
Like, what are you talking about?
Like, make these words make sense in my mind.
That doesn't make any sense to me.
So then you read Albert Lasker,
and then he tells you about Claude Hopkins.
He's like, yeah, the information was so good
that I stored that in my vault for 20 years.
And then once he sold his advertising,
or I think he gave it away,
like a token, like $100,000,
to the people working there.
And then they released it
and Claude went off on his own and everything else.
So these are not like...
Yeah.
Okay, so you were doing the 30-minute hard cutoff
when we had that famous...
And so when it's so unsatisfying,
it's like, I'm going to listen to 30 minutes of this episode and then
I'd have to get, someone's asking
me to pay for the rest. But you probably have to get a good conversion, right?
The conversion rates were higher, but you guys said
this is where... You were at a local maximum.
This is where you were very helpful.
David, first of all, and you guys are nice.
This is not the language you use. You're like,
you idiot.
But you guys are so nice. It's like, dude,
you're doing it wrong. Listen, for every one person,
I think it was Ben that said this,
for every one person that would buy a podcast,
there's 1,000 or 100 that would listen to them for free.
It's about 100.
Yeah, probably even more than that.
And so then you guys would show me,
you open the kimono.
You're like, these are our downloads.
This is who we advertise with.
This is what we charge for advertising.
Well, the other really key insight is,
so after spending a bunch of time with originally Kimberlite, then Glow,
which sold to Libsyn, and still what powers the Acquired LP program, an interesting learning is most podcasts should generate about 50% of their revenue from direct monetization, some kind of
membership program, or paywalling their feed, and about half from
advertising. And the math should sort of work out where that's going to be the case. For the type of
podcast that we are, where you have lots of founders and CEOs and hedge fund managers and
these sorts of people listening, you could never ask someone to pay you in membership what they
are worth to the most valuable advertiser for that slot. And so the
way it sort of works out is like you're massively hamstringing your monetization potential if you
make it membership only because you'd have to be like, yes, please pay $2,000 to $5,000 a year
in order to get access to this private thing versus if you were to take that same piece of
content and open it up to advertisers. You made the good point earlier,
and we can elaborate on that,
why you're so psychotic about this sentence
needs to get out of here,
like these two sentences, let's remove it.
Because if you could factor in the average hourly rate
of the people in your audience, it is unbelievable.
So even I think if you make, what, a million dollars a year,
and we know people obviously in our audiences
make a lot more than that,
but I think a million dollars a year is what,
500 bucks an hour or something like
that i don't know the math i'm not a good math person but like so you're asking if they listen
to an hour long podcast of founders it's like that's 500 like you cannot waste these people's
time so i never answer your question when you're like hey how do you guys think about this do you
do re-edit or do you cut them out i use the script as well i actually think the way i listen to
founders is obviously listening to it and listening and reading. Like the superpower of podcasts is you can listen to
it when you're doing something else. But when you're editing. But I think I'm going to put
all my podcasts up on YouTube. I don't have any video, but I think I'm going to use Descript.
So some people have success just putting up the audio on a static picture and you can listen to
it on YouTube. But I also think I was like, well, if I'm going to do that, I might as well just, I have this and that's kind of cool if you want listen to it on youtube but i also think i was like well
if i'm going to do that might as well just i have this and that's kind of cool if you want to use it
but don't have to we did not find success doing that like this episode will be the first episode
this year that's on youtube because we basically said if there's not interesting video then it's
not a video podcast and you can go find it in a podcast player i it's i'm using it just for search
and i would use it i'm never gonna i don't think I'm ever going to do video anything
because it's so much simpler to do.
Literally, what I'm saying is I'm going to upload the MP3 to YouTube.
I'm not making a video just because it is.
They're eventually going to have.
They're not stupid.
They're eventually going to have the podcast player inside of YouTube.
They released this 40-page document I read on their podcast goals on YouTube.
Did I send it to you guys?
No.
I'll send it to you guys.
So right now I have YouTube Premium,
so you can listen to them in the background like a podcast player.
Which is great.
But they need to have podcast functionality.
It's still like a video.
Yeah.
So anyways, the way I do it is like, yes,
I'm very aware that who's listening,
I'm not ever going to waste a lot of their time.
And what I've found with the more practice I have for the podcast is I'm able to edit on the fly.
Like, I don't have a script, right?
So, like, I'll go through the book.
I highlight, then write down whatever pops in my mind.
I don't, like, just, first of all, the highlights, like, am I excited about that?
Oh, that's interesting.
Highlight.
Just go off instinct, right?
And then write down, like, something that, oh, that's like this, or that made me think of this, and I just write it down, right?
Then I'll reread all these highlights the night before I record.
So it's like the second time.
You're doing this in physical books, right?
Physical books, yeah.
But you're putting your notes into ReadWise?
That happens after.
Okay.
That happens after.
So the fifth time, every single book I do,
I think I read the highlights five times.
And the fifth time is me actually taking pictures of the physical book and putting it in ReadWise.
So Jeff – I was thinking about this yesterday because I'm also slightly obsessed with Jeff Bezos.
You're slightly obsessed with a lot of founders.
That's why when we're like – you're like – we're sitting in chairs.
Like, dude, I'm going to be forward.
Yeah, we were setting up the camera angles before.
Because you know what I love?
We're like, we've got to move David's chair back here a little bit.
Have you ever watched the old Jeff Bezos interviews
when he's first starting Amazon?
He's skinny and bald.
The one that's in that field outside the conference.
Yes, I think it's the one.
He's sitting.
You see grass behind him.
I don't know if he's in a field.
But he leans forward.
And he's like, we're going to be the most customer-obsessed company ever.
And he's got that look on his face.
That's how I am about founders.
I'm like, we're not.
You're like, that dude's a psycho.
But Jeff says something that he is.
But Jeff says something in Invent and Wander, which is an excellent book.
Because it's all of his shareholder letters and transcripts of his speeches.
Walter Isaacson did that, right?
Yep.
And all of his transcripts of his speeches.
And he goes, do you really want to live in a world or to compete against somebody that's as good as you? Like, I certainly wouldn't. That's what he states. And he's like, if you 60 or maybe 80 books I haven't put in there yet that are in my library.
So it's like that's my ReadWise account is an unfair advantage.
Because anytime somebody's talking, it's like I can immediately, oh, you said something?
I search for that term and it pulls up.
And it's like, oh, and then I see my highlight and I see my note.
It takes so long.
Like so long to do that.
But it's worth the extra five or ten hours a week.
And that's integrated into your process of making matters.
Yes, because I'm reading something.
I remember.
No, I know I've seen this before.
I can't remember it.
Type in that term, and it pulls up every single instant.
Wow.
Instance of it.
It's an unfair advantage that I have with me all the time.
And what I'll do is, like, whenever I'm, like, waiting for an Uber today,
just pull up Readwise.
And Readwise has the highlights feed.
And I'll show you guys what it looks like.
It looks a lot like a Twitter feed, completely random.
So I'm not choosing this.
And instead of me reading Twitter all day,
which is not a good use of your time,
it's this highlight from the Dodge Brothers.
I haven't read that book.
That was episode, probably in the 115th Billy Duran who
is the founder of GM Sam Colt and so are these ones that other people have liked
a lot no therefore no it's just repopulating your own yes oh so it's my
form of practice so you've got so let me give you a healthy Twitter there on your
phone so is that what like how many times a day,
like, how often are you just pulling up ReadWise?
Almost every day.
And if I'm not doing it on ReadWise,
I'll go to, like, my bookshelves.
So what will happen is you can pull a book off my shelf.
And I'm thinking about this for, like, my kids.
Long after I'm gone, my kids can be like,
what was my dad into?
You know, and they can go back and see,
oh, and when he was 35 or 38, this is the podcast made let me go find that book and then they pull off the shelf
like oh this is the line he thought was interesting oh wow you see dad's handwriting here and like so
i use this for myself where i can pick up a book and quote unquote read it reread it in 30 minutes
by rereading my highlights and notes and now i'm like it's back in back like in front of mine um
and then what happens is like you can do this anytime like
people are like oh i'm running late for lunch like i'll just do this or i'll answer dms or
i always have stuff to do with me but i use it as a form of practice the reason i said this is like
it sounds stupid people think it's maybe maybe they think it's silly i don't know but i read
this book uh it's episode 212 of founders it's called michael jordan the life it's a 600 page
biography and in that book you just have like this encyclopedia knowledge, too, of the numbers of your episodes, which I'm so impressed by.
I don't.
It's only because I reference that all the time.
So if you look up something over and over again, it's repetition.
Everything in life is repetition.
Sam Walton's career is repetition.
It's like, I just think you're trying to—this is what I asked Charlie.
One of the most interesting things he said, he's like, one of the best things that ever happened to me is I got rich later in life.
He saw the time and how difficult it was.
He was talking about imagine you being super famous or rich when you're 21 or 25 and how disorienting.
He's like, I was a full-grown man with life experiences with a wife and kids.
He had a child who died.
Yeah, I did not mention that, yeah.
Yeah.
But like he had all, you know, a full life experience.
And therefore also the main problem that happens is people don't know.
They're like, I was the son of a poor man.
Now I'm rich and my kids live an unbelievable amount of wealth and privilege.
How do I deal with that?
That comes up in the books for hundreds of years.
The answer is no one knows, right?
And so with Charlie, though, the benefit is he didn't have a famous last name or
a lot of wealth his kids were like grown right they wouldn't have to deal with that when you're
five or seven or ten he also gave me some advice that was fascinating you do that like you got to
pay that bill eventually though like his grandkids have to well so how do you deal with this though
right like he's multi-billionaire.
Like that's an insane.
Right.
This is a five-generation problem.
Not only is he a multi-billionaire, he's like people like us talk for hours about him.
He's like a celebrity.
So I just read this fantastic book.
I like reading obscure books because go back to what Jeff Bezos said, differentiation is survival.
So like I'll find like weird books.
Like me and Sam were in this weird.
I was searching for books for you guys.
I couldn't find any
I will order them
and bring some to you
because I always bring books
and I was really
we went to three different bookstores
I'm not kidding
you brought energy drinks
yeah
but no we literally
like bless Sam
and his patience with me
and like drove me
all around Menlo Park
and Palo Alto yesterday
going to bookstores
like I was literally
looking for you guys
like you had specific books
in mind
no no no
I like going to used bookstores
and then like I think of how I my interpretation of you guys in my a great... Like you had specific books in mind. No, no, no. I like going to used bookstores and I think of
my interpretation
of you guys in my mind
and I just know
if this book
is good for that person.
Like the Henry Flagler book,
I knew that was good
for Charlie Munger
because of what he said.
So I don't know
what's going to happen.
Now I do have two books
picked out for you guys
which I'll send you
but they're like newer books.
But anyways...
That sounds like a great day
driving around with Sam Pinky and going to bookstores.
Like what better day could you spend?
Also, the peninsula is like beautiful.
Yeah.
And like, you know, Sam's unbelievably intelligent and like she's got a weird alien brain.
As I always tell them, our mutual friend Mitchell Baldrige, that all three of us know, says Sam has a giga brain.
I think it's what he said, his description of it um but i like obscure books i read uh this book
that it's very hard to find it's like 300 bucks uh it's called the invisible billionaire daniel
ludwig uh was the richest person in the world in the 80s and no one knew who he was he paid
uh a public relations firm to keep his name out of the papers. Do what your competitors don't.
Yeah, so he's just like, I don't want to be known.
And a lot of his was like shipping and oil and refining and mining
and all that other stuff.
But the author makes the point in the book
that how different a million and a billion is,
going back to Charlie Munger, right?
Oh, yeah.
And he goes, a million dollars in a stack of $100 bills is like 40 inches.
A billion dollars in a stack of $100 bills would like 40 inches you know uh a billion dollars in a stack of hundred dollar bills would be taught would be three times taller than the
empire state building yeah and so like for us like oh that guy's kind of rich it's like no the
billionaire millionaires are not in the same category it's so disorienting i this is also a
thing where like the english language has done us a disservice by naming two things that are a
thousand times different very very similar words.
It sounds similar.
Yeah.
They're not similar at all.
What was, a lot of people were asking,
like think about all the wealthy people that Charlie talks to.
And they're asked like, okay, what do I do with like this wealth with my kids?
And it's like, you know, if you give your kids a bunch of money,
is it going to demotivate them?
And Charlie goes, of course it's going to. So he's like, but he's like, you know, it's like your kids a bunch of money, is it going to demotivate them? And Charlie goes, of course it's going to.
So he's like, but he's like, you know, it's like, again, like this should be obvious to you.
So he says, don't try to steer his kids or his grandkids into what they should do for a living,
which is Charlie Munger's, one of his best piece of advice that I took to heart.
It's like, follow your natural drift.
Yeah.
Like how I pick books.
There's been like 15 or 20 that I've read completely or half.
And it's like, I don't like this book.
I'm not making an episode about it. I go to my bookshelf and I have like probably 80 or
a hundred books I haven't read yet. Most come from the audience. And I was like, what am I most
excited to learn about now? And that's how I pick it. Right. So following natural drift.
Which is also more or less how we pick episodes too. We have a little bit more planning because
now like there's such long lead times, but it's kind of like, what's interesting to us right now? Yeah, 100%.
Very emotional.
So he's like, don't try to steer them too much.
And he definitely feels that some of them
are going to be less motivated because they're born rich.
But he said this was the most surprising thing.
But he goes, you have to give them the money anyways
or they're going to hate you for it.
And I was like, that's like, because my answer before this,
I've read so many like family dynasty stories
and I'm not saying
I'm trying to build a dynasty
where they decide
we're not going to give them money
or no they did
and it ruined them
like did you guys
you guys haven't done
an episode on
TCI
John Malone
Cable Cowboy
that's like
that will happen this year
for sure
so you know why
that was one of the books
that was recommended
the most
they're like
you gotta do Cable Cowboy you gotta do C like, you got to do Cable Cowboy,
you got to do Cable Cowboy, you got to do Cable Cowboy.
We both have read the book.
It's awesome.
It's excellent.
And so you know the story I'm about to tell you,
where the crazy thing is like,
I'm always thinking about,
I didn't understand this before studying,
dedicating my life to studying history, right?
Where it's like, oh, wow,
the decisions I'm making now
can reverberate through the generations.
That's a crazy thing.
Where Bob Magnus, which is the founder of TCI,
he doesn't have any monies,
and rural Texas wants to jump into this new industry cable,
full of cowboys, literal cowboys.
And he doesn't have money,
so his dad gives him a $2,500 loan.
So Bob takes that $2,500 loan,
and then, let's say 40 years later,
Bob dies, and he's got to pass on his money,
right? That was created from the company he created to his two kids. And he winds up giving
them, I think, I don't know the numbers. I want to say like 200 million each, two sons. So think
about that one decision. I think I talked about in the episode and if I didn't, it's a big mess
up on my part. And I stopped in that part. I'm pretty sure you did i was like hold on think about that like what if his dad didn't give
him the 2500 yeah he's talking about that yeah so his 2500 turns into 400 million let's say 200
million each for his grandsons change his grandson's lives right so that means you rule of
thumb you take like i don't know you probably three more generations after that of wealth
guaranteed that wealth is gone
because I think
it went up their nose
like that was
it's pretty hard
in one generation
but I don't know
like the point was
it's like
that wasn't good for them
because they were not motivated
they did a bunch of drugs
I think they went to jail
like that kind of stuff
and you see that so much
so my thought was like
oh like
get them a little bit
but not enough that they don't have
to work or whatever and charlie's like they're gonna hate you yeah and like what's the point
it's such a good instantly he's just like human nature this is my biggest takeaway from charlie
and i think the biggest benefit that people that listen to founders and acquired and then hopefully
read a bunch of the books and do studying on their own are going to realize this is like
charlie i said it at the top of my notes and this is the first thing this is like
it's comforting the conversation i I had with Charlie was comforting
the same way that people tell me listening to founders is comforting. It's like, Charlie has
an almost complete indifference to problems. Troubles from time to time should be expected.
This is inescapable, so why would you let it bother you? And the difference, and if you think
about, that's the main takeaway from this three-hour dinner
I had with him, right?
And if you think about how does he avoid this,
he avoids it by great things have less problems.
You're never going to escape problems,
but if you're around great people,
like they're not going to throw up,
just like a great business doesn't throw up
big problem after big problem after big problem.
Your wife, your kids, your friends, your coworkers,
his whole thing is aim for the highest quality you can get.
And then that's going to solve 99% of your problems.
And then when you have the problem,
the inevitable problems are still going to come,
okay, you just deal with it.
He talked about like when he lost the money on Alibaba,
he brought that up, you know,
that people try to make fun of him for or whatever.
It's like, you guys are missing the point.
Like you're not going to escape,
get through life without making mistakes.
The founder of Ikea has this great quote where he says, making mistakes is the privilege of the active.
Only those asleep make no mistakes.
It's a version of the man in the arena.
Yeah, the Teddy Roosevelt idea.
So what do you think is the ideal way to handle it if at 35 someone becomes very wealthy and so when their kid's memory starts
around age three, so for their entire kid's memorable lifetime, they've grown up in wealth
and privilege. How does one handle that? I have no idea. I have no idea. Me even giving you an
answer to that is there's this guy named Charles K or kettering i don't know how to pronounce his name uh i read his biography i think it's episode 127 or something like that so
he invented the electric uh starter he founded ac delco that gets acquired by gm right he is the head
of research and development at gm when gm is the most valuable company and most like the cutting
edge of technology company in the world at the time. There's a story from his wife and his daughter in that book saying,
hey, when he dies, there's only one,
there's only going to be three words on his tombstone.
I don't know.
Because that's what he would say over and over and over again.
He's having this conversation.
Same thing.
He was the son of a poor man.
He is now a rich man.
His kids are rich.
He's talking to other people that have the same experience, his peers.
They're like, what do you do?
And the answer they came up with, I don't know.
Yeah.
Because it's so dependent on who the person is.
Like, maybe you give them money going to Bob Magnus' grandsons.
Maybe they're, you know, they're like Warren Buffett's kids where, like, they run foundations
and they want to give the money away.
And I don't think they're coke addicts.
I don't know.
But, like, you don't, it's just dependent on the person so i if there was a simple if there
was a correct answer i think some of these guys some of these guys would have figured it out well
that's the thing about humans right like every person is different yeah yeah so it's i have no
idea um it really and that's the biggest thing where i think um this is one of the lessons i
learned from the podcast where you know you mentioned this at the biggest thing where I think this is one of the lessons I learned from the podcast where, you know, you mentioned this at the beginning, Ben, where most of these people are just so, they're like best in class in this one dimension in the world.
And of course, to get that, they had to be poured, they couldn't optimize all other areas of their life at what they did for like their work, right?
You know, Sam Walton is one of the rare guys where he gets to the end. He knows he's dying because he's got cancer all over his body
when he's writing that book.
And he's like, listen, if I could do everything again.
He's like, yeah, I missed some of my kids' childhood.
They worked in the stores and he took them with him.
But he's like, I'd do it again.
I had to do this.
I had to get after it.
I had to improve.
A lot of them get to the end of their life and are like,
oh, I regret.
The founder of Ikea has the best words on this.
He said, I had three sons growing up.
He started Ikea when he was 17, worked on it until he was 80-something.
And he's like, I sacrificed my three sons' childhoods.
I regret it.
He goes, anybody that has kids knows that childhood does not allow itself to be reconquered.
And so we were hanging out today.
We were going to do a recording, go to dinner.
And my plan was, I want to see my son. And my daughter. It's like, We were going to do a recording, go to dinner. And my plan was I want to see my son and my daughter.
It's like, I'm going to take the red eye.
And then I realized, yeah, but I want to spend time with David and Ben,
so I'm leaving early tomorrow morning.
But it's like, I'm doing this as fast as possible.
And if I had to, I'd fly back and forth.
Because your kids are, think about the relationship you guys have with your parents.
Are they still alive?
Yep.
So you get to talk to them, see them.
But you have your whole life, right?
Right.
When your kids are small,
there's like this tiny window
when they're like two to five to six
where you're everything to them.
Oh, yeah.
You and I have talked about it.
I absolutely feel this way.
Even my 10-year-old daughter,
like right now,
she wants to spend time with me.
Like it was the cutest thing ever.
I was leaving, going to LA to see Charlie
and then coming up to San Francisco to see you guys.
And she texts me.
She goes, I'm wearing your sweater because, like, it makes me feel close to you.
Like, while you're gone.
You know what I mean?
But if you ask her, do you want to spend movie night with Dad and Mom,
or do you want to go play Roblox with your friends?
For sure, the latter.
They're friends.
And she loves me.
Don't get me wrong.
But, like, their friends are way their friends are really important to them.
Where every day I miss, my son's about to turn three,
it's like, I'm not going to get back that day
and there's only like a thousand of those days.
And my wife won't have any more kids,
even though I was like, I don't want a bunch of kids.
Like, what's that?
I was like, I don't want a bunch.
And she's like, no way.
I said, hey, I don't have to get pregnant, so that's fine.
Something that Buffett and Munger did with the Graham Group that was way ahead of its time that
now anybody can do is they formed their social networks outside of geographic barriers. And they
found their most compatible, most like-minded, highest level of talent peers. And then they just
got on planes and got to go see them.
You know, and like that was really hard to do back in the day.
And now anybody can do it.
It's kind of like the Bill Gurley, you know, you have no excuse not to do that.
You also, but here's the thing.
What people get wrong is they're like, oh, I want to meet this guy.
You have to do the work necessary to make them worth your time, right?
Which is like the unfair advantage that the three people sitting in this room have is
that it doesn't matter. That's why like in the last six weeks, I've gone to lunch
or dinner with multiple billionaires. This is, like, and the people that, like, you get to talk
to and all this other stuff is, like, this dude is crazy. He's read 300 biographies of entrepreneurs.
There's no way I'm going to have dinner with him and not pick up one idea. Like, and then now I've
built this machine where, like, oh, that's an interesting idea. I'll just plug it into this
business. And, like, it's not a financial transaction by any means,
but there's no, the reason it's not that like,
Charlie was the first person I met
that I was actually nervous about.
And it's the reason I'm not nervous
is because I know I've done the work.
Like you can't put me in a room with anybody on the planet
and I'm not gonna be able to tell them
at least one interesting thing.
It doesn't mean I'll be the most,
the best dinner they've ever had in their life.
That's not what I'm saying.
It's just like, they're gonna hear something
that's like, oh, that's interesting, and it goes through their own brain.
And it's only because I've spent six years, and same with you guys.
It's like, oh, you should feel comfortable.
Like you guys mentioned earlier, it's like your audience feels like two football fields.
And like, oh, it's a little bit of like, you didn't use the word insecurity, but like a little nervousness.
I want these people to like me.
Yeah.
It's like a fear pushing you from behind.
But you know,
you've most likely read,
you know more about the subject than they do.
Sure, I do.
But I need to make something worthy of their time.
Yes, that is an admirable...
It's like, who cares?
I could spend all the time in the world
and fail to synthesize the narrative and the takeaways,
and all of a sudden then I've just you know then i failed them regardless of how much work i did the product wasn't good and so that that's that's the thing it's hard to not have the product be
good because you did the work i guess that's my point well yeah i think we now have a process
that uh means that when you and I put in the work,
the product is good,
but it took a long time to arrive at that.
It's almost like, you know,
this is another Sam Hinckley thing,
trust the process.
Yep.
That was a chapter.
I guess the point I was making there, though,
is because you guys do so much preparation and like it's now
your life's work like it's just so much it's it's gonna be so hard not to add value to the people
in your lives whether it's like friends that never show up on a podcast or friends that like you
don't have a business relationship with it's like and like you're just gonna add value because what
you do is so rare.
Naval Ravikant, he's influenced my thinking a lot too.
And he has this thing in the Amunak Naval by our friend Eric Jorgensen.
And he's just like, if you read an hour a day, that puts you in the 0.0001% of humans.
And I'm like, that can't be true.
That's the dirty secret of acquired and founders is that people don't read books. So if you just read them and then tell people what's in the books, you're going to 100x the market for books.
And I couldn't believe that.
I was having dinner with the same friend that was telling me, like I told him,
I was like, oh, I'll try to build a business around my reading.
This was like a couple months ago.
And he's like, you vastly overestimate how much people read.
He goes, how many books a year do you think the average person reads?
I was like, I don't know, 12?
It's one.
It's like 0.5. It's zero. I remember asking a book publisher,
he said, America reads a book a year. Well, he quoted some other study. I said 12. He's like,
no, not 12. He's like, it's zero. The average is zero. It's crazy. And yeah, to your point,
I've become friends with a bunch of writers. Some of them I met through the podcast.
And they've been telling me, teaching me about the publishing industry and just breaking
down like 98% of books ever published sell less than 5,000 copies. It's parallel.
The book business is the venture business, which is so interesting to me how the advanced model
works. It's like quite similar to a seed financing. I mean, they, they put out,
you know, $50,000 for an advance on your book, which is, you know, covers your cost of living
while you're writing it. And like, they kind of don't care about recouping it because it's even
worse. The whole business is about, do I, did I sign up, you know, um, James Clear this year.
And like, you know, when you have Michelle Obama on your hands and you have to pay for it,
but you don't know when you have a James Clear on your hands.
And when that becomes the book that America reads this year,
you better make sure it's in your publishing house
and not one of the other three big or four big,
whatever it is, publishing houses.
Seed funding is better
because their advances are recoupable.
Right.
So it's like, we were having this long conversation.
It's the most preferred stock.
Yeah, we were talking before. It's's participating preferred we were talking before we started
recording i was like man jimmy sony would be great to do a sessions with just because he's
got this historical knowledge of paypal paypal being so important to like silicon valley history
and he we were talking about this and he's like no like i have to pay that back through sales i'm
like oh because the thing is um going back to like um did you guys listen to gamecraft blake
robbins oh yeah every episode yep so excellent like unbelievably good and what i loved about The thing is, going back to like, you guys listen to GameCraft, Blake Robbins? Oh, yeah.
Every episode.
Yep.
So excellent.
So good.
Like, unbelievably good.
And what I loved about it is how they focused on the business model innovations and how
one decision by some random group of programmers in the 1980s affected a business model decision
10 years later or whatever.
And I was talking to Jimmy about this.
I go, the books are fantastic.
They're the best products in the world.
There's a great quote in Poor Charlie's products in the world you can uh there's
a great quote in poor charlie's almanac which says that uh there's ideas worth billions in a
history book for charlie munger and warren buffett that is literally true right yeah um and what i
don't understand is like you guys have such a high value product and you haven't innovated on
the business model at all yeah and so i was telling um jimmy i was like do you know the deal like like
you just you think about this as an entrepreneur.
You're not a writer.
You're an entrepreneur, and your product just happens to be a book.
But you can make money off that any kind of way you want.
You can just get creative.
I go, people think it's crazy where I'm like, I'm trying to be the Jay-Z of podcasts.
And people are like, what the hell is wrong with you?
Have you done episodes on Jay-Z?
That episode I did on Jay-Z's autobiography is one of my most popular.
I bet.
I love Jay-Z, and I love you. So I can't believe I haven't listened to that episode. Jay-Z has the founder mentality, on Jay-Z's autobiography is one of my most popular. I bet. I gotta listen to it. I love Jay-Z and I love you
so I can't believe
I haven't listened to that episode.
Jay-Z has the founder mentality
and he had it since he was a kid
and you just see everything
his whole career
and people look at him
and they're like,
oh,
this is another thing about
intelligence manifests itself
in vastly different ways.
It's not always credentialed.
In many cases,
it's not.
But Jay-Z's a straight up genius
if you listen to him
and what he did
and he looked
at he's like yeah he says it from the get-go he's like i thought i told you characters i'm not a
rapper he's like i'm a businessman and rap just happens to be my product and so i'm going to
think about it like that i go jimmy you should do that i go why don't you just find a deal like jim
like jay-z did with samsung he's like what are you talking about well that's like true founders
entrepreneurs whatever you know founders in your is the title you want to put on them, they care about ownership.
They own their work.
And realize that the business model matters, which is why I brought up GameCraft.
So what Jay-Z did, this is years ago.
This is his Magna Carta Holy Grail.
Probably came out in 2013.
So he goes, he goes, you know, I could record this album and then I could sell like normal.
You know, stream it and then sell it for $10.
You want the physical copy, et cetera, et cetera.
He goes, what if I just want my money guaranteed?
So he goes to Samsung and says, Samsung, you're launching this new app,
this new phone, and you have your own app on it.
I'm going to sell you, I will sell you a million copies, $5 each.
You give me $5 million guaranteed for my album.
I'm still going to own it, so he gets the streaming rights.
He goes, and so what I'll do is you pay me $5 million guaranteed for my album. I'm still going to own it. So he gets the streaming lights. He goes, and so what I'll do is like,
you pay me 5 million.
The first million people that get access to my album
are going to be Samsung,
whatever phone was coming out.
You download it for free if you have this device.
And so it's advertising to the Samsung
and it's guaranteed money to him.
I go, dude, you're writing about technology founders.
I was like, there's these venture capital funds
that have $80 billion of assets under management.
Just like, hey, will you pay me a million dollars to write this book?
And then you say, hey, this book is now presented by whatever firm.
This is why me and you have talked about this privately.
You guys already know this.
There's been something like 15 acquisition or investment offers for founders.
I said no to every single one.
A lot of them are like this, where it's like, oh, well, you have the attention of people that are valuable.
You just said the worst thing that could happen to a venture firm is they miss the hit of
that.
So they have to expand.
They have to make sure they catch that, right?
So it's like, hey, we'll pay for founders or whatever, give you X amount of money, pay
you to do it.
You do exactly what you do.
The only difference is, essentially, they're trying to buy up our inventory forever.
It's like, hey, founders is presented by X company.
If you're going to raise money, email here. And the response I have when I get these pitches is like, if I did that,
that means I'm not actually learning the lessons in the books, which is like, you never give up
control. It's like, no, why would I ever do that? Let's dive into a deal structure on that. So
what if you weren't giving up control? And what if you weren't giving up economics forever?
You're just doing a period of time buyout of all your ad inventory.
This is the intelligent thing.
This is what Tegas is doing with Invest Like the Best.
And this is why, like, it's crazy to me when I talk to people and they don't understand this.
I had a conversation with a founder and he's like, it's really weird.
I'm not going to say who it was. He's like, it's really weird that this company
is running ads on
that podcast every single episode forever.
And I'm like, not at all.
And I go, oh, see.
Moving parade, not standing army.
I go, David Ogilvie ran the same exact
ad in the same magazine for
30 years and it was still effective.
And so I went, I was like, this is, I go, what do you think Coca-Cola
has been doing for a hundred, this is not new ideas.
Either Coca-Cola is really
dumb or. Exactly.
And I don't think they're dumb.
Apple has the prime billboard in
every major city in America to advertise
whatever the latest iPhone is.
Forever. Forever. So I talked
to Michael Elnick, who's the co-founder
of Tegas. And he's an,
we all know each other.
Great team.
And we talked about this, like, and this is another example,
because this somewhat affects our business, because when there's like a decline in overall economics,
like ad markets usually shrink a little bit and ad rates come down.
And it's like, oh, you're doing exactly what investors do.
Like, what do Charlie and Buffett do when there's a crash?
They don't.
Deploy. Deploy. You read Izzy Sharpe's fantastic autobiography, The Founder of Four Seasons,
right? And he says this. He goes, he's building what didn't exist at the time, the only chain of five-star hotels at the time. And he says, I grow. And this is every founder does. It's Andrew
Carnegie, John D. Rockefeller, Henry Kelly Frick. When they have recessions, that's when they grow.
So what he would do is his competitors would pull back on advertising.
He would spend more.
And he says he claims, I think in the book, he increases market share by like 25% or 28% using this over and over again.
Because human nature is, oh, crap, things are small.
And they cut.
This is what Ogilvy said.
Ogilvy's like, if you need advertising to sell your product, it's not a marketing expense.
It's a production cost.
It's actual cost of manufacturing your product it's not a marketing expense it's a production cost it's a it's a it's actual uh cost of manufacturing your product and so what what tigas what michael elnick did that was such a genius move was first of all he knew something was working right and he scaled
up through podcast ads and um he knew it was effective and then he's like oh okay well like
now you have this the all these people in the tech industry.
Their stock's creating.
Everybody's running a retreat.
What does he do?
He goes like, oh.
There's probably available inventory.
And so he goes, hey, Colossus Network, I'd like to buy up every single ad inventory for 2023 on every single one of your shows.
That's how you know that likelihood that guy's going to win.
I don't know the details of his business. It's private and everything else. It's like the right decision the same decision that's what ogilvy would have done that's what buffett and munger
do when they put money in like that is that's what coca-cola does it doesn't matter the economic
climate is you ever can see less apple uh uh billboards you can see less coca-cola no it's
interesting to like think about this in the venture business, which obviously, as we record this here in mid-March 2023, there's a lot going on in the venture business.
It's so dynamic right now that I feel like we don't know the last two iterations of what have happened because we've been recording and I haven't checked my phone.
That's how fast the world is moving right now.
Things are happening very quickly as we speak.
But I think a consequence of that,
to your point about like you should advertise
heavier during recessions,
I think customer differentiation among venture firms
is just declining rapidly, right?
Like what is-
Well, no, it was until interest rates went up.
But now- No, but even now that capital is scarce again.
I think both the up and the down cycle is both, I think, are commoditizing.
I totally disagree with this.
I think when capital was a commodity and money was free,
it was extremely hard to differentiate yourself as a venture firm
or any financial firm.
But it should be easier than ever
to differentiate yourself because the thing...
Okay, so how do you differentiate yourself right now?
You guys are doing it.
You can, I mean, well, one of them,
let's abstract away speaking to the acquired audience
as one of them or as a gigantic means of differentiation.
Your XYZ average venture firm out there. Having money
and writing the checks.
Right, but
yes, having money, right?
A year from now, it's like 6 to 12 months
from now, that's going to be differentiating.
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in the show notes. Our huge thanks to Huntress. So I have a thought on this. One, I don't know
anything about venture investing. Two, I don't know anything about investing, period. Like,
I get to talk to super smart investors, and I'm sure the questions are like, hold on,
you had to find that for me. And I'm sure they're like, this kid's an idiot.
But when you guys were talking a little bit about your business and
the venture game in general, I just think of one of my favorite things that I heard
Jeff Bezos say is, for years, people were like, hey, when are you going to do physical retail?
When are you going to do physical retail? When are you going to do physical retail? And he said
something that was crazy. He's like, physical retailing is an ancient business. And I love that term.
It's like, it's an ancient business,
so I'm not going to do it until I know,
like, I can, it's so hard to improve on an ancient industry.
It has to be completely differentiated.
You mentioned, I heard you on one of your podcasts
where you're like, you went to the Amazon Go store
just as like, like, pure curiosity.
It's like, not like you needed something.
And so you guys have probably read that story too,
where it's like, at one time,
they were going to do like, like meat and like all this other stuff that you'd have to like talk needed something. And so you guys have probably read that story too, where it's like, at one time they were going to do like meat and like all this other stuff that you'd have to like
talk to somebody. He's like, no, you have to redo this. This doesn't make sense. The key,
the differentiation here is that you walk in, you walk out. Not walk in, talk to some guy,
he's like cutting salami for you. Like you got to get that out of there. And so I've had this
thought because I've read a bunch of biographies on investors too. And like investing is an ancient business. And we're just doing it in different
ways now. And so I was like, well, if you wanted to invest, right? Let's say you wanted to invest
in private companies, which people have been doing forever. I always think of like, where did
JP Morgan get his deal flow? And you know, like you've read through the history. It of like, where did J.P. Morgan get his deal flow?
And you know, you've read through the history.
It's like, people are like, oh, that was J.P. Morgan Bank.
No, no, there's no retail bank.
You're not going in there.
There's no sign on the door.
It's like, here's J.P. Morgan Company.
It was a relationship based.
It's like, you got in if you knew somebody, right?
I read this biography that's incredible.
I highly recommend people read it.
It's episode 103 of Founders.
It is the richest woman in America, Hedy Green.
I can't remember the subtitle. I love how he denies that he knows every number of every episode and then busts out three more.
It's only because I reference this all the time.
So Hedy Green, right?
It's only because you reference every episode all the time.
One day it's just going to be a recording of just all the episode numbers.
You are an algorithm.
You are your ReadWise app.
That's how I get it.
So the Hedy Green, though, was so wealthy that she bailed out the city of New York.
Like that book has unbelievable stories.
What?
I've never heard this person's name and they bailed out the city of New York?
Her family.
So when she was alive, the richest city in the world per capita was like New Bedford, Massachusetts.
Oh, yeah.
Wailing. Whaling.
Bingo.
So her family made so much whaling.
And the way they looked at the family fortune is, I am a steward of this money.
My job is to make it grow so that the next generation has more.
And then she's like the third generation of these whaling.
And then whaling, it died out, I think, the generation before her.
So they had to figure out how to make money.
The technology stocks of her day, railroads.
She made a ton of money in railroads,
and then she'd buy land,
like real estate in New York and everything else.
But anyways, my point being,
and I had this conversation with Patrick one day.
I was like, think about it.
That was an ancient, investing is an ancient business,
so you wouldn't do what Hedy Green did.
Where did she get her deal from?
People knew her. They knew she was wealthy. they knew that she was the first person to go to in financial panics they called financial panics what we call recessions
and depressions now and it was like you know every three years back then yeah um and so what she
would do she had a desk in chemical bank in manhattan so the the advantage there is geography
physical location you're at the center of finance in america you need to be here
you build a reputation so literally there's stories in the book where there'd be a line of people
in financial crashes waiting for at her desk it's like okay i'll sell you my rose stocks pennies on
the dollar corneas vanderbilt did the same thing she invested with him and a bunch of other people
right and i was like but what would you do today like you're an ain't you're you want an edge
everything we're talking about is like you need an edge.
You can't play.
Ed Thorpe has a great quote in his book.
He's like, I've been a money manager for 50 years.
One thing I know is the surest way to get rich is only play games and make investments where you have an edge.
Right.
Right?
Which is another way of saying do something your competitors don't, aren't, or can't.
Or Edwin Land.
So Edwin Land plays a huge role in my life.
Founder of Polaroid, Steve Jobs Hero.
Because he said, I have a personal model.
It may not fit anybody else.
Don't do anything somebody else can do.
And so I was like, okay, I don't think anybody else could do founders the way I do it.
So I'm just going to do this, right?
Dope.
So my point being is like, how would you do it today?
Well, it would look very much like what I think you guys are building.
And I'm not an investor, so I don't know anything about your world. But it's just like, I'd spend my time reading and learning about business history.
Charlie Munger and Warren Buffett did that. Every single investor you guys have probably read about
does that all the time. They read constantly, right? I would share what I know. That's going
to build my network of other people. Those people are eventually going to sell me deals. Then I have
this huge advantage that you couldn't even do 10 years ago or 15 years ago because there's no such
thing as a podcast, right? It's like, now I can record all the stuff I'm learning, right?
Which we should say,
there have been iterations of this.
This is how Union Square Ventures
became Union Square Ventures.
Our foundry group became foundry group.
Blogging.
Blogging, and then Brad and Jason
writing the book on venture deals.
I mean, it's like-
Angel Venture Hacks with Naval and Rivi.
I have two other examples.
It's just like, it's not even venture.
Like, what is the most successful content marketing of all time?
Michelin?
No, Berkshire shareholder letters.
No, totally, of course.
Berkshire shareholder letters.
Of course.
Because this is how you know genius is a genius.
It is the greatest act of salesmanship because you never even see the sale happening.
It's like, hey, and they spend, you know, you guys have probably done this research,
how much time they spend on those letters. It's like, hey, and they spend, you know, you guys have probably done this research, how much time they spend on those letters.
It's like half a year, seven, eight months for every letter.
This is not like, oh, I just jot it down
and what I learned this year.
And the crazy thing is like, he's-
Old Uncle Warren.
How many people have, this is something Charlie taught.
Oh, so this is a great, great thing that this came up here.
Did you talk about the letters with him?
No, I asked him about like,
so I was explaining to him, I was like, Charlie, I'm literally in asked him about like so i was explaining i was like
charlie i'm literally in the middle of like reading about you when you were like around my
age so every time i read a book i'm like okay i first of all i know what year they're they're
born so every time as i go through the books i'm like how old are they and i write down okay he's
24 here he started i want to know what they were doing in and around my age and so i'm like charlie
i'm thinking about you guys like you just started like your fund starts he's like 41 or something
like that i don't remember what it was right and um and i was like then Charlie, I'm thinking about you guys. You just started. Your fund starts when you're 41 or something like that. I don't remember what it was, right?
And I was like, then you start out.
You're trying to figure things out.
You could see them kind of figuring it out, making mistakes.
You guys did an excellent job on your episode talking about what they learned from getting to get away from the Ben Graham, get to excellence.
Great businesses are rare.
We should be in there.
And then just let time do all the work.
And now you guys put up the greatest investment record the world's ever seen.
Are you surprised?
He goes, of course.
He's like, of course I'm surprised.
How could you not be?
We want to be successful.
And we were ambitious and driven.
But there's no way you could say, hey, I'm going to be worth.
What's Berkshire's market cap right now?
I don't know.
500 billion?
500 billion.
Yeah, whatever it is.
But he said, but the reason that popped to my mind when I was asking him these questions,
let me actually get the exact note because I don't want to mess up the way he said it
because his lines were just excellent.
And so he goes goes he's surprised how
successful him and warren turned out but how could you not be surprised and then he said something
was fascinating he goes i think we get too much credit and i was like whoa that's interesting
like why do you think that charlie and he's like uh it's very he goes it's he i find it odd to be
so wealthy and loved that's not these are not exact words these are my interpretation of his
words let me just be clear here i find it so odd that to be wealthy and loved. These are not exact words. These are my interpretation of his words. Let me just be clear here.
I find it so odd to be wealthy and loved.
That's not a usual human reaction.
And then my note tied to why I think the Berkshire Letters are the greatest content marketing
of all time, he goes, and I go, I wonder if this is because they spent so much time teaching
others.
So when you listen to Choir, you guys are teaching, right?
Berkshire, I'm going to go to Paul Graham too.
Berkshire, they're teaching.
You could just not read a book and just read berkshire's letters and you're gonna get a
fantastic education right and then in there it's like oh by the way we'd like to be the buyers of
choice so if you happen if you happen to know of this business like this business that you want to
get your hands on like you know you care about it and he does this excellent product differentiation
call me yeah the greatest The greatest content market.
What is, like, how much money do they make off of that?
And obviously...
And I think this is probably,
I don't even know if it's on the list of things
that they care about,
but, like, it's also marketing for their businesses.
Totally.
I have Geico car insurance
because it's a Berkshire Hathaway company.
This is how we talk.
I'm drinking these.
I feel an extra kinship for Brooks running shoes.
Absolutely.
I'm wearing Brooks right now. Okay, so I so i'm wearing our arena i changed there you go i
changed out i was in a polo hoodie right before i came over i watched the documentary on ralph
lauren i just did a podcast i just listened to your episode yeah i think it's episode 288 i
wonder if i'm right it is good let's see if i'm right though let's see if i'm right i could be
wrong i could be full of crap it It's 288. But before that,
I had watched a documentary on him
years ago, and I found out that he did
the... I always go to Ben for the proper
pronunciation. We'll do the same podcast.
I say, like, Akio Morita.
And then he's like, Akio Morita.
I'm like, alright. I go with Ben.
I go with Ben. I will give you
the correct American pronunciation.
It's unclear if it's actually right or not.
So he did the same thing that Akio did.
They were struggling in the early days of Sony.
They get this huge order.
They're like, we're going to take 100,000 units or whatever it is,
but take off Sony and put on our name.
And Akio's like, we have no money.
But he refused to do that.
Because he's like, I'm not building your company.
I'm building mine.
I love that entrepreneurial, bullheaded tendency.
Same thing with Ralph.
Ralph was broke. Him and his wife are living in a house our apartment with a train
running over on top of them they're sleeping on a mattress and he's making ties and bloomingdale's
like we'll take them we love them take that name off you're gonna be our house brand yeah and he
packs up his ties he's like i'm not here to build your brand i'm here to build mine like that so
that which is funny because later in life, he would
make so much money on just licensing out his brand. He's like, I don't even make any of the
products. I literally just license the brand. Hearing that made me buy more polo clothes.
Hearing your affinity for Geico makes you buy Geico. The advertisers you haven't acquired
because they love you. Your audience, I know you guys vet them, and you have a ton of people that want to
advertise that you don't let. It's like that goodwill that you're building up, the goodwill
that Buffett built up. The second maybe most- And by the way, there's a litmus test for that.
Does the acquired brand, like I want to only work with sponsors that I want to so full-throatedly endorse that I feel the acquired
brand gets stronger by working with them. And if you can actually just keep doing that durably,
I think that is an amazing way to build a brand. And we try. It doesn't always work. And sometimes
we just don't sell ad slots because we're like, well, the bar's here.
Long-term. Like, okay, I, the bar's here. Long term.
Like, okay, I miss a week on advertising.
It doesn't matter.
I'm doing this for you.
When we get on the phone, the first time we ever talked, do you guys love podcasting?
I love podcasting.
You're going to do it forever?
We're going to do it forever.
We say the same thing.
Right, right, right.
It's like one week.
We could do this for another 40 years.
Right. So the same thing.
It's like the same goodwill that you're talking about.
It's why I'm drinking.
I don't even drink energy drinks.
Right?
But the format for
founders showed up with five jaco goes this is this is uh the only energy drink i found and i
only found it because um the i was driving home on thanksgiving and all the coffee shops are closed
and i heard jaco's podcast and i know he has this and he says he's in wawa's and i was like wait
there's a wawa on the turnpike i was like i can just go there like they're there and i bought them and then i was wired for the whole drive home i was like oh wait, there's a Wabla on the turnpike. I was like, I can just go there. Like, they're there. And I bought them.
And then I was wired for the whole drive home.
I was like, oh, they work, man.
This is fantastic.
But the point there is like, it's not like when I went to the energy drink aisle, I was like, oh, maybe I'll do Rockstar or Monster.
It's like, no, they didn't make a podcast that I love.
Jocko made a podcast I love.
You were not evaluating energy drinks at that point in your...
The format for our founders I got from Jocko.
I found his podcast because he was on Tim Ferriss's. His podcast at the very beginning was just him reading books
for an hour, hour and a half saying, oh, I like this section. I didn't know that. Yeah, and he does it for
autobiographies for military people. I was like, oh, I should do this for autobiographies of
founders and everything else. So it's a combination of ideas. The second best version, and you guys
know this more than me because it's your world and I don't know anything.
I had spent three weeks reading Paul Graham's essays.
Paul Graham's essays changed my life.
Also, content marketing. Yeah, absolutely changed my life.
So we're going to get there.
The reason to finally jump and dedicate my life to founders came, my wife was sleeping in bed next to me.
I'm up late at night.
I read Paul Graham's essay, How to Do What You Love. I talk about this on episode 275, 76, and 77. Those are right. I know
that for sure. Are the three Paul Graham episodes I did. I talk about this snap, how he changed my,
that episode changed my life, or that essay changed my life in 275. So then I'm re, so I
spent three weeks going through every single one of his essays. So something his new essays lack that they had before,
he used to have this bright orange box at the top.
It says, do you want to start a startup?
Apply to Y Combinator.
Apply to Y Combinator.
Yeah.
And so I was like, think about, so again, it's not like you went,
I thought about this, like what is the founder's version of Y Combinator?
What is the acquired version of Y Combinator, right?
You have to be very careful like who you partner with and what you're doing. So I was like, what is the founder's version of Y Combinator? What is the acquired version of Y Combinator? You have to be very careful
who you partner with and what you're doing. So I was like,
what is the orange box? It's not like
you go to Paul Graham's and he's got
10 banner ads. He's just like, no.
Yeah, he worked for Yahoo. He knows that doesn't
work. Your attention
is here. And it's like, he
didn't know that starting Y Combinator, you can go back and read
his essays about it, watch his interviews. He had
no clue. Just like Charlie told me. he's like yep no i did not expect to build
what was it was called the summer founders program you know it wasn't even that's the best thing
about learning about the company and founder history it's like they didn't there's no way
when you could interview sam walton when he's his shoes the bottom of his shoes has watermelon and
donkey crap yeah he's not gonna be like hey going to be the richest man in the world.
Right, yeah.
And so I love this idea of, hey, all of these discussions about the business benefit all comes from,
it's the byproduct of educating people, sharing people.
That's why people love Charlie and Warren White.
All three of us love them.
How much have us three learned from them?
Right, so much. Yeah, this three of us love them. How much have us three learned from them? Right.
So much. Yeah.
To the point where like-
It's such a good point.
I wanted to cry when I met him.
Because of their content marketing.
I mean, it sounds trite, but like-
His lessons changed my life.
They're going to change the trajectory of my kids' lives.
Yeah.
Like that is, and you know, he probably hears that a million times a day, but it doesn't
matter.
It's like, I got a chance to tell him that.
That's it.
It is crazy.
He educated America on investing while still managing to do it better than anyone else.
There were some funny things about that, too, where he says something like, well, you know, they're completely – he says you both – in your episode, you talk about Snowball.
Snowball has that quote from Buffett in there.
He talks about it's really important to have an inner scorecard or an outer scorecard inner scorecard is his dad
it's like i'm doing this because i know it's good outer scorecard is like i'm doing this what are
the people gonna think about me newsflash no one's thinking about you they think about themselves so
outer scorecard people cannot have like it's almost really hard to have a uh a happy life
having an outer scorecard i like charlie's description of that better. He says, I think it was Andrew that asked him the question.
Maybe Chris asked him the question.
He's like, were you driven to succeed to impress your dad or your mom?
It was a great question.
He goes, no.
He goes, I had an interclock.
He goes, I have an interclock, and I always had an interclock.
I did this because I wanted to do it.
And he goes, and they're like, do you think Buffett's like that?
He goes, Buffett has an interclock too.
And it's just like this idea where they did it their way.
Regardless, they don't care what other people think.
He said this about the fact that they keep some of their wholly owned businesses.
And like, oh, the profits are less.
So they kind of just let them run out.
And like, they'll just keep the cash.
And then people are like, oh, you should invest the cash.
And he's just like, no, because we're opportunists.
We're individual opportunity driven is the line that he has about that.
Right.
You were going somewhere, David, earlier with the discussion of being a professional investor
and how it's less differentiated than it's ever been before.
Well, where I was going with it was,
I bet, look at the reaction on Twitter and elsewhere
and I think in much of the country
to what's happened with the Silicon Valley Bank situation.
Not that this is a current events podcast, but like...
It's also, by the time this comes out,
it's going to be two weeks.
It's going to be old news, right?
Hopefully things will just be calm and settle down and there'll be no more impending crises.
Yeah, right.
But another one's coming eventually.
Right.
Just like Charlie says, you're going to have another unintended problem a year from now.
Yep.
I think you are right, Ben, that just having capital to invest will be differentiating going forward.
However, I think the aggregate brand and reputation of the venture industry has taken a massive hit. Totally. Massive hit over the last several years. And you're not holding up
SVB. It just keeps going down. SVB is revealing to how other people think of Silicon Valley.
What I'm specifically referring to is VC's behavior and reactions on Twitter over the past
week. But that's just emblematic of the direction things have been going for years now.
And part of it's related to tech in general, but I think there's a specific,
maybe hatred is strong, but brand decline of the venture capital industry.
Yeah, I agree with that.
Tie it to differentiation among venture firms.
So yes, as the market goes down, having capital will be differentiating and the number of
participants will go down in the industry and whatnot. But how do you stand out in this market
as if in aggregate your industry is thought less of and people don't want to work with you. How do you turn that tide?
Right. Yeah. If the next Sam Walton has the opportunity to raise venture capital dollars
and he's like, you know what? I think I would rather just figure it out another way and not
build in that ecosystem. I think there are a lot of people out there right now who want to start
businesses and are like, I'm not going to raise
venture capital because F that. And I don't need to. And it was a lie that I needed to.
Right. Can I tell you from the founder's perspective? Because I talked to a ton of
founders. I'm going to go down, I think, well, we'll see, talking to more founders than any
non-VC, right? I get offers all the time like, hey, you want to invest in my company? I've said
no to all of them. Just because I'm like, dude, I'm focused on founders. Like I don't care
about anything about my podcast. And so we have these conversations and it's just like,
what VCs don't understand is like how much founders hate them. They like, they hate them.
And it's not, they hate the good ones. They love the good ones. Right? Like, I'm not going to say
some of the brands that I've heard about, they're oh no like we raise money from a bunch of people they're good
they don't mess with us but if we ask a question or we need something they jump on it you know
and the problem is this is not like it's it's a natural like distribution of any industry like
there's going to be crappy founders and great founders there's gonna be crappy investors and
great investors and so i really think it ties back to the principle that Buffett and Munger
built their business on,
is like only associating themselves
with the best people on the best companies.
And that solves so much other problems.
So yeah, my issue is like,
there's a lot of VCs in my audience too,
and they're nice people.
Don't get me wrong, right?
Some of them I've talked to,
it was just like,
who gave you money to invest?
Like, what is going on here
but what I don't like
is like
the best ones
like this is what I like
about Patrick right
if you talk to the people
that Patrick has invested in
he doesn't like
here's a list of 10 things
I took two minutes
to think about
he's asking questions
he does exactly what he does
on his show
he asks questions
and if you need something
like I'll do whatever I can
because he's got a good network
and help him out
but he's certainly not
he's like if I have to tell the founder what to do
then i why did i invest in like that doesn't make any sense so what happens is like i'll get these
emails like i love your show etc etc here's like 10 ideas for you and it's just like you read you
read them it's like you hired like an assistant or a researcher maybe you wrote this yourself
you thought about this for 30 minutes like i think about this all day i every day. I've thought about this every day for years, man.
That's not helpful.
What are you doing?
You're just making,
I have a lower opinion of you
because this is a dumb idea.
And the only way about that is,
do you know who Bryce Roberts is?
Yeah.
Okay, so he has,
this is, again,
I've never raised venture capital,
I've never made a venture capital investment,
but I talked to a ton of founders, and he has the greatest description.
He's like, what is the product that founders are buying from VCs?
It's not money, because everybody's got money.
Well, you used to have money.
Yeah, I guess you used to.
But still, the VC.
There's still a lot of people that have money.
There's still going to be investments made in markets.
Compared to venture in the 70s, yes.
He said two words, improved odds.
That is the best, from a founder's perspective,
that is the best description.
It's like, if I take investment from you
as opposed to this other guy over here,
this other girl over there,
like who is going to be,
founders, all they care about is,
can you help my company succeed?
Is it more likely that my company succeeds?
I'm dedicating my life to this, man.
This is not a game.
Like, can you make my company succeed?
And sometimes you can do it with money.
Sometimes you can network.
There's other people sitting right across from me that could probably help with distribution
that is actually value-added.
Like, that is the difference.
Like, if I was going to be a venture capitalist, and God knows I would not be, right?
I would just start a podcast.
And then I would do it for six years.
And I would get really valuable.
And then my inbox is full of people.
I don't have deal flow.
This is what Patrick is doing.
Yeah, it comes inbound.
I have a friend, Chris.
Chris Powers.
He syndicates real estate investment.
You know, rich people like to invest in real estate.
There's all these tax benefits.
And he's got, he says,
David, even with like,
and this guy's done like,
I think he's got either a billion or $2 billion
of industrial class real estate under management right now. And he's like, even, he's like, and this guy's done like, I think he's got either a billion or $2 billion of industrial class real estate under management right now.
And he's like, even, he's like, David, I just was interviewing and doing my podcast.
Again, same thing, educational, interviewing people operating in the real estate industry and interviewing founders.
And just doing it because he liked to do it.
He wanted to talk to those sort of people, happened to press record, put it out there, never really promoted it.
You know, got, he's like, even with my small audience, he goes, I've raised, he goes, it changes the
dynamic from, hey, I'm Chris, I'm sitting on Outbound.
Hey, I'm Chris.
This is what I do.
This is like, can we talk?
Can we set up a meeting to, oh, Chris, love your podcast.
How can I get 5 million in your fund?
It reverses it because they get to know you as a person.
This is what I don't like also.
It shortcuts the relationship.
But you just said, it's a relationship, right?
Which I think there's too much of this calendar Tetris, no offense, that venture capitalists play.
Because they try to do it with me.
Where our founders do this too.
Where they're like, hey, love your show.
Love to get to talk to you.
Can we talk?
And I reply back, yeah, let's set something up.
Then I'm routed to an an assistant and then it's like
oh you know uh how about six weeks from now
you know joe small has 30 minutes three weeks from now and i've done this like
once or twice and now my response is that's no way to build a
relationship here's my phone number just text or call me when
when you're free i'm not a 30 minute block in your calendar
and if we have the inbound that all three get it's like i'm already almost here's my phone number, just text or call me when you're free. I'm not a 30-minute block in your calendar.
And, dude, we have the inbound that all three get,
it's like I'm already almost hitting a limit to how many deep relationships I can build.
So I'd rather instead of talking to a million people,
I'm not a fester, instead of talking to a million people for 15 minutes,
I'd rather talk to five or ten people over and over and over and over again.
That's what Charlie...
You and I have talked a lot about this,
and you've rubbed off on me a lot on this.
I have changed my mindset and my daily behavior hugely because of our conversations.
Charlie and Warren.
They built relationships.
They found people they like, admired, and trust.
They repeat like, admire, and trust over and over again in the letters and their talks,
and then they just did business with them forever.
It's not this wide but shallow, and that's where you get the bad behavior.
Anybody that's high quality can see through it, and it's not going to work with you.
And you're only going to succeed.
Like you guys, if your business is parallel, you're only going to succeed if you get the very best ones.
It's interesting though.
Man, just like so much in life.
Warren and Charlie, really, they're just so often right. If you buy the premise that the aggregate opinion of the venture capital industry has declined a lot, it may continue to decline.
Whether it does or doesn't, it's meaningfully worse than it used to be.
What have Warren and Charlie done?
And to your point about the best content marketing ever, what is what they do?
It's a combination of a hedge fund and a private equity firm. What is the aggregate opinion,
public opinion of hedge funds,
managers and private equity firms
over the last 50 years?
Nothing but down.
What is the aggregate opinion of Berkshire?
Nothing but up.
It's amazing.
This is one advantage that I have,
the fact that I'm not an investor.
So I don't have to keep up on like,
to some degree,
venture capitalists have to know what's going on.
And I close myself off. I was having dinner with Sam and his wife and his wife was asking me, to keep up on like, to some degree venture capitalists have to like know what's going on, right?
And I close myself off.
Like I was having dinner with Sam and his wife and they're asking me, like his wife
was asking me like, hey, do you know about this person?
Oh no, do you know about this?
And Sam's like, he's got a very limited like, he said it nicely, he's like, you can ask
about like books, but this dude's not watching TV, he's not doing any other stuff, right?
We keep him in a, you know, hot out back.
And the good thing about that, though,
is somebody actually,
so essentially the way I use, like,
Twitter or any social media
is, like, I put out little snippets
from my podcast in text.
You put out a lot on Twitter.
In text, though, form, right?
Yeah.
Which has been really working for you.
I'm going to read something
that has a million,
over a million views in 24 hours
because everything's going on
and because I just had dinner with Charlie. So I'm going to read this and then I'll go back to 24 hours because everything's going on and because I just had dinner with Charlie.
So I'm going to read this, and then I'll go back to the benefit.
This is an amazing tweet, by the way.
So I go, Charlie Munger tells a story about human nature.
Now, I didn't put this because of the bank run.
I was just thinking, I was like, oh, I was reading the highlights.
You didn't post this with regards to the bank run?
No, no.
Remember, I reread my highlights every day?
Yeah.
And so when I reread my highlights, what my Twitter is
is when I reread highlights,
it's like, oh, that's a good one.
I just put it on Twitter.
Oh my God.
Then you have just
the greatest timing in history.
Yeah, exactly.
Well, it wasn't intentionally.
I knew it was going on,
but it never said,
oh, I need an SVB tweet.
I don't have any money in SVB.
Whatever.
So it goes,
Charlie Munger tells a story
about human nature.
And then this is all Charlie speaking.
One of my favorite stories
is about the little boy in Texas.
The teacher asks the class, if there are nine sheep in a pen and one jumps out, how many are left? And everybody got the answer right, meaning eight, right? Except
this little boy who said, none of them are left. And the teacher said, you don't understand
arithmetic. And the little boy said, no teacher, you don't understand sheep. And so... So effing good. Okay. When you were in the room with Charlie for several
hours, how did, like, in natural conversation, are they just pulling out these like parables
and these fables? Like, you know... Let me, I'm going to ask that question. The best response to
this tweet, I didn't even, I missed it myself. He goes, was the child Charlie himself? And I'm like,
oh my God, that's exactly what he would have done. He would have been the kid. He would, was the child Charlie himself? And I'm like, oh my God, that's exactly what he would have done.
He would have been the kid.
Yeah, totally.
He would have been the kid.
So the reason I think it's so powerful, like the storytelling ability you guys have, how
I try to break down things to aphorisms.
You ask like, why is this guy on my phone, right?
I only think in stories.
I think people only learn through stories and then one-liners, right?
That's why Charlie, David Ogilvie.
That idea, it's like he says it in a creative way,
and you remember Fur.
Charlie Munger says,
hey, if you don't learn probability,
you're going to go through life
as a one-legged man
in an ass-kicking contest.
So good.
So good.
So you laugh,
and then you think about it,
and it's like,
oh, I'm going to get my ass kicked.
So that's the way,
this is here because it's Ernest Shackleton.
His family motto was,
by endurance we conquer.
So we're in the podcast business.
People are like, you can't do podcasts.
There's like 2 million of them.
It's like, dude, there's like 70% or 80% of them that have quit.
98% have three episodes or less.
Me and Patrick were just talking about this.
I just saw him in person in Miami.
And we were talking, and I showed him this.
I was like, dude, for podcasts like me and Patrick's and yours, business categorize in business.
Have at least 10 episodes.
And I think release at least once a week.
You guys, I think, are release schedules less than that, right?
Two weeks?
Every two or three.
So those three categories is like.
But in terms of minutes of content per week, we're the same as everybody else.
But that was one thing.
They release once a week, right?
18,000.
And the business category
is the second most popular podcast,
the second most populated podcast category.
Behind.
Do you know the first?
Spirituality.
Faith.
Yeah.
Oh, True Crime has fallen off then.
Yeah, thankfully.
I'm going to start.
So there's a thing about that
where I heard somebody said,
they're like, Founders is like church for entrepreneurs.
And I might start dropping podcasts on Sunday.
No, no, I'm not kidding.
And if I do video, I swear to God, I went and looked.
I looked at pulpits.
I was like, I'm not going to get a pulpit.
I swear to God.
I swear to God.
You went crucifix shopping.
I'm not going to get a desk.
Like, think about, my mom was like fundamentalist Christian and stuff. And like, I had to go to I swear to God. You went crucifix shopping. I'm not going to get a desk. Think about, my mom was fundamentalist Christian and stuff,
and I had to go to church my whole life.
And it's just like, this is pretty crazy.
Not in a bad way.
I don't mean that to a majority.
It was like, they're learning from the same book every week over and over again.
The stories you could tell are limitless.
It's one book.
I can do the same thing.
I have access to all the books in the world.
I can do that.
So I do think there's an element of...
Totally.
Five years from now, people are going to be like,
this is the moment where David started the cult.
It's right here on video.
We're documenting.
Cults are the best businesses, though.
A hundred percent.
If you listen to my episode, In and Out, episode 244.
Oh, yeah.
There's no way I got that right, by the way.
Oh, now we get it.
I did that.
You keep talking. I'll look no way I got that right, by the way. Oh, now we get it. I did that. You keep talking.
I'll look up if you got this right.
I did that episode because it's 244.
Of course.
Is it?
Oh, my God.
I read that book because the best businesses in the world are cults.
That's what the founder of Trader Joe's, he wrote his autobiography.
He said that.
Trader Joe's was a cult for the overeducated and underpaid.
Right. And that's not to say that like cults are amazing businesses.
That's not what you're saying. You're saying the very best businesses are cheerful. In-N-Out
calls them, they use this terminology in their business, cheerful cult. It's a positive cult.
I'm not talking about Jonestown, let's get together and freaking drink mass suicide. No,
no. I'm talking things that hopefully you're building a product that's good for the world.
We had Gary Tan on back in the day,
and he was talking about Palantir at the very beginning,
and he was like, oh, Palantir was a cult.
That's why it worked.
Well, this idea also influenced me.
Zero to One, Peter Thiel's book, is like, you know, he says that.
He's like, the best businesses, startups look like cults.
You have to inspire emotion in people.
Otherwise, you can't stand out in the world.
And you certainly can't have repeat behavior
and in a sea of choices for someone to keep choosing you
over and over and over again.
It's like how founders have to be weird.
Nothing interesting was created by ordinary people.
But I have to be intentional about this.
I'm glad you said, oh, this is where we get it on camera
and on recording that David started
his cold.
It's like podcast.
No, I go crazy.
People start talking about me.
A bunch of them say, David's too obsessed with podcasts.
And I'm like, I'm glad they say that because even now.
You're like, thank you.
That's a compliment.
No, it's like I see an opportunity that other people don't, which is the same thing in the
book.
So I think podcasts in general are just fun to make and I'm obsessed with it.
But they're also going to be wonderful businesses because they're prone to be cheerful cults.
And how do you know that you have a cult?
You just Google and see if the people have tattooed themselves with the brand.
How many people are walking in with a Joe Rogan's face on his tattoo or a Joe Rogan face tattoo on their skin?
A ton of them.
Really?
Yes.
How many people have tattoos of the Apple logo? A ton of them. There's an insane number with Mario. We
learned this in the Nintendo research. Mario, Tesla, In-N-Out. There's a ton of it. Dude, I like
cheeseburgers are my favorite meal. I'm not tattooing an In-N-Out logo on my arm, dude.
You take another level and you see this over and over and over again and so when i analyze
businesses i i'm not just doing this like it's not a game to me i was like oh can i use these
ideas in building my business and like warren buffett says the greatest thing and this is i
think speaks to why you guys are so like hey we know how big our audience is and we're going to
take this seriously seriously warren goes all a brand is a promise that's the best description of
brand it's just like i talked about the the fact that I stayed in this hotel brand.
I'm not going to say what it is.
In Austin, I loved it.
I stayed in Santa Monica.
I loved it.
I found out they had one in San Francisco.
I didn't check the reviews.
You came here and they broke their promise.
I told you to stay with us.
Yes.
And that's the biggest thing.
A brand was a promise.
I know this is going to be excellent.
The hotel is fine.
It is in like, it's in a tenner line.
It's like a-
Not a place you want to stay.
No.
Like if I wasn't traveling alone, there's no way I'd let my wife-
This is the major misconception about San Francisco.
Many people who don't live here think that it's, you know, an absolute hellhole and wasteland.
A specific part of it is.
Yeah.
But like there are other-
And that part grew a little bit.
And unfortunately, that part is mostly where
the hotels are yeah which is not good for the city because i'm like i'm not ever staying i'm
staying with you or i'd stay in uh like i stay out in silicon valley like i've stayed at the
rosewood which is really nice yeah but that is the most expensive hotel which is good i didn't
pay for it so no one ever does i didn't that's the whole business model i didn't pay for it. No one ever does. That's the whole business model. I didn't know how much it was.
It was really nice, though.
I got to thank that person.
Yeah, so again, I don't mean it in like a – but I am very intentional.
Like, hey, I'm not going to break my promise.
I want you to know, and you guys do the same thing.
It's like if I press play on an acquired episode, this is why I like Dan Carlin.
I read one book an episode.
He reads like 30.
He only does two a year or one a year.
But like, I know there's no way I'm going to press play.
It's going to be good.
And he didn't do the work necessary.
That's what we feel.
We all feel.
I mean, in our own ways,
we all definitely feel that about what we're doing.
Can I get some feedback?
Like, how can we make Acquired better?
Or have you ever had moments where you like paused an episode
and were like, oh, I want to talk to Ben
and David about this right now because I have
some feedback? No.
You'd probably just text us if you did.
No, but I would, first of all...
Or the model. Not
necessarily just the content, but...
No, what you guys said on your Benchmark Dinner episode
I think was, you know...
There's
a few podcasters, I was having this conversation with Sam yesterday, there's a few podcasters I was having this conversation with Sam yesterday
there's a few podcasters that like
they know what they're doing
and they know by like
what their position in the market is like how they're thinking
about it and I'm not going to say who but like
you guys hit it like what makes you special
it's the Edwin Land thing don't do anything somebody else can do right
where you said it's like your marquee
thing is these super indebted like
Blake made the funny um Blake Roberts said the funny thing on Twitter I saw.
I loved it.
He's like, only a choir could say, all right, let's bring this home.
And it's still an hour and a half left.
That's your brand.
People know it.
Totally.
Yeah.
And I think what you're doing here with the sessions is a way to also,
it's like you can't increase the amount of episodes that you can do
because they take so much work to do.
But you also have a way to surface all this information that you guys have that's valuable to other people in different formats.
We were talking about this a little bit before, which I hate saying we were talking about this before we were recording this.
Why didn't we just record?
But you were also thinking about potentially doing something similar.
Yeah.
And there's like...
Not now. Not now now years from now yeah
but for the core episodes we spend you know so much time preparing but then for stuff like this
we don't prepare at all because our whole career is does this make sense like what what is the right
number and format of sessions because this is the second session. We're still figuring
sessions out. In your dream world as an acquired listener, what do sessions look like?
I mean, your sessions should replace your interviews. Anything that's a non-acquired,
long, deep dive, just make them a session. There's enough people interviewing founders and investors,
but we need more conversations. So if I ever did, people are like, if you ever do an interview show,
I was like, first of all, I wouldn't do an interview show because like you interview
is a skill it looks easy like i always tell i tell patrick patrick you're world class at this dude
like you have you wield because you've been on every weekend now twice a week for eight nine
and he's just it's for i like to read he likes to ask questions so therefore our formats match
the personality right yeah and so what i tell him is like i've been on the other side of it it's like you can tell it's not he doesn't have a
list of questions in front of him because you can hell his good question just came off of response
of what like a lot of people like um and it's fine but like the tyler cowan thing where he just like
he has his questions and you just said something interesting he's not going to follow up and he's
going to go on the next question it feels very odd because you're like are you guys not having
a conversation like no they're not there's that guy like left you
an opening and how did you not take that opening they're not so but tyler you have to do let's
tie this to jay-z and j cole and the answer question also about like i'm glad you guys are
so much nicer we're like do you have any feedback because like i i can't stand feedback we're like
not in the sense of like like i told you, I texted you guys this one time.
We're like,
one guy was like,
hey,
I don't like that you reference,
like the superpower of the show
is that I tie,
it's not like,
the episode on Ralph Lauren
is gonna tell you
how Ralph thinks like
Andrew Carnegie
and Rockefeller and Bezos
and it's like.
You literally know
all your episode numbers by heart.
So to me,
it's just one large conversation
on history's greatest entrepreneurs.
That's how it is to me.
It just happens to be separated.
And so I text you and this guy's like, could you save that at the end and just do it like a carve out like acquired?
And I was like, don't listen to acquired.
No, I'm not going to.
I have a singular vision for how this is going to go.
And that's why I own and control and operate the entire thing.
It's even further than that.
It's like I'm not putting on a show.
Like, there's a lot. I loved
Anthony Bourdain when he was alive. I read
his books. He had a huge influence on me.
Like, anytime I traveled to a place that he went
to, I'd go and watch it. Have you done an episode on him? Yeah, 219.
There's no way that's right. There's no
way. Keep going. There's no way that's right.
Fact checkers. It's called
The Oral Biography. That format
should be done more, where his assistant had interviewed,
an assistant and a friend had interviewed a bunch of people
who actually knew Tony and were there in his last days.
And then she organized that interview into this biography called
Bourdain, the Definitive Oral Biography, I think.
And is it 219?
It's 219.
And so,
and so like,
where was I going with that?
I went on a digression,
but,
oh,
so there's a line in the book
that I love.
It says,
the line between Tony
and the show is non-existent.
Yeah.
Right?
That's why people like,
I hear a lot of people
talk about podcasting.
It's like,
oh,
you don't actually know
what the superpower
of podcasting is,
right?
Where it's like,
to me,
one of the superpowers
of podcasting is
it's authenticity scaled,
right? Yes. When I meet with founders that listen listen to founders and we have a three-hour dinner,
they all say the same thing. They're like, this is like a three-hour episode of Founders.
It's like the same person there, right? Well, and I think that that is a thing that you did really well and we sort of accidentally did well, But I realized over time why that makes both of the things we've built
as durable as they are.
A lot of people play characters on the internet.
Which in other mediums is an easy trap to fall into.
And it's a way to catapult growth.
If you adopt a polarizing character,
you can get a bunch of followers.
There's a lot of dividends that pay to it, but it's exhausting to maintain over time.
And it has a conflict where when people meet you in real life, they're like, oh, weird.
And so when you actually are just yourself, it's going to probably grow more slowly because I'm not as polarizing. It would be horrifying to live as a polarizing character that you play
on the internet in real life also. And so you have this more like slow organic growth path.
But like it is, there is this cool by-product now where like I sit down with someone and they're
like, yep, exactly the same as I expected. This is why I said have Blake Robbins on here
because he gave me the dynamic,
that spectrum that he talks about. Blake is a super smart person in general, but he's like,
the way you think about this is there's a spectrum. This is not my idea. This is Blake's
spectrum because on one end of the spectrum, it's like, how much time do people spend with you?
Right? He's like on one end of the spectrum, you have these like 30 second TikTokers that dance,
right? And then all the way on the other end of the spectrum,
as you move down, they spend more time with you.
All the way down the spectrum,
you have the Twitch streamers, right?
Which he helped incubate 100 Thieves, 40 Thieves, 100 Thieves,
where they're spending like 40 hours
or 50 hours a week with you, right?
He goes, David, you're like one,
you're not, they don't spend 40 hours with you,
but you're one click to the left.
And they're going to wind up spending 10, 20, 100, 200 hours with you.
And you keep moving down.
Let's say you do 10-minute YouTube videos.
It's like the deeper you go down there, it's why when I think the guy's name is Nadeshot.
When 100 Thieves has a new product and he announces it, you'll see a line down the block.
Because hundreds of thousands of people have spent all their time with them.
And so it's like, oh, Nadeshot has something.
So I'll come down here.
And you see this over and over again.
And then Blake says you could have like a TikTok that has,
a TikToker that has like 10 million followers,
yet they can't even get 3,000 people to show up somewhere.
And so I think that is like the way to think about it.
So that's algorithmic throttling too.
TikTok, it is almost a zero signal if somebody follows you. It's all views. It doesn't
actually matter. Or YouTube.
It's like, oh, they subscribe to your channel?
Maybe that'll come up in one of the top
eight videos that shows up at the top of the screen
of what they should watch next, but maybe
not. So my point in all that
is if they're spending a lot
of time with you, and I love, this is my
flip of what Charlie Munger says
that you need to learn
the big ideas
in the main domains
like physics,
psychology
because they carry
the most freight.
I flip that to
time carries the most weight.
As long as what we're doing,
you said,
we're not playing characters,
we are passionately
interested in this,
we're not going to quit,
then we do this
over a long period of time.
You'll get what you deserve.
You'll get the audience
you deserve,
you'll get the business
opportunities and everything else. It's like time carries the most weight. I know I'm not going to quit. You'll get what you deserve. You'll get the audience you deserve. You'll get the business opportunities
and everything else.
It's like time carries the most weight.
I know I'm not going to quit.
You're going to have to pry the microphone
from my cold dead hand
and I'm just going to let the chips fall where they are.
And that doesn't mean I'm like lollygagging here.
Like I'm on it seven days a week.
I'm going to try to work myself into a position.
So it's something I learned from Steve Jobs
when he came back to Apple, right?
And he's like,
people hear that speech he gives, which is fantastic. He's like,
wearing shorts. And he's like, I don't even know if he's in the turtleneck yet.
But he mentions what they're going to do. And everybody focused on the fact that he's like,
there's no sex in the products anymore. And we're going to do the four quadrant thing.
A lot of people in the technology industry, particularly, know that speech.
And like, yeah, let's cut the fat and put put all of our a players fire the b and c players put all of our a players on these four products that we're going to make right but they miss desktop laptop high
end yeah consumer and pro for both laptop and desktop those are four categories right they miss
what he said earlier when he talks about nike he's just like marketing he's like apple sucks at
marketing we have to be a great marketing company. And so he said something
where I read the quote and then my reinterpretation
of this, right? And people don't know that. It's in
Ken's, no, it's in this book called Insanely
Simple. I think that guy's name is Ken
Siegel. And he's like, he was
an ad guy at a company
for Apple. And he's like,
TWBA
Chiat Day. It was the
ad agency. So he goes, and every Wednesday, actions express priority.
So there's another maximum, right?
He's like, I don't care what people say.
I care what they do.
So when people ask me, like first people that you talk to at the founder,
it's like, hey, what would you do about this?
I never answer.
It's like, well, David Senra would do this.
I'd say, hey, well, Charlie Munger would tell you this,
or Steve Jobs would do this, or like, hey, I heard a story about here.
Because my opinion is useless.
It's, you know my opinion on business building and how I build my business.
It doesn't matter what I say.
It's like, how is he approaching founders?
Why is he making decisions?
That's the important part, right?
And so Steve told you that marketing was important to his actions because every Wednesday at
like 3 o'clock, or I forgot the time, they had like a three-hour meeting.
He would approve, have to approve every single piece of advertising marketing that went out
for Apple.
There's not a billboard in Kentucky that went out without him saying, yes, it's going to
go out, right?
And so in that speech, if you actually listen to what he's saying, he's like, listen, I
feel that the products we're making in Apple make people's lives better.
I want, he says this line, he goes, I want everybody in the world to own an Apple device.
We know that's not going to happen because it's so expensive.
But he goes, and to do that, we have to get really good at marketing.
So my interpretation of that on the podcast, what I said is like, if you feel your product
can improve people's lives, I think you guys already know because you get thousands of
messages just like I do, that yes, listening to a choir, listening to founders will improve
people's lives and work, right?
Then you have a moral obligation to get good at marketing.
All that means is not get good at marketing
so our ad rates are going to go up
or that we can be celebrities or anything like that.
It's no.
So these messages for all these
of history's greatest entrepreneurs that are dead,
that these ideas don't die with them.
And then therefore, a choir of founders
can gather these ideas and push them down the generations.
So that's what I mean. It's just like, I'm not dilly-dallying. Yes, I'm going to let time carry all the weight, but I'm going to do everything I can so more people at least know.
And if you try founders, you say, oh, this sucks or whatever, whatever. I'm cool with that. But I
just want you to have the opportunity to know it exists. And me and you have had these, us three
have had these conversations where it's like, guys, I'm telling you right now, I've said this to you, there's millions of people that would benefit from listening to Inquire.
They just don't know it exists yet.
So we got to come up and find ways to make sure that people know it exists because they will love it and it will make their lives better.
Amen.
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Yeah, Vanta is the perfect example of the quote that we talk about all the time here
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This may be an area, I'm curious what you think about this,
where our shows and approaches are a little different.
I'm also curious what you, Ben, think about this.
A lot of these stories are just incredible stories, too,
that are just worth telling just for the sake of the story.
Yeah, it's interesting how sometimes I'm like, I'm not sure that we came up with a lesson that I would advise a founder to follow, but I know this was very entertaining and as true as we possibly can make it.
Yeah.
And so, like...
Every single episode I've listened to,
there's lessons in there.
Oh, yeah.
I'm not saying there's not lessons.
Of course there are.
But, like, sometimes we'll do an episode,
like, I always feel this way
about the most recent episode,
but we just finished making the Nintendo episode,
and I'm just like, can I...
Like, if you put the best fiction writers in the world...
That's true.
...together, and you said, come up put the best fiction writers in the world that's true together and you said come up with the best like corporate-ish story that you could imagine you couldn't write something this good i guess the thing i'm i was referring to is a little
bit the um survivorship bias where like someone did something that uh i would not recommend anyone
do and it still worked but it made for a great story. It's like Morris Chang in TSMC.
It's like he invented the notion of a
Fabless semiconductor company
before there was any demand for that.
And then it turned out that his timing was exactly
right that within a couple of years, a whole
ton of Fabless companies
spun up and wanted to use his foundry.
But he created
a solution in search of a problem.
No founder should do that, but my God, did he pull a in search of a problem. And no founder should do that,
but my God, did he pull a rabbit out of a hat.
There's a good number of Acquired episodes
where I'm like, we should be crisper,
I think, about pointing out where this was inadvisable,
but amazing that it worked.
I think that goes back to the game tape analysis
where we talked about Kobe Bryant.
Jordan did this too, where it's like,
I read this 600- page biography of Kobe. And in the biography, they interview his high school
girlfriend. And they're like, what was it like to date Kobe Bryant in high school?
I'm surprised he had a girlfriend in high school, right?
Well, not for very long. It's like, what's it like to date Kobe Bryant in high school?
She's like, well, our dates consisted of me going to his house and watching tapes of michael michael jordan and magic johnson it's just like that's we're not leaving
i'm not taking you to dinner like we're literally gonna watch this thing and so i think the the game
tape analysis of that is just like it is helpful to realize that a lot of this stuff it's impossible
to plan in advance it's the one of the great i mean steve jobs has a ton of great quotes oh one of the best ones like speech he's like the commencement it's like connected
it's impossible you're only going to connect the dots looking backwards so you have to put something
faith in something you can call karma religion god intuition but you have to do something i just
did a rewrite ray crock's autobiography the guy from mcdon. Again, and it hit me. I've been thinking about
the Steve Jobs quote, too. And this is why it's so
valuable to reread your past highlights. You mentioned this
in the McDonald's episode.
If you think about this, he's a perfect illustration of what
Steve observed 50 years
after Ray dies, for God's sake. He's just like,
he goes from selling paper cups. Paper cups
leads him to selling multi-mixers, which are like
make milkshakes. Multi-mixers
goes, like like why the hell
are you have eight
why do these
McDonald brothers
out in San Bernardino
have eight of my machines
like people
he'd had a hard time
selling one
that goes to
the franchise system
which he didn't even do well
and then he meets
Harry Sombor
and then Harry Sombor
is like dummy
you don't even know
the business you're in
you're not gonna
he's like you don't
build an empire
off a 1.4% cut
of a 15 cent hamburger
you build an empire
by owning the land
upon which that hamburger is cooked those Those five things. There's no, he's selling, he's
from paper cups to real estate. He sold paper cups for 17 years, but he just like, Hey, I have
to go in my gut to the point where he got divorced over this. His wife was like, you can't do this,
Harry. And he's like, you have to trust my instincts. That's one thing to what Ben said
way back in the beginning of the conversation that you're really good at
highlighting Ray Kroc. Like he was a terrible person. And he didn't try to hide it. Most people
in autobiographies are trying to hide it. Yeah. He's literally like, thank you very much,
June Martino, my first employee, for missing every single one of your kids' birthdays.
You're going to get some stock at McDonald's.
It's going to get you rich.
But 20 years later, I'm going to fire you.
And you don't have to put that story in there.
He chose to put that.
That's crazy, dude.
I said on the podcast, I was like, listen, it's interesting.
I'm glad he persisted.
Interesting ideas for business.
But not only do I never want to do business with this guy,
I wouldn't even want to be his friend. I wouldn't want to do business with this guy i wouldn't even want to be his friend yeah like i wouldn't want to do business with steve jobs
but i want to be his friend yeah oh yeah he'd be a very interesting person to be friends with
oh i feel like the opposite what's that like i'd want to do business with steve because you could
create incredible things together but i'm not sure you'd want to be friends i think the difference is
from like a founder's perspective like there is no working with Steve Jobs.
It's working for.
You hear the stories of how he even treated his subcontractor, or not the owners of the companies that contracted.
These guys are empire builders.
They're literally building worlds.
They're not used to being like, Charlie was talking about this, because he loves Leeloo, the new guy, the BYD guy, Du Wan,
I don't know his name, something like that.
Those guys.
He loves Lee Kuan Yew from Singapore.
And what you realize is these are founder types,
but founders are benevolent dictators,
or in some cases they're dictators of their own company.
And some people call Lee Kuan Yew a dictator.
It's like, oh, you can't do that in America, even if that would be beneficial.
But all of them, there's no working with them.
They're going to be in complete control of the situation, even being in the room with them.
I'm not saying they'd be rude or mean, but you're a subordinate to them. Because everything is in...
Ray Kroc, he says in the book, perfection is difficult.
I'm demanding perfection at McDonald's.
I will constantly keep expanding this empire until I die.
If you get in my way, I will run you over.
He says in the movie, he's like, if my competitor was drowning, I'd walk over and put a hose in his mouth.
And he goes, and he was on the other end of the call
as McDonald Brothers because they're fighting over this.
He goes, would you do the same?
And the stated thing is it's like,
you're going to have to compete on my level
or else I will literally destroy you.
Yeah.
So Warren and Charlie are so interesting.
I'm trying to decide if they are the complete opposite of that
or if they actually are like that just in their own ways.
Every single person has some kind of like their public persona for that level, right?
It's not like a podcast where they're going to listen to Joe Rogan for 1,600 episodes.
Like you know who Joe is.
You can't hide.
He's doing three-hour shows three days a week for 15 years.
You have probably a good idea who he is.
You see flashes of like, you know of imperfection like we all have.
I don't think you don't get to that level without having –
they all got sharp elbows.
You ever read stories about how Warren negotiates?
It's like 12.50 bid.
What about 14? 12.50 bid.
What about 13? 12.50 bid.
Well, it's because he's already – he spent 10 years analyzing your business, and he knows exactly
the price that he's going to buy it for.
And so now he's telling you the price he's going to buy it for.
Yeah.
This wasn't like a new consideration that popped up, and he's like, oh, look at this,
a business.
It's like, no, at the scale he's operating at, he knows all the businesses.
Yeah.
And this is from Jim Clayton's autobiography where he buys Clayton Holmes.
Right.
And he even said he wanted to sell to Buffett.
He idolized Buffett.
And he talks about he wasn't insulting him by any means, but he's like, Warren wants the microphone.
And if you're in an area where Warren doesn't have the microphone, he is not interested.
And I've heard that about Warren a lot.
You know?
Because they're world builders.
He runs everything.
You think you're going to go from being poor to
having $200 billion and not distort
your perception of the world?
It's impossible.
Say more about Warren wanting the microphone.
What does that mean?
Literally in person. I think they were doing
Jim Clayton was at either
an event to talk to the employees or whatever
the case was. Jim wanted
to have input. And he's like, Warren would not allow it like he monopolized this and i've heard that about warren
like same thing we're like you're gonna there's got to be an element of him that you know loves
the shareholder meetings oh of course but he didn't need to do that he created an event
around he loves having a million people come yeah you know how he loves it because he's still doing
it right right like he doesn't he doesn't have to do anything in the world that he doesn't want to You know how he loves it. He loves having a million people come. Yeah, you know how he loves it because he's still doing it. Right. Right.
Like, he doesn't have to do anything in the world that he doesn't want to do.
Right.
And that's how you know he loves it.
Like, they're beyond.
I told you, we talked about earlier how, like, just how disorienting it must be to, like, have, and I would love to know this feeling, don't get me wrong, like, have a $200 billion net worth.
It's like, you're living life on, like, God mode.
Right.
Like, it's insane. Like, I was watching this video. I don't know if it's true, but it's, like, Jeff Be200 billion net worth. It's like, you're, you're living life on like God mode. Like it's, it's insane.
Like I was watching this video.
I don't know if it's true,
but it's like Jeff Bezos's private jet has its own private jet.
Like his new yacht has a chase yacht.
Yeah.
So it's like your God has a yacht.
I think it's like a guest yacht.
Like I think it's so that,
I mean,
he has,
he now owns the biggest yacht in the world and there's a yacht that will sail behind it.
I would say this may be a,
I don't know. Maybe we'll become so successful someday that I will regret my words on this,
but I gotta imagine having a yacht
is actually not like additive to your life.
Oh, so this is a fun Ralph Lauren thing.
I think that's more problems than...
Yeah, so I think it was Ralph Lauren
sold his yacht and it's now a charter yacht
because he was like,
this thing was more work than any of the businesses
I've ever run. One of the most interesting
ideas I've heard, and it comes from our
mutual friend Jeremy, who I think we mentioned earlier
in the podcast, hopefully we did give him credit.
I actually
was talking to him and David Perreault
and I'm pretty sure Jeremy said this,
not David, but
he's like, I would actually make the argument,
because everybody's like, oh, like, what does Charlie talk about, call the Berkshire jet the indefensible?
The indefensible, yeah, right, right.
And then wasn't there a second one, the indefensible two?
The indefensible two.
Before they bought net jets, and now it's like, we should be on net jets.
So you look at, like, how could you possibly spend, like, you know,
these yachts cost $25,000 an hour
to operate in fuel or some crazy number that planes are the same like you know how expensive
they are and Jeremy makes the point Jeremy knows because he's been buying businesses forever and
he's exposed to like great wealth uh people you know unbelievable amount of wealth he goes he
makes the argument that they're actually underpriced assets and I was like oh tell me more he's like
that's that's not what I would expect to hear. Yeah. I'm going
to tell you this book that just proved his point. I actually got to text him and tell him this.
So he's like, they use it not for, you know, like yachting, sitting there sunbathing, right? He's
like, they're using it for like customers and potential. And so I had heard this, I'll tell
you about how this relates to Invisible Billionaire. So I had heard this, because again, I've never
raised money. I don't pay attention to the venture industry.
I don't know anything about it.
I just have a bunch of founder friends.
And founders tell founders everything.
And so I'll have these discussions
where they're like,
they describe the courting process
that they get from some of these
well-known, super famous people.
And it's like,
well, the process you just described to me
sounds like an old rich dude
that wants to sleep with a young woman.
What would you do, right?
We actually didn't put it in the episode, but there's a bunch of this in Nintendo history.
Because Warner Brothers bought Atari, and so Warner Brothers was running Atari as Nintendo was kind of like...
And this is how they courted Nolan.
That's how they courted, yeah.
So that's how Warner Brothers courted Atari and Nolan.
And then how they tried to court Nintendo was the private jets, the, what was it, it was Clint Eastwood.
They put Clint Eastwood on the private jet with Atari flying coast to coast.
So what does that tell you? History doesn't repeat, human nature does. These founder dudes are running technology companies now, and they're like, yeah, oh yeah, I'm not going to name who. They're like, oh, yeah, he picked us up in Manhattan in his private helicopter, and we landed at his Hampton estate.
Do you think he got the deal?
He got the deal.
This guy said, hey, what are you doing?
It's Friday night.
What are you doing Saturday morning?
Okay, come on my private jet.
I'm going to take you to California with me.
Here, you want to stay with your girlfriend at this mansion that I'm not using in XYZ.
So Jeremy was explaining to this man. It's of like a like a luxury suite at a sports arena
Yeah, like it's it's forgetting deals so but they're operating a different level where it's like
Oh these influence and some founders the smart ones don't let
Like Sam Walton, you know, he's like don't give us don't give me a freaking gift
Right, right
That's what like the whole everything in Bentonville is like,
you can't come in here and woo me.
Because they know it works.
If you give a Walmart salesperson a bottle of gin or something,
it's going to influence them where he's just like, I want your price.
You guys did a great job on your episodes.
It's like, tell me your lowest price, and then I'm going to go to your,
it better be your low price because I'm going to this guy,
and if you tell me a dollar and he sells me 98 cents, don't waste my time.
You're not going to hear from me again.
I have an obligation to the customer to do this, to find the lowest price for them.
Yeah. Because everything, his entire thing, the low cost structure thing, that's, that's not,
that's a Walton thing. That's a sole price thing. That's a Jeff Bezos thing. That's a Rockefeller
thing. That's, that's the most common theme in the history of entrepreneurship. Every single thing,
Jeff is like, we're going to have the lowest cost structure. We're going to have a low cost
structure. We're going to be efficient. We're going to be efficient.
We're going to be efficient.
Somewhere along the line,
25 years later,
now the technology startups
is like,
we can just spread money
all the time
because there's no interest rate.
There's just money coming back.
He built Amazon
at a pretty different time
than founders today.
The business laws of physics
were different
when there were interest rates
versus when there weren't.
Well, he started
when there were none. That's true. And. Well, he started when there were none.
That's true.
And then the environment changed as he was building it.
Yep.
But while it would have been stupid for Amazon
to spend $100 million on crazy marketing activities in 1997,
you could imagine that in 2018, if all of your competitors had
raised a billion dollars and were trying to chase market share as fast as possible,
you either have to exit that market because you're going to lose or play that game on the field.
Or find, and even better, find a different way. Be more resourceful.
But be more resourceful. It's easy to say, but
when all your competitors
are hiring all the best engineers by throwing a million
dollars a year at them,
you're just not going to be able to build a good product
if you don't try to play
that game also. Yeah, for sure.
The whole thing, when Peter Thiel says
this in his book, Paul Graham says it, it's just like
startups don't have the advantage
of, you're not going to outspend Microsoft or Netflix.
So you've got to find underdeveloped talent, right?
You've got to find these people that if they were credentialed or if they were the well-knowns,
then they're going to go take, you're going to work for me $80,000 and some stock options
or go make a million dollars a year at Netflix.
Like they're going to, so that's the whole thing.
It's like you're not going to win unless you are capable of finding underdeveloped talent.
Silicon Valley used to be able to build a high growth and profitable startups.
The rule used to be, you couldn't go public until you had over a hundred million dollars
in revenue and you were profitable.
Like if you didn't hit both, check both of those boxes, you weren't going to IPO.
And in 2021, of all the companies that went public, it had to be single digit percentage
that were profitable.
Were any of them?
Yeah, I don't know.
It's crazy.
The game just changes.
Well, to your point, if you have free money, the money supply grass expands.
It's raining down.
That's going to build.
Did you listen to Doug Leone?
I know you guys had him on your show, but did you hear him on Invest Like the Best?
Yeah, he was great.
He said he was telling crazy stories.
I loved everything about that guy.
I loved him when I heard him on your podcast, too.
It was like that tough love.
This is what I'm into, right?
He still has, I think, maybe my favorite quote.
Favorite quote said live on an Acquired podcast of,
you could burn cigarettes in our arms and we wouldn't flinch.
And then he has a great line.
He's like, I want you to know we were killers.
We weren't killers to make the most money.
We were killers to get the job done.
But he made the point, and very few people probably know more about the venture industry than that guy, right?
I would imagine he's up there.
And he's like, of course.
You have money raining down.
He didn't use that word.
It just creates bad habits.
Yeah.
It is crazy how many things in my life I falsely attributed to something that were not just interest rates. Like so many things, the answer is just like, oh, it is that way because we live in a zero
interest rate environment.
And the human brain likes to tell stories.
And at the end of the day, it's like things are the way they are because of mean reversion
and what the current interest rate climate is.
I wish I'm going to pull up, like, this is what I mean.
It goes back to Buffett.
Like, if you just, we should have, I wish I knew this.
I had read this.
I didn't remember it, though.
This is Warren Buffett on interest rates, right?
He says-
Oh, is this from-
Laws of Gravity?
The log in Snowball?
No, this is from his shareholder letters.
And he said it in 84, 88, something like this.
I think the intro to Snowball, I think the scene that opened the vignette that opens it,
is Sun Valley right before the tech bubble burst.
Oh, no, this is like a decade and a half before.
Oh, okay, okay.
This is why it's like so, it's like, God, you could have made such better decisions,
I could have made such better decisions, if you had just known this,
and he had known it for 40 years before it happened.
I posted this on Twitter, and I opened up the next day.
I'm like, why does this have 2.5 million views?
It's like Elon replied.
He goes, yep.
I was like, oh, okay.
I was like, what the?
Like, what the?
Like, damn, you people really like interest rates.
It's called grand replies on steroids.
So I go, Warren Buffett on interest rates,
and the headline is,
they power everything in the economic universe.
So that was what Elon was responding up to.
And this is Warren writing in the 80s.
The value of every,
exactly what you're saying,
the value of every business,
the value of a farm,
an apartment house,
or any other economic asset
is 100% sensitive to interest rates.
That's because all you're doing
when you're investing
is transferring money to someone now in exchange for a stream of money which you expect to come back in the future. And the higher the interest rates. That's because all you're doing when you're investing is transferring money to someone now
in exchange for a stream of money
which you expect to come back in the future.
And the higher the interest rates are,
the less that present value will be.
This is fantastic.
Interest rates are to asset prices
sort of like gravity is to an apple.
When interest rates are low,
there is little gravitational pull on asset prices.
We just lived through this, right? Totally. Textbook. Yeah, when interest rates are low, there is little gravitational pull on asset prices. We just lived through this, right?
Totally.
Textbook.
Yeah.
When interest rates are low, there is little gravitational pull on asset prices.
Interest rates power everything in the economic universe.
Because I found that because all this, remember, the inflation went crazy like a year or two
ago, whatever.
And I was like, OK.
Every time that happens, all I do is I have, you can buy the Kindle version of Buffett's shareholder letters for like two bucks.
I know, it's crazy.
And I search it for like interest rates, inflation.
And I just go and I read, okay, this is what.
You made a billion dollars off that $2 purchase.
There you go.
And so like you'll say, okay, this is what he said in inflation.
And then you see what year he said it.
And it's just like, and that's where I found that.
I go, what did he say about interest rates?
Boom, 1980 whatever.
And he just laid out.
It's so funny because what he also did right there is for every college finance sophomore that's having to go through a class to do DCFs and they're like, I don't understand this.
This is complicated.
Like he just explained conceptually a discounted cash flow model there in a way that was unbelievably digestible.
He's so good at that.
The clarity of thought.
Because he wants the microphone.
But also, he just educated you in a way that makes more sense
and is interesting and you're entertained by
and you might build a business off that
and then you might sell one day or whatever the case is.
This is where I'm spending a lot more time
of really trying to work on storytelling ability and concision.
The value is in the compression and the distillation.
If you could listen to an audiobook for 25 hours, but if I can give you the best idea or one idea that changed your life,
and I can do it every week or whatever, in a couple minutes, some of that value is going to be brought back to me what and all that comes from is what i realize is all my heroes have like
what they have in common is like the unbelievable clarity of thought like steve jobs charlie like
you're not going to be like oh what does that mean they take unbelievably complex things like
you're not advertising to a standing army advertising to moving parade make it in a
memorable way and then you carry that maximum with you forever.
How do you get better at that?
You said you're working on it.
Reps.
Just straight up reps.
Like, thinking about it.
And then hearing yourself back.
So the advantage I have of that edit is you can say something and like, oh, that was so good.
And then you hear it back.
And sometimes it's even better or many times it's worse.
It's like, oh, I lost it.
I know what I'm saying. Yeah. But you missed this part that doesn't make any sense.
And so normally I have to cut it.
I don't think I've ever re-recorded something.
We only did that for one episode ever.
It's really hard to do.
What, re-record?
Yeah.
Do you know which episode we did it for?
No.
It was recent.
NFL. David and I got on and re-recorded
40 minutes of material over
maybe 15 different parts
of the episode. The original
recording of that episode was really rough.
The NFL episode was too long
when we started. It
took way too long to get to
the interesting part, the Pete Rozelle era.
And so we had this massively
bloated beginning.
And then we had a story arc that didn't cleanly resolve. And we had a bunch of concepts where we
didn't nail the explanation. And so we went in, we cut like half of the first epoch of the story.
We recorded new bits to like create nice rising action and resolution on the Roselle era. And
then we recorded another like,
like 10 areas where we were just like,
this wasn't said super tight.
And I'm,
I'm really curious if people noticed because we had to like,
we basically had a voice act.
Like we had to listen to the way that we sort of came into that segment,
get that in our head.
This was your,
your theater background coming in.
And then like pick it up from there.
But yeah.
Your editing is so good.
We've talked about like back catalog sponsorship and you told me what you're doing with like zoom info
and i've been listening to your back catalog and it's like dude it's like it sounds like it was
there the day you did it it is perfect and i know because we talk about this that that ad was not
there yeah but it sounds like it's there that's the goal the nfl episode is what i meant over like
it's a crazy story but even there is like a lesson where like you guys, I texted you, you like totally changed
the way I think about things. Or maybe we were talking on Zoom about this, where it's like,
I never even thought of that. The NFL is like the largest media company. Yeah. I hadn't either.
And the funny thing is, that's like, that was a David Rosenthal insight that like,
the NFL is the single largest media property by value. And the funny thing is if you go look at the,
because we did this for the Nintendo episode,
you go look at the largest media properties,
they list Mario, they list Pokemon,
and I think if you sort,
the list includes like video games and movies.
And so there's like the MCU in there
and there's Star Wars in there,
but like they don't think,
the NFL is way bigger than all of those.
But it's not on the list because people don't think of it as a media property.
I love looking for stuff like that, both to do episodes on and for investing too.
What is something that is just so in the air that people don't even realize what it is?
Or what's a comparison we can make that is super eye-opening,
but people haven't thought to compare those two things before.
Yep.
Which is why I tie things into past,
because it's like, oh, this- Episode 244.
The idea, no, but the idea behind this is like,
we've seen this before.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I reread like the show notes
on like the Johnny Ive episode I did.
Johnny said something that was great.
And he said, he goes, one of Steve's talents was identifying markets re-read the show notes on the Johnny Ive episode I did. Johnny said something that was great.
And he said, he goes, one of Steve's talents was identifying markets full of second-rate products.
And so he was like, oh, there's the opportunity here.
And we're all podcast addicts, right?
And the reason that we get along is because-
And it's a market full of second-rate products.
And because you know how hard it is to do.
Yeah.
And when you go and listen to other business podcasts,
and like I had a friend, his friend has a podcast,
and he's like, hey, these three guys,
they have large social media followings,
but it does not translate to episodes,
which people don't understand.
Yeah, rarely will.
Yeah, and they're like, would you listen to their episode
and give it feedback, right?
And we went, so I was like yeah i listened to it and i go
it's three guys sitting around talking whatever happens to pop to their mind
what did you expect to happen which is kind of what's happening here i was i was thinking the
same thing i was like like we need to all listeners we apologize no no so max craft
there's zero chance that people aren't do people interested in entrepreneurship and investing are not finding this
interesting because the prep for this is not three guys that have a million
other things to do.
It's three guys that do this all the time over and over again.
That's going to cop up naturally in a conversation that you can,
but Oh,
I didn't know about this.
Maybe there's a bunch of people probably like,
I didn't know who Evan Land was.
I didn't know Ogilvy.
I never thought about the NFL as,
as a large media company.
Like,
so no,
but their problem thing is like,
there's no value proposition.
This is actually something that I think ties into much of what we've talked about over the last couple hours.
People are going to do what they want to do.
And if people can do what they want to do and are given unfettered freedom to run in it,
they can do great things.
If people are forced to do things that they don't want to do,
they're not going to make great things.
Or either forced to or choose to put themselves in a situation
for whatever reason where they're doing something
they don't want to be doing,
they're not going to be very good at it.
I think that's one of the reasons why we find ourselves
so attracted to episodes that highlight craft
is because that's sort of like how we think about Acquired.
Like if LVMH, Benchmark, it's like people who do few things but do them exceptionally well are just so entrancing to study.
I think this goes back to what you were just saying, and I want to go into the craft thing.
It's like Charlie, again, has these simple ideas.
Like most of the problems are that you're just not intensely interested in what you're working on.
Yeah.
And he's like, I don't care how smart you are.
And Charlie's smarter than almost everybody else.
He goes, I was not successful until I moved myself into a position where I worked on something I was intentionally interested in.
That just, these, like, small rules carry most of the weight.
It's like, how bad do you actually want it?
And if you're not willing to do those things, then there's nothing wrong with that.
Like, entrepreneurship is for a very small percentage.
I'm not one of these people that think everybody can be an entrepreneur.
I would like to see more of them,
but it,
there's no safety net.
It's like,
no one's telling you what to do.
No one had to tell you guys,
Hey,
you should buy microphones and do a bunch of research and pick a name.
We didn't buy microphones to start.
Oh yeah.
But like,
yeah.
I think the most interesting thing is that like,
I think we've talked about this concept before on air, is that if someone's going to advise you on starting a podcast, they would say, do a 30 to 40 minute episode and like do it weekly.
Have a guest.
And you release it at the same time all the time. Have a guest, so that way that person promotes it too. And we're like, okay, well, we do the opposite of all of those things.
And I think it's like, the conclusion I've come to is advice is an average.
And reality is a distribution.
And averages suck because they hide the distribution.
You kind of want to know the shape of the distribution. And you kind of want to know things that apply to your specific data point, not the average thing. And I think advice is always an average that hides the distribution.
And if you know that you're actually an outlier in some way, then you have to sort of selectively
follow advice because it may not apply to you. Charlie told me a fantastic story about this,
where he was singing the praises of BYD, that they're kicking ass.
He told me, not just me, I'm with a group of people.
They make batteries for cars.
Yeah, but he started out doing knockoff cell phones in Korea or something.
I forgot the guy's founder's name, and I apologize, but he was telling me the life story. But he was saying that the founder, that Charlie and Li Lu,
Lu Li, Li Lu, gave the founder advice, and he ignored it,
and he was right.
He's like, don't go in electric cars or whatever it was that he did.
He's like, and he was selling, I think he said like 2 billion cars.
I forgot what, 2 million cars.
There's no way he sold 2 billion cars in a year.
So he sold 2 million cars in China.
China is a big market.
Yeah, so he's just like, and he did it.
And he gets all the credit because Lee and me told him not to do it.
And he's just like, same to your point.
It's game tape.
It's just like when Kobe is watching this particular play of Michael Jordan,
that may never appear in his life.
And maybe the move he did wasn't the right move for what Kobe did, but maybe it influences his other thing.
It's just like the life is complex and messy.
And like you can think you're really smart until you have a two-and-a-half-year-old.
And they ask you, why is that the way?
And you answer the question.
And then their follow-up question is going to be why.
And eventually you're going to get to 11 where you're like, I don't know.
Yeah.
Like, I don't know why.
Everything ends at I don't know.
It's like, I don't know.
And so, like, of course there's no certainty.
Like, that's why if you have to, if you crave certainty, you've got to get a job.
But there wasn't even Facebook when I was in college because I had to work full time.
I went at night.
But my college did not have Facebook.
It was just coming out.
So we had MySpace.
And my MySpace, you could put a quote, right?
Like at the header.
That's right, yeah, yeah.
And I've always thought like this for my entire life.
It was like, there's no security in life, only opportunity.
And I think that's what we did.
So investors and entrepreneurs are going for opportunity
at the expense of security.
And if you need security, you can get a job.
But we see like, everybody said,
go into tech, go into tech, go into tech.
Look, you get all this money.
I think this is a super mispriced thing.
I think people who crave security,
which I get, like all humans crave some level of security,
sort of mispriced security
because no jobs are as secure as we think they are,
but they definitely cap your upside.
And people, it's like, is founding a company
or going into business for yourself as an entrepreneur
extremely risky?
Yes, it is.
But is it actually that much riskier than a job
where you could get laid off
or the sector could go through a downfall?
Or like, there are a lot of things about having a job
that are not nearly as secure as people think they are.
Steve Wozniak and jobs.
They're like, worst case scenario, if this doesn't work,
we'll just go get jobs.
We're broke anyways.
Right.
Let's just try.
And he sells his van for like $1,500.
He's like, oh, I'm just all in on Apple.
To me, that's like, again, I think a lot of this is like,
people are asking, it's entrepreneurship.
Like at Nate, can it be taught?
Can there be a school of entrepreneurship?
And I was like, well, ask Charlie Munger if he taught a business class.
What did he say?
He's like, I would just teach the history of what you guys do.
He's like, I teach the history of 100 companies, and I would talk about what went right and what went wrong.
There's no security.
He's not saying, yeah, take my class, and on the other end, you get this degree that guarantees business success.
That doesn't exist.
Well, that's what's cool.
Like they have been teaching entrepreneurship for the last 50 years.
So I was in, so I went to the UCF, which is this like diploma mill essentially.
And they, I was in the pilot entrepreneurship program, right?
The very first year.
And it's a two year program.
Wait, so do you, take us back to that.
Yeah. first year and uh it's a two-year program do you take us back to that yeah were you thinking about what was your relationship to entrepreneurship before starting the founders podcast so like i
have never been on a job review i've only had two jobs in my life like i was but i was like there
was no entrepreneurship there was no entrepreneurship like community there was no entrepreneurship
industry right so like my first business was this is a long story, but, like, I had been accustomed.
I was talking about this yesterday.
By the time I was 17, I had been accustomed to working full-time and going to school, right?
So, like, people were like, oh, you work a lot on Founders.
It's like, I don't have to go to school.
I can, like, do this all the time.
You work in halftime as far as you're concerned.
It's like, there's a long story here, like, that would take me, like, 30 minutes.
But, like, my dad sat me down when I was, like, 15. there's a long story here like that would take me like 30 minutes but like
like my dad sat me down
when I was like 15
he's like listen
you don't have to pay rent
but like
I don't have any money for you
so like
if you want something
you gotta go get it
right
and the good thing about my dad
he's a Cuban immigrant
not educated
but like
the best piece of advice
that he ever gave me
and my brother
was a maxim
he's like
don't half-ass things.
Right?
So he does it
in like a blue collar,
he's a truck driver,
like, you know,
that kind of thing
where he's like,
he prides himself
on the fact that like,
he'll work 72 hours straight.
Right?
But he never made
a lot of money
and never had an education.
Like, his mom wasn't good
and whatever.
And they had to
escape Castro's Cuba.
My dad was born in Cuba.
Wow.
So it's like,
imagine like,
I talked about this on um because
you know Patrick's at the end of investing every investing episode he says episode with him yeah
yeah he's like thing he's like uh what's the nicest thing everybody ever somebody ever did to
you or for you did to you uh for you and I was like man like something that it was a decision
that happened way before I was born and like my grandfather is in Cuba in 1959, 1958.
And he, again, not an educated man.
He worked as a butcher and worked in a factory that made shoes.
He's married and he's got a baby.
That baby is my dad.
And Castro comes to power.
And he doesn't have a lot of money, doesn't speak English.
And yet he had some kind of insight that I need to get out of here.
And he goes to a country, picks up, loses everything.
Not that he had a lot anyways.
Goes to a country, knows nobody, doesn't speak the language.
When I sat down, the first thing me and Sam Zell talked about,
and I think helped bond us to the point where at the end he said he liked my energy and everything.
So hopefully he liked me energy and everything but uh so hopefully
he liked me i don't know um was in his story i was like because i had obviously read his
autobiography and one of the first things me and sam talked about was sam i i understand and
empathize with your story because sam's story is his dad being jew, getting the last train out of Poland
before the Nazis bomb it.
Literally the last train out.
18 members of his family, his dad went around to saying,
we got to get out of here.
This is not good.
They're like, no, we're going to stay.
They're all dead.
Sam's dad and his mom have a daughter.
They get to America.
His mom's pregnant.
Sam was born in America.
And so in that book, Sam's dad's always telling him,
you don't understand how lucky you are to be born here.
And I was like, I understand that mentality because I grew up meeting.
Cubans have this thing called Nocho Uena, which is they don't celebrate.
My wife's Colombian, so I married into a Colombian family.
They do this too.
They don't celebrate Christmas on Christmas Day. They do same I married into a Colombian family they do this too they don't celebrate Christmas on Christmas day they do it the night before it's a Christmas Eve
and so I grew up you know for as long as I can remember I was like eight seven ten ten years old
meeting people that came over on rafts and you would see these things I've seen these in person
all right it's just like the rafts think about how great how bad it has to be it's like 50
miles right 90 miles right um i'm gonna go over to the study of the university of miami just did on
this 90 miles uh you're you're a parent hopefully you might be a parent one day like you love your
kids way more than you love yourself like yeah there's people that came hundreds of thousands
of people went to the edge of the island
and put their kids on a raft
just in hopes that they get to America.
And so the problem is,
it's like you don't make the announcement
to everybody.
It's like, hey, tomorrow we're leaving on a raft.
Could you get caught?
You know, imprisoned or killed
or whatever the case is.
And so the University of Miami did this study.
It was like, well, how many people did this?
We know hundreds of thousands survived.
Right.
And they estimate that like half, at least I think something like half a million people perished, never got there.
There's a conversation with, there's this UFC fighter named Jorge Masvidal who lives in Miami.
He's a Cuban guy.
And his dad was one of the ones that escaped.
He went on a, their raft was made out of like a truck tire.
Like, you know, think of like a size size of a bulldozer tire, right?
Wow.
It's his uncle and two 14-year-old boys.
They get off path, right?
Their water wound up being contaminated, so you can't drink, you'll die.
How do they propel it anyway?
Like, how do you make sure it gets to Florida?
You have, like, some have oars and some have like like you see that blanket over there
like you try to make a uh a sail a sail out of like a blanket or you know they're some of these
are unbelievably in in like the level of ingenuity is like yeah for uneducated they don't have the
internet like they don't it's an unbelievable and so they're in his case they i know they had oars
i think they had a um a sail They get close enough to the Bahamas.
They haven't drank water for like three or four
days or something. A pigeon
lands on the oar.
They wind up killing the pigeon,
opening it apart and drinking the blood. That's
the only thing that's saved.
He gets to America. Eventually he gets to go from the Bahamas
to America. Now his son
makes millions and millions of dollars
as a professional
fighter and a celebrity
and all this other stuff.
Anyways, long story short, the one
thing, my dad's still alive.
I told you my mom passed away.
I really think my dad
did not baby me at all.
He's just like, you've got to
figure out how to get a job.
I worked at
back then, this is something that Paul Graham made the point of, right?
He's like, dude, when I was a kid, the only jobs available were either Scoop Ice Cream or something.
And you've probably met them.
I met some 17-year-old founders, a bunch of founders.
You talk to them, they're on their second company.
I'm like, what?
They're like, oh, yeah, when I was ninth grade, I did this Gmail plug-in.
I had this SaaS tool.
Yeah, I made $40,000 a month.
And I was making so much money, my parents let me drop out of high school so I can do this business.
I'm like, I worked at a car wash, dude.
I made $4.65 an hour.
So anyways, long story short, I would go to school year-round, right?
Because I had figured this out where it's like, oh, most people in summer school, they were forced to.
I went to public school my whole life, right?
Yep.
And so like people would go to public school, they would be forced to because you failed something else.
But if you elected to do that, in six weeks, you get a full semester's credit.
And there's two six-week terms.
Yeah, like mini-mesters.
So I always, even when I was in college, I did this.
I would go to school year-round, right?
And so in high school, I went to school so much
that by the time I got to my last two years of high school,
I was in this program called OJT,
which is on-the-job training.
So instead of having six periods,
you would leave after the fourth period,
and you'd have to have a job,
and you would get two of your other credits
through your employer. so your employer would have
to like fill out paperwork like is david you know cleaning cars and like oh there's a baby that came
in and threw up he did a good job with that it was disgusting but the the benefit of that was
being able to work full time full time yeah um make enough money where i could like buy i bought
like a new car with my own money like all that other stuff um and so like then i
realized like oh like i think i was making like 400 or 500 a week in high school which is freaking
really good this is like late 90s early 2000s um and then i was got promoted to being a detailer
and that's like you have client list and then you start developing relationships it's like every
other business like right and they're like hey i love what you do would you do this at my house or would you do it on my boat that you don't do or like whatever and so my first
business was just detailing cars and boats and taking all this other stuff where it's like okay
i spend an hour waxing this guy's car i might make 20 bucks i do it at his house i make 150 dollars
and so like i've always just had that like and again there's not like
this is the story you guys read in the books and the history the story is it's like there's no
master plan here yeah it's like hey i need to make the opportunity all of my other friends were
working at mcdonald's chick-fil-a where you just said something like they cap yep you're i never
had a capped upside right um and then so I did all these other businesses.
I started in college because I thought I was going to be a lawyer.
And this is so silly because everybody,
all my friends that are lawyers hate it.
Right.
I dodged a bullet there.
Well, that's the dream.
Like the immigrant dream is for like the kids to become lawyers and doctors.
Well, my parents, not my parents.
So my parents never said the word college to me once.
Not one time.
Because they're both high school dropouts.
So like, they never, like I was one of the only kids in high school
and they didn't have a curfew.
Like my parents knew I was independent and left me.
They gave, that's the best thing they did.
It's like, oh, David can take care of himself.
They thought, my mom told me, she's like,
I just thought you were a lot smarter than
everybody else
in our family
so like
we trusted you
to make the right decision
well I was also driven too
but she
because you have to understand
like being smart
in this family
is not like being
like
the bar is low
in the sense that like
they're both coming from
multiple generations
of people that
did not prioritize education
or self-improvement
so that's why I'm so like
ferocious in this because I didn't see that, you know?
And so this demonstrated when my mom was dying of cancer.
So, like, you know, HIPAA has this thing where, like, they're not going to share paperwork or information unless, like, it gets permission from the person.
And, like, my mom could choose whoever she wanted to.
She could have chose her husband, right?
They had a bad relationship. They should have they got divorced and remarried they should have
stayed divorced but whatever and she you see that with actions we said that actions express
priority she's like we're in there and she's like who do you want the paperwork like who do you want
us to communicate she's like david not her other kids not her husband not her sister not she trusted
me implicitly um and so i i essentially like they never met in college so i
just kept this routine i was like people are like oh um they're like what do you want to do for a
living and like i remember watching tv when i was younger i was like well i want to be rich and you
think when you're younger you don't anything like who's rich on tv like i liked freshmen's of bel
air i was like you'd be a judge or a doctor and And I was like, oh, I can't see blood. Like that freaks me out. So now I'm going to be an attorney. So I went to school
and I worked full time and I was trying to do hustle, anything I could do. And so the idea
was like, okay, I'm just going to go undergrad for business because I'm interested in business
anyways. But I'm only doing that till I get, till I go to law school. Right. And the point of this story was not to go on this
deviation, but I was in the entrepreneurship program, the pilot one, right? Because I was
already interested in trying to make money in any way possible. And this is how bad the
entrepreneurship was. And this is why I'm kind of jealous of these young kids where now you actually
have an entrepreneurship industry and there's stuff you can learn from. The head, the main, what is it called?
Like the main subject, Entrepreneurship 101, right?
The curriculum.
Yeah, but there's all these other classes,
but Entrepreneurship 101 is run, the teacher, right?
What is her credentials?
Her dad started an AC company in Florida.
You're going to make a lot of money.
Yeah, that's a good one.
And he died on the job because he got electrocuted to death.
Oh, God.
And she inherited the company, and then she ran it, and so she's the teacher.
And so the curriculum was terrible.
It was terrible.
The best thing, and this relates to what we do for a living now, which I could have never predicted, is there was a guy that – this is kind of like Charlie Munger says you should read, if you want to learn about incentives in a really difficult business, read Les Schwab's autobiography, which I did because Charlie told me to.
I did it like episode a long time ago.
And he's like, this guy made a ton of money in a really hard business, which is like tires and like oil changes and stuff like that.
And so the guy was coming into the class.
He was going to donate like $3 or $5 million to have a building named after him and he had one prerequisite he goes i want to talk to your
entrepreneurship students before i give you this money and i learned more in one hour from that
dude than i did in two years on entrepreneurship because he would talk for like 20 minutes and
he's like open up your questions yeah and i lit him up with question after question after question
and i remember to this day just like the simple way this is like you know he was building his business in the probably the 80s and 90s and he's like um how
did you know where to expand and he's like we would pull the car registration data from the dmvs
right and we would know how many car owners there were in this specific radius and we'd have to hit
like let's say we need 40 000 car owners in a three mile radius there's are there any other stores put a store right there and they did that over and over
and over and over again awesome yeah and so like he had ideas like that and just like again you
learn through experience like that guy could teach us way more because he actually did this
compared to yeah i think probably all three of us have an unintended impact
of college entrepreneurship programs on us.
You definitely do.
I have a minor in entrepreneurship.
Really?
Yeah, from Ohio State.
Similarly, only ever went to public school.
I was a little different.
I was really into computers.
When I was 10, my dad and I found a PC on the side of the road, and he was like,
do you want to install Linux?
And I was like, what's Linux?
And, like, taught me to use a terminal.
Like, I was really lucky to have a dad who's an engineer.
And so I went to college for computer science.
But...
Wait, wait, wait.
Back up.
You found a PC on the side of the road?
100%.
And you were like, let's install Linux.
And my dad's like, I'm willing to bet that thing is just old yeah
like he's like i because we're looking at the you know you're like that at that point you could open
computers so we're like looking at it he kind of like puts it apart looks inside he's like got all
the pieces like this is just an old computer throwing away that's amazing all right keep going
so you majored in computer science yeah but i i like went in
thinking like i want to have some kind of like i want to do business and tech but i didn't know
what that meant and so i found my way to a um a club called the business builders club and they
were like oh there's like a real like an actual minor that you can take and so sort of like
through student organizations found my way to actually doing something in the college of
business which like i go back and forth on whether undergraduate business stuff is useful.
Because on the one hand...
But it got you plugged into your network.
All your buddies are, like, you guys have all done amazing things.
We just came back from my bachelor party,
and half the crew is the Business Builders Club Ohio State friends that I made there.
The content sucks, but the relationships are everything.
But the relationship, that's what...
And it's not...
The stuff you're learning is actually super important, but you don are everything. But the relationship, that's what, yeah. And it's not, the stuff you're learning
is actually super important,
but you don't have the context for why yet.
It's like, you're working on a DCF model
and you're like, I don't, this is useless to me.
Or you're like learning about depreciation and amortization.
You're like, this is awful because I have nothing.
Whereas my thesis classes were awesome.
Like there's labs, like I can touch and feel the things and understand mechanical advantage and how the free body
diagram works. But in these business concepts, they're like super abstract and it's, they weren't
useful to me then, but like I went and took a Coursera class last year, two years ago on accounting
because I was just like, okay, like I want to actually understand accounting in part because we talk about it on Acquired all the time and David understands
this stuff more than I do and I hate it.
But like, it is so much more useful when you understand where the rubber meets the road
in the real world.
Like, it would just be beneficial to just like go out and try to sell something.
Like, you know what I mean?
Like, get real world experience.
Like, what did Charlie, I just reread, have you guys read The Tao of Charlie Munger no I've heard it's good okay I can't remember
if I looked at it for the episode or not I might have I own the hardcover the kindle and the
audiobook that should tell you like it's worth it um by the way I own the audiobook and the kindle
of almost every book that I own I uh including the hardcover too no I don't know you're not a hardcover person oh because you I don't own that many books. You're not a hardcover
person. Oh, because you can also switch. That's the whisper sync or whatever it's called. And all
the time, I actually hate that they sync because my common workflow in doing acquired research is
I listen to the book and then I'll take some notes and Apple notes of like half quotes where I'm like,
oh, I got to look this up later. And then I go back in the Kindle and I search for the actual quote and like pull out the
data to be able to use it in the episodes.
I think listening to the audio book before reading the book is very helpful.
It gives you a basic overview.
It's almost like reading a Wikipedia page before you read the biography.
It's not enough detail, but like you have, okay, like watching a movie for the second
or third time, you know how it ends and it gives you, you pick up on things you missed
the first time.
In the tale of Charlie Munger though charlie was talking about
this where he's just like i learned about business at the buffett grocery store right from the cash
register it's like because that money is the lifeblood of all i think the quote in the book
is like money is the lifeblood of all businesses and that's where the cash that's where the money
was at this point yep and it's like you just learn and he says like you learn the importance of like
showing up on time how to work with people you don't like, how to take care of your customers.
These are things that are all universally applicable.
It's another form of education.
That's the biggest key of experience and why it's so important.
It's the most valuable form of education because it's education of life.
I love to read more than almost anybody else.
Like you guys obviously love to read.
There's just so much things you can't learn from books.
So it's just like, it's not enough.
David, what was your college entrepreneurship?
Well, it's funny.
It's more thematic than an actual impact,
but I can't remember if I've talked about this before.
Princeton had then just one entrepreneurship class.
It was like one class in the Department of Electrical Engineering.
I was not an electrical engineer, but people knew about this because it was like, oh, this is cool.
So senior year, I had already, the recruiting happened in the fall, so I already had my investment banking job that I was going to go do.
A whole other can of worms.
But I was like, oh, I know, I'll take this class.
It's supposed to be good.
I'm going to go work on Wall Street.
I should learn about high-tech entrepreneurship
was the name of the class.
And it was like all guest lecture.
It was case method.
And Ed Schau, the professor, would have guests come in.
One of the guests, either the last or the second
or the last class class was Tim Ferriss
what
right before
he published
the four hour work week
no way
yes
he gave
he asked
Buffett a question
at the annual meeting
I'm a guest lecturer
at Princeton
you're in the class
oh he totally
hustled this
he like traded on
that name
for like years
before he made it
as Tim Ferriss
because he just
went in for one class
it was one class yeah yeah yeah it was went in for one class. It was one class.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It was one day of one course.
And that was this case study class.
And I think he had taken the class when he was at Princeton.
And the professor liked him and kind of took a shine to him.
So you and I then are guest lecturers at Columbia.
Oh, yeah, totally.
Yeah, yeah.
Oh, yeah.
We're guest lecturers everywhere.
So he came in.
And so he was working on the book. But it was, like, done, but, like, was
about to get published.
And so he came in, and the whole, like, class was, like, basically telling his story and
then, like, showing the book.
I remember in my notes, like, for the class, I titled them.
I have them still somewhere on my, on an old computer.
The title was Supplement Guy.
Do what you love.
Yeah.
That is the moral of the story.
Oh, my God.
And then, oh, man, afterwards, talking about missed opportunities.
He's older than me, but he's not that much older.
So he's only been out for a couple years.
So class ends, and he was like, hey, guys, anybody want to hang out?
Like, I'm going to go, you know, I'm going to go like hang at Terrace.
Like if you want to come at the, Princeton has eating clubs instead of, they do have fraternities,
but like one of them is Terrace and Jenny was actually in Terrace.
And, you know, it was like, basically I'm going to go like hang out and have a good time
with anybody who wants to come along.
And I was like, nah.
Now I'll see you on the podcast circuit later.
Yeah, exactly. I love how this just was uncovered in
random conversation right? It was just like computer science
investment banking, law
no but like
no common denominator.
I use theater
more than I use computer science.
The idea
from venture capitalists and podcasters
I went and uh my daughter
asked me to go speak at um at career day oh hell yeah and this is last year so she would have been
that's like the greatest thing she went into fourth grade right i can't wait and so she's
like well daddy like you have a weird job like will you come in yeah she's like will you come
in and like give a talk and so you mentioned earlier like entrepreneurs are like odd ducks and like crazy people they don't like they don't like they
see rules it's like oh that's just words written down on paper like i'll just do my own thing
so i show up i'll say i'll do anything for you like whatever you want um and so i show up and
the there's two each class at the school she has has two teachers right and so they're like oh
well we didn't hi mr senator we didn't get your email.
Did you get like, did you bring like a thumb drive?
I'm like, what was I supposed to email and why would I have a thumb drive?
And they're like, you're a PowerPoint presentation.
And I go.
Have you ever made a PowerPoint presentation in your life?
And I go, no, but this is right.
I go, they're nine.
Why would I make a PowerPoint presentation?
And so I go there and I was like, listen, listen i'm fine like i'll wink like i got this like
they're like you're gonna wing it they didn't use the word wing it but i forgot what it was so
you're like no really i got this i show up right and they're all like sitting on the floor
and there's like 39 year olds like are you like stand up no no no no never okay and so i want
to see some energy and i was like i talk for talked for two minutes, right? I have 30 minutes slot.
I go, I talked for two minutes.
I was like, listen, don't listen to your parents.
Don't listen to your teachers.
I go, follow whatever you're intensely.
I just gave Charlie Munger's advice.
I go, what are you interested in?
Keep following that.
Even if it doesn't, there's not an obvious career path.
It's, and I used a word.
I go, it's highly likely that the job that you're going to have has not yet been invented i was like there
was no such thing as a podcaster like i couldn't go to school they're all going to be prompt
engineers or whatever and like so that was like the two minute summary and i said a little bit
more than that i go okay now what questions do you have for me and so i spent the next 28 minutes i
told them the importance of reading i was like listen your friends are all going to be these stupid apps i was like you're going to have no attention span
learn how to read and read whatever you're interested in um meanwhile your daughter's
probably like oh my god so i'll tell you the funny thing so then 28 minutes and then they're telling
me about books they love they're like oh i like harry potter and i like this and i like travel
and we had like the greatest time right so i come I come back, I see, there's like nine in the morning, I leave.
And my daughter gets out, you know, later on in the day and she goes, daddy, thank you
very much.
My friends thought your talk was the best.
I was like, oh, that's like interesting.
Like that's, I'm glad they liked it.
I go, well, let me ask you a question.
Who came after me?
And they're like, oh, it was, you know, John's mom or something. they're like oh is it you know john's mom or
something i was like oh what does john's mom do she's like uh i go well first i should do a
powerpoint she goes yes everybody did powerpoint and i go what does john's mom do she goes oh she's
a corporate attorney i'm like yeah so you like they're nine years old and also that's like the
alternate future for you yeah like it was like yeah you would have had a PowerPoint. It was, like, Bizarro David
going after you.
I know.
It'd be interesting, like,
what you would, uh...
Yeah, but then again,
I was living in Florida,
and, like, the law there
is not a lot...
Like, you'd have to move
to, like, D.C.
Like, the law there
is, like, insurance.
Like, so I'm at
the San Francisco airport, right?
Which is way nicer
than Miami International Airport,
by the way.
I've never been to Miami. Airport. Oh, it's like third
world, man. Really? It's like the ceilings are low.
They have the new, they built like this
new part, but SFO
was way nicer than mine.
And I see this billboard
of, it says the world's, or America's
largest personal injury attorney.
That guy was in Orlando. I was going to school in Orlando
at the time. His name's John Morgan. He was famous back then
and now he has. So like that,
I probably work for him.
Like I'm like chasing ambulances
or whatever.
No disrespect.
Like whatever you got to do
to pay your bills,
like I have no problem with that.
But yeah,
I just thought it was funny.
I was like,
you also have to think independently.
Like they're nine years old.
Like they don't want to sit through.
I don't even want to sit
through a PowerPoint.
That's certainly what I'm nine.
Nobody wants to sit
through a PowerPoint.
No, you should try to,
like I would have just brought
a video game console or something. was like that's my video you know
maybe you could decide your career blake and mitch blake robbins and mitch lasky made the point in uh
one of their gamecraft episodes i never even thought of they're like you know how hard it is
how few pure software companies are that that do over that sell over a billion dollars a year in software, and how many game
companies. They said it on the podcast.
There's so many video game
companies that make so much
money. I think they say
the video game industry is bigger
than music, movies, and
books combined or whatever.
It has been since the 90s.
That was the interesting thing we uncovered on the Nintendo
episode is that stat gets bantied around
bantered? Bandied? Bandied.
Bandied around a lot right now, which is very interesting
because the video game market has
done this, but
the video game market
has basically always been larger
than TV and movies combined, but
has never gotten attention
or been thought of
as a legitimate entertainment form. It's one of those secrets that's been out there for 30 years that people haven't paid
attention to.
Yeah.
All right.
I'm afraid of these memory cards filling up.
This has been wonderful.
Yep.
Thanks for having me, guys.
Listeners, thank you.
We almost never say this, but I think we got to do this again.
Let's do it again.
I'll be here next week.
Thanks, guys.
We'll see you next time.
All right.
Bye.
Well, listeners, thank you for going on the journey with us with David.
We would love your feedback on the session's format as we sort of continue to refine it.
It's obviously very different than our LVMH Nintendo-style episodes,
and getting your thoughts on how we can continue to improve it would be hugely helpful.
Also, go check out the Founders Podcast.
Search Founders in any podcast player.
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Also, join us in the Slack.
Discuss this episode and all the others.
There's now over 15,000 smart, thoughtful, kind members
at acquired.fm slash Slack.
It's pretty cool i think
david that represents only like five to ten percent of those of you out there who listen every month
it's funny i literally texted ben yesterday and i was listening to the nintendo episode that we
just released and i was like the way we talk about the acquired slack it kind of makes it sound like
only 15 000 people listen to acquired, that is 5% of the
people that listen to Acquired. Yeah. All the rest of you come join us in the Slack,
acquired.fm slash Slack. I don't know. It's just a great way for us to get a better pulse on
all of you, who you are and what you like or don't like or want us to improve about the show.
So that's all we got. Listeners, thank you so much. We'll see you next time.
We'll see you next time. We'll see you next time.