Digital Social Hour - Avoid These Venture Capital Pitfalls: A Founder’s Journey | George Stoitzev DSH #885
Episode Date: November 13, 2024Dive into the exhilarating world of venture capital with this episode of the Digital Social Hour featuring Sean Kelly and his guest! 🚀 Discover the highs and lows of a founder's journey as they nav...igate the challenging landscape of venture capital. 💼 From e-commerce successes to software ventures, this conversation is packed with valuable insights you won't want to miss. Join the conversation as they explore the critical differences between cash flow-based business models and venture-backed approaches. 📈 Don't miss out on the exciting discussion of leveraging new opportunities, the power of organic growth, and the importance of building a solid foundation. Tune in now to uncover the secrets behind successful entrepreneurship and how to avoid common pitfalls. Watch now and subscribe for more insider secrets. 📺 Hit that subscribe button and stay tuned for more eye-opening stories on the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly! 🎙️💡 #dropshipping #shopify #digitalmarketing #makemoneyonline #ecommercebusiness CHAPTERS: 00:00 - Intro 00:25 - George's Background 05:00 - BetterHelp 08:20 - Buying Generic Programs 12:05 - Top 1% Students Differences 17:29 - Free Consultations 19:34 - Partner Creation Strategies 21:54 - Current Call Availability 25:08 - Income Disparities: 5k vs 200k 28:10 - Path to Billionaire Status 31:13 - George’s 5-Year Plan 32:44 - Impact of Words 34:30 - Consequences of Poor Decisions 41:55 - Religion Discussion 44:56 - George's Perspective on God 49:50 - Booking a Call with George 50:18 - OUTRO APPLY TO BE ON THE PODCAST: https://www.digitalsocialhour.com/application BUSINESS INQUIRIES/SPONSORS: Spencer@digitalsocialhour.com GUEST: George Stoitzev https://www.instagram.com/georgestoitzev/ https://www.redactedstudio.io/ https://www.redactedcapital.com/ www.youtube.com/@GeorgeStoitzev SPONSORS: BetterHelp: https://www.betterhelp.com/DSH LISTEN ON: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/digital-social-hour/id1676846015 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5Jn7LXarRlI8Hc0GtTn759 Sean Kelly Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seanmikekelly/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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My goal is, so for this year, I call it the blossoming.
Where all these companies begin to take shape and become self-sustaining.
Once I feel like all those are self-sustaining now,
the bigger you want to go, the deeper your foundation has to be.
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All right, guys, George Struicev.
Struicev.
I tried. What is that?
A Bulgarian.
Bulgarian.
Wow. Is that where your family's from?
Yeah.
Nice. Thanks for coming on though.
We've known each other for, man, what, seven, eight years?
Seven, eight years, I think it was 2018.
Yeah, you were doing e-commerce back then,
the phone charging cases.
Yeah, mainly people know me from e-commerce.
I started in 2013,
it was the first time I had a Shopify store,
and I've done over $15 million in e-commerce sales.
And then in 2020, I decided to branch away from e-commerce
and dip my hand in software.
So I started a venture-backed software company
called Blue Recy, which was SMS marketing
for Shopify brands.
That was the first time I raised capital,
so we raised $1.5 million of venture-backed capital.
But then what I realized was that was a completely
different game than a cashflow-based approach.
You see in e-commerce what you wanna do,
especially if you're drop shipping,
you wanna make your money tomorrow.
Whereas in the software game,
there's these things called payback periods.
So imagine a lot of these companies,
they'll pay back the money they spent
to acquire a customer 15 to 28 months ahead of time.
And so you need a lot of that capital to burn
to be able to sustain that long-term value
of that software product.
So what happened was we raised this money.
When you raise money, you become almost a glorified employee
because now you're not paying yourself out,
you're paying yourself out of salary like a W-2 employee.
And now you're relegated to this opportunity
that you're kind of stuck in.
And what happened was a lot of my competitors,
especially in 2020, 2021, raised so much capital.
Attentive Mobile, one of the biggest competitors,
raised $1 billion in a essentially a coffin.
They started giving away $500 gift cards to Amazon
just to book a demo call with them,
giving break even pricing
because they had all this money they needed to spend.
Klaviyo raised 400 million, Postscript raised 250 million,
Emotiv raised 50, you had a lot of these other ones
raised 10, 15, and then some auxiliary competitors
like Active Campaign raised 250. And what I realized was, fuck. The motive raised 50, you had a lot of these other ones raised 10, 15, and then some auxiliary competitors,
active campaign raised 250.
And what I realized was, fuck, now I'm in a bad position.
I'm in a rock and a hard place where I can't just say,
you know what, I don't wanna do this business anymore
because remember, I have obligations, I have employees,
I've raised this capital, I can't just walk away,
but at the same time, I can't just do other businesses
to make an additional income, like other ventures,
because I feel like I'm committed.
I wanna be all in on something.
And so then in 2022, I was like, you know what?
I gotta sell this company because it didn't seem like
when you go in a venture-backed approach,
you wanna go into a venture-backed approach
for two reasons.
One is you're looking for 100X outcome,
or two, you're looking to validate an unknown opportunity
and there's a lot of capital-intensive things
that need to happen before validating that aspect.
If that's not gonna be the case,
there's no need for you to raise venture-backed capital.
And so for the vast majority of people that I recommend today, for any young person, there's
only a couple of things you got to do.
I would focus on dropshipping, number one, because you're making cash the next day.
Info products, billing on your social presence and producing things that have massive gross
margin, I'm talking 90% margin or more, with almost no upfront capital.
That's the number one thing you need to do and then you're going to be taking that distribution
and transitioning it into other aspects.
Maybe it's branded e-commerce, maybe it's software products, maybe it's something else,
but everyone that I'm seeing talented today, they're not taking on these more standard
approaches of business back in the day.
Everything nowadays because distribution is so cheap,
if you're good with organic,
you wanna be focusing on things you're making money
the same day with huge margin,
and you're not taking on crazy upfront capital risk.
There's no need at all.
Right, because a lot of people see these headlines
of people raising millions,
and they assume they need to do that for their company.
For every one person you see
that has an amazing success story
of selling their company or For every one person you see that has like an amazing success story of like selling their company
or something really amazing happens,
there's a hundred dead bodies you don't hear about.
Right.
And that's by nature, the game of venture capital.
The venture capital is like placing a number
on a roulette wheel.
You're supposed to lose 36 times for every one hit.
And so the venture capitalist, well,
he's somewhat concerned about the dead bodies laying around, but he's not the dead body laying around.
See all the people who took on that investment are now obligated to that position on doing
something.
And for a lot of times, there's a lot of stories where even if you raise so much capital, you're
in a bad position.
You raise 40 million bucks, that's not also a great thing because now you have a threshold
to uphold.
If you sell your company for 50 million, well.
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about your gambling or someone close to you,
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Investors get their money first,
depending on the liquidation preference,
and then the debt gets paid out and everything else,
and then you get the little sliver at the end.
So it's about the value you create.
And nowadays, I mean, they're super successful people.
Like one of these young killers that I know,
his name is Arrib, and Daniel and Moosey,
they created a software product
and in a couple of months,
they're crushing over $500,000 in monthly recurring revenue.
Wow.
With absolutely no cost to create this product essentially.
Damn.
Why?
Well, because Moosey and Daniel,
they're the one and number two on WAP for distribution
for short form editing,
for making money on TikTok, making money with shorts.
And the product called Creo is creating faceless content,
creating AI generated content
and allowing people to make money.
So if you're building software today
or you're building anything in that regard,
you wanna be thinking about
how does the software make someone money?
Because if it's costing $100 a month
and it's making them $500 a month,
that's where they're gonna stay in
and that's where you'd have a reduction of churn.
But simply saving people time or all this other stuff
is not how most software is really growing today rapidly.
So your advice would be get something
with high margins and operate lean.
Operate lean?
Dude, there's so many amazing AI tools today.
The cost of executing a product is like this today.
The most expensive thing today is distribution, by far.
And it's only gonna get more expensive.
Right, marketing.
Marketing, but not just marketing.
It's really having an identity
in a piece of resonating content
that captures an organic flywheel.
That's really the most important thing
because you can layer on paid ads afterwards, right?
Paid ads is where you're gonna be able to scale up,
but you lay the foundation with quality organic distribution
and an initial flywheel.
Almost like, you know, if you wanna create a fire,
you don't pour the gas first, you build the foundation,
you get a little spark.
Once you get that little fire working,
that's your organic, that's your kind of initial distribution,
you could pour the gas easily,
but without that initial flywheel,
you're kind of left chasing your tail
because as soon as you stop your ads, it fizzles out.
You see a lot of these people or a lot of these brands
where they'll make the vast majority of their revenue
from paid ads, but no one's commenting on their stuff.
They might have half a million followers
and they have five people liking their post on Instagram.
And that discrepancy happens
because there's no underlying value
of their organic distribution.
No one really cares about them in particular
or the outworld of offer.
They're just selling people in pain
in a specific moment of time to get that sale.
But then people fall off tremendously after that.
I've noticed that.
The people who make the most money on info
get the least amount of results.
And it's this kind of paradoxical situation
because I talk to thousands
of the world's best entrepreneurs.
My network is like a very, very dense network
of people who are absolute killers.
And across the board, almost no one has really ever bought
a generic ClickFunnels-based type of program.
Yet those ClickFunnels-based type of program,
those are the ones making the most amount of money.
I'm talking about 10, 20, sometimes even someone like,
I don't wanna call it names, but over $100 million,
and no talented person has ever gone through that.
In fact, I don't know someone who's successful,
who's gone through those types of programs. The people who are very talented, what they do is they'll focus in on
something specific, a specific niche, and then they'll go find a relevant person in that corridor
who doesn't have such a big following because they can get personalized support and they can
build out their mastermind in their kind of smaller community to get over the threshold.
Their action takers themselves, they're not looking for a handout.
The people who make the most money,
they're selling community college level people.
They're selling people who are in pain,
who don't have that much money,
they have a couple thousand dollars,
and they need to do something
because they've been thinking about it for so long.
Those people are never gonna get success.
In fact, there's no information or education
that can make them successful
because you gotta move their hand.
Yet those are the people you can consistently sell on a high ticket over and over again like butter. And it's just like add to
a sales call, to a pain point to get a sale, and the drop off rate is like that. Because remember,
these are, I mean, community college level talent. They're not talented individuals. They're 26 to 35.
They're not going to be the next e-commerce superstar. I'm sorry. They're not. they're not talented individuals. They're 26 to 35, they're not gonna be
the next e-commerce superstar, I'm sorry, they're not.
They're not.
That's why you see them getting called the scammers,
because.
Yeah, a little bit because, I mean,
scam by definition is you're saying a promise
that you can't fulfill upon.
I don't know if I would classify it such a scam
because a lot of these times these people are in pain
and they just want education.
They just want like a, you know,
imagine you're 28 years old,
you have like $5,000 in bank account,
you're working a regular job,
and you've been thinking about making money online
at e-commerce for so long,
and yeah, we know you're not gonna make millions on it,
right, I mean, let's not kid ourselves, right?
If you were that talented,
you would have made something happen before,
but you just want some hope.
You just want someone to like,
you wanna commit some money, you wanna take some action,
you wanna just like, have some change in your life.
And there's nothing wrong with that.
And I think that, so to label a total scam,
I don't think is the right way to do it.
What I'm just saying is that the people that I help
with my business model, which is called redacted,
those are the world class talent across the board of those people. They never buy generic programs. They did. I just never
see it. No one really talented. It's like, Oh my god, yeah, I bought this generic program from this clickbait thing. And then
I became successful. No, they took it upon themselves to take proactive action.
They found their small community,
they learned from someone in particular like a mentor,
they built out their connections within the industry,
they found the kind of great loopholes and they made it work.
They didn't rely on a program or anything else,
they relied upon their own actions
and finding their own communities to make it work.
Right, you've done thousands of consultations as you mentioned earlier.
Yeah.
Is there any similarities between your top 1% students out of those consultations?
Absolutely. So what's really interesting, people ask me like, why am I doing this business
model? You see, I didn't even, my social media is not really big. In fact, I'm not a public
influencer by any stretch of the imagination. All the money I've made has never been from
my face or my voice or anything else. I've made my money from e-commerce and software before,
but when I sold the software company, I realized something in that moment. The guy who bought me,
Bruno, he bought me with a handshake. And we raised $15 million after I came in at $70 million
valuation, essentially with a handshake. What that means is Bruno showed me,
he did a thousand consultations,
a thousand like calls with VCs and investors the year prior.
So a year and a half prior,
and this you can look back like years prior,
he's had all these connections, he's built up.
So when there was an opportunity, in this case, Magna,
he had all those people to go reach out to right away.
And I noticed, I was like,
I have all the skills and ability, I have no leverage.
And leverage comes in the connections.
Where you have something and someone else has something,
and through a handshake,
a huge value creation can happen, right?
You have maybe distribution, someone has execution,
and a connection happens, and boom,
money gets kind of built out of the ether
because there's some kind of multiplication happening
with these two individuals.
And so I said to myself, you know what,
I'm gonna spend the whole 2023
under this vision called Redacted.
And the vision of Redacted is that
there's so much information,
there's so much things going on today,
you need someone to give you that level of trust to redact all the irrelevant information and
just tell you, talk to this guy, talk to Sean, talk to Daniel, talk to someone who knows
your particular pain points for a world-class entrepreneur.
I'm talking about people who make over 20 to 50k a month minimum.
I really don't talk to people under that mark because level one is 20k a month.
Level one is 20k a month because it means
you're never gonna go back to a regular job.
If you make 20k a month as an online entrepreneur,
there's no W-2 job for your level of talent
for the most part that could sustain
around a $400,000 a year W-2 career.
It just doesn't exist. And so once you cross over
that threshold, you almost can't go back. And so they stay in the industry forever. And so I focus
on those people, find those exceptional talents, connect them with the right people, be kind of
like their mentor. I'll give you some cases. In 2020, I did a call with Sebastian Jordy and Jordan
Walsh. Wow. During COVID, they were back in their mom's place and they were kind of having a little bit of a
rough patch in their life, but they had amazing potential.
They had a little under 50K on YouTube.
I told them the exact same advice.
Double down on your personal brand,
utilize that niche you were good at, which was e-commerce,
to produce better content, to build out your name
in the industry, but you're gonna make all the money
with your highest leverage, which is gonna be
your brand identity
for larger gross margin things,
whether it's education, whether it's software.
Jordan sold his software and Sebastian Georgi
crushed it with his TikTok low ticket course
for the backend affiliate commission for Shopify.
And so both of those cases, you need more leverage
and that leverage comes in being a winner in distribution.
And so the same thing over the last year,
then over a thousand of these consultations,
people I think just as talented as Sebastian Georgi
and Jordan Walsh were in 2020.
And so imagine three, four, five years from now,
I'm investing in individuals.
What I mean by that is if I do a call with you,
it creates something very different than a piece of content. It's a relationship that just no amount of content can replace. And it's almost like I buy shares of you in a way where it's like I
establish a credit line with someone, a trust level. George has seen me at my lowest and then George has seen me at my highest.
And I can know a person very differently
than someone else just meeting Jordan today.
So if someone meets Jordan today,
they can never really know Jordan in the past.
It's not possible.
Yeah, they can hear the story,
but Jordan's in a different place now
in the way that this person's finding Jordan is here.
So the relationship can never really be that way.
But if I can meet someone here
and I can spot that talent, I can be like,
dude, you do have this talent,
let me connect you to these people.
And that could be a cause of their next breakthrough.
Well, that relationship,
imagine those people become hyper successful.
Well, now there's a big deal to be had
because I'm looking for 10, 20, 100 million dollar deals
in the next four to 10 years.
And those things take time to marinate.
It's like planting a seed.
So the first year in 2023 I've redacted,
I essentially planted the seeds.
A thousand seeds and I started watering the plants.
What do I mean by that?
I follow up with people.
I encourage them, I introduce them to people.
I just invest, invest, invest, invest, invest,
just water, water, water, water. And people ask me, George, what can I do for you? And I tell them the best thing
you could do for me is be the best person of yourself. Because in the future, I'm looking
for huge deals. I'm not looking for a couple thousand dollars from you right now. What
am I going to do with a couple thousand dollars? Not much. And really when you take on money,
you're taking on an obligation. So if I take on someone's four or $10,000, whatever, I'm
now taking on the obligation of some of their success
and some of the other aspects,
and it also changes the dynamic.
So you don't charge at all for the call?
No. Wow.
Now, of course, how do I make money from this?
Well, sometimes if I introduce someone
to make some affiliate commission from an introduction,
whether it's a 3PL, a payment process,
or a Google Ads guy, et cetera,
but really I'm looking for 50-50 partners.
I'm looking to spot that one-of-one talent, and now I have 11 of these companies.
One-of-one talent, what that means for me is they are resonating with an audience for
a specific type of vertical offer that has amazing underlying distribution, and they
can be the winner. So I'm look because the power law states that the the people
Who there's a few people who get all the rewards and so you're looking at like the Jordan Welsh's the Sebastian Jordi the?
Eman Ghazi's the Luke Belmars, right the sliver makes 80% of the reward and so I'm looking for that talent
Before their breakthrough and I'm And I could spot that talent, I think, better than anyone
because I've just had so many of these conversations
because I've focused in on that.
Remember, I'm doing these calls under that premise.
I'm looking for what makes someone that level of caliber.
And what makes someone that level of caliber is
they have to be playing their own game.
So if someone comes to me and they're really talented
but they're playing e-commerce,
well, I have to compare you to e-commerce guys.
And now I gotta compare you to the Josh Snowes,
I gotta compare you to the guy who runs Cut Stephen,
Brewmate guy, Christian Goode.
I gotta compare you to really hitters.
But if you could narrow out your niche
and you could be a one-of-one in a
corridor so one of my initial partnerships was this young superstar
talent named Hudson Archer he's a 17 year old who had two mobile detailing
vans making over 200,000 hours a month in his profession which is mobile
detailing and I came together we put together this concept called drive
systems and the first product was called Driven Elite, helping mobile detailers get to 10k a month.
And so there's over 30,000 mobile detailers in the United States.
I am now comparing Hudson to other people who teach mobile detailing in the space.
And what I noticed was, ah, Hudson could be a one of one talent. Meaning he could be that guy,
the Iman Ghazi of mobile detailing. And I could build around that infrastructure.
A next person like Shelby Sapp,
teaching high ticket sales education for women.
What's a competitor?
There isn't that many.
She could be the one of one talent.
I'm looking for the one of one talent in specific verticals
which could have a practitioner like niche.
Meaning that you start off in this career,
like a trade, whether it's mobile detailing,
high ticket sales, closing, pressure washing,
e-commerce, whatever that might be,
you're gonna make your first five to $15,000 a month
in that profession.
But at the same time, we're gonna be building out
your content generation and your distribution
such that when you cross that threshold, you then become a partner within the system.
So what's crazy is within Drive Systems now, we have seven partners we've signed on.
What that means is people have come on, have learned from our program,
and then we've signed them on to build up their social media to promote our product
and get 50% commission.
But they're not affiliates, they're partners.
And the difference is this, an affiliate sends traffic to someone but it doesn't do any of
the fulfillment.
For us, the partners actually do the fulfillment of the one-on-one because in order to scale
out an info product correctly from my perspective and keep attracting great people in service,
you have to do one-on-one.
But most people do the one-on-ones with hiring coaches
and some random people.
Look, if you're hiring a guy for 510K a month
to be a coach, that person probably isn't the best person,
to be honest.
Really?
I mean, look, they can do some of the stuff,
but they're not the hardcore practitioner
because they're not gonna have enough time
to service people correctly for 510K a month
being a coach.
Come on. So that's what we do.
The partner model where these people are so incentivized because they're getting twenty five hundred dollars a sale.
They're so incentivized for teaching and being a coach and doing those one on ones because they're making so much margin.
They're so incentivized and building the community.
They're not just a coach behind the scenes.
No one knows about they're getting paid, you know, essentially a salary, essentially a worker. They're not just a coach behind the scenes, no one knows about, they're getting paid,
essentially a salary, essentially a worker.
These are not workers, these are partners.
And I think that's how the model really grows effectively.
It's a win-win, wow.
So are you still taking more calls,
or was that years ago?
No, so I'm doing still a lot of calls.
I think, crazy enough, even though the vast majority
of the calls, almost none of the calls were paid,
sometimes people wanna pay me for like,
George, can I pay you for consulting?
So we'll do sessions for consulting.
The rate is $4,000 an hour.
But again, it's not just, it's not about the one hour.
People are not paying for the advice.
They're paying for the Rolodex.
They're paying for what have I done in the past
and the relationships I've set,
such that when you need something like,
George, do you have a guy?
I have $200,000 on Hold, on Stripe and on Shopify, do you have a guy?
Yes.
Hey, you know what, I'm selling so much,
do you have a guy for 3PL?
Do you have a solution for me?
Yes.
That's what they're paying for.
Advice is, go ask GPT, go ask Google.
You know, if you can't think about a good enough question,
if you have a good enough question,
you can go ask these other tools.
That's not what you're paying for.
You're paying for the Rolodex.
You're paying for, George is gonna redact
and tell you, just do this.
Because not only have I done it before,
but I've talked to people who are in
all the realms of your position.
If you're an e-commerce, I've talked to people here,
and I've talked to people here.
So if you're here, I know your turn-by-turn directions
to the next stage.
That's what people are paying for
when they're paying for
a very high ticket for Alex Ramosi or Grant Cardone.
They're not paying just for his time.
There's nothing Grant Cardone can tell you in an hour.
I don't care.
There's nothing no one can tell you,
Wes Watson, Alex Ramosi,
no one can tell you anything in an hour
that I couldn't tell you or GPT couldn't tell you.
What you're paying for is the relationship.
Okay, Alex Trimose remembers me now, he might follow me.
I can leverage his Rolodex.
When I get bigger or when something happens,
I can ask him for something.
I have a direct line.
You're paying for a direct line.
That's what you're paying for.
Nothing else.
Yeah, the access, the relationship,
the years they spent networking those relationships.
The my number one recommendation is, if you're in any industry, go after the best of relationship, the years they spent networking those relationships. The my number one recommendation is,
if you're in any industry, go after the best people
and say, hey, how much can I pay for 15 minutes of your time?
500 bucks, paying 500 bucks to 1,000 bucks
for 15 minutes of their time.
There's nothing they're gonna tell you, bro.
It's not about that.
You're not paying, you're paying for the introduction.
You're paying for when you get on a call with them
and you're like, and you impress them, they're like,
whoa, okay, I remember this person.
What I do for Hudson is I connect them
with Sebastian Jordan, Jordan Welch, Brett Malinowski,
everyone, and we pay people.
We say, hey, Colin, Wade Houston,
we pay them 500 to 1,000 bucks for a 15, 20 minute call.
And then what we do is we say,
we take whatever their advice was,
because remember, all their advices devices have some meaning and then we make
Sure to follow up with them and say hey because of your advice. I'm now on my next level. Mm-hmm
And then every time Hudson goes to another milestone
We go back to all the people we've ever paid and had a relationship with and say hey because of you that advice
You gave me that's what helped me we give them a testimonial
They then also promote on their socials because how do you provide value to the biggest people
if they're selling info?
Testimonial.
And the value you provide to them is your testimonial
and your success because that's how they're gonna
get more people.
But remember, the people who are doing those testimonials,
those people are gonna be successful regardless.
Yeah, I love it.
That's the reality of the situation.
So the people that are doing 20k a month
Those are probably more common than the people doing 100k a month. Have you noticed any big differences with those two groups leverage leverage vehicle?
That's it. That's simple. That's it. Wow
There I mean, I'll tell you there's people who make 5k a month who I think are vastly more talented people making 200k a month. Hmm
Yeah, I don't think talent and intelligence has to do
so much with the money you're making.
I mean, people who make anywhere between 100 to 500K a month,
I would consider them like,
the vast majority like middle talent.
Really? Yeah.
Interesting, because a lot of people
just assume they're geniuses.
No, I would say they're, it's not so correlated.
It's about leveraging vehicle.
Like if you're operating in a specific niche,
which has a really, if you become a practitioner
in a very good profession that has good replicability
and you sell an info product, it's really great, right?
Because you're able to then compound that effect.
But if you do it in like e-commerce
and you don't become one of those big winners,
you can't really scale out your info too well
unless you kind of narrow down.
Like if you narrow down to someone like a Brooks,
which does high ticket e-commerce
with a very clean funnel and a great KPI of success,
it's very clean.
Hey, I'm gonna mentor you
until you hit your 10K in total sales.
So you pay 5,800 bucks because I'm guaranteeing you,
you're gonna hit 10K in revenue.
It's a no-brainer. If you don't have some of those, you can't scale very well. If you're in e-commerce and
you become pretty good, you could scale out really quickly. I've noticed, yeah, the
e-commerce has the most scalability if you hit it, but again, there's a lot of dead bodies,
but if you cross a certain threshold, you could scale out really quickly
because all you gotta do is add a couple zeros to your ads.
You know, I mean, Facebook and all these platforms
are doing a lot of the targeting for you.
These days, yeah, you don't have to type in anything.
Nothing, right, it's about your creative,
it's about your offer, it's about everything else.
So if you could just, if you can dial it in,
you can add a zero and you could scale out.
Whereas operationally, if you're in another business,
Hudson can't just add a zero.
He can't just add a van like that easily.
It scales operationally and it's just more difficult.
But yeah, the biggest differentiator
between someone making 20K a month and 200K a month
is leverage and vehicle.
That's it.
Very little to do with talent.
Now, if you're talking about the same people
in same industries, so we're comparing people
who make 500K a month in same industries,
okay, then you do see a differentiator
between talent level systems and processes
and everything else in the long term.
Right, so over a year's time, people will come in, fall off.
So you'll know how good someone is based on their longevity
and their underlying systems
and how well they've been able to execute
once they've crossed a certain threshold.
But those two gaps now, 20 to 100K a month,
300K a month, I don't see too much of a,
there's no correlation too much with intelligence.
Yeah, so this is how you'll become a billionaire,
similar to Hormozzi's model too.
Yeah, so Hormozzi's model,
what's interesting is people think he,
this is also very interesting about Hormozzi.
So he doesn't invest in too many companies.
He only does like one, two deals a year.
Really?
Yeah. That's it?
I thought it was way more.
No.
I actually, he almost invested in one of my companies.
So he doesn't do too many deals.
He's looking for really big deals
and he's leveraging this idea of like,
almost like the hot girl method.
You just keep leading them on.
Right? Like, oh, fill out the type form.
Like we're going to invest in you.
You just like leading them on.
Like, I don't know, edging them or something.
Yeah, just one mile a month, apply here.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So he's building on all this like juice.
Just keep building out the juice, the juice, the juice.
And then he makes a big bet.
He'll be like, okay, now I'll be 50% owner in school.
Because I know I have a distribution audience for that.
That was a big one for him.
So he'll be looking for deals like that
because he doesn't need too many winners to get his outcome.
Whereas he doesn't wanna be placing too many small bets.
He's saying he's placing these small bets because that's his audience. But he doesn't wanna be placing too many small bets. He's saying he's placing these small bets
because that's his audience,
but he doesn't really do too many of them
because they're operationally more intensive
and there's obligations there.
Whereas his highest leverage, he'll tell you,
is focusing on the book, focusing on his brand,
focusing on the content he creates,
and then focusing on big opportunities like school,
which you can get 40, 50% of
and hit a $500 million sale
or leverage that distribution towards another bigger vehicle.
But all those like sign up, newsletter, all this stuff,
it's free value.
I mean, same thing he did with his event.
He got one million people sign up for his new book
and then he like built up how much he's gonna provide them
and then it's free. I was shocked when he didn't charge on that call.
Yeah, I mean, because what he's doing
is he's just trying to, you can call it the hot girl method.
You're leading him on and you're like,
oh my God, yeah, let's go to dinner.
And then you flake on the last minute.
Yeah.
And you kind of just keep building up the juice
and they keep kind of following you, thinking about you
but you never give it to them.
That's what I think he's doing.
I mean, you can look, he hasn't invested in many things.
Yeah, so slightly different from me.
You're kind of spreading out more, right?
I'm spreading on more right now.
Think about me as like a dispatcher.
I'm looking differently from Hermosy.
Hermosy is looking for very established businesses
because he's already in that position of status.
So people who are like three to $10 million a year
are kind of like getting on their knees for Hermosy
to look at them and tell them how good they are
and help them get to their next chapter.
I'm not looking for that person.
I'm looking for the young superstar
before their breakthrough.
Because I know how I can replicate their success
and I can make them a winner.
So I just need a winner and I'll make them successful.
Whereas Hermos is looking for an established person
to do some tweaks and get to the next level.
I'm looking to make them.
It's a little bit of a longer play,
but I don't have the status to go after those people
making three, 10 million a month
and do the types of deals that I'm looking to make.
Right, you're low key.
Yeah, I've noticed that a lot.
I would have to do a very different type of deal.
Now, my goal is, so for this year,
I call it the blossoming.
The blossoming is where all these companies
begin to take shape and become self-sustaining.
Self-sustaining to me means about 100K a month.
So that's what self-sustaining means
and there's a natural flywheel happening.
Once that happens, we're gonna layer in secondary products,
software, e-commerce, things which have a little bit
of a lesser margin but have more scalability,
but we need the distribution.
So we're looking to build distribution in high ticket
and high cashflow from high ticket sales.
We're then gonna funnel that into more distribution.
We're gonna funnel that into agency, e-commerce, software, to build out essentially
a vertical value proposition in each industry.
Sales, mobile detailing, other industries
like smaller verticals.
And then in the next year, once I feel like all those
are self-sustaining now and have their own distribution,
then I can be thinking about,
well, how does George then become like an Alex Ramosi
or a Iman Ghazi?
And I think the bigger you wanna go,
the deeper your foundation has to be.
No one cares about the words you say,
they care about who said it.
So if I regurgitate the same thing,
Iman Ghazi or Alex Shamozi says,
the value isn't in the words,
the value is in the foundation and who said it.
So the same words can be said by two different people
mean completely two different things.
So those things are relevant.
So I'm looking right now to keep building my foundation
because I have a very high threshold of who I
wanna be perceived as in the market.
And I don't wanna be playing a game
that I feel like someone's better than me at.
I don't wanna be producing a lot of content
and be like, oh, he's a copycat of Alex Chemos,
a copycat of Imman Ghazi, someone else.
I wanna play my own game.
Because if I play my own game, if I become a one of,
and I tell everyone this,
why are you gonna produce the same videos as someone else who's better than
you you just look like a clone of them no one's paying for a replica of a
Picasso painting okay there's no value in a replica of a Picasso painting even
if it's more beautiful so a splatter of paint like the the image itself isn't so
valuable it's the artist who made it oh And it's the resell value of that artist's name.
That's what you're-
There's a piece behind us that's going in an art museum.
You and I could have painted that one right there.
So it's not about that.
The same thing, it's not about the words you say,
it's not about the edits you have,
it's about who you are and who's saying it,
and what's the audience you're saying it to,
and who are you in that industry as a tastemaker.
That's what the value is.
And so if I wanna be, if I believe I'm this type of person,
well then in order for me to do that,
I have to build a deep enough foundation to sustain it.
You can't build a skyscraper without a deep foundation.
And so right now it's that phase.
It's building out, okay, yes, I have experience
in e-commerce, yes, I have experience in software,
yes, I have experience in info now.
If I wanna go big and be a big personality in my space,
I feel I have to lay this foundation in this way.
And this is the edge I have today,
which is this partner model,
and it's leveraging all my prior experience
to make this next generation even more successful than me
and avoid all the potholes.
Because I look back at all the mistakes I've made,
has nothing to do with my skill or my talent.
Had everything to do with like one sentence
and one wrong move.
Wow.
It's that crazy.
Imagine you're on a highway,
there's this highway in Florida called Alligator Alley.
It's a two hour straight.
If you get a wrong turn, you have to loop around.
Oh.
Right?
So that's kind of what I would describe a mistake as. At a critical moment
of your life, and I look back in my life and there's a couple of those big ones, where
you just make one sentence, just one sentence like, oh, I should date this girl. I should
not do this. I should do this. I should take on this thing or I should, even timing. And
now, two years maybe to loop around. Damn.
Right?
Or one example is you want to sell your company.
And you're like, oh, well, I'm going to wait till I make more sales
and then I'll think about selling.
But then when you're kind of peeking out
and you're kind of going like this, you're like, fuck, I need to go sell.
But now is the worst time to think about selling
because now in order to sell your company,
you're six to seven months away from selling it.
And so by that time, it's its, in order to sell your company, you're six to seven months away from selling it.
And so by that time, it's its own business
trying to sell your company.
Now you're mentally drained and your business
is failing at the same time,
and you have no leverage to sell.
The best time to do something like sell a company
is six to 12 months before you wanna sell.
Before you even think about wanting to begin the process.
That's when you wanna start.
Much in the same way, that's what I help people do
when I'm partnering up with them.
I know the map, because I've gone through it
and I've talked to all the people who are currently in it.
And I could spot the pothole
and I can give the connections needed
to empower these people.
I could take this world-class talent
and I can give them the connections, Rolodex, support,
execution, introduction, avoiding mistakes, capital, anything, and align them towards
their highest potential.
That's really what I do.
And when you're young, you have so much more years to compound.
So if I take someone like Hudson who's 17
or someone else who's 18 to 20,
and I can just establish their foundation at that age,
now they're 25, 27, they're still gonna have
so much more years ahead of them,
and they're gonna be in a crazy position.
And now when I'm 35 to 45,
it's not just me, I have the drivers,
those partners who are now driving
and I believe execution cost is dropping to nothing.
And I believe that identities and distribution
is gonna skyrocket in cost.
And the power law is gonna mean that a few people
are gonna have so much distribution of rewards.
You're looking now at like the Kim Kardashians,
the Logan Pauls, et cetera.
There's gonna be hundreds if not thousands of those people
across all small industries.
So you look at the Logan Pauls,
now you kind of see the broad ones,
but in each one of these industries,
like mobile detailing, which might have 30 to 50,000,
that's still a billion dollar industry.
There are thousands of these billion dollar vertical industries, and there's going to
be five to 10 identities who capture 80% of that reward.
And I want to find the one two who can get 50% of that reward in a lot of these industries.
That's really the value of redacted.
It's find that identity, build around that identity.
I can go execute everything.
The cost of me making a software
and e-commerce company, it's like that.
As soon as I see it, I can make it.
The cost, it's so low, it's so cheap, it's so simple.
The value's so low. It's so cheap. It's so simple. It's there's no there's the value is not there
The value is in how can we build around the right identity?
Get the distribution get the cash flow get the more distribution get the partners get the affiliates
Layer in the software e-commerce in all that vertical. Yeah, and then it'd be in it just becomes easy
Then you anything you throw at it just works And you gain this like compounding effect in it.
No, that's a brilliant model, man.
I love it.
I mean, look at Logan Paul with Prime and Jake Paul even.
Absolutely.
Six months, his skincare company
is already worth 150 million.
Absolutely.
You have the distribution.
And so funny enough,
so the people who partnered up with Logan Paul,
they also did a deal with Christian Guzman and Alani Niu.
So they look for identities and then they build out the product.
Because remember, that part is not that difficult if you have the right distribution and the
right branding and the right messaging and the right need in the market.
I mean look how fast it grew.
Skims. You take the right identity, the right
distribution, you put in the right specific product line. Boom. Instant. Yeah. Mr. Beast
chocolate bars. Instant. And that's really what I'm looking for. Again, these are established
because they've happened five, 10 years ago. I mean, you're looking at the success that Logan and Jake
and Kim and everyone else has done 10 years ago.
I'm investing in the ones today,
which are gonna come about in five to 10 years.
It's like a vintage, you know, you buy a wine,
you don't buy a wine, you know, it just got made.
You buy the wine 10, 20 years ago.
You're playing the long game.
Most people don't think like that though. Well, I think I'm in a different position in my life. If you're not in this made, you buy the wine 10, 20 years ago. You're playing the long game. Most people don't think like that though.
Well, I think I'm in a different position in my life.
If you're not in this position,
you gotta build out your practitioner.
You focus on a niche, make some cashflow,
build out the type of life you want
and then figure out what's your next step.
You don't start here.
Right.
How would I be able to sign these types of partnerships
and do these types of deals if
I wasn't in my position?
It's only because of the edge in the person I am today that is what I'm doing.
If I'm not this type of person, if it's not my edge, I'm not going to do that.
You should only play games where you make the rules, you're a one-of-one type of individual,
and you have some type of an edge.
You want to be playing games that you can win. You don't want to be playing someone else's game where, you know,
you have a massive disadvantage. A nine-to-five job, basically. A nine-to-five job, you know,
yeah, it's very difficult because you have to be such a superstar to make significant amount
of money in a W-2 job. You know, you gotta be a,
it's just very difficult. What's the politics of it too you gotta deal with?
Politics, bureaucracy, and you know,
then when you're four, five, six years deep into that,
the threshold of you then leaving to go do your own thing
graces because your lifestyle goes up.
So you're living kind of paycheck to paycheck in your W2 and you need
this kind of like for your survival, but now you're 28 to 30. And now the threshold for
you to go make five to 10 K a month as your, you know, your e-commerce business or something
else is the gap is so large. Whereas someone's starting off, they have no expenses, they
have no lifestyle inflation, they have nothing, they have nothing to risk. So even making
two to four K a month and building up their initial snowball is nothing at all.
But now they're already in this game and now it's harder for them to go back to doing a
W-2 job than to stay in it.
And so that's why the dangers of W-2 are there.
Is that you get deeper into your lifestyle, your inflation, your relationship, all your
stuff and the gap it's gonna take
for you to kind of build your own stuff
is getting larger and larger by the day,
and less and less people take that jump.
Absolutely.
I wanna end off with religion,
because as someone as logical as you are,
this surprises me.
So you've gone more religious recently.
Yeah, I would say about a year and a half ago.
And there's a reason, so I started off
like four or five years old, maybe kind of being atheist.
So on this side of the spectrum,
meaning that I thought the puck ended with me
and no one else is coming to save me, it's all on me.
And people who believed in these kind of fairy tales
are almost like believing in Santa Claus, right?
That there's so much understanding about science
and physics and everything else
that there's no need to believe some of these
traditions or mysticism.
But as I got older and I started learning about
all these different types of things, my threshold kept going like this. And I was like, oh, well,
I'm spiritual. I see the value of the mindset of these ideas. But I would kind of redline and not
go over the edge and say, yes, there is a God. 100%. Yes. I would kind of like redline there.
I'm like, oh, yeah, well, these are good mindsets to have and because of your mindset your actions your habits your you change your life, but it was never like
yes, there is and
someone can maybe move you and change the network and
So it was only when I had to sell the company and I was like I
Have to make this I had to sell this company the next day
I read this the next next day I read this,
the next day after I read this book
called Reality Transurfing,
it's a book I read on my YouTube,
it has over 200,000 views now,
and every single top entrepreneur loves this book,
ranks in their top three.
And I read this book and it's all about
writing your own book,
picking the variant space you wanna embody.
And so I looked back and I was like the
moment I was in there, I wished upon I wished it upon myself years back. It's
almost like I wanted to suffer. I wanted to prove how tough I was and I realized
in that moment like, oh I don't want this story anymore. Almost like I
visualized tearing, you know, throwing away that
story and writing a new one. I'm selling this company, I'm living in Miami,
I'm doing this, I'm having this business, et cetera.
The next day I do a consultation call,
and this is why I love the consultations,
with some kid, I'm in Miami,
and some 18-year-old is in Stanford,
freshman in Stanford, I'm doing a consultation call with him
because he's looking to raise a round
and I'm giving him some advice.
He tells me at the end of the call,
George, I appreciate you so much, I'm gonna connect you with my mentor tells me at the end of the call, "'George, I appreciate you so much.
"'I'm gonna connect you with my mentor.'"
I was like, yeah, sure, no problem.
He connects me with Anil.
Anil owns Soma Capital.
His dad owns the Sacramento Kings.
Wow.
Like the craziest connection, Anil lives here in Miami.
Damn.
Like what was the odds of this being his mentor?
Anil then texts me right away after the group chat,
he says, "'George, come to ZZ's,
which is a private membership club here in Miami.
I'm hosting a business dinner with a couple of people.
I said, perfect.
The guy sitting to my left, Bruno, ends up buying my company.
What?
Crazy.
Wait, his name's Bruno?
Yeah.
Holy crap.
So, it was almost like too much of a coincidence where in that moment I was like,
okay, deal. I believe. Now let's see. And as soon as I said yes, I realized that's just level one.
And I started realizing just how far the rabbit hole goes in that regard. And I'll give you a very
maybe simple idea of how I think about God. I
think about God as the higher leverage abstraction of consciousness.
So you are the amalgamation of trillions of cells, bacteria, etc. in your body.
You have like one point of contact, your like conscious one singular sliver that
almost like controls this whole thing, controls the
network. If you ever see a flock of birds they kind of operate in unison. It seems
to me that when singular forms of consciousness, in this case us or birds
or whatever it might be, come into a flock, come into a almost like a close
proximity, they start to act in unison.
It's almost like they gain a higher level of consciousness.
It's a weird concept to think about, but imagine that this flock of birds is
operated by a singular source of consciousness on top of it that maybe
you can't see. And so I think about God as the network architect, and what he's
looking for is good people and good nodes,
an individual is like a node which is having like a good things happen to it. Imagine like you work
out your bicep and it gets bigger, like this is a node in your network, and you start to like value
it more. It's almost like if I become a good person, I become a great node, God starts to favor me more.
He starts to say, ah, there's good things happening here, let me focus in more on it, let me put things into its position. And that's how I see my relationship
to God and everything else. I see him as this network architect, a higher level of abstraction
of humans or of you can kind of keep... Think about how many levels there are. I mean,
God could be like an Elon or Mark Zuckerberg.
Mark Zuckerberg and Elon control billions of people.
On a whim, they could change their algorithm
and move billions of people like this.
They're almost a single point of contact
for a higher level abstraction, a God-like figure.
You're a God-like figure to yourselves.
That's how I see it.
That's how I see it.
And there's just so many levels. That's how I see it.
And there's just so many levels.
I think there's so many forms of a God in, you know, where does the last one end?
I don't know, but I just see it as that way and I want to be a good note in the network
so that I get favored.
And I get favored because this higher level of consciousness is saying, oh, good things
are happening here
Good value is happening. Here's a good person. There's there seems to be something to that effect where
when you're a good person seemingly
Potentially more good things can happen right karma, right?
You know, these things have been spoken about for thousands of years. There must be something to it for sure. It can't
you can't have billions of people in,
over the last, however long civilization has been around, you know, 4,000 years,
maybe from the first written word to tens of thousands of years, have a lot of these
reoccurring patterns. There's something to it. And in a way, they're all right. In a way,
in a way they're all right.
In a way like they're all symbols pointing at something
and that thing is,
you can abstract it in a way that maybe helps your life. Because they're all pointing at the same thing
and when you look at it, you could take those aspects
and you can kind of help it for your aspect, for your life.
What an interesting point of view, man.
Yeah.
Did you come up with that on mushrooms?
No, I didn't come up with that.
I'm very straight edge.
I actually don't do anything.
Oh, wow.
I don't do anything.
And it came about because I think I've just consumed so much data, much in the same way
that how do you make these AI models today is you let it consume, they just want to learn.
They consume tremendous amount of data
and they almost like gain a level of consciousness.
They predict the next word effectively.
And I've, my whole life,
all I've cared about more than money,
is just consuming high quality data
because I knew that what I wanted to do
was that I wanted to do everything.
But I can't do everything that I wanted to do everything, but I can't do everything
because I can't be every one. And that's why the redacted model is what it is. It's almost like in
a way it's modeled after some aspects of God. It's I want to be a dispatcher in the node,
in the network. I want to find these nodes and interconnect them. Where's George? He's redacted.
What does he do? No one knows what I do. I don't do anything.
I just enjoy.
I try to change, I try to move the network
and you know, what they say, you know,
the Illuminati or people above us,
there definitely is some level of consciousness
or maybe even individuals like an Elon and Mark Zuckerberg
who can at a whim change the direction of society and people at large.
Absolutely.
I love it, man.
Where can people watching this book call and how do they qualify?
Well, you qualify if you have some mutuals.
Go on my Instagram, George Tweets have, and we'll probably have a lot of mutuals.
And just reach out to me.
I'll look through your stuff.
I'll see if you're just a cool person to talk to and we'll get connected.
Or if you have a referral to say,
normally what I tell people to do is like,
be the best person yourself after that call
and introduce me to the best person you meet.
So if you meet a superstar,
tell them you gotta meet George.
I love it.
Perfect, well, thank you, Sean.
Thanks for coming on, man.
Pleasure.
Yeah, thanks for watching, guys.
As always, see you next time.
Bye, guys.