Escaping the Drift with John Gafford - The Role of AI in Productivity with Ari Meisel
Episode Date: April 29, 2025Visionary entrepreneur Ari Meisel transforms the way we think about productivity and time management. From launching a web design company at just 12 years old to founding the innovative Less Doing Mov...ement, Ari has turned personal challenges, including a bout with Crohn's disease, into opportunities for growth and efficiency. He shares the blueprint that has empowered countless entrepreneurs to reclaim their time and avoid the pitfalls of being overwhelmed by business chaos. Ari's journey is one from the "chronically unemployable" to a successful entrepreneur, enriched by diverse experiences at companies like Freddie Mac and Mac Cosmetics, and under the mentorship of Michael Tomczyk from Wharton. His story is as much about the transformative power of overcoming obstacles as it is about embracing innovation through biohacking. The episode delves into how a shift in health priorities led to the development of unique productivity strategies, culminating in his guidance for founders and CEOs through coaching and writing. The conversation with Ari also ventures into the future of work, highlighting the pivotal role of AI in reshaping personal and professional spaces. With tools like ChatGPT enhancing everything from diet to productivity, Ari discusses both the opportunities and ethical considerations of automation. The episode concludes with practical insights on maximizing productivity through process optimization, challenging the notion of busyness, and advocating for technology to elevate human roles. Tune in for a wealth of practical strategies and inspirational stories that promise to unlock potential and efficiency. CHAPTERS (00:00) - Optimize, Automate, and Outsource for Success (05:29) - Entrepreneurial Journey and Mentorship (14:51) - Overcoming Crohn's Disease Through Biohacking (19:50) - Advanced Biohacking and Dietary Insights (25:06) - Future of Work and Automated Innovation (32:40) - Maximizing Productivity Through Process Optimization (36:55) - Evolving From Startup to Legacy Businesses (46:26) - Productivity Tools and Personal Growth (55:31) - Unlocking Productivity and Solutions 💬 Did you enjoy this podcast episode? Tell us all about it in the comment section below! ☑️ If you liked this video, consider subscribing to Escaping The Drift with John Gafford ************* 💯 About John Gafford: After appearing on NBC's "The Apprentice", John relocated to the Las Vegas Valley and founded several successful companies in the real estate space. ➡️ The Gafford Group at Simply Vegas, top 1% of all REALTORS nationwide in terms of production. Simply Vegas, a 500 agent brokerage with billions in annual sales Clear Title, a 7-figure full-service title and escrow company. ➡️ Streamline Home Loans - An independent mortgage bank with more than 100 loan officers. The Simply Group, A national expansion vehicle partnering with large brokers across the country to vertically integrate their real estate brokerages. ************* ✅ Follow John Gafford on social media: Instagram ▶️ / thejohngafford Facebook ▶️ / gafford2 🎧 Stream The Escaping The Drift Podcast with John Gafford Episode here: Listen On Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/7cWN80gtZ4m4wl3DqQoJmK?si=2d60fd72329d44a9 Listen On Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/escaping-the-drift-with-john-gafford/id1582927283 ************* #escapingthedrift #arimeisel #productivity #timemanagement #entrepreneurship #biohacking #ai #automation #outsourcing #health #diet #futureofwork #efficiency #coaching #innovation #legacybusinesses #productivitytools #personalgrowth #solutions #lessdoingmovement #chatgpt #michaeltomczyk #wharton #crohn'sdisease #optimize #automate #outsource #success #mentorship #entrepreneurialjourney #freddiemac #maccosmetics #negativeexperiences #positiveexperiences #balance #negative #positive #biohackingtechniques #dietaryexperiments #veganism #saturatedfats #butter #butyricacid #lowsugar #highfiber #fermentedfoods #gpt #meallogging #busylifestyle #fivekids #workouts #alcoholconsumption #saunas #sleeppatterns #biohackinggadgets #wellness #globaloutsourcing #bloodtesting #medicalprofessionals #geographicalshifts #employment #ethicalconsiderations #humantasks #machines #government #economy #automatedmanufacturing #humanoidrobots #ultimatekpi #repetitivetasks #busyness #realestate #constraints #innovation #legacy #businessconcepts #zirtual #virtualassistantcompany #externalfunding #onproductivity #oldestcompanies #longevity
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Today's episode of escaping the drift is brought to you by Mando. Are you somebody that stinks?
That sounds crazy or more to the point you got a teenager that stinks because uh,
wow this Mando stuff they sent me a package of it to try out and if you've got that weird odor
emanating out of your teen's room try Mando all over deodorant because this package they got this
man I put it on I put it on the boy and I gotta tell you
He in this room, but never smelled so good. I mean literally you can use this stuff all over you
I'm talking about your feet your butt crack anywhere anywhere. You got skin. This stuff will work as a deodorant
It was created by a doctor it lasts for up to 72. And all of this stuff is baking soda free and paraben free.
So if you want to try it out, if you yourself are stinky or you got a stinky teen, I'm telling
you this stuff will change your life.
You can get right now Mando's starter pack, which is perfect for new customers.
It comes with a solid stick deodorant, cream tube deodorant, two free products of your
choice like a mini body wash or deodorant wipes, you get free shipping and as a special offer for our listeners.
New customers get $5 off a starter pack with our exclusive code that means that you're
getting 40% off of this starter pack.
Just use the code Gafford when you go to shopmando.com.
That's user code Gafford at shopmando.com you're going to get
40% off so support our show let them know that we sent you obviously this is a paid advertiser
which is how we get to be able to do what we do for you guys so check them out spell smell fresher
stay drier boost your confidence from head to toe try mando and now escaping the drift
your confidence from head to toe, try Mando. And now escaping the drift.
And now escaping the drift, the show designed to get you from where you are to where you want to be. I'm John Gafford and I have a knack for getting
extraordinary achievers to drop their secrets to help you want to pad the
greatness. So stop drifting along, escape the drift and it's time to start
right now.
Back again, back again for another episode
of Like It Says in the Opening Man,
the podcast that gets you from where you are
to where you wanna be.
And today, piped in live from the interwebs,
now that we have our interwebs fixed,
we have somebody that is really a master of time.
This is the guy that entrepreneurs
that are drowning in task and drowning
in all kinds of chaos call.
This is the guy that they call when they need help.
He is the founder of the less doing movement.
He is the author of the replaceable founder,
the idea of execution, the art of doing less.
He's helped thousands of business owners
work smarter,
not harder. And he turned his personal battle with Crohn's disease into the blueprint for
ultimate efficiency. And now for you today, he's going to show you how to optimize, automate
and outsource everything. If you are someone that is trapped by your business and don't
have enough time, this today, folks, is going to be the podcast to you. Welcome to the program.
Ladies and gentlemen, this is Ari Maizel, folks, is gonna be the podcast to you. Welcome to the program.
Ladies and gentlemen, this is Ari Maizel.
Ari, how are you, man?
Hey, thanks for having me back.
No, I appreciate it.
So for those of you guys listening,
Ari was nice enough to come back again.
We had a major technical difficulty
that crashed this entire thing about 30 minutes in,
and he is taking time to spend with us again.
So thank you once again for your understanding, Ari.
I appreciate you, man, I do.
Absolutely.
Sometimes do-overs are a good thing.
I know, so let's talk a little bit.
Let's start out.
Like I always like to start out with the nature versus
nurture part of what we do.
So somebody that is as high functioning as you are,
tell me about early Ari, young Ari.
What do you think burned that type of, burned that India?
So that's a good question.
I think that there was a really interesting statistic
that I read a long time ago,
which was from the National Foundation
for Teaching Entrepreneurship,
which said that 74% of young entrepreneurs
come from households where the father is physically
or emotionally absent and the mother is overbearing.
For whatever reason, you can draw some extrapolations. So that was mine, my setup. My father is very emotionally absent, not physically absent. My mother is a Jewish mother, so overbearing.
And I guess that just like squeezes out this like need to overachieve and get recognition
and all sorts of things, which I end up having to fix later as an adult in therapy.
But that's the start of my first company when I was 12, I started working
as a model when I was nine and I was doing children's birthday parties
as a met a magician before that, believe it or not.
So I've always, I've always been working.
What was the first company you started when you were 12?
Website design. So it was a company called Lion Tex. Ari means lion in
Hebrew and Tex was technology extraordinaire. It's like the lamest
thing ever. Lion Tex. So I've had like eight or more companies at this point
and I find like every company I've gotten involved in is basically like
something that I like and then I'm good at and then somebody offers to pay me.
Uh, and so that's what, you know, in 1994, I was 12 and then 1994, you either got a 12 year old who knew HTML or you hired some giant ad company to do a website
for $300,000.
So, uh, I made a website for my father's art gallery and then someone saw it and
asked him, I would do theirs and ended up doing like 150 or so websites before I turned 16
so
Being that you've always kind of had that entrepreneur gene. Have you ever had a job?
You a guy that have you ever worked for somebody else? So interestingly enough. Yes. I've had several jobs
Many many many jobs actually and they just don't last very long
Yeah, I always liked I always like to say that people that function very highly as entrepreneurs are
what I like to call chronically unemployable. Yeah.
Would you say that's you for sure?
I get it. I would be a terrible, I would have, I mean,
I was a terrible employee. I think in some ways,
not because of like quality of work,
because I was like always second guessing the bosses and stuff like that.
I have worked for Freddie Mac, big mortgage company. I've worked
for Mac Cosmetics, which is part of Estee Lauder. I worked my last job before, my very last job,
which I guess was now 23 years ago, was in real estate development with a Japanese real estate
development company that was doing work in Austin. but that lasted about six months and then since then, no, I have not worked for anybody.
Here's a question about that because I know which way I leaned coming out of that same
situation, but do you find that you took away from the bosses that you had into your companies?
Do you think you took more positive things of what they did or did you see things that
they did that you perceived as negative that you're like, I'm never going to do that?
Yeah, I think it's, I think there's a lot more negatives.
You know, so like Freddie Mac is a good example, right?
So Freddie Mac is, you know,
the big government organization for mortgages and stuff.
So I got there for a summer internship and I had seven
bosses that I met my first day.
All seven of them gave
me a project to work on and then all seven of them went on a went to some convention for like a week
and I finished all of the work that they had given me that day that first day and then was just like
you know bouncing around for the rest of the day. I went to actually I grew up in New York City
so like the the the Lincoln's at Tyson's corner or the type, I dunno,
there was some big mall in Maryland that was like mind blowing for me.
I spent more time at that mall the first week than I did working at Freddie Mac.
Plus the company had flex hours.
So you had to do seminars and 45 minutes of work any, any given day,
but the building operated 24 seven.
So I'd come in at like five and be done by lunch essentially and then just be done
So I'm for that a lot of weird ways to organize it. I wouldn't say a government organization is necessarily most efficient
Yeah, so I definitely learned more about what not to do
Would you say there's anybody from that young time of your life that stands out as a mentor that you can say?
This was the person that I kind of modeled after I
life that stands out as a mentor that you can say this was the person that I kind of modeled after?
I don't know that I modeled for say after it, but I definitely had several, several mentors
actually and maybe the most impactful was actually in college is a guy who's still alive
named Michael Tomczyk, who ran the Innovation Center at Wharton. And I worked for him while
I was there. And Michael's sort of big claim to fame is he was one of the original founders of the Commodore 64.
Oh, wow.
Wrote the book on like personal computer wars, essentially, really fascinating guy. But he was
great. He was an army officer, just really, really interesting and was an important part of my growing up, I'd say in a lot of ways.
Yeah. I think the Commodore 64 kind of summed up my childhood,
which was, you know, everybody was getting the Commodore 64,
but my mom was on a budget. So we got the Vic 20, which was
like the model down there.
There it is.
Yeah.
But this is what I had a little bit after you, I guess.
Yeah. Yeah. So we had like the Vic 20, which was like,
and all your friends look down their nose at you like,
oh, you can't get the 64 bit, you can only get the 20.
Yeah, that was the story.
I remember when a friend of mine,
it was like such sour grapes,
a friend of mine got a 28, eight bond modem.
And we're all like,
like you don't even need that if you're running a business.
14 fourths is fine.
I know you're like, you're hating up at him.
You're like, no, it doesn't work.
Oh my gosh.
So at what point, now you went to Wharton, which, you know, we talked about a little
bit about the last podcast that we'll never see light.
Eh, to me, that's like the super bowl of business.
And it is, I know you didn't take it.
There's that much of a compliment.
I guess us normies looking from the outside in, we see it that way. How did that experience
kind of change you shape you and what was the value you got out of that?
Yeah, you know, it's interesting. People, there's obviously a lot of cloud around Morton
and I'm very happy that I went there. And it's definitely opened doors for me to be
there that I went there. There's no question. But like it's been for a very, very long time,
it's been a known thing that like Harvard produces
more CEOs and Wharton produces more operations analysts
kind of people.
So it does a much better job of creating like human machines,
I guess in a way,
but it doesn't necessarily create leaders.
And I hate to overgeneralize, but that's one of the things
that was like a big issue when I was there.
The other thing is that the entrepreneurship major
had basically gone defunct in the 90s.
So while I was there, I actually worked with
a few other students and we recreated it
and redesigned it from the ground up,
the entrepreneurship major.
But Wharton, I don't even know now if Wharton is in the top
20 schools for entrepreneurship, Babson is kind of the standard.
So it kind of depends what you want and what you think you want and what kind of
experience you want. But
I was there for three years, so I graduated a year early and I graduated
with two majors and two minors and a terrible GPA that, you know, I got a job right out of college, obviously, but
it was, it was like a 2.68 GPA, which I think is barely passing. And I have a handwritten
personal letter from the dean thanking me for my service to the school. So like it, that was just
how I operated. You know, I knew what I was there for and it was not to get a job at Goldman.
I knew what I was there for and it was not to get a job at Goldman.
Right. Well, you know, it's really interesting that you say that because I think people think so
linear and opportunities like that, like graduate top of your class,
then get a job at Goldman. Like that's the linear way to do it.
But you probably,
your recommendation from the Dean thanking you or the president university was probably worth as much as a 4.0 would have been to real world executives.
Right, exactly. Yeah. And that's what I always said. So like another good example of that is that I had this incredible real estate development class with and the teacher was the former CFO of Trammell Crowe. So like big time real estate guy. And the class was so cool
because every week we would do a case study
on a real project that had been developed.
And the next week he would bring in
the person who developed it.
The guy was very connected and just very cool.
And I was doing terribly in the class.
And I knew that I wanted to be a real estate developer,
but my analysis, so I was, it's really funny.
This is like really sort of like exemplifies how this
works. So we had to do these one page executive summaries essentially. So we would have hundreds
of pages. These cases would take hours and hours and hours. And the very first line of
the page was I would invest in this project or I would not invest in this project. And
then you have to give it an analysis. So in the entire class, which I had to get a permit to take the class because it was
an MBA class, I always got the right answer in terms of investing or not investing, but
my analysis was terrible.
So on paper, it didn't make sense, but I just knew what made sense for a good project.
And we met, I met with him at one point, I was like, I'm getting really bad grades in
your class, but I really want to do this for a living.
And he's like, Yeah, look, if you, if you try to get a job somewhere, I would be surprised if you make it six months, like you need to go do this, this and this.
And it was he was a mentor, too. And so what I always say is like, I got a shitty grade in real estate development. It was like, I got a C- in real estate
development, which I ended up doing for 25 years. But of
all the people in my class that got A's, I don't know how many
of them are still in touch with the teacher.
Sure. Yeah. Because they don't remember him. So the teacher
obviously recognized that you had, it's odd that you're
teaching a class that's based in math and science, effectively.
But you also understand there's an art to it. That kind of the art side of it is where the real success comes from.
Cause I, I, I'd like to think that the people that are really successful in
business depend on those that think linear or data that helps them give them
data points and make decisions. But at the end of the day,
there's always kind of a nuance that runs between the numbers that if you can't
see that you're not going to get there.
Right. Exactly. Uh. And you know, it also like you have to be able to connect the dots to the real world.
A really good example actually is what's happening right now in the world with tariffs, right?
If you look at Homo economicus, you know, the perfect version of like somebody who responds
the right way to economic changes, like you learned this in macroeconomics in the first year of college,
20% increase in tariffs should reduce
a 20% reduction in demand.
That's how it should work.
But we can't grow coffee in America.
Right?
Like so, some people still want Swiss chocolate,
even if it's double the price.
Yeah.
That's like the context that really matters.
How does that actually affect the real world? Let me ask you this. Now,
obviously when did you get diagnosed with Crohn's disease? Cause that kind of started this whole journey that you're on now.
When did that happen?
So I had just finished this really big real estate developer project in upstate
New York and Binghamton and I was 23.
So you're 23.
And for those that don't understand what Crohn's disease is
and don't wanna Google it,
how did you know you had it?
What was it?
How was it affecting you?
What was it?
Yeah, so I didn't actually, I didn't know what it was.
In retrospect, I'd actually been having symptoms
since I was 14, but it was so infrequent
that we never got it checked out.
And so Crohn's is a chronic inflammatory
congestion condition that affects the digestive tract.
It is considered to be incurable by the medical community and it is very dilating, very painful.
And for most people, it means frequent trips to the bathroom, not being able to sort of
draw nutrients effectively out of your food. But for me, I had what's called the obstructive kind.
So basically food would get stuck in my intestines and create blockages, creates scarring. It's one
of the most painful things actually, like a human being can experience is the stretching of your
intestines. Oh God. Yeah. I had about once with diverticulitis once and I've heard that it's similar to that.
So to have what I had just, you know, fluke-ishly one time to have that as a repetitive thing.
I can't even imagine, dude.
That's dreadful.
Yeah.
Threadful thing.
But how did that change the trajectory you're on into where you are now?
Obviously that was a catalyst.
I know you've talked about that.
Yeah.
So I've been working these crazy hours.
I was, I was working in construction, like
hands-on in construction for sub for three
years at that point.
And I also had amassed $3 million of personal
debt when I was 20, you know, great.
And I, the short answer is that I went from
working 18 hours a day to working an hour a day
because I was just so weak and sick and unable and I started taking a lot of medicine and
Initially what it started with was sort of this biohacking journey
which was
Really starting to take shape as a movement at that point
And the idea of like looking at all the blood tests
I've been getting all the different medicines and supplements and trying to experiment, that sort of analytical look at my health really, I feel like formed the basis for the
first part of my system of productivity, which is optimize.
Because optimizing to me is really looking at how we do what we do and really digging
into the shining of light as it were.
But also, and what I feel is sort of the genesis for everything that's
come since then, is that that idea of what would you do if you could only work
an hour a day is a fascinating question. I love to ask people that because
there's so many productivity systems out there that are really about like eking
out every last little percentage of your day and your hour and what you're doing.
And you ask somebody what would you do if you had to leave the office an hour early?
Most of them just say they would skip lunch.
But if you say to somebody like,
what if you only had an hour a day to get things done?
At that point, it's really not a question
about what would you do, it's really wouldn't you do.
And if the things that you wouldn't do
still need to get done, then who or increasingly what
is gonna do them for you?
It's just like a very mind bending kind of experience. So that
question is what really led to me starting to experiment with
all sorts of different productivity methods. A lot of
the things that I teach are very counter intuitive to what a lot
of other productivity people teach. And, and it worked. And
it's grown since it's grown since then to coaching,
speaking, writing all that stuff.
Yes, I don't think people fully grasp that concept until something happens either to you or to somebody like that's close to you. A friend of mine that were in business with his wife,
they were in Hawaii and his wife was pregnant and they were just there on vacation and she
had a complication where she couldn't fly. And so all of a sudden you got six months left
on this pregnancy, your business is here
and she can't leave the island.
I mean, she can't go on an airplane.
So he just figured it out how to run his business
from Hawaii and now I'm pretty sure they go back there
for several months every year,
just because they figured it out.
And I think, you know, they say that necessity is the mother of invention, of course. And
I just think people have to get there. Now that obviously led you to writing your first
book, right? Which I want to talk a little bit about it. The first book was the art of
work. That was the first book, right? Art of, uh, light of love doing the first book.
That was the first one. So obviously that book, like you said, well,
you know what, I want to go back a little bit further because you glossed over something that
I love, which was, we talked about biohacking. So what were the things that you did to get ahead
of your Crohn's disease? That's the first question. The second question is, what do you still do today?
Second question is what, what do you still do today? Are you still adding new stuff to the protocol?
What is the Ari Mizel biohacking protocol?
That's what I want to hear.
Yeah.
So it was definitely an interesting experience.
There were definitely things that I did that did not help.
There were some things that made me feel worse.
But ultimately what I learned, so I tried all sorts of things.
I tried a vegan diet, a vegetarian, pescatarian. At this point, I can pretty much eat,
I mean, I eat anything I want,
but I believe that the best diet overall,
it's not about being gluten-free,
it's not about pescatarian or anything,
it's that it is low in sugar
and very, very high in saturated fats.
Okay.
So grass-fed butter, pasture-fed egg yolks, heritage raised pork, grass-fed beef.
Butter is, I think butter should be prescribable, honestly,
because one of the things that a lot of people don't realize is that butter is
called butter because of butyric acid, and butyric acid is one of the main
ways that probiotics in your gut, or the bacteria in your gut,
communicate with each other.
So butter it up.
As much as you can eat. Yeah.
All right. Tell me about it.
It's incredible. And then there's a bunch of supplements. I think that, uh,
the supplements are kind of easy. There's some weird ones. I definitely tried it. I don't take those anymore. Now I'm just probiotic and krill oil and, uh,
vitamin D and some zinc, I think is what I'm usually doing now. But the other one is we don't have enough
fermented foods in the diet in America, as far as I'm concerned. So things like sauerkraut, even
pickles, like real pickles, and kimchi and other fermented foods, fermented foods and real yogurt,
like all that kind of stuff, I think is really good for Crohn's disease.
But ultimately it's really an inflammatory condition.
So stress is a big component and that's really kind of where less doing played into this.
So nowadays, I wouldn't say that I'm particularly biohacking at this point, but I am using ChachiPT
to do all my meal logging, which has been incredible.
Through all of this process, I've never found a meal planner or not meal planner,
a meal logger that I liked. I think they're all flawed in a lot of ways.
And what's nice about ChachiBT is that you can be proactive. So you can say to it,
and I just did this at lunch. So I have a cold right now. And I said to it, and I just did this at lunch. I have, so I have a cold right now. And I was, I said to it, I was like,
I don't feel great right now.
And I kind of like to have dessert,
which I don't normally have.
So I took a picture we have from Costco,
banana, not muffins and pound cake.
I said, which one would be a better choice?
And it said, do go with pound cake
because it's a little bit lighter.
Your protein's looking great for the day.
So fire.
Great.
So let me get this straight.
Cause I use my fitness pal,
which can be cumbersome sometimes.
And I find that the macros can be off a little bit.
So you just created GPT and said,
you're gonna log on my macros
and just log into that one particular GPT and say,
here's what I just ate.
I mean, are you giving it the exact,
are you just taking pictures?
That's what you're doing.
I'm taking pictures.
And it's- Of your plate.
Yeah, it's really, really good.
And, but I can, I find it to be really accurate and it understands what my goals
are. Right. So I'd like to sort of lean out a little bit. Um, I want to increase
fiber. I think a lot of Americans also, we don't have fiber. Yeah. Also it knows
the vitamins I'm taking. So it literally, the other day it was like, you've been
taking zinc for five days. You should cycle off it for two days.
Like, which I was like, I never knew that was a thing.
So, and I asked it why, and it told me.
And the other thing that's really cool with that
is that you can take a picture of your fridge
and your pantry.
So you can say to it like, hey, I just had, you know,
this sandwich or whatever, I'm still hungry.
Like, what can I add to it that would be a good choice? It will say to me, and just had, you know, this sandwich or whatever. I'm still hungry. Like what can I add to it? That would be a good choice.
It will say to me, and it has said to me, it's like, take the,
take one of the apples from the fridge and the Indian yogurt and put that in.
It was with, you know, and if you want something sweet,
add a little bit of honey. It's great.
It's wild. No dude, man. And I, but I guess that's your whole thing. Right.
So, but, but outside of like food and supplements,
are you doing it like, is there a hyperbaric chambers,
or your cold plunger, any of that stuff?
I mean, I have five kids, man.
Like, you know, there's a limit
to how much biohacking gadgets I can do.
We had an infrared sauna, which we just sold,
we're moving to a new house and I may get another one.
I love my sauna.
Yeah.
I hate the cold. I hate it. but I have tried to be a bowl, the face in the bowl of water a couple
of times, which actually I think is pretty good.
I do like that.
Uh, but I also, I work out twice a week.
Like I, I just, I don't drink either.
That's another one.
So I used to, and I probably will again, but at this point in my life, my sleep
is generally fairly shitty just because of the lifestyle that we have, um, with
the kids and I work one overnight shift a week, and I'm will again, but at this point in my life, my sleep is generally fairly shitty just because of
the lifestyle that we have with the kids and I work one
overnight shift a week on the EMS squad like so recognizing
that my sleep is shitty, like it's not worth it to me to have
a drink because I'll just feel like crap the next day.
Are you do you were, were you were a tracker to track your
sleep? Are you doing all the stuff?
I have. I mean, I don't need a tracker to know that it's not
great, but I, I, I, so I operate pretty well, honestly, I'm not
that much sleep. Uh, I don't know how long I'll be able to
pull that off for the rest of my life, but yeah, I've used the
aura ring. I think the aura ring is the best tracker there is,
but currently, uh, I go through these phases where I've track a
lot and then I don't track anything because I kind of just
have a sense of things.
Yeah. But I do do my a sense of things. Yeah.
But I do do my own blood testing every six months.
So that's usually that's like the big one too for me.
And that's as well.
Yeah.
I think everything checking your blood.
I get my blood and I upload it to chat.
GPT immediately.
I learned that, um, it's 10 X health was scaling, right?
And obviously Gary Breck has had a major falling out
with them and I lived through that.
Like I understand why he had a falling out
because I signed up for 10X Health and, you know,
I did the blood work and it came back
and the way that it kind of laid it out on the sheet,
like I basically Googled doctored myself
and gave myself liver cancer based on these results.
I was freaking out and right, cause I'm like, cause they're like, well, a doctor's going to talk to you in three weeks.
And I'm like, what do you mean three weeks?
This thing says I have liver cancer, which it wasn't.
It was just some nonsense that happened to my blood work.
But now whenever I get my blood, I get every three months, I go right to chat.
GBT.
I don't wait to, I don't wait to have the doctor review it may ages goes in
over everything tells me if I need to adjust my supplements and tells me if I'm
taking too much of anything, it's great.
It's wonderful. I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, I, to, I don't wait to have the doctor review it made is goes over everything tells me if I need to adjust my supplements and tells me if I'm
taking too much of anything, it's great.
It's wonderful.
I imagine that chat GBT has just taken the con or whatever AI you're using
has taken so many of the concepts in your, in, in your methodology over
the years and just turbocharged them.
Yeah, absolutely.
So, so one of the things, which I think is a really cool sort of thing to talk
about now is I've, uh, you know, in my career, I've worked with hundreds of
VA's I've outsourced thousands of hours of stuff and spent tens of thousands of
dollars on it.
I have not had a team or any support staff in any shape or form in the last
two years because I do everything with Chatch She became, I'm involved in a lot of different things and a lot of different nonprofits and
municipal communities and stuff like that.
And it chat, she'd be team manages all of it.
So I find that amazing.
Well, I had a guy reach out to me that I had used as an outsourcer previously in India and he was
like, Hey, do you have any work? And I was like, dude, same story.
I'm like, man, you know, art goes out to you,
but you should probably learn to do something else
because I think, I think there's a large segment
of the Indian economy, Pakistan economy,
that part of the world, Bangladesh, the Philippines,
that's, it's gonna be hard hit by this.
Absolutely. Yeah.
I would say this is that you can't,
I don't think that we're at a point
where we can outsource or AI taste.
I guess we can outsource it,
but we can't really AI taste as far as I'm concerned.
So that's something that I think
will hold out for a little while.
But yes, on mass, I agree with you.
But I would also say this, like I've done so much outsourcing over the years. something that I think will hold out for a little while. But yes, on mass, I agree with you.
But I would also say this,
I've done so much outsourcing over the years.
There's sort of geographical shifts that happen.
So like 10 years ago, India was the place to go to for VAs,
but I wouldn't say that that's necessarily the case now.
You're seeing a lot more coming out of the Philippines
than you're also seeing
some of the most ones coming out of Pakistan. India is probably better now for SEO
kind of stuff so like that you see sort of this movement all over the place and
like graphic design is a great example there was a time coding actually there
was a time where Ukraine had like the best outsource coders and this that
changed way way before the Russian war and stuff but like that changed at at some point, uh, graphic designers used to be able to get
amazing graphic designers on a social and can't do that.
Well, I know we're taking kind of a hard left turn into the unknown now, but I
mean, do you kind of watch some of the stuff you can do with chat GBT and do you
lay a, do you ever lay awake in bed and think, what are people going to do?
Like aren't every, is it literally every time you,
something comes in your brain, you're killing a job?
Cause I know that's the way I think about it.
And I'm like, oh my gosh, we're going to get to a point
where what are people going to do?
So it's a good question.
My way of thinking about it is this,
is that if you give
work to a human being that a computer can do, you are in essence dehumanizing
that person, right? Because it's very hard for somebody to engage with the work and
do it well and not make errors when they know and you know that a computer can do
it and the computer should be doing it. So in an ideal world, the idea of the replaceable founder is that we're replacing people up, not out.
In reality, that doesn't always end up being the case.
And sometimes people have to end up reinventing themselves
and getting into a different line of work.
But it's not so much like, are we taking the jobs?
It's more like just how are we going to adapt to that?
Because it's like an inevitability.
Right? No, it not, it's like an inevitability. Right?
No, it completely is. And I wonder, you know, part of the tariff push is bringing manufacturing
back to the States, not even though most of those plants, as they're building them into the new
world will be automated plants, but they're still going to need bodies to run them.
Do you think there's a thought in our government of,
wow, look at all of these people that are not going to have jobs.
We need to do something to create an economy at scale where they can work.
Yeah. So I actually have a client who just bought six humanoid robots
to work in his warehouse. Like that's, we're there.
So I think it's called Futurist, maybe.
I can't remember the name of it, but like they're getting delivered next week. Like this is, he're there. So the company called, I think it's called Futurist maybe, I can't remember the name of it,
but like it's, they're getting delivered next week.
Like this is, he's there, you know?
So on the one hand, you can think about it this way, right?
In an ideal world, what this ends up doing
is making every product cheaper, right?
So somebody with like a job that makes $7 an hour
could still buy everything they want
because you know it now costs three cents to make the thing because we don't
have people doing it so and obviously I think that there's a lag for that kind
of thing but long term that's probably something that will happen the more AI
stuff that we have the cheaper things can get although there is a I can't remember
the name of it there is is an effect, it's some
like psychological effect where it has to do with, it's an old thing, it has to do with coal
plants in the 1880s, but essentially the idea is as we get more and more efficient, the idea is that
we have less jobs, we need less people, but the truth is when it actually ends up happening is we
just end up building and making more of those efficient things.
So same thing with AI chips as the cheaper and we'll be able to do more
faster. That doesn't mean we're going to need less.
We're going to end up needing more and it will expand faster. So, uh,
I think it's more like there's like a seesaw effect, right?
So it's going to, we're going to lose some jobs and then some new jobs are
created and do some new jobs.
And that's going to be really awful for a lot of people
for sure. But the ones who don't change are the ones that will, you know, not come out on top.
Maybe I'm just watching too much black mirror lately. I don't know. Watch it on
refresh. It's a black mirror. The dystopian future is upon us. Sorry. It's terrible.
Yeah. It's a possibility. I mean,
it's a possibility. Well, let's try to help some people that are still living
and working today, shall we? Instead of depressing everybody with a,
our podcast. Now you're so big on optimization in that first book on basically
optimize, automate and outsource.
How should you go about finding things to opt, like walk me
through your data point analysis of your daily work day, of your daily work life
to identify things that you can do that with. So there's a couple ways to look at
that. So I have a framework called the ultimate KPI, where you look at the 20 things that you do
on a regular basis.
And that could be everything from,
I'm meeting with my team to I'm doing podcasts
to I'm making deals, whatever it is,
20 things that you do on a very regular basis.
And then the idea is to look at those 20
and pick 16 of them that in one year's time,
you will no longer be doing.
And basically we reverse engineer, are we going to optimize it automated or
outsource it? And it's, uh,
it's a sort of a fascinating process to go through because essentially everybody
in organizations should do this,
but what you're kind of asking people to do is like,
if you were to be fired tomorrow, you know,
what would we have to do to replace you?
And what that does again, is it frees people
from the shackles of the level that they're at
so that they can rise up to the next level
as far as I'm concerned.
So they can push that work down and down.
So that's the first thing.
We're gonna have to take this, again,
it's like shining a light.
We look at how we do what we do
and start to dig into the processes.
The next one, which is a big one about automation
is the word every, right?
So look at your day and anytime you use the word every,
so every time a customer signs up, right?
Every time I record a podcast, every time I travel,
the word every suggests
that you're doing something repetitively.
And anything that we're doing repetitively
probably can be automated definitely in part,
probably in its entirety. So that's a
ripe opportunity for optimization or for automation and then once we have optimized and automated
at that point whatever's left that's when we can look at outsourcing or delegating to some sort of
specialist or generalist but if you do it before that which a lot of people do they try to outsource
first because it's this like hands-off knee-j reaction. I don't want to touch this. That's where we get into problems.
Well, you know what I found is, and I challenged the people that work for me to do this a lot,
which is in that process of going through your day, how much actual work do you actually do?
Cause especially being in real estate, right? You know, we have a very large real estate company and realtors are famous for this.
Like it's like, Oh,
I get up in the morning and I come to the office and then I have a cup of coffee
and then I talk about my weekend and then I got to go on social media cause we
got to do that. And then I do this. It's like, and then, you know,
by the time this and it's two 30, I got to go pick up the kids.
And then I kind of drop them off and then I come back.
It's like most realtors actually do an hour's worth of real work in an eight
hour day, but yet they've positioned themselves to feel like they've had this
long day. Oh, I went to this meeting. I sat in this class. I did this,
but activities that will actually bring you dollars,
they're only spending maybe an hour of actual work a day. So I mean,
do you find that in other industries or is it just really sales? I mean,
where do you find that, that loss of just time?
Yeah. So I think the actual average across all industries of productive work in
a nine to five kind of position is like an hour and 12 minutes of productive
work.
All right. So I'm not just saying, we're not realtors for that. That's okay.
I mean, it's kind of like 80 20, right?
Like the other another really funny statistic is that like in the average not in the average nonfiction book
There's like 12 pages of actual content. Everything else is just love
so like we see that all the time and
What it's one of the reasons that oftentimes when people say to me that they have no time or they don't have enough time, typically what I find is that
they actually have too much time and they're just not using it correctly at
all. I have no idea. I love when someone I it's, I mean,
I'm kind of a jerk about this, I think, but some, when people are like,
Oh, I'm so busy. How have you been? Oh, I'm just so busy.
I always like to be like, what are you busy with?
And like nine times out of 10, it's like,
Uh, I'm busy. I'm just busy. It's like with
what? Like, are you you're not busy. You're overwhelmed with
the thought of all the things you should be doing that you're
not doing.
Exactly. So people have too much time. There's an unpopular
opinion, sometimes too much money. Like that's where
these restrictions are really what breed innovation. As you said, mother invention, necessity of
the mother of all invention, restrictions are the mother of innovation, as far as I've
been certain.
Well, after you wrote the first book, now it's just so interesting to see how the world
has changed so much, but the concepts remain the same from 2016 when the first book came
out to this. Because the second book, I I think was idea to execution. Is that right?
No, let's do more living and then I wrote another version of it called the art of less doing and then I think the third one
Was idea to execution?
Okay now
That's it. I feel like you started to shift more thinking
From everyday use and to shift more thinking, um, from everyday use into being more specific
with founders, CEOs, that type of stuff.
It came to use or may know that.
Was there something that happened in your life that created that out of necessity or
was what happened there?
Yeah.
So, uh, it was 2015, August of 2015, uh, a very large virtual assistant company at the
time called Zertral, which I think is still around
in a different forming I thought.
But they very suddenly went out of business.
They basically ran out of capital
and I guess requirement wise,
they had to let everybody know like,
hey, we can't pay you so you gotta go home.
So it was like a Sunday night.
No, I'm talking like a Wednesday night.
Excuse me.
They sent out this email
and I had a lot of clients that were using virtual and I had
worked with several of the VAs.
And so the whole day, the next day I'm getting calls from both sides being like, VAs who
needed jobs and people who were like, I just lost my assistant, like my life's over.
And I was connecting different people like throughout the day.
And that night I had planned on having dinner with a friend of mine. And he and I had dinner and he was working in finance, but he was working on a productivity app.
So we were talking about it and about Zortrol.
And he was like, why don't you just start your own VA company at this point?
And I was like, I don't want to do that.
I was like, let's do it.
He's going, well, my wife's pregnant with our fourth child. Like, things are good. And he was like, let's do it. He's going well. My you know, my wife's pregnant with our fourth child, like,
things are good. And he was like, what if we do it together? I was like, Okay, but we got to do it quickly. Because
I'm going away, you know, next week with my family, and I guess we'll try it. So we launched two days later, a VA
company with with basically two VA's, which was me and my partner. And I took 10 of my
coaching clients and brought them into it. And we did
everything with free tools. And we sort of built everything from
the ground up in like a less doing image in a way. And three
months later, we were operating comfortably, we had like three
or four assistants and maybe 20 or 30 clients.
And then we've spoken to this, no, sorry, we like 20 clients. And we spoke at an event at Joe
Polish's event, actually, you know, Joe Polish, right. And got 70 clients from that one presentation
and like, you know, quadrupled the business overnight, essentially, and then grew from there.
So what we wanted to do, the idea was to document month by month
what we were doing to build the business
because we never put a penny into the company.
We did a million dollars the first year,
then 183 people working for us in 17 time zones.
And I think at the end of the first year,
we had like three or 400 clients
and everything was being managed with Trello
and amazing automations that my partner built,
coded custom
stuff. So that was a big turning point there because at that point, not only up until then,
I've been doing a lot of work coaching wise with individuals about their individual issues.
But at that point, not only we were growing our own business, but we were starting to
service a lot of small business owners. So we were just seeing a lot more issues and
challenges and I was doing a weekly webinar series for them, for all our
clients. So, uh, it was a lot of like on the job learning in a way.
Yeah, I can, I mean, you can definitely see that kind of shift through the way
that you're writing was. And even with the most recent book now, the replaceable
founder, I think, I think you've gone from like, like you've gone from your everyday employee to the person running the business to
now CEO founder level.
And it's almost like that trilogy is now complete.
Um, in that book, just go ahead.
Sorry.
Yeah.
So the latest book is actually called on productivity, which is like my sort of,
Oh, I'm sorry.
Yeah, no, no.
The rest was second to next or last year, but then I did this sort of like Oh, I'm sorry. Yeah, no, no. The best place to find her was second to last to last to go.
But then I did this sort of like opus at the end.
But the thing that I think may have also had some contribution there is so I've always
been really interested in history.
And in particular, I got the I found this like passion around the world's oldest companies.
So there are hundreds of companies in operation today that have been around for hundreds of years. And there are a few dozen
companies that have been operating continuously for over a thousand years. And there are about eight traits that these companies
tend to share that make them last so long. And a lot of those, I think in some ways have informed the things that I've written about and what really makes a company that is
a thing unto itself as opposed to just a CEO who owns their own
job.
Well, let's talk about that. What are the eight traits that
make 1000 year old company? You don't get to throw that out
there without me digging deep. Come on, man. That's solid.
That's
so so one of them is that they rarely if ever took outside
investment, which I think
is really interesting.
They always, and that wasn't a protector protective thing.
It was more just like they wanted to grow into their own steam.
So there were no unicorns per se that grew.
Well, I know that's not true.
Actually, there are many of them, but they didn't like they weren't overnight successes,
you know, by name and again, so, so like there's a hotel in Japan
that started in 702.
There was a restaurant in Austria that started in 806
that is still running.
You know, think about the restaurant business.
There are beer, beer gardens.
There are banks,
because banks used to be private institutions.
All sorts of really crazy stuff, and
everything in between. But so
that's one. Another one is that
they had very, very strong sort of guiding principles,
but all of them were very open to change and like accepting new things, because these companies have existed through literal
regime changes, wars, famine,
disease, like all sorts of things.
Another one was that all of them tend to see themselves as a member of a greater community.
So the company was not just like a thing unto itself doing its own thing for profit.
It was part of a bigger of a, of a bigger community around and, and, and acted as such.
A good example of that is Fiskars.
So, you know, Fiskars, the mix of the orange
handled scissors and like gardens.
Yeah.
So Fiskars is a 350 year old iron
smelting company from Finland.
Um, and Zildjian, Zildjian that makes the big symbols.
Right.
Symbols.
Zildjian is 400 years old.
It was a Turkish guy who had this secret formula
for making a metal alloy that was like, no,
the secret was never shared over all these generations.
And that's Zildjian, 400 years old, right?
And now like, you know, greatest,
like every rock band in the world has Zildjian.
That's what they play.
Lots of really fascinating stories like that.
And there's really inspiring.
So, and then like the oldest of all time is Congo Gumi, which is the construction
company from Japan, which started in the fifth century.
And essentially it was liquidated four years ago, uh, because it just couldn't
at that, there was just too much debt and Japanese economy kind of screwed them over.
But the 80th generation of the Congo family had to put this business out of
business. We're talking about pressure.
Oh God. That's in a Japan.
That guy was probably wearing one of those signs and getting him publicly humiliating
to whatever they do with their business culture. Yeah. And cause I think when we,
you know, when we build a business,
I think everybody wants their business to be around forever. But I think, uh, you know, again,
Yes. Yes. I think your first business, yes. And I can tell you this because I think your first business, when you build it, you, this is like, it's like your first child, right? You want it to be there forever. You want to have it.
You want it to be there forever. You want to have it. I think subsequently, when you start opening businesses, you're like, okay, we need to set this up right now to sell.
Like we need to, we're building this to sell because that's what you need to do when the
market is right. And I think, I think that's the evolution, but that very first one, man, I think
people, I said, maybe I think they just want to keep it for as long as they can. And I think people
probably wait too long to get out of them too, which causes some problems. Yeah. Like could they have sold off that Japanese
company earlier and still made money or do they wait too long to the end? Now granted you'd be
going for 800, however many, you know, hundreds of years, 1400 years. So the odds are probably
in your favor to stick it out through another bad turn. but, but, but probably, you know, they should
have liquidated a little faster.
Now, my question is this.
So I want to talk specifically about chat GBT and the impact that it's making on your
methodologies in those things.
I mean, I, I have so many people are like, Oh, I use it to write my Twitter posts.
It's like, no, you don't understand.
Tell me what you think is the most powerful thing people can do with chat to BT right now,
because technically speaking, they could ask it to be you and help them find inefficiencies in
their business based on your writings. Right? Yeah. So I actually don't think that that is
the most valuable use totally could do that.
Okay, good. And interestingly enough, the first version of Chassis BT, I guess the second one,
maybe I think the second one had was familiar with my writing. Right. So like it was one of
the first things I asked was like, you know, Laurie, my daughter was like, yes, he wrote this and
that. So like, write this in the style of Ari, my zone and did it. So whatever, you know,
compendium of knowledge they
scanned their first set from, like my book was in it I guess. But at least up until now,
I think now is a little bit different. It really couldn't innovate and iterate further
in some ways. One of the things that I think is the most valuable thing for me is I am a really bad
reader.
So I've always just been much more of an audio visual guy.
I'll watch a movie and I will remember every single line for the rest of my life from watching
it once.
But I read a book and I have to read the same page seven times.
And I know that about myself.
Yeah, I'm similar, but unfortunately,
the stuff that I tend to memorize
is every line from the movie Point Break
and nothing pretty much else of value.
That's a terrible one to remember all the time.
Just to drive my wife insane, I guess.
I think that's the reason I have it.
Well, pretty much, yeah.
I could do that movie cold, pretty much I could.
God, I don't even know why. don't know why I have no idea anyway
Such a piece of shit movie to at the same time. I know I know I know I know
At least now, you know, I'm honest
So I am involved
Fortunately, unfortunately, I've evolved in a bunch of things right now that require a reading. So I've been elected to the school board here in Princeton, where we live. I am on the vice president of our local rescue squad. I'm on the executive board of the Jewish Center. I'm also on this municipal committee on affordable housing, racial, economic and social equity. And the only way that I can do all of that is because I have a project in Chachi Petit for each one and every time like the school board, we have a meeting tomorrow where we have to review 20 really boring policies that have been handed down by the state, like everything from
smoking policies in the school till like how parents are supposed to behave at sporting events.
Right. So like, and these are like, you know, very dense legal stuff.
So I can just load all of those in basically be like,
do I have any comments on this?
And it was like, yeah, you should ask this, this and this.
It just spits out,
kids shouldn't smoke,
parents should act like adults.
That's what you're supposed to do, there you go.
And now Ari has his opinion.
So it's like, and that's the thing is like, that's
the greatest value I can possibly give to it other than being like,
otherwise I could just be in a meeting and be like, yeah, it looks good.
You know, so that's really important.
I have found with, with me, as much as it speeds things up, it also tends to
slow things down because like, if somebody sends me, like, for example, I'm, I'm working with
some guys that are really good, sub-stacked AI developers and
built an outbound sales rep for me, built an out route, an
outbound, I trained it.
Um, our scripts, our objections are everything on calling
through old leads for our agents.
Just trying to re-engage with old leads.
You can make 10,000 calls a day, trained by me.
Really, really good.
I mean, to the point where, you know,
when they were testing it, I had it call me.
And I said, what other features look for a house?
And I'm like, well, I need a five bedrooms, four baths.
And the kids are getting ready to leave for college.
So me and the wife are gonna need a sex dungeon.
And the AI replied back to that.
The AI replied, it's okay, five bedrooms, betters for Beth and apparently you and the wife are
looking for some private time. Hey, no judgment. That's what it
responded. And it was shocking that it said that like, of
everything else that happened during the call, that to me was
the most profound. But these guys had sent me an NDA just to
start getting this process working where normally I just
would have breezed through it and like, okay, no problem. And
send it back, send it back.
But instead of send it through and it was like, well, you know, I said,
send it to Chad GBT.
What are the pitfalls from me in this NDA?
And I was like, well, it's pretty standard with tech firms, but we
don't like the feedback where they can essentially take everything that
you're giving them back as feedback and use it to create products to sell to
other people.
And I was like, okay.
So I pushed back on the feedback part of the NDA
and the guys were like, yeah, no problem.
We'll take it out.
So yes, this is speeding things up.
It's also kind of slowing things down
because I'm like, well, wait a second.
Something that I wouldn't even thought of
before is now front of mind.
Yeah.
And so-
By the way, have you tried Sesame for the voice stuff?
No, no, no, no.
I'm gonna write it down though.
What is it? Goodness. Try having a conversation with Maya at Sesame. Okay. It will blow your
mind. So yeah, so that's that's the other thing that's been really great is the
last couple weeks. Chachi BT particularly had really updated their image
generation capabilities. Yeah, Great. Way better.
We're building a new house right now.
We're going to be moving in in June and being able to say,
this is the vanity that we bought from restoration hardware.
And this is the lights that we just got from Creighton barrel,
put this into an image and it does it is like insane. Our,
our designer was like, Oh my God, I'm going to be out of a job. I was like,
well, no people still have to make the choices. Cause you job. I was like, well, no people stuff to make the choices
You can't because like you said you can't teach taste
Boards where you're cutting and pasting things like now you can just throw it in Cheshire. It's amazing. So
That's been really great. The other thing is like well, I love the video feature in Cheshire
So I can show it like hey, I the other day I was making a recipe of
Biscuits with my son and the consistency just didn't look right. So like does this look right? It's like no
It's a little try add this in it just makes a lot of things easier. It really does
It's shocking. So I I just I'm guessing
It's gonna be interesting to see what we have
I'm gonna lean hopefully into your positive thought
that we'll just need more things and the world will adapt
and not the dystopian future that Black Mirror
has presented to us where we're all being hunted down
by robot dogs, forest, we're not.
Because we're just, yeah, I mean,
that's the day that we don't want us for,
we ought to be like, you know what?
We don't really need you people.
Just, I don't know what you do.
I don't know what you bring to the table here.
Have you ever seen the movie Runaway?
Runaways with Tom Selleck from the 80s?
Yes, I have.
Yes, yes, yes, yes, the cyborg.
Right, so like, I mean, we'll have to adapt.
Maybe that'll be the new set of jobs
is the people that have to hunt down and kill robots.
More exciting than sitting at a desk.
I guess that's how it is.
All right, well, Ari, if they want to find you,
want to learn more about all of your great systems,
if they want to work with you, man,
how do they find you, man?
So everything is at let'sdoing.com.
I do all of my coaching over Voxer asynchronously.
So if people want to get in touch with Voxer, they can.
They can go to VoxwithAri.com.
And I really mean that.
Reach out, it's going to be me. There's no automation there, no VA go to voxwithre.com. And I really mean that, reach out, it's gonna be me.
There's no automation there, no VA's, it's just me.
And I love talking about productivity
and helping people grow their businesses.
I have one last question that I'm just curious about,
because I really don't know the answer to it.
I can't seem to find the answer when I looked, which is this.
I became exposed to all of these kind of philosophies
by reading Tim Ferriss' book, The 4-Hour Work work week it was the first exposure I had to this and I know
you and Tim are friends so my question is this which kind of came first the
chicken or the egg was it Tim leaning on your ideas you leaning a little bit
back on Tim or you guys coming together because you dose both had a similar idea
Pat? Definitely Tim was first there's no question Tim was first I was such a
fanboy of Tim's
and I don't know if I told you the story
about how I met him, it was not-
No, please, please.
Yeah, so it was not the best way to be introduced to him
but one thing I will say is that Tim has never had a family
and it's very, very different when you're doing all this
and you've got five kids and stuff and all this. I mean, and he's changed people's lives, another question, you know what I's very, very different when you're doing all this and you got five kids and stuff and all this.
I mean, and he's changed people's lives.
Another question is, you know, I respect, but I think we have sort of different approaches to some of these things.
So I got asked to speak at Joe Paul, which is a genius network event.
I had no idea who he was or what the event was.
I showed up and I walked into this room and I stand in the back wall and to my right is comparison.
I was like, oh, my my God. Oh my God.
And we were chatting. It was very nice. Uh,
but then Joe gets up and introduces me and says,
I'm about to bring up our myself. Uh,
he is going to be the greatest productivity expert in the entire world,
even better than Tim Ferris. And, uh,
cause I gotta go. So it's like, it's, and I've had 10 of the podcasts, a bunch.
And Tim's an interesting character.
So, but no, he definitely was there first.
There was no question.
I would argue that I think a lot of my methods are very, very different.
Very different.
Well, cool.
Well, I love it, man.
Thank Ari.
Thank you again for taking time to talk with us, man.
I appreciate you so much.
The second time, this was indeed better than the first. Uh, so grateful for your time, buddy. I appreciate it.
My pleasure.
All right. Well, wrap it up today, man. If you just listened to that, if you are somebody out there that feels like you can never get anything done, dude, I mean, there's so many methods out there to help you change that from chat, GBT to just picking up one of Ari's books.
I mean, if you want to go next level with some serious
coaching, reach out to him.
There are solutions available.
You're just not taking advantage of them.
We'll see you next time.
What's up everybody.
Thanks for joining us for another episode of escaping the
drift. Hope you got a bunch out of it,
or at least as much as I did out of it.
Anyway, if you wanna learn more about the show,
you can always go over to escapingthedrift.com.
You can join our mailing list.
But do me a favor, if you wouldn't mind,
throw up that five star review, give us a share,
do something, man.
We're here for you.
Hopefully you'll be here for us.
But anyway, in the meantime,
we will see you at the next episode.