Finding Peak w/ Ryan Hanley - 200 Rejections to a Billion-Dollar Exit: Larry Cheng on Resilience and Growth
Episode Date: December 10, 2025Spartan philosophy, built in the black-ops lab of business: https://www.findingpeak.comFinding Peak podcast: https://linktr.ee/ryan_hanleyJoin our community of unreasonable leaders achieving undeniabl...e success: https://www.findingpeak.comWatch on YouTube: https://link.ryanhanley.com/youtubeIn this episode of Finding Peak, Ryan Hanley sits down with Larry Cheng, founder of Volition Capital, for a masterclass in resilience, fundraising, and brand building. Larry shares the unfiltered story of how he overcame 200 rejections to raise his first fund, the philosophy that drives his success, and why he believes a founder's personal brand is more critical than ever. This is a no-BS conversation packed with actionable insights for entrepreneurs, investors, and anyone looking to level up their game.Connect with Larry ChengVolition Capital: https://www.volitioncapital.comLarry Cheng on X: https://twitter.com/larryvcLarry Cheng on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/larrycheng/Key Topics Discussed:The Power of Resilience: Larry shares the story of facing 200 rejections before securing the first investment for Volition Capital and the mindset that kept him going.Fundraising Philosophy: Learn Larry's core principle: "Don't take no's personally. Don't take yeses for granted."Venture Capital vs. Growth Equity: A clear breakdown of the different stages of private equity and what it means for founders.The Chewy Story: The inside story of how Volition Capital's investment in Chewy became a multi-billion dollar success.The Founder's Brand: Why Larry believes a founder's personal brand and community engagement are non-negotiable in today's market.Authenticity in Leadership: How to be an external and authentic leader, even if you're an introvert.--Recommended Tools for GrowthOpusClip: #1 AI video clipping and editing tool: https://link.ryanhanley.com/opusRiverside: HD Podcast & Video Software | Free Recording & Editing: https://link.ryanhanley.com/riversideWhisperFlow: Never waste time typing on your keyboard again: https://link.ryanhanley.com/whisperflowCaptionsApp: One app for all your social media video creation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/captionsappGoHighLevel: It's time to take your business workflow to the Next Level: https://link.ryanhanley.com/gohighlevelPerspective.co: The #1 funnel builder for lead generation: https://link.ryanhanley.com/perspective--Episodes You Might Enjoy:From $2 Million Loss to World-Class Entrepreneur: https://lnk.to/delkFrom One Man Shop to $200M in Revenue: https://lnk.to/tommymelloIs Psilocybin the Gateway to Self-Mastery? https://lnk.to/80upZ9This show is part of the Unplugged Studios Network — the infrastructure layer for serious creators. 👉 Learn more at https://unpluggedstudios.fm.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
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This podcast is supported by the Real Real.
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My philosophy is you try and turn the long maybes into a quick no.
That saves you time.
Every firm has a fit.
It's the type of deal that's in their comfort zone.
You want to assess whether you're a good fit.
You could spend two months and it's not a good fit at the end.
So I try and make it easy for people to turn me down.
We might not be the right stage.
We might not be the right sector.
Maybe we don't have enough proof points.
Let me tell you all the reasons you can turn me down.
I will not take it personally.
Try and encourage the no.
and that will save you time because the place that I wanted to start with you is actually a tweet
that I found from a few weeks ago. It's just something that intrigued me and I was wondering where
it came from. You said, just a thought this morning, a personal philosophy applicable to selling,
fundraising, et cetera. Don't take no's personally. Don't take yeses for granted. I love just,
I think you're dialed on that and just interesting where that came from and kind of how that applies
to both the businesses you run and the businesses inside your portfolio.
Yeah, so let's go there.
When we started Volition Capital, we're a private equity firm, specifically focused on growth,
and we had to raise a fund.
And a fund is made up of different investors, very institutional, like university endowments,
big charitable foundations, wealthy family offices, and so forth.
And when we first started this firm in 2010, it was two years post-financial crisis.
No one wanted to invest in a new emerging.
firm. They wanted to even cut their allocations to this asset class and only stick with the firms
that they knew. And I put my head down. I talked to 200 different investors, and they didn't
even say no to me. Most of them ghosted me. And in my world, the investors are called limited
partners, LPs. And the reason they ghost you is because they want to see if you can raise your fund
and get close to your target, and then they can come in at the finish line. And I didn't take any of those
turn downs or ghostings personally because honestly I understood we are a new firm there are
reasons to not invest with us it's a long-term commitment it's like a marriage and I didn't take it
personally and somewhere in like 200 to 210 someone actually committed and that started the ball
rolling and we got a few more investors and we ultimately raised our first fund and in our first
investment out of that fund was Chewy which became the leading pet foodie commerce business which I'm
sure we'll talk about multi-billion dollar exit
and we've been off to the races the last 15 years.
And so now we're sitting here where we are 15 years later.
And I still don't take turn-downs personally
because there are going to be times in certain investors
they can't invest or it's not the right fit, and that's A-OK.
And we certainly don't take for granted any investor
who wants to invest in us because we know how hard it is
at the first time.
And so you always treat your LPs, your investors well.
You care about what their needs are.
You're transparent with them and all that good stuff.
And so that's always been my philosophy.
I thought it applied even just to selling it anything is it seems like a healthy
philosophy to go after it with.
Yeah, I completely agree.
So 200 meetings before you got your first yes.
I mean, even if you logically have this, you know, don't take no's personally.
Like I might say detach from the outcome, you know, whatever, whatever way you phrase it, right?
Like even though logically we can sit here and go, yeah, detach from the outcome.
to test, like, you know, you get banged over the head 200 times or ghosted, you know,
there's a little bit, like, how do you, I think a lot of people would give up before,
before they would hit 200 meetings, you know, without a, without a yes.
Like, there had to be moments in there where maybe you were questioning your investment
thesis or who you were going after. Like, how do you stay committed to the mission to get
to that point where you hit that 200 first meeting and you get that first yes, right?
Like, how do you emotionally work through that?
because I think that's where a lot of people.
Logically, I think we understand, but emotionally seems to be where we break down.
It's not that you don't learn along the way.
It's not that you don't try to improve your story and react to what you're hearing.
But there was no fundamental questioning of what we were doing.
And no fundamental question of the strategy,
the strategy that we were talking about then is the same strategy we're doing today.
And I think it's just maybe there's a little bit of context that, yeah,
there are valid reasons to not invest.
There are valid reasons to wait.
And you don't need to take any of that personally and just keep going.
And actually, when I got my first job in this industry in 1998, I was two years out of college,
I was in consulting and I was trying to break into this industry.
And I kind of told myself the same thing.
I said, I'm going to reach out to 100 people in this industry by any means that I can.
And I am not going to worry about the response.
I am just going to get to 100 people.
And then we'll think about it.
And ironically, I got to 100, but someone in the first 10 actually gave me a job, and that's how I broke into this industry in 1998.
What was it that initially attracted you?
Like, what was the thing that said, this is where I want to be, this is where I want to build a career?
Oh, yeah.
So I was in consulting at a Bain spin-out.
We were doing growth strategy advice to Fortune 500 companies.
On the side, I was trading penny stocks.
And I was trying to make a buck, and I put all this money into this penny stock that was doing broadband wireless.
And I had convinced half the firm, my consulting firm, to invest in this stock.
It was called Cellular Vision USA.
I still remember it.
And it turned out to be a total bust.
But what I realized is I liked the scorecard of investing.
I was an athlete.
You like to win or lose.
you know if you're right or wrong. I think that's fun. It motivates me. So that was fun. I liked
tech. I liked innovation. So that was fun. And that got me into investing. I started in venture
capital, at Bessemer Venture Partners. And I haven't stopped having fun ever since. It's been 27 years.
I work with phenomenal entrepreneurs every single day. And it's a lot of fun. Yeah. I'm with you.
I like my hobby outside of what I do.
And it's more than a hobby because obviously you're playing with money is I want
I still love looking at the pink sheets like I still love.
I hear you.
I, I, um, there's a, uh, uh, I won't say the company, but there's a,
a psilocybin company in Toronto that I caught at like 30 cents right before,
right when the first research started coming out that a psilocybin could be really good
for PTSD and particularly soldiers.
And I was like, you know what?
Like, I've had a really good experience with psilocybin.
Like, you know, my own experimentation, we'll call it, or supplementation, maybe.
So it doesn't sound like I'm using it just to get high.
And I was like, there really is something to this, right?
I had had very positive results.
So I was like, screw it.
Through like a couple thousand bucks in, you know what I mean?
Like, again, you're, they're all just like powerball tickets anyway.
So, you know, and then this thing goes from like 30.
cents to nine bucks.
Yeah.
And you're like, holy shh.
You know what I mean?
This was probably like 10 years ago, like right at the very beginning of this move.
But it's intoxicating.
But like you said, there's just as there's 10x the losers, right?
So, you know, one of the things that I've always been really interested in philosophically,
you hear this a lot with VCs.
I think with venture firms and stuff, it's maybe a little less.
But it's we're going to place 20 bets and hope one.
One of them goes big because we figured the other 15 of them are going to go to zero.
Four will be maybe get our money back and then one we have.
So when you're like I'm really interested in that philosophy, right?
Because every bet, and just taking this kind of arbitrary example of 20 companies or whatever, right, portfolio.
Obviously when you're going in, you must believe that each company has the potential to be that Grand Slam winner,
but you know they're not.
Like, how do you sort through those and work through?
Because I think a lot of people who are listening to this
who maybe haven't raised VC capital
or dealt with a large fund, like, you hear these things.
Maybe you hear about something on, you know,
on one of the, you know, CNBC or on a news story.
But it doesn't, I think a lot of people are,
just don't understand how this side of capital raising
actually works and like what you guys are thinking through
when you're considering companies.
That's a great question, Ryan, and I think it's an important thing to elevate to all of your listeners.
First, let me say there are different asset classes within private equity.
Venture capital is the early stage group.
Where I sit, Volition Capital is growth equity.
It's investing in growing businesses with revenues and so forth.
And then there's buyout, which is large companies levered transactions to go by them.
You're right.
Venture Capital is what we call a high loss rate asset class.
They lose money a ton.
It's about 70% of the time.
and they try and make it up on the one big winner,
exactly what you described.
I think it's really important
before you take venture capital dollars
to understand that reality.
That is the underwriting philosophy of the firm.
Growth equity, we tend to lose money
maybe 20% of the time as an asset class
because we're investing in growing businesses.
We don't want to lose money,
and in some sense, the upside is a little bit less
than the huge home runs that you might experience in venture.
But where there's a conflict, I think,
and the entrepreneurs need to understand this,
is if you take on venture money, that partner who you're working with, that firm that you're working
with, if they're good at their job, we'll lose money about 60 or 70% of the time. There's no difference
in loss rate between a really great venture firm and a mediocre one. The only difference is how much
they hit the home runs. And so all of the advice that you're going to get from a early stage venture.
This podcast is supported by the Real Real. Meet Christine. She loves shopping. And this?
the sound of fashion overload. Too many fabulous things, not enough space. So Christine started selling
with the Real Real. I've always loved collecting designer pieces. Gucci bags, prodded heels,
but my style keeps evolving. Selling with the Real game changer. I earn more and they do everything.
Seriously, just drop off your items or schedule a pickup. We handle the photos, descriptions,
pricing, even shipping. You just sit back and watch your items sell fast to our 38 million members.
And I get peace of mind knowing I earn more selling with The Real Real than anywhere else.
Exactly.
This?
That's the sound of your closet working for you.
The Real Real.
Earn more, save time, sell fast.
And right now, you can get an extra $100 site credit when you sell for the first time.
Go to the realreel.com to get your extra $100.
Thereelreel.com.
That's the realreel.com.
The future firm is to go for the home run because that is their business model.
So it's going to raise as much capital as you can, invest it as aggressively as you can, grow as aggressively as you can.
And if it doesn't work out at the end, so be it because they have a portfolio.
But if you're the founder, that company is your entire net worth.
It's your entire life's work.
And you have to decide what type of investor mentality you want to bring on.
And so a lot of our founders don't want venture dollars because of that very dynamic.
For us, we hate the idea of losing money.
We understand if we lose the money, that means the founders lose money.
That means everything that they've worked for.
They've lost.
That's a terrible outcome.
And so we talk about helping founders reach their dreams without risking them.
And there's a balance of saying, let's not screw up this whole thing while we go for it,
but be aggressive within a range.
And so it's more risk-adjusted where we live, but you're totally right.
Venture is a different ballgame.
When you have a portfolio, it can work great.
when you're the founder, there's risk there.
So maybe break down if I'm a founder and maybe I'm coming to this,
I'm doing my first real raise, right, outside of maybe a friends and family
or someone I know personally, right?
I'm going out to a firm.
I don't know.
I'm building a connection.
I'm starting to introduce them to my business.
And let's say I have a good thesis, a good business, and a good model, right?
Something that people will be interested in.
Okay.
What advice would you give to these founders as they start to think,
through their, they're, the set of filters to, to figure out who they actually want to work with,
right? Like you said, there's different venture for the most part is, you know, hey, 20 bets,
hope one's a home run. Like, but even inside of there, maybe there's different levels of aggressiveness.
I know, I know people that have, I know founders that have been on both sides, right?
They, they took some venture money and then they thought they were getting a partner and all they
were getting was money. And then I took, I, I know other founders who thought they were just
taking on money and all of a sudden got someone sitting over their show.
shoulder, you know, questioning every decision they make. So like, how do they start to think through
or is there maybe a framework that you would recommend for figuring out which type of partner
is the best for you and what you want to achieve with your business? Yeah, probably the first
question of the framework is do you need to raise capital at all? And you can build great
businesses without raising capital. You can bootstrap it all the way. And there have been some
phenomenal outcomes and and that the first delineation is that and what you should feel in your
business to raise capital is that you are missing the opportunity and there's something you could
be investing in quite accretively if you had a bigger balance sheet that you should feel that in
your bones if you don't feel that maybe you don't need to raise capital certainly don't raise
capital because your friends are raising capital and you see press releases of companies
raising capital like that's the worst reason but if you're
If you feel like there are investments that you are not making or you're too risk-averse
with your thin balance sheet to actually make the right choices, then that's where I think
you just start looking at it.
So let's just say you're in that bucket of, okay, let's raise some capital.
Then the question is what type of underwriting or philosophy of the partner do you want to bring
on board?
Do you want someone who has the mentality and perhaps the experience of just gunning for it will
help you raise tons of capital, will keep the eye on the prize of a multi-billion-dollar
outcome, and you know that there's some risk to that.
And sometimes that is exactly, they will take a ton of risk, and they will swing for that
one in 20 or maybe one in a hundred shot.
And maybe that's right for you.
And so that's great.
If you want someone who has a different mentality and is going to be more risk adjusted,
maybe growth equity is the right partner.
And so you start to look within that sort of delineation.
Then when you pick one, you look for partners that have sector expertise or value
you add in the areas that you need or have portfolio companies that are relevant to your work,
have the same philosophy in how they're going to work with you.
Are they going to be too overbearing or not?
You start to delineate underneath that.
But I would say that's kind of the trio of how you think about it.
Yeah.
And I love that you started this with your story about, you know, you had 200 phone calls
before you got your first yes because that has been my experience raising money is that
like in our heads we're like, oh, I'm going to contact some companies and I'll bring
someone in.
And it's like, not 10 names is not enough.
Like you've got to be 50, 100.
I mean, it takes a lot of phone calls.
And it takes that founder, most often the founder,
one raising the money,
it takes them away from the business quite a bit.
And, you know, I guess like my last tactical question around this,
at least for now, is how does the,
what is your best recommendation for founders who maybe are still
operationalally, you know, important to the business.
They play a vital operational role.
And now they have to go raise, you know,
how do they manage their time?
How do you set your business up?
So as a founder, you do have the bandwidth to go out
and do all these phone calls and take all these meetings
because I know in the, there's two separate times
where I've raised money, you know, it's like months and months of life.
Like all you're doing is like, you know,
20 phone calls a week.
and preparing for them and adjusting based on feedback and, you know, all this different stuff.
And you kind of lose touch with your business a little bit if you're really going after this.
So how do you set your business up to make sure that you can actually do that and you don't
lose the business while you're trying to get money, I guess?
Yeah, you know, my philosophy is you try and turn the long maybes into a quick no,
and that saves you time.
And every firm has a fit.
And it's the type of deal that's in their comfort zone.
and you want to assess whether you're a good fit
because you could spend two months
and it's just not a good fit at the end.
And so I try and make it easy for people to turn me down.
Listen, I totally understand
we might not be the right stage,
we might not be the right sector,
maybe we don't have enough proof points.
Let me tell you all the reasons
you can turn me down and turn this company down.
And I will not take it personally if you do
and maybe we'll talk to you in the next round
and try and encourage the no.
and that will save you time because I'm going to guess that 99% of the time if you encourage
the know and you get to know, that wouldn't have been there anyways had you tried to cultivate
it.
And so that's where I save time.
The right investor will say, wait, wait, time out.
No, we love what you're up to.
This is a perfect fit.
And hopefully that clarifies everything for you.
Yeah.
What I love about what I'm hearing from your philosophy is very much an abundance versus
scarcity mindset.
and I think that's how you have to approach this
and probably approach everything,
but this line turned the long maybes into quick nose.
Like, this isn't just fundraising advice,
whether it's dating, right?
Selling, you know, basically anything associated,
getting to know, and this is a very big fan of Chris Voss.
I've met him a couple times and gotten to know him
in a very small amount.
I don't want to pretend like we're close.
But his whole philosophy is shoot first.
no, right? Push for no because one, uh, knows give people security, right? Uh, so, so part of it is it's,
I feel much more confident when you give me an opportunity to say no to you versus I feel like
you're pushing me towards a yes. I become much more hesitant, much more willing to go, well, this sounds
good. Let me socialize it among my team and I'll get back to you in a month, you know, like, like,
now, you know, now you're just sitting there and, and, and, and purgatory. So, uh, I think it's
tremendous life advice, not just fundraising advice, but I think this,
Like, is it, you know, I guess for me, this idea of thinking through abundance and scarcity,
while it feels ethereal to assert, I think, to some people who are very kind of tactile,
it really is a core to where you started, right?
If you're not thinking from a place of abundance, you're not going to make 200 phone calls
because you're going to think after the first 10, I'm screwed, no one wants this,
there's no other opportunities out there.
And you have to believe, you know, if you believe in your, in your,
your vision, your mission, or in this case, your investment thesis, you have to believe there's
eventually going to be someone who agrees with you and wants to come in, or you're almost
dead on arrival.
Yeah, I believe in the financial sense that capital finds good opportunities.
I believe in the market.
And so if you are a good investment opportunity and the market is efficient, it should find
you.
And now you need to go out, you need to do your work to go tell the story and meet folks.
but it's not a question of whether there's a match out there.
It's you just got to go get it.
And so the more efficiently you can do that, the better.
So you kind of have to, I actually believe in the efficiency of markets.
I believe if you have a good investment product when I'm meeting with investors, it's not whether we'll get capital.
There's people that should be investing in us, and same with the company and so forth.
And perhaps I have, I've been married for a long time, so perhaps in dating too, Ryan, it also makes sense.
makes sense. I don't know. But yeah, you kind of trust the outcome and then just manage the process.
Yeah. Yeah, I'm with you. I think if you're up front with who's a good fit and who's not and believe
that there's enough opportunity out there that you will eventually find it, that just becomes a
filtering mechanism. Like, you know, I've, the first time I raised money, you know, one of the
investors that we brought on, like I wish we hadn't, like in hindsight. You know what I mean?
So it's like we were kind of, instead of providing a, let's put it, let me, let me frame this the right way.
We made what I would consider a classic mistake in that we, we glossed everything to make it seem right for this particular investor where I think if we were maybe a little more pragmatic, not that the business was bad.
I mean, the business ended up doing fine and everything was good, but for this particular investor, if we had just been.
kind of fully transparent and exactly real with where we were going, you know,
instead of like, hey, we need money, like we want to get someone in.
I think this person would have selected out and we wouldn't have had the downstream
problems of now the friction of it really wasn't the right investment for them.
It didn't really fit what their expertise was.
They didn't understand the market.
So there was a lot of friction there.
And it's like I was so anxious to get that capital in the door that I didn't put the right
filters in place and then had all this friction downstream that I wish that I didn't
had. So that was like a really good life lesson. And just in general for people listening,
like the wrong money is almost as bad as no money. Oh, that's where it's worse. I have a couple
of thoughts on that. First is the the relationship between an investor and an operator,
an entrepreneur. I mean, it may last longer than most marriages in this country. So you should be
making that choice above everything else on the basis of trust. Do you trust this person? Do you trust this person?
do you want to be married to them in some context?
Set aside valuation, set aside value ads,
all of that stuff.
That's the most foundational thing.
You raised something that was secondly that I thought was really interesting.
I often ask this question in a first meeting with a company,
but you can invert it.
The question I ask is, okay, if we go through this entire diligence process with you,
what is the worst stuff that we're going to find?
What are the worst metrics that are going to bother us?
And can you just tell them to me now?
So I can tell you if it's worth it to go through the entire diligence process,
And again, that's a reverse qualification, right?
Like, can my firm stomach your greatest risk?
Because firms have different personalities.
And so in some ways, if you want to reverse qualify, again, put out the bad stuff first.
Say, here, this is what you're going to find.
And be upfront, be transparent.
And if they can handle it, great.
If they can't, you've saved yourself two months of due diligence.
And so.
Completely love that.
I call it eight-miling.
And I use that in all aspects, you know, in a lot of different aspects.
of my life. I think it's a good sales tactic. I think it's a good relationship builder.
It's good for partnerships, all kinds of stuff. Like, just like, and I actually learned this from
a mentor of mine 15 years ago in my first executive position. I was, you know, I got brought
along on a lot of meetings as a young professional at the time. And I think I was 29 and I was a
CMO. And I got to sit in a lot of rooms that maybe I, maybe technically on paper shouldn't
have been sitting in those rooms,
but I got to listen in and be part of these conversations
and what the CEO at that time,
and he,
he was kind of a slippery son of a gun,
but he was very good at what he did.
And, you know,
he would start certain meetings,
like, here's what this looks like if it doesn't work, right?
Like, here's how, if this doesn't work,
if we do what we're about to do,
we came to sit at this table to talk about,
here's what it looks like if everything falls apart.
If after six months we hate each other,
here's how we get out of this.
And he would literally start by talking about the end.
And at first I was like, you know,
it just didn't make any sense to me.
I just didn't have enough life experience at that time
or business experience to understand what he was doing.
But then he explained to me what you're talking about.
He's like, I don't, if they hate what this looks like,
what this could potentially look like in six months,
I want to know now.
He goes, he goes also, it's a backdoor sister.
tactics because it shows that it kind of shows that you don't need them or that you're willing
to talk about the end and it's almost like an assumed sale like we're going to do business together
but if it goes bad here's how we get out right and and that's where I kind of came up with this I
called it the I go you're eight-miling them right where Eminem at the end is like here's all the
bad things about me now tell them something they don't know you know that's kind of where I got
different and but it's a wonderful I mean one I think it does create healthy relationships
absolutely and it sets that filter up front.
It also is a sneaky, really good way to create that assumed sale or, or, or urgency mindset
of like, oh my gosh, these guys like, they're sophisticated enough to think about the end first.
Like, okay, and that, you know, it was a whole different kind of conversation.
So I love that.
I was trying to figure out the eight mile reference.
So thank you for explaining that to me.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You know, I, you know, I, I've always found that, um, uh, I've always found that scene at the end to be,
like, it's a wonderful scene.
It's, you know, dynamic and the rapping and all that kind of stuff.
Philosophically and just from a, from a business perspective, I always, I found, it's like,
you've completely taken away when you put all, like you, you said, put the warts out first, right?
Here's, here's the three metrics that, you know, when people say no to us, here's the three
metrics that they use to say no. And if you don't, you know, if whatever, right. Um, but just in a,
in a relationship right now. So I bring up the dating thing. I got divorced three years ago. So,
uh, I had to go through some dating. I'm now seeing a woman. Everything's very good. I'm happy.
But like, but dating again in your 40s, I was like, oh my God. Like, it's, it's wild, dude.
It's wild. It's wild. It is a wild world and, um, whatever. It's all good. But, uh, but the idea is like,
by Eminem, you know, in this scene, for guys,
if you haven't seen the scene,
basically the idea is at the very end,
there's a rap battle and the best guy,
you know, Eminem's going up against this guy
who's been the, like, top guy in this rap battle
for, you know, months or years or whatever.
And essentially what he does,
because the rap battles are usually tearing each other apart,
he and his version of it basically says all the shitty stuff about himself, right?
So he's going, you know, he's like, you know,
so it's mostly like, it's very urban,
Detroit, so it's mostly black guys. And a lot of these guys use the fact that he's white
against him. And he's like, look, I am white. I am a bum. I am a trailer park. You know,
my mom is broke. He says all this stuff, right? And basically he takes away all the ammo that the
other person would use against him. And I said, okay, well, I don't do rap battles. But I would rather,
if I'm going to sell something to you, right, say, okay, here's where we, here's where we're not great.
You know, this thing and this thing, you know, other competitors, they must.
might do that better. If those are high priorities for you, then, you know, whatever. But this thing and
this thing we're awesome at. And now by leading with the things we're not good at, like you said,
if those are major problems, that person immediately steps away and you don't have to waste your time.
It's the quick no that you said earlier. So yeah, you can use it if you want. That's awesome. That's how
I referred to it. If you search my tweet archive, since you have already done that, I do have a post,
which I think is adjacent and relevant, where I say for good CEOs, they give you.
me the bad news early and the good news late. And what happens a lot is you go to a board
meeting or something and the CEO will say, we're about to sign this, we're about to sign that,
and I think we're going to land that and this and trying to get you really excited about what
might come. And oftentimes those don't come or it doesn't come exactly the same way. But
what's really trust-building is when there might be bad news and they come early with it. I'm seeing
some problems here, it might turn into something. And they don't tell you any good news until it
actually happens. Like, tell it after the fact. And so that's a really a trust-building posture
that might think my best CEOs adopt. I love that. That is tremendous advice. Guys, if you're
listening, that also works, I think, really well with your team, right, when you're having
team meetings. Again, it's, if trust is important to you, which it should be, right, and in these
things, I think when you hide the warts that everyone knows are there,
right it creates this like gossipy culture of like oh why it that must be really bad because he's not
talking about it even though we all know right or maybe it's worse than we thought where if you
just come out and go hey we missed our quarter by three percent here's the reasons you know we're
going to fix this one you know whatever the issues are you know what's funny is and you probably
see this is oftentimes when you lead with the problems again you eight mile them people will go
oh, I know how to solve that.
Oh, you're having that problem.
Right.
You know, especially with a situation like yours
where you have all this experience and other companies,
you know, you're in a position to go,
oh, if you're having that problem,
we got two companies over here that have already solved that.
You know, either we can connect you or, hey, let's spend an hour.
I can show you how to fix that problem.
And now all of a sudden these things that were problems aren't
that you would never know about if you buried that stuff.
100%.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
I love that.
Well, dude, I want to transition to Chewy because
I want to talk about this story.
So guys, you were first or early into Chui
and first investor.
First into Chui, which is amazing.
And then this is the largest e-commerce exit in history, right?
Chewy at the time, yep.
So talk to me about just the process of finding a company.
Did you know or just have a feeling or hopeful?
Like what is it, like what is the experience of being first into a company that then has
the largest exit in its sector at that time ever.
Like, what does that process from start to finish look like?
And how do you navigate that?
Sure.
So for those who don't know, Chui is a pet food e-commerce company.
And we invested in the company in 2013.
We found the company, but you have analysts, folks recently at a college who were calling
companies.
And one of the analysts called Chui and I hopped on a call with them.
And they said they were trying to sell pet food online.
If you don't know, back in the dot-com era, the biggest bust of all the dot-com companies in 2000
was this company called Pets.com.
It had a sock puppet as its kind of mascot, and it was just a huge debacle level.
Like, how can you send 50-pound bags of dog food over the mail and make any money?
Like, it's stupid.
And that persisted in the venture and growth equity mindset.
So I spent some time meeting with them, and what I realized is that the world's,
had kind of changed and at the highest level this is a great way area to invest and
it's sort of contrary is look for big failures let time pass and see if those
models might work today and what had changed with with chewy is number one
there's this whole humanization of pets movement where people wanted to buy organic
grass fed like all the best stuff whereas we used to buy like
Purina kibble in the grocery store and we don't do that anymore I'm so basically
basically that bag of dog food got more expensive, which made it more affordable to ship.
And then just the proliferation of online shoppers, more pets, like more than half of households have pets.
And so the market just got a lot bigger for online pet food e-commerce.
And I remember, literally this is what happened.
I was in a PetSmart.
And I was...
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Getting pet food for my dog,
and I had met with Chewy,
and I knew Chewy was trying to be the low-cost,
low-price-point player.
and I started looking up every, in this store, I started looking up the price point of the exact
same product on Chewy. And Chewy was 30% cheaper than what PetSmart was in store, Petco in store.
And I was thinking, it kept happening over and over again. And I knew Chewis financials in my head,
and I thought, wait a second, you're saying that I can just order on Chewy for 30% less lower
price. I don't have to come here, drive here, park, see if my product is even in,
in stock and carry it home and leg it all home.
And it just seemed like a no-brainer value proposition.
It's basically a more convenient lower price point
service for exactly what you're already buying.
And so we made an investment.
And the company grew from, so we met it
when they were doing $25 million in revenue.
And about the time that we invested,
they finished the $70 million revenue year.
And they went to $200 million, to $400 million,
to $900 million to $2 billion in revenue.
and onwards as a public company.
And it was a great success and much, much credit to Ryan Cohen, the team who actually took
on Amazon in the pet food vertical by having better service for the pet customer.
Did that, this probably isn't the right follow of question, but it's where my brain goes.
Is like, did that push you into looking at other like e-commerce verticals?
Like, did you get like that all of a sudden?
oh, hey, there's an opportunity and then you start snowballing into those?
Or did that feel like a one-off opportunity in terms of it's vertical because of the space
and the timing, et cetera?
So we definitely did some more in e-commerce.
However, doing more in e-commerce helped us to appreciate how unique Chui was as a company.
And we do a very foundational analysis called customer cohorts,
which is you track of how much a customer spends over time.
And Chewy, for a transactional consumer e-commerce business, it was like the customer came and they never left.
They kept spending the same amount, and we're talking over time for a decade.
And so it was the most stable, predictable spend pattern of any consumer business we have seen.
And normally, like, a very good enterprise product gets that kind of retention dynamic.
And so, Chui had figured out something in a great category.
It's definitely a special company.
We sold the business for $3.3 billion,
and after just three and a half years after investing,
and it was a great success for us.
But hard to replicate.
I do think I have a company right now that reminds me of Chui called U.S. Mobile,
which is a mobile carrier.
You can get your cell phone service through them.
And so it's taken like a decade to find a company
that has similar dynamics.
So a company like Chui that comes in, you said they're doing $25 million when you made the investment,
they looking for, was that just financial and then you sit on a board?
Are they looking for guidance, support, help?
When you're at that size, what are you looking for out of your investors that come in?
Like if they already got the team mostly in place and your job is really just to kind of follow along
and maybe just be a fiduciary as far as a board member, et cetera, or an investor.
But or are they still at that point looking for you, hey, can you make a connection here?
Do you have any expertise here, et cetera?
Yeah, I mean, at the time, they had never raised capital.
They didn't have a board.
And so the first board meeting in the firm's history was after we invested, me and the two founders,
which was a lot of fun.
I always remember that first board meeting.
They didn't really know what was supposed to happen in a board meeting, which
is totally fine.
But the two founders handed me four printouts pages
from QuickBooks.
And they said, they passed it to me over the table
and said, OK, so what are we doing in a board meeting?
That was the board meeting.
And it was a relatively brief one, I have to say.
But by no means, at the point that we invest,
the team is not fully built out.
The strategy is not fully developed.
And the capital needs may not be fully addressed.
And so there was a lot of the level.
lot of big steps with that company. We made a strategic decision to actually insource all of our
own fulfillment centers for fulfillment capacity. We were using a third party and we decided to
actually build our own, which is a huge decision. We helped to raise capital to do that.
And there were expansions in the different product categories, expansion in different geographies.
And so there was a lot going on at the time.
I think for you guys listening at home, one of the big takeaways from there is think about
this Chui's $25 million in revenue, right? And you're saying they don't have everything built out.
They don't have everything. You know, every system's not.
No. So I think, you know, just take a little pressure off yourself, guys, when you're building these
companies and you're early. I think there's a lot of stress that I think founders put on
themselves to be to be mature faster than maybe is even a positive, right?
I think sometimes immaturity in certain places helps you look at problems differently,
ask for help from people, et cetera.
When we race to maturity really fast,
we sometimes get this idea that like we're supposed to know everything
and we're supposed to know how a board meeting works and we're supposed to know how every system.
And it's like that, you know, I've talked to very successful people on this show,
100 million plus, you know, exits and all this different stuff.
And they'll even tell you the day they're exiting, 10, 15 years.
into their business, they still don't feel like they have everything lined up.
So it's like, you know, there's, I think sometimes especially early or first-time founders,
et cetera, they put so much pressure on themselves to be perfect when I don't know that anyone,
you know, and I guess maybe I'm just looking for validation on this.
Like, you're not expecting them to be perfect when they start talking to you.
Not at all.
All of our companies, we would probably describe as raw operationally.
What I often say like over the course of our.
investment, a lot of things change, but certain important things stay the same. What stays the
same is sort of the problem that you're trying to solve, the customer that you're focused on,
your commitment to that mission, the culture that you're trying to instill into your business,
that stays the same. What changes is the scale and the organization of that scale in a better
change because you want to grow. And so how finance changes, sales, customer success, your board,
You know, all of this stuff, it'll be, you know, hopefully if you're successful,
10, 50, 100 times the size.
But who you are as a company should stay the same.
Now, you also sit on the board of directors of GameStop still today.
Yep.
Were you on the board during the big, what was it, the Reddit run-up or whatever,
the message board when everyone was going and driving the price all over the place?
Were you there when that was going on?
Thank goodness, no.
I came in right after that.
And maybe I'll connect the two.
Yes, please.
Ryan Cohen was the founder and CEO of Chewy, co-founder and CEO of Chewy.
And he became the active and investor behind GameStop and is now the CEO of GameStop.
And so that's how, that's my connection to GameStop.
And I joined the board to help out shortly after all of that.
Yeah.
Now, just, I know you weren't there during the time, but I'm sure you've had discussions about that moment since.
And I know even there's been.
a couple secondary tries at doing a similar run-up and it hasn't worked as well, et cetera.
Like when you're sitting on a board and, you know, I've never sat on the board of a public
company. So, you know, this is experience that I don't have. I'm very interested.
Like, and you see, like, you see that kind of like your stock price.
Everyone looks at a company basically if you're, you know, and I'd say particularly
amateur or unsophisticated investors.
And they basically just look at price and they look at how much they're willing to spend
on something and they put this arbitrary value on it, right?
when you're sitting there as a board member and you really understand how these market dynamics work
and you watch something like, you know, some price manipulation happening, which is what was happening,
right? I mean, they were, people were driving the price up and, you know, obviously it came back down.
But, you know, how do you handle that as a public company and managing, you know, what's happening
with a stock price and, you know, having to hit quarterly earnings and all that kind of stuff versus
the private company world where you're not necessarily on that time clock
if you're able to pay your bills, right?
As long as you're not running out of money,
you're not necessarily on a clock.
Like with a publicly traded company,
you have to do quarterly earnings reports,
you have people pushing price up, pushing down, shorts,
you know, all these different things that you have to deal with.
Like, how do you manage the value of the company differently
and just what are some of the things you have to consider public versus private?
Yeah, I appreciate the connection.
between the two because I live in the private company world and I'm on a couple public
company boards, GameStop and Grove. And I think I bring that private company mentality into it,
which is I don't worry about the day-to-day movements of the stock price or, and I actually
don't look to optimize for a quarterly earnings report because our job is to build the business
for the long term and make those decisions that set the business on a great foundation to grow
profitably in the long run. And that's what we do. So if there's volatility between here and there,
it's not even occupying my mind, to be honest. It's really about just making the right
decisions for the business over the long run. Awesome. All right. Well, I want to transition into what
you're seeing in the market today, because I have a bunch of questions from where you sit and what you
think about. First, first I want to go to crypto, right? In general, is this a space you follow?
And two, like, obviously we've seen a big move down.
Bitcoin actually was, it's kind of bounced back up a little bit.
But as of last week, it was down 10% year over year.
You know, a lot of questions around the crypto space.
You know, my personal belief is that this, the technology outside of the tokens and the value of the tokens,
the technology is absolutely game-changing revolutionary.
And ultimately where I see a lot of businesses going over time.
but that seems to be, you know, I look at like the, I'll give you an example, I look at the insurance
industry and the insurance contract in particular. And if insurance contracts were put onto a
blockchain and that was ubiquitous across the industry, how much faster, how much more
transparency, how much more pricing stability, I think could be built into the market, but no one
has even stepped their toes in that. I mean, it's literally just conversations at association meetings,
etc. So where do you see kind of crypto in general? And are there any businesses or or spaces that
you see taking the application of a blockchain or crypto technology in general and actually
being applied outside of just the tokenization of this technology? Yeah, crypto is funny.
When crypto is riding up, everyone is like, it is the game changing currency of the future,
of the world and when it's going down, it's like there's no intrinsic value.
It is, it's a joke.
It's a Ponzi scheme.
And I do think there are practical applications.
Probably the most likely and most bullish on us just the use of stable coins for
international money transfer.
That's a slow, expensive, complicated process.
And I think that's where the combination of crypto and blockchain can do very basic business
things like make a transaction cheaper and faster, and that's what it needs to do. I think there is
utility for certain currencies as an inflationary hedge and as in the same way gold is. You could say
gold is not a cash-producing, a yielding asset. But, I mean, it's gone on a bull run the last
couple of years, but it's always been occupied a space. I think there's space for that in crypto.
there's a lot of junk in crypto.
There's a lot of stuff that's going to be worth nothing and it already is.
And so that's sort of the nature of speculation in an early market.
Yeah.
I'm with you on the stable coins to me are so obvious.
I mean, just I know a lot of founders, a lot of just business owners in general that I talk to.
They're the ones that are leaning towards the future a little bit are paying, say, either expats or virtual assistants,
or overseas, they're paying them in USDC or USDT because it's, one, it transacts immediately.
So they have the money instantaneously, essentially.
The fees, you know, there's no essential fee for the transaction to the, for the most part,
or at least relative to what it would cost to, you know, pay them internationally through
a standard, you know, service.
And just just taking that expense out of the business, especially if you have a large international
team, it can get you more bodies.
I mean, I literally know, no people who have been able to put more bodies on their team
simply by paying in, you know, in stable coin versus paying just because of the fees you pay
to transfer internationally.
It's just easier for everybody.
That one seems so obvious.
The, I follow and am very intrigued and speculate, speculate quite a bit on Bitcoin.
I think the rest are, you know, I think it's very interesting how much sentiment drives
that particular space.
Like it's all, it's crazy.
It's like this big human psychology experience.
It's wild.
But yeah, I find it.
And I think the underlying tech, as much as I can understand it as a lowly math major with a liberal arts degree, you know, as much as I can understand it, I see that the technology itself being game changing.
But the real world applications have been slow, very slow.
I unfortunately think a lot of that has to do.
with the craziness associated with the tokenization.
And if that wasn't so, there wasn't so much garbage out there.
I feel like there'd be, there'd be more effort and enthusiasm behind bringing it into
kind of how we operate and businesses outside of that space.
But so I guess the next one that we have to talk about from where you're sitting is,
is AI, right?
I mean, obviously, we talked a little bit before we went live around chat,
GBT selling ads.
Like, you know, there's so much news.
We're in the model wars.
It's freaking nuts, you know, like every day.
Someone's got a new point something that's X better than someone else.
And, you know, and then everyone's just using it to write emails.
So it's like, what are we even talking about?
But, you know, from your seat when you're, you know, with your investment thesis, like,
what are you, what are you seeing coming that gets you excited that you're spending time on from a, from a sector perspective?
Well, it's interesting.
if I extrapolate up, I have seen more companies, AI companies, in the last 10 months that I would say have gotten to 10 million of revenue with less than 10 employees in probably less than one year being in market than I have in my entire career. It is shocking, and that's all on the rails of AI. And there's a huge amount of experimental spent in everything. And what's challenging for us as investors is we don't know what's going to stick. And there's whatever is working,
there's 50 competitors along the same lines.
And the way I think about it is not dissimilar
than how you might think about crypto
or just any other businesses,
is set aside the revenue growth
because there's so much experimentation happening.
Who is solving a real long-term business problem
or consumer problem well?
And who is doing it in a way that builds a moat for your business?
And I just asked those two questions
and try and decipher everything else through that.
But we're seeing really, I mean, I can't even begin it
because we're seeing so many applications.
And by the way, all of our portfolio companies
are embracing AI across their businesses.
And so it's really fun.
The hype cycle needs to chill out a little bit.
All those VCs we were talking about
at the beginning of the episode,
they're all feeding into the hype cycle, they know it.
They're all paying super high valuations
that will not sustain and they know it.
They just don't want to be the last one.
holding the bag, but AI will certainly be transformative.
Yeah, I, as an experiment, I was using one of like the vibe coding platforms just to say like,
you know, you read all this stuff online, you hear different things.
And I was like, okay, I want to just see, like, what is what's real and what's not real?
Like, how hard is this actually to do?
And, you know, I think very basic, you know, just for those who haven't played with these things
at home, you know, very basic applications, simple, eight.
API connections into different systems, you can, you can set up and create some, some nice little neat,
you know, kind of straightforward functional applications you can vibe code pretty well.
And then there becomes a spot where if you want to really take this the next level,
you have to do real development work and solidify the systems and do different stuff that I think is the next level.
But what hit me was if, if, you know, this, this Jamoke sitting in his house on a Saturday morning while his kids are watching TV is vibe coding.
up an application that I can sell in three hours, right?
How does someone who's out there maybe solving a similar problem, but I'll say in a more
real way, I don't want to discount vibe code of platform, but like, you know, in a more
entrenched and long-term way, right?
How do you figure out the signal from the noise in that scenario, right?
So like, let's say you've taken on, you've put your own money in, you have a team,
you're doing something similar.
and maybe from a consumer perspective, sounds similar,
but is deeper, richer, more secure, et cetera,
than something I just, you know, told the computer to make.
Well, you know, again,
while I was having my cup of coffee on a Saturday morning.
But to a consumer front facing,
very difficult to differentiate between my very light, vibe-coded thing
and this more entrenched piece.
How are you working with,
or what are you seeing from your portfolio companies
or just the market in general?
Like, I don't want to say real businesses,
but, you know, how do they, how, if this is, if this is something that I'm going to do for 10 years, right,
this is a real company, I want to expand it, I want to grow it, I'm going to eventually want to take on
capital, whatever, versus my like little side hustle, side quest project, right?
How does that company stand out today when there's so much noise in the marketplace versus
the 400 vibe-coded things that kind of look and feel like it?
Yeah.
Well, businesses can differentiate on.
other things other than the code of their product, right?
And so, I mean, we talked a little bit about Chewy.
Chewy was going directly up against Amazon.
It was much, you know, the 800-pound gorilla, and we won on customer service.
So I look for an AI application slash company to, can they differentiate on other things?
Is there a community element that's a mode?
Is there a service element that's a mode?
Is there a pricing and packaging orientation that's better suited for their market?
So there's layers around the business.
Is there a go-to-market strategy that is different than the other one?
Because you can win by doing a lot of other things right,
despite the products being sort of comparable.
Think about how many versions of water are on the shelf.
If there's a commodity product, perhaps it's water.
Yet certain water brands win.
like liquid death or others versus and that's because they've done something different with brand
and distribution and in their community and so forth. So I almost think about it in that dimension is,
okay, forget the code for a second. Let's look at everything else and how are you going to win?
Yeah. It's funny. I was thinking through this, this idea with coffee. I had a founder of a coffee brand on
seven weeks coffee. He was on a few weeks ago. And, you know, we were talking about this because,
man, I mean, there are just a million micro, you know,
we'll call micro coffee roasting brands out there.
And he's, you know, he basically said,
and, you know, his spin was more like,
his was like a Christian pro-like,
you know, very kind of classic Orthodox Christian views
is kind of the tact he took.
But, you know, you look at black rifle coffee,
you look at, you know, all these different,
they all, the way they differentiate, I mean,
I, if you can tell me that you can really taste the difference between all these different things,
I think you're lying to me. I mean, not that they're not good, but I mean, come on. I mean,
there's 10 million different roasted coffee beans. There's only so many ways you can make it
taste. But, but it very much feels like the brand and the connection to the community is how
they differentiate themselves. It could literally be roasted in the same place. Yeah.
I put a different package on it that speaks to a different audience. So do you feel like today,
Like my, my, what I'm, what I have been talking a little bit about and thinking through is that while brand has always been important content and how you tell your story has always been important in this kind of era of AI where people can spin up narrative so quickly.
It's, it almost feels like, uh, your brand, your message, your community and and this is kind of where my question is going, the, the personal brand of the founder or founders has become more.
more important than ever before, almost like, uh, like, I mean, look at Elon Musk.
Like, none of his companies do, I mean, obviously Elon Musk is an exception to an exception.
So I get what I'm asking here.
But, um, none of his companies do advertising.
None of them.
It's just him on Twitter, you know, talking, saying crazy shit and everyone goes and checks out
his company, right?
So like, I, I guess every very few founders will ever be Elon Musk or say the crazy
shit that he says as much as I love him.
Um, you know, how do you balance that, right?
Do the founders need to have a personal brand today?
Does there have to be some core intrinsic, you know, this happened in my life and this is why
I started it story?
Is that more important than before you think because of this?
Or is it just kind of same and need to be good?
I think it's really important.
And I preach this to my founders and CEOs to be external and to be authentic and to be engaged
where your community is.
A great example of this in my portfolio is the founder and CEO of U.S. Mobile, Ahmed Katak.
He is dominating Reddit.
All product development ideas go on Reddit.
All announcements go on Reddit.
Customer service is on Reddit.
I think we have the largest corporate subreddit on Reddit for US Mobile.
And it's a very authentic community.
And he's right in the middle of it.
And he takes hate, he takes love, he takes everything in between.
And I think we're in a day and age where the face and the founder and the CEO of the business can't be hidden.
You've got to be up front and you've got to engage.
You've got to be real.
And even as a public company CEO, it's like if you're going to rely on the quarterly earnings
call as your communication with shareholders, that's from 50 years ago.
I mean, we've got to come into this age.
And so I actually think that is super important.
And to go back to your AI question, if you have two AI companies with like products,
but you have one founder who's built the community in a social ecosystem around it,
and the other who's just coding in the back, you know,
then you have two different,
completely different companies.
And so I'm very much forward on that dimension.
Yeah, I look at Jensen Wang from Navidia,
and as their run-up has happened,
and he started getting out there more before the big run-up,
but during it he has been out front.
You see him at more conferences, more, you know, talks,
more whatever, more panels.
than I think you saw him in previous years.
And I have to believe that that is not an accident, right?
I think that's not like one day he just woke up and said,
oh, I think I'll start doing more talks today.
I mean, it very much feels like a strategy.
And, you know, the messaging behind it of like, you know,
I think it's gone viral quite a few times now,
but that whole like it's supposed to be hard talk that he gave.
Like, I feel blessed that, you know,
I had these hardships because they made me better.
And, you know, too many, too many,
founders are looking for easy and, you know, that whole, I'm butchering it.
You can go find it guys.
It's gone viral a couple of times.
But it's brilliant.
I mean, it's absolutely brilliant.
But it also kind of makes you, like when you hear that, if you're that type of like,
you know, I'm going to go get it, you know, I'm going to work hard.
Like I'm going to dominate the world mentality, whatever your thing is.
Like, you can't help but like now lean towards him a little and be like, geez, I kind of,
I kind of hope these guys win.
Like, I love that.
Like, you can't help yourself.
It's a human reaction.
And, you know, I guess my last question for you around this is just like,
if you do get that founder who really wants to just sit in the dark room and code,
that's their zone of genius, that's where they want to be.
Would you, and if there's another option at it,
but I guess the two that I'm thinking about are,
do you recommend that that founder stay in the room and stay in their zone of genius
and hire out a face to go out and start telling the story?
Or is it look like,
I know that's where you want to be, but part of your role as the founder and CEO of this company is you need to spend some time in front of people and start to develop that side of your career of how you operate.
Yeah. I probably shouldn't knock founders who want to see in a room in code because there have been some great founders who are in that bucket, Mark Zuckerberg being one of them, who I've been in the past.
But I might suggest this.
Just turn on the camera during your day a little bit and be who you are.
And, you know, maybe you're basically Twitch streaming as your code.
But, like, people want to see the real thing.
And even if it's just a little bit every day, it actually says something.
It tells your shareholders, your customers, whoever, something about you.
You don't need to be Jensen Huang and go do TED Talks if that's not who you are.
but even sharing a little bit from your day,
I think that's awesome.
Yeah, I love that idea.
It's funny.
I, you know, I've been in insurance for a long time,
but in executive different things.
You know, today I do more consulting and coaching
and then I say I run this media business.
And, you know, sometimes, like,
I don't want to say bored
because I probably always have something to do.
But like, let's say I'm just kind of like banging around
through my day.
A couple times I've just popped open.
my phone turned it on live to like Instagram or something and I'll just be banging away on my
work talking about an idea or something I'm doing and then people ask them questions and like
those will go crazy like people will be like why are you doing this why you know why did you
you know in some of it's like silly decisions like why did you choose substack for like your home
for your business you know whatever and you know these are real questions that people have you know
varying degrees of difficulty and triteness but but you know ultimately
important to people. And it's, I'm literally working just with the phone on a live and then
you're looking down and seeing questions that come up and answering the questions as you're
working. And it's very simple to do. And I think that, I think we're people, where particularly
people who tend to be more tacticians of the thing that they do, they don't want always that,
that content piece. It feels, it almost feels like beneath them sometimes. I've had
people say like, wow, that content stuff's for influencers.
I don't want to be an influencer.
I'm like, you are an influencer, but you know, you're the CEO and founder of this
company that you are an influencer, whether you think you are or you aren't, you are.
And I think that's a real thing that we just can't get away from today.
It just feels, it feels like just, it feels like part of the job.
It doesn't feel optional anymore.
Yeah, I do Twitter live streams every once in a while, maybe once a month, something
like that.
And the first time I did it, I had a very clear agenda of what I wanted to talk about.
And I had certain questions I wanted to address and this and that.
And I put together a nice PowerPoint deck.
And now I'm just like, I'm going to go live, whatever you guys got, let me know.
And we just go.
And it's always well received.
I think people want to see you in your real element and just be who you are.
Yeah, I completely agree.
Larry, this has been an incredible comment.
I can talk to you for another couple hours.
I love your methodology.
I love your mindset and how you're approaching this.
And I think in particular, this idea,
you know, we've talked about a lot of really good stuff,
but this idea of turn your long maybes into quick nose,
if there's anything guys that we can take away,
this is, it's great for fundraising, it's great for sales.
Like I said, it's great for really anything in your life
that you're trying to achieve.
We don't want to waste time on the people
who aren't serious or committed to us.
And there's 8 billion people in the world.
So if you have something of even the smallest amount of value or potential, eventually you will run into someone who believes in what you believe and wants to be part of it and just keep going.
I absolutely love it.
Larry, where can people get deeper into your world if they want to follow along with your journey or they want to know more about volition and what you're doing or maybe they are a founder and they want to talk to you guys?
How do they get deeper into your space?
Yeah, so volition is volitioncapital.com.
I'm very active on X.
So my handle is Larry V.C.
And both Volition Capital and myself are on LinkedIn as well.
So those would be probably the X, LinkedIn, and the website are the ways to go.
Tremendous.
And guys, I'll have links to everything that Larry just mentioned, whether you're on YouTube
or wherever you listen to podcast.
Just scroll down in the description.
I'll have links to everything.
Dude, appreciate you.
Appreciate the time.
Tremendous.
And anytime you want to come back on, open invitation, my friend.
Thanks so much, Ryan.
It's a lot of fun.
Take care.
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