Founders - #48 Finding My Virginity: The New Autobiography by Richard Branson

Episode Date: November 26, 2018

What I learned from reading Finding My Virginity: The New Autobiography by Richard Branson.  ----Founders Notes gives you the ability to tap into the collective knowledge of history's greatest entr...epreneurs on demand. Use it to supplement the decisions you make in your work.  Get access to Founders Notes here. ----“I have listened to every episode released and look forward to every episode that comes out. The only criticism I would have is that after each podcast I usually want to buy the book because I am interested so my poor wallet suffers. ” — GarethBe like Gareth. Buy a book: All the books featured on Founders Podcast

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Starting point is 00:00:00 I view life as one big adventure. I'm always learning and finding new things to try and challenges to overcome. Whether you're running a company or simply living your life, hopefully you can learn from my mistakes and put a smile on your face along the way. A reviewer described Losing My Virginity as the first autobiography in which the author had written an expose on himself. I hope finding my virginity will be similar. If your life is one long success story, it won't make for a good read. What's more, you're most likely a liar. We all have ups and downs, trials and tribulations, failures and triumphs. We just hope to come out stronger on the other side. The late Steve Jobs, the entrepreneur I most admire, said, my favorite things in life don't cost any money. It's really clear that the most precious resource we all have is time. That thought has been on my mind as I
Starting point is 00:00:58 write this book, thinking back to all the good times and tough times behind me and looking forward with wonder at what lies ahead. I've always lived every day as if it's my last, fiercely loving my family and friends and trying to make a positive difference. We only get one life and this is mine. So that is from the prologue of the book that I want to talk to you about today, which is Finding My Virginity, the new autobiography by Richard Branson. So this is going to be the second of a three-part series on Richard Branson. Last week, we covered the book that he just mentioned, which was Losing My Virginity, How I Survived, Had Fun, Made a Fortune, and Made a Fortune Doing Business My Way. So the Finding My Virginity is written about 20 years after he wrote Losing My Virginity. So at the end of the first book, he has about a billion dollars in the bank.
Starting point is 00:02:00 And for the first time in his life, he's achieved financial freedom after a career because most of losing my virginity is all about the struggle from starting his first company at 15 years old all the way up until selling virgin records which is the first time in his life that he ever had room to breathe and he didn't have to go to banks and beg them to like extend loans and raise more credit so although there is going to be a ton of business stories in the book, after I finished it, after I finished reading the book, I came to the conclusion it's more about a book on life. And he's almost 70 years old when he's writing it. And he's looking back and he's kind of giving us explicit lessons on, like he said from the prologue, I'm hoping you can learn from my mistakes. And so that's the frame from which I want you to look at the stories that we're going to talk about today as quite contrasted from the stories we talked about last week. And then next week
Starting point is 00:02:58 will be part three. He's written many books, but I just chose three to cover. And if you want to see which book we're going to cover next week, go to founderspodcast.com forward slash books. And you could see not only next week's books, but you could see the 40 plus books that have been covered on the podcast so far. So before I get into the rest of the book, and we start talking about the start of what he calls his third career, just a reminder that once we get going here, this podcast is a little different
Starting point is 00:03:25 from maybe the other podcasts that you're used to listening to. I'm not going to interrupt our time with ads. This podcast is supported solely by people that get value from it. If you like the podcast and you wanna support it, the best way to do that is by becoming a member. Just go to Founders Podcast forward slash support,
Starting point is 00:03:43 or you can just click the link that's in your show notes on your podcast player. And for a very small monthly fee, you can unlock members-only podcasts. So these are podcasts that are not released anywhere else. It's only for people that are actively supporting the podcast. And I think if you sign up today, there's like 11 you'd unlock, maybe 12. And I do an extra podcast every week just for members. Okay, so I'll talk more about that at the end. Let me go ahead and jump into the book. And we're just gonna, we're gonna pick it up right in the year 1999. And this is what he's calling the start of his third career. Necker Island, New Year's Eve, 1998. I was in my bedroom trying to make an urgent to-do list.
Starting point is 00:04:26 With the end of the year approaching and the end of the millennium looming, I found myself both reflecting back and looking forward. As so often during my life as an entrepreneur, I really had no idea what was coming next. I had created and sold the biggest independent record label on the planet and fought doggedly to build Virgin Atlantic into the best airline in the world. The Virgin Group had grown from a couple of companies to more than a hundred and I had gone from a struggling hippie to a proud father and businessman. My mind was starting to wander to other projects, fresh ambitions, and bigger dreams. It was time for a new start and to look to the stars.
Starting point is 00:05:11 Many experts will tell you it tends to take a year to get a business off the ground. From the initial idea through planning, market research, development, and launch. Personally, I've always disregarded this rule. When I was a wide-eyed teenager, our mail order record company was set up in a couple of days, and even more complex businesses like Virgin Atlantic went from idea to liftoff in a matter of weeks. Generally, we like to work fast, try ideas, see if they stick, and if they don't, quickly move on to the next one. I work best when my mind is able to jump from one topic to the next in quick succession.
Starting point is 00:05:52 It keeps things lively, and it's amazing how often good ideas from one company come out of another company's unrelated businesses. We talked a little bit about this last week with second order effects. There's many examples, not only only this book, but in last week's book, where he wouldn't have been able to seize the opportunity if he hadn't already done something previously. Like in the case that he's referencing here specifically, can't start a mail order record company if you haven't started a magazine first. So this whole idea, when he goes back a couple paragraphs where he's like, you know, like most entrepreneurs, I really had no idea what was coming next. So how do you combat, in Richard's opinion, how do you combat the fact
Starting point is 00:06:32 that you can't predict the future? Well, he just described it. He's like, I like to iterate. I like to try a lot of different ideas, see if they work. And if not, let's just move on to the next one. One of my favorite quotes of his, I think i mentioned this last week is uh businesses are like buses there's always another one coming and sometimes i feel it's like founders uh we can fall in love with our idea and like kind of like stick to it as if it's the only one out there and it's just a good reminder that's not okay uh so it says you know sometimes one company came out of a completely unrelated business. He's just describing that with Student Magazine into the mail-order record company, which then turns into record shops, which then turns into a recording studio, which then turns into a record label that he sells for a billion dollars 20 years in the future.
Starting point is 00:07:17 So he says, The turn of the century was to prove unprecedentedly productive even by our standards, meaning it's a virgin group. After my first wave as a records impersonario, I think that's that word, and second as an airline founder, the third wave of my career as a global entrepreneur was about to begin in earnest. So I just want to set up the rest of the book because it expounds on this idea. I think I talked about it on last week's members episode. So if you're not already a member, you missed out on that. But the quick summary is that he has this idea of this new wave he's talking about as a global entrepreneur and expanding out into other areas with the Virgin Group. He has this term he uses.
Starting point is 00:08:06 It's called branded venture capital. So I think I said last week, I'm obviously familiar with what venture capital is. I've never heard the idea of branded venture capital. And so his idea is, hey, we have all this money. We have a great brand. Let's do a bunch of 50-50 partnerships. And I'm saying 50-50.
Starting point is 00:08:23 Most of them are 50 50 some of them there's obviously different um different breakdowns but his preference is 50 50 partnerships so people are bought in sometimes it's 51 49 and we're gonna find people that are on either from within the organization or outside we'll partner with them and we'll run a bunch instead of thinking about the virgin group as one company it's you's a small collection of loosely affiliated three. Last time I checked, it was like 400 companies. I don't know what it is today. And in this book, he gives a couple of different numbers. Sometimes it's 100, 200, 300, and so on. So I'm not exactly sure the exact amount, but you get the basic idea. And then what happens is these tiny companies, as they grow, they're broken up into even smaller companies. And what this does is it caps his downside. It almost looks like, to me, it looks
Starting point is 00:09:09 like an out of the money option. So his downside's capped, his upside's potentially unlimited. And I don't know if I'll cover it in here, but it talks about like one airline he started. I think they started with like either three or $10 million. They get a buyout offer a few months or a few years later for 250 million. He turns that down and it winds up going public for like 1.5 billion. So that's an example. There's a bunch of examples where he takes these tiny little companies that he starts after several years and they'll do IPO, you know, for smaller numbers. And I think we're used to in America, at least where maybe we're the outliers, at least the
Starting point is 00:09:44 media that I'm exposed to but there's several these companies where he'll take public for you know one to two billion dollars so that's his basic business idea and I really like that idea but the reason I'm telling you all this is not only so you understand you know his modus operandi and how he wants to organize businesses and you know my own personal like it know, my own personal, like it speaks to my own personal, like philosophical leanings. But there's going to be issues with these because think about what he was just at the very beginning of the book, he was comparing,
Starting point is 00:10:15 you know, who did he name as the entrepreneur he most admired? Steve Jobs. This is the exact opposite approach that Steve took. And so Steve was all about control. And Richard is more about people and opportunities. And he self-diagnosed attention deficit disorder. So he wants to constantly, you know, his business wants, he wants his business to be a constant like reflection of his personality. But the only problem with that is sometimes when you have you're not controlling it completely you're you're partnering you can't really control what other human beings are going to do especially the ones outside of your organization so that was
Starting point is 00:10:53 a very long wind up to tell you about a little story that's in the book that i want to share with you that has to do with going to court against a partner and um we're going to jump right into it i dislike going to court almost as much as I dislike wearing suits. Back when I was starting out, I'd scribbled out the words, we don't need lawyers in my notebook and underline them for good measure. Court cases can keep me up at night with worry. And there have been numerous occasions over the years where we've had to go and defend ourselves. My first, and now we're going to do some flashback before we get to this fight with T-Mobile. My first experience was
Starting point is 00:11:30 back in 1970 when I was arrested under the 1899 Indecent Advertisement Act for using the words venereal disease. This is so ridiculous, but it's actually true. For using the word venereal disease in our student advisory center leaflets to encourage young people to get sexual health checkups. What he's talking about is one of the, it's not a charitable project, but one of the projects that came out of student magazine. So student magazine was a for-profit endeavor that they funded by selling advertising. But they would do things that, you know, they were young and idealistic. So they started basically a call center
Starting point is 00:12:12 where you could call in and it's for students that had problems. You know, they wanted to commit suicide. They had sexually transmitted diseases. They had all these problems that some young people have that are uncomfortable telling, like maybe their family about. So that's what he's's talking about that's what the student advisory center was so he's saying hey um we had these ads saying you need to get checked to make sure you're not spreading
Starting point is 00:12:33 venereal diseases after day in the dock meaning jail we were given a nominal fine of seven pounds but as a result the outmoded law was eventually changed. Next, the infamous Sex Pistols case in 1977, when we were taken to court for displaying the band's album title, Nevermind the Bollocks, in our record store window. So that's the second time he's prosecuted under the 1899 Indy Scene Advertisements Act.
Starting point is 00:13:00 And this is actually, I don't know if I covered this last week, but it's actually pretty funny how he gets out of this. We won the case when a professor of linguistics testified for us that bollocks was a nickname for priests. What is it called? The epitomology? I don't know if I'm pronouncing that correctly. But basically tracing how the term originally started and the changing of the actual definition into the slang. So they were using bollocks like BS. But the actual definition was a derivative of clergy, like priests.
Starting point is 00:13:38 So it says, before revealing that he was a priest himself, and so once he had this linguistics expert testify, the judge realized he's a priest and the charges were dropped so it says i was in no mood for another day in court and not because i hate wearing a tie but the situation with t-mobile was so serious there was no other option so um this is an example what what he means by branded venture capital and so we're going to figure out what is act what is virgin Mobile, what are the components that make up Virgin Mobile?
Starting point is 00:14:08 He says the shame was that Virgin Mobile was actually doing really well. By 2003, Virgin Mobile UK was turning over more than a million pounds a day. Again, I'm so used to talking about dollars that sometimes I'm going to be saying dollars accidentally. It's every number that is in this book is in pounds. As such, we were already looking into floating the business on the stock exchange. Our partners, T-Mobile, was very happy with the way things were going, or so I thought. It all changed with the arrival of the new T-Mobile UK managing director, Harris Jones, from America. Mr. Jones took a very different view of the situation.
Starting point is 00:14:47 He saw our relative inexperience in mobile markets as an opportunity and decided to try to snatch our 50% share in a company now worth more than $1 billion. He claimed he was upset that T-Mobile had to pay us a marketing fee of around 4.5656 a month for every Virgin Mobile customer. The deal was written plain as day in our contract, but this didn't stop T-Mobile calling in their high-powered lawyers and threatening us with court if we didn't change the agreement. I thought it was disgraceful and we immediately took legal advice. However, we were in an acutely difficult position
Starting point is 00:15:26 because as we didn't own our own infrastructure our masks we relied on t-mobile to provide service for our 2.4 million customers see what he's doing there so he's basically just rebranded and this is common you see this in the united states like metro pcs and all these other cricket stuff like that we have a third party say hey um we we're going to do a new service. We're going to, the branding on top of it is going to be different. The price structure might be different, but we need you to provide, to become our partner and provide the actual service, which is what T-Mobile is doing.
Starting point is 00:15:58 So think about Virgin UK as just being a different, operating under like a private label, in this case Virgin Mobile UK in the United Kingdom. He does this in a couple of different other countries too. So it says, as was typical at the time, Virgin Group's cashflow was running low with money disappearing fast in the Virgin Atlantic among others. We could ill afford an expensive legal battle.
Starting point is 00:16:23 T-Mobile asked us outright to cut the marketing fee payments. We debated whether it was worth conceding substantial amounts of money for the sake of saving the relationship. In the end, we decided on principle to stand firm. We're in the right here. I'm not being bullied by them, I told the team. Once we gave them our response, T-Mobile attempted to break our partnership by activating a so-called no-fault termination clause. If successful, it would have given them all of our shares worth over half a billion pounds for just one pound. A date in court became inevitable.
Starting point is 00:17:01 See, I don't know when this is taking place because well he says to by 2003 okay so that's about ten years after he sold the record company because he's saying they're running out of cash but he just had 500 pounds so maybe meaning like actual cash flow and he was reinvested into companies. Okay. Well, I guess it's not. It's just my own curiosity. It's not too important to the story.
Starting point is 00:17:36 The judge not only saw our side of the story, he was actually appalled by T-Mobile's behavior. In my judgment, this is the judge talking, their behavior was not acceptable commercial conduct. T-Mobile took the view that its commercial interests took precedence over the rights and wrongs of the situation. That, in my judgment, is a course of conduct which is deserving of moral condemnation. Instead of T-Mobile being given our shares for one pound, as they demanded, the judge ordered them to give us all of their shares worth 500 million pounds for one pound. What's more, they were made to pay the cost of both sides as well as the damages. A bad day for T-Mobile just got worse. By taking us to court, they had ended up losing well over half a billion pounds.
Starting point is 00:18:21 The following day, I had a telephone call from the head of t-mobile or from the head of t-mobile's owners this is this come this company called dutch dutch telecom so he says uh he was really charming genuinely mortified by what had happened and invited me over to their headquarters so he could apologize in person he told me he was going to fire harris jones that's the guy that came from america that took over virgin mobile uk and excuse me, T-Mobile UK and got them into this whole mess in the first place, and that he accepted the court's judgment. I hope, and this is the surprising part, I hope we can enter into another commercial deal going forward, he said. I was impressed and admired his pragmatism, and this is a a lesson even though he had lost half a billion
Starting point is 00:19:05 he wanted to at least rescue something from it okay so this is how he identifies the opportunity for virgin america and his his conclusion is something that um that i love to hear and it's something that i think is observable when you take the time to think about it and that size meaning size of a company rarely equates to the quality of the company so he says whenever i flew in america i encountered the same problems i used to find with international travel the service was poor prices were high the entertainment was almost non-existent the food was barely edible and the customers were missing out. It felt like an accepted truth that cross-country American flights were something to be endured rather than enjoy. We saw it as a real chance to disrupt a sector where we had already had expertise in a key market
Starting point is 00:19:57 where the Virgin brand was loved but had room to expand. Why not make flying good again instead of treating customers like cattle? So a few pages later, he identifies why is that even the case? And he says, in their wisdom, the U.S. competition authorities somehow let the six largest airlines in the U.S. become three giant airlines. Through sheer size, they dominate the market and control slots in key airports, stifling competition and innovation. The industry response bore this theory out. In nearly every major survey of the U.S. airlines, United came out last, while Virgin America was top of the pile. Size rarely equates to quality. So most of the part I'm going to skip over is there's this huge war with the consolidation of the airlines. They're continuing to consolidate
Starting point is 00:20:54 internationally as well. So Virgin America creates a profitable airline. They're doing rather well. They take it public and then they get bought out by Alaska Airlines which just happened recently in the last maybe two years I think and later on in the book he talks about how being furious because you have this beloved brand right and Alaska buys them I don't know for maybe like two billion2 billion or something like that. And they shut everything down and fire all the employees. So from a consumer's standpoint, like why do you do that? And you do that because you're trying to eliminate competition. But that's not good for your customers.
Starting point is 00:21:39 So it's just something I hate seeing. Even though I'm very much capitalist, I don't like concentration. What I find, like my personal opinion, like this is really crony capitalism. When you have, you know, usually these massive companies that have paid off politicians and now are getting to, like the politicians should be working for the consumer. And what is best for the consumer is like a diversified market lots of little players trying to innovate and constantly like improve not only the product they're making but the prices that consumers are paying and letting you know six airlines consolidate into three like that's that's just not it's never good at least it's not good for us might be good for the shareholders and the people the company but you gotta i think think broader um okay so i want to he has this so a lot of uh a lot of what
Starting point is 00:22:32 is written about in these books is like his adventure venture um side he he has like six guinness guinness book of world records from anything from like the fastest crossing the atlantic ocean the fastest in a balloon to crossing the fastest in like a boat all kinds of you know kind of dangerous crazy uh life threatening adventures he's been on but the reason i was i i left a lot of that out is because i want to focus obviously like the lessons that we could take for a business. But I think he has this anecdote here that's helpful for us. And it's the – how would I put this? Like the correlation between risk and focus.
Starting point is 00:23:19 And this is especially present in my mind because I just saw this fantastic documentary in the movie theater with, I think it's by National Geographic. It's called Free Solo, and it's about this free soloing is mountain climbing with only your hands, feet, and chalk. And it's about what they call one of the greatest athletic feats in human history. And this guy named Alex Honnold walks up to this 3,000-foot-tall piece of granite in Yosemite National Park called El Capitan, and he climbs it in four hours just on his own will. So once I finish reading this part, I'll explain to you why I feel like they're connected. So it says, Pushing the limits of flying and stretching the technology to take us into space
Starting point is 00:24:05 offers those who take part in it remarkable, never-to-be-forgotten experiences. But those rewards don't come without a risk attached. And in the mid-'90s, I was devastated to lose several heroic men in two separate accidents. So I don't know if that's a typo, because he says in the mid-'90s, but now we're
Starting point is 00:24:25 in february 2005 when this happens so he actually this the guy we're going to talk about that dies dies in 2007 so i'm a little confused by that in february 2005 i had turned my attention away from virgin galactic and back to the project that had led us to working with burt rattan in the first place which is the the Virgin Atlantic Global Flyer. So Virgin Galactic, you probably know this is his attempt to take regular citizens into low Earth orbit, into what is defined as the lowest part of space. Now, the Virgin Atlantic Global Flyer is this, I would say, marketing stunt that he did. That might not have been his primary motivation, but it was like the largest, the longest flight without stopping to refuel. It's like this future, if you want to Google and you want to see what it looks like, just
Starting point is 00:25:21 Google Virgin Atlantic Global Flyer. It's a rather interesting plane designed by this this guy named bert raton who's also uh heavy heavily featured in that book space barons which i did a podcast a few months a few weeks or months ago but it was this like carbon fiber futuristic plane that that traveled or am i actually gonna am i telling you what's gonna happen before it happens Okay yeah I am Let me just read this Because the book is going to describe it better than I can summarize it So it says
Starting point is 00:25:51 I traveled down to Salinas in Kansas And was met by a crowd of thousands on a freezing land strip Looking up at the majestic plain As Steve Fawcett So Steve is the guy that's going to die in a few years from now And I stood on the runway I took a moment to marvel at the sheer strangeness of what we had built. Okay, yeah, I was totally tripping over myself.
Starting point is 00:26:08 He's going to describe what it looks like in here. The Global Flyer had a single jet engine above a short casing in the middle with a tiny cockpit in front of it. Steve would have a few feet of space to sit in while he flew around the world without stopping. To either side, he could see twin-tail booms mounted, making up a 35-meter wingspan, with every part of the plane built with ultra-light material.
Starting point is 00:26:36 If we could pull this off, it could revolutionize the way planes were built and save massively on CO2 emissions. As Steve got into the cockpit, I jumped into a chase plane to follow. the way planes were built and save massively on CO2 emissions. As Steve got into the cockpit, I jumped into a chase plane to follow. So he's in a plane. It says, Steve expertly guided the plane off the runway, and it flew magnificently from the get-go. It was exhilarating flying behind,
Starting point is 00:27:01 watching this unique machine zip through the air in front of us. I was already envisioning converting this technology to our commercial jets in the future um it says but then the global flyer began to lose lots of fuel very quickly next the gps system faltered i was nervous i have to confess but had full confidence in steve's ability at the controls he was extraordinarily calm under pressure as he had shown on countless other adventures including becoming the first person to fly a helium balloon around the world solo even so it was alarming that i could no longer follow steve's progress in the chase plane when it got to the morning of march 1st i had to stop in toronto to launch virgin mobile canada
Starting point is 00:27:41 and was dumped onto the tarmac at the airport as Steve flew off overhead. So this is back in the Mojave Desert. Burt and his team were frantically calculating whether the Virgin Atlantic Global Flyer had enough fuel to continue the challenge. The wind was playing in our favor. If the jet stream remained strong, Steve could still make it.
Starting point is 00:28:03 Nearly three days after he left, with almost no sleep, no respite, and no landings, he glided back onto the tarmac in Salinas. He had set a world record for the longest non-stop flight in history, 26,389 miles in 67 hours. So this is the result of that, of this stunt. Boeing and Airbus were quickly in touch and visited Scales Factory. This is Scaled Composites. It's the name of the company that built the plane for Virgin. And that guy, Bert Rattan, who's legendary in his own right,
Starting point is 00:28:41 is the founder of Scaled Composites. I got to see if there's a book about that guy because he's had a rather interesting um life and it'd be interesting he'd make a good um episode of founders um so uh talking about boeing and airbus they were astounded that a plane built out of carbon composite material could fly around the world non-stop using less fuel per hour than a four-wheel truck they set about developing their own versions and now planes like the Airbus A350 and the Boeing 787 are largely made of carbon composite material. Years later, Virgin Atlantic
Starting point is 00:29:12 ended up buying them from both companies. Steve went on to complete two more world record-breaking flights in the Virgin Atlantic Global Flyer, which were among an amazing 116 records he set in five different sports. Okay, so that is a lead up to, remember, this whole section is about risk and focus. So he's doing something insanely dangerous, and as such, he has to be completely focused.
Starting point is 00:29:45 And now here's the sad part. He says, but Steve's record-breaking trials were soon followed by a tragedy. A year later, he disappeared while flying over the Great Basin Desert in Nevada. I was distraught and hoped against hope he was alive. So it says they went to look for him. When the Civil Air Patrol called off the search on October 2nd, 2007, after a month with no breakthroughs, we continued the search using Google's Earth new satellite imagery technology. Sadly, there was to be no miracle. On September 29th, 2008, a hiker found Steve's identification cards in the Sierra Nevada mountains in California, and remains matching Steve's DNA were later recovered.
Starting point is 00:30:30 This is Richard's takeaway from this. It's strange how adventurers often die doing something relatively mundane. Steve died flying a normal plane, not while chasing the land speed record. When you, and this is the last two sentences that I really want you to focus on, and I'll explain how it relates to Free Solo. When you know the dangers are trained for them and are fully focused, you are usually ready to deal with them. Mistakes can often happen in less dangerous situations. So to me, that is a story that can be applied to the risk that you take when you're building companies.
Starting point is 00:31:16 But the reason I would say that is because when you watch Free Solo, Alex had been mountain climbing and preparing for that one day for 22 years. And the documentary shows over and over again. He would climb the same route he was going to climb with just hands and feet with, you know, the way normal mountain climbers do it. They usually do it with partners and they have ropes. And he would just train over and over again and practice and practice. And he did this hundreds of times before he attempted it. And what he liked about free solo is that the point he made in the documentary was he knows the risks.
Starting point is 00:31:52 One mistake and he falls several hundreds of feet to several thousands of feet to his death. So he has to be completely focused and almost in like a flow state where he's not thinking about anything else because he can't afford to and that's the thrill that he gets off off of it and Shortly after seeing the movie I was so amazed I went home and started doing research on Watching other documentaries about mountain climbing and everything else and it came across Something interesting the exact exact route that Alex was able to free solo up El Capitan a few months after that there was two guys who were in their 40s they had been mountain climbing for 20 plus years they had
Starting point is 00:32:32 climbed el capitan over and over again but with ropes and they were doing they were practicing i guess it's called speed climbing so you see how fast you and a partner can climb up whatever specific route that that you're going on and so as, they had done it so many times and got so used to it, they were not taking the proper safety cautions because they were comfortable. So this is the – you can kind of see where the story is going if you think about it in terms of risk and focus. Alex, Steve, these guys are extremely focused because they're doing something dangerous and if they make a mistake, it's their life.
Starting point is 00:33:05 But when you're doing something nonchalant, something you've done a million times, I'm just flying a normal plane. Like he said, there's a lot of examples of adventurers dying doing normal things, not the adventure. Well, these guys were tied together. One of them didn't set a safety hook in and was just doing it, you know, because he thought, oh, this part's easy. I can do it.
Starting point is 00:33:25 He accidentally slipped. As he falls, he pulls his best friend off the mountain and they fall 900 feet to their death. So when you're building a company, it's not life or death. But I think the good lesson here is that mistakes can often happen in less dangerous situations. So when you know you're doing something that may be risky for your business or you you knew you know you need you need your full attention and focus chances are you're getting the
Starting point is 00:33:52 your best work out of that you're capable of out of like let me say that again chances are in those environments you're getting the best performance that you're capable of doing it's when you're doing something a million times that you don't think is there I guess what I'm saying here is that the the biggest risk is when you don't think there's a risk because that's when you get relaxed that's when you think oh I've done this a million times I can just do this with my eyes closed and that's when you've realized that you know maybe the the thing that you thought was easy is actually more complex and that complexity can be dangerous for you okay so this is
Starting point is 00:34:34 switching gears a little bit this is how Richard Branson feels about selling companies at heart I am an, which means I love building businesses and creating new things. In order to keep this going, however, it sometimes means selling stakes and companies or entire businesses. This is one part of my life I don't enjoy. I am not a person who harbors regrets,
Starting point is 00:34:58 but selling companies has always left me with an empty feeling. I can still taste the tears streaming down my face after I sold Virgin Records in 1992 to keep Virgin Atlantic float. Selling 49% of Virgin Atlantic in 1999 was very tough too, but we needed the funds to kickstart the early stages of Virgin Active.
Starting point is 00:35:21 Virgin Active is their line of gyms or health clubs. The expansion of Virgin Money and the creation of virgin mobile i think all three of those businesses virgin active mobile and money i think all ipo'd and i think they're all i think they all ipo'd for over a billion dollars i might be wrong but i'm pretty sure i enjoy the intensity of the building process and the process and the heat of the negotiating table. But as I believe that a business is nothing more than a group of people trying to make a difference, selling always leaves me sad, feeling somehow I have traded people. So when I do have regrets, it is generally about upsetting people along the way or letting anyone down. Sometimes in business, people get hurt. But sometimes, too, doing a deal is the right thing for all parties.
Starting point is 00:36:09 Okay, so now you know how he feels about selling companies. I don't know why this has been on my mind so much, about just enjoying the time you have now because it's only coming once. And maybe it's because I have a young daughter, and I know there's a lot of stories that kind of make me. Can't be the words not nostalgic because I haven't experienced it yet. But in the book, Richard talks about like, you know, his daughter Holly is born. And one day he's playing with her, you know, dance, playing, dancing with her at three years old. The next he looks up and she's getting married.
Starting point is 00:36:41 And I thought about that last night. I was out to dinner with my wife and I was just like,'re gonna miss these times like she's like what do you mean i was like these times right now being in our early 30s like having a young child like this like 20 years from now you're gonna you're just gonna miss it i want to make sure that i'm like relishing and enjoying life and i think i told and she looked at me like i was a little crazy. I was like, listen, I really think it's because I'm reading all these autobiographies and these, you know, they're writing autobiographies towards the end of their life
Starting point is 00:37:11 and they're talking about things they look back on and they miss and it's heavily influencing me. So I tell you that to tell you to say the next thing is that, you know, something I've talked about, I think it started in the Paul Allen book, might've started in before that, but just this idea that, you know know it's really hard for us as single people as individuals to make a change in the world it's not impossible it's really hard
Starting point is 00:37:33 but the thing you can influence is like your immediate surrounding and even more of an influence is by being a good parent i think is the best thing that you can do to have a positive impact in the world. Because if everybody was a good parent, like think about all the ways kids can grow up in just really wretched, putrid environments. And those kids are influenced by that environment and become the adults and they do the same thing. You got to break the cycle somewhere. And so this is just a quick little paragraph about, it's kind of stuck in my mind about him talking to, he's talking to his son. He's like, like many young people, Sam, this is his son, hadn't worked out what he wanted to do by the time he left school. I reassured him that that was absolutely fine and natural too. think about those two sentences like how many of us knew i mean i you just you're just so young you don't know anything about the world yet and so i
Starting point is 00:38:30 do think there's a lot of pressure to like make a decision like think about how it's set up in the united states like i guess in most other countries but i'm just talking about the culture that i grew up in it's you're we're asking 16 and 17 year olds to make like life-changing decisions to sometimes take on hundreds of thousands of dollars of debt and pick a career that they are going to need to enjoy for the next 40 years. That just seems really impossible. And so I felt these things too. I'm sure you probably did as well at this age.
Starting point is 00:39:00 And so he goes, you're 19. I remember telling him in one conversation, and this is the sentence that just hit me hard and i was kind of talking about last night at dinner that only happens once so enjoy it i was very keen not to put any pressure on him or his sister and let them stand on their own two feet like me me, Sam wasn't particularly academic and told me that school had always made him feel like his options were quite narrow. So he goes on and tells him, hey, take a gap year.
Starting point is 00:39:33 Like, learn who you are first. And so I'm not going to continue reading the rest of that, but just a reminder, you know, if you are, whether you are a parent already or you're going to be, you know, most likely most of the people listening to this are either a parent already or will be one day you just got to um just just try to be a good parent just really think about it's probably the most important things that we're ever going to do in our lives although sometimes it feels like our businesses are you know all right um okay so let me skip ahead.
Starting point is 00:40:15 Oh, this is interesting because I've told you one of my favorite authors is Michael Lewis. He can make almost any subject entertaining. And one of the books that I've read that made a fundamental difference on me, maybe because at the time I was younger when I read it or I don't know what it was but it's the big short so this is right around the time that Richard's been given a business opportunity and this is taking place in the early to mid-2000s and this is his his the takeaway from the story is to trust your intuition in the mid-2000s lots of people were excited about a new commodity that Goldman Sachs wanted to invest in. I had never heard of it, found it quite confusing, and balked at the amount of money required.
Starting point is 00:40:53 We decided to bide our time and get more details. As we investigated the deal further, I grew even more skeptical about the damage it could do to our brand, and we turned it down. I forgot all about those commodities until the real estate lending crash sent the financial world into disarray. So several years later, suddenly the commodities were all anybody was talking about. Subprime mortgages. Many experts placed lots of the blame for the crash on subprimes, and gold and sacks
Starting point is 00:41:21 were fined $550 million by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. As well as forking out the second biggest penalty ever paid by a Wall Street company, Goldman Sachs also had to state that its subprimes marketing material, the same documents we had been looking at, had misled investors with incomplete information. So basically they wanted a ton of money in an area that he had no idea. It didn't make sense. His gut told him not to do it. And it turns out they were, they were lying. I almost said a different word there. They were, it's interesting. Oh, it's incomplete information. No, it's they're, they're scamming you. It was a timely reminder to always examine every aspect of a deal and go with your instinct if it doesn't feel right.
Starting point is 00:42:12 So this is on, this is interesting. I never thought about this, about, you know, he's setting up all these companies. Like, do you have a favorite? And he said, one question I'm often asked is which company is my favorite founders, just like parents shouldn't have favorites. We love all of our kids equally equally but if you promise not to tell anyone i'll admit to you virgin atlantic will always have an extra special place in my heart can you imagine me still running a record label in my 60s that was actually surprising if first of all i never thought to ask the question what company's your favorite but if i did if somebody had asked the question i would assume that his response would have been the record label so it says can you imagine me still running a record label in my 60s?
Starting point is 00:42:48 Virgin Atlantic was the jump-off point. This kind of makes sense why it's his favorite, though. He's describing here. Virgin Atlantic was the jump-off point from which I built a whole world to live, love, and laugh within. He called that a lateral move. As I said in 2012, we have no plans to disappear. Virgin Atlantic was my baby 28 years ago when we set it up with just one plane. Like all children, they never really stop being your babies,
Starting point is 00:43:13 and Virgin Atlantic is still much cherished. And he's talking about on the very next page, you know, I think it's funny that he loves it because it seems to be also the one that gives him the most problems. So he's now continuing to talk about this issue he raised earlier about the further consolidation in the airline industry and, you know, the disastrous effects it has for the actual end consumer. For more than a decade, BA, British Airways, tried to form a partnership with American Airlines, which we fiercely contesteded this partnership could lead to antitrust immunity under u.s law which would allow legal collusion on pricing substantially reduced competition and potentially
Starting point is 00:43:57 put virgin atlantic out of business and i love this um this is like a thought experiment what would you do if you were king for a day? If I was king for a day, I would ensure competition laws were more strictly adhered to. I believe in this wholeheartedly, and I love this next quote. I believe small is beautiful, and the more companies competing, the better. Again, something I always reference on the podcast. There's a lot of these ideas that, you know, this is Richard Branson now writing this in 2017, but it could very easily have been Edwin Land writing it back in the 1940s. So this is BA was essentially requesting permission to fix prices and schedules as well as share marketing and operational data activity that would normally be illegal.
Starting point is 00:44:46 It was an unholy alliance." And so this is his takeaway. He goes, allowing the two biggest carriers on the planet to merge would create a hugely uneven playing field. So now I want to talk about, well, this is on social media, technology, writing, taking notes, delegation, and telling stories. And this is going to unfold over several pages, but I found it really fascinating. It says, two of the big changes over the 20 years since I wrote my first autobiography have been the rise of social media and the way the internet has changed the way we consume information. I did an interview with the New York Times,
Starting point is 00:45:29 which they headlined, Taking Virgin's Brand into Internet Territory. Richard Branson says the web is ready for his style of business, ran the subheading. The web may have been ready, but I definitely wasn't. In many ways, Virgin wasn't, and this cost us a lot of time and money. One of the biggest mistakes Virgin ever made was not being fast enough off the mark to become a digital leader. However, there have been many episodes along the way for us to learn from. To begin with, this is interesting, we were extremely quick off the mark when it came to the iPad. And we decided to launch the world's first iPad-only magazine called Project. I joined the team outside Apple's flagship New York store covered head to toe in a newspaper.
Starting point is 00:46:21 The magazine was great fun, pioneering a new way for people to digest stories. I quickly realized we had completely misjudged the market and we were publishing into a void. The critical reception was positive but there weren't enough people with iPads and certainly not enough people willing to pay to read a magazine. Within less than a year both publications were dead. I was disappointed that project didn't work because journalism was where I'd begun all those years before. I started student magazine because I had a passion for making a positive difference in the world and thought one of the best ways to do so was by spreading the word in print about injustices, as well as sharing new breakthroughs and innovation in the arts, culture, and politics.
Starting point is 00:47:02 While I dislike school, I always love writing. Aged 19, filling with the optimism of youth, I ruminated on the power of individuals to stimulate positive change. But as well as realizing my journalistic ambitions through student, I was trying to make ends meet, calling up potential advertisers, and organizing distribution. Without even knowing what the word meant, I was becoming an entrepreneur. Then, as we struggled to balance our books, the mail order record business we had started in the back of the magazine took off. Simultaneously, we were running the student advisory center, that's what I was referencing earlier. Our nonprofit organization helping more than 500 young people each week cope with issues
Starting point is 00:47:50 ranging from loneliness to contraceptive advice to sexuality. With these projects taking up lots of time and effort, Student went on the back burner. Soon, Virgin Record Shops and later Record Lab labels superseded everything and my journal journalism career was parked so before we go into the rest of this uh just to recap he's talking about hey i really wish uh like so i started late in the digital game right but then in some ways i started early by doing a ipad only magazine except at the time i launched it not enough people had ipads and certainly not enough were willing to pay for a magazine on just the iPad. But he talks about his first love was, you know, if you're starting a business at 15, chances are you like doing what
Starting point is 00:48:34 it is you're doing. So he's like, I was bad in school, but I love to write. And so I'm going to share later on some of the letters he wrote, because he has a lot of handwritten letters that in some cases are over 20 years old that I found really instructive for just good advice on how to live a good life. But the reason I bring this up is because I love his ideas. Like, listen, I loved writing. I liked making a difference. Maybe the iPad magazine wasn't the best way to do it. And so he realizes that a blog and Twitter is basically the same thing, but the modern equivalents. So he's going to come to that realization here. He says, but while project wasn't a success, I like to think students' spirit of outspoken thought and heady fun is revived through a different way of connecting with people, my blog and Twitter account.
Starting point is 00:49:24 So what does that mean? He's basically, well, we basically started our own in-house online publishing operation. And thanks to social media, I'm back in the editor's chair. To begin with, I was unsure about its benefits. But 20,000 tweets, scores of social networks, 40 million followers, and a world record for most LinkedIn followers later, I'm happy to be proved wrong about social media not being here to stay. So I went and looked, and I was astonished at how frequently he publishes on his blog.
Starting point is 00:49:58 They're little short, just little random thoughts that he has. I recommend reading it. It's interesting. So he gets into this right here. He says, people also often question, how do I find time to write so regularly? Whether notes, letters, blog op-eds, or even books like this.
Starting point is 00:50:15 But the reality is I'm always getting my thoughts down on paper. The trick, and this is great advice here, the trick is to make it part of your daily routine. You have time to eat, drink, brush your teeth, and do dozens of other things every day. Just add writing to the list. I jot down ideas, thoughts, requests, reminders,
Starting point is 00:50:35 and doodles every single day. If I didn't, I would forget them before I ever put them in action. So that's part of the reason. There's two things here that are important to me. One, the reason I take notes on books and podcasts and i don't i didn't know i didn't know this was less um common because like i would never remember all this stuff it's just like you can read a book and then go back five years later and scroll through and just read your highlights
Starting point is 00:51:01 and your notes and there's suddenly like these ideas that, you know, have escaped to the ether are now forefront of your mind again. I think it's extremely helpful. And there's a – he said – I don't know if I share it on the podcast or not, but he said like Davos taking notes on a presentation. And somebody comes over to him. I'm like, you're the only one in there taking notes. And his point was just like so common.
Starting point is 00:51:24 I was like, yeah, of course. How else do I remember it all? I think there's, and I certainly used to suffer from this until I saw studies and then my own life experiences, that you really overrate how much you're going to memorize. I mean, even now I talk to my mother-in-law. I want to try to compare and contrast what goes on with my daughter. When my wife was three years old, how was she? And she's like, you know, outside of videos and pictures, you'd be surprised how much you're going to forget as time passes.
Starting point is 00:51:51 Because as you live through it, you're like, wow, this is the most important thing ever. I'm never going to forget this. Not realizing that's just fundamentally not how your brain works. But this whole – the second part is I want to do this saying that you should just make writing a part of your daily routine because um i'm going through and having to having to read a book every week and make a podcast on it take notes go back and think about all this stuff i want what i want to do is like write like in addition to the podcast I was thinking about doing this in like uh like writing what if I could write like a 500 to a thousand words on like the the best
Starting point is 00:52:32 what's the number one thing I learned from reading this book and um not only because I it would help me retain the ideas but I think it'd be useful for other people to read as well and the reason I do this because in in like personal conversations i feel like whether it's with an old friend or somebody you're getting to know there's a really i really like designing questions with constraints because you really see how a person thinks so for example i would ask the question like if you were stuck on a desert island you can only be in one album with you to listen to for the rest of your life what does that album be would be or uh one i ask a lot in my personal life is like you could only visit one city for the rest of your life what would that be and the reason is like
Starting point is 00:53:16 because you know people say they'll give you a list of their maybe favorite books and that would be 20 books or their favorite cities they visited or whatever the case is but when you say no you have to choose one you really get to see how that person thinks and um and i really do feel it's like a good tool to get to know the inner workings of somebody else's mind better and i was thinking i was like well what like, okay, so if I wrote an article or whatever you want to call it, an essay, whatever you term you want to put a note to diary entry, um, about what's the one thing I learned from each of these entrepreneurs, I think over time, if I'd already been doing this from the get go, I'd have, you know, close to 50 of them by now. I think actually that'd be an interesting like audio book or maybe even a book. But, uh, if I had to do that and I
Starting point is 00:54:04 want to start doing it now it's like well what's the one thing you learned from you know paul allen what's the one thing you learned from steve jobs uh james dyson over and over again like this collection of would be really interesting and and helpful not only to myself but i think to others so when i think about that with richard branson it's obviously what i talked about last week it's like protecting your downside and i think going into details with stories which were in the middle of the importance of stories, the section I've just taken a tangent on, I think that would be useful. And I like books that are short, concise, and get right to the point. And I think that's just easier for most of us to learn
Starting point is 00:54:40 that way. So, okay. So now we're in the middle of why he's taking notes and everything else. So he goes, if somebody works for me and doesn't take notes, I asked them, are you too important? Note taking isn't beneath anyone. I take notes in every meeting to keep the frame of mind to learn. I edit as I go along and follow up with dates and tasks in order of importance. I couldn't have written two autobiographies without them. My first widely read blog was about the art of delegation. So now we're going from note-taking to delegation. This is about two paragraphs later. It was an appropriate theme since delegation has been a secret of my success for five decades. Asking for support is a strength, not a weakness.
Starting point is 00:55:23 If you try to do everything yourself, you won't succeed, and you'll make yourself miserable along the way. I now work with our content team on around 600 blogs per year, and I call the team several times a day. So that's what he's going back where he's talking about, hey, student was, you know, this ragtag group of people trying to make a difference. He's like, well, I'm not going to make a magazine today, but an online blog is kind of best in both worlds.
Starting point is 00:55:48 So he's like, we have an in-house online publishing operation, and it's through his. It's through his blog. He has a team helping him, and they're producing a lot of content every year. And if you think that sounds too time-consuming, think of all the things you do that take lots of time and are not productive.
Starting point is 00:56:05 I love this. I love the art of getting more done by the elimination of... There's a Bruce Lee quote. It's the daily decrease, not the daily increase that you should focus on. Hack away at the unessential. I'm paraphrasing, but it's one of my favorite Bruce Lee quotes. Rather than slave over a spreadsheet, why not write a blog and turn your pitch into a story? Humans communicate through stories. It's how we make sense of our surroundings, ourselves, and our place in the world. Human beings have glands.
Starting point is 00:56:41 This is such interesting writing to me. Human beings have glands that secrete all sorts of things, but the human mind secretes stories. We live narratives. That is the only way we know how to experience anything, and it is our glory. This is one of my favorite parts of the book because what I just read to you is just his insights takes place over five, six pages.
Starting point is 00:57:09 And he's wrapping up what the effect of social media technology is on today, like the importance of writing, why he takes notes, why he feels you need to delegate if you're going to build successful companies, and then how to communicate the values of your company by telling stories. That's just a lot of information I found extremely valuable. So just a few more things. So remember at the beginning I told you that this is a book. As much as he talks about business, it's really a book on life, on somebody that's had an unbelievable set of experiences in one lifetime. And it's just like his musings on looking back and the things that he still remembers. Well, this is a short anecdote. It's really sad about remembering, I would say melancholy.
Starting point is 00:58:08 Maybe sad is not the right word, but we have one life, as he said, multiple. You have to live a life filled with purpose. Do not suffer every day. Some level of suffering in life is inevitable, of course, but don't suffer through it. Make your life filled with purpose. Do whatever you need to do to work yourself in that position. And this is the realization that he comes to, you know, he had a really close relationship with his dad and his dad's going to pass away here. So he says, I rang up dad to talk about the arrangements for the big day.
Starting point is 00:58:36 So he's talking about is that, um, his daughter and his, what is now his, his daughter's husband called him up and it's like, well, you, you know, we, can I marry your daughter's husband called him up and is like, will you, you know, can I marry your daughter? Will you give me a blessing? So he's talking to his dad, and then after that, they said, hey, we want to get married on the same day in the same place you did,
Starting point is 00:58:54 which was on, I forgot, I think December 20th on Necker Island. So it said, Holly and Freddie had decided that they wanted to get married the same date and in the same place as Joan and I had, 20th December on Necker Island. Dad listened carefully and then stopped me in my tracks with his reply. I really hope you all have a wonderful time, he said simply. As he spoke, I understood what he meant. It was like an arrow through the heart. I think he must have known that he only
Starting point is 00:59:26 had a few hours left. That night, March 19, 2011, he died peacefully in his sleep. I was devastated. However far away we had been from each other in terms of distance, we had always remained extremely close. Dad felt as constant a part of my life as the sun rising and setting each day. He lived a life. He lived as full of life as anybody could wish. So to me, I just took away. It's like just live your life with purpose. Enjoy it.
Starting point is 01:00:04 He was 93 years old. He said, dad died a happy man. The only way you can do that is by filling your life with purpose and love. What you give, what you do, how you treat people, and how you make them feel. He's describing his dad here. He had a kind word for everyone, an infectious laugh, a cheeky streak, and a thirst for exploration that I am immensely proud to have inherited. His favorite phrase was,
Starting point is 01:00:37 isn't life wonderful? It truly is, though a little less wonderful without him. Okay, and I want to read, this is one of what I was referencing earlier, one of his letters. All right, so this is Richard's letter to young aspiring entrepreneurs. Olivia Hill, a 12-year-old schoolgirl who sent me a wonderful note about her own entrepreneurial dreams. She wrote to me asking about the key skills I used when first starting out. I swiftly replied, the advice might be useful for other young business
Starting point is 01:01:20 students too. So here it is. So I want to read you Richard's letter to young aspiring entrepreneurs. And it doesn't just have to be young people. It says, Dear Olivia, many thanks for getting in touch. I'm honored you have chosen yours truly as a subject of your business studies project. As somebody who did not particularly enjoy school, I hope you have some fun finding out about Virgin's adventures. As you pointed out, my life in business started with student magazine when I was a few years older than you are now. We set up student to give a voice to people like me who wanted to protest against the Vietnam War and the establishment. I
Starting point is 01:01:58 didn't have a career in business in mind. We just wanted to make a positive difference to people's lives. I soon learned one of the best ways to do that is to become an entrepreneur. The key enterprising skills I used when first starting out are the very same ones I use today. Now he's going to list off what he feels are valuable traits of an entrepreneur. The art of delegation, risk-taking, surrounding yourself with a great team, and working on projects you really believe in. As you mentioned in your letter, I suffer from dyslexia, but was able to turn this to my advantage.
Starting point is 01:02:36 I delegated the areas I struggled with to people who also believed in the project. This freed up my time to focus on what I was good at, the strategy of the magazine, making contacts, and develop and developing marketing. We had very little money so I had to take risks to get our magazine on the map. I approached to be in student people like Mick Jagger and David Hockney whom somebody with more experience may have been too intimidated to contact. For some reason they said yes. I secured advertising by calling up big brands from the school phone box,
Starting point is 01:03:13 telling them that their rivals were already advertising with us, and playing them off against each other. It was all great fun, and we learned so much about business by taking chances, getting things wrong, and getting up to give it another go. Back then, people who were interested in starting their own businesses were not encouraged in school. Nowadays, while I still think much more could be done to encourage entrepreneurship and education, there are lots of tools and mentors to help you get started in business. If your studies spark your interest, then that's brilliant. If you don't get top grades,
Starting point is 01:03:54 remember there's a lot more to life than some letters on a piece of paper. Have you thought about your own first business idea yet? When you do, be sure to let me know. And a paragraph or two later, he expounds on his own personal philosophy. And I love this, and this is where I'll end. It's entrepreneurship is our natural state. All human beings are born as entrepreneurs. But unfortunately, many of us never had the opportunity to unwrap that part of our life, so it remains hidden. Now, as you do have the opportunity, don't waste it. I think entrepreneurship is our natural state, a big adult word that probably boils down to something much more obvious like playfulness when we are young before we have our childlike wonder beaten out of us by
Starting point is 01:04:47 adult life we are at our most inventive and ambitious interactions i've always tried to keep that youthful spirit i think one of the best benefits of having to read so many of these biographies is that. It breaks you out of the mold because I'm constantly exposed to people that just, they designed their life. They didn't just let life happen to them. And it's this constant reminder that life can be almost anything you want it to be it's so much broad more broad than the narrow track society kind of try to push us pushes us into and you realize that the people that just follow that track those are not the people they're the opposite of the people we're covering here. And so I think that whole thing is like, just, we had it when you're a kid, like you have a childlike wonder at the sense of the world
Starting point is 01:05:53 and then it's beaten out of us. And he's like, you know, I'm always trying to keep that youthful spirit and you can kind of see it in the way he lives his life and the things he does. So, okay. So if you want the full story, read the book. You can go to, and if you want to read the book and support the podcast at the same time, like I said earlier, you go to founderspodcast.com forward slash books. If you buy one, two, I think I said this before, somebody bought 12 of the books at one time. When you click on the link through that page, founderspodcast.com forward slash books, and you click through and you buy a book, Amazon sends me a small percentage of sale at no additional cost to you. So it's a great way.
Starting point is 01:06:35 It's kind of like if I was sitting on the corner and I was doing this in the public square, you could come down and give me 80 cents or a dollar. That's the equivalent of what you're doing when you buy a book. So it may not seem like a lot, but any little bit helps. And again, do you ever regret buying books? A book is a bargain. It's just probably the best. As far as dollar for dollar, I can't think of anything better that you could purchase. And if you want to support the podcast, the best way to do that is to become a Founders member.
Starting point is 01:07:04 For a small monthly fee, you get access to Founders members only podcasts. There's already 10 or 11, maybe 12 by the time you listen to this. And I do a new one every week. So if you sign up right now, the Founders members podcast I'm doing this week is on Richard Branson and some more ideas from this book. We're going to talk about giving Steve Jobs an idea. Branson's advice on marriage and relationships. His idea about how to turn business. The metaphor is, you know, how to how to turn a business from an acorn to an oak tree, which is one of my favorite Jeff Bezos quotes.
Starting point is 01:07:44 We're going to talk about what would Richard do if he had to start over, one of the most unique questions I've heard him asked. Some problems, his outlook on why some problems need a private company, right, so not public companies, and a founder with a long-term vision and how that's a way that you can only solve specific problems that are not relied on like quarterly earnings um he's got a great story on not not on why it's unwise to keep selling onions when the customer wants carrots um there's some another story i want to tell you about that i'll share on the founders uh uh, members podcasts on Richard Branson, uh, Elon Musk and satellites
Starting point is 01:08:26 and on how expense expenses compound and how to keep an eye on, uh, an eye on that. And finally, uh, a letter that he wrote to his grandson, which I think is just wonderful advice. Um, cause a lot of people say, you know, they, there's these questions where it's like, okay, well, if you could talk to the younger version of you, you know, like what would you tell 20 year old Richard or 30 year old Richard? That's a great question too. But more importantly, that is what would you tell your grandchild? Because you're going to love your children and grandchildren more than you love yourself. And so I think you'll actually learn a lot from that. So I really like doing the members-only podcasts. Some of them look very similar to Founders podcast episodes like the one that you just listened to. Some are
Starting point is 01:09:17 very much an experiment. They're kind of weird. There's one that was only five minutes long, and it's a great story from Samuel Zemuri. Some are just as long as a regular podcast. My point being is, by me going out and making these podcasts, it's my way to say thank you for actually supporting and allowing me to do the project. And if you get any kind of value from this, and you know, I love the reviews, I love the emails I get and everything else. But at the end of the day, people willing to spend their hard earned money to support a project is the best signal for me to keep going. And that I'm actually doing something with my time that's that people find valuable. So please, if you do love the podcast and you've been thinking you've been on the fence, like, oh, I'm going to do it eventually.
Starting point is 01:10:09 Oh, yeah, I'm going to support one day. Don't wait. Do it now. You click that link that's in the show notes or go to Founders Podcast for support. If you're doing it on an Apple device, whether a Mac or iPhone, you can use Apple Pay. It takes less than a minute and then it's set and you don't have to worry about it. So that's the best way. The second, another way to support the podcast is
Starting point is 01:10:30 just like I take notes in highlights and books, I do the same thing for podcasts. And I do the same, and the reason I've been taking notes for so long on podcasts is because just like what Richard said, like how else am I going to remember them all? Going back and reading notes, if you're listening to a podcast to learn,
Starting point is 01:10:53 you should be taking notes. Because if not, these ideas, a few of them are going to stick in your mind and they'll stick around forever and they'll probably change the course of your life. But there's a lot of stuff that maybe you learned six months ago you heard six months ago and that by rereading it today sparks another idea that now interacts with an idea that you've had since then and you know knowledge compounds and so what founders notes is is hey we're covering entrepreneurship from historical context on founders, right?
Starting point is 01:11:25 And we're doing that through books, through autobiographies and biographies. But what about all the entrepreneurs are still in the arena today, operating today, building companies, they, when they go appear on a podcast, which are to me, what that is, is like, it reminds me of back when I was in college, it's just a lecture, except a lecture is way more valuable, because you have an expert in a very narrow specific domain, which is they're an expert on how they built their one specific company. And if we can pull ideas out of how they built that one specific company, now some of those ideas won't apply to you, but some of them will. And then you can, again, take an idea that's basically, what is that? That's just a distilled, it's like they're experience distilled, right? So you have maybe
Starting point is 01:12:04 years of building a company that can come down to a helpful lesson or helpful hint for you. You can then take that from, from them, from their experience, combine it with something else that from your experience, and now you're led to maybe a new business model, new idea, new opportunity. I think it's unbelievably value. So for the people that are already paid subscribers on Founders Notes, you see that something I've just done is also explaining like the value is very clear once you read it. But at the top of every email, it's going to say, hey, I think last week it said Founders Notes turned five hours of audio into key ideas you can read in 10 minutes. And so every week at the top of the paid email,
Starting point is 01:12:41 you're going to have, okay, Founders Notes took hours of audio. And basically what I do is I add up all the, how long the podcast takes to listen to, and then how many words the average person reads like 275 words a minute. And so ideally I want the email to be, you know, five, maybe about 10 minutes long. I think it's good. And so what, what, what happens is every month that you're a subscriber, paid subscribers are going to hear from about 20 different founders every month. It's about five every week. If you want to test it out first, go to foundersnotes.co, put in your email address, you'll immediately get back the most recent version of the free list. And the people on the free list are probably going to hear from about one founder a week.
Starting point is 01:13:26 So about 20% of what I'm currently producing. That gives you a good idea of what it looks like. And basically it's, I take key ideas and I put them in tweet size bullet points. So in two and a half minutes or thereabout, you can read the best ideas out of an hour long podcast. And if you're interested in listening to the podcast, I leave a link and you can go directly there and listen to the whole thing for additional content. I personally think Founders Notes is extremely
Starting point is 01:13:55 valuable for people that are interested in entrepreneurship, whether you're already a founder now or you want to be or you just want to learn about business in general. So if that sounds like something you're interested in, go ahead and sign up at foundersnotes.co. Links are in the podcast player like always. Okay, so Founders Members, Founders Notes. If you want to buy books, Founders Podcasts, forward slash books. If you want to listen to the book, the book I just read or any one other one, Instead of reading it, there's a link below. I think it expires soon though, and it's a way for you to get two free audiobooks.
Starting point is 01:14:30 So I'd recommend picking up two of the books that I've covered so far, whichever ones stick out to you. And one last thing before I get out of here is if you want additional content from me, extra podcasts that are not on the free feed and are not on the free feed and are not on the member feed. I do extra podcasts for people that have left reviews and have told other people, I've recommended this podcast to other people. So if you do it on like Apple Podcasts or Stitcher,
Starting point is 01:14:57 you can leave a review, take a screenshot, email it to foundersreviews at gmail.com. I will reply back. I check this email about once a week. I'll reply back with a reviewer-only private feed that you can then input into your podcast player. It's really easy to do. And you'll have access to not only the past reviewer-only podcasts that I've done. I did one on Steve Jobs,
Starting point is 01:15:21 as told through Ed Catmull, who worked with Steve Jobs for 26 straight years, and one on Max Levchin. But any ones I do in the future, that feed will automatically update into your podcast player. If you're listening on things like Overcast, pick an episode you truly, truly loved. And they have a recommendation engine or a mechanism where you can – I think it's a star. It is a star. It will turn the star gold, take a screenshot of the star turning gold. Email it to me and same thing.
Starting point is 01:15:47 And any podcast app that you use, whatever kind of recommending mechanism that podcast player has works for me. Take screenshots, send it to foundersreviews at gmail.com and I will reply back. All right, I've talked enough. Thank you very much for the support. Thank you very much for listening
Starting point is 01:16:04 and I will talk to you next week.

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