Founders - #79 Charlie Munger (The Complete Investor)
Episode Date: July 7, 2019What I learned from reading Charlie Munger: The Complete Investor by Tren Griffin ----Founders Notes gives you the ability to tap into the collective knowledge of history's greatest entrepreneurs 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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What is most interesting about Munger is not his success as an investor, but the way he
thinks and keeps his emotions under control.
Munger's ability to cut to the heart of an issue with a few well-chosen words is legendary,
as is his desire to think independently.
A fundamentally important truth is that people rarely make decisions independently.
This means that people who can think independently, gain control of their emotions,
and avoid psychological errors have an advantage. Warren Buffett once illustrated Munger's desire
to do his own thinking with this story. In 1985, a major investment banking house undertook to sell
Scott Fetzer. Real quick, Scott Fetzer is the name of a company. It's best well known for selling the
Kirby vacuum and the world book
encyclopedia, but it also owns about a dozen or so other businesses. I had never heard of it before,
so I had to look it up. So it says a major investment baking house undertook to sell
Scott Fetzer, offering it widely, but with no success. Upon reading of the strikeout,
I wrote Ralph Shea, then and now Scott Fetzer's CEO, expressing an interest in buying the business.
I had never met Ralph, but within a week we had a deal.
Unfortunately Scott Fetzer's letter of engagement with the banking firm provided it with a $2.5
million fee upon sale, even if it had nothing to do with finding the buyer.
I guess the lead banker felt he should do something for his payment,
so he graciously offered us a copy of the book on Scott Fetzer that the firm had prepared. With his
customary tack, Charlie responded, I'll give you $2.5 million not to read it. So that is from the
introduction of the book that I read this week and the one I'm going to talk to you about today, which is Charlie Munger, The Complete Investor by Tren Griffin.
And what I was just reading from was actually a direct quote from Warren Buffett from his chairman's letter all the way back in 1999.
So last week we did an introduction to Charlie Munger with the book, the wonderful book, The Tao of Charlie Munger, which I'd recommend everybody go out and buy.
It's a fantastically easy to read book and a good introduction into the beautiful mind
of Charlie Munger.
It contains like 130 or so individual essays where the author would take like a quote or
a statement by Charlie and then use that that to expound on his own thoughts.
Like I said, it's a really easy read and a really good introduction to getting to know Charlie Munger,
which I think everybody obviously should get to know.
In that book and in last week's podcast, I covered a little bit about Charlie's early life
and how he got into investing and everything, so I'm not going to cover that this week.
Definitely go back and read that.
What I'm going to do is just jump right into the highlights and notes that I took while I was reading the book and the things that really stuck out to me.
This book is formatted in a similar but at the same time different way.
There's a lot of quotes from Charlie and Warren in this book, but Tren breaks it down into more regular chapters.
So it reads more like a book than last week's book,
where I consider that more like a reference book,
where you could just pick it up,
read one or two or three essays,
put it down, and so on and so forth.
You can read Tren's book straight through,
and it kind of follows.
You can understand why Trent organized the way he did.
And if you're not familiar with Trent Griffin, I'd recommend, first of all, he's a good follower on Twitter.
But I'd also recommend checking out his blog, which I've learned a lot from, 25IQ.com.
Okay, so let's just jump right into the book. And I love how I talk about this all the
time on the podcast. So this is Charlie just telling us that we should read biographies.
But I love the point that Trent's making here, which is his interpretation of how Charlie Munger
thinks, because I say this all the time, like, listen, we're here to learn from these people,
we're not here to idolize them. Because you know, all humans are imperfect. So Trent picks that point up right here.
He says, the point is not to treat anyone like a hero, but rather to consider whether Munger, like his idol Benjamin Franklin, may have qualities, attributes, systems, or approaches to life that we might want to emulate, even in part.
This same process explains why Munger has read hundreds of biographies.
Learning from the success and failures of others is the fastest way to get smarter and wiser
without a lot of pain. And undoubtedly a lot of other smart people, current smart people and
people in the past have picked up on this idea. I always say like the genesis, the little kernel
of idea that stayed in my mind for
a year or two before i started this podcast and kind of influenced me to start it was uh when i
was listening to elon musk on another podcast and he was asked you know you started a business
really young did you how did you even think to learn about these things like did you read a bunch
of business books he's like no i didn't read business books i read biographies and he thought
they were really helpful i talked last week in the first like five or six minutes of last week's podcast, how every single one of the entrepreneurs
I've studied for this podcast are nearly every single one.
They did the exact same thing, whether Jeff Bezos studying Sam Walton or
the founder of Costco, which he Jeff talked about, like
the breakfast with him or something like that.
The meeting he had with his name is Jim Senegal, I think, was life changing.
So this is definitely a good idea for us to use. And what he's saying here, like, I love what he says is like, listen, we just want
to consider whether they have qualities, attributes, systems, or approaches to life that we want, that
we might want to emulate even in part. Okay. So let me skip ahead a little bit. And I love this,
this idea, which I think applies to a lot in life which is
simple but not easy it says much of what is interesting about munger is explained by this
simple sentence i observe what works and what doesn't and why that's a direct quote from him
life happens to munger as it does to everyone but unlike many, he thinks deeply about why things happen and works hard to learn
from that experience. So again, just sitting down and thinking and analyzing, it's really simple.
But for some reason, for our species, this is actually not easy for us to do. And if you're
able to do that, you have an advantage over a long period of time. And I think I'll touch on
this later, but just in case I don't, Charlie brings up a lot about the importance of leaving your, like, do not pack your schedule.
He's like, you wouldn't believe how much time Warren and I leave to just thinking and reading.
That he's even said, like, if someone was to follow around Warren Buffett or himself, like, it looks very academic.
They're just sitting and reading.
They're sitting in there.
He calls it sitting on their ass, sitting on their ass and reading or talking one-on-one with people that have
information that is valuable to them, but not like one of the most famous quirks about Warren is that
he won't, he schedules very rarely, like he won't fill up his calendar and he won't make a commitment
that far in the future. He does that very rarely. So for example, if you want to meet, let's say you
want to meet him next Thursday, or let's say you want to meet him three months from now, right? He's like, well, call me
the day before. And if I can do it, I'll do it. But he is rather strict about keeping like
controlling his time, which I think is smart for everybody to do. All right. So Munger is going to
tell us we need to use checklists here. He says, Munger is a strong proponent of a checklist
approach to life challenges. Direct quote from Charlie. He says, Munger's a strong proponent of a checklist approach to life challenges.
Direct quote from Charlie.
It says, I'm a great believer in solving hard problems by using a checklist.
You need to get all the likely and unlikely answers before you.
Otherwise, it's easy to miss something important.
Part of the benefit of creating a checklist is the process for writing down your ideas.
I've always loved the point Buffett made about the importance of making the effort to actually put your ideas in writing. In Buffett's view,
if you cannot write it down, you have not thought it through.
So I actually just heard the founder of WordPress, Matt Mullenweg, talk about that, how
when he's looking for people to hire, he always sees how they write. And he's like, listen,
writing is important, but it's not the most important thing.
Thinking is the most important thing.
But it's really hard to think if you don't write it down.
This is something I'm definitely trying to work on in my own life as well.
Okay, so this is another trend that you're going to see over and over again.
And this monger is telling us, like, if you want to have a good life, if you want to succeed at what you're doing, you need to become
what he calls a learning machine. He says, so this is trend writing. He says, the learning and
teaching opportunities related to investing are essentially unlimited. And so this book is about
investing. Our purpose is we're just going to, every time you hear the word investing, just
think about entrepreneurship, running a company. it's really very similar activities.
Obviously, entrepreneurship is where our focus is.
Munger likes to say that a successful investor, read successful entrepreneur,
never stops being a learning machine.
This need to learn and relearn means that an entrepreneur must read and think constantly.
Munger has said he does not know a single successful entrepreneur,
remember, I'm just changing every time he says investor to entrepreneur, who does not read voraciously. Learning about Munger's ideas and methods will forever change the way you think about investing and about life.
You will make better decisions, be happier, and live a more fulfilling life.
Okay, so that's the end of the introduction. Let's go ahead right into So they're both proponents He's going to start off with who influenced them
Ben Graham
Obviously the godfather of value investing
Heavily influenced Warren
And Charlie
And then Charlie did some tweaking to his system
Where it's not just about buying fair businesses
At great prices
It's about buying great businesses
At fair prices.
And just a few quotes here I'm going to pull out that I don't think need expounding on.
And it's Charlie Munger's distaste for complexity. And the note I left myself is,
complexity is not your friend. So here's Charlie says, we have a passion for keeping things simple.
Another quote, if something is too hard, we move on to something else.
What could be simpler than that?
And another quote, I love this.
He says, we have three baskets in, out and too tough.
We have to have a special insight or we'll put it into the too tough basket and just move on.
And then here's Charlie quoting one of somebody from history that's heavily influenced him. That's Confucius. He says, Confucius said that the real knowledge,
that real knowledge is knowing the extent of one's ignorance. Aristotle and Socrates said the same
thing. And so now I want to get into this concept, which I really like. So this is Munger's concept
of worldly wisdom. And there's
an entire chapter in this book dedicated to this. And I think it's a really useful idea. So he says,
Munger has adopted an approach to business and life that he refers to as worldly wisdom.
Munger believes that by using a range of different models from many different disciplines,
psychology, history, mathematics, physics, philosophy, biology, and so on, a person can use the combined output of the synthesis
to produce something that has more value than the sum of its parts.
In developing his worldly wisdom approach,
Munger uses what he calls,
I'm hoping I'm pronouncing this word correctly,
but you know I can't pronounce any words,
a lattice of mental models.
So the lattice metaphor was also carefully chosen by Munger to convey the idea that multiple models needed to acquire worldly wisdom must be interconnected.
And so this is Munger expounding on that.
He says, you've got to have models in your head and you've got to have and you've got to array your experience, both vicarious, through reading, and direct, on this latticework of models.
And now this is Tran expounding on that.
It says, understanding the worldly wisdom methodology is made easier if you see it applied in an example.
To illustrate the method, Munger gave the example of a business that raises the prices of its product and yet sells more of the product.
This would appear to violate
the rule of supply and demand as taught in economics. So his point here is if you only
study economics, you might never attempt something like this because you're like what Munger was
saying. You've got to connect all these models in your mind. Well, if you only have one model,
you're going to think it's right and it's a good approximation of reality, and it's not.
However, if one thinks about the discipline of psychology,
one might conclude that the product is a geffen good. I've also never heard this term before,
and what that means is people desire more of it at higher prices. Another explanation, one could conclude that low prices signal poor quality to buyers and that raising prices will result in more sales.
So again, he's studying human behavior
from different angles.
So it could be economics, it could be philosophy,
it could be psychology,
and he's applying why it makes sense.
And this is actually a rather important tenet
to how Berkshire thinks about their businesses.
They don't want to buy businesses
where they're not able to raise prices,
and we'll get into more of that later.
Simply put, Munger believes that people who think very broadly and understand many different models from many different
disciplines make better decisions this view should not be a surprise because he
believes the world is composed of many complex systems that are constantly
interacting okay before everybody's quote there's many ways to think about
this Munger is gonna call them complex systems. Marc Andreessen calls the act of starting a company and living in
the world in general as a complex adaptive system. Bill Gurley would call it a multivariable
nonlinear system. They're all describing the same thing. And so here's Munger talking about that.
He says, you've got a complex system and it spews out a lot of wonderful numbers that enable you to
measure some factors.
But there are other factors that are terribly important, yet there's no precise numbering you can put to these factors. This is a really important point. You know they're important,
but you don't have the numbers. Well, practically, one, everybody overweighs the stuff that could be
numbered because it yields to the statistical techniques that are taught in academia, and two, doesn't mix in the hard-to-measure stuff that may be important.
That is a mistake I've tried all my life to avoid,
and I have no regrets for having done that.
I also say on point number two,
you've heard me reference that as a human score in the abstract.
Like if there's not a number, if it's not right in front of us,
we kind of ignore it even though it's really important.
Okay. So again, the best way to survive in a complex system is to, one, what he was just saying about Confucius and Socrates and Aristotle.
So you have to know the limits of your knowledge.
I think he calls this like knowing the circle of your competence.
And also just being well-read is a way to spot BS.
Okay, so here's Munger on why he feels reading is so important.
This is something he, I don't know, decades he talks about.
Munger's speeches and essays are filled with thoughts of great people from the past and present from many different domains.
So it's kind of an extension of what we were just talking about, right?
Munger is also careful to set aside
a lot of time in his schedule for reading.
This is Charlie Munger speaking in 1998.
I believe in the discipline of mastering the best
that other people have already figured out.
I don't believe in just sitting down
and trying to dream it all up yourself.
Nobody's that smart.
Connects again to what he was saying
about the complexity of the world. It's impossible for one person to uh to understand everything he also applies this to
businesses and i think i've heard warren buffett say this as well he's like listen for there's only
a certain amount of businesses that one human being can know intimately enough that they can
put a large percentage of their assets into so he talked about why they're not fans of diversification.
He's like, I can't understand six,
like one individual can't understand 30 or 40 different great businesses,
and you don't need to.
They always say like if you have a handful,
I think the number's like two or three great businesses in your lifetime,
you can get fabulously rich.
So again, these are all,
when you start studying and understanding how their minds work,
you see how their philosophy is connected.
It's the same philosophy applied to different parts of life, whether it's learning, investing, managing, whatever the case is.
And then here's more importance on reading.
He's going to continue on this.
He says, I constantly see people rise in life who are not the smartest, sometimes not even the most diligent.
This is one of my favorite quotes of Munger. I've talked about it in many different places. I may have even
mentioned it last week on last week's podcast, but also on my email list. So he said, I constantly
see people in life who are not the smartest, sometimes not even the most diligent, but they
are learning machines. They go to bed every night a little wiser than they were when they
grow up. And boy, does that help, particularly when you
have a long run ahead of you. So if civilization can progress only with an advanced method of
invention, you can progress only when you learn the method of learning. Nothing has served me
better in my long life than continuous learning. I went through life constantly practicing,
because if you don't practice it, you lose it. The multidisciplinary
approach. And I can't tell you what that's done for me. It's made life more fun. It's made me
more constructive. It's made me more helpful to others. And it's made me enormously rich.
You name it, that attitude really helps. And so Munger applies that to reading i think it like obviously like i love
reading as well and that's the single best way for me to learn but i i think it applies to so
many other things it applies to podcasts uh audiobooks uh lectures videos like i don't like
however you got to figure out however you learn you know i know some people that
they just absolutely cannot sit down and read a book,
but they will consume audio books voraciously.
To me, it's all the same.
It doesn't matter.
Okay, just whatever works for you.
Okay, so now he's got this famous speech on YouTube,
and it's called The Psychology of Human misjudgment. And it's like
an hour and a half lecture. I'd recommend reading it. But this chapter I'm in has the same title.
And I'm just going to pick out some things where he feels like he's identified through studying
the humans, like where we're most likely to make mistakes. And then, you know, being aware of that mistake
and then trying to avoid in our own life.
So I'm just going to pull out some of the parts that I found most interesting.
And the first one is this thing called reward and punishment super response tendency.
And so let me just read this quote from Munger.
He was talking at Harvard University in 1985, and this is what he said. Almost everyone thinks he fully recognizes how important incentives and disincentives are
in changing cognition and behavior, but this is not often so. For instance, I think I've been in
the top 5% of my age cohort almost all of my adult life in understanding the power of incentives and yet i've always underestimated that power
never a year passes never your passes but i get some surprises that pushes a little further my
appreciation of incentive superpower and another way to say this he said a few years later was
the iron rule of nature is that you get what you reward for. If you want ants to come, put sugar on the floor.
Okay, so he's just saying, listen, we are heavily influenced by incentives.
So whether you're thinking about that from product design or dealing with other people
or just analyzing, like, why would somebody do that?
There's usually an incentive hiding behind that.
So he says, and this applies to,
they talk a lot about the importance of incentives when you're figuring out compensation in your company, right?
So it says, Munger believes that structuring compensation incentives
is critical.
If the right structure exists,
then a seamless web of deserved trust,
this is also a term that's repeated over and over again,
can be created which lessens problems related to this tendency.
For example example it is
surprising how many people fail to recognize how performance suffers if you pay someone in advance
rather than after the work has been completed it's precisely because of the dangers of misaligned
incentives that munger and buffett choose to make competition compensation decisions themselves
whereas they delegate almost all management responsibilities.
So what they're talking about there is this weird, maybe weird is not the word,
this unique way that the conglomerate that is Berkshire Hathaway is structured,
where it's almost completely decentralized. They're famous for buying businesses and then leaving the people alone to run them.
But when it comes to... They do control... Some decisions are centralized. One, where to invest,
obviously, the profits from that business. And two, the compensation of the people in the business.
So again, I think that's a signal to us Like that's obviously important to them If they're saying, no, no, no We're going to do this ourselves
Okay, another one of the psychologies of human misjudgment
Is something they call doubt avoidance tendency
And I think this paragraph describes
Like gives you a good like summary of it
It says the confidence of entrepreneurs bolstered by doubt avoidance tendency creates positive benefits for society in the aggregate by generating productivity and genuine growth in the economy, even if legions of entrepreneurs may fail.
Nassim Taleb put it this way, quote, most of you will fail,
disrespected, impoverished, but we are grateful for the risks you're taking and the sacrifices
you're making for the sake of the economic growth of the planet and pulling others out of poverty.
You're the source of our anti-fragility. Our nation thanks you.
Let me say, researchers believe that doubt avoidance tendency exists because a brain's
processing load can be substantially reduced if a person rejects doubt. That's very dangerous,
though. Another one, curiosity tendency. And I'm not reading all of them. These are just the ones
that I find most personally most interesting. There's a bunch of them in here. All right,
so curiosity tendency. This is Charlie Munger on that. Experience tends to confirm a long-held notion that being prepared on a few occasions in a lifetime to act promptly in scale in doing some simple and logical thing will often dramatically improve the financial results of that lifetime.
So this is kind of a core tenet of the way they invest, right? A few major opportunities clearly recognizable as such will usually come to one who continuously searches and waits with a curious mind that loves diagnosis involving multiple variables.
So there's the whole complexity thing again and the whole reason to be a learning machine because he's saying it's a curious mind.
And usually if you're curious, that means you want to learn.
And then Charlie continues here,
and then all that is required is a willingness to bet heavily
when the odds are extremely favorable,
using resources available as a result of prudence and patience in the past.
So prudence, he's meaning frugality, sitting on tons of cash,
keeping your operating expenses low,
and then he preaches over and over patience.
That's actually really good.
Now that I've read two books on Munger and I've watched a ton of his talks and things,
this is actually a really good, I didn't think about this when I took that, when I
highlighted this, but that one paragraph is actually a really good view into the mind of
Charlie Munger. Let me read that again.
Experience tends to confirm a long-held notion that being prepared on a few occasions in a lifetime
to act promptly in scale.
Okay, so that means go all in.
He's not one of like, oh,
like if you really believe in something,
like they talk about if you look at them,
it looks like they're doing nothing
and then they move fast and they move like,
they make an investment fast and they do it like Like they don't put a, they usually don't
put a tiny bit of money in. They're kind of, um, kind of like a self-confidence in their own, uh,
like skills. So to act promptly and scale and doing some simple and logical thing
will often dramatically, there's the whole simplicity thing again, right? Will improve
dramatic, will dramatically improve the financial results of that lifetime.
A few major opportunities.
Remember what I was just saying a few minutes ago, how they say you just need a few wonderful businesses to make yourself really rich.
Clearly recognizable as such will usually come to one who continuously searches and waits, learning machine, with a curious mind that loves diagnosis involving multiple variables, complexity.
And then all that is required is a willingness to bet heavily.
They're not fans of diversification when odds are extremely favorable. Diagnosis involving multiple variables. Complexity. And then all that is required is a willingness to bet heavily.
They're not fans of diversification.
When odds are extremely favorable.
Using resources available.
Saving your money.
As a result of prudence and patience in the past.
So, yeah, that is a really good combination of a lot of the things I've learned from Munger.
Now, this is Tren expounding on that. He said curiosity can.
Okay, so this is important. Expounding on that, he said, curiosity can cause an investor to engage in too many activities or a business owner to offer too many products and services.
Startup founders can end up repeatedly pivoting their business into oblivion if they overload on curiosity.
At the same time time curiosity can lead to
important breakthroughs for a business so you see this a lot um somebody made the point on twitter
and i wish i saved the tweet but i didn't they're like if you really analyze some of the most
successful businesses in the world right now and i guess in the past even then um they were found
on extremely simple ideas um and i'm not so let's go through like some of the example.
Like Apple has a bunch of different products,
but the vast majority of the profits they will ever make
come from one product, the iPhone, right?
Google, I know they try to do all this other stuff,
but all their profits come from one thing,
making the world's information online searchable, right? So these are, are they're simple ideas that doesn't mean they're easy to do um uber uh press
a button get a ride like these are again simple ideas not easy but very simple um so i love this
idea where um it goes back to what i was saying about andrew carnegie where he was lecturing
henry frick and other people he's like go study how the great fortunes of the world are made.
It's like, don't, it's not a scatter.
He called it like a scattershot approach.
Focus on what you're doing.
One thing.
His case was like, I'm just going to make money on steel.
So I really like this, what Trent is saying here.
Startup founders can end up repeatedly pivoting their business into oblivion
if they overload on curiosity.
A business owner can offer too many products and services.
And then that last sentence I think is also important.
It's like at the same time,
curiosity can lead to important breakthroughs for a business.
So there's a dichotomy there.
Moving forward, another one is,
and this is a note I left myself as another reason
we should all be nicer.
Reciprocation.
You know the word I'm trying to pronounce.
You know what?
Here.
My co-host will pronounce it.
This YouTube channel is a lifesaver for me.
Reciprocation.
Okay.
So reciprocation tendency.
So this is Charlie Munger on it.
The automatic tendency of humans to reciprocate favors and disfavors has long been noticed as extreme.
What an interesting choice of words, extreme.
So this is Tren talking about this.
Actually, he's quoting, he's the guy that wrote Influence.
Cialdini, I think is how you pronounce his last name.
People will help if they owe you for something you did in the past to advance their goals.
That's the rule of reciprocity.
That's the end of his quote.
The reverse is also true if you have done something that negatively affects a person.
The urge to reciprocate favors and disfavors is so strong that even someone smiling at you is hard not to reciprocate the indebted
feeling that humans have when they receive a gift tends to make that person feel uncomfortable
until he or she can extinguish the debt so this is him obviously um studying psychology and the
reason i said there's another reason we should be nicer is because you know you might be having a
bad day and take it on somebody else but then what is he saying he's like the automatic tendency of humans to reciprocate favors and disfavors has long been noticed as an extreme
and what i always talk about in the podcast something i've learned from studying other
areas of history is like humans are uh virtuoso what i call virtuosos of violence and you just
don't you can we're unpredictable and you just don't there's no reason to go around making
enemies just be nicer.
And that person's hopefully is not going to feel the need to reciprocate what, what, what
trend here is calling a disfavor.
Okay.
Moving ahead.
This is funny.
This one is called excessive self-regard tendency.
So it says, this is Trent talking, companies are not
immune from the successive self-regard tendency, including Berkshire's portfolio companies. And
now Charlie's going to talk about this. He said, Geico got to thinking that because they were
making a lot of money, they knew everything. So anybody with the experience of in the ecosystem
of entrepreneurship has seen this behavior before.
Because they were making a lot of money, they thought they knew everything.
And they suffered huge losses.
All they had to do was to cut out all the folly and go back to the perfectly wonderful business that was lying there.
And this happens to people that should have a high regard.
We're all prone to excessive self-regard. I mean, think about the
entire podcast I just did on Steve Jobs' Time and Next. When you create an amazing product and you're
in your early 20s, you're worth hundreds of millions of dollars in the 70s, I think the early
70s, 80s, and you do that for a decade, then you come back and the entire book, Randall Strauss'
book, The Next Big Thing, in case you haven't listened to the podcast yet, is all about this excessive self-regard.
It's amazing to me the difference between the quality of entrepreneur in Mike Moritz's book, Return to the Little Kingdom, which at the beginning focused on just the beginning of Steve Jobs, where he's still like a young and mature, but he's undoubtedly a talented entrepreneur.
And then obviously what we see when he comes back to Apple in the late 90s and early 2000s,
that's the same person that in the, let's say,
the late 80s, early 90s was doing everything incorrectly.
So we're all prone to this.
I'm definitely prone to it as well.
So it's something to be aware of.
Another one, social proof tendency. Here's
Charlie Munger on that. Big shot businessmen get into these waves of social proof. Do you remember
some years ago when an oil company bought a fertilizer company and then every other major
oil company practically ran out and bought a fertilizer company? And there was no more damn
reason for all these oil companies to buy fertilizer companies but they didn't know exactly what to do and if exxon was doing it it was good
enough for mobile and vice versa i think they're all gone now but it was a total disaster and
trend expounding on that humans have a natural tendency to follow a herd of other humans
in other words because humans do not have unlimited time and complete information,
they tend to copy the behavior of other humans.
I love Munger's use of this word constantly.
So this is the twaddle tendency.
Charlie Munger speaking,
it says,
it's obvious that if a company generates
high returns on capital
and reinvests at high returns,
it will do well.
So right, Another thing that's
simple, but not easy, but this wouldn't sell books. So there's a lot of twaddle and fuzzy
concepts that have been introduced that don't add much. And so he talks about that constantly
about modern finance, all twaddle, which is just a really a polite way of saying bullshit.
And I just love, I absolutely love this idea about like you know what we're doing here is
real simple it's not easy but again like no one can sell you it and another reason I think why
he's read hundreds of biographies as opposed to hundreds of like the latest business book
and I used to I felt when I when I was let's, I have to go back and look at Amazon, but let's say the last like 12, 14 years.
I bet you when I started college, I read a lot of business books.
Like here's this one idea.
And then it took me way later in life to actually skip over and get over that phenomenon.
Because, you know, you're young.
You don't know anything about the world.
I still don't know that much about the world.
And you're just, you don't know anything about the world. I still don't know that much about the world. And you're just looking for answers.
And you're trying to see, oh, this guy must know,
or this girl must know what's going on
because they have a book and it was published.
And the idea is obviously good.
And you realize that's not an indication that the idea is good.
So I love this quote, and I just want these traits.
This is an author, Roger Lowenstein, who's, this is a
quote from the biography he wrote on Warren Buffett. It says, genius was largely a genius
of character, right? Not intellect, which is a very important, interesting distinction in my
opinion. So it's saying largely a genius of character, of patience, and now he's going to
list off the traits. Patience, discipline, and rationality.
That's what I mean by I want those traits.
His talent sprang from his unrivaled independence of mind.
I'd also like to do that.
I'd also like to be capable of that.
And ability to focus on his work and shut out the world.
So yeah, those are just great.
I mean, who doesn't want that?
Who doesn't want to be patient?
I'm not patient.
Disciplined.
I'm somewhat disciplined.
Rational. I'm not patient. Disciplined? I'm somewhat disciplined. Rational?
I have no idea.
And then independent of mind and ability to focus on work and shut out the world.
I think that, I mean, those are fantastic traits, right?
Oh, so I didn't explain.
I just transitioned out of the psychology of human misjudgment.
And now they have this concept, Charlie, and I think Warren has the concept.
They call it the right stuff.
And it's just like, well, I guess that's a good opening of it. It's just traits and ideas that
people have, which they consider like to be successful at what they're doing, investing
and starting companies, buying companies, et cetera, et cetera. Like this is the stuff you
need to do, right? So it says the chapter identifies a few of the attributes that make
up the right stuff of a successful entrepreneur investor as identified over the years by Munger.
Okay. So there's a bunch of traits in here. I'm not going to obviously read all of them. We're
just going to pick out the ones that I found interesting. So this one's on patience.
Success means being, these are quotes from Charlie, success means being very patient,
but aggressive when it's time. Another one, it would be nice if finding great investments happened all the time.
Unfortunately, it doesn't. Hence, the need for patience. Another one, patience combined with
opportunity is a great thing to have. My grandfather taught me that opportunity is
infrequent and one has to be ready when it strikes. That's what Berkshire is.
And then later on, this is interesting.
He's telling us that we need to study probability.
Here's a quote.
If you don't get elementary probability into your repertoire,
you go through a long life like a one-legged man in an ass-kicking contest.
And if you want to learn more about probability, I would read
the entire inserto, but if you could only read one of the
collection, I'd read Fooled by Randomness.
I think a little trick that I have as far as if you want to be good at conversations,
I always like to ask questions like that.
Like, okay, if you could only recommend one book for somebody to read, that Like okay if you can only recommend one book
For somebody to read
That's it
They can only read one book
What would that be?
My answer to that question would be
Fooled by Randomness by Nassim Taleb
But even last night like I was texting friends
I was like hey if you can only visit one country
That you haven't gone to yet
What would it be?
When you put these artificially
Like artificial constraints on it
You really get to know people better
To know their thinking Sometimes I'll ask the question like uh when i'm at dinner okay you're
you're trapped on a desert island you're gonna be trapped on a desert island um you can only bring
one album what like what are you bringing with you like you're gonna listen to this one album
for the rest of your life what is it get you a good idea how they think about music and it's
just works for everything books podcasts, podcasts, just anything,
cities to visit, experiences to have.
So anyways, if you want to learn probability,
I think one of the best books you can read is Full by Randomness on that.
Okay, so this is Munger's unique definition of being disciplined.
We've got great flexibility in a certain discipline
in terms of not doing some foolish things just to be active.
Remember, that goes against human nature.
Discipline in avoiding just doing any damn thing
just because you can't stand inactivity.
So I think that little idea comes from his lifelong study of human nature.
Another quote on this,
I think it's possible for a great many people to live a life,
I think it's possible for a great many people to live a life like that
where there isn't much risk of disaster
and where they're virtually sure to get ahead a reasonable amount.
It takes a lot of judgment, a lot of discipline,
and an absence of hyperactivity.
Absence of hyperactivity. Absence of hyperactivity. By this method, I think most intelligent people can take a lot of risk out of their life. So he's telling
us you need to have judgment, discipline, calls the right stuff, is honesty.
And here's him talking about that.
Generally speaking, when Berkshire has the power,
we try to be more than fair to the minority who don't have the power
and who depend on us.
You can say, aren't they wonderful moral people?
I'm not sure we get credit for a lot of morality because
we early knew how advantageous that would be to get a reputation for doing the right thing,
and it's worked out well for us. My friend Peter Kaufman said, if the rascals really knew how well
honor worked, they would come to it. So this idea that being honest and being honorable is actually
a long-term competitive advantage. Most people optimize for the short term is what they're talking about.
Munger continues, it really has worked well. People make contracts with Berkshire all the time
because they trust us to behave well where we have the power and they don't. There's an old
expression on this subject, which is really an expression on moral theory. How nice it is to I just love Munger's own love of simplicity.
Continuing, this is another quote on honesty. More often we've made extra money out of morality.
Ben Franklin was right for us.
He didn't say honesty was the best morals.
He said that it was the best policy.
Another trait for the right stuff is long-term oriented.
Charlie says, almost all good businesses engage in pain today, gain tomorrow activities.
And this is Tran expounding on that.
He says, Munger has recognized that it is hard to think on a long-term basis
when you are just getting started or starting over.
For this reason, he said once that accumulating the first $100,000 is a bitch.
That is reason enough to work hard to assemble a basic financial cushion.
Not only is it not fun, it is a handicap to live on the edge of financial ruin.
This applies to your personal finances
as well as your company finances.
It's amazing to see how few people actually,
and businesses actually adhere to this very simple idea.
In the long term, the power of compounding
becomes ever more evident.
Unfortunately, understanding the power of compounding
is not a natural state for the human race.
I've always wondered why people use human race.
Why isn't it human species?
However, it is a critical task.
This is more on Charlie.
Charlie is speaking about this again.
Understanding both the power of compound interest and difficulty of getting it is the heart and soul of understanding a lot of things.
What does he mean by that?
All good things in life compound. So he says many things that are not, this is Trent speaking, many things that are not
directly financial will compound. Skills, relationships, and other aspects of life can
compound and benefit a person who invests time and money wisely to cultivate these things.
Another trait that he identifies is passion. This is Charlie speaking about that.
What matters most? He's asking a question. What matters most? Passion or competence that was born
in? Berkshire is full of people who have a peculiar passion for their own business. I would argue
passion is more important than brain power. That's a hell of a statement. This is Tran expounding on
that. If you do not know
about the link between passion and success, you have not been paying attention. People who are
passionate tend to work harder and invest more in achieving their goals. Passionate people also
read and think more. Passionate people tend to have an informational edge over others who are
not as passionate. This is also an indictment. If this is true, which I tend to believe it is,
it's an indictment on our education system. And i just read who knows how they they come up with these
calculations if it's true or not but like 75 of people uh i think this was just in the united
states uh are working in a job that they don't like they're just literally doing it for money
well it's really hard to get to be really great at something that you don't actually care about
and if you don't actually care about it you're not going to invest the time outside of work to get better at your skill,
whether it's reading and understanding the history of the industry that you're in
or doing what Danny Meyer and Bill Gurley call professional research.
Often the level of passion you will have for a topic will grow over time.
So this is another idea about compounding they keep hitting on, right?
The more you know about some topics, the more passionate you will get.
That's probably true.
Some of the best passions in life grow on you in a nonlinear way after a slow start,
which is just another word for compounding.
Another trait that they consider as the right stuff, studious.
This is Charlie.
Learning from other people's mistakes is much more pleasant.
He's continuing on this idea that you need to be studious.
And I think they kind of go hand in hand.
If you're naturally passionate about something,
you can't help but study and want to learn everything about it.
So I think finding passion is the key to unlocking your inner studious person.
And really what they're talking about is like being studious.
It's just about ignorance removal.
So it says, in my whole life, I've known no wise people who didn't read all the time.
None.
Zero.
You'd be amazed at how much Warren reads and how much I read.
Another quote, development into a lifelong self-learner through voracious reading,
cultivate curiosity and I put the a little wiser every day.
So again, he's already hit on that. He's just saying it a different way. And another way to think about this is you got to work where you're turned on.
And again, I think passion and being studious,
they're connected.
Oh, and here's,
he's still talking about being studious here.
He's got a lot of quotes on this.
Apparently it's important to him.
The main contribution of buying See's Candies,
they mentioned See's Candies constantly,
was ignorance removal.
If it weren't good at removing ignorance, we'd be nothing today.
We were pretty damn stupid when we bought See's, just a little less stupid enough to buy it.
The best thing about Berkshire, yeah, they were
talking about Berkshire. The best thing about Berkshire is that we have removed a lot of
ignorance. The nice thing is we still have a lot more ignorance left. I love this guy. Another
trick is scrambling out your mistakes, which is enormously useful. We have a sure to fail
department store, a trading stamp business sure to fold, and a textile mill. Out of that comes Berkshire.
That's a really fascinating way to look at things. Think about how we would have done if we had
had money. Think about how we would have done if we had a better start. This guy's hilarious, man.
I love, and some people call him like an ass or arrogant, but I don't interpret it that way and again i always say like i'd i'd
appreciate and i think what he's it's kind of the opposite of arrogance isn't he saying
i know such a like there's so much more things that i that i like i'm ignorant about and i
haven't fixed yet he's saying these words and he's in his 90s he's saying um we uh what is it
the nice thing is we still have a lot more ignorance left i just think it's um again i mean you want to call it arrogant whatever but
i would i prefer real arrogance to false modesty and i like that he you know he has an independent
of thought it does like he gets to say what is actually on his mind, where I feel a lot of public statements is, you know, basically performance art.
Okay.
So another trait.
We're still on the right stuff.
This one is frugal.
And I had this thought.
Okay.
So I had this idea, I had this thought rather, that if you were able to transcribe every single word spoken so far in Founders Podcast,
that the most common word uttered on this podcast has got to be the word frugal.
And when I read this quote from Charlie Munger about the importance of frugality, which obviously is going to be very important to them,
it made me think of one of my favorite scenes.
So I've said before, I was fairly obsessed with Game of Thrones.
So when I read this part earlier, I left a note on one of my favorite scenes in Game of Thrones.
Two of my favorite characters are talking.
And it's Tywin Lannister and Olenna Tyrell.
And they're paying for this huge royal wedding.
And Tywin walks up to her, and he's just like,
this is a bit much, don't you think?
Like, this is ridiculous.
And she's like, oh, no, it's what the people expect.
And then he says something that I love.
And he says, people who spend money on this sort of nonsense
tend not to have it for long.
And again, I think that applies to your personal finances
and also to your company finances.
And this is an example.
You know, Berkshire Hathaway is one of the most successful companies in existence.
And this is Charlie describing it.
He says, we don't have an isolated group of managers surrounded by servants.
Berkshire's headquarters is a tiny little sweet. And Trent continues to expound on Munger's frugality
and maybe who influenced him to be frugal.
He says, like his idol Benjamin Franklin
and his partner Buffett,
Munger is relatively frugal given his wealth,
especially when it comes to operating
and investment expenses.
In addition to the axiom, a penny saved is two pence dear,
Benjamin Franklin wrote,
the way to wealth is as plain as the way to market.
It depends chiefly on two words, industry and frugality.
That is, waste neither time nor money,
but make the best use of both.
That's the best description of frugality.
And I think why it you know, it's not
a coincidence that so many entrepreneurs that we study adhere to this principle. You're not going
to get, you're not going to be able to build a successful company, especially on the scale that
these people do, wasting time or money. Without industry and frugality, nothing will do and with
them everything. That's the end of Benjamin Franklin's quote. Other Graham value investors
have a similar focus on frugality. This guy named Walter Schloss was famous for running his investment firm out of
a single room leased from another investment firm. I suspect that some of the frugality that can be
seen in grand value investors springs from their understanding. This is interesting. Why are you
doing this? Other than you're not just being a miser and sitting on a bunch of money. He says,
I suspect that some of the frugality that can be seen in grand value investors
springs from their understanding of opportunity costs and the power of compounding.
They naturally compare the value of consumption today
with the value of greater consumption tomorrow,
which causes them to be frugal.
That's fantastic.
This is the idea of being risk-averse.
Really what Charlie's telling us here is how to run your business.
And again, the note I left myself is this is also good for your personal life as well.
Here's Charlie.
You can easily see how risk averse Berkshire is.
In the first place, we try to behave in such a way that no rational person is going to worry about our credit.
And after we have done that, we also behave in such a way that if the world suddenly didn't like our credit,
we wouldn't even notice it for months because we have so much liquidity.
That double layering of protection against risk is as natural as breathing around Berkshire.
It is just part of our culture.
Okay, so I'm skipping way ahead in the book now.
Towards the end, they have another chapter.
It's called The Right Stuff, but this is the right stuff in business.
And they're talking about how they actually manage Berkshire and what they prioritize.
So this is on the importance of capital allocation in the management of a business.
One major fundamental aspect of any business is management.
Munger and Buffett are famous for delegating almost all authority and responsibility to Berkshire subsidiaries to run their own business.
This is what I was mentioning earlier.
With the exception of capital allocation and the creation of compensation systems.
In other words, while management of the business within Berkshire is extremely decentralized,
the management of capital allocation and compensation systems is extremely centralized.
So you have a decentralized management of the business, of the subsidiaries,
and yet the complete control of capital allocation and compensation systems.
Munger and Buffett believe that capital allocation is a skill that many managers simply do not learn before they become chief executive officers of companies.
They believe this could create big problems for a business because the CEO will often not know how to make critical decisions that will maximize shareholder return. And you can argue that's one of, in addition to many of his other talents, Jeff Bezos is fantastic at this. The most important task in a capital allocation is to take
cash generated by a company and deploy it to the very best opportunity and avoid what Buffett
called the institutional imperative. Now, what's the institutional imperative?
This is a quote from 1989 from Warren Buffett.
Rationality frequently wilts when the institutional imperative comes into play.
For example, number one, as if governed by Newton's first law of motion,
an institution will resist any change in its current direction.
Number two, this is such an important point.
Just as work expands to fill available time,
corporate projects or acquisitions
will materialize to soak up available funds.
I don't think I've ever heard anybody else say that.
Three, any business craving of the leader,
however foolish, will be quickly supported by detailed rate of return
and strategic studies prepared by his troops.
So fake work.
Four, the behavior of peer companies, whether they're expanding, acquiring,
setting executive compensation or whatever, will be mindlessly imitated.
So he's telling you to avoid all this.
And those four things he calls institutional imperative.
This is trend now.
The culture at Berkshire has been created by Buffett and Munger
so as to reject the institutional imperative like a foreign body.
The heads of many companies are not skilled in capital acquisition.
Another thing that they say is a skill that you need to develop in business
and i'll expand on this because they have an entire chapter just on moats but they say
you need to develop moat widening skills this is what i mean about the ability to raise prices that
they love um charlie says i can see instance after instance where that isn't what people do in
business meaning widening the moat one must keep their eye on the ball of widening the moat to be a steward of the competitive advantage that came to you.
Munger once manages a business who have an ownership mentality toward the business.
And Munger is now going to quote Carnegie and others.
Carnegie was always very proud that he took very little salary.
Rockefeller and Vanderbilt were the same.
It was a common culture in a different era.
All of these people thought of themselves as the founder
and their partners as founders.
If you think about Carnegie's unique private partnership,
they all had a small percentage of the business.
And so what are they actually taught?
Why would you do that?
And the importance is they want risk and benefits to be symmetrically allocated.
So skin in the game in other words.
This is an interesting thought I've never heard of.
This is Munger on the curse of scale.
For example, if you worked for AT&T in my day, it was a great bureaucracy. Who in the hell
was really thinking about the shareholder or anything else? And in a bureaucracy, you think
the work is done when it goes out of your in-basket into somebody else's in-basket. But of course,
it isn't. It's not done until AT&T delivers what it's supposed to deliver. So you get big, fat, dumb, unmotivated bureaucracies.
The constant curse of scale
is that it leads to big, dumb bureaucracy.
This is kind of, I never articulated it this way,
but this is kind of why I would say
like I favor smaller companies
and I try to support independent entrepreneurs
whenever I can.
Because as businesses grow,
inevitably, as they scale,
the end result for the end users is usually worse. Some of the best service you're ever
going to get and some of the best products you're going to get are small batch independent owners,
people that are actually there. In a large company, the owners are separated from the
customers in many cases.
So I love that. The constant curse of scale is that it leads to a big dump bureaucracy. And
who's going to get great products or services from a big dump bureaucracy?
Let's see. This is Charlie telling us how to make decisions. Intelligent people make decisions based on opportunity costs.
In other words, it's your alternatives that matter.
That's how we make all of our decisions.
And this is the chapter on moats.
So there's a bunch of, just like anything else,
he's got like a bunch of numbered lists about what he feels builds a moat.
Some of them I don't even know know if they made sense to me,
so I skipped over a bunch.
But I'm just going to pull out the ones that are interesting.
So one, supply-side economies of scale and scope.
If a company's average cost, this is how you widen a moat.
So basically they're saying, hey, if you don't have a moat,
you can't raise prices.
If you can't raise prices, you might have a commodity business,
which means you have heavy competition,
and all your profits are going to be competed away eventually.
So it says supply-side economies of scale and scope.
If a company's average costs fall when more of a product or service is produced,
there are supply-side economies of scale.
Intel is a classic example of a business that benefits from economies of scale.
And so this is, it says regarding the impact of
supply side economies of scale, Munger has pointed out. Now we're going to go some quotes that
illustrate how he's thinking on this. In some businesses, the very nature of things cascades
toward the overwhelming dominance of one firm. It tends to cascade to a winner-take-all result.
And these advantages of scale are so great, for example, that when Jack Welch came into
General Electric, he just said, to hell with it. We're either going to be number one or number two
in every field we're in, or we're going to be out. That was a very tough-minded thing to do,
but I think it was a correct decision if you're thinking about maximizing shareholder wealth.
Another quote. Actually, no, this is Trent speaking now. If it is cost-efficient for a
company to produce several different products or services,
a company can also benefit from supply-side economies of scope.
So now he said economies of scale and economies of scope.
Economies of scale, everybody knows what that is.
Economies of scope is different.
So you're benefiting because to benefit from economies of scope,
a business must share resources across markets while keeping the amount of those resources largely fixed.
Businesses with the desire to benefit from economies of scope must avoid
running as isolated units. So basically you have one successful product, the
customer already knows who you are. If they already know who you are, they're
more likely to buy another product from you. That's economies of scope. This is
the benefits of expanding a moat with demand side economies of scale,
which almost no one uses that term, and everybody uses the other moniker for this, which is network
effects. I'm not going to spend too much time on this because it's talked about ad nauseum.
It says demand side economies of scale, also known as network effects, results when a product or
service becomes more valuable as more people use it. So Craigslist, eBay, Twitter, Facebook, you all know this already.
But American Express is an example of a company in the Berkshire portfolio
with network effect benefits.
The more merchants that accept a card, the more valuable the service gets,
the more people use their card, the more valuable the services are for the merchants.
Thus, over time, that concept expansion expands their moat.
Another way to expand a moat is brand.
And that's very different. So it says a moat is brand and that's very different so it says a
moat powered by brand is something very different from one created via supply side or demand side
economies of scale now they're going to use uh regarding brand power this is charlie munger he
says the information this is really interesting talking about thinking about what like you know
everybody's like i'm building a personal brand or i'm we think about branding all this you know kind of like i hate when people talk like that but
um and the reason i hate other people talk like that is because they're not really like adding
anything new to discussion they're just kind of mimicking other people right i never thought about
and maybe i maybe that's my fault for not listening intently maybe people have made this point
but monger is the first person to talk about what a brand is.
A brand is just an informational advantage.
It's a way in a small amount, whether it's the name of a company, a logo, an image, whatever,
to convey a lot of information about that.
And think about that.
Think about when you hear the word Disney.
That's one word.
What is that? Six, six letters.
Think about all the stuff that pops into your mind like that is a brand that is conveying.
It has an informational advantage because in six letters it tells you, you know, hundreds of different things that may come to mind.
So this is what this is the way Charlie thinks about brands, which I think is really smart. The informational advantage of brands is hard to beat,
and your advantage of scale can be an informational advantage.
If I go to some remote place, I may see Wrigley chewing gum alongside Glotz's chewing gum.
Well, I know that Wrigley is a satisfactory product, whereas I don't know anything about Glotz's.
So he talks about the ability for Wrigley to improve to increase prices just on that informational advantage so in effect wrigley simply being uh so well known has an
advantage of scale what you might call an informational advantage everyone is influenced
by what others do and approve we already covered this earlier another advantage of scale comes from
psychology the psychologists use the term social proof we are all influenced subconsciously and to some extent consciously by what we see others do and approve of.
Therefore, if everybody is buying something, we think it's human.
All told, your advantages can add up to one tough moat.
A very important test for Buffett and Munger in determining, though this is trend talking,
in determining the strength of a brand-based moat
is whether a competitor can replicate.
This is another interesting idea.
Okay, so a very important test for Buffett and Munger
in determining the strength of a brand-based moat,
so how do you check that?
How do you know this?
Is whether a competitor can replicate or weaken the moat
with a massive checkbook.
As just one example, here's what Buffett said about Coke at the 2012 Berkshire meeting.
If you gave me $10, $20, or $30 billion to knock off Coca-Cola, I couldn't do it.
And now what's interesting is in this chapter on moats, then Trent's like, okay, let me analyze Berkshire and see what kind of moats they have.
And he says some companies like Berkshire have been able to create a moat
as a result of a combination of better systems and culture
than their competitors.
So I'm just going to go over some of the ideas that he has.
Number one, what adds to the moat of Berkshire?
He says, Berkshire is tax efficient.
They're well known for buying something
and then holding it forever.
And if you let something compound for 30 years
and you don't pay taxes on it once,
you save a ton of money over that time period.
Another one, which is just another way to say they're frugal, is they have low overhead.
And this is a quote from New York Times. It says, Berkshire has a corporate headquarters with a mere
25 people on a single floor of an office building. From there, Mr. Buffett and his staff allocate
capital and contemplate acquisitions of sales, hire or fire people to run those portfolio companies and otherwise stay out of the way. Another way they expand their mode is
they're the private buyer of first resort. And this ties into what Charlie was saying earlier.
If people understood the long-term benefits of acting with integrity and honesty and morality,
it's going to add to your reputation. That reputation in the future can give you access to opportunities
that other people just won't have.
So it says, if you've spent your life building a business
and decide to sell the company, Buffett and Munger offer you
a unique opportunity.
They will let you, and in fact want you to, continue running the business.
Your other option is selling the business to a private equity firm
that does not give a damn about your business and will probably load it up with debt, creating a serious risk that the company will fail.
Another one, Berkshire has what they call permanent capital.
They basically say, this is some guy, I don't know who he is, his name is Bruce, that they're quoting that is describing Berkshire.
He says, that's why we keep a lot of cash around.
Cash is the equivalent of financial volume.
It keeps you cool, calm, and collected.
And I'm going to skip the other ones.
But I want to describe, well, this is them talking about moats again.
And I'll leave the idea of moats alone.
It says, so you know you have a moat when you can raise prices.
This is, is this Munger again?
Yep, this is Munger again.
Here's a quote from Munger.
There are actually businesses that you will find a few times in a lifetime
where any manager could raise the return enormously just by raising prices,
and yet they haven't done it.
So they have huge untapped pricing power
that they're not using.
That is the ultimate no-brainer.
Disney found that it could raise those prices a lot.
Anybody with little kids knows this.
It's ridiculous.
And the intended stayed right up.
So a lot of the great record of,
they're just naming some old CEOs of Disney,
came from just raising prices at Disneyland and Disney World
and through video
sales of classic animated movies. At Berkshire Hathaway, Warren and I raised the prices of
See's Candy a little faster than others might have. And of course, we invested in Coca-Cola,
which has some untapped pricing power. Creating a moat is something that people like Ray Kroc,
founder of McDonald's, Sam Walton, Estee Lauder, Mary Kay Ash, and Bill Gates have accomplished.
And finally, I'll close on this.
And this is trend talking.
And this is really my definition.
Other people throw around the term mental model a lot and for a while I didn't even
know what the hell it was
and I think this is just the easiest way
to think about what it is
at least in terms of what
we're trying to accomplish here on the podcast so it says
with that last bit of wisdom I send you off
into the world hoping that you too learn
to concentrate and invest successfully
whenever in doubt about
making a decision related to investing or otherwise,
ask yourself this, what would Charlie Munger do?
And so what I mean is like,
what I mean by that's my definition of a mental model.
The reason that I read,
so I didn't just read one book on Steve Jobs,
I read like six.
And I try to go deeper um on on these people's because
you're exposing yourself to a lot of information and more importantly how they think
and to me that's what the mental model is like if you constantly reading biographies on henry ford
steve jobs etc etc you're going to eventually be able to in your own mind develop a mental model of
how they think and then when you're presented with a decision like this is kind of the transmission of these ideas that are in these biographies right
the practical application of these ideas is you can sit there and say okay i'm presented with an
opportunity what would charlie munger do what would henry ford do what would whoever you
personally identify with their philosophy of business do um Same reason if you're on my email list,
like I take notes on a lot of the same people over and over again, because what I'm doing is
I've identified people that I admire their mind, and I'm trying to go deeper so I can develop
mental models on them. So one example is this, Marc Andreessen was giving a talk,
and he's one of the people that I'm interested in how he thinks, but he's done his own research
on Peter Thiel. And I think he thinks Peter Thiel is like one of the people that I'm interested in how he thinks, but he, he, he's done his own research on Peter Thiel. And he, I think he thinks Peter Thiel is like one of the
smartest people around. And so he says he has a mental model of Peter Thiel. And as he goes about
his day, he says he has a little Peter Thiel on his shoulder and he'll ask himself, well, what
would Peter Thiel say? Or what would Peter Thiel think or do or whatever the case is. And I don't
think you need mental models. You know, we, uh, there's been what, like, I don't even know how many founders we've covered so far. But over time, being exposed to more of
these ideas, you're going to identify the people that just they click with you. You can't even
really, I don't even think you can you can explain why. Maybe you can you can point to certain ideas
that you like of theirs or certain ways they they run their business or whatever it is but it's like deeper than that it's like a more of like an abstraction um so
that's the way i think whenever here people talk about mental models i think of them like personal
um like personal mental models i know other people's like this is my framework on how i
make decisions i wish i could say i have those i just don't um i think of things and like like i
said and maybe it's because I spend
so much time studying people as opposed to just decision frameworks or whatever the case is.
So anyways, Charlie Munger, if you want to learn more about him, if you thought this podcast was
interesting, you'll probably like the book. So if you want to read the book, there's a link in the show notes.
You can just click it and it takes you right there to the book.
You can buy it.
If not, you can go to Amazon.com forward slash shop, forward slash founders podcast.
You'll see this and every other single book.
It's like the visual representation of this podcast presented in reverse chronological order.
If you purchase using either the links in the show notes or going to that URL,
Amazon will give me a small percentage of the sale
and no additional cost to you.
So it's a great way for,
I always say like you're supporting yourself
because you're getting a book that'll benefit your life
and you can apply the ideas that you learned in that book
to your own work
and get an unbelievable return on that investment.
You're supporting the author
who's taken a lot of time writing these books and you're supporting me who's hopefully introduced you to these ideas
and expanding it to an audience that may not have known about those ideas. Other than that,
if you're listening to this and you have not become a misfit yet, misfits are the people
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And you get the benefit of me reading, taking notes and doing all this work.
But if you want more, every other podcast I do is reserved exclusively for misfits.
So if you haven't signed up yet, you're missing out on half the podcasts.
You can click the link.
Oh, so I need to bring this up.
Several people have sent me messages and said, David, you are not being clear.
You're not communicating clearly.
So I've gotten this message enough times that I need to figure out another way to do this.
They're like, I wanted to sign up for misfits.
I couldn't figure it out. Or it's, it's not like they had to like,
it wasn't making it easy. So I thought I was making it easy because I include every single
link in your podcast player. And 90 something percent of the people listen to me, listen to me
on Apple podcasts or Overcast and they make links clickable. So when you're listening to me, just
click on the link. If you want to sign up
for your Misfit, you click on it. You can use Apple Pay in like 10 to 20 seconds. You'll have
the private RSS feed, which is all what a podcast really is, the private podcast feed installed into
your podcast player of choice. And then you can listen to all the unlocked, you can basically,
you're unlocking all the other, the Misfit Podcasts that you haven't heard yet
if you haven't upgraded.
So I thought that was really easy.
Some people prefer just to go to the URL.
So you can open up the browser on your phone,
go to glow,
G-L-O-W,
.fm,
you know, every podcast,
like the.fm extensions,
like every podcast service or podcast
loves that extension. But anyways, glow.fm extensions, like every podcast service or podcast loves that extension.
But anyways, glow.fm forward slash founders.
So you can either go directly to the URL and do that,
or you can tap the link that's in the show notes.
Or if you want to take a roundabout way for some weird reason,
you can also go to founderspodcast.com.
And I have the link on every single podcast I've done,
although people said that I should have it
like right in the beginning when you go to the website.
So anyways, I appreciate the feedback.
And I know that I'm obviously making a mistake
if multiple people have run into the same thing.
And that's obviously not my desire.
My desire is to make it as simple and easy for you to support.
So if you sign up for, here's the thing.
If you sign up for Misfits, you pay a small monthly fee.
If you're willing to pay a small monthly fee and press play,
you're going to get four podcasts
because I have two free and two Misfit podcasts a month.
All you have to do is sign up and then listen.
And then you're going to have some of the best ideas
from some of the greatest entrepreneurs in history
just injected right into your ear every month.
And undoubtedly, you will get more back than the small amount of money that you pay every month.
And if you don't say, David, I didn't get value out of this, I'll give you a refund.
It's impossible that that would happen. So if you haven't done it, I know some people are like,
oh, it's kind of a pain in the ass. I promise you, the company I use, Glow,
they made it all. The only thing better than the way they did
it is if Apple did it themselves and Apple's not going to do it themselves. So they did it
beautifully. Like they use it. It's almost like you're, you're, you're paying for an app on your
iPhone, which you've probably done a million times. Um, I've actually talked to the founders
at glow two separate times for over an hour each because I've tested every single other podcast product
and this one was by far the best.
They just have their shit together over there.
They design a beautiful, beautiful, beautiful product.
They make it super easy to have a private podcast feed,
because some people sell private podcast feed
and then you have to listen to a browser.
That's not ideal.
I understand that.
I think all audio, literally all audio is better in a podcast feed.
So even if they had like people that do YouTube videos
that some people only listen to, I think, at least for me,
the experience of listening to audio in a podcast player
is the single best experience.
So that's the experience that you get.
I would very much appreciate it if you support the podcast, but if you're going to buy the books, and I know a lot of people have sent me messages that, you know,
they've bought a lot of books, they haven't used the link and they're going to use it in the future.
Listen, it's really more important to me that you buy the books and read than it is that you use
the link. But at the same time, if you're going to buy the book, why not just click the link and benefit the podcast at the same time?
What else?
What am I doing next week?
Oh, and if you go to amazon.com
forward slash shop,
forward slash founders podcast,
usually I put the book
that I'm doing that week up there
so you can kind of have like a sneak,
it's a way to have like a sneak preview
of what I'm working on.
I'm not sure which one I'm going to do.
I have like 30 to 50 books to choose from. So I can't tell you that. Unfortunately, I don't know why I brought
that up. Other thing is, actually, that's it. I've talked enough. Please sign up, become a Misfit,
tell your friends about the podcast, and I'll talk to you next week.