Founders - A conversation on focus and finding your life's work
Episode Date: May 9, 2025My friend Patrick O’Shaughnessy asked me to come to New York and record a conversation. Patrick had just finished listening to episode #383 "Todd Graves and his $10 Billion Chicken Finger Dream" and... he believed there was an important conversation to have on focus and finding your life's work. This conversation was off-the-cuff and from the soul. I hope you find it useful. If you'd prefer to watch the episode you can do that on Spotify and YouTube. Patrick and I are doing a live show on May 27th in New York. Event details and registration here!----Ramp gives you everything you need to control spend, watch your costs, and optimize your financial operations —all on a single platform. Make history's greatest entrepreneurs proud by going to Ramp and learning how they can help your business control your costs and save more. ---- ----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
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I want to post this conversation that I just had with my friend Patrick on his podcast,
The Best Like the Best, and I want to tell you why. So a few weeks ago, he called me after
listening to the episode, it was episode 383, the one I did on Todd Graves, it's called Todd Graves
and his $10 billion chicken figure dream. And Patrick asked me to come to New York and record
an episode with him on the topic of focus. And if I had to simplify and distill what I've learned
from this entire project,
eight years, maybe nine years, close to nine years,
almost 400 biographies of history's greatest entrepreneurs
read to one word, that is definitely the word
that I would choose, which is focus.
It is, I believe, it is the single most prominent attribute
that the people that I've studied on the podcast have
that I think the rest of the world lacks in fact
I just flew to San Francisco to meet and have a conversation with my friend Daniel Eck who is the founder of Spotify
we've probably talked close to four hours and
There's probably not another living entrepreneur that I've learned more from than Daniel and he actually gave me really great advice
And I think he did this inadvertently. I don't even think he meant to and the advice was
related to focus he had told me has like more and more people ask for your time
and this happens to all of us like if you don't guard your time he had a great
line that he said about this he said if you don't guard your time greatness will
disappear another way to think about that said, if you don't guard your time, greatness will disappear.
Another way to think about that is like,
if you lose your focus, greatness will disappear.
That literally gives me chills.
That is terrifying to me.
And another thing that me and Daniel talked about
is the fact that he has this really great idea
that you really should be optimizing for impact,
a positive impact on other people.
And I believe that what I'm trying to do with founders has a positive impact on the world.
And I should be very, very, very careful to not lose the focus on that because really what I
believe is like the people I read about the people that you and I study on this podcast,
they're they were brilliant. They made incredible things. They built incredible lives.
Even though they didn't know each other,
they lived at different points in history,
lived in different parts of the world,
worked in different industries.
They arrived at very similar conclusions
on how to build a great business.
And I think the idea is very simple.
I got this idea from Charlie Munger where he says,
find an idea and take it very simple,
find a simple idea and take it seriously.
And the simple idea I have that I'm trying to take very, very seriously and focus on
is like, hey, somebody should read all these old books, mine these timeless ideas, and
then just spread them to current and future generations.
And this applies to everything, including who I pick to partner with on the podcast.
One of the most important, I'll give you an example of this.
One of the most important ideas that is repeated over and over and over again is
the fact that all of history's greatest entrepreneurs constantly emphasize the
importance of controlling expenses and controlling your costs.
This idea goes back hundreds of years.
You can go back and read Andrew Carnegie.
Andrew Carnegie would repeat a mantra over and over again.
He said profits and prices are cycl, subject to any number of transient forces
on the marketplace.
Costs, however, could be strictly controlled, and in Andrew Carnegie's view, any savings
achieved in cost were permanent.
That is why I picked Ramp as the presenting sponsor of this podcast.
I know all the founders of Ramp.
They're friends of mine.
We've spent a ton of time together.
Before they were the presenting sponsor of this podcast, they all listened to the podcast and they
picked up on the fact that the main theme from the podcast is also the reason
that Ramp exists and that's the fact that the importance of watching your
costs and controlling your spend and how doing so can give you a massive
competitive advantage. And one thing I would add to that that I think is
related to the conversation you're about to hear, doing that is also a
demonstration of focus. The reason that Ramp think is related to the conversation you're about to hear, doing that is also a demonstration of focus.
The reason that Ramp exists is to give you everything
you need to control your spend.
Ramp gives you everything you need to control your costs.
Ramp gives you easy to use corporate cards
for your entire team, automated expense reporting,
and cost control.
I use it for my business, Patrick uses it
for his business, I've gotten hundreds of emails,
text messages, DMs about people that listen to the podcast that are now using ramp for their
business.
There is a line in Andrew Carnegie's biography where it said cost control
became nearly an obsession. Keep in mind,
when Carnegie sells his business to JP Morgan,
Carnegie had the largest liquid fortune in the world.
Knowing your business rate is E and your costs down to the penny makes you very, very hard to compete with. In fact, I think Sam Walton in his autobiography really beautifully
summarized this point and really the competitive advantage of doing so. And he wrote, our money
was made by controlling expenses. You can make a lot of different mistakes and still recover if
you run an efficient operation, or you can be brilliant and still go out of business if you're
too inefficient. Ramp helps you run an efficient organization.
Ramp gives you everything you need to control your spend
and optimize all your financial operations
on a single platform.
I believe that if Andrew Carnegie and Sam Walton
were alive today,
they'd be running their business on Ramp.
Make history's greatest entrepreneurs proud
by going to ramp.com
to learn how they can help your business today.
That is ramp.com.
I hope you enjoy this conversation. I'm very passionate about these ideas by going to ramp.com to learn how they can help your business today. That is ramp.com.
I hope you enjoy this conversation.
I'm very passionate about these ideas
and I really appreciate Patrick for giving me
an opportunity to convey some of these ideas
that I think are very, very important.
As always, thank you for listening.
If I think about founders and try to simplify what it is,
I would say that it's an entrepreneur lives 40 years and built something,
biographer spends four-ish years researching them
and writing something, you spend like 40 hours
reading the book and thinking about it
and tying it to all the other lessons,
and then you spend 40 minutes,
and so we spend 40 minutes listening
to your summary of that thing.
And if you think about that incredible amount
of distillation, like that's a big reason
it's so interesting and so valuable.
So I guess my first question is to distill it even more.
Like if you think about the entire project,
the entire corpus, and we're forced to distill it all,
all your work and therefore all the work
that came before it down to one thing,
what that one thing would be.
Yeah, the one word would be focus.
The way I think about this is like,
by the end of this year, I would have studied,
read over 400 biographies of history
to create entrepreneurs, right?
I'm like eight years into the project.
And if I was forced to distill that down to one word,
the word would be focus.
And the reason I think that pops out
is because the way I look at this,
and I've told you this before,
we've talked about this a bunch,
I feel that when you read a biography of somebody
or an autobiography is even a better example of this,
I feel you get to have a one-sided conversation
with somebody.
And obviously if I do a monologue podcast,
I like to talk.
And so I can't talk.
So I'm just forced to sit there and listen.
And I feel that person is telling me
the most important parts of their life, their 40, 50, 60 year career that person is telling me, you know, the most important parts of
their life, their 40, 50, 60 year career.
Then I go online, you know, and we live in this very modern environment.
I open up Instagram, I look at TikTok, look at X, and it's like, oh, the exact opposite
of what this person did their whole career and what I've just spent 40 hours doing is
this.
It's like, let's not focus on something for 40 years or five decades
or even 40 hours. Let's focus on it for four seconds. We were on the walk over
here. I mentioned the point where I was like, maybe the best thing for me to do.
Because where I do is like, what I get joy is just literally like, I like to
spend about half my, oh, the time that I'm awake alone. And most of that is reading.
I get a lot of joy out of that. And then the way I feel after I read a good book
or make an episode that I'm proud of,
and then the way I feel like when I go online,
I'm like, oh, these are like the complete opposite.
They're the contrast.
And one is feeds my soul, one is good for me,
and one is the opposite.
And so I told you, I was like,
maybe what I should do is just like not read online at all
and just post all day long about the stuff I'm reading.
Like use it as a tool instead of a giant distraction
where I think a lot of people like,
it's just completely destroying their ability to focus.
And I think it's related to maybe why you asked me
the question is like, I'm very reluctant
to like have an opinion on like when you listen
to the podcast or when we have conversations
or we're on the phone, if something comes up,
it's like, well, you know, Steve Jobs would say, do this, or David Ogilvy did this,
or Buffett looked at it this way,
or Munger looked at it this way.
It's not like David thinks you should do this.
And because I don't really have an opinion
on what other people should do.
I just think of like how I want to run my life.
And now I'm thinking maybe I should actually like
be a little more vocal about, hey,
it's kind of weird that the people that were literally
the best at what they did in their life were completely focused, were not in this huge rush.
They obviously work very fast, but they didn't have goals like when I'm seeing a lot online.
It's like, we're the fastest company ever to X revenue.
It's just like, they didn't talk that way.
Sam Walton did not talk that way.
Coco Chanel did not talk that way.
And so Ferrari, they understood they found something they loved to do and did it for
an incredibly long time.
And so I talked about this, where I get to meet a lot of great entrepreneurs.
And my favorite entrepreneurs, entrepreneurs that I've been the most impressed with, they're
all over the age of 70, like all of them.
It was like, who's the young entrepreneur you admire?
I don't even know any of their names, because I'm so focused on this person has spent five
decades thinking deeply about what they're doing. Because I'm so focused on this person has spent five decades
thinking deeply about what they're doing.
And the stuff they can convey to you over a dinner,
a phone call, a conversation,
I just, I don't find that anywhere else.
And I think that's a complete byproduct of the fact
that they were able to focus on something
for many, many decades, which is completely,
I would say opposite of human nature.
I think that is why it's valuable,
because it's so rare for people to really do that.
Why does that interest you?
Why is the 50-year version of a business story
more interesting than a 10-year version?
Which I'm picking 10, because a decade's a long time.
Time is the best filter.
Time is the only filter that I trust.
Most of the people I cover are dead.
If they're not dead, they're at the end of their career,
they're an older, wiser person,
and they're passing on these lessons, right?
And I remember, I got a lot of pushback
when FTX was taking off,
and all these people were telling me,
you gotta do an episode on SPF, this guy's a genius,
he's the fastest person to like a $35 billion net worth
or whatever the number was.
And so I was like, oh, maybe I'm like missing something,
like that's maybe they're right.
And we got to talk about Todd Graves
in the episode I just did,
because I'm really proud of it.
I think, you know, when people ask me-
It's my favorite episode, yeah.
Yeah, when people ask me who's my favorite living entrepreneur,
they expect me to say like a tech entrepreneur.
It's like, no, the guy that owns Raising Canes.
They're like, what are you talking about?
I get, he owns 90% of a business that he started in college.
He's been doing it for 30 years.
The business is worth at least $10 million,
it's growing at 30% a year, and he refuses to sell.
What would be the opposite of that, right?
The slow grind to really perfecting what you're doing
before you try to just scale it up.
There's a great line, I think, in Nick Sleep's
partnership letters, which I just did,
and he's like, we just don't understand why we go to these companies that are losing money,
and they want to figure out how to get bigger. And so lose more money. And he's not talking about
like an Amazon where you actually have to do that. SPF, I'm like, oh, well, maybe I'm wrong. Like,
maybe these people are right. And the reason I thought about Todd Graves, because there's so
many people in his career, which we'll get to, they said, no, you're doing it wrong. And he's,
and we was younger. He's like, damn, they're like experts. They're smarter.
They're like older than me.
Like, and he started to doubt himself for a little bit.
And he's like, wait, no, they didn't know what the fuck
they were talking about.
And so I was really resistant to the SPF thing.
So I started listening to all these podcasts on them.
And then when he does podcasts, he would like multitask,
which my personal hero is Charlie Munger.
I think he's the wisest person I've ever come across,
the wisest person I've ever talked to, and what does he say?
He's like, you're gonna get half-assed effort,
that's not an exact quote, like if you multitask.
He just, he single-tasks, like I'm just focused
on whatever's in front of me.
He has this great quote that I put up that went viral,
it's like obvious, he's, and he's like,
I didn't succeed in life because of intelligence,
I succeeded because I had a long attention span.
And that's what I'm so interested in to go back to your point
But then I start watching these SPF podcasts and no disrespect. I'm sure he's a nice guy
I'm not trying to insult him, but he's like I've been on a bunch of podcasts. I've never played fucking video games
Well, how I'm doing it
Yeah, it's like this is so first of all, it's kind of disrespectful. It's like a human level
It's like you don't even deserve my full attention.
You know what?
My phone's not here.
Like we're like just having this conversation.
But then so I said, okay, well, maybe there's interesting ideas here and then he explains
what he was doing.
And then I heard him say something and immediately said this.
He's like, well, I actually think no one ever has to read a book.
And he talks about like he doesn't read books.
Books are stupid.
Should just be a blog post. And I was like, oh, there's no way I'm doing
What's the chance that this young?
kid, right
He arrived at a conclusion that for the last five thousand years of humanity
You have all these people talking about how valuable it is to write down the lessons from the people came before us and to
Pick up that book and read the lessons and this this guy comes along and says, no, no,
just disregard that mass of humanity.
That's not a valuable activity.
I'm sorry, I'm going to take monger over SPF every day.
And I'm so glad I didn't do the episode.
Because imagine if I had in the founders back catalog
a podcast on history's greatest entrepreneur
and it's a guy that was essentially a fraud.
If you think about that over 70 category of entrepreneur that you've learned so much
from, what do they do most differently in contrast to the in a hurry fastest to a hundred
million ARR type entrepreneurs that you've also spent time with?
One they just, I think great anything takes time.
Like a great business takes time.
You can be phenomenal.
If you look at the early days of Amazon, obviously Jeff was really gifted.
He was really smart.
He was doing a lot of smart things, even before he started Amazon.
But if you look at how good he was and how great the business was a decade, two, three
decades in, I always say this quote, and I think it's dead right.
It's fascinating that everybody in technology has read zero to one, right?
If you're only going to read one book, probably that would be the one to read.
I think it's excellent. But they missed the part of
what he says in there where he's like, hey, there's a big problem with
technology companies is they optimize for growth at the expense of durability.
But if you look at when do these giant companies and he said tech companies but
you see this in all these companies, Raising Cane is another example, where
like they actually make more money three, four, five, six decades into the future.
All the real money is out
there.
So therefore, if you're optimizing for growth at the expense of durability, you're never
going to get to the real rewards.
And the reason you do that is because growth you can track and durability you cannot.
And I just did this episode on Ken Griffin and what's fascinating is he founded Citadel
I think 35 years ago and I think he founded Citadel Security 23 years ago.
And he just said, we've had the most, the best financial years of our entire life in the last four
years.
He's 30 years into that business is the best time he's had, and he hopefully keeps compounding
that.
So where does the durability come from?
How do they, those long stories, how do they earn the durability?
I think what this really comes down to, you're kind of hitting at this, I think this is why,
even though I'm not an investor, I do like your framing of like trying to back people that it's their life's work.
I am very interested in people that have a mission and I don't know why.
It took me 32 years to find my mission, another five and a half to make it to where it can actually support my family. And then, you know, now I realize like, oh, this is it. This is the thing I'm doing.
I want to tie into something I've already just said. You guys actually made this great,
profound, Neil. Yeah. And what I would say is there's a lot of good quotes in there.
I feel like I should do like a miniature like episode, bonus episode on that one.
He gave this analogy of like, of the helicopter.
It's like most people are like doing due diligence
on a company or whatever and they're at like 8,000 feet
and they maybe go, they'll hover down to 5,000 feet.
And they're like, oh, we did our job.
They're like, no, no, Neil lands the helicopter
then gets out of the helicopter
then goes underneath the helicopter
and then puts his hands in the dirt.
And I read that I don't think of any entrepreneur living.
I think, oh, that's Walt Disney, that's Steve Jobs,
that's estate lauder, that's all the people that admire,
that's Todd Grace.
Sounds like I heard stories, I was just at this dinner
last weekend for somebody that knows Ken,
and they asked what episode I'm working on,
I was like, oh, I'm working on an episode of Ken Griffin,
and they were telling stories that were very similar
to that, paying attention to even,
this is the tiniest corner of the business,
you wouldn't even think he's paying attention to you,
but he's spending it to sit there
and talk to the person responsible for three straight hours
to make sure it's being done.
I just like people that take what they're doing seriously.
The feedback on the Tiger East episode,
it's absolutely ripping,
but the only negative feedback is like,
I can't, because he says in the episode,
that he believes that God put him on earth
to be good at chicken fingers, to help people.
So he can make a lot of money
and he does a lot of like charitable work.
And people are like, you know, they think they're smarter.
Too obsessed with chicken fingers.
They think they're smarter than him.
They essentially what they're saying is like,
have you built a $10 billion company?
Have you done that?
Are you the best in your profession?
Are you the top of your craft?
It doesn't matter what the craft is.
At least he has a mission.
You may laugh at his mission.
You think it's ridiculous,
but one I know he believes it for a fact.
Or he's the world's greatest actor for three decades, right?
And we can go through the level of commitment that he had to make that dream real, right?
And you can make fun of the fact that he's a mission, but he's already ahead of most
of humanity that is alive today and has ever lived.
Most people don't have a mission.
There's a great example of this in Steve Jobs that he was heavily criticized in early of
his career because he would make the inside
of the computer that you couldn't even open up beautiful. And people are, you're wasting
your time. It wasn't a waste of time to him.
The reason I like the Graves one so much is because it's chicken fingers. Like the object
of his obsession is like this sort of low status thing. I think so many people would love to build
a fancy piece of technology or something very sexy
as their lifelong mission or something.
But in many of my conversations with you,
the object of obsession is something very simple
like chicken fingers.
And I just think chicken fingers is such a visceral thing.
We've all eaten chicken fingers.
And a man like Todd has devoted himself to one thing.
I think you said on the episode,
he won't even make, people wanted a sandwich
and he just took his chicken fingers
and put buns around it and that's the sandwich.
Like he is singularly obsessed
with this chicken finger dream.
And I love the question now,
what is your chicken finger dream?
And chicken finger is better than something else
because of almost how absurd it is.
So tell us a little bit more about what you've learned
from studying him.
It was probably my favorite episode of Founders ever.
And maybe you just hit me at the right time
and I needed to hear that message right then and there
to work on something for an absurdly long time,
not think short term, whatever.
Lots of common lessons, but what is it about,
why do you think this one is so,
especially this person and this business,
which is so simple and so low brow,
so resonant with so many people?
I truly believe, like I'm obsessed,
and we've talked about this all the time,
like, you know, I get literally emails,
so they're like, why do you quote Munger
in every single episode?
And it's just like, cause all I do is listen to this, what I thought this brilliant guy,
his advice, and I just did it.
Like I always say learning is not memorizing information.
Learning is changing your behavior.
And there's been a handful of times where I meet people, I read a book, I have a conversation,
where literally my behavior, my behavior has changed.
The trajectory of my life has changed.
The way he was able to describe things to me, he's just like, there's a bunch of examples
where he's, and he's like, you know, he knows everything about business history.
He had 60 years of experience and he would share freely with everybody.
And he's like, occasionally we find scaling down and upping the intensity, you get an
advantage.
That sounds like Todd Graves to me.
He's like, oh, you have, my competitors have 10 things on the, on the menu.
I have one.
You can get three chicken fingers, four chicken fingers,
six chicken fingers, and you want a chicken finger sandwich?
Here's two buns, and that's it.
And then find a simple idea,
and take it seriously, it's another mongerism.
And then what he'd realize when he analyzed Costco,
where he's like, oftentimes in business,
we find the winning system goes ridiculously far.
That's the most important two words in this sentence.
Ridiculously far in maximizing and or minimizing one or a few variables.
I think it was Ken Griffin talked about this. I've seen this with a bunch of investors.
We talked about this with Richard Rainwater before. Jay Pritzker was like this, Sam Zell was like this, because we'll tie this to investing.
It's like if you bring them a deal, and there's like seven different things that have to go right, like the chance of every single one going right is very, very small.
And so like I love what Richard Rainwater would do where it's like,
you bring me your idea on one piece of paper,
you write it on one piece of paper, explain to me in simple words,
and then at the end, just tell me how much your own money you're putting in.
And then I'll decide if I'm going to do this.
This guy was one of the best dealmakers, you know, investors of all time.
You see it over and over again.
Sam Zell told me when I got to meet him, it's also
in his autobiography. He's like, Jay Pritzker was the most
brilliant financial mind I've ever come across. He was like an
older brother to Sam, he's like 20 years older. And his whole
point was like, I'd come to him when I was younger and bring him
like, okay, there's like six things we have to do. And Jay
would look at he's like, no, one. If you nail that everything
else, well, well, everything else will either work out, either
sort of live or die off of of that they go back to win in
the huge mania in you know, with 2020 21 all this huge tech
bubble, where seems oh goes on CNBC is like we works going to
zero. Like, no, not gonna work. And it was like at all times
high muscles pinning in like $20 billion where the case is, it
was like asset price liability mismatch
or whatever the word.
He's like, no, this guy in 1972 did this, failed.
82, this other guy did it.
This is the company, failed.
Why?
Because there's only one thing that's important
and an app doesn't fucking solve that.
You're not paying attention.
And so when I look at Todd Graves,
the reason I wanted to do that episode is one,
I just saw a clip.
This is what I mean about learning
is not memorizing information,
learning is your changing behavior.
I talked to a lot of people and they're like,
I love your podcast and something I've become friends with.
And I see the decisions they're making in their business.
Like, oh, you're listening and you're just wasting your time
because you're not actually applying the lessons.
Take what they did and what they said
and see if that works in your business
and then actually change it.
And so I saw a clip,
and it was a clip, I think on TikTok,
where Todd Graves was being interviewed
on a comedian's podcast, The O'Vonnell.
And he was talking about, he's like,
I've been a big believer in always doing one thing
and doing it better than anybody else.
And then they kept cutting the clip,
you know, it was probably 45 seconds.
And he talked about, he even got down to the minutiae
of how simple is my menu?
If it's this, how easy can I make it to select
what the customer wants?
Okay, so that customer is now gonna take five seconds
to decide, I go to a reason case,
I know exactly what I'm getting, right?
As opposed to you go to McDonald's
or another competitor's.
Now it's instead of a 10 second order,
it's a 40 second order.
That mean make not a big difference when you're having, you know, instead of a 10 second order, it's a 40 second order. That may not make a big difference
when you're having 100 orders a day and you have one store.
He's got 800 now.
It makes a huge difference.
And he just immediately understood.
And so when I, this is how,
because I fucking brainwashed myself about this,
I don't think of Todd Graves when I hear that.
I'm like, oh, that's like Rockefeller going over
to one of his employees who was soldering,
closing up oil cans and says,
how many drops of solder do you use?
And the guy's like 40.
Have you ever tried less? Try 38.
OK, I tried 38. It leaked.
OK, try 39. Oh, 39. It works.
So we were wasting one drop of solder, which might not make a shit of difference when the business is, you know, making a couple thousand.
That business went up scaling 10, 20, 30X.
Makes a huge difference. All of these people, they, 20, 30X. Makes a huge difference.
All of these people, they're obsessed with their business.
They're in the details.
Another thing that Todd Graves said that was very fascinating,
he's like, I had all these experts tell him,
hey, like you should delegate.
And he has the funny sign, he goes, delegate?
What does that word even mean?
He goes, what kind of word is that?
Right, because he was literally being interviewed
in one of the podcasts I use as a source material to make mine. And he's, again, this, this, this
happened, you know, in the last few months, maybe a year ago. And he stops the interview to look at
the Instagram reel, because they just had an event. I think they were like throwing a Superbowl party
or something like that. And he's like, I'm going to watch it before it goes out. I don't think of
Todd Grace. I think of Steve Jobs every Wednesday having a three hour meeting in Apple
reviewing every single ad that goes out.
Nothing went out of Apple.
Not a billboard in Missouri,
not what's on their landing page
without Steve looking at it.
There's a guy that wrote the book called,
I think it's called Insanely Simple.
I think his name is Ken Siegel,
if I'm correct about that.
He was running, he was the ad executive
for the marketing company, the ad company
that Steve was using.
And he said, Steve would call me at midnight
and we'd have to talk for an hour about a single word.
That's obsession.
That's loving what you do.
That's taking what you do very seriously.
I don't care if it's building computers,
if it's making a podcast, if it's making chicken fingers. I just love people that take what they very seriously. I don't care if it's building computers, if it's making a podcast, if it's making chicken fingers.
I just love people that take what they do seriously.
This idea of anything worth doing being worth doing
for its own sake.
And my favorite maxim, you know, that I've stumbled across,
I think originally from Kevin Kelly,
the old editor of Wired Magazine was
that the reward for great work is more work.
And it seems like so much of the fastest to 100 million of ARR type thing is that the
target is something that's not the work itself.
It's some other thing.
And that the healthy orientation that you're describing that Todd Graves has and all these
other people have is actually just towards the work itself.
And you had this really interesting notion of almost anti-business people.
Yvonne Chouinard is the founder of Patagonia,
comes most immediately to mind.
I love that book of his,
I'll Let My People Go Surfing.
So talk a little bit more, dig deeper on this idea
of anything worth doing for its own sake.
The reward for great work is more work.
Being anti-business as an entrepreneur
There's some depths to this that I think continue to pull at the same thread. You can change the name of a podcast I can log into my podcast host and change founders to whatever I want
Whatever you can't change the URL slug for the RSS feed for the first name
You picked and the first name I picked for founders was telling you from day one in back in 2016
The name of the podcast was called Auto-Telec.
Auto-Telec, the definition of that is an activity done for the sake of itself.
I was telling you from the rip, I don't care if nobody listens, I need to do this.
I got some advice the other day and they're like, this reminds me of Ted Graves, Henry
Ford has the exact same thing about experts, people outside of your business try to give
you advice.
And this is why I like read Twitter, I'm like,
these people, sorry, I'm not gonna read that tweet,
I'd rather, I'll just listen to what Steve Jobs said.
He probably has better advice
than this random fucking guy on Twitter.
And so somebody goes, hey, I have a great idea for you.
Have you ever thought about hiring other people
to read the books for you?
I, like, that's not what I'm doing it for.
I'm not taking the easy way.
The hard, I love what Jerry Santhoff said, the hard way is the right way.
And so I told them a story and this is the line that this is my response to this.
And this is a line that I say is like, you don't work all your life to do what you love
to not do it.
And all I know is that person doesn't have a mission.
They don't have a love.
They're not, that's fine.
Most people never do, but I don't go around
and kiss the people about what they should be doing.
It's the weird thing where the source
of this advice comes from.
And I remember reading about Charles Schultz,
the guy, I was a fucking kid,
and I'd read Charlie Brown and Peanuts every Christmas.
We'd watch Charlie Brown's Christmas.
Yeah, I think he came out in the 1960s.
And so I was like, oh, I'm gonna read his biography.
And then you read it and it's like crazy.
It's like the guy ran, you know,
I'm gonna, these are approximately right.
He ran the comic strip for like, let's say 40 or 50 years.
He drew, drew, came up with the idea, penciled everything,
drew everything, every single strip over 50 years. I think it was 17,000 different individual ones
that he did. He had already had one planned. So when he dies, this is the last, no one can ever
take it over. When I die, this is what you put out. Like when I die, this is the last one's ever
published. And people would go through it. If I remember correctly, he's living somewhere in
California to come tour his studio. At the time he's a much older people would go through it if I remember correctly living somewhere in California to come to our studio
At the time he's a much older man. He's like 67 years old and they're like, well, who's doing this?
He's like what you mean he's doing this
It's like me and they couldn't these people who toy with me couldn't wrap their head like well
Could you hire somebody else to do it so then you could take it like a vacation or you could take some time off?
And that was his line. He's like you couldn't understand why they were asking him that and he's like
But you don't work your entire life to do what you love to not
do it. That's why I think thinking a long time, you know, most of this is trial and
error. Some people find what they love to do really, like I think of Kobe Bryant, the
episodes are done on him. He's 12 years old. He would tell you I'm gonna be the best basketball
player of all time. No one finds what they love to do at 12. I'm working on this Michael
Dell episode right now. You could see from 12 years old, the guy was a moneymaker, he's
obsessed with computers.
There's a part in the story that's great
where he takes apart an IBM and he has this realization.
He says, wait a minute, IBM's selling the computer,
but they don't make any of the components.
And like you just see as like a little kid,
it's like, hmm, there might be an opportunity here
that he's gonna pursue later on.
And then he gets in trouble in class
because he's not paying attention to class,
he's just reading computer magazines.
He's telling you what his life is going to be.
You just have to listen,
and every single person has something like that.
They just don't fucking listen.
They don't listen to themselves.
What does it feel like when you find it?
Because you said earlier you were 32
before you kind of stumbled on it,
and then five years after that,
was it like actually the full-time thing
that you could do during eternal living and much more?
What was the change in feeling of,
what does it feel like to do the thing that you love to you?
Unbelievable relief.
Like a weight off your shoulders that like,
I can't describe it.
And then from there, that doesn't mean like,
oh, now I wake up, you know,
that's like I'm kind of a tortured person. Like, so there was a clip of me on another podcast that just went out that doesn't mean like, oh, now I wake up, you know, that's like, I'm kind of a tortured person.
Like, so there was a clip of me on another podcast
that just went out and the person's like,
you know, the podcast is good if the host
looks asleep the part.
I'm like, that's as good as I can look.
Okay, cause that's like, my sleep score
on my eight sleep right now is like 60.
Like, it's not, I'm not doing well
because I am completely obsessed with what I'm doing.
And I, you know what's weird?
Like people keep telling me, it's like, you shouldn't be obsessed with what I'm doing. And you know what's weird? Like people keep telling me, it's like you shouldn't be obsessed with this,
like low status, you're wrong.
I don't-
Time status now.
Yeah, but I don't even hear it.
Cause I'm like, I know exactly who I am
and I know exactly what I wanna do.
And we talk about this, we have mutual friends
that like they're kind of so obsessed to their detriment
about like, what will somebody else think of me?
Or like if I do X, well, like,
I'm worried about the public perception
or what my friends will think of me.
I don't think about that at all.
There's a great line.
The reason that, like, people are surprised
with some of the people that I wanna meet
that are still living.
And so I have like, you know, a list.
And in the top three of that list
is this guy named Jimmy Iveen.
We mean you share a love for that Defiant Ones.
Defiant Ones documentary. Last dance, Defiant Ones.
Those are the best documentaries.
I watch them over and over again.
And Jimmy Iveen has this great line.
He's just like, when you're running after something,
he goes, they do this great editing job
where it shows horses on a racetrack.
And it goes back and forth between that and Jimmy.
And Jimmy's like, you know why they put fucking blinders
on those horses?
And he goes,
cause if they look left or right, they'll miss a step.
And humans should have that too.
When you're chasing after something,
don't look left, don't look right, go.
And that's why I wake up every day.
We talked about this when we did that live show
in New York city.
It's obvious if you read the books
that the great entrepreneurs,
once they find what they love to do,
low to zero introspection. now they think deeply about their business, but they wake up every morning. They're not wondering what should I do today?
They know exactly what they're doing and to find that for me to know I'm gonna wake up and do this
For as long as I have a voice I have eyes like hopefully I have life
Like that's an unbelievable leaf now because it your mission, and because I'm also super competitive
and kind of a little crazy,
our mutual friend Daniel Eck has the greatest line
he told me.
He's just like, one of the reasons I like you so much
is because you're like an LLM trained on history's
greatest entrepreneurs with the temperature turned on.
It's like, yeah, obviously like some people
are not gonna like that and that's fine.
Then you kind of torture,
I did this episode on Jensen Wong and he has a great thing where he
doesn't like to fire people. He's like I'd rather to torture them into greatness
and then you realize when you how he goes about his life he actually tortured
himself into greatness. You know even this is in recent few years they tell a
great story. Blowout quarter. Company's doing incredible and And he walks into the meeting and he goes,
every morning I wake up, look myself in the mirror
and say, why do you suck so much?
We've heard that a few times from some exceptional people.
They're all like this.
They're all like this.
Say one click more about this anti-business,
you call that anti-business billionaires
so that they would get lots of these on Instagram
or whatever.
That's not why I did it though, because that's what I believe them to be.
I like, I appreciate that you thought it was click baiting.
I'm not trying to click bait anybody.
Although, although Todd Graves and his $10 billion chicken finger dream is
probably a good, that's a banger episode.
I don't, what I mean by anti and it really should be anti-business
as usual billionaires.
Okay.
So the, and again, I'm in my own business.
I don't care if people say, I want to wake up
and all I'm gonna do is take a pile of money
and make it into a bigger pile of money and they love it.
Cool, I have no opinion what you're doing.
The people I most admire,
the people that I'm trying to powder myself off of
is these people where it's like they're so obsessed
about the product quality, right? And there's three people in that video. It's Yvonne Chouinard, James D obsessed about the product quality, right?
And there's three people in that video.
It's Yvonne Chouinard, James Dyson, and Steve Jobs, right?
One guy's making outdoor equipment,
one guy's making high technology,
and one guy's making fucking vacuum cleaners.
Okay, but there's the exact same approach
where it's like the reasons company exists,
and Jobs has said this multiple times,
where the only reason to start a company
is because the product. And then like, where the only reason to start a company is because the product.
And then like, so the company needs to assemble
all the resources, but the product is,
we exist to make the product.
And then of course, he talks about profitability a lot,
because the profits allow you to keep making the product.
Everything starts from the product.
So everything I do, the reason I still do
every single social media post,
the reason I answer all my emails,
the reason I don't have an assistant,
the reason I don't have an assistant, the reason I don't have an editor,
is because I'm trying to make the world's best product.
I feel my podcast is a handmade artisanal,
but it just happens to be like technology
and infinite leverage.
Same amount of work is gonna go into it
if one person listens or 10 million people listen.
And I'm trying to build what drives me,
and I think annoys most of the people that are
around me because I can be pretty fucking stubborn about this, is that I want to make
the best product in the world based on what I like for the best people in the world.
The very first time we talked, you kind of, and this is when I had like, I think like
3,000 people listening back then, and you kind of nailed it on our first talk
You're like, oh you you built it like you're gonna win by default
You built this pulling mechanism in the founder ecosystem like by the time people try to do it now
They're gonna try to cat they'll never be able to catch you
But I it's really important to me as a competitive person that I build the best product for the best people in the world
I am NOT interested. I've told this story before I know know Mr. Beast, Jimmy's been very nice to me.
He's tweets about the podcast.
It's very nice.
He's invited me to go to like his headquarters
and he's like, you can use our studio record here.
We'll help you with the script.
Jimmy's, there's no script.
We'll give you data analytics people.
I don't even know how many fucking people
listen to the podcast.
I don't look at analytics.
I build what I want for me.
So the reason I have to edit it is because
when this is done, I listen to it.
It's the Stephen King thing.
I am not just the writer.
I am the first reader.
That's what Stephen King said.
Quentin Tarantino says, when I, people are like,
when you make a movie, do you have an audience?
I'm like, he's like, yeah, me.
I'm making it for me.
What is your own measure of good or great
for your own product?
That I like it.
But why?
Like what is it about whatever that episode was or the Todd Graves episode, or like,
if I stack ranked, there are 50 most recent episodes based on the quality, your own perception
of their quality.
What's different about number one versus number 40?
Like what's more true in number one than number 40?
What is the measure of goodness?
I have been thinking about this recently recently and it applies specifically to the fact
that I'm covering people that build companies.
And what I realized is like,
I've never been around impressive people
in my entire life, right?
We talked about this the very first time
I was on your podcast.
No one in my family even graduated high school,
what's this college?
So it's like, I never saw examples of great people.
And then you add to the fact that my father,
I'm the son of a Cuban immigrant,
I grew up meeting people that risked their lives
and came over here on a raft.
And it's like kind of weird, hey, like you have,
like we both have kids, we love them more than life itself.
Like I would die for my kids,
everybody would die for their kids.
And it's like, things were so bad in your country
that you risked your 14 year old son's life
and put him on a boat.
Like how bad does it have to be?
And I'm like, well, let's go to the Miami beach.
How many people, how many Americans are getting
on a raft and going, that's a one way trip.
So that tells you something is very special
about where we live and very, very bad
about where they're coming from.
And what I realized is like not being,
not being an educated family, parents never having money,
the being terrified, growing up terrified, being a loser,
it's like entrepreneurship is a miracle.
Capitalism is a miracle.
Where I meet some of these other people,
where they're like, they might be the son
or the grandson of somebody really wealthy,
and you'll find like a weird high correlation
for like almost like socialistic perspectives.
And I was like, this is so crazy to me.
Just like my wife's from Columbia.
Like no one in South America is like like that made it to America's like no
I want to go back there like you don't even understand what you have
And so now what I realized about this is like one of the reasons so passionate about is yeah, I like to read
The most unbroken hobby I've ever had. Yeah, I legitimately think podcasts are miracles you we were at this
Conference together and you said something really funny you walk, and every time I'm at another table,
and I'm like, most of the people will listen to the podcast,
but if not, I would grab their phone,
and you saw me installing it, and you had to quip.
You're like, I wish I could find a way to make money
for David's ability to turn every conversation
back to podcasting.
It's like 14 really successful capital allocators in me.
I don't even know what the hell I was doing there.
The root cause is like,
I really believe entrepreneurship is a miracle.
The fact that anybody could say, hey, I have an idea that makes somebody else's life better
because that's the best.
That's all businesses.
Business is just an idea that makes somebody else's life better.
No one can stop me from doing it to delivering value to other people.
And then if I deliver the more value I deliver to the higher number of people that generates
wealth.
What?
Imagine going back to you know I might do this episode on Genghis Khan like the 1100s and saying like you could be the richest person in the world and you could
You invented a button and you know it press that button and anything is to deliver to that or like any other Sam Walton
I told the story I was in my beach marine on a friend's boat, and I was like
That boats huge who owns that boat, and I was like, that boat's huge. Who owns that boat?
And I look it up.
It's like Sam Walton's niece.
And I'm like, this guy, I had like this great experience.
I'm looking at this giant boat.
It's probably, I don't know, $300 million,
some crazy number like that.
And I'm like, and it came from your uncle just realizing,
hey, if I just deliver everyday low prices,
again, another simple idea taken very seriously,
everyday low prices, no one's gonna beat us on pricing.
So how do you work backwards from that idea?
There's all kinds of technologies, there's logistics,
there's talent, all those other stuff is very difficult.
The idea is simple, but the definition is very difficult
and locally generated.
And people shit on Walmart.
I had to shop at Walmart when I grew up.
Like I'm not shopping there now,
but like it did a service for my family.
And for millions of people,
it's like they destroyed mainstream businesses.
It's like we couldn't afford to not shop at Walmart.
It's a miracle that he gave.
And what's the byproduct of that?
By making, I don't know,
how many people do you think shop at Walmart?
Billions by now?
A lot.
Billions.
Everyone at some point?
Yeah.
He deserves that money.
Good, I'm glad he got that money.
I mean, he wrote a lot in his books
about the relationship between simplicity and mastery.
Yeah.
And that's, I mean, that's the theme of our conversation.
Like it shows up over and over and over and over again.
That conference you're referencing
with the capital allocators, you know, you said,
I don't know why I'm there.
Well, I know why you were there.
Like I wanted you to go because I had a theory,
which was correct, which is that the people there
were gonna be more interested wanted you to go because I had a theory which was correct, which is that the people there were gonna be more interested
in you and your project than, you know,
the next guy's like latest great investment.
And I think the reason for that is that everyone recognizes
a truth in this basic message of the power
of finding one's mission and then pursuing it forever.
And I would just love to hear you riff a little bit
on what that has taken for you in the last,
I guess we met in 2022, so called three and a half,
four years ago, something like that.
In that period of time,
which is when this thing has really taken off,
what are your drops of glue or like,
what are the things that you've done,
had to do to make this thing better?
Because I just wanna keep bringing this point to life
that like once you find the thing,
what kinds of things does it then take
to make the thing great?
So what have those things been for the last four years?
I don't even know if I can,
I have a good answer to that question.
Other than there is something that I think is,
two other lines from Monger again, I go back to him where it's like he says intense
interest in any subject is necessary for like to master it he has a better line
I'm messing that up and then he says fall in a drift you know we talked about
this all the time where when I describe you to other people I'm like well you
have to understand Patrick is doing invest like the best episodes all day
long every day like ten times a, he just doesn't record them.
He's just naturally curious.
He just wants, he's curious around other people
in a way that I am frankly not, right?
I'm interested in books.
I can't like deal with people.
It's why I work alone in general.
Like obviously I have a handful of very close people.
But I just think, I don't know why.
There's a great line.
So I just did this Ken and Griffin episode
and I made the point in the episode
I think is really important,
is like I'm not interested in timely.
I'm interested in timeless.
And so there's no book on Ken.
There's a bunch of great stories spread
throughout the internet that I use as source material
and then I listened to every single thing
I could find, all these talks.
And most of the interviews he does
is like, what do people wanna know?
What do you think about the market?
What do you think about this president?
But I did find like he had this hour long talk at Yale,
highly recommend listening to it.
Where it's like more like almost like an oral biography,
like more timeless principles.
And then I transcribed that and then, you know,
I listened to, I don't know, 30 other hours of him talking
and it maybe only made like five or 10 other notes
or something small,
but something he said is very fascinating.
He's like, for. I don't quite understand
Since I was in the third grade. I've been obsessed with the stock market
How does it work? How do you make money? What are these problems you can solve in that line for reasons?
I don't understand. I truly believe that Jeff Bezos nailed it when he said you don't pick your passions your passions choose you
You don't choose your passions your passions choose you I was not like, you know, at five years old wondering like,
what's a good hobby for self-development in my future?
Maybe I should read.
I just read.
I told you the first time we talked,
like my mom before she died, she said,
I would read the back of cereal boxes.
I have no idea.
And so all I do is like,
I'm just intensely interested in everything
that I'm learning.
And then I like the craftsmanship.
I heard there's an idea that Ken has that,
again, I think is an entire reason
that Founders is Valuable is a podcast.
He says, you really, you wanna know
what's going on in your business,
you wanna sell your competitors,
but you really should be grabbing ideas
from other businesses far afield from your industry.
And he told a story about a way to mitigate his risk.
And he got an idea from Saudi Aramco.
Saudi Aramco and Citadel, very different businesses, right?
What was the idea?
Okay, so I'll explain this.
Make sure I don't forget that,
because I'm in the middle of the weave.
So he uses the term, I think they were like,
they were like a B player in risk.
They weren't doing well on risk.
And he was still in Chicago at the time.
And he goes and visits Saudi Ramco
and he sees this giant screen on a wall
on their headquarters there.
And it's like 30 feet long, 10 feet wide.
And it has all the most important data.
Not like a hundred things, but like where the ships are,
how many barrels of oil we're reducing,
like the handful of metrics.
And they just look at it all day.
Yeah, their distillation.
Exactly, what's gonna happen? Like you look at it all day. Yeah, their distillation. Exactly, and what's gonna happen?
Like you look at it all day,
like then you're gonna improve it, right?
And he's like, oh, what if we took
all the important risk metrics
and put on a giant wall in our headquarters?
And he said it took him from like, you know,
a B player to like one of the best in their field.
And his whole advice was like,
you really need to be taking ideas
that are far afield of like your own industry.
And you know, that's what you do when you read a book.
I'm not going to build Walmart.
I'm not going to build Ferrari.
I'm not building Apple.
I'm building my podcast.
But there's all these ideas that I can take from them.
So as I expose myself to that, I just
find little ideas that I can use in the craftsmanship
of the product.
And one of the main ideas goes back
to your question about the anti-business billionaires.
The reason I say, and I do this same book over and over again.
So I've done an episode 25, episode 200, episode 300,
and it'll be episode 400.
It's James Dyson's first autobiography
called Against the Odds.
He, it took him 14 years, 5,127 prototypes,
until he got the world's first cyclonic vacuum cleaner
that he owned 100% of, that it was up to his standards.
And so all I'm trying to figure out is just like,
can I make something that I would listen to?
I don't know any other way.
And so last week I actually had to republish an old episode,
which is still a great episode,
but the reason was because I read a book
where I found the person I did not like,
and I don't want to spend any time in his mind,
so I'm not gonna make an episode on him,
because not only do I have to finish reading the book,
which I threw across the fucking room,
but then I have to spend another, you know, probably-
You're reading this one together, if it's the one I think.
Yes, and then I spent another 30,
then I have to spend another 30 hours making the podcast,
and this is like, I don't want to be like this person.
I'm looking for role models,
because I didn't have any when I grew up.
And then I read a fabulous book that me and you both read,
Pappyland by Wright Thompson, excellent writer.
A great writer too, yeah.
Unbelievable.
But I couldn't figure out how to make an episode on it
because it's really like, it's about a family business.
It's really about a family.
It's really about the relationship
between a father and son.
Like, and I'm very interested in that relationship.
I think it's the most powerful relationship in the world,
which I got heckled at one of our live shows
when I said that.
Why'd you get heckled?
I don't remember.
They were just like, because I said it was the most,
it's not discounting the relationship
between a father and a daughter or mother and daughter.
It's just like, it's clearly something that pops up
in these biographies over and over again, all the time.
And he, and right has, right, Tom's son has great writing
about, you know, relationship that the grandson had
with the father and the father with the,
it was just a lot of family dynamics.
Excellent book.
But I was like, this isn't good enough.
Then the book was, but I can't make anything good enough.
So I'm not putting anything out.
Nothing.
I'm not going to put out something I wouldn't listen to.
One of my favorite things that happens with you
is someone will say something that just bothers you
and sets you off and gets you going on
this stream of lessons that we're talking about today
that you've learned, that you've shared with people.
What other things that you see people do bother you the most in business?
You have a great line on this.
You talk to way more people than I do.
And I'll ask you about, oh, is this person, this person reached out?
And you're like, oh, no, he's a casual.
Again, I don't care what people do because they're, I know, because they study fucking
people's lives for a living.
So much of what shapes you is like,
it happens when you're so young
and you can't even describe why you're interested
in what you're interested in.
But I think the only thing that bothers me is like,
there's a great line that I mentioned in the Ovid's episode
that mediocrity is invisible until passion shows up
and exposes it.
And so much of the people that you meet,
so many of the products that you deal with,
so many of the people, it's just like they're casual.
They have a casual affectation about them
that I find personally disgusting.
And I'm not, again, it's not like I grow on judging people.
It's gonna make me sound like a terrible human being.
It's just like, it's a way for me to filter
who I wanna spend time with.
And my favorite people to spend time with,
like they're all, they all work in vastly different things,
but they take what they do so seriously.
And it's not a selfish thing.
They're making something that they feel
makes somebody else's life better.
So the only thing I can think of is,
I don't like the casualness,
and then I'm not a fan, personally,
of the over-fin financialization of business.
I think a lot of people aren't starting companies.
They're creating financial instruments, which is fine.
But I think you're gonna realize
like just these kinds of people
just don't have enough experience
and they haven't read enough biographies
to realize like you think what you want is money,
but what you really want is meaning.
You're gonna get the money
and then you're gonna be like, why am I so unhappy?
Because you're human and this happens over and over again.
That doesn't mean people don't like money
and that obviously solves a lot of benefits,
but you're gonna feel a lot better.
If you think about the reasons that people sell a business,
typically it's either because they have a chance
to make a tremendous amount of money
or some amount of money,
or it's because they're tired of the thing,
of the business therefore,
of the product, of the whole endeavor, of the product of the whole endeavor.
Why do you think that the money thing has become,
I would think about it as like a false idol or something,
like it has become the unit of interest, of obsession,
of showing off, of status, of all this kind of stuff.
What's your theory for why this seems to have inflected
like so crazily in the last couple of years?
Well now we have like a giant mirror into everybody else's life we never had like this
way. Like think of like one good thing about decentralization of media is like there's
no gatekeepers. That's also the bad thing in the sense of like now there's somebody
just put me onto crazy rich Asians of TikTok and it is some of the most-
Haven't caught that one.
Oh, we should...
I'll send you some clips.
And it's some of the most disgusting behavior.
Like one lady is, I guess her parents own,
she lives in California, but her parents own
one of the largest cloud computing companies in China.
Another one is like some giant,
maybe even like government collusion
in Singapore or something like that.
But it's like all the videos,
all the videos are just straight consumption.
It's look what I got.
Me and my, and they do this thing where it's like,
me and my mom went shopping today
and we spent 25,000 at Van Cleef
and then we bought a Hermé thing and we did this.
And it's just like, this is disgusting behavior
because you shouldn't take pride in what you consume
that doesn't take skill or talent you should take pride in what you built that is the most selfish
thing you could possibly do and i'm not like dude like i'm building the goal here is to you know to
change the trajectory of my entire family tree i'm going to build generational wealth not so my kids
can do that shit that That'll never happen.
But to try to teach them, it's like, man,
the wealth came because you made somebody else's life better.
You dedicated, it's a selfless act, even if you love it.
And this idea that like we are,
so I understand that, it's like,
so then young people see that and they're like,
oh, that I need to figure out how to make money.
And I was like this, like I was so embarrassed when I was younger, that I had to like, how much I had to figure out how to make money. And I was like this. I was so embarrassed when I was younger.
That I had to like, how much I had to work,
or like, I didn't have a car,
or like all this other stuff that happened to me.
I remember being deeply, deeply embarrassed.
And then switching from embarrassment
to like almost like relentless self-belief
that like I am better than that person.
Like I remember going, there was this kid
that lived close to like, went to the same school as me. It was a public high school. But I remember going, there was this kid that lived close to, like went to the same
school as me.
It was a public high school.
But I remember the crazy story I heard where like, I think, again, this was like, it's
funny when you think of wealth, but like his dad owned like, I don't know, like a hundred
dominoes or something.
But I just remember they used to take a helicopter to lunch.
And I'm like, what?
And I remember him bragging about the car.
His dad bought him like 120,000 in the car.
He'd park in front of the country club,
which obviously I would never even be able
to get into the country club.
And I remember flipping and I was like,
I'm better than that kid.
Like I'm smarter than him.
I work harder.
Like I'm gonna fuck him up.
And it turned into like this competitive,
like I will prove to you that like,
you what was handed to you, I will get myself.
And it was like some kind of weird drive behind that.
But so when I see people like that, where it's just like, you're glorifying the wrong
thing.
We're like, if you think about there's this great talk that Steve Jobs gave when he came
back to Apple, and he's talking about Apple spends all this money on marketing, you would
never know it.
It sucks.
All your marketing sucks.
And he's like, who are the best?
What is the best example of marketing?
And he talked about Nike.
And he's like, what does Nike do?
He doesn't even talk about like,
the shoe has a bunch of six bubbles or whatever.
They glorify great athletes.
They glorify great achievement.
And so that's why he did the crazy ones ad.
And so I think that is like to some degree
what I'm trying to do is like the reason I make these clips
on the anti-business billionaires,
the reason I spend so much time talking about these people
and the craftsmanship and talk about this guy
that is literally a craftsmanship with his chicken fingers is because I
To some degree like I want to celebrate these people saying hey
I'm gonna dedicate my life to building the best possible product I can and to make somebody else's life better and
I'll talk all day long about that and not about the fact that you know
I'm building a yacht or I'm doing all this other stuff.
Like you can have all these things,
but like what are you actually proud of?
You're not proud of your consumption.
What are you proud of?
Anybody can go to the store and buy that.
Not everybody can build a truly great product.
Why are the people that are doing it that way
so much better at marketing than like,
if you read a marketing book and, you know,
tried to go market your product
or had some marketing person at your company
in charge of how the world hears about you.
I'm thinking about the Red Bull founder, Estee Lauder,
like this seems to, Steve Jobs, of course,
this shows up over and over again
that not only is the ability to create an incredible product,
God, I love that line of mediocrity is invisible
until passion shows up to expose it.
So I won't forget that one. But the same thing seems to happen.
So that's the product side.
The same thing seems to happen from all these same people
on the marketing side.
What is the flame there that's behind that?
Like why, what have you learned about that side
of business studying all these people
where they're not only responsible for the product
but also for how the world engages with it
and hears about it.
Again, I'd go back to those three,
Yvonne Chouinard, James Dyson, and Steve Jobs.
I think they have all these lessons in that.
Yvonne Chouinard calls it nonfiction marketing.
He's like, if you have a shit product,
like you have to like dress it up,
you have to have a mascot,
you have to hire these expensive advertising companies,
you have to make up all this stuff. It's all fiction. But if you just in his thing, he didn't even want
to be a billionaire. He just like, hey, I'm going to you
again, he built a product for himself. He was a mountaineer.
He was he spends all his time outdoors. He fishes he mountain,
he skis he climbs mountains, he does all these super risky
sports. All the gear I'm using sucks.
I'm gonna make the gear that I use and guess what?
If I make the best gear, then everybody's like,
where'd you get that?
Oh, that's good too.
And it takes-
Your best friend to wear it. Exactly.
Yeah, exactly.
And that'll compound again,
if you don't sell after five years or four years
or do anything that puts in jeopardy
the durability of your company.
And so I think about James Dyson,
he has this great line and I'll paraphrase,
but how he wants to spend his time, he wants this great line in all, like paraphrase, but how
he wants to spend his time, he wants to invent.
He wants to be as close to the possible to the design of the product, the manufacturing
of the product.
He will be on the line of the product even in the seventies, right?
But what he realized is like, after he's done making the product, he's the one that went
around the world and sold the product because he's like the creator is the only person that can explain
what went into the process of the thinking behind it.
And then with his full heart, he's something like that,
with the full heart and complete belief in what he's saying,
foisted upon other people at a high price.
Because he knows, hey, yeah, this,
you can go and buy a vacuum cleaner for 40 bucks or 600.
Guess what, my house, I have a Dyson.
It's the best vacuum cleaner.
It just is.
And I'm asking you to pay 10X for you can get,
you know, anywhere else.
Why?
And I can tell you what went into it.
The blood, sweat and tears.
I kind of reject this like purely rational,
like the way people like,
they try to analyze business in a rational way,
which is weird to me,
because humans are nothing but irrational.
And they give money for reasons they can't describe. And some of this like, why would somebody pay, you know, I love this, this
thing that you see with like ends up for are you guys did a great post about this, when
you did a Ferrari episode and it showed like the racetrack the test track, and they're
like, there's a test track. And then literally ends up for his house. He built the racetrack
around his house, right? It's just like, why do people come from all over the world to meet this guy, right?
And to buy a car that, you know, is 100 times, 10 times, 20, 30 times more expensive than
just another car that could go fast.
There's a story behind it.
And I think that's where, like, you see the people that love the product so much, they
put so much of their life's energy into it
But then they can explain very clearly why it's valuable the reason I'm not trying to be like obnoxious
When I ask people to listen to the podcast and they don't I tell them take out their phone
I heard this great thing and this is another idea I got from Paul Graham
We said in the early days of stripe they call it the Collison installation
Where they're like, oh there's other YC companies like I love to use stripe to use Stripe. And they'd be like, oh, great, give me your laptop.
And they would install it right then.
And so I saw that idea, great idea.
I'm gonna do this center installation.
And so I've done this over and over.
I don't even know, I probably installed it,
I don't know, not joking, like 500 times.
Like, oh, this is gonna be the best day you've ever had.
You're gonna look back on this day.
Unbelievable what this podcast is gonna do for your career.
Here, follow it right there. Like I think this James Cameron podcast is gonna do for your career. Here, follow right there.
Like I think this James Cameron episode
is the best episode ever done.
Maybe the Red Bull episode,
maybe the Chicken Finger episode,
but like I can tell you that with a straight face
and not feel shameful or shameless
or whatever the term is there about doing that,
because I believe in it.
It took a lot of fucking work to make that.
And I know the lessons are good
because that guy told you they're good. What is it about the Red Bull?
Story
It's so unique. It's so different. It's one of my favorites they've ever done. So
This is another again like it's like you you know me well. I'm getting hot. Um
You know me well enough
It's just like I'm not like somebody could offer me like come run my company or like pay me more money. Like there's just no way I would do that.
Like I'm not doing there's other ulterior motives for it.
And one, like if you're really smart, you can find a way to build a good business almost
anything.
It's not what you do.
It's how you do it with Dietrich Metzsch is like his whole thing.
One of the stories crazy because at the time I did that episode, there's no biographies
in English.
So like this is also what drives me insane.
In everything, you should be thinking about differentiation.
The reason I started a solo podcast, right, on history podcast in 2016 is because in 2016,
I thought there was way too many, I can't go interview entrepreneurs, everybody's already
doing that, right?
And there's obviously something I didn't understand, there's always room for great, right?
But I had this natural inclination
I've had my entire life to like go in the other direction
that other people are doing.
So I knew it was differentiated.
And what I love about the episodes I love the most
is like, there's not even a book about it.
You have to like make the content for the episode.
So I had to translate, or a friend of mine
translated that biography from German.
So first of all, I was like, oh, good.
Like how many people have done an episode on this guy
based on this book?
Well, if you haven't spoke German, none, right?
So, and then you realize the story is just like, you know,
he was working for a bunch of CPG companies,
traveling to Asia, he's jet-lagged all the time.
He winds up finding the Red Bull,
but it's in a different language.
It's like 15 cents or whatever the case is.
He's like, oh, this works.
And there's really no like energy drink category.
So he helps create the category and then masters the category
and then realizes you have a lot of like,
you really need to raise the price.
And then even the way he looked at things
where he's like, oh, we're a marketing conglomerate.
So we're gonna outsource everything else but marketing.
It's like everybody's talking about content to commerce
and all this other stuff today.
It's like, this is not, nothing is new. You just haven't read enough
history. Like you want to look at the best content to commerce right there. And then
what does he do? He optimizes for, he did not want to have a board of directors. He did
not want to be in the public stock market. He didn't want to be answerable to anybody.
The guy, I mean, the guy wasn't married. Like you just look at it. People will give you
hints about what's important to them. Just look, read between the lines. And you clearly see he doesn't like people telling him what to do.
He has a ton of fun. He's also crazy.
He likes to like, even well, to his seventies, he was like taking risky sports, mountain biking.
He had, he was like flying his own planes, racing his own cars.
He was like the Red Bull.
Like the brand of Red Bull was him.
And then you get to the point where him and his partner, they each own 49% of the company.
They fit $500,000 in each,
then they had a small bank loan,
and every single thing from the growth from there
was out of profits.
How many people, essentially can bootstrap,
if somebody gave me,
if me and you have a business right now, right,
you're gonna put in half a million,
I'll put in half a million,
we're gonna get a small bank loan.
You know how hard it would be,
the unlikely outcome that you and I build a business
that's worth 40 or 50 or $60 billion? You know how hard that is? that you and I build a business that's worth 40 or 50 or 60 billion dollars.
You know how hard that is?
How the hell did he do that?
There's a great line by Charlie Munger.
He says, one of my favorite ways to knowledge is finding an extreme example and asking what
the hell happened here.
You know, and in my case, it's like people.
It's like, what?
There's a guy, there's some Austrian guy
that owns Red Bull that is turning down,
he turned on multiple offers
where he would have made 20 billion for his 49%.
He's paying himself 500 to 800 million a year.
He's so private that he buys the magazine
that's trying to write a story about him.
Like, there's a guy that is trying to write
an unauthorized biography of him, goes to his mom's house. Dietrich finds the guy and says, if you don't leave my mom alone,
I'm going to bring, I'm going to pay a Russian guy to break your knees, your kneecaps. It's like,
what is happening here? Who is this person? And I think that's really important because all it does
is like completely pops off the top of your head about what is possible in life. The reason I'm
obsessed with these main acts on emissions, these super driven people, the
opposite of casual people is because it's like they stretch what I believe is possible.
Let me give you a perfect example.
There's this reoccurring theme on the podcast that's in all these biographies and the shorthand
I have for this is how bad do you want it?
And I just came across an example of this with Ken Griffin.
The reason I did the Ken Griffin episode, even though there's not a biography on him,
I think there's one that's like crappy and it's like two stars on Amazon.
So you know, there's people writing, it's probably like ChatGPT wrote it or something,
or the old version of ChatGPT, the new version actually, the Deep Research can write.
The Deep Research, hey, I use Deep Research every day.
It's really good.
He talks about when he was 33 years old and ran both of them.
John Arnold tells a story on Twitter and it goes viral on Twitter.
And that's how I found it.
That's what sparked me.
Cause I keep hearing about Ken.
Once I read that, I was like,
this is a founder's guy, have to do it.
And Enron blows up spectacularly in 2001.
The day it blows up,
Ken charters a Gulfstream jet,
sends like 16 people down to Houston,
interviews every single person in the Enron Energy,
like the commodity business,
everyone finds out how they made money,
what their competitors were, what worked,
what didn't work, right?
Then he finds the head trainer, which is John Arnold,
and John Arnold's like, Ken's assistant calls.
He's like, hey, Ken wants to talk to you,
would you talk to him?
He's like, listen, I'm not open for a job right now.
I'm trying to close the books,
but I respect what Ken has built, so I will talked to him. He's like, listen, I'm not open for a job right now. I'm trying to close the books, but I respect what Ken has built.
So I will talk to him.
Okay.
I'm headed to Aspen for an event right now.
When I'm back in Houston, tell Ken,
I will take his phone call.
Hangs up.
Assistant calls back a few minutes later.
Ken is willing to fly to where you are.
If he flies to Aspen today, will you meet with him?
He said, yeah.
How bad do you want? And Ken's point that he makes,
I don't think that's in the Twitter post,
but he tells that same story in the conversation with Yale.
And he goes, I hired all the best people at Enron,
and since then we've made about $30 billion
trading commodities.
How bad do you want it?
Most people are like, oh, I'll wait till next week.
I'll catch you a couple of days.
He's like, I'm coming today.
33 years old.
You always see the true interest is revealed early.
He was doing stuff like that.
When long-term capital management blew up in 98,
he was 30 years old.
He went and visited those guys.
What do you want to know?
You guys didn't lose control of your business
until over 90% of your equity.
How the hell did you keep it after like 30%, 40%, 50%?
How is that possible?
And then what happened?
That was in 1998, he was 30.
In 2008, when he was 40, he lost 50% of his equity.
And he says, what I learned from those conversations,
I used 10 years later to keep Citadel in business.
I asked sort of the marketing version of this question,
like the non-fiction marketing,
like if you believe so deeply in the thing,
it actually becomes easier to sell the $600 vacuum
versus the $40 one.
What about on the talent side?
I know you've learned a lot from Brad Jacobs
and other people about the power
of hiring the very best people.
Everybody says that, like, of course you should have
the best people.
Everybody says it, but they don't do it.
But they don't do it.
So like, why don't they do it?
What do true founders in your sense of the word
do differently in this,
the same question I asked about marketing, but for talent.
Yeah, there's a great line.
I did this clip in this video called overpay for talent
because you can't really overpay for talent.
And Brad Jacobs in his book,
he talks about that over and over again.
We, me and you went to his house and he talked about,
he told us like numbers he was paying for talent.
Like, it would shock you.
Mr. Beast video editors,
like this 22 year old, the main kid kid 22 or 24 year old kid like if you
Know he paid him like you see this over and over again
Why because the example in the video is like well, you know did Apple really need next no need to see jobs
So they paid five they paid half a billion dollars to rehire the guy they shouldn't that they needed and he produced you know
Whatever return on that money like they got a deal on getting him back
The reason I think people don't do it is one,
I don't think, everything we describe,
and I do, I think there's like a limit
to like the actual application.
I guess these ideas you can scale down and scale up,
but like there's just not that many talented people
in every field and they're really hard to find.
They take a long time to usually
convince. They're usually really, really expensive. And in many cases, they're working for themselves.
So there's not an abundance of people. But this just happened with me and you talked about this.
Your new editor-in-chief just wrote that Neil Maeda piece. And how did you find him?
You found he wrote the best Palmer Lucky,
and Palmer Lucky's-
The best profile period.
Yeah, and the best, and Palmer Lucky's like,
he's got a lot of coverage,
he does great interviews and everything,
he's wildly entertaining,
and yet this guy wrote the best piece on him.
Jeremy Stern. So it's very simple.
Jeremy Stern. Thank you.
It's very simple.
It's like, oh, this is what Munger
told our mutual friend, Brent. He's like, how do this is what Munger told our mutual friend Brent.
He's like, how do you find CEOs? I just find somebody did a great job at being a CEO.
I said, do that, but for me. And then Brent's like, what about higher potential?
And Munger's like, I don't do that. I don't do that.
I just find the great guy and tell him to come over here.
So you just did this. You're like, hey, that guy's really good.
What's the chance that he's only able to write one good? Right. Impossible.
Yeah.
Like you don't get that good without,
there's a skill there, you know?
And so I have gone through,
I realized I wasn't even taking my own advice
because I would use like all these people when you,
there's like inside baseball this,
like when you see all these podcasts
that have all these clips, they're outsourced.
Clip farms.
Yeah, they're like, they're like all,
the pitch is like, it's so cheap.
And I even use some that my friends recommended.
I'm like, these are terrible.
And I found a guy and we met him together.
And he is really young and really gifted.
His name is Maxim.
He is, in my opinion, one of the best short form editors in the world.
Shout out Blake Robbins for for connecting us.
It took me a while, a few months to do this.
Only works because he's obsessed with the podcast
and he was like in the audience
and he's predisposed
and he's already listening to it anyways.
And I was like, do that for me.
And then he tells me the price
and the price is like six times,
six X what other people pay.
And I said, done.
Where do I send the wire?
And then what happens?
The clips are coming out
and the person that doing your video right now,
all these people would meet.
They're like, these are the best podcast clips.
And then we, I mean, you've talked like,
what's the management?
There is no management.
Like I bought your taste.
It's like, I already know you're great
because I watch your videos and like, this is incredible.
It's like hiring Tarantino and be like,
I have some feedback for you. No, we should shut.
That's Tarantino.
This happens to me where like I get emails
and the subject line, feedback on the podcast.
Don't even read it, right in the garbage.
You link me to a podcast that you have made
that is even in the, in what?
Like even in the same category.
And then I will listen.
But again, you think I'm making it for you,
I'm making it for me. I'm making it for me.
The act of publishing it makes it an act of service, but I
made it for me first.
So I can't do what you want me to do because I'm not making
it for you.
I'm making it for me.
I have to be satisfied first.
And so the answer question is like one even me who every
single episode is like overpaid for talent find the best
people never ever forget the dynamic range of humans, you
know, Steve Jobs says, you know, the best person is not 100 times better, not twice
as good.
There are 100 times and thousand times better, which is obviously true.
Think about the best investors like, you know, that profile you did on Neil Maeda, like,
I don't know how many other investors in the world are better than him.
It's not 10,000.
Whatever the number is, it's a small number, especially if you you say the same age group now
What five two one?
I don't know
but that's the in that's so hard to actually find the person in this case it came because
somebody else that's really good at spotting talent told me and you about this guy and
Maybe I probably wouldn't have found him if it wasn't for that
So these things take a lot of time and then what I would say is just like if you're not you have to actually act yourself
I think having a I have a basic intolerance for casualness, for mediocrity,
for not being completely obsessed with what you're doing.
And so that weeds out most of humanity anyways.
And then what I do is like, I have this great back somewhere.
It's like, you should limit,
you should limit the amount of details
and then make every detail perfect.
And so for me, it's like, I don't need a bunch,
I don't need anybody to edit, I don't need anybody to make it.
The only thing I can't do is I'll never be a video editor
like him.
So I can't, it's not like I have to go out and hire.
I don't want to put myself in a position
where my business only works
if I find like the 15 best people in the world.
That's not the game I'm playing.
I love the answers on product, on marketing, and on talent.
Maybe the last one is on capital.
Is there anything that you've seen the people
that you've studied do different or especially well
when it comes to attracting the right sources
and partnerships with on the capital side specifically?
Raising money, doing clever deals, clever financing.
Is there any dimension there that's worth exploring? This is where I'm starting to get in trouble too.
I literally have no friends that aren't entrepreneurs, but I just can't talk to anybody that's not
an entrepreneur.
What I always tell them, they're like, yeah, I started this company and it's like a software
company.
And they're like, all right, I got to go and raise a bunch of money.
I was like, you should take a look at what Larry Ellison did and Steve Jobs and Bill
Gates.
You listen to the podcast, right? You told me you listened to those episodes.
What did they do?
They raised money?
No, they sold the product.
They started selling the product
before the product was made.
Well, maybe you should go out and see
if you can get like other ways to do this.
It's shocking to me how the default is,
I must go out and convince other people
that are not my customers to give me money.
And sometimes you have to, like, there's nothing, I'm not against, I'm not anti-raising money.
I'm anti-wastefulness.
And the, what, the, the, the point that Todd Graves makes in the episode is like,
listen man, a lot of these PE guys come in and they try to buy you out and everything else.
It's just like, why do you think they want your equity?
Because it's very valuable.
So, doesn't mean you can't change, you know, exchange money for equity.
Sometimes you have to do it. But you should be very, very careful. And he came mean you can't change, you know, exchange money for equity.
Sometimes you have to do it, but you should be very, very careful.
And he came up with like, think about this, this way, how bad do you want it?
And I'm doing the Michael Dell episode.
I'm almost positive.
Michael Dell, his initial capital for Dell was $1,000.
I have to double check because I've already listened to the book three times.
I've read it.
I'm going through it again.
So I couldn't remember me.
And I'm pretty sure when he went public, he like 70% of Dell. It's not my opinion. I would just go, how does Larry Ellison own
so much work? Like, where did the funding come from Microsoft? What about Apple? Like,
what did they do? Like they obviously raise money, they go public, do all this other stuff.
Just like, think about that. And do you have to do that? This is a really important decision.
You should not be casual about what you're doing. So Todd Grace, chicken finger, right?
How many people are gonna criticize this guy
for being put on this earth by God
to make the world's best chicken fingers?
And I love them.
Fried chicken outside of like, I like fried chicken.
Like, I like it.
I don't know what to tell you.
I try not to eat it cause I get fat immediately,
but I like fried chicken.
I've eaten a lot of fried chicken.
I like his fried chicken.
I think it's the best. So what did he do? He's like, listen, I went like fried chicken. I've eaten a lot of fried chicken. I like his fried chicken. I think it's the best.
So what did he do?
He's like, listen, I went to a bank.
He goes, the idea for Raising Canes was a paper
in business school at LSU.
And he got the worst grade in class,
which is funny because FedEx, Fred Smith got a bad grade.
Phil Knight, Nike, bad grade.
Maybe we shouldn't have professors judging business plans.
Maybe this is kind of stupid, right?
So Todd Graves goes, I bought, he goes to Office Depot,
buys a briefcase, you know, like the little shitty one
with like the zero, zero, zero.
Like I put the brief, so I buy a $99 suit.
I buy a briefcase.
I put the business school paper that I got a bad grade on
in the briefcase.
I go down to the bank and they're like, dude, you're not in a position to loan you money.
And one of the reasons was you have no experience.
They told him you should work in the industry for 10 years, even though he'd already worked
through it in college.
But you want to just make chicken fingers where your industry is going in the opposite
direction.
And this is where I got really pissed off in the episode.
I was induced into a state of rage.
They said, Todd, obviously this is not gonna work out
because look what McDonald's is doing.
They're going after variety.
There's salads, there's all these other stuff on the menu.
There's milkshakes.
You just have chicken fingers.
Like, what is wrong with you?
And my point was, like, that shame on that person
at the bank because, again, nothing we're doing is new.
Go back to 1948. Look up this guy
named Harry Snyder, who founded this company called In-N-Out. All Todd Graves did if you look at what
he did, he's like, oh, I'll just do In-N-Out but for chicken fingers. It's the exact same story,
except he started earlier and is now I think when Harry Snyder passed away, he only had like 17
restaurants and you know, Todd's son charges companies got 800 and something. And so like,
and Todd Stone Chargers Company's got 800 and something. And so that part really frustrated me
because there's already a historical equivalent
of this succeeding beyond your wildest dreams.
In-N-Out probably wasn't an LSU, the guy didn't know,
maybe there was no internet back then, whatever the case is.
I'm not being overly harsh on this.
So then what's Todd left to do?
You're not gonna loan me any money.
What do I do?
I guess I'll just give up.
That's what most people just stop right there.
I know, okay, I will work for 10 years.
These guys are right.
I'm some young, stupid college kid.
They're in fancy suits and a nice office.
Like they know what they're talking about.
History clearly sees that in many cases is not the case.
So then what do you do?
He's like, okay, these oil companies hire boil makers.
And what happens is if a refinery goes down,
every day that thing is down, that's very expensive to them.
So boilermakers come through
and they either like update the equipment
or fix the equipment.
And so if you're willing to work 95 hour weeks
in grotesque environments, in physical labor,
you can make so much money working 100 hours a week
for like five weeks at a time.
Then he meets, so he makes a ton of money.
He saves up a couple of tens of thousands of dollars doing that.
Then one of the boiler makers named Wild Bill, who's also one of his investors, which I love,
he got the money from saving money from boiler making, right?
Then he got, then they tell him, hey, you can go up and do commercial fishing in Alaska.
At the time Todd is doing this, I'm like much younger watching Deadliest Catch.
He was on like the show is being filmed
when he's doing this.
And so yeah, you may fall overboard and die,
but if you don't, you're gonna make, you know,
50 grand in two months as a 20 year old kid.
And he lived in a tent.
He lived in a tent.
He ate nothing but ramen noodles.
He risked his life, right, on the boat.
He went to the boiler maker.
Then he comes back.
The boiler makers give him a little bit of money.
Like, you keep talking about chicken fingers,
you're fucking crazy.
I will give you a little bit of money.
Then he had a bookie.
You guess what?
My bookie has a lot of cash.
He has a cash business.
This guy does not have a bank account.
So then he invested.
And that's how he got the money to do his first store.
And then from there, he's like, okay, well,
how do I do store two, store three, store
four?
The first 28 stores after this was financed in a very unique way, which he says, this
worked out for me, do not do what I'm about to tell you to do.
They're all geographically concentrated in Louisiana.
Right?
And so he would go and he said, he called them angel investors.
They're not angel investors.
So he goes, so I have two chicken finger stores.
I'm going to open the third.
I don't have any money, right?
Banks not still not giving me money, right?
But these things start cash flowing right away.
So I go to you, I go, dude, give me 200 grand.
I'll give you a one page contract, personally liable,
not the company, personally liable.
And I will pay, guarantee you a 15% return on this 200 grand.
And you say, okay, you don't, you give me the 200 grand.
I put the 200 grand in the bank.
The bank now will lend me that like, oh, you have $200,000 equity. put the 200 grand in the bank. The bank now will lend me,
they're like, oh, you have $200,000 equity.
I'll lend you 800 grand on top of that,
million dollar, whatever the number is on top of that.
And I start the store.
And what happens?
Well, day one, there's gonna be some people buying chicken.
So cashflow happens right away.
I pay my rent 30 days later.
I pay payroll two days, two weeks later.
And I pay all my supplies, you know, net 30 or net 60.
And so it works as long as people come in
and start buying chicken fingers.
And so he's like, I was rolling.
I was balling out of control.
He gets all the way up to 28 stores doing this.
Leverage to the, is it, yeah, exactly.
Leverage to the hilts.
And then Hurricane Katrina comes through and goes,
there goes all of your restaurants.
And so then he's like, oh my God,
I'm going to lose everything.
And then what happens?
He turns the pandemic, he does this,
and this is what great entrepreneurs and investors do.
They find opportunity and catastrophe, right?
And so he's like, listen guys, we have to open up.
One, you guys want to paycheck, right?
Two, every single other restaurant in Louisiana
is closed, so people need to eat.
Three, if we don't, I'm done.
There's nothing left.
Like, I need to make money.
He winds up being the first restaurant
to open after Hurricane Katrina.
He had like 90 days, something like 60 to 90 days to himself.
So what happens?
You live in Louisiana.
Maybe you never tried Raising Canes.
Guess what?
Now you try it now.
Oh, this is really good.
And now you're a fan and you tell other people
and it keeps compounding.
Same thing with the pandemic.
What happened?
All the restaurants are closed.
But the government said,
food is essential, right?
An essential business,
but it has to be in the drive-through.
He went from doing something like,
I don't know, let's say two billion
or let's say a billion dollars a year
in 2020 to like five, like 2024.
Yeah, so taking something that's terrible
and turning it into an actual opportunity.
So that's like pretty creative way to finance something.
And his whole point is just like, yeah,
or you could go-
How bad do you want it?
How bad do you want it?
And just think through what you're doing
because his whole point,
whereas he saw a bunch of other people,
they raised money,
and we know people that this has happened to,
they don't have control.
And his thing was he was not optimizing for money.
He was, if it's your dream,
the first thing, the most important thing is survival.
It's to make sure that they can't take your company
away from you.
Steve Jobs, again, people, founders talk about this all now like this
is something new. Steve Jobs said in like the 80s, victory in our industry is spelled survival.
You go back and talk about like people think like he was unbelievable. He was he said his line,
he said something like you pay attention to the nickels because the nickels turn into quarters.
And he says when he's like, at the beginning of Apple, we paid attention to all of our costs,
we watched what we were doing.
We bought intelligently.
He would call up his suppliers and had all the hell out of them.
And obviously, he's probably the best husband ever lived.
And then when he started next, he's like, oh, I didn't do it anymore because I'm rich
and I don't need to and I have Ross Perot writing fat checks and I'm on.
I'm famous.
And he stopped doing it.
He's like, we got to get back to the basics.
We have to be very creative and pay attention to this.
We started our conversation talking about focus.
To conclude it, can you just define,
after all this study, what the word founder means to you?
That's a good question.
I don't know if I ever thought about it.
The way, so my definition for entrepreneur
has always been like somebody has ideas and does them.
And I think the reason I'm interested, we have this thing called like, short hand called founder
mentality. And there's the reason I profile not only just like founders, but investors and athletes
and filmmakers and people like Napoleon and Churchill is because what they did is like they
saw something missing in
the world.
It could be leadership and like think about Winston Churchill post-World War II or during
World War II.
It could be, you know, a nonprofit.
It could be a product.
It could be a company.
It could be a service.
And they're like, this thing should exist.
And like, I'm going to make it come to life.
And the way I'm going to do this,, I'm going to direct my energy on creating this thing
from nothing and making it real.
And I still think, again, you know this,
because you have small kids,
and especially when they're really small,
they have a different kind of intelligence
where everything to them was a wonder,
and so they're constantly like, why is that?
Why is that? My son's in this age right now. Just why, why, why, why, wonder. And so they're constantly like, why is that? Why is that?
My son's in this age right now.
It's just why, why, why, why, why.
And sometimes it can get frustrating,
but it's also like kind of brilliant.
It's like on the midwit meme,
it's like all the way to the left,
but like really actually brilliant.
And I don't think I ever get over the fact
that you can have an idea that you don't even know
where it comes from.
Maybe it comes from your subconscious,
maybe it comes from a dream, maybe it comes from God, whatever you call it. And that idea just starts as an idea that you don't even know where it comes from. Maybe it comes from your subconscious, maybe it comes from a dream,
maybe it comes from God, whatever you call it.
And that idea just starts as an idea.
It's like, oh.
And then that goes from your mind into real life.
And the version of this is like,
it's a little disorienting to this day
where I just sat in a room by myself reading
and then I spoke into a microphone
not knowing what was gonna happen,
and that made something real, that act of creation.
And it's the thing I'm most proud of,
the fact that I was talking to a friend of mine,
we went on a walk right before I flew up here to meet you,
and I was like, I think the thing I'm most proud of
in my life is I grinded for five and a half years
with no visible progress.
And I didn't give up.
And like, I don't know if I'd do that today.
I don't know if I would do that today.
And I look back, I'm like,
you would make a lot of stupid decisions along this way,
but like that is a really good decision
that you just something told you, you can't explain.
You didn't, couldn't predict that like, just keep going.
Like you will figure it out.
You have the self-belief, keep going.
It's a wonderful closing thought.
So cool to think about everything you've done
the last, I guess, eight years now, nine years now.
I love how you close your thing by saying,
400 books down, 1,000 to go.
There's always 1,000 to go.
Wonderful closing sentiment.
Thanks for doing this with me.