Founders - My Conversation with Brad Jacobs

Episode Date: October 28, 2025

I’ve started a new show where I have conversations with the greatest living Founders. The show is called David Senra. It will be on a separate podcast feed from Founders.  So it is very important ...that you follow David Senra on ⁠Spotify⁠, ⁠Apple Podcasts⁠, ⁠YouTube⁠, or ⁠wherever you're listening to this so you don't miss future episodes⁠. Nothing is changing with Founders. I will never stop making Founders.

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Starting point is 00:00:00 I've started a new show where I have conversations with the greatest living founders. That show is called David Senra, and it will be on a separate podcast feed from founders. So it's very important that you follow David Senra on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, or wherever you're listening to this so you don't miss future episodes. The first two episodes were Daniel Act, the founder of Spotify and Michael Dell. This episode is with Brad Jacobs. I find Brad Jacobs very fascinating, not only because he started eight separate billion-dollar companies, but also because of his infectious energy and enthusiasm for business building and money making.
Starting point is 00:00:32 He was kind enough to invite me to his house, and that is where we recorded this conversation. I'm going to post our entire conversation on this feed so you know what the new show is like. I hope you enjoy the conversation, and please don't forget to follow the new show, David Center, now, so you don't miss future episodes. And by the way, nothing is changing with founders. I'm still doing episodes every week and we'll work on founders until I die. I'm ready when you are, man. I'm in the zone. I'm in the soul, man.
Starting point is 00:01:00 We're going to pick up, right? I hope we start with this. I love your energy. This is what I always tell people when, you know, I did the episode in your book, right? And since then, thousands, and this is not an exaggeration. Thousands of people have sent me messages. But what I try to explain to people? They're like, well, what's like so different about Brad?
Starting point is 00:01:15 I was like, well, first of all, how long do you have? Second of all, he's got the best energy and the most energy of any person I've ever been around. So, like, I really appreciate you taking the time and agreeing to do this. One of my favorite things is your affinity and relationship that you had. You had a bunch of mentors, but one of your most important one that you mentioned, I think, four times in the book, is Ludwig Jesselson. You have a list of maxims in the very beginning of the book that you learned from other people. The maximum that you listed for him was get the major trend right. So if you could just talk about your relationship with him and what he meant to you, I think that's a perfect place to start.
Starting point is 00:01:50 He meant a lot. So Mr. Jesserson, I never called him Ludwig. Mr. Jessison, he was significantly older than me and much more accomplished than me, so I showed him respect but calling Mr. Jettison. Mr. Jettison was a special guy. This was someone who was deep, very profound, and had lived life fully and by principles. And he was a religious guy. I wouldn't say he was like ultra-religious. He was more taking the morality of Judaism, the do's and don'ts and ethical behavior and honesty and so forth.
Starting point is 00:02:21 And that became the core of his life. that became the core of his personal life and his business life. Relationships, deep relationships, long-term relationships, honest relationships, relationships you can keep coming back to. And sometimes one person has the leverage, sometimes the other person has the leverage. It doesn't matter. You don't take advantage of that.
Starting point is 00:02:39 It's long-term relationships. And he had about a few dozen deep principles. And one of them is one you just mentioned, which is because he was a traitor, ran the largest commodity trading from the world, Philip Brothers. It was, you got to get the long-term trend right. You can get a lot of the stuff right. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:02:59 But if you don't get the long-term trend right, you're kind of in trouble. So you've got to figure that one out. You've got to see what's going on here. You need context. You need to see what's happening, what did happen, what is happening, and what will likely happen in the future. And one of the different future states that could happen, and what's the probabilities for each one of those? and then you have your risk management. So, yeah, the converse of that is if you get the major trend wrong,
Starting point is 00:03:27 you can do a thousand things right, you're still going to lose. You're not going to create alpha. You're not going to create value there. So, yeah, that was a big lesson from him. The other thing that I love is you were 23 years old. You're having lunch with him on a very frequent basis. Like you just said, he's much older. He's one of the most successful people in the world.
Starting point is 00:03:42 He's taking an interest in you. And yet you were still comfortable to, like, unload your stresses and your problems. and he would sit there patiently listening, and then I love his response where he's just like, yeah, business is problems. Like one of the, I think, most important lessons is there's like problems that there's a line from Henry Kaiser who was, you know, in his day was as famous
Starting point is 00:04:01 as like, say, like an Elon is today or you're becoming. And, you know, he started 100 different companies. He built the Hoover Dam. He built Liberty ships for the Allies in World War II. And I've read a bunch of biographies on him because he was one of Charlie Munger's favorite founders. And he set a line in the biography
Starting point is 00:04:16 that's in multiple life stories about him, that problems are just opportunities and work clothes. And so I read your recounting in your book of some of your lunches with Mr. Justiceson, he essentially gave you the same advice. Yeah. So in the book, I talked about a specific episode when I was having lunch with him
Starting point is 00:04:37 and I was kind of down and glum and said, what's going on? And I was talking about this problem and this thing. I was just kind of down. And he said, well, don't stay in the business world if you're going to get down on this stuff this is the things you should get up from
Starting point is 00:04:51 when you have problems when you have challenges you have obstacles by addressing those that's how you make money you make money so the more problems you have as long as you can solve them
Starting point is 00:05:01 as long as you figure out how to address them and remove the problem that's how you're creating value that's a wonderful way to go through life number one it's a great way to make money because you're always down
Starting point is 00:05:10 because you always have incoming missiles when you're in the business world they have problems with employees with competitors, with regular... I mean, just all day long, you have incoming missiles. You have great stuff, too, but in between that is punches to the face. And if you're going to get beaten up by that,
Starting point is 00:05:26 you're not going to be successful. And secondly, you're not going to be happy. So you're going to go through life, like, glum. You see, sometimes you see these, like, multibillioner guys may always look like this. Well, what's the point in all the money? Seriously. So I would not want to be one of these senior guys
Starting point is 00:05:44 who's, like, frowning all the time. and upset and angry and depressed. That's much more important to me to be in the right frame of mind and to go through the short time we have in life. Happy, reasonably happy. I don't have a perfectionist standard I'd have to be like in ecstasy and bliss
Starting point is 00:05:59 24 hours a day, seven days a week, but generally happy. Did you ever meet Sam Zelle when he was alive? I did, yeah, I'm sure many times. Okay, so he... Great guy. He had the same thing. I was lucky enough to have a two-hour,
Starting point is 00:06:09 very intense lunch with him. He said the very similar thing to you. He was just like, I know all the rich guys. He's like, you wouldn't believe how many are miserable. He's like, don't do that. He's like, I wake up every single day. You guys have a lot of similarity
Starting point is 00:06:21 where, like, I'll spend time with you. You know, the very first time I met you when I went to your book launch party, right? I just remember, like, oh, this guy's got crazy energy. And I'd already read your book by then. But something that you talk about over and over again in your book
Starting point is 00:06:33 is like, problems are just opportunities. It reminded me of there's this line from, in what Jeff Bezos is, there's several books on him, but one of his main biographies this book called Everything Story, Everything Store. And they said that Jeff, you would tell him problems about his business and he would get excited. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:49 Because he's like, oh, and he talks about the shareholder letter. It's like, oh, this is like, these are problems. If I solve these problems, this is going to increase the enterprise value of the company that I'm building. These are actually good things to identify and embrace instead of a void. One of the most important things that I learned from Brad Jacobs is the importance of working with the smartest and most talented people you can. Brad says the most important thing that a CEO does is recruit superlative people. Brad recruits the smartest people he can find and says there's no substitute for smarts. Steve Jobs believed that this was important too.
Starting point is 00:07:19 Steve said, I think that I've consistently figured out who the really smart people were to hang around with. You must find extraordinary people. The key observation is that in most things in life, the dynamic range between average quality and the best quality is at most two to one. But in the field that I was interested in, I noticed that the dynamic range between what an average person could accomplish and what the best person could accomplish was 50 or 100 to 1. You need to build a team that pursues the A-plus players. That is the end of the Steve Jobs quote,
Starting point is 00:07:51 and that is exactly what Ramp has done. Ramp has the most talented technical team in their industry. Becoming an engineer at Ramp is nearly impossible. In the last 12 months, they hired only 0.23% of the people that applied. That means when you use Ramp, you now have top-tier technical talent and some of the best AI engineers working on your. your behalf 24-7 to automate and improve all of your business's financial operations. And they do this on a single platform.
Starting point is 00:08:17 That means the longer than you use Ramp, the more efficient your company becomes. This is important because, as Sam Walton said in his autobiography, 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. From a customer's perspective, what does a team of A-plus players sound like? It sounds like this customer review that I read, which said, Ramp is like having a teammate who you never need to check in on because they have it handled.
Starting point is 00:08:47 Go to ramp.com to learn how they can help your business save time and money today. That is ramp.com. I do have a question on your long-term reputation. So there's this line. Do you remember when Buffett got in all that trouble with Solomon Brothers? He's like, listen, you can lose money. That's fine. But you lose a shred of reputation.
Starting point is 00:09:08 I'll be ruthless. I'll be absolutely ruthless. I, it was a very jarring experience for me at your book launch party because, first of all, I was the only one that didn't show up in a suit. So I rectified that today, right? And then everybody else was just like, you know, I've known Brad for three decades. Basically everybody was there was like, how do you know Brad? It's like, you know, I was investors of his, you know, he made all this money for the pension fund that we were on and everything else.
Starting point is 00:09:31 And like, the stories that I've heard at the party and then since I've released the episode is just like, you have a fantastic long-term reputation. Do you have any advice on how you were able to maintain that and how important it was for other people to do the same thing? Reputation is really important. Your personal brand is extremely important because based on that, people are going to want to do business with you or they're going to want to not do business with you. So every day you're in the office and doing stuff, you're either raising your brand or you're lowering your brand. And that's the main thing you've got to work on. You've got to make sure that your brand reflects integrity and honesty and dependability and stability and people can count on you.
Starting point is 00:10:07 back to Mr. Jesselson. So Philip brothers, this is before email. This is before, actually it was even before faxes. It was more Twix's and Telexus, which took a few days to go through when they went through. So you could do a deal worth hundreds of millions of dollars on a handshake or on a phone call. There's no written confirmation of that for like days. In the meantime, maybe the price of whatever you were trading, oil or copper, had gone up a lot. You still had to have a deal. Otherwise, you know, the whole system doesn't work. So dependability is so, so, trust is so so important to do. How old were you when you, when he gave me that advice? Did you immediately start playing it? So you, you were optimizing for the long term, even when
Starting point is 00:10:47 you were that young? Yeah. I think as you get older, you optimize long term more. I think. I think when you're young, you're just so ambitious and you want to get stuff done. You're in the now. As you get older, as you mature, you have more context. I think life in general is about getting more context, seeing things in proportion to other things. Can you say more about that? Well, you know, because we've talked about it a lot outside of your podcast, I'm into meditation. So a lot of the meditation I do is changing, looking at space from different perspectives, not the normal perspective that we have right this minute.
Starting point is 00:11:20 So I expand my mind from the earth to the sun, to the solar system, to the galaxy, to the clusters of galaxy, to the universe, to the multiverse, just go way, way, way, way, way high. and then bring it all the way back in and then go into the molecule and the atom and the proton and the nucleus and right in the middle of all that and then go to strings. And I find that accordion,
Starting point is 00:11:43 making my mind like an accordion getting really big and then really, really small. And they're doing the same thing with time. Looking at time, go back towards my life over the last few decades and then go back centuries and millennia and just keep going way, way, way back all over the back, 13.8 billion years,
Starting point is 00:11:58 go back all the way to the Big Ben. and then go all the way forward and like picture of the world going forward forward forward forward forward that time and space juxtaposition for me at least different things work for different people gives me context it gives me humility gives me humbleness
Starting point is 00:12:13 it shows that I'm just one thing right here in a major major thing going on I'm just one little tiny day but at the same time I'm part of that so I'm very uplifted I'm very inspired and very motivated like wow I'm part of like a real big deal here it's great we all are We're all part of this huge, huge, huge, huge thing.
Starting point is 00:12:32 So I think context is really important. It gives you meaning. It gives you purpose. It gives you understanding. It gives you wisdom. I know you hate when I say this because we've talked about this privately. It's like you obviously know I study uncommon people for a living, right? They do a great job.
Starting point is 00:12:45 I appreciate it. Maybe unique. Yeah, I appreciate it. But like, think about how crazy is. Like the people that I study on founders is they were so good at their job. Somebody wrote a book about their life. Like you're talking about very small. But most of their inner monologues, you're different.
Starting point is 00:12:58 You have a much more positive energy. And like there's almost like a, let me give you some context here. We were together a few months ago at a mutual friend's birthday party in Miami, our friend Rick. And at that, there's a bunch of interesting people at the party. One of them it was Apollo Ono, okay? Apollo Ono is the most decorated winter, American winter, Olympian of all time. He's become a friend. I met him through the podcast.
Starting point is 00:13:22 And he walks up to me. And there's just one of the funniest things. And, you know, because he has, people think you're Olympic. being, like, he was training since he was a kid. His dad would make him get up at, like, five in the morning and run drills in the, in the school parking lot. But he still comes from, like, a very positive, he has a great relationship with his dad. Normally, it's, like, you know, not good when they're put in under circumstances.
Starting point is 00:13:41 So he was asking me, he's just like, I see this pattern in, you know, when you're reading all these hundreds of biographies about these great entrepreneurs that, like, there is something inside of them driving them is actually negative. It could be insecurity, it could be, you know, they grew up in poverty, could be a bad relationship with their family. And he's like, are they all like that? And I, you're like 20 feet right. You see that guy over there?
Starting point is 00:14:01 You go, you know who that is? And he goes, no, I go, that's Brad fucking Jacobs. I was like, I guarantee you he's not driven by that. This is what I mean, your uncommon amongst uncommon people, because at least from the outside in the conversation I had, it's like, I think part of this impenetrable nature that you have in like, oh, yeah, business's problems, it's gonna come. What do you think we're doing here?
Starting point is 00:14:22 Like, you don't seem to be rattled by them. So like, what is your inner monologue like when, when, like, You're doing huge, fucking deals right now. You're doing all kinds of crazy stuff. You built eight separate billion-dollar companies. You don't do that by accident. So how do you make, like, I'll stop talking there. What is your inner monologue like?
Starting point is 00:14:38 So it goes back to what Ms. Justin used to say is problems are your friend. You don't want to just tolerate problems. You want to embrace problems. You want to hug problems. Problems are the way you succeed. You want to run to the fire. You don't want to run away from the fire. Be brave.
Starting point is 00:14:53 We'll be courageous. Go into it. I think you can start with anything that's, anything. And in this case, in Apollo's case, he starts with, and other people he's his study, start with negativity, trauma, stress, insecurity, fear, anxiety. And then that's their motivator. They zero in on that. And then that makes them run faster. Was that ever your case? No, that's not my thing. This is, I don't, you're like a unicorn. So you're, I don't know that I'm a unicorn. I don't embrace negativity. I'm okay with it, but I don't make a big deal about
Starting point is 00:15:26 negativity. I'd much rather enjoy the positivity. I'm a sunny side up guy. But your inner monologue, are you nice to yourself? Your ongoing inner monologue. I'm reasonably nice. Yeah, I am. I am vicious. I sound like, you know, David Gagins' is this like... Oh, yeah,
Starting point is 00:15:42 I was just, someone was talking, the honest, the mentalist is talking about it. My inner monologue sounds like David Gagin's. We're just like, you're not doing enough. This wasn't good enough. Like, I see the problems so, like, I attack them. Like, it's like, oh, like, I'll listen to it like a past podcast or anything I've done.
Starting point is 00:15:58 It was like, and all I see are the flaws. I don't see any of the good part. So let me comment on that. I think there's two different ways you can approach that. So yes, as cognitive behavior therapy has taught everyone, we're born with a schema, a prism through which we see life. And that can be clouded by core beliefs of, I'm inadequate, I'm weak, I'm defective, I'm unattractive,
Starting point is 00:16:22 I'm unlovable, all kinds of negative stuff. Now, there's two ways you can approach on that. You can either dispute those things, first validate, then dispute, so say, well, of course I'm hearing this. I have executives who report to me over the years that have exact same scheme as you just described, where they're always saying, oh, I'm no good at this, oh, I'm going to, when people realize how bad I am, I'm just faking it, I'm wearing this mask, and I'm doing a bad job, I'm going to get fired, people are hiding stuff against me so they don't respect me.
Starting point is 00:16:54 me, all this like negative self-talk, it's a complete waste of time. But nevertheless, that's their reality. The reality is they have this steady drone of automatic negative thoughts. There's two ways to deal with that. Either you can dispute them, but first validate it. Don't start with the disputing. First validate and say, okay, yeah, of course I'm having all these negative thoughts because I got a tough job, for example.
Starting point is 00:17:17 I have a big job. There's a lot of pressure, and I'm not perfect, so I'm not getting everything right. And so I do mess stuff up, and I do get things wrong. all that negative talk, and then you catastrophize on those negative things and make them into huge, huge issues when they really should be minimized if you put in proper context. So you first validate it, but then dispute it, and then say, well, what does the evidence say here? Is this really a rational thought, or is this my schema kicking it? To me, when you say that, it's like, I think you have this gift to step outside of yourself,
Starting point is 00:17:46 which now you're saying, but when I say you step outside of yourself, you're like, no, I'm in myself. I much prefer to be in myself. Okay. Okay. I like to come to center. Okay. I like to find the center. The first time that concept of centering came about was when I was, I went to enrichment camp
Starting point is 00:18:03 at a school in the summertime and there was a book they gave out called On Centering. I don't remember who wrote it and had a picture of someone making pottery and they were explaining in the book that it's all about finding the center of the pot you're making. So centering, finding that inner calmness, finding that zone where you're in the groove. and everybody has it. Everybody has that. You just got to find it. And that's one of life's missions
Starting point is 00:18:28 is to find that center, find that inner calmness zone. And then when I went to college and I studied music under Bill Dixon, same concept came out. I said, come back to the center. So we're playing improvisation,
Starting point is 00:18:41 what he called black music. Some people might call it jazz. He didn't like the word jazz. Playing with some friends and then you have to find the center. Come back to the center. Back to the center. So there'd be a center point
Starting point is 00:18:53 in the music. You could go anywhere you wanted in the music. You can improvise all over the place, but come back to center, and then everybody come back to their common center. So I've incorporated this concept of centering, of finding a center into my meditation practices, into my business practices, into my philosophy of life. So I like to find centers. But going back to what we're saying before, see, I have this negative self-taught coming. You can either take one of two paths. You can take the path of validating and disputing it and seeing it in a proper rational way. Or you can take the approach of just witnessing it, just enjoying it, and just, it is where it is. It's mindful acceptance of it, so acceptance of that.
Starting point is 00:19:33 And I vacillate between those two. Sometimes I do the, you ask how I do it, my internal monologue, if negativity creeps in, of course it creeps in. I'm dancing with the ghosts of my ancestors just the way you and everybody else are dancing with the ghosts of the ancestors. Evolution worked very slowly over, generations over it, long periods of it. time. So we always have the set of genes that were good for survival and procreation of our ancestors, but not necessarily now. We still have in the gene pool all these like irrational thoughts. So another way to look at it is just observe it, kind of more of a Buddhist way. Just observe it. One of the ways the most simplest Buddhist meditation is just observe your breath.
Starting point is 00:20:16 To observe your breath. I mean, how easy can that be? All you got to do is we just did this before we started recording. Let's go through a miniature like meditation before we began. I don't ever do that, and I probably should start doing it. I just kind of wake up and go and just try to attack things that I feel like, and you don't get me wrong. Like, I absolutely am obsessed with what I do. I love my work. I work on a seven days a week, but I want it to be the best in the world at it, and that's where it's like, oh, you just see these deficiencies. So that sounds to me like perfectionism.
Starting point is 00:20:44 So I suffered a lot from perfectionism when I was younger. I wanted to be perfect. Not only did I want to be perfect. I wanted everybody else to be perfect. Now, like, did I want myself and others to be perfect? I wanted the universe to be perfect. Everything just goes swimmingly well at my beck and call and command. Well, it turns out, that's not reality.
Starting point is 00:21:03 None of those three constituents are perfect. There's something that you said in your book. It's actually in this section that I was writing down. You're like, I'm not surprised when things don't go perfectly. That's the nature of the universe. The big problems can be where the best opportunities lie. And so obviously, you know, like, anytime I read something, it's not that I'm reading it.
Starting point is 00:21:20 I think about how it relates to every single thing. I also have experienced and all the other books I read. And I remember I got to have dinner with Charlie Munger. I spent three hours with him, you know, six months, eight months before he died. There's like a trend here, unfortunately, where it's like, you're kind of dangerous. Remember, you're like, I don't know. I don't know if I'm going to have dinner with you. But one of the things I loved, it was the top note I left myself because as soon as I left
Starting point is 00:21:41 there, I just wrote down and like what I learned. And it said that Charlie has an almost complete indifference to problems. Troubles from time to time should be expected. This is inescapable. so why let it bother you. And it's like one of the things I most admired about him. He's like, yeah, it's part of life. What's wrong with you?
Starting point is 00:21:56 Like, you know, he had 10 decades of life experience. He was way further down the line and obviously way wiser than I was. I have two comments on that. One is when you go back to the Big Bang, the current construct model of how the universe was created, it was actually created out of imperfection. There was like a slight imbalance
Starting point is 00:22:16 between matter and antimatter. Just a slight imbalance. A lot of debate of what caused that. As a result of that, everything came out of that. Had there been perfection at the beginning of the universe, the Big Bang would not have happened. So we are imperfection. We are the children of imperfection.
Starting point is 00:22:32 Imperfection is good. Imperfection is not bad. Expecting perfection will cause you stress and strain. It won't really work. When you were in your 20s, though, you said, hey, I wanted to be perfect. Not only do I want to be perfect. I want everybody around me to be perfect.
Starting point is 00:22:45 I wanted the universe be perfect. Like, how long did it take for you to learn what you just explain? When I stepped down from United Rentals, I still stayed as chairman, when I stepped down as CEO of United Rentals, had done it for about 10 years, and I wanted to do my next big thing. I wanted to do another startup from beginning. I was running a big company. I wanted to start it from scratch. And there was a period of a couple of years where I was trying to figure out what I was going to do. And I didn't find it. And then the great financial crisis came and it was kind of lost. It was kind of, it was probably the only time in my life that I was depressed. I'm just, not depressed. But that period of time, I was actually clinically depressed. I took the Beck depression inventory, and I came up, yep, depressed. So I found an amazing cognitive therapist, and I went to the guy twice a week, hour and a half a shot for two years. It was fantastic. One of the best things I've ever done in my life, because what we did was in an environment that was very safe and confidential and trusting with someone who was a professional at psychology,
Starting point is 00:23:47 I was able to, first of all, identify and then notice more fully my automatic thoughts, the negative thoughts, and the irrational thoughts, unconstructive thoughts, and then first validate them, then dispute them, first join, and then lead to a more constructive way of looking at things. So that cognitive therapy approach of identifying the thoughts and then dealing with them really was the turning point in my life on this perfection thing, because after a few sessions he said, you know, I kind of know what's going on here now, for I've gotten your measure, you want to hear. I said, yeah, I want to hear it. And they said, you're suffering
Starting point is 00:24:27 from perfectionism. Like, you want everything to be perfect, and an eight. So we need to get over that. We need to reduce these demands, these musts, these shoulds, these commands that either I or you or the rest of the world is perfect to, you know, preferences, where I would like me to be better. I would like you to be better. I'd like things to go better. But they don't have to. I can still be happy. And frankly, they're not going to all the time. So I need to accept that. You need to radically accept that. I need to be in reality, not put these, you know, Jeff, you mentioned Bezos. Bezos says a lot of cool stuff. One of the things he says often is, don't fight with reality because reality always wins. Yeah. So the reality is, is nothing's perfect. Like literally nothing is
Starting point is 00:25:12 perfect that I found yet. He has another line I think that's related. It's similar to the the idea in your book where he's just like, if you don't want to be criticizing, you don't want stress, and you don't do anything. Exactly. Then just sit in a room and watch Netflix and order a DoorDash or something, but you're not going to do anything
Starting point is 00:25:27 that you can be proud of. So that's another irrational thought you see people have it. I used to have this a lot, but I don't have it now because I went through that therapy thing and it turned a switch on in my brain is a demand that everybody likes me. And everybody respects me and everybody says great stuff about me and I get good press and I get good reviews
Starting point is 00:25:45 and the stock just goes up every single day, well, that's not going to happen. That's called perfectionism. That's not reality. So you just kind of modify that to, well, sure, like everybody else, I'd like people to say good stuff about me rather than bad stuff about me, but I don't really care. If people say bad stuff about me, then, okay, maybe there's some truth in it. Maybe it's maybe some good thing I can learn from that.
Starting point is 00:26:08 Or maybe they're just off and they don't know me and they're just kind of, they're imposing their distortions on me. But does that really change who I am? It really doesn't. If somebody is saying something bad about me or is that, does that really matter? It doesn't matter really at the core. And again, it goes back to context. In the larger context of things, most problems really don't matter.
Starting point is 00:26:29 It just don't matter. Maybe at the time they seem like one, and maybe we're kicking in magnifying those problems and catastrophe, making them into big catastrophes and dramas, but most problems really aren't a bad thing. I always say opportunities are a strange beast. It usually frequently appears after a loss. There's always a play. There's always, no matter what happens, it goes back to the Jettleston conversation.
Starting point is 00:26:52 No matter what gets thrown in your face. At the moment, it may seem ugly and bad. There's a play. There's a way to utilize that. There's a way to use that. There's a way to embrace that and turn that into success. Anything can be turned into positivity and success, even if it starts in a bad place.
Starting point is 00:27:10 Something came to mind when you were talking. That's also unusual. because most of the people that, like, I read biography spell, they go through several different companies so they find their life's work. But normally they're working on something for, like, a very long time. Why do you keep starting so many companies?
Starting point is 00:27:26 Like, what is going on? That's my thing. Everybody's got their thing. So you're a great podcaster. You have a talent. Your superpower is you can consume a large amount of information and then distill it down to, like, boom, here are the most important takeaways from that.
Starting point is 00:27:39 It's really brilliant. That's your thing. That's why you're doing it, right? Because that's what you're good at. Yeah. You're not playing professional baseball or, you know, acting or singing, whatever. You're doing what you're good at. This is what I'm good at.
Starting point is 00:27:50 I'm good at figuring out what's the right industry to consolidate. And secondly, I have a toolkit. And it's the same old toolkit. You told me this last time. Can you explain this? I love the way you described this toolkit of how you approach building your businesses. So first I find the right industry. I find something that's large.
Starting point is 00:28:08 I find something that's growing. I find something where it's fragmented. I find something where we can buy things. at reasonable prices. I find things where technology could be used. It's not very tech-forward industry. I find stuff that AI and automation are not going to disrupt
Starting point is 00:28:23 at any time in the near future. So I find industries that have certain characteristics to it, whether it was garbage, whether it was construction, whether it was transportation or logistics and now distribution. They all have the same characteristics, same traits. So that's point number one. Point number two is I then put together an amazing team.
Starting point is 00:28:43 I put together a team of people who are generally smarter than me and who are more talented than me in what they do. So I have a great CHRO who knows everything there is to know about HR and compensation and talent recruitment and so forth. I have great M&A team who really know how to do deals and get deals done rather than turn them into dramas. I have great finance accounting people who understand everything there is to know agency about running a fast-growing company and keeping the books clean.
Starting point is 00:29:12 So, et cetera. And I get the team together. Then I get the compensation sorted out. So I make everybody my partner on the senior team. And I give people tons of equity, but there's a catch. It could vest, but you can't sell it for five years. And most of it vests in the last two years. So everyone is committed, going back to long-term relationships.
Starting point is 00:29:31 Sure, people come and go for whatever personal reasons or people burn out or whatever. But generally speaking, most of the team stays for a while. And you work together as a team. And then I have certain rules of how we're going to interact with each other in a very respectful way, but in a way that encourages looking at things from different angles. So we disagree and we argue, argue is too strong of a word. We present different ways of looking at a situation that partly overlap and partly conflict. And then we, in a very scientific way, figure out, well, let's risk adjust these things,
Starting point is 00:30:07 figure out what's right. It's a scientific experiment, an ongoing science experiment, like all day long of trial and error and experimentation and A, B, experimenting. And so that culture that we create is gives us a power. It gives us a power to attack the industry in a way without all the noise that a management team has. A very coherent team, like a superorganism, like a brain, like a very organized group. And then I have, between all those people, we have experience at our main job, which is to buy companies at reasonable prices.
Starting point is 00:30:41 where there's a difference between what we can raise capital at and what we can deploy it at. And then we have a skill set to be able to improve the companies that we buy. These are the two main things we're good at is buying companies in a disciplined way. Prices too high, we don't do it. Price is reasonable. It doesn't have to be cheap.
Starting point is 00:30:59 We're not trying to steal companies. The price is reasonable. We go for it with gusto. And secondly, the other talent that the team collectively has is we know how to improve the businesses. We know how to improve the pricing, improve the procurement, the HR element, the compensation systems, the technology, the whole tech stack, just everything from A to Z, we're just good at transformation.
Starting point is 00:31:21 We're good at taking a company that is making a billion dollars of EBITDA, and within three to five years, doubling the profit, doubling the EBITDA. That's the main criteria I look at when I look at a company is purchase price, and secondly, can we double the profit in three to five years? And most of my main acquisitions I've done that. So Conway, Novoddata Songla, all these different ones. They were great companies, and everyone says, oh, they're working really well. Okay, well, three years later, we doubled the profit.
Starting point is 00:31:50 Yeah. Because we apply the toolkit. We apply the playbook. And it's the same playbook industry after industry. The playbook gets refined a little bit here in there. It's the same playbook. So when you say this is just what I do, like to me, you now have figured out who you are as a person, right? I have this weird theory that I can't prove, but I believe.
Starting point is 00:32:09 And, you know, there's, like, this myth of, like, the genius young entrepreneur. And I was like, well, I don't know. If you say, like, you say the history of entrepreneurship pretty intensely. You realize that, like, people do most of the time their best work many decades into their career. And so there's all kinds of reasons. They're like, oh, they've had more experience. They're wiser. They have more resources.
Starting point is 00:32:27 They have more practice. And I don't dispute that. That is all true. But I have this weird theory that they also know themselves way better. And I think the key to being a great entrepreneur is building a business. that's, I used to say building a business that's authentic to you, and then I read Michael Dell's excellent autobiography, and he has a better line. He said, he built a business that's natural to him. And there's a great story. I want your opinion on this in one second, but there's a great
Starting point is 00:32:53 story where, you know, Michael starts in his company was 19. He's in his 20s, and it's doing fabously well, but he realized like, hey, I need some, like, I need some help here. And so he gets us the guy, I think his name was Lee Walker, if I remember correctly. And he's about 20 years older than Michael already started a bunch of companies. Rich, you know, didn't have to work anymore, but he saw an unusual once-in-a-generation talent, and Michael decides to help him. He lasts like four years. And so I read the book, and then I was about to make the podcast on it. I go and see it. I wonder whatever happened to this guy. And I found an interview that he did, and he's in his 80s. And he's talking about that time. And he gave me some of the
Starting point is 00:33:29 best context to really understand this story. And Michael's story is really a story of you and everybody. And all the people really are, you know, very similar people that were studying. And he's just like, you know, Michael starts his company with $1,000 says, I'm going to take on IBM for my dorm room. IBM is the most valuable company in the world at the time, which I didn't know. It was the first company to hit $100 billion market cap, which is nuts. And he's, you know, just the audacity had that. And he's like, in the first few years, like, we're going against this behemoth.
Starting point is 00:33:55 And I lasted four years. I started losing my hair. My back hurts. I can't sleep. I'm unhealthy. And he goes, but he goes, but Michael was energized by it. He built a business. that was natural to him.
Starting point is 00:34:08 Because, like, this is what I want to do. I'm not, I'm not losing my hair. I'm not, you know, depressed. My back's not hurting. I can't sleep. I'm, like, waking up every day, just getting after it. So is that the way you feel about just, like, what you're doing? It's like, this is, it may seem weird because it is, in not a pejorative way.
Starting point is 00:34:26 It's not weird in a, in a negative way. It's, I don't know another person that started eight separate billion-dollar companies. So it's like, almost like you can't help yourself. That's what I do. Yeah. And that's, I know how to do that. So it's just natural to you. This is just like—
Starting point is 00:34:39 Yeah. This is—I mean, I've done it many times before, and I've made every mistake in the book over the decades. And I've learned from those mistakes, and I've refined it and refined it, but I have a winning formula. I know how to execute on this. And the team I have knows how to execute on the day. I don't want to underestimate the team.
Starting point is 00:34:54 So one of the things about being the CEO and the founders, you get all the credit. But like, there's a lot of people on the team who are doing these things, accomplishing these things. Yeah, you have a great line in your book, which I see over and ever again. You said the CEO's most important job is very important job is really. recruiting superlative people. Totally. It's like you're people.
Starting point is 00:35:10 So my question to you, though, is like, what would it take to get you to stop? Yeah, I don't know because I'm not, I'm not, and I don't see that in my near future. This is what this is, I just started the company in the last few months. This is what I, no, but in general, like, so this is what I loved about, you know, most of the people I admire. It's like, I can still remember this. You know, I put it into the maximum. It's like, if you love what you do, your extra strategy is death, right? Like, it should be worrying on something.
Starting point is 00:35:37 So, like, you know, Sam's L. told me, he's like, I'm going to be doing deals until I died. Well, we just do a deal so he died. Munger, same thing. Like, I met him right after the Silicon Valley Bank collapse. It was like growing up. He was like a kid in a candy shop. He just thought this was like the fun.
Starting point is 00:35:51 He didn't want people to be hurt, obviously. But he's just like, you know how many financial panics that I've seen in my lifetime? Like, of course, this is like nothing new. So I was, I remember I was actually having dinner. I remember where I was, I was at Harry's Pizzeria in Miami in a design district. And, you know, I was supposed to be paying attention to my. wife and on our date and I was thinking about the podcast and all the shit I'm reading and I go and like take a bite into a piece of pizza and I was like people you say if you love what you do you do for free and I go no there's a different level if you love what you do they couldn't pay you to stop there you go and I was like how much money could you've gone to Steve jobs like hey how much would it take for you to not work an apple that's not why he's doing it it's that it's not why they're doing it in Enzo Ferrari Estée La Edwin Land, Coco Chanel, all these other people.
Starting point is 00:36:40 Like, they just can't, Michael Ferreiro, I just, the Michelin Brothers, like, this story over and over again, I get the same sense to you. It's just like, if I said, hey, what price I'm going to pay you and you can't do any work? You have to stay home, you can't, it's just like, there's no price. Everyone you just named all those successful people. They were all in. They were 100% in. They weren't like partly in and partly in.
Starting point is 00:37:01 They're in 100% in and completely focused and single-mindedly concentrated on on executing the plan. And that's important. And you want to have people on your team who share that passion, that commitment. The best leaders in business are able to spot patterns, but you can't spot patterns
Starting point is 00:37:18 if you can't see your data. And most businesses are only using 20% of their data because 80% of your customer intelligence is invisible, hidden in emails, transcripts, and conversations. Unless you have HubSpot. HubSpot is where all of your data comes together so you can see the patterns that matter.
Starting point is 00:37:35 Because when you know, No more, you grow more, and that is a pattern that never fails. Visit HubSpot.com today. That is HubSpot.com. That leads me to another great one of your, I don't even think you think it's a maximum, but it's how you differentiate between A, B, and C players, where you're like, I'm just going to summarize this and jump in whenever you want, but you're, you envision, you do another thought experiment of, okay, do you want to see if you have the absolute best people on
Starting point is 00:38:02 your team, just visualize it. They're coming into your office and they're saying, Brad, I quit. Yeah. So then what happens next in this scenario? So I'm always interacting with my CHRO and going over talent and making sure everybody's happy and motivated. How much percentage of your, like... A lot. I spend most of my time on people and talent issues.
Starting point is 00:38:24 So most of your time. Yeah. There's a fun... Not the most, but the most... If I did a pie chart of like how I divide up my time, the largest percent is on people issues. There's a funny story about this. And then I don't want to interrupt, but I do, this is inside of me, and I just has to come out all these stories because I find them fascinating. So there's two MBA students in Stanford in the late 90s.
Starting point is 00:38:45 And in 97, they interview 16 technology company founders since they're in Silicon Valley at the time. You know, and they publish this book called In the Company of Giants, and everybody's in there. You know, Bill Gates and Steve Jobs and everybody else. And they're telling Steve, they're like, well, you know, you're the founder. Of course you don't have time to, you know, recruit people. And he's like, what? Like, no, it's the most, it sounds exactly what you said in your book. It's the most important.
Starting point is 00:39:09 And he does a great way to demonstrate the point. He goes, let's say you're starting a company, right? You're in Silicon Valley, that's what you're doing over here. You pick your co-founder. You should think long and hard about that. Your co-venter is 50% of the company at that point. And then he goes, and then he goes, but you still goes out. Now you have to pick the 10th person.
Starting point is 00:39:25 That person's 10% of your company. And you're saying you don't have time? Like, what else are you doing? It's all about the people. It's all about the people. you know systems and tech and budgets and customers and sales all these things are really really important but you can't achieve excellence in those things without fantastic people without fantastic leaders and i spend a lot of time especially on the top few dozen people i want to make sure
Starting point is 00:39:50 everybody's in it to win it everybody is fully fully engaged and i do a mental exercise where i picture the person coming into my office and saying brad i quit like this is not a conversation about you making me a counteroffer, I'm done. I've already moved and it's over with. This is about a conversation about how do we make an orderly transition because I respect you and I don't want to leave you high and dry. And then I try to feel and visualize what would be my reaction if that person came into me and quit?
Starting point is 00:40:18 If my reaction to that is, yes, I don't want to smile. I don't want to act like I'm happy about this, but, you know, I didn't have, you know, nobody likes firing people. And I just didn't, you know, I just, kept postponing fire in that person. I shouldn't have, but I did. And this is great. I don't have to pay severance.
Starting point is 00:40:36 And, you know, that solves that problem. No problem at all. We'll replace them. That's a C player. That's someone, really, you should get the courage up to get off the team right away. And then on the second category, if my reaction to it is, you know, it kind of sucks. You know, it's what I would have preferred that person stayed. But it's not the end of the world.
Starting point is 00:40:58 We'll hire head hunter. We'll get someone as good. maybe something better, and, you know, things will work out. That's a B player. But if when I visualize that person quitting, my reaction to that is pure terror and absolute panic. And, like, somebody took a baseball bat and just whacked me in the stomach and then punched me in the face. I'm not going to, oh, my God. Like, I'm never going to find someone as good as her.
Starting point is 00:41:22 No way. Or I'm never going to have someone as talented as that person. I'm never going to have someone who brings to the table their particular superpower. power. I am, and I can't even hear what they're saying anymore, because I'm just like having this internal panic dialogue going on. That's what you call an A player. So I want all A players around me. I want people whose relationship with me, I value so much that if it was terminated, I would be lost. And I want them to feel the same way. I want to have mutual relationships. I want people who love being in a relationship with the team, with the company, and that we all
Starting point is 00:41:58 are in it together to go conquer the world. I think I had named it. It's been two years since I wrote the book, but I think I had a chapter that said how to kill the competition instead of killing each other. And that's, you know, it's kind of funny, but it's a serious title.
Starting point is 00:42:12 You don't want to have a dysfunctional management team. One of the most important things that has allowed us to create tens and tens of billions of dollars of value is the management team's coherent. We have the right people on the management team, and we have the rules of the road of how we're going to deal with each other
Starting point is 00:42:29 in a respectful way that still encourages differences of opinion. First of all, I love the way you described because everybody says, oh, yeah, hire A players. It's really hard to differentiate.
Starting point is 00:42:39 Like, what does that actually mean? And I think this thought experiment is perfect. It's like, we are fucked. If this person leaves, that's an A player, that's a way to think about this. But this also goes down to your gift and why I think,
Starting point is 00:42:51 I've learned so much from you. One partially is like, your ability to feel like to have very clear thinking and then put it in a memorable way. So you were just talking about like the relationships that you have with the people we work for.
Starting point is 00:43:01 You have a line in the book where like he says an organization is like a party. You only want to invite people who bring the vibe up. My team and I spend a lot of time together, so it's a big deal that we like one another.
Starting point is 00:43:12 Yeah, I agree with that. Who said that? That was a good one. Bezos has a line and I think his shareholder letter is just like life is too short to work with people who don't admire. Like it's same situation.
Starting point is 00:43:22 It's like you're in charge. You get to choose, again, this goes back to a loan the gift of being the CEO, of being entrepreneurs, like, it's very rare that you get to literally choose who has access to, who's around you. And I love this idea. It's like, hey, the organization is just like a party. You want people to, you only want people to... David, it's all about the people. It's all about the people, because the people then create all the different processes and work streams and transformations and everything.
Starting point is 00:43:47 This is very fascinating because, like, it's obviously, you know, business is people, right? You know, he's like the people that are building the product, but like all the businesses, the best definition of business I've ever heard actually came for Richard Branson. He says all businesses is an idea that makes somebody else's life better, right? And like there's infinite. That's why there's always more opportunity because there's infinite ways. We think technology is going to like, it changes things, but then it just usually opens up other ways to make other people's lives better. So just focus on like if you're looking for an opportunity, how can I just serve other people? Another line that's very related to this is Henry Ford where he says money comes naturally as a result of service.
Starting point is 00:44:21 Like, I think those two ideas go together. The reason I was thinking about this, though, the best way I just – I've heard describe what you were just saying. It's all about people work with the best people you possibly can. The A players, we're going to talk about – you have this great line about there's no substitute for brains. But before that, it's like the way that I've heard this described best, in my opinion, is from Ed Katmel, the founder of Pixar, right? He would go around and give all these talks. And he was actually, like, shocked that he would ask the audience, like, what's more important? People are ideas.
Starting point is 00:44:49 He says every single time people got it wrong They said it was the ideas And he's like, no, it's the people And so he has this great line where he's like, listen If you give a mediocre idea Right to a brilliant team They're either going to fix it Or they'll throw it out and come up with something better
Starting point is 00:45:05 Something new But if you give a great idea to a mediocre team They're going to screw it up So it's obviously because ideas come from people So it's the people So you're exactly what I'm trying to say What he said. He says it in like just way
Starting point is 00:45:17 But you have a very like explicit piece of advice in your book that I think is interesting, where you're like screening for, there's no substitute for brains, screening for superior intelligence eliminates 90% of all candidates. So it's the first thing I look at. There's no substitute for smarts. The CEO trait most closely correlated with organizational success as a high IQ, double down on hiring the brightest. Yeah. Well, you want smart people. And I particularly want people who are smarter than me. I want people who uplift me, who teach me. I don't want to be. Do you want them specialized? Because you mentioned earlier.
Starting point is 00:45:49 You said you want them smarter than you, but also better at their particular? The vast majority of them are specialized. Okay. They're a finance person. They're an investor person. They're a strategic person. They have something that they, tech person, they bring to the table that they're an inch wide and mile deep in. But you also want them to have certain human qualities that transcend what their specialty is.
Starting point is 00:46:13 And those are as or more important than the technical skills. Explain. Well, you want to mention smart. You want people who are honest. You want people who are hardworking. You want people a collegial. You want people who are really in it, like on the work-life balance thing, boom, it's work. And their life is a lot of their work.
Starting point is 00:46:29 And, you know, that's – they enjoy that. And I don't have to hold them like a schoolteacher to stick over their head, getting them to work late or coming early work on weekends. Like, they want to do that. Like, they enjoy doing that. Their job, their career, their success, the collective success of the company is an important part of their gestalt. It's really important part of their being and their purpose. Was there ever a time? I don't mean you can be interrupted you, but this is fascinating.
Starting point is 00:46:51 It's almost selfish to have this conversation because I get to ask you questions and learn from you. Was there ever a time where work wasn't, where you were more balanced? When was the last time you were balanced? So when you started your first company at 23. I did, and I'd be completely imbalanced since I'd be working seven days a week. Yeah, because you guys scaled like four years to, I don't know, like a couple billion dollars. It was just like an insane story. But for me, it's not work.
Starting point is 00:47:14 For me, it's like I'm really enjoying it. To me, it's a craft, it's a skill that I have. That I enjoy doing it. Were you always honest with yourself that it was the top priority? I think so, yeah. I just had a conversation with a friend of mine on the drive over here, and I think I'm lying to myself. So let me give you an example. So, you know, in many cases, like, you read these biographies, these people, and it winds up being a cautionary tale, you know,
Starting point is 00:47:38 because they kind of like will sacrifice everything for professional success, their health, their relationships, everything else. Well, that I'm not in favor of. Yeah, no, no, you're still married, you're a good father, like, everything else. yeah, for sure. But your main, it's not like you have an abundance of hobbies outside of work from what I understand. Meditation and music, that's pretty much, yeah. There you go.
Starting point is 00:47:56 So I, for a long time, every single person I read about it, I was like, okay, well, I even titled the episode, My Personal Blueprint, which was Ed Thorpe, right? Ed Thorpe, I'll give a short, right now, we're quick, first person to invent a quantitative hedge fund. He invented, you know, the ability to count cards for blackjack, writes this book in the 1960s called being a dealer, you know, made more money and he'll ever spend. But if you read his book, you get to the end, it's like he was much more balanced, right? He also came from Academian. Maybe this had played a role into that. But essentially, like, lived a life of venture
Starting point is 00:48:30 because he truly loved what he did. Once he made more money than he could spend, he stopped trading more time for money. He had a good marriage until his wife passed away from cancer, took care of his health. But like much more of like a, let's say there's five important things. and he kind of, like, divvied up. Maybe work was 50%, but the other four are other 50%. And I was like, oh, that's kind of my personal blueprint. And I said on the driver, I go, no, I'm lying. It's like 90% of what I think about and how I spend my time is just work.
Starting point is 00:49:05 That's a beautiful thing. So all the people you've mentioned so far, all these very, very successful people, I guarantee you probably every single one of them with few exceptions, if any, were all in. And what they were doing was their passion and they were just so excited about it. They were in the flow. They were in the flow of being so absorbed on something that you'd lose track of time
Starting point is 00:49:25 and the whole rest of the universe is gone. You're just in it. You're just really into something that you do well and with people that you really like and you're likely to be successful because you're doing what you do. When I was thinking about the amount of research that you do that you explain
Starting point is 00:49:41 before you get into an industry, before you start a company, it's like the way I describe your book is buy it, read it all the way through. And then what I really think it is, you put it close to your desk because it's a reference manual. Because you can just pick this up now
Starting point is 00:49:53 and read one chapter that takes 10 minutes and get good ideas out of it. Do you know I'm writing a sequel? Last time you told me he was like, I only had one book in me, I have nothing else. So I wrote the book
Starting point is 00:50:04 and I got so much feedback of what people thought about it and people asked, well, you should really talk more about this, this. At first I said, I'm never writing another book. Yes, I remember. It takes a lot of time to write a book.
Starting point is 00:50:14 And I don't have a lot of time. Yeah. But I had so many people ask me similar questions. Okay, I'm going to write a sequel that addresses those particular questions. You know, the title's going to be? That was How to Make a Few Billing Dollars. This was going to be called How to Make a Few More Billing Dolls. That's a great award.
Starting point is 00:50:28 Let me get an early copy, please. You were very nice to send me an early copy of this one. But I think what ties all this together, when I think about your research process, the way you go after life, all the people we've been talking about from Steve Jobs to Jeff Bezos. This is like, mediocrity is always invisible until passion shows up and exposes it. Love it. I think that is what animates me. It's just like, you see this.
Starting point is 00:50:49 You're talking about, like, even when you buy great companies, good companies, they're like, what else could you do? It's like there's always more. Because you can always infuse passion into what you're doing, obsession, work with the best people. Of course you can keep getting better and better results. Yeah. Well, I agree with that.
Starting point is 00:51:03 I think, so what you just said, you buy a company, it's doing very well. And then three or four years later, you've doubled the profit out. What did you do? You went in with a toolkit and you went into the – attack the pricing using algorithms and elasticity analysis. You've attacked the compensation so you've got the salespeople made partners rather than pupils to the parent authoritarian figure at corporate. You've put in technology that frees up time that allows people to spend time doing selling
Starting point is 00:51:32 and doing their job rather than trying to find information. You're sharing information in very good ways. So you apply a certain toolkit. Boom, you double profit. So wait a minute. This brings up something interesting and I've been talking about lately. the different archetypes there is in founders and CEOs, right? Everybody thinks, like, oh, there's kind of one archetype,
Starting point is 00:51:48 and especially the ones that are popularized now. It's like essentially like the Steve Jobs dictator, make, you know, almost all the decisions. I don't like that. Yeah, so exactly. I just heard the pupil part. Who am I to criticize Steve Chalach? No, no, no, no. It's not a criticism.
Starting point is 00:52:00 It's just like, that's the beauty of entrepreneurship. It's like you get to do it. I wouldn't be able to do that. So what is your archetype? What is, like, let me back up before I ask you a question, because I've been having a long conversations with Daniel Act, the founder of Spotify, who's become a good friend. and that's his whole thing where he like we're actually might be writing something together about like he's concerned that there's going to be young entrepreneurs out there that like I'm not like Elon or I'm not like Steve or I'm not like all these people so therefore I can't be an entrepreneur he's like there's multiple archetypes he's like I'm not like that he says he thinks he's a better coach than he is a player and essentially he has discovered it's almost like he recruits some of the best talent in the world to the point he's like I used to be the best at product that guy's better at product he should do it But I'm not, that guy's a better designer.
Starting point is 00:52:44 That guy, that person's a better HR. That person's everything. So he's like, the way I look at is like much more of a coach than a player. What is your, like, archetype? So you want to get the right people in place. You want to get the compensation aligned. And then you want to be communicating with each other a very constructive way and a very prolific way.
Starting point is 00:53:01 So Friday, we had our second MOR, monthly operating review for this company we had bought Beacon. And how did we come up with the agenda? It was 10-hour meeting. two breaks, one was 10 minutes, one was five minutes. Nobody was distracted. Nobody was on phones or devices, those were all shut off. We're very concentrating on the one person that had the, the proverbial microphone at a time
Starting point is 00:53:24 and listening very carefully and intently of what that person was saying, and then debating each point and each action point. How did we come up with the agenda? Here's how. Did I, the CEO, come from above and say, here's the agenda that I think is the important thing. I'm smarter than all of you and here's what we should be doing? No, how pompous and arrogant and kind of ineffective, really, to do that. What I do is just the opposite.
Starting point is 00:53:46 I send around a question pro, an app, and we say, here's all the materials pre-read for the meeting. We don't do PowerPoints and go through all that nonsense where everyone tells each other how great they're doing. It's just the silliness that you see a lot in corporate America. We send all those decks out ahead of time. We have everybody read them, and then we have everybody fill out the app,
Starting point is 00:54:08 say, based on everything I read, here are my main takeaways and here are the main questions that I think are so important in terms of creating value that we should, the whole team, all 25 of us who are in that meeting, spend time debating and discussing around the table in the limited time we've got, because $10 goes by like that. And then I send back out the takeaways, and I send back out the questions, people rank them on a scale of 1 to 10, again, we've been apt for this. and then I send people the takeaways here's how they were rated
Starting point is 00:54:39 here's what people thought were the most important takeaways very valuable now you've got the benefit of everybody's perspectives on the same data so people have seen the same charts the same data
Starting point is 00:54:48 the same metrics, same KPIs but they've seen it from a little different angle it's very enlightening and then I've got the questions I tell everybody rate the question one to ten and then all the questions
Starting point is 00:54:57 that are rated 8, 9 and 10 between 8 and 10 that's the agenda David that's what we talked about so we just went then we put them in categories everything about tech that was rated eight or above, here they are. Everything that was on comp or people, everything was on strategic, everything was in M&A,
Starting point is 00:55:13 all the different categories, only the ones that the group voted on at least in eight. Now, what is the consequence of that? Number one, we have an amazing meeting. Like, it's a good agenda, much better than I could come up with. Because now it's got everybody's angle on. It's group sourced. Secondly, everybody's involved in it because the boss didn't come. down and like, here's the agenda. It's like, we collectively made the agenda. So people realize
Starting point is 00:55:39 the truth of the matter is we really respect each other's opinions. There's no one person who's the authoritarian figure who's like teaching everybody else. It's a group. I've created a group. I've created a superorganism. I've created like a beehive or an ant colony or a brain or a human body, superorganisms, things that are a collection of people that some is greater than the collection of the parts. And the whole is greater than each individual. We have a holistic, powerful approach to that. That's how I run the business.
Starting point is 00:56:12 How many people would be in a meeting like that? So I've experimented with this over the years. I used to have larger meetings with 40 or 50 people and it just didn't work. And so those meetings, those monthly operating views, which are the most important meeting in the month. Okay. So then the most senior people in the company come together and do the exercise I just mentioned for 10 hours with almost no breaks.
Starting point is 00:56:30 almost no breaks at all. That I have 25 people, and I limit it to 25. I don't want more than 25. I don't know what's so magic about 25, but 20 to 25 is the ideal group. You have enough people that you get diversity of opinion and you have dialectical discussions, meaning looking at issues from multiple perspectives,
Starting point is 00:56:48 then analyzing those and synthesizing them and finding the truth. But you don't have so many people that you're, you know, people are peacocking and trying to impress each other and don't want to be vulnerable. You want people to be vulnerable. You want people to be to trust, the other people in the room so much that you've created a safe zone
Starting point is 00:57:04 to say, you know what? I've been thinking this and thinking this, but the more I'm listening to you and the more I'm hearing about this, I'm maybe wrong. Maybe I got this thing completely upside down. I'm starting to come around to look at it like this with one little twist.
Starting point is 00:57:16 Now I think what we should do is X, Y, Z. And then what do you all think of that? That's a fantastic conversation. When you have leaders of the company feeling it's safe to show that, hey, I was wrong. I was thinking of things wrong, and I modeled that. I role model that myself.
Starting point is 00:57:30 all the time. Be flexible in thinking. Don't be rigid in thinking. Don't be black and white dichotomous thinking, but be open-minded, be receptive, to be willing to learn and to be challenged. And that's okay to be proven wrong. It's actually a good thing. We're learning together. Two questions on that. How, what percent of the meeting are you speaking in a situation like that? So I open up usually and I ramble on for like an hour or maybe more than an hour of the state the union from my perspective. And I try not to just mention things that I form conclusions on, but I try to frame things of these are the most important successes of the company, but these are the things where we need to improve. And here are the issues that, in my view,
Starting point is 00:58:12 after reading everybody's votes and everything, I think of the things we should attention direct. We should spend most amount of time something because I think those will create the most amount of value. And I try to keep it balanced, the good stuff and the bad stuff. Yes, I do out of boys and out of girls and rah-rah. That's a good thing to do for leadership. But I, an equal measure do, look, we've got to keep it real. We've got to keep it honest. Here's things that we said by this deadline we're going to do it. We're a couple weeks behind on this. Let's get going here. What's going on? Here's we thought this outcome was going to happen and we're only 92% there. How can we get to 100%. So I try to start off with a balance,
Starting point is 00:58:45 but then I try to shut up. And then I try to let the mechanical going through the questions where I just go down the questions by categories and then go around the room and hear everyone's opinion. And that's, that's, you don't want the leader talking a huge amount of time. Yeah. So you basically start with an hour. The next, in this case, nine hour, the nine hours for this a meeting. Everyone else. Everyone else. I'm not talked to, but not inordinately. I've already used up my hour for God's sake. Yeah, this is one of the things I felt, and I've seen this with a lot with like really remarkable people, is how many people, like when we had this intense breakfast at your house a few months ago, you had a no pad and you were, I'm talking. I'm talking.
Starting point is 00:59:25 and you're taking notes. I'm like, what the hell is going? It's the reverse. No, but it's just to be the reverse. In fact, I have a story about this, and then I want another question for you was Mitch Rails, obviously, one of the founders of Dana here. Great company.
Starting point is 00:59:38 Oh, incredible. And Dan in her way. Yeah, he's actually a mentor of two close friends of mine. So I get, like, insights from them about him and just one of the most remarkable things that he did. But he was at this vertical market software conference. There's only like 40 people there recently. And a friend of mine, I was going for a walk in New York City about this.
Starting point is 01:00:00 And he says, I don't understand. The guy sat in the front row. He's the most successful person there by far. And he was just taking notes the whole time. I was like, that is why he's successful. It's not the reverse. It's not that you go and build a $200 billion company or whatever it is and then take notes. He was like that his whole time, just the relentless, like you have valuable information.
Starting point is 01:00:17 I just did this episode in Jimmy Avine, he's a very fascinating person. And he's this great line. He said, great can come from anywhere. Yes. And then you have this other thing. I'll give back to my other question. Great can come from anywhere. He's in the music business.
Starting point is 01:00:29 His point was that he was trying to help. He was partners and a mentor of Dr. Dre, who's one of the greatest hip-hop producer at all time. Dre didn't have an artist to work with. They wind up getting this demo tape from Eminem. And at the time, he's this poor kid in Michigan living in a trailer park, right? No, like, no resources at all.
Starting point is 01:00:47 And yet they're like, we weren't looking for, you know, somebody to be controversial. We were looking for great. And guess what? It can come from anywhere. It came from this kid that was obsessed sitting in a freaking trailer park saying, I want to do this thing,
Starting point is 01:00:57 and I'm going to do this the best of my ability. I want to talk about, I'm going to go back to this question I have, but you have, I love this idea of grabbing information, which is really fascinating. There's multiple examples in your book, and then I find these in other books,
Starting point is 01:01:10 where it's just like, it's so nuts that, especially when companies get big and older, they stop asking information from people from the front line. So you're like, often when we buy a company, we discover that the frontline employees, middle manager, and even some senior executives have never been asked, what would you do to improve the company?
Starting point is 01:01:30 You would think owners would want to know that. And then you have this great thing that I think is actually good for business but also personal relationships. You ask, what is the stupidest thing we're doing and what is the smartest thing we're doing? This ability to, like, you're just almost ascribed it in these meetings.
Starting point is 01:01:44 It's like, hey, we're going to disperse and ask these questions and see what comes back and then we'll rank the information. So at the end of those operating reviews, once we've gone through all the lists, Now we do human interactions. That's where the fun starts. So we work really hard solving all these problems and debating all these issues.
Starting point is 01:02:01 Now we put that aside. And I ask a series of questions. I modify them a little bit every month, but I have a list of a few dozen questions. I pick which ones I want to ask each time. Usually one of the first ones is, what is something somebody said today that you have a different opinion on? What is something that somebody said you disagree with and you get a chance to talk about it? And I just go around one by one to each person. that's a wonderful thing.
Starting point is 01:02:25 Many management teams can't do that because everyone will get upset. Here it's like, great. And then we have a nice estimate. I ask everyone, what's your single biggest takeaway from today? What is something that 10 hours ago you didn't understand about
Starting point is 01:02:37 how we're going to make money and how we're going to serve customers better and how we're going to improve employee engagement and how we're going to kill the competition? What is something you didn't know? What is something you learned? And just go around one by one by one by one. And then I ask them,
Starting point is 01:02:49 when I think about people not in this room, but people in the organization out there in the field. Who's an MVP? Who's a most valuable player? Who's somebody who's going above and beyond that you really respect, you really admire, you really think is amazing, which we had a thousand more like that person, and why?
Starting point is 01:03:06 And I sent an email to them afterwards saying, hey, I was in a meeting, the leaders of the company, and you were nominated as an MVP because X, Y, Z. People love it. I just start crying. There's a lot of times. It's really, really emotional things. It's really, really nice thing.
Starting point is 01:03:18 Validating the field. And then I bring it inwards, and I say, who around this table today, in your mind, did their star go up? The star already might have been high because everyone loves each other, but even higher. And why? What is something that somebody said today in the meeting that impressed you, that made you go, aha, or made you say, damn, that's a good insight. That's a good perception.
Starting point is 01:03:40 I really like that. Who was it? And what did they say? You go around and everything like that. And I have a few other questions like that. And then I bring it down to the person themselves. And I say, finish the sentence. I resolve to improve the company by,
Starting point is 01:03:55 and just go one by one, and each person stands up and says, I resolved to improve the company by, and then they say what they want to say. It's a great thing. What I didn't get a chance to do Friday because we ran out of time. What I often do is,
Starting point is 01:04:08 then we go into another room, we get out of the boardroom, get out of the conference room, and then we stand in a circle and just silently look at each other with, for the first couple minutes, a couple minutes is a long time to be like looking around everybody else.
Starting point is 01:04:20 It's a lot of people that's uncomfortable. It's not uncomfortable if you all like each other. And look at each person and say, I admire this person because, like, what are the strengths, what are the qualities, what are the traits, what are the skills, what are the things that they do that you really are impressed with. You really like that person a lot. And just go one by one, look at each person and just identify that. And then after a minute or two is going by, I say, okay, now let's do the same thing. look at each person and say, I really, so we've already said why I'm grateful they're on the team. So now I want to say, so it was gratitude. Gratitude is a wonderful leadership technique.
Starting point is 01:04:59 And then the second thing is, I really wish that person great success to the company. And I can picture this company five years from now accomplishing X, Y, C. And I'm, I send nice vibes. I send love vibes to that person. It's going around one by one by one by one. All silently. Nothing out loud. It's one by one by one. And you start seeing people say, smile. Like always, I've done it so many times. You start seeing people smile, so you're looking at people, you see looking at people in a very positive, uplifting way, and appreciative way. And then I say, okay, now we've concluded the day, and I declare the day of success, and congratulations. Then we just clap. And we clap. Sometimes this clapping goes out for like five
Starting point is 01:05:36 minutes. And it's like, really, really goes out. But it's a very, then people levitate home. Go to the airport and go home. How much of your, the way you run your company is, like, guided by intuition. Like, you seem like a very intuitive person to me. Maybe not as much as you think. No? Not really. Yes, there's always instinct. There's always intuition. You're always going by your gut. Well, like, how would you even know? Like, this is, this is an unusual, like what you just described. Like, how did you learn that? So I've experimented over time. Okay. I've experimented with different things. I've read a lot. I've studied positive psychology.
Starting point is 01:06:08 I've studied cognitive therapy. I've studied a lot of stuff. I read a lot of stuff. I meditate a lot. I do things that worked for me. So I think of things that have worked for me on my path, my evolution of feeling gratitude and all the happiness that comes to feeling gratitude by feeling appreciation, by problem solving, all the different things. And I try to imbibe that to other people. So feedback loops. One of the key tenants of all my companies is we have intense, voluminous feedback loops, feedback loops between the senior team, feedback loops between the senior team and mid-level management, feedback loops between senior, medium, and frontline management,
Starting point is 01:06:50 feedback loops with customers, feedback loops with vendors, feedback loops with investors, all the constituents of the constellation that make a corporation, that make a company. We have to be communicating, we have to be communicating very intensely with each other in an honest way, and then sharing that information. I share information much more widely in my organisms, in my organizations,
Starting point is 01:07:15 than most companies. Most companies, they're afraid to share it. They're afraid to share the good information. They think a competitor is going to hear about it. Okay, well, they will. But let them try to copy us. They don't have all the ingredients to do that. Or they say, we don't want to share the bad stuff
Starting point is 01:07:31 because then the market's going to hear our weaknesses. Okay, well, that's kind of true, too. That's so much overshadowed by the benefit of we're learning where we have to improve. we're learning how to become better. I read something Jeff Bezos said that changed my perspective on the importance of high quality sleep. He said that he makes sure he gets eight hours of sleep a night.
Starting point is 01:07:52 And as a result, his mood, his energy, and his decision making is improved. His point was that you get paid to make high quality decisions and you can't do that if you're sleeping terribly. And the product that has made the biggest impact on my quality sleep for years is eight sleep. I'm lucky enough to be friends with the founder of Eight Sleep Mateo and we live in the same city. A few months after I started using eight sleep, I randomly ran into Mateo at a restaurant and I was with some friends. So I go over and say, hi. When I got back
Starting point is 01:08:20 to my table, my friend asked me, who was I talking to? And I said, that's Mateo, the founder of Eighth Sleep. And my friend replied, he looks like he gets good sleep. Mateo is living and breathing his product. I had never had the ability to change the temperature of my bed before I had an eight sleep. I had no idea how much that would improve the quality of my sleep. I keep my eight sleep ice cold. It's cold before I get into bed. So I fall asleep faster and wake up less during the night. That feature alone is worth 10 times the price. There are very few no-brainer investments in life and I believe 8 sleep is one of them. That is why elite founders like Mark Zuckerberg and Elon Musk have all said publicly that they use 8 sleep. I would recommend getting the
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Starting point is 01:09:35 Make sure you get yours at 8Sleep.com forward slash senra. So this is what you were describing earlier. This is like almost a constant iterative trial and error process and just keeping the information flowing through the company. There's an idea that I think when I thought of your idea is like, hey, we're going to buy the company, we're going to ask like, what would you do if you were running the company? What's the stupidest thing we're doing? What's the smartest thing we're doing? I, as you know, like very, I'm not interested in timeless principles, not timely, right? And when I read that in your book, what I thought of was not you building your company.
Starting point is 01:10:05 I thought of Jim Casey building UPS 100 years ago. And what he learned, because a lot of these things that these ideas have survived for a long period time, they're not dependent on the company. It really depended on human nature because history doesn't repeat human nature does, right? Human nature is kind of constant, doesn't really change.
Starting point is 01:10:18 And so what Jim realized is the more successful he became, the more successful company became, his executives, their incentives were to, like, hide the bad news and just tell them good things because then it's like, everything is great in the company, Jim, and so like, and I was the one that made that great.
Starting point is 01:10:31 And so pay me more and, like, make sure I keep this great job I have. And Jim realized, It's like, oh, I need to have constant unfiltered access from the people that are delivering the service to my customers. So what he would do is like he would instruct his driver every time we see a brown UPS truck, you were to pull over. And he would get out no matter how successful he was, and he would talk to the driver. I love it. Unfiltered information.
Starting point is 01:10:57 Same thing. People would go and they try to meet Sam Walton in Bentonville, Arkansas, right? They'd show up. They even have appointment on the books. and they'd walk into the office and they're like, hey, I'm here to meet Sam for our, you know, 7 a.m. meeting and his secretary's, like, he hopped on
Starting point is 01:11:11 because he used to fly his own plane. He left at 5am this morning and he went to, you know, this Walmart over here and he's hanging out and, like, greeting customers and talking to the people, stocking the shelves and everything else, but this constant... I think there's a lot of wisdom in what you said in your book, basically,
Starting point is 01:11:23 is what I'm saying. It's like, you see this over and over again. They want unfiltered access from the front lines. They don't want the information to be, you know, massaged or presented in a... manner that seems good. So Todd Combs is one of Warren Buffett's manager, and we were talking on a Saturday about, I don't know, 10 years ago, 8, 9, 10 years ago, when his first, he was getting
Starting point is 01:11:47 on the JPMorgan board, and he was kind of moving up on the world, stuff like that. I'm lost touching them, but really great guy, really smart guy. And he said, what are you doing? I said, I'm reading employee surveys. I'm reading all the employee surveys from the whole company of, we ask him two questions, What's a single best idea to improve the company and rate your job satisfaction scale of one to 10? And sometimes we add a third order
Starting point is 01:12:07 we'll take to make it a 10. And I just go through all these one by one because I feel like I'm talking to every employee and learning on that. He said, that's amazing. So what's so amazing about that? So I was just talking to Bezos, and Bezos was reading customership, right?
Starting point is 01:12:19 So I'm talking to, so he's talking to customers. I'm talking to employees, but it's the same concept. You need feedback loops. You don't know how you're doing unless you have radar like sending beep, beep, beep out there. and seeing how it comes back.
Starting point is 01:12:32 You have to have this very intense feedback. This is why I'm so obsessed with what I'm doing because nothing we're doing is new. Like you had all these people that ran all these kind of experiments for centuries and they built great companies. And just because they passed on and maybe the company's not around anymore,
Starting point is 01:12:46 it's like there's a treasure trove of data in there. So like the Bezos idea I love where he would publicize, it used to publicize the very early days of Amazon. Jeff at Amazon.com, email me. And he read one of the reasons that he figured out, he's like, oh, I can,
Starting point is 01:13:00 we can't just sell books. Like, I could sell anything. People, he would, like, he would send emails so that I think, like, the top thousand customers, like, what else would you buy? And one guy, he had this epiphany because, you know, they were like, hey, I want toilet paper. I want, you know, groceries, whatever. One guy's like, I want windshield wipers. And he's like, winchia wipers. If this guy wants windshield wipers, I'm going to be able to sell everything.
Starting point is 01:13:17 Like, it's a true everything store. But I was, I was thinking about this recently because I just read this book translated from French about the Michelin Family Dynasty, which starts out in 1891 selling tires in France. You're selling tires. There's like 350 cars on the road for God's sake. But there's a line in the book that is related to all this where they start, the two brothers have to take over this failing factory. And they don't know what to make because most of the products of their manufacturing are unprofitable. They're one profitable product, so they eliminate everything else and they focus on the one profitable product, which is a rubber brake pad for horse-drawn carriages. Say that again, though.
Starting point is 01:13:53 A rubber brake pad for horse-drawn carriages. Okay. This is 1888. And so it takes them like a year or two to figure out, like, hey, we should manufacture a rubber. and there's two twin phenomena. You're talking about, remember what Justice said, get the major trend, right? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:14:06 They're like, well, horse-drawn carriage has been around for a while. You know what's growing way faster? Bicycles and then cars, even from a small number, like, we need to go to where the technology's going. But the point being, he's like, so we need to make more products, we need to make rubber tires.
Starting point is 01:14:19 And the guy took over a factory, he's like, I don't know how to do that. So his answer was, he would go, and it sounds just like, would you do. He only had like 50 employees that were making the rubber brake pads, and he would just ask questions. He's like, I came to them and I admitted my ignorance.
Starting point is 01:14:32 I know nothing about revenue manufacturing. Why did you do that? Can you explain to me? Can we, what if we did? And it not in like, what you just said, you said something about not like coming down from on high. It's like a peer almost like, teach me. Yes. And he's like, it was wildly effective.
Starting point is 01:14:45 And he's got a great line in that book. He's like, it turns out the guy that handles the material for eight hours a day while the CEO's in the office has something to teach you. Like he's going to understand something about that process because you have, you have like a bird level of you. He has a very particular job, and he found it very instructive. And he's like, it was a wonderful way to learn the business. And then that led him to like, oh, now I know how to make things. And then from there to grow and grow and grow. And I just absolutely love this idea.
Starting point is 01:15:12 It's like you should have this unfiltered access, unfiltered information over and over and over again. Completely. All the different constituents in an organization need to be talking to each other, need to have feedback loops to know how they're doing. If you're not asking your customers how you're doing, you may think you're doing a lot better than you're, than you really are. How do you figure out how you're doing in your position?
Starting point is 01:15:34 I ask all day long. And we have different modalities of anonymous surveys and 360 reviews and we're, I'm interacting with the teams nonstop all day long. I'm walking people's offices, what's going on? What do you think of this? What do you think of that? Do you like the, you have this great line in your book
Starting point is 01:15:50 where it says, I love working with that, we're justly talented people to deliver outside returns for shareholders in public stock markets. I love that. view this constant feedback from the public market. It's fantastic. You love it. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:16:03 I don't always agree with it. But some of it, there's always some truth in it. You get free advice from, like, the smartest people in the world, the global allocators. People have raised billions of dollars from pensions and endowments and sovereign wealth funds. And now they're analyzing what you're doing, and they're giving you advice. They're telling you, this is what I like, this is what I don't like. Okay. You don't have to, you actually, you mathematically can't agree with it all.
Starting point is 01:16:31 Because a lot of times you get conflicting advice, people saying, you're going right. You should be going left. The other guy saying you should go left even more. So it's good to hear all this stuff. It's good to hear what people are saying. But then you have to go within yourself and you have to, you're going to make the decision. You have to be an adult. You're taking tons and tons of information and opinions and beliefs and data, as much as possible.
Starting point is 01:16:54 Then you've got to kind of just ignore all that, just go inside. and say, this is what I want to do. You're going to make the call. That's what the CEO does. It's the leader does. You make the call. But you have to get all that input. Otherwise, you're in a, you're just a bubble chamber, echo chamber.
Starting point is 01:17:08 You're just hearing your own thoughts instead of others. You want people challenging your thoughts all the time. I think for a long time, like one big goal was like starting a company and then taking a public. And now I talk to a lot of founders and even the ones that raise a lot of money and they don't want to ever go public. Do you have any of... I love being public.
Starting point is 01:17:25 What advice would you give to somebody that say 30 years younger, than you. They're trying to build a great company. They've raised a bunch of money, but they don't want to go public. Well, they have to be at a level of maturity of the company to go public. Yeah. They have to be preferably profitable. But there's a bunch of them like now. There's never want to go public. Yeah, yeah. That are, that reach that criteria and are choosing not to. You know, it'd be interesting to ask them why. What's the reason why you don't want? I think people think, yeah, I can't speak for them, but I think they're like maybe the scared of the public scrutiny, the hassle, the, the, but that goes back to what we're talking about
Starting point is 01:17:57 an article is, so they might have a core belief saying, I need everybody to always be like saying great stuff about me, which is never going to happen. And they may think that, gee, if I go public, when you're public, at any moment in time, you have people in favor of you and people who are naysayers. You have people who are selling and buying. The people are selling think you're overvalued. People are buying, get the joke and they understand, you have a real, real business plan here that's going to create much more value. So you always have those two different things going. Maybe those people don't want to hear the naysayers. Maybe those people don't understand that naysayers sometimes can help you correct your own path, can tell you, gee,
Starting point is 01:18:32 you know, maybe I'm cutting costs too much. People come in and say, you're cutting cost too much. I visited one of your locations. I didn't think the service was so great. Oh, wow, I didn't know that. Thank you for telling me that. So now I have to invest more around the cost. You have other people who say, you know, I'm looking at your numbers here. Your margins are growing, which is great. That's only half the situation here. The other situation is, what are you doing with your top line? What are you doing with your price and volume? What are you doing with your organic growth. In my business, in all my businesses, the only two things I had to do in the end in order to get great valuations and create shareholder value were grow the
Starting point is 01:19:04 top line faster than the competition, faster in the market, be taking share, and growing the margins, increasing the market, increasing the profit margins. If I did those two things, everything else float, everything else flowed from that. But those are the two main things. In order to do those, accomplish those two things, you want as much input as possible. You want as many chefs in the kitchen as you possibly can. The public gets you hundreds and thousands of voices. So it's amazing data. It also being public allows you to build a brand much faster
Starting point is 01:19:34 and much more voluminously. Explain that part? So you want to be a magnet for talent, for drivers, for people in the branches, for people in mid-level management. You want to be going back to what you said before. You always want great talent coming in. Well, if nobody knows who you are,
Starting point is 01:19:48 they're a little skeptical about joining your company. If you have research written about you by bunches of firms and you have press releases and a public website and you're very well known what you're doing, it's very clear what you're doing, people say, okay, I get it, you're a known quantity and I like this. I buy into it. I like what you're doing. I want to join the company. So in order, and then you can pay them. You compensate them with stuff they can look on their iPhone every day and see the value of the compensation. If you're private, you give people these phantom shares or whatever the compensation plan is. They don't really know the value of it until they sell it someday. And it may be very very different than what they thought it was all along. So from a compensation point of view, which is a big element of success in these high growth business plans, being public is fantastic. Was there ever time in your career
Starting point is 01:20:30 where you're like maybe I should do a private company instead? Or you were pretty much all in on it? I've been doing public since 1992, and I'm nonstop. And I like it. I enjoy it. I find it very helpful, very constructive. I like the pressure. I like the ability to hear what the street says
Starting point is 01:20:48 and then agree with what I agree with. but to disagree with what I think is wrong, what I feel passionately and have evidence to support and they're wrong. So sometimes the street, particularly like the hedge funds, they're very focused on like this quarter, like the next 90 days. That's a terrible thing long term.
Starting point is 01:21:04 You don't want to be focusing on just what's good for the quarter. You end up, you see these public companies that go out and they cut costs in the field that hurts customer service or hurts employee morale and they're understaff, which is even worse than being overstaffed, which is bad. And here, it's a completely different story. So, yeah, I like being public. You said something interesting.
Starting point is 01:21:23 I like the pressure. I do. Thrive on it. What do you mean about that? So many people give you the money, whether it's a retail individual, whether it's a high net worth family, whether it's a sovereign wealth fund, whether it's a pension plan, whether it's an endowment. All these people are investing, long only funds, mutual funds, all these people are giving, they're wiring money to buy your shares. This is a intense pressure. This is probably the biggest pressure I have in life
Starting point is 01:21:51 is to make sure that I do everything I possibly can to make sure I give them back more money than they gave me, make sure that they invests in the company. And like, if you look at my neighbors and my friends, I don't know the exact number, but I would guess over 90% of them are invested in the company. And that's what it's been over time. Well, that's pressure, man.
Starting point is 01:22:10 That's like, wow, I don't want to disappoint them. These are my relatives. These are my friends. These are the people I really love. These are people come to say, look, I believe in you so much. I put two-thirds of my retirement play in your stock. There's single, no, forget their reverse vacation.
Starting point is 01:22:24 Boom, I'm going all in on Brad and his team. Well, that's a lot of pressure. I like that pressure. I enjoy that pressure. That motivates me. That inspires me. That makes me feel, I have something to do here that's important. I think that's so important to, like, put that out.
Starting point is 01:22:38 Because we were talking about the negative self-talk and, like, you know, just living a pretty crazy life where it's like you want to work seven days a week or you're just completely all in. and the way, again, this goes back to you can hear a sentence and just be like, oh, I feel that way too and it kind of changes the way you approach things. And I remember reading about Herb Keller, which is the founder of Southwest Airlines, you know, it's such a crazy story
Starting point is 01:22:59 that like in an industry where bankruptcy is the most common, you know, outcome. The guy had, his company was profitable for 40 straight years, just nuts. And he's like a nut job. He's drinking a fifth of bourbon every day. He's chained smoking cigarettes. That's not me.
Starting point is 01:23:13 No, no. I don't advocate that. No, he wouldn't sleep. He's like, it was, he's just hilarious stories in his life. And I thought he was, like, he just lived on the edge and completely, like, all in. It was a great story about this where they tried to get, you know, he'd chain smoke and then drink a fifth of bourbon every day. And they're like, but then he had, like, prostate cancer or something like that. And like, you should stop smoking.
Starting point is 01:23:34 He's like, I don't smoke with my prostate. But that's not the thing that I remember. The thing that I loved in an interview one time, they're like, you have, like, you deal with a ton of stress. Like, how do you handle it? He goes, I don't handle it. I like it. Yeah. He wanted the stress.
Starting point is 01:23:50 He's like, I want to be in the game. Yes. This is, he was an attorney. He just started his company. It was his first company. He was an attorney who was 35 years old. And then it's like, hey, I'm going to try to do an interstate or intrastate airline. And like, then he had, it was like four years of legal fights before he could even take his first flight.
Starting point is 01:24:06 He's just like, I love this shit. This is what I want. I want the pressure. Passion. What I love about this is it's in your book. You constantly talk about the other people. other entrepreneurs, other investors, other CEOs that you learn from, then knowledgements, all these maxims from all these other brilliant people.
Starting point is 01:24:23 You talk about, obviously, Ludwig Justice, and I do want to talk about, I read something on LinkedIn about other, I want to talk about the other people that you've learned from, the other founders, CEOs, executives that you admire. I want to start with Fred Smith since he passed away. I read his biography probably like four or five years ago. Tell me if I'm wrong, you know more about this industry and I do. It just seems like FedEx had to be one of the most difficult operational companies to ever invent. Like an unbelievable...
Starting point is 01:24:55 You're talking about somebody you wanted pressure. Yeah, the complexity. You wrote on LinkedIn that you never missed an opportunity to spend time with them and you admired them. Could you just tell, like, why? So Fred endorsed my book. Yeah, I saw. And I was very touched. He did that.
Starting point is 01:25:07 He was a competitor. Literally, the Wall Street competitor to endorse my book. So Fred was an amazing guy. I mean, this is a very special. You meet people in life that are just special, that are certain integrity. So I met Fred for the first time in 2013, and I came out of nowhere from this industry. I got into 2011, but I really started doing a bunch of acquisitions out of nowhere. And suddenly, like, I was on the front pages of the trade journals.
Starting point is 01:25:34 And I was in Atlanta at the National Association of Manufacturers, the NAM conference. And Fred was the keynote. So I was in the audience watching him. And somebody, said, what do you think of Brad Jacob? I go, oh, my God. My heart starts being. Oh, my God. Fred Smith's about to, like, destroy me.
Starting point is 01:25:53 My brand is going to be completely crushed. You know, the icon of the industry is going to say, oh, yeah, I don't believe he's really that. And he said, I really like watching that guy work. He said, he is coming into this industry with courage and buying things left and right and has big goals and big ambitions, and I'm going to keep an eye on that guy. And I cried. I said, wow, Fred Smith's saying great stuff. So I went up to him afterwards, after the speech was over.
Starting point is 01:26:22 And I said, Mr. Smith, I'm Brad Jacobs. I really appreciate what you said. I said, well, first of all, I'm Fred. And that was the beginning of a great, great friendship. And we got together many, many times. Of course, he was on the business council. He was the longest serving member of the business council over a quarter of a century. Oh, wow.
Starting point is 01:26:37 And I go to every business council meeting I possibly came to meet other CEOs and to hear what other people are thinking. It was just a generous guy. This was a guy who had vision, he had passion. Talk about grit. I mean, he was flying around all the time everywhere. Vietnam. He was decorate.
Starting point is 01:26:52 He was flying helicopters with people shooting bullets at him to go get Marines who had been, he was a Marine. Marines who have been killed, but you don't leave any Marine behind. He'd go in the, he's risking his life with bullets like shy, he's shooting at him
Starting point is 01:27:06 to go get the remains of a dead Marine. Yeah. Putting his own life online. He got a purple heart. He got silver. I mean, serious, serious, courageous, high-integrity guy, and everybody, everybody loved, everybody love Fred. Everybody love Fred. The opening paragraph of that, of his biography is the craziest opening paragraph I've ever heard.
Starting point is 01:27:27 I'm just going to, like, paraphrase it. Essentially, like, you know, he's in debt. He ran through, like, his, his great-hound, his dad's greyhound bust millions. I think he burned through, like, 15 or 20 million. His planes are about to be confiscated. They just got fired by his board. the FBI is investigating him. It goes to Vegas.
Starting point is 01:27:47 Yes. And then they're like, he thought, he thought, and he was like 30 years old at times, so still young, but he refused to let his federal express dream die. And the line was just like, he thought of suicide. And then the next paragraph is like, but the idea of thread, of Fred jumping out a window is ludicrous. He's more likely to throw somebody out of a window. He's just like a guy that you, like, he was like the termination.
Starting point is 01:28:06 You couldn't stop, like he just wouldn't stop coming. There's a few lines. No, I don't recognize that in him. So throwing something out the window. I mean, I was... At 30, I think he might have been a little different. Well, maybe, yeah. But I was a direct competitor of him in transportation and logistics and in tomorrow, not in package,
Starting point is 01:28:23 because we didn't do package, but pretty much all the other lines of business, we competed against him. He was generous. He was terrible. He would always take a meeting with me. He used to come to my house. We'd spend hours and hours to hours talking about everything. This is what is so special. I know it's part of humanity in general, but entrepreneurship in particular is just like you see this over and over again, just how generous.
Starting point is 01:28:41 These people are with that Because they know how fucking hard it is They just went through all this And now we might be 15, 20, 30 years different in age But it's like, just like Ludwig Juselton did when you were 23 And in many cases like what you did with the book Like the idea like think about Sam Walton right He wrote his autobiography
Starting point is 01:28:58 His cancer was all over his body He was in pain He knows his time is towards Dan And what does he do? He spends a big chunk of the last time he had left Saying this is what I learned in my six decade long career That is a gift to future generations.
Starting point is 01:29:13 And then in the book, they're like, somebody, I love this part because in the book, they're like, people ask me all the time, could another Walmart story happen? He's like, yeah, it's probably happening right now. And it was Jeff Bezos, going around with his copy of the book,
Starting point is 01:29:26 writing it, annotating it, giving it to the executives, the early executives, Amazon, it's such a beautiful thing that Fred would do that. It's a beautiful thing you did for your book. Fred and Amazon didn't get along. No, no, no, I'm saying,
Starting point is 01:29:36 but like in general, yeah, obviously. Well, yeah, I can see why. But my point being is the transfer of, even for competitors. He was, Fred was your competitor, but he's transferring knowledge to you. Absolutely. I don't think people understand how much that goes.
Starting point is 01:29:49 I'm glad you just said that. Because, yeah, you could see in the books. You hear stories like that. He endorsed my book. Exactly. You hear stories like that all the time in private. And for you to say that, I think it's really important. There's a few things I pulled out from his biography
Starting point is 01:30:00 that just remind me of you. And I'm curious if, like, you, if you agree with some of these things. One, the amount of... If it's about Fred Smith, if I don't have that trait, I should work on getting it. Okay, well, perfect.
Starting point is 01:30:13 The amount of information, so, like, think about it. Like, he started in FedEx and 60s, I think, something like that. No, after Vietnam, so maybe early 70s. But in the 80s, he says that he estimated during 1980s, he spent four hours a day reading. He says he found he relied quite heavily on his own vision, back by assimilating information, which you've mentioned multiple times so far, from many different disciplines at once. You've talked about that meetings, you talked about in trade journals, you talk about all the research you do, right? This is his quote, though, that I want to read to you.
Starting point is 01:30:40 the common trait of people who supposedly have vision is they spend a lot of time reading and gathering information and then synthesize it until they come up with an idea. That sounds like you to me. I like that, yeah. Going back to what I've said before you. You don't want to be rigid in your thinking. You want to be open-minded.
Starting point is 01:30:57 You want to be flexible. You want to be scientific about it, that if new evidence comes along that just proves your theory, then modify your theory. Go by the evidence. Go by the facts. You want to get, you want to interact with people who you respect, and you want to be picking their brain all the time.
Starting point is 01:31:11 But you're also like a lot, the way to describe is like you're also alive in paying attention. Like the story in your book where you're like reading a magazine in bed on a Sunday morning and you read about like these waste management companies making like $500 million in profit.
Starting point is 01:31:24 You're like, whoa, what? Like they're picking up trash from one spot and bring it to another. I need to learn about this industry. But that's my point is like you're people like Fred, people like you. I think there's a ton of people to have the same thing where it's like the whole world
Starting point is 01:31:38 is like a classroom. If you're actually paying attention, like, you can pick up ideas all over the place. So the waste management business, I contrast it to the oil business. The oil business was a lot more complex. We were negotiating complicated long-term contracts and chartering vessels and negotiating processing agreements with big major oil companies and hedging. I mean, it's a very complicated, complex business. When I read that about the garbage business, that is so much easier picking up.
Starting point is 01:32:05 That's a simple business. It moves some garbage and sent out an invoice. So I definitely think I can do that. And it seems like they make a lot of money. And the trend seemed in the right direction. So, yeah. Oh, and the application of technology, which is, I love how at the end of your book, you have essentially some key technology developed by humans starting, you know, back 300,000
Starting point is 01:32:26 years ago, and you move forward. I thought that was a beautiful way to, like, just put that in the appendix. So I got that from Kurzweil, by the way, Ray Kurzweil. So Ray Kurzweil, huge mentor of mine. Only met him once, men for about six hours to do it. But I've read every book he's written. I've read every article about him. I see every YouTube.
Starting point is 01:32:43 I'm a Ray Kurzweil fan. I mean, I really, and what I read in the singularity as near in 2005, 2006, when that book came out was amazing. Where it was a chronology of the universe going, you know my meditation. I go back to space and time. Kindred spirit here. There's somebody who thinks a large scale of time. And what are the key things that have happened over the last 13 billion years? and reducing that down to a couple hundred points.
Starting point is 01:33:10 I thought that was real helpful. So I modified it a bit and made it more specific to business, things that would be applicable to business. But the main trend, going back to Mr. Justin about, you've got to get the main trend right, the main trend for the last two million years had been humans creating tools, aka technology, to do things,
Starting point is 01:33:29 to outsource to those things that do better than us, that free up our time. So whether it was fire, whether it was a wheel or whether it was the printing press and more recently all the digital electronic stuff we've done and all the internet and now artificial intelligence and robotics and nanotechnology.
Starting point is 01:33:47 This is the trend. The main trend in life and therefore in business is technology. Outsourcing our senses, outsourcing our memory, outsourcing now our intellect, our speech, to computers, to the cloud. This is big. This is really, really big.
Starting point is 01:34:04 So when I looked at 55 different industries, before I picked building products. I ruled out a bunch of them, so this looks like an interesting industry, but I think AI and automation are going to like, I bought shit for a day. And I didn't do it. I mentioned it in the book.
Starting point is 01:34:17 There was one particular online education company. It was called Chegg. And I said, I don't know. It seemed like you got a good business, but I think the AI is going to come in basically do that for free. And I said, I think the stock might come down. Well, stock came down a lot.
Starting point is 01:34:33 It came out from 50 to single digits. So, fortunately, I made a good prediction there. As Yogi Bearer said, predictions are difficult, particularly when they're about the future. But that turned out to be a good prediction. Why was that a good prediction? Because to me, I'm looking at it saying the main trend, the long-term trend, is to use technology
Starting point is 01:34:52 to do things that we've been doing ourselves. And so I'm always trying to look at these different work streams and say, is that something that can be automated? Is that something going to be AI or robotics going forward? And then capitalizing on that. And the opportunity to, to always do something slightly better, which is an event tools to do so, technology.
Starting point is 01:35:11 Even starts out when you were talking about collecting. Sometimes a lot better, not slightly better. But the good thing is, like, this is not exclusive to the time we live in. It's a constant throughout our experience. You can go and look at the, like, when you guys were collecting all, this is what you said before fax, before email,
Starting point is 01:35:25 you were collecting all the information for Amorex. Yes, yeah. You know, 40 years ago. Yeah. And then the waste management, when you're like, hey, how, like, I should get into this. And then you realize, wait, they're not even using technology to figure out the most efficient route.
Starting point is 01:35:38 And this constant application to technology is one of the things that I'm glad it was all my notes, but I'm glad you directed the conversation there because the way I thought about this is really crystallized my mind when I read Andrew Carnegie's autobiography, right, which is probably written 130 years ago. And for whatever reason, if you talk to somebody today, they don't think of like the production of steel as technology, which is like a crazy thing. At the time, it was like, they literally invented a new and a better way, and then everything in the world was going to be made out of this. And so what I do is, like, when I'm finished reading a book, again, we go back to this idea that you and I share. We have to, like, distill it.
Starting point is 01:36:16 You're not going to remember 250 pages, but you'll remember a paragraph or a sentence, if you can. And Andrew's a young person getting into an existing industry. It's a new industry, but it's still an existing industry. Most of his competitors were much older, and they were very resistant. To your point, resistance to change. You cannot be resistant to change. to embrace the major trend, which is what your mentor told you. And so I was hearing the criticism that his competitors, almost like when you were in that
Starting point is 01:36:43 business and the guy took you out to lunch, and it's like, slow down. I used to be the first. Now I'm the second. That's a terrible way to do business. It's like, take your competitor out to lunch. You'd be like, stop being better than me. Motivation. It's not going to work.
Starting point is 01:36:59 But the way I would summarize the main theme from Andrew Carnegie, you know, you know, book that then reappears over and over again on these stories is invest in technology the savings compound it can give you an advantage over slower moving competitors and can be the difference between a profit and a loss and you see that over and over and over again it doesn't matter if it's steel waste management software over and over again it's like the the best entrepreneurs the best CEOs the best executives they're you they're not scared of technology if you're scared of it you're going to get destroyed by it they embrace it and they invest heavily in it. And again, the benefit I have is like, I'm reading about a chocolate company that was
Starting point is 01:37:36 started 80 years ago, and they have some of the most advanced robots making chocolate. I'm reading about a tire company from 150 years ago. They watch their costs and they're very efficient in how they spend their time and their money, but they invest heavily in technology. No one thinks of Walmart as a technology company, but if you go back in 1979, right, Sam's in his 60s and they're like, hey, we're doing everything by hand. Our business is getting way too complex. We have all these distribution centers.
Starting point is 01:38:06 Think about the logistics. You would know all this. Moving all this material where it needs to be at the right time. We need to invest in computers. And Sam, at the first thought, he heard a computer, he heard overhead. He heard expense. I can't do that. And then he was slowly allowed himself to be convinced by the talented people on his team.
Starting point is 01:38:21 And he wind up, and when he decided to invest, he didn't, like, dabble. He invested $500 million. in $1979, who knows what that would be today, in the most advanced computer system to handle his logistics and distribution. And that was an edge that no, not another retailer on the planet had,
Starting point is 01:38:39 or at least in America had, that he had the technological edge over the rest of his competitors. In business, you always want to be finding waste because there always is some and eliminated. You always want to find inefficiencies, and there always are, you want to reduce them. Technology helps you with that.
Starting point is 01:38:55 Walmart's a big tech company. So my chief supply chain office, came out of Walmart, very, very sophisticated guy. It's all about technology, all about using tech in order to get the data and then being very data-driven. I would argue that if anybody, I don't think you could be the leader in any industry and not also, we don't think of them as tech companies because we think tech has to be like Google or Facebook.
Starting point is 01:39:13 It's like, no, they're all tech companies. I just did, I wanted to do more than just like American entrepreneurs. Because, you know, the, when you have an outsized share of entrepreneurs. Everybody's like, you should do more XYZ. It's like, why are they all American? And that I understand that. And my point being is, like, if you think about entrepreneurship in, like, the market economy,
Starting point is 01:39:32 it's only a couple hundred years old. It's like, well, America's kind of dominated there. So it makes sense if 75% or 80% of my episodes are about that. But I did one on one of the most successful entrepreneurs in Europe named Amoncio Ortega. And I didn't know anything about them. All I know is that. Is H&M? Zara.
Starting point is 01:39:50 Oh, Zara. Inditex. Yeah, yeah. And then you're reading about this. You're like, it's not a fashion company. It is a technology company. What does that mean? He built the logistics and the system to say, me and you can walk out on the street right now,
Starting point is 01:40:02 and we can see, oh, there's a trend here where all these ladies are wearing dresses with whatever, you know, red flowers on them. And he can take that idea and put it through his system and he can have manufacture dresses with red flowers in eight, you know, 25 different countries in seven days. That is technology. He says it's like we're a technology company with a chain of stores attached to it. So Zara Intertech is a big customer of GXO, logistics, one of the companies we spun off from XPO, and GXO runs a lot of their warehouses in Europe, and it's exactly what you're saying. It's e-commerce.
Starting point is 01:40:35 It's trying to do things very efficiently and very quickly and very accurately, and you need technology to do that. You need robots and need AI. Every business, every single business is going to see more automation and more AI. People have to get on the program on that, or they're going to be dinosaurs. 100%. I'm going to go back to Fred Smith. He says something that sounds...
Starting point is 01:40:53 Fred was in a tech. Oh, of course. In a big way. Yeah, of course. I was always talking about this new invention he just did in the removing packages and robots. And we were trying to figure out some way you could use automation in LTF. He was a big LTF. FedEx is the biggest action LTF.
Starting point is 01:41:06 And XPO is a big LTF. The automation is not there yet to get, because all the close spaces and all the people are still involved in that. But it's going to be. Package you have automation now. Packaged automation is much further ahead. Yes. So there's something we haven't touched on. I have a question for you.
Starting point is 01:41:21 And this is a quote from Fred in his biography, says you have to be absolutely brutal. in the management of your time. Oh, yes. Do you have any insights into it? Look, if you want someone to disagree with that, you're going to have to talk to somebody else. I'm 100% agree with that. I'm curious how you do this, though.
Starting point is 01:41:36 So time. So when you're a CEO, when you're an executive, you only got two things. You got time and you get capital. And how you deploy that time and how you deploy that capital equals results. So it's your time. And it's the time of the people, the organization.
Starting point is 01:41:53 So when I was running XPO, we had about 150,000 a little more employees worldwide. See, each one of those work the senior manager worked long hours, but the average work worked eight hours a day. So you had eight times, but 1.2 million hours a day of work
Starting point is 01:42:09 getting done. If you've got people very focused and very motivated and very well trained and feel good about the company and feel good about their job, that productivity of that 1.2 million hours a day is going to be a lot more than if they're
Starting point is 01:42:25 if the conditions I just mentioned are not present. So managing people's time, putting them in the right priorities and ranking what people should be spending their time on is very, very, very, very important of success. Now, how do I spend my time? I spend my time deliberately and consciously and intentionally on the things that I think make most amount of value
Starting point is 01:42:46 for the company. How many things at any given time are you having to focus on? No, fair amount. So if you're CEO, you're managing, you know, 15, 20 different things, always. You're managing people, you manage technology, you're maintaining budgets, you're managing investors, you're managing infrastructure, you're managing transportation, you're managing logistics, you're managing pricing, you're managing procurement with the vendors, you're managing customer relations, you're managing sales, you're managing sales force excellence. I mean, there's about 20 things that are your life.
Starting point is 01:43:15 Like, that's what a good CEO does. The problem with a lot of CEOs is they've come up through just sales or operations, and they're good at that. but they kind of just delegate the other 15 things. That's really part of the CEO job. You look at the great CEOs. The CEOs have created a lot of alpha, a lot of shareholder value. They've been in each one of those 20 or so things. You talk to a Dave Cody.
Starting point is 01:43:37 You talk to an Ed Breen. You talk to Larry Culp. You can talk about any of those 20 things, and they have things to say, and you can learn from them. You talk to CEOs who haven't created a lot of value. We're not really good at this game. They'll know four, five, or six, even half of those 20 things,
Starting point is 01:43:53 don't do the other. They don't do the other part. You've got to be in all of them. But you're not in all those things in equal measure. Some things you don't have to spend as much time on. The people things and compensation things, I actually spend a lot of time on. So that's core. That's critical to get right. That's something that if you get wrong, you waste it. Budgeting, I spent a lot of time going on the budget. Customer satisfaction, I spent a lot time on that. The employee engagements, going out to the field, doing the town halls, doing the zooms. I'm all in on that. But when you say that the CEOs that you think might not be doing the best they could, are they delegating too much? Yeah. They're not, they're, they're afraid to do the, in jet,
Starting point is 01:44:32 I'm making generalizations. There's always exceptions, but generally speaking, what I find is they gravitate to the stuff they like and that they're good at, and they kind of just don't do the stuff that they don't like or they don't aren't very good at. And you can't. You've got to, you've got to be, if you want to be a good CEO and have a high performing company and be in the top, and be in the top decile of stock performance. Like United Rentals and XPO were both top 10 stock performers in Larsonage. That's not random at both those companies were because it was the same principles, same structures. You've got to have CEOs, and they did, that are in the whole thing, and understand from
Starting point is 01:45:09 A to Z what running a business is and how you create shareholder value and see the whole picture of the levers. So I always tell friends who are portfolio, and I have a lot of friends who are portfolio managers or analysts on the buy side. I said, when you bring a management team in, you need to ask them, what's your stock price going to be five years from now? And what are the levers that I have to believe that's going to get you there? And if that CEO tells you, that's a great question, I'll get back to you, short that stock. At least don't buy that stock, because that's the first thing the CEO has to know. First thing is a CEO and
Starting point is 01:45:44 the senior management team has to know with great specificity, here's where we are right now, the stock price. We want to get massive outperformance and get to here. That's great. That's just the beginning. Here are the levers of how I get there. Here are the levers of the things that we must do as an organization that will improve our profitability, improve our multiple, generate free cash flow, just how are we going to get to there? And in my case, it's not that hard because when you do the graph, the first two bars, when you do the levers, comprise the vast majority of what you have to do to create the value. And those are buying companies right, meaning being very disciplined in what you pay and looking at lots of acquisition candidates
Starting point is 01:46:30 at the same time so you don't fall in love with any one of them. And so you have alternatives and you don't... What's the distribution there? So you've done over 500 acquisitions throughout your... My teams and I have. I like to give credit to my team. You deserve it. You're your team, for sure. So you and your team have done over 500 acquisitions. You've looked at how many? Thousands and thousands. I mean, many thousands. Like 100,000 do you think it would be that?
Starting point is 01:46:51 I've lost count. I don't know if it's 100,000. When I say, look, looked at in depth. Yeah, yeah. But in the thousands, many thousands. Okay. Going back to the time management, though. I think, especially in, like, the age that people are growing up in, like, where there's
Starting point is 01:47:06 a shortened attention span, a lack of focus, in my opinion, and, like, really easy to give into distraction, like how you sound like you're almost not impervious to distraction. That's not the right way to put it, because I know how you're going to be humble when you describe yourself, but how do you avoid being pulled into things that are not prioritized? So many, many people know Warren Buffett. I barely know Warren Buffett. I met him a few times, but he's not a close personal friend. I wish he was, but he's not.
Starting point is 01:47:31 But I know a lot of people who are close to me, who are close to him. And they most of them have the same story, so he must tell us to everybody. He tells people, I'm the richest person, I'm the wealthiest person in the world. And I said, well, Mr. Buffett, you work for one period of time, but I think you're number four or whatever. He says, no, no, no, I can prove that I'm the wealthiest person in the world. I say, why is that? And he reaches and he brings out his daytime or his, you know, his calendar. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:47:53 And he says, Monday, I have one appointment. Tuesday, I have no appointments. Yeah. Wednesday, I have no appointments. Because he controls his time. Yeah. He controls his time and he has no problem saying no and refusing people time. So he's very difficult.
Starting point is 01:48:07 I think I have a problem saying no, though. Like, this is why I'm asking you. Well, you can solve that problem. That's a problem you've identified. That's great. That's half of the solution to the problem. He has that great line where he's like, the difference between successful people and really successful people is really successful people say no to almost everything. So like you have 20, you know, whatever the number is.
Starting point is 01:48:24 Yeah, so whatever the number is, like you have 20 things that, that, you know, you're focused on the CEO level at this moment. You know, you know, where you want to spend your time, what you're best at. We talked about incentives and then recruiting talent. But like, you also are one of the most. and you're not going to like this, but like one of the most famous and wealthiest people in the world, you have an unbelievable amount of people
Starting point is 01:48:45 that want your time. How do you stay disciplined? Like, you seem to be disciplined from the outside of saying no to a lot of things. Like, how is that something you learned in the last like five years, 10 years? You liked it when you were younger? So first of all, I'm not that famous.
Starting point is 01:49:01 I'm well known in the business community. The business community I'm not. That's the only community I care about that. But like, you know. No, the average part, yeah, for sure. And I'm not one. one of the richest people in the world. There's many people who are vastly richer than I am. But in my own modest way, I've created some level of recognition and some of wealth and
Starting point is 01:49:19 more importantly, wealth. You should see my inbox when it comes to you, but that's fine. That's fine. Well, I appreciate that. But in context. It's funny because people, the way you said it is a little grandiose. I don't think I, I don't think I am that. This is why every time I say these things to you, you say, same thing. I want to correct the record. I don't want to get grandiose in the wrong. No, it's a smart move. But the funny thing is when I did the, I did the, I don't know, I had breakfast with Brad Jacobs episode. Now people were like, Floyd, like, can you introduce it?
Starting point is 01:49:44 Like, no. Like, you had to figure out to get to him yourself. Like, you can't do that. So when I was researching after, after XPO, yeah, I was looking for my next thing. No, no, excuse me,
Starting point is 01:49:55 after you're not at rentals, I was looking for my next thing. And I was looking at asset management. And I went, and I went to Chicago and I wanted to get an appointment with Ken Griffin. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:50:02 Who, now I've met, and now I know he's a neighbor down in Florida. I don't know well, no well enough. And, you know, I think he'd return my call if I called him.
Starting point is 01:50:10 but he would turn down the meeting he wouldn't take the meeting said wow that's kind of humbling but you can't even like spend an hour says no 10 is a very and I think you you interviewed him right no not yet I did a
Starting point is 01:50:22 you definitely should I want to meet him very interesting I want to meet him so if you can introduce me please he can be president of the United States so this is a good thing about when I do remember most of the people I said you're dead when I do episodes on people that are living this is why I was asking some of the questions
Starting point is 01:50:36 because like I'll do this episode it reaches a very valuable community and they're really helpful. And then I get all these crazy stories about this guy's even more remarkable in your episode. And I got it about you and I got it about Ken.
Starting point is 01:50:48 And then I was like, oh, I got it. Like, I definitely want to meet Ken. Ken's in a different league than I. Yeah. Ken is like way, way up there. He's a very fast same person. Oh, you should definitely do something on him. You ask how I managed my time.
Starting point is 01:50:58 So I have a chief of staff. He used to work in the Oval Office and managed the most important person in the world's calendar. So I mean, he's always very good. And more importantly, he understands what I'm doing. He understands my priorities and he understands what I was talking to before.
Starting point is 01:51:14 Like the two most important things that I got to do or have organic revenue growth, better than the competition, and a margin expansion and everything false. He understands that. He understands that in order to do that, I have to focus on people. I have to focus on technology. He understands the different levers to do that. So you run every decision between those two? Yeah, that's my framework.
Starting point is 01:51:34 In business, my framework is because I've learned if I do those two things and it takes a hundred different things to do those two things well. But if I do those two things well, I will create dramatic shareholder value. If I buy companies at significant lower multiples of profit than I trade at, Monday morning at 7 o'clock after we announce the acquisition, I've already created alpha for my shareholders. That's a nice way to start the week. Number two, if I then double the profit over the next three to five years, then I'll get a nice multiple.
Starting point is 01:52:05 And if I generate, those are the two main things I need to focus on. And he understands that. Now, what he also understands is all the components, because, you know, in the monthly operating reviews and all the correspondents, we're very good at communicating with each other what's important and what's not important. So he knows my priorities, and therefore he's a great gatekeeper. Is there anybody that could tell you when you're getting off track
Starting point is 01:52:27 from what you're professed to say is important to you? So if I'm spending too much time, like, I'm going to catch heck for being on this podcast. Dude, you're the man for doing this, by the way. I mean, they're going to, no, I love doing it. And it will also get to, like, I do think, you know, one of the things that you obviously accomplished with the book and, like, I try to help amplify with my work, it's like, just millions of people are going to benefit
Starting point is 01:52:48 from your lived experience. You have 40, 50, almost 50 years, let's say 40 years of experience as an entrepreneur. It's like how many people that have ever lived life that have done that? Most people, you know, they quit or they fail or whatever the case. It's like you have so much to teach the world. Can I comment on something about the time?
Starting point is 01:53:05 Yeah, go ahead. There's a phrase I used to use. And you brought it out of me, so I'm going to start using again. I've been using it recently as W-W-W-W-O-M. W. Waste of time, waste of money. So when people have brainstormed, we're kind of, let's do this, let's do that. Someone can say, wad-wam. That's a waste of time, waste of money.
Starting point is 01:53:24 Like, how does that, how does what you're suggesting we do influence directly or even indirectly, growing organic revenue growth or increasing the margin? And if it doesn't, wot-wom, that's a waste of time, waste of money. You have limited time and you have limited capital. You've got to be directing that time and deploying that capital that things have the greatest returns. Otherwise, it's what, wow. And I'm so glad, first of all, it's hilarious.
Starting point is 01:53:49 I'm glad that you said that you actually have other people around you doing this too because I am kind of skeptical that no human can hit their goals and what they want to do 100% of the time. I can't imagine, you know, the complexity of running FedEx. and this guy is just like, no, you have to be brutal. There's a word, like that, he picks it absolutely brutal, is the word, absolutely brutal in your time management. Yeah, I think there's a lot of things.
Starting point is 01:54:14 There's another thing that Fred Smith said that, again, like when I'm reading about Fred, when I was going through and rereading all my highlights from his biography, I wasn't really about Fred. I was thinking about you, you know, like this, to me, feels like a lot of what I've learned from you. And this is a direct quote from Fred. He says, I believe that a man who expects to win out in business without self-denial and self-improvement stands.
Starting point is 01:54:34 It's about as much a chance as a price fighter would stand if he started a ring battle without having gone through intensive training. Natural ability, even when accompanied by the spirit to win, is never sufficient. If I look at the way you were building businesses when you were 23 compared to, you know, you can pick first billion-dollar company,
Starting point is 01:54:53 then you look at the second or the third or the fourth or the fifth or the seventh. It's like you're not even, like you'd go back and kick that dude's ass because of all the stuff you have learned since then. Well, you do get better as you keep, with experience like in anybody in anything. But the principles are pretty the same.
Starting point is 01:55:08 If you look at all my companies, the essential concepts are the same, that you want to have fantastic people, that you want to have rules of engagement with those people where you get along and go kill the competition instead of killing each other, that you want to have fair compensation so that everybody's in on the action here. So that... When did you keep repeating that? When did you understand the power of incentives? Because you talk about compensation incentives a lot.
Starting point is 01:55:33 Very, very early. very early in the oil brokerage days because I used to have, we had tables, like 10 brokers at a table. And every month, we paid people monthly. I'd meet with everyone and say, look, we made so much this month in the bonus pool, what percent do you think you contributed to it? And then I would add it up. And it would always come to like 300 percent, never added up to 100 percent. So I had to have these difficult conversations that people say, like, you know, you think you're inflated with how much of these other than that. But what I realized very early on is people are coming to work, not because they love me,
Starting point is 01:56:04 They might love me. I might love them. But that's not their main motivation. The main motivation why they're coming to work is to make money for themselves and more often to make money for others, to make money for their families, for their spouses, their kids, or whoever. And that's important to understand the motivation of the other person is really, really important. It's called theory of mind. When you understand, and a child gets that after a few years, they don't have it at first. And there's been a lot of psychological studies done on that. It's important to look at things from what's motivating the other. other person. What's driving the other person? What's important to that other person? That's good in dealmaking. That's good in compensation. That's good in building teams. That's good in customer relations. That good vendor relations. You need to understand their point of view. You can't just be in your mind. You can't just say, here's what I want. Here's what's important to me. And I'm a bully. I'm going to go get it because people is going to stick their tongue out. You're going to turn away and do something with else. You have to have a partnership. You have to be trading with people all the time. You've got to be figuring out what will help
Starting point is 01:57:01 them what's good for them and how can we make money together not me at your expense you at my expense but how can we go talk to the world together i think you're a faster learner than me because like i i don't think i ever thought about intentives uh i think episode like 97 so it's probably like six years ago i'd read that means i read 96 biographies before this i get to poor charlie's almanac and he's really the one that got charlie was the one that really put into my mind about how important this was because I thought he was one of, I still think he's the wisest person I ever met and probably one of the most brilliant people. And he said something fascinating in that book where he's like, I've been in the top 5% of my age cohort, my entire life of understanding the
Starting point is 01:57:42 power of incentives and how it drives human behavior. And there's not a year that goes by, and he's probably in the 60s when he said this, there's not a year that goes by where I don't underestimate the power of incentives. And he would repeat over and over again. You show me the incentive. I will show you the outcome. Remember I told you a few minutes ago that I give everyone on the top level of the company, a bunch of equity, but it's locked up for five years. So I meet with my CHRO, who's fabulous, regularly, usually twice a month, and she shows me a spreadsheet of how much the equity is going to be worth at $50 a share, $75 share, $100 a share. And I look at that, look at the numbers.
Starting point is 01:58:16 And I say, okay, this person has something to work for. This person is on the team. This person, that's something I see them working really hard to get those numbers. Or I see, gee, you know, somehow or another, we messed up the comp and maybe we got to top the person up or, wow, I can't take anything back, but maybe I gave too much that person, whatever, but at least I know where everyone's head is at because I know what's in it for them. You know, there's always that joke. I listen to radio station, WIFM, what's in it for me. And people are generally, they don't care about you and me, David. They care about them,
Starting point is 01:58:45 which is normal. That's capitalism. That's free markets. That's a good thing. Yeah, I don't feel it's a negative thing at all. It's like we're all self-obsessed. But I do think you have a great line in the book where you're like money. He's like, I built businesses all over the world when you have 150,000 employees, they're spread throughout, you know, people like, oh, it's all different cultures. It's like, oh, guess what? Money animates people everywhere. Yeah. For the whole point, you have a great line of the book. Like, they're not coming to work to make Brad Jacobs more money. Not at all. They're doing it for their families. I love this idea of, I think it's really important to have a, I think it's tied to your obsession
Starting point is 01:59:16 with like the public markets too. And what you said in your book about being very proud of building wealth, not just for yourself, but for school teachers, pension plans, nurses, firemen, and everything else is like the importance of having a um a mission bigger than yourself i think like if you just live a completely selfish life first of all you would have stopped way a long time ago like you didn't need to in general people you wouldn't have to do this um and i've seen this in a couple different places where like um jeff basas we talked about him a few times today where his idea was when he started amazon he's like i want to build the world's most customer-centric company so i want to be an example not just to our employees and our customers but to other
Starting point is 01:59:55 companies to see, look how you can, over the long term, you can align the interest of the customer and the shareholder perfectly aligned. They just have to be done so over the extremely long term. But this idea of like going, it drives me. It's like, I want to build wealth, you know, so my kids are proud of me. And like, and I show them like what it's like to like chase after something and be deeply committed to it and be passionate about and love it. And also make something that's better for other people. And if you do that automatically, you know, the family will prosper and everything else. So I think that's like, I think I love, that was one of my favorite parts of, um, of your book. Do you know, I, I think Amazon modified that, that mission statement.
Starting point is 02:00:32 Now, something with employee engagement, too. Something about, something about workplace, great workplace environment or something like that, the best workplace environment in the world. Um, it is funny when you think about it because, um, it's one of, I, I have this conversation. Actually, last night, I went to dinner with our mutual friend Patrick O'Shaughnessy. He texted me this morning. He's like, make sure you say, tell Brad, hi. That's like the best. Yeah, 100%. And we had, he was with us, uh, we had, we had, we had, we had breakfast here a few months ago, and we were having this discussion at dinner with his family. I was like, what is the most impressive company built in our lifetime? And so me and him were born
Starting point is 02:01:05 in the 80s because what about Microsoft? Microsoft is in 70s. Like, it was before us. And I would say it's like, for me, the answer is like Amazon. Like, started in 97. Like, I can't think of another company started in the 90s, like, in terms of like as impressive as what, a big success story, as what Jeff is built. By reading your book, listening to your interviews, talking to you now, you kind of, for me personally, like, you kind of remove any self-imposed limit that I have. Where I'm like, oh, like, there's no, I don't think Brad has a limit to what he thinks he can achieve. He thinks on a big scale automatically. Like, you just, you operate in a very big and ambitious way where I think a lot of people have, like, self, there's like self-imposed ceilings that are most likely invisible in many cases, right?
Starting point is 02:01:47 If you want to build more wealth, you want to grow great companies, just find more customers to serve. Like, it's a pretty straightforward process. but I do think one of the things that I absolutely love is and it's the way I ended the episode it's the way you ended the book and I would summarize what I'm about to say here as go all in
Starting point is 02:02:03 you only get one shot at life and I think this is a perfect spot to like wrap our discussion and so I'm just gonna read from your book to you and you said the summer after eighth grade I attended the Rhode Island Governor's School for the gifted in art and music
Starting point is 02:02:14 a summer enrichment program for kids who've been nominated by their schools I wasn't sure what to expect on the first night I was captivated by a speech given by one of the leaders. I remember goosebumps rising on my arms as he spoke. This program is a special opportunity, but it's up to you to take advantage of it. You have a choice. You can waste the next couple of months and not accomplish that much, or you can go all in. This is an opportunity
Starting point is 02:02:37 to go deep on a project and do the best work you've ever done, but you have to decide if you want it. I learned what it meant to go all in. The magical connection between intensity of focus and the end result. This is, to me, the punchline, and I love this. If I put my whole heart and soul into a project, I had it in me to create really cool stuff. You talk about the passion and going all in and the advice that you'd have for other people listening to this.
Starting point is 02:03:06 I'm reliving the goosebumps, literally, but physically I'm feeling the tingling of my sensation because that was a critical moment in my life where I understood that it's up to you. You can dittle-dattle through, life and just kind of sleepwalk and then die, or you can live life, you can embrace life, you can have big dreams and go all in and find your passion, which for most people is not going to be business or making money, but whatever it is, that's what it is, and really achieve something
Starting point is 02:03:35 fantastic. And for me, that's a big motivator. That's a perfect place to end. Thank you very much for writing the book. Thanks for taking the time. Brad, I really admire you. I've learned a lot from you. And now I'm very humbled and privileged to call you a friend. I really appreciate it. Thank you very much. I hope you enjoyed this episode. Please remember to subscribe wherever you're listening and leave a review and make sure you listen to my other podcast founders
Starting point is 02:03:56 for almost a decade. I've obsessively read over 400 biographies of history's greatest entrepreneurs searching for ideas that you can use in your work. Most of the guests you hear on this show first found me through founders.

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