I am Charles Schwartz Show - The $50M Exit Playbook Most Founders Don't Know - Chris Van Dusen
Episode Date: January 2, 2026In this thought-provoking episode, Charles sits down with Chris Van Dusen—investor and managing partner at Solyco Capital—to explore how disciplined thinking, long-term vision, and operational foc...us drive enduring business value. Chris unpacks his journey into private investing, sharing how Solyco Capital partners with founders and management teams to scale companies with intention, not hype. From evaluating opportunities beyond surface-level metrics to building businesses that can withstand market cycles, Chris explains what truly separates sustainable growth from short-term wins. He dives into the mindset of patient capital—why alignment, leadership, and execution matter just as much as financial engineering—and how the right partnerships unlock exponential outcomes over time. Together, they examine the realities of modern investing, the importance of capital stewardship, and how operators and investors can work in harmony to build companies that last. The conversation reframes success as more than just exits or returns—it's about creating resilient organizations with strong fundamentals, clear strategy, and values that scale. This isn't just a conversation about capital allocation. It's a blueprint for building durable businesses, making smarter investment decisions, and creating long-term value that outlives market cycles. KEY TAKEAWAYS: -How Chris Van Dusen built his investing philosophy around discipline, patience, and long-term value creation -Why sustainable growth matters more than short-term returns or hype-driven wins -How Solyco Capital partners with operators to scale businesses through alignment and execution -The difference between financial engineering and real operational value Head over to provenpodcast.com to download your exclusive companion guide, designed to guide you step-by-step in implementing the strategies revealed in this episode. KEY POINTS: 01:08 – Inside the mindset of patient capital: Chris explains how his early experiences shaped his long-term approach to investing—while Charles reframes investing as partnership, not prediction. 05:12 – Beyond the numbers: Chris breaks down why metrics alone don't tell the full story—while Charles highlights the importance of leadership, culture, and execution. 09:47 – What makes a great operator-investor partnership: Chris shares how alignment creates scale—while Charles explores why trust and shared vision unlock value. 14:33 – Financial engineering vs. real growth: Chris explains the danger of chasing leverage—while Charles emphasizes building businesses that last. 19:26 – Capital stewardship and responsibility: Chris discusses the role investors play beyond capital—while Charles reflects on accountability and long-term thinking. 24:58 – Scaling through fundamentals: Chris unpacks how strong systems and processes protect companies during downturns—while Charles connects fundamentals to resilience. 30:41 – Navigating market cycles: Chris explains how patient investors prepare for volatility—while Charles reinforces why timing matters less than durability.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the proven podcast where it doesn't matter what you think, only what you can prove.
On this episode, Chris shares he helps founders navigate venture capital, understand what investors
actually want, and turn million-dollar ideas into multi-million dollar exits. This one's
unforgiving, unrelenting, and it's just trying to help. The show starts now.
All right, everybody, welcome back to the show. I'm excited to have Chris with you. Thanks so much for
joining. Thank you so much for having me. I'm really excited to be here.
Absolutely. There's a bunch of people who don't know who you are. So if you could get everybody kind of
caught up, that would be amazing. Absolutely. So Chris Van Dusen, senior partner, Slico Capital.
We're an early stage, growth stage venture firm. Home office is out of Rochester, Michigan. We have offices
in Dallas, Louisville, Miami, as well as I'm out here in California. And we're here at Skull
Kennedy, so thank you guys for doing that. Yeah. So can you tell people a little bit about your
history of what you've done that's allowed you to get to this point? Absolutely. So I grew up in the
Northeast. It wasn't always from this nice sunshine laden place here in California.
I grew up in Connecticut, went to school at the College of William, Virginia,
graduate degree in economics.
I actually played baseball at a fairly high level.
I thought that's what I was going to do.
I know the feeling.
Yeah, unfortunately, Tommy Johns is what was the destiny.
I just couldn't find a strike zone.
That was my problem.
I didn't try him on a fastball, and I kept hitting the guy.
I remember where it was.
So, graduate degree in economics, started in sales, ended up in finance,
moved out to California, the end of 09.
The problem is there was this little thing called a real estate recession that was happening.
I don't know what you're talking about.
a whole much bigger thing, right?
And so when I got here,
a company that came out for went BK,
went bankrupt. So I'm now
this marooned person and
beautiful Southern California.
Little cost of living difference between
Williamsburg, Virginia. Just a little bit.
It was a smitten. It was just a little.
And so I just was this accidental entrepreneur.
It wasn't something I set out to do.
I ended up starting a marketing firm.
Met my wife shortly after. She started a firm.
We ended up merging those back in 2018,
which is fun. And part of the reason
we did is I had the opportunity to start what ended up being the second largest CBD brand in the world
with a few other people. And we sold that in 21. Co-founded liquor distillery, sold that in 21. So a
beauty care brand in 19. It was just kind of this crazy five-year period of my life. But in 2017,
I also met this guy, John Garcia, who founded Slico Capital. And I loved what they were doing. It's
totally different than traditional venture. And so the opportunity to join beginning of 22 in January
as a senior partner.
And so I do now.
Absolutely love it.
So what you guys do there a lot is you help people exit.
You help people in that whole process.
There's a lot of stuff you and are going to go over in this.
That's going to kind of leave people on the dust.
Sure.
So let's get everybody caught up on some terms when we go into this.
We're talking about exits and we're talking about EBITDA.
We're talking about things.
Let's kind of get everyone caught up on some basic ones just so they can understand what we're doing as we go into this.
Absolutely.
So let's actually just look at it as the life cycle of a company.
Right?
So let's say me and you had a great idea.
Maybe we have our own cash.
We're going to start there.
Hopefully we're going to produce something that we say, okay, that's interesting.
Could be the MVP minimum viable product for a tech company for a SaaS business.
Could be a new widget or a new, you know, apparel, whatever it is, right?
We're going to use our own capital traditionally and we're going to try to get something going.
Or we're going to do what we call a friends and family round.
Yes, that's where we go out.
professional panhandlers.
And we go to our friends and family.
But what's funny is it's actually a really important time
because these are the people that love you, trust you,
want to see you succeed.
And so I always say, if you can't get that,
then you should probably question whether or not
that was the best idea, right?
And so friends and family around,
it's also where you start talking about the angel investing, right?
And so usually at that point,
you now have some seed capital,
you're going out and you're trying to do it a little bit more,
maybe try and get it on some shelf space
or you're finishing R&D or you're making your first order.
And then you're going to move into what they call pre-seed or seed rounds.
And that's where you're going out traditionally now to more institutional type capital.
And what I mean by that is venture firms or family office, right, people outside of your network.
And you're now going to bring in capital to grow to that next phase.
Then there's what I call alphabet soup.
So there's A, B, C, A extension, B extension, A2.
Everyone has their own names.
But the reason why I say this is this is all the different kind of funding mechanisms that go along till eventually you get to a size where you're profitable.
You use the word EBTA, right?
You have EBTA, which is earnings before interest, depreciation, taxes, and amortization.
Really means.
And your profit dollars.
Right.
Yeah.
And so as you're on your growth trajectory towards that, as you get up to that level, maybe you're a target for a roll up.
And that would be a private equity term, meaning.
someone, right, is sitting out there going,
if I took 10 of these businesses,
five of these businesses and put them together
and then shored up all of the back office
or allowed for selling contracts to be against all 10,
I'm going to make the business more valuable, right?
From an EBIT up perspective, from a private perspective.
And as things grow, so do their values
on an enterprise level.
Right.
And so maybe you're a target for that.
Maybe you're a target to go public.
because you're that large.
But you just looked at a company that was an idea through funding mechanisms,
through growth to get to where they're either sold or they go public,
or they just continue to be amazing cash flow generating machines.
So there's a lot of things you went over there.
There's a lot of different things that we're going to pull back on.
So there's what is the difference if someone says,
I'm an angel investor versus VC?
What is the difference in that dynamic for most people?
So traditionally it's whether or not you have a firm and you're raising outside capital.
So that's the biggest thing.
So right now, if you have a company and I had money in my bank account and I said, I believe in what you're doing and wrote you a check, that's an angel investment.
Right.
Now, it also is what stage?
Okay.
When you look at it from a venture perspective, I'm a, let's call it syndicator or I'm a sponsor.
So what ends up happening is I go, hey, I really like this company.
We're going to put together a deal, a fund.
some kind of, we'll call it, vehicle that we can go out and go to others receive their capital, right?
As a money manager, now we're going to invest that money into this company.
But we're the ones that hold the keys to being able to make that investment.
So one is, I'd call it binary.
One is saying, I have my own money and I'd like to invest a small amount in these kind of emerging companies.
And the other might be a venture firm that likes the same type of deals.
but is using a vehicle,
meaning using a fund or some kind of structure,
some kind of product,
they're going to raise a bunch of money,
and then that might be one investment amongst many others.
It's interesting to talk about one investment amongst many others
because a lot of people say,
hey, I'm going to come in, I'm going to buy this one company
and say, I'm selling my company.
My first company ever sold was an IT company.
Like, hey, I'm going to sell this one company.
And for me, it was a one-to-one ratio,
which was like, listen, it was sold, it was gone.
It was very rare.
It happened.
It was great.
As I've gotten bigger and as I've learned this, you will purchase five or six of them because you, I think it's called rolling them up.
Yep.
You roll them up into one and this way they're worth more.
The problem is most people when they're sitting here, like, what is the proven path?
What is the way that I go from, hey, I have this fun idea.
I want to get funded.
I want to do all these things.
What are the proven things you can do inside your org?
If you walk through and you go in and say, hey, I want to do this, I want to get to the point of either getting someone to invest in me or getting to the point where I can even say, okay, I've got this.
I want to sell it.
I burnt out, which, of course, never happens to entrepreneurs.
When you're complete, never, never, never at all.
Hey, hour weeks are nice vacations.
So, yeah, hey, going into the situation when you go into a company and say, okay, you're struggling.
This is where you are.
If you want to be more attractive to investors, no matter how they are, there's very specific
things you need to do, be it culture, be it systems, be it whatever it is.
When you've walked in, because you've had a lot of exposure to this, what are some of the
things that when you walk in, like, okay, these are the core five or six things that
you need to do this before we can even talk about getting the next round of funding.
Yeah.
it's really stage dependent.
So if you're an early stage company, right?
So let's say that angel investing or pre-seed or seed, you might be in revenue.
You might not be.
You might hopefully have your R&D done enough to have that thing that we're looking at going,
oh, I see what you're doing.
What's hard is now putting a valuation on that, right?
So there's a bunch of mechanisms you can do, which I'll save everyone from,
to be able to say, okay, you don't have a value today, but we believe in what you're doing.
we still want to invest.
What gives you, sorry, interrupt,
why do you sit there and say it doesn't have a value?
If someone comes in and is like,
hey, I want to sell this, I want to do this.
This is who I am as an organization.
You don't have value.
Because a lot of these people,
they don't understand,
this is a problem with most business owners.
They don't understand that their business
is not their identity.
That's two completely different conversations.
So they'll take it personally.
When you go to someone and say,
you do not have value, what does that mean to you?
Yeah, so let's look at it as two different stages
kind of on that trajectory we talked about earlier.
Yeah.
If you're an early stage company,
you have no sales,
You have no EBITA.
You have an amazing new product, right, that you've put some money into.
I can't value you.
Right. Because I'm valuing assumption.
I'm not valuing guarantees.
Now let's say you have $3 million in sales, right, but you're not profitable.
Gotcha.
Okay, you have sales.
Not profitable.
So now I'm looking and going, okay, what are your sales contracts, right?
And we have this very, very long in-depth due diligence process.
But it's still hard to put a true value on you at this point, right?
Now let's go to the far other side and say,
you're a business doing $50 million in revenue,
$5 million in EBITA, right?
Okay, I can put an enterprise value against you.
Because it's tangible.
Because it's tangible.
And so when you look at this continuum,
the earlier you are, the harder it is to peg value.
So what will end up happening,
and I'll explain one vehicle is what's called a capped safe.
All right.
Okay.
What that means is I'm going to invest in you at no valuation,
but I'm going to give you $100,000.
Right.
usually that safe will have a value in the future.
Let's call it $10 million.
And then traditionally, because I'm doing it now
and taking a lot of execution risk, right?
You haven't sold anything yet.
We don't know if you have product market fit.
We don't know if you have anything.
Then I'm going to get a 20% discount on that round.
Right.
So 10 minus 20%,
$8 million valuation for my $100,000.
Right.
And I think most people don't know that there's multiple rounds.
When you're doing multiple rounds.
There's always multiple rounds.
And how you negotiate those rounds are important.
Because most people think,
hey, I'm going to sell the business.
I mean, don't with it.
I'm just going to sell it.
Not understanding that there's probably going to be more rounds coming.
And if you're the business owner, there's ways to get residual from this for a very long time.
Well, what's interesting, just to kind of riff off that is let's assume we do peg a value on that
company that has no sales and no EBIT and just a product.
Well, you're worth a million dollars and you need $500,000 to do your next thing.
So you're going to give me 50% of your company?
Probably not.
Right.
Right.
So instead, you're saying, I still need the half a million.
in and you have individuals who invest at that level, meaning at that time frame, and would say, okay, I believe you can get there.
So 10 million is the cap like I used before, and I want the discount.
When you're all the way to the other side, now I can say, okay, in your industry, SaaS, advanced manufacturing, name the industry vertical, you trade, meaning your value is based on three, five, ten times your EBITA.
Right.
So that five million dollars in EBITA times call it 10, your business is worth 50 million.
Right.
And they're like, wait, but I'm doing $50 million in sales.
Okay?
You're making $5 million.
Right.
And people don't understand that.
There's a big difference between gross.
And that is a huge difference.
When you talk about verticals, because everyone goes as entrepreneurs because they have this great idea.
They sat down and they said, hey, I've got grandma's cookies and recipe, which is great,
but no one but you and grandma want to eat them.
Go do something else that's going to create because no.
what your real goal is. If your goal is to create freedom, it's a very different conversation
that I want to create groundless cookies. Well, let's brief on that. Okay. Because this idea of I want
to create freedom, and I talk about the entrepreneurial journey. I've had the few exits that I've had,
but I've been around entrepreneurs and, you know, inside of our company, we have 40 different
portfolio companies. So I'm around CEOs, entrepreneurs, people with big dreams all the time.
If you start your entrepreneurial journey thinking I'm going to have work-life balance,
Yeah, no.
You are thinking of it wrong.
100%.
I agree.
You are saying, you are signing up for a 24-7, 365 slog, and only luckiest are successful.
Yes.
I think the best example I've heard of this was you're going to work this much in your life.
Yeah.
That's how much energy.
You can either do it in three years or 30 years.
It's not going to change your amount that you have to work though.
So you've got this much.
You've got to pay that Piper.
Yes.
So it's the conversation of I don't want to have a nine to five.
Okay.
So then you just work five to five to five.
just all the time.
Yeah.
So congratulations,
you don't have a 9 to 5 anymore.
You just have it all the time.
Just all the time.
Just all the time.
What's interesting,
we romanticize this idea
of being an entrepreneur.
And by the way, I love it.
I loved it.
I love it.
Yes, but I don't think people
should be that.
No.
Because there's some people
who have entrepreneurial traits
and they're adorable.
And I like them because I watch our tank.
And I'm like, you're very cute.
Please go away.
Yes.
And then there's the people.
And the easiest way I get the people
to figure this out is you do a word association game.
So if I say cat,
you say dog.
I say house, you say whatever it is.
If I say employee and you spit out paycheck, congratulations, you're an employee.
Yes.
If I say employee or job and you get angry at me uncontrollably and you want to stab me in the face, you might just be an entrepreneur.
Might just be an entrepreneur.
Because it's a different narrative and people don't get that.
People go in and they keep because our society, just like now it's cool to look at Marvel because when I was in high school, it was not cool to read comic books.
Yeah.
It would have been so much cooler.
I was never been cool.
and now it's all of a sudden cool to be an entrepreneur.
I became an entrepreneur because it's who I was.
It just, I'm not, I'm hireable, I'm not employable.
If you're employable, you might not be an entrepreneur.
And I think it's a big differentiation.
I think you're spot on.
I think also just, again, to build on it,
one of the things I see inside of a lot of early growth stage companies is they've either
now gotten their glide path or they're about ready to get it.
And they've been working so hard.
And traditionally it is founder or co-founders led
or those first couple employees
who really bought into the vision.
And as you scale,
what sometimes gets lost is the fact that,
while you are the entrepreneur,
you are the 100% arbiter of the vision and the culture,
but your employees sometimes are employees.
Yes.
And putting your values down, stream on people who don't share that,
is sometimes really tough.
And so it's really understanding at one point
do you get managers
who truly understand
how to manage the people
who are there for work.
Now, great culture
means they're going to overindex
the amount of effort
they're going to put in.
But an employee is an employee
even at startup companies.
And sometimes that is lost.
And I think it's important
as we talk about culture
to understand
you can't push down
to your 300,
300th higher.
Right.
The same,
look at them in the same way
as you did higher number one.
Right.
And I think you can,
you know, you can brute force
your first seven figures,
maybe beginning of eight,
you can brute forth this
as an entrepreneur.
You can just put your head down
and go through walls.
At some point,
when you get past that $10 million mark,
all of a sudden,
like, okay, now I need to start
to look at things.
I mean, look at systems.
I need to look at culture.
I need to look at decentralized command.
I need to change the way I operate.
And for most entrepreneurs,
they're burnt out at that point.
they're absolutely fried.
And that's from my experience,
that's when they go hunting
for people like you.
And they go, okay,
give me money,
my stuff is great.
We're like,
that's adorable.
What are your numbers look like?
And you're like,
no, no, no,
but it's great.
It's really special and it's shiny.
You're like,
shut up,
give me your numbers.
So I think as they go through that,
there's a couple things where
when you talk about verticals earlier,
what are the verticals that you've seen
that not only have succeeded the most,
but are the easiest to get funding for.
Please don't say crypto.
I might hit you with a mic.
I will not say crypto.
Thank you.
No.
No,
No crypto projects.
We actually aren't invest in that.
You know, today right now,
anything in AI is really hot.
Yeah.
But if you kind of take a step back,
really solidly thought out businesses.
And there's a great GP at Benchmark Capital.
I've drawn a blank on his name,
and I really apologize.
So if he hears this,
I apologize for not calling you out.
Truly understanding what you're trying to do.
There's an old thing we talked about in marketing,
right?
I used to have a marketing firm,
which was,
everyone wanted to sell speeds and feeds back in marketing.
So think the old school computers.
Think this RAM, this hard drive, this, whatever it was,
but we called it speed and feeds, all your product benefits.
But Apple comes out and just tells you how you feel when you use it.
Identity.
That change is fundamentally very interesting.
And there's a piece where I think every founder, every co-founder,
needs to have a little PT Barnum,
now the good part of it, the showman, not the bad part,
but be able to weave a yarn,
be able to tell a story and be able to say
this is what's in it for you,
because at the end of the day,
the speeds and feeds won't get you so far.
It doesn't mean that they're not important,
but it's truly being able to tell that story.
Yeah.
I think it's the idea that people don't buy product and services.
They never have.
They buy stories, identities, and ways out of painting.
And, you know, you understood this.
You own a marketing company.
You and the missile had marketing companies agencies.
So as you're going through those and those verticals,
I still think it's the idea that if it works,
and it's simple and it's needed,
I've always seen funding to those who happen fast.
If it's something that's fluff,
it's your grandma's recipe,
you might have a bad day.
So you go through and really where that GP benchmark told the story
is sell me the wind, don't sell me the sail?
Right.
Don't sell me the beam if you're selling me a sailboat, right?
Because even crappy boats catch flight,
if the wind's good enough.
So what are you doing in a certain market
that you either have an unfair knowledge set in
or experience?
or are you innovating in a current market
or are you building a new one?
And then if it's a new one,
why is that one going to exist meaningfully?
Right.
What kind of consumer data
have you actually mind
to know this is going to work?
Do you have commitments already
from big companies, right?
Like, do you understand the incumbents?
Because one mistake that entrepreneurs make a lot
is they say,
I have designed something that works
for everyone, everywhere, anytime, always.
And you're going, well, maybe, but probably not.
Right.
So we talk about it again in the little stories of I'd rather you an inch wide and a mile deep than the other way.
Exactly.
I was going to inch wide mile deep.
And really what it is is you could have the greatest, and I'll just use CRM software that starts in health care and you're killing it.
You're like, I'm going to insurance.
And you're like, yeah, but do you know that well enough?
And maybe you do.
Yeah.
But then I'm also going to mortgage and I'm also going over here.
And you just keep saying I can tackle it.
And what you don't know is what are the incumbents?
How long are the contracts?
right? Is this a long sales cycle? Who owns it and why? And that kind of education chasm,
you can't be an expert at everything all at once. Or maybe you can, if we were back in the old school
days where you just get a couple hundred million dollars dropped on you pre-revenue.
Kidding.
Wasn't that a good idea?
Yeah. And then you're throwing FTEs at problems. And as we go back a little bit in one of your
questions, the biggest thing I see is a use of funds strategy that makes sense. So when you're saying,
I want to raise a million dollars.
Right.
What are you doing with it?
If it's a ton of what we call OPEX operating expenses,
meaning hiring people,
then I'm going, have you thought through your systems well enough?
And especially with the, I don't want to say the advent of AI,
it's been around for quite a while,
but consumer available AI,
right?
Sometimes it's not, I need more bodies.
Sometimes it's, I have bad systems.
Yes.
And if you think about that from just a cash flow management perspective,
reworking your system
traditionally is to be less expensive
than hiring two new people.
Yes.
Right?
And so a lot of it is,
what are you doing with the use of funds?
Like, is this funding R&D?
Is this funding a new market?
And you're now presenting
why that market's going to be a game changer.
So really during that process,
I'm evaluating,
what are you doing with the money
if I do give it to you?
So how do you,
when we talk about systems,
which argues my favorite word in business,
because I wrote something called systems
that you free.
It's a simplest way to do it.
If you can't fire yourself out, you know, we talk about this all the time, go into a room, here's a black marker, walk me through acquisition to fulfillment.
Now here's a red marker.
Circle where you're involved.
The minute that marker touches, you have failed because you haven't built a prison, you haven't built a business.
That's just, it is what it is.
People hear about systems all the time.
You go in and you're professional at evaluating systems so you can go back to your investors and say, hey, this is good, this is a good fish.
This is not a good fish.
When you look at that, what are some of the systems that you see that say, okay, yeah, that I want that.
What are some of the ones that you see the ROI on?
So when we look at, say, consumer-based businesses,
I'm looking at have you created a flywheel.
Okay.
Walk me through that.
Yeah.
So what ends up happening in businesses is when you're acquiring a customer,
there's a fixed cost traditionally.
And so you acquire them once.
They're now in your system.
What now?
If you've been thought that through,
I think that's a big liability.
it's a big kind of red flag.
I don't care whether or not you're running
Facebook ads or you're doing direct mail
or whatever your marketing de jour is to acquire your customer.
The best, most efficient way
acquiring new customers is through that
existing customer. And so
most people look at acquisition. They don't look at
retention and kind of
organic referral-based
acquisition. And so I think
understanding that, that's a big red flag for me.
But if you have that dialed and you can show me
how the flywheel is working and you can show me
going back to old growth hacking back
right in the in the in the in the 2015 to 19 range it's not 2015 right now i'm very confused i know
confused if you went back there and said what is that one or two things right that people can't live
without with your product service whatever it is honing in on those and making that the core uvP or
unique value proposition and then figuring out how to get other people to parrot out what that uvP is
if you can do that well that's a great business
Can you give me a couple examples or even one or two that of ones that you've seen like,
hey, wow, these were really good.
Yeah.
So I'll call it the most famous one, right, as people in growth talk about.
And this is what my agency did back in the way.
Talk about it often.
Dropbox.
Guy the name of Sean Ellis here actually lives in town.
What they figured out was people wanted storage.
And back in the 2010 range, digital storage, what was that?
Like, my files go there?
like on the line.
Yeah, like where, huh?
People don't understand cloud in them.
No.
Yeah.
And so they just float there, like they're above me right now?
Anyway, sorry.
It was okay.
I used to own MSP.
So there's a lot of that I was like, okay, no, no, no.
Don't feed it water.
It's not thirsty.
What are you doing?
Yeah.
But once they got a taste of their, I think it was two gigs at the time, right, or
whatever it was.
I think they got up to five at some point.
Yeah, but you could get 100 gigs or, sorry, 100 megabytes by just referring someone.
And what ended up happening is once you had all your photos in there now,
you needed more.
You needed more.
And you were like, well, I could buy it.
Who wants to do that?
And I think actually the time you couldn't even buy it.
I don't think they had the model yet where you could actually.
In the beginning, they didn't.
No.
It was really, it was Dropbox.
You drop it and it went away.
I don't think they opened up the.
The paid version.
Yeah, they didn't have the online yet.
And so the only way to get more storage is to get more people.
Right.
So I remember just iron off emails because I was like, this is the best thing ever.
Well, everyone did that.
And if you think about, all they said was kind of, and I figured their marketing line was like, your stuff anywhere.
If it wasn't, that's a pretty good one.
But the idea was, that's what it was.
And at the end of the day, people were like, yeah, my stuff anywhere, but I have more stuff than you're allowing me to store in here.
How am I getting more?
Oh, hey, I got to tell more people.
I'll tell more people because I'm going to get more storage.
That flywheel just kept going and they exploded because they weren't trying to say, we can have your documents.
We can have you.
We don't care what you house in there.
that's you.
This is your stuff.
So do you have one that's non-tech related?
Because I think there's a lot of people when they look at this and they're trying to build flywheels in their environments.
Tech's relatively easy.
Again, I'm spoiled by this.
I have a biased because I have a tech background.
For me, tech is one of the easiest things to scale.
It's not hard.
I don't have to go out and buy warehouses for most of what I have to do.
The costs going in, the hard costs are not that bad for me.
For not, when you're going into these and you're evaluating them, what are some of the ones that you have seen that are,
kind of easier to or do or have worked.
Do you have another example?
Yes.
You know, we've got a company now in the CBG space.
I've sold a CBG company.
It is very tough to acquire customers
because traditionally they're very much a commodity, right?
And why I'm saying that is I don't care if it's toothpaste
or a protein drink or for me it was CBD back in the day, right?
There are a ton of competitors.
Yeah, how would you different?
create the loyalty, yeah, because they want to try the newest and latest and greatest thing.
How would you create that loyalty?
So what we did was kind of twofold.
One, we made it a movement, not just a product.
And so we were at the time less expensive.
So we were democratizing the ability to have this amazing product where others were not.
That was one.
Two, we started to truly understand who our consumer was.
And everyone was chasing the younger millennial, cool, hip demographic.
Not that who our demographic wasn't hip and cool, just,
that millennial demographic was what everyone wanted on the coast
because that's where the majority of the sales were.
What we realized was the actual people who have a use case for this,
typically 45 plus,
and they may live on the coast,
but if you live on the coast,
you also have access to a ton of education around,
I'll call it full strength, cannabis, right?
We were hemp-derived CBD,
so we could ship all 50 states to all that.
What we ended up finding was our most loyal and best customer
who would subscribe and save and tell us,
people, we're in the middle of America.
And who they listened to, or this isn't a political comment, but Sean Hannity and Rush Limbaugh
and those influencers of the day.
So as we had them read more, more people would get comfortable with it.
That was their influencer.
It wasn't the people on Instagram saying you should try this, right?
And what we found was that flywheel started because we would invest in that acquisition
and they would stay with us longer, be more loyal than the millennials who, if you
you look at that cohort as an actual consumer, they are not loyal traditionally, unless there's a
movement behind it. So we had that, unless there's a movement. So think Tom's shoes, for example,
right? Absolutely. But outside of that, it became very much trial. They want to try local.
They want to try regional. They want to try the hip new brand. They want to try this. And that's a very
hard fly wheel of it. It breaks it automatically. Yeah. And so that was a really good way of
understanding, okay, who is our customer? Where are they? And how do we get them? How do we keep them?
not only loyal, but enjoying the product.
I think it goes back to the idea of where's a watering hole and what language are they using.
Like if I was going to create a dating website for 25-year-old women, it would have very specific
conversations about spontaneity and adventurous and travel.
If I was going to create one for 35-year-old women, it would talk about stability and family and, you know,
all of that.
It's totally different things.
So if you don't know your audience's language, you don't know the watering hole that they're going to,
in your case, it was those two gentlemen, you have to, you really have to know that.
So when you're going in and you're analyzing these deals,
and you're looking at their systems
and you're looking at their flywheels.
What are the other things
that you're looking at?
Well, so we took really a marketing lens, right?
So now it's a distribution lens, right?
Is this something that can be sold online?
How is it going to be sold online?
Right, I realize that's still backed in marketing,
but that's really a distribution.
It's a sales channel.
Then I'm looking and going, okay,
who's selling competitive products today?
Right?
What are your inroads there?
Or do you not have any, right?
Because there's, I call it the old,
the old biggest secret
in a lot of products is traditionally there are things already baked.
The success stories of new up-incomeers are there 100%.
But like in CPG, a lot of times you see this brand comes out of nowhere.
It's because they're seated by one of the larger companies already.
And traditionally, we'll get an unfair share of shelf time and other things because of it.
And so how are you going to compete against the incumbents, right?
Back when I had my distillery, you'd start doing success.
successful in a market, and then the big guys would be like, oh, no.
No, thank you.
We're going to run a sale on everything and just drown you out.
Happens more than you would know.
Correct.
Right?
So, like, how are you what I'll call swap proof at that point, right?
It happens.
It absolutely happens.
To anything.
Any industry I've ever been in, that SWAT comes in.
And I don't know if there's a way, and maybe you know of one.
I don't know the way to avoid that.
When it comes in on that high of a level, like when I sold my IT company,
we were crushing it.
And then we were, we were five to eight million dollars.
We were doing okay.
We were doing okay.
And then someone else came in there, $150 million.
Like, guess what you owe now?
I'm like, shit.
I'm not going to purport that I have all this data that shows this specifically.
But I would contend that a lot of companies that are Uber successful, if you were looking at their cap table, they have industry players involved who help.
Yes.
I'll leave it there.
Number two.
Very politically correct.
Well, done.
Yes.
Number two, we used to call it in the liquor industry, like, you just need to get to AAA.
way, right? You need to climb your way up the minor league ranks enough where you are getting
swatted enough that you're starting to become a nuisance. Right. And as a nuisance is when you get
bogged. Yes. And that was the strategy that I used to exit out. I just need to annoy them long enough
and they're just going to either, they're either going to destroy me, which is a little hard to do
or they're just going to buy me out because it's easier. Yeah. And the second company I sold literally
was that they're walking like, you're annoyed. I'm like, okay. They're like, we're just going to buy you.
I'm like, okay. And that's how the deal completely happened.
And I think it's a question I wanted to bring to you.
There's a lot of people who are like, okay, I might not be an entrepreneur, but I have this experience.
I want to go buy something.
I want to go into it.
And please not tell me to go business by sell.
Do you ever recommend that path?
A straight buy.
A straight by.
Or if you don't have an experience as an entrepreneur, or do you just say, hey, I'm going to invest in a fund.
I'm going to find someone like what you guys do.
I'm just going to give you guys a bunch of money and then I'm going to go study shore erosion
on a beach because watch it go in and out versus actually going in and doing it because
it's a very different skill set.
being an employee versus an entrepreneur, as you said earlier.
Yeah, I think it's a yes and, right?
So what I mean by that is you can take, and I'm not a financial planner, but you can say,
oh, I like these deals.
I want to, if I'm a credit investor, I want to invest in them.
But let's say you're the COO or CEO, right, of an established company, lifestyle business,
it's going great.
And you're like, you know, I've worked here for five years.
I've helped make the owners a ton of money.
I know everything that happens in this business, right?
And you have a non-compete that expires or you don't have one.
Hopefully for you, you don't.
Or it's not enforceable in your state.
And you go, look, there's three of our competitors who alone aren't very good.
But if I could roll them up to use that term before, right, I can now compete against this company.
Right.
I'd say that might be unfair baseball, the fact that, you know, you have all this embedded trade secrets.
But the idea would be at that point, you've already shown you can run the company.
Now you're just balancing the debt that you took to buy the company and you're running it the same way and rolling it up and building teams and doing everything you did.
But you actually are at that level of proven operator.
And so I'd say that's a safer way to go if you wanted to go from a career CEO to saying, now I want to be an entrepreneur.
You're still a CEO.
And now you have a baked business.
I think where individuals get in trouble is they go, I'm a whatever level in the business, and I know more.
Right.
So I'm going to go.
I'm going to go start.
Right.
And I think the problem is you don't know what you don't know.
Correct.
Right.
I look at my own kind of trajectory and career.
And if I already go back in time, a couple of the businesses that I started, if I had the knowledge that I have right now, I would have never started.
Your bank account will look a lot different.
Yeah.
And so there's this level of like, okay, I'm glad I did.
It brings in this amazing experience in what I'll call battle scars to as I'm helping other entrepreneurs today
and what I'm evaluating when I'm looking at investing.
But it's hard.
And I don't think that's fully appreciated as we were talking about earlier.
So you say, oh, I can do that better or I have an idea for optimizing it.
Well, that's great.
Optimizing.
We don't have any customers.
It's real easy.
Yes.
And so now you've got to sit with a blank piece of paper,
and I'm not even saying I'm ready to business plan,
say, how am I going to start this?
How am I going to build it?
What do I need to do?
And I think that the best engineers,
whether or not it's coding in tech
or actually building a physical product,
can do those really well.
But as a founder, now is your responsibility
to do every single thing else.
Yes.
From filing your LLCs to doing your taxes,
to remember we don't have all the money yet right marketing
doing the marketing fulfillment customer service and I think there's
is a conversation I heard read on sushi chefs are great but don't make your sushi
chef be your plumber yes totally different things
you might have built a wonderful restaurant don't go try and be a plumber
stay in your lane inch wide mile deep and what's interesting is now you go okay well
many co-founders well how many co-founders are going to have five six and every
disability no yeah and then what are you going to yeah and then does everyone share
in the vision.
Yes.
Because I would contend that a lot of companies
don't hit their maximum success
or just quite frankly fail
because of dissent between the co-founders.
And also distent lower down the chain.
If you're in a situation where, again,
you can't go to anyone in your office
and say, what is your vision?
If they don't spit out within reason,
it's kind of the same thing,
you've got problems.
100%.
And that's where the next thing I was going to talk about
where there are companies
that come to organizations like yours.
And they come in this, okay, I want to do this.
I want to sell.
I'm done.
I'm exit.
I'm exhausted.
And because of your guys' expertise, you'll come in say, okay, great, that's nice.
But if you can hold your breath a little bit longer, we can do this, this and this instead
of walking away with $5 million, you're going to walk away with $50.
Yeah.
When that happens, because that's a different ballgame than most people are used to.
Most people are like, okay, I'm going to systematize this.
I'm going to get to a certain level and then I'm going to exit.
And a lot of the ones that you've seen and I'm blessed enough to see, we're like,
No.
You just did the appetizer.
Just hold on.
We can help you get to this next one and then have a massive multiplier.
What are the things that you've gone through as you go through and someone comes to you in that situation?
Like, hey, you know, I got this for my father.
I got it from my grandfather.
I got it from my grandmother.
I got it my mother, whatever it is.
I built this org, this org.
And I think I can get goofy numbers.
$5 million for it, which is adorable.
And you guys come and say, that's cute.
I'm pretty sure we can get you 50 in two years.
When someone comes into that, first off, for most of the most of you,
people, they don't understand that.
When you come into that situation, what are the things that you do and you look at and you help them kind of step by step to elevate into that environment?
Yeah.
So there's certainly a few things.
One is, and I like saying this just from the get, right, pigs get fat, always get slaughtered.
So if you have an operator that in your example is saying, white flag, I need out, what I'm doing first?
Yeah.
Right?
Which is, all right, we're going to figure out how you take a little break.
And we're going to get some proven operators in there to pressure test whether or not we can get it there over the next two years.
Right.
So that, because you've already told me you can't.
Right.
That's really important.
That's not a bad person.
No.
You've got your here won't get you there.
It's not that.
It's a Tarzan theory.
If I go from vine to vine, I have to let go of one of them to keep the momentum.
But if I hold on to what, it's over.
Yeah.
So there's a lot of time with founders.
And I've run into that situation.
And I was like, I'm out.
I'm empty.
My sponge is full.
I'm out.
Having the ability to step away and search.
have that go off and do something else is important.
Mm-hmm.
So what the next thing we look at is to go, okay, how realistic is it, right?
And why I say that is, if we just wanted to sell that $5 million business today,
I don't care who you are, that is six plus months.
And by the way, that's not shoring up anything yet.
Right.
That's just the process takes that long.
It does.
And that's with a buyer at the table, right, to do diligence, to do everything.
So you're going, okay, I have all the regular investment banking things I have to,
you have to build a virtual data room.
I have to, right, get everything optimized in the company if I haven't already.
But that optimization could change that $5 million in EBIT a company.
Hey, well, all be ready now.
Right.
We've done it.
Now, what does that mean?
This is where you hear all of the bad terms for people in venture and private equity
because a couple minutes ago we talked about throwing FTEs at problems.
And traditionally most businesses have done that.
Yes.
Therefore, if I'm looking and saying, we want to maximize,
the amount of money you get for this business,
then we are scrutinizing everything within the business today,
which also means human capital.
Yes.
And if that's the biggest line on your P&L, right,
is the amount of people, my question would always be,
is that needed or not?
I don't know the answer.
It could be.
Right.
And I also understand in the culture because, you know,
I, when I sold mine, my, I paid more per tech
than anyone else in the industry.
Because I knew my clients would be exceptionally happy
and the LTV just skyrocket.
We never had a client leave.
So when someone came in,
they're like, I want to buy your org,
your salary's too high.
I'm like,
nope, you're done.
You get to go away now.
It's over.
So you go through there and you figure out those things.
When you have an owner who is completely fried
and they're exhausted,
which I love the people think that they're not going to get there.
You guys are cute.
When that person gets there,
is their way to continue to scale
and have them involved,
or do you just kind of say, hey, guys, go to Tahiti,
I'll talk to you in six months.
It is fully dependent on the human.
All right.
They can be a great asset and knowledge transfer partner.
Sometimes they can be an absolute cancer
within the organization because they're not in control.
And that is human dependent.
Just to be transparent about it.
You'd love to have them there.
They have this unbelievable knowledge set
from being there from the beginning
or being second generation.
They're there as a kid.
They've watched how they're dead to it.
there's certain parts of the culture that the connections they have all of it. Absolutely. And that is also a thing that a lot of people in private equity don't think about is we buy this thing. But what you didn't realize is every deal inside of that company for the past 70 years was done in a handshake from family to family. And the kid, you know, the new CEO is the second generation. And oh yeah, same with the client side. Right. And the minute you remove that, you remove all of the. So how do you prevent that? How do you?
when you're walking in and looking at deals,
because I authentically don't know this answer,
when you go to deals and you have, you know,
Billy grew up with Bubba their entire lives
and Bubba Sr. grew up with Billy Senior
and you had all that.
How do you vet that out?
Ask a lot of questions.
God bless your job, dude.
Yeah.
Just not doing that.
Well, no, I mean, so we'll, like,
if you're looking at a standard kind of process, right,
whether or not it's through an investment bank.
And we typically bring it,
we do some investment bank,
but we'll bring in investment bankers as well, right?
because we're generalists, as I mentioned, right?
We invest in all different industries.
But that also means we're not sitting there as a specialized investment bank.
So if you're selling a consumer product, you're going to bring in the best investment
bankers, by the way, of all the connections on the other side, right, to help you sell that
business or roll-ups or do whatever you're doing.
But that's where you're going to go and say, okay, I'm going to look at what liabilities
there could be inside of the business.
And so you're going to get a list of their top customers.
your list of all their customers, really, right?
And then you look at is there customer concentration issues?
Right.
Meaning you have 20 large customers that make up 80%, but really two of them are the majority of that 80%.
You go, okay, that's interesting.
Because if it's Bubba and the other guy and they leave, you've just totally destroyed the company.
So that's the first one, you know, customer concentration rest.
Then you're going to actually call them.
Right.
And what questions do you ask them?
Again, depends on.
Right.
But a lot of it is, you know,
know, how is this, like, what does the relationship look like?
Right.
How long have you guys have been in business?
What are your, right, intentions moving forward?
A lot of it's based on, before we ever asked those questions, how are the contracts written, right?
Is this a multi-year?
Is this expiring in six months that I'm probably going to negate it from value, right?
Like, you're looking at a whole bunch of different things.
And this is also what your investment bank's going to do for you as well.
Well, I think this is why people, and not to step on anybody's toes, I think they choose investment
the branch is incorrectly. They choose them by geographic location versus the talent that's in them.
Because I authentically don't care if it's the investment bank down the street. I want
of the people that are in, they're going to vet it out, that they're going to have the experience.
And I would prefer, and this is just me, someone who isn't local to me. I want to have someone
who's coming in and has experience and are battle-hardened. This is conversations I had for a long time.
There's that you could have a Harvard taught doctor or you could have a corpsman that served
downrange. That individual went downrange is going to give me a much better result than
a Harvard doctor who just hasn't done it.
So just because they were in the club,
I want someone with fresh eyes to be able to detach.
Yeah, and you know, I think I'm going to talk in two ways with investment bankers, right?
They're either going to be happy with what I say or they're going to,
I'm going to get some nice phone calls.
Either way, you get what you pay for.
Yes.
And I think that entrepreneurs sometimes don't understand how to integrate the correct service
providers to your point into what they're doing, whether that's an M&A
attorney, an investment banker, whatever it is, you get what you pay for. So if you're saying,
look, this investment banker's only charged me X to sell my company versus Y, but you get the one
that's very deep incumbent in the space, knows all the players, you're probably going to have a
better shot there, but they might be twice as expensive. Now, I'd also say if you have,
if you stand to make a large gain on this transaction, make the transaction happen over here,
don't go cheap because you, there's certain things.
that you can get kind of run afoul on.
I think it, I think it goes back to what you said earlier.
When you're an entrepreneur, you have to do everything.
And as entrepreneurs, even as a successful one, I had no idea about how to sell.
I had no idea about investment beggars.
So when I had investment come to me, I was like, huh, huh, I just walk out the room because
I was just overwhelmed because I didn't know what I didn't know.
And so being able to sit down and find someone you trust where again, I think that trust
factor is more important than a location factor and making sure they have their experience.
Well, and that's where you know, going back to someone like us,
If we're going to invest earlier, it's called seed through that B round C, A, B, even the C, a lot of seed C in that round. Part of my role on your board is to introduce you to the best investment bankers. Because it's my job, if I'm really to look at it, to understand where deal flow is coming from, who else is in the space, why we're choosing you, who could actually buy you downstream? Like, what's your exit strategy and when? Therefore, wherever I made, before I made that investment, I've started to contemplate.
this. Where you fit today, where you could go, who would eventually be your acquirer, right? I mean,
unless you're going to build something that you're endeavoring to take public because you can get
to that size and scale. But if you're building something that maybe is a couple hundred million
dollars in revenue and profitable, probably not taking that public, especially in today's market,
but then who's your strategic, right? Is it going to be a roll up? Is there going to be some kind of,
you know, strategic that just comes in and acquires you as a bolt on, right? Like, where do you end up? And then
it's my job to as we're helping you fundraise and why I say that helping you is we make make the lead or do the lead but there's going to be other investors so now I'm going okay who else is strategic who has other investments in the space and other investment bank so you're starting to weave this web of where you want to guide them to where they need to go to eventually get bought because the end of the day my job is to return money right in the form of a return right to our investors right
and do the best for our founders.
And that is not a seesaw.
That is everyone is aligned.
And so I'm starting to make introductions to investment banks and great M&A attorneys,
good corporate attorneys, great CPAs who are entrepreneurial and have great connections today.
When you're worth $5 million.
Right.
And you're going to sell it at $50 to $100.
And so I want to make sure that they're there guiding you along the way with the best.
When you guide them, what are the questions you start them out?
If they're starting into this and they're like, crap,
There's a ton I don't know about this, which at this point, however long we've been going at this, I'm sure a bunch of them are like, oh, crap.
Yeah.
There's a whole different world here.
I'm like, mm-hmm.
What are some of the questions right off the bat you asked them?
You're like, hey, make sure you have this stuff answered before you call me, which you can call me as much as you want.
It's adorable.
We'll just put yourself one up.
What are some of the questions that you wish that they were like, hey, just get this locked in.
Get this so it's sitting down and you know it to your core.
So, again, I'm ripping off someone else.
Culture, vision.
capital raising are the three main focuses of a founder.
It doesn't mean that you aren't in there, right,
doing the wrenches and doing the coding.
But ultimately, this is your company.
You need to own that.
Which means you should be out telling the world about what you're doing.
And in the process, you're going to meet a ton.
Yes.
And a ton of people are going to promise you the world and underdeliver.
I'm there to help you sift through what's possible and what's good
and what's bad if I'm on your board.
If it becomes more pragmatic about fundraising, early stage,
actually have put together why you exist,
why I should care, what the opportunity is,
don't just sit there with a 48-page deck
showing me every speed and feed.
And I come back to that because I have sat through so many of those.
I'm so sorry.
It's okay.
And so there's this level of like,
if you truly understand what your company is doing,
that can be a very short deck.
If you see some of the best decks for the most amount of money ever raised
for, you know, Silicon Valley traditional startups,
They're like nine, ten pages long.
The Sequoia decks.
Exactly.
You look at those and you go, but that answered everything I needed.
That's all that should be there.
So when someone goes, okay, I get that.
I get where I'm going here.
I know what I have to do for me, the business owner,
because that's my job on this side.
It was me, the business owner.
I know what I have to do.
What should I be looking for on your side of the table?
What are the questions I should be at?
Let's say, for some reason,
you guys eaten by a purple dragon and you disappear.
What are the questions they should be asking firms like yours?
So there is money
And there is smart money
And they are very different
So let's say I only invested in health tech
If you're coming to me
With your apparel company
Why am I smart money?
I'm just money
Right
And so one of the biggest pieces of
Of advice I would say
Actually just opinion
Because advice you have to actually own
This is the thing I learned in EO years ago
You don't give advice
because you have to own that advice, right?
No, thank you.
My opinion would be truly understand
when you're sitting across the table,
like what I invest in.
You can find this, really available.
You can see what boards I'm on.
You can see which deals I originated at the firm.
I like, you know, last one was AI.
I've done CPG.
I have a prop tech, right?
Like, there's certain things I like.
There are certain things in biotech.
I have no idea.
I have other partners.
And that's their job.
That's their job.
Understand how to, like,
if we get introed, say,
I know you don't, but I would love for you to see, and maybe if it sounds interesting, bring a joy in.
Because now that means you've actually learned enough about my firm to say, done the homework.
Yeah.
If not, then I'm just a piece of meat with a wallet.
Right.
And that's a little different.
It is.
And I think knowing the person's character is vitally important.
And one of the things we were talking about before we recorded, it's the type of character you have and what you do and the people you connect with.
And I'm going to be selfish here because it's my podcast and I can do whatever on.
going in, and one of the reasons I came out to Skull Candy and did this with you is because some of the stuff you do behind, you know, one of the things is you just, you mentioned you just did this event. And you get a bunch of CEOs that come together. And you're helping out a very specific group of the population to reintegrate back in. I think that conversation, I'd love to share what that is because that for me tells the type of person you are, versus why I got on a plane this morning at 0.0.00 to do this was because of that. That was the reason I came here.
So I think when you're researching, not only are you researching businesses on your job, on our side where we're business owners researching the other way as well.
So if you could tell a little bit of what I'm trying to be as vague as possible with, because I don't want to steal on your interview with them.
Yeah, no worries.
So how I met John Garcia back in 2017.
I said earlier in the podcast, I'd met him, right?
I met him in this group called Alde, R like the tree.
It's all around generational leadership, kind of living your legacy today.
There's this great book by David Brooks, the political commentator.
It's called A Road to Character.
I know the book.
I don't know the author.
Yeah, yeah.
The simple question is, which is more important to you, your professional CV are what people say about you when you die?
Right.
And everyone goes, well, what people say about when I die?
And I go, well, what are you doing about that today?
And I go, shit.
Yes.
Right, like that's literally, I can give you 30 conversations like that.
Right.
So what this group does is it puts about 200 of us across the country and, you know, in major markets, LA, Orange County, San Diego, Dallas, right, Miami, D.C., Nashville.
And we get together and we have those conversations.
And one part of it is, well, called Brain Candy, listening to amazing humans tell stories.
And the other part of it is impact.
And one of our initiatives is to work with Tier 1 Special Forces.
And you go, what does that mean, right?
On the military, there's a thing called a skill bridge.
And so traditionally for the last four, six months of their time in the military, they will go off and they will work in the civilian sector in a company.
And so that's what I call one to one, meaning maybe they come here to Skull Candy.
And they're an unpaid intern for four to six months, learning what it means to be out.
And they've been in for 15 years or in for 20 years.
It's a totally different world.
And they're trying to figure out if they want to work here and Skull Candy.
Sorry, I'm not calling you out, Skull, can I just saying?
We want us to figure out, well, is there a job for them?
Do they have a skill set?
Right?
It's a skill bridge program.
When you look at these tier one individuals, they already have amazing skills.
Or they wouldn't be doing what they're doing.
There's some of the most cerebral and thoughtful and certainly have leadership and team building and soft skills galore.
Everything we want to hire.
But on a resume, it might say Pier 1 imports, J-Soc or Applebee's SEAL Team 6.
Yes.
Right?
Like, how is that running through an HR portal?
It's not.
And so a lot of them have these amazing skills that we'd all want to hire in our company,
but no way to actually access that.
And so what we built was kind of this really interesting skill bridge
that they skill bridge inside of the group called Alder.
So now they have access to 200 CEOs because it's really interesting.
I've had so many conversations with these operators, these individuals,
and they say, I'll go do the mission I'm tasked to do.
and I'm not scared, I'm not worried,
I go, I know what I need to do.
But you asked me to sit down in front of you, Chris,
I'm scared to death.
Absolutely.
And that is an interesting reframing of,
oh, wait, they want to get reps.
Yes.
And reps means, just like if they were going to do mission
and go to rehearsal.
That's how they trained.
They've learned it.
Reps, they get to meet 200 CEOs,
ask questions about what we do,
and start saying, oh, that's interesting.
So instead of going to one company
and the company doesn't hire them
and they're back to square one,
there's no obligation to hire out of this skill bridge.
You get to meet 200 and learn what's possible.
Right.
And if we really think about it,
I don't know about you,
but my entire career has been based on something
my dad told me when I was a kid,
which was your network is your net worth.
Yes, it's your leverage.
These individuals may have great networks,
but probably not in the things
that they're going to be doing now.
We talked about before.
When you go and you're looking for that banker,
when you're looking for the firm that does this,
hey, you're great in medical.
but you know didly poop about plumbing or whatever it is.
So now they have 200 new CEOs in their network.
Their chances statistically of finding something they want to do as they transition out is much higher.
Also, we've had the opportunity for the 200 of us who don't hang out with these individuals all the time to learn how they could be a valuable asset in our companies.
And whether or not it's our 40 portfolio companies at Sleco, our company itself, or,
my network outside of the older community
where I can go, you know, Joe, you'd be great meeting
Stan over there, right? And helping make those
connections happen. And so we just got back from Montana. We launched
the program. Absolute success. Raise some great capital. We have
four individuals who will kind of come sequentially in line
next and the program is kicking off. We're going to be more excited. We just
we'll celebrate July having our first fellow go through the program.
Awesome. So for me, the reason I
that was very tactical because what you're doing
and the way you approach things are tactical.
So that example of going through and saying,
hey, we're going to go through this.
This is why we do it.
This is a result we're going to get is everything I've known about you
since I've known you is this is how you approach things
and this is how your firm approaches things
and this is how you delivered information.
Right on?
There's a ton of stuff we went over.
And there's a ton more that people are going to want to get a hold of it
because there's a bunch of people who sat down and said,
I don't know what that word me, but that was FTE.
So there's a bunch of people just lost
and they're just overwhelmed at this point.
If someone wants to track you down,
and they want to find out more information.
How do they do that?
Easiest way?
LinkedIn.
Chris M. as in Michael Van Dusen,
not the producer of scandal,
not the children's illustrator,
the other one.
Right.
That's me.
My email, quite simple.
C, as in Chris Van Dusen at slycocapital.com.
And then also Instagram,
which I'm fairly active,
is Chris M. Van Dusen,
same as LinkedIn.
Make it easy.
Perfect.
And I really appreciate you.
Thanks so much.
Thank you very much.
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