Leap Academy with Ilana Golan - Tom Bilyeu: How I Proved Everyone Wrong and Built a Billion-Dollar Brand
Episode Date: December 17, 2024Tom Bilyeu’s journey is a powerful story of transformation, from self-doubt to self-mastery. His early years were shaped by fear of failure, a lack of direction, and doubts from those around him. Af...ter struggling to break into the film industry, he joined a startup with the goal of getting rich, but found himself unhappy and in a strained marriage. Taking a leap of faith, Tom walked away from millions to pursue something more meaningful. This gave rise to Quest Nutrition, a billion-dollar company creating nutritious, great-tasting products. Yet, for Tom, wealth was never the endgame. He launched Impact Theory, a media company designed to impact lives positively. In this episode, Tom shares with Ilana the key moments that shaped his career, the philosophies that drive him, and how he defines true success. Tom Bilyeu is a billion-dollar entrepreneur, motivational speaker, co-founder of Quest Nutrition, and founder of Impact Theory. Through his content, he inspires millions by sharing tips on overcoming self-doubt, developing the right mindset, and building resilience for success. In this episode, Ilana and Tom will discuss: (00:00) Introduction (01:43) Facing Doubts and Rejection (04:21) How Neuroscience Changed His Mindset (06:28) Why People Struggle to Make Progress (07:59) Learning the Power of Discipline in Film School (12:46) Tom’s Guide to Finding Your Next Step (15:25) Walking Away from $2 Million to Save His Marriage (17:14) Building Quest Nutrition with the Right Team (22:00) Why Tom Launched Quest Nutrition (24:37) The Key to Surviving Entrepreneurship (26:19) Strategies for Thriving in Competitive Markets (30:20) Solving What Others Say Can't Be Done (31:16) Conquering Fear Through Hardwork (36:20) The Journey from Quest to Impact Theory (40:15) Using Entertainment to Inspire Young Minds (45:24) Lessons from Childhood that Built Tom’s Resilience (48:06) Two Beliefs to Unlock Your Potential (49:44) Letting Go of Ego to Grow Tom Bilyeu is a billion-dollar entrepreneur, motivational speaker, and co-founder of Quest Nutrition, a company that revolutionized the health and fitness industry with its protein bars. After selling Quest Nutrition, he founded Impact Theory, a media company focused on empowering people through storytelling. Through his podcasts, interviews, and online content, Tom inspires millions by sharing tips on overcoming self-doubt, developing the right mindset, and building resilience. Connect with Tom: Tom’s Website: https://tombilyeu.com Tom’s YouTube: youtube.com/c/TomBilyeu Tom’s Twitch: www.twitch.tv/tombilyeu Leap Academy: Ready to make the LEAP in your career? There is a NEW way for professionals to Advance Their Careers & Make 5-6 figures of EXTRA INCOME in Record Time. Check out our free training today at leapacademy.com/training
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you want something, just go get better at it.
You have to put a ton, an inhuman amount of discipline and energy into that thing.
Tom Villio, co-founder of the billion dollar company Quest Nutrition, you also started
Impact Theory, a media company that helps others realize their full potential, build
massive thought leadership.
I mean, you have what? company that helps others realize their full potential, build massive thought leadership.
I mean, you have what?
4 million YouTube subscribers, 500 million content views.
I'll tell you why I founded Quest.
I didn't want to change behavior.
I wanted to leverage it.
You don't want to feel dumb.
You don't want other people to see you fail.
And because of that, you're never going to get better.
Being a good person is not enough to build a good business.
You have to understand you cannot guarantee the success.
You can only guarantee the struggle.
So make sure you're struggling at something that you care about.
It is weird to me that people ask the question,
oh, is it too late to enter the podcasting field, YouTube field?
Fill in the blank.
And the answer that I gave when asked that question was...
Tom Billio, co-founder of the billion dollar company Quest Nutrition. FYI, my kids and
their friends are huge fans, so I'm so excited and they're going to love this episode.
You also started Impact Theory, a media company that helps others realize their full potential,
build massive thought leadership.
I mean, you have what?
Four million YouTube subscribers, 500 million content views.
It is incredible, massive impact. But Tom, will you take us back in time to Tom who was a teen?
Maybe your mom kind of believed that you will not be as successful.
Tom, take a stare for a second.
Yeah, so the story that you're referring to is when I left for college,
my mom, who was always celebrating me, always encouraging me,
but she quietly assumed I was going to fail,
which I didn't find out until years later when I asked her,
you essentially kicked me out of the nest.
I was about to stay home.
At one point, I was like, look, I don't think I should leave.
And she recognized that that was just fear.
And she basically kicked me out.
She was like, you are going to go pursue your dreams.
And then has spent every day since then trying to get me to come back home.
And so one day, it's probably 10 years ago now, I was finally like, mom, why
work so hard to get me home?
You kicked me out.
I would have just stayed.
And she said, oh, I just always assumed you were going to fail.
And I was like, whoa.
So hearing that it was very in keeping with how all the major people in my life had seen me.
So my best friend said, oh yeah, I just assumed
you were gonna marshmallow your way through life.
And when I went to my now father-in-law
and asked for his blessing to marry his daughter,
he said no.
When I asked him why, he was like, look,
I think you guys just come from very different backgrounds.
And if I'm honest, I don't know that you can take care of my daughter."
And I was like, wow, okay, so hey, fair enough.
And I said, look, I heard you, I get it.
And I now looking back completely understand,
but I said, I am gonna propose to your daughter.
So please just don't tell her I'm gonna propose.
And he didn't, he did not say anything
until after I had proposed.
But there was a lot of tears, a lot of drama,
because he tried to talk my, again, now wife of 22 years,
talk her out of it and say, look, you guys are going too
fast, I don't think this is the guy.
And let me be very clear, my father-in-law has always
been lovely to me, always.
But he was honest, and I actually respect honesty
tremendously.
So yeah, when I was younger, nobody thought,
oh, this is gonna be the guy.
But what I have found that I now call the only belief that matters is that if you
believe that you can get better and you put the time and energy into getting
better at something, you will get better.
And so I just spent the last whatever 30 years proving that that's true.
And to me, that is so strong because sometimes we look at people like you
and we say, oh, it's all been easy.
Their path to success has been all pink and roses.
And it's almost like a born thing.
You have to be born, incredible leader,
and that's the only people that are successful.
And I think one of the quotes that you have
that just hit me like a brick,
I think you're kind of at some point, you say something along the line,
like, I needed to admit that I'm actually average.
I don't know exactly how you say that, but that to me was hitting home
because I think this is what listeners need to hear.
Everybody can do this.
Now, the only question is, how hard are you going to try?
When are you going to give up? When are you gonna give up?
What are you willing to do for success?
Talk to us a little bit.
What changed for you?
Honestly, it was studying neuroscience.
So I was reading about the brain
and at the time I had a very deep fear
that I simply wasn't smart enough
to achieve the things that I wanted to achieve.
I started reading about neuroscience
and in the late 90s,
there was this idea being put forward
that we would now call brain plasticity.
But it was put forward as we're not sure this is true,
maybe yes, maybe no.
But it's possible that even people that aren't kids can keep learning,
because everybody knew kids could learn.
But it was pretty hotly contested as to whether adults could keep learning.
So I said, okay, I'm going to act as if that's true, partly because it just felt better.
When I thought about never being able to achieve the dreams that I had in my mind, it felt
very constrictive.
And when I thought about, oh man, maybe I could get better, it made me feel lighter.
It made me feel expansive.
And so I thought, okay, I'm going to act as if that's true.
And then in acting as if it were true, it started making my life better.
And of course, the science is now settled.
You can keep learning and growing until the day you die.
The rate and the ease with which you can learn does diminish pretty dramatically, but you
can grow and get better.
And so I was like, I'm not going to worry.
If only I'd known this at 11, I'd be better.
Yes, that's true.
But hey, here I am.
I'm in my mid 20s.
At least I know it now.
And let me push forward and see what I can do.
And it's pretty extraordinary.
We're 50% hardwired.
So there are parts of you
you're not going to be able to change,
but the 50% that's malleable is pretty extraordinary.
And so I just decided I'm gonna focus on what I can change.
I'm gonna aim myself at a very specific set of skills,
and then I'm just going to be relentless.
And the big punchline for me is that the reason most people don't make the progress in their
life is because they either don't believe that only belief that matters, so they just
don't practice, they don't push themselves, or what I'll sum up as they're afraid to be
embarrassed.
And if you're afraid of embarrassing yourself,
because you will, you're gonna look stupid a lot
when you try something you're not good at
and you put yourself out there
and you really put yourself in a situation
where there's high stakes,
which is how you're gonna get better.
You're going to look stupid
and people are going to laugh at you
and it actually is going to set you back.
And most people, they just can't deal with that.
And they never put two and two together that,
yes, I take one step back, but every time I step back,
I learn something new.
So every step back, every defeat, every embarrassment,
if you stop and reflect on it,
you're actually growing more powerful.
So you're only stepping back in the eyes of other people.
And in a world of 9 billion people,
it literally doesn't matter.
If a billion of them think I'm a moron and 8 billion don't even know who I am. I have an opportunity to go impress
the other 8 billion people. People are just so convinced that, oh man, I only get one shot to
make a first impression and I blew it. And that just isn't true. You blew that chance, but you
learned something. Now go blow another billion of those chances,
and then talk to me at that point about how strong you are.
So just most people, they just cannot sit
in the difficult emotion of looking stupid.
Because again, it's uncomfortable as heck,
and fear can be numbing, it will be numbing.
But then again, you go to film school,
which is basically,
I wanna say 180 degrees from where you ended up,
but actually you are coming back towards that.
But share a little bit, you go to film school,
what happened there?
What happened at film school was,
I really got my first taste of discipline,
that if I set my mind to achieving something and I'm
willing to pay a higher price than anybody else, then I actually can't make
it come true. So I would not have had any of these words back then. I was really
just acting out of desperation and fear, which is perfectly fine. Those are very
powerful motivators. But I found out that you could apply as an incoming freshman to film school.
I didn't know that.
I thought if you got into USC, you just got to pick whatever college you were in, and
that is not the case.
So I found out I could have applied as an incoming freshman, but I was too dumb to know
that.
And your only other chance is as an incoming junior.
So I was like, okay.
Thankfully, I thought, who says yes and no?
Who are those people?
And I found out one of my teachers
was actually on the admissions committee.
And I found out yet again
that he would let students take him out to lunch.
So I was like, oh my God,
I'm gonna take this guy out to lunch,
which practically nobody did,
which I just thought was insane.
I took him out to lunch, I had him to myself,
and I was just like, okay,
what do I need to do to get into film school?
I have really bad SAT scores.
To give people an idea,
and I know they score them differently now,
so I don't know if this will land,
but to get into film school, they wanted a 1300.
I had a 990 and I took it twice.
So I was like, oh man, this is rough.
I don't know that I'm ever gonna be able to get in
just because of that.
So I said, hey, look, his name was Drew Casper.
I actually remember to this day. Drew, what do I have to do to get in? And he that. So I said, hey, look, his name was Drew Casper. I actually remember to this day,
Drew, what do I have to do to get in?
And he said, look, SAT scores are a proxy
for how well you'll do in college.
I don't need to know your SAT scores
because you can't apply again until you're an incoming junior.
So for the next two years, just get good grades.
And I was like, okay, word.
And I just put my head down and I didn't drink,
I didn't date, I didn't go to parties.
Everything was about is this going to get me into film school? Yes or no. And so I got to know as
many people that were in film school as I could. I watched as many movies as I could and I tried to
just get the best grades ever. There's whole other stories there and it worked. And so my grades were
so high that whether my writing samples were good or not, I won't speak to. But I ended up getting in and it was so systematic of like, oh, I went and found the guy that
could tell me what to do.
And then I just literally did it.
And then in working that hard, you start seeing, oh, wait a second, I'm actually getting better
at all of these things.
And so it starts giving me this reinforcing loop.
My life is not just an only-up trajectory yet.
When I graduate, my life is a mess.
I'm in a terrible emotional situation.
I sort of forget all the lessons that I learned in college
and it starts to feel like,
yeah, that worked fine back in school,
but now I'm in the big bad world
and none of it seems to work anymore.
And so, but it planted seeds that I would later be like,
wait a second, this is an echo
of exactly what I did in college.
I think this is going to work again, but now I need the new context.
Seeing you suddenly that motivated and hustling to make this way,
what made you fall off that horse?
I wouldn't say that I fell off the horse.
So it really is, you have to have a framework
that you're looking at your life through.
In high school, I thought,
oh, I don't mind cheating and not learning all this stuff
because this is really a time for me to pursue friendships
and doing the things that I think make for a meaningful life.
And so if I loved it, like speech and debate
and things like that, then I would do it a lot.
And if it wasn't something I cared about,
I just cheated and didn't pay attention. But when I got to college, I thought, hold on a second.
I'm about to take on a lot of debt.
And this is the thing, my parents said,
whatever you wanna pursue, pursue it.
So I was like, okay, film is my greatest passion.
I wanna pursue that.
I'm paying a lot of money to learn a thing
that I supposedly wanna do the rest of my life.
I can't track anymore the logic of cheating.
It doesn't make sense.
And so I said to myself before I started my freshman year, A or F, sink or swim, I'm going to get good grades based on what I've earned. And then you put that with the guy saying,
you have to get good grades. So now I have this interesting intersection of I promised myself I
wouldn't cheat for reasons, right? Not just moral. This is the only thing that makes sense is to
actually learn this.
And then somebody telling me that you need the reflection
of what you've learned.
So I'm like, okay, cool.
And we're just gonna double down, we're gonna do it.
And thankfully, it never made sense to me
to cheat my way to get into film school
only to then one day you're gonna be on the job.
And it's like, if I don't know how to do this stuff,
there's an end game here
where I actually have to know how to do it. So I get out of film school and I can't break on the job. And it's like, if I don't know how to do this stuff, there's an end game here where I actually have to know how to do it.
So I get out of film school and I can't break into the industry.
And so now I realized, wait, wait, wait, this is not the game I was prepared for.
And so now I'm just lost and confused.
So all of the great discipline that I had, I'm like,
I'll point my discipline at whatever, but what do I point it at?
I just felt so hopeless.
And that hopeless led me to despair and that starts sliding you to depression.
Because now it's like, well, I have the willingness, but I don't know what to do.
And when I try to sum up business for people, because everybody thinks they need the tactics,
the reality is you don't need to learn more about marketing,
creating videos or funnels.
All of those things are important,
but you can get somebody else to do those.
What you can't get somebody else to do
is know what to do next.
Life is simply a series of questions.
What do I do next?
What's the smartest thing that I could do next
that will lead me towards the outcome that I want?
People get lost in all the fancy stuff
and the reality is you're probably just not answering
that question well and there's a process
by which you can answer that question.
And so if I skip over that question and just go to,
for instance, I wanna be a social media influencer, right?
That just seems like the thing I wanna do.
And so cool, I'm gonna go start a YouTube channel
And so I'm gonna go look at people that are telling me how to be a youtuber
But what was your process like to asking and answering the question that?
Led you to the conclusion that you want to be a youtuber that matters a lot and what I've seen is
Nobody knows how to do that. They get an emotion, an idea pops into their head,
they don't know why,
they don't translate that emotion into logic,
and so they pursue an emotion.
Emotions make dots feel like they connect
that don't actually connect.
They learn tactics to building a picture
that never made sense in the first place,
and now I've gotta rewind you,
because those tactics, by the way, will burn out anyway,
and then you're gonna be left asking the question,
the age-old question, what's next?
Now what?
What should I do now?
I did all the things the influencers told me
and it helped, but I'm stalled out again.
Now what?
And my life is about the framework of now what?
How do you figure out what to do next?
And I absolutely love what you just said
about the quality of a question
will dictate the level of success that you have, but you need to remember to listen to the data, not the
drama that comes with it.
And I think one of the things that you say is don't limit yourself to where you are now,
which I think is also really important because the lens that we see life in is right now,
but it's hard to really connect the dots.
After this horrific experience after film school,
you somehow joined at the bottom of a startup.
Tell me a little bit about what that experience was,
and I think it was a pretty toxic environment as well.
I was teaching filmmaking and I ended up being
invited to join a startup as a copywriter. And the idea was that what life was teaching me was that I couldn't
control my destiny in filmmaking. And so I'd met these two very successful
entrepreneurs, the guys that made me the offer to come on board. And they said,
you're coming to the world with your hand out. And if you want to control the
art, you have to control the resources. So you should get into business and get rich
and then you can build your own studio.
And I was like, that sounds amazing.
I thought it would take 18 months.
It took 15 years, but it ended up working.
But the part in the story that you're talking about
is for roughly eight years, I had just pursued getting rich.
I showed up every day, I'm just here to get rich,
here to get rich.
And at the six and a half year mark, my wife pulled me aside and said, you are now damaging
our marriage. You need to change something because you're so unhappy that you just bring
that energy at home. And I had told her, don't ask me about work. I do not want to talk about
it. So I'd come home in a terrible mood. I don't want to talk about it. And so she just felt alienated from my life effectively. And so her saying that I was like, I had always
said in this boys and girls know your value system. I'd always said that my marriage is
my highest priority. So if it's true that my marriage is my highest priority, and my
wife is telling me I'm damaging the marriage, then I need to do something to address that.
So I went in and quit. And by that point, I'm worth about $2 million on paper.
And I said, look, here's your equity back.
I'm not gonna cross the finish line.
I don't want anything for this.
I'm just gonna go do something that makes me feel alive.
Long story short, we end up realizing
that we all felt that same way,
that there was a dark cloud over all of our lives,
that we wanted to keep working together,
but to do that, we were gonna have to radically change our approach to business.
And so the company that we end up founding after that ends up being Quest Nutrition,
which goes on to be this legendary success.
But at the time, it was really born out of something pretty dark.
When I read Lisa's book, Radical Confidence, who is your wife, for those who don't know,
it literally seemed like it's almost like within a few days or a day or something.
You literally are supposed to move out, you're supposed to quit, and instead you're starting
Quest.
And in fact, you believe in it so much that you're willing to risk your house, if I'm
reading this correctly.
What's switched?
Can you go back and why Quest?
Can you share that a little bit, Tom?
TOM MADDEN-WILKINSON Yeah, so what changed was
I had all this pent-up anxiety around,
I'm gonna let these guys down.
They felt like my brothers.
They had taught me so much about business.
And here I am after, at the time that Lisa said
that was six and a half years in.
So Quest ends up being like another year and a half
down the road.
So this is at the six and a half year mark.
But that's a long time to be working with people
that you really care about.
And I just felt like, man, I'm quitting, I'm leaving them.
So there was a lot of shame around it.
But once I quit, you feel that sense of freedom.
I mean, it is instant.
And I felt so good.
And I was like, whoa, I really nailed it.
I wanna do something that makes me feel alive.
So now the great irony is I quit, I give the equity back.
I have the conversation.
It was just absolutely horrible.
And I am driving home and I call my wife and I'm like,
I did it, because we were gonna move my wife and I'm like, I did it.
Cause we were gonna move to Greece.
I did it, I quit.
We're gonna move.
This is gonna be amazing.
I felt so good.
I felt light and alive and she was happy.
And I am quite literally pulling into the driveway
of my apartment complex and they call me.
And I'm like, hey babe babe, it's my partners.
Let me take this because I still loved and respected them.
I felt very guilty, but I knew I had to do it, but I was like, let me take this call.
I took the call and they're like, look, man, you really caught us off guard.
Come out to dinner with us.
Let's just talk about this.
And I was like, of course.
Now at this point, I'm like, of course. Now at this point,
I'm like, I'm not going to go back to work. I've done the hard thing, but I'll happily
go to dinner and I'll explain everything. And anyway, they kick off the dinner and they're
like, we feel the same. We don't like what we're doing anymore. So what would it need
to look like for the three of us to keep working together? Because look, finding people that
you can build things with is not easy. And so we were like, I mean, this is a very long process. I'm sure in the
book it sounded very short, but like I said, this takes about a year and a half, but we
decide, okay, immediately at the dinner after a conversation with my wife, but we lay out
this path of let's spend the next year trying to hit revenue metrics in our software
company. If we can't hit that, though we've already done this for six and a half years,
it's crazy to just shut it down. So let's set goals. If we don't hit them at the end of the year,
we'll shut the company and we'll do something else. And in the meantime, let's start building
out what the next company would look like.
And so over the next year and a half, we start mapping out, okay, what would the next company
look like? We start prototyping, doing all that stuff, debating and arguing about what
the next one would be. And I just kept saying, here are the things I'm not willing to compromise
on because I'm not going to get sucked back into this. I'm only going to do things. I'm
passionate about them. Only going to do things to make me feel alive. I'm going to be myself.
I'm going to be authentic.
I don't want to be a slick marketer.
I want to build community, thousand true fans,
all the things that end up being the playbook that people run in terms of social media.
But back then it wasn't called that.
This was all just beginning.
So out of anger and frustration,
I end up being one of the first entrepreneurs that understood the power
of social media for business in building real authentic communities. And that ended up being
one of the things that just really helped us explode, along with other things that my partners
can take responsibility for. But that was my big contribution was we're going to use social media,
we're going to tell stories, all the things that I was like, I'm not going to get pulled into another
business that doesn't do this stuff. I'm not gonna get pulled into another business
that doesn't do this stuff, I'm gonna do it.
And the world just met us right at the right time.
As social media began to explode,
as using influencers began to explode,
we were just some of the earliest people to do it.
Can you share why Quest?
We founded the company for three very different reasons.
So I'll tell you why I founded Quest.
So for me, I didn't wanna change behavior,
I wanted to leverage it.
So this is now something I teach people,
it's called solve a known problem.
So you wanna meet people where they already are.
So the known problem is you have people
that are morbidly obese because they would rather choose food
based on price and taste.
And if you then wanna help them,
don't ask them to eat healthy,
don't ask them to eat chicken breast and broccoli,
give them something that tastes like candy,
but has the macronutrient profile
of chicken breast and broccoli.
So I was like, okay, if we can do that,
then I can show up every day fighting
for my mom and my sister.
Now why Quest specifically?
Because I wouldn't have started a nutrition company. It was really the three of us each
represented one of the three areas that every business gets broken down into, and that's
product, process, and people. So I was people, one of my partners was product, the other was process.
Literally, when you're in manufacturing, process is extremely important.
And so when we really thought about,
okay, what's a business that the three of us
with those natural proclivities could really be into?
So Tom wants to go love people, build communities, help,
serve his mom and his sister.
Okay, cool, that fits nutrition.
One of my partners was obsessed with just
the physics of the human body
and how what
we eat impacts us and all of that.
So okay, that fits nutrition.
And then the third one, understanding being an Iowa farm boy was like, oh, I get manufacturing.
Cool.
Here we are.
This is a business that suits the three of our personalities that the three of us are
already passionate about.
And it meets those unique individual needs,
and it's something that people eat.
So having a product where the person is going to consume it,
imagine a car that you eat every day,
and you need another car tomorrow.
That's a good business to be in, right?
Because as you build that brand loyalty,
they just come back and back and back.
And once people make a decision,
now for sometimes years, that's just the default decision.
I don't think about it.
I'm not trying new protein bars, I just see Quest.
And so getting those customers in the door,
then it's just an incredible business model.
I love how you explain the team
because I think this is so hard to find.
Teams that are from different
backgrounds. They all bring a different mix, but they're all passionate about
something. It's not easy to find at all. And I love that it's based on a
personal thing, right? Because I think one of the hardest thing, and tell me
what you noticed, Natan, but is that in entrepreneurship, there's a lot of what
we call the near death experiences.
It gets really hard.
And I think having that really strong why
really, really helps Tom.
But did you run into that?
What I have run into is that the human mind is built
over millions of years of evolution.
And if you look at it through that lens,
you will understand the quiet little algorithms
that are running in the back of your mind.
And one of them is that you must contribute to the group.
Now, if you contribute to the group
in a self-sacrificing way, you will burn out.
But if you contribute to the group in a way
that also keeps you excited, you're passionate about it.
Now you have what I call fulfillment.
And so when you're pursuing fulfillment,
you really can push through a lot of stuff. And since it really is the emotional difficulty of building a business that kills most entrepreneurs. So if you have that thing to fall back on of, oh, I'm serving myself and the larger group, which makes me feel good about myself, which is the ultimate punchline of life is to earn your own respect. Now you're in a great position. And so you wanna create that kind of fulfillment flywheel.
And when you create that, you've got a shot
of being able to stick through something.
So a hundred percent.
If you ignore that element of service,
you ignore it at your own peril.
Between wanting to do something big
and actually growing to Inc, you know, second fastest growing
company.
I told you I have so much respect because I felt we are growing really fast and you are
just like at a whole different level.
How do you do that?
How do you get started?
Because again, it's there've been other bars before.
Yes, they were disgusting.
But how do you get in front of people?
And I think a lot of it is what you stated,
but it would be great to hear a little more.
So one, it is weird to me that people ask the question,
oh, is it too late to enter the podcasting field,
YouTube field, whatever, fill in the blank.
And the answer that I gave when asked that question
was there's always room for the best.
And if you understand that there's going to be a new everything all the time, like the
gigantic conglomerates, sure, some of those are going to have modes that are so tough,
the vast majority of things just don't.
You just have to find a way to be different and better.
So my latest endeavor is going into the world of video games.
And you want to talk
about a crowded field. I mean, it's just absolutely obscenely crowded. So the question becomes, how are
you going to be different and better? And if you can accurately identify an area where you can be
different and better, then it's never too late. And you just have to go in and actually be better.
And this is the hard part. Being a good person is not enough to build a good business. You actually
have to understand business. You have to understand your target audience.
You have to make a product that solves a known problem.
And then to your actual question, you have to figure out a way to get people to be aware
of what you do.
And in business, you always want to be in a position where you only have an awareness
problem.
So your product is amazing.
And all you have to do is let people know that it exists.
Now when you have an amazing product and you simply need to let people know that it exists, you're in great shape.
Now, getting good at understanding that's really hard.
I'll walk you through something that's very real about what we're going through right now.
Okay, so building a video game, just to give you an idea, I'm going to compete against a game called Grand Theft Auto.
Now, Grand Theft Auto 6 is about to come out. So not only do they have a 10 plus year head start,
but Grand Theft Auto 6 cost a billion dollars to make.
As successful as I am,
throwing a billion dollars at a video game
would be very unwise.
We have way, way, way smaller budgets
and we still have to somehow compete with those guys.
So what I know is right now, even though I have a part of my video game out in the world
and people can go play it right now, I know that that's actually not my product.
My product right now is the community that I'm building around the video game that I'll
use to get people aware of the video game in the next phase when it really is the final video game.
Now, the difference between an entrepreneur that survives
and the one that dies is the entrepreneur that thinks
that at this stage in my development,
that the game is actually the product, misses it.
And I even have trouble convincing my own team of this.
And I'm like, guys, stop trying to sell the video game.
You don't have a video game that will sell itself.
Sell the community. The community trying to sell the video game. You don't have a video game that will sell itself. Sell the community.
The community is gathered around the video game.
But the thing, the unique selling proposition right now
is we've gathered a bunch of gamers
that are like-minded around mindset, empowerment, positivity,
all of that.
That is a beacon of light in the gaming world.
So focus on that.
But this is where I go back to tactics don't help you
if you don't understand the strategy.
And so what I'm trying to bring to the world
is there is a way to think through all of this stuff,
but if you don't do it or you never learn it,
or you think, ah, I just have to learn
how to market, market, market,
you will miss the fact that you don't even
have the right product.
That is a mic drop here that I need to also sink in market, market, market, you will miss the fact that you don't even have the right product.
That is a mic drop here that I need to also sink in a little bit.
And I think that is just so fundamental,
because there is something about a best product,
but there's also a best known product.
But what you're saying is sometimes you
need to think about what you're actually selling.
And in your case, it's not necessarily the game,
it's not necessarily the bar, it's the community that will advocate for it because that's going
to create a real snowball versus trying to acquire one in one, right? That's what's going
to make it successful, which is so interesting. As a CEO, as a founder, what makes you so determined?
And again, I'm sure a lot of it is experimentation,
but there's a lot of noises and there's a team that says
that this is not the right way.
What helps you with decision-making?
Because I feel like that's a hard one sometimes.
This is the thing.
The thing is the ability to solve novel problems. There's a very simple
solution. It's just you really have to be disciplined to do it. The simple solution is
you must think from first principles. That's it. Now what does first principles mean? First
principles is literally thinking from physics. Okay, why would you want to do that? Because when you're not reasoning from first principles,
you're thinking from a cage.
Somebody gave you that cage.
And the human mind needs shortcuts.
But if you don't understand that those shortcuts
are cages that you get trapped in,
then you won't understand how to break out.
Now in my own life, breaking out of a cage
was a big part of the reason
that we were able to be so successful. So cage number one went something like this.
Hey guys, cool bar idea that you have, but this bar can't be made. Okay. Why can't this
bar be made? We heard that from multiple people, actual manufacturers, the bar can't be made.
And I thought, thinking from first principles, that just isn't a true statement. So does this bar
somehow violate the laws of physics? No, it does not. But it really doesn't work on the equipment
that's available. Why not? Oh, the punchline ended up being super weird. The reason that our bar
couldn't be made on any of the commercially available equipment was because for the last 70 years
more now, all of the manufacturing equipment
was engineered assuming that you're going to use high fructose corn syrup. Why? Because the government
subsidizes the production of corn and high fructose corn syrup is cheap and delicious. So you have a
thing that's cheap, delicious, and subsidized and now all of a sudden you as a manufacturer of
equipment really can't assume
that people are gonna have high fructose corn syrup
because it's so good.
It preserves things, it's delicious, it's cheap,
it's subsidized.
Oh man, it's got everything going for it,
except the fact that metabolically it is disastrous.
So we were like, okay, well,
it doesn't violate the laws of physics.
So I reject that cage of thinking
and I'm gonna ask myself a new question.
Am I willing to engineer my own equipment?
And if I am, then I have a path forward.
If I'm not, fair enough.
But getting out of that frame of reference
that was handed to us first, this bar can't be made.
Every single person before us went either,
oh yeah, this bar can't be made, I accept that frame. Or I reject the frame,
but I'm not willing to become my own manufacturer.
We were the first ones that said I reject the frame and I'm willing to become
my own manufacturer.
How do you cope with fear, Tom? Because that sounds scary.
That is a decision that costs more. Now you need to raise more capital. Like,
I don't know, whatever, maybe you didn't, But I'm just saying, that is a scary decision.
How do you cope with the fear?
One, you're gonna wanna try to mitigate
all the things you're afraid of.
Fear is a wonderful emotion to assess and go,
okay, cool, what am I afraid of?
So rule number one in business is avoid a mortality event.
Okay, cool, so if we bottle the equipment up front
and it doesn't work, mortality. If we make the bars by hand, prove that there's profit, get profitable
and then buy the equipment, now you've got a shot. So we literally just said,
cool, we're gonna keep running our software company by day because I don't
want that pressure on me. I want to be able to pay my rent and all that stuff.
So we're gonna keep running that and nights and weekends we're just gonna
grind it out. We're gonna start growing this protein bar company.
And we made them literally by hand with rolling pins,
everybody rolling pins and handheld knives
and sealing them three at a time until we were profitable.
And it was just an obscene amount of work.
And here's the reality.
The reason that magic works like actual magicians,
the reason they work is they find a place
where you would sooner believe that they're able
to tap into some other dimension to pull this thing off,
then that they put in 3000 hours of work
to make the way that they touch their coin seem seamless.
No, they really just put in 3000 hours of work
that nobody saw alone in their bedroom
and they practice that so many times that it looks effortless, that they know exactly where you're going
to look and how to control that.
There's a famous one where there's a card hidden inside the basketball.
And so the person's like, Oh, is this your card?
No, it's not your card.
Oh, no, go open that basketball.
They go get it.
They stab it.
They open it.
Oh my God, my card is in here.
Now what they don't understand because they just can't allow themselves to believe
that the magician learned how to do what's called
force a card where they get you to pick a card unnaturally.
And then on top of that,
they go to the basketball manufacturer
and they have them put, let's say,
five different cards in the basketballs
because they're not necessarily 100% sure
you're gonna pick the right card.
And then they memorize which of the basketballs
has which card in it. And then they just tell you to go pick the right card. And then they memorize which of the basketballs has which card in it.
And then they just tell you to go pick the one
that has a card that you actually picked.
And they think, oh my God, that'd be way too hard.
How do you convince a basketball manufacturer to do this?
And so the brain doesn't even go there.
That's building a business.
You have to be willing to do that level of obscene work
to just keep, okay, well, if we wanna do this,
we're gonna have to do that.
And you end up going, oh, we're going to fly to China to try to find manufacturing
tips that we can learn from.
We're going to go to Germany and meet with manufacturers and learn how to do
this stuff.
And then literally instead of buying a Ferrari, we're going to spend that money
on engineering a new slab line, which is exactly what we did.
So you just have to be willing to do what other people are not willing to do.
Yeah.
There's a saying, there's no traffic jam at the extra mile, right?
I think you say it really well.
Don't ask what's the minimum I need to do, but ask what's the
maximum I need to bear, right?
And it's just so exact.
So you decide to sell Quest.
Well, for me, that was easy.
I had gotten into this, if you remember,
this all starts back at film school,
and me realizing I couldn't control my destiny in filmmaking
and meeting these two guys who said,
well, if you got rich, then you could go build your own studio.
And so I thought it would take 18 months, but we did it.
In the end, we actually pulled it off.
So for me, that was just the natural part of the evolution now admittedly when I was at quest
I didn't know if I was ever gonna be able to exit
It was so much work
We had so much capital tied up and everything and we'd been reinvesting hundreds of millions of dollars
And so it was all a big question mark and I learned a lesson a long time ago that
You cannot guarantee the success you can only guarantee the struggle
So make sure you're struggling at something
that you care about.
I was still grinding it out at Quest.
I loved it. I thought it was awesome.
It was amazing.
But the fact that I had an opportunity
to go pursue my ultimate dream
has been just the most incredible gift ever.
And so, yeah, I left on a Monday.
On Tuesday, I started Impact Theory
because I felt like it was a dream
that I'd been holding my breath on at that point
for 14 years.
So you're starting a media production company with Lisa.
Yeah, and again, you're not retiring on an island.
Why, first of all?
Well, that's meaning and purpose.
So I really believe the punchline of life
is to respect yourself.
You wanna feel good about yourself when you're by yourself.
Okay, if I'm right about that, then the right question to ask isn't how much money can I make.
The right question to ask is what makes me respect myself?
And the answer is that you need to act in accordance with evolution.
So evolution insists that you serve yourself and the group.
So I'm like, okay, that's where meaning and purpose comes in.
I've got to be doing this thing, whatever this thing is,
in service of other people.
Cool.
I live stream me playing Fortnite and my game Project Kaizen.
I try to do it seven days a week.
I don't always make it, but I stream a lot.
Now, if I were just streaming to play video games,
to get followers, I wouldn't feel good about it.
But because I'm streaming, to talk about mindset, playing video games, to build an audience so that
I can have an audience for the video game that has mindset at its core and that I know that's how
I'm going to reach 11 to 15 year olds with empowering ideas. Now it's like, okay, this is
dope, man. And so I'm here fighting to try to make people's lives a little bit better, that I
understand that most people you cannot reach
by saying, think like this, act like this.
So anybody, if you hear my voice right now,
you are part of the 2%.
The 98% will never listen to something like this.
They've got to engage in a movie, a story, a game, something.
And then if you entertain them,
you have the opportunity to give them an empowering idea.
Because I have that meaning and purpose, now I can get up and fight and do all the things
that I need to do to build a video game, which is ironically harder than being my own manufacturer.
Crazy but true.
And because I know meaning and purpose is so important, I knew if I retired to an island
that I would not have ready-made meaning and purpose.
Now, the most natural way to have meaning and purpose
in your life is to have a family, have kids.
I've not chosen that path,
so I knew I needed to be way more careful.
And if I had chosen that path,
I would not want to raise kids on their own private island
because ooh boy, are they gonna struggle.
Well, I agree with all of it. And I have kids and I don't necessarily think, for me personally,
it's enough. Every single person can decide what's right for them. And I think it's really
important to bring not just the paycheck, but the life that you want with it. And I think you
actually say, there's no amount of success that you can stand in it forever. And I actually just
talked about it literally two hours ago
with the ex-president of Starbucks, right?
You could theoretically, you know,
ticked a lot of boxes of success,
and it's just not enough, not for certain people.
Again, waking up every single day with this mission.
Talk a little bit about this mission.
Why is it fueling you so much?
Why are you trying to touch that
11, 15 year old to become their best version?
That's a pretty interesting journey. So I assumed that I would only ever speak to adults.
Didn't even cross my mind to make things for kids. Even towards the end of Quest, when
I was like, I can see now that I'm probably going to actually get a chance to do this.
I just assumed that I would make movies for adults and I'd put empowering ideas and it would be amazing.
And then I started Quest University and I started teaching all my employees every trick that I knew.
And I said, look, I'll even teach you how to build a competitive nutrition company.
So part of it is I'm just wired. I love to help other people. So I'm probably,
I get a disproportionate response out of helping other people than maybe some.
So I wanted to make sure that they were working at Quest
because they saw that I believed in them and their success
more than their own mother.
And what I found was the hard reality was 2% of people
did something with the ideas and still to this day,
I get texts and phone calls from people saying,
you changed my life. I started this company, I moved up the corporate ladder,
whatever. It's amazing. But I was just haunted by the 98% that did nothing with it. Now,
obviously I'm rounding those numbers, but that's roughly accurate. And so my wife and
I just as scale people, we said, okay, but what do we do to reach the 98%? And going
back to neuroscience and just researching the brain and human development,
I realized that, okay, what are the things
that end up making your frame of reference?
We talked about this earlier.
So your frame of reference is your biology,
can't do anything about that.
And then it is your beliefs and your value system.
Now your beliefs and your value system,
those are malleable,
but they're largely set by your zip code,
which is why right now in the developed world,
your zip code or your country's equivalent of that
is the number one predictor of your future success.
So it's basically who are you born to?
And if you're born to people that were unsuccessful
before you, odds are that you will be unsuccessful.
And if you're too far down the rung,
now you're just in a soup of terrible ideas.
And what I realized was, pick any kid.
But if at birth you took that child
and you put them into an upper middle-class household,
odds are that they're gonna succeed in life.
And a guy named Jeffrey Canada figured out
one of the biggest reasons why.
It's absolutely astonishing.
The number of words that a kid hears
by the time they're five and the ratio positive
to negative words has a tremendous impact
on the language centers of their brain.
So now when you grow up without hearing enough words
and hearing a lot more negative than positive,
you literally have an accent.
Even though you grew up in America,
you grew up with that inner city accent.
And the reason that you grew up with that inner city accent. And the reason that you
grew up with that is because the language centers of your brain just didn't develop.
Has nothing to do with the kid, has nothing to do with genetics, has everything to do
with zip code. So now I'm very aware of this. And I'm working in manufacturing and I have
3000 employees and a thousand of them grew up in the inner cities. And it does not matter
your race. Literally doesn't matter. They all have the
same accent, first of all. And then second, they all have the same set of ideas. I'm just like,
what is happening? So I start, okay, what can you do? Because I can't control who their parents are.
I can't control that they've started in this environment. So where can I intercept? And I
discover something called the age of imprinting, which is 11 to 15. The Japanese actually have a word for it,
it's called shounen, which translates as the few years.
So we have an intuitive understanding
that there's this period, this few year period,
where kids push away from their parents
and they just drink deeply of culture.
And this is why there's a famous line,
I think it was written by Stephen King,
and he said, you'll never have friends
like the friends you have when you're 12.
And what he understands intuitively
is the age of imprinting.
It is that first moment again,
where you push back from your parents,
you connect with your friends,
you guys all drink deeply
of whatever is culturally relevant at that moment.
This is why people say we're all a product of our time,
right, so that's a people say we're all a product of our time, right? So that's a stamp to we're all a product of our culture, which is obviously true.
So I was like, well, okay, I can't control your genetics.
I can't control who your parents are.
I can't even control who your friends are, but I can influence what your friends think
is cool.
So awesome.
I'm going to hit kids at 11 to 15 with empowering ideas through entertainment.
That became the thesis statement.
And that's why literally the company is called Impact Theory
because my theory is that you impact people at scale
through entertainment specifically at the ages of 11 to 15.
But because that's the area that I didn't have
any credibility, it's the area that we're coming
to the latest, but we did start developing here
about four years ago, first with our comic books, and then two and a half years ago, we moved into
video games.
Just when I could see that it's eaten the world from a revenue perspective where I think
technology is going.
And that's why.
Wow.
That is incredible.
Well, I have two kids to donate.
So we'll take it.
We need all the feedback we can get.
That's incredible. Um, do you think there's something that you went through
in your childhood or after that builds you to who you are today?
Of course, of course. We are all half how we're our genetics.
So just mom and dad, thanks.
You know, the good and the bad.
I have high levels of anxiety and so does my mom.
So mom, I'm looking at you, but then of course,
I'm looking at her mom and so on and so forth.
So that's one.
My genetics set a stage.
And then, yeah, it's a lot of little things, right?
It's the way that I was raised in terms of, for instance,
my parents did not have a lot of money.
And so I was constantly,
I wanted things that I couldn't have.
And I was told,
you can't have that because we can't afford it.
I'm actually glad that they baked that in.
So I really grew up with a lot of resentment
about not being able to have the things that I wanted
because I couldn't afford them.
And then in my household,
you had to have a job in the summer.
Every summer, I had a job from the time I was 12. So I got a job in a door
factory when I was 12 because my parents refused to buy me a Nintendo. One, because it was
expensive and two, because they believe that video games have wrought your brain. I highly
disagree obviously, but all of that really instilled in me this resentment of not being
able to control my own life.
And then that, oh, wait a second, if I work for something, I can get money and then I
can control my life.
I was like, okay, yeah, I can get behind that.
It's just cause and effect.
And so yeah, from the time I was 12, I had horrible jobs and my dad always said, this
builds character.
And so I just had it beat into me that you do hard things,
you learn the lessons, sometimes it's I don't want to do this, but you don't quit, you push
through. And so even though I resented it tremendously, it built a lot of resilience,
a tremendous ability to suffer because I was just so often doing things I hated that were
physically demanding that it really showed me,
one, none of this broke me, none of this killed me.
I really did get better for it.
You would constantly realize,
oh, because of that job that I had that one summer,
I can do things that somebody else can't do.
And so it's just all these little seeds.
Now, when I was a kid, I was just frustrated and annoyed.
I don't want anybody to think
that I sounded like some sage.
As a kid, I was just mad. And so dear parents, remember, your kids aren't going to appreciate it now.
They're only going to appreciate it later. But suddenly all the dimes started dropping in my
early to mid 20s. And so by the time I was in my late 20s, I had put together a set of ideas that
really allowed me to set my sights on something and achieve it. I will make sure my kids listen to that.
But Tom, if you go back in time,
I don't know, maybe right after film school,
when you're kind of in that phase of anxiety,
maybe even depression,
I know a lot of our listeners are very driven,
but some of them just don't know what's next for them,
or how to take themselves to a next level,
or how to really become their full potential.
What would be one advice that you would want to hear back in the days that you wish you
knew?
This is where the idea of the only belief that matters came from was, all right, dear
me, if I have 30 seconds with my younger self, there are two things you have to understand.
You can get good at anything that you apply yourself to or better. You'll get better. Don't worry about becoming the greatest.
You can get a hundred times better at anything. So just point yourself at the thing that you want
to get better at. But number two, there's a reason that you don't believe me right now. And that's
because you were dumb enough to build your self-esteem around being right, being smart,
being better, faster, stronger. And so you're just in constant defense mode.
You don't want to feel dumb.
You don't want other people to see you fail.
And because of that, you're never going to get better.
So you need to build your self-esteem around being the learner.
Now, if you build your self-esteem,
like legitimately reward yourself emotionally for staring nakedly at your
inadequacies and then remember, the reason I'm doing this is because if I
decide that I want to point myself at getting better,
I now can.
And that one-two punch will take you everywhere
you want to go in life, kid.
But you got to do them.
You have to build your self-esteem around learning,
and then you have to understand,
if you want something, just go get better at it.
But you have to put a ton, an inhuman amount
of discipline and energy into that thing.
When I was vice president,
I already clicked some boxes of success.
And I thought that I was coachable.
I thought that I knew it all.
It's kind of that ego that you're talking about, right?
That confidence that you think you have,
you think you know it all.
And actually that's the most dangerous area
because you're not listening to learn,
you're listening to argue.
And you're listening to prove to someone're listening to argue, and you're listening
to prove to someone else that they're wrong and you know better.
How do you wake somebody up from that?
Because again, I wish somebody woke me up a decade ago, but I don't know if I was even
receptive to listening.
How do you wake somebody up?
Steer by what works, dear person, especially if this is me talking to my younger self again, explain to me how
anything makes more sense than saying this is my goal and then all you want to know is
is the thing you're trying to do to get there, is it working or not?
Is there any other better question?
No.
Okay, cool.
Then we're going to judge every idea's merit by whether it moves you towards that goal.
We are not going to judge an idea's merit by whether you thought of it.
That doesn't make any sense. So always be open and receptive. Somebody else might see something
that you are missing. And by the way, when you let go of your own idea to grab onto somebody else's
idea, because it is obviously more effective, you need to celebrate yourself for that. You need to
be like, yeah, I'm the learner. I learned from anybody. And so cool. I just got this amazing idea. Hey, everybody.
I just spent the last 48 years being wrong.
And thank God this person just gave me the right answer.
And now if you campaign that hard, other people will start judging you
based on your willingness to do that.
So you end up pulling a Jedi mind trick on them.
So if you're really worried about what other people think, guess what?
You get to set the frame on them for how they judge you, because you just say, ah, I don't care if I'm right about
this. I don't care whose idea this is. And by the way, if when that person gives you an idea,
you're like, yo, Suzy just gave me this idea. Suzy's amazing. Everybody, Suzy's amazing.
Now here is the weirdest thing about humanity. They're actually not going to gravitate towards
Suzy. They're going to gravitate towards me because people go where they find certainty and enthusiasm.
And if you can bring certainty and enthusiasm and make people feel good
and they're like, I want to be celebrated like Susie.
So now they're trying to point out, hey, did you think about this?
And what about that? And did you try this?
So in building my video game community, people are giving me ideas all the time.
And I'm like, oh, man, that is brilliant.
The number of ideas that someone will just come and stream and be like,
hey, Tom, have you thought about doing this? And I'm like, yeah, we didn is brilliant. The number of ideas that someone will just come in stream and be like, hey, Tom, have you thought about doing this?
And I'm like, yo, we didn't think about that.
That is so smart.
And so now I am building a community
where they're coming in to help me.
It's unbelievable.
Everybody wants to give their good ideas.
And if you're receptive and open and you celebrate them
and you point out it was their idea and they did this.
I try to give away more ideas than I take credit for, which by the way works shockingly well.
The number of times I have literally said an idea and everyone's like,
that's a dope idea and I'll be like, yeah, I'm so glad they came up with it.
Everybody just watched me come up with it, but people will still take the credit.
It's amazing. Give your credit away. Do not worry about it because what people gravitate towards
is not the person that comes up with the great ideas,
they gravitate towards the person
that makes them feel good about themselves.
And if you make people feel good about themselves
and you have certainty, ooh buddy.
That is so strong, Tom.
Anything else that you wanna share with our audience
that they can help you.
Oh man, don't worry about helping me.
So the question is, ask not what the world needs,
ask instead what makes you come alive
because what the world needs
is more people who've come alive.
If we line up on anything, if you find,
if you're a gamer, man, come and join me
on the Tom Bilyeu Twitch live stream.
If you are really trying to push yourself forward,
we have a university for stuff just like this.
It's Impact Theory University.
We have a mindset course called Billion Dollar Habits.
Check that out.
Otherwise, I'm sure I will see you somewhere on the internet.
Tom, thank you so much for all the nuggets and all the inspiration.
And I was really looking forward to it because I was binging your stuff.
But thank you so much for sharing all of it.
Absolutely.
Thanks for having me.
And I'm so impressed with your 314.
Well done.
That is unbelievable.
Thank you.
We sort of made the list.
So I'm proud.
Fastest growing company.
Not sort of.
What are you talking about?
As a favor to me, don't ever say it like that again.
Okay, okay.
The vast majority, 90% of all businesses fail.
Not only did you not fail, you made 314.
That's unbelievable, it's unbelievable.
And if you wear it with pride,
then you give other people permission
to wear their successes with pride.
And plus we both know the difference between second
and 314 is industry, is timing, it's things like that.
So it's incredible what you've done
and you should be obscenely proud of yourself.
Thank you, Tom.
We are, we are.
And we're changing lives just like you guys.
So I think we share that passion, which is important,
but thank you for all the inspiration, Tom.
Truly my pleasure.
Thanks for having me on.