Mick Unplugged - Crypto's HIDDEN TRUTHS by Tycoon Armando Pantoja
Episode Date: January 9, 2025Armando Pantoja is the visionary powerhouse behind transformative advancements in financial technology. An influencer known for his deep expertise in blockchain, cryptocurrency, and software engineeri...ng, Armando has dedicated his platform to reshaping the future of finance. As "The Tall Guy Tycoon," he inspires millions with his wealth-building insights and forward-thinking perspectives on financial markets. In today’s episode, Armando took listeners on a journey through his groundbreaking achievements—from his early days as a software engineer to becoming an award-winning innovator recognized by IBM. His mastery of cryptography and his success in integrating technology with finance have made him a beacon of inspiration for aspiring entrepreneurs. Armando Pantoja's story is a testament to the power of dedication, innovation, and a relentless pursuit of excellence in the ever-evolving world of fintech. Takeaways: Understand market cycles and psychology Reduce time spent earning and build passive income Build a network of successful individuals Sound Bites: “The only way you can be rich is by thinking differently than the masses." “When everybody does something, it’s probably wrong.” Connect and Discover https://twitter.com/_TallGuyTycoon https://www.linkedin.com/in/tallguytycoon/ https://www.instagram.com/tallguytycoon/ https://www.tiktok.com/@tallguytycoon https://www.youtube.com/@tallguytycoon Podcast: Crypto Trends Book: The Strategic Millionaire: Seven Laws of Wealth the Rich Don't Tell You 𝗙𝗢𝗟𝗟𝗢𝗪 𝗠𝗘 𝗢𝗡: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mickunplugged/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mickunplugged/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCIPaMel-Fb4zQmCSZDPHu4A LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mickhunt/ Website: https://www.mickhuntofficial.com See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Welcome to Mick Unplugged, where we ignite potential and fuel purpose.
Get ready for raw insights, bold moves, and game-changing conversations.
Buckle up.
Here's Mick.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to another exciting episode of Mick Unplugged, and today's guest
is a visionary in the financial technology space, blending his expertise in blockchain,
cryptocurrency, and software engineering to reshape the future of finance. Known for his
influence on social media as the Tall Guy Tycoon, he continues to inspire millions by sharing
insights on wealth building and the future of financial markets. Please join me in welcoming the innovative, the driven,
the tall guy tycoon himself, Mr. Armando Pantogia.
Armando, how are you doing today, brother?
I'm good, I appreciate you having me.
Hey, I am honored to be here
and I wanna just go straight in, man.
Like you have, I don't wanna say you figured out
blockchain and crypto, but you figured it out.
But the most important part is you're sharing your knowledge
and expertise with others.
So my initial question is, man,
what got you into blockchain and crypto?
So it's an interesting story.
I was a software engineer for many years.
So around 2009, 10, I decided to go back to grad school.
So when I got first day in grad school,
you learn the base of software engineering in undergrad,
but then you go on to grad school,
you have to pick a specialization.
So first thing they asked me,
what's your specialization gonna be?
I don't know, I guess software security.
Well, you need further specialization.
What are you gonna focus on?
I said, well, looked at the list of stuff,
cryptography, cryptology,
which is the study of computer encryption.
And then, you know, I got into it
and I liked it and everything.
But then right in the middle of grad school,
cryptocurrency came out.
Now cryptocurrency and cryptology and graphy
is two different things.
Now cryptocurrency is a currency based on the science
or the study of cryptology or cryptography,
which is the study of Qt encryption.
And that's why crypto is so transformative
is because it's the most advanced database
ever known to man.
And that's what people don't realize.
They see Bitcoin is like some kind of money
or some kind of investment,
but it's way deeper than that.
So I was just lucky to get in so early
because I was studying that at the time
and I thought it was a cool technology.
Now, for about three years,
I didn't really realize it as an investment.
So the opportunity I saw in cryptocurrency
the first three years was way,
I could be a crypto developer,
I can integrate stuff on people's sites.
I also was looking into like buying Bitcoin ATMs
because I thought it was gonna be the next currency.
So around 2015, Ethereum came out
and that's when I actually, 14, 15,
I started seeing the investment potential.
I started investing in it instead of just developing
on the technology side.
So I was just lucky to be around the right people
and getting it got in early, being around, you know,
studying the technology that cryptocurrency is based on.
Yeah, man.
So, you know, I told you offline,
I'm a huge fan of you and what you do for people
and helping them understand, right?
Because, you know, you just hit on it.
There's this big thing,
well, what is Bitcoin and what does it do?
And for some people, it's one of those things,
oh, it's just a fad, it's gonna play out.
And there's other people that really go hard into it.
But what I love is that you're helping people
with financial literacy also, right?
Like how important is financial literacy to you
and what you're about?
Yeah, so I got into Bitcoin 2011.
I'd been playing around with stocks for a little bit.
Before then I made some money.
And before that I did have a guy that would train me
in stocks and how they work and everything like that.
So, you know, he was actually a close friend.
He was an older gentleman.
He brought me along in stocks,
but I really didn't put any real money into it.
So when I got into crypto,
remember the first three years of crypto
was on the technology side.
So I really didn't look at charts and markets
and how things work.
So 2013, I had a bunch of Bitcoin.
I put up a post the other day
and I was buying Bitcoin at $200.
You know, $150, $100, $80, you know.
But at the time I thought it was a currency.
But around that time, about around 14,
I started seeing the investment potential.
And so I started like actually buying it,
you know, for investment purposes.
2013, one of the only exchanges,
I think it was the only Bitcoin exchange on earth,
got hacked. And somebody stole like $50 million of Bitcoin.
At the time, that's like billions now,
but it was 50 million at the time,
which was like a lot of Bitcoin.
So everybody panicked,
the news starts saying that Bitcoin was a scam.
It wasn't, it really wasn't,
that's proof that this was a Ponzi and all that stuff,
because people got panicked
and Bitcoin dropped all the way from a thousand all the way down into the hundreds again,
90% draw down.
And then, so I gave for two years,
I didn't even look at it no more to like late 15, early 15.
And then I saw it start to creep back up.
And I was like, well, you know, that's weird.
Why would it creep back up?
I thought they said it was over.
And then, so I started buying it again, 2015-16. And
then, you know, I started looking deeper into how markets
work. Like, why did they tell us that it was going to crash? And
I started researching, I realized that there's underlying
truths in all of that. There's a cycle, there's a dot, there's
cycles, there's patterns, there's all these things that
happen almost predictably in markets, to start applying it to
stocks and crypto at that point.
And that's why I've done so extraordinarily well
is because there's underlying truths in all of that.
There's a four year cycle in Bitcoin.
There's also market cycles in the stock market.
There's times when the media will tell you
that things are over, it's done, they'll make you scared.
And it all deals with cycles, curves,
curve cycles, and also human psychology.
All of that is interwoven into like a tapestry
of that underlies all these financial markets.
Now we figured it out,
you can figure out everything on top.
So that's what I've been trying to teach people
over the years is that these things is very simple
to understand if you just look past all the fluff
and just look at the base and see what's happening.
Yeah.
And you know, you've done a lot.
You made a ton of money, obviously.
You're helping people understand crypto and blockchain.
But you're also an award winner, man.
In 2020, you won the IBM Blockchain Award, right?
So tell us a little bit about that project
that led to that award and then,
I know that's not the pinnacle of your success, right?
Because that was four years ago. but at that moment, man,
like how did Armando feel?
Like, did you feel validated that, yes,
I'm doing the right thing?
Yeah, that was one of the validation points
along my life, you know, cause,
that was one of the big moments because, you know,
IBM a company like that recognized you
for your innovations on blockchain.
That was, we can't have with a solution to get people,
you know, work with IBM to get people to use the blockchain
to get people hired back after COVID,
to get people back to work.
And we won an award for that.
It was me and my business partner actually.
And we, you know, that was a big moment to win that award.
But like you said, that's a big validation point.
It makes you feel like you're doing the right thing.
And you know, I was proud to win it.
And actually that was after I won that award,
I got a blue check like the next week on Instagram.
That was before the blue checks you could pay for them.
You had to earn it.
So that's the biggest thing.
The IBM main Twitter page, you know,
shouted me out and said, you know,
I want this warping my picture.
And then like the next week,
I got a blue check on Instagram.
That was before you had to pay for it.
So you had to earn it and you couldn't even like ask for it.
They just had to recognize you.
So that was really the biggest thing.
So I was really excited about those two things.
Yeah.
So I want to go into your book, man,
because there are a lot of listeners and viewers
that I know you can give strategic insight and tips to.
So the strategic millionaire, right? We're talking the seven laws of wealth. I love for
the man, the myth, the legend himself, right? There's no better source than the source,
right? What are these seven laws of wealth and how can people start imparting them into
their routine and their habit when it comes to finance?
It's about like these market cycles and patterns that we you know that we I just talked about
So these are the seven laws that I've learned over time and a lot of them, you know
almost fly in the face of what traditional logic is because uh
Traditionally, I've learned in life is that when everybody does something is probably wrong
Traditionally, I've learned in life is that when everybody does something, it's probably wrong.
When everybody thinks a certain way, it's probably wrong.
And then if you just fly in the face of that,
a lot of times you'll be right
because the system does not allow everybody to be rich.
It's relative, it's based on ratios.
So only a certain amount of people can be rich
and everybody else has to be middle-class and poor.
That's just how it works.
The more people that move up, the system will readjust
and then now the goalposts move.
And then now all of a sudden this is rich.
So everybody can be rich.
So the only way you can be rich is by
thinking differently than the masses.
And that's what those seven laws are.
It's like, you don't have to hustle
and be up three, four days straight to make money.
A lot of the billionaires I know, they don't have, hustle and be up three, four days straight to make money. A lot of the billionaires I know,
they don't have, their schedules are pretty free
because they got everybody else doing the stuff for me.
And also I learned in that book,
we talk about how you have to have a certain amount
of your week free because if you're maxed out,
you're hustling, you're working six hours a week,
early in your life is different.
When you get later, 30 and 40s,
you gotta start pulling that back.
It's because if you don't have a certain time you're free,
if an opportunity comes, you don't have time to chase it.
You see, if you're working 60 hours a week,
somebody comes to you,
look man, I got this idea,
this is gonna make a lot of money.
You don't have any time to work on it.
So what you have to do is you have to find something,
work on it and reduce the time it takes for you
to make money on it, then put it like in a basket.
And that basket is your passive income.
So when you reach an opportunity,
let's say somebody comes to you and say,
man, I got an opportunity to build a website
that can make a bunch of money.
All right, well, I'm gonna build a website,
I'm gonna go on and work on it,
we're gonna get it developed.
But over time, I have to reduce the amount of time
it takes me to work on it to finally a zero.
Then I throw that in my basket of passive income,
then I move on to something else.
So that's, you have to think about things in life like that.
That's actually a law, it's called be lazy.
And it talks about how, not actually technically lazy,
but it talks about always find ways
to not make money with your time,
constantly be jealous with your time
because you need that time to build up new passive income.
You can't work all the time
and you won't be able to build up anything.
So, and then if you stop working, the money stops.
So, a lot of that book is focused to that.
Some of the book is, it talks about the trends
that we talked about, trends and patterns
and stuff that exist in markets.
It talks about having the right circle of friends around you.
That's very important.
Building a circle of winners.
All right, it also talks about how a lot of people
think that they just can show up to a group of people
and all of a sudden that group is gonna feed into them.
It doesn't work like that.
So you have to show up to the group.
Let's say you show up to a group of millionaires,
you're not the millionaire.
The first year of that group,
you have to be giving them stuff.
You have to, you know,
I've heard people just show up to a networking event
and say, now what do I do?
It doesn't work like that.
You know what you do when you show up to a networking event, you find the people that can help you and you offer them
something first. Everybody's trying to get, everybody's trying to take them out to lunch,
pick their brain. That's nothing. So I don't even, people ask me to lunch five times a day. I don't
go because it's, I'm not driving over to Tampa because I live a little bit outside of Tampa.
It's not worth it to me. So you have to come to these people and say,
hey, look, do you need somebody
to pick up your laundry every week?
I'll do that.
And don't ask for anything in return.
Say, hey, do you need somebody to spot you at the gym?
I'll do that.
Especially when you're young.
Do you need somebody to help you with anything?
I'll do that.
And don't ask for anything in return.
And do that to all the people in the group.
Over time, they will pull you up to their level.
Eventually, you're building, get into their life, you're helping them,
they'll start to like you hopefully.
And then they'll start your hear stuff
and you'll start understand how they think.
They'll put you on opportunities.
And that's how things work.
It's not like you show up and they're not gonna,
why would there's no incentive to pull you up
unless you integrate yourself into their lives.
And that's how you have to do it.
That's why most people fail in those situations.
No, I'm on spot with you a million percent.
So I wanna unplug a few things that you said
about what I'm gonna say, the hustle culture, right?
And I've been saying this for years.
Hustle works to a certain extent,
but then it's gotta be strategy.
To me, real wealth comes when I can work on the business,
not in the business.
Real growth for me as an individual works
when I can work on me and not in me all the time.
And so I love the fact that you said that
because I think that people miss that both in business
and in life.
You do have to be able to work,
but you've got to work smarter.
And people talk about, you know,
the person that works smart and hard always wins.
No, the person that works smart and hard
usually is burned out.
And the person that's working smart and smart and smart
is always looking to the future
is the one that gets to wealth faster than those who don't.
And so I love the fact that you said that, Matt, like that, to me, that validates some things that I say.
Yeah, I agree with you.
Yeah, so you have to just work smart.
A lot of times labor is not needed
if you're strategic about anything.
At first you do, especially if you come from poverty
or a lower income,
because you don't have the initial capital.
Yeah, you gotta grind.
You gotta grind, that's your capital.
That's all you got.
But once you start building up capital,
you gotta look for ways out of labor.
Because nobody of any significant wealth
has gotten a labor for it.
It's normally the ownership of some idea, a technology,
or they got other people doing it for them.
That's right, that's right.
And then the other thing-
Go ahead, because most people don't wanna,
you can always find workers, because most people don want to take the risk of owning a business.
So you take on the risk, which is not that bad. And then you always have workers.
Yep. Agree. And then the other thing I want to unplug is also something that I wholeheartedly
agree about and it's leveling up, right? And so it's, you know, you get to a certain level,
you should always be looking at how do I now level up, right? Because in, you know, you get to a certain level, you should always be looking at how do I now
level up, right? Because, and you know this, and I got to see this now going into these
different worlds, there's always somebody a level above you, right? Like always, I don't
care who you are. There's always somebody that you can level up and strive to get into
that room, into that table, Right. And you're exactly right about
networking. Most people look at it selfishly, right. I go to events all the time and I laugh
at people that just want to be around celebrities or influencers and take a picture. I'm like,
that person, he or she gave you 30 seconds and you wanted to take a selfie. Do you know how valuable those 30 seconds
really could have been?
You could have asked an amazing question, right?
You could, to Armando's point,
what do you need help with?
What can I do for you for free, right, to prove myself?
People get it wrong.
The next time I see somebody taking selfies
with celebrities or influencers at a networking event, I'm going to go crazy.
I'm probably going to grab a mic and say something because that's not that time.
If you really want to grow your influence, if you really want to level up, spend 30 seconds
and ask an amazing question.
If you can't ask an amazing question, you really probably shouldn't have been in that
room anyway
because you were there for the selfie.
And I promise you that celebrity is not gonna remember you
in five minutes from the selfie.
Ask an amazing question, they can't sleep
because they're thinking about that question.
That's right. Exactly, I agree with you.
Yeah.
And it's funny about these events and stuff
is that when I go to events,
especially at InvestFest last year,
it was like a lot of people would come up to me
with these business ideas, apps or mostly tech.
And the thing about it is that it's so many,
I can't really, you know how I stop people from,
you know how I stop people from doing that?
They come up to me, they show me an idea
to give me the elevated pitch and I say,
hey yeah, sounds great man, so here's my email,
send me a full business plan by Monday.
95% of people never send it.
Of course, of course.
So I cut the conversation short, I said,
look man, I love the idea, send me a business plan
by what's called, here's my email.
And 95% of people never send it.
So that shows you how people will show up
to networking events and really don't have a plan
or a strategy or even don't wanna put in the effort
to get to the next level.
Nope, that's it, man, that's it.
So Armando, again, I've been a huge fan of yours,
and I'll make him applaud,
we talk about your because, right?
That purpose, that thing that's deeper than your why,
that really moves the needle for you
that's almost like your accountability.
So for Armando to get to where he is today,
what's been your because,
or what's been one of your becausees,
if we look at it that way,
that holds you accountable,
but is really your mission and your purpose?
So I grew up in poverty.
My father left when I was three,
so I really didn't have a lot of money.
I didn't even get a computer until I was 19.
And that's when I bought it
with the Pell Grant money from college.
Austin P. University.
Austin P., yeah.
So that was the first time I had a computer in the house.
So technology took me out of Clarksville, Tennessee,
a poor kid, and made me into what I am today,
just technology.
And I know I can see that we're in a transformative time
from the late nineties to about maybe 2030, 35.
It's almost like the industrial revolution
in the early 1900s.
It has the power to transform a lot of people's situations,
transform entire communities,
transform entire ethnicities to a whole different level.
If people would just pay attention and learn.
And that's my because is like,
I just, I screamed from the top of the roof.
Many people are listening because
there's never been a time I can see in my life
where things to me are more obvious
than what they are today.
Like where to invest, where to grow,
where to build your businesses at.
Because the thing about technology
makes it so much different than other industries
is that the amount of money that can be made.
That's why most companies are becoming tech. It's because if I make a factory The thing about technology, it makes it so much different than other industries is that the amount of money
that can be made, that's why most companies
are becoming tech.
It's because if I make a factory and I sell,
let's say widgets, and I'm selling these widgets
and I can make them for $20 and I sell them for 50.
So let's say I sell it for 100.
So that's like a big profit, $80 profit for each one.
So in order to increase my production,
I have to, let's say I double it.
Well, I'm still making 80 a widget, but now I have to have twice as many employees.
The fact that we has to be twice as big, I'm using twice as much electricity, twice as much material.
So my profit is still linear. It's the same no matter what.
It may go up a little bit, you know, based on the math of scale, you know, that does help, but it's still basically linear.
Now technology is different. I can develop one app, I can have four or five people running it.
And as users come onto that app spending money,
the chart looks more like a hockey stick, right?
Because the amount of money you can make
on technology is exponential.
And that's why stocks reflect the profit
and tech stocks like that.
And that's the reason why,
if people start tech companies
that can make money like that,
that's a transformative technology
where a lot of people can build a lot of wealth rapidly
with small teams just with a great idea and great execution.
And I understand that that's why I appreciate so much
because I know it has the potential for people
to hear that message and make a lot of money
and change their lives, their children's lives
and their grandchildren's lives.
Which is one five to 10 year execution
on a set of ideas or an idea.
I love it brother.
I love it.
And I know, you know, we're pinched for time today.
I love for you to tell people, you know,
what does Armando have going on
and then following up with where can they find
and connect with you.
I mean, I already gave them in the opener,
but I want you to tell it yourself.
So I'm available on all social media platforms,
Tal got Tycoon on Twitter, it's an underscore before,
somebody got my name before.
So I'm also on the Crypto Trends podcast,
you can see back here,
I'm about to film it in a few seconds.
So me and Robert Croak talk about
what's happening this week in crypto,
and we try to predict where things are going.
So it's a very popular, I think it's the biggest right now,
the biggest crypto podcast on Spotify.
So reach out, make sure you guys listen to that.
And that's it really.
So I would appreciate if you guys would follow me.
I will make sure we have the description
both on YouTube and on the audio versions.
We'll have everything in the show notes.
Man, just honored to have you here.
Really quick rapid fire with Armando, right?
So, Groping Clarksville, tall guy, Tycoon.
How tall is Armando for those that don't know?
Oh, 6'6".
6'6".
Ken Armando, Hoop.
Yeah, I used to be good.
I messed my knees getting bad now though,
but I played overseas, I played in Puerto Rico.
Pro ball.
Yup, so still hooping.
Yeah, as soon as my knee gets better,
I'm going through physical therapy.
So I was dunking before, I was still dunking before that.
So I'll have to catch them off the rim and everything.
Hopefully I get back to it.
That was like eight months ago.
All right, that's the new YouTube channel.
Armando getting back, Armando getting back.
All right, man.
So again, appreciate your time.
I know you're a busy guy, truly honored.
All the nuggets and wisdom that you dropped
for the viewers and listeners.
Appreciate you more than you know, brother.
I appreciate it, man.
Thanks so much.
You got it.
For all the viewers and listeners,
remember your because is your superpower. You got it. For all the viewers and listeners, remember your because is your superpower.
Go unleash it.
Thank you for tuning in to Mick Unplugged.
Keep pushing your limits, embracing your purpose, and chasing greatness.
Until next time, stay unstoppable.