My First Million - #152 with Trung Phan - Sam Talks About the Hubspot Deal & Ideas With Trung Phan

Episode Date: February 10, 2021

Sam Parr (@TheSamParr) and Trung Phan (@TrungTPhan) discuss: - How the HubSpot/The Hustle deal came about? - Why did Sam decide to sell? - What will be Sam's biggest purchase now that he's sold? - Wha...t will change with The Hustle and MFM going forward? - Trung brings some massive opportunities: financial engineering for good, improving the lives of prisoners and the big potential of paid Twitter Articles mentioned: - https://thehustle.co/he-was-facing-life-in-prison-now-hes-the-ceo-of-the-instagram-for-the-incarcerated/ - https://thehustle.co/how-one-man-went-from-a-life-prison-sentence-to-a-100k-engineering-job/ Thank you to Lemon.io for sponsoring today's episode! They are offering a 15% discount for the first 6 weeks of work for all MFM fans. Go to Lemon.io/mfm to claim the offer! Have you joined our private FB group yet? It's a page where people share each others million dollar ideas or what they're already working on: https://www.facebook.com/groups/ourfirstmillion. Editing thanks to Jonathan Gallegos (@jjonthan)  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

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Starting point is 00:00:06 I feel like I can rule the world. I know I could be what I want to. I put my all in it like my days on. On a road, let's travel, never looking back. All right. We're live. We're on. Okay, we're on, man.
Starting point is 00:00:25 Listeners, so Sean is, had a little work emergency. Not like a real emergency. He just couldn't join the podcast today. So we have Trung. What up, man? So Trong is a writer for The Hustle. He wrote for trends. Now he basically writes to the daily email by himself
Starting point is 00:00:42 to close to 2 million people a day. He is big on Twitter. What's your handle? Trong Tee fan. So he's around. A lot of you guys hopefully know him, but he's been wanting to come on the podcast. Sean wasn't here.
Starting point is 00:00:53 So I want to be grilling Sam for everyone. And I just want to clarify, we do have some other hitters on the daily email. I mean, did some heavy lifting in Q4 2020, but we got some hitters now. Jacob Cohen. I got to give a shout out to the young one. He does great stuff.
Starting point is 00:01:07 But yeah, I'm here for the list. listeners to ask Sam when he was selling hot dogs. Missouri, if he ever thought he'd be selling a media company to SaaS firm. We have this group on this app called Apex. And it's like a private group where a bunch of my first million listeners are on this group and they anonymously say stuff. All of them make fun of me for talking about hot dogs too much. So I don't think I could talk about that anymore because they say I talk about it too much.
Starting point is 00:01:35 So I don't know if you can go the hot dog route. But you know what we should do one day, Abraeu? We should have Trong and his team come on and actually talk about how they write the daily email. I feel like a lot of people ask me that all the time. But it's way less sexy because it's basically Trong just locks himself in a room and does it. One time I talked to Trong at like 11 a.m.
Starting point is 00:01:52 His time and he was like outside with this kid at the playground. And I was like, Trong, don't you got to write the email? He goes, dog, it's done. I did it already. He just took the day off. I was like, all right. We'll have to do that sometime. But yeah, our deal was announced, I think, last Wednesday.
Starting point is 00:02:07 the company, the hustle has been sold to HubSpot. That includes this podcast. And we're going to do a ton of cool stuff. I actually think we're having Keering on the guy who was like the champion of the deal at HubSpot. He's going to be on this podcast tomorrow to talk about from his perspective why they did it. But today we can talk a little bit about our company's perspective and some things like that. Just as everyone knows. And so Trung knows because we got bought by a public company, we're definitely not allowed to talk about certain things or to like, I'm going to try my hardest not to make a joke.
Starting point is 00:02:32 Like, oh, you got to go out and buy the stock, right? Because that's illegal. and I'm still learning all this as I go. I'm not as I go. I mean, I've learned a lot already, but it's definitely new to me. I have to make sure I don't do anything unethical or illegal on this podcast. So Trung, hopefully you'll be able to keep that in mind.
Starting point is 00:02:47 Well, just for anybody that's wondering, the ticker is H-UBS. So is that going to have to get bleeped out? No, you're not, I don't think you're saying anything wrong. All right, that's a ticker. I mean, this one might have to get bleeped up, but I was telling Sam that of all the hub companies that purchased the hustle, I'm glad it was HubSpot. Versus who?
Starting point is 00:03:04 Well, you guys can do the math and the other hub companies. What do you think, Cabreou? No idea what you're talking about, dude. There's a big one based in Montreal. We'll just leave it at that. So what do you want to talk about? What should we talk about with this deal? Well, why don't you tell the listeners?
Starting point is 00:03:18 I mean, no one's heard from me other than that thread. Just tell them, download on them right now. You're feeling. Yeah, so we, a while back, so we've always had people wanting to buy us. A lot of media companies and mostly all media companies and private equity firms. and I was never going to sell to a private equity firm. Like, no, not a chance. Was it going to be part of that?
Starting point is 00:03:40 Media companies, I thought it was cool. So I went to, like, the offices of, like, a lot of these cool New York publishers in Brooklyn or some of the older ones that own lots of brands in Manhattan. I went to a lot of these companies, and they were lovely, nice people, but it was just not a culture fit. It was, like, I remember I was, like, in this boardroom,
Starting point is 00:03:59 or it felt like a boardroom. Like, you imagine, like, boardroom in, like, we just picture like an old white dude with a tie overlooking Central Park and me telling him when I was 26 or 27 about like this email where it's kind of funny because we could say the F word and we just do crazy stuff and yada yada yada yada we went time wrote an article about doing a bunch of LSD like and I'm like this guy does not get it like I'm just a line item to him and and I didn't want to be part of that I also felt that a lot of the media companies out there they were dying and they thought that buying us
Starting point is 00:04:31 or buying a bunch of businesses like us would somehow save them and I did not want to be part of that. So we never like, Trump, name one media company that's doing great, like publishing media company who you'd want to own stock in. Are there any? No, well, I mean,
Starting point is 00:04:43 I think you've talked about this before, but like, I mean, the ones that raised major venture like four or five years ago, like the vices, but fees, the voxes, just like those business models
Starting point is 00:04:52 aren't going to be able to last in 2020 and beyond. They're all tons of venture, tons of growth expectations that there's never going to be able to meet. So to answer your question, no. And then, like, is there any public company that is a like a traditional acquirer of us that you'd want to own stock in? Have you ever spoken to the Times? New York Times? Yeah. Not in this capacity. You're right. So that's one. I would want to own New York Times stock, but there's not many. No, there isn't. I mean, the other one is a, I mean, it's a private
Starting point is 00:05:19 company. And it's at this point, it's a common nonprofit is whatever Steve Jobs is a widow is doing, Marine Powell Jobs. I've talked to them, but not in this regard. Do you believe that those companies can like 3, 4, 5, 6, 7X? They're... Oh, and the valuation's impossible. I mean, what's vice? It was at its peak?
Starting point is 00:05:36 It's a $5 billion company. It's insane. Yeah. So when we met with these companies or just, like, thought about these companies selling to them, it destroyed me. I also think that a lot of media companies, particularly in New York scene. And I make fun in New York. I love a lot of these people.
Starting point is 00:05:49 A lot of them are my friends. But, you know, just like in Silicon Valley, there's negative stereotypes. the New York media scene has these negative stereotypes. And in my head, it's the same people revolving doors at company, building the same shit, and most of it is horrible. They all say, oh, let's go to video. Let's do this. Let's do that.
Starting point is 00:06:04 Now they're all saying, let's go to newsletters. It's like, dog, that was six years too late. But they're all saying the same stuff, and I didn't want to be part of that. And so in my head, I always thought, you know who should buy us? We work. I thought we work should buy us. Like, before we found out that they weren't that great. And then I thought LinkedIn should buy us.
Starting point is 00:06:23 And then I started thinking, oh, what about like a sales force or like companies like this? And then last fall, HubSpot reached out to me. And I was like, oh, my God, this is finally happening. One of you companies that I always thought should buy us is showing interest. And so that was quite interesting. And then they just kind of explained their plan. And it made a ton of sense. And I was like, all right, this is great.
Starting point is 00:06:45 We got to keep talking. What do you explain just like briefly before Kieran gives a full download? I mean, top level. What is the value prop for them? Yeah, so basically the hustle, our vision from day one, here's been our vision from day one. We said that we wanted to build up this really large email list and we're going to do it for like this entrepreneurial business-minded person. We're going to make profits early on, which we did with advertising.
Starting point is 00:07:06 We had about an eight-figure advertising business. And then as we grow, we're going to use those profits to launch more stuff that we could sell directly to them. And our first thing was trends, which was a massive hit. I think it's a massive hit. And then eventually it was like, all right, that's working. let's launch another, let's launch another. And then it was like, all right, we're making all this profit.
Starting point is 00:07:25 Let's invest in some of these cool companies that are trends members or hustle readers are making. That was kind of the long-term goal. And HubSpot came to us and they go, yeah, we want to do this thing. And they basically described what I described. They're like, we have these products. But a lot of media companies who have these great audiences, they haven't made like the really high margin stuff.
Starting point is 00:07:40 And we could partner with them and kind of have a one plus one equals three type of thing. And so that's what they said to us. And I go, well, we're already going to do this. Maybe it is a good idea to partner. So we can just get to it right. way. So the idea with HubSpot is like they have like 90,000 customers or something like that. And a lot of their customers, I think are not a lot, but some portion of their customers are small to medium sized businesses. Well, the hustle has like a million and a half, almost two million
Starting point is 00:08:07 of those people. And then we have tens of thousands of trends members and they're all that person. And so they're like, well, if you could get us like two or three thousand new customers, we're talking like, you just gave us like a three percent bump in our customer base. That's Awesome. And so, like, we don't need to sell that much stuff eventually. I mean, the way that we're going to look at this is just brand awareness. Can we, like, get the brand well known? But this allows us to buy the best or hire the best writers, the best creators. I mean, the life that Trung is going to have starting, I guess, today, whenever we, that starts, is going to be probably better than everyone who works at the New York Times. I mean, I like some of those Twitter followings, but to your point, I get it. I'll actually want to add something that, afford you something that Ross Simmons wrote from Foundation. I know you know Ross. Ross. He's a trends member. He did a quantitative back check on what you just said about the audience that were the HubSpot is getting with the hustle. So he looked at the most frequently used words in the bios of the HubSpot followers, marketers, digital marketing SEO. And then he looked at the most used terms in the bios of hustle followers, co-founder, product, growth strategy data.
Starting point is 00:09:15 A complete different subset, right? But also somebody that HubSpot is going after. I mean, there's literally numbers put behind this that they found a very yin-yang kind of acquisition here. Yeah, it was great. And then here's what's something funny. As we were talking, the founders were like kind of stalking us a little. Like I could see Darmash was like friending me on Facebook and following me. Brian was doing the same thing.
Starting point is 00:09:34 They were just wanting to check in and make sure we are legit. And I know Darmesh. I don't know them well, but we run in the same circle. I've never met Brian up until recently. And I saw Brian join trends. He must have bought it with just his company credit card. and he was trying to fly under the radar. And I saw that shit.
Starting point is 00:09:50 And I immediately went to the group and I said, hey, everyone, Brian Halligan from HubSpot just joined the group. And he got like 300 replies in like an hour. Those hilarious. And I told all my friends, I go, hey, comment on this for me, will you? There was reasons like, and people were saying like, oh, HubSpot Rocks, I use HubSpot, yada, yada, yada, that's so cool you're here. And I was hoping that in his head he would feel like, oh, this is perfect.
Starting point is 00:10:16 Well, I mean, clearly, something worked. Yeah, that's what I was hoping for. But anyway, so that's kind of how it came to be. Let's just, let's add this. This was, I mean, I don't think you noted this, but it was completely unsolicited that the cold approach you got over the fall. Yeah, it was just a cold email. They must have saw your lecture.
Starting point is 00:10:36 Yeah, and I was not intending to sell at all. I was never going to sell. There was a few reasons that when I decided to sell, I had just recovered from a really bad illness. I was in a weird state and I was like, you know, like, if there's like a horrible emergency, like it would be nice to have this like a win under my belt and I was just like really sick. And I just recovered from Lyme disease where I'd spend a ton of time in the hospital. And I was like, you know what?
Starting point is 00:10:59 Let's just guarantee a win and keep building it. And I think that could be fun. And that's kind of like where I was when they called. But it was just a cold email. Have you in the last week like mentally changed it all or I mean, you've been telling me, yeah, it's not really just more the same. But like, to be honest, there, anything. Anything changed.
Starting point is 00:11:15 You wearing a great shirt on Friday. It's black today, man. Like, something's going on. Are you asking, like, if I bought something? No, just in general, man. Like, you can't tell me that nothing mentally has not changed. I don't know how most people are in the situation, but my, like, I don't know how to put this in a non-dushy way. But, like, I had a fair bit of money before this.
Starting point is 00:11:35 I had enough money that my, that I was on like the high, one of the hierarchy of needs where I was like, I didn't need to worry about stuff. The thing that I've changed is that change is just. the fact that like I proved to myself that I could start something and end it. And that is the thing that has changed. The money doesn't really matter because I already live a nice life. I already owned a nice home. I have cars and I've got and I don't really buy fancy stuff. So there's, I mean, I'm not wearing a watch.
Starting point is 00:12:00 You're a gym guy. You spend all your money on fitness. I spent all my money on fitness and that's not that much money. You know, I built out of a gym for five grand. I'm going to buy a rowing machine. That's $2,000. That's like what I'll buy because I normally would try to give them to me for free. But now I'll buy it.
Starting point is 00:12:14 But no, I think the biggest relief is that I started something and it ended. And also the second biggest relief is that I don't have to worry about the stuff that I used to have to worry about. So during this process, we're going to hire a CEO. And don't say his name, by the way, because Tron, because we haven't announced who we never actually said who the guy's name was. And I don't want to call him out. He was awesome. I loved him. And we almost did it.
Starting point is 00:12:42 And then when this thing happened, I had to fill him in. I'm like, hey, man, I think we're going to do this thing. So anyway, the reason I was going to hire a CEO is I hate doing stuff, like, managing payroll, negotiating with people about raises, checking in with people to make sure that, like, just traditional managing stuff. I hate it. I hated it so much to the point where there were some days where I'm like, I'm not going to work.
Starting point is 00:13:02 I don't want to do this. I called in sick every once in a while because I'm like, I've got eight meetings. I can't do it. Like it was Lyme disease one of the times you called in sick for six weeks? Was that a fake one? That was a real one. My face didn't work. I was looking like that.
Starting point is 00:13:13 No, I hated that. You know, someone tweeted something, you tweeted something Trung Today where you like talked about MBAs and someone said founders found managers manage and that's the truth. And when I was managing stuff, I was horrible at it and I hated it. It felt like it sucked the life out of me. And so I'm so thankful that I don't have to do the type of managing of like worrying about like looking at balance sheets and things like that and making decisions. I can't, I'm so bad at it and I hate it.
Starting point is 00:13:39 Well, actually, now that you mentioned that tweet, I think it's pretty funny to talk about because the content of the tweet was basically like, look at the big fame, M companies, whatever, like Facebook, Apple, Amazon, and Microsoft, Google. They're all run by MBAs now. I didn't even realize Satya at Microsoft was an NBA until I Googled it, and it made the tweet way more fire. So, no, managers, manage, founders found.
Starting point is 00:14:01 And, like, if you're Larry Page and Sergey Brin and you're worth 80 billion or whatever they're worth, you just want to go off somewhere and do peyote, right? Like, they don't give a shit. No, like, that's not where I was. You know what I wanted to do? I wanted to be locked in a room. I want to no one to talk to me and I wanted to make.
Starting point is 00:14:14 I wanted to create stuff. Yeah, that's all I want to do. They're doing payote and like trying to do crazy like moon shot stuff, right? I wanted to make stuff. So like when we launched trends, it was me and I'm not like bragging here, but I'm just telling a story. It was me who made literally designed the page, ran the paid marketing to it to get a little bit of traffic, called the customers to figure out what did you like about that?
Starting point is 00:14:35 What did you not like about? And I did that for about $50,000 for the customers. And then we decided to launch it. And I kind of helped people. figure out the vision and then I gave it to other people like Trung and Steph who are way better than me at it and then they made it awesome and I just wanted to only do that all the time. You're a starter guy. You like starting stuff. Yes, I cannot run stuff. I love starting. I mean, I can run stuff, but I like starting. How comparable would you say like you want the
Starting point is 00:14:58 porno rule where you just get to be on Twitter 10 hours a day? He's creating. He's creating all day, man. That's all he's doing. He's creating. Yeah, but his creating is different than my creating. His creating is like performance art. I don't want to do that. That's for sure. You want to keep making cool products like whatever. Or the community. Keyword for the community. Yeah, I don't care if my name's on it. It's just fun to tinker. And that's just what I wanted to do more of.
Starting point is 00:15:21 So yeah, the deal happened. It was cool. A lot of fear, a lot of excitement. It's just a lot of Bix feelings, right? HubSpot, by the way, is like a $20 billion company. Sometimes you have to check these things to realize it, how big these software companies are. Yeah, and it was badass. I've spent
Starting point is 00:15:37 a little time with the CEO. The CEO came to our meeting today. That was cool, right? He's just like a normal guy, I guess. He's just really successful. MIT dudes. I lived in Boston for five years, I lived in Cambridge. MIT and Harvard. I'll tell you about living in Cambridge. What's interesting about that area. You'll never hear, actually, no, you live in San Francisco. Those two places, San Francisco and Cambridge in the States, or where you're like, you'll walk around the street and just hear like overhearing stuff.
Starting point is 00:16:02 It'll be like the craziest kind of random talk you'll hear. Like somebody will be hearing some random disease or launching some kind of program in the Middle East, which will save the region. These are the type of conversations that go on when you're just walking around. I mean, you know that. Yeah. And so Abrae had a question,
Starting point is 00:16:19 and he wants to know, what's going to change going forward? Is the pod going to be shit now? No. So over the last three months when I've been working on this deal, I unfortunately have kind of left Abraeu and Sean hanging a little bit.
Starting point is 00:16:31 I haven't been, people were criticizing the podcast. They're like, man, you guys aren't like focused enough and you're not preparing enough. Well, I'm sorry. It's because there was 90-hour work weeks for this deal.
Starting point is 00:16:40 So, no, I think actually the podcast is going to be even better because we're going to hire some people to help Eva make it even better. We're going to get more distribution because we're going to spread it across our channels a little bit more than before. We're going to spread it on HubSpot channels. We're going to have some more money and budget to make it great. And then maybe we'll do it more often. I'm not sure yet.
Starting point is 00:16:57 But we're also going to be releasing a ton more podcasts. Maybe Trung's going to have his own podcast. Maybe some other writer who we find is going to have their own podcasts. And so we're going to actually have more. In terms of changing on the consumer's point of view for the hustle or the, for the pod. Nothing. I don't think anything is going to be changed, except we're going to do more of it. And maybe you'll see a HubSpot logo on some stuff. It's going to be more than the same. That's how when people ask me, like, I got a lot of congratulations. I'm sure you got like a multiple
Starting point is 00:17:24 of a thousand. But they're like, hey, man, how's this changed for you? I'm like, honestly, nothing really just, I still got to work on those five emails a week. And honestly, at the end of the day, nothing really changes for the content side. Well, we're going to hire more people. So right now, like we didn't hire more people, but I mean, like the job's still the same, right? Yeah, like some great writers cost hundreds of thousands of dollars. And like, we could never afford that. Now we can. And hopefully we can go, or, you know, I don't want to get any.
Starting point is 00:17:48 Send those applications in. Yeah, I don't want to give any applicant a false sense that they're going to get hundreds of thousands of dollars. I just mean like, we're working at a tech company now. It's a lot different than a 30 person media company. And that's interesting. Another thing is I think a lot of these media companies, because they're reliant on advertising, I think they're so screwed. And they're not screwed.
Starting point is 00:18:09 like they're necessarily going to die, but they're screwed in that it's a horrible place to work. Yeah, it's high pressure and you got to deliver, like you said, these numbers. But you mean, you've been a very even-keeled person about it because you run an advertising-based business, but you also have a subscription-based business. So I think, I mean, when you kind of opine on it, I'm like, oh, you know what?
Starting point is 00:18:31 I'm going to kind of take sound word on this because you've seen both sides of it. I've seen you on Twitter. I argue both sides, right? Like, you're very balanced about it. Look, it's not bad. it helped us get us to where we had to go. But if we wanted to be, it would be really hard to become, I'm not saying advertising is bad to have.
Starting point is 00:18:45 I'm saying it's great if it's part of your mix. But like if we had Bonobo, one time we had Bonobos as an advertiser and there was a shooting that we covered. And Bonobos was like, hey, like we can't be running next to this like Nazi who just killed this. There was something like a shooting in New York where a guy shot like a, what's a Jewish church?
Starting point is 00:19:07 Synagogue. Synagogue. God, there's something like that. And some brand, I don't remember if it was Bonobos, but they were like, you know, we don't want to advertise. So it's like, fuck, we just lost 30 grand that day. Absolutely. Well, like you said, you can sell.
Starting point is 00:19:20 The back end's real good now. It's a software, man. All right. So we just got done talking to the deal about the deal. We're actually going to talk about it more tomorrow or I guess in two days, whenever these go live with Kieran from HubSpot. So we're going to talk about that a little bit more in detail. But I just wanted to give you a little bit preview on.
Starting point is 00:19:44 what happened with the deal. Now, let's get back into it with the old stuff. And we're going to have Trong tell us some interesting ideas that he's looking at. Trung is the writer of the hustle, a writer at the hustle. Let's do it. So why we throw some ideas out there? All right. I didn't prepare anything. Did you? I did. Well, it's because I've been writing so much the last couple of weeks. I got some ideas here. So I actually wanted to ask you a very specific one. When you hear the word financial engineering, what do you think? Bernie made off. Okay. So you think financial engineering, it's a negative connotation. When I think financial engineering, I think of a thief.
Starting point is 00:20:15 Okay. I think that characterization is pretty much out there. A lot of financial engineering happened in 08 with the mortgage-backed securities. Goldman was involved in a deal where they put a mortgage-back security bond together and basically bet against it. This is actually one of the most famous financial engineering, which is a lot of fuckery involved. Probably have to bleep that out. But when Greek tried to join the EU, you have to hit certain debt numbers. And Goldman basically said, listen, we can do some kind of...
Starting point is 00:20:42 financial instrument for you, which will make it look like you have a lot less debt than you do. Goldman made like $700 million on this deal, and they basically lied to get the Greek government and Greece into the EU. And that basically led to the European financial crisis, right? So to your point, financial engineering, very negative. Okay. But where are you going with this? There's a very positive story I just wrote about it. And it involves a professor at the school of our co-founders now of the company we work for HubSpot, MIT. His name's Andrew Lowe. Andrew Lowe created a new financing mechanism for the biotech industry, which has now led to a company
Starting point is 00:21:21 that's worth over $8 billion. And essentially, what he did was he put financial engineering to the biotech industry. Because you know, for example, what do you know about the drug creation process? It's expensive. It's expensive. It's hard and it fails a lot. Exactly. It's a lottery, right? So you'll spend $200 million for a chance, a 5% chance that I get a expensive. a blockbuster drug might be worth $20 billion. So Andrew Lowe, about a decade ago, this professor, lost six people very close him, including his mother to cancer, over the span of four years. And this, like, made him to reassess his life and, like, look at his field and be like, what can I use my expertise with? He's like, he's like a godfather in the industry. A whole
Starting point is 00:22:02 generation of quons were taught by him. And he's like, I'm going to look at biotech to figure what the issue is. And you're probably familiar this term. Do you know the term of, you know, the value of death and funding. Some industries are unfundable, right? Like a solar reached the value of death like a decade ago. It's just very difficult to fund these like long shot things with long off payoffs. He goes, I'm going to find a way to make biotech funding more viable. So he went and said, what if we got 150 startups to get $200 million each and that's a $30 billion fund. And he ran the numbers and said if on this fund, there is a 90% chance that you'll be able to get five blockbuster drugs out of it. So the key being this though, each startup has to go after a different disease
Starting point is 00:22:45 be completely uncorrelated. And he ran the numbers and he's like, this now can make financial sense for an investor. So explain this again. What do you do? You bundle, you pool risk together. So instead of you fund 150 startups attacking 150 diseases. But isn't that what a biotech VC firm would do anyway? No, the thing is that you have to specifically go after different diseases. Wouldn't a fund, wouldn't any smart fund already do this? No, but this is the thing. Like, the industry just hasn't been doing it. Like, this is what he discovered.
Starting point is 00:23:19 And how's it going? One of his students took his model, and he went out, raised money from KKR, raised money from Sequoia. It's a public company now. It's worth almost $9 billion. They have 20 drugs in the pipeline, and four of them are in phase three. So they literally applied his model, and they're curing rare diseases and rare cancers. Is that the name Lube, Andrew Loeb?
Starting point is 00:23:39 Andrew Lowe. So he's like the fund manager? No, the company's not a fund. It's just a biotech firm that treats his model like this. They have a centralized research, centralized operations. Each new drug that they create, they spin it off as subsidiary. So where's the opportunity here? Basically, he created this funding model where you can attract money from conservative investors that wouldn't put it into biotech, which is otherwise way too risky because he's saying it's actually de-risk by doing it with this model. So to your point, you would think that it has been done, but it hasn't, and he created kind of the situation and went out was a champion for it. And now he can go old guard money and potentially pension insurance money into this type of system before it just be venture VC kind of biotech risky money.
Starting point is 00:24:24 But now he's going to pour all this other money into it and with his proven unmodel. The company's called Bridge Biopharma. Bridge Biopharma. Yeah, check them out. So to answer your question, it seems to be a little bit minutia of confusion here. You're like, aren't they already doing this? I think that my rebuttal, that is the amount of money needed isn't going into it because it's still too risky.
Starting point is 00:24:45 Let's say a biotech fund is like 100 mil. Andrew Lowe's like, no, no, we need tens of billions of dollars. And he's out here championing this model. It's like, you've got to think bigger. You can't just diversify across 10 startups looking at 10 different diseases. He's like, I want 150 startups looking at 150 diseases. And looking at my model, I can get the probability of three blockbuster drugs, which is probably worth 50 to 60.
Starting point is 00:25:07 billion over a lifetime is like 90 plus percent. So he's de-risking for a conservative investor. If you're an insurance company, you can actually look at this now and be like, you know what? This is viable, whereas before you would not. So we had Jason Calcanus on here a few days ago. He might be worth $100, $200 million. I'm not sure. I mean, he's up there because he's invested in Robin Hood, Com, Uber, all these great things. And he says that that's his strategy with angel investing is like a little bit of a shotgun approach. I don't think he said this explicitly, but if you look at his track record, it appears as though he's like, I meet with tons of people and I invest in a ton of stuff.
Starting point is 00:25:45 It has worked for him. I mean, it seems like a pretty common model for high risk investing. It's just quantity over quality because it's too hard to tell the quality early on. Yeah, absolutely. I think the thing I really want to emphasize here is the low to no correlation. I think that is really what, because if you're looking at, like, for example, the biggest kill in the United States is about heart disease, if you're just trying to attack heart disease in different parts of it,
Starting point is 00:26:07 they'd probably have the same underlying causes. So that model wouldn't work, right? You have to be very specifically, you're searching for diseases and maybe single gene mutations that are completely uncorrelated. Listen, I'm probably completely chopping up Andrew Lowe's paper here, but I thought it was super interesting because financial engineering gets such a bad reputation as when I ask you what your first instinct is to that word.
Starting point is 00:26:33 All right, what else you got? idea guy. So the other thing we wrote, and I think you saw this, you retweeted it, but I know you retweet a lot of my stuff without reading it, which I do appreciate. Marcus Bullock, the CEO and founder, former inmate turned CEO of what they call. Yeah, that's a crazy business. Let's talk about that. Yeah. So do you remember, you read the story? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So basically, there's like a sob story along with it. I say that just, I don't mean that disrespectfully, but like there was like, it was like a sad story. I think if I remember, he screwed up, got locked up, and at 15.
Starting point is 00:27:08 I imagine, like, he did what he did, and so he just spent some time in jail, and they'd make a call call. Went to the point of he almost like bankrupt his mother, right? His mom had to move from an apartment into studio just to be able to afford to communicate with him. Yeah, and what did he get locked up for? Arm carjacking.
Starting point is 00:27:24 Got it. And this happened six years, about six, seven years after the 1989 Central Park rape case. Remember, the jogger was raped by five. well, the drugger was raped by five minority youths was what they were charged with, but it turned out to be not true at all. But in the aftermath of that, the start of that case, every state in the United States basically said, we're going to start trying use as adults.
Starting point is 00:27:48 So we got totally fucked. Banked rep his mom, not banked up his mom, but depleted her funds. She had to completely change her lifestyle, just to talk on the phone with them, once a week, however long it was. How much it cost to make a collect call? Like $12 a minute? $18 for 15 minutes. 18 for 15?
Starting point is 00:28:03 Yeah, insane. Yeah, and that was in the 90s, right? Yeah. So a lot of money. A lot of money, and it's because the telephone systems for prison system in America is run by basically two private equity-backed telecom companies. Okay, and what did he create? He created something that he just looked around. He's like everybody using their phone for social media.
Starting point is 00:28:24 Prisoners obviously don't have access to Twitter and Facebook, but what if I could create something that would be similar from the family side and you can kind of still communicate with them? So it's very simple. You open an app on your phone. It's called Flick Shop, F-L-I-K-S-H-O-P. And you basically do whatever you do with Twitter or Facebook, you click on an image and you send it. But instead of sending an image between phones, you are sending you to Flick Shop and they're going to write a postcard for you with the image and the text. And what's amazing about the story is the hustle involved for him to get into like over 2,700 prison systems in America. He was like meeting these wardens and administrators. like in person, trying to convince them that they should allow Flickshop. And for the administrators of these prisons, it actually makes a lot of sense. They want to reduce recidivism inmates that go out and commit crimes again. But one way to do that is just keep them mentally healthy, right?
Starting point is 00:29:18 Let them communicate with their family, let them know there's job opportunities. A lot of corporations use Flickshop to send job opportunities and ideas. And the other thing that's a benefit to the prisons is Flick Shop is a known vendor quantity. so you're not going to be getting ketamine laced into these postcards. What? And how big is the business now? I haven't gone through the full numbers. I know he sent,
Starting point is 00:29:38 I think he sent maybe hundreds of thousands of millions of postcards already. And I'm just looking at the landscape. I know that there are kind of these like on-demand, I think Flutter Shop or something. I don't know if that's right in Flettershire. That's an interesting industry. Let me tell you a story real quick.
Starting point is 00:29:52 So about two years ago, one of our investors and now a mentor and great friend of mine, his name is Chris Redlitz. Chris, like, helped start Reebok, and then he was the first investor in Wish. He's been around. He's very successful. Real low-key, though. But about 15 years ago, someone asked him to go volunteer to prison to talk to them about
Starting point is 00:30:14 technology. And he was like, what? I don't want to do this. What am I doing? And then he gets there and he does the presentation, and he's like, I'm going to dedicate my life to this. He starts this thing called the last mile. And I went and volunteered at it.
Starting point is 00:30:26 And basically, I went there. He took me out to San Quentin. And this guy, he's met, I think he's met with, like, the Clintons and the Trumps. He's met with, like, on both sides of the aisle, they all support this program. And it's this in-depth program, and it teaches inmates' WordPress, basically, like, relatively simple things, but it allows them to get a job. So some of them have gotten jobs at Slack. He teaches them, like, front-end stuff, I think, a lot of WordPress, a lot of just basic web-building stuff so they can get gigs. And I went out to this prison, and I'm a big crime guy.
Starting point is 00:30:57 Like, I love, like, crime. I love, like, prison TV shows. like cops and all that stuff. And so, like, I knew what San Quentin was because, you know, that's like, oh, you're going to San Quentin. That was like the, you know, that's a big deal. And I was just walking around the yard. We go up there.
Starting point is 00:31:10 We show up. We walk around these yards. And imagine just exactly what San Quentin is. It's like all dirt. It's kind of overlooks water. And there's these huge dudes shirtless, lifting weights, mean looking dudes. And me and Chris walk in there and they part. They like get out of the way.
Starting point is 00:31:29 It's like the Red Sea. or Chris and they all go hey Chris man how are you and he goes like what's up Darren like what's up like he was God there because everyone knows if you get into his program they have a zero percent or they had a zero recidivism rate meaning everyone over the last 10 years who went through their program not one of them went back to prison do you know how many have gone through I think thousands thousands I think um you could look it up and so it was crazy I was just walking around with these guys I mean these are many of them or just... Dude, were you scared?
Starting point is 00:31:59 Were you scared? Like, you must have been extremely uncomfortable. I was scared at first and then you start talking to him and it's like, I start talking to this guy. I'm like, hey, what did you do? He's like, I beat up a guy
Starting point is 00:32:08 20 years ago. He goes, I caught a guy cheating with my wife and I beat him up really bad and he almost died. He was like, I was just so angry and I just lost my temper and I flipped. And in my head, I'm like,
Starting point is 00:32:18 yeah, I mean, you deserve to be here, but that was 20 years ago, you're doing better. So he was just a guy to me. He was wearing, you know, his inmate clothing. But besides that, he was just a nice smart dude and we were just talking about stuff and um for the most part it felt
Starting point is 00:32:32 like normal guys who did bad stuff like years ago and i don't want to generalize i mean obviously there's a lot of bad people there who deserve to be there but it was crazy and so what he's working on now is they are what he discovered was the same thing it's really hard to communicate and very expensive to communicate and it's hard to track people and he said that uh like i forget who it was exactly but a lot of these private equity companies have like these prepaid cell phones or something like that, and they were gouging these families, like crazy to use them. And so his new startup, I don't know if it's launched yet, but when you think about it makes sense, but it's crazy on the surface, he wants to give an iPhone to all the prisoners. Now, I don't know if this means
Starting point is 00:33:09 like low security, high security. I don't know which prisoners exactly, but he wants to give an iPhone to all of them. They won't be able to use the internet, but it's a way to track them, to send them education stuff so they can learn how to prepare for work. A lot of really cool stuff. It's very fascinating. It's called The Last Mile. And the hustle, we actually did a great story on it. super interesting space. And he says that this business, he goes, it's going to be massive. He goes,
Starting point is 00:33:31 we're going to be as big as T-Mobile. He's looking at like a businessman, right? He's not looking at this. I mean, he runs a nonprofit that he raised money for and it just doesn't make any money. It's a, you know, they just pay, they cover their ass.
Starting point is 00:33:43 But he's like, I want to make a business for this. And he's like, I want to come at it at the right direction. So it's like good for customers. It doesn't completely screw them. But if I make it for profit, that allows me to expand faster and reach more people.
Starting point is 00:33:55 And it's a crazy unique situation. This whole private prisons and that whole space, it is quite fascinating. It's really corrupt, but it's very interesting. Well, your friends at the Cicero Institute, you remember, you remember the Cicero Institute? Yeah. So they sent us a bunch of stats about the prison industry. I mean, 2.2 million incarcerated. And what Marcus said was essentially, when you go to prison, your whole family goes to prison, right?
Starting point is 00:34:20 So 2.2 million times, what, call it to average families, four or five people, maybe extend is 10? you're talking 20, 30 million people directly affected by the prison industrial complex, right? That's 10% of the U.S. expenditure government and state and federal spent 81 billion on the prison system. So huge industry that needs a ton of change. And, I mean, you get the social good out of it. The lowering recidivism is huge. Yeah, super interesting space.
Starting point is 00:34:48 We actually do more research on this space and come back. If you want to learn about this, Google, probably the hustle. what would they Google to The hustle to last mile Zach wrote about it, right? Well, Zach did the last mile. So Google the hustle the last mile.
Starting point is 00:35:00 The last mile is three words, the last mile. And then for Trunk's story, Google the hustle and then what was it called Flick Shop? F-L-I-K-S-H-O-P. I mean, we could probably throw these in a nose.
Starting point is 00:35:10 But yeah, and Marcus is crazy is insane. Yeah, actually, one part of the story there I just want to add before we were jumping into something else I asked him, I'm like, in your late teens,
Starting point is 00:35:20 16, 17, 18, and you're in prison, like, who are you mentors. How did you even come an entrepreneur? He literally said he got hold of Jay Z's album, his first album. And Jay Z was rapping about these non-traditional paths to entrepreneurship. And the line that he said was from the song, You Don't Know. He goes, you can make 40 off a brick, but one rhyme can beat that. So he's like, why be in the street hustling if there's other paths that you can possibly use, right? And I mean, I'm sure Jay's influenced a lot more
Starting point is 00:35:49 and inspired a lot more people. And let's go to one more idea. But to wrap it up, what did that guy get from the article. Did he get a bunch of customers or anything? Well, I'll tell you, that one was he wrote me and he said a state government reached out to him and they wanted to put him the flick shop in a lot of institutions. So I mean, like, honestly, that was amazing, man, to get that message from him. He's like, and he wrote to me, he's like, Trong, you know, this is amazing. And dude, like, what did I do? Like, this is your journey, man. Like, I didn't spend eight years in prison, right? You got to be like, yeah, I helped you a ton, man. You got some equity or what? All right, man. All right. Well, let's do one more.
Starting point is 00:36:20 All right. Well, this one will be an easy one for you. I'll show you got a million ideas. on it. Tell me what you think about Twitter's subscription business. Tell me about exactly what's going on. So basically Twitter bought this company called, is it review? It's spelled like a really cute way. It's a newsletter business. I don't know if you saw them. Yesterday, Twitter said that they were going to put subscription offerings potentially in this upcoming year. So you can pay for the following things it looks like, potentially. I don't want to front run a fake story here. You can pay for tweet deck, which I don't use, but I hear a really good thing about. You can pay for of pro features, which is like more customization on your profile and something about undoing
Starting point is 00:36:59 sense, which doesn't really make a lot of sense to me because I just delete tweets I don't like. Yeah, but if you have a Twitter thread and you want to delete number three or five. Okay. So that one I might actually pay for. And then the other one was tipping. You can tip accounts you like for extra content. I think that one's a no-brainer. And they also bought a newsletter business. Yeah, not a newsletter business, but a software that makes newsletters. Yeah. And I didn't Facebook say they're going to do paid newsletters as well? Yeah, Facebook has a team doing paid newsletters. So, I mean, you're the guru here.
Starting point is 00:37:28 Tell us what you think. I'm happy we sold. That's a lot of competition. I think Twitter will work before Facebook works because Facebook's in the shitter right now. A lot of the people who make paid content, I think are on Twitter and trust Twitter far more than Facebook. I think that's amazing. I think I should go buy Twitter stock.
Starting point is 00:37:44 I think it's awesome. I think that's a great, great, great idea. I think it's going to be a massive, massive success. Yeah. People are going to rely on Twitter more, which is probably not good. if you're a creator, but I think it's going to make a lot of people, millionaires. If there was some stock guru, like, and he was like, hey, I'm going to tweet out, like, whatever I'm buying each day.
Starting point is 00:38:02 Yeah, pay for the tip me for the exclusive content. Yeah. I mean, that's going to be the biggest thing there is. So obviously, that's going to be awesome. If Elon has a thing where he just, Elon would never do this because he doesn't want that money, but if he just is just like, I'm going to tell you my inside thoughts once a week or something. Yeah, it's going to be the best. I think it's such a great idea.
Starting point is 00:38:18 Ashley, now that you mentioned that train of thought, the amount of sketchy, insider stuff that could go on now is actually pretty insane. People that you know can move the market can just be like, all right, now you get the paid tipping to see me move the market beforehand. Whatever. I mean, I'm just putting it out there. I think it's great. So we have trends.
Starting point is 00:38:34 It's trends.co. You have to go to trends.coe in order to buy it. There's some special stuff on Facebook where we can get people to purchase it in the content. If you're on your phone and you see Trends.com, sometimes you can buy it right there in the app. And that's great. But trying to get new users, we post on Facebook and Twitter. Twitter, the user has to click off, try to be sold on it, buy it, sign up, and each week they're
Starting point is 00:38:59 sent information in their email. And we know that removing a little bit of friction can increase the amount of users you get by two or three times. So you could have a 1% conversion rate. And if you change just a few things, you can have a 3% or 4% conversion rate. And if Twitter can make this, so my credit card is on file with them, and I'm just doing this like, oh, I want this, pop, done, got it. It's going to go through the roof. And I could tell you that the people who buy with Apple Pay convert at a much higher rate. Of course, people aren't always using Apple Pay on their computer, so we don't get that all the time. But I do know that having payments like that is going to be a huge win and it's going to make it really easy. Also,
Starting point is 00:39:35 I didn't know this, and this isn't like me joking. Do you know that there's like nudity on Twitter? I'm just no, I did not know that. Yeah, you can get nudity on Twitter, but I had no idea either. Someone told me, I'm like, wait. That would be the other hub company we're talking about. Yeah, it is. There's nudity on Twitter. I had no idea. I don't know if it's softcore or hardcore. I don't know what the deal is, but obviously we've seen only fans take off. Dude, I didn't even think about that. Twitter literally might have just doubled its market cap based on this potential. It's super interesting. I think that's a really smart, smart play. I don't think it's going to work as well for Facebook. It's wise. I think the running joke,
Starting point is 00:40:10 probably even on the last thought is it took him this long and figure it out. Yeah, the thing about Twitter is like, they don't innovate. I think if I was working at Twitter or if I had power there, I would fire Jack Dorsey right away. Or I would say, you know, you're demoted to this thing and we're going to put a new CEO in place because they don't ever innovate or do anything new. So I think it's badass. What do you think? No, dude, I'm 100% on board. It's a little bit fair to them. I mean, they did have Vine. You just have a history of crushing things. Periscope vine. So I'm on board, man. I like that take. All right. So today's episode, a little, not entirely all over the place, a little new trunk.
Starting point is 00:40:43 This is your first, we're wrapping up. This is your first time on the podcast. Say your Twitter handle again. We need all the hate mail, but hopefully way more fan mail to go to you. So what's your Twitter handle? All right. That's at Trung T-R-U-N-G-T-P-H-A-N. Hopefully the people love it, and you can keep coming back. But it's up to them. Yeah, that's fine, man.
Starting point is 00:41:06 All right. Thank you. All right, thanks guys. Yeah.

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