My First Million - #172 - Indie Businesses Making Millions, Advice to Young Entrepreneurs & How to Grow a Podcast

Episode Date: April 19, 2021

We start this one off with a little "Inside MFM" from Shaan (@ShaanVP) and Sam (@TheSamParr) as they discuss growing the pod and how they are going to do it. Then they break down the big news of the w...eek: the Coinbase IPO. They talk about Coinbase's humble origins on HackerNews and how most big businesses have these same origins. It's often hard to see the big picture in the early days. They also talk about their own early days and give advice to young entrepreneurs. The second half of the pod turns into a brainstorm. They brainstorm around indie businesses like Microacquire and Photopea and how to build similar businesses. Finally, we end it by discussing the opportunities around "Affirm for X". --------- * Want to be featured in a future episode? Drop your question/comment/criticism/love here: https://www.mfmpod.com/p/hotline/ * Support the pod by spreading the word, become a referrer here: refer.fm/million * Have you joined our private Facebook group yet? Go to https://www.facebook.com/groups/ourfirstmillion and join thousands of other entrepreneurs and founders scheming up ideas. --------- Show notes: * (0:24) Growing the podcast: how we're going to do it * (9:02) The guys break down the Coinbase IPO * (20:25) Big businesses are often not apparent at the beginning * (25:26) Advice for young entrepreneurs * (33:55) Microacquire dissected * (40:55) An indie project making million * (52:17) Brainstorm "Affirm for X"

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 I used to chase money a lot. Like, how do I make money? Maybe this will make us money. Maybe this will make some money. And that was good because I like learned skills about how to make money. But the things that actually paid off, none of those really paid off with a big dollar amount. I feel like I can rule the world.
Starting point is 00:00:16 I know I could be what I want to. I put my all in it like no days off. On the road, let's travel, never looking back. All right. Before we actually get to the content, a few things. We've been making a ton of changes to this podcast. The numbers are working. I think the last month was our highest ever, right, Abraeu?
Starting point is 00:00:35 I believe so, yeah. I think we should start saying the numbers. I think we should start saying the numbers. I think we should say what it is, say what we're going to do, and say what happens, whether it works or it doesn't. Yeah, so the trailing of 30 days was, I think, 350,000 listens, which if it's not the highest ever, it's one of, like top one or two. But the trajectory is really what matters, and that is great.
Starting point is 00:00:59 So we're getting around an average episode, I think is 20,000 downloads an episode, which is, I think, a 60% increase from the year before. Is that right, Abrae? Am I getting all these? Yes. 22,000 to 23,000. Right. So let's say we're at 22,000. It used to be 15.
Starting point is 00:01:19 Of course, it used to be zero. So, you know, whatever. It's growing. And our goal is 100,000 per episode. One Rose Bowl Stadium per episode is what I was. want to be doing something like that. And so we're not far. 4x is, you know, it's not far. I think naturally that would happen in a couple years. And what we're going to do is just accelerate it so it happens in one.
Starting point is 00:01:39 Yeah, I feel quite confident that if we do the same thing, but more, it would happen with time. But I don't want to do that. I'm impatient. I want it to happen immediately. So the changes we've made is we've prepared more for every podcast, which I think is very clearly working. Yes. We now have these videos going, which I also. think is clearly working and that it makes me feel good. Is it driving downloads? I don't actually, I'm not convinced, but it's worth it. What you know what it does do is there's a whole group of people that like either
Starting point is 00:02:10 A, just don't listen to podcasts or don't listen much. So they're like kind of like, otherwise they would only hop in once in a while. They didn't build a habit with us. And they follow just through the clip. So there's actually just like another audience that's like, oh, good. I watch those clips every time because they're good. And I always get messages about them. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:02:27 And I'm in that category as well. I don't think I've ever listened to a Joe Rogan podcast, but I watched a lot of clips. Right. And we're putting our clips on YouTube, which is not working. That is not working well at all for us. Right.
Starting point is 00:02:41 Maybe we're putting the full episodes on in a handful have 20 to 30,000 views, maybe even more. A couple of them have a few more. That's working, but the clips are not working. And then we're doing email blast and the hustle. I think that started two weeks ago. That is working. We should rewind.
Starting point is 00:02:56 We should basically say, we had a meeting. which was like a few, I don't know, week ago, maybe something like that. And it was like, oh, okay, we got all these ideas. Basically, I had thrown a few ideas. You had a few ideas. Bray, you had a few ideas. My buddy Ben had a few ideas. They were like, oh, yeah, great.
Starting point is 00:03:10 All these sound good. So, like, who's going to do them? And then we kind of had this, like, come to Jesus moment where it was like, look, in Sam, we trust. Like, if we can't, we can't outsource this to somebody else who doesn't really, I don't want to say it doesn't care, but like, it's a different thing when it's your baby. It's your show. you are getting the like the more people who listen to this the cooler opportunities we get the
Starting point is 00:03:34 the better DMs we get every morning and so like clearly it matters more to us than it would be for even if it was somebody's full-time job and the second thing is like your skill level super high right like we saw you grow the hustle I saw you grow the hustle a lot of people who were subscribers saw you grow the hustle saw you grow trends from scratch and so you sell the thing and it's like so I got excited because I was like I'm going to get to see Sam in action even closer than I did with the hustle where like you would send a monthly update. Now I'm seeing how you actually operate and it's pretty dope. And I actually think the listeners will like to see how you operate,
Starting point is 00:04:06 how you approach growing a thing. And I think that'll be exciting. That's a lot of pressure. Thank you for the problem. That's a lot of pressure. I will say I think growing the podcast has been, I mean, that's actually one of the harder things I've done.
Starting point is 00:04:19 Yeah. But HubSpot owns us now. It's not my money. Like it's their money. And so we're in a totally, I mean, where our owner, you know, the company, this company now does a billion a year in revenue. There's like a billion plus in cash in the bank account.
Starting point is 00:04:34 Like, so we could actually, so we're going to have a lot more resources. I actually am not convinced that that's actually going to help us grow. Yeah. I don't think resources helps you grow, but I think, I would say like that wasn't the problem before. Yeah. It can be helpful, but that wasn't necessarily the problem. And then, so what we're doing now is we don't have ads in the email anymore.
Starting point is 00:04:53 So in the hustle, we do zero advertisements. and the podcast is going in every day now, or not every day, but a lot. And then also, what we are launching at HubSpot and the Hustle is we're creating this thing. Well, I actually don't know if I could say too much about it, but there's going to be a lot more podcasts. And amongst those podcasts, we can promote one another. And that's what you're going to hear.
Starting point is 00:05:16 So whoever is in our podcast crew, we're going to promote them, them us, yada, yada, and I actually think that's going to help a ton. I actually don't think I could talk any. It's pretty joke who's in that, but we'll say it later when you can. So, okay, can I give the audience the five ideas that we had brainstormed that were like, oh, okay. Thing one was like, let's put Sam in charge of it because Sam knows how to grow shit. That was step one.
Starting point is 00:05:40 Step two. Okay, so what are the like, how would you grow a podcast if you're going to grow a podcast? So we said, I'm going to just rattle off the ideas. Number one, big name guests that actually have an overlapping. audience. So people like Chamath, people like Tim Ferriss, not just like a famous person who, like, for example, we had Jake Paul on, super famous, but his audience and our audience is not going to have a huge amount of overlap where it's not necessarily that his fans would connect with us and become ongoing subscribers. Okay, the other one was paid. Can you advertise
Starting point is 00:06:14 to grow a podcast, right? Like running some experiments on, take a few thousand bucks, run it on a paid campaign and see, can you grow through paid? I think we'll find out that's interesting. Which we're doing. So we bought ads in Player FM, Abraeu. Is that what we did? Yep. And then we're buying ads and a few more.
Starting point is 00:06:34 I have a few more that we're buying ads. Did that work? Abreu, Player FM? It's hard to tell because they claim a lot of their views come from desktop listeners, which doesn't necessarily get measured according to them. Okay. Well, that's like saying like, oh, yeah, yeah. It's like saying like, no, look, it's like, this is like selling like CBD treats for dogs.
Starting point is 00:06:57 Like, does it work? Right. Can't ask your dog. Yeah. It's like the greatest business ever. It's like selling vitamin B for your puppy. Yeah, exactly. So I would say if it's hard to tell, it didn't work.
Starting point is 00:07:11 It's a very obvious way to think about it. Okay. Another one. Go on other people's podcast. So do a, do a tour. going on other people's pods. They already have an audience. Those people listen to say,
Starting point is 00:07:21 oh man, what a great guy. I'd love to listen to more of this person. They were interesting. Boom. Get some people from there. Clips. People have seen we tripled down on clips.
Starting point is 00:07:29 We found awesome clipmakers. We're making a fuck done of clips. And we're going to post a shit out of them. So I think that's a good strategy. There's the, and then the last one that I thought was kind of an interesting one was like, get sharper on the branding. So if you want to grow a product,
Starting point is 00:07:44 the sharper the hook of what is the product, the better chance you have to, to grow because it'll be more clear. It'll resonate with more people. And so being able to describe it well, as well as just being like on brand all the time about like what this is and what you get out of it if you listen to it. I think that's an area that honestly, we're kind of shitty at, which is ironic because I think we're pretty good at it with our startups, but we're pretty bad at it with the podcast. Like the name doesn't really make much sense. The description, I don't know. We don't have like, we don't do an intro when you join to like, be like, oh, this is the podcast where
Starting point is 00:08:16 X, Y, Z happens. We don't have like a highlight reel of like, you know, start here. If you're, new to the pod, like go here. This is the onboarding episode, you know? Basically, in a sense, it kind of succeeds a little bit in spite of itself. Right. And a lot of people say the name doesn't really matter. Or sorry, the name doesn't reflect it. And I'm in my opinion towards just names is it doesn't, your name really like, it rarely will it hurt you in some occasions. It actually could help you. I think Coinbase is like the perfect name ever. Right. But, uh, even if if Coinbase is, like, was called like a blue sky sunglasses. I'm just looking,
Starting point is 00:08:51 I'm just making shit up that I'm looking at. It would work. Blue sky. Like it won't work. It would have worked. Okay, so should we move on to Coinbase actually? Let's move on to Coinbase. So Coinbase went public today and it's everything about it is astounding.
Starting point is 00:09:09 Right. I can read off some of the kind of the numbers of like just how big is that business. and then we can talk about the returns of the investment. So how big is the business? So Coinbase came out, the public now, so now they released their numbers. Their Q1 numbers came out, 56 million users, 6 million monthly active users, which is, I think, more than E-Trade had, you know, like total. I think E-Trade had like 3 million, like, trader accounts or whatever.
Starting point is 00:09:37 And so this is kind of amazing to me that there was more people on Coinbase. Coinbase makes up 11% of the crypto asset market in terms of how many assets are stored on crypto on Coinbase. 335 billion in trading volume. Okay, here's the interesting bits. 1.8 billion in revenue for the quarter. For the quarter? For the quarter.
Starting point is 00:09:58 So round up to two. So about 8 billion-ish in revenue is annualized. 800 in net income off that 1.8 billion in revenue. So like $2.4 billion. annualized in profit. Right. And then, yeah, so basically, Coinbase goes, it lists publicly today. It wasn't a, it wasn't an IPO, it was a direct listing where you basically, you know, IPO is you create some shares, you issue new shares to buyers. A direct listing is you don't issue new shares. It's just people who have shares can get, you know, like basically sell some of
Starting point is 00:10:30 their shares. So they listed, they had about 114 million shares for sale. And it's up about 40% on day one. So the implied market cap as of right now is a about $110 billion. So what I wanted to know was there's this kind of phrase in the startup investing world, which is like anytime there's a gold rush, like some new frontier, new space, it can be hard to like pick the winner. It can be hard to like, you know, just grab your shovel, dig and find the gold. And there's a thousand people looking for gold.
Starting point is 00:11:00 You don't know where to dig. It might be this one, might be that land. You know, you don't know exactly where the gold is. So the foolproof strategy in any gold rush is what they call the picks and shovel strategy, meaning you sell the shovels to people who are going to go mine to gold. And so Coinbase is kind of a classic picks and shovels thing in the crypto market. So you could buy Bitcoin. You could buy Ethereum.
Starting point is 00:11:21 You could buy one of the light coin or doge coin or one of the thousand alt coins that exist. And you're betting, okay, maybe one of these will become like the digital currency. Or you could buy a Coinbase and exchange that's going to trade a bulk number of these coins. And so I wanted to know once Coinbase got up to where it was like $100 billion. in dollar valuation, I had the question of, what would have been a better investment? Coinbase added seed round or Bitcoin that same day. Should you have bought the currency or should you have invested in the company? And the reason I thought this was interesting is I remember 2013, I just kind of heard
Starting point is 00:11:58 about crypto from a guy in my office, like Pete, our IT guy was like, dude, Bitcoin is the shit. It's at $7 now. It's at $11. I was like, I don't know what that means. And he was like, yeah, fuck fiat currency. and I was like, Fiat, that was a car. I didn't even know that's a currency at the time.
Starting point is 00:12:14 I didn't know what that meant. And he was like mining Bitcoin using our servers at the office. And he's like, we mine two Bitcoin today. And I was like, okay, good for you, Pete. Like, what does that do? I was kind of like, you know, mocking it, but I was curious also. So I started going and listening to some talks. And so one of the things I was looking at was like, are smart VCs,
Starting point is 00:12:34 are people smarter than me investing in this space? And what I remember happening was I listened to this talk and it was Andresen Horowitz, So it's Mark Andreessen, who now blocks me on Twitter. He was talking about how crypto is going to be great, how Bitcoin is such an interesting technology, how blockchains might change everything. And then the interviewer was like, so how many investments, how much money have you put into this?
Starting point is 00:12:57 You're kind of hyping it up. Like, how much money have you invested? And they're like, we haven't invested in any crypto companies yet. This is like, I think 2012, I think it was 2012. And he goes, right now we're just owning the currency. We're just buying Bitcoin. And I was like, what? That's so weird.
Starting point is 00:13:11 These guys, like, they're a VC fund. They bet on companies. There's a few companies out there. Like, I found it to be super strange. He goes, right now, the bet, we don't know which of these companies is going to emerge as the winner. So we're just buying the underlying currency. We actually think that's the right move right now.
Starting point is 00:13:27 And later, you know, Andrews and Horowitz has actually did invest in Coinbase later and since invested in many projects. And actually, Andrews and Horowitz changed their whole fund structure from a private, you know, VC fund to like some other. kind of like financial investment vehicle. They went and got registered with like the SEC or whatever because they wanted to own crypto assets and you couldn't do that out of a traditional fund. You couldn't buy currencies out of a traditional fund.
Starting point is 00:13:51 The paperwork, the docs don't let you. And so anyways, I went back and looked at the numbers. So Coinbase announced a seed round September 2012. I don't know. They probably raised it a little bit before that and then they announced it. They raised $600,000 from investors, including a crowdfunding campaign, which I found interesting because I you don't like them. I shit on crowdfunding all the
Starting point is 00:14:13 time as like me too it's always the bottom of the barrel but this was through funders club funders club had put in like $285,000 through its crowdfunding into that that round and so anyways what is is fun and funders club is just a startup like under his self is a YC startup and then Coinbase was a YC startup
Starting point is 00:14:29 and so Funders Club took a share uh did a did a crowdfunding campaign for that if I read this correctly I could be wrong in this part but anyways I went and asked one of the The seed investors. So somebody who, a friend who invested in the seed round of Coinbase, I said, what was the valuation back then? He said it was 15 cents a share.
Starting point is 00:14:49 So 15 cents a share there. And he said the A round was only 20 cents a share. So it wasn't even that much more. So something like that. So 15 cents a share. And now it's trading right now, like right before this podcast, at $330 a share or whatever. And so you got this, you know, 2,000 X markup, I think 2200X market. up. And so you invested $100,000 in the seed round of Coinbase. That's worth $220 million
Starting point is 00:15:16 on this day today because it goes public. Now, if you had invested in Bitcoin, same time, Bitcoin in that same month was trading at $12 a coin. Now it's at $62,000 a coin. So your same $100K instead, you know, would have been worth $500 million. So still, Bitcoin was the better investment, even though this was like a, you know, you invest in a startup that became $100,000. $110 billion company, still Bitcoin outperformed, but it's closer than I would have thought because Coinbase has really gone up in value in the last two years. So let's give some more numbers. I think right before we started, the valuation was $80 billion, but a few hours ago,
Starting point is 00:15:57 it was $100 billion. We're going to use $100 billion because that math is a little easier. Brian Armstrong is the CEO. He's 38 years old. He owns, I think, 20% of the company. which means at $100 billion, his net worth is $20 billion, which puts him, I think, like, in the top 50 richest people in the world at 38. The company, Coinbase, let's see, it started when 12, so it's 9 years old.
Starting point is 00:16:25 So basically became from zero to top 50 richest people in the world in only 10-ish years, 9 years. And also, he owns 20% of Coinbase. Who knows? How much Bitcoin owns? I certainly don't know. But you have to ask how much Bitcoin does this person own? If you told me that it was another $20 billion, I don't think I would be surprised at all. Would you be surprised at the own?
Starting point is 00:16:55 20 billion is a lot. That is a very, very large amount. So I don't think it would be quite so high, but I wouldn't be surprised if it was over a billion dollars. I think $20 billion would be like, he'd be one of the, you'd be one of the, the top three, I think Bitcoin whales, I think at 20 billion or something like that. Okay. Okay. So I think that'd be way too much. Would you think, I don't, I didn't do the math ahead of time, but would you think he would be a top 50 Bitcoin holder? That seems reasonable, right? It's plausible. Yeah. So I don't know.
Starting point is 00:17:28 I don't think he's ever said or disclosed, you know, if he, if he was buying the underlying coins. So the biggest thing is, did you hold? Right? Because Bitcoin on this run up, right? So from when, you know, if he's doing Coinbase, Bitcoin's at $10 a coin, right? That becomes your kind of like frame of reference. Bitcoin today is trading at $63,000. $63,000 from 12 is such a like mind-boggling like change. And so when I was talking to my friend who was an investor in Coinbase, I said, I was like, wow, did that mean, does that mean that Coinbase outperform Bitcoin?
Starting point is 00:18:00 He goes, no, I think Bitcoin still wins. He goes, but name one person who held all their Bitcoin from 2012 to 2021. He's like, me. Sam's right. Well, I guess like, oh, people who owned a lot of it at that time. No, I didn't, I didn't own a lot. I owned. I bought hundreds of dollars worth, but no, not a lot.
Starting point is 00:18:18 So let's say you owned a lot, you know, as that nest egg becomes 10 million, 20 million, $100 million, you're going to like, a lot of people would liquidate some of it. And so he was saying, you know, all of us at Coinbase, we really couldn't sell this whole way. And he goes, the illiquidity was a feature, not a bug. Like, the fact that we couldn't sell this whole time for Coinbase, It was the best money-making strategy for us to not be able to be liquid until now. I didn't sell, but my numbers were like tens of thousands or maybe hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Starting point is 00:18:48 It certainly was not a million or tens of millions. But I didn't sell because I actually forgot my password. And I was like, I just don't want to log in. It's too hard. And so I didn't log in. Have you still? Have you have it now or no? Yeah, I have it now.
Starting point is 00:19:03 Like I had, I just never did like a forgot your password thing in my email because I was like, too much work. Maybe it's a sign. I'm just not going to sell. Right. And so I didn't sell. But can what do you have in front of you? Are you looking at something? I'm looking at this tweet you put in of Daniel Gross. I want to bring I want to bring this up. Yeah. So the numbers here is fascinating. But I actually don't think that's the really fascinating part. What's the fascinating part is the psychology behind this because today is Coinbase. In 20 years, it's going to be something else. 50 years ago, it was real estate or something. A hundred years ago, it was oil. There's always some thing. Yeah. And the psychology behind the human being, I think, is far more interesting.
Starting point is 00:19:42 And by the way, he was an engineer at Airbnb before he left to go start Coinbase. His Airbnb shares from, you know, would have done amazingly as well, right? Like, well, he only worked at Airbnb, I think for a year. And before that, he worked at Deloitte. So I'm almost positive. Granted, he was probably a genius, probably like, you know, crazy high IQ, but like, like a normal guy, uh, normal, like a normal nine to five. Um, and also, uh, so let's talk about the, Let's talk about the personality part here that I love. I like knowing what drives people, what makes him tick? We talk about billionaire the week, and it's not actually about necessarily the money,
Starting point is 00:20:14 but what do people think who achieve greatness? In this case, it's money, but reality greatness can be a variety of things. So Daniel Gross is the guy we had in this podcast. He went, so Hacker News, if you guys don't know what Hacker News is, you should read it every single day. It's basically Reddit, but only for nerds. I love it. I read it every day. It's tech folks.
Starting point is 00:20:33 And anyway, Brian Armstrong has a, handle on tech news or on hacker news and you could read his old post and he has this old and Daniel Gross tweeted out some of this guy's old post his handle is uh actually don't know what his handle is but well it's sorry it's B Armstrong and so B Armstrong actually had a blog listen to his blog and this is actually kind of funny it's called start breaking free.com which is which is kind of on brand consistently and actually if you go to start breaking free.com it's controlled by a virus so So it automatically wants you to install a plugin. It's controlled by a virus.
Starting point is 00:21:12 Are you what I mean? Like, are you like, it's like, if I go to it right now, it's going to try to install like, you know, security software that actually is going to steal all my money.
Starting point is 00:21:20 Yeah. Just steal a little Bitcoin. Yeah. Well, it's going to say like you won, you know, you're the lucky winner. Like somehow he let the domain expire or something like that.
Starting point is 00:21:29 And someone got a hold of it. So now it's just a scam, which is kind of funny, uh, that the guy who's supposed to be like, Mr. security. his domain expired and whatever.
Starting point is 00:21:41 But anyway, you can see his post history, and he was launching a lot of stuff. He launched this one thing, and it says, hey, Hacker News, I just built a new forum software. Hey, Hacker News, I just built a new photo sharing website. So the guy was really prolific,
Starting point is 00:21:54 and it's really interesting to see his posts. Yeah, he was definitely like trying, like what Daniel tweeted out was, I look back at Brian's Hacker News submissions before he started Coinbase. you can see what you see is a story of a hacker working on different projects, slowly zeroing in on his launch coordinates, right? Because he's consistently shipping stuff.
Starting point is 00:22:16 They're not all like, you know, some of them have like one upvote, seven upvotes, 32 comments, right? Like they're not like taking off. So you see, I take it a bunch of swings. And as his swings, you can see it was, you know, like something about maps, something about how would you start your own country, something about like, could you build an entire web app in one language? And then it's like Bitcoin Android release.
Starting point is 00:22:38 You know, like how Airbnb does X. And then it's about, you know, like how to build your own forum, Bitcoin iPhone app. And, you know, just like sort of finding, finding like the thing that is his thing. And this is the true for everybody, right? Like, you know, people joke about Sam's, you know, Sam's foot long weaners or whatever, your hot dog stand. Yeah. You know, my sushi restaurant.
Starting point is 00:22:59 It's like, if you dig back into people's first projects, you're always going to find interesting things like Mark Zuckerberg. project that I've heard him talk about. Have you heard this? The dentist office thing? No. He set up an internal, like, just internet network for his dad's dental office. So it was like a messaging, like the secretary in the front desk could message him
Starting point is 00:23:19 in his office, you know, at the back. So he just like kind of set up the internet inside their office and let them message each other. Then he built wire hog, you know. Wirehog, I think was really successful, by the way. Well, for like a 17-year-old kid. Yeah, exactly. For a 17-year-old kid, it was more successful.
Starting point is 00:23:33 and there's chat transcripts of when he after he like leaves to go work on Facebook he moves you know in the social network they moved to palo alto it's like this is it facebook's going to be the thing there's chat transcripts of him talking at that time like you know facebook's cool but like yeah like I think wire hogs the thing um you know like so even them it's not obvious at that time and whereas people try to project that these guys are visionaries they are you know visionary geniuses who never had a doubt in their mind and then they saw the future and then they built it. And it's like, well,
Starting point is 00:24:05 maybe. A couple of those things are true. They could be visionary geniuses, or rather, they could be geniuses, but that's actually not a prerequisite, but it does help. But they definitely had doubt,
Starting point is 00:24:17 regardless of how confident someone is. It doesn't matter if you're kind of McGregor and you're going in a fight. You always have doubt, no matter what. And second, they probably didn't have a vision until it started getting a little bit of traction.
Starting point is 00:24:29 Right. I go back through, there's this interview on YouTube of Mark doing, there's like some college news station that's interviewing him. Some guy, some guy has like a college podcast. And he invites Mark Zuckerberg on because he's got the college social network that's kind of like taking off on a handful of colleges. I think they're on like, I don't know, five or 10 campuses at the time.
Starting point is 00:24:50 And he's like, you know, so what, what is this going to be? You're going to go out to more colleges and then what? Like high schools and then, you know, non-college students. And Mark Zuckerberg sitting there in his like basketball shorts with a red solo cup in his hand. and he's like, I don't know. Like, I don't know if it has to do that. Like, why can't this just be like the cool thing for colleges? Like, once you take it out of the college thing, then you let everybody in, it's like less cool.
Starting point is 00:25:12 Like, maybe this is just cool. And like, now he's literally putting fucking satellites into the sky to give people in India the internet so that they can use Facebook. Like, you know, his aspirations changed. The takeaway here. And I actually just went back to my high school the other day to like give like a talk. And I was like, you guys look small when you walk in a high school. Yeah. And you'd be a 16 year old and you're like, oh my gosh, like I felt I was mature.
Starting point is 00:25:37 I felt I knew what I was doing. You're a child. Yeah, I could beat you up. Yeah. I'm like, I was like, dude, I'm 30. And I thought that we were more similar, but we're not. We're not at all. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:25:48 Yeah, we're not like. Why are these chinks on low to the ground? Yeah, everything is so small and like water fowls are disgusting. I can't believe I used to drink for them. Anyway, I was like, you guys, just do shit. take swings, tinker on stuff. First of all, a lot of stuff that starts out cool. It actually looked really dumb early on.
Starting point is 00:26:08 But even if it stays dumb, just get into the habit of taking swings and making stuff. Because, like, I'm not like Uber successful, but my first shit was like a poison ivy business. It was a hot-off. A poison-y-business, what is that? My first stuff was, like, stupid. And, like, it led to this thing and this thing. And, like, hopefully the thing that I'm doing now is actually going to lead to something even bigger. I also did a ton of research and I found out that there was this poison ivy treatment called
Starting point is 00:26:34 X-A-N-F-E-L, I think, Z-A-L, I think, Zanful. And basically, I did a ton of research and I found the guy who started it used to work at a cleaning supplies company. And I was like, oh, that's interesting. What is going on here? Like, that's kind of weird. I just saw that connection and I did research. And I found out that basically what he did was he took this thing called, I think it was
Starting point is 00:26:58 called Mean Green, and it was really good at washing oil off mechanics' hands. And it costs like $5 for a gallon. It was dirt cheap. But he found out that the way Poison Ivy works is if leave gets on you, or if it leaves gets on you, it gets this oil on you. And you have to use this oil stuff, this oil remover. I've done it. Yeah, yeah. Same thing with poison oak or whatever. Yeah, yeah, same thing. And I was like, oh, so I'm just going to bulk buy this mean green crap and repackage it and sell it for $40 as opposed to, I sold it for like $40 for like some like a like a like a carmex size or like a, you know, like a like a like a chapstick size thing when it costs like $40 for like literally an industrial size barrel and I just repackaged it and I was making thousands of dollars a month.
Starting point is 00:27:43 And then I quit doing it because I was like, I don't want to do this. Anyway, it was kind of a cool thing. But I shut it down because I was like, all right, this is making money, but like I don't want to do this. I'm not proud of this. This isn't like anything I like to talk to tell people I'm doing. It's kind of lame. even though it was making like $5,000 a month, shut it down.
Starting point is 00:28:01 And the point is, the thing that we're doing now, I have a feeling it's going to lead to something even bigger. And in Coinbase's regard, everything was much bigger and in a much shorter time frame. But it doesn't matter. The exercise, I think, is still true. That's great. You know, those guys who came and set up my studio here,
Starting point is 00:28:21 they just released a vlog on his channel. This guy, Henry, I forgot I'm not saying, Henry Bladcaster or something like that. I don't know what it is. But basically, I don't know how you'll find him. Henry on YouTube, he did this thing. He put out a video show, they've been like, oh, the advice that I got from Sean Puri. And I was like, okay, well, I'm one of his like, I don't know, 100 subscribers. Like, I'll click this.
Starting point is 00:28:40 This is about me. So I will go ahead and watch this video. And his videos are actually super well made. He's like very Casey Nistat-ish. Mini KCasey, nice stat, yeah. Yeah, which just shows how hard it is to win on YouTube. Like his quality is really high, but like no one gives shit because it's just YouTube. There's a billion things on there.
Starting point is 00:28:56 Hey, as we said, just give it some time and just keep trying my hit. So the advice, and I was like, I'm curious what the advice was because they came over and they were like doing all the work and I'm just sort of standing in the garage with like a cup of coffee, just like, you know, just sort of like trying to be nice. I'm not helpful, but I was like trying to talk to them and I was like, and they're like, hammering things and I'm just like asking them questions and giving them some kind of like, well, here's how I would do it if I was you guys. Because I really resonate with anybody who's like, if you're like 22, 23 and then you,
Starting point is 00:29:25 you're smart, but you chose not to go the traditional path. And like, that feels right. But then you also just get these like hunger pangs of like doubt when it's like, shit. My friends actually have a salary. Wait, like I'm sleeping in a like, you know, four of us are sleeping in this one bedroom apartment. And, um, and so I started like, I really like empathize of that because that's where I was.
Starting point is 00:29:45 And, uh, like I just want to tell them what I, what I would tell myself, which is like, dude, you're doing the right thing. Here's how you need to think about this, though. Don't like, don't worry. You know, here's how this is going to play out. And what I told them was like, look, honestly, the best times of my life were three of us living in a, you know, one bedroom apartment. My co-founder and my roommate lived in my closet because he couldn't even afford our dirt cheap rent. So Trevor lived in my closet and like turned my living closet into like a room for himself with a lava lamp and shit.
Starting point is 00:30:15 And then like his girlfriend moved in with him in the closet too. Oh my God. And so then I was like, you know, he had a grocery cart because there's no, he didn't have a closet because he was living in a closet. So he stole a shopping cart, rolled it into his closet, and used that as like his hamper, his closet for himself.
Starting point is 00:30:32 And I just remember like, like at the time, everything seemed so shitty. It was like, oh, this is the shitty version of life. And now I'm like, no,
Starting point is 00:30:39 that was the most fun time because all we were doing every day was just trying to figure shit out, trying new different schemes and projects. We had no responsibilities, no burn. And then we were just like party for fun, like on the side.
Starting point is 00:30:50 And so I just remember, like, now that I look back, I'm like, that was the shit. And that's what I was trying to tell I was like, first of all, guys, this is the best. So like embrace this part.
Starting point is 00:30:59 You're never going to get to have this again with your friends like you have right now. It's so fun. Embrace these five years. I said the second thing is, like, I used to chase money a lot. Like, how do I make money? Maybe this will make us money. Maybe this will make some money. And that was good because I like learned skills about how to make money.
Starting point is 00:31:14 But the things that actually paid off, none of those really paid off with a big dollar amount. The things that paid off were like the people I was meeting and like doing projects with or learning from, like those relationships pay off big in the end. You know, the learning of like building skills around like, I did my first e-com project like you, I was selling these wristbands called fatbands.com. And it was just a fat wrist band that I like noticed
Starting point is 00:31:39 that a bunch of kids were wearing on campus. I thought, oh, wait, maybe that's a friend. Let me try to sell those online. You can customize them. And so those skills translated, but the business did not. And so what I told them, the advice that he put in the video, that I didn't even realize I said was like, you're 23 years old now,
Starting point is 00:31:56 like here's the trick to this whole thing. You're doing the right thing. Every day you're just making stuff. You're trying stuff. You're making content. You're having a blast with your buddies. We're going to measure the scoreboard when you're 30, not when you're 24.
Starting point is 00:32:09 And it's like, that was the game changer, like kind of like advice I wish I had in that I gave them. And maybe 35 or 40. Right. But basically it's like, don't, like you're planting seeds. Don't go dig up that seed that.
Starting point is 00:32:21 next day and be like, shit, this didn't grow into a plant. Like, no, plant that seed, water it, enjoy it. And just say, look, I'm not trying to win the whole game in one year, uh, and a year and a half. And like, if my, if my friends who went, took this banking job or consulting job are, are doing better than me in 18 months. Like, I don't need to feel like I made a bad choice. Like, I'm making the right choice for me.
Starting point is 00:32:42 And it's going to, like, let's look at this as a 10 year game. And we can only measure the score. Like, the fourth quarter is 10 years from now. So that's the only time you can look at the scoreboard, really. And the seeds that you're planting, at least in my experience, and I think in a lot of my friends' experience, and it also seems like you for sure is it's shit, it's shit, it's shit, it's shit. And it suddenly it's like, oh my God, it worked.
Starting point is 00:33:04 It hits, yeah. So it's like it's shit for the most of the time. And then finally it's like, oh, okay, now it's all happening. Your learning goes in this like gradual curve. Like your learning does go up every year where you're like, oh, man, last year I was such a dummy. I didn't know shit about shit. And now I know better how I would do this.
Starting point is 00:33:22 And then the same thing happens in the next year and the next year and the next year. But your results can kind of stay flatlined for like a decade almost for like seven years before it actually stops being a flat line and it just like curves up rapidly. So I wanted to continue talking about this, but I'm actually going to save my stuff
Starting point is 00:33:39 that I have these notes here. I'm going to save that for the next time because I don't want this episode to be entirely this stuff. Although, frankly, I love this stuff. Brayu, do you like this or not? Yeah, man, I'm just soaking it all in. Okay. I like this stuff, but Sean, you want to move on?
Starting point is 00:33:55 You want to do the other thing? Do you want to do micro acquire or do you want to keep talking about this? I don't want to keep talking about this. I want to do either some micro acquire or some ideas. I want to do micro acquire. And this is an idea, actually. But at the hustle, we worked with this guy. And I never talked to him because I wasn't the one working on the project.
Starting point is 00:34:12 But anyway, I just started hanging out with him recently. This guy named Andrew, people call him Gazette, but his last name was like Gasnadi or something. Do you know Andrew? Jazz Decky or something, yeah. Gas Decky. I think they can just call him Gaz. Do you know Andrew or do you know who he is? I did the like the mini spec with him.
Starting point is 00:34:27 So that's the only way I know. Just through DMs. I never talked to him. So Andrew is 32, I think. He previously had a company that I think was an agency and he told me that he sold it for like tens of millions of dollars. So it was very, very successful. But his new thing is incredibly interesting. It's called microacquire.
Starting point is 00:34:45 I think it's just microacquire.com. That's right. And the premise is very simple. He finds people that want to, that wants to sell their company, and he just talks about it in a newsletter. It's basically like App Sumo or like The Hustle, but a newsletter that just sends out cool companies,
Starting point is 00:35:01 except what he does is he makes you pay money to get access to it. You only have to pay $200, $300 so, and you get a year's access. And his numbers are pretty interesting. And keep in mind, Andrew's actually the only employee. So no one works there. And so as of today, he's got 1,500 subscribers paying $299 a year, and that brings his revenue to about $400,000 a year.
Starting point is 00:35:24 And I posted a chart of this. Do you see the chart I posted? No, I'm on his Twitter because I was looking for that because I know he posts. Oh, here it is. No, I have the chart. So I posted it. And I'll, he just sent this to me. So I guess, I mean, I said, can I share it?
Starting point is 00:35:36 He builds in public. So he announces the revenue publicly as part of his, like, way of getting more traffic. So he's at 425 ARR. And look at the chart. Yeah. That's a pretty amazing chart. Really, all of the growth happened like in, November, December, January, February.
Starting point is 00:35:52 Like, it just lasts like four or five months. Yeah, and it's pretty interesting. And I actually shared with you, just go out a little bit more. I shared with you his vision. But what this guy is building, I mean, this is his vision. We'll see if he can pull it off, is a different type of angel list. So basically, he wants to disrupt investment banking and he wants to make it easier to buy and sell companies.
Starting point is 00:36:13 And it's incredibly fascinating. So he wants to, or sorry, not disrupt angel list, but kind of be like angel list. I feel you didn't describe what it is. So what it is. You go on there if you want to buy a small SaaS business. So a small business that makes recurring revenue through subscription. And so that's the thing. And the size are it ranges.
Starting point is 00:36:35 So you could buy one for $5,000 that's making $100 a month of revenue or something like that or $0 revenue, but it has users. So you can buy for as low as like $1,000 or $5,000 you could buy a business. And as high as there's a couple for like single digit millions. of dollars on there. Maybe there's a few that are outliers. But that's like, I would say the sweet spot, the range for these things are kind of like hundreds of thousands of dollars is like where the, you know, decent businesses are on this platform. And this is the thing where I talked about this ones on the pod, but he had DM'd us and he was like, hey, like, love my first million. You guys
Starting point is 00:37:09 are great. Would you know, would you guys want to do something with me where I like give away a $5,000 micro SaaS business? And I was like, dude, that's a great idea. I'll like go in with you. And like, I'll pump this to the audience. And so basically I tweeted out, like, I didn't even talk to him. I didn't actually respond to his DM. I just tweeted out, hey, me and Andrew are giving away a SaaS business for $5,000. Like, who wants it? Oh, you know, all the business is there.
Starting point is 00:37:32 We'll buy it and give it to you. It's like these are business that are already working to some extent. You know, it's like we just need to add some hustle. Who's a hustler who wants this business? And what ended up happening was a bunch of other people started chiming in being like, I'm in for 5K. I'll put 5K in. And so we ended up raising $100,000 as a,
Starting point is 00:37:50 a micro spec, meaning a blank check company. So we raised $100,000 into an entity to go and use that entity to go buy a business off of Microquire. And then as of last week, it closed. So we found an entrepreneur, found a business, and we closed that deal to buy a Shopify app. That's amazing. And that's pretty wild. I'll be eager to see what happens.
Starting point is 00:38:13 And I'm sure you'll reveal it in like six or 12 months. My opinion around Microacquire is at worst, it's going to be a little bit. okay. At best, it could be amazing. I don't know what's going to happen to it. What do you think? It's a really fascinating business. The thing is now, I'm actually shocked he's letting me talk about it
Starting point is 00:38:32 because I feel like I can clone this so quickly. Yeah, it's a lot of work. Like, I saw this guy doing the one deal we did and it was just like, fuck a ton of work. So it's like, you know, shepherd everything to make it happen, do the paperwork, get a deal, to do the clothes. But that's not the work for
Starting point is 00:38:48 micro acquire. Well, they have to help you do the transaction. So that's their, that's their function. It's what's good is that they don't make money on the like transaction closing. They make money on you paying a premium subscription. Like I pay a monthly fee to be able to browse businesses, which is a much better model because you're not just reliant on taking a brokerage fee of closed M&A because there's just not a lot of closed M&A that happens. But there are a lot of people who are curious and will pay the, you know, $100 or whatever it is, $200 to be able to like browse the premium listings and get the get the details, get the info.
Starting point is 00:39:21 What I would do if I was Andrew is I would decrease the price to $99 a year because that, or even $39 a year, because that would make it an impulse buy and I would get loads of people. Then I would do this company selling. Then I would have a course that costs $2,000 to $5,000 and include a community and was all focused on buying and selling companies. And I'm pretty confident that you would get that to around $30, $50 million a year in business. I don't know if that would be a valuable company to sell, but I'm pretty sure that you
Starting point is 00:39:55 could make $10 to $20 million a year and profit for at least a handful of years. I think it's good. I think it's needed. So I think it's smart that he specializes in SaaS. I think that it's smart that he's a curated marketplace versus like Flippa or these different places where you're just like so much fucking junk. You don't know what there's no trust. So I think he's doing it right, that he's bringing trust to these kind of like lower trust. us like marketplaces. So I'm with you. I really like the project and I'm with you that the minimum is a good outcome.
Starting point is 00:40:28 The maximum is like, oh, wow, this was a big idea hidden in plain sight. And I think it's interesting. I think it's more likely going to just be the good outcome, but I like that it has the, you know, the option to do both. And it seems like a fun, a fun kind of business to build if you're this guy. I think he wants it to be the okay outcome, which is he owns it and he lives a really good lifestyle. Right. And, uh, which by the way, I think like I would probably do the same as well. Yeah. Um, so anyway, that's a cool company I wanted to bring up. What do you got? Uh, I got a couple.
Starting point is 00:40:57 Okay. So I'll go for, um, we talked about this before, but I'm curious what you think. So, um, PhotoP. Uh, we talked about this many, many months ago, but, you know, we were much smaller than people, those people aren't probably even listening anymore. So we'll just pretend it's the first time. So there's this thing called PhotoP. And all it is is, is it's Photoshop, but it's free, and it's in the browser. You don't have to download anything. And the guy who makes it, I don't know much about it. He posts on Reddit or he has posts on Reddit.
Starting point is 00:41:27 It's a pretty big thread. I think you know a little more about them than I do, kind of like the backstory. But it's a free version of Photoshop that has cloned every feature of Photoshop pretty much. It's like it's the exact UI of Photoshop, which is crazy because Photoshop is such a complicated piece of software to build. And this guy just chipped away, just chipped away. just chipped away, just chipping away, and basically built PhotoP and P as in like the vegetable, like P-E-A. And so Photopi.com, you go there and it's just like one banner ad.
Starting point is 00:41:59 That's like how he makes this money, I think. I think it does a million dollars a year now because so many people use this goddamn thing, like students and like people who don't want to spend, Photoshop's really expensive. People who don't want to buy Photoshop can use PhotoP and get like 80 to 90% of the same power without any of the cost. and without any of the headache of downloading a big-ass one-gigabyte application. What, oh my God, I'm on it. So I know this person. Is that what you're saying?
Starting point is 00:42:25 I remember the first time we brought it up, you had already heard about it because I was like, dude, I have a really obscure thing. And then you're like, Mr. Obscure. So you're like, oh, yeah, I've seen this on Reddit at the time. So I remember being like shocked that you knew about this thing. Because I thought I had just discovered like an uncovered gem, you know? Yes, I see it. It's from November 2018.
Starting point is 00:42:43 a guy, yes, because it got 50,000 upboats. And he started it by saying, I made a free alternative to Photoshop. Ask me anything. And that's how he got promotion for it. Yeah, I like this. And you think he's making a million dollars a year doing this? Yeah, so I don't know why Ben told me this,
Starting point is 00:43:01 Ben gave me this topic. And he was like, photo, you know, he's like, you know, photo people was like, yeah. He's like, you know, it's been a million dollars a year. So if I'm wrong, Ben's wrong. I didn't look at it myself. But by the way, I got access to similar web. I've got a premium account now.
Starting point is 00:43:14 Oh, bro, you got the goods. Yeah. Someone who works at HubSpot, I don't know if I can blow up there. Anyway, I got similar web. Dude, I'm the same way where at Twitch, I was like, oh, dude, you got a premium app any account. That's like a couple thousand bucks a year to see app download stuff. Like share the login.
Starting point is 00:43:33 And they're like, you know, we're like a company. You just buy a seat and it's just the company pays for the seat. If you think you would use this just to buy it. I'm like, oh, but they're like, I felt like such a pocket. Like I had to like hide. I was like, oh yeah, yeah, of course. Of course. I wouldn't bootleg that.
Starting point is 00:43:46 Like, well, yeah. That's not what I meant. That I'm still trying to like be a little bit less hood rat, Sam and more like, oh yeah. It's like this is ROI positive. Just buy it. Right, right. It's actually like very much looked down upon to be that way. Like I was negotiating with somebody and they're like, wait, well, why are you trying
Starting point is 00:44:05 to like, why are you trying to like save us all this money negotiating with this vendor? Like just pay the thing and do it up front. And you're like, but this goes against like everything in my jeans. I can't not do it. I was like, yeah, I booked him a hotel, but it's in the motel six. Like I saved us to $200. I always just to tell people, yeah, like we'll take care of your accommodation. And it was, they would actually be sleeping in my house.
Starting point is 00:44:30 Stay at my aunt's house. And I would actually go, I would stay at my girlfriend's house and they would get my bedroom. I did that all the time. I'd be like, yeah, we'll take care of your accommodation. Because we get hustle got. They just slept at my house. So according to similar web, Photope gets 8.5 million monthly Uniques.
Starting point is 00:44:48 They spend a ton of time on the website, and most all the traffic is direct. So I, if you told me this made a million dollars, I would think, are you sure it's on a million dollars a month? I don't know. I got a check.
Starting point is 00:45:02 I don't think it's a month. I think that would be pretty crazy. I think a year because, you know, he's not monetizing well, right? He's just got display ads. So he's got the bottom of the barrel monetization, I think,
Starting point is 00:45:12 on the site. Yeah, you could probably crush this, though. Speaking of, just, oh, go ahead. Well, I was just going to say, like, you know, okay, to, so what? So I think the so what here is, A, photo piece cool and interesting and like just a cool thing to know about. But B, like, couldn't you do this for more things? Like, first of all, take the whole Adobe suite and do the photo P for After Effects, do the photo P for illustrator, photo P for the whole suite, right?
Starting point is 00:45:39 Like anything that has over X million users, you could do this for. What else? Like maybe it's like autocad. Like I don't know if that's free or if you pay for it or whatever. You know, like I forgot like, what's that thing called MathLab, Matlab or something like that? It's the thing that all the engineers have to use. Like is Matlab paid? You know, great.
Starting point is 00:45:58 Can you do this? And I think a version of this is called OBS. So have you ever used OBS? No, what's that? OBS is a open source piece of software. That's basically the most popular thing for every Twitch streamer or YouTuber. So it's the easiest way to stream from a PC, high quality video and audio to Twitch to whatever. So for years, Twitch, actually just until recently, Twitch didn't have any way.
Starting point is 00:46:24 If you went to Twitch, you're like, great, I want to be a streamer. They're like, cool, go use OBS. What the hell is OBS? Twitch doesn't have a button just saying go live. And same thing with YouTube. You go live on YouTube? Nope, can't just go live on YouTube without like using more sophisticated software. And so OBS is actually an open source project maintained by a small community developer,
Starting point is 00:46:43 but really it's just one guy Jim. And I met this guy and Jim's like, you know, I don't know, five foot seven and like long hair down to his kind of waist. And you look like an open source, you know, like app developer. And he's an extremely high ethics and morals where he's just like, the app is 100% free. He's been working on it for a decade. And it's supported by donations of people who are like, dude, I run my whole business. this off OBS, like, sure, here's $10, you know? And, and Twitch,
Starting point is 00:47:13 actually was paying him every month, just to keep maintaining OBS because it was like, cheaper to just pay Jim, I don't know, X thousands of dollars a month than to like have 20 engineers try to recreate this thing. I think that that is cool. I think that like, when I hear that, I'm like, that's badass. I love that. I love that that exists. But what was my, what was my thing earlier? I'm like, cornrows and sleeve tattoos. I respect it. And I think that's badass. I just don't want. want it. It ain't for me. I'm not wearing it. And that's my case with this, which is I'm so happy that that exists. I ain't doing it because there's a bunch of examples of this. So another
Starting point is 00:47:49 example is SpiceWorks.Spiceworks.com. They were doing like $50, $60, $70 million a year in revenue and they ended up selling because they raised too much money. It didn't work out. But they had traction. And basically what SpiceWorks did was they created software. So if you're like, if you have like a thousand employees and you wanted to figure out which computers you needed to buy, they created software to help you figure that out, which normally costs money. And they actually made money through advertising on the website. In my opinion, that's like neat, but just charge people money for your thing. Because I'd like, would you rather be PhotoP or Adobe?
Starting point is 00:48:31 Yeah, I know which. Of course. Of course. I know which one I'd rather be. So I think it's cool to actually do that free stuff just to get a ton of users. But after a while, if I was PhotoP, I would be like, well, if I just, I should just hire more engineers and we should just make some premium features and upcharge. And that is what I would do. I would not do this. Well, there's another way of looking at it, which is sometimes like free doesn't mean no ambition. So for example, Skype was like, hey, free international, you know, like calling.
Starting point is 00:49:01 And WhatsApp, same thing. Why did WhatsApp take off? because SMS was actually really expensive. We had to pay for every text, especially international texting. It was super expensive. So what's that free was the growth hack? And for these guys,
Starting point is 00:49:12 I would say free is also the growth hack. But if you want to just be one person maintaining this thing and like, whatever, like you're, where you do it matters. So Photoshop is still at least big, but nowhere near as big as texting and calling was, right? That was like such a huge market.
Starting point is 00:49:28 And then the second thing is like, if you're going to do free, find some other way to capture a ton of value. So Skype and WhatsApp were able to capture a bunch of value using a totally different method, whereas Photopee is like, cool, here's one banner ad, you know, and that's enough for me. Or OBS is like, hey, donate to me and that's it. Whereas OBS could have like created, you know, either premium features or sold to Twitch or, you know, could have done many things to try to capture more value out of the free thing that they made.
Starting point is 00:49:56 Do you know the website Unsplash? So Unsplash is like an alternative to Getty's images. So Gettys images, everyone has probably heard that word. Not a lot of people probably use it. We used it. We paid them 50 grand a year, and we were a small client. Getty images, they pay photographers. They buy rights.
Starting point is 00:50:12 Why were you paying so much? Because when there's cheaper or freer options for photo libraries. Gettys is the best. So a lot of free or cheap ones, they don't actually have images of the people. So for example, if you want to write about Elon Musk, a lot of the free ones don't have good pictures of Elon Musk. second once you get to the size that we were like we like which is not that big once you get past like 500,000 monthly uniques you probably want to stop doing things illegally when it comes to photos because there's all these people that yeah and which is like a it's the right thing to do right
Starting point is 00:50:45 you you are using other people's stuff so you shouldn't do it it's it's okay to kind of bootleg it early on but after a while you should pay for it and we were a small person we're and we paid I think 50 I forget tens of thousands of dollars and anyway there was this competitive editor called Unsplash. I think Unsplash is dope. I think they're badass. They are just acquired recently. I got a little information where I heard a little bit about what they were doing. They were only doing around $4-ish million, $5 million a year in revenue, even though like hundreds of millions of their images were being downloaded. And I was actually shocked at how small they were. If I had that much traction, A, I would have been far more aggressive about
Starting point is 00:51:28 selling ads on the site and be far more aggressive about getting subscriptions and charging a lot of money for them because this website, unsplash, which from the outside appeared to be doing wildly well. And I imagine they actually were acquired for a lot of money because if a proper person could get their hands on that, they could crush it, I would think. But if you have that much usage, like unsplash did, unsplash wasn't ubiquitous, but it was quite popular. You can make way more money by charging money up front for all that stuff. When unsplash giving away their stuff for free, I think they're only doing like $400,000, $500,000 a month in revenue. Right, right, right.
Starting point is 00:52:04 Okay, yeah, that's a good example of one. I had one other topic I wanted to do. Okay, which one's more interesting to you? Is it the affirm for X or is it game film for salespeople? I'll let you pick from those two categories. Affirm. And I have a take on there that you're not going to like. Oh, okay, good, good.
Starting point is 00:52:24 All right. So if you don't know what a firm is, a firm was a company. started by Max Levchen, I think. Am I mixing this up? No, you're right. All right. So Max Levchen, the co-founder of PayPal. A firm went public, I think this year or last year, it's about $17, $18 billion company right now.
Starting point is 00:52:42 And what a firm does is when you're on an e-commerce site, you're going and you're buying a mattress online, you go to Casper's website and it'll be like, oh, wow, this mattress is $1,200. And it'll say, or, or for, you know, 96 easy pay. of $8, you can own this mattress, right? So it's basically a pay-as-you-go software that lets e-commerce stores sell more stuff because if people don't have the full amount or they're hesitant to spend a large amount of money right now, you can offer them pay-as-you-go plans with a zero effort. And then they take a cut. So, you know, on our e-commerce store, we use one called Sezzle.
Starting point is 00:53:23 And Sezzle will basically say, great, you can buy this thing for, you know, four payments or eight payments of $10 instead of paying the full amount right now. And then they take 7%, and then they extend us the rest of the money. And so it's kind of a no-brainer as a retailer because it really does improve conversion. And for us, customers were asking for it because they were used to buying it. And it's a public and traded company now. It does really well. And so there's several of these.
Starting point is 00:53:50 So there's Afterpay in Australia, which is even bigger. Afterpay is a $34 billion company, which is kind of interesting because normally Australian companies are much, much smaller. Klarna is like big in Europe, I think, for this. I think Klarna is even bigger than all of them. Exactly. So Klarna is probably the biggest one. And so there's kind of this war going on.
Starting point is 00:54:09 They're all trying to like, I think a firm partnered with Shopify. So it's like built into Shopify now. That's a big move. But basically, okay, pay as you go. Interesting space. Kind of was one of the big ideas that just came out in the last like 10 years. And there's a good example of once it started working in the U.S., It was not hard for people to just say and be like, cool, we're going to do a firm for Australia.
Starting point is 00:54:29 We're going to do a firm for the UK. We're going to do a firm for India, whatever, right? So I think generically that was a good business idea. What I thought was interesting is what else could you use it for? So I heard of one company in this year's YC batch that was doing pay as you go. How did you get access to that? Bro, big time investors like us, that's what we get access to. Actually, YC still has not accepted me into the investor pool, even though I've invested in probably like 10 YC companies at this point.
Starting point is 00:54:55 But I have a friend who gave access, so that's no problem. So anyways, one of the companies, what they do is they're a firm for general contractors. So another high ticket item, you're getting your garage redone or whatever, bathroom remodeled or you're building out a multifamily apartment complex or whatever. They're giving the general, what they did is they went to the general contractor, just like that's their version of the e-commerce store. And they say, hey, instead of charging your client 12 grand for this, you can just offer them pay as you go.
Starting point is 00:55:27 And it helps your clients pay you money. And you get a higher collection rate, you have less kind of late payments and defaults, and higher conversion rate because people can afford you this way. It makes you more affordable. And they're doing all right. They had decent revenue. And it was early still.
Starting point is 00:55:45 But I thought, oh, this is interesting. Are people going to do pay as you go in more industries, more sectors? And what else might be? I'll pause there. Here's my take. Clarna, after pay, a firm. I like the people who start them.
Starting point is 00:56:00 I think they're horrible companies for the world. I think that they should burn down completely and not exist. I think that... Why? Because it's getting people in debt? It's getting people in debt. It's making you buy stupid shit that you can't afford. So where's a firm?
Starting point is 00:56:16 Like, if you go to like Fashion Nova, like people who can't afford... People who want to do a firm for a $29 pair of pants, I'm like, don't buy those fucking pants. Don't use a firm. Don't buy any of this. You don't need this bullshit. Don't buy it. Do not buy it.
Starting point is 00:56:33 Run. And also, if you're going to have to buy it, don't go in debt to buy it. I think this is horrible. And I'm actually shocked at a guy like Max Livchin, who I think is a cool dude. He started PayPal. He started all this stuff. It's badass. The guy seemed like a nerd.
Starting point is 00:56:44 I love nerds. What are you doing? This is useless. You're just doing dumb shit. You know how he got the idea? Tell me. He was, so this is the version of the story. I know I'm going to be.
Starting point is 00:56:55 somebody who was there probably knows a lot more details. But what I had heard was there was an engineer who had, so he had this lab. Like I had Monkey Inferno. He had a lab called HVF, hard, valuable fun. And basically it was an incubator where he said, I'm going to do any project that satisfies those three criteria. It's got to be hard. It's got to be valuable.
Starting point is 00:57:12 It's got to be fun. And then they kind of like didn't have, like I think they've had a few nice companies. Glow came out of it. It's a fertility tracker. And then Affirm was the big one. And Max went all in and he became the CEO of a firm. all that stuff to take it forward. But the origin story from what I heard was,
Starting point is 00:57:29 is an engineer who had come up with a new, like, a new database technology or database technique. He's like, oh, look at this. He's like, basically, there's like nerding out. He's like, look at this. We can do like so much computation and so little time and like with this new technique. And I was like, okay, but what are you going to use that for? It's kind of like blockchain.
Starting point is 00:57:44 It's like, great, you're blockchain. But like, why do we need a blockchain? What are we going to use it for? Does it really make this better? And like there's, you needed to find an application. So the way that blockchain found money, currency as the core killer app. What Max realized was,
Starting point is 00:58:00 this guy was an EIR for him. So for months he was just like working on this like databaseing technology and how he was going to use it. Couldn't really figure out an application. And then one day Max walks in and he goes, dude like credit scoring and credit reporting is so like ancient. We should be able to like, if you're a person today,
Starting point is 00:58:18 I should be able to take signals from the internet. Social networking data, publicly available data on the internet. to do instant credit worthiness versus like the way that this works today with this kind of like, you go get a credit score and it's based off of like, you know, stuff in the past. So his insight was there has to be a better way to determine the credit worthiness of a person. And he's like, your databasing technology is actually perfect for doing that on the fly and doing that at scale. And so they came together and he's like, great, I'm going to like basically create this application to do this.
Starting point is 00:58:51 And I think at first they didn't want to do, I don't think the initiative, very initial idea was what they ended up doing, which was like pay as you go on ecommerce websites, but pretty quickly they realized that's the use case. That's the market that needs this the most is basically instead of, like I guess my question to you would be, do you also feel the, do you also use a Visa and MasterCard? Because it's just credit cards. That's all this is. It's just credit. So do you also hate credit cards the same way you hate pay as you go? You want to know what's funny is my credit, my personal credit card limit is $4,000. So I've got to, I've, I've never had any debt.
Starting point is 00:59:28 I just got to, are you one of those people who uses debit cards instead of credit? I do it because lately someone has advised me to do it, but for a long time, no. But I'm not against credit. And I realize that what I'm saying is not entirely logical. It's definitely emotionally driven. And you're saying, and I'm not like going this hardcore libertarian route, which is like, well, I'm like against the government, therefore all government is bad. I'm like, no, no, no, no.
Starting point is 00:59:52 Like, I'm going to draw. So what I'm doing right now is basically I'm drawing the line, which I get. That's not always the best. But I think that credit cards in some cases are good and a firm in most cases are bad. That's what I think. Okay. I think that's, you know, that's whatever. Because the people, like, do you know, do you have any, do you know like in Europe,
Starting point is 01:00:14 like our friend Ramon and a lot of my other friends from Europe, they were like, you know, credit cards. We don't use credit cards. Like in Germany. Yeah, like in a lot of places in Europe, if you want to use a credit. Also, we use bidets, proper clean. Yeah. Which, by the way, whatever people were flipping out over COVID toilet paper, I'm like, dude, take a shower.
Starting point is 01:00:34 Like, what the fuck you flip it out over this? Why are you fighting over this? Anyway. You're going to shower every time you shit? How inconvenient is going to be. But like, it's, it's, the inconvenience is not bad enough that I'm going to fight over that. That's fine. That's fair.
Starting point is 01:00:52 That's what I'm saying. You're not going to like stab someone and like, No, I'm not going to go to jail over this. Like, I'll just like a shower. Or I'll just be uncomfortable. Anyway, I just think like credit cards aren't that common in Europe. It's definitely an American thing. But long story short, I am not in favor of a firm.
Starting point is 01:01:09 I think that that is a stupid thing to spend his life working on. That's my opinion. I would love for him if we could goad him or bait him into coming on here and convincing me of otherwise because I'm open-minded. But I think it's dumb. I think it's stupid. For general contractors, that's a little bit different, but for buying like a $29 pair of pants,
Starting point is 01:01:27 like don't fucking buy the pants. Well, my family member trains his daughter in Jiu-Jitsu. And so maybe, maybe we could use the daughter Jiu-Jitsu connection to get Max on the pod very soon. Am I wrong, though? Do you agree or disagree? I disagree completely. I think credit is a great thing.
Starting point is 01:01:47 It helps the economy move. I'm always a kind of don't hate the player, hate the game type of situation, where I put the burden on the individual in the same way that I wasn't like, oh my God, jewel or like, you know, like, is, you know, is Grey Goose evil because it's alcohol and alcohol causes problems? No, like, I don't think so. I think I basically, for myself, I live my life where I never blame a company for tricking me into like doing something. I blame myself if I don't have the self-control and the like thought process to do it. And so that's how I
Starting point is 01:02:20 look at others too. I will never blame a credit card company for somebody getting in debt. Now, what I do say is if you're not transparent about what the fees are, what the charges are, what the rates are, then that's shady, right? You're withholding information. You're not disclosing. You're hiding the fees. But in this case, they don't charge people more for buying. A lot of the times it's zero percent interest, actually, because they can offer the customers zero percent interest because they take 7% from the merchant for helping them close the sale. And so it's actually an interesting model compared to...
Starting point is 01:02:55 That's interesting. I didn't know the full story. It depends on the credit worthiness. Like when I bought an eight sleep mattress using a firm and I was like, because I was like, oh, do I want to spend like two grand right now? Oh, I'll try this a firm thing. And I was like, oh, this is cool.
Starting point is 01:03:08 I can just pay in payments and it's zero percent interest. Because I had a guy... Well, I tried doing it. I also have an eight sleep. I tried doing it with there. And I actually was going to have to pay like a pretty hefty fee. I was like, oh, no, because you don't use credit cards.
Starting point is 01:03:20 You don't have high credit. Something. Like, for some reason, I don't have a good credit. My credit score is not bad anymore, but it was bad because I didn't have history. Anyway. Well, I have one last idea on this, which is, I think this is the same thing as, like, you probably know what layaway is. I don't even really fully understand what layaway is.
Starting point is 01:03:38 Layaway sounded like a total scam to me. It's silly. It's silly. Basically, like, what it is, if you want to buy a $500 thing, you would go each week and you would give them a little bit of money and it would start paying down your balance and then eventually you'd get the item. Right.
Starting point is 01:03:52 But it's crazy because with a firm, you get the item first and then you pay later. Buy now, pay later, right? That's the, that's the... Well, you have to remember there's a one big thing, which is like, is that if it's going to take you three months to purchase and you can't, if you don't have the internet to buy stuff, like you want to guarantee that they're going to, like, that's yours.
Starting point is 01:04:10 Right. I guess for me, it's like, our items really out of stock. But apparently there's a huge thing. Like Walmart, like in most parts of the country, layaway is like a huge part of their business. And it's a, it seems like a pretty predatory thing in a way, but I don't know too much about it. So I shouldn't really speak on it. But anyways, I guess my point is, why aren't people doing a firm for retail stores?
Starting point is 01:04:32 So why isn't this the same option? Every time I check out, you know, my wife goes and shops at, I don't know, wherever, you know, Nordstrom. Like when she checks out, they're like, oh, you know, do you want to open a Nordstrom card or whatever? Why isn't it, hey, you want to pay the full amount? today or would you like to pay in installments? And you can pay an installments. Now, maybe this is already the case. I don't know, but like it seems like something that should be built into the point of sale
Starting point is 01:04:53 at retail stores. I don't do a ton of retail shopping. So this might be me being dominant. Actually, it's totally a thing. Does a firm plug in to Shopify? Yes. And do a lot of people use Shopify to, but like Norsham doesn't use it, but like a coffee shop might. Yeah, not really.
Starting point is 01:05:10 They're trying to do more of that square is definitely trying to do a lot of like retail plus online, like, you know, brick and mortar and online. So maybe Square does it, but, but I think a lot of retailers that just have their old school POS still. This is like one of those rare topics that you're bringing up. And I'm like, oh, I don't know. Like, how do people buy stuff at stores that have done it? Yeah, same.
Starting point is 01:05:31 We should just smoothly exit this topic before we, uh, before we try to hard. We got to find the emergency exit at this one. Okay, I think we should wrap it up. That's a good, good episode. feel like I can rule the world. I know I could be what I want to. I put my all in it like no days off. On a road, let's travel, never looking back.

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