My First Million - #221 - How to Make Millions With a Modern Day Infomercial
Episode Date: September 22, 2021In this episode Shaan (@ShaanVP) and Sam (@theSamParr) break down a 30-year-old infomercial and they discuss the modern day approach that can make you millions. They also talk about businesses built a...round trust, professional certifications, and what investors Shaan would call first if he was raising. You'll also meet a serial entrepreneur who is this weeks' Internet Founder of the Week. --------- * 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: https://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: * (0:57) Meet a future guest * (4:34) Building a business around trust * (9:17) The problem with content businesses * (12:25) Subscription opportunities for content based businesses * (18:30) Trust as a service businesses * (23:01) Someone got a little blue checkmark * (25:16) The health department score is BS * (28:34) Klout reimagined * (32:14) Thoughts on professional certifications * (34:24) Meet Matt Mickiewicz * (42:12) Guthy-Renker - direct marketing masters * (53:07) The modern day infomercial * (59:19) The first five investors Shaan would call
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I think if you're starting a media company and if I started it again, if you didn't go subscription first, you're an idiot and you're a fool.
I 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.
All right.
We're live.
So did you see I got Ariel Hohani to agree to come on?
I know.
Good job.
How'd you do that?
A friend, a good buddy of mine is like best friends with him.
And I just begged them.
Your outreach, I had never seen you try so hard.
Normally, you're pretty cool about things.
I don't think you really care with too many people.
But I could tell you wanted this one.
I did.
So basically, for the people listening, there's this guy named Ariel Hawani.
He's got a million followers on Twitter.
So he's not like that niche.
But basically, he's like the god of MMA journalism.
And the reason why he's interesting is because he just quit ESPN,
where he was probably making close to a million dollars a year as a host.
And he created a substack, his own podcast, and he's kind of building like a little media empire.
Yep.
And so we'll have them on and talk about that.
Yeah.
And the thing that's interesting about him was he's been in it for a while.
So like you have this phrase, I think you've said like niches get riches, basically, which is like a lot of people are afraid to go into a niche market.
Is it niche or niche, by the way?
I have no idea.
Both will work.
Okay, good.
So, you know, a lot of people are afraid, oh, is this too niche?
And I think you have the opposite reaction, which is too niche, fantastic.
At least that's my understanding.
You tell me if that's right or wrong.
Well, it's two things.
One, whenever you start doing something, it's definitely better to start for a very small group of people
and a very small niche and corner that or at least get big in that and then expand.
Or the second thing is you can stay in a growing.
niche and grow with, but you know, start your, start your business on top of a huge wave.
For example, Twitch, video game streaming, super small niche.
They never expanded really, right?
It's still the same thing from day one.
They tried, but it's still, you know, dominant where it's just gaming.
Yeah, and that niche has just, they're in it.
It just is no longer really a niche.
Or you have like an Amazon, only books, and then you dominate that and then CDs and then
this and then this.
So yeah, I think starting.
small is always the way to go or is often the way to go. Yeah, I think in Ariel's case,
what he did was, I know he's a fan of, I kind of want to ask him this, he's a fan of the NBA,
like he's a big basketball fan, but he didn't go for journalism, basketball journalism,
which would have been a more obvious, safe choice. Instead, he went for M.MA, which was like
this fringe, really niche sport that, you know, it was kind of like, you know, John McCain in New
York is calling it human cockfighting. It's like not allowed in certain places. Yeah. And so,
It wasn't really like a very safe choice, but he was the only dude doing it, it felt like.
It was like, you know, you can go back, you know, 15 years basically and you see clips of him
talking to people backstage and just budget production value.
But he was like the guy covering this regularly.
And because of that, he's got like deep relationships, deep respect amongst the fans to the point where even though Dana White, who's the president of UFC, hates him and has banned him from like UFC events, he's still the number one journalist.
So imagine, you know, like this guy that Roger Goodell, the commissioner of the NFL just hates and bans from the game, still being the number one, you know, journalist for the athletes.
That's kind of unusual.
And so he's an interesting dude with a cool story.
Yeah, I'm excited to have him.
I actually think that it's going to, it'll be a hit with our listeners, even the people who aren't into UFC.
I think it's going to be a hit.
But I am a fan boy.
So we'll see.
Yeah, that's all good.
Can I tell you about a business that is,
on trust that I'm obsessed with at the moment.
Okay, go for it.
All right.
Have you heard of Examine.com?
No.
What is Examine?
You've never heard that?
Okay.
Can you go to your computer now?
You have, okay.
I'm at it.
Let me go there.
All right.
I tell you what I see.
Yeah.
Okay.
I go to Examine.com and I thought it was going to be about books or something.
No, it says nutrition information you can trust.
And then it's just like a giant kind of like Google search bar.
It's like, for example, oh, this is perfect actually.
My trainer was telling me about Ashwaganda.
I see Ashraganda here.
I've been taking that for eight days now.
Great.
So it's a supplement.
And so I go here.
And I guess the idea would be, hey, there's going to be a lot of it.
If you Google this, you're going to find a lot of information.
But we are a trusted source.
We do the research.
We put the pros and cons here.
We make it easy to understand.
Is that the idea?
Yeah.
So I'm going to summarize this.
So the reason this interests me is I have a friend named Sol, S-O-L-Rwell.
He's a good buddy of mine.
I'm not even met him, but we went to a bunch of conferences and we were in the same room.
We never met up, but we became friends.
and he's a great guy.
And I just met him as a guy.
And then I saw his business.
And it's called Examine.com.
And what it does is they do a few things.
So first, they get about 40,000 visitors a day.
And they get those visitors by having this free content.
So what you're looking at, where it examines that supplement, Aschwaganda.
But the model in which they make money is that they have a membership.
That membership has supplement guides.
And then they also have a thing where they look at all the.
recent studies and they summarize it to tell you exactly what you need to know. And it'll say,
this is a strong study and the conclusion is this. This is a not great study and the conclusion is
this and you should avoid it. And they do that with all types of studies. And basically what the
company is, and I'll explain why I think this is a big deal, but basically they take knowledge
that's locked up or complicated to understand and they make sense of it into a really easy
to understand way. And so they have, I'm going to give you some stats. 40,000 visitors a day,
20 employees, 7 figures in revenue, 50,000 people have signed up for their membership or bought some of the guides.
And that's only been around for about two years, the guides have, or the membership.
And so they made money by selling guides.
And so I bought the supplement guide.
They have one on like, I have like panic attack problems that I'm trying to fix.
And they have guides on, it listed all the, it said here, if these six supplements have been proven by clinical
trials to help with panic attack. And it lists them all. And it says, take this one. If you don't feel
anything in two weeks, pair it with this one and then pair it with this one. And they tell you,
and they go, and when you buy it, make sure that it's magnesium, not magnesium oxate. Like,
they tell you very specific stuff. And I think this business is amazing. It's amazing because
they've spent years building up trust. So men's health, Dr. Andrew Schumerbin, do you know who that is?
He's that guy who has a YouTuber, he talks about health stuff. He's like kind of going viral right now,
was just on Joe Rogan and Tim Ferriss.
Everyone citesexamined.com.
New York Times sitesexamined.com.
They've spent years building up trust.
Every word that they write is very meticulous.
Now, they're starting to monetize.
And this model, I actually think it's amazing.
And I didn't, at first, I was like, there's no way this can be a big idea.
But there's this company called Up to Date.
You've probably never heard about up to date.
If you're listening and you're a doctor, you probably have heard of this.
And so it's basically Examine.com, but for doctors.
I mean, it's been around before Examine.
So Example.com is that for nutrition.
In this business, doctors pay, I believe, $600 a year, and they get the same exact thing.
They get access to a content database that very explicitly and clearly says which clinical trials are proven, which are not, and what the conclusion is.
And then summarizes a bunch of stuff.
Guess how much money that makes a year?
I think a lot.
I think probably, I mean, I'm just looking at up to date.
And I think it has 15, you know, similar rub shows about 15 million visits a month.
So that's pretty impressive.
I would guess, okay, I'm going to go high.
No, I'm going to go low.
It's always fun to be blown away.
So I'm going to say $50 million a year.
So the estimate is closer to $500 million a year.
I'm blown away, just as I hoped with my low estimate.
Isn't it a shitty when you're trying to blow someone's mind?
And then they estimate over it.
You're like, well, okay, not that much.
But it's still cool.
And it's like, God damn it.
Like, you know, that should just be a rule amongst friends.
If I ask you to ballpark something, you know,
No, let me blow you away.
And the company that owns this does the same thing for finance, tax, and accounting, I believe.
And that whole company is publicly traded.
It does like $5 billion in sales a year.
Crazy business model.
And I'll tell you why this is interesting to me.
This is interesting to me because I love content businesses.
I love them.
There's a huge problem with content businesses, which is they suck at making money if you're going to make money in the most traditional way of banner ads or some type of BuzzFeed style native ads.
I fucking hate that.
This model I love.
I think that you could use this model for a bunch of different categories, including skin care, including beauty.
I think that would be the easiest one, according to Saul.
What do you think about this business?
It's pretty neat, right?
Genius.
Yeah.
So up-to-date makes total sense.
Yeah, like I am surprised I haven't heard of it.
I am not surprised something like this exists and works.
It just makes all the sense in the world.
examine.com also very, very cool. And I think sort of like if up to date is kind of like a B2B
examine is kind of like a B to C where it's like, you know, the average person who's just curious
like you, I'm curious about panic attacks or I'm curious about Aschaganda or I'm curious about, you know,
whatever, El Carnatine. And, you know, I hear about it. I hear some buzz, but I'm trying to be
like smart and safe about things. Where do I go that's not just trying to sell me shit and not
just trying to like print page views as like a content form?
And so I think that trust is, you know, like sort of like one of the only things that matters, you know, like world of abundance.
And that's where we are.
We're in a world of abundance.
And so trust is like one of the key things.
And examine.com, their rule is they don't recommend any brand.
So you can't find any brand on their site.
If they say take magnesium oxy, I was like, Saul, just tell me like which brand.
So I can just buy it on Amazon.
He goes, no, we can't tell you that.
You got to go and figure that out.
because the day we start doing that is the day we start like incentivizing the wrong shit.
So it's pretty amazing business model.
You know who else does this is consumer reviews.
So consumer reviews, you probably don't use anymore.
A lot of the people who are younger or my age and younger don't use it anymore.
So consumer reviews, it's wirecutter, but they charge a subscription.
That company, it's actually a nonprofit.
So you can actually look up their revenues.
Their revenues, they charge a subscription revenue.
What did I say?
Consumer review?
Consumer report.
Yeah.
Consumer Report, it was around before wirecutter.
I prefer wirecutter now, but Consumer Report is pretty amazing.
They charge subscription revenue.
They still do like $120 million in subscription revenue.
And they're telling you like the best TV, the best microphone, the best computer, and they crush it.
Yeah.
So let me just, consumer reports, subscription newsstand and other sales.
In the year 2020, they did $212 million in subscription revenue.
Crazy, right?
Subscription revenue.
That's insane.
245 million overall revenue in 2020 insane.
I think if you're starting a media company and if I started it again,
if you didn't go subscription first,
you're an idiot and you're a fool and you're a masochist and you like pain.
If I could do it all over again, knowing what I know now,
I would only start that way.
And it's totally the, I think it's the best business model.
Clip it.
All right.
Yeah, that's a good one.
I like that a lot.
You've talked about this thing on like consumer,
reports for other things, right? So you've talked about it for SaaS tools. And then some people
have tried that, G2 and others have tried that. What do you think about that? What's your latest
thinking on that? Because you've been thinking about that idea for a while. I think it's an amazing
idea and someone could still do it. G2 has raised another round of funding at like a multi-billion
dollar valuation. I think I think it still could be done. There's a company called J2 Global. Have you
heard of J2 Global? No. All right. Look up the stock of J2 Global right now for me. I act like I'm
setting you up. I actually haven't looked at it in a while. Is it good?
Okay, so J2 Global. All right. It's trading at $130 a share. The market cap is $6.3 billion.
And yeah, you know, like sort of year to date, it's almost a double.
So J2 Global, what they do is they own a handful of publications, including IGN, mashable, PCMag,
offers.com, and one or two more. But basically, they make the bulk of the revenue, I believe,
from suggesting which software to buy in PC magazine,
and that's how they make most of their revenue.
And it's a public-contraded company, new look it all up.
So I think this model can still crush it.
I think PC magazine is pretty much garbage.
G2 is okay.
But anyway, I think it's a really big business
that so many people are sleeping on.
And, you know, what else could you do this sort of trust model for?
So I have one idea, but I'm curious.
What else comes to mind for you?
Skin care and beauty.
That's what I think it could be done.
skincare and beauty.
Yeah, because there's an ocean of, there's an ocean of brands and you kind of care about,
you know, the problem I think with that is you don't have fear.
So that's one really good thing about supplements and medicine is that there's like a fear
component to it, right?
Like I don't want to actually like die or get side effects from this thing or have a,
you know, sort of a big problem occur because of the potential benefits of something.
Whereas the skincare, I think, yeah, you might break out or you might just want to know
which one's better.
But it doesn't have that fear component where people are going to look at it out.
up and say, before I buy this, I've really got to check. And so I think that's one of the keys.
You know, there's like which one of these dishwashers is best. I think that's a consumer
report thing. It's like, oh, I don't want to research this. Like, oh, these guys test this for
5,000 cycles and they tell me which one lasts the longest and works the best. Like, okay,
that's great. I was never going to do that myself. You know, I think that's one version where it's like
tires, which tire is the best tire to get? What's refrigerator is the best refrigerator to get?
And then on the other side, there's the fear one, like supplements, medicine, sort of like alternative
medicines.
What's going to happen from those?
I think those are two like especially good categories.
And I think the difference of choosing the right category versus the wrong category is a multiplier
of like 10x, 10 X or 50x of your outcome.
I would imagine you could do the same for physical therapy.
So the reason physical therapy is interesting.
So basically, I've had injured Achilles for about a year now.
And I've been researching like crazy.
And if you search Achilles tetanitis, there's low.
a different stuff. And I've been reading so many studies. And my conclusion now is this. There's
only one way to fix your Achilles tendonitis. And that is to do, well, no, no, no, it's rest,
but it's to do six sets of 15 Achilles, like, an eccentric drop-down. So what that means is
you stand on a curb or a step, and you slowly let yourself fall, and then you kind of step up,
and then slowly, and if you do that, and I read study after study, it's almost like been unanimous
that if you do this for three months every single day, your Achilles tendonitis will get better.
And I had to dig so deep for that.
And I think that something like this could exist for physical therapy and injuries and things like that.
Right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I kind of agree with you.
Right now, my mom has this like, she had vertigo, but then it kind of went away, but she still feels symptoms.
And the doctor's like, you don't have vertigo.
She's like, you don't know.
I get that.
But what do I have?
I have something.
This is not right.
And they're like, uh, blood work looks fine.
And then she has to call back and like, hey, I know the blood work looks fine, but I'm not
right.
Yeah, what do I do?
They're like, ah, go to, let's do an MRI.
Same thing.
And then it's like, finally, okay, do these, do this physical therapy.
So she literally walks around the house with a piece of paper in front of her that has
like a letter on it.
So her eye has to focus on it.
And she moves it to the right while she's walking and they moves it to the left while
she's walking.
Oh my gosh.
Dude, is this the exercise?
Like, maybe it is.
If it is fantastic.
But where, how do we know that this is it and that there's not like a much faster,
better way?
Because previously when she had vertigo, that was like vertigo proper.
She went to three doctors.
Nobody knew what to do.
The fourth doctor was like, oh, lay down, and he, like, shook her head, like, vigorously,
and it's like this known cure.
And basically, like, loosens up the crystal in the inner ear or whatever.
And she was, like, fixed in 10 minutes.
And she's like, wow, like, if I just hadn't come to see you, how many more months or years
when I've just had vertigo?
Like, that's a pretty scary thought.
Yeah, I think that could work.
Or here's another thing.
Do you know, you know anything about chiropractority?
I know.
I know what most people know, which is, like, skeptical, skeptical hippo-wise, as our boy, Brendan Chob says.
And I didn't know that.
I thought, sorry to chiropractors or chiropractors fans out there, but basically chiropractor, it was invented by a guy, I forget his name, but he was like a snake oil salesman. He was full of shit. And he thought that like, I'm going to, someone's going to correct me because I'm kind of getting it wrong. But basically like there's like evil spirits or something in you. And if you adjust, if you adjust the spine, it releases it. Now, some chiropractor like can help very little. Like, but 90% like 90% of what chiropractors is what we think they do.
You can't adjust your spine and your headache stop.
Like, that's just not how your body works, but it's nonsense, right?
Also, the acceptance rate of chiropractor school is 100%.
It's like, it's like a Google AdSense certification.
It's not like, you know what I mean?
I know I'm going to get flack for this.
And yes, there are some chiropractors out there.
A lot of it, though, is nonsense.
And I think an examine.com can exist for all types of parts of the body.
So anyway, that's my idea onexamine.com.
I thought it was interesting.
I'm a bit obsessed with it.
I'm currently on a vitamin regimen and I discovered it on there.
I thought it was cool.
You want to do another one?
Yeah.
Okay.
So let me give you another trust as a service.
So this is just like a, I'm calling this my $2.
Blue Collar side hustle right now, which is here's a side hustle that will make you some bucks.
It's not going to be a huge business, probably.
It's not even maybe going to be around five years from now.
But I think right now it's a thing you could do.
So are you big on, do you order a lot of food?
I'm a door dacher, right?
I do, but not like you.
You do like every meal.
Well, I got a chef now, but even with a chef, there's still two to two meals a week
where I'm like, let me just fire up the door dash and see what happens.
Dude, it's so expensive.
It hurts me.
And so when you get your meal, they all have this like sticker on it now that says safety sealed.
And it's just all it is like, you know, normally it's like in a bag and they were like tied the bag in a knot.
And now they like sticker it to show like no human like the food went in and then we sealed this shit.
Because there's like viral videos of like DoorDashers eating the food.
Eating food, coughing in the food.
I don't even know what the fear is.
It's just like, I can't lie.
When I see this sticker, I'm like, good.
I'm glad they sealed it.
Like, good.
I'd rather be sealed than not sealed.
That's for fucking sure.
And it wasn't even a thing I was thinking about before.
But somebody is out there selling branded safety seal stickers to restaurants.
And I just think that in general, there's going to be a whole wave.
If you just said, I'm going to sell trust in safety as a surface.
I'm going to sell it to.
every business that needs to reassure its customers that it is taking COVID safety protocol seriously.
And then you can dial that knob up to level 12 of like chiropractory where you're like,
I'm just going to mail these to everybody.
They put it on yourself, honor code.
This is an honor code system.
You know, like just put this sign up in your restaurant.
Put this mat on the outside of your thing.
Put this on every door knob.
Hang this on every door knob.
You know, put the sticker on every cup, you know, whatever.
you could just send it or you could actually like go out and verify and say hey here's our five point you know safety inspection and we send mystery shoppers out or whatever we like actually create kind of like a zaget reviews type of of sticker or seal of approval specifically for trust and safety around COVID that's the general idea what do you think I love it and I'm going to show you an example of of something similar to this have you heard of I think it's pronounced lead L-E-E-D leads
certified the like green buildings thing yeah so i was looking this up so it's a non-profit so you could
easily see their sales so that that wow they do uh i think this is i'm almost positive it's run by
a company called the u.s green building console and i think they is that it do you know
no but uh yeah i believe you and they do 31 million dollars a year in sales and basically i have
no idea what the i have no idea why buildings are in
to do that. But I imagine the business model is such where you pay L-E-D lead, I guess is what it's called.
And, oh, here, Dan says he's a former accredited professional for lead. So that's crazy. Dan,
unmute. Dan.
Okay, on a scale of one to chiropractor, where is lead certification?
It's nowhere near chiropractor. It's legit.
And you are a lead accredited professional. What the heck does that mean?
Did you pay for the first? Did you pay for this accreditation?
My company, my former company did, yeah.
Okay, so somebody paid for you to get certified,
and then you charged other companies to go give them the stamp of approval.
Is that right?
Yeah, so as a professional, you get like one point towards the point total you need
to become a lead building.
And then there's like a silver, gold platinum scale.
And it's shit like, you know, you use the right kind of light bulbs,
you use the right kind of insulation, that sort of thing,
when you're building, you're building, right?
Or renovating?
Yep, stuff like that.
Air quality, indoor air quality, which is really bad normally.
low-use water, things like that. No smoking.
And why does it-
You sound like a lead professional right now, bro. I feel like I'm getting lead-certified as we speak.
Why does a building care about getting lead certified?
That's a good question. Yeah, I think it's a little bit of just wanting to be green.
But there's no incentivization.
Oh, dude, dude, dude. The government does the government, like, give you anything?
Or is it simply just for branding and awareness?
I don't know. It's been 15 years since I took the exam.
So I'm a little out of pace on it.
But I'm not sure if there's a big incentive for it.
Dan, how old are you?
I'm 35.
Do this when you were 20?
You were a 20-year-old lead certified?
Might be around a little bit.
I think I was 22 when I took it.
Okay.
More importantly, I got a lead certification.
Go to my Twitter profile real quick.
Just see what you see there.
Dude, fuck that.
I think you were the worst.
That is so lame.
So you'd be verified?
So lame?
Are you kidding me?
John got verified on Twitter.
He's got a blue checkmark.
I think that is the lamest, dude.
You are not one, you're not a man of the people anymore.
You're so out of touch for getting me.
I used to shit on, uh, I don't need that.
I don't need that.
You know, what does that mean anyways?
Who cares about that anyways?
You know, I actually prefer not to have.
And now that I have it, all that, all that bullshit is out the window.
I am so glad I'm verified.
Why?
Why did you get it?
So glad I got the blue check.
Well, I got it for like actual legit reasons.
Like first I was just, I wanted it for my ego for many years, but I was, you know,
okay, whatever didn't happen.
Who cares?
But then people started actually impersonating me and scamming my followers.
So there were all of these accounts that get created every month.
And they would go DM my followers, but hey, yeah, what's up?
And people were like, oh, hey, thanks for the DM.
They'd be like, no problem.
You know, I saw you follow me.
You know, what are you doing with your portfolio lately?
And they would scam them into either sending them crypto or buying random crypto shit coins
or they were getting them to like buy stocks or like send them money to go like invest in their
They pretended they were my fun.
And so people were actually like, you know, it used to just hurt my feelings that I wasn't
verified, but then it was actually like hurting other people.
And so I was like, dude, what the fuck?
So I was bitching about it.
Yeah.
And I get that.
I get that.
But that's the only reason I'll accept.
I think every other reason is bullshit.
I think they're stupid.
What's that?
It's a little jealousy I was smelling.
I don't know.
I think you kind of want the blue check mark too.
I think the people on Twitter need to help you out.
I think I'm barely famous enough to get it, but I will not get it.
I'm not, you have crypto pros and you tell me right now.
You push a button and you can just have it or not have it?
Nothing else.
Just push this little key on your key.
You're telling me you wouldn't push that button?
I give you my word.
I will not push that button.
Wow.
But if I end up having scams like you, then yes.
But I've not had that.
I've not had that problem.
Yeah, it became like a legit problem.
Anyways, so, okay, lead certification.
So, yeah, basically, I think lead is another good one.
Like, I would love if somebody just took on lead and just called it like,
you know, Green Home.
Oh, you're a Green Home triple star?
Wow.
Doesn't that sound good already?
Yes.
And like, again, you could turn the knob.
You can go super legit if you really like find ways that you could kind of score buildings.
Or you could like be somewhere in the middle and, you know, don't scam.
But like, dude, I would do that.
the service is a great business.
I actually think that the health department's scorecard is bullshit.
So I had a hot dog stand.
I mean, duh.
I talk about that too much.
Have you told that story?
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know I don't drink either.
And when they did my health certificate,
I just bullshitted through it, like hardcore.
And like, I mean, my shit was clean.
But like they had all these boxes we had to check.
And it was bullshit.
But in the day that we were doing it,
I actually was wearing flip flops.
And they gave me a 95 instead of 100.
And so like I think it's kind of not gross toes out while you're making hot dogs.
Yeah, nobody wants that.
We're outside and 100 degrees selling meat that's been sitting there for like,
you know what I mean, like forever.
Like it's fucking disgusting anyway.
It is super.
I worked.
So my first thing was a sushi restaurant.
And we had a commissary kitchen,
which is like a,
it's a central kitchen where like caterers and bakers,
it's like a kitchen without a storefront.
So in there was all the food truck guys.
And so in that, I saw the hierarchy of like degeneracy.
It's like caterers.
Like bakers are good people.
Bakers are nice women who care about their product and they do a great job and they're
very hygienic.
And then caterers are like kind of like they're like bakers.
They're legit, but you know, the needs on a caterer are so high.
It's always high urgency.
They're preparing for a 200 person party or whatever.
So, you know, they're kind of get shit done.
They'll cut through the red tape.
but you know, you respect their decisions.
Then there's the fucking food truck guys.
Food truck guys, they think this is a bar.
They're just drunk while they're prepping their tacos.
They're pretty disgusting.
And then you have the hot dog guy at the end.
This guy straight up, okay, so there's like a sink.
And if you don't know what a three compartment sink is,
you haven't paid your blue collar dues.
But basically a three compartment sink is like kind of where you do the dishes
in a commercial kitchen.
And like the three compartment sink is just literally it's full of like the dirtiest dishes.
and just a chemical bomb you put in there to like clean them.
And the fucking hot dog guy in our camera
in the kitchen would just go and he'd just fill up the sink with the hot dogs
that he's going to be selling like three hours later.
You'd just be throwing the hot dogs around there, washing them,
you know, put them in the other sink to dry off.
It's like this guy, there was zero.
And I literally, I don't think I've had a hot dog since
because I saw how the sausage was made and I never want to see it again.
So that's my public service announcement.
Don't eat hot dogs.
I agree.
I was clean.
I mean, I kept myself.
clean, but I can see why most don't. You can get, you don't have to. You can just get away with it.
It's not even counting what's the meat. I'm not like, forget the meat. Let's say the meat was pure
the way it's handled. Disgusting. So I think you could build a new version of a, of a health
department score actually. I actually think that's legitimate. Dude, how many other, could we just do
this like, okay, I'm bullshit about Twitter right now. Could you just do this where it's like,
you have a content, you have like a content score? Like, you know, just like how, uh, either like how like,
you know, safe and kind of like non-offensive your content is.
Like maybe it's something that's like, you know, it's around your cancellation.
You know what we should do?
You know, it's interestingness or your fan score?
Like how much your fans care about you?
We just bullshit like your engagement score.
But we make it really visible.
It's like Sam, he may not have the most followers, but his followers love him.
It's like we make your Q score.
Yeah, you know what Q is?
It's like a popularity ranking.
We just makes it.
Oh, you haven't heard this?
Q score.
It's like a thing for celebrities.
Yeah, it's a thing for like a hollow.
Hollywood celebrities, like, what's your, what's your popularity kind of like, it's not approval
rating? It's like your popularity rating. How well do people know you? And like, you know, Obama has a
high Q score. And I feel like you can do that on social media with clout, but just like bullshit the
whole thing. Yeah, I think that's crazy. I think that's good. Clout score. I actually think
Clout was amazing. So Clout was a company that was around. It was spelled K-L-O-U-T. They had like
100 employees. They raised a lot of money. They ended up selling for $100 million. I think it was like
$100 million of stock in a privately held company.
Like, I don't think it was actually that good of an exit.
But they, um, great idea, cloud early.
You were just too early.
Amazing idea.
Way too early.
Amazing idea.
If it were around now, it would be the best.
Somebody restart cloud and just DM us.
I thought it was, it was a great branding.
And people still to me make jokes about cloud.
Like, they'll be like, oh, I got to crease that cloud score.
I know what they're talking about.
I had a cloud score and basically what happened.
I mean, my cloud score wasn't that great.
I had like 5,000 friends on Facebook.
And so I qualified.
And so McDonald's...
The fact that you're justifying it shows how good of a hook this is.
I would use it all the time.
McDonald's would send me a $5 gift card once a month.
Right.
Yeah.
Amazing.
It was so cool.
I loved clout.
So I think that could exist and I think that could kick ass.
I think this is like, yeah, I think there's a lot of interesting businesses here.
I don't even think you really need to do that much differently, right?
Like, I'm sure there's like 20% of things you would tweak.
Maybe in the execution, like, you know, maybe you don't have raised that much.
much money. I think the timing is the biggest tweak that you needed to make. Maybe you change
the way it's calculated or the way you promoted or the business mall, whatever. I don't think you
need to change that much. I just think that the time is now. And like as Donald Trump basically
created this thing called fake news, I think fake news is very underrated how like big of a wave that
actually was created and how much distrust there is around brands and entities now. And so people are
kind of like the atomic unit of a brand at this point.
And so, yeah, I think that that cloud should be remade.
How about the fact that so HubSpot has a hub.
So this one woman who works at me just got scrum certified and we paid five
grant, it was $5,000 or $4,000.
And I'm like, so scrum, I don't even know what it is.
I guess it's just like a project management.
Yeah.
It's how you manage engineering sprints.
And we paid five grand.
And I was like, who the heck like is the scrum like decision maker?
And then I realized HubSpot.
Scrum Master, by the way.
Is it really?
Oh, my God.
It sounds so much more like legit that it probably really is.
HubSpot has HubSpot certification courses.
And if you look on people's LinkedIn, they brag about passing HubSpot certification courses.
We got to talk to HubSpot.
I'm like, look, like, you guys are amazing and wonderful and legit.
But like you weren't always amazing, wonderful and legit.
You were just starting out and you somehow convinced people to trust you and take this seriously.
How on earth did you do that?
Because that's amazing.
So they paid HubSpot.
So HubSpot is the collector of the 5,000 dues for the scrum training?
No, sorry.
There's a different organization that does scrum.
But HubSpot, you've never seen people brag about their HubSpot certification.
So, like, if you Google HubSpot certification, they've got like these classes on social media.
I just block people if they tried to brag to me about that.
So that's an immediate block.
So there's like inbound sales, HubSpot marketing software, inbound marketing.
And if you Google like that and LinkedIn, there's so many people that put that on their LinkedIn,
in, like, certified in whatever.
Like, there's so many people that cite HubSpot as their thing.
And so they put it like, you know how, like one time, if you look up Tower Banks on LinkedIn,
she probably still does this.
She puts that she grads away from Harvard, okay?
She went to a Harvard executive learning day.
And people put like HubSpot.
Yeah, it's like a two-day.
Look at, if you look up, Tyra Banks, let's see.
No, no, no, no.
Okay.
Okay.
So she did a nine-week program for executive.
It's called the owner-president management extension program.
Yeah.
Dude, Harvard makes it unbelievable.
I'm going to break this down next to the next podcast.
Harvard's kind of whole business model around online programs, Harvard Business Review,
the media company.
I'm going to break that whole thing down because it's crazy.
I'll do it with you.
I've studied the business review a bunch.
All right.
Can I tell you about another idea or a person, actually?
Yeah.
All right.
There's this guy named Matt.
How do he pronounce his last name from Flip.
K-Witch or whatever.
Man, I don't want to butcher this guy.
Mick, sorry, Matt.
I like you.
I just don't know how to say your last name.
It's kind of like Mickey and then with the Wicks at the end.
Mickey Wicks.
All right, Mickowitz.
I've known about this guy for a long time,
but I'm going to tell you everything that he's done
because I bet you know all of his work,
but you maybe didn't know he was the one behind it.
So in 1998, when he lived in Australia,
he started this company while he was in high school called SitePoint.
Sight Point basically is a publisher of books,
courses and articles for developers.
And so you can learn HTML, CSS, Java, Ruby, all that.
They've never raised any funding, and they have like 50 employees.
I imagine if I had a bet, they'd probably make five to 10, maybe $5 to $15 million a year.
That's my guess.
Well, how do you spell it?
Mitskevich.
Mitzkevich.
His name's Matt Miskavich.
Have you heard of SightPoint?
SitePoint.com?
No.
Is it still around?
All right.
It's still around.
And so, like, I've heard his story.
He was like, basically, I started this as a forum and then a blog, and people would come to my forum and blog, and I was taking like $10,000 advertising checks when I was like 17 high school.
So I dropped out of high school and went all in on this.
Then when he went all in on it, his forum on site point, people were buying and selling businesses on it.
And so he spun out one of the forums into its own business called Flippa.
You've heard of Flippa, right?
Yes.
So I believe they've been prolific.
Yes.
He's really prolific.
Because you haven't even got to two of his hits.
Listen, so he started Flippa, which is a.
marketplace for buying and selling small-ish websites and stores and things like that.
They've got millions of users.
Flippa is like, now micro acquires in the space, but Flippa is like considered like
the thing.
And in fact, I think they just raised a little bit of funding like $20 million recently.
It's got hundreds of employees.
It's a pretty big business.
Third, on site point, he also discovered that people in the forum were buying and selling
designs.
And so he started this thing called 99 designs, which is amazing.
99 designs is one of the best sites.
that I've used. It's a great place to basically, you're on 99th designs, you give them $1,000,
you tell them what you want, and like 100 designers give you a mock-up of what if they think
that your project should look like, and then you pay for, you select the one you like, and they
get the money. So they do close to $100 million, I believe, in revenue. They've raised $45 million
in funding. Okay. From there, he also saw that people were hiring all types of devs. So we started
Hired.com. Hired.com, I think it kind of fizzled out a little bit. It might still be around.
It's definitely around, but it kind of fizzled a little. But they raised 132.
million dollars in funding definitely could still be quite big so that's pretty amazing then he now his next
thing is he's creating and so this is all has to do at site point started site point 998 his next thing is called
unstoppable domains you know what that is I bet you know that is better than I do go ahead it's just a way to buy
by domains in crypto so like I have a domain that ends instead of dot com it ends in dot eith which is dot eht
So it's a domain name service like it's a domain, I think it's a registrar.
So it's a domain registrar for making crypto domains.
And the reason it's called unstoppable domains is because when you own that namespace,
nobody, it's on the blockchain, nobody can sort of take it away from you,
nobody can switch the rules on you.
It is sort of there forever.
So this guy, Matt Mitzkevich, has done all of this.
I don't think he started by the way.
I think he joined it, which is I DMed him when he joined it because I was like,
if if the guy who's a founder of all these successful companies joins a company, it's like one of
the strongest signals that there could be. Like just recently, I was saying this about my friend
David McIntosh. He started Tenor. It's a gift keyboard. Sold it to Google for I think a couple hundred
million dollars. And then he joined Instacart as like one of their execs. So you know, like anytime you're,
it's like this person is independently, massively wealthy has started their own company. And if they want to
join as like, not even like join as number one.
It wasn't join his CEO.
Didn't join his CTO, just CPO.
He was like, you know, maybe like in the top 10 of the Insta Work execs.
So that's when you know like, oh shit, this is like a jugger or not.
This person thinks this is a $100 billion company if they're doing something like that.
So the end this guy.
Let me just tell you.
So I DMed him.
I go, you join unstoppable.
Super interesting move.
I said, what makes you bullish on it?
Here's what he said.
I'm just going to read it out loud.
May or may not mean anything.
He goes, there's a trillion dollar asset class.
which is basically domains,
that people are navigating
using the equivalent of an IP address.
If Web3 and Crypto is here to stay,
then building the identity,
basically the address for consumers
is one of the most important companies of the decade.
He's like in the normal web,
you have ICANN.
You know what ICANN is?
Yeah, so it's like a committee,
which is kind of bullshit to me, but.
It's the committee that decides shit about the internet.
What domains can be, you know,
can you have a dot phoenix?
or dot biz domain like ICAN kind of decides those types of things.
He goes, it's one of the oldest monopolies on the internet.
It's begging to be disrupted.
Crypto gives us a way to disrupt that because it's creating like a new,
a new ground where they don't have jurisdiction.
They don't have rule of law over there.
That's one of the few crypto examples or blockchain examples where I wholeheartedly agree.
And I think that's actually incredibly useful and totally right.
I don't know who's going to host the domain or like how that works.
But I agree with that like idea because if if you're doing,
something I can or whoever can pull it.
Right.
Yeah.
Anyway, so he was just telling me a little more about it.
But I was like, yeah, that's great.
That's cool.
And I bought an unstoppable domain.
This guy's amazing.
So, and get this, he's 37.
He's only 37 years old.
Amazing.
This is, have you, you've heard of him.
I feel people don't really, yeah, people don't really know about this guy.
Like, or they don't really talk about this guy.
But it's a pretty prolific career, and he's kind of like independent and definitely like a,
I don't know, he's an independent thinker, I could tell, right?
Because 99 design is actually a pretty like very novel mechanism.
It's like, oh, what if we created kind of like a design auction, right?
And it's the best.
It's the best.
Like we used it for our podcast thumbnail or our cover photo.
Yes, we did.
Done through 99 designs.
And check this out.
When we did it, HubSpot, like had all these designers work on this stuff.
And they made like some pretty good logos.
But we still went with this guy in the Philippines who made this logo.
And it was better than all of them.
The Trends.co website I had designed on there.
Because when you work with the designer, you don't want to be rude to your own designer.
Be like, no, this sucks.
Can you just do exactly what I told you to do, please?
But you can do that with a freelancer a little bit more than a full-time.
So I'm a fan of 99designs.
And by the way, it looks like there's this guy, Mark, who is his co-founder
because it says co-founder of 9-9 designs, Flipa, and SitePoint.
So that's like, that's pretty cool.
I like when people create this kind of like duo.
It's like, yeah, let's just build a bunch of companies together.
I find that to be like pretty inspiring.
And it tells you something about how somebody is to work with if somebody wants to keep going back in and work with you again.
And I've talked to this guy.
I actually invited him to hustle con two or three different times.
And he committed and then some scheduling stuff happened.
And we weren't able to make it happen.
But I've talked to him on the phone.
He's very humble.
So I'm a big fan of this guy.
Yeah, me too.
Okay, so he's kind of like our little, you know, internet founder of the week.
I don't know.
We need a name for that.
We have the billy of the week.
We got the blue collar side hustle.
We need something for just founders who are badass who have done like serial, serial entrepreneurs.
Yeah, this guy's great.
All right, you want to do one or two more?
Yeah, let's do some other ones.
Okay, so do you know this company, Guthy Ranker?
I bet you know about it.
I can tell you all about them.
Tell me all about them.
So last night, so I've been on this.
I've been on this binge, I guess I've said.
I've been on this binge.
I'm rereading the book that really got me into being kind of like a startup founder.
Can I guess? Can I guess?
Guess it.
Think and grow rich.
No, but that is a good guess, especially if I saw what we're talking about.
I actually haven't read that book.
So I want to read it now after reading about Guthranker.
But I'm rereading the four-hour work week.
So your bud, Tim Ferriss, wrote this book.
I got it right when I was starting my first company.
So I started my company before this.
But once I started reading it, I was like, oh, wow.
There's people that are like me that are out there who think this way.
And this guy's got like systems about this.
I just started figuring this stuff out.
This guy's like, been doing this for a decade.
Great.
And I got what you call the four-hour fever, which is what happens right after you read the book.
It's my own term because I've given this book to maybe 50.
people since and they all get the four-hour fever right after I infect them with the book.
And so I read it a long time ago.
We already lived the four-hour work week.
So now we live it.
And so I went back and I'm rereading it.
I'm like, okay, I'd rather, yeah, I want to reread the classics.
And so I went back and rereading it.
And I just want to see, you know, what of it?
Do I still believe in?
What of it?
Do I disagree with?
What's changed?
Anyway, it's pretty interesting.
I'm taking a ton of notes.
And I texted you this while I was reading it.
I go, let's write a bestselling book, 10 million copies sold.
the next four hour week. And then you're like, okay, easy. And I was like, all right, perfect.
Because I'm serious about it. I'm like obsessed with this. So I've just been writing content.
I've been writing and I've been reading all weekend long. Like I just been binging. Like,
I'm up to four in the morning every night doing this. And I'm like pretty convinced that we could put
out like an amazing, amazing book. So anyways, that's like, you know, just calling my shot.
I'm going to do that. We'll be surprised. We're going to use, well, I want to be involved. Let me.
Let's see.
I invited.
I wanted it.
I wanted to do it.
I'm doing it either way, but I was like, what would be the best?
I go, what if the best writer I know, partner with me on this?
And we trade it off chapters.
So like I can say something.
I'll write a chapter.
And what I want you is basically, I want you to read it.
And then you write what you would write right after you read that.
So it's like, you know, like actually, I totally agree with Sean with this one.
I have my own story of how I did that.
Or disagree.
I do it totally differently.
And I just think that if we play off of each other a little bit,
it can become a very interesting book because there's not many books that are out there that
are like that. That may all change, but that's what's in my head. I also think that we should do,
there's one book that had a pretty fundamental change in my outlook and it's called Founders at Work.
And it was by Jessica Livingston, the woman who started a white combinator with Paul Graham, their husband and wife.
And basically, it was just interviews, but for some reason it was really special. And it was just
interviews transcribed, I think we could do just interviews and write our analysis and reply to the
interviews. And we, I read that book on a plane. I still remember it because there's a chapter in there
about Hotmail. And I just remember reading that book and being like, this is awesome. Is this what it's
like to start a company or be around people that start companies? This is fucking awesome. And,
you know, by the way, I hope this podcast ends up being that for some number of people in the world.
That could be our first book if you want because that's like a pretty easy and actually amazing and
It could be fun.
I don't even care on the details.
I just know 10 million copies sold, bestseller.
For some people, this is their version of 4-R-Rourke.
What 4-Rourg reviews was for me?
I want this to be that for like a whole million people out there.
I think that would just be amazing.
So let's talk about Gunthery Raker.
Can I tell you what I know and you can tell me if it's true or not?
Yeah, explain them.
I did a deep dive on them last night.
So I can fill in gaps.
All right.
So they are a marketing and IP owner.
So they own like a, it's a business.
that markets other stuff.
They mostly don't develop their own products,
but they buy products or they license them.
It's started by a guy named Stephen Gunthry.
Is that his name?
There's a guy.
One of them's last name is Gunthi, Gutthie, Guthy, not Guppy.
And the other guy's last name is Rinker.
And they started, I think, as early as the early 80s.
They are in marketing, and they basically bought infomercials.
And one of the first big hits was they bought the rights to the book,
Think and Grow Rich.
and they created infomercials and direct response copywriting ads that they put in magazines,
and they sold shit loads of this book, like millions.
And then they just reits and repeated.
And then they eventually bought Proactive.
They own Proactive and they own a bunch more.
They probably do a north of a billion in sales.
And they do the same type of model.
Go ahead.
So it's an infomercial, it's a direct response company,
which basically they made their name by doing infomercial-based sales.
And they do about between one and a half to two billion in sales a year.
They own brands that you've heard.
They brought brands to market that you've heard of, like proactive.
Also, Tony Robbins, his kind of personal power or like audiobooks, thinking grow rich.
So, okay, so here's kind of some of the cool stuff I found out about it.
Okay, so how did it start?
One of the guys, I think Guthey, he had started a company.
And this is how funny the world works and why really all you got to do was just get in the game and start making shit happen because nobody could have predicted this path.
Right.
So he starts a company that just does audio cassette production.
So, like copying.
So like you have a cassette, you want more copies of that cassette.
Send me the original recording.
I'll make you a bunch of copies.
So it's basically like, this guy's a fucking like kinkos, right?
Like it's just like a printer for audio cassettes.
And he gets this order and this guy says, hey, I need 200 to 250.
Sorry, I don't know why I said that.
This is a small number.
Basically the guy wanted almost 100,000 cassettes made.
And he goes, 100,000, what are you making?
And, you know, it ended up being 50,000.
copies of a cassette that was about real estate, about how to make money doing real estate investments.
And he's like, wow, that's amazing. And he looked up the company and the guy was selling through
infomercials. So he goes to his buddy, Ranker. And Rancor at this time, I think, had his family
owned like kind of like a resort, like a tennis resort or something like that. So he probably
comes from a good family. So he goes, hey, dude, this guy ordered for me 50,000 copies of
this cassette. It's amazing. Forget making cassettes. Like, let's do this infomercial thing. That must be
amazing. And so they go, okay, what are we going to do? We need a product. And so they,
that's when they were like, hey, what's something we're both into? It's like they both had
made their bones. They both really love this book, Think and Grow Rich. So that's when they went
and bought the rights to it for $100,000. They ended up making $10 million in the next three
years off of sales of Think and Grow Rich, right? They basically bought the rights of thinking grow rich.
And they produced this infomercial. They hire this football player, Frank Tarkington, to do it. They
go. By the way, I watched the full 30-minute infomercial last night at 4 in the morning. I'm
watching this thing. And you can find it on YouTube. And it has 875 views on this video.
And basically, it's this infomercial. And it starts with like this production. And it's basically
like these people, it's kind of like testimonials, but they don't tell you what the product is.
It's like, you know, I always wanted to just own my own business. I was so tired of working for somebody
else. And then finally I felt like this is the solution, broken down into tactical steps,
but they don't tell you the name, right? And then it's like an interview with the founder of
Domino's, he's like, I never went to college. I had the lowest GPA in my high school class,
but I read this book. And afterwards, you know, like it became my blueprint for how I started
Domino's. And like, it's like, what's the book? They just get you like salivating, what's the book.
And then three minutes in, Frank Tarkit comes on. He says, you know, the richest,
people in the world, Andrew Carnegie and the Rothschilds and whoever else, like all these people,
are Andrew Carnegie commissioned this guy to go study what the most successful people on Earth,
the Rothschild and others were doing.
And he went and he interviewed all of them.
And he packed it and tacked all that knowledge and wisdom into a book that's been a bestseller
for years.
It's the book that executives say is their secret weapon, blah, blah.
It's just like such a hard sell, but that's like what infomercials are.
It's like, once you get in, you're like, all right, I'll bite.
What is it?
So, you know, like, I'll order the thing.
And so that's how they sold thinking grow rich.
It's kind of like an amazing infomercial.
I recommend you go watch it if you're kind of like a marketing person.
By the way, they bought that in 1988.
So 100 grand is the equivalent of, is this true?
Only $225,000.
So it's only $2.2.2.
And when they, the takeaway here should not be like, I can't do that nowadays.
But actually, if you look at the infomercial and if you go and if you,
If you Google like Guthrie Raker infomercial breakdown or if you just go and make your own
and you break it down and you like copy it word for word and you break down the sections
and you apply that section to a sales letter right now, it 100% will continue to work.
Right.
Like if you see their infomercial, like the ladies are going to be wearing like 1980s clothes
and the guys will have weird haircuts and you're like, oh my God, so old.
No, it will continue to work.
And TV infomercials at the time was like dirt cheap.
So they were, they, when they did the think of Grouch, they just bought TV space in six small TV markets.
And like, you could buy the midnight slot, the 2 a.m. slot. And these are basically like,
it's essentially free. They needed some programming to fill airtime. And so these started out really, really cheap.
Now, it's gotten much more expensive, right? So like, let's take proactive. I think proactive at its heyday or, you know, kind of like some, you know, this is maybe a 10 year old data at this point.
But they were spending about $250 million a year just on the media.
buying. So just on the infomercial space. And then they're spending like, because if you go,
if you watch a proactive thing, it's like Justin Bieber was their like signature person, right?
Because proactive was basically saying, hey, teens, you don't need, you don't have to have acne.
You can get rid of your acne this way. And Justin Bieber was like, you know, the teen idol with great
skin. And so it was like, Justin Bieber and Adam Levine and like, you know, the Maroon 5 guy.
Like this is all these people, right? Bittney, I don't know who else it was. But they would get paid
$5 to $10 million to appear in a proactive infomercial.
Like crazy money for an influencer.
Like that's a big influencer spend.
And so this is just influencer marketing done like at level 12, as I like to say.
Right.
Like what is the maxed out version of this?
Proactive is the maxed out version of it.
And so they own like a bunch of brand.
They own like glow by JLo.
It's like you want JLo's skin by JLo's glow.
Then it's like, oh, you want this other supermodel skin by her thing.
It's very much around skin care because that, I guess, is like one of the, like, you know, that's like the sweet spot of like price, big market and celebrity endorsements go a long way.
The two big niches are fitness.
I would say three.
Skin care, fitness, self-help.
So like Tony Robbins became like a household name using this on the self-help side.
On the fitness side, they had a bunch of different brands.
And then Beachbody took the same playbook and they created P90X and the Beach Body program using the same idea.
they became competitors.
There's a guy.
I'm trying to think of what's it called.
It's called Mind something.
I'm trying to look it up.
But basically there's a guy.
It's not Mind body, but it's similar to that word.
I can't remember what it was.
Mind Valley.
Yes, you do exactly what I was talking about.
The guy like the Philippines or Thailand or I don't know where they're based.
Yeah, there's some, I don't want to be disrespectful.
But there's some weird stuff going on with this company.
I don't know what the truth is.
But basically, if you look up this company, mind valley, mindvalley.
He does this now.
And basically this company, what they do, they probably do 50 million a year in sales.
And what they do is they buy programs from people.
So they have one called Lifebook, one called Omvana.
I think that's a yoga thing.
And then they have Evercoach, which is, I actually don't know what some of these services are.
But they have a bunch of these.
And what they do is they find people who have like a yoga course or some type of program on.
So they have programs on sleep.
They've got programs on yoga, on meditative,
It's like health, wellness, and hippie-dippy shit.
You know, it's like a combination of like very legit to like, you know, like tantric astrology or whatever.
You know, like it can be anything.
And they're experts on long form copywriting, which is basically an infomercial.
And they're really good at buying traffic.
And they make tens of millions of dollars a year in revenue all bootstrapped.
And so if you want to look at the internet version of this, there's also Agora, which is a $1.5 billion.
And another version of this is we had a guy named Craig.
is Craig Clements. We had a guy named Craig Clements. His business is called Golden Hippo. They own,
I think, eight or nine brands. And I think, if I remember correctly, didn't he say they do like mid nine
figures in revenue? Yeah, I think I think Golden Hippo, our buddy Craig's company, I think it's on par with
Guthranker, um, in terms of like, sort of like success. I think Guthrigher does, does over a billion in
sales. So, you know, it's the next level. But golden hippo is that from the internet.
for the internet instead of TV infomercials.
They basically just do it with like long form blogs and then long form embedded video.
So if you ever like go down the rabbit hole, like I've tried to do it.
I've tried to figure out like look at some of his brands.
They hide their brands.
They hide them really well.
Very hard to find.
But when you do find one, you're like, oh, okay.
And then it's hard to find where are they advertising.
It's like, okay.
So they buy a display ad through tabula on some random article and it's for a toe cream,
toe fungus removal.
And then you click that and then you watch a 40.
minute video that auto plays with no pause or skip button. And then by the end of that,
you're like, God damn, like, you know, if you ended up making it there, you're almost certainly
going to buy this token. Then you subscribe to the SMS is and you get like text messages from this
legit doctor who, you know, is the face of the brand. It's kind of like the, the, the,
like, Rodan and Fields is another one, which spun out of Gunther Raker. It's basically like two,
they created proactive. So I think it's two dermatologists that created the formula for
proactive. And then they left to create a rodent and Fields.
which is a multi-level marketing company that created their own,
they created new formulations in this one they owned 100%.
I think that's a multi-billion dollar company as well.
And if you're on your computer listening to this,
one of Golden Hippo's brands is called Gundry MD.
I think Dr. Stephen Gundry, a lot of people, he's kind of famous, I think.
He's not famous in my world, but I think he's famous in like kind of mainstream world, actually.
Gundrymd.com is their website.
Go to that website and look at this website.
and they make it look like it's a small, like almost mom and pop thing.
First thing, peak mobility plus.
It's all about you.
I love mobility.
You love mobility.
And they even sell dog food.
It's like, it's a pretty wild business.
And I think this is their most popular brand.
This brand, if you told me it does $100 million in sales, I actually wouldn't be surprised.
But if you didn't know better, you go to it, you would have no idea.
Right.
And this is all about like gut health, plant-based, you know, plant-based eating, stuff like that.
And so, like, you know, I get their text messages all the time.
Like, don't, you know, don't get leaky gut syndrome, like, by this thing.
And so, you know, it's very fascinating.
And the reason I like bringing these up or like what you brought up, I think all
the companies you brought up today are cool because if you work in our, are, like, most
of our friends who are like successful internet entrepreneurs, tech people, Silicon Valley,
executives at big tech companies, they will have never heard of any of this.
In fact, I did a breakdown of one of Golden Hippos flow.
and I sent it to all the execs at Twitch.
I go, hey, I went down the rabbit hole of this.
They laughed at you.
They laughed at you.
They were just like, huh, fascinating.
And they went back to doing like, you know, spending millions of dollars on Facebook ads that just said, download Twitch.
And it's like, okay, like, you know, like, is there any creativity we could do here?
Like, to try to like, like, I just showed you one of the most creative things.
And like, nobody really cared.
Nobody asked any follow up questions.
Some people were just like, huh, cool.
Send it to me.
Send it to me.
Send it to me.
I said is it's crazy to me. And so like, so I feel like there's a lot you can learn from,
from these kind of under the radar brands or non-traditional. And a lot of people just write them off.
They're like, oh, infomercial, sleazy, affiliate marketing, sleazy, MLM sleazy. And like,
you may be right about like the sort of like that these aren't the best products, that they're
maybe the best sold products. But look, I'm trying to get great at sales. So why would I not look at
the best sold products? It's like a no-brainer to me.
This was a good one, I think.
Yeah, I think it's a good one.
This is definitely sort of like unusual slash potentially gray hat.
Trust and untrust, untrustworthy businesses.
You know, I think it's going to be entertaining.
So, yeah.
Can we wrap up with, well, let me wrap up.
First of all, Gontrary raker is amazing.
I would love to see your notes on that if you can share them.
Also, I want to wrap up with the one thing that you, on Twitter,
you said you wouldn't call me to invest in your company because I'm risk-adverse.
You said this and I want to explain myself because that was a dig at me.
I don't think you meant to be rude, but I took it as you being rude.
And I think that a lot of our friends call me this as well.
You guys are so wrong.
I just don't take dumb breath.
So here's my philosophy.
Listen, here's my philosophy.
So from age 20, I said by 30, I'm going to make enough money that I never have to worry about money ever again.
And so that's when I started my conversation.
company. Many would say that was incredibly risky. I would say compared to the average show,
it was, but it wasn't that risky, the reality. It wasn't that risky. Then I got the money and I
invest in safe stuff. But here's the thing. When I find shit that I love, I go all in on it.
I just, what you and a lot of our friends do is they go, they spread their shit like wild. I
try to go all in on a couple things. So I think, I don't think I'm risky, a risk adverse. I think that
I just pick and choose them different.
Yeah, that's true.
Like, okay, let's say, let's say I was starting a company.
And I think I know what your answer would be, but let's see.
If I was starting a company and let's say I either didn't have an idea,
I just said, I'm going to start a company, or I said,
it's going to be in this space, but I don't know exactly what.
Or I said an idea that you're like, I don't even get that or that sounds kind of dumb
or fuzzy to me.
Would you just invest then or would you want to wait?
Because you know I would let you in at any point.
I would ask one question.
Are you going all in and it's going to be your only focus?
Yeah.
If the answer is yes, I would be like,
and that wouldn't raise money.
I wouldn't even ask the valuation.
I would just say, okay.
So that's what I think the answer is.
And that's kind of the,
so the person asked a good question.
I did a Twitter kind of like, I don't know, like an AMA,
where I was like, you know, just should be questions.
My wife took the kids out to Target.
I got an hour.
I want some immediate rush of Twitter love.
Let's just do some cute.
day. And the person said, you're raising money for a company who's the first person you call.
And I said, I said, like, here's my first five phone calls. And I basically name them, name them.
I don't really remember what I said. So I'll tell you, Suli, Suli, I totally agree with that.
He's an amazing operator, very good investor. Scott Belski, amazing investor. Good signal to everyone.
The third was, uh, Justin Caldback. I think I had on there.
who's a I don't know him well but he's an amazing investor
and then I had uh Bologi I think I had on there they put Bologna?
Okay obvious reasons.
Yeah.
Pretty brilliant.
And then I had one more person who else is on there and I can't find the tweet.
I forget who that fifth person was as well.
But I'm not offended that I didn't make that list.
I'm offended that people think that I'm risk adverse and and I had a friend text
me and he goes, do people think you're risk adverse?
And I was like, I think they do, but I think the wrong.
The first person I had was Michael Birch, the person who backed me with my previous company.
So that would be my first.
So here's my like, in reality, you know, I'm answering these questions fast.
In reality, I would actually not, like two people who would, two people who I would not actually go to first would not be Scott Belski or Bologi.
Right.
Because two reasons.
I don't actually know them that well.
They're not like my homies.
They're like, you know, like, apology, I consider like, yeah, we're kind of friends, but we never like.
We're not hung out.
Yeah, we're cordial.
Scott Belski, same sort of thing.
Like, even, even more distance, actually.
And so like, you know, respect, but, you know, I can't say this is like my homie.
And so in reality, my first five calls would be to like you, Suli, Michael Birch, you know, Ramon, like a bunch of our, like my true friends who I'm like, hey, I'm doing something.
Like family.
Like family.
Exactly.
And so that's like the true answer.
For Twitter, you know, I kind of like, I didn't want to put only people that people would not like not recognize their names.
I said it.
A couple of people that they would know in there.
And there's also kind of aspirational like, who would I have?
want to be in my company. I think Scott Belski is an amazing product person. So I think that's just
like an amazing person to have on there. I think Boller's. And he's like the greatest and I mean,
he's one of the best angel investors. Right. So he's done well and I think it's well connected.
So I think that's useful to have. And I think, uh, Bology also is like a different kind of signal.
So super obviously like hyper intelligent. He comes from the future. So that's helpful in general.
And I think that, um, I think that having him adds credibility. Because if you only have your friends
there, it doesn't help you get the next.
investor on board necessarily because they look at who else is invested. And if they don't see a name
that they recognize, that they respect, then they don't, hasn't been like kind of like,
they don't see the Harvard stamp of approval on there. So you need that mix in there. So that's
my justification for it. But yeah, in reality, of course, would call you. I know, but you said,
I don't care about that. I care about it. Oh, then I told other people that you're risk averse.
I think that's crazy. I think that's a smiley face. That means it's a joke. The smiley face means it's
a joke. Oh my God. You think that I'm, and just, I'm going to wrap it up with talking about Scott Belski.
Scott Belski, his grandpa started Kaplan. Kaplan. Really? No way. I did not know that.
Yeah. His, his grandpa started Kaplan, sold that for like 80 or $100 and like I think the 80s or 90s.
So it's like, you know, that's like the equivalent of like $300. Then when he was 24, he invested $15,000
into Pinterest when it was worth $3 million and $15,000 into Uber when it was worth $3 million.
He did this while he was running his company called Behance, which was mostly bootstrapped until like six months before they sold it.
They raised a series A, but prior to that it was bootstrapped.
And when he sold it, he owned, I think, 75% of it.
He sold it for like $150 million.
And then so he made probably $100 million from the sale, probably $100 million on Uber and $100 million on Pinterest or give or take 50%.
And now he's next in line to become CEO at Adobe, which is like the 40th largest company.
and the world.
Yeah, total gangster.
And good dude, just fun, fun hang, which is, you know,
means a lot of me.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Financially successful.
Whenever I met with him, I met with him a while ago, and, like, he's, like,
really good looking.
He dresses really nice, and he's, like, fucking dreamy.
He's, like, so optimistic and so happy.
And whenever he, like, talked, I was just like, dude, whatever you say on.
Yeah, he looks like the guy from Maroon 5, Adam Levine.
Exactly.
He looks like that guy.
He's very good looking.
and he's nice as hell.
He's really nice.
Yeah.
Okay.
We should wrap it up before we just totally, you know, totally,
totally.
That's right.
Gay for Belke.
I was trying to think of something that would, like, be appropriate to say.
My mind only went too dirty words.
I'm gay for Belsky.
I'm hardcore gay for him.
I like him a lot.
All right.
We're out of here.
