My First Million - #37 - Mastering Amazon FBA
Episode Date: January 22, 2020Ever think your side-hustle could become a million-dollar company? Paul Anderson (@paul_d_andersen) did. Today on My First Million, we sit down with Paul who quit his 9-to-5 to focus on his Amazon FB...A and how his passion became a full-blown multi-million dollar company. Side hustles, getting ‘em out there, increasing your profits, credit lines and more this week! Also, go sub to his new personal finance newsletter: https://wealthfam.com/newsletter/ See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
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I built and sold an Amazon FBA business.
For me, no VC money, no employees.
I was working full time.
I started with $5,000 in my little Chromebook.
Building on the back of Amazon, I mean, it has this risk.
We can talk about that, but it also has this huge scale and leverage that you can generate.
All right, I got the great first product.
It's going to be awesome.
Look for enough demand, but not so much competition.
I've done all my product research, and I sourced it out of China.
this logo off of fiber. Like I feel like, all right, I got the right pieces in place. And I get it in,
I launch it, and it is a total fail. I got burned so bad the first time. I'm hurting because
I do not want to stay in the career of mid-night. So I'm feeling like so much is riding on this,
and it's just got to work. Once I got a little taste of it, it was like, okay, now it's on.
That first year, it did almost six figures in revenue. It almost didn't feel real until the
deposits hit in the bank. And I'm like, oh my God, people are really buying.
this. The hardest thing to overcome was really my own self-doubt. I mean, it felt like every
order I placed, I was like putting my whole net worth on the line. It was crazy. We put the
business on and within, I want to say a week or 10 days, there were seven full price or higher
offers. People can access these types of businesses and with a pretty small bet, like create a life-changing
business for themselves and their families. To carry something from kind of the idea in your head to
building it, to scaling it, to selling it, like, you got to want it.
Pretty asymmetrical. Like, I started with $5,000 and it turns into seven-figure business.
$5 million is not enough. 10 million. $15 million. $100 million.
Almost a half a billion in revenue. One or two people in a bedroom actually the threats to these
giant multi-million dollar companies because you have creativity and you have nothing to lose.
Add another zero to that price, buddy. Add two more zeros.
Every week we sit down with self-made millionaires and ask them, how did you do it?
I didn't start a podcast.
I started my own personal business school, and the teachers are the successful entrepreneurs
behind the biggest brands and businesses that we find today.
I wanted to know the real stories with all the details, like, how did you get your first 100
customers?
What did it feel like when shit had to pay?
I asked them, how did you spend your money now that you're rich?
and what would you do if you're starting over from scratch again today?
If you're like me and you want to own your own business instead of living a nine to five job,
this is the podcast for you.
The Hustle presents my first million.
Paul, what's up, man?
How are you?
You flew in today, right?
I did.
Last night, yeah, late last night.
I was excited for this.
You were a listener who is on the show.
Is that correct?
Exactly.
That's the new American dream.
I love the show.
I reached out to you.
you and and here I am.
Yeah, and I liked your story because you did something that I think not a lot of people,
well, I'll put it differently.
You built a Amazon FBI business.
And I've seen a lot about FBI, but the people who tell me about FBI are always selling me
something for FBI.
And so I hate that.
And I like just talking to people who, if you're telling me you got rich, then you probably
don't need to sell me something for $9.99 type of thing.
Exactly.
And so I'm excited to talk to you because you built a successful Amazon FBA business
and you're here to tell the tale.
What made you want to do this?
Well, for me, when I was learning the business podcast for everything, like podcasts,
Facebook groups, Reddit threads.
I feel like I've gotten so much from podcasts.
So hopefully someone will either get a little bit inspired or get educated.
Like you were listening to them or you went on them and that's how you're doing.
No, listening.
Absolutely, yeah.
There's this guy named Mani Coats who does an Amazon podcast.
He never met me.
He doesn't know me.
I mean, I probably would know a million dollar business without him.
So there's all these people that have been really influential via podcast that it kind of is fun to come full circle and say like, here's my story on a podcast.
Right.
And so what is your story?
Okay, so we're here in my first million.
How did you make your first million?
Just let's start with the basics.
So I built and sold an Amazon FBA business.
Okay.
And let me, I can give you kind of the, please do the scoop. So FBA, people don't know, is essentially selling on Amazon, right? So that gives you access to two of the most powerful things out there, which is millions of Amazon households, prime customers and Amazon's distribution network. So say we want to create a product, Sean, you know, cell phone case. Sean's cell phone case, we put your, your handsome face on there. We can list it on Amazon, all right, reach millions of prime households. And when someone buys that product, we're going to, you're going to, you
Amazon's distribution. They're going to do pick, pack and ship. We don't have to do a thing.
And then we get paid. So the net of reaching all those customers and having their distribution
means we can scale up a huge business, a seven-figure business with just one person.
Like for me, no VC money, no employees. I was working full time. I started with, you know,
$5,000 in my little Chromebook. So building on the back of Amazon, I mean, it has this risk.
We can talk about that, but it also has this huge scale and leverage that you can generate.
I love it.
And so FBA stands for fulfilled by Amazon.
Exactly.
You don't know what we're talking about.
And it's similar to other e-commerce businesses, but Amazon is your, in this case,
it is the main selling channel for you.
Was it the main selling channel?
It was the main selling channel.
And then secondly, Amazon is the sort of back of the house.
It is the sort of pick, pack and ship so that you can focus on growing the business and
not just the operations.
It's not have to hire staff and get a warehouse and do all these other things in order
to fulfill your orders.
Is that correct?
100%. Yep, you nailed it. And so what, what were you doing before you started this business?
Yeah. So I was, so I started the business in 2016. I'm about 10 years out of school at that point.
I'm kind of reaching this inflection point where I was really not happy in following kind of the right path, quote unquote, the right path.
What's the right path? Well, you know, you kind of are, whether it's society or whatever else, you kind of hear this throughout, you go to school.
Like, I went to school. I studied accounting. I got my CPA.
worked for, you know, good firms.
And at the end of it, I just wasn't that engaged or happy.
And I got really scared.
Like, you know, I'm early 30s, mid-30s now.
Is this going to be my next five years?
Is this it?
Is this all there is?
And that scared me so much.
Right.
And that was really what lit the fire of, like, there's got to be, like, I got to build
my own life raft out of it.
Because you were winning the normal game, right?
Go to school, get a good job, do well in that.
that job and that's a scary feeling when you're like I'm winning but I feel like I'm losing.
Yeah, it totally is. Yeah, it's a really scary. It's sort of like this dissonance in your head.
Like I thought I was doing the right things to win this game. And it's not like I was financially
that far ahead either because like, you know, you end up getting a decent car, a nice house.
And now, you know, we have a kid recently. So it's like, wait a minute, I don't even like playing
this game. And I'm not really getting where I thought I was going to go. So that's kind of what
spurred like. It's sort of an hour and every time we're going to be having a kid.
in the near future. And I mean, as you probably know, like having a kid in starting something
or they're hard to do at the same time. So I felt like all this pressure, like, I got to go and I
got to go now and get something going. And so do you remember what, do you remember the sort of
the day you made that decision or you really felt like, okay, I got to do this? Well, it really
comes back to these pockets. Like I said, I mean, everything from kind of marinating in the Tim Ferriss
world to this guy, like I said, man, he kind of learning all that. And then I could see myself,
like I can see myself doing this and you don't need an insane amount of capital like I'm living in
Minneapolis I'm not you know out here going to pitch to VCs it's like it felt attainable like I could
I could start it and I said you know at the the thing I like about Amazon is it pretty asymmetrical
like I sort of $5,000 and it turns into a seven figure business so it feels like hey I'll make a small bet
that's going to really sting if this thing just goes to zero but I can pick my life up and keep
going even if I you know lose every dollar put into it right.
Right. And you, what were you, I like this question, what were you making before you quit your job to do this? What was their salary as a CPA? Is that right? Was that what you're doing? Yeah, transition to finance. So I think, I want to say it was making, I don't know, 1005, 110.
And living in Minneapolis. Yeah, it goes pretty far. It's a comfortable life. And like, I don't, I don't want to say I'm ungrateful or, you know, come off like, you know, totally out of touch. But I just on the inside of the end of the day, when you layer,
head on the pill. Like, I just didn't feel fulfilled.
So, yeah, so it was comfortable, but it just wasn't, something was missing.
Right. And so, okay, so you do this. And by the way, we're not going to be able to say exactly
what the product is or exactly the company name for sort of non-disclosure reasons because
when you sold the business, you agreed to keep things confidential. But we'll talk around it.
And I think more importantly than the specifics of what your product was, it's the mechanics, right?
It's the mindset you had to go into it. It's how you figured out how to actually.
actually build this thing. It's the mechanics about what it means to be to sell online. And then lastly,
sort of the happy ending, which is being able to sell this for seven figures. And now, you know,
you're anew. You sort of achieve the thing you set out to achieve. So talk to me about getting it
off the ground. So you decide, I got to do something. You're inspired by these podcasts. What does that
really mean? First, did you start it as a side hustle or did you quit and go full on?
First started as a side hustle.
I wasn't, you know, I was optimistic, but not so optimistic.
I was ready to stake my whole future on it.
So I started on the side.
My first product, I can say what that was.
I started with this, have you ever heard of pour over coffee?
Yeah, popular in San Francisco.
Yeah.
So I started with this accessory for pour over coffee.
It was made out of wood.
And I thought, like, you know, I've done all my product research.
And I also like to choose things that were kind of trending upward.
And this seems sort of like a hipster, like cool thing.
It's going to keep trending and grow.
Like, all right, I got the great first product, pour of a coffee stance.
It's going to be awesome.
And I, you know, I source it out of China.
I get this logo off of fiber.
Like, I feel like, all right, I got the right pieces in place.
And I get it in.
I launch it, and it is a total fail.
It flops.
It turns out products made out of wood can break.
They can crack.
And that's what happened with this.
And I'm getting one-star reviews on Amazon.
I'm getting all these angry customers.
So I'm feeling pretty defeated at that point.
point, I was able to, you know, I probably put $5,000 and maybe I got $4,000 out of it.
So I took like small loss.
But how much time did you put into that?
Maybe three months.
Three months.
And I learned, it was like, you got a test run.
I got so much learning out of that from how to source out of China to how to, you know,
optimize a product on Amazon to deal with customers.
Like, the learning wasn't valuable.
And if I could, if I would have quit there, obviously would have never hit the second product.
But like, without that, I might not ever, you know, been able to grow it to what I did.
So I take a hit there and I'm down kind of licking my wounds and visiting my parents in Arizona.
And we start talking and they casually are mentioning what turns out to be my next product now, right?
And I think you mentioned this recently on a podcast.
Like I'm a big believer in like the notes app and like observing everything.
Like we filter out so much.
And I was kind of in this frame where everything I was doing, I'm like, could this be a business?
Could this be a business?
And I'm going to put in the notes app and I'm going to come back to it.
And I'm going to see what happens with it.
And this was one of them. I relate to that. Yes. Yeah. I got probably 30 of them, you know, I leased that in my phone. So you can turn your brain into a scanning machine for opportunity. You can. If you're wired, if you start thinking that way, you won't even have to try. Your brain will just start seeing everything. Your friend will be telling you about something. You couldn't give less of a shit about what they're telling you, except for the fact that you're like, huh, is that made in China? I wish that's out for. So do you buy multiple of these or just want, you know, you start assessing the business potential of everything. It's so true. You start deconstructing it. Like,
Like, wow, I bet I could get it out of China for three bucks.
I bet it's, it's, but you just got to flip the switch because then all of a sudden you do that.
And then you can marry it up to there's these great tools.
You can do research on Amazon to kind of see, you're looking for.
So let's talk about some of those tools.
So you start to get this idea of like, what about this product?
What about this?
What's the first step of research for you when you were like, okay, how do I figure this out?
Is this good or bad?
Yeah.
So there's a couple tools.
And essentially what you're trying to do is look for enough demand, but not so much competition.
Right.
So there's sort of this sweet spot.
Like, if you have no demand.
man and you can be the only one standing there, but no one's going to buy it, and the opposite
is true. So there's a couple tools, helium 10, jungle scout. If people want to learn about those,
go check them out. They're great tools to learn, you know, what's selling on Amazon. So this product
that zero went on and like, all right, I hear about it for my family. It looks good. Let's, you know,
fire another shot here and see what, see what happened. So I run the same play. This, again,
it's 2016. I probably put now my $4,000 that I have allocated for this into it. And the
$4,000 is going mostly towards the minimum order.
Is that correct?
Of inventory.
Yeah.
Yep.
So I think I ordered 500 units at the start, which was the minimum order.
Right.
I found my supplier in Alibaba.
Right.
I'm up at, you know, 9, 10 p.m. at night talking on the phone, trying to, you know, come off is that I have half a clue what I'm doing.
And you're private labeling a product.
Private labeling a product.
You weren't saying, let's invent something together.
You were saying, I want that.
Was it, did you even modified?
Or you were like, I want that, but here's my brand logo colors, etc.
I did some modification. I think especially now, you got to do more than just be a total me too. The modification doesn't need to be big. So like for me, I added something to my product that literally cost me 10 cents. I think, you know, say my product costs seven bucks and with this little addition, seven, ten. But the thing is you're trying to increase the perceived value of your product. So if I have product A and product B and I've got something else in product B that that A doesn't have, I might pull a bunch of buyers from that for the, for the,
low, low cost of, you know, five, 10 cents.
Yep.
So there was slight modification, but it wasn't like a reframe, you know, inventing stuff,
doing all these sketches.
Right.
Nothing like that.
It was like, let's get some nice branding and let's make it appealing to people online.
All right.
It's 2020.
New year.
It's going to be a big year.
And you know we had to come in with some new awesome partners.
So for January, we are partnering up with Microsoft and my first million.
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the test of time. And now they've come out with teams to help teams chat, communicate, and work
together. And I think it's awesome. All right, great. Let's get back to this episode.
And now, for anyone who's ever tried to source products from China or Alibaba overseas in general,
there's the natural sort of like, there's a language barrier slightly. There's, the biggest thing is
trust, right? So how, did you have any missteps in terms of sourcing the product or any bad
experiences where they ship you something and it's junk? Did you, how did you navigate that?
No, that was, I was really scared about that at the start because you, the way you pay, you pay 30%
to start production and then 70% when production's complete. And I thought, you know, they're going to
just take my money and run. I'll never hear from the chat messages will just be unanswered.
So honestly, it's, you know, there was never anything like that.
Like, you know, there's always little quirks and little quality things.
And, you know, you ask for something and you get something else.
Like, that's just part of the nature of the beast.
Nature of the beast.
But there was never any big, you know, big problems or issues.
Okay.
So you get this product source.
And we can say it's, what's the sort of generic way we can talk about the space you were in?
We can, so there's different categories in Amazon.
So we can say it's in the sports and outdoors.
Sports and Outdoors Category.
So you source this product.
You spend about how long to do that.
That takes a month.
That takes a month and a half.
About a month.
And how does round two go?
So round one, kind of got your ass kicked.
What happens in round two?
So round two.
So I think I get the product up the fall of 2016.
And then, you know, Q4 is the prime time for selling online.
It can blow your mind the amount of sales that can occur.
So I've got the product on there.
My expectations are fairly low because of what happened around one.
And it takes off pretty much from the jump.
There's some different things you kind of want to do to get the wheel spinning.
But that first year, a partial year of 2016, did almost six figures in revenue.
So for someone going from zero to something, that that was like, wow, this is huge.
I mean, there's, I'm not sure if you sold on Amazon or C, but there's a seller app.
And I was just like an attic, just refreshing that thing, like constantly.
Right.
And it almost didn't feel real until the deposits hit in the bank.
And I'm like, oh, my God, people are really buying this.
Right.
The product.
So that's when it was like, this could really be something.
And then kind of the rest of the journey was doubling down and trying to just grow it from there.
And so that sounds amazing.
And if I'm listening to this, I'm like, oh, hold on.
I feel like the magic step of like how the order started coming in.
Like, what was that?
What did you do to get it off the ground in terms of the marketing or acquiring customers?
Yeah, so on Amazon, you need to be at the top of page one if you want to get sales in the organic rank.
There's a couple of different ways you can get there.
It's harder now than it was done.
This is somewhat like the gold rush days of Amazon that I was starting.
So it was a different time and easier than it is today.
But you need to get to the top of page one.
So a lot of times people will cut the price of their product pretty heavily, which will basically entice people to buy the product.
And then you get in the good graces of Amazon's algorithm.
you start moving up to the top of page one so long as your product's good and your service is good,
you can stick there.
And what did you notice for the algorithm?
What did it favor?
Was it reviews?
Is there anything else?
Return rates?
What did it like?
To me,
the two big variables are reviews and price.
Like,
if you have good reviews and your price competitively,
like you're going to begin the good graces of the algorithm.
So those are so.
Is that what you did?
Did you lower the price initially to get going?
I lower the price initially.
Yeah.
And I got some initial reviews.
There's all sorts of funny business going on right now with reviews.
But back then, you know, I did it the right way.
I didn't engage in any of that funny business.
I got all these legitimate reviews.
And it just started small.
There wasn't that much competition then versus now a lot of things.
There's still a ton of opportunity in Amazon and you can grow a huge business today.
But it is a little more saturated and competitive now.
So month one, do you remember what you did month one?
Was that what you were saying six figures?
Or that was?
No, that was the first like three months.
Yeah, so month one, I want to say it was like 10 grand.
And then it starts to ramp.
And then it starts to ramp.
Yeah.
And it gets into the holiday season.
And how are you feeling at this time?
I'm like, I'm just pinching myself because I got burned so bad the first time.
And like I said, mentally I'm in a place where it's like, I'm just, I'm hurting because I do not want to stay in the career.
I mean, it's just not the right fit.
So I'm feeling like so much is riding on this.
And it's just got to work.
And then once I got a little taste of it, it was like, okay, now it's on.
Did you give yourself a certain amount of time?
It's like, all right, I'm going to give myself six months to try this.
If I don't do this, I go back and get my job.
Or did you just say, I'm doing this?
Well, I kept my job, right?
So I was still at my job.
So it was kind of, you know, if I was single in my 20s, maybe I would have been a riskier.
But I was, we were expecting a kid and, you know, at a house, at a mortgage payment.
So it was like, I can't be irresponsible and just die.
How was it going to work that day when you're like, well, I'm doing, you know, 60 grand a month?
right now in my side hustle. How was that? Very difficult. Very difficult to focus. I have to say,
you know, I was a professional. I hope, I like to think through and through, but I can't lie like my,
you know, my output or what I gave to the company probably wasn't everything that I could have
just because, you know, it was so exciting. Like something else could be hitting here.
And so how long did it go before you did end up going full time? So 2016 is one.
I started in the fall and kind of ramped up.
And then 2017, like halfway through 17 is when my son was born and also I left the company.
So that was a big moment there.
And 17 was just over seven figures in sales.
So that's when it really started to kind of validate like this is a legit business.
You're always a little bit like, is this real?
Is this going to be here tomorrow?
And then after you see it kind of run a certain amount of time, it's like, okay, I think it is.
And I can step away and do it.
So what's a healthy margin on a business?
You do a million in sales for an Amazon FBA business.
What's considered good, bad, mediocre, whatever?
Like, give us a sense for the margin you should be looking for.
What you actually get to keep out of the revenue.
Yeah, yeah.
So I would target about 25% is good, I would say.
PPC costs, advertising costs have been creeping upward.
So I think, like, there's not a ton of, like, high sales spots anymore where you're
going to be able to pull that margin.
But 20, 25% is pretty realistic.
And you were advertising on Amazon itself?
Absolutely. Yeah. Advertising is key on Amazon as well, and you can do, you know, like Google, you can get on Amazon the most powerful shopping platform in the world, bid on a keyword and be the top result, you know, your sponsor, but you are at the top of Amazon.com for whatever keyword you want to get and reach millions of people. That's that is serious power.
And so at your, let's say, when you were in your stride, what percent of your sales were coming from the sponsored link versus organic?
So it was probably 70% organic and 30% sponsored.
And was there any sort of key things you did that were, because what I like about your,
what I like about what you said so far is there's two types of stories.
The founder is a genius.
It's like I was a genius for coming up with this idea.
I invented this thing that didn't exist.
And then when I was marketing this, I came up with this genius idea to do something
nobody else was doing.
And then there's the other one, which is my idea.
more like reality, which is, Founder's Not an Idiot.
And Founders Not an Idiot says, I did basically all the obvious things you would expect me to do.
And I did them well, and I did them consistently.
And then I succeeded.
And it didn't require an act of God in order to do it.
Were there any Founder's Genius moments?
Because so far, you've told me a lot of the other one, which is sort of not fumbling the ball.
Were there any unconventional things you did or tried that worked?
You know, not really.
I think that's the appeal of this business is that the hardest thing to overrequess
was really my own self-doubt. And at the start, I was really uncertain. Like, I'm just a fool. I'm
going to lose this money. And I was telling my wife about this idea. I'm going to sell stuff on Amazon.
I'm going to take $5,000. I'm going to send it to China and bring product in. And like, she, you know,
very loving and trying to be helped from the start, but saying, like, are you, you know,
looking at it like a, like she would any business trying to poke holes in it. And I remember saying,
like, at this point, like, please just be a cheerleader because I'm already kind of hanging by a
thread like on my own belief in it so just like tell me I can do it and then like once we get this
ball rolling then like you know come on in and help me with some of the tactical stuff but
but no there was no big thing and I think the biggest thing is like it's all so much of stuff
is right there on the internet in Facebook groups on podcasts on Reddit like if you seek it and
you really want to go out there and and do it and actually take action and and you know do more
than kind of just look at it and talk about it like it's there if you want to learn it and
And it doesn't take huge capital to build a business like this.
I mean, five grand is a lot of money, but it's not, you know, going to sink someone or
going to take someone forever to save that type of money up.
Did you go visit your manufacturer?
I did.
Yeah.
I did go over there.
How many times you do that?
And when did you do that early in the process as you grew or right to the beginning to vet them?
So I went, uh, I found the manufacturer in Alibaba.
And then as I was finding them and coming out of this business, I actually had a trip
book to go over to the Canton Fair, which if you don't know the Canton Fair, it's like,
the world's biggest fair with suppliers over in China.
And it was insane.
I mean,
anything you ever would want to source was over there.
So I was going over there thinking,
I'm going to find all these products.
I'm going to start my empire.
And that was really cool.
And I loved being over there.
And the Canton Fair is like,
I forgot the number.
It's like 800 football fields long or something crazy.
It's the biggest expo for manufacturers to meet sort of buyers.
Exactly.
Yeah.
So I went over there.
I didn't actually find my support.
there. I kind of had him on the line ahead of time. But it was still a really good educational
experience, kind of both to see different suppliers, learn more about the culture, just kind of
get like in the in the headspace of doing business with China. But then I did go visit my
manufacturer a couple times. And yeah, it was really interesting. I mean, the first night,
I think he just wanted to mess with me. He took me out and we were eating street food. Like,
he bought me spiders and crickets and all these things just to just see, you know, what I would do.
I played right into his hands
and got all freaked up by it.
Fuck with the American.
Yeah.
And he played it well.
But it also,
I felt like going there
cements the relationship further.
So like you get,
you know,
maybe a little bit better pricing
or a little bit better look
to make sure you get the qualities right.
So I think it's such a relationship game
with suppliers,
like whether they're going to prioritize
your shipment versus someone else's
and all sorts of things.
Were they supplying for your competitors too?
I believe so.
Yeah.
I mean,
that's the case for a lot of,
A lot of these suppliers, like, they'll, you know, they're putting outputting all sorts of
different products and slapping on different labels.
So, yeah, they, I'm pretty certain they were.
So you went and you cemented the relationship.
You spent some time together.
Great.
So you did that.
The other question I had was you talked about, you know, the more successfully you get,
the bigger your orders need to get.
And so you're always in this cash poor business, you know, asset rich game where the
business is growing, your asset is growing.
But you continually are pouring out money before it comes.
back. And so talk a little about how you manage that. Did you do anything with the line of credit or
anything like that? Talk about some of the mechanics there. Yeah, that was, I'm way underestimated
that. You're spot on. That was really a tough component of it. And you feel really poor,
even though you're like, I'm showing these profits on paper, but like the money just immediately
goes back out of my bank account. So I really just did it based on the profits of the business and
drawn them down to, I mean, it felt like every order I placed, I was like putting my whole net worth
on the line, which was a...
scary feeling, but it was kind of necessary to keep fueling the growth of the company. So I didn't,
Amazon offers a line of credit once you get some establishment. The interest rate is pretty high,
but you can always pull on on that or once you've been up and run on a while. But for me, I just
poured the profits right back in. Gotcha. So let's do the formula. So what on one side, the inputs. So five
grand is what you put personal capital into the business. Right. Time. So you started this sort of late
2016. You sold when? Early 2019. Early 2019.
And so let's call it two, two and a half years, roughly, right?
Yep.
So that's what came in.
What you got out of it.
So you sold this business.
What multiple do these businesses sell for?
Are these the types of things that, you know, you can be doing a million bucks and sell for 10 or a million bucks you sell for a million?
Yeah.
So usually about a three multiple.
Of what?
Of EBDA.
Of EBDA.
Yep.
Three of EBDA.
So it's a lot, you know, relative to other businesses, it's a little multiple.
But you're also, Amazon's a risky animal to be on.
So, like, I think the...
So how did that decision to sell come up?
Man, that was so hard because I really liked, like, this was like the first job, if you will, that I ever felt like, I love this.
Like, I love doing this.
So the idea of selling it was hard.
And I didn't, when I started this, it was all about, I want freedom, I want flexibility and want to be around when my son is here.
I don't want to be in commutes and in these meetings.
I want, like, the actual time to be here, but also kind of the mental, mental health or mental clarity to be present as well.
So, but as I built it and it got bigger and bigger, it seemed like, all right, this is the right thing to do for my family.
If we can sell this, this would go a long way.
So I started.
Because there's risk, right?
That was there's risk.
Yeah.
Amazon is on risk.
Amazon can take you out in a moment's notice for something very legitimate, something not legitimate.
So, like, I mean, I would have nightmares at night.
Like, hey, what if I wake up tomorrow and I have the email from Amazon and I'm shut down and I got to go through all the hoops and who knows.
Like, so that just felt really scary.
And like there's probably a lot of upside left on the table.
Like maybe, you know, the folks that bought the company from me, they can turn around
to sell up for 5X in a few years.
And that would be, I'd be thrilled if they do that.
But for me, it was like to bank the win.
The win just felt like the right thing to do.
And you also mentioned when we were chatting before we came on here, the sort of other risks
that are in a business like this with physical inventory, you know, you're putting a lot
money into inventory, what happens with a bad batch? What happens, you know, to talk a little bit about
that, the other risks that you saw besides the Amazon sort of competition or algorithm changes.
Besides that, what else was there? Yeah. So it's, you know, when I started, I was bringing in 500 units.
It's pretty small. Like I said, $5,000 at the start, but it's a very cash intensive business.
Growing is great, but that means your next order from your supplier is going to be that much
larger, right? So it went from these tiny little orders to, you know, 40-foot containers that have
you know, quarter million dollars worth of inventory in them. And if something goes wrong with that,
that's like, I'm sunk. So there's also like every shipment you have this, this low grade fear that like,
you know. Is this container going to fall off the boat? Is this container going to fall at the boat? And then like my business is done. So, you know, to mitigate that, it felt responsible too. There's, there's just various risks. You have all your eggs in that basket. So how'd you go about selling it? How did that happen? So I used, you had Joe Vali on from Quietlight Brokridge. I used. I used, you had Joe Vali on from Quietlight brokerage. I
use them. They were fantastic. I never sold a business. I didn't know this world. So they,
you know, I have my former accountant, former CPA. So like my books were clean. That's usually
a pretty big thing that people mess up. People mess up. That wasn't an issue for me. And yeah,
it was crazy. We put the business on. And within, I want to say a week or 10 days, there were seven
offers, full price or higher offers, which was just like mind-blowing to have that too. So that was
a super nerve-wracking process and also an exciting process.
And you went back and negotiated with all seven or took one of them or what did you do?
Yeah, so there's negotiation.
So it's like, I think when I walked into it, it's like, well, whoever names the high number, I'm going to, you know, that's what I'm going to take, right?
But when you get into it, you realize some people are like the guys that buy my business.
I had just a good connection with them and I thought they would really do a good job running the business.
Like they knew what they were doing.
They were really capable.
They seemed honest, straightforward about things versus other people were a little bit like me.
a few years ago, like they were awesome, but like they were still sitting in their in their
cube somewhere and they never touched e-commerce or Amazon. I was just afraid like if they
inherit this beast and like things, you know, go bad. Like I don't know what that looks like.
So I want to make sure I pass this someone that you thought what? You thought you get sued or
what did you think would happen? Who cares, right? You sell this. I guess you didn't need this
business before. I'm sorry, this business just came out of nowhere. You built it. You sell it. I don't
know. Yeah. Maybe it wasn't a rational thought. I'm really not sure. I mean, the other piece was the
transition too. It's like if people know e-commerce and Amazon, it makes life so much easier. They
just pick it up and run versus if it was someone that never touched this. It would have been a lot
of investment. But yeah, part of it probably was just an irrational fear. Like, they're going to,
they're going to jack this thing up and somehow I'm going to, it's all going to get unwound
and it's going to be like a bad joke on me or something. Right. You know, we've only known
each other for, I don't know how long have you sitting here 30 minutes maybe. But I like,
I really like your personality because, A, you're a nice, humble guy and you did, you, you
you know,
you're smart guy.
But B,
I think it's cool to see somebody who's not,
uh,
Mr.
Bravado,
who started a business,
uh,
like I,
I actually think you're quite risk averse.
And you just took very practical,
pragmatic steps to like,
approach this business and get the outcome you wanted without being like sort of
hero entrepreneur.
Um,
and there's a lot of hero entrepreneur stories out there because that's what sells,
right?
So I'm taking crazy risk.
That's a great story.
Right.
Um,
but what I like about your story,
it was a great story to me is that,
uh,
you were,
more of a conservative guy, it sounds like to me.
You know, you're like, you know, I got beat up my first time, but you lost only a thousand
bucks in three months. It's like, that's nothing. You know, like, that's the cost of entry
for business. But the way you were approaching it, I think really is very, I think we'll
be very relatable. If I'm listening to this, I'm like, okay, this, it's not like this guy's
from some cut from some totally different cloth than me. He's not some alien species that has
this different, no fear gene. It sounds like you're a regular person who did a really awesome
business and I really like that.
Cool.
Yeah.
Thanks for,
I think it's really the truth that people can access these types of businesses and with a
pretty small bet like create a life changing business for themselves and their family.
So I think, you know, I would encourage a lot of, you know, if you feel something inside
you, go for it and try it because you never know what could happen.
And so you sell and you do, is it a clean deal cash in the bank or you're going to do a seller
note and sort of take money down the road?
It's mostly a clean deal with a small seller note.
Okay.
Yeah.
And so money hits the bank.
What happens?
Tell me about that day.
It was, I think it was so, going through the process was so stressful that when it hit,
I was just like this big relief.
And it just felt like, like, I had run like, you know, an ultramarathon from like kind of
birthing this little business out and then carrying it for a few years.
And then the culmination of it, it was just like pure relief.
And it felt really good.
There was no like, you know, big part.
It was nothing maybe like, like, you know,
think when someone sells a business and they see seven figures drop in their account. It was just
like, ah, a big exhale. And so, so you, um, you see it coming your bank out. And, uh, what changes
for you in your life, right? You said, you, uh, by that point, I assume you had had your,
your child. Um, yeah. And so, uh, what changes in your life, uh, what did you, what did you
change in your lifestyle? Um, tell us about what that's, what that's like. Yeah. I mean, it really was,
is a blessing. It was and it still is a blessing. Just, you know,
wealth in and of itself to me isn't kind of the end game, but it's what the money can enable.
And like my son's two and a half now.
And like the freedom and the flexibility and the relationship I have with him, like it wouldn't have been possible had I still been working, you know, my normal nine to five.
You have your time.
I have, I have the time and I have, I'm just present and like a really happy and open to be with.
It's been the best thing that's ever happened to me having, you know, having our son.
So that honestly just kind of that time and freedom has been the best thing.
And it's also giving me the gift of just being able to sit back and reflect a little bit.
Like what do I want to do next?
What type of dad do want to be partner?
I think for me, like I was just on this treadmill, you know, going, going, going, I'm working, I'm traveling, I'm trying to get groceries in the house.
You're just going all the time and you don't like, this allowed a little bit of space to just step back and think like, what do I want to do next?
What do I want to do with my life, you know?
So that was a real blessing.
think a lot of people don't have the luxury to do that.
And so you talk about asking yourself that question, all right, what do we want to do now?
Sale comes through.
You have that sort of anticlimatic day where you just feel relief.
You don't go do anything.
Like I remember talking to Michael Birch.
He's probably the third or fourth episode.
And, you know, he sold his business for crazy money, like $850 million.
And they went to a movie.
Like him and his wife went to a movie.
Like a $10 ticket movie because he was like, I don't know what to do.
We haven't seen a movie in a while, and I love movies.
Let's go watch, you know, they went and watched Forgetting Sarah Marshall.
So what did you actually do that day?
Oh, man.
I honestly, I think it was such an unremarkable day that I can't.
I think my son was home from his school.
And I feel like we just like watched, you know, Mr. Rogers or something and like hung out.
And like when you're hanging out with a little kid, like you go into a whole different headspace.
So it wasn't, yeah, it was just a normal thing, which is.
actually totally fine and how I would have liked it. So it was pretty, pretty chill day. And you said,
you started to ask yourself, what do you want to do again? So you had option one, which a lot of people
would take, which is great. I got to win. I know how to do this now. Next time, if I did it, I'd be way
smarter at it because I know all these new things. And they jump back in and try to, you know,
sort of exploit this opportunity again. You didn't do that. Why not? Oh, I really want to, like,
I liked this, but I feel like it was sort of a chapter in my life. And like I did it. I started it. I
learned a ton and I don't know if I have the energy to like knowing what I know now like you got
to really want it to carry something from kind of the idea in your head to building it to scaling it
to selling it like you got to you got to want it deep down like every single day and keep grinding
keep grinding keep grinding and I honestly don't know if I have that in me right anymore for an
Amazon business um so I'm doing a little bit of Amazon consulting which I really like because I'm
actually like when you do an Amazon business it's kind of a lonely existence like it's it's
just you, you're talking to your suppliers, but you're just kind of rolling solo for most of it. So
it's been fun. I've been working with, with some companies to help them sell on Amazon. That's
been pretty cool. And I'm trying to get into the content space as well, kind of leveraging. So,
like I said, I'm a former CPA and personal finance nerd, like building online businesses. So I think
Sam talked about like, hey, if I was starting something new, you want a weekend business,
go build a content site. These guys are in a nerd wallet or wherever. They're
doing well. So I saw the same thing. I felt the same thing as him. So that's kind of my next
thing. Shout it out. What's the website? I was reading it this morning on my way. Yeah. So it's called
wealth fam.com. It's brand new. I'm kind of, I'm still in that sort of fragile state like I was
when like I haven't my parents like what are you building them? Does it have a name? I'm like,
none. Yeah. Yeah, of course it has a name. So it's still kind of in those early days.
But the thought is like I'm a personal finance nerd. I've learned a lot from
podcasts and online. So I'm trying to like pull all these things together and put a site out there that
people can learn about making money, saving money, financial independence. Like that's
became a big thing on this journey too. Like, all right, if you really want freedom, you got to,
you know, get financial independence and financial freedom. So talking about some of those things.
So we'll see. I mean, it's such a crowded space and it's a hard thing to do as far as like stand out
and get eyeballs on it. But I'm starting at the same place as I was before at zero. Give it a shot.
and I really like to write and I hope, you know, we'll see what happens with it.
Yeah, wealthfam.com.
So I think you'll get thousands of visits just from saying that, you'll say it three times,
wealthfam.com, wealth fam.
You know, people will listen because I think, you know, you touched on the right thing,
which is financial independence.
You know, I regret naming this podcast, my first million now because, you know,
the gimmick kind of is interesting at the beginning, but like then you're stuck with the gimmick
because it's hard to change your name.
but B,
you know,
the intention is never really about
making millions of dollars.
What people want is a great life.
And the good thing about what money can provide you
is that freedom,
the financial freedom to live life on your terms,
whatever those may be.
For you,
it might be hanging out with your kid.
It might be writing.
It might be consulting.
It might be skiing.
I don't know.
I don't know what all you like,
but it enables the freedom for the lifestyle you want.
And I think it's,
really fundamentally what people want and are realizing that, you know, job is one option
and it can get you to financial freedom, but it usually gets you there when you're 65.
And if you're willing to trade 21, yours 21 through 65, then that's a path that's tried
and tested.
But a lot of people are now realizing, especially as the internet opens up all these new
opportunities, that you can get financial freedom much faster.
In a way, maybe that's more in line with you and who you are.
And once you have that financial freedom, you can play the game differently because every
month you don't have to sort of wonder where is the paycheck going to come from.
And so I like that you're teaching that because I think that is probably the most important
thing people can learn in terms of career or finances is that one principle.
100%.
Yeah.
It took me a long time even to realize that, you know, I was never really changed.
chasing money for the sake of money, but then once you get going, you're like, I'm sure you've heard
of the 4% rule, like, which is, you know, if you can, if your burn rate essentially is, say,
40 grand a year, you need to save a million bucks for 40 grand, 4% of that. So you kind of can
quickly do like this math, like, all right, here's what I need to achieve. So 4% rule helps
you figure out what's your number where you would be financially free. Exactly right. And,
and it comes from your monthly burn rate, which most people don't even know. That's a important
First step.
Figure out your burn rate.
And so, uh,
I said, do you track your burn rate every month?
You know, I'm not like hardcore.
But you have a rough sense.
I have,
yeah, definitely have a rough sense.
So, like,
there is definitely like a number like,
hey, if we get to, you know,
this number, like, we can live a comfortable life.
Like, we're not going to be like,
you know,
taking month long vacations to, you know,
the most exclusive places in the world.
But like, we can be very comfortable
of a very nice life.
And like, that was the goal.
And we're pretty much at that goal now.
And it feels like really, really nice.
And so you set a new goal now or what happens?
You know,
I don't know. I guess so because you got to keep moving forward and doing something, but it's,
the new goal is a little bit more like do something that's interesting. Like, I also want to figure out,
like, I feel like in my life, I'm, you know, mid-late 30s now and I've done like very little to
ever like give back or like do anything positive for the broader world. So somehow I want to do that
because I think like that will feel really good. And those are the types of things that kind of stick
with you and really matter. I mean, that's been a big thing about being a parent, just like
hearing about someone else more than you care about.
yourself, like, actually feels selfishly. It feels like really good. It feels great to love someone
that much, contribute that much. So I think like there must be some nugget there that there should
be some other other things to do than just keep chasing money, keep chasing money. Because I don't
know how you end that game if you just continue to try to do that. Do you, do you know much about
Tony Robbins? Have you ever followed him or read, or listened to any of his stuff? I listened to him,
but I, you know, I'm not like it, not deep. I know people that are. So I'm deep in it. Yeah.
And basically you go from like, I don't know of him and I'm skeptical.
Seems like just another motivational speaker.
It's kind of where I am to be honest.
Yeah, like that's the normal.
And then like you take two steps forward and you're in the cult.
And it's like there's no in between, I feel like with him.
And so I went to one of his events.
I would actually recommend you go, especially now because I think it's best when you're in transitions or you're in a free space mentally to think.
And so I went to one of his events.
He has these like events where he'll sell out, you know, five.
thousand, seven thousand people will come to this event called Unleash the Power Within. He has
lots of cheesy names because he's like, you know, older and built his fame on like the
infomercial days. Sure. There's a lot of like cringy stuff like that. But his content is very
good. And he, two things stood out to me. One, one just for context, which is even if you're
not into the content, it's just fucking amazing to see. This guy is the best public speaker I've
ever seen. I would say he's the best public speaker on earth. He is able to hold 10,000
thousand people's attention for four days straight from 9 a.m. until 9 p.m. with no breaks in between.
And, you know, he says this even during his thing. He's like, you know, most people can't sit through a two-hour
movie nowadays. Their attention wanders. Like, watch what happens in these next four days. And it's true.
People are like wired. They're like connected to him. It's really crazy. So just from a, wow, that's a, that's what an
effective speaker looks like. That is the Michael Jordan of public speaking. It's cool to see.
just to take that in before he retires.
And when you're talking about your goal and the fact that, you know, you got to come up with a new goal, he talks about this.
He's like, you know, you're going to reach what you achieved.
If you put the work in, you're going to reach what you achieved to do and you watch what's going to happen.
You're going to move the goalpost back.
And some people see that as a defeating thing.
But he has a very simple phrase, which is progress equals happiness.
And I've really found this to be true, which is you aren't your happiest when you feel a sense of progress towards whatever it is.
If you're trying to lose weight, if you start to lose the weight, you will feel happy.
Yeah.
It doesn't actually matter what your weight is.
If you plateau, you will start to feel unhappy.
As soon as you start to make progress again, you'll feel happy.
Financially, same thing.
Career, same thing.
Relationship, same thing.
Progress equals happiness.
I love that.
And I use this to manage people, too, because it's like, instead of looking at the absolute
goal of where people want to be or where they are, you just try to measure progress and
encourage progress because they will feel happy along the way.
And it works for yourself, too.
So it's a very long-winded way.
to get to a very simple phrase, which is progress equals happiness.
I wanted to share that.
Yeah, no, I'll have to check out.
I'll have to go from, you know, a mild skeptic to your level of all in on Tonya.
Yeah, there is the other one, which is, oh, I checked it out.
And, no, that guy's the worst.
And it's fine.
You can have your range of opinions.
But I think there's lots of, you know, nuggets of gold and his stuff.
Okay, so this has been awesome.
Where can people sort of get a hold of you, reach you, read your thoughts?
So obviously, wealthfam.com.
what else is like a good way of follow on?
I just created a Twitter account.
I think I have 12 followers right now.
It's brand new.
It's embarrassing a little follower account,
but I'm tweeting about financial independence,
building businesses online, Amazon,
all those sorts of good topics.
It's at Paul underscore D underscore Anderson.
Anderson's S-E-N.
You just buy yourself like a thousand followers
just to get off the 12 number.
Yeah, for real followers,
but you get to a thousand.
All right.
Go on Fiverr by a thousand dollars.
I'll go on Fiverr just to get the credit.
Yeah. Yeah, you can, yeah, I'd love to, if you're interested in starting an Amazon business, you're doing it, you have questions, thinking about selling it, you know, financial independence, anything. Be happy to, you know, converse with you online.
Awesome. Dude, thanks for coming. I like this. I like, I like, I like this a lot for a lot of the reasons I said. I think that if you're listening to this and you're in the same mindset you were in, I'd be pretty inspired to say, yeah, I can do something like that too.
Yeah, thanks a lot, Sean. I think you're going to be, you're going to just like me, I had these people that changed literally.
changed my life and they don't know who I am like you're going to have people that listen to this
your podcast and in you know one year two or three years that you know look you up send you know like
hey man you changed everything for me and I'd have to think that's going to feel pretty good when
that day happens because I think it is going to happen yeah my favorite email that I get from listeners
is the one that says um you don't know like you don't know this yet but I'm going to be on your show
someday and I'm like hell yeah that's the yeah that's the spirit yeah you came from the audience
onto the show so you are the sort of a good example there
all right man all right thanks so great thank you too
