My First Million - 5 under-the-radar trends (+ our business ideas)
Episode Date: April 24, 2025Want to spot trends before they explode? Get the guide here: https://clickhubspot.com/wdv Episode 700: Sam Parr ( https://x.com/theSamParr ) talks to Steph Smith ( https://x.com/stephsmithio ) abou...t business trends that are currently untapped and ripe for opportunity to build businesses around. Use code "MFM" to get access to Steph's Internet Pipes - http://internetpipes.com/ — Show Notes: (0:00) Trend 1: Hearing Loss (11:33) Trend 2: eVTOL (17:42) Trend 3: Psychedelics (24:26) Trend 4: New Job Skills (42:50) Trend5: Nature technology — Links: https://www.faa.gov/newsroom/new-rule-faa-ready-air-travel-future https://psychedelicalpha.com/data/psychedelic-laws https://x.com/stephsmithio/status/1877418726485799283 https://www.amazon.com/Immense-World-Animal-Senses-Reveal/dp/0593133234 https://asknature.org/ https://internetpipes.com/ https://mischiefusa.com/ https://clickhubspot.com/wdv — Check Out Shaan's Stuff: • Shaan's weekly email - https://www.shaanpuri.com • Visit https://www.somewhere.com/mfm to hire worldwide talent like Shaan and get $500 off for being an MFM listener. Hire developers, assistants, marketing pros, sales teams and more for 80% less than US equivalents. • Mercury - Need a bank for your company? Go check out Mercury (mercury.com). Shaan uses it for all of his companies! Mercury is a financial technology company, not an FDIC-insured bank. Banking services provided by Choice Financial Group, Column, N.A., and Evolve Bank & Trust, Members FDIC — Check Out Sam's Stuff: • Hampton - https://www.joinhampton.com/ • Ideation Bootcamp - https://www.ideationbootcamp.co/ • Copy That - https://copythat.com • Hampton Wealth Survey - https://joinhampton.com/wealth • Sam’s List - http://samslist.co/ My First Million is a HubSpot Original Podcast // Brought to you by HubSpot Media // Production by Arie Desormeaux // Editing by Ezra Bakker Trupiano
Transcript
Discussion (0)
We all run into these stats throughout our lives, and most of us are just like, oh, that's cool.
But I think there are some where it's like, maybe you should actually examine this a little more closely.
And so I compiled 100 plus of these, and we can talk about some of them today.
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.
Step Smith, this is your 10th time on MFM?
9th.
Is your 9th time?
center. And Steph Smith, the background, if you're just now listening for the first time,
she used to work with me at The Hustle where she ran this thing called Trends, Trends.com.
And then she went and joined A16Z, one of the most prominent venture capital firms.
And your whole thing right now is finding up-and-coming trends, but you do it by looking at the
data. Is that right?
I try to. I try to. But yeah, I guess now after Trends, I run this thing called Internet Pipes.
And that was kind of like trends in the way that you want to surface things that other people don't know about.
But it's also about how do you show people how to catch their own fish, if that makes sense.
And you come on every once in a while and you just basically have all of this data that you rattle off a story behind the number, a story behind the data.
And you explain why it's an interesting trend.
And sometimes you'll say like how different people are pouncing on this trend.
Is that right?
Yeah.
Lately, I, or recently, I compiled this digits database.
I call it digits.
You guys call them like one-chart businesses.
But basically these generation-defining stats, like we've all talked or heard about when Bezos saw
the internet was growing at some crazy rate.
And he was like, what does that mean?
Well, it means that people will be buying stuff online in the future.
Let me go create this crazy thing called Amazon.
And so we all run into these stats throughout our lives.
And most of us are just like, oh, that's cool.
but I think there are some where it's like, okay, maybe you should actually examine this a little more closely.
And so I compiled 100 plus of these and we can talk about some of them today.
And the guy who, one of the two guys who started your firm, Mark Andreessen, he has this famous quote or this famous story where, you know, people are like, you know, Mark, what's most important?
Is it having a good team? Is it having a good product? Or is it picking the right market? And he goes, it's picking the right market. That's easily the most important thing.
Because if you pick the right market, you can have a bad team and a bad product.
And you still, like, the market pulls the success out of you.
So, for example, you could have the world's greatest team who are brilliant, who are smart.
And they come up with this amazing product.
But if it's in a tiny market that people just don't want, then you're going to lose.
But if you are Coinbase in 2014 and crypto is all the rage, which is what happened.
Coinbase.com crashed all the time.
It wasn't that good of a website.
but people were begging for it.
And so they put up with it and they used it
and they pulled the company into fruition
and made it a success.
And so you are going to show us
potentially some of these markets.
Yeah, maybe, maybe.
But I mean, I think that's the perfect setup
because if you think about it,
a bunch of other people saw that exact same data point
and he was like, oh, well,
I should go create this company called Coinbase.
And a bunch of other people were like,
oh, I'm just going to go for a run.
I'm going to go to my 9 to 5
and ignore that same thing.
So let's start with one that you,
I think, no, pretty well, hearing loss. So the stat or the digit is that nearly 2.5 billion people by 2050
are expected to experience hearing loss with over 700 million requiring rehabilitation. And then I saw
this interesting quote that kind of was just like a frame to take away, which is that some project
that hearing aids are about to become as common as reading glasses. So you think about just like
how normalized reading glasses are, people wear them.
all the time. You have all these optometrists. Like, it's a very normal thing, even if you think about
the benefits that companies offer, right? Vision is often part of that. And then if you think about
where hearing is in that equation, it's nowhere near that on the same trajectory yet. But if it's
true, that billions of people are going to require hearing loss. And you even think about some of the
other signals, like the fact that today we have AirPods in our ears, or many people, at least in our
circle, how many hours a day?
Like eight.
Exactly.
That was not true 10 years ago, right?
Wait, so why?
First of all, I wear a hearing aid.
I've had probably 10 or 12 surgeries on my ears.
I was born with the bad ears.
And I fought putting a hearing aid in because I didn't want to look old.
And a lot of times on this podcast, people see me where I'll do this.
And I do it instinctively because I'm always leaning in with my good ear.
And so I wear a hearing aid.
And it was, they all suck.
But why are more people needing hearing it?
Is it because something's going on?
Or is this a normal number and there's just more people?
No, I mean, I think the technologies that we use are influencing a greater number of people who experience hearing loss.
Like if you think about even, as you said, there's a cultural element to it too.
Like I go to SoulCycle the first year I went, no one's putting in the earplugs.
Like it's so uncool to put in the earplugs.
And then as, you know, I've been doing it for a few years.
now it's like maybe 10, 20% of the class is putting in the earplugs.
People put ear plugs in because the class is too loud?
The class is way too loud.
And by the way, even think about the technologies that we have that now signal to us.
Some of this stuff, like your Apple Watch will tell you when you're in a sole cycle class,
this is damaging your ears.
Like if you do this for more than 10 minutes, you will impair your ears in a permanent way.
And so the point around the cultural side is interesting because I don't know if you
experience the same thing, but I grew up in the nine.
like glasses were not cool. And then now you see like some people when you're like, man,
you look so much cooler because of the glasses you wear. Like I wish, I almost wish I needed
glasses. That's how I used to feel like when I was in third grade about braces. If you had
braces, you were cool. It's like I knew braces. I don't know if I ever felt that way about braces.
Well, that's probably why I didn't have a girlfriend until I was 21 years old. Are there any
interesting companies in the hearing aid space that you've seen? Because when I was trying to get a
hearing aid, there was all types of promises of like this will listen to the words that people are
saying and it's going to repeat it in your hearing aid. And it was stupid. And honestly, I think I paid
two grand for a hearing aid. They're really expensive. And the app is horrible. Like it's,
these are not good products. One time, in fact, my hearing aid broke and got stuck in my ear and
I had to go to the hospital just to get part of it out. So I've had all types of, yes, it was horrible.
Oh my God. You should, you should found a company in this space because you know of all the problems.
but I don't know the hearing aid space as well.
I have been seeing a lot of people who have you heard of Loop,
the earplug company?
It's just these kind of like nifty looking earplugs,
which, again, you go to something like a workout class
and they give you these disposable, like bright yellow earplugs
that you can't even get into your ear.
And so I do think there's going to be like, again, on the cultural side,
how do you create products that not only, to your point,
are solving the problem.
Like they have utility,
but they also shift in this direction of,
oh, I look cool, I feel cool.
I want to wear this thing.
Dude, this company Loop is going to kill it.
They sell $50 earplugs.
Oh my God.
Yeah, and it's super smart marketing.
Like, if you go, if you just search Loop Earplugs,
like they've got a page and they're like earplugs for events.
Because again, they're not marketing to like, oh, the everyday user necessarily for
this stuff. It's like, oh, you're going to a concert. You're going to the Super Bowl. It's going to be
really loud. And these look really cool. People don't even realize their earplugs.
All right. Let's move on from hearing stuff. But one last fact. Did you know, this is one of the
reasons why I succumbed and got the hearing aid is if you have a hearing loss and you don't
address it, the increase of getting dementia jumps significantly, like four or five times.
And I believe there are two reasons.
One, that part of your brain that hears stuff because it's not working, it begins to atrophy.
And that's correlated with dementia.
But also the second reason, and I find myself doing this all the time, is when I'm at a restaurant or something,
I cannot hear the difference between someone talking to me in the background noise.
And so I usually just zone out.
And if you zone out all the time, like you're going to be like mentally like or permanently
kind of zoned out.
I believe those are the two theories as to why that happens.
But so yeah, getting your hearing fix is a big deal.
What's another one you want to do?
Okay, so rounding out the hearing loss thing, by the way,
something we didn't quite touch on there is the fact that they went over the counter in 2022,
which means, like, you don't need to get a prescription.
And that also, I think, is, you know, opening the aperture.
And you guys often talk about these, like, policy or legislation-related shifts or unlocks?
Yeah, I call them regulation inflections.
So something changes drastic.
So, for example, one negative inflection is like New York bans Airbnb.
So there's like an inflection where like short-term rentals are just going to go to zero
versus if they were to there would be an inflection where they now say it's allowed.
There's a massive change.
Yeah, exactly.
So one of them is the FAA has made a few changes recently.
And I want to call out two.
And one of them is around drones.
So consumer drones have existed for quite a while.
I have a DJI drone.
People use them for anything from like just filming your neighborhood.
Real estate agents use them to like capture better imagery of their assets.
But recently the FAA changed regulation for some companies where they can fly drones beyond line of sight.
And that doesn't sound like a big change.
But if you can fly a drone beyond your like visual aperture to actually see what it's doing,
while it enables things like drone delivery, their company's.
like Zipline. I'm sure you've heard of Amazon playing around in this space. That changes the game.
Another change that the FAA made recently is they started approving these electric vertical takeoff and
landing companies, the EV tool companies. And again, that was in the news. But what wasn't covered
as much was the fact that this was the first new category of aircraft in nearly 80 years. And the one
just before this was called Light Sport Aircraft. You know what Light Sport Aircraft is?
No.
It's helicopters, it's small business jets.
These are things that each individual is a massive industry.
And if you think about how, you know, if you take like super wealthy people who take helicopters, who take these business jets, like that's meaningfully changed their life.
And each one of those is a vertical.
EVTool, again, this is the first new category of aircraft in 80 years.
You can only imagine, like, we're in the early stages of it.
How do you say that word?
EV tool. So again, it's like electric, vertical, takeoff, and landing. So there's some companies
who are playing in this space, obviously, like, I think Joby Aviation is one.
Archer's another one. Exactly. We had Brett Adcock on the pod, and he started a thing called
Archer, which is publicly traded, and they, I think they have some huge deals with United,
things like that. Yeah. So, I mean, if you think about, this is like thinking more long-term,
but these are designed specifically to be, you know, operating within cities, taking people from, like, one end of New York to the other, airport trips.
If you think about, like, what that kind of is a parallel to is not the, like, mega, you know, Boeing air jets.
It's actually more like cars, right? And if you think about how cities have been oriented around cars, what businesses have been drawn up from there, I think, again, these are two,
legislative changes that are
in the long term
going to meaningfully reshape
the way that we all engage.
One of our friends, Nikita, who a lot of people
know who he is, he was
telling us, I have to get it right, but
I believe he told me that he
invested in a company
where if you are in
L.A. and you call
911, the
police will take however long to get there,
let's say 20 minutes or something, because L.A. is
really big, 30 minutes.
or even just 10 minutes,
but they send out a drone right away
to go and see what's going on.
Have you seen that?
Yeah, we, at A16 Z's invested in a few of these companies,
so they get there more quickly,
but they also have a safety angle
from the perspective of, you know,
if someone calls 911,
they're telling you something.
Sometimes they're just reporting like,
hey, I think there's a scary person
like on the highway doing X.
Or I think there's someone in this alley
and they have a gun.
And the ability for these drones to not only get there more quickly, but to validate the statement and say, oh, actually, like, that's not a gun that's a poster in a, you know, in a tube or something.
Like, that's, that changes their ability to actually react to the situation more safely as well.
Yeah, you just got a guy, like, wanted to show off, like, his Lamborghini poster from, like, the Scholastic Book Fair instead of, like, a gun.
Yeah.
That makes sense.
Happens all the time.
Yeah, no.
Yeah, been there.
Been there.
What are some other ways people could pounce on this?
Well, I think the thing that I'm trying to drive home here is like these are obviously going to take years, if not decades, to influence us in major ways.
But it's for people to ask questions, like, for example, if there is drone delivery at scale, think about even the ways that we package goods and the fact that you package a good to sit in a truck to travel across the country.
And it needs to have certain levels of padding of, you know, to make it unbreakable.
all of those things potentially change if we're able to, you know, pick something up and drop it off a mile away, right?
So I think it's just encouraging people to ask about, you know, if this is true, what are those second, third order effects?
If it's true that there's going to be a lot more autonomy, like, how quickly does that ramp up?
You take, like, Waymo, which is a lot of people think of as in, like, Phoenix or San Francisco.
I just read an article the other day saying that Waymo's are already taking up 20% of Uberrides in Austin.
And so this stuff can like move pretty quickly.
I had a, I don't, I don't smoke weed anymore or do anything like that.
But I had like this thought the other day because I had to send someone a letter in California.
Isn't it insane that for what's a stamp cost?
40 cents, 50 cents, that I can send a letter 3,500 miles and it will reliably get to pretty much any house I want to in a matter of like four or five days.
I think that is insane.
that is so crazy.
And to think that, like, so there's that type of delivery that I think of all the time.
And I'm like, the post office, UPS, FedEx, these companies are wild.
That's got the biggest mode ever.
To build that, that is so freaking hard.
But then there's the last mile component.
And that's this whole other thing.
And to think that drones, that's what's going to be happening, is that drones are going to be
flying everywhere.
It's pretty wild to, like, imagine, like,
the moat that a company in the space has.
It's hard to like comprehend because if you think 50 years ago to try to explain to someone,
no, you're not going to go to Walmart anymore.
You're not going to go anywhere.
Everything is to come to your door.
To think how is that going to change in the next 20 or 50 years, it's hard to comprehend.
Totally.
And I think to your point, it's like, are people in this podcast going to go create like the next way moe or the next zip line,
these companies that have been working on these problems for years and years and years.
Maybe not, but, okay, if all the, or if a significant number of cars on the road are autonomous,
who's cleaning those cars, right? Who is creating the LiDAR that goes into the cars so that they can
actually drive safely? Who is, you know, actually coordinating the cleaning and the use of these
cars, the degradation of them, who's the person that gets called if there's an issue in a Waymo?
Like, all of these are new businesses the same way that, like, when Airways,
Airbnb was big. The answer wasn't go create another Airbnb. It was like go create the cleaning companies and the operations companies to run an Airbnb. There's still, I think, a lot of opportunity on, you know, on the edges of these major trends.
All right. Let's do another one. Let's go to the psychedelics thing.
So this one is just, is pretty simple. Like psilocybin has been illegal for a long time in the United States and elsewhere. And it was decriminalized.
in the first state, which was Oregon in 2020, and has subsequently become decriminalized in a host of other states and cities with, you know, lots of legislation pending.
And this is another one where we're talking like what's going to happen not in the next year, but several years, if not decades.
But people are already jumping on this. Some people are doing psychedelic retreats, you know, again, a policy change that we're seeing.
I think we have a few Hampton members that have these psychedelic retreats. And I've seen some of these.
Did I ever tell you that I tried to go to one?
I think it was in 2018 or something like that.
Like right when this stuff was getting popular,
I knew this person, it was a friend of a friend.
Jack introduced me to this person, my friend Jack,
who was like hosting, he said it was a shaman.
And I was thinking it was going to be some brown dude
and like a sheet.
Like he's going to say like namaste as I walk into their house
and take off my shoes.
And they ask us to go to this meeting in advance to see if it was a good fit.
So I go to the meeting and it's just this like normal looking white lady in San Francisco and
in a condo, a fancy condo building. And we sit down for dinner so she can get to know us to see if it's a
good fit if we actually want to go through with this like psychedelic experience with her.
And she like does a few things. But she's like, so where are you from? And she was like,
I was like, oh, Missouri. And she's like, oh, flyover country. And I was like, bitch, what the
fuck? Are you insulting me right now? And she said like three more things, making fun of like where
I was from and like mocking me. And she was like, what do you do for a living? And she, I was like,
oh, I like kind of work in like technology and the internet. And she's like, oh, capitalism really
bothers me. And I looked at her LinkedIn in advance. She worked at Lehman Brothers. That's where she
worked out. She worked at Lehman Brothers. Before she became a shaman. That is why she's now doing
psychedelic. I go, lady, you worked at Lehman Brothers. You were literally a venture capitalist.
What are you talking about? And then at the end, she was like, by the way, it's got to be $2,000.
I'm like, lady, you just said you hated capitalism, all right?
What the hell is going on?
And so I got asked that night not to come back and I was disinvited from my psychedelic experience,
which probably shows that I need this more than anything.
Well, I was going to say, you definitely, like, those are some pretty bad vibes and you
definitely do not want to be on psychedelics, you know, with that, with that introduction.
I got kicked out of my psychedelic group.
So that was my only experience.
I forget what it was, like ketamine or MDMA.
I don't know.
But everyone said it was dope.
And I was like, let's see what this is about.
I got kicked out of the group.
But I have seen a bunch of these like retreats.
I do think it's cool.
I have friends that are like, I've got a couple vet buddies who have done it and it's like
changed their life.
And we had Scott Galloway on here.
And he says that it's been really helpful.
So I'm on board with them.
I'm just not on board with it for me.
You know, it's kind of like I say cornrows, you know, it's cool for other people, but not for me.
Cornrose and face tattoos.
and psychedelic retreats.
Yeah.
Any other interesting opportunities with the psychedelics?
I mean, I think maybe the marketer in me,
not that I'm trying to push psychedelics,
but I think a lot of people think of them as either you do it
if you're like just a druggie and you just, you know,
you do these all the time,
or you do it if you're in an impaired mental state
and you need to like get past something,
like, let's say you were a vet and you had some terrible experiences.
Like, there's a lot of ketamine assisted therapy that's popping up, psilocybin as well.
But again, it's often to solve some kind of negative experience in your life and get past that.
If this does become more normalized, I think some of this at like a much lower dose,
you could imagine being very helpful in smaller life decisions.
Or, for example, you're starting a new job.
You're trying to decide if you want to join one company versus another.
You're trying to decide if you want to quit.
You're trying to decide if you want to have a child.
Those are not things that have any direct relationship to psychedelics, but are things that
people have a really hard time, understanding their perspective, understanding how they relate
to, you know, let's say their partner or their family.
And I think that could be a future scenario.
Like imagine if you had someone guiding you through a psychedelic experience specifically related
to your career, specifically related to, again, like the,
difficult and very meaningful decision of having kids. I think there's something interesting there.
I completely agree. That's actually a really cool idea where, like, for example, if you, like, are
in a certain social class, like, you don't have the same problems as someone who's not in that class.
So, like, when I quit drinking, I went to basically, like, a mental clinic in Soma. And it was,
like, me and, like, everyone else was homeless. And I was like, what am I doing here? But the reason I went was
because I didn't have any income because I had just started my company and I was like
solid on Yelp and I went to this place and I stuck to the same doctor for like 10 years.
She was amazing. And then there was at one point where I remember telling her like certain problems
that I had and this woman had never worked with anyone else that had similar types of problems
because she wasn't used to a client like mine. And I was desperately seeking like a therapist who had like
people who were at like maybe a higher higher tier on Maslow's hierarchy of needs. And it was so hard
to find like a person who could serve that need. You know what I'm saying? And so that is very
interesting to have like a different genre of psychedelic guides or whatever the hell they call them.
You know what I'm saying? Yeah. Yeah. I mean, to your point, even within therapy,
for a long time, people thought therapy was only for when you're kind of about to divorce,
right? They're like, we only provide therapy for when there is a clear issue. And then now
therapy has expanded a lot, right? Like people do it preventatively. People do it because
they just like their therapist and just need someone to talk to.
There are many different reasons now that people do therapy.
And I think obviously in the, you know, people on their own do psychedelics for many different reasons.
But you could imagine that if this is going to be something that is no longer illegal, people are building businesses around,
that they can build those businesses for kind of these other needs.
There doesn't need to be a problem.
Is this going to become like a whole therapy session for me?
I'm telling you about these doctors that I used to.
like when I was homeless or like about my psychedelic getting kicked out and how I'm deaf.
Oh my gosh.
Every time you come on here, man.
Can you talk about this job stuff?
I find this the most interesting.
Okay, so a few things.
I think the most, you know, relevant thing to the listeners would be that AI is here, a bunch of people are freaking out about jobs.
They're wondering, you know, do I still have a job?
Are my skill still relevant?
And so I think it's just interesting to discuss, number one, like, what are the new jobs that are on the horizon?
What are the existing jobs that are going to become more important?
And then I have some other ideas that we can talk about.
But, like, first, did you know that the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports all the time every year, or I think more frequently, what the fastest growing jobs are?
And do you know what they are?
Fastest growing jobs?
Yeah.
White collar stuff.
So like computer engineers, graphic designers, anything involving computers?
Yeah.
So there's like of the top five, there is data scientists, there's security analysts.
But there's also wind turbine service technicians.
There's solar panel installers.
Nurses are also on there further down the list.
I think some of the interesting ones are certainly in the like,
again, climate installation, operation space.
Like one interesting thing that I didn't realize
because I've never owned a house with solar panels
is that you don't only need to install them,
but in order for them to be efficiently used,
they need to be cleaned.
And some, you know, if you want to get the max efficiency out of them,
they need to be cleaned like every six to 12 months.
So it's like, who's cleaning those solar panels?
Like, that's an opportunity on its own.
Other things on the list, I'm just scrolling down at,
physician assistants, actuaries. But over the last two decades, some of the fastest growing jobs
were manicurists, HR managers, event planners, massage therapists, and compliance officers, which is
also interesting. I have a, I have a, I have a, this small website called Sam's List where,
uh, you can, it's like Yelp for accountants. And, you know, we, it's a tiny website, but I think
we have three or four hundred accountants on the website. And the woman who runs it,
Kimmy has talked to like all 400 of them and the common complaint that they all have.
And it's like horrible for my business because Sam's List, like the way it makes money is
a user who needs an accountant for their business or for the personal life.
They go on and they can submit their information.
And then also we allow other accountants to pay us money to go and like basically like bid on
that clients like, you know, this person is looking for this.
can we also pay money for them for us to be shown or introduced to them?
And it's a horrible business for me,
because what we've noticed talking to 400 accountants
is that they don't need more business.
They go, we have enough business.
What we need is more accountants.
They're like, I can't hire fast enough.
Like, no one wants to be an accountant.
And we just simply do not have people who want to work here.
Yeah.
And by the way, those are exactly the industries
that people should be looking at for building AI products,
If you think about even just the selling motion that you need to do for any new product,
if you're going to a company and they have ample demand and there's like a very, very liquid market for talent.
While that means that they can probably get talent for cheaper, they have to worry about like,
oh, am I going to bring in this AI tool and then fire or lay off a bunch of my existing staff?
Those are all considerations.
But in the world of accounting where, let's say, like you said, there's a firm,
and that firm is like, I can't hire fast enough.
I literally don't have people.
I have clients who want to pay me,
and I don't have, you know, the staff to actually facilitate that project.
Well, then it's an easy sell, right, to be like, I can support you in this way.
So I think that's just like AI is obviously being implied to a lot of the obvious areas,
but a lot of these industries where there is not enough talent, there is, you know,
that is, in my opinion, where folks should be looking.
There was two different members in Hampton who had companies.
So in nursing, there's a huge shortage of nurses in America.
And it's a great job.
It pays really well and you get good benefits oftentimes.
I mean, the downside is like you're obviously working with sick people and it's probably, it's a tragic, it can be tragic sometimes.
But there's a huge need and you have relatively secure, you know, you will always be able to work.
They have these things called travel nurses.
So a lot of hospitals are lacking nurses, and so they'll pay extra money to have someone come and stay there for three months or to stay there Monday to Friday or wherever, like the five-day block or a three-month block.
And there's a bunch, I think Trusted Health is one of them, where they build these massive businesses all around facilitating getting a travel nurse to the hospital in need.
And I believe Trusted Health, I have no connection with these guys.
I just saw them online.
I believe that they are a unicorn.
I think they've raised funding in the billion-dollar-plus range.
I mean, I've heard that that's a huge industry
and the fact that, again, we talked about it last time,
silver tsunami, a lot more nurses are needed,
and the concentration of that talent is not always where it needs to be.
And so it makes sense.
All right, let's do one or two more.
Tell me some other interesting ones.
Well, one note about just the,
the world of jobs. I want to get your take on this is we've talked before about pay transparency.
And there are, I think, over a dozen states that have also put pay transparency law in action.
And that's why California is one of them. You go to a website, you see a new job posting,
and you see how much that job makes. One super simple opportunity for folks that I haven't seen,
but I'm sure someone's building this, is basically just the glass door for open salaries.
Like, there's levels.fye, kind of an more aggregate level.
But if you take what Glassdoor did, Glassdoor basically became the, they had a bunch of other features, but like, why did people go to Glass Door?
One, they wanted to see if a company had like good or bad reviews, TBD on if that was actually useful.
But then they also mostly wanted to see how much am I going to make at this company?
Like, if I'm negotiating, what should I ask for?
And that relied on people who worked at that company to submit their salary, right, to Glass Door.
and then they built up this database and that was their moat.
Today, all of that is online.
Every time a company is posting a job posting,
they are saying how much they pay.
And I have not seen anyone aggregate this information
in a meaningful way where if I'm, again,
if I'm trying to join a new company
or if I'm trying to negotiate,
I'm still going to Glass Store,
which is crazy to me because even Glass Store
has really limited data, in my opinion.
And so someone should just go and, again,
Like, you would need to build this up over a little bit of time,
but someone should be scraping these salaries off of different website or different companies
and building up this database,
completely usurping, again, the, like, requirement of people needing to submit their salary themselves.
Is that, like, is the range huge?
Like, so, for example, A16Z, I assume they're California-based.
So, like, would they list the sal-let's see, do they list their salaries there?
They do.
And lots of other companies do, too.
do. And people only notice this when they are in the job process. And so they have a snippet of time
and often jobs that are not the same as the one that they're applying to. Right.
Oh, sorry. So I just went to Andreessen Horowitz. I clicked a fund assistant controller.
I assume that that is related to accounting. They're going to work closely with assistant controllers
and fund. So it's a finance accounting job. It says the expected pay.
for this position is between
$216 and $252,000.
But the actual
starting pay may vary based
on a range of factors which include
experience skill. They have to say that. They always say that.
Yeah. Interesting.
So, wow, that is very
intriguing. I did not think, but would it
say
like, in order to be like
a legit partner at A16C
or something, like will they even
list like the jobs that
are paid potentially millions
of dollars?
They have to.
But the thing that is worth calling out is that they are only required, as in through law,
to my understanding, is to put base pay.
So obviously a lot of these jobs, not just at A16Z, have other mechanisms for rewarding
people.
And so this is only one part of the story.
But also, if you've ever gone to Glassdoor, Glassdoor has been terrible at capturing that
other segment in any case.
And so at the very least, again, a lot of this information is out there.
And I think you take this like age old company.
Well, actually, I don't know.
When was Glassdoor even founded?
Let's see.
That's not that old.
It's not age old.
Age old.
I would say it's internet.
What does age old beat?
It's as old as age.
It's in my opinion, you know, it was great for the first version of the internet.
And now again, like there are, there's a change in legislation here fitting with our theme.
But also it's like the technology exists in a way for us, for someone to be able to
to scrape this really easily and aggregate this information across, you know, not a few
companies, but many, many companies. What else do you want to cover here?
I read a book that you suggested because of this whole animal thing. It was called like the
five senses or what's the animal? It's called an immense world. And immense world.
You have heard me give this spiel so many times. But I, okay, so there's this book,
an immense world. It's by this guy called Ed Yong. And whenever I explain it, it sounds really
obvious, but, you know, obviously does not do the book justice, but it's about the fact that we as
humans are familiar with five senses. Like, this is how we interpret the world. Even within those five
senses, though, they're not equal. We talked about hearing, for example, but sight for sure is
the sense that not only humans tend to use the most to interpret the world, but also if you benchmark
that versus other species. Other than birds, we have the most precise vision of, you know,
again, the animal kingdom. We have really strong vision. And again, that drives the way that we see
the world. I say that because this book is about recognizing that, yes, this is how humans see the
world, but every animal, again, this is not surprising, is uniquely tuned to their environment,
their prey, you know, how they survive. And for many, it's, you know, sight is not the most
important way that they interpret the world. But there are senses that we don't have that they use,
again, to engage. And then again, within the five that we're familiar with, it's just, it's worth
acknowledging that, for example, the way that, you know, the spectrum of light that we see or
the spectrum of temperatures that we're comfortable in are just simply not the way that, you know,
other animals exist. If you take an Arctic squirrel or if you take a camel and you put them on
hot plates, they will not move at temperatures that we think are crazy and uncomfortable because they
are comfortable, for example. Or if you take UV light, which we can't really interpret,
other animals or creatures will react to that. So that's my spiel about what the book is about
and obviously does a better job of making that interesting. But this is my first million. And the
reason that I'm bringing this up is because there is this, this, I think, converging world of nature
and technology, which has always existed to an extent. But at the same time, I think for a long time,
people thought that technology was kind of adversarial to nature, because it's like humans.
We're like moving forward and we're progressing and we're leaving nature behind and sometimes
even destroying, you know, that natural world. But I think there are tons of examples, whether it's,
whether it's Velcro being, you know, modeled off of burdock burrs, whether it's bullet trains being
inspired by the King Fischer's Beak, whether it's NASA learning how to design airplane wings to be more
like birds. Like we not only learn a lot from nature in the way that we build technology, and I think
that's an interesting thread we can pull, but also there's a really interesting space of how
technology is actually getting us closer to understanding the animal kingdom and communicating with it.
So we can pull any of those threads, but that's my nature technology rant.
Keep going. I'm fascinated. Just keep talking. Now, you on this document, you were talking about
a trip you took, but does that weave into this? Yeah, so I just came back from the Glovakos
Islands. Have you ever been there? No. And I'm
super ignorant. If I'm being honest, I don't even know where it is. But I know it's related to Darwin.
I mean, I'm incredibly ignorant of Galapagos. Yeah. So, okay, the Galapagos are, I think it's 600 miles
west of Ecuador. So they're in the Pacific. There's a set of islands that-
Central America, right? I mean, South America, but yeah. I'm not the biggest South America,
Central America expert. I don't even know. I don't know to which about it.
Ecuador is the north end of South America.
Okay.
So basically they're part of Ecuador, but a lot of people know them again because of, like you said, Darwin.
They are this, at least from my perspective, and I've been to 50 or so countries, the most kind of nature scape trip I've ever done where you actually feel like you're entering their world versus the opposite, right?
And so the reason it fits into Darwin's story is when you have a bunch of islands, the way that these different species evolve across the different islands, especially land creatures who can't make their way from one island to another, they end up evolving differently due to the unique fauna, due to the unique environment set of predators, etc. on that particular island.
And so he was like, wait a minute.
why are there, for example, blue-footed boobies, which are a type of birds, and red-footed boobies on two different islands?
And that was him witnessing some of these.
He did a lot with finches and I think some of the giant tortoises.
Like, he noticed these things.
And then that was his kind of like, aha to understanding evolution.
I have never heard this story.
Like, I knew nothing about Darwin.
This is actually the first time that a...
ever like heard like the I'm sure there's a lot more to the you know the aha moment story but I have
never heard that before yeah and he did a lot of his research there and I think in particular with the
finches I think there's like 17 kinds of finches and the interesting part is like when does an animal
become a separate species right so you take these two finches they exist on different islands and then
like they're evolving at what point do they become a new species it's when they no longer mate
with each other.
Right?
So one interesting thing,
fun fact, is just they had these,
you know, one example is lava lizards.
And these lava lizards would do these mating dances,
but in the case for them,
they're doing these push-ups,
at least that's how humans, like,
describe this mating dance.
But because they're different species
that have evolved on their unique islands,
it's like one lizard might do like three push-ups,
another one might do five,
another one might do it like a little bigger
or funkier.
than the others. But what's crazy is that, like, they will not mate with each other. Like, if you take
one lava lizard from one island and the other one's doing, you know, the male's doing the push-ups
for the females, just slight differences in how it's being done. It's like, nope, sorry, like, we no
longer mate. And one interesting takeaway from me, and this is just me, again, like, this is nothing
to do with business. It's just, that's never happened to humans. Now, there are some, like, bad historical
examples of like segregation and stuff but for the most part like we've existed on different continents
evolved right and over long long long periods of time like you still like someone from australia
will still mate with someone from north america which who will still mate with someone from europe
etc right like i just thought that was that was an interesting like i wonder why that is
i've heard of a bunch of friends of mine doing push-ups to impress some lot lizards
But never lava lizards.
Steph, do you know what a lot lizard is?
I don't. Is that embarrassing?
No. It means you're much more sophisticated than me.
A lot lizard is a prostitute that serves truck drivers.
Oh, that makes sense.
I feel like if you know what a lot lizard is, that sort of says what part of the tracks you're from.
You know what I'm saying?
I hear you.
So you're talking about Galapagos Islands and Darwin and, you know, the eight senses that animals have.
But I know a few people that know a few things about lot lizards, if you want to talk about that, just saying, what's this ass nature thing?
So if people want to go down the rabbit hole of exploring not just like let me go look at pictures of animals, but.
understanding like how do animals produce color, what are the examples of technology being
inspired by natural design, for example, like a search algorithm that was inspired by ants?
This is so fascinating. So as nature has this, there's all stuff you can click on. So there's one about
the African darter. Apparently that's a type of bird. And it has a very special feather
that is incredibly water resistant.
And then it tells you like different applications
that this potential feather
or like inspiration of this feather could have.
And it talks about like the strategy of how it works
and like the potential for copying this feather.
This is amazing.
How did you find this website?
This is really cool.
So someone shared it within internet pipes.
We have this survey whenever people join,
which just asks like what's your favorite tool.
A lot of it ends up being what you expect.
Chachy-B-T,
HRFs, etc.
But there are a bunch of gems
that come through like this.
And so, by the way,
is Internet pipes,
it's literally just
tons of different resources
for finding these things?
So what the product started as,
it was,
I hate the term course,
but it was a course
that existed to say,
okay.
It was a book.
It was a book.
It exists in Notion,
and there's videos,
and there's text,
and now there's a community
and now there's things,
databases like the Digit's database,
but the origin,
was, okay, the most common question I get asked is you find all this cool stuff online,
how do you find it? And so internet pipes was showing people how to find this information
through a series of tools. And that's why it's called pipes, right? It's like, use this tool
to make sense of all of the purchases that are happening on Amazon, all of the pages that exist on
Wikipedia, all of the searches that are happening on Google and, you know, you go down the line.
this data exists. And by the way, we're at a unique period where, like, it didn't quite exist 15 years ago.
And 15 years from now, probably everyone will know it exists. And so it's like this internet pipes is a course, a book, whatever you want to call it, to learn how to do that.
And you've made a lot of money off of it so far, haven't you?
Yes.
That's pretty dope. When you answer just yes, that means I'm not going to ask how much.
It's six figures. There's a pretty wide range of, you know.
Does the six figure include the dot zero zero so it could really be like one thousand dot zero zero dollars?
It's eight figures now.
I got it.
This is a really, really cool website.
I could spend hours just looking at this.
Like there's an article about like camel's fur and how it keeps people cool or it keeps
camels cool in the desert but also warm at night and why that particular type of fur is special for this.
Like it's so, and the reason it's kind of interesting.
is like the two that I've named are clothing related.
But like if you had a clothing related brand, like some type of like,
it's stealing the story for you.
Like it's like, or not stealing, it's giving you the hook.
Do you know what I mean?
Exactly. Exactly.
And by the way, like people in our world in business tech are always talking about the
like Lindyness of something.
How long has something existed for?
And it's like you are learning from millions of years of evolution, right?
of these animals that have become purely optimized for this purpose.
And to your point, I think like the marketer and both of us is like, what could, you know,
what products could you make off of this?
Like there's one of like the otters where it's like it keeps, it keeps heat in and cold water out.
So otters.
And I'm sure every single wetsuit company has like stolen this marketing for their branding or
whatever.
But like, so it's like really fascinating.
Sorry, go ahead.
Well, did you ever see, you know mischief, right?
Mischief the brand.
Mischiff.
is the company that, like weird projects.
Like they did like a blood shoe with Lil Nas X or something like that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So they've done a ton of shoe collabs.
They did one.
I think it was, I don't remember if it was with Jimmy Kimmel or they just announced it,
but it was called the Gob Stomper.
Did you ever see this?
No.
I thought they were kind of cool.
They basically, the bottom of the sneaker comes gray at first.
And then as you wear it more, basically, like, as your shoe wears away, it looks like a gop stopper.
And it was just like...
Which is the candy that you suck on in each shell, layer of shell, it turns colors.
Okay, cool.
Yeah, exactly.
And so my, like, you might think this is the silliest idea ever.
But when I went to the Galapagos and I saw these red-footed and these blue-footed boobies,
and by the way, fun fact for the listeners, the reason that these birds have different colored feet is because of what
they eat, which I just thought was so strange and interesting. Basically, like, the two different
birds on different islands eat different things, and that ends up impacting the pigment in their feet.
But imagine a sneaker brand that was, again, stick with me here. This might be a really
awful idea that's related to health in some way. So, like, let's say you're wearing a CGM. And on your
shoes, your shoes change color in some way based on
if you're in range or some other metric that you care about.
But basically you're able to signal something in a way that changes through your feet.
Awful idea.
Well, it could be like if, you know, we could we could show your fertile or something.
It'd help with the whole lot lizard thing.
It's like those parties, right, where you wear, like, what are they called the stoplight parties, where you wear red?
Yellow, red or green.
That's pretty funny.
So stoplight shoes.
Maybe that's a better.
version of the idea. We just put all of our blood work on our, you know, like, I don't have a thyroid
issue. I'm good. Yeah, your function health results show up in your, in like a pendant around
your neck. Let's, let's send here. I think we got a ton of stuff. Steph Smith. Thank you very much.
Internet pipes, steffsmith.io. Is that your website? Technically, yes, I haven't updated it in a while.
But yeah, if people are interested in internet pipes, I think we dropped a code last time, MFM if people want to use. And they
can get that, that digits database of 100 stats. We talk about shipbuilding, disaster insurance,
you know, tech literacy, nomad visas, all that good stuff. All right. God bless America.
We're done. That's it. That's the pod. Thanks, Sam.
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.
