My First Million - #55 - Lead Gen Businesses, Islamic Finance & COVID-19 Virality

Episode Date: March 7, 2020

Sam (@thesamparr) and Shaan (@shaanvp) talk ideas, news, trends and businesses. Why aren't you in our Facebook group yet? www.facebook.com/groups/ourfirstmillion. For detailed show notes: https://bit....ly/3aOxEBz. Topics for today: Sequoia Memo (5:00), Virality in startups and viruses (8:51), Lead Gen Businesses (14:39), Islamic Finance (30:06) & Rebranding actions & lifestyles (42:18).  See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:10 Boom, we're here. Coronavirus and all. Yeah, the streets of San Francisco are empty. You could have walked down in the middle of the street and it would have been fine. Yeah, and we're in this studio and Sam's just coughing up a storm, which has got me concerned. Allergies. This may be my last podcast. You don't know.
Starting point is 00:00:26 Allergies. The type of allergies that you can catch and kill you. So this is for all the students of Stanford, Harvard, Syracuse that have been shut down. They're at home. Certainly just listening to the podcast in quarantine. this is for you. This one goes out to you. Yeah, good luck.
Starting point is 00:00:43 All right, what are we going to talk about? We got a bunch of words on the screen. They all look interesting. Where do you want to start? Pick one. Can we talk about, I read every review for the podcast. We have 600 reviews maybe. 794.
Starting point is 00:00:55 Just check this morning. So 800. Let's say 800. They're all five stars except for like five. Yeah. And that's cool. I like reading the positive reviews. And those five were from early on when you weren't even on the pod.
Starting point is 00:01:06 So really, I take those, I take those elves. No, there were two non-five-star reviews. And I like listening to negative feedback. And I don't like following all of it, but some of it I follow. The first was that the sound for the guests were bad. Agreed. Fair. We will listen to that.
Starting point is 00:01:22 And the second one, and I hate this. I don't hate it in that it bothers me, but I just don't, like, I don't think it's bad feedback, which is we were called bros. Right. And I don't really care about that because what's that mean? How is that supposed to be? Like, people use that as an insult. I don't understand why that's an insult. Yeah, it's an insult for sure, to be clear.
Starting point is 00:01:43 It used to not be an insult, but being called a bro is an insult. And, yeah, I don't know, is it the way we talk? Is it what we talk about? Is it, are we using the wrong words? I'm not exactly sure. Yeah, I don't take offense to that, even though people mean it to be offensive. So I don't care if people say that. Yeah, I'm not a bro.
Starting point is 00:02:04 I'm a lover, not a fighter. I am a bro. I got multiple angles. I got gears. What does a bro mean? I don't know, Henry, what's a bro? We need the, get the, get the, you got to go into the mic. Yeah, I think you can hear me.
Starting point is 00:02:17 I don't think it's, uh, come on, bro. Yeah, come on, bro. Maybe we have to replace Henry with a female and then we'll get more credit for not being just a bro down. No, I don't care about being called a bro. So then it's a compliment. Yeah, kind of. I don't know, whatever. I'm not trying to be liked.
Starting point is 00:02:40 I'm just trying to be me. No, well, here's what I've tried to do. I've tried to be, B, and I'm. I'm trying to create stuff that people want. And if it's predominantly people think it's bro-y, but they love it. I'm okay with that. Yeah, like, for example, I listen to the Joe Rogan podcast. Joe Rogan talks about his carnival, all-meat diet, you know, working out, UFC fighting, cage
Starting point is 00:03:00 fighting, hunting. These are cars, like, these are his topics because that's what he's genuinely interested. And he talks about. And he talks about other things too. Everything else. And I like when people, I like listening to stuff where people are interesting and they're interested in certain stuff. And so for me, the test with this podcast is, would I want to listen to this?
Starting point is 00:03:18 And so at the end of the episode, I just sort of think, would I be interested in listening to that podcast? And if it's appealing to me, then I'm sure it's appealing to other people. It's not going to be appealing to everybody for sure. And then the last bit of negative feedback we got, which is we focused too much on the San Francisco Silicon Valley scene. And I'm from Missouri by way of Tennessee. You're from everywhere, including Colorado. I love San Francisco, and I hate it at the same time. I'll be the first to make fun of it.
Starting point is 00:03:44 But also, I love all types of cool shit going on throughout the country. So that's probably fair. If it's interesting, let's talk about it. In fact, I actually think personally, I think we skew a little too far in the kind of like low tech ideas. And I think there's a lot of interesting high tech ideas that don't require a high tech entrepreneur. For example, I don't know how to code, but I've started tech startups in Silicon Valley, taking venture capital money and worked with an engineering team where I'm the only guy in the room who doesn't know anything about engineering. You can do that. So I actually think that there's plenty of cool stuff that we're not talking about that I'm going to be bringing more of.
Starting point is 00:04:18 So if you don't like the Silicon Valley stuff, I'm sorry. I'm going to try to bring more interesting technology to the table because there's a lot of it out there. And I feel like we haven't been talking about it as much. The way that I described San Francisco in Silicon Valley is to me it's kind of like Hollywood. But it's only only if you're trying to make like a big blockbuster hit. Right. I believe that you can make those anywhere. It might be a little bit more helpful if you are physically in Hollywood.
Starting point is 00:04:42 Hollywood because you'll not because the chances are necessarily higher, but because you'll be around other people who have similar wants and dreams and your baseline becomes a certain thing. For sure. But you can certainly make it from anywhere. Absolutely. It's been proven. Okay. Let's talk about some of these things.
Starting point is 00:04:59 Let's start with, let's start with the Sequoia memo. Okay. Did you read this? No, I avoided it on purpose. Nice. Denial, the best, the best approach. Yeah, I, we haven't raised venture capital. So it's a little bit different.
Starting point is 00:05:13 It's not as applicable. But once you explain to me what it is. So Sequoia is one of the biggest venture capital firms here in Silicon Valley. They are famous for back in 2008, I want to say. They released this presentation called RIP Good Times. And they basically called an emergency meeting of all their portfolio companies. They invited them to this dinner, locked them in a room, put this presentation up on the screen that was basically like, hey, the good times we've all been experiencing are about to end.
Starting point is 00:05:39 Here's why. Most of you entrepreneurs, you have not been a part of these cycles. We've been investors through the dot-com boom and the bust and then this new boom. And this was right before the sort of financial crisis of 2008. And they told them, look, money is about to become hard to come by. We are going to have a giant financial crisis that will have ripple down effects to you guys, to your customers, to your clients, to your investors. And so you need to start tightening up.
Starting point is 00:06:08 Anything you're wasting money on, you need to stop wasting it. anything. If you haven't raised money, if you don't have 12 months in the bank, you need to go raise money right now to sort of be able to endure a downturn. And they just released another one, which is the new Sequoia memo. So that was 2008. Now they released a new one. And they basically were like, look, this coronavirus stuff is a, this is a once in a hundred year virus. And there's this, it happened to China, which is like when you shock China, you shock the global supply chain. And also now that travel is going to stop, a hole in it. But a business is going to come to a halt, that stock market's going to go into a panic because
Starting point is 00:06:44 we've been in a 10-year bull run, and that's about to sort of end anyways. So they told them the same thing. Change your spending habits. You need to tighten up. Raise money. If you have an offer out there, take it. Don't worry about valuation. Just take it and get the money in the bank. And you need to go into sort of survival mode. You need to change gears. And that's what just came out, which I think is very interesting. Have you made any adjustments to your business? Not yet, but I live like this anyway. I'm kind of a cockroach in the first place. And I actually think that me living this way has kind of been a consequence.
Starting point is 00:07:21 It has hurt me more than it's helped me actually. I think it made it so I wouldn't spend enough money, which if you have a machine that turns a dollar into more than one dollar, dump the truck, your money truck. Like what, ad spend or what do you mean? Yeah, I mean, look, if you have a funnel where you or a product where, if you just spend more on marketing or spend more on engineers or spend more on content creators and it turns that new customer into more than what you acquired them for, then if anyone had a little machine that turned $1 into $1 and one penny,
Starting point is 00:07:51 the name of the game is throw as much money into that machine as you possibly can. As fast as you can. And I've had those machines and I didn't capitalize on it. And so I've lived this way all the time and I think it's actually hurt me a lot. But in times like these, bring it on. Yeah, you don't need to adjust. We haven't changed how we've done things. because we're always tight.
Starting point is 00:08:09 Yeah. And your company's in a good position like just now before this. We were looking at a company's P&L. And it was like cash in the bank, $220,000 or something like that. It's like, dude, you're a couple months away from insolvency, you know, if that was the case. Whereas you guys are in a much better position. Yes. I do, I am, I do have a little fear.
Starting point is 00:08:30 I don't know how I feel about this Corona thing when it means, what it means for business. I do think that I am on the side of, I think. think it's bad, but I don't think it will be as bad as I think, or as I originally thought. Right. I guess I just have faith. I have a lot of blind faith that it will work out, which... So I've been on the other side of the... So when we were doing our idea lab, I worked with this guy, Michael Birch.
Starting point is 00:08:58 Michael Birch was, is known as, if you just Google, he's like one of the top growth guys in the world. He sort of was doing and invented viral marketing before viral marketing was a word. word. He did it because he didn't have money back in the day. So he built one of the first address book importers where for this company called birthday alarm he had, he was like, and I think he did it before that at Rick Marini's company. I forget what that was called. Birth alarm was before that. So birth alarm was the first one where he was like, hey, I want people to send this to their friends. What if I just imported all the addresses from their hot mail?
Starting point is 00:09:28 And then I made it easy. Push this button to send it. And he's like, he literally told me at his house he was like I thought that 10 days later like I thought there's no way they let this go for more than 10 days and he's like it's now been 15 years and this thing still works and he's like so he was working on viral marketing because he just didn't have a budget so he's like I got to use my customers to get me more customers and to explain that you didn't explain it totally clear but someone signs up for your thing and says do you want to invite your friends here's your Gmail contacts click select all and send an email to all of them and so in this case for birthday alarm it was I make a calendar where I'm and I'll invite you. I'll say, Hey, Sam, can you add your birthday to my calendar? I don't want to forget your birthday.
Starting point is 00:10:07 This is before Facebook. This is before Facebook exists, by the way. And so you would add your birthday to my calendar. And they would say, Hey, Sam, don't you want to remember Sean's birthday? That'd be nice. Like reciprocate.
Starting point is 00:10:16 And you'd be like, yeah, sure. And then it would say, hey, Sam, you got one birthday on the calendar, but you surely got more friends than one. So why don't you invite some other friends? Here, let me make it easy for you.
Starting point is 00:10:23 Would you like to import all your friends from Hotmail? And you're like, yes. and then he added one thing at a time to make it more viral. So he would add a pre-filled message because he's like, oh, people are stopping because they can't think of what to say. Right.
Starting point is 00:10:36 So here's a pre-filled message that I know works. And then I'll just say, send. And so then he got this thing super viral. So, you know, birthday alarm grew to 50 million members with zero paid marketing. 50 million. And then he's done this again and again since then with his social network, Bebo and others. So when I worked with them, the name of the game was viral growth.
Starting point is 00:10:55 And so we did a charity campaign to try to raise money for charity water. Well, we made a story, a website that was just telling a story of this boy, Jean Bosco, with no water. And then we said, can we get this to go viral? And so we did the same thing. Import emails, get people to send the story to their friends and raise money for the cause.
Starting point is 00:11:12 And we got it to go viral. So I've literally been it where like nothing, nothing, nothing, you'd come into work, nothing, no growth, no growth, no growth. And you would just tweak the right thing. And then all of a sudden, you know, between overnight, something would have doubled. And the next morning, it doubled again. next morning doubled again and i remember it's just going from zero to five million people
Starting point is 00:11:30 uh signing up for this charity thing within like you know two weeks it was insane and so i've seen viral growth and how counterintuitive it is like you don't think you know well yesterday we had 4 000 people so today we're going to have i don't know 5000 6 000 it's like no you're going to have 16000 then you have 32 000 and it's going to you know it's going to go up to the millions within a few days and so i've seen viral growth when you're talking about it in the good sense from a product perspective. Now it's viral growth of an actual fucking virus. And so, uh, and you could see actually in the US, somebody did a great graph where they mapped Italy where everything's on lockdown because Italy has started spreading like crazy.
Starting point is 00:12:09 And they showed Italy day one, US day one. Italy day two, US day two, number of cases. And the bar graphs are like identical. And the thing is we're just in like, whatever, day six. And, uh, you can see by day 21 where this thing gets to if you don't like lock everything down right away. So I am very fearful because I've seen viral growth. I've seen viral spread. And I know that it doesn't work the way. It breaks our brains. Our brains think things go linearly, but this goes exponentially. And it's really hard to just comprehend an exponential spread. And to take the story a different way than coronavirus, which is that stuff that you're describing, that Michael Birch thing, you can actually still get all these cool plugins that automatically, like allow people to share a pre-populmonary
Starting point is 00:12:54 a message to all their Gmail contacts. We used it. And people still share. Yeah. And the math works out where, you know, because you would think I would never do that. I wouldn't email all my contacts. No, we had a lot of people doing it. But people do it.
Starting point is 00:13:06 And what happens is, you know, 1% or less will do it. But you look at the math. 1% of people do it. On an average, they have 326 contacts. So for every 100 people that come in, you get 326 people blasted out. It doesn't work as good as that time because the email open rates are much higher than. Yeah. But now people are like, oh, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:13:24 I never talked to Sam, so if he's sending me this, this is junk, this is spam. Now people filter it. But in certain countries, it works like we were growing like, we could do this like clockwork in India. In India, people still opened it like they did in the U.S. 10 years ago. And they forward even higher rates. They don't care. They'll forward everything to everybody.
Starting point is 00:13:40 And so India, Turkey, all these little countries where we would see this crazy growth that you couldn't get in the U.S. or U.K. anymore. They kind of suck because the monetary value ends up, you know, the value per user is lower there, but it does still feel good to get like. And it definitely works. And people are shocked by that. Yeah, we did one through SMS, I remember. And over the weekend, it went viral.
Starting point is 00:14:02 And like, you know, during the week, Monday through Friday, everything looks fine is growing, but like not at a crazy pace. We didn't realize the viral coefficient was two. And so over the weekend, it took off and started compounding on a big number. And we racked up $120,000 in SMS, $120,000 bill in SMS is going through um, uh, Kazakhstan. It's like, we didn't even know we're going, we're going to grow in Kazakhstan and it went crazy and turns out texting in Kazakhstan super expensive. And so 120,000 dollars in two days, we had to pay off. That's crazy. It sucked. Well, I need it. We need the texting stuff,
Starting point is 00:14:37 um, which we haven't. Uh, you want to talk about Zumper? Mm-hmm. They just raised, uh, was it $40 million today at a 400 million dollar valuation? Total, they've raised $150 million in valuation. Uh, it's a cool, it's a cool service. If you're a consumer, how does it work? Yeah. So, so, Have you ever used Zumper? If you're trying to find an apartment, you'll probably run into Zumper because you're like, it's a search engine to find apartments to rent. Yeah. And typically for these new guys, San Francisco isn't the major market.
Starting point is 00:15:03 It's typically more middle of a more places where they have high-rise buildings, which we don't have a lot here. But basically, if you Google Chicago apartments or moving to Chicago or something like that, Zumper or apartmentless mile the place where I used to work or a bunch of other things like that will come up. And it'll be like, here's 843 apartments available in Chicago. Chicago, click here to get information and submit your information. Okay, great. Here's how they work, which a lot of people have no idea how they work. Henry, I'm going to explain to you how they work, and you tell me if you've ever heard this. Okay, so they're lead gen companies. You know what a
Starting point is 00:15:36 lead gen company is? Okay. The way it works is, uh, and a lot of people are shocked by this, and it's actually way easier to start than most people would realize. So the way it works is there's, I don't know how many there are who do this, but I know that there are for sure four or five that do this that are big names. And so just in the apartment space. Just in the apartment space. So there's Apartments.com. I believe there's Rent.com and there's maybe two others that are quite large.
Starting point is 00:16:00 And then there's dozens that you don't even realize exist. You'd have to Google them and find them. But what they do is they work with all the big apartment buildings. So there's Grey Star, which has probably millions of apartments. Then there's Co-Star, which has a bunch. And then there's every apartment building that you have. World Star. World.
Starting point is 00:16:20 What are the other ones? Gray Star and then there's Avalon, Avalon Bay, I think they're called. There's a bunch of them. And they have millions of units. And what they do is they go to Red.com and they go, or Apartments.com, and they go, for every person who signs a lease with us or who calls our phone, we're going to give you 100 bucks. And so what Zumper can do or probably how they started out or what anyone can do is they go, hey, apartments.com, you guys are getting $100 per call.
Starting point is 00:16:47 will you give us $10 per email that we give you of people who are qualified leads? So what Zumper did, I imagine they did this when they launched, and I'll explain why I say when they launched, is what they did was they go to these places and they go, all right, give us a cut of the revenue per email. And so the math works out that if we send you five emails, basically people who said, here's my email address, here's my phone number.
Starting point is 00:17:09 I'm interested in a two bedroom at this particular building. Apartments will be like, all right, we'll give you $10 for that because we're pretty confident that for every five of these. these we collect, one of them will become a lead. And so now we make 50 bucks in profit. And so what Zuppert does is they create a different funnel where they learn how to rank really high on moving to Chicago, find an apartment, or they are able to have really good Facebook ads and they get all these leads. And that's what their margin is. And so the margins for these businesses, I know this firsthand can be 60 to 70% gross margin, which means, let's see, what's the map behind that?
Starting point is 00:17:45 You million bucks comes through the door. You paid, you know, 250K on search engine marketing. Yeah. But, you know, the rest is because there's no cogs. There's no physical product you're selling. So you have a very high margin product, 67% margin, plus whatever content staff you have internally. That's your other cost. So it's just a lead gen company.
Starting point is 00:18:04 Yeah. And the interesting thing, I've known a lot of people who have these lead gen companies. I knew a guy who had a lead gen company for swimming pools. So if you wanted to buy a swimming pool, you'd Google, swimming pool repair man or indoor ground pool, indoor, in ground pool set up California. Right. Or something like that. He's number one.
Starting point is 00:18:23 And he would be number one. You submit your information and he would sell it to these people who go and service. Who actually do the thing. Who actually do the work. You're a middleman when you're a lead. Now, there's pros and cons to this business. The first pro is you could set these up really cheaply and you could start making cash flow very quick. Like if you were able to spend one month just building this.
Starting point is 00:18:42 site and creating the relationship with this person, you could next day go out and start making cash so long as you were profitably acquire a customer. So that's great. The second great thing is you could do this for most anything. The best way I think to figure out how to do this is you figure out what has the largest total market size with also the largest possible cost per lead with also the least amount of competition. And you do like a grid. Yeah, like a grid. And so for example, I've been bullish on truck drivers. The reason why, Why is I think that there's a whole lot of truck drivers in America. The average truck driver makes a good salary, let's say $50,000 a year. Therefore, recruiters would be willing to pay like $100 per lead. So I was like, can I send leads there? Or you could do it for local services. So I need a landscaper or I need irrigation work done at my home. My home. And someone will buy those leads for, I don't know, 50 bucks. So you can do this for anything. You just have to optimize for what? So my father-in-law is in the senior living business.
Starting point is 00:19:45 He owns a couple of facilities. And the biggest thing for them, his business looks great when he has high occupancy and it looks terrible if he gets high vacancy. So low occupancy. And so there's companies out there that do this for seniors. If you start Googling like, you know, memory care and Alameda, California, there's a company that will pop up right in the top of search and say, hey, we've reviewed the top 15, you know, facilities here and come read about them.
Starting point is 00:20:11 Or, hey, are you looking for this? talk to our consultant. Just put in your email address here and we'll help you get land in a spot. And so then they'll pay these lead gen services a high amount because, you know, somebody who goes into a senior facility, they're paying $8,000 per month and they're usually there till end of life. And so you get, you know, that very high lifetime value of that customer. So you're willing to pay $1,000 per qualified lead who's looking in your area. I don't know if it's that exact number, but high price. And I have firsthand knowledge.
Starting point is 00:20:41 I know someone personal. and I know the financials of a senior home living or senior living liege and business. It made hundreds of thousands of dollars a month in revenue and a very good profit. I know someone who did it for rent to own properties. I know people who have done it for, like I said, swimming pools. I know people who have done it for apartments. I know a guy who did it for local home services and did about $60 to $70 million a year in sales. Right.
Starting point is 00:21:05 And so that's the name of the game. I also know people who have done it for jobs. Jobs is another good one. Now, like RIGUp has done this. They've raised money at two or three billion dollar valuation. And they've done it for oil workers. And the way the math works is there's actually way more oil workers in America than you think, hundreds of thousands or can be hundreds of thousands. And those oil workers, the barrier to entries relatively low, you don't have to have like a master's degree in something.
Starting point is 00:21:28 So anyone can do it or a lot of people can do it. And the salary is quite high, 100 grand a year in some cases. So they're willing to spend a lot of money. And so it's a really interesting company or a business rather. And a lot of people don't know that's how it works. Now here's the downside. The downside is lead gen companies can be very transactional, which means as a business, you only capture value and make money, the more leads you're coming in through there. And often that
Starting point is 00:21:51 means you only make money when you're spending money. A lot of times they suck at building brands. So like I said, you could spend something up really fast. That means it can likely go away just as fast because let's say that if you create a URL that's like home, senior home living California.com, that is not like maybe someone is just going to Google that and they're going to see it one time. Right. They don't think of you. Yeah. And then they're going to get there and they're done. They're never going to think about you ever again. And you have to pay for them again. And so if you want more customers, you got pay again. And so that's quite hard. So if you can build a brand around it, then that's where it's really interesting. And the second thing is that you are
Starting point is 00:22:27 dependent on the person buying elite. So in my case, I worked for a person who was doing lead gen and they go, all right, there's a cap on this. Like, we can only make a certain amount of money giving leads. The way that we become a huge business is we make a relationship directly with the apartment buildings and go straight there, go straight to them. Now, the reason why that's sucked is because the person buying the leads was like, oh, you're our competition now. Right. You're out and they cut it off and their revenue goes away immediately. Right. And so what Thumbtack did, I like Thumbtack. What they've done is they've built a direct relationship with the people. So if you Google San Francisco wedding photographer and you see a wedding photographer on Thumbtack,
Starting point is 00:23:08 they've built that relationship with them and that wedding photographer will pay Thumbtack directly for a lead. That's great because there's no middle band to cut out. Now, the downside with that is, it costs a ton of money to do. This is like a really big problem. To build a marketplace. And so you likely have to raise money or figure out some scrappy way to get it done. Right. But that's my rant on Zumber. The big version of these, if you take it to its absolute max, is like Expedia or booking.com. Yeah. So what they're doing is, as they're saying, okay, cool, you want to book a flight? I will become the best at ranking for how to search for flights, find a good flight,
Starting point is 00:23:38 here's some recommended trips, and then we just, the airlines pay us a commission and affiliate fee for every lead we're sending them. And that is a notoriously difficult niche. Yeah, they've done well, but they're hyper competitive and they're, you know, it's always contentious. And then hotels is another one that's quite challenging. If I wanted to make money really fast, I would find a relatively boring one like trucking jobs, which I find interesting, but most people do not. So they will not enter that. The flights and
Starting point is 00:24:08 travel is a lot sexier. And so it can be a lot harder. I'll give you another niche one. I have a friend who created this business called a plyboard. And what he was doing was international students, people, you know, I went to high school in China. And when I was graduating in China, everybody wanted to come to the U.S. to study. Everyone wants to come to U.S. colleges. So internationally, India, China, Indonesia, Malaysia, the best students all want to come to the U.S. if they can. So they want to come to the U.S., but they don't know where the hell to start. They don't know what the schools are. They don't know how to apply.
Starting point is 00:24:37 They don't know how to translate their scoring on all these, like, you know, aptitude tests in Malaysia to like what the U.S. schools want, et cetera. So there's a barrier there. And the U.S. schools love foreign students because they pay more. Like I think a foreign student who, an international student who's going to school at Berkeley will pay double the tuition as a local student. Not just an in-state student. Like a U.S. out-of-state student versus international, the international student pays double.
Starting point is 00:25:01 And Alan, that's you. You paid double. So I paid more than double. So I went to school in Australia. I think the average per semester is like five. Okay. All right. Great.
Starting point is 00:25:17 So you paid like nine times as much going to go into school. That's insane. So basically what he was doing. So he went to colleges and you have all these small colleges that just need applicants because they don't have a brand name. So yeah, a lot of Stanford and Harvard, they don't really care because they're getting so many applicants anyways. It doesn't matter.
Starting point is 00:25:33 But like San Jose State. You know, they were like, hey, we will pay you. $1,000 per admitted student, $3,000 per admitted student. So he was getting three grand per admission in contract with all these different schools. And then he just had to do lead gen on the other side for students who want to go to school in America, which was actually a big market of people who are searching for. And what happened to it? He's still going.
Starting point is 00:25:54 I haven't checked in with them lately, but hope you're doing good. Martin, I hope you're doing all right. They were making so much money for it. Yep. International students everywhere. Yeah, I went to University of Sydney as well for a little while. It was crazy. How did I? We should actually talk about that on another time because that's an,
Starting point is 00:26:26 there's an interesting thing there. But to get back to this lead thing, to wrap this up, there's actually a lot, and this is way bigger than people think. And one of the biggest ones is credit cards. Credit karma. I don't know what they do in revenue, but they just sold for $8 billion. I bet they did one or, I bet they did a billion in sales. And what their hook was, we're going to get you to sign up for a report, a credit, a free credit report. And we're going to recommend credit cards for you use. And they'll make $100 per credit card affiliate. We get, they get now thinking about credit cards huge market huge referral fees very competitive nerd wallet does the same thing uh they're they bootstrapped i think i don't know multi hundred million in
Starting point is 00:27:04 yeah i mean but i think they bootstrapped to like 50 or 60 million in sales then raised money so it's quite good now here's another company and here's one more interesting thing you know the penny hoarder no i don't actually i don't know why you guys heard of the penny hoarder the penny hoarder the pennyholder kyle spoke at hustlecon he's a cool guy he he was a great success story still is but he uh started the penny holder. And what it did was he would write about when he was poor. He didn't have any money. He would say, I didn't have any money. I was trying to pay my bills. And so I would do things like drive Uber or I would do coupon clipping. And he would blog about it. And anytime someone saw an article that he wrote about driving for Uber, he would make two grand per Uber driver.
Starting point is 00:27:40 And so he was like, oh, this is cool. I should, I'm going to blog about all the ways in which I can save money or make extra money. And so he did that like through, like there's websites where you can fill out surveys and make dollars and make a few bucks. he would blog about it and mostly middle america moms would see and be like that's great i'll make money on the side and i'll sign up and he would get an affiliate fee and he scaled this thing from zero to 60 million in sales completely bootstrapped in like six years i love this and but here's the problem there's this other company called fluent media fluent i think it's called fluent fluent fluent is a publicly traded company and they are performance marketers which means they do what i'm
Starting point is 00:28:17 describing but across tons of niches so someone will say like direct tv will we'll come to them and be like, hey, we'll give you $80 for every customer you sent us. And they go, great. And they spin up these landing pages. Influent Media does this with trucking as well. They do a bunch of stuff. It's a big business, publicly traded. They saw Kyle's website and how much he was killing it because he talked about it a lot for PR, which, I mean, it's good and bad.
Starting point is 00:28:38 Good and bad. And they ripped them off completely. They created, like, the dollar saver or like something like very similar, like the penny hoarder. They just copied the website, copied the articles. and then they threw it on Facebook and they drove traffic to an article that said, here are the 100 best ways to save money. And they did the math so they could get a click for a penny or they could get a click for a dime. And each person who came, they would make 20 cents because that's the conversion rate of which people would sign up.
Starting point is 00:29:06 And so Kyle at Pennyholder, this is all public. You can Google it. sued them. And what they found out was fluent media, according to the lawsuit, hired one of the penny hoarders employees. And they said, yeah, here's how we did it. And so they just spun this up and it made a ton of money right off the bat. Yeah. And so these are the pros.
Starting point is 00:29:25 Did he win the suit? I think it's ongoing. It's ongoing. For Kyle. But this is why this is interesting. And the penny holder amongst its crew, amongst its audience, I think has a great brand. And NerdWalt actually at this point has a great brand. At first, NerdWalt was simply a, you're just going to Google our just going to Google best credit card and we're going to show up one and you're never going to remember us.
Starting point is 00:29:48 But at this point, they're doing all this advertising. in commercials and people like turn to the nerds like it's working that's a commercial so really interesting business model I like lead gen but a lot of people didn't realize how that worked Henry was that interesting did you learn how it worked that was great yeah all right I got another one for you um Manzil so this is cool this is one of my favorite reasons to do the podcast is that interesting people just reach out and tell me about their business so manzil is uh this so this guy Sam reached out he listens to the podcast podcast. What's his last name? Sam Malaco, Halako, something like that. He was tweeting at me too.
Starting point is 00:30:25 And so he was like, hey, I got this business, you know, would love some help with it, or just would love to chat. And so I said, okay, let's chat. So I get on the phone and I end up blown away by what these guys are doing. So they teach me about something I've never heard of and is now very, very, very fascinating to me. So what they do is Manzel does Islamic financing. Oh, we talked about this. What's that meaning? We talked about it not on the podcast, but we talked about it offline because I was pretty interested in it.
Starting point is 00:30:55 So, Henry, do you know what Islamic financing is? You didn't know Legion, I don't think you'll know this one. Definitely not. So are you Muslim? I'm not. I'm Hindu. Well, I'm neither, but like my family is Hindu. So I didn't know about this.
Starting point is 00:31:10 But basically, in the Muslim faith, there's actually sort of the advice is against traditional loans. So interest, which is known as like Riba, I think, in their faith, is found upon in these. So a traditional mortgage where you go to the bank, you have your down payment, you take out a loan, and you're paying interest, is actually not compliant with their faith and their law. Which is actually common in a lot of other different religions. Is that true? Yeah, so I'm Catholic, Christian, and I was raised that way. there's definitely rules regarding handling money and interest and things like that.
Starting point is 00:31:51 Yeah, and I think the fundamental basis, I'm going to kind of broach you this, so I apologize, but I'm just trying to explain as best as I understand it. So apparently, you know, money, sort of fiat currency, which is just not pegged in anything. It's just a made-up concept. The belief system is that money has no value, inherent value in itself, and so you should not be charged interest for borrowing money, which is this sort of abstract concept. So they have loans or they have sort of agreements which can work as long as both sides are taking shared risk and getting sort of shared upside shared return in some way. So there's Sam Islamic.
Starting point is 00:32:30 I believe so, yeah. And his partner, Mohammed, is also. And so they were explaining to me that, hey, there's this big thing called Islamic financing and there's these Islamic Challenger banks. And so if you ever heard the word challenger bank, check this out. It's pretty cool. We know that banking's been around forever. There's these big bank brands that are, you know, in every country, there's big banks that are worth billions of dollars. And recently, over the last, let's say, five to seven years, there's these things called Challenger banks or Neo Banks they're called.
Starting point is 00:32:56 And so in Brazil, there's a bank called New Bank, NU Bank. And New Bank is worth $10 billion. It's one of the most valuable startups in Brazil. In the UK, there's Challenger banks. Oh, my God, I'm going to forget the name now. But Challenger just means a new one? It's a startup bank. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:33:11 And they offer a different things. So what these guys did was better digital access, so mobile apps, quicker ability to get sort of credit cards and debit cards spun up. And so there's a couple of them that are huge now. A few different multibillion dollar startups done this. What these guys have done is they've done this for a faith-based bank, which is basically say there's a set of customers out there, in this case Muslims, who are not being served well by the generic banks. And we can make a bank that serves them better. and the way we're going to do it is you want to take a mortgage out,
Starting point is 00:33:43 you can either take a sort of a mortgage out, a traditional mortgage, which is not compliant, or you can take one out that's compliant with your faith. We've come up with a mechanism that is blessed by sort of the village elders, you know, the sort of leaders in the community that says, yes, this is, you know, I think Sharnia law is what it's called, it's compliant with Sharneya law. And then on the other side, this works as a mortgage.
Starting point is 00:34:06 You can actually buy your home. And so these guys have this, have this concept. And in other countries, this is apparently really big. So in Africa, Indonesia, places where the Muslim population is the dominant population, they've already solved this problem. But in places like U.S., Canada, where it's just a minority of the population is Muslim, they don't have these banks yet. So I love this startup idea because... How are they doing? So how they're doing.
Starting point is 00:34:28 So they spent a lot of time making sure that they can actually get it to be compliant and actually get the financial mechanism to work. That took a while over a year, maybe two years. Now they've gotten that to work and they have basically, They have two sides of a marketplace. On one side, they have people who are investors. Because if you're going to issue mortgages, their average mortgage is like $500,000. So it takes a lot of capital to start this business. They don't want to be the one, they don't want to go raise a billion dollars and then start issuing these loans.
Starting point is 00:34:55 They want on one side to have investors who will put in the capital to fund these loans. And on the other side, they want to have the borrowees who are trying to buy a home who can pull from this pool of, you know, sort of halal financing, you know, this financing that's compliant. And so they have $10 million committed on the investor side, $1.2 million in their bank, $10 million total. And then every week they're trying to close more of those checks. Which is a small amount, but this is like just inbound interest. This is not like they haven't really done anything yet.
Starting point is 00:35:27 But $10 million will let you let you do if you just do half a million dollar loans. That means they can do whatever, 20 mortgages right now. And every mortgage has a certain value. So it's worth about, I don't know, 20K,000. year to them is that mortgage just in their fee that they get on top of it. And so on the other side, they have all these applicants, I think, you know, about a thousand applicants. And these are what they call super prime applicants because these are people who are doctors,
Starting point is 00:35:51 lawyers, they have good jobs. They have the money. They have the means to afford their homes. They're just looking for a solution that doesn't force them to compromise their faith. So I really like this business. There's a working model in the UK. There's a working model in Africa. There's a working model in Indonesia.
Starting point is 00:36:08 There's nothing in Canada where these guys are, and there's nothing really in the U.S. How many Muslims do you think they're in America? I look this up. I think there's like a couple million, only two million, I want to say, roughly. That's pretty interesting. I like that. I think that there's a bunch of weird rules around banking. I mean, they're not weird.
Starting point is 00:36:28 They should be there. And so starting a bank, I think it's almost like nearly impossible. It's very difficult. So what all the neobanks do, all the charter banks, They're not real banks. They sit on top of BBVA or they sit on top of these other banks and they're just the application. They're the consumer facing layer, but the banking happens with their underlying partner.
Starting point is 00:36:48 And it's sort of like the lead gen model that you're talking about. They go to these banks and say, hey, I can get you a whole bunch more customers. I'm going to spend all the money doing the marketing. They'll be banking with you, but we own this sort of relationship. Yeah, and that's actually pretty common. I use this thing. My debit card is simple. Right.
Starting point is 00:37:02 I've heard of it. Yeah. This is my debit card. It's pretty cool. I like it because the customer service. I can just text and they're like these like young guys in Portland and they're easy to chat with and they answer 24 hours a day. They were acquired for $100 million and I was like, it was like a freaking bank.
Starting point is 00:37:20 That's it. Yeah. And I did research. It's not a bank. Yeah. And it was what's called BBVA? Yeah. That's who they use.
Starting point is 00:37:25 BBVA compass, I think it's. Exactly. They're under there's a few that are underneath all these. Now the very first, there's a now one of the challenger banks got their very first banking charter banking license, which is very rare. I forgot their name, but they just announced a couple of weeks. weeks ago, last two weeks. So now it's very interesting. Now once that seal broke, because it was so hard to apply for this. Yeah, I think what you, they all want it. Robin Hood wants their license.
Starting point is 00:37:47 Brex wants their license. It's just very hard for them to get this. I think you need five percent, or what is the number? I think you need 10 percent. In reserve. Yeah, you need a certain amount of reserve. That's not even the problem. It's just that there's no incentive for the government to give these out. They're like, ah, you, you kind of highfalutin, you know, tech startups. Do I really want to give this to you? You've only been around for so long. I don't know if I have the trust in you. So now the seal is broken. The first one got it. We'll see what that means.
Starting point is 00:38:12 But what I like about these guys is they're not a bank. They're not taking your deposits. They're just doing loan issuance. So on one side, they have the reserve cap, the investment fund. But they're using other people's money? OPM, on one side, yeah, other people's money to make the loans. And they're the broker, and they take 1% to 2% of the transaction fee. And people are willing to pay a premium to have halal financing,
Starting point is 00:38:31 just like people are willing to pay a premium for halal meat or for vegan or kosher meat, you know, whatever. Right. People are willing to pay a premium. for things that are compliant with their faith. So I think this could be big. And what's interesting, I think that they've had a hard time raising money
Starting point is 00:38:44 from traditional VCs because this is hard to understand. Yeah, you have to like, you know, most VCs are old white guys. And, you know, it's the sort of cliche and, you know, I know they do look into it. But I think that there's, there's the natural challenges of any high aspiration startup, they have those.
Starting point is 00:39:03 They have the problems that any startup that's really ambitious. But then they also have the problem of like, first they need to educate you about this problem. Like you saw how I stumbled through this explanation. And I talked to these guys for an hour, you know, and that's where I am after an hour of really trying to understand it. But you, and you read this by Ferkont, your best.
Starting point is 00:39:19 So I ran it by him. I introduced them yesterday. I said, hey, Furkan understands this. He's Muslim. He's an investor. He's a technologist. And he's an entrepreneur.
Starting point is 00:39:27 If he doesn't like this, I don't like this. And what did he say? And so he's like, I've looked into this. He's like a lot of my friends really wanted this. I tried to look at what options are available in the U.S. They suck. They're really super.
Starting point is 00:39:38 high premiums. Is he practicing? Yeah, like, you know, to an extent. Like what I want to know is do really like cultural. Like he doesn't pray five times a day, but he doesn't eat pork. Right. So he's like culturally. He drinks, but like his dad runs the mosque in San Jose.
Starting point is 00:39:52 And you know, like it's, so even people who are like culture, who aren't incredibly devout are into this. If he had the option, he would prefer halal financing over not. If it was convenient and he's like, the problem with all the existing options, they're not convenient. They're not easy to use and they're very high premiums. He's like, if these guys did it conveniently, I think this could be big. So he's going to talk.
Starting point is 00:40:08 We'll see. Like I'm not a practicing Catholic anymore. Are you guys Catholic? You're Catholic for sure, right? I am. Do you eat meat on Friday? Yeah, I've been bad about it, honestly. I went to like all boys Catholic high school.
Starting point is 00:40:19 Me too. I went to an all boys Catholic high school. I don't practice anymore, but that's another thing. I don't eat meat during land on Friday, so I try not to. So it's kind of like that's what it's kind of like where it's like people, it's a spectrum. It's a, you prefer it. But not.
Starting point is 00:40:31 Yeah, you prefer it, especially if it's convenient for you. You know, the way Henry just said that a lot of guilt there like, yeah, I should, but I don't. So there's, you know, if you can make it where people do what they want to do
Starting point is 00:40:42 without lifting a finger, then they'll do it. You know, that's great. That's pretty cool. I like that thing or I like that angle of finding, because I don't know anything
Starting point is 00:40:51 about Muslim culture. I don't know anything about Hindu culture, which is where you're from. I don't know. You probably don't know too much about Catholic. Yeah. It's kind of an interesting way to like look at how other religions do things.
Starting point is 00:41:02 Right. Another thing that we should talk about, not today because I don't think we know what we're talking about. we definitely don't yet is building things on top of banks i think that's super interesting what do you mean by that so like what simple did and like what what the what's the name of this company manzel man spell it mn z i l manzal okay kind of like what mansle did a building a building a front end on top of someone else's back end right which is the bank um i think that that's really
Starting point is 00:41:29 interesting simple dot com is my uh card i didn't know they did this at first this is kind of what drop shipping is so where you build the layer that says I'm going to get the customer to a landing page and they buy. Yep. But it's just going to place an order with this other manufacturer and they'll ship it directly to them. But it's super effective. I like that with banks because, um, like simple.
Starting point is 00:41:49 They did this all, I mean, it's, it's a little different. The card is all white and it's a brandy looking. Yeah. Um, and their app is really good. And so it's kind of interesting. I think this is kind of what Brex is doing. Right. That's totally what Brex is doing.
Starting point is 00:42:03 They're layered on top of Mastercard. I love these things. I really like that. Let's talk about how many minutes are we in? We're about an hour in. Okay, you want to, we can answer some questions or what do you want to do? Let's do one of these fun ones. So let's do the rebranding words. So this was in the Hustle, Hustle,
Starting point is 00:42:23 the Trends hustle Facebook group, which is like a source for entertainment and gold. Which go to trends.com and sign up. And if you use the phrase, million? Million. You'll get 50% off. That's my plug. I believe that's it. Is it slash million or it's a promo code?
Starting point is 00:42:38 Both. Both will work. Trends.com slash million or Trends. And you guys have this thing where you can sign up for a dollar, which is pretty dope. Yeah, and it's working. Great. I love it. I love it. Okay.
Starting point is 00:42:46 So somebody in the group, can you scroll up? I don't remember if I have their name. I should have their name to. Your other up. Yeah, there you go. Okay, we don't have the name. We should find, we should find. Alan, will you find the name of the guy who wrote this because I want to give him credit?
Starting point is 00:43:01 So somebody was just talking about like, hey, isn't it funny how people just rebrand stuff and like give it a whole new meaning. So he's talking about MSG. He's like, oh, MSG, which was like got this really bad reputation for being a food additive, whatever, and just rebranded as umami. And now it's this like foody word that like is good. And somebody came into the comments with like a bunch of really funny ones. You want to know another food one, Aoli.
Starting point is 00:43:25 Aoli? It's mayonnaise. Aoli is mayonnaise that has a little garlic flavoring. Look it up. I don't think that's true. I'm pretty sure it's better for you than mayonnaise. Look it up. Aoli is flavored mayonnaise.
Starting point is 00:43:37 Look up Aoli versus Google is Aoli mannais? I'm telling you, Aoli is mayonnaise. But there's like way more. You have to do it in a separate tab. Yeah, you can't do this because we have to... Oh, here, right there. What's the answer to say?
Starting point is 00:43:49 It says it right there. What's the top result? What's it say? Is Aoli any different than mayonnaise? Aole is made from garlic and olive oil. Am I off? All right, Henry Wenz. Okay, it's not exactly mayo, but I like the intent.
Starting point is 00:44:04 All right, so let's go back to the dock. Chile and sea bath is actually... Yeah, that's awesome. Yeah, I love it. So this guy had a bunch of them for business, which I like. Or nerds. You know, when you skip, you know, I don't know, I'm like this. I skip breakfast for years because I'm just lazy.
Starting point is 00:44:22 It didn't wake up early enough. And now it's intermittent fasting. It's like this health trend. It's like, oh, I'm fasting till noon. It's like, yeah, you skip breakfast. By Marlon Montgomery. Okay, Marlon. Marlon was the original post.
Starting point is 00:44:34 And then who posted all these comments in it? So Logan Jeffrey. Logan had a bunch of them that were fire that I like. That's the reason I put it on here. Okay, so when you just quit your job because you want to travel, now that's called disperse retirement. That's hilarious. Which I like. When you're a grossly underemployed writer or marketer, now you're a digital nomad because you have to go live in some low-cost area.
Starting point is 00:44:55 Or a coach. When you just like to eat beef and cheese because it's delicious, and now that's called the carnivore diet or keto. I used to call salami and cheese redneck charcutory. Sleeping around, online dating. I don't agree with all these. I'm relaying Logan's good ones. When you quit your shitty business idea, that was bad all along and everyone told you it was bad.
Starting point is 00:45:18 It's called pivoting. I like that. You're failing fast. When you have a fear of commitment and therefore do not own anything and do not settle down, you're now practicing minimalism. I love that. So these are great. And in general,
Starting point is 00:45:31 funny shit aside, I think there's a lot of power to this. I think as a leader, you often have to rebrand stuff so that it's more palatable to your team. or to your customers. Packaging. Yeah, you have to frame things, package them up in a certain way. We did this with our sushi restaurant where we realized that if we just describe things better
Starting point is 00:45:52 or differently with better words, people would buy more and we could charge more because people wanted to have sushi that was more sophisticated. So when we called it, you know, whatever, you know, Atlantic salmon with blah, blah, blah, rather than just saying salmon, that was better. Or if we would create a whole new word, together and put a little trademark next to it. That was even better than using common words. Every once in a while, there's certain things that they use the positive phrase and just generally accept it. I like to use a word that means the same thing, but it's generally regarded as a negative
Starting point is 00:46:24 just to fuck with people. So for example, instead of saying like, well, we're going to get the customer to do this, like we're going to get them to buy by doing this or we're going to influence them by doing this. I like to use the word manipulate. So like, yeah, let's manipulate them and get them to do this. Like where is that by definition work? Right. Just to kind of throw a... What happens if we call it what it is? Yeah, let's just say...
Starting point is 00:46:46 So we're going to manipulate them. Like, I'm going to manipulate this person to liking me. They're like, well, how are you going to do that? Well, I'm just going to be nice and charming and be listened to what they say. But if you use that word manipulate instead of influence, it fucks with them. And I love using that just to screw with people. Like, yeah, or like when political people say like, well, they have an agenda. I'd be like, yeah.
Starting point is 00:47:05 Well, so, guys, I'm here to talk to you about my agenda, which is to do, like, Of course I have an agenda. I'm trying to get you to do stuff. I'm like, yeah, you're tiring like someone has a political agenda. They should, right? Yeah, they should have a political agenda. I love using those words. Henry, if you scroll up for a second.
Starting point is 00:47:21 So, all right, does that say the end of this episode? Thanks for listening. Tell your friends, make it all happen. Leave us a review. We like that. Give us the real talk in the reviews because we read all of them and we like it. Or tweeted us. Sam's got 12,000 Twitter followers now.
Starting point is 00:47:33 He has surpassed me in the Twitter rankings. 11,300. 11,300. But he's counting. So he's winning. Great. All right. We're out of here. Thank you.

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