My First Million - Brainstorming $100M Ideas with the $1B+ King of Brands
Episode Date: October 8, 2025Want the guide to spot $100M+ Product Ideas? Get it here: https://clickhubspot.com/hre Episode 754: Sam Parr ( https://x.com/theSamParr ) and Shaan Puri ( https://x.com/ShaanVP ) brainstorm $100M i...deas with Eric Ryan ( https://x.com/ericthomasryan ). — Show Notes: (0:00) My $1B product playbook (3:32) Look for a sea of sameness (9:31) Trend trips (15:27) Remix opposing ideas (22:46) Case Study: Olly (32:14) The State of Make (37:54) IDEA: A better Metamucil (44:34) IDEA: The SoulCycle of diners (55:57) IDEA: White label chicken (1:03:28) Holy Grail of Naming (1:06:23) IDEA: Gourmet Babybels (1:10:28) IDEA: fun shaped cheese (1:14:26) Commit and then figure ou — Links: • Method - https://methodhome.com/ • Olly - https://www.olly.com/ • Welly - https://www.getwelly.com/ — 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)
So we have with us today, the King of Commerce, the Titan of Target, the big man of the brand,
Eric Ryan is here.
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 the road, let's travel never looking back.
You're the co-founder, the inventor of products that sit on a lot of people's shelves.
There's some in my kitchen right now.
Method soap, uh, Ollie gummies that my kids have every day, uh,
belly band-aids and then your investor and a whole bunch more. So you are here and you're kind of
the magic man when it comes to reinventing consumer categories. So when we did our call before this,
we agreed to do two things. I said, I want to know your playbook. How do you do this? How do you go
into the category and figure out which product to select and how to disrupt it? And you have this
like four-step process or whatever you outlined to me. And the other thing is we agreed that we
would each bring a couple of ideas of kind of half-baked ideas of brands that we think an entrepreneur
could go do, and we're going to kind of pitch them back and forth to each other. We didn't tell
each other beforehand. And so we'll see what we came up with. How's that sound? Amazing. That
sounds great. And that is way too kind of an introduction. So thrilled to be here. And I'm way too
kind. Thank you. How big were some of these businesses, just so we understand the magnitude here?
they are they're both probably getting close to a billion-dollar brands now but would you go in and
see like even 10 million of soap or vitamins sitting in a warehouse that's what it always blows
me away of like how many units we actually both are these products and that are sitting in people's
homes today and i've been looking forward to this because i remember sam used to host this conference
called hustlecon and he would invite founders entrepreneurs to come speak i didn't know your story at all
i was sitting there in the crowd and i remember you got on stage and you talked about
how you started method, how you started Ollie, how you started Wellie. And you had all these
phrases. You were like, I walked through the aisles and I look for, and I saw just a sea of sameness.
And you had a picture of the soap aisle or the dish soap aisle. And it was like every single one
was green and looked like a green packaging and looked just like an old school like my mom's
cleaning product. And then you had this like totally different shape of a bottle. It was like,
you know, blue or purple or whatever. And it was and it stood out. And the, I,
I remember the way you talked about it,
I really had never thought about how much thought goes into which category to go into,
how do you actually bring something fresh and new to the table,
and then how do you hustle to get it off the ground?
You had a great talk that day.
And so I know that was like, whatever, a decade ago.
But if we can get even close to that, this will be a success from my perspective.
And you said it in passing just now, but Method is probably a billion dollar brand now.
OLLie Gummies is also
OLLI, the vitamin
company is also probably half a billion
to a billion dollar brand.
And so that's pretty amazing.
And I think like one of the other
claims fame is Target loves you.
Don't they? I feel like somebody told me this,
they go, Target loves that guy.
Well, I love Target.
So it's a mutual love affair.
You've like launched brands with them,
like even from the start, right?
You have like a kind of a unique relationship with them.
Is that right?
I do.
I mean, what we did back in
Oh, God, 2002, when we pitched this idea of designer commodities, like, it was at a time where no mass retail work with startups.
And so through a lot of Hail Mary passes and some good luck, we were able to be the first to kind of go in there.
And it's just, it's been an amazing partnership ever since.
So can we do your process?
Before we brainstorm the ideas, I want to hear the process you outlined.
And I took a couple notes, so I can kind of prompt you.
But you basically had told me these four, three or four things that you do when you go go in.
because I was like, you've done this not once, not twice, but three times.
And I was like, can I nerd out with you a little bit?
Yeah, and as you're good to hear, I'm really annoying to go to a grocery store with.
To me, it's like the Super Bowl of Commerce.
So every time I'm in a mass retailer or a grocery store or a drugstore, I'm always hunting.
So I came out of, I have a really simple model, and it was built off of this idea of what I learned in advertising,
which is how do you take a really deep consumer insight and translate to great creative execution?
So my kind of core thesis as an entrepreneur is to look at.
look for these, you know, like you said, these kind of white spaces where there's a C of
S-Same mess and it just kind of smells ripe to go into different. And what I do is I look for
a cultural shift or a big macro trend that that category is missed. And then in between that
and where the category is is the business opportunity. So in the case of method, there was like
two big cultural shifts I found. One was this idea of lifestyling of the home. You know, this is back
in 2002. You know, you look at a dish soap more than you use it. But nobody thought about these products
as part of like the emotional connection to your home and, you know, making decorative.
Basically, looking good on your sink. So like I keep my method soap next to my faucet. So just like
looking good when it's on my counter. Exactly. Which is, because you look at it more than you actually
use it. So it's a pretty meaningful part of the experience of buying a dish soap. At that time,
did you see, what else did you see where you're like, huh, that's new, that's new. And then you
you applied that to dish soup. So what, what else?
were people doing that you, where you noticed the shift before you did it?
Well, it's really in personal care. And so a lot of, like, I always say, like, I'm a bit of a
thief, too. Like, I don't steal from my competition, but I try to steal from as far away as
possible. So in method, there's two areas I stole. I stole from personal care. So if you
looked at the colors, the fragrances, compared to, like, how home care, which was these, like,
really toxic cleaners at the time. So I brought a lot of that personal care approach over to
home care. And I also stole from the housewares. I would always say, like, I go to a department
store. I look at the beauty aisle, and then I would look at the houseware's aisle up top.
And so we stole, like, all these beautiful base shapes. And so we wanted these things to look
like little objects of desire, you know, sitting on your camera top. Okay. So the first thing
you said was you look for a cultural shift that's happening that a category has missed. So it's
happening and it's maybe happening elsewhere because what do they say about the future? The future is
here it's just not evenly distributed.
So a shift has started to happen, but maybe it hasn't hit in the home care aisle yet.
Oh, my God, I got steal that from you.
That's great.
It's not an original.
That's a bunch of VCs like to say that one.
All right.
So that's the first thing you do.
And are you looking for a new category or are you looking for a preexisting big category?
What do you like to do?
So like some people would say, oh, that's already done.
It's already saturated.
I need to go find something that doesn't exist yet,
and they're making bets on what doesn't exist.
And it seems like what you did was you went into things that already existed
and you weren't scared of the saturation or that it's already been done for 50 years.
No, that's right.
I think it's much easier to make money by creating an iteration of something that already exists
because then you don't have to drive all the consumer education
to educate and explain something that's wildly new.
And I was living in London in the 90s,
I was super inspired by Richard Branson, as many entrepreneurs are,
But what I liked about, he had a model.
And I think that's what inspired me to create a model.
His model is an entertainment model, right?
So you'd go in these really unsexy industries like airlines,
and you'd apply his entertainment model that he really understood well.
And so I was always inspired by this idea.
And I looked at, you know, if he looked at any successful serial entrepreneur,
they typically had a model.
But what I also loved about Richard did is he went into like really well-established categories
that were easy to understand and just put his twist on it.
And so that very much became a lot of the way I thought about how I would approach entrepreneurship.
And then you talked about being a thief.
Can you give a couple examples there?
So you said, I go to a big category.
I walk through the aisles.
I look for the sea of sameness.
I look for a culture shift.
Oh, sorry, you told me one other things.
That was great.
You go, you said something.
You go, have they made it unnecessarily over, over complicated?
And you go, I think they're hiding something.
There's an insecurity there.
if they've made this product category feel overcomplicated
and that they take themselves.
And another one was taking themselves too seriously.
Can you talk about those two attributes also?
Yeah.
So I think any type of category is taking themselves too serious.
As you said, they're probably hiding something, right?
There's like an insecurity there.
And so a lot of my model, too,
is going into these categories that are unnecessary complicated.
Can I really simplify it back?
Make it easy for the consumer.
And also, I love categories that take themselves way too serious.
And so I love to bring almost like an inner child approach into the categories that are great.
So if you look at method, it's kind of like what a kid would use to clean the kitchen.
If you looked at Ali, like I got adults to take gummy vitamins, you know, in masses.
That didn't happen before.
With Wellie, I got adults to wear, you know, bandages with patterns and colors on it versus just the nude ones that are supposed to hide away with your skin, but never really do.
And, you know, when I tried to do with the idea of a culture shift.
So if you look at method, it was both this idea of lifestyle of the home, but also at the time, you know, you were asked to pollute when you clean or use poison to make your home healthier.
So there was this other big macro trend of health and wellness sustainability.
But to your point, you know, it was showing up some categories, but it was yet to show up here.
So it's really connecting the dots on those trends and bringing into new spaces that I find is kind of core to my model.
I saw that you said that one of your favorite ways to come up with ideas is to travel abroad.
We had this guy named Kevin Ryan on the podcast. Kevin has founded this thing called MongoDB,
which is like a $30 billion software business. But very interestingly, he also started guilt,
which is, you know, guilt group, the women's clothing thing. And he was like, I got the idea for guilt when I went to France.
And I think I saw this thing called the Vendee. I think it was called where it was basically like flash sales for clothing.
And so he would talk about that as well.
of going abroad. When you go abroad and you like to travel, do you like, are you going on trips
just to find ideas? Yeah, totally. It's a, I think by far, for me, it's where I get my best ideas
for a couple of reasons. One, I just think better when I'm in motion. So, you know, walking retail
with a cup of coffee in your hand, there's ideas flow better than ever sitting at a desk.
Two is we do these like trend trips where we also take designers with us. And so our goal is not only
to spot ideas, but translate it immediately into a design idea that we can bring back.
But also, when you're in a foreign country, you're jet lagged, which means nobody's bothering
you. I think you see when you're jet lagged, too, you look at things a little bit more fuzzier,
which could be a good thing. But also just opens up to your pathways where you're walking
retail where everything is foreign, you don't understand the language. And for me, like trying to
connect the dots between seeing what somebody's doing in one category, could we apply that
to another space, it's so much easier to do when you're out of your home market.
So what's an example?
So where would you go?
And what's an example of maybe an idea you had while you were on one of these trend trips
that turned into like a success with one of your brands?
Yeah.
I mean, I think one of my most favorite was, and this was like 20 years ago.
So this was before collaborations became such, you know, a mainstream part of building any
brand.
But we got Orla Kiley, who was really known for very expensive handbags and patterns to do,
a collaboration with us at Target, which as far as I know is the first ever designer collaboration.
And somebody who was known for very expensive items, speaking of opening those patterns into a product
that sold for $3 and was the first tie to the target ever did designer collaboration, like at
that price point. So that was out of London, was a huge success. There was a building we saw in
Japan that we absolutely loved the way it was skin. We turned that into a hand-washed design.
Like the shape of the building, or what do you mean?
Yeah, it's like the texture of the building
It was in Tokyo
and just had this incredible kind of like pillowed
texture on the outside of it
and we turned that as inspiration into a bottle
And you're saying that like really simply like
Oh, we we saw the texture of a building in Tokyo
And then it turned it into a hand wash
Like that doesn't even
Those dots seem really far apart
Can you describe your actual process
So you go to Japan presumably right
You're then going to do what?
You just walk around.
He said the texture of the building.
That's like when you're like on drugs, you're like, can you feel this building?
Wouldn't it be great if that was a bottle of soap?
Okay, so I try to design everything like an object because it's all about creating these like little objects of desire,
especially when you're doing it in a category like soap that you have to buy and you're trying to turn in something you want to buy.
So I look at everything kind of through this idea if it's an object.
So I looked at a building, the building, the building,
the building looks like an object.
And it was easy for me to think about like,
oh my God, that pattern, that shape, that texture is amazing.
Would if that little object was sitting on a shelf at a store
versus in the ground as a building?
So it's like trying to look for those types of patterns.
Or the original method bottle was this camping fuel bottle I found in Norway.
And I just love the shoulders on that bottle.
So we translated that into our first ever product
because we couldn't afford a dust or decide.
that point. So I had to find something we could just riff off of.
Hey, everyone, really quick. I can already tell it this is an episode that you guys are going to be
taking a lot of notes on. And that's kind of a pain in the butt to do while you're either
watching or listening to this. And so we actually made it really easy. We made the entire episode
into a downloadable PDF. So you can actually download the transcript. Look at the notes. And
this way you could just sit back and enjoy the podcast right now and get the notes later. So the link is in
the description below. Click it if you want those notes. Now back to the episode.
You told me something that I loved. You said my favorite question when I'm doing these trips is,
what if this, but for that? And you said something, you go, you know, I'm trying to take one dot over
here and then say, what if that was connected to this dot over here? And you said something cool,
you go, the further apart those two things are, the more powerful, the potential idea. Like,
it's not always going to work, but like, if you, you're going to be, you. You know, if you,
just look at your competitors and you say, oh, we could do that too. That's not very powerful
idea. But if you take something from a whole different country or industry or like different
genre and you bring it to your genre, all of a sudden you have something, right? By the way,
an example that just came to mind. I got a little kids. And the most popular show right now on
Netflix is K-pop demon hunters. And they basically did like K-pop music, but then like kids
cartoon, American kids cartoons, which like wasn't what people were doing before. Like you were doing
cocoa melons like a baby singing american nursery rhymes and right now the most popular songs for like
you know five to eight year olds half the lyrics are in korean but they love it and it worked and
they you know they connected two different dots that seemed far apart but it created a pretty
powerful idea when it works yeah and first of all you make me really miss being able to watch
cartoons and my kids because they're all older now i love that show and i think what you're
describing is really it's about creating creative tension and the more too disparate ideas are that come
the more creative tension. So method was really the first to do eco-cheek. So we brought together
high design and deep sustainability. Those were really two opposing ideas. But by bringing it
together, it created this creative tension. And also, when you have creative tension, you create
a deeper experience that also drives much more loyalty and people stay within the brand. So that's
exactly right. So I try to look for the most two disparate ideas that could come together.
The other part that that unpacks is this idea of finding something that lives at the intersection
of familiar and novel.
So if it's too familiar, right,
it lacks complete differentiation.
If it's too novel,
it's incredibly foreign
and it becomes harder
to get somebody to try it.
So I look for those ideas
that bring together
exactly what you just said
of this creative tension,
but there's enough familiarity in it.
You can jump into it,
but there's enough novelty to it
that it makes it a new experience.
And it's easy to say,
but it's hard to find,
that's the art form,
I think, of finding those intersections.
I'm not sure what percentage
of Wellie or Method soap, you would say,
was to just the fact that it was a different colored Band-Aid
or a different shaped bottle.
But if it's a high percentage, it's sort of insane.
That's kind of a hard, you're like this,
it's almost like this seems too easy a little bit, right?
The more I try to innovate, the less successful I've been,
where I've moved more into that space of being too novel.
I think I feel more times by being too now.
than being too familiar.
We launched the most amazing laundry detergent years ago.
It was 10x concentrated.
So it was the size of a shampoo bottle for 50 loads of laundry.
But because it was so small, this was an idea I got out of Japan, too,
where I saw they had bigger laundry detergent,
but they would use these almost like the X meltwash,
where you squeeze it, pre-measures it.
But we turned it into where you just pump it,
a pre-measure dose.
But it was so hard to get consumers to believe
that something so small could be so effective because they've been trained forever that, you know,
a giant jug of laundry detergent is what you need to get your clothes clean. But yeah, I've always
usually over-innovated when I fail than under-innovated. I think I saw a quote with you and Simon Sinek
with his on his podcast. He said, if it's hard, it's probably wrong. And then he said,
I know I have a good idea when I can't believe others aren't doing it. And I think that when a lot of
entrepreneurs want to grow, their companies are start a new company. I know I fall victims as
all the time. I somehow think that there's a correlation between, this sounds controversial,
but there's a correlation between how hard I work or how hard something is and how much
value a customer will get or how valuable my business can get. Yeah, there's a kind of this
golden rule. And this came out of a lot of apparel in fashion, which is if you change one thing,
like if you do one iteration off of the core, you have a higher probability of success.
The second you change two or three things, you're most likely going to fail.
It's almost like an advertising we used to say, if you throw a consumer an egg, they're going to catch it.
If you throw them two or three eggs, their chances are they're going to drop it because you're throwing too much change at them too fast, whether that's communication or a product.
But also, I think it's such a, we live in such a surplus world, right, of like endless ideas and choices that I think it creates this pressure to really sometimes over-innovate to be too different.
And to your point of like, if it seems so obvious, then I would always get tripped up.
of like, well, why has nobody done this before if it's this obvious to me?
That's a really good insight. That's a really good insight about the, you know, just change one thing.
Do you think that that applies across software companies or internet companies or is that just commerce or fashion,
like things that are more consumable and that I touch and feel and wear?
I think it applies to everything, whether you're launching. I mean, even if you're, you know,
within a B2B business, arguably, you're just as distracted as a consumer as you are.
when you're, you know, I think, I guess a real consumer. And I don't know that world as well,
but I would imagine, again, just creating simple iterations off of a successful model is way
more likely to succeed than trying to create something radically new from scratch. Or when something
radically new from scratch has started, I mean, think about like in the social space of, you know,
MySpace, Brancer, it was really the third that got it right. But it's just kind of simple iterations
off of that first model.
I did a call the other day with an AI company that's raised a ton of money.
And they have this huge valuation,
this closer, basically a billion dollar valuation.
And they initially grew because in AI, AI is so hot.
There's so much attention that people were willing to try a bunch of things.
But now they're like, hey, how do we grow from here?
So they're like, hey, really respect your growth ideas.
We want to do a growth session.
I was like, I don't know, guys.
It's not really my, you know, like, I don't know if I can solve your problem.
But cool, I'll jump on it.
a call. And we get on the call and they start telling me all about this, all the stuff. And I just
kept asking the same question. And I was like, cool. So why would somebody choose to use you? Like, why?
Because most people today are using tool A. You want them to switch to tool B. And I was like,
awesome. So like, why is tool B better than tool A? And then they were like, oh, it's way better.
Like in all these other, all these different ways. I was like, awesome. So just like, tell me the one
that like is the biggest one that would immediately convince me. And they were like, well,
well, there's not really like one.
And I was like, cool.
Okay, so let's say there's three.
Just tell me one of them first.
They were so focused on we're better that they forgot to say we're different.
Like, how are you better?
And they were trying to throw four eggs.
And I was like, none of those eggs were very convincing and they all just cracked on me, right?
And I wish they had just thrown me one egg that said, listen, for this type of person,
here's the problem with the tools that you're currently using.
And we can, we do it this way instead.
And I say, you know, that that would resonate.
That would be obviously the ideal scenario.
So I definitely think this applies to not just consumer products.
The way I think that comes from is just pure ego.
I think a lot of entrepreneurs, like their ego gets in the way,
and so they almost intentionally overcomplicate it
to show how special the product is, therefore how special they are.
And the best entrepreneurs I've always met
are the ones who take incredibly complex ideas and simplify it down.
And then it's easy for consumers to get it,
for their teams to execute.
And I think that art form of simplification,
is the biggest hack in entrepreneurship.
And yeah, the number of pitches I sit through
and like, I'm like, you're intentionally overcomplicating this
to justify evaluation or justify your specialness.
I think it is ego, but there is something strange.
I think that, like, it's easy for you to think this
because you've done it so many times,
but there is something strange where it's like, wait,
so if I just change the color of the band-aids, it's going to win.
And that's obviously you've done a lot more than that.
But like within my company, I run a,
within my company with my employees, they'll be like, we have to do this, this, this,
or this.
I'm like, but what if we just like don't do any of that and just make better ads?
Or, you know, like, you just like, just do one thing.
But for some reason, that's hard to conceptualize that, like, just a minor change on one
thing can create a significant amount of value because you think to yourself, I have
to work one billion dollars worth of work or put one billion dollars worth of effort in
order to have a one billion dollar idea.
But it's oftentimes it's not the reality.
Well, can we do an example?
here with, you talked a little bit about method. I want to talk about Ali. Maybe it's because I take it
every day. Maybe my kids take it. So it's like very like in my life. And, um, you went into the vitamins
category. So let's imagine, just take you back. I don't know what year this was. You walked into the
vitamins category. You're looking there and you see, um, you know, a bunch of sort of nature made type
of looking things. You got maybe Flintstone vitamins. You're still hanging on for dear life. And you saw an
opportunity. I just want to give you one prompt, which is he said something on the prequel that was hilarious,
Sam, he goes, I went into the aisle and I saw, okay, cool.
You know, first thing I observed, all of them were round.
So I thought, okay, I guess we're going to have a square packaging.
And I just thought that's literally the funniest, like, the funniest way of like, well,
I guess that's that's that's.
If everybody's round, then we must be spared.
If everybody was squirder, then we would have been round.
Like, it's as simple as that there is no focus groups.
There was no, it was like, yeah, they're all, they're all round.
So we have no choice but to be square.
That's awesome.
And the other thing I remember was vitamins used to be like a,
a game of inference.
So it would say, you know, whatever,
vitamin D, but you don't know what vitamin D does, right?
You'd have to then know what is the purpose of vitamin D
or what is the purpose of melatonin or what is the purpose of,
I don't know, whatever the thing I put you to sleep.
But you guys just wrote sleep.
And he wrote like, you know, immunity, right?
Like you just wrote the benefit instead of the feature.
And I was like, oh, that was also quite simple of a change to make.
Can you talk about, take us back.
You go, you walk into that aisle or I don't know how it actually started.
Yeah.
So I sold method, but I still involved.
And I, first of all, like, I had, for the first time I like, I'm pretty optimistic happy
by default person, but for the first time in my life, I felt a little rarless because I was
like, I'm an entrepreneur, and suddenly I was, did not feel like an entrepreneur anymore.
I was working for somebody else.
And I was also doing a project for Target to create what we call made to matter.
And the goal was to get them to have credit for having all these natural brands.
And so we were looking for these brands that connected with millennial moms.
And we couldn't find any, we couldn't find one for the vitamin category.
So I just went and literally walked the aisle.
And first thing I noticed was people stressing out trying to choose something that was healthy for them.
Since I think I was studying the aisle, people assumed maybe I knew what I was doing.
And so, like, people would just randomly ask me, like, do you know what magnesium's for?
They thought you worked there?
It was, yeah, they were just like.
Man standing here, staring at us?
Just lost people in that.
that aisle. And it was a dog's breakfast. It was really hard to shop. The brands were super
inspiring. The packaging was terrible. So that was the clue dig here. And so the first thing I tried
to figure out was like, all right, what is kind of going back? What is that big cultural shift this
category is missing? And what I figured it out was it was really millennials view health and
wellness as a lifestyle pursuit. And the clue for me and kind of what you said earlier of like
you start seeing these trends in one area, the clue was really soul cycle. And the way,
way that SoulCycle had repositioned
fitness into something that was almost spiritual.
But I love the branding of SoulCycle, the name, the whole identity.
And so my inspiration a little was like, all right, what would the soul cycle of vitamins
look like?
And if we reimagine a vitamin as a lifestyle product.
So then to your point, it's like, all right, well, it's got to be a square pack.
And then I always want to design everything to have like a...
So again, it's really designed as a product, not a package.
So I wanted to design it like a jar, something you would want to leave out, because if you left it out, you most likely remember to keep taking it.
But also, like, it actually had like intrinsic value.
And then I realized, okay, well, we have to put a giant cap on it.
So we might as well make the cap the logo.
So then the whole idea, and this flowed really within a matter of probably days, the idea that it would be a square jar with a white cap, and that's what would make it iconic.
And then it just started quickly flowing from there of like, well, everybody else is selling like,
why sell biotin?
Why not just sell beauty?
Why sell melatonin?
Why not sell sleep?
And do these really unique blends.
And again, it was all the spirit of really making this thing easier to understand that almost, you know, again, turning a vitamin into something you have to buy, into something you want to buy in this little, like object of desire.
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We didn't talk about the hustle that it takes to make them happen because there's like the artist brain that you're talking about.
You're like, so then I took the roof of the Japanese, you know, HUD I was staying in and that became the lid and then I did this and I did that.
But now you just have a product idea at that point.
A box.
But like, you know, the cool thing about you.
A beautiful box, though.
Don't give me a wrong box.
The best box.
People love this box.
So you, but, you know, all entrepreneurs, they're typically not like the best in the world
at a single thing, but they're like pretty damn good at a couple of unrelated things.
So, you know, maybe there's better designers than you are product, product designers than you.
But you also have the entrepreneurial hustle to be like, I'm going to go.
now stand outside of this natural grocery store and pass out samples, or I'm going to go do a thing
that's like, I'm going to keep showing up in some way that, like, other people would have given up
five days ago, but I was still here, and that was the thing that gave me the break. You know,
your top 20% in two different things, rather than being top 1% or top 0.1% in a single category.
I'm just assuming that. Is that true? And are there any stories of the hustle that it took to get,
to get into the stores, actually, get the momentum? Yeah, super true. It is funny. It's like,
As an entrepreneur, I think a lot about energy flow.
And when I'm working on something, if it's giving me energy back, then I know it's right.
And to your earlier comment of if it's hard, it's wrong, that's a lot of the way.
And I'm working on a concept right now that I've literally been pushing water uphill.
It's been painful as far as trying to, but last week it broke.
I'm like, oh, there it is.
Now it's flowing.
Like, I can't stop working on it right now because it's energy giving.
It's flowing.
The narrative is like beautifully coming together.
Each insight's unlocking the next.
but in that case, like, I had to push water uphill for, like, the last six months on this concept,
trying to get it to a place where suddenly, like, I can see it now.
And then hopefully other people will see it.
But to your point of execution, like, at the end of the day, like, ideas are easy.
Like, execution is a hard part.
So with method, I think that was where we had, because we had, you know, we're Adam and I were two guys in a dirty flat in San Francisco with, like, zero, you know, zero experience on how to make or sell anything.
and I think where that persistence really paid off is we had to sell it into these local San Francisco grocery stores where the manager made the decision.
So we would just show up at 6 a.m. and, like, you know, grumpy manager and you got, you know, quickly you've got literally three minutes to like pitch your idea for this new premium cleaning brand.
And I realized a lot of ways selling was just really this transfer of emotion.
Like, I don't think he ever believed in the product that we're selling.
but you got to get him to believe in you.
And in some cases, believe that you're going to keep showing up until he says yes and that persistence.
But it's really that emotion, that energy that's contagious.
And it's finding it first in what you're building that you love so then you can share that with other people
and have the energy to keep going when things get hard, which of course they will.
Do you look at a company like a project?
Like this is my art project and I'm going to jump from thing to thing to thing.
Do you acknowledge it?
Or are you more of a, are you more operational?
I, I'm a project guy at heart.
I love the start, middle, and finish of creating something.
But also to build great companies, the operating side of it is so important.
The kind of my kind of core philosophy of building companies is this idea of artisan operators.
So I want to build companies that have incredible imagination, creativity that can innovate,
but also run a really good predictable business with great supply chain, finance controls.
and doing both, like if you think about it,
there's so few companies in the world,
Apple, Nike,
that do both really, really well at scale.
And so I try to build teams and cultures
that have this idea of being great artisan operators.
But I do, you know, at the heart of it,
I do love, you know,
I heard Tim Kugel, who was on my board,
say once he referred to Yahoo as a project,
you know, which he started as employee number six,
the CEO, scaled it through an IPO and beyond.
And when he referred to Yahoo as a project, I thought that was pretty cool.
Do you have like an open check from Unilever or Target?
And they're just like, whatever you got going on, get after it and come see us in two or three years.
And we'll look at the traction and we'll just buy your company.
I wish.
It was that easy.
But no.
I get a great.
In his chair with a cat on his arm.
I mean, we've had a lot of success.
We've had a lot of failures as well.
It always, like, every one of them is hard and hard in their own way.
I do, so I'm moving over.
I joined Greatcroft, and we're launching a new Great Croft Consumer Brands Fund.
So I'm moving into the VC space.
And kind of what you're talking about, too, it's, I realize my superpower of working with
entrepreneurs is to help infuse them in energy because, you know, I've sat in their shoes
so many times to understand how hard it is.
And so I love now not being the quarterback on the first.
field always throwing the pastos, but actually being the coach on the sidelines and, like,
coaching these young founders.
And it's just a thrill to do that now.
You told me something kind of amazing.
You said that you went on your trend trips, let's say, to Tokyo or wherever you're going,
and you took some people from Target with you during this kind of like brainstorming phase,
but you had this system that was kind of like going to wow them.
Can you tell this story about how you, the 24-hour cycle that you had that would like wow them?
Yeah, I mean, a lot of people, you know, trend trips are quite common within consumer, especially about retailers.
The problem is you come back with all these amazing photos and then you're buried in your inbox and meetings you've missed and usually it goes nowhere.
So the process that we found worked really well is we'd kick off every trend trip with like, okay, here are, you know, ground ourselves.
These are the big macro trends.
And then we'd hire somebody on the ground where for Asia or Europe and we would go to all of like the most influential retail that was occurring in that.
market. But everybody had almost like a scavenger hunt. You had an assignment. By the time we got to
that pub at 5 o'clock to sit down for a happy hour, everybody had to have multiple ideas that they were
excited about while being in the field. And then we would talk about it. We would pick a couple.
And then as we're going to dinner, I would call it into our creative team who's sitting in San
Francisco where it's morning. And then they would have all day to work on the brief that we just
gave them, they would send it at the end of their day. We would wake up and then at breakfast,
we would present what looked like polished products ideas to target. And so by time we got on that
plane to go home, we actually had sold in new products. That's like how South Park makes an episode.
If you guys see Matt, where like Matt and Trey will like write all day and then they'll like send
it to their Korean editor editing team. And then the next morning they like, oh, cool, thanks.
And they like run with it. I saw the podcast version of this, Sam. So we do a thing where
whenever we have a guest on
or like especially when we do them in person
we will bring a gift
because I was just like oh you know like
this person took time out of their day
they did this like I want this to feel like a great experience
like what makes a great experience when you
when you have something when you when you are with somebody
I think given a gift is a nice thing right
Steve Bartlett who's another podcaster
he was on Jimmy Felon the other day
and Jimmy was talking about how his experience on the show
he goes you guys do this incredible thing
I did the podcast with you
and when we got up and the episode was done
somebody from your team came and handed me this book,
and it's a photo book of printed photos from the podcast
that they were just doing moments earlier.
And he was like, I've never seen anything like this.
And this guy's been doing TV production
with Hollywood stars for years,
but like creating, like going a little bit extra to create a wow.
And in that case, it's the speed of the turnaround,
similar to what you were saying with your,
the speed of the turnaround.
I'm sure a lot of people will come up with mockups
or product ideas two weeks later
at a follow-up meeting.
But the emotion's gone and the wow factor's gone at that point.
Doing it in the 24-hour cycle is that little extra, that entrepreneurial juice that, like,
I think most people wouldn't even think to go.
They wouldn't, they would think that's, that's, there's an invisible fence that you can't do that.
Well, see, living that state of make.
And also, I love that line by Steve Jobs of, I trust people, just not in groups.
And so it allows you to keep a really small team that's agile, that isn't overthinking things.
and just living in that state of make,
and that's where magic,
and I'm such a huge student of SNL,
and how Saturday Night Live,
their entire creative process,
any of the former actors on it
that's written in autobiography,
I've listened to,
I think I know it by heart now
of what they do Tuesday morning through,
but there is something so powerful
about being in that state of make.
And now that we have,
between AI and digital tools,
where it could build and make things
in such real time,
I think it's even more powerful.
And it's also where you see real talent
versus people who don't know how to actually do anything,
they know how to manage.
And so it's a place where, like, builders and doers really thrive
and managers kind of just get in the way.
I don't know if we should do it right now,
which maybe have a part two,
but it would actually be awesome.
I never realized for, like, you know,
Sean has an e-com brand
and for all the people who are in the more physical space,
it would be really fun to see how you use AI to ideate.
That would be really interesting.
I never thought about, you know,
folks making physical products,
being able or not being able to use it.
Oh, I'm so bad with you at ChbT right now.
Like last night, just I use it as a whole creative team and partner.
It's absolutely amazing what you can do now.
I want to get to the brainstorm.
So we did promise.
I basically said, outline your method and then let's use the method to try to come up with some ideas,
which I think is fun.
Living in the state of make on the podcast too, right?
Because how many podcasts would actually try that?
Okay, so you, just to outline, your process was find a big category,
ideally an already big category, so you don't have to educate the consumer about something new
that I haven't thought about buying.
You want to find a sea of sameness.
Everybody's kind of doing the same thing.
You want to look if there's a cultural shift elsewhere that hasn't applied to this category.
Ideally, it's something that's overly complicated.
They're taking themselves too seriously.
Then, to crumb up with your idea, you'd be a thief.
You find unrelated things.
You say, what if we did that over here?
And you're trying to come up with a single stroke that cuts through the noise.
That might be your packaging or your colors, your positioning, whatever it may be.
the square bottle when everybody else is round.
And then you got to hustle to get the momentum going.
All right.
So I came up with a couple of half.
I'm calling these half baked ideas.
I don't think they're,
I think one might be good,
but the others are pretty tough.
Did you have a chance to come up with some?
And if so,
let's,
we'll go back and forth.
Yes.
Yep,
I got a couple.
Okay.
I'm going to pitch you one.
And then I want you to,
to give me the,
the thumbs up,
the thumbs down.
Feel free to be brutally harsh.
It makes for better content.
All right.
All right.
I think this first idea,
I think it's genuinely good.
The other ones, I don't really have a lot of faith in.
But this one, I generally believe in.
All right, so I think about products that my mom takes that I'm going to take.
Because humans are not, like the world, you know, feels like it's changing really fast,
but biologically, we're not changing that fast, right?
And so when I see my parents, I'm seeing a future window into what I might look like
or things that they prioritize that I don't really think about today.
And my mom was just over at my house.
And one thing my mom takes religiously is fiber.
She drinks fiber.
every single day. And I've, you know, I'm in a world where I hear about gut health and microbiome and
fancy stuff, but she's like, I need to take this to poop. Okay? So that's what I'm going to do
and I need to take this to put. You got that? I'm like, yeah, that's simple enough. And so then I
looked, I looked at the brands that she's using and I walked through the aisle. So preparing for this
podcast, I went to the grocery store. And I walk through and I see metamusel, which to me sounds like a
disease. I see benefiber, which sounds like an Obamacare, you know, spin off. And I just thought,
the leading brands in the fiber category,
I think are completely outdated.
But I do think that there's something familiar about fiber.
So, like, I get pitched a lot of products
that I don't really know if they'll work or not.
But if somebody said, hey,
this increases the fiber in your diet,
I would personally have pretty high conviction
that that's, like, good for me.
I just don't want to take a grandma product, right?
Because that's not really,
that wouldn't,
I would feel unhealthy taking the product.
So I want a fiber brand that I feel like I'm,
in the same way when I take, you know,
protein or amino acids or something that's like, yeah, I'm at, I'm trying to be peak performance
right now. And so I want to reinvent the fiber category. That's the point of view. And I have an
idea for how to do that, which is to get out of this kind of grandma product category and do a
fresh take on fiber. Sharks. All right. Where does that land with you? Well, let's start with the
space, because if it's the wrong category, then there's, it's, it's pointless to go any further.
I think he found great white space. Like, I agree. Fibers.
a new protein, as protein gets more and more saturated and the record, you know, we're seeing
huge growth across all areas of higher fiber. The place I would look is if you walk Costco
and what fiber products are available there, you're right, it's the legacy brands.
Nobody's really put a fresh spin on it. You could do it, like, where would you steal from?
I would steal from juice bars of like that wellness, appetite appeal,
like a green juice, like what is a modern green juice
look like as a fiber product?
And then you can innovate on flavors around it.
And the other thing is, it's a really great margin category.
Right.
We, I have this friend.
Do you guys know what Kegel exercises are for men?
I don't know how to do it.
You're supposed to like squeeze something inside, but like, but what?
Women have women, anyone, the few women who listen to this,
they know what that is.
But for men.
All four of you, listen up.
This part's for you.
Yeah, for the men, people apparently do Kegel exercises so don't like premature ejaculate basically during sex.
I think that's the main thing, but I have a, I've got a buddy who made a.
That's commitment, by the way.
Well, I've got, yeah, yeah, like, you must, you really need it.
And I have a friend who created a Kegel exercise app for men.
And he was like promoting this.
And I was like, man, I see why young or any man wants this.
That's great.
It sounds like you're doing great for the world, but my honor costs too much.
I don't want to be an influencer or a promoter for this.
And I wonder if there's like a little bit with fiber where it's like,
I don't know if I want to talk about like, you know, pooping more.
So I did think about this.
And I have two at two possible angles.
We either lean in or we swerve out.
Okay, lean in.
Here's the lean in path.
We'll think that.
The lean in path is going to be, look, poop is, yeah, poops, poop's poop.
It kind of could be funny.
And so I actually pitched this to our friend who came on the podcast, Hussein Minhaj.
I said, listen, I got a product for you.
Because I was like, this guy's so funny that, like, his ad creative would be, like,
would perform better than anybody else's ad creative.
And it's almost like, you know, any celebrity who hawks a product, there's a little bit
of sellout nature.
And so it's almost funny to sell out for something that's like so clearly silly and in that
way that it might actually work for him.
Like, he gets a license to, like, promote the product because it's kind of a silly
product. So one way is to lean in and actually have a comedian who you kind of have as a face of the
brand that actually leans into the fun of it. You can be the dude the dude wipes so well as
a cute leaned into that to the use case. All right. So then there's the swerve out paths,
which was you're right. Maybe it's not about maybe it's not about maybe the framing is a
little more on metabolism or digestion. Can you work? Can you use a different word? Because
I don't know anybody that wants worse metabolism. Yeah, like cleaner system. And I've never heard really of
that many products that like talk about like this this improves your metabolism right and so you get
away from the sort of like the lower intestine area and you sort of like you move up towards more like
the stomach and you get a little away from the gross stuff and you talk about metabolism so those are
my two ideas i love it and i would do if i were you and i would then create two very different
concepts around that so i would do like like copier like dude white popery approach that just
completely unbashfully claims that that function and then to your point then I would go to a really
elevated almost like beauty like a brooch and then what would you do would you test those in some way
or you just look at it and feel which one feels right like what would you do once you come up with
the two very disparate concepts so I like to solve the work in the creative and so I take those
two concepts I'd work with with a designer and creative team really bring him to life and then first
I'd be like what one of my most excited about back to that idea of
energy. Like, which one am I, like, personally excited? I would share it with friends and family,
because if they don't like it, why would anybody else? And then if I was really torn,
I would do consumer auditions, not for the consumer to, like, choose A versus B, but just so I can
hear feedback from consumers, like, in a qualitative focus group to help kind of guide my
decision of which direction I want to go. And then I would also put it in front of retailers.
I don't ask the buyers. I think most people go into buyers with the intent of, like, I'm going
to sell to you. I'm here to prove myself versus I'm here to improve myself. And when I sit
down buyers, I was trying to go into improve and really invite their feedback into the process.
That's interesting. Consumer auditions. I never heard that. That sounds good. I like that.
That sounds way cooler than focus groups. All right, rookie. What do you got to pitch, Eric? Let's hear it.
So I'm going to pitch arguably one of the most important institutions in America and arguably one of the
lost institutions of America. And that is the American Diner. At one point,
these beautiful, you know, silver, and it was really the first third place before Starbucks.
And in a world where more and more, I think we'll see a backlash to AI of understanding what is real and what is not,
we're going to want these places of human connection and just deep authenticity.
And there's also no better place than to really start your day.
So my pitch is, I'm going to go back to SoulCycle again.
I would create the sole cycle of the diner.
It would only be open from morning through lunch.
So it's one shift, so it's a really good academic model.
But when you walk into it, it feels incredibly vibrant.
So I would do probably like the entire thing would feel almost like a modern barn of white beboard with yellow accents.
I would have a stand-alone grab-and-go, juice bar, coffee bar.
but the rest of the restaurant would be how a diner is set up where it's all stool bar seating.
But I would have it so it moves throughout.
So the counter, there's no separate tables.
The counter kind of flows so you can get everybody around the counter for that communal.
But also so it's really efficient for the staff too to move through it.
And then when you pop it at 7 a.m., like it's popping.
Like it's got great, great energy.
It's just a place you would want to start every morning.
with that level of optimism.
So the seating is kind of like those sushi bars
where they wrap around,
like those conveyor belt sushi bars.
You're sort of stealing from that,
but applying that to the American diner.
Yes, there's that out,
I forgot the name of it,
that Parisian restaurant
where the entire restaurant is built
like a counter,
but the counter kind of meanders
so you have a full view of the kitchen.
And it's very communal.
It's in and out.
You don't have to seat anybody.
And it's also about creating
this amazing energy.
So what I would want to do is take on Denny's and IHop with that model.
That's awesome.
I have a, since we're in a creative brainstorm here, I got a what if for you.
I got a how might we for you, you know what I mean?
I feel like I need a hacky sack or something, creative with me here.
Okay, so in mobile gaming, I tried to make a mobile game once.
And so before I even made the game, I went and talked to a couple guys who made really popular mobile games.
And I sat down and I showed them a prototype.
and they go,
oh, dude,
you have a TTF problem.
And I was like,
I don't know if that's an STD.
I don't know what you're talking about,
but I don't want a TTIF problem,
but I'm sure,
I'm absolutely certain I have one
based on the way you just,
he was like disgusted with.
Or you're like,
oh,
thanks.
Like,
I worked really hard.
So I was like,
do I have too much or too little?
What's the,
which way do I go?
So he was basically saying
the most important metric
in a mobile game success is TTF,
time to fun.
So basically from the moment I click the button to open the app, how long does it take for me to have some fun?
Because I was like, cool, open the app, registration screen, sign up, give me your email address.
How about your phone number?
Would you like push notifications?
Would you like me to remind you?
It's like, you haven't even tried the app yet, right?
You're like, what's my TTS?
You're like, never.
The fun never game.
Yeah, yeah, there was no fun.
And he was showing me like, you know, if you open up, like Mario is one of the classic examples of this.
Like if you start Mario first level, there's no tutorial.
there's no nothing. Like Mario starts
and a small gumba starts walking towards
you, the easiest enemy to defeat. And you jump
on his head, you get a satisfying, like,
yeah, I squash that bug.
And then the next thing you do is there's a brick above your head.
You jump up, you punch it, and you get a coin.
You jump up and punch the next one, you think it's a coin.
No, a mushroom comes out. You're like, oh my God, do I want this?
And you go get it and you grow. And so in the first
15 seconds of Mario, you have learned all the controls,
you've defeated an enemy, you've gotten money,
and you grew bigger and stronger. And it's like
the greatest,
first 15 seconds of your life. So I have an idea for you because I went to a diner this weekend.
Wait, hold on. Can we use like that time to fund? Like that's a new metric I'm going to use for
everything now. Whether you're like, it is like getting a restaurant, airline, my marriage,
like thought your time to fun is off right now. But it's like, yeah, removing all the friction to get
to that experience. Time to fun. Okay. Can I front load a little bit of the fun, right? I'm not going to
give to all of it, but can I get a piece of it here now because I need to, you know, hook you? And so I
I thought I went to a diner this weekend.
And from the time we got there and we were all excited to get there and my kids wanted
pancakes and all this good stuff, to the time we actually had anything fun, like any food
or drink on the table was like 22 minutes.
And I get it.
They were totally busy.
But I wonder if there's some way where right when you walk in, there's something because
right after the diner, we went to Costco.
And right when we walked in, there was like a Costco sample person.
And my kids got something.
And they were like, hey, what is this place?
We like this place.
because they instantly got like a cracker when they walked in.
And so I just wonder if with the diner you could do one thing,
which is like eliminate the weight and bring that TTF down,
which is what we want.
We want low TTF.
I love that.
Okay.
So what I think is like,
you know like Dunkin' Donut and Munchkins,
we do like a really great like gourmet cinnamon munchkin.
So when you walk in,
like it's almost like a sample,
you grab a munchkin as you walk in to go sit down.
So you get that first like little taste.
Do they have a smell too?
Because that would be nice.
double to get to get two senses.
But you can do a smoothie shot next to it.
So it's a tray of smoothie shots and munchkins.
So it gives you that little and also takes the edge off your customers while they're waiting as well.
So the wait time will never feel as long.
I love that.
Two other little culinary steels maybe.
Okay, one other steel we could do five guys.
They have the barrel of peanuts, which I think is kind of what you're talking about.
You go in and there's just free peanuts you can scoop.
Again, I love that.
Who doesn't love that?
It's great theater.
My first business was a sushi restaurant.
and a traditional sushi restaurant
when you walk through the door,
the entire kitchen staff,
they don't turn to you,
but they hear the door chime go,
and they go,
Irochet.
Like the whole crew is like,
oh,
what's up?
It's basically like the Japanese,
what's up.
And it basically means,
like, a customer is here.
Like, hey,
like, pay attention or whatever or welcome.
I don't even know what I or say,
but like,
that's what they all say.
I think you could also,
like, kind of,
if you talk about soul cycle,
I think there's a way
to make the experience of the customer,
are interesting when you walk in.
Like, I just wonder what ritual we could have
when somebody walks through the door.
That would be welcoming and unique
and interesting as well.
We're just such neat.
We're so neat.
We're Neanderthals.
Like, you know, we're going to talk about, like,
Aristotle and the philosophy of life and all this stuff.
And it turns out you just kind of throw a bunch of nuts
at my face when I walk in to get a burger.
Dude, I love a good high five.
Yeah.
You just got to say what's up in Japanese.
I'm like, I'm good.
I mean, you can picture the plur
playlist in this place, right, of like the best morning music. And there's something of, like,
they hit something and like a good morning, good morning comes over as people walk as each time
somebody walks in the door. Right. I love that. I'm so fascinated with time to fund now.
I think about like vacations. Like going skiing, time to fun could be really low.
Shlopping to get to the hill. That sucks. Yeah. But everything now I'm going to measure in TTI.
Well, like, you know, you arrive in Hawaii and they give you the lay, right? When you get out the door,
right, like a hotel check-in process, right?
So that normally the fun is when you get to maybe your room.
And Hawaii, as soon as you get out of the door, lay, blue drink, fun instant.
Do you just, Sean, do you just have a notepad of like all load?
Like, do you have a ranking of low TTF?
Well, he said travel.
So it just, you know what I mean?
Creative savant brain.
My boyfriend, I say there's nothing better than a rival drinks.
Yeah.
Like, that's the best moment of a vacation.
Would you ever get into a non, I mean, you've done the same category forever.
Would you ever get into a restaurant business or something that's not what you've done?
Well, I just tried building a retail business and was, I think what we built was amazing and
I was super proud of it and it was working with the consumer.
It was just impossible to fund in this current capital cycle.
So what I try to do is reinvent the American Jewelry Store.
And my theory was I always wanted to do retail, you know, geek out on every expression
from the playlist to the sense, which we did.
and even the way you're greeted.
And I'm a huge student of like Danny Meyer
and the way he thinks about it at each restaurant,
like 15 seconds right to be greeted.
And even the service mantle,
where does a salt and pepper go?
And how do you think every detail through?
But when you walk into a jewelry store,
I found it to be like the most intimidating experience.
Like you never felt like he belonged there.
You had to like ask for the world's smallest price tag
to be turned over.
And then you have to give a reaction
to something you thought was 5,000,
but it's actually 50,000.
And the insight there was,
was women self-purchasing is driving growth and fine jewelry, but nobody was really creating
an experience for them. So we created this brand called Cast. We have put up three stores in the Bay Area,
and I wanted like, you know, Willie Wonka, pure imagination to play in a consumer's head when
they walked in and feel like a kid in a candy store again. But again, being able to sign leases,
build-out stores, Omnichannel, we had an incredible partnership with Nordstrom who put capital in the
business. But it was so capital in time.
that a path to profitability and then raising capital in this market was just incredibly,
incredibly difficult. So that's where those situations, you're like, all right, I'm sitting
at the wrong, Tony Shea would say sometimes you've got to move poker tables and just I'm at the
wrong table and, you know, gold pricing was spiking, diamond pricing was crashing, you couldn't
sign a lease in these A class because LVMAT should eat up so much of these leases. So I realized
like it was just back to like if it's hard it's wrong.
It was a hard business to build.
How long did you work on it until you were like, all right, it's dead?
I worked on it from launch to it's dead three, three to four years.
Oh, a lot.
A lot.
Yeah.
Now we worked, we worked hard at it.
It was a fun business like designing jewelry and our, you know, incredible culture, our team.
Issa Ray was part of it.
And we were on the white, you know, White Lotus season two.
the cast was wearing our product.
We had a, you know, we had a profound market in the industry in a very short amount of time,
but it just was a business that nobody wants to put capital into, unfortunately.
And there's never been really great access.
It's not like the easiest pitch at the moment.
Like, okay, so how are you an AI company?
Yeah, I mean, it's not like very appealing.
You know, he has like great phrases.
He had one on this when he's telling about the jewelry shop.
He goes, it was like a plane made of gold.
Like, it was a great idea, but it was like a plane made of gold.
you couldn't it couldn't get lift off it couldn't get off the ground it's too bad it in a hawfancy went down the runway
like it just could not get airborne and uh but if you look at it's cast jewelry our store i mean
i was super proud what we built but um i picked a i picked the wrong space to try to innovate in
all right let's take quick break because i got to tell you a story let me tell me about the first time
i tried to run payroll for my team i was using a traditional bank and you know the type it's got a
a janky interface. It's built like a 2002 tax form, and it was open only during business hours.
And I hit send, and it froze. They flagged the transaction. They locked my account. They put me on hold
for 45 minutes. And then they told me, I got to visit my local branch. And that was the day I started
looking for a new bank solution. After asking a few founders what they were using, I found out about
mercury. And so now my payroll is two clicks. I can wire money. I can pay invoices. I can reimburse
the team, all from one clean dashboard. That's why I use it for all of my companies. And so do
200,000 other startup founders.
And so if you're looking to level up your banking,
head to mercury.com and apply in minutes.
Mercury is a financial technology company, not a bank.
Banking the services are provided through Choice Financial Group,
column N-A, and evolve bank and trust members at the I see.
Do you want to tell more of your horrible ideas or?
Yeah.
Okay.
I got another one here.
You think I had one bad idea?
I'm a volume guy.
No, your first one is a great idea.
I would invest.
Thank you.
Thank you.
All right.
So now here's, it's about to fall off a cliff here.
Okay, so I walked through the grocery store looking for that sea of sameness.
And honestly, like, you know, shout out to the grocery store.
There wasn't a whole lot of categories that I saw.
One that stood out to me because I'm looking for everyday products.
I'm looking for repeat purchase.
I'm looking for everybody buys this.
But I'm looking for something where there's not a brand.
I don't have a favorite brand.
I don't have even like, I couldn't even tell you the name of four of the brands in the category.
That's kind of what I was looking for.
So I'd like you to introduce you to my company, White Lable.
chicken LLC.
And white label chicken LLC is getting into the chicken game.
And what we're going to do is we're going to white label someone else's chicken.
So we're going to take chicken from somebody else.
We're not going to get into farming.
But we're going to put our own brand on it because they're like, Sam, what's your
top three favorite chicken brands?
I don't know.
Don't know.
Eric, you got a favorite chicken brand?
What's that about like packaged chicken?
Package chicken?
You're going to go buy like breast meat or whatever.
It's like nine bucks for the little mini tray.
Yeah, that's a real, that's a wear inspiring name.
Well, we're not, the front facing brand is not white label chicken.
It's a, it's a working title.
And so we're white labeled chicken LLC.
And so then I don't even know the angle yet.
All I knew was I can't believe there's no like, like, there's no oat leaf for chicken.
No, you know what I mean?
Like, there's no, there's no, I can't believe there's just not a favorite, like, not like, distinct chicken brands that stand for something and mean something.
Like, whether it's, whether it's about the flavor or it's preseason, whether it.
it's about like, this is man's chicken and like you're going to get your protein from this meal.
Like, this is what we do.
We give you a little extra.
I don't know what it is.
But I just kind of saw that white space and I wanted to open the floor to you gentlemen to help me kind of workshop this.
Point, this is where it goes to like familiar and novel.
So this is very familiar.
So how do you add novelty?
It's interesting.
You're right.
As soon as it gets like put in a dinosaur shape and breadcrumbs around it, it becomes, you know,
like, it becomes.
darylnugas becomes incredibly well branded
or it gets served at a restaurant
as a sandwich, Chick-fil-A.
But the chicken itself,
I mean, there's, like,
foster farms did a pretty good job of this
out in California,
but it was really not the product
that's just their advertising was so good.
Right.
That Goodby did years ago.
Okay, so I think you've got to go back.
I would sell,
I would turn it into an origin story.
I wouldn't sell the chicken
I would sell the farm.
And I would
create this
smart.
Right?
That just sounds cool.
I wish I had said that.
As if Don Draper wore hoodies.
Don't sell the chicken.
Sell the farm, baby.
I might say that to my wife later today
in any context.
Eric,
do you have like a pack of sigs
that you can light up right now?
If you took out a cigre right now,
you would be the coolest man
I've ever met in my life after that line.
Put your feet up,
smoke a sig,
and tell me about selling the,
farm, not the chicken.
Because
the
because we don't want to think about the chicken
because we murdered it.
We want to think that the chicken
had a good life on this farm
before it was killed.
Right.
That's going to make us feel good
about the quality of the chicken.
It's going to make us feel good
about the chicken's short life.
And so I would build the whole brand
around
this heavenly farm for chickens.
What if we create an Instagram account?
We actually pour all our
into the Instagram account of this incredibly aesthetic farm.
And it's like Truman Show.
It's just totally a set.
Because again, we're white-labeled chicken LLC.
So I'm starting with inauthenticity here.
But like, I'm just thinking, what if we, what if you started with the social?
You just made everybody's favorite farm.
And then from there, you're like, of course, if you're going to buy chicken, you'd buy it
from your favorite farm.
Dude, I have a, I've got a friend that exited a multi-billion-dollar consumer.
brand. And I was, I, yeah, so he's, he's, he's, he thinks you're his best friend, but he's just a friend
yeah. He might, he might use the away, a word, acquaintance. And I use, you know, close friend.
Yeah, close friend. Yeah, we're a little bit different. But we, uh, he was like telling me this
idea for his new business and presumably he's very smart because of his previous success. But he was like,
do you know what free range means? Like free range chicken? And I was like, I guess that means they're,
they're running around a farm. And he was like, no, the definition is like, they've got like a
cage the size of like five by five. I forget the exact definition, but it was like shockingly small.
And he's working on this thing where he's putting RFD, is it called RFD tags? Is that what it's
called? Yes. Is that what is? He was putting them in cows and in chickens. And as they are
scant, so the whole farm has like the technology to see how far away they're running. And as they go
to the kill, you know, the kill bin or whatever they got to go to, their RFD thing is scanned. And so a
consumer can on his chickens, and this is a real thing that he's, he already built, you can see how,
like, what radius they were running around. This was his old premise is that people, which
it kind of, that could, maybe that, that actually might be interesting, but you could actually
see, it's just truly free-range chicken or were they just, like, in a small pen where they're just
in their own feces, like, you know, like, because there's like a correlation between how, how, like,
healthy the farm was and how, they actually followed the rules. Yeah, and I think to build an area, too,
I always say the framework of like, you've got to find the intersection of altruism and
narcissism.
So the case of method, you bought it for very narcissistic reasons.
You love the fragrance.
You love the design of it.
But the altruism, it's good for me, good for the planet, brought you coming back.
And if you can deliver on both, I think is real power.
We try to do that in all of our brands.
So in the case of our chicken farm here, we need to sell the narcissism that this is the
most organic, good for you, great tasting chicken.
But the altruism that you can feel good.
chicken while they had a short life, it had a really good life.
And I think you...
Right.
It was a great six weeks.
Yeah.
You know, it's almost like you steal from children's books.
So you do the whole branding, like it's a children's book of this magical farm.
And even like you make the farmers who work there kind of, you know, part of the overall, like, iconography, the brand.
And you make them heroes in it as well.
Old McDonald had a farm.
It's called bingo chicken.
Yes.
Is old McDonald's available?
Old McDonald's would be great.
Old McDonald's, if that's available.
Does anybody own that IP?
Because McDonald's, you'd have to be like old, you know,
McDonald's, you'd have to do something weird with the spelling.
Do you guys ever buy these eggs?
Yeah, all the time.
Yes.
Yeah, they're in my fridge right now.
This is like what you're talking about of like the sea of sameness
or like the commodities that they made.
Like look at the bottom here.
Medium brown egg is literally the name of the product.
it's like a transparent medical packaging, like sterile packaging,
and you just see these eggs.
And then this vital farms thing on top,
because they literally draw like flowers and like, you know,
hay or whatever on the thing, I'm like, oh, farm.
Good. Armed to table. I'm doing good.
Now that he says C is sameness, I'm like, oh, I do this all the time.
Like the other day, I bought yogurt the other day,
because instead of Greek yogurt, this yogurt was Icelandic.
Right.
Like, I don't know.
I do know what that means, but I'm in.
Yeah, I was like, for some reason, it's all Greek, and this is from Iceland.
And do you have a theory on naming?
Because you've named your products extremely well.
Yes.
How do you come up with names?
So the Holy Grail of naming is one word for letters, if you can do it.
That'll really, really hard.
Naming a brand is the most difficult part of a startup because everything is taken.
Do you use like an agency?
Do you just sit there and think?
it's all different. I'm not good at naming, but I'm good at spotting a name. So method was, Adam was
literally my co-founder, we were literally brushing her teeth at the same time, and he's like,
what about method? I was like, that's it. Lawyers, like, you never could get method. It's like way
too generic. Then I asked my lawyer, while he wasn't working over drinks, I was like,
if you thought this meme was really important to your success, what would you do? He's like,
hey, I'd go for it. Because lawyers never want to be wrong, but they don't need to be right.
Ali came from, I was working with Alan Dye, who was helping me, who was creative director at Apple, and we came up with Ollie Slate, like, Ali for Friendly.
I wanted the name, with each case, I come up with a jumping off word.
So for method, I wanted to represent technique, right?
So if you're in the gym, you use good technique to get force, because this was going to clean without force.
So I was like, we want something that represents technique, and he's like, how about method?
It's like, that's it.
with Ali
everything in the category
was pseudoscience
like
eccentric or was very
fulxy like
nature's garden
or bounty
so I wanted a name
that just sounded friendly
so he came up
with Ali's slate
and then we realized
Ollie just
we were able to get it
on its own
so we didn't need
the slate part of it
you're like
ripped it through
the story
and it's like
insight insight
insight
and like you you make it
you have what I call
the knowledge
like the curse of knowledge
which is
you think
that
this is, you're like, oh, yeah, I just did this and then I just did that.
Like, you didn't even tell us that, and that was so interesting.
And what if we hadn't asked the question?
We wouldn't have known that.
Like, how many more of those you got?
It's like, you're like, oh, well, I just do this.
Of course, as one does, you pick a jump off word.
And then you, I was like, oh, I don't do anything like that.
I just look for things like mine.
But like you know someone's a master when they, when they're fluid.
They're fluid with this.
And it's incredibly clear when you describe the simplest things that you are a master.
jumping off word for Wellie.
So for Wellie was, I wanted something about health care.
And so we actually came up with Nightingale.
So Nightingale, because of the idea of like Nightingale is like she is like this icon and it's all about caring for you.
And Anthony Spurudy and Partners in Spade came up with Wellie.
And I was like, you're like, done.
Most every time I've never, every name like cast we came up with for jewelry for again.
each time we, I saw the name, it was like, no debate.
It was like, that is it.
And then it's all hands on.
How do we secure this name?
Amazing.
Do you have another idea?
One of my favorite foods, and I watched my kids go through it, is packaged cheese.
So I think craft singles, mozzarella sticks.
I have never seen anybody do anything really.
So there's this big delta in cheese, too.
You go to like the artisanal cheese.
counter, right? It is, it's art for. And we have this place, we live on Shaltre Island summer,
and this guy, Andrew, runs the cheese wagon. It's literally a wagon. And my wife and I will go there
every few days, just because we'll sit there and taste the cheese with them. And it's like wine.
He just romances it. So the gap is, if you look at all the categories that have taken a more
artisanal approach, and then you go shop packaged cheese, it's the same thing. It's cheddar,
is shot like
Monterella,
it is not change.
And I love,
my favorite packaging form
in the world are the most
baby bells, right?
And the wax,
like little Pac-Bans
that you split apart.
Love them.
So my idea is,
I want to create a line
of gourmet cheeses
in the,
you know,
in the pre-package
in those baby bell wax forms.
But do really,
like, take what they've started
and go super gourmet
with different flavor profiles
in it and make that,
that packaging form.
I'd make it slightly bigger to different colors,
but I would build a whole line of gourmet cheeses around it.
And if anybody wants to do this, please reach out to me.
Sorry, is this for, you say it's for kids or it's not for kids?
You're just saying, I want to do the gourmet cheeses,
but in this new packaging and in that aisle.
Yes, like my boys love the baby bales.
I want to do that for adults, again,
taking something that's a kid product,
but then elevate it as an adult product.
And there's just something so fun about opening up that little wax.
It's very sad.
Sam, you're a man, child.
Where does this land with you?
Dude, I had three of these.
So I do what I do what I call redneck fitness food.
So last night I just had three baby bells for dinner and I wrapped it in salami and just piled them in my mouth.
And I call it balls of fun.
And so.
Time to fun is really fast on that one.
Who are you telling this name to?
What's that?
you know, Sam's mouth surprise.
I don't know.
We're still work chopping it.
I'm not sure yet.
But you can even square a little mustard at this ball.
But yeah, this is great.
I love those cheeses.
And I think they only make Gouda and like the normal one.
What is it about that packaging?
Does it actually, because it's kind of softer inside, right?
Is that because of the type of cheese or does the packaging do that?
Well, I think it's already like that.
But you can just like grab it.
It's just like, I'll grab them and I'll literally put it my pocket.
And like as I'm walking, I'll eat it.
Oh, it's a crab and go cheese.
Okay, gotcha.
And it's a single serve.
It's a single serve.
So like, it's like super easy.
But yeah, it's definitely a convenience thing.
Not necessarily a, it's better tasting thing.
But I think there's something very primal to you about opening it.
So it feels natural.
It's very relieving back the wax.
Like opening an orange, like you feel like a little monkey just or getting it to your snack.
And so it's in a time to fun on that is three seconds.
Yeah.
It's oddly, it's oddly satisfying whenever I peel back that wax.
And then when you peel back the wax shot on, if you have
ever done it. The two things open up and like the top part doesn't fall off the bottom part of the
wrapper. Yeah. It's like an oyster. Have you yeah it's like an oyster? Have you guys seen those new
Coke bottles where you twist the cap off and then it peels back and the cat like stays on the bottle?
No, I haven't seen that. Oh man. It's kind of like that. I love that. Just delightful.
Oh, is that so you can fully recycle the bottle then because the caps usually don't get recycled.
Now we might be breaking the laws of physics here but one of the most satisfying food experiences in
the world is cracking the top of a Coke can, the sound, and the, like, literally it's like an iconic
sound of the tab. I wonder if there's a way to, like, create some sound or satisfying crack here,
but I think I'm, I think I'm making a good idea bad here. You've over-innovated it.
Yeah, one iteration. Yeah, just blue bell or baby bell, whatever it's called, but fancy cheese.
I also had a cheese idea. So great minds think alike. I also had a cheese idea. Yours is better,
but I'm just going to say mine out loud in case there's something you want to steal out of the carcass of this idea that I'm about to give you.
This was like a dying idea I had.
But so my mother-in-law came over and she's great.
But, you know, she's got mother-in-law Iidas a little bit where she's like, well, I know the answers to the test.
And you're still trying to figure out the answers to the test.
So like, let me just tell you what to do.
And so, for example, it would be like, oh, he'll love this rice.
Kids love rice.
She'll just say these generic things like, kids love rice.
So your kid's going to love rice.
I'm like, no, no, he doesn't eat rice, doesn't like rice, blah, blah, blah.
Or, you know, milk.
Like, one of our kids wasn't really drinking, like, milk from, like, a milk, like a gallon of milk or whatever.
And she was like, all kids love milk, your kids are going to love milk.
And we're like, you can try, be my guest, but, like, this kid doesn't drink milk.
And I was waiting for, like, the satisfaction of being right.
And then five minutes later, she was like, oh, he loves it.
And I'm like, no way.
And I go over.
And basically what she did was she would pour the milk into the top of the cat.
and give him, like, he got to have a tiny mini cup, and he was like into that. And so he was like,
oh, like taking shots of milk, like a, like a, you know, like a spring breaker, basically. And
I couldn't believe it. And she was like, change of presentation. And so now this phrase, change of
presentation has become a big deal. So anytime there's a food my kid doesn't eat, it's not a question
of do they like it or not. It's what is the change of presentation we need to do to get them to eat
it? So for example, bread was another. Didn't want bread. My wife takes a cookie cutter, like a, like the star
shape or whatever. And he gets to stamp out the bread and now he likes that. And we're like,
oh my God, change of presentation. And now your mother-in-law is the man of the house.
I think she already was. And I just was in denial for a period of time. But I too have now bent
the knee like the tech CEOs like sucking up to Donald Trump basically. Like that's me now.
I'm like, wonderful idea. Love mother. Can we get more gold in this room? Love it.
So basically my cheese idea is basically instead of just slices of a cheese,
you include a stamper.
And the stamper is like shapes
that they can stamp the cheese into
so they can play like Plato,
stealing from Plato,
and you basically get the Playto shape cutters,
but you apply it to cheese.
And you sell it together as a little pack, basically.
I think my kids would love that.
I know how scalable that is.
You got to add...
That's the problem.
I don't know how you're going to...
Did you hear the point about my mother-in-law?
Did that come through?
Was the audio good on that?
When...
When we sell 10 million versions of this, I don't know if we can afford the operations.
I agree with the insight of change your presentation.
I don't know if I agree with the application of it there.
Trying to get into a toy, so like giving them a little thing that they can do to the food.
I like that idea.
That I like as well.
Again, it could be a durable.
It's to your point of like, how do you make it a consumable so it's an annuity so people keep buying it?
See, he's in the cheese, but he's a.
competitor now, so he doesn't like this idea because he's like all about his like artisanal cheese.
I'm going to do this.
His cheese comes with a little stamper, and he's like, yeah, the haters said it wasn't scalable.
Dude, Sean just pitched craft singles that come with a cookie cutter.
Exactly.
I think he overcomplicated it.
The story is key to the understanding of the idea.
In fact, the label is going to include the entire story that I said in verbatim in size 8 font.
Instead of buying the chicken to support the chicken, you know, or like a good farm,
we're going to be supporting Sean to stick it to his mother-in-law.
What happened to the safe space where there's no bad ideas?
You're like, watch what I do if you bring a weak, wimpy idea in here.
Let me give it a wedgy.
So I want to leave you with a big picture question.
You've obviously done it.
You've proven yourself, so that's good.
You've made money doing what you have.
You're financially secure and free and all that.
What is the end of the story for you?
Like, what are you trying to do?
Do you have somebody in mind, a hero?
You're like, oh, I kind of want to be like them.
Do you think like 30 years down the road, like I want to have done X, Y, Z?
Do you not think about that at all?
How do you think about your life?
Because, like, you could just keep doing this.
Sounds fun.
Is there a big picture?
Yeah.
No, I'm a planner, so there definitely is a big picture for me.
At the heart of it, I love building and creating.
And if I wasn't doing that, I think I'd be really miserable.
But what I don't want to do anymore is, you know, be a CEO.
Were you the CEO before?
I've been CEO of my previous companies, yes.
And I love, like, being in it with a team and building it every day.
and in the trenches with your team
and helping steer the ship,
I absolutely love that as well.
But I'm at the stage of my career
that the pressures of raising capital
and being able to answer to that capital,
I want to be able to work,
going back to projects,
work across more things.
So I'm splitting my time between,
you know, continue to incubate new ideas,
but then I hire CEO and team
and I work alongside that team.
And then moving over to joining Greycroft
to launch this Consumer Brands Fund,
really now being able to, you know,
be more of the coach and help work with entrepreneurs.
We've had a bunch of people come on here with that,
the dream, the have your cake and eat it too.
It's like, I want to be part of the idea and like the start.
But then like the grind for 10 years,
like I really want an operator to do that part.
And some people have come on here and told us how they do that well.
So other people have been like, I don't know how to,
I can't intercept my idea and my energy into somebody else.
That's a really hard transfer to do.
Do you have like a talent threat?
Like how do you,
how do you get the CEO to then like,
run your thing. Do you have a strategy around that or is it?
It's hard. And that's what I've been doing. I've been doing more of an incubator model, my last few
startups where I've not been the CEO running it, but actually, you know, create the team.
So really what I love doing is like create the concept, pull together the team and the capital.
But the part of that that has been really hard is actually finding those leaders. And, you know,
the reality of being an entrepreneur, it's iterative, right? You try something it works or it doesn't
work. You're constantly iterating your way to success in those early years, which,
means you're running up against roadblocks and things that worked and what didn't work.
And what I found is there's a certain personality that can live in that uncertainty of a startup
and stay committed to it.
So when something doesn't work, instead of panicking, they quickly start taking the clues,
figuring out, making adjustments, keeping the team confident and bringing along with them.
That's the art of entrepreneurship that is really, really tough to hire for.
Because the ones who are good at it want to create, they probably have their own idea that
they're working on.
And what I found is I would hire very accomplished people, but their entire,
life had been fairly linear in their careers where, like, I, you know, I get good grades. It
unlocks getting in this good college. I do really well at school. It unlocks getting the
right into, like, each thing unlocks the next step for them, and that's always work because
they're incredibly smart, talented people. But that's not the reality in entrepreneurship.
And so what I saw a pattern of, like, I would hire these incredibly accomplished CEOs,
and then as soon as things would start going wrong, which they always do in a startup,
they would really struggle to the mental games of that. That's the high.
hardest part of this model.
You're amazing.
You know, every once in a while we have episodes and we're like, we have to have a part two
and sometimes a part three and a part four.
And hopefully that will be the case with you.
No, let's do it.
I would love to.
I feel the same.
I'm walking away on Monday morning here with more energy.
So I really appreciate it.
This has been such a fun conversation.
And if anybody loves our ideas out there and wants to pursue it, please reach out.
EricRind.Rind.com and then there's like a contact button.
Is that right?
Yeah, you can go to gobstop.com, g-o-b-st-o-p-p-com.
It's for this idea that I try to build these everlasting gobstoppers
and brands that continue to be able to refresh themselves
and stay on trend.
And, like, you try to bake that into the center
when you create something new.
Oh, you're a ridiculous human being.
You're awesome.
Like, you have, like, silly, crazy ideas,
and yet you've been able to make potentially hundreds of millions
or even billions of dollars off it.
I mean, that's the dream.
So thank you so much.
You're the best.
You guys are great.
Thanks for a lovely conversation.
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.
This episode is brought to you by HubSpot Media.
They have a cool new podcast that's for AI called The Next Wave.
It's by Matt Wolf and Nathan Lanz.
And they're basically talking about all to do tools that are coming out,
how the landscape is changing, what's going on with AI tech.
So if you want to be up to date on AI Tech,
it's a cool podcast you could check out.
Listen to the next wave wherever you get your podcast.
