My First Million - Every Business I Tried Before Making My First Million
Episode Date: November 17, 2025Want the Side Hustle Ideas Database? Get it here: https://clickhubspot.com/jnd Episode 765: Sam Parr ( https://x.com/theSamParr ) and Shaan Puri ( https://x.com/ShaanVP ) talk about eve...ry business Sam tried before he made his first million. — Show Notes: (0:00) #1 - Flipping Sports Equipment (2:05) #2 - Hot Dog Stand (5:42) #3 - Online Liquor Store (8:33) #4 - Anti-MBA Book Club (10:40) #5 - Roommate Matching (12:11) What to start now (19:48) Risk vs uncertainty (24:57) #? - Itch Juice (29:04) A bunch of failures (34:17) Lessons from starting 17 businesses — 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)
All right, everyone, on this podcast, we talk a lot about the successes, but I want to talk about the failures.
So here's about 10 different companies that I started before I made my first million.
Almost all of them, they sucked. It didn't work. But I'm going to explain how much I made for each idea and the lesson that I learned.
I feel like I can rule the world. I know I could be what I want to.
I put my all in it like my days off on the road. Let's travel.
All right. What's going on?
Let's set this up. Name of this podcast. My first minute. When did you make your first million?
So cash, like cash million, I made it when my wife worked at Airbnb and it went public.
And that's when we made our first.
And then about three months later, I think it went later in December.
My company sold in February and then we made a lot.
Leading up to that, we were doing pretty good too, but I don't think we had crossed one million.
Okay.
So you made your first million, let's call it 31 years old.
Here's all the businesses you tried before that before making your first million,
which I think is pretty fascinating.
I want to go down this list.
Does it start in high school?
Yeah.
All right, go for it.
Give me number one.
In high school, I made $2,500 one summer by buying graduating seniors old sports equipment and selling
it on eBay.
And so what I used to do is I would just buy people's like track spikes or, you know,
whatever.
And I would sell it on eBay.
And most of the time, I didn't buy it.
They would just give it to me.
They would hand it to me.
And on eBay, I made $2,500.
That was my first business where I actually started making online money.
And this is flipping, basically.
This is flipping assets that other people not only undervalue, they might even, to the,
not value it to the point where they're just happy you took it off their hands.
Yeah, and frankly, I did this in college too, which I didn't list here, is when at the end of the college year, I would stay a few weeks after the end of the school year.
And when people were moving out, I said, I have a storage unit.
You can come and put it here and just give it to me.
You're going to throw it away.
Just give it to me.
And then I would resell it.
Exactly.
I saw people doing this in college with textbooks.
They would just say, oh, at the end of the year, you don't want to take all these heavy textbooks home.
You're done with that class.
Well, guess what?
The next semester, there's a bunch of people that are going to need that exact textbook that were happy to buy it used.
And so they would just go buy up people's tech. They would just take people's textbooks. And each book was like, you know, a $40 or $50, you know, future sale that they were able to pick up for free. Okay. And then at 20, I started a hot dog stand, which everyone makes fun of me for talking about. I have a hot dog stand. You have a sushi restaurant. They're sick of us talking about it. But I had one called Southern Sam's, we're as big as a baby's arm. Basically, I knew a guy named Doc who had a hot dog stand. He let me rent it from him with very little money up. I was able to pay him on the 30th, as opposed to the first of the month. So he hooked me up. And with $500, I went to a restaurant deep.
and I bought a bunch of Vienna sausages to get my supply, and I was in business, baby,
within a week of having this idea. And I used to live in a bad neighborhood.
Rydell was my next-door neighbor, and he became my best friend. He had served 20 years in prison
for attempted murder, and somehow we became best friends. He had the spare key to my house.
This was my guy. And Rydell ended up working with me at Southern Sam's, and we spent all day
outside, and it was a pain in the butt. Some days I would make 50 bucks. Other days, I would go to
a concert or, like, an outdoor place that was popping. And I always,
make $1,000. And I did that when I was about 20 or 21. This is summer in college? What were you doing?
I was in college. I was in class. And so I would work until 3 p.m. I would go to classes from 3 p.m.
into 8 p.m. And then I had a night session where I was out by all the bars. And that would be like 9 p.m. to like 1 am.
That's amazing. How did you have the idea to do the hot dog stand? You just saw somebody else doing it?
I met a guy who had a cart and I wanted to do something. Yeah. Did he tell you like I'm making 300 bucks a night or something? I saw a video. I saw a video on
online of a guy saying how much money, the Home Depot hot dog guys make. They make $100,000 a year,
the ad said. And you were like in? I was a man. I was, I was, I was broke. I had by PhD,
poor, hard working and driven. Would you do this again? This one? No, man. It was so hard. It was so
not now. But like if you were 1920 again, you needed to. I learned how to sell so well, man. This is
what inspired me to get in the copywriting. I realized that you had to like wheel and deal a little bit. You had a
smooth, you had to flirt, you had to do this. And then I realized, what if I could do this on the
internet where I could write something one time and have an infinite amount of people come and read
it? And I didn't have to sell constantly. Didn't have to stand there in the heat.
It didn't have to stand in the heat. I will post a photo here. I had these horrible, I mean,
look at me. I'm like the whitest guy ever. I had these horrible sunburns that when I took my tank top
off, it still looked like I was wearing a shirt, just a white like Peter. There's this,
there's this tweet that's been going viral. They said, flirt with everyone. Flirt with
flirt with women, flirt with men, flirt with old people, flirt with kids, just flirt with
everybody. It's non-sexual, but literally just be the most playful, charming person you could be
at all times, like practice this muscle. And I actually think this is 100% true. I know a couple
of people in my life that are like this. I'm not really like that, but I've been starting to do it
just for fun, just that's a little mini game. You know, when you're just living a pretty routine life,
you're just going to the grocery store, it's either going to be a forgettable experience or you
try something to make it a little more fun. I've been doing this and it's kind of amazing.
You know what I call it?
You know how people say nonchalant?
Be shalant.
Be shalant.
Don't be nonchalant.
Be shalant.
Shalant as hell.
Yeah.
Be shalant.
Try hard.
I emailed my wealth manager at Morgan Stanley, and I was like, hey, I made this trade.
And it was like a commission of like a hundred something bucks at the end of like the trade.
I was like, is there like a magic button you got over there, man?
Like, you got this magic button you can push that makes all those fees go away.
And that was what?
what I sent the private wealth manager. And he goes, he just replied, magic button pushed,
commissions reversed, enjoy your trading. And I was like, just flirt with everybody. Like, I could
have been an annoying Karen. I could have just took it, done nothing. I could have been a Karen
complaining. Just flirt a little bit. Everybody likes to be flirted with. So my next business
after that, I started this thing basically in Tennessee at the time, white whiskey, which it's called
Moonshine. Moonshine technically means illegal whiskey. But there is these companies making
whiskey that was in a mason jar and it they called it moonshine and I started selling that online and I
thought I was doing it the right way because I kind of like Googled it and I talked to like a lawyer where
I was like selling it as a novelty because it was kind of like a gift item I did that for about
two or three months and then I went to my university's like entrepreneurship program where they had
free legal advice and I was like hey I've made 10 grand and like the last like you know 30 days or
something selling this whiskey online, I think I'm following the right rules. But is there anything else
I need to be doing? And they're like, yeah, brother, you got a, you better shut that down tonight.
And so that was like my second internet business, which inspired me to get into the game of the
internet. And my lesson learned on that one was if you're going to do something like this,
you better really do it right. And you better pick something that aligns with your values. Around this time,
I was still drinking. And I didn't even like alcohol. I mean, I, you know, I had a love,
hate relationship. And I was like, why am I going to start selling this? I don't want to do. This is
stupid anyway. But you're going to see there's a pattern. It was definitely like a quick money,
which I think everyone who becomes a good entrepreneur, they do the gray hat, gray hat area
phase. And this was my gray hat phase. Okay, I like it. You started it online. Did you learn about
online marketing through this? Like, were you, how'd you get the 10K? Where'd you get your customers
from? I posted on forums, like motorcycle forums. Like, so basically like this whiskey that I was selling,
People were already searching for it because the guy...
Drink and drive, of course.
That should have been the name.
People were already searching for this whiskey, but it was very early.
And so I was able to rank super easily on Google, and I posted on message boards, forms of people who wanted it.
And that's how I made money.
Nice.
All right.
So a lot of people watch and listen to this show because they want to hear us just tell them exactly what to do when it comes to starting or growing a business.
And really a lot of people who are listening, they have a full-time job and they want to start something on the side, a side hustle.
Now, a lot of people message Sean and I and they say, all right, I want to start something on the side.
Is this a good idea? Is that a good idea? And again, what they're really just saying is just give me the ideas.
Well, my friends, you're in luck. So my old company, The Hustle, they put together a hundred different side hustle ideas.
And they have appropriately called it the side hustle idea database. It's a list of a hundred pretty good ideas, frankly.
to them. They're awesome. And it gives you how to start them, how to grow them, things like that,
gives you a little bit of inspiration. So check it out. It's called the side hustle idea database.
It's in the description below. You'll see the link. Click it. Check it out. Let me know the comments,
what you think. Okay. So now you move to San Francisco. I think you, you, don't you just do like a
cross-country motorcycle ride to get to San Francisco as well? I do at a later date, but this time I flew out
there because I had a job offer at Airbnb, which got rescinded when I got there because I'd lie to my
resume about getting a DUI. And so I was out there. I'm like, what the hell am I going to do? I got to meet
people. And so I started a thing called the anti-MBA book club. And I tried monetizing it, but I couldn't
really at first. And so what I did was I posted ads on Craigslist and on Reddit. And I think I posted
on Facebook. And I got 2,000 people to sign up. But here was the premise. It was called the anti-MBA
because I was very envious of Stanford students and Berkeley students. I was very envious that they had this
network and said, I'm going to read it one book per month. We're going to break it up into a quarter,
so a week, a week, a week, a week. And I'm going to find an expert on that book's topic,
and we're going to come and discuss it with that expert. I'll organize and get the expert. You come.
It's free. And I got 2,100 people to sign up to my emailing list. And I had about 20 people
show up every single week. Some of those people include Syeva, who's now one of my best friends.
It's one of your close buddies. Neville Medora, who's now the best man in my wedding,
came from that. And so it was my best friends came to the anti-MBA book club. And I posted a photo.
If you zoom in on the top left of the photo, you're going to see a ski ball machine.
I found an arcade that let me host the book clubs for free in that place, as long as we'd play
ski ball. And you were reading books. Now, what kind of books were you reading in this?
Is this like, were the books actually useful for you in business or was selling white whiskey
the right way to learn business? I don't remember everything we read, but it was like, it was like
Tim Ferriss's book, the four-hour work week.
So, you know, how, like, you want to, like, if I was a techie, I would have built, like, clubhouse or something actually cool, but I didn't have, like, anyone discussed these books that I wanted to read. But it was kind of a forcing function because I was like, like, I need to get good at business. I better, like, get educated. What I could do is, I can get these people to come to this book club and I'll just read one week at advance and take really good notes and I'll sort of teach it. Because when you do a book club, by the way, no one reads a book, just the one guy who was organizing it. And so I was just going to organize it. Organize and talk about it. Okay, what came next? Okay. And then around that same time, when I moved to,
San Francisco, I met a guy who had an idea for a roommate matching app. And I was like,
hey, I don't have anything to do. May I please join you? And so I previously had a pickup truck
in Nashville where I live. I sold it. I had roughly $5,000. He had a little bit of money.
We put it together and we started with this idea called a bunk. And the idea with bunk was it was a
roommate matching party website. And so we went to landlords who had two, three, four, five bedrooms.
And we would say, we're going to post an ad on Craigslist and we're going to advertise this three bedroom as a one
bedroom apartment, meaning instead of a $3,000 three bedroom, we're going to advertise it as a $1,000
one bedroom, and we're going to get 100 people who are interested, and we're going to host parties
to help them team up and move into this apartment and potentially other apartments.
Sounded interesting, and it was somewhat interesting. Couldn't figure out how to monetize it.
Roommate matching apps are one of like four businesses that every just graduated college kid tries
to start. That's one of them. It doesn't really work. So we got Aqua hired roughly nine months later,
which basically meant we got a job and we got some bonus money if we, like, accomplish
a couple things. But what we did do, that was interesting. And I was not able to do this. I was
definitely like the marketing guy. But we turned that idea into Tinder for roommates. And that was
really dumb because most people, when we launched, we actually got tens of thousands of people to
sign up for it via these infographics that I linked to that we made. But most people, or many people,
who were using it, were just meeting it to date. We should have just done Tinder for Tinder.
It would have been way smarter. And so that didn't really work out.
Okay, so I think that to win in business, you've got to have essentially three components.
The first component is you need to have a money-making skill, meaning you have to have something that drives value.
This is either going to be learning to sell, learning to make things, learning to hunt down interesting deals, right?
You need a money-making skill.
What was your money-making skill you were developing across all these different little projects?
Copywriting and also just like tenacity, like getting after it, but copyright.
writing was the one and marketing marketing right learning to sell um in your case learning through
selling through getting website traffic and getting the web visitor to do what i wanted them to do
cool the second thing is you got to learn to be sort of tenacious and scrappy which comes not as a
thing you want to do but as a thing you are forced to do because you really have no other choice but once
you find that gear you now know you have it that's how i would describe it is that accurate it sounds like
it's what happened in your case too nobody wants to you want to
to be scrappy, to be clear.
Right? Like, if you had the option to not have to tough it out, you would probably have
taken that.
But when you're forced to do it, you learn, okay, I have this sort of animal inside.
I can do this.
And now I'm going to use this in every single thing I do.
Whereas somebody who doesn't know if they could do that, they're hesitant to go for it.
Yeah.
And what's funny about that tenacity or, sorry, being scrappy is there's this chart where basically
like, you start that way and you don't like it.
And then you like kind of get a little bit of fancy.
but then once you already are fancy or successful,
you realize you should always be scrappy.
You know what I mean?
There's like a reason that Amazon has like the pizza rule
where it's like you'd only have a team of people
that are like four people
because small scrappy teams do significantly better
in many cases than bigger teams.
And so yeah.
When we met, it's actually hilarious.
If you had just taken a picture of both of our offices
and you had said, which of these two guys
is a successful entrepreneur?
Your office was like a museum.
Dude, if you walked up to Sean's office,
I'm not exaggerating you.
In San Francisco, we lived by Yosemite and the redwood trees.
They're huge.
You could drive it.
You could cut a hole in it and drive a car through it.
Sean's office.
It's as if they made a coffee coaster for your cup out of a redwood tree.
And it was the size of like 18 feet long.
It was like a 18 foot in diameter circle.
That was like a probably a half a million dollar table.
Yeah, it was.
We had four stories.
We had an entire apartment built in with heated bathroom floors.
So if you needed to stay the night, you could sleep there.
every wall was made of one-way mirrors.
So you could like see out, but it couldn't see in.
You had a chef.
We had a chef there every single day.
We had a masseuse on Fridays.
We had open bar.
So every Friday we had, so all these things.
It's a 30,000 square foot office decorated by Ken Folk,
one of the fanciest designers in the world.
And that was my office.
I remember Sam came over one time and he picked up the ashtray,
which nobody smokes inside.
I don't even know why we have an ashtray.
It's like illegal to do that.
And he picked up the ashtray, flipped it over,
and he goes, this is a $700.
dollar ashtray because the sticker was still on it. And I was like, I don't know what to tell you.
I don't know what, I don't know what I'm doing here. And I stole it. It's like the Titanic got built and
then they just plucked like a 23 year old idiot. And they were like, you drive. And I was just
driving that company into the ground. And you had this like half an office. It was like literally
like somebody's apartment. It was a apartment that was $700. Me and Cava shared it.
Yeah, like the bathroom didn't have a door. Like you just had to be like, hey, I'm taking a shit.
You know, like, it was like the craziest scenario.
See, Ava was just sitting over there.
He doesn't even part of your company.
Just like another guy was just there.
And like the wall, like, there was, everything was so strange.
Like nothing made any sense.
You like didn't have Wi-Fi and you were building this internet company.
And yeah, you actually were the one who was building something successful.
And at that period of our lives, like you were actually onto something.
And I was sitting here just like, you know, making things that nobody wanted.
And so, you know, your scrappiness was well deserved at that time.
and earns you some good things.
I had to go through my scrappy period at a different time.
So the third thing I would say,
so one was the tenacious side developing that scrappy mentality,
being willing to be at the bottom and survive at the bottom.
Two is the money-making skill.
And three is project selection.
So starting to figure out, like,
almost through process of elimination,
what are all the bad businesses that you should not be in?
I was in the elimination phase for sure.
Yeah.
You eliminated like, hey, I probably don't want one
where I'm standing outside in the heat selling hot dogs
because I'm going to be capped at how long I can stand outside in the heat.
That's probably not a good idea.
Right.
So manual labor, it's not scalable.
You know, another one that you did was like illegal business.
Like, oh, great.
A lot of people want this moonshine, but like it's only going to go.
The bigger it gets, the more likely I am to fail and go to prison.
So that's probably not a good project to select.
So you were going through process of elimination on project selection.
And so you go through this roommate matching app.
You're making apps now.
That's already better.
If I say, like, what's the SAMPAR criteria now after?
after doing all 10 of these things,
what is a good project to be in for you?
I believe in an Ike guy,
which is like, what's the world want?
What's the world want to pay for?
What am I good at and what I'm passionate at?
And I try to find that in the middle.
But my goal, I'm then, okay,
so that's like the woo-woo stuff that I totally believe in.
But then the other side is,
can I get something?
Can I bootstrap it to $100 million in revenue in 10 years?
Okay, but can I bootstrap it?
So there has to be something you're answering underneath that.
That's like saying,
you know what, my strategy in chess is checkmate.
Right?
Like, okay, yeah, I get it.
But how do you get there exactly?
So what do you look for?
That's going to be a thing you can bootstrap.
So are you looking for,
I can see that somebody has done a similar thing in another space
that I can recreate or apply over here?
Seemed like, the hustle was very much that way.
Yeah.
The newsletter, right?
You looked at the scam.
You looked at a couple others.
You were like, oh, I get what they're doing,
and I can do that just in my way.
Yeah, so I like to say,
I call it like a forgotten business.
So there's a lot of these businesses
that I haven't even talked about on MFM.
But basically, like, there's a bunch of businesses like Hampton that are doing hundreds and hundreds of millions of dollars a year in profit.
And what I tend to do when I looked for Hampton, I mean, Hampton's my only company.
That's what I'm going to be doing for a very long time.
But before I started it, I researched and I go and talk to the owners and I do diligence.
And I thought of it this way.
But then when AI started coming in play, it really solidify it, which is like something that can't be disrupted easily.
I also like looking at things that serious operators don't take serious because I think that there's less competition.
So like with the hustle, people laughed at me when we started it.
But I was like, well, if you do the math, it definitely can get to $100 million in revenue.
And I sold before it got there.
But Austin Reef, who founded Morning Brew, he only sold part of the business and still kept running it.
And they're in the 80 or 90 million revenue, I think, ranged now.
So like the math was right.
And so I look for things that can be real opportunities, but the ballers aren't taking it serious.
Yeah, what Charlie Munger says, the secret to success is weak competition.
And so if I was to say from afar, I've known you for.
I don't know how long have I known you
12 years maybe yeah long time
three obamas
and what I would say is I've noticed
that one thing you do really well
is you're very good at sniffing out
interesting things in spaces where other people are not
not even looking
which is you mostly just following your curiosity and taste
but you go and you do a lot of research
you come across nonchalant
but you're pretty fucking shalant about the research
you go really detailed you go
meet them. You like talk to the bankers. You talk to a lot of people in a space to get a real,
like a real idea of like what those companies look like. And because I want to eliminate the
uncertain, like, okay, so entrepreneurship, I've been thinking about this. The reason I think
entrepreneurship is almost philosophical to me and a lot of people is because entrepreneurship
is sort of like how much uncertainty and fear can you take and still continue moving forward.
Because entrepreneurship is basically like you work on the same thing for six, 12, 18, sometimes
I was 24 months and you're like, I'd still see barely any progress. Is this going to work?
And the price that you're paying for potentially a big outcome or potentially for building a
business or potentially being free, it could take five or 10 years. And the ones who win are the
ones who can handle that uncertainty for a long period of time. That is what entrepreneurship is,
ultimately, in my opinion, it's dealing with uncertainty and dealing with fear. You have fear over
hiring someone when you only have $30,000 in your bank account. I remember when my first employee
had a kid and I was like, it feels like I had a kid. I felt so much fear. Now at this really
has to sustain itself. You have fear over finding your first customer and thinking, I am
promised them one thing. Now I really have to work my butt off to make it work out for them.
You have fear over getting hate and people making fun of them. And so the name of the game of
entrepreneurship is just can you handle the fear and can you handle what's worse is the uncertainty
over potentially five or 10 years. Beautifully said, Monish Parai had a good addition to this,
which he said, understand the difference between risk and uncertainty. So he was talking about it
with the stock market.
He goes, basically the stock market,
stock market investors hate uncertainty.
Like, if they don't know whether your earnings are going to be good or bad,
they will just sort of assume bad, right?
Like, you basically get a huge discount for uncertainty,
but it's not the same thing as actual risk.
And, you know, risk is like, you know,
what do you have to lose?
Uncertainty is just not knowing what's going to happen.
And so people think that entrepreneurs take a lot of risk,
but I actually think that you are a good example of what most entrepreneurs
really do, which is their actual risk.
minimizers. It's like, how do I win while taking the least amount of risk necessary to win?
I'm not trying to take risks. I'm not trying to take unnecessary. I'm trying to vaporize risk
everywhere I can. And whatever's left over, fine. I'm willing to live with what's left over.
And he tells the story of Richard Branson. So he says, Branson is seen as this like freewheeling,
gunslinger, Mr. Risk type of guy, partly because of his look, his brand, etc.
It goes, when Branson started his airline, which is a very, what people would think is a very risky business to be in.
Most airlines fail.
Even today, most airlines don't even make any money.
Even the airlines that exist are very razor-thin margins.
And when he started Virgin, he called up, I think it was British Airways.
And he was trying to get one plane.
So he was like, hey, do you have like, whatever, a 747?
And they were telling him, no, we don't just give out.
We're not going to sell you, random guy on the phone.
like he called the customer support.
We don't sell you a 747.
Can you just connect me to the person who does sell 747?
We don't sell 747.
He's like, all right, do you guys have extra capacity of 747?
So you're not currently in use in your fleet.
They're like, yeah, we do.
He goes, okay, well, would you lease one to me?
And basically he started Virgin by leasing the plane, not buying the plane, which reduced risk.
He released it.
And he was only on the hook for the payments like 60 or 90 days later,
but he was already going to pre-sell the tickets.
for the flights. Like the airline business works where you sell the tickets before you end up paying for the
for the plane and the fuel and all the actual cost of operating it. And so he realized like actually,
well, what's the worst case that happens? I just give them the plane back. Like that's all I'm on
the hook to do is give them the plane back if I can't follow through on my commitment. But if I can
get it to work, I'll know ahead of time because I sell the tickets up front. So it's actually a very like
risk reduction approach to doing what other people see is taking massive risk. And I would say you're the
same way where when I've seen you go into a business, you're looking to reduce risk everywhere
possible. So you're like, does another business like this already exist and work? So I know that
there's demand and I know the business bottle works. Can I apply it into this space where there's not a lot
of competition or there's weak competition? There's not a lot of other really smart super geniuses
running around San Francisco trying to do what I'm doing. Cool. That's a way of reducing risk.
A third way of reducing risk is you try to bootstrap it. You don't take on external investment.
You try to do it where I can start this with pretty much no money. So what do I have?
to lose, just my time. I'm not actually going to be in the hole if this goes wrong. That's another
way that you reduce risk. And the fourth one is, can I use basically my copywriting skills to attract
demand before I have to fulfill the service? I would sell sponsorships before. Yeah, I sold
sponsorships. I wouldn't sell, but yes, I would pre-sell as much as possible. Right. And so, you know,
and you would do a bunch of research to reduce risk. You would talk to the bankers to figure out,
you know, what works in these businesses. You talk to the ex-CEOs, the ex-employees to understand
what works, what doesn't work in this business. And so I think you're a mass
master risk reducer.
And so when somebody sees the business that you do,
they all sound kind of random,
but I would say like where you've come to,
I think at the end is you've figured out your money-making skill,
you figured out how to be tenacious and scrappy.
And then lastly,
you've gotten better at project selection.
And ultimately we'll use sort of a risk reduction method
to pick a project that you think is like kind of a,
I wouldn't say slam dunk,
but like you're not hoping for this sort of one in a hundred outcome.
It's kind of like,
I have to fumble execution for this to fail.
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You should hold your breath still on saying I had good project selection because
In 2015, I started a business called Itch Juice, a poison ivy treatment.
Scratch your own itch, as they say.
So stupid.
So there was this type of lotion that mechanics used.
It was called a green scrub.
I forget exactly what it was called.
But it turns out it also had the same ingredients as Poison Ivy Treatment.
And I bought in bulk like a barrel that you would have at a mechanic shop.
And it was like 20 cents an ounce.
But that as Poison Ivy treatment, it sold for like $20.
ounce and I realized I could rank high on Google. And so I got in the poison ivy treatment
business. And I learned the same thing there that I learned in the alcohol business, which was,
and this did, this was starting to make money, which is like do these short little get rich
quick schemes that you jump into without like doing the Ike guy preparation of like,
what am I actually passionate about? They're stupid. So I learned that one. I feel like I was a lawyer
who just stood up and told the jury my client is innocent. And then at the very end, you were like,
I did it, by the way.
It's like, oh, I told you.
Just don't say anything.
Now I think I did good at selecting new things.
So I got rid of that.
And then I started working.
I think that I have the same story where it took 10 years for me to even figure out what a good business is.
Dude, I don't know how like I read about these prodigies who do, who like are so mature when they're like 26, 27.
And I just, I'm like, am I?
was I just like slow to develop?
Like when I see some of these smart 26,
27 year olds,
I'd think to myself,
I still don't behave that way
and I'm 10 years older than that.
So I don't,
like when I was 26 and 27,
like,
I didn't know anything.
I knew nothing.
And I actually felt this way about you.
And I was like,
he's right stuff on a whiteboard
and he's got these like frameworks way of thinking.
I don't think it frameworks.
I just like do.
Yeah,
while I was sitting there being like,
why am I just on a whiteboard?
This guy's out there just doing it.
I got to do what this guy's doing.
It took me 10 years to even figure out,
at all what the hell is going on.
Ten years.
And ten years, you could say that.
Look, I said that in ten seconds.
It took me ten years.
Watch, that was so quick.
When you're in it, ten years is like an eternity,
especially because you don't even know that.
If I knew, by the way, it'll take me ten years,
but I'll figure it out.
It would have felt so much better.
At the time, it's like the tunnel is still dark.
And I don't even know where, if and when the tunnel ends.
And I don't know how much time I've got left to get there.
So it feels much worse in the moment.
So if anybody is out there who's in their kind of tenure,
tenure doing dumb stuff arc you know i feel you uh it's it's it's normal it still works just keep going
so uh lewis and clark it's like one of my favorite stories ever but they basically they were sent out
starting in st louis thomas jefferson was like hey lewis hey clark do me a favor just walk in that
direction and tell me does it end and what's it look like and what's on the end and they just go
and back then obviously phones didn't exist males mail didn't exist they were just walking around
uh and they didn't know where they were going exactly and it took them two
two years. So imagine that. Imagine sending someone off on a trip for two years and having no idea
like what's going on if they're ever going to come back. And that's what entrepreneurship kind of
feels like. It could have took two years. It could have took five years. Who knows? But we're just
going to go in that direction and I pray and I hope that we're going to find something. That's like
what the uncertainty feels like. Exactly. And every year you're like, now I know, now.
And then you say that again the next year. Like, oh, well, last year we were so so dumb. But this
year. Now we haven't figured it out. And it takes a certain amount of self-delusion to not be like,
hey, man, listen, you said that three times already. And now do I really believe you this time?
And so you need delusion. I think that's also why you got to move to San Francisco is because
you'll be surrounded by success stories and you'll see them. You'll be like, okay, cool, that guy's
not special. I could do it. If you could do it, I could do it. And also, everybody around you is
similarly diluted, which really helps because you sort of brainwash yourselves into.
to this mode where you're going to keep going,
keep taking shots,
and that that's a normal, rational thing to do,
even though it's a completely abnormal,
irrational thing to do.
I think it's one of the biggest benefits
of coming to Silicon Valley.
Can I run off just a few tiny ones?
So I did this thing called a Frisco Disco Taxi
where we dressed up in disco outfits
with afros and we gave rides home for people on New Year's Eve.
Was this like before Lyft?
Yeah, before Lyft.
Or maybe like right-off.
You literally had Lyft figured out.
Yeah.
Yeah. I did Tinder too.
Tinder too.
Yeah. We made $800 that by I did a copywriting class at Neville. We actually hosted it at your office. I think we each made $10,000 or maybe we made $10,000 total. And then another couple failures, I bought some real estate. And I learned that basically the way you make real estate is through doing the most due diligence up front and looking at tons and tons and tons of property because you make your money when you buy. And that is not my skill set. And then, of course, I had the hustle. The hustle started as a conference, then to a blog, then to a new.
newsletter, which worked, we launched this thing called Trends, which was a fairly successful thing,
and then we expanded our events business. Events business is horrible. The way that we did it,
horrible. We had hundreds or thousands of people coming to each event. Way better to go after
smaller groups and charging a lot more. But back then, I couldn't even imagine the idea of someone
being willing to spend two or three or four or five thousand dollars per ticket to a trade show.
And I wish I would have figured that out. Yeah. So me and Tyler, the CEO of Beehive, came up with
a little challenge for you. It's the newsletter challenge. Now, if you know me, you know that I'm a big
fan of newsletters. I got my own newsletter. I also had a business that was a newsletter
business that was amazing. I wrote this newsletter about crypto. We grew it to quarter million
subscribers and we ended up selling it after a year for millions of dollars. And I want you to be
able to do the same thing in your business. So we're doing a challenge. 10 grand is on the line.
Plus, me and Tyler will actually be in your corner as growth advisors. You just need to go to
beehive.com slash MFM and you either start a new newsletter or you move your current newsletter over there.
and five finalists will get picked to pitch me and Tyler, sort of like Shark Tank, and the winner gets 10 grand.
So go to Behive.com slash MFM.
That's Bihive.com slash MFM to enter the challenge today.
And then this podcast turned out to be a business.
We didn't really realize it.
I started a hello and I definitely didn't think of it as a business that you joined.
I still don't think we thought of it as a business for what, the first two or three years?
For the first nine months, I'm almost certain it made zero dollars, right?
No, I had a sponsor somewhere there.
I mean, round down to zero, yes.
Like, 10, 20 grand.
So I posted this photo.
I want people to like understand this.
So Sean came up with the podcast, I think in July, and then I think I joined him in September.
So he did a bunch of loan and then I joined him later on.
I think sometime in December.
So we're talking six months in.
Lance Armstrong, for some reason, read the hustle and I became friendly acquaintances with him.
He wanted to use my office where Sean and I were recording the podcast.
And so he came that day when John and I recording because he messaged me saying, I need to use an office for a meeting. Can I use this? And I said, yeah. We pull him into the podcast as we're recording. And I posted this photo of me, Lance, and Sean standing there. And we only have two microphones. And two chairs. And two chairs. And Sean's just like, Sean's like sitting on like the arm of my chair. And during the episode.
When Sean wants to talk, he has to, like, lead in to reach my microphone.
And then another episode, we had someone like, we had a guest call it.
It was like a digital guest.
It was me and Sean in real life, I had a guest.
For some reason, one of us didn't have AirPods.
And so we just, like, shared an AirPods.
Like, we each had one in our ear.
And I think we were recording on an iPhone.
Like, it was so janky, even six months into it.
Yeah.
Which was funny, too, because it's not even like these were the early,
days of podcasting.
It's like pretty late in the game of podcasting.
Someone should go and look at those old chairs that we use.
We pick these chairs because there was a podcast at the time called Fighter and the Kid,
and they use these bright red chairs, the brightest red chairs.
And we figured they use it so it sticks out on a thumbnail, which I don't even know
if we did YouTube at the time.
But we wanted those chairs.
And it is just a hilarious-looking set.
Honestly, it got to be pretty cool.
When we were in person together, it was pretty amazing.
I still wish we could be doing that.
Oh, my God.
It would be the best.
It would be the best.
It was so much fun.
And we ran to Best Buy and bought like a video camera.
And we had an intern record us.
And the shot is just you and I, like it's dead on, you and I talking.
And the guys that we were copying was Theo Vaughan and Brennan Shop, who obviously Theo Von is Theo Van now.
But back then he was like a came in as a cameo for this other podcast.
Yeah.
Good times.
It feels nostalgic going through this stuff, doesn't it?
Because you are with me for most of it or a lot of it.
But doesn't this is kind of fun to look back and like, it's crazy.
This stuff that we've done.
Yes.
I mean, when you're in it, you just want to get out of it so bad, right?
God, I just want something to work.
Anything.
Is this going to work?
I really hope this thing works.
And I just wanted to get out of it so bad.
And then now you're right.
You know, you look back.
And I've really never had as much fun since as I did on the come-up.
Like the come up was really, it was a lot more, I don't know, high variance or just like unpredictable and like crazy stuff happened.
And it was fun things that I would never make the time to do now.
Like you're never going to go do Sam's Frisco disco now.
You're never going to go do the hot dog stand now.
But actually those are pretty fun like kind of random projects, great stories, great photos, great like memories of trying to pull it off that you were at the time, you know, too dumb to know it was dumb.
And now, unfortunately, you know, you sort of have the curse of knowledge the further you go where.
where you're less likely to go try random dumb things
that might actually have high, you know,
high upside or high fun or high memories,
you know, that come at the end of it.
We have a lot of, like, young guys listening to this
who are in their 20s.
Enjoy it, man.
It was such a blast.
It doesn't feel that way.
But I would say with a high degree of certainty,
if you do the same thing or you try really hard for 10 years
and keep taking risks,
you and I, Sean, have dozens of friends
from that same era.
And we have seen dozens of them.
like many, many, many of them succeed.
Not always like total home runs,
but we have many of those,
but a lot of base hits,
a lot of doubles,
a lot of life-changing businesses have been built,
and it's so exciting to, like, look back and be like,
it works.
You just kind of do it.
It is, I mean, it sounds corny,
but the truth is,
at the time you think your success is about how hard you're working
and maybe your idea or your team
or your execution of the individual thing.
And that's true, like, at the project level,
but at a personal level,
the only thing that's going to determine your success is basically your rate of learning.
How quickly are you figuring things out?
Are you adapting and learning and getting better at your next shot than you were at your last shot?
It's that rule of 100, right?
Like, do 100, try it 100 times and each time try to make one thing better.
If you do that, success is pretty much inevitable.
But at the time, you don't think like that.
At the time, you don't really realize that.
But looking back, that's very much the case.
I'm sure there's some people who have a way to get there a lot faster.
You know, for both you and I, it took 10 years because we sort of, through process of
elimination got rid of most of the dumb things. You did do one thing differently than I think most
people did. You'd ever made the mistake of building something nobody wanted, which is maybe the main
mistake I did. I had a bunch of things that the business sounds great on paper. If it works,
it's going to be huge. But nobody even wants the thing to begin with. So you die on the launch pad.
Whereas you made the opposite, everything you made, people wanted, whether it was hot dogs,
whiskey, whether it was like, you know, a way to get rid of their itch, whatever it was,
you know, you had a way, you always made something that people wanted.
Sometimes the business model was broken or the scalability was broken.
But I feel like you did the one thing really well, which is you never made the Cardinal sin,
which I would say most entrepreneurs make, which is you do something that sounds good on paper,
but nobody actually wants the thing you're making.
And you spend all your energy trying to convince them why they're wrong and why you're right
and actually, no, they just don't want it.
They don't need it.
You know what's funny?
looking back, like, for example, The Hustle,
I think we were at 100,000 subscribers in year one,
and then I think it was 500 in year two,
and then a million and three, something like that.
And that sounds lovely.
It didn't feel like it at the time.
It still felt like I was pushing a rock up a hill.
And so you're saying I made things that people wanted.
Looking back, I agree.
But when you're going through it,
like I remember Ryan Hoover launched Product Hunt,
and people were talking about his product way more
than, like, my product.
And I was like, that's what product market looks like.
Not mine.
I've never experienced that.
What the hell?
And I look back at it and I did have it.
And so some of these things, when you're in the thick of it,
you have to really work hard to try to come up with these lessons at the time.
And you have to sit by yourself to come up with these lessons in the time
because there has been so many things looking back where I'm like, had I only done this,
I would have had so much more.
I would have worked so much better.
But I didn't learn those lessons in the process.
So for example, I used to think that I was like, I want to become a big company, so I have to act corporate.
Now, I know you want to act small as long as you can.
Or if you have something that is growing at like 50% a year, don't mess with it.
That's a great growth rate.
Whereas if you see other people, or I saw other people at time growing significantly faster, but they ended up like dying and blew up.
But I was like, I want to grow that fast.
What the hell?
And I'm looking back, I'm like, no, no, no, that was a rocket.
That was fantastic.
It was great. It was bootstrapped. It was beautiful. I think that I heard this line that basically
says VC is like rocket fuel. And you know who deserves rocket fuel? Rockets. Not fast cars, not cool cars,
not cars that you love, rockets. And the thing about rockets is most of them blow up and don't go
anywhere. A cool car, a great car, a car you love, that could be an amazing life and it could
actually get to the destination eventually, but it might go a little bit slower. And I thought
that was an insult to me. I said, but I want a rocket and I want it to work. Nonsense.
wanted a car. And I wish I would have like had the confidence back then and learned that lesson
that that was the way. All right. So that's Sam's story. Made his first million at 31. But
instead of focusing on how he did it, which we've talked about before, it's the, you know,
I don't know, 10, 15 things he tried before that, the stumbles and fumbles on the way to success.
I'm going to do mine. We'll do one next episode. I'll do my, I'll do my version of that
where I tell you all the terrible, terrible ideas that I had going up to finally making it.
through 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.
Hey, let's take a quick break.
I want to tell you about a podcast that you could check out.
It is called The Science of Scaling by Mark Roberge.
He was the founding Ciro of HubSpot.
And he's a guest lecturer at Harvard Business School.
The guy's smart.
And he sits down every week with different sales leaders from cool companies like Clavio and Vanta and OpenAI.
And he's asking about their strategies, their tactics, and how they're growing
their companies as, you know, head of sales or chief revenue officer. If you're looking to scale
a company up, if you're a CRO or a head of sales just looking to level up in your career,
I think a podcast like this could be great for you. Listen to the science of scaling wherever you
get your podcast.
