My First Million - How Nick Saban’s Side Hustle Might Make Him a Billionaire
Episode Date: April 28, 2025Episode 701: Sam Parr ( https://x.com/theSamParr ) and Shaan Puri ( https://x.com/ShaanVP ) talk about Nick Saban’s car dealership play, plus the most defensible ideas for AI startups. — Show ...Notes: (0:00) Car dealership billionaires (13:35) Local Maxima (17:07) Most defensible AI ideas right now 34:40) AI workflows for profitable newsletters (43:10) Spermracing — Links: • Want to make $ with AI? Get the database here: https://clickhubspot.com/bfu • John Elway - https://www.elwaydealers.com/ • Lovable - https://lovable.dev/ • Replit - https://replit.com/ • Bolt - https://bolt.new/ — 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)
Where were you when you were thinking about this?
I have this room in my house where I have the best ideas.
It's a cool room because if you need a shower, you're already there.
It's just the bathroom.
Okay, so I'm in the bathroom.
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.
All right, I got a business.
I can tell you a little bit about that.
It kind of blew my mind.
So I was on TBPN by a good buddy John Coogan.
I went on there, and they asked me a question.
And they go, so you're a creator and you've got this kind of like cool business, you know,
business underneath yourself as a creator.
Are you bullish on investing in creators right now?
And I go, no, but I'm bullish on creators investing in businesses.
And they were like, what do you mean?
I said, well, actually, like, what I'm doing is it's not that somebody invested in me.
I'm investing.
I'm buying pieces of businesses that I think, you know, should exist or that I can accelerate
in some way.
And that's going really, really well for me.
So I think that's going to be a model that people do.
And so I started thinking about this and saw an example today that kind of blew my mind.
So do you know who Nick Saban is?
I smell what you're stepping in.
Great.
Not a great.
Yes.
I love where you're going with this.
Yes, I do know who he is.
You toot my horn?
Yeah, beep, beat, my friend.
I like Nick Sabin.
All right.
So Nick Sabin, who is the, he was the coach, football coach at Alabama and LSU.
And he's like, probably the most successful.
modern day college football coach.
The guy made probably $150 million as a coach.
Amazing money.
Is that real?
150 as a college football coach?
Yeah, he's like in his 50s.
He's been doing it for a long time.
But his last contract was basically a 10-year, $100 million contract.
He was making $10 to $12 million a year, his last contract.
Wow.
But Nick Saban is actually going to be a billionaire.
And he's going to be a billionaire because of car dealerships.
And I found this pretty fascinating.
I couldn't believe what I was reading.
So the story's pretty cool.
Here's how it goes.
So Nick Saban has partnered up with this guy.
I think his name is John Agresti.
And the headline of the article was the man who will make Nick Sabin a billionaire.
And it talks about how Sabin, after his, while he was coaching was deciding like, you know what?
I think I might go into car dealerships.
And car dealerships have had like an interesting history with athletes.
I remember growing up in Colorado, John Eloway, all the.
all the car dealerships had John Elway's name on him.
And he was our active quarterback at the Broncos.
And I didn't really know this because I was just a kid at the time,
but I went back in the look.
I was like, what happened with John Elway's car dealerships?
And it turns out Elway basically had this insane story where he,
while he was a player, he started this car dealership brand,
selling Toyotas and like Chevys or something like that.
And before he retires, he sells his car dealership group to AutoNation for $87 million.
mostly stock.
And so he gets,
he gets paid out $90 million,
which was more than he was making
as a quarterback for,
you know,
a professional quarterback in the NFL.
And he then also licensed them
his face and his name
so that they could continue using his brand
all the way for like another 10 years.
And he had a non-compete during that time.
And two crazy things happened.
One, because of that deal structure,
John Elway,
both he made a bag and he lost a huge bag
at the same time.
So he made 87.
million dollars but then when he retires it turns out that the owner of the broncos offered john
elli an incredible deal he basically told him you can buy 10% of the team for 15 million dollars today
and actually i i owe you this like deferred salary because you're going to retire uh earlier or something
like he owed him 21 million dollars a deferred salary he said you know what i'll let you buy
another 10% for that 21 million and he's john elway's like i don't know that's a lot of money and the guy
He goes, I'll make it even more of a no-brainer for you.
If you change your mind, you don't like it.
You want to sell the team within the next five years.
I will pay you back everything you put in plus $5 million and 8% annual interest.
So you literally can't lose money in this deal.
You can only make money.
Who owned the Broncos at the time?
Bernie Madoff?
Because this sounds like a deal too good to be true.
Pat Bolin.
And so Pat wanted John Elway to be part of the team.
So he wanted also to work as an exec with the team.
Got it.
And I guess he was like, I'm going to pay you this money either way.
How about instead I trade you stock for the team?
Okay.
So, Elway actually turns the deal down.
It turns it down for two reasons.
One, he's illiquid because he sold for $87 million, but it's auto trader stock.
And so he didn't have liquidity at the time.
Maybe you couldn't sell right away.
He didn't have the $15 million cash on hand because he had also just made an investment for $15 million.
It's some guy named Sean Mueller, who was actually just running a Ponzi scheme that ended up
failing and he lost, you know, half of his money in that.
He got half of it back.
He lost half of it.
So he didn't have the cash.
So he's like,
ah,
I can't do it.
And then he's like,
you know,
also.
Dude,
he listened to the wrong,
the wrong Ponzi team guy.
I thought it was the Baraco guy.
Turns out it was this other guy.
Exactly.
And by the way,
that steak,
that's about a billion dollar stake today in the team.
The team just sold for $5 billion.
So Eloy missed out on that.
And after the non-competeed ended,
he then went back into the car dealership business.
And he,
he's built it back up.
And now that car dealership business,
does like, you know, again, over a billion dollars in sales, and he's worth a few hundred
million dollars from his second rodeo on the car dealership side. So I don't really, I don't know,
I didn't put enough respect on the car dealership name. Let me tell you about the, the Nick Saban
one now. What caught my eye is that a story came out saying that they bought two dealers,
two dealerships in Miami. Two, two car dealerships in Miami. Guess the price?
$20 million? I don't know. 10? You're only off by $680 million. Wait, what? They bought two dealerships
for a reported $700 million in Miami.
Oh, my God.
Oh, and they're Mercedes.
I'm looking at the article in Mercedes.
They're high-end Mercedes dealerships.
I think they have like an exclusive.
I think they're into like the prime ultra-rich area of Miami.
But dude, I actually spent 30 minutes this morning to figure out, is this a typo?
Because I was like, there was no way that individual dealerships can be worth $350 million.
In fact, I'm still like 25% convinced that might be a typo and it might be 70 million.
But I couldn't, after 30 minutes of digging, I couldn't find it.
But it's pretty insane.
Their dealership group, they now own like, I don't know, 10 to 15 dealers, dealerships
across like Alabama, where he was the coach to now Miami.
And he says that the guy said that they sell 22,000 cars a year, 20,000 Mercedes a year,
which is, and then he says they do about $2 billion in revenue on that.
That's insane.
The partner is now worth a billion dollars on paper, and Sabin will probably be worth a billion
dollars after these deals. Isn't that wild? It's crazy. Did I not bring this up a while ago?
I thought, because I think I read some, I didn't know that he was a billionaire, but I read some
stat about car dealerships. It's crazy. And you told me you wanted to cover car dealers.
Interestingly, Forbes, they did an article with another beautiful title. It was called the car dealership
billionaire, no one knows. And it's about this guy named Terry Taylor, who owns, I think, 120 car
dealerships and he's also lives in Florida. But they came across him because they're like,
well, this guy doesn't do any interviews. We've never seen a photo of them. We don't know anything
about him. But what we do know is that someone recently bought Tommy Hilfinger. They bought his
$30 million mansion in New York City. And turns out the same LLC owns $250 million with a real
estate. Who's behind this? And they find out that it's this auto dealership owner who owns practically
the whole thing, and he owns a bunch of them, and he's just making a lot of money, and they
eventually get a hold of them. And he goes, I heard you've talked to all my associates. Fine.
I will answer just a few questions for you. And the whole story is how he purposely is trying to be
low-key and under the radar, but they uncover that he owns, you know, $80 million jet. He owns all this
amazing stuff. And so turns out car dealerships, shockingly amazing companies.
Shockingly amazing. Yeah. I think they get little local monopolies, because I think,
you get like a territory, you might become the only dealer for that brand in that area.
And then people tend to buy from, you know, a local radius if they're not buying online.
And I think the way that they work is like the car manufacturers basically do like floor financing or something like that.
They basically like lend you.
They basically finance you to own the inventory.
So I think you're not out of pocket as much as it would sound like.
It's very bank friendly.
So in this article, they were talking about how once you've proven to Mercedes,
or whoever that you're a decent operator, they, you know, they're like, yeah, we would love to expand.
You're trustworthy.
Let's go.
And then the banks will be like, yeah, like, this is a very, like, predictable business.
Like, we've seen this for 100 years.
We will loan you money once you've proven to be successful.
So it's a very loanable business.
And the way that this happened was Sabin was sponsored by Mercedes.
So he had just done some events.
Show up, take some pictures, kiss some babies.
And so he goes to these Mercedes events and he's like, huh, okay.
like I think like Mercedes is great.
So he talks to them.
He's like, yeah, I'm interested.
Actually like I might be interested like doing a dealership.
And they go, listen, you're not going to want to operate these things.
You keep being Nick Saban, God tier football coach.
You go obsess over that.
Let's enter, we'll introduce you to four or five of our favorite franchisees that we think to kick ass.
We have all the data.
We know who kicks ass.
You might be able to partner with one of them.
So he does a four hour meeting with the first guy they introduced him to, this guy, John.
And he takes no more meetings.
He agrees after the first.
four hours, I'm going to partner with this guy. And he goes, it's like interviewing an
offensive coordinator. When you know, you know, which is so romantic. I thought he would use like a love
analogy, but he's like offensive coordinator. And this guy, John, is a hustler. So in addition to
the car dealerships, they had a new bourbon company that they started, a Kentucky bourbon company,
him, Sabin again. And then during COVID, they created a medical business called Dream Medical
Group. So they have Dream Auto Group and they created Dream Medical Group and sold over $100 million
of PPE during COVID-19.
This guy's doing shit.
By the way, whenever I hear that story of someone doing PPE during COVID,
always a hustler.
Well, it can go one of two ways.
You're always a hustler.
You're in that circle, but it's like you're either full of it or...
Good hustle or bad hustle.
Yeah, like there's something about it.
How fascinating.
I did not realize it was that big.
It seems like the key to this is two things.
Partnering with the right dealer before, like, you know, I own a Mercedes.
And it seems like Mercedes has been booed.
booming for the last 10 years. Like they're cool now. They were always, they were always cool.
But now they're like they have, it's like they have some accessible models that many people can
buy. So they, I imagine they're selling a lot. But also he picked the right cities. So he picked
Nashville in like 2016 or something like that. You know what I mean? Like picking like the right
GOs that are growing with richer people to be able to support a dealership. And where your name,
if you're an athlete or a coach, carries weight. Like it's kind of silly, but like just the jump the, what is,
What is Elway's one called?
I think it's called John Elway Chevrolet.
It's the number one Chevy dealer in the country.
Because guess what?
We like our hometown kid.
We like the local hero, you know, the local quarterback who brought us the Super Bowl, right?
Like that's a heroic guy.
And John Eloway Chevrolet, it does $50 to $100 million a year in revenue, just that one, one dealership.
And, you know, that's pretty crazy.
And so I think these guys have done a good job.
By the way, here's a quote from this dude.
Tell me what you think of this.
So it says, they're talking about this guy, John.
They go, he's even more obsessed with the financial details.
He's a former accountant, and he compiles his own monthly statement for every single store.
Quote, if you say to me, how's March going?
I can look and say, Cutler Bay sold 13 cars last night, eight new, five pre-owned.
I can tell you who the salespeople were.
I could tell you that Evelyn bought one.
I know every name, every car we sold, how much money we made, and I tracked them on parabolic
curves to make sure we're not overcharging or undercharging anybody.
What a beast, man.
The only thing is, what is he's talking about?
parabolic curves for. What could that even mean? I tracked them on parabolic curves.
Isn't a parabolic curve like at the beginning of when exponential growth happens?
Yeah, but what does that mean? I track them on parabolic curves. What does that even mean?
Patrick Collison tweeted this thing the other day and he used the phrase local maxima.
Did you see that? Love that. Love breaking through a local maxima. I had to like go and figure out what all this meant.
He said, I think worry about local maxima comes from imaging the 3D world, where it is in fact
easier to get trapped.
I didn't know what that meant.
I had to go figure out.
Each word had to be individually looked up.
I did not know what that sentence meant at all.
And then he goes, but company space has many more dimensions.
And so most critical points are, as you say, just saddles.
There's almost always a positive gradient.
You can trundle along.
I did not know what any of that any of those sentences.
Did not or do not?
I did not.
And so I had to, I shared.
I said, could somebody explain to me?
And they, and he explained what it said.
And it's actually brilliant.
And I totally got into this.
What does it mean?
It means people often worry that they're going to grow their company a bit and hit a ceiling and get stuck.
Like reaching a small success and thinking that's as far as it can go.
But the original quote says that business isn't like climbing a simple hill where you can easily get trapped on a small peak.
business has many moving parts product team market pricing strategy etc and that creates lots of directions to explore
so even if growth stalls or slows it's rarely the true limit there's almost always another path forward
something you could tweak improve change to unlock more growth most stuck points in business are just temporary plateaus
not dead ends and the saddle thing kind of blew my mind it's a mathematical it's like a it's like a mathematical thing
but if you google like if you or if you look you could you could i could show you this but oh i see the
picture of a shape. You see the photo. It's kind of mind-blowing, actually. When I, like, saw this
photo, it's hard to explain to the listener. We'll put, we'll put the, uh, the photo up, but it's
basically looking at a normal like X and Y access, but now there's a third and it's 3D, and it shows
that you can go forward or back up or down. And it actually kind of was mind-blowing. I felt like Tom
Haverford, uh, in the show Parks and Rec, where he like sees like a piece of art and he's like,
this makes me feel something. That's so strange. And someone had to explain to him, that's like,
Yeah, that's what art does.
Like, it makes you feel something.
And I remember seeing this this weekend, and I just sat there and I'm like, I feel,
I feel special after reading this.
Like, I've just learned.
And it was kind of cool.
I think you got reality distortion fielded, my friend.
He just RD my ass hard.
Telling somebody there at a local maxima is always one of the, like, patch on the head.
It's like, wait, are you patting me or are you like telling me I'm a little boy, right?
If you ever use that on somebody, it's a great backhanded diss.
It just says like, you're doing great, but you don't realize you're still at the kids table right now.
And there's this other game.
That's the global maxima.
You got to throw in a bud there.
You're like local maxima, but local maxima.
In fact, this article with the car dealership guy says an article on Forbes.
And at the end of it, they go, Joe loves dealmaking so much.
He, you know, in the middle of our interview, I has to apologize.
Sorry, pal, don't mean to be rude.
I just really got to close this deal.
And I was like, oh, damn, he just paled you.
And you put that in, you put that in the article?
Joe, Joe sounds cool, but also like a douche.
He's got into the whiskey business, too.
Check, check, check.
He called Joe.
His name's John also.
Local Maxima, bud.
I don't remember for it.
I don't remember names.
That's hilarious.
That was the virtual version of slapping someone on the ass
and say, go get them.
Call them another wrong name.
All right, what else we got?
I have some other stuff.
All right, so in AI, there's been these like waves
where four or five of the same company will get started
and they'll all get like an incredible amount of traction.
So a few years ago, this was when chat,
maybe GPT3 or 3.5 was out.
It was like copyrighting services.
So Jasper, copy AI.
There was a whole bunch of companies
that just exploded past 10 million in revenue very quickly with the same idea,
which was like, hey, we'll help you write blog post and marketing copy, right?
Marketing copy written for you.
That was like one idea.
And then they got kind of wrecked by just chat GPT, just became good enough where you could do all
those things.
You didn't need a separate tool.
So they ran into trouble.
I shouldn't say they got wrecked, but they ran into some headwinds where the explosive growth
didn't last forever.
And then the current batch of AI companies that's doing,
this is these website builders.
So lovable is one of them.
Replit is another.
Bolt is another.
And so there's these website builders,
which is very simple.
Like just the way you had Squarespace and Wix,
you go drag and drop and make a website without code.
Now you don't even have to drag and drop.
You just say what you want.
You're like, hey, I want a website for a law firm.
And it just gives you a beautiful website for a law firm.
You're like, uh, make the hero thing a carousel and it makes it a carousel.
Like you don't have to, you don't have to code.
And you make these sites.
And so these businesses have now exploded.
They're some of the fastest growing companies.
I don't know the latest revenue numbers.
Is cursor one of them?
No, cursor is a little different.
Cursor is a tool for existing developers.
But like, you know, lovable hit 4 million.
It was doing basically a million dollars of ARR every week for the first four weeks.
And it's now at 20 million plus.
That's insane.
Bolt is at 20 million.
Loveable is at 20 million.
It's crazy.
Right.
So like they're growing really, really fast.
And so those are there now
But I also kind of predict
That that that's gonna be a very shaky space to build on
I don't know how much
It's gonna be like a Groupon
You know like
Could be it might be that they're the next Squarespace
Curspace you know eventually became a public company
But I don't I don't personally think so
I think that that's gonna be just like a feature inside of chat chvety
It's like make me a website
And I think they're gonna be able to do that
Something like replets a little different
Because you got a whole back end or whatever anyways
That's all nuance what I'm saying
What I'm trying to get to is
It got me thinking
what would be a more defensible AI business?
So what's a simple business?
That's about AI,
but is not going to get just wrecked
by the next chat GPT update.
And so I started thinking,
I was like, okay, well,
some of the most defensible businesses are marketplaces.
And nobody's really built a good AI marketplace yet.
What would that even be?
You know, why not?
We all know that marketplaces are super, super valuable
when they get built, right?
eBay, Amazon, Airbnb, etc.
Uber, these are all marketplaces,
supply demand.
Where were you when you were thinking about this?
Tell me, walk me through, like, when you're having these very strange conversations with you, where?
I have this room in my house where I have the best ideas.
And it's like we have tile on the floor.
It's a cool room because if you need to poop or pee, you're already there.
If you need to shower, you're already there.
It's just the bathroom.
Okay, so you're just sitting in the bathroom.
thinking about
defensive,
defensible AI companies.
Exactly.
As one does.
And so I'm thinking,
I'm like,
why isn't there like a high end,
like,
you know,
one of the hardest things
about AI right now is just
keeping up with the tools
and being able to do something.
And I was thinking,
somebody should make a upwork or Fiverr
that is just for highly skilled
AI doers.
So a place where I can go
and I can just put up a task
that I know probably somebody
with AI can either do it,
build it for me,
or show me how to do this on a recurring basis
and make a very skilled marketplace
where people can go earn a ton of money
for their own AI enthusiasm.
Because I know a bunch of people
that are really enthusiastic about this stuff
and they build their own pet projects.
They try every new tool that comes out.
But they don't really have like businesses
where they need to use them
because they're just like AI enthusiasts.
They're just like kind of bored on Twitter all day.
And I think that you could,
if you even just had like 150 people
on the supply side for this,
I think every, a lot of businesses know
that they could probably benefit
from AI. And I think if you went there and you were able to just like state your problem and then
have people sort of like tell you what they could do with AI to solve your problem and you just
pay them to do that, I think you could build a marketplace around skilled AI practitioners right now.
I think that I think that could be built. It's like the upscale version. You know, you go,
you go to like the top kind of like one percent level of quality of job on Upwork or Fiverr or 99
designs. Dude, I always thought that like somewhere, your company somewhere,
or something like this should just make it where I can hire an expert.
And they could come and they could spend three or four weeks looking at my company
and saying, I can make this better, this better, and this better.
Because that's what I want.
Because I see online that everyone's like, you know, I think Shopify made this announcement.
They go, instead of hiring, you first must say, can I hire AI?
And if you can't, then you can hire a human being.
And I see these things like this and I'm like, oh, man, I feel left.
out. I don't know how to do any of this. Like, like, I want, I want to automate all this. Like,
when you say AI, to me, I'm still on level one. It's just me talking to chat GPT. But then I hear
about all these other things and vectors and all this stuff. And I'm like, I know it's important,
but I don't know how to do any of it. Do you know what I mean? It's like saying like,
Sean, do you with the V6 or the V8 car? And you're like, I don't know what any of that means,
but I know that the V8 is better. I, like, that's how I am with AI. And I wish I could pay someone to just come
and do this. So I think this is an excellent idea, by the way. So you can. There's,
there are consultants that will do this. They'll shadow your work. They'll, they'll come into your
company. They'll do a discovery phase. I mean, all the way up to Accenture, I think is going to do
a billion dollars this year in AI consulting. Like big companies are hiring McKinsey in Accenture to do
it. And then small companies can hire these like indie shops to basically say, all right, I'll pay five to
10 grand to come do a like six week program where you kind of figure out where you can optimize and then
and then optimize.
But a lot of that's so speculative.
And like, what if you don't find anything?
That sounds like work on my end.
Here's kind of how I want it to work.
So what would you call this?
What would I call it?
I'd call it.
Cute name.
Upslice, top slice.
I call it top slice.
Do you remember that's not bad?
Do you remember that's actually kind of cool?
Do you remember when we talked about A-Team?
I thought that name was so good.
A-team is fantastic.
It was a fantastic name.
A-team.
I want that name for everything.
Let me just give out some marketing, some absolute marketing gold here.
Have you ever heard this phrase?
I'm almost scared to say this because I love, like the marketing genius of this phrase is so good.
Nobody ever talks about it.
And I really want to use the same principle on something, but I'll give it away here.
Have you ever heard of marry me chicken?
No.
I don't know what that.
Is that a nursery rhyme?
No.
It's a chicken recipe.
And it's like you ever, it's like, oh, if you want to learn how to make my, like,
this chicken dish is called
Merry Me Chicken because if you make it for a man
He will be like marry me right away
And it's this thing that women say
It's like a it's a it's a it's a way to say the recipe
And it's like if you just think about that
There's a thousand ways they could have described like
This creamy chicken recipe right
Creamy chicken it could have been like
The name of the ingredient
It could have been the cooking process
No marry me chicken
Love that phrase. Love the idea of marry me chicken
I think for any business
You should come up with like a Merry Me chicken level
description of like what the person really would want like how good must it be that they say marry me at
the end of it right so i love that so i would love to come up with something like that for this but
yeah i think that there's an opportunity to create create something like this here's what i would
want it to work so i have a buddy who invest in this e-commerce company i was like why did you invest in
that and he goes he's doing really interesting stuff with the i and honestly i wanted to invest just so that
i could like see what he's trying he's trying to build the company the whole company i first so he's
trying not to hire anybody.
He's trying to do AI for pretty much every job.
It's e-com in the sense of they make a product and they sell it or it's like Amazon.
Like it's like a platform.
No, like they make a product.
It's like a brand.
Like you buy this supplement and then you and then they sell it on Shopify.
And I was like, oh, fascinating.
So like, what's you doing?
I really want to know.
I got an e-com brand.
And I think actually that's a kind of a good hook, which is instead of saying,
let me study your business or you come in and you describe the problem that you know
AI can solve because that already presupposes you know quite a bit about
what AI could or couldn't do for you.
But if I just subscribed, I was like, hey, I want you to tell me once a week
what somebody paid somebody to build for their ecom brand here and show me kind of like
how it works, I then as an e-com store owner would be like, oh, you can just, I don't have to
do product photography anymore.
I could just use this thing to do all my photography.
It actually works.
Like, wow, that's great.
I didn't even realize that.
And then, oh, the next thing, oh, they set up this agent that manages the supply chain.
So it takes every freight forward invoice and it puts it into the sheet and then it checks that sheet to make sure that there's no overages and then it and then it posted in Slack.
That's great.
I have a person doing that today.
That's awesome.
I'd like to take that task and sell it to AI instead.
And so I think the problem with most businesses adopting AI is a problem of imagination, not capability.
Like you could sit down and figure it out or you could hire somebody to do any of these things.
It's an imagination problem for most people.
They don't even really realize where they could be doing things.
So for you, with Hampton, for example, you might, maybe it could be as granular as like
memberships or paid communities or something like that.
Or it might just be like somebody who's doing sale.
It's like, you subscribe to the sales feed.
It's like, cool.
Anytime somebody comes in and pays for an AI job that improves their sales process, I want to know what they did.
Like, I'll give you an example in one of my companies.
This company is growing really fast.
It's so fast that we literally can't get enough proposals out the door.
Like, customers want to pay, but the sales guys have too many proposals to create.
And so what he did was he created this, our CTO created this little agent that will listen to the sales call.
And it knows what our capabilities are.
And it just, it's listening to the sales call and it knows our capability.
So it auto generates a draft invoice of what services we should package to this customer.
And there probably wasn't like a good plug-in and he just customized it for you.
Yeah, that didn't exist.
In fact, I think this is a whole startup idea, somebody should build.
But, like, he built that internally.
And now our sales guys, as soon as they get off the call, the draft proposal is ready.
They just need to tweak three things.
And I was like, wow, this is genius.
And, again, like, I think that should just be a startup idea altogether.
It's like a tool for salespeople that, like, by the time they get off the call,
the AI agent has already figured out the follow-up email, the draft, the proposal,
the CRM thing that it needs to input, et cetera.
This is kind of a 10 out of 10.
Idea.
Yeah, I think so.
I think this might be a 10 out of 10.
I don't know if it's...
The AI marketplace or the sales thing I just said?
Because they're both kind of dope.
Well, I don't know anything about the second one.
But yeah, that's cool.
But the first one.
Because I'm like thinking, like I, I guess like I would easily give money to someone right now.
If they, if like, because a lot of times AI, it feels like I don't know what I don't know, but I know it's important.
And it's like, just give me all the examples of how this is helpful for me and just do it.
Right.
You know what I mean?
Now the, the hard part about a business like this is, of course,
marketplaces are incredibly difficult to spin up, right?
It's a chicken and egg problem.
How do you get supply?
How do you get demand?
How do you get demand where there's no supply?
How do you increase?
Are you, how do you figure out are you supply constrained or demand constrain?
That initial cranking of the crank is really hard.
So this is not something that like, I would say a B minus entrepreneur can do.
You know, like I think I think you basically have to be an A plus entrepreneur to do
marketplaces.
It's just like maybe a personal belief because I think the initial cranking is so difficult.
and take so much kind of skill and hustle to do.
But I think it's a great opportunity.
Because when you build them, they're very valuable when you do build them.
And so if anybody wants to work on this,
feel free to email me, shana shopperry.com or DM me.
I want to hear if anybody tries this or is interesting trying it.
Well, how is Fivert taking advantage of the AI stuff?
Have you seen anything?
Dude, I used to use Fiverr so much.
I don't use it at all anymore.
We'll know from the homepage.
It's still the same old junk.
And I feel like if I had to imagine a lot of their business was graphic design and now it's basically just taking advantage of people who don't know that chat chitpT exists and they're like yeah and they're like hey can you like oh I can just pay this kind of big an image he gets back to be so fast.
It takes a lot of iteration though.
But but you know what one thing I heard people do?
I think there's people who are rolling up the top Fiver accounts because they're like cool you have top real estate under graphic design on Fiverr.
So you're just automatically getting, you know, hundreds of jobs a week inputted to you.
So they're buying them.
And then they're just replacing the creator with AI and like an AI managed service underneath it.
And I thought that was pretty fascinating.
It's like buying, you know, beachfront property on the world shittiest.
That sounds like a horrible idea.
But this is, yeah, this sounds like a horrible idea.
Because that's like, you know, what happened to the thrasios?
Property, like right where the hurricanes keep hitting in Louisiana.
Yeah, I mean, this sounds horrible.
So, you know, the key with any roll-up is like, yes, either you're going to get extreme durability,
in which case you pay a higher multiple, or you get unknown durability.
But if you're buying it like one X, for example, or you're buying it like one and a half X or two-X or something like that, you can make it work, right?
Like, you can end up looking like a genius if you buy it a low enough multiple.
So in something like this, I bet these people have never been offered anything before.
It's like, oh, you'll pay me like a year of earnings.
or two years of earnings for if I just walk away right now.
And then I know that I can kind of increase the earnings of the cost potential,
you know,
the cost savings by,
you know,
30 percent.
And as long as it holds for,
you know,
two years,
as long as fiber doesn't just go under the next two years,
every year after that,
it's profit, right?
So,
you know,
you could make it work.
It's not like,
it's not,
it's not a horrible idea,
is what I'm saying.
My mother-in-law has this pillow business.
And it does many,
many hundreds,
close to seven figures a year in revenue.
And it's quite,
profitable. Like, she's paying herself a good salary. And, you know, now that she's got some,
a bunch of grandkids, she's like, I guess I'm just going to shut this down. And I was like,
you know, Smithy, I don't know anything about e-commerce, but I'm pretty sure, you know you could sell
a business. And she was like, what do you mean? I was like, well, someone will pay you something like,
it could be one times. It could be eight times. I'm not sure your, your salary. Like,
they'll pay you that or your owner's earnings to buy your business. And it blew her mind. And she was
like someone will buy this and it it was like amazing to hear this woman who's like killing it just
on Etsy realize that someone will pay her money like to own this thing and I don't I have no idea
what it's worth I don't know if it's one times if it's five times what it's worth but it was pretty
cool to see her go through this exercise are you doing are you actually using AI in a meaningful way
in anything in your company or I'll ask differently are your employees using I'm sure you use
it as a thought partner. Are you using it like, are your staff using it on a daily basis where your
company has gotten significantly more productive? Well, the example I just gave you on the sales
side, that's probably that was one great example. The most impressive example, I would say,
other than that, it's like more chat GPT plus, you know what I mean? It's kind of like, oh,
review this email. It's like, hey, we need to write this thing. We need to like research this thing.
we need to draft something, stuff like that is like the daily stuff.
I don't, we haven't like replaced job functions yet with AI.
That's what I'm waiting for is like basically like, oh, we don't need to hire this person
because an AI agent or this person with AI is better than this person with another person.
But that's where something like this service is, this actually plays like an interesting part here
because you know it's important, but you for a variety of,
of reasons haven't implemented it.
Then there's all these other people.
I don't operate anymore.
So I'm not the CEO of any of these businesses.
So the people who run these businesses are their heads down on the business.
They're not as AI curious as I am.
Yeah, but they have the same mindset, which is either I'm either too busy right now or I don't
exactly know how to do this or this sounds like a project that I'm a little bit ignorant
on.
But I know that this is interesting.
And then you have all these guys who have like in the past three years been like raised
on this stuff and they're like, are you a fool? Why aren't you doing it this way, this way,
this way? You know what I mean? And that connection would be very valuable.
I remember, so we both did the newsletter business and the workflow for the hustle was probably
similar than the, of the workflow for the group. Dude, it was so janky. So like, what's the output?
The output is we got to write an email. We got to write an email that's going to go to, you know,
hundreds of thousands or millions of people tomorrow morning. It's got to basically say,
here's the most important stories that you should care about.
Here's what happened.
Here's our kind of quick commentary of what it means.
And let's make you laugh, right?
Let's entertain you along the way.
And let's put it in the sponsorships and all that.
And there needs to be the right ads.
The right ads need to be in the email.
I had a full-time person whose job was to do that.
And when you say the right ads,
what do you mean by the right ads?
Just explain the complexity for somebody who's like,
why do you need a full-time person to make for what do you mean the right ad?
Just put the ad in.
Because if you're sending an email to, let's say,
three million people and you make $100,000 every time you hit send. Sometimes, like let's say
Target will say, I want to spend $1 million with you over the course of the next three months.
And then Warby Parker will say, well, I want to spend $20,000 with you over the next three weeks.
You have to figure out how to mix and match. So today's email to three million people,
500,000 is going to see the Warby Parker ad.
2.5 million is going to see the Target ad. And then next week, it's going to be swapped. And you have to
make sure they're not the same people are seeing the same ad. And no technology, at least when I
started, did any of that. So I had to one person manually do all of this. And it's not crazy
complicated, but when the stakes are high and it's like my whole business, it, and you have people
giving you. Ad ops was kind of the name of the job, right? Like you're not the salesperson,
but you're the ad ops person in between. So, okay, great. So I met a guy who was doing a new and there's
multiple ads per email. But even if you take the ads out for a second, if you just take the content
itself. Okay, so what do you need to do? That means every day somebody's figuring out what are all the
top stories today. So there's like a search and then there's a curation. And then you have to like,
so you find all the top stories. You make a judgment call and which ones are worth talking about.
Then you have to research those topics. And then you have to write about, you have to summarize them.
And then you have to maybe add some commentary, some value at. Okay. So we got to do that every day.
And, you know, we did it with one or two writers. I think you did it initially with a few writers.
And so let's say that the cost of production there was like, you know, let's just call.
call it on the lowest end, $250,000 a year.
If both of us weren't so scrappy, like another person running that business,
in fact, when we sold the business, it became like closer to a million dollars a year
of cost to, like, do the editorial.
Yeah, we were definitely spending seven figures.
And so I met a guy who's doing this entire workflow with AI.
So you just did that thing and he was just like, cool, I'm going to do this way.
So he's like, he was using AI to scan specific sources to figure out what stories are hot.
then he would use AI to summarize those articles.
Then he would use AI to check which influencers
were reposting those articles on Twitter as a signal
for like social signal of what's important,
what's generating buzz.
And then he would take that final thing
and then he would send it to a human dude who was living in Japan
who would just like proofread it overnight.
And they'd be like, yep, this all is like legitimate.
Fact check, just kind of like make sure the AI didn't hallucinate.
he's paying that guy like whatever
$50 an hour to spend two hours on it
like a 50 or 100 bucks a day on this
on the editing and then he never wrote
he never wrote it and he never had a writer
and then it auto formatted it for him
so it created an HTML email for him
and it inserted the ad
and then it sent it out and then it tracked the results
and it sent him a report
to take it even a step further
that sounds like I'm gonna one up you
I know a guy
who is doing the same thing, but it's for local newsletters.
And the thing about local newsletters is it's a fantastic business,
minus the fact that the profits are totally destroyed
because you have to have local ad sales and local writers for everyone.
But if you could just have lots of newsletters for Raleigh, for Nashville, Louisville,
but not have the writers, it would be a very great business, right?
And he's doing what you're describing, but for local news.
And it very quickly spins up a place,
a newsletter that says like, hey, and it makes an ad and it says, hey, Danville in California,
do you want news just for Danville? And it goes to a Danville.com or whatever. And he's built this whole
local newsletter empire all automated. How's it doing? It does six figures right now a month in revenue.
And it's just him doing it. And so it's him and it's buying ads on Facebook targeting local people to get
subscribers. That's awesome. That's great. Very cool. Dude, our business is,
like, oh my God, thank God, right?
Thank God we got out.
But why are you saying that?
You're saying thank God because it's just way different.
It's just way different.
It's way more competitive now?
Or what is the underneath that feeling?
I have the same feeling, but I think maybe for a different reason.
I think, okay, so when I started in 2016, people like laughed at us.
And I know you hear that story a lot, but like people were literally like you, you were
that person.
Yeah.
You said, why are you doing this stupid?
Kermit drink?
Yeah.
You said, people left.
You were like, why are you doing this silly thing?
And I was like, no, it's like, if you read the math, it could be big.
Now, like, I, like, I know these like hipsters, like, hipsters have newsletters.
Like, it's like, it's, everyone has a newsletter and it's way more complicated inside of someone's inbox to stand out.
And so it was, I think I succeeded because it was a silly business that I took seriously.
and there weren't that many serious operators in there.
And you could say I wasn't even that serious of an operator,
but I still succeeded.
Now there's actually really smart people trying to win the game
and makes it much harder for just like, you know,
it's just harder.
Let's say you were motivated to start the hustle this year.
What do you think would be the outcome four years from now?
So the caveat is you're committed to doing it.
You're going to work hard on it.
Does it have to be the same genre?
of content?
No, it could be different.
I think I could build a significantly larger business.
I think it would look a lot closer to industry dive,
so where it would be lots of different newsletters built for job titles that are kind
of forgotten and ignored.
And then to monetize it, it would be newsletter, it would be advertisements, but then
also it would be community peer groups, sort of like Hampton would be on the back end.
And I think it wouldn't grow as fast, and I could own it forever.
I think it would be very, very hard to grow as fast as I grew it, the hustle.
And what if you did the hustle idea again?
I don't think it would succeed.
I think that it would, I would not succeed.
Dude, I got to like 300,000 subscribers organically in like two years.
Like, it was so easy looking back on it.
That would never happen again.
There's too much noise.
I think that to buy subscribers on Facebook, it's actually shockingly the same price.
I don't know if you know anything about the market.
Yeah, I don't.
But I hear it's still like $1.50.
But we grew organically because we got popular on Reddit, on hacker news, places like that.
And it was considered outlandish and silly and remarkable what we were doing.
It was noteworthy, rather.
It's not noteworthy anymore.
So it's too hard to have something spread virally now.
Do you agree?
Yeah.
I think all the things you said are true.
But I do think you could do it again and you, I think you could do it again and win because, you, you know.
you're good at that type of content and that type of business.
So I think you would,
I think you would figure it out again.
And I think you'd have other advantages,
which is that like, you know,
newsletter advertising is a lot more sophisticated and, like,
available than it was back then.
So it's also cheaper now, though.
So we used to charge,
I forget what we'd be charged,
but I think it was $25 to $40 per 1,000.
I'm hearing now it's much cheaper because there's so many options.
Interesting.
Huh.
I didn't know that.
When we were doing Milk Road,
I think we were charging that or more.
And that was only two, three years ago.
So maybe it's changed or maybe it was crypto.
So it was like financial, financial newsletters, I think definitely command a premium.
So I'm not sure.
But I would never do it again.
It's hard.
It's a way harder business than people realize.
It's fucking hard.
Can we wrap up with me telling you something funny?
Okay.
Let's do it.
Go to this.
Go to sperm racing.com.
Have you seen sperm racing?
What have been go to it if it's my homepage?
Yeah, I mean, you seem like a sperm racing.
Yeah, they probably, they were trying to figure out who just sent the sponsorship deck guy.
They're like, Sean seems like a sperm guy.
Guys, two words, blank check.
All right, so the world's, I go there, the world's first sperm race and one of the most epic little videos behind it.
Okay, so what is this?
So click manifesto and just read the first couple lines.
All right.
So sperm racing.
When people hear it, they ask me the same thing every time.
Wait, is this really happening?
And the answer is always?
Hell yeah, it is.
But here's a thing.
Sperm racing is not just a joke.
It's not just some viral idea for the internet to laugh at.
It's something much bigger.
All right.
Let's see.
Let's see if they could pay off that promise.
Male fertility is declining, like a lot.
It's happening quietly, steadily, and nobody's talking about it.
And then there's a diagram of the.
average sperm count in a man from the 1970s to today, and it's basically cut in half.
So we have half as much sperm per milliliter of semen.
Wow.
A metric, I didn't even know.
I didn't even know you could measure that.
I didn't even know that existed.
All right.
T.I.L.
All right.
And sperm ability, which is how fast it moves, which is a massive factor in fertility in getting
pregnant, is a measurable, trackable thing just like running a race or lifting weight.
It's something you can actually improve.
and nobody's cared about it until now.
So we're turning health into a sport,
and they built a race track for sperm,
two competitors, two samples,
one microscopic finish line,
and then they have a MS paint diagram of the track.
Is this a real thing or is a joke?
It's 100% real.
Can I watch this live?
Can I pay pay per view for this?
So listen to what they're doing.
So here's,
this is from an article,
the times.com.
So once the samples are taken,
which I assume that means
they have to go backstage
because like it's got to be
like ready to roll right away.
It's going to be placed into the middle of the stadium
and a live video feed that's magnified 40 times
to display the sperm will track the samples of progress.
And the sperm are going to swim through a...
They typically spend...
Swim five millimeters per minute.
Meaning this race is going to take 40 minutes
because they're going to have them swim through this course.
The event will run over three races in front of a crowd of 4,000 spectators
and feature play-by-play commentations.
instant replays and leaderboards.
And this company, according to this article,
is run by like three 17-year-olds
and they've raised $1.5 million.
This is incredible.
Everyone else out there who is working on a product
that isn't working?
Take notes.
All right.
The high video was amazing.
I genuinely think we should be sponsoring this
and or we should be the
the presenting sponsor
presenting podcast
or us bias baby
so
okay so what are they
really trying to do
okay so they
they're going to sell out
this
5,000 attendees
to watch this
which is hilarious
they're trying to raise awareness
but is this
is just an awareness
is this an offshoot
of a bigger brand
or so
they want to make this a sport
I don't know
it's hard to
they haven't like
they've done
the right thing so far, which is they have it relieved the tension from the joke. Like, you know,
that's, I think, the way to go about it. But look at the photo that I posted on here where this guy
wrote me to the photo of them. Eric. And it says, the future of technology. How beautiful is this?
And so I assume that this is all about like content marketing for some type of male fertility
startup. But they've done the best thing ever, which is they've not acknowledged that it's a
And you might, and apparently the founder is Eric Zhu, Z-H-U, but that's like a pretty common name.
So you probably know.
No, I know this guy.
I did a phone call with this kid.
He was doing a different startup before this that I didn't think was that, like, you know, was the one.
Did you advise him?
Did you advise him?
You're like, I got an idea.
Hear me out.
I said, just dream about the future you want to build.
And this is what he came up with.
What's the secret, Eric, that you know that no one else knows?
We wanted flying cars and we instead got sperm racing.
Yeah.
Wow.
This is crazy.
Fun project, though.
You know, I've talked about this before, actually, but I think that silly projects like this,
and not to be insulting because obviously this is actually greatness, but things that to others
might seem silly are amazing starter businesses.
And I think that one mistake a lot of people make when you're early on as a founder is
you try to do, A, what you think will work.
So you end up doing some like, I don't know,
a boring business that you're not really,
you don't really understand very well,
but it sounds good on paper.
Or you try to, you know, shoot for the moon where you're not,
you know, you shoot for the moon, but you don't have a rocket, right?
You don't have the skills, the capability, the network, the whatever.
And of, of course, those can work.
And there's no, I'm not saying don't do those.
But I think another path that I did, which was like,
my first business was a sushi race.
restaurant chain.
Like most outlandish idea.
Yours, you were doing like, I don't know what your first first was, but like you did a
hot dog stand.
You worked for the American Pickers guy.
You did like a bunch of random things that the business itself isn't great.
You know, opportunities of sort of three out of ten, four out of ten.
But at the time, you don't know any better.
But the important thing is that you're going to build a bunch of like random skills.
And so like, for example, with our sushi restaurant, I learned because we were trying to make
stuff. I learned how to pitch investors. I learned how to do, I learned
Photoshop. I learned how to use After Effects a little bit. I learned how to use
I Movie. We created a YouTube channel. We'd learned how to do, you know, door to our sales.
We learned a bunch of random, random experiences that I wouldn't have got had I just, A,
had a traditional job, or B, if I had done a startup that was just like more serious in
nature. I guess because the startup was like a little bit fun, I was willing to do things that,
uh, or it felt normal. Once the first idea is a little bit fun, you know, then your
marketing idea can be a little fun and out there.
And then your hiring practice can be a little fun and out there.
You can just sort of stack on from there when you kind of have like what feels more like a
sandbox where you could be creative versus when you feel like you have a, you're on tight,
tight rails of what you're supposed to do.
I don't know if that makes a lot of sense.
That makes a lot of sense.
And I agree with it.
And I also think.
Reminds me of me.
We didn't do something anywhere near as interesting or cool as this.
But like we've talked about Henry and Dylan, those guys who were doing, uh, clip, they were making
content.
They have this like.
Yeah.
A little like animation, what's it called?
Like a service business.
Like a funny newsletter.
They'll do like, they came to our house and they built our podcast studios.
They're just doing a bunch of random shit that was like building little skills for them.
They weren't experts on any of those things, but they became expert level doing them.
And they sort of pivoting from what I do the next and to others it might look like they're sort of lost.
But I've seen it work out very well for myself and my friends who I was doing it with.
And so I don't know if you could advise people to do that.
But if you're already doing that, I would say, don't sweat it.
I can actually pay off.
And Eric Zhu is listening to this podcast right now,
and he's saying,
I need to clip this and send this to my Chinese immigrant parents
who are like,
it's like they still,
you know,
they're not on board with sperm racing.
And imagine being 17 years old
and selling out a 4,000 person at a stadium.
I mean,
that's pretty,
it's pretty baller.
Yeah,
although they're just saying it's sold out.
Is it actually sold out?
When you go to the ticket master,
when you go to ticket master to buy a ticket,
There's a lot of blue.
You know, there's a lot of open seats.
So I don't know.
You know, I'm not exactly sure, but I could see this being a pretty fun thing for a much of college kids.
Like, are you going to go watch the sperm event?
The sperm race.
Even the logo is so good.
Everything about the branding is extremely well done.
Oh, no.
Event canceled.
What?
Oh, no.
All right, update from the sperm guy.
He's, I go, is the event canceled?
I don't see it on Ticketmaster.
He goes, no, we got effed over by the Palladium, I guess the venue.
They weren't happy with the TMZ interview and some other stuff.
And then he goes, it's still the same day, but we move into LA Center Studios.
Tickets will redrop Tuesday.
Oh, my God.
What is, what is the other stuff is?
Sounds like a sticky situation.
I don't think I want to know.
Yeah.
All right, that's it.
That's the pod.
Days off on a road.
Let's travel.
Never looking back.
