My First Million - How to Make $1,000,000 After You Graduate (5 steps)

Episode Date: January 8, 2025

Get our Business Monetization Playbook: Watch this episode here - https://youtu.be/qkcFcwb6mk0 Episode 666: Shaan Puri ( https://x.com/ShaanVP ) breaks down his 5 step process for making $1,00...0,000 quickly.  — Show Notes:  (0:00) Intro (2:32) Slay the salary monster (13:26) Play the game 10 times (20:05) How to win even when you lose (25:26) Proximity is power (26:33) Impatient with action, patient with results — Links: • Sarah Moore episode - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dF6zvTXimxY  — 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 The HubSpot Podcast Network // Production by Arie Desormeaux // Editing by Ezra Bakker Trupiano

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Starting point is 00:00:00 If you click this video, it's probably not the first video you've ever clicked like this. Maybe one like this or this or this. There are a ton of videos on YouTube that are promising you how you can get rich quick. And I get it because everybody wants that. I wanted it too. Let me guess it didn't work. You did not, in fact, get rich quickly. And that's not your fault because most advice on the internet either comes from people who
Starting point is 00:00:21 themselves never got rich or it's too vague. It's too general. It's just things like work hard, find your passion, things like that. And as bad of a reputation as get rich quick has, the truth is it is actually possible to get rich quickly, right? You can get rich slow, you can get rich quick, you can get rich. But most of the people who are doing these videos, they've actually never done to themselves. A few weeks ago, I was asked to give at Berkeley, and the talk I chose to give was called How to Make a Million dollars after you graduate. And I gave that talk because that's what I wanted when I was a college kid.
Starting point is 00:00:50 Like, I didn't know any better. I just thought, well, I'm, what am I doing all this studying for? Why am I working so hard? Because I wanted to get a job that would be successful, that would give me money and then I would be financially free, and that's what I wanted. I wasn't really ashamed to admit it. Now, the problem was the whole time in college, nobody was explaining to me, like, what do you actually go do to make that happen, right? I was learning about mitosis, and I was learning about, you know, the history of the world wars. And nobody was telling me, I'm here at school to learn how to be successful. Nobody was telling me how to actually do that. And so this talk that I gave at Berkeley has, at the beginning, it does have some of those
Starting point is 00:01:23 core principles, the things that you got to know in order to make this happen. and at the end I have specific ideas. I call them my white belt businesses. So the specific ideas that I would go do if I wanted to make this process faster. It took me about 10 years, but I think I could have done it in about four if I knew what I was doing.
Starting point is 00:01:41 So this is it. I'm doing it. This is my get rich quick video. Enjoy. I feel like I can rule the world. I know I could be what I want to. If you're listening to this on audio, I'm just going to tell you right now,
Starting point is 00:01:57 you're going to want to go watch this on YouTube because there's slides and they're good slides. There's slides with beautiful pictures on them and there are things that are going to make this way easier to understand. So just go to YouTube and type My First Million on YouTube and you will find this video. And while you're there, just subscribe. Just do the good thing. This is not going to be like one of those videos where the thumbnail and the title sound really good, sound really promising. And then you watch and 40 minutes in, you're like, dude, what is the message? That's my promise to you.
Starting point is 00:02:22 I'm actually going to tell you a bunch of really core principles. with my real story and then some specifics of how you can actually implement this. All right. So let's jump in. The premise of this talk is how to make your first million. I says after Berkeley because I did this at Berkeley. It's how to make your first million in your 20s. So how to make it in a few years rather than working for 40 years, saving up and then hitting
Starting point is 00:02:47 this goal when you're 60, 65 ready for retirement. And most people who talk to you online or in person will tell you just follow your passion. But I don't know about you. I personally, I liked the idea, but I did not know what my passion actually was. If you told me what your passion when I was in school, I don't know, I would have said recess because there was not something that I was so passionate about that I just thought, oh, wow, this is it. This is my true calling.
Starting point is 00:03:10 Maybe there's some people out there that are that lucky, but I wasn't one of them. And so that advice didn't really work for me. So I'm not going to tell you to follow your passion. Instead, I'm going to do what somebody did for me when I was younger. So this is me in college. I went to Duke University and I thought I was going to be a doctor. I was pre-med. I spent my whole college career taking physics and biology and chemistry classes.
Starting point is 00:03:38 And finally, my last semester, when I was done with all those requirements, I had taken the MCATs, I was ready to go to med school. I finally took the easy class. I took the blow-off class, the class that my roommate always was taken, rocks for jocks type of classes. And it was called Getting Rich. I just took it for an EZA, but instead it actually was the most important class I took. my entire college career. You know, because at the time, I knew what I wanted, right? I wanted to be happy. I wanted to be rich. I wanted to have abs. But, you know, my plan was just a, there was no plan. It was really just a goal, and a goal without a plan is just a wish. And so I knew what I wanted,
Starting point is 00:04:16 but I had no idea how to actually get there. And then I met this guy. This guy came into my class, and he changed my life. This is not actually a picture of him. This is just a picture when I search cool men's haircut. But that guy had a really cool haircut. and he walked in and he blew my mind. And so here's my promise to you. My pinky is out for you here. I'm going to tell you how I did it, how I made a million dollars when I was in my 20s, how you can do it, and specific ideas that I would be doing if I was you today to go make it happen again. Because even if you don't follow my exact path, I know better now. I know how I could have got there easier and with less pain and faster. And I'm going to tell you what those three ideas are.
Starting point is 00:04:54 Okay, along the way between you today and this picture of you at the end, lying on a hammock under an umbrella at a beach somewhere, there are sort of five key checkpoints, five things that you got to do in order to make that dream happen to get to paradise. But, you know, before I give you any advice, rule number one, never ask directions from somebody who's never been to that destination before. You know, or never trust a bald barber for a haircut, right? So I want to fast my credentials here so that you know that I'm legit. So if you give me a minute to brag, I don't like to brag, but I got to brag here because you should not be listening to business advice or money advice from anybody who has not achieved it themselves. Here's my basic resume.
Starting point is 00:05:35 I've started over 10 companies. Three of them have sold. I've invested it over 100 others. My current portfolio of companies that I own and operate will do close to $100 million this year in revenue. And that's where I'm at now. And when I was in my 20s, I started off completely clueless. And so I went from clueless to that.
Starting point is 00:05:52 And I think you can too. It took me about 15 years. I think you could do it faster if you knew better. One of my companies, Bebo got acquired by Amazon. I started a newsletter company called The Milk Road that got bought it for about a year. I have also a quote unquote thought leader, and I have to put Dr. Evil up here because that's pretty embarrassing to even try to say. But the truth is, have a podcast that's pretty popular.
Starting point is 00:06:13 Have a Twitter that's pretty popular. Justin Bieber follows me. He did not respond to my DM. So that's a little bit of a soft spot for me. You get the idea. Okay. I'm legit. Do I have permission to continue?
Starting point is 00:06:22 are we good? So this is me back in 2010. I'm sitting in that classroom and I am painfully average. I have average grades. I have an average social life. It's not even so bad that I'm like, oh, wow, this is going to make for a really great comeback story. Nobody was rooting for me because I was just in the middle and I was stuck. And I was not bad enough where I felt even really a lot of motivation to change it. I just thought that's who I am. I'm kind of a middle of the pack sort of guy. So that was me, Mr. Mediocre and what changed. I met a girl, not my wife. It was a woman named Lisa Keister. And she changed my life, my plan without even knowing it. I took her class and in walks, Mr. Cool Haircut. And Mr. Cool Haircut asked a question. He's supposed to be
Starting point is 00:07:03 giving a talk, but he says, instead of giving a talk, let me just ask a simple question, who here wants to be an entrepreneur someday? Who here wants to be wealthy and be a successful entrepreneur? Everybody's hands went up, right? So everybody had the entrepreneur side down. And then he said, cool, you guys are all seniors, right? We said, yes. He said, awesome. So you're graduating in just a couple months. Yes. Who here is already working on their business idea? One hand went up. And he said, okay, well, who knows that they're going to go start a startup when they graduate? And two hands went up. He said, wow. So out of a class of 100% of people who wanted to go be an entrepreneur, almost none of you are actually going to go be an entrepreneur. What's up with that?
Starting point is 00:07:46 And he said, what are you planning to do? And person said, well, yeah, I do want to start a company someday, but I got a great job at UBS. I got a great job at McKinsey. And everybody had great jobs lined up after school. And so he just asked why. And he asked why, like, we were crazy. This quote from Andrew Wilkinson to me explains it. Well, he said, go into business school to become an entrepreneur,
Starting point is 00:08:10 like reading a book about basketball history because you want to join the NBA. In the same way, going and getting a job at a business in order to learn how to run a business, that doesn't really work. That's not actually what happens. happens. And instead, what will happen to you is what Nassim Taleb calls the third great addiction. So the three most harmful addictions in the world are heroin, carbohydrates, and a monthly salary. And for most of us, we will be trapped by that salary monster. As soon as you get on that path of having the job and you have the salary, it is very, very hard to get off that.
Starting point is 00:08:40 And so that is the first trap for anybody who wants to get rich is that most of you will talk yourself into why you need to have a job. I did this too, by the way. I went and got a job for about two months and quit by you know quit my my job after two months even though it was a six figure job straight out of college it was a good job and it wasn't like the job was boring or terrible in any way but i just realized like this is not getting me closer to the thing i actually want and so the safe path which was taking the job was actually kind of dangerous because it was dangerous to my dream right i think we all think of danger as danger to you like oh it's gonna you something bad's going to happen to you but the worst thing that could have to you is actually you choose a path
Starting point is 00:09:18 and you spend all your time and energy working on something that's not your dream. And so if I had a dream of being a successful entrepreneur, which is what I did, then the salary monster was the very first thing to avoid. And so you need to slay the salary monster. Most of you will fall into the someday trap where you say that someday you will go start that company and someday you will make it happen. But someday never comes. My friend Trevor has this great analogy that I want to offer to you here.
Starting point is 00:09:46 and it's the story of two tigers. And there's two tigers that were, you know, born together, same mom, separated at birth. And one tiger was taken by these wonderful tiger-loving people and cared for and raised at a zoo. He was loved every day. They brushed his hair. They fed him everything that he loved. And they taught him new tricks. They just cared for him in every way they could.
Starting point is 00:10:10 They took care of him. That is the zoo tiger. And the other tiger was neglected. He was left alone in the jungle to survive on his own. He had to, if he wanted to eat, he had to hunt. If he wanted to drink, he had to find water. And he had to survive against all predators and prey. And so they became these two tigers, the zoo tiger and the jungle tiger.
Starting point is 00:10:29 And let me ask you a quick question. So after 10 years of being raised this way, if the jungle tiger was put in the zoo, what would happen? He would be bored. He would be bored out of his mind. He would be like, what am I supposed to do all day? I just sit here, I just sit here and look pretty. his entire way of life would be almost neutered, and he would be put in a zoo,
Starting point is 00:10:48 and he would be bored out of his mind. And this is the most entrepreneurs, if they ever get a corporate job. They sort of sit there at their desk, and they wonder, what am I supposed to be doing here? I don't understand. What does this job title mean? And the opposite is also interesting.
Starting point is 00:11:02 So if you take the zoo tiger, you put him in the jungle after 10 years. What happens to him? He dies. There's no idea how to actually survive in the real world because he has been coddled and cared for and lived in this structured boxes his entire life. And that is the problem with the someday trap, which is if you spend your life in
Starting point is 00:11:20 these jobs, even good jobs, even challenging jobs, you are being raised as a zoo tiger. And every year that you were in the zoo, you are less likely to be able to survive in the jungle. It's not impossible, but man, your conditioning is really wiring you for that. So you get to choose early on if you were going to be a zoo tiger and a jungle tiger. And you should know that the jungle tiger's path is often much more uncertain, much more uncomfortable, and he's going to get dirty and rough and get some cuts and bumps and bruises, but in the end, it's what he wants to be able to survive on his own. Okay, so that is the zoo tigel jungle tiger story. And I say that all of this to say that step one of being successful is it not about intelligence. It's not about experience. It's not about
Starting point is 00:12:00 strategy at all. It is about courage. And that courage is the rate limiting step for 99% of smart people. And so if you consider yourself a smart person, instead of trying to pour more water into the bucket of intelligence or information and read the next article or learn the next strategy. In fact, you should actually look at your courage bucket and make sure that it is full and that you are ready to go because if you don't do that, none of the other stuff will work. Okay, let's move on. Oh, yeah, this is a little slide I had here. Courage is like toilet paper during a hurricane. It is in scarce supply. It is not on the shelves. Okay. Now, you've done step one. You've decided to go do it. You've decided to do it now.
Starting point is 00:12:40 not someday. So what is the second thing that you got to do? Well, the next thing that's going to happen is you're going to fail and you're going to fail miserably. I know very few people who just decided to be an entrepreneur and then went and did it. But you have to decide if you're going to be okay with that kind of failure. And I love this Bill Burr quote. I want to read it to you here. Bill Burr, the famous comedian said he knew he should go after comedy because he realized that sleeping on a futon when you're 30 is not the worst thing. You know what's worse? Sleeping in a king bed next to a wife that you're not really in love with. But for some you married and you got a couple of kids and you've got a job that you hate and you're laying there
Starting point is 00:13:14 fantasizing about chasing your dream and sleeping on a futon. There is no risk when you go after a dream. There is no risk when you go after a dream. There's a tremendous risk to playing it safe. I love this Bill Burr quote and I agree with it wholly. Now let me tell you practically speaking, strategically speaking, how I did this. So I decided when I graduated from college that I was going to spend a year strategically broke. And I chose this phrase instead of of saying unemployed or saying I'm traveling. I said, I am being strategically broke. And I said that because it got people to ask me questions, intelligent questions.
Starting point is 00:13:48 Like, what does that mean? Why are you doing that? And I had to have a real answer for it. And so I decided I'm not going to med school. And I calculated what I call the freedom number. And the freedom number is a very important number. A lot of people will calculate their desired net worth. They will calculate their dream amount of money that they want to have.
Starting point is 00:14:06 That is a sort of a maximum number you want to have. But you actually want to be. to calculate the minimum number. And the minimum number I call the freedom number, which is the minimum salary you need to have maximum freedom. Okay. So what is the minimum amount you need to earn that would give you the most of your time every day to go do whatever it is that you want to do? You know, for me, for example, I calculated that I needed roughly, I think it was like 15 grand to live on for the year. And I said, if I have 15 grand, then I can pay all my bills and I could just spend all my time doing whatever I want. And so 15 grand became my target. And this is when all my friends were targeting
Starting point is 00:14:43 six figure salaries or whatever. They wanted to get as much as they could. And they were willing to go work banking jobs, 80 hours a week, 90 hours a week, trying to get that extra 10K or 20K salary. Whereas I was going the opposite way. I was like, can I tutor kids? Can I like coach basketball at a school like and that's what I did. I literally, I tutored stats, even though I was a C plus stats student. And I taught basketball at a school for autistic children. And that's what I did. That was my job when I was graduated from a prestigious school. I decided to spend a year doing that because that paid me my 15K that I needed in the minimum amount of time. It only took me like, you know, whatever, four hours a week or five hours a week of time to do that. And then I had 80 hours a week free to do whatever I wanted.
Starting point is 00:15:28 And so I wanted my freedom number to be hit. And to do this, you're going to live a little scrappy. This is actual pictures from my apartment at the time. So this is, you know, our art is like a towel on the wall, this ugly Craigslist couch. We slept on air mattresses. You noticed that the air mattresses next to the couch because we put three people in a two-bedroom apartment, like, you know, just the basic things. This was our kitchen. I don't know why we nailed the garbage bag to the wall, but like we did whatever we needed to do. We just didn't spend money on anything that was going to, because it was decreasing our freedom if we spent money on other stuff. And we used the time to start our first business. And this is us on CNN pitching our first business with
Starting point is 00:16:05 sabi sushi, and it worked right away. We had a brilliant idea. We were brilliant co-founders, and we had a huge success right away. Oh, wait, that's not at all what happened, actually. It was a terrible idea. We decided to start a sushi franchise, even though restaurants are terrible business, and we knew nothing about the food business. I started it not with two brilliant co-founders, but with my two buddies who were equally clueless as me, and it did not work immediately. It was not a huge success. It failed badly. And this failure was very painful because reality punched us in the mouth. We had told everybody we knew that we were doing this. Everyone we graduated with, our teachers, our parents, our friends of family, all of them.
Starting point is 00:16:43 And we made no money. In fact, we lost money doing this. We burned about $25,000 of prize money that we had won to do this. We made no money during or after. And now we had a new label. Instead of being entrepreneurs, we were labeled as failures. And this is where I want to offer you a chance to play a game, because this is the second fork in the road. The first fork in the road was, are you even going to get started? Right? That was the salary monster. Well, the second fork in the road is, are you going to quit after the first failure, which is almost inevitable? And so if there was a game where I had a piece of paper, and on this piece of paper, I had, let's say, there was 10 circles. And under the 10 circles, one of the 10 circles had a prize,
Starting point is 00:17:27 and the other nine were, you lose. Try again. So I let you play the game. You pick a number. Think of that number in your head right now. Whatever number you thought of, it's not that. You lost. Okay, cool. So you lose round one. And that makes sense. You only had a one in ten chance of winning, which is, by the way, similar to the odds of a successful business
Starting point is 00:17:48 when you start a new business. Now, the trick here is that even though the game is rigged against you, meaning I have a nine out of ten chance of winning, you have a one out of ten chance of winning. You do have one tool at your disposal, which is that you get to play the game as many times as you want. Well, the funny thing about that is that if you get to play play a game like this, even with a one out of ten chance to win, if you got to play that
Starting point is 00:18:10 10 times, your odds of success now go up to about 65%. So now you're an odds on favorite to win. You're going to win two out of every three times. You actually try that. And so this is the game of entrepreneurship. The game of entrepreneurship is you have to have the courage to start, and then you have to have the endurance to try 10 times. Okay. So these are my first two lessons to you. Number one, start now. Number two, play the game. 10 times. It took me 10 years to be successful, and that was about 10 attempts. So I think technically it was about eight or nine years total, but 10 or 11 attempts in those eight or nine years, that's about normal. It takes about a year to try anything in earnest. And I was willing to try 10 times.
Starting point is 00:18:53 And this is the same as true for all of my cohort of friends. So of all of my friends, we were in San Francisco together. We were in our early 20s. And we all wanted to be successful. A couple of them got it in their first, second, or third try, but most of us, it took about 10 tries. But the amazing thing is that after 10 years, almost everybody is successful. You know, the great quote from Naval is that startups fail, but founders don't.
Starting point is 00:19:15 And you've got to remember that. The startup itself might fail, but you won't fail if you play the game 10 times. Now, the third thing you need to do is answer this thought experiment. If you know that you're going to lose many times, for sure on the first, and probably the first, second, third,
Starting point is 00:19:30 four, fifth, sixth, seventh time that you're going to try this, Can you win even when you lose? At Berkeley, I had people come up to the whiteboard and write down an answer. How do you win when you lose? And somebody said, well, maybe you win because you learn some lessons. Okay, that's great. You won when you lost.
Starting point is 00:19:49 How else? Maybe you met some great people along the way you earned some connections. Great. That's another way to win when you lose. What else can you do? And so the one that I want to draw your attention to is the skills that you will build while you fail. And so even though the startups you're doing might fail, in fact, probably will fail,
Starting point is 00:20:08 even though you believe in your heart, there's no chance that's going to fail. This is totally going to work. The one thing that you can control that will certainly succeed is if you build your skill stack. And there are three master skills you must build along the way. The first skill is learning to build. The second skill is learning to sell. And the third skill is learning to get lucky. Let's walk through them.
Starting point is 00:20:30 Learning to build. Okay, you are going to have to choose one way to build. one way to make things. It doesn't have to be building with your hands. It can be engineering, robotics, things like that. So Elon Musk type stuff, rockets, cars, that's the type of thing. You can learn to build that stuff. And you will suck out of the beginning.
Starting point is 00:20:47 But if you're going to do this for a few years, you'll be pretty damn good by year two, three, four. You will know what you're doing. You'll be able to build at least prototypes and maybe even, you know, your V1 of things yourself. So you can build things with your hands. You could build things with code. So you can learn to program. you can build things as a designer. You could also learn how to build or make content.
Starting point is 00:21:07 So, you know, this podcast, YouTube channel, you need to learn how to make something. And so that is the first thing you're going to learn. Pick a path of what thing you're going to learn to make and then practice that nonstop. And so you should pick the thing that you love the most. Don't try to strategize this. Just pick the one you're drawn to.
Starting point is 00:21:24 Pick the one that you think would be really cool if you could do it, that you think you would have the energy to do even when you're tired after work. And that's the one you want to pick. and that's the one you want to start doing, and you're going to do it hundreds and hundreds of times. The second thing is learning to sell. Learning to sell is how you get the thing you made into people's hands.
Starting point is 00:21:44 This is learning Facebook ads. This is learning Google ads. This is learning how to do content marketing, where you write blog posts, and then the blog posts teach somebody something, and then at the end you say, here's my product. You learn newsletter writing and how to sell that way. You learn copyrighting skills,
Starting point is 00:21:59 that you learn what words get people to actually click. And so you need to learn the core set of sales, skills, whether this is in-person selling, whether this is phone selling, whether this is cold emailing, whether this is digital marketing, one of those, one of those paths, you've got to learn to pick and figure out how to do. And so the startups that you build along the way, somebody's going to need to make the stuff, somebody's going to need to sell the stuff. That should be you at the beginning. And even though you suck at it, and that's why your startup's going to fail, you're going to build, you know, one inch at a time those skills so that you're actually good at it. So then when
Starting point is 00:22:29 you actually have a good idea, you will be able to execute on it. And the third thing is learning how to get lucky. There are four types of luck. If you've never heard this before, I'll do the fast version. The first type of luck is blind luck. It's just, you know, a lucky break. You know, you're standing still and lightning strikes you. This happens, but you can't count on it. There's nothing you can do to influence it. The second one is motion luck. This is fortune favors the bold. This is, you do so much stuff that you just get lucky more than the guy who sits still. I think we all know this in our gut. The person who's doing more things, giving themselves more surface area, more of a chance of getting lucky. Even if they're doing, you know, not the best things or not the most
Starting point is 00:23:08 effective things or efficient things, just simply doing more things than less will increase your luck. The third is spotting luck. So this is, you know, the prepared mind. This is when a guy who spends his whole career analyzing stocks and then one day he reads a report that everybody else ignores, but he knows, wow, this is a winner. This is about to be a hundred X return for me because he knows what he's looking for. And the way you get spotting luck is, again, by doing so much stuff that when something is actually an outlier, you will be able to recognize it because you've seen a hundred mundane things. This is like in dating, you've gone on 100 bad dates that actually prepares you so that when you meet that remarkable person, you actually recognize,
Starting point is 00:23:50 wow, this is an amazing person. Do not let this, do not blow this chance. Do not let them go. Do not just take the first no, really go after it. And so that's the third one. And the fourth one, which is your reputational luck. It's where luck is like a magnet. The classic example here is that you are the world's best deep sea diver. You are known for it. You are renowned for your ability to dive deep into the ocean. Well, when somebody discovers a sunken treasure all the way across the world,
Starting point is 00:24:17 their first phone call will be to you because of your reputation. And this is why making content online is so valuable, because if you get a reputation for being the guy or gal who knows about X, then people start calling you. They start thinking about you and other people's luck becomes your luck. And so the three core skills
Starting point is 00:24:34 you want to learn, learn how to make things, learn how to sell things, and learn how to get lucky. It is actually a skill that you can develop and you can intentionally do things to increase your level of luck.
Starting point is 00:24:43 A very simple one. The fourth of the five things that you need to do is move. And people don't like to say this because it sounds harsh. It's a lifestyle choice. Shouldn't you be able to live and let live and just do whatever you want to do?
Starting point is 00:24:54 Yes, sure. But if you want to increase your odds of success, move because every city has a whisper. Every city has something to it that is its promise. If you want to be an actor, go to Hollywood. If you want to be in finance, go to New York. If you want to be in tech, go to Silicon Valley. And the reason you do these things is because every city has a certain energy and has a certain
Starting point is 00:25:13 set of people in them that will conspire to your success. You will be able to get a crew and being around a crew of people who are chasing the same dream as you is very powerful. Proximity is power. Just simply being near people who live the life that you want to live. is the fastest way to become that person. And the last thing I'm going to do is I'm going to give you three specific ideas that you can actually do, three specific paths that you could pick now that you know the core principles, right?
Starting point is 00:25:38 So the core principles, just to review again. Number one, you've got to start now. Number two, you've got to be willing to play the game ten times. Number three, you're going to build your skill stack along the way along those failures. Bill, learn to make something, learn to sell something, and learn to get lucky. And now number four and five are going to be around the specific ideas that I think you can pursue. I call these white belt businesses. It's basically a business that anybody can do with very little business experience.
Starting point is 00:26:03 They're pretty safe. They don't require a lot of capital or experience. There's no big barrier to entry. They're not the best businesses, but they are great starter businesses. It's like when a kid starts a lemonade stand, it's just an easy starter business to get into. So here's three white belt businesses that I think anybody could start. The first one is a marketing agency. So you want to learn that skill of how to sell.
Starting point is 00:26:25 Well, a marketing agency is going to be a forcing functional. to do that. Now, the problem is most people don't know anything about a marketing agency. They don't know anything about marketing themselves, so they don't feel qualified to do this. And so here's how you go about doing this. You're going to pick a version of marketing that you like. Maybe it's making video commercials and you're going to learn video production and actually create little YouTube videos that are going to be commercials for products. Maybe it's Google Ads, and you're going to help local businesses get discovered with Google Ads. Maybe it's Facebook ads. You're going to learn how to sell e-commerce products through Facebook. Maybe it's TikTok ads or
Starting point is 00:26:58 TikTok videos because that's the new new field. Whatever it is that you're drawn to, whatever you're interested in, you pick one of those. Now, you're going to go to a friend or family who has a crummy business. You want something low stakes. And you're going to go to this friend of family who's got this crummy business, Aunt Patty, who's, you know, selling her little chachis out of her basement. And you're going to go to Aunt Patty and you're going to say, Aunt Patty, I love you chachis. Best chachis I've seen. Can I help you sell these? and you're going to take a very starter budget, maybe $100 a month at the start,
Starting point is 00:27:28 and you're going to figure out how you would sell that online. So if it's Google Ads, you're going to do Google Ads. You're going to study every free course on YouTube for Google Ads. You're going to join every Facebook group about Google Ads. You're going to be on LinkedIn, and you're going to subscribe to everybody who's a thought leader on Google Ads, and then you are going to run your own Google Ads all at the same time. You're going to do learning and doing at the same time.
Starting point is 00:27:51 You're going to learn with your own time being free, and you're going to have kind of crappy results, but you're going to work your way up. And so, you know, a very simple thing you could do here is you can go to, you can go to really any business because the good news is most businesses suck at marketing. So you can go to a senior living facility nearby. And you could say, wow, this is a senior living facility
Starting point is 00:28:10 that is a service that people definitely need. And they get a bunch of their customers through Google, but they don't know how to run Google ads. And you can go offer to do it for them. Now, the beautiful thing about a senior living facility is maybe they're charging three grand a month, for one bed in their facility. Well, three grand a month means that one customer is worth 36 grand a year in a year's
Starting point is 00:28:31 time frame. And so even if it takes you $500 or $1,000 to acquire a customer, that's still super profitable for them. And so you want to find any business that you can, like a local plumber or a daycare or a senior living facility or whatever it is. And you want to go offer to run their ads for free or audit their ad account for free or give them advice for free. and then you're going to use that as your bootstrapping mechanism to learn.
Starting point is 00:28:55 And once you do that three, four times, then you want to go to every other senior living facility in other areas and say, hey, I did this for this company. I could do the same for you. And over time, you start charging more for what you're doing. And your goal is to eventually get to 10 customers that are paying you $5 grand a month for your marketing services. And now you're doing $50 grand a month of recurring revenue. You've built a million dollar business if you have a 50 grand a month recurring revenue
Starting point is 00:29:20 business off of literally just hustle and commitment to learning how to market through one channel because most people, especially a busy business owner, do not know how to do this. Okay, idea number two. If you don't want to start a marketing agency, here's idea number two. This is the real estate path. Now, real estate is great because, you know, a lot of people become millionaires through real estate or own real estate. I personally know more dumb millionaires in real estate than any other industry. They take that as an insult as a backhanded compliment. But, I mean, it has a good thing, meaning you don't have to be a genius for. to work. And I like games like that. I don't want a game to go into a game where you have to be
Starting point is 00:29:54 the next Mark Zuckerberg in order to win. And so real estate is one of those things. And I'll give you an example of how to actually do this. Because most people think, real estate, I have no experience and I got no money. How am I going to go buy a building? Well, let me tell you what my friend will call him Alex in this case, what he did. And I think you could do this too. He made, he drew a five-mile radius around where he lived. And he contacted every real estate developer that he could find in that radius. And all he said was, hey, I'm Alex. I'm a young kid that lives nearby. I'm super interested in real estate. I see that you're really successful. I love that property that you have over here. You're somebody that I think has achieved something I would love to achieve. I would love it
Starting point is 00:30:32 if someday I could just take you out to lunch and learn a little bit of a little bit from you. Maybe somebody earlier in your career helped you and this could be your opportunity to do to do the same for me. And that last line is really, really key. Because he's not really offering much besides I'll take you to lunch. Well, guess what? This rich, real estate developer doesn't need your lunch, but he does pull on their heartstrings a little bit. And so he got lunch meetings with everybody. And he goes to lunch with them and he asked them a bunch of questions about how they do what they do, how they got into it, what makes it successful, what makes them different than everybody else, et cetera, et cetera. And for the person that
Starting point is 00:31:01 whoever he vibed the most with, who he respected and seemed like they were interested in him and they liked his energy, he would make an ask. And he would say, listen, I know this is unorthodox, but actually, I would love to come help you out in your business. And I'd love to come help you out for free. Because right now, I've got a ton of time on my hands. And I could go get any job I want, but I don't want any job. I actually want to learn from somebody like you, and I want to learn this business. And I know that to learn this business, I'm going to have to work really hard and learn the ins and outs. And I can't think of a better place to do this than with you. Would you be open to me working with you for, let's just say, three to six months? I'll work completely for free.
Starting point is 00:31:35 I'll work harder than anybody you have in your office. I guarantee you I will add as much value as I can. And my goal up front, I'll tell you this, is that, you know, a year from now, I actually want to go into this business myself, and I actually want to go and try to buy my first property. And I hope that at that time, you know, you might be one of my investors. But, you know, no strings attached. I just want to focus on the main thing, which is learning this business inside and out by helping you out. And he makes that pitch. And this is exactly what he did. And so he did a one-year apprentice with a real estate developer that live locally. He learned everything he needed to know about the business. And after the, at the end of that year,
Starting point is 00:32:08 he located his own first property. He bought it, using the money from that guy who trusted him and basically was willing to back him because he knew him at that stage. And this is a path that anybody could take. Anybody can do this. You can look up the people around you. You could take them to lunch. You can make this pitch. And you can work hard for one year.
Starting point is 00:32:25 And in one year from now, you can already own your first property. And to be a millionaire in real estate really only takes a single property. You know, one fourplex or one eightplex that you buy could be enough to do it. And so that is the second path that I would advise anybody who wants to get rich quickly is to go under the wing of a successful real estate developer if real estate is something that interests you. The last path, the last idea that I think is, you know, if I was going back and trying to do it again,
Starting point is 00:32:52 as fast as I could and as high likelihood of success as I could, would be this. It would be to buy a business. Now, this is only for, I'll say, the top 5% of either brainpower or experience. So this is either somebody who's actually gone and worked in the real world for five, six years. maybe they're an MBA student. Maybe they've, maybe you've managed some, you've been a manager already
Starting point is 00:33:14 at a business or you're just that high IQ and that driven. And you know who you are. You know if you're cut above the rest. And if you really are that person, then this path is really, really interesting. I didn't even know about this when I was in my early 20s, but now I know a lot about it. It's called entrepreneurship through acquisition, which is that you buy a business that is already working. It has been working for years. And you buy it using other people's money. A simple example, we did an episode with Sarah Moore. She graduated from, college. She wanted to buy a business instead of start one because she didn't have a great idea. And so she searched, again, locally for any business that she could find that was already doing
Starting point is 00:33:49 about a million dollars of profit a year. And she wanted to go buy that business using an SBA loan and some seller financing. You can go watch this episode to go learn what those terms mean. And she was able to buy, of all things, a egg carton business, like literally the styrofoam container of eggs using zero dollars of her own money. And she was able to own the business out right herself. And this business does millions of millions of dollars a year of profit. And she built her own path this way. And so this is the fastest way to get to it because you're buying a business that's already gone through the startup learning curve and the bumps and bruises to get going and to get to work. And you're buying something that's already already has cash flow.
Starting point is 00:34:29 And then you're just going to run it better because maybe you built that skill of learning how to sell and you know digital marketing. And the current business owner doesn't. They're just a retiring, you know, dad somewhere that never, never ran a Google. Google ad in their life. And you know that if you started doing that, you could grow the business 20, 30 percent. And so that's what you're looking for when you go this path. So in summary, the five steps to get rich quick. The real steps, things that you could actually do. Number one, you have to have the courage to start and start now. Number two, don't quit on the first failure. You're going to need to try 10 times. Number three, learn to build, learn to sell, and learn to get lucky.
Starting point is 00:35:02 That is your core skill stack. Number four, proximity is power. Move around other people who are as motivated, hungry, and ambitious as you. It will just, like, osmosis, it will just, you will learn and get better faster just by doing that. And the fifth thing, be impatient with action, patient with results. The impatient action you should go take
Starting point is 00:35:20 is one of those three businesses, a marketing agency. Go and be an apprentice for a real estate developer and then become a real estate developer yourself. Or third, go buy a business that is already working using SBA money, and now you day one have a business that is profitable that you run and you own and you operate
Starting point is 00:35:36 yourself. So that is it. I hope that was helpful for you. And if it was, leave a comment in the district of below.

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