My First Million - How to manufacture a billionaire childhood
Episode Date: May 13, 2026Get Shaan's $0-$1M guide: https://clickhubspot.com/rgfr Episode 823: Sam Parr ( https://x.com/theSamParr ) and Shaan Puri ( https://x.com/ShaanVP ) talk about their billy of the week, childhood pas...sions and people making millions on TikTok selling stuff. — Show Notes: (0:00) Billy of the week (8:25) Raising kids with an edge (13:37) childhood passions (26:44) Random TikTok People Are Making Millions Selling Hoodies (42:11) the best brands start janky — Check Out Sam's Stuff: • Hampton (joinhampton.com): My community for founders. Average member does $25m/year. Many of the guests are members. Get after it...apply: http://joinhampton.com/mfm — 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 • I run all my newsletters on Beehiiv and you should too + we're giving away $10k to our favorite newsletter, check it out: beehiiv.com/mfm-challenge 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)
I got something, Sean.
I just had the craziest thing happen to me.
One of the craziest things I've ever happened to me.
Do you want to hear a story?
Does it have to do with those glasses?
No, but I am a cool guy, so that's why I decided to wear them.
I feel like I can rule the world.
I know I could be what I want to.
I had one of the craziest things happened literally just 45 minutes ago.
I was walking down the street in New York City near my house.
And do you know, honey, I shrunk the kids?
Yeah, the movie from back of the day.
Of course. Rick, what's his name?
I know his name. My first name is Rick. I had to look up his last name.
The cruey and your dad?
Yeah, I saw him walking. I saw him walking down the street.
And I felt bold and I walked up to him and I said, excuse me, sir, I just like huge fan.
I grew up watching your movies. And I kid you not.
He was like, what's up, man? I appreciate that. Also, I've seen your videos.
You're cool. You know, I like MFFM.
And I was like, are you kidding me?
And I go, Rick, I'm here talking to you now.
if you know MFM, then you know it's like as part of the schick.
Like, did you just kill it in the 90s with movies?
And he goes, I killed it.
I go, really?
Like really good.
He goes, do you have a few minutes?
I go, yeah, Rick, I got a few minutes.
He goes, let me show you something.
Brings me up to his apartment.
This beautiful apartment overlooking Central Park.
Beautiful.
I'm like, you really did well, huh?
And he was like, yeah.
So, like, you know, I bought this from Harrison Ford.
It's this beautiful apartment.
and he's like, look, in the 90s, VHS were just pieces of plastic,
and they were $25 a piece.
Of course I killed it.
And I'm like, walking through his apartment, and I'm like, Rick,
is that an original Salvador dolly painting?
And he goes, he points at it, he goes, Ghostbusters.
And he just kept walking.
So awesome.
None of that happened.
I did see him walk by, though.
None of that happened.
He did walk by me, though, and I imagined that that could have happened, though.
What a rollercoaster of emotions he just took me on.
That was fantastic.
Wait, so you even see the guy or the entire thing was fictitious?
I saw him.
He lives near me.
I did see him.
And in my head, I went through all these things.
Like, you know, when someone, like, insults you and you think of a comeback, like, 30 seconds later?
I, like, thought of all these things that could have happened if I, like,
I said hi to him, but I didn't, I'll never know.
Turns out, though, he, uh, that was an episode of TV.
That was fantastic.
Turns out, he, uh, quit acting because his wife passed away and he decided to raise his
kids.
So, you know, he's just a nice old man now.
He's in the 70s.
I don't know what you're doing to me today.
It's Wednesday morning.
Give me, give me a break here.
Do you ever watch the TV show, Dave?
Of course.
I love it.
My favorite show.
There's an episode.
I don't know if you remember this episode or if you've seen this episode.
It's like in one of the later.
seasons that he where he accidentally fakes his own death. Have you seen this? No, I've only seen
season one, but that is something he would do. Well, basically, they have this janky tour bus.
This is not too big of a spoiler. The tour bus like explodes. And someone was filming and it's like
his face on the side of the tour bus. So it looks like he died and his phone had died. They just have
no signal. They're like out somewhere. And so for like, you know, eight hours or whatever after the
tour bus exploded, he doesn't have any single.
So the whole world thinks that he died.
And then he logs in.
He's like, oh my God, everybody thinks I died.
And he's like, I got a tweet out that I'm okay.
And his manager's like, but just wait a minute.
Because there's all these like memorials.
There's like this outpouring of like people saying how much they love them.
Like Drake is in his DMs.
It's like, bro, like, you know what?
I always loved your shit, man.
I'll miss you, bro.
And he's like kind of reveling in it.
But then there's no way out because, you know, he's like,
the longer he lets it go, the hard.
harder it is to get back to just like come out and be like, just kidding, guys, I'm here.
Because then you're seeing it as like the ultimate asshole, but he can't resist because the
idea of what it would be like is too intoxicating for him. I feel like you did something like
that to me just now. He's like, he's like he tweets or his manager tweets out like, you know,
Dave, RIP. And he's like, he's not dead. I just want him to be, have peace.
Rest in peacefully. Rest in peacefully. All right. I have a, I have one interest.
thing that I could bring up.
Let's do it.
Billy the week.
We haven't done that in a minute.
I have an interesting person.
Billy of the quarter, I guess.
We haven't done this in a while.
Well, it's the billy of this week.
We don't do it every other week.
Have you heard of a guy named Jim Ratcliffe, sir, Jim Ratcliffe?
No, I don't know who that person is.
Okay, so listen to this.
Here's a story of this guy named Jim, Jim Ratcliffe.
He's really interesting to me.
So he's born in Manchester, England, which is sort of like a blue collar.
It's kind of like the Boston of America.
of England. It's like, you know, white blue collar, you know, hardworking kind of poor. He
studies chemical engineering. He becomes a chemical engineer at an oil company, but like things are
only going okay. And then he has a background in accounting. He studies accounting and chemical
engineering in college. And he gets a job at a PE firm at the age of 35. And he's like, this is
pretty amazing. Like, you know, this is a great way to make money. I like making money. But at the
age of 40, he was like, all right, I've worked for another guy for long enough. I want to try and
do this on my own. He doesn't have a ton of money. I think he had a home that he owned and he had like
a hundred or 150 grand to his name. And this was in the late 80s. And so he partners up with a guy
and they're like, okay, we've been buying companies for our employer, the firm that we worked for,
let's try and do it on our own. And they convince some of their old clients, some of their old LPs to
invest in them and they spend about a year looking for a company. And so with three million pounds
in equity, they buy a $80 million, I'm going to say dollars, but I mean pounds, but a $80 million
company that is a spinoff of BP. Basically BP, the oil company owns a chemical division,
which basically makes like chemicals. So like the commodity that let's say like your toothpaste has
like, you know, fluoride in it. Well, someone like has to get the fluoride. Right. Whatever it is. The
chemicals that make like plastic packaging, whatever. They buy that unit from BP for $80 million,
of which $3 million was equity and the rest was debt. So like a really heavy debt thing.
And he mortgages his home. He uses 100% of his money. He has two kids and a wife. And they're like,
he was like my wife like, we talked about it for six months. Like, should we do this?
Is this like, you know, this can ruin us. This is going to ruin our careers. This is going to
use all of our money. But you know what? We have to take a risk. And so he does that in 19,
I believe. And by 1997, it works. This $80 million company is now worth like a billion and a half.
And that's how he makes his initial money. And over the years, he's kind of kept that one thing.
I think it's called Ineos is the name of the company. It's a chemical company that you probably have
never heard of. But to this day or today, it does about $40 billion in revenue,
employs many tens of thousands of people. It's one of the largest chemical companies in the world at this
point. And basically the way that he's grown is a combination of PE and his chemical
engineering background. So he understands chemicals, but his whole schick was finding like spinoffs
that conglomerates didn't want to own anymore because it was a distraction. He would buy it for
whatever he would pay for. And his goal was to double the EBITDA in five years. That's like sort
of standard stuff. That's kind of the boring thing that he did. But now at this point, he's, I think,
the number one or number two or three, richest person in England. Amazing. But the more interesting
part, in my opinion, is what he has done with his money. So check this out. Do you remember the
two-hour marathon with Elud Kipchogi that Nike did like four years ago? Yeah. It didn't
have recently, right? Well, someone actually just broke two hours recently, but like four years ago
or three years ago, there's this amazing runner named Elud Kipchogi, and they set up like the
world's perfect setup for him. So they have like a pace car that was like perfectly in front of
them that went on pace for an hour, 59 minutes. They had.
They did it on an F1 track, so it was perfectly flat.
And they let him wear shoes, or he decided to wear shoes that weren't technically allowed in sanctioned races.
But he was like, you know, this is just a spectacle. Let's do it.
And so he broke two hours in the marathon.
Well, Jim Radcliffe is a huge sports nut.
He's run 50 marathons.
He's gone to the North Pole, the South Pole.
He's climbed all these mountains.
He's like one of these crazy guys.
And he was the underwriter of that.
He paid for the whole thing, just because.
He also owns a ton of different sports league.
So he owns Team Sky Cycling.
So this is the team that won the Twitter Fray.
eight times. He owns one-third of Mercedes F-1 team. He owns one of the best America Cups sailing team.
He owns 25% of Manchester United Soccer team. He used to own Chelsea, which is, you know, a big soccer
team. But the really cool thing that he's done recently, have you heard of a car? I think it's called
the Grenadier. Have you seen this car? Google this car and tell me if you've seen this.
It looks like a G-wagon or a defender. Yeah. Yeah, it looks a lot like a G-wagon.
Okay, so check this out.
So in 2016, this guy, Jim, he loves Defenders.
Now, the thing about Defenders is Land Rover, and I think Land Rover's is owned by Jaguar.
So Jaguar still makes the Land Rover, but the real famous ones are the old ones, the ones from like the 80s and late 90s.
Those are really cool.
They're really boxy.
But although enthusiasts love them and they pay sometimes hundreds of thousands of dollars for these cars, you can't really buy new parts anymore,
because Jaguar just quit manufacturing it.
And he is a huge enthusiast of the defender.
He loves it.
And he's a rich guy.
So he was able to get a meeting
with someone high up at Jaguar
and they go to a bar called the Grenadier Bar
and the gym is like trying to persuade them.
Like, hey, you know, I'll even help pay for the tooling.
Is there a world where like,
I think it could be for shits and giggles,
it would be fun.
Let's remake some of the parts for the defender
because the defender,
it's the most comfortable off-road car.
But unlike a lot of new cars,
it's still got a little edge on it. You know, it's got like, it's like, it feels not too luxurious.
It feels like a proper off-road car. And they're like, no, man, this doesn't make sense. We're not
going to do it. So he's like, you know what? Fine. I'm just going to create a car company.
That's what we're going to do. And so within his chemical business, they create this thing called the
Grenadier. It's a SUV that you just saw. I think it sells for like 80 or 90 grand. It has a small
cult following in America. I think it's pretty big in Europe as well. And he's like, screw up. We're going to make a car company.
just because I love these cars so much,
but they don't make them anymore,
so I'm going to make what I think it should be,
the way it should be done.
And so there's this famous line where,
just to give me an idea of what he's like,
he said, it's the most comfortable off-road vehicle, bar none.
And the journal says, like, yeah,
but like those late models, they don't, like,
they don't, like, fit the environmental standards of today,
nor are they really that safe.
And he was like, what's wrong with that?
And he's like, he goes, what's wrong with that?
that they're effing great cars. And so he starts making these cars. And that's where we are now.
So these cars have a huge following in America, a bunch of like my car nerd buddies like them.
They're known for being like kind of sparse on the interior. So if you look at the interior,
they've got these like the switches look like switches from like a tank a little bit.
Like it's like all mechanical stuff. And they're kind of a pain in the ass. And the truth is
that it's a horrible business. Since 2018, he has lost $2 billion on this car company.
Last year, the company was negative $300 million in profit.
It's not going so good.
But it's awesome.
All right, let's take a quick break.
This podcast is called My First Million.
And it's probably the question we get asked the most.
How do I go from zero to making my first million?
And so I did an episode a little while back where I broke down exactly the sort of philosophy
and frameworks that I would use.
So things like finding your white belt business or identifying your bear on a unicycle.
advantage, the core way that your two skills can overlap,
or why maybe starting a service business is better
than starting a software business for your initial businesses
to make that first million.
And so the team at HubSpot has created a guide
that took the stuff I said in that episode,
they laid it all out for you.
You can get it for free in the description below.
Just click that link, and it's all yours.
All right, back to this episode.
What do you love most about this guy?
He's got a fuck you attitude that I really dig.
I really, like if you Google him,
you'll see that he's wearing a barber
wax jacket, which is sort of like an adventurer's like jacket. It's like what like kind of like
rough and tumble, blue collar like guys wear. It's like workwear. And I appreciate that he still has a
little bit of edge to him, even though I think he's like the 90th richest man in the world.
So I really appreciate that. And I also appreciate that he does shit just cause.
Yeah, there's something great about the, I don't know if you want to call it side quests or the just
because or the FU attitude, but I think both of us love that.
I have this thing that I keep running called the SideQuest Hall of Fame.
And it started because Palmer Lucky was on Joe Rogan.
You know, Palmer created Oculus.
We created the leading VR headset, sold it for a few billion to Facebook.
Then he created Anderil, the leading, you know, the first kind of like significant tech
company that was doing defense stuff.
It's worth like whatever, $100 billion, whatever it's worth right now.
And he goes on Rogan and he says,
oh, you know what I want to do next?
And I'm expecting him to say a company, like another startup.
And he's like, I want to create like a privately funded version of the X-Files.
He's like, I just want to go hunt for aliens.
And he's like, I'll fund it.
And we'll go find him.
We'll figure out what's going on.
He's like, I feel like the government's not telling us everything.
And I was like, well, that would be an epic use of this person's talent and money.
And since then he's done, he did this thing where he like basically brought back the Game Boy.
I own one. I was about to bring that up. He's done N64 and Game Boy.
Yeah, he's got Mod Retro. And so he's just, he just does cool shit. And then, you know, he's kind of like these, you know, dresses eclectically, all the stuff.
And I saw this video recently that it was, I thought, a more endearing side tip. Did you hear the video about why he wears the Hawaiian shirts?
No. Would someone make fun of him one time and he like was going to do it out of spite?
Well, he was like, we grew up, he's like, I grew up really poor.
And so I didn't have any, we didn't have any money for new clothes.
So I had to wear my dad's old Hawaiian shirts every day.
Like, that's just all I had.
My wardrobe was like seven of these.
And I wore them and I got made fun of, but that's all I had.
So I wore them.
And he's like, and then when I sold my company, you know, he says something where it's like,
I got, like, I got some money and I tried to change.
And then he's like, basically reverted.
He was like, actually, I'm just going to wear the shirt.
shirts that like I like and I know and like this is what I'm all about and I don't need the fancy
clothes to like validate me as like I've done it and I love that I just think he carries that
FU energy with him pretty much everywhere a thing that he has that I don't find him to be a hearto
I don't find him to be insufferable I find him to be someone who's confident in his opinion
and you could challenge him and he's open to new ideas but he's very confident I find him like
At a very young age, I mean, when we talked to him, I think he was 33, and he was like saying, like, here's the thing about defense contractors. They're doing this wrong. That's a very bold thing to say, right? And I appreciate that about him. And I used to meet these people, and I used to think, how do I become like that? But now I think, how do I raise children that are that way? How do you raise kids that are that confident at such a young age, but not in an insufferable way. And also in a way where I think they've backed it up by studying whatever they're going to say. Have you ever thought about it?
Well, what do you think his parents were like?
I guess he said he was raised poor, so he had not a wealthy family, and yet they still were
able to instill the sense of, like, you can do it and you can figure this out.
Well, I'm not sure how much it is watering the plant versus the soil you grow up in.
So, for example, there's a reason that the most successful people on Earth typically come from
disadvantaged backgrounds.
you go to look at, you know, why is, you know, sort of dyslexia so common amongst successful people?
It's like, it is disproportionate.
You know, you would expect it to be the proportion of dyslexia in the population.
But no, it's a higher percentage in successful people.
Or, you know, why are, you know, so many athletes come from, you know, poor families in single, single mother homes and things like this?
Like, you know, they don't have all the training and the advantages and the best gear and the best anything, right?
but like they have the one thing that can't be bought,
which is like this sort of insatiable hunger.
And so I think that confidence is a byproduct
of the adventure and adversity you've faced in your life.
So you don't just say be confident.
Actually, the advice to somebody who wants to be confident
is go have more adventure and adversity.
It will make you get hardened by confidence over time
because the more adventure you do
where you put yourself in unfamiliar situations
or the more adversity you face
and you come out still survive.
Even if you didn't win, you survived, then the next thing doesn't seem all that scary.
You sort of think to yourself, well, I did all those things.
Of course, I can go into this new unfamiliar situation and thrive as well.
And so I think that the confidence is not so much like, you know, as parents told you, but, like, you know, the environment.
Like if you grow up and you're poor, but you're tinkering or you're nerdy or you have access to certain books, you know, it's kind of amazing how these very small things make a difference.
There's a story I read this morning, actually, about Dan Brown.
You know who Dan Brown is?
The author?
He wrote the Da Vinci Code and like...
Oh, okay.
A bunch of other like thriller adventure books.
Yeah, yeah.
Where a hero goes on a quest.
They're sort of a puzzle.
They've got to figure it out.
Growing up, Dan did not find Christmas gifts
under his Christmas tree as a child.
His father, Richard Brown, a math teacher,
instead put a treasure map under the tree.
And Dan would have to have to follow the treasure map
for a trail of clues all over the house
and sometimes all over the neighborhood
until he finally found the present.
this sparked a deep love of solving puzzles,
cracking codes, and hunting treasures.
He channeled this into the Da Vinci Code,
angels and demons,
and other thrillers that have sold more than 200 million copies,
all about cracking cyphers,
untangling coded messages,
which is the heart of his books.
A lesson from this.
A childhood obsession can be a source of infinite inspiration.
If you want to seek a meaningful quest as an adult,
look towards the childhood toys and games
that you couldn't get enough of.
There may be clues in there.
It's so funny.
that sounds like a cute thing, but there's been so many times. And I wonder if there's actually
research that verifies this, but there's been so many times. We had Robert Green on MFFM a while ago,
and that was really great. And he said to find the thing that you want to dedicate your life to,
you have to do something that sounds easy, but it's really challenging, which is you have to
revert back to what you were like as a 12-year-old before you had people who put pressure on you,
before you realized that something was stupid or uncool. And before you got jaded and when you were
excitable. And you have to ask yourself, what was that thing? And I've heard people talk about this
constantly of like, in order to be great as an adult, you have to do this challenging thing of
pretending to be a kid. Where were you weird as a child? What would it be for you? So if you think back
to that era, what were you doing? You're 12, 13, 14, you know, let's let's take this window,
eight to kind of 14 years old. Skateboarding a ton. I was skateboarding a ton and I was always
taking apart remote control cars
and building them back to building them
in interesting ways to get out doing chores.
For example, I spent a whole six months
trying to rebuild a remote control car
so it had a mop on it
because I hated sweeping the floor.
And I distinctly remember doing that
and being obsessed with it
and building model airplanes,
like assembling things that had clear instructions.
I love doing.
So, I mean, in a way,
you chose to build things
instead of doing nine to five.
instead of doing a job.
Yeah, well, I also loved, I had a huge passion for selling CDs.
I remember I used to make like $30 selling like $3, you know, burned CDs.
And I loved doing that.
And for the longest time, I thought I was going to be in the entertainment industry.
My hero was Ari Gold from the TV show Entourage.
And I went to Belmont University because they had this degree called a music business degree,
which I made it through three years.
And then I was like, I'm going to drop out of school.
Just give me, like, the easiest degree I did.
can get like with the credits that I got so I didn't get to complete that degree but the reason I got
into media and the reason why I probably enjoy doing this and working in the content game is because
I wanted to work with entertainment people but then I realized that Hollywood is full of idiots and
I hated them but I can build my own little world like that yeah I don't know how much of this is
like horoscopes or whatever where you just sort of you try to back test and fit fit anything into it
but I just was in Austin yesterday and I did a podcast
with Monish for Brian.
Monish has this thing where he tells these stories about Buffett,
and he says his theory is basically that a huge percentage of your personality is pretty
hardwired and baked by the time you're five years old.
And you don't want to spend your whole life fighting your nature.
So that's the first thing.
And then he says that for kids, we do pretty much the opposite thing we're supposed to do.
So he says the human brain, if you just look at brain science, is that there's a golden
window between, I think he says, the ages of 8 to 18. So there's this 10-year window where a child's
brain is developing in such a way that it can specialize and do some incredible things if you specialize
during that window. And the people who do, and if you go look at like, oh, Bill Gates when he was
coding or Mark Zuckerberg when he picked up programming or Mr. Beast when he started doing
YouTube videos at age 12, it's often that these people who become the extreme performers that
doing something pretty specialized during this golden window.
And he's like, in school, we tell him to do the exact opposite.
Hey, go to school, spend 30 minutes in eight different subjects.
Don't, you know, go an inch deep in each one.
Don't care about anything.
You know, don't specialize.
Become this like super generalist.
That's the factory model that we have.
So he's like, we're doing them kind of a disservice.
He's like, your job as a parent is, you know, by five, their nature is somewhat baked.
You observe it.
in 8 to 18, if they show an interest or an obsession and anything, feed it,
let them go crazy with it, let them get obsessed.
And lastly, like, get them around as good of a peer group as you can.
Those are really only things you're going to be able to do is kind of his opinion.
I don't know if I fully read that, but I think it's interesting.
And then he tells a story of Buffett.
And he's like, you know, when Buffett was a kid, he did all kinds of little hustles, right?
Like he would buy a thing and he would sell it, right?
So Coke bottles and pinball games inside of barbershops.
But one of the things he loved to do was he would,
go to the racetrack, he would watch other people betting.
And he didn't bet.
He was a kid, but he would watch other people betting.
He would watch the horses, study the track.
And then what he would do is at the end of the day, he would go collect all of the discarded
betting slips that the, you know, people go to the horse track, they drink, they watch the
thing, they're having a good time.
They just check away their betting tickets.
And he would see that, oh, actually, this wasn't a losing ticket that actually they
got a third place payout here.
They didn't realize it.
or they got a second place pay out here.
They didn't realize it.
He would collect all the, and, you know, 80, 90% of its trash.
But if even 5, 10%, he could make some money,
then he would ask his aunt to go cash the tickets for him
and that's how he made money.
And like, it's not that different than what value investing is, right?
He would go look at a thousand companies, a thousand tickets, you know,
most of them are rubbish.
But when he found one that had like hidden value,
he would pounce on it and he would make money.
And that's essentially how Warren Buffett, you know,
invested for the first, you know, whatever, 10, 15, 20 years of his investing career.
And he bought his first stock when he was seven.
And, you know, so he was doing things in this kind of golden window as well, which I think is
interesting, especially, you know, for you and I, we have kids, not at that exact age yet,
but, you know, I think about that stuff.
I don't know, to what extent you can control it or you want to try to control it.
But it does seem like it's worth knowing that and looking out for the right signals rather
than being blind to it.
There's this, I'm not religious, but I grew up going to Catholic school and you got to
read the Bible a lot. And there's this biblical story where it's like someone's by a volcano or
I forget what it is, but there's like a loud like earthquake or like a natural disaster.
And then they're told like you have to listen to what God's telling you. And they're like,
well, I hear this really loud noise, but it doesn't like, I don't hear like a person talking to me.
And they're like, even when things are really loud, the whisper or the God talking to you,
it's going to sound very faint in a whisper. And that's the challenge is you have to like
you know, like really pay attention when there's a lot of loud noise because the most important
stuff is just going to be a really faint whisper and you have to like try and hear it. And I don't
really care about the message when it comes to God on that one. But I do think that like one of,
that's what this thing is because it's like that whatever you're being told what to do or you feel
compelled to. It's a lot of times it's not a yell. It's like this really small whisper that you have to
like and that's like quite challenging is it's really hard to try and listen to like where you're being
drawn to, you know, like, or where your energy is pulling you to. It's not a push. It's a very,
very, very small, like, faint nudge. Right. Yeah, and there might be false positives along the way.
And it's only obvious in hindsight. Like, when I was thinking about that, like, what was I doing
when I was 12? Because I wasn't, and I used to actually be, like, kind of insecure about this.
I was like, I wasn't really selling lemonade as a kid and, you know, flipping CDs and sneakers and
whatever, like the pattern I see now that I invest in a lot of founders, I'm like, I didn't
really have that. Like the light bulb didn't come on for me, at least in terms of like trying to
do business until I was, you know, 21. And frankly, like, I don't think I'm the best
entrepreneur or CEO anyway. So like maybe that's true that that was the signal. But there were a
couple of, couple of signs that I, when I did think back and I actually like took more time to
think about it. What the hell was I doing back then? What was I really into in a way that like,
or what was I naturally pretty good at
that I didn't maybe pay as much attention to
but now I can think about it
and the two that came to mind was
I randomly
like entered an improv class
and improv competition when I was like in sixth or seventh grade
and we like made it to like the Texas
state finals or whatever for like what we were doing
it was like a duo's improv
which like that's what this is
this is duo improv what me and you do twice a week
and like that actually did come pretty easily
I did have a lot of fun doing it.
I didn't triple down into it because I, you know, whatever, life happened.
My parents didn't help me and I didn't know to ask for it.
But, like, maybe there was a signal there of like, hey, you kind of like this making things
up, thinking on your feet, riffing off a partner.
If there was another way to do that, what would that look like?
And, you know, I don't think I could have predicted podcasting, but it does make a little
bit of sense now that I look back on that one.
I did a podcast the other day and someone asked about you.
And I was like, in another lifetime, or maybe even this lifetime, Sean's going to be
either like a comedian or something in.
show business.
Yeah, I was in a movie or two when I was like a little, like in same, same era,
six, seventh, eighth grade, something like that.
And then the other one that I noticed was I love video games, which is pretty common,
you know, boys love video games.
But the way I played video games was a little bit weird.
And so if I said, hmm, what was, let's pay attention to the weird.
You know, I used to play Madden or NBA 2K, but I would basically never play the games.
I would only do franchise mode, which is just where you're the general manager.
You're building the team, drafting the players.
You're basically making bets.
you're essentially like scouting, investing,
simulating to see the result.
And I would just simulate like decades in these games
without ever playing the actual game.
And my sister would make fun to be like,
are you ever going to play this game?
Like, what is this like fantasy roster you're building?
But yeah, I don't know.
I think it's interesting to go look back.
I'm not sure again how much of it is like forced narrative versus reality.
But maybe there's something to it.
I've now heard this enough times where I kind of got to take it somewhat seriously.
And I think it is important because it's like,
when you are screwing a screw into the wall or whatever.
And if you start out crooked, right,
if you're at the wrong angle,
no matter really how hard you push,
it's just constant friction, right?
You're just like breaking the wall,
breaking the screw and breaking your own wrist
trying to make it go in.
And then if you get things like aligned right,
it's like, oh, just four spins to the right, click.
And I feel like a lot of my life was pushing screws
into walls at the wrong angles,
you know, trying stupid projects,
trying things that weren't really in my nature, trying to be somebody who I wasn't.
And man, life got a lot easier and it got a lot more successful when I sort of figured out like,
oh, what am I actually like naturally pretty inclined to doing?
Well, do you think you figured it out?
Yeah, I think like what we do is like probably the closest approximation to it.
Like if I look at what I do today, I get to nerd out on topics, which has always been something
that I would do.
Like, I would always go down these like rabbit holes.
And then this kind of duet improv type of thing.
being able to riff on topics and being generative with ideas has always been good.
And then the other side of it is investing.
I don't want to play the game, but I like being the GM.
I like being the sort of the franchise mode of doing this.
And so I've had way more success investing or even incubating companies with other CEOs as operators now.
Right?
Like I think in our portfolio is probably like forget like angel investing, just like in the companies we own a big chunk of.
There's like four companies or so where there's four CEOs.
and I don't do any of the day-to-day work.
And it's performing so much better than, you know,
back when I used to do my own startup and I was all in on it, right?
So it's a better fit for me to do that.
I didn't know you had four.
You're doing shit that you don't even talk about.
Well, I want to talk about some of them soon.
And hopefully I will have some news sometime in the next few months
that I can come on and maybe start to tell these stories.
All right, let's take a quick break.
And I got a question for you.
When a buyer asks AI for a solution like yours,
Does your business come up?
Most companies have no idea.
And by the time they found out,
they've already lost the deal
to another company that did.
HubSpot has AEO,
which helps you show up in the moments
when the rag buyers are looking for a company like yours.
Before the first click,
before they fill in the form,
that is the moment HubSpot AEO is built for.
Check out HubSpot.com,
the agentic customer platform for growing businesses.
What did you think of Austin?
Austin is a funny place.
A funny place.
I went to my like hotel room and I walked in and housekeeping was in there.
But I was surprised.
And I came out and I told Ben, I go, y'all got white housekeepers here?
I had a white housekeeper that my wife hired and I was like, I bet you she's going to be a drug addict.
And I was right.
She was a drug addict.
I don't hire these guys anymore.
It's like there's this great stand-up bit where I forgot who was like Aziz or it was Husse.
And I think who was, like, an Indian comic was talking about, like, how they made it.
And they were like, I'm going to go adopt a white baby.
Like, just bring a white baby to, like, events and, like, stunt on people because it's like, yeah.
I adopted a white child.
So, I don't know.
Austin's a fun place.
I mean, one interesting thing is because we're, you know, it meant Austin, which is much more populated city.
And we were just sitting, like, in a coffee shop basically working all the time.
So many people came up that love the podcast.
That was funny.
That's crazy, right?
And then they would tell me their story, right?
And it's like, oh, wow.
So, you know, it's almost like you get a lot of ideas for the podcast, just talk to these people.
Like, this guy came up and he's like, I'm all in on social selling, social commerce.
I know those two words apart.
Like, what is it together?
What does that mean?
And he's basically like, you know, people who are making, you know, hundreds of thousands,
if not millions of dollars just making TikTok videos for products.
And they're just getting affiliate fees, just making content.
And they're not influencers.
They're not famous people,
but they make, like,
the best way to sell this soap,
this teeth whitener,
this,
you know,
these leggings,
this hoodie,
and that they're generating,
you know,
$40,000 a month,
$100,000 a month,
$200,000 a month,
$400,000 a month.
What platforms?
On TikTok and whatnot.
So, like,
there's like live selling.
That's like whatnot and TikTok.
And then there's like just short form video.
And I mean,
I'm not,
I wasn't like unfamiliar about this concept.
We use it in our e-commerce brand.
But it's amazing just to hear the individual person story.
It's like, yeah, she worked at this like hair salon.
And then she just took the product from the hair salon and started talking about it on TikTok.
She doesn't have a following.
But the way TikTok works is any video, you know, it's like America's funny on some videos.
Any video gets to have its, you know, it's day on the for you page.
And she realized, like, wow, if I just get good at kind of like authentically,
and I use quotes because it's like obviously not authentic, but like,
They don't look dressed up.
They're not in a fancy place.
They're in their bedroom.
They look like they're just talking informally to you.
Like, hey, y'all, I just want to tell you about, oh, my God, this or like, whatever this thing is.
And they're just making a killing on it.
And so, you know, this guy was like trying to build the agency around it and a podcast around it.
Like, what's an example of product?
Soaps, you said?
Just anything.
Anything, dude.
I don't know if you've seen.
Are you, like, are you tapped into this, like, wave of what's going on?
No, no, no.
So I don't, I don't have a TikTok.
and I've seen whatnot, but I buy a ton of stuff off eBay.
So, like, I know about, like, buying you stuff.
I'm not stupid.
So I don't know what you're talking about.
I read.
It's not part of the eBay trend, right?
Like, this is all new shit.
eBay?
This is eBay?
What I mean is social commerce, like, it's all, like, new products.
It's not, like, it's just commission-based.
Like, they're selling someone else's stuff
and they're getting an affiliate feed.
They're not selling, like, they're not like...
And it's without permission.
So it's not.
like they needed to cut a brand deal, right?
Got it.
You just grab the product from the shop and then you sell it.
And then brands can see if you move product, right?
You move weight on your corner and then they start sending you free shit to try their
stuff.
And then you could try to sell their stuff.
And if it works, it works, right?
And if your video is good, then the brand puts ads behind it.
So like there was a really good podcast by our buddy, Sean Frank.
I think their podcast is called the Operators Podcasts, like an e-commerce specific
podcast.
he did one with the CEO of comfort.
Have you heard this brand,
FRT?
I see that guy,
and I see this other guy named Greg Lovecki,
who started a thing called Bloom,
which I think is energy drinks,
but I've seen these guys all over the place,
and they're using phrases that I've never heard before.
Like, I knew what UGC was,
but, like, they're using it in way different phrasing,
and they're also, like,
implying that they have, like,
tens of thousands of people making this content on their behalf.
And this is a totally foreign concept to me.
And so this company,
comfort, as far as I could,
I was a total outsider, went from something like zero to $500 million a year in revenue in
like five years.
And I went to their website.
It's just like a fleece hoodie, I think, right?
Yeah, super basic hoodie.
But yeah, so they're a good example of this.
How big did they get to?
So the model is this.
The model is you have a product.
The old way of selling it was the old way, as in the last 10 years, was you run Facebook
ads and you run Google ads.
And for both of those ads, you, your team makes the content.
typically will have an ad creative team in-house, one, two, 10, 15 people.
Their job is to come up with concepts.
They do photo shoots.
They do scripts.
They do static images.
Give it to the designer, the editor, you make it, you run it, you see what works.
You're putting paid ads.
That's what's been working.
Well, there was a new game in town.
And if you remember, I kind of hinted at this maybe a year or two ago where I said,
I invested in this company.
And it's gone zero to 30 million in, like, a few months.
What was it? Can you say what it was?
I can't, I don't want to say the exact brand.
So the brand, the brand, the brand blew up.
It was in a bad way, not the good blow up.
It was a supplement brand.
It was crushing it.
The product was all fine, but they got banned off Amazon because they were like, like,
manipulating like reviews of other companies or stuff like that, like other brands or something.
And so Amazon was like, oh, you guys were the ones who wrote a bad review about them,
boom, shut down your ad account.
They weren't playing by the rules.
Ruined the company.
But, and I think.
I even told you at the time I go, this is growing faster than any e-commerce brand I've ever seen.
And, you know, zero to 30 million in a couple of months. And I think I told you, I was like,
I hope I can come on in a year or two and say the playbook that they use. Well, the playbook is
is more or less out now, now two years later, which is that what e-commerce brands do is you
basically gift or, you know, called seeding. You seed your product out to not one, not 10, not even
100, but maybe 1,000 creators that are out there.
And these creators are everyday people, non-famous people.
So not influencer, not micro-influencer, not influencer, person with time on their hands,
who has been on TikTok and reels enough to know what type of content could work.
And those people will make sometimes just like, you know, one video, but what ends up happening
is that they realize, oh, I should just make 30 to 40 videos a month.
I should make a video every day.
and I'll have multiple accounts, and I'll post it.
And so they basically rapidly test content.
And so now you've got, instead of having an in-house team of a couple of people doing
10 to 20 creative assets a month and usually just thinking inside the box because it's like,
this is my job, this is what I do.
I work at the company.
We have a way of doing things.
You're just letting the crowd figure this out.
You're crowdsourcing your creative.
And that's UGC means user-generated content.
So you're getting in a given month
3,000, 5,000 different pieces of content
that go out there.
Most of which get absolutely no views,
but a few of which pop off.
And then all of them look at you,
then you tell all the creators who are like, you know, on board,
you say, look at this content.
This works best.
This worked.
And then they all start to remix them.
And then the hive mind gets smarter
every single month.
And they keep trying to do it.
They keep trying to sort of one-up themselves.
And brands like goalie,
goalie is a gummy, like, vitamin brand.
I don't know if you've seen their like commission structure for this.
They started out with apple cider vinegar gummies and grew it to like,
whatever,
500 million or something in revenue in very short order.
And then they got slapped on the wrist and they kind of tanked and they're coming back,
whatever.
But like point is they were pretty aggressive on this model.
So what they were doing was as they found good creators who were good at making this content,
they started incentivizing them more than the commission.
So there's a default like commission on these platforms, right?
15%, 20%.
You set your commission.
What's the platform?
TikTok, TikTok shop.
Oh, so, so you find all your influencers on TikTok?
Usually, yeah.
Wow.
And so you, what you do is you go to those TikTok influencers.
Again, sorry, not influencers, TikTok creators.
And they get a commission.
And so, again, just to describe the system, it's crowdsourced.
It's way higher volume.
So you're talking about thousands of pieces of content a month instead of, you know, maybe 100.
You don't control it.
You don't operate it.
In many cases, you never even met them.
just pull your product and your shop listing and they just decide you just say i'm if you're an
affiliate use this use this tag so that you get paid if you sell product right that's the core
idea now what happens is on top of that goalie started going crazy so they were like yo if you do
ten thousand dollars you get 15 percent commission if you do 100 thousand dollars you get um you know
a trip to miami you do a million dollars you get a million dollars in a month you get this condo in
Miami. You get this Lamborghini. They started giving
away crazy shit. I'm making up
the tears, right? The math made sense for them.
But I have this like one cheater
that Goley was giving creators and like the top thing was a condo
in Miami. The next thing was a Lambo. It goes
all the way down to just like, yeah, you get like a bracelet.
You know, like you go to Chequechecheese and there's the
prize wall and like, you know, you end up with the shitty
rubber frog. But like up there is like, you know,
the Nerf Blaster. And this is basically the
model that they were doing. And so there's been
several brands that, I mean, several, hundreds of brands that have aggressively used this
strategy. And, uh, yeah, it works. Works very well. What? I'm looking at. I just Googled it.
It said that they went from zero to four million dollars a month in 30 days. Oh, they got way
higher than four million a month. That maybe they did in 30 days, but they went way high,
way past that. Okay. So let me ask you a bunch of questions. This is so fascinating to me.
One, is this stuff profitable? So a company like that, like, that got however big. So
four times 12 is 36 million.
So they were at least doing 36 million a month.
They were probably doing hundreds of millions a month.
If you're doing that amount of money,
are you actually creating a valuable company?
Well, you ask two different questions.
Is it profitable and is it a valuable company?
When I say profitable, I'm going to say cash flow positive.
Should be profitable.
Here's just basic math.
Let's say you're giving a 20% commission.
So a way to think about that is you outlaid no cash up front.
Okay, so no ad spend.
This is, they take the risk of making the content,
if they sell, then you pay.
So you pay out of the revenue,
not up front the way that normal ads work, right?
I go to Facebook, put 10 grand,
and I have no guarantee I get anything out.
So with this, I only pay when they sell.
I pay a fixed percentage of the revenue that they sold for.
So let's say it's 20%.
Well, that means my marketing spend is 20% of revenue.
Now, a normal e-commerce brand is spending somewhere 20% to 50%
depending on their level of aggression,
what phase of the business that they're in,
etc, etc. Usually at the beginning they'll run 40%, 50%, aggressively to go get a big customer base,
and then those customers hopefully will repeat by, and that's where the profits come from those
customers. And then, you know, over time, your ad spend as a percentage of revenue shrinks because
you have all this returning revenue coming in. But at the beginning of no returning revenue,
so it starts out pretty high. So is it profitable? Yeah, it should be profitable.
I mean, it doesn't take a lot of, it doesn't take a lot to make something unprofitable.
also, but you should be able to do this profit.
Now, are these companies valuable?
That's a different question.
Well, hold on.
When we say profit, I'm actually saying, like, can the owner pay themselves a huge sum?
If you're making...
Yes, but it depends on where you are in your life cycle.
You're one, no.
You're two, maybe also no.
But also, could be yes, if you just decide to grow slower, right?
So it's up to you how much you want to prioritize taking market and land and, like, going for the opportunity.
Because Sean Frank will always say, like, you could have to have to be a lot.
have a business, he's put the numbers out there. I forget exactly what he said, but it was something
like $100 million a year, and like the two owners are barely drawing seven figures a year.
E-commerce is like saying, is like startups where the spectrum of outcomes ranges from everything to,
you know, you can go from loser's shirt to, oh my God, this person is rolling in profit. I know people
on all ends of that spectrum, there's operational excellence, how are you going to run? And so there's
no, like, rule. What I'm saying, though, is that in some cases,
it's like, let's take startups, for example.
Startups, you're fighting gravity.
Almost every startup fails, even the ones by smart people,
even the ones by smart people who work hard,
who are like doing all the best practices of management, right?
They'll still probably fail because building a billion-dollar startup,
which is usually a novel idea or a disruptive company,
like the venture startup game.
I'm not talking about a person who starts a barbershop.
I'm talking about venture startups.
It's such a hard game.
The gravity is that you're going to fail.
E-commerce is not like that.
The gravity is you should be a business.
the gravity is you should be able to succeed if you were, you know, smart and hard working.
And so same thing here. Now, are these companies valuable? No, not really. Because values typically
based on defensibility and a buyer of this business doesn't know how long this channel, this tactic,
is going to last. And if this is what's driving all your growth, then you're going to trade at a much lower multiple.
This is for the folks out there who have a business that does at least $3 million a year in revenue.
Because around this point, that's when you're able to look up at first.
being heads down for years building your company, and you realize two things.
One, you've done something great, but you're still a long way from your final destination.
And two, you look around and you realize, I am all alone.
I've outrun my peers, which means you're now making $10 million decisions alone by yourself.
And that is when mediocrity can creep in.
My company, Hampton, we solved this problem by giving a room of vetted peers, of other
entrepreneurs who are going to hold you accountable, call you out on your nonsense, and help
show you the way. Because the fact is, is that there's only a tiny number of people in your town
who know what you're going through and who have been there. And they're hard to find. And if you can find
them, it's hard to have this explicit time, this explicit place where you sit down, where the rules are
clear that we are here to help each other and to be one another's board of directors. The biggest risk is not
failing. You have a company and it's working. You're going to be fine. But the biggest risk is waking up
10 years from now and saying, shit, I barely grew in business and in life. And for people like
you who are ambitious, wasted potential, and regret is what we want to help you to avoid. We have
so many of these groups and we have a thousand plus members and I know this stuff actually works,
whether you work with Hampton or you get your own group on your own. But having a group like this,
a group of people who you meet with in real life once a month, it can change your life. It changed
mine and I know it will change yours. So check it out, joinhampton.com. It seems like you could
start off being a nobody company and you sort of have a get rich mentality.
I do think you can, it's better to start off, like, thinking my brand should be amazing, my product should be amazing, and that's how I should grow, and I add ads and all these tactics on top of it.
But I think that some companies do start off doing these, like, stupid things early on, and they swap.
They can switch.
Like, I don't know anything about Ridge, but, like, there's a world where this was like a silly, dumb thing, and then he switched it.
I'm just hypothetically making this up.
It could have switched to like, oh, there's actually product is good, and we are going to invest in our brand.
I mean, have you seen like original
athletic...
Have you seen the original athletic greens?
No, was it lame?
This is, you know,
one of the early days landing pages
of athletic greens.
I mean, it's like...
This is late-night,
Beach Body, MLM infomercials, right?
Dude with six-pack, girl Iyingham,
all your vital nutrition
30 seconds or less money back guarantee 100% satisfaction
limited time offer act now giant orange arrow rush my order
is the name of the button for buying it
the world's number one superfood cocktail
antioxidant rich with great sweet taste
okay so that's like an old version of that
that's not even the original version that's the old version right
and you go look at it today right if I go to like the AG1 website
yeah it looks great it looks like a
and you have Hugh Jackman
drinking from a glass vase
his daily, you know, green nutrients.
Right.
With clinical trials and, you know, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And like, you know, who knows?
Who knows if this shit works or not?
But, you know, yes, you're right.
Like, you can absolutely start a little janky,
a little move fast and break things,
a little, you know, fake until you make it.
And then you can adapt.
And you could, like, you know, go go more and more legit over time.
You can improve your formula.
You can improve your packaging.
You can improve your sales methods.
You can get off one hacky sales tactic and get more diversified, right?
Like go from there.
I mean, Moise, who did native, I think is one of the best examples of this.
I think he's told all this publicly.
So I don't think we're saying anything that's out of school here.
Here's the timeline that I love.
Moise is sitting next to you in a co-working space.
And he's at some point had this idea of he looked at Etsy
and saw that the number one selling product on there was a now.
natural deodorant. And he realized, oh, wow, that's market validation. Cool. Like that.
Contact's a woman on there says, hey, can I take your natural deodorant? Can I put my label on there?
You know, goes outside the office. There's like it was like homemade. It was like homemade ammonium.
I forget the drug or the chemical. Something free, you know, per what's it called?
Parabins and aluminum and parabins. Aluminum free. Whatever. And it was like a mom and pop thing.
and he was like, let's commercialize this.
Yeah, so he was like, I'm going to put my label on it.
We've both seen right outside where you guys worked,
there was a restaurant or something called Native
that looked exactly the same with the exact same logo.
Somehow that ended up to being his name and his logo.
You know, he grew the thing with cheap Facebook ads
and grew it like crazy
and was like packing orders himself on the kitchen table.
When she was like, dude, I can't make like 10,000 bars of deodorant in my bathtub anymore.
He's like, okay, like, can I buy the formula off you?
And I'll move to like another person.
and figure that out.
He used to put deodorant on his armpits, run around the block, two different sticks,
two different formulas, run around the block, have his brother smell each one and be like,
which one's better?
And like that was his like clinical trial that he was running.
And so, you know, like you do what you got to do.
And somebody asked him, I remember early on, like he told the story where somebody said,
like, you're starting a deodorant company.
Like, boys, do you know anything about deodorant?
And he goes, today I know nothing about deodorant, but in six months, I'll know everything
there is to know about deodorant. And that was true. And like, you know, ends up selling the company for
$100 million to Procter and Gamble. And now it's in Target. It's like the best selling thing.
Now it's probably a multi-billion dollar company. Multi-billions in revenue, right? Like unbelievable,
unbelievable, like sort of story, right? And there's a even better part where Procter Gamble or
someone was in the meeting to buy the company. And he was like, well, how do you expand? He's like,
well, can you put the native logo on a shampoo bottle? And they go, yeah, I go, okay.
that's what you do.
Do you think you guys could print it on toothpaste?
All right, you'll be fine.
And by the way, there's another great story.
People should go back and listen.
He was like in the first 20 episodes of this podcast.
I'm shocked that he says some of the stuff he says.
Moyz is very good with words.
Oh, he's super entertaining.
He tells a story of how when they were trying to sell,
they didn't own the trademark for Native.
And he's like, shit.
Procter Gamble is not going to buy this if I don't have the trademark for my like consumer,
you know, good that's going to be on the shelf of Target someday.
And so somebody was squatting on it
And the negotiation story of getting that trademark was great
Like there's just so many great stories in the
In the formation of native
A lot of people don't realize this
But Moise, now that I think about it, it is, so Moise used to have a company
called Casker or Caskers
Which, did you know about this?
It was like a spirits brand, but I don't actually know
What was it?
Was it actually a liquor or was it a D to C shop?
What was it?
It was basically like they would get rare whiskeys
And I think wines
that only had limited runs and they would do drops.
So it was sort of like, this was like during the guilt group or guilt craze where it was like,
you know, crazy good deals, but you only have a limited amount of time to buy it.
So I think it was basically like a email list of like wine and alcohol buyers of who like rare stuff.
And they would broker deals where they would, you know, send out an email drop of like a rare whiskey.
And he sold it.
He sold it for, I forget how much, but he, you know, changed his life at the age of 30.
But he has this cool blog posts that interestingly, it's actually on The Hustle, my old website, but it used to be on Medium.
But the first, listen to the first few sentences.
The Hair of a Dog is a Sports Bar located in Lower East Side of Manhattan.
Like most sports bars in New York, it has an ungodly number of televisions, a beer pong table, and 3.5 stars on Yelp.
More importantly, though, hair of the dog has a single dollar price rating, which is really important,
when your goal is to be drunk by 3 p.m.
It was October 2013.
My co-founder and I were in negotiations to sell caskers.
Any commerce site we found it
with just one and a half years ago
that sold spirits,
meaning booze, not ghosts, online.
Negotiations had already dragged on for a few months,
and we were days away from our scheduled closing date.
And then he goes on to, like, explain the story of how he sold.
But isn't that a beautiful, like, first couple sentences?
That's awesome.
And then he, like, tells, he, like, gives five lessons
about his starting cascar.
He called it Birch by.
for men, if you ever heard of that.
But he says, be frugal, be relentless.
And then he says, be experimental, be careful.
And he gives, like, all these cool tidbits about it.
Last question.
Can this work for B2B products?
Why do people only do this for consumers?
I think one of the great arbitrages is that B2B businesses don't do the proven tactics of B2C
companies.
So B2C companies are out there fighting for their lives with customers and marketing to
try to build their brand.
And B2B companies, if they simply borrowed the playbooks from B2C, not everything would work,
but way more would work than doesn't work.
And I think it's woefully underused.
And usually the skill sets, a lot of people who are in B2B don't know this because they
don't come from that world.
People in consumer tend to stay in consumer or they go to B2B and they are so scarred that they
only bring over like a portion of it.
But I think a lot more of it would work.
This soon out to be pretty cool.
We were supposed to have a guest on.
This is a little behind the scenes.
They're supposed to have a guest on.
Something happened the last minute.
And here we are.
And it turned out to be quite fun.
That whole thing was live and improvised.
I'm prepared.
Here we go.
All right.
That's it.
That's the pod.
I feel like I can rule the world.
I know I could be what I want to.
I put my all in it like no days off.
On the road, let's travel.
Never look at back.
Hey, let's take a quick break.
I want to tell you about a podcast that you could check out.
It is called The Science of Scaling by Mark Robbers.
He was the founding, he was the founding,
of HubSpot. And he's a guest lecturer at Harvard Business School. The guy's smart. And he sits down
every week with different sales leaders from cool companies like Clavio and Vanta and Open AI. And he's
asking about their strategies, their tactics and how they're growing their companies as, you know,
head of sales or chief revenue officer. If you're looking to scale a company up, if you're a
CRO or a head of sales just looking to level up in your career, I think a podcast like this
could be great for you. Listen to the science of scaling wherever you get your podcast.
