My First Million - I went from $1/day to billionaire in 10 years... here's how
Episode Date: February 5, 2025Episode 673: Shaan Puri ( https://x.com/ShaanVP ) talks to Nick Mowbray ( https://x.com/NMowbray23 ), the founder of the most profitable toy company in the world. — Show Notes: (0:00) Selling... DIY hot air balloons door-to-door (5:57) First product (21:32) $30M David Beckham Tamagotchi fail (30:18) Nightball (36:18) Robofish (41:43) Diapers (48:44) Shampoo, pet food, confectionary, supplements, home products (1:00:07) Zurutech - a self-funded moonshot (1:03:28) Serial entrepreneur flywheel — Links: • Zuru - https://zurutoys.com/ • Zuru Tech - https://zuru.tech/ • Boom Supersonic - https://boomsupersonic.com/ — Check Out Shaan's Stuff: • Shaan's weekly email - https://www.shaanpuri.com • Visit https://www.somewhere.com/mfm to hire worldwide talent like Shaan and get $500 off for being an MFM listener. Hire developers, assistants, marketing pros, sales teams and more for 80% less than US equivalents. • Mercury - Need a bank for your company? Go check out Mercury (mercury.com). Shaan uses it for all of his companies! Mercury is a financial technology company, not an FDIC-insured bank. Banking services provided by Choice Financial Group, Column, N.A., and Evolve Bank & Trust, Members FDIC — Check Out Sam's Stuff: • Hampton - https://www.joinhampton.com/ • Ideation Bootcamp - https://www.ideationbootcamp.co/ • Copy That - https://copythat.com • Hampton Wealth Survey - https://joinhampton.com/wealth • Sam’s List - http://samslist.co/ My First Million is a HubSpot Original Podcast // Brought to you by The HubSpot Podcast Network // Production by Arie Desormeaux // Editing by Ezra Bakker Trupiano
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It seems like it was an insane decision to go to China with no money, no plan, no relationships, no language skills,
slept in a bush and literally build your own factory.
That was a disaster.
When I say we were naive, I feel like that is even an understatement.
But to be fair, success is a bad teacher.
And in our business now, I'm a huge believer in firing bullets and failing fast.
And then at the bullet works, it's a cannonball and we invest and we build the recipe around that.
How big is the empire today?
So we'll have a $2.001 billion U.S. in revenue.
And it's public or it's not a public company?
No public.
No.
Wow.
I feel like I can rule the world.
I know I could be what I want to.
So here's what's fascinating to me.
So I have like a love language when it comes to business.
And my love language is self-made, dropped out of college, family business,
multi-billion dollar company with no outside capital.
Like you hit all of the things on my little bingo card there,
which is what got me interested.
I want to start with the origin story.
So here's the bullet points.
Grew up on a dairy farm.
Started selling door-to-door hot air balloons.
Was in law school, then quit because he didn't like walking up a big hill every day.
And then made a crazy rash decision, moved to China with no money,
no plan, no relationships, no language skills,
slept in a bush, somehow turned.
that into a billion dollar company. So that's the bullet points. Can you unpack that a little bit?
That's quite accurate. That's quite a good way to summarize it quite quickly. If I was to frame up
our probably first 10 years, it's that famous saying that success is going from failure to failure
with no loss of enthusiasm. I think that actually really does sum us up, grew up, more or less
on a farm, and then we moved north for our schooling. And my brother won that.
the New Zealand Science Fair with a model hot air balloon and then we decided or he decided he was 12
that we should make these kitset balloons and sell them door to door on at festivals when we're at
school and I'm slightly younger than him so he kind of hired me as the when I say hire I was the
free labor to help make the hot air balloons and yeah we used to make these model for the air balloons
and sell them door to door I used to when I was quite young get my friends together and
backpack around New Zealand and sell door to door and I can tell you.
that learning how to sell door to door is a great life lesson because you never know who's behind
that door and you never know what response we're getting. And on top of that, selling a flying,
burning plastic bag is particularly hard to sell. So it really hones your skills early on.
What was your technique? So knock knock.
I used to be like, we're just a small company trying to get off the ground, wink, wink, like,
no pun intended. We were young kids, so that always helped. And we'd often like, we'd sort of build
thesis around which neighborhoods were more likely to buy. It was usually not the richest
neighborhoods. They were all maybe a little too smart. And so it was sort of somewhere in
between. It would always look for, you know, signs of children in the backyards, of houses.
And I always remember that one of my good friends, still one of my very good friends today,
Fraser, he used to always outsell me. I don't think there was a day where I outsold him.
And I always thought I was a much better salesperson than him when the door opened.
but he just did not care about being rejected.
He'd go from each house.
He'd get yelled and shouted out and swear that
and he'd come out laughing
and it'd be knocking on the next door within seconds
and I always had to build myself up
after getting rejected,
which was most of the time,
to knock on another door.
And it just kind of taught me,
I guess the power of just persistence, right?
And you kind of keep going.
And if you keep going
and have that level of grit and perseverance,
then your chances of winning or your chance of success are much higher so I was
certainly learning that at a very I guess young age yeah from there we we we kind of
Matt went to university as well and then he dropped out after a year to set up and make
or develop this hot ebbler and through it a little bit more of a professional level and
Matt said why don't we start why don't we explore going to India or China to try
and manufacture our hot air blue and given I was making
them. I thought that was a great idea. And so now actually went off to India and China,
did a little scowling trip, came back and he said, China, let's go to China. And my
let's go to China, he said, you go to China. So I tapped up, didn't go my second year
law, found the most entrepreneurial guy from my first year at university, a guy called Joe,
dragged Joe to China. And we had no money, really no contacts. We went to a little place called
Shantau. It was the middle of nowhere. There were no other Westerners. And we had an apartment
I think it was like probably the equivalent of $8 a month to rent.
It was the eight floor, no lift.
So whenever you were thirsty, he had to get water.
You had to walk out, eight flights of stairs to go and get water and come back up.
And that's where we started.
But we ended up getting ourselves into all sorts of trouble and strife.
And there's a lot of funny stories.
The story I had heard was that you guys like first night you like slept in a bush.
What happened there?
And basically, what was the plan?
Were you just going to kind of go try?
to find a manufacturer, walk around, like, what were you thinking of doing?
We were so naive, and on reflection, I looked back on it's almost like we built a toy company
from first principles, because we did everything different to everyone else without even
knowing it.
So we didn't know that you could go on contract manufacturer, your product.
We were planning on setting up our own little factory, and that's essentially what we did.
But me and Joe got into some trouble, and Joe had to fly home to New Zealand.
So my brother came over.
we ended up trying to see it if we could get a hotel
but everything was way too expensive
so we decided just to sleep in the bushes at Hong Kong airport
and I remember just getting completely attacked
by mosquitoes all night
and we didn't want to sleep in the airport
because the fluorolites were so bright
and so yeah we ended up sleeping in the bushes
and getting attacked by mosquitoes all night
it was not fun and then we fed it up to China
and we set up a little factory on the side of a river
it was a small kind of shed more or less in China
and my cousin Simon came up at that time as well
he was an engineer to help us. And he welded a production line. And we bought, we pretty much spent
all of the money we had on an injection molding machine. We employed a few people on the production
line. We had a little old lady who used to cook for us every day. I think the budget was two R&B per meal,
which is about 30 cents. And we started making our first product. And then we started making our
second product out of there as well, which was a night frisbee, which we got sued on and we had no
money to defend ourselves. So, so stupid question, but like,
Why not, like it seems like it was an insane decision just to go to China and literally, like, build your own factory.
Like literally, like, create a structure on the side of a river and, like, weld it yourself together.
Why did you feel like you needed to be in China instead of just doing it where you were?
Well, we understood that most of the toys in the world were made in China.
But when I say we were naive, I feel like that is even an understatement.
Like, we were trying to make our hot air balloon, but we didn't even realize that we couldn't sell it to any toy chains or large retail.
retailers around the world because of course it didn't meet any of the regalry standards.
I mean, it had a burning can under it.
So we were super naive.
So then we started looking out products that we can maybe make in our little factory.
And we saw this company in America making a light-up frisbee with LEDs.
And it could be thrown at night.
And we thought, oh, that's cool.
So we made this night frisbee in our factory.
And I started hustling to try and sell this thing.
As in like, I would email every buyer in the world of every major retailer.
in every country I possibly could.
And I remember I sold it to a distributor called Schilling in the US,
and we spent what was a lot of money at the time,
and I went to New York Toy Fair.
And we'd made this night frisbee,
and we'd also made this other pot like,
or copied this other potter called a Money Gobler,
which was a money bank in the shape of an animal,
and you'd feed the coins into its mouth
that would go down the throat into the stomach.
So we started making these two products.
Matt decided if he wanted to set up a wooden toy factory for this money gobler,
and we had our production line for making this frisbee.
So I sold them to this company called Shilling.
So I go to New York to a wharf at it to be on their booth to start selling these two products.
And I start selling these products and this guy comes flying onto the booth and starts yelling out a distributor.
So he's obviously got wind that we've made a product that's identical to his.
And he had multiple patents for how the LED connected to the fiber optics and how this all worked.
And of course, we're again, we didn't even really know what IP was.
So he comes, and so Dave comes up to me off the booth, the owner of the distributors,
he says, hey, we need to pull that frisbee off the booth.
This is probably an hour into New York toy show starting.
So I'm pretty disappointed because one of our products is gone, but I'm like, that's okay,
I'll sell the money.
But gobbler.
Well, if I thought the first guy was crazy, about three hours later, this lady, she has a whole
business.
She's built over 25 years building these money, animal banks, and she has this big booth on
the ground floor of Jarvitz.
And she comes up, and she screams onto the booth, and she's, you know,
yelling and screaming and swearing at Dave. And Dave sort of, I can see this from where I am,
but Dave sort of wanders over to be sheepishly and says, Nick, you need to take the money gobbler off
the booth as well. So within the first morning of New York Toy Fair, both our products have been
taking off the booth of the distributor. I flew back to China. I said to my brother, I said,
have you ever heard of this whole IP thing, this whole patent thing? I think we need to start
renovating and coming out with our own ideas. And then we ended up getting into a lawsuit on the
nightfly. They sued us. We had no money for defend ourselves. I remember going to Colorado
because that's where they sued us to try and find a law firm to defend us. And I was going to
all these firms and I was saying, well, that'll be a million or two million dollars. We had
like maybe a few thousand dollars between us at that stage. I was saying how are we going to
defend ourselves. I ended up actually hiring a lawyer convincing him. His name was Chad. He later got
disbarred that we would write the whole suit. He just had to put his name to it. And Chad did the
whole case for us but didn't really do it. We did it ourselves. We learned how to become lawyers. So we
did it incredibly cheaply, but he did. He ended up being disbarred later on, but that was our only way
because again, he had no money. And I was so enthusiastic, we had no other choice that we had to sell
this product. And I remember selling the Knight Frisbee to the department store chain in the US Coles
with the K. I know we have Coles down here in Australia with a C. Never forget the buyer's name.
I actually still work with her today. This is, you know, 19 years ago. The name was Jen Sarah.
She was the buyer at Coles. And I would email her every single day. And one day I got an email,
reply from her and it was all the capitals. It said, Nick, I do not have time for your daily email
communication. Please stop emailing me every single day. And then I always wrote that, oh, I'm so sorry,
Jim, but I just think our product was really great. And at this stage, we knew we were in a little
legal trouble, but we had to sell something to survive. So I was like pushing and pushing, and then
eventually I get this email back from her. It was just two words, nothing else, and said, send the
sample. So we send the sample to her, and she ends up ordering a full container. I think it was 20,000
units of this night frisbee so we're pretty happy at this stage it was a big celebration we never had a
full container order of any product and so we ship this full container of night frisbee's uh and of course
she gets enjoined in the lawsuit as well um at coals and didn't speak to me again for a long time
the irony is today she's the director of family dollar stores in the u.s and we're their second
biggest toy supplier after fatale so that's the funny thing
You're like trauma bonded.
Correct.
But we have so many of these stories that is one of many, many, many in those early days.
So we really were just scrapping every day to try and survive and sell something and just like live somehow.
But we were living on less than a dollar a day.
Okay, I have two things.
One, let's do a detour to the dollar a day thing because my guy Diego who helps me with research,
he goes, you got to ask him about the McBroke diet.
and the McBroke diet, I said, what's that?
He goes, apparently they were just eating off the dollar menu at McDonald's in China every day.
And he had some trick about the French fries to get free French fries.
So what is the McBrough diet as far as?
It was, we didn't eat McDonald's.
McDonald's was a treat.
So me and that were in China.
And for Christmas, of course, I think my brother didn't come back to New Zealand for eight years.
He lived in a factory for 10 years.
He had a tiny little room at a factory for 10 years, which is crazy in itself.
But for Christmas, we would celebrate by going to McDonald's.
And probably the equivalent of a combo is probably $2.50 in China at that time.
So that's how frugal we were.
We wouldn't even go to McDonald's.
But we'd go and we'd celebrate Christmas.
I always remember going, Merry Christmas, Friday.
Merry Christmas row.
And, you know, finally eat some good food.
I looked like, you know, I was so skinny at this point.
But I'd always play a trick in order to get extra fries.
I always eat half of them.
And then I'd take them up to the counter and say,
hey, you only filled my fries, you know, half full, and they'd give me another one so,
so I could get more for free. But we were so, we were like, even, you know, when we'd go on the
train, we'd use a concessionary or children's pass and hope we wouldn't get corks, it was half
the price, but I looked back on it, it was like, you know, a fear would only be 12 R&B or a
couple dollars and we'd be saving a dollar. So by getting a concessionary fear, and we did that
for years. So what was driving this? Because like you lived in New Zealand. New Zealand's a beautiful place.
I assume you could have just had like a normal.
old life that was like
more comfortable
and I love like
I'm a founder
I've been a founder
but I didn't do what you did
I didn't sleep in the factory
on like a mat on the floor
for eight 10 years
I didn't live off of the less
than dollar a day
like were you guys just like
was it you're having so much fun
or you just felt there was no other choice
or what was the mindset
that kept you going
because it was like
many many years
just scrapping
I reflect back on us
and it's
It is a little bit hard to understand in all honesty when you reflect back on it.
But I think when you're in it together, you kind of hold each other accountable and you
push each other because you don't want to fail.
And I would say, me and my brother are equally as competitive.
And so I don't think you want to let the other person down in a sense.
And so you just keep fighting because if one of you gave up, you're kind of admitting defeat.
And so in a sense, you hold each other accountable to.
continue to fight and push forward. And as well as that, I think we didn't really have another
option. We didn't understand like back then that there was even such a thing as going and
raising money to build a company or, you know, again, I look back at the extreme naivety.
I used to write emails to my mum from China and she was beside herself that, you know,
I was up there. I was so young, it's 18. And I read these emails and to understand
how little we understood, even about the world, but just about business and how things worked,
is quite scary.
And so I just think we didn't know any better.
We just thought, we'll just keep fighting and try and get these little wins and little wins and
little wins.
And, you know, we started to get, you know, a little win after little win.
And then we started to get a little bit more momentum.
And then you started to learn.
One of my favorite sayings is you win or you learn.
You never lose.
You never fail.
And so connect the dots.
So now you're, you've painted the picture beautifully of the extreme naive approach,
the scrapping.
And then somehow, you know, fast forward the tape and the movie.
And you end up with this super successful toy company.
I think, you know, the third most profitable toy company in the world doing over a billion
dollars a year of sales.
Plus, like, forget the other stuff you've even done after that.
But I'm just saying just the toy part.
So connect the dots.
Where did you start to really get the momentum or what were the brink?
breakthroughs, the epiphanies, the key, key breaks that got you to actually getting to that success.
Well, there are a few stories along the way. And I remember just sitting there every day,
harassing and thinking really big early. So thinking, I've just got to get Walmart,
or I've just got to get K-Mont at that time, or I've just got to get these big retailers.
And, you know, one story, I remember ringing Walmart every single day. And because of the time
zones, it was late at night and to month after month after month after month,
And I always remember all the early names because I just see it in my memory.
And I remember one night, my brother was basically telling me to give up.
He was like, you're not going to get Walmart.
And eventually the buyer, Ryan Halford, answered.
And I was on the phone to the Walmart buyer from China.
And again, I was up with this young company, we're just in China.
We're trying to get off the ground.
We've got this pot ice.
And he said, do you have a showroom in Hong Kong?
And I said, I didn't know what a showroom in Hong Kong was.
But of course I said, yes, I'll get back to you at the address.
we started to learn
that the toy industry
at the time revolved around these showrooms
in a place called Tim Sharsui in Hong Kong
all the companies had showrooms there
and all the buyers from around the world congregated
in Hong Kong twice a year
to come to these showrooms
so I got on a train the next day
to Hong Kong
and had research where these toy companies were
and so knocking on toy company doors
and trying to do a deal with him
I said I'll bring the Walmart bar
and if you just give me some space to use
in your address
and then hopefully you could sell some of your products to them as well and every company denied me
and denied me. So I thought, okay, we need to rent a showroom. And at the time it was a lot of
money, but we found these little glass cubicles in a place called South Sea Centre. And they were
just a few metres by a few meters, like tiny little cubicles. But I think they would have been like
I know, two or three thousand US dollars a month to rent because Holo Hong was so expensive. And so
at the time, we didn't have that money. It was, we were so poor. But I thought we don't have an option.
We've got this chance to get the Walmart buy coming in.
And so we just did we have to do it.
So we read this little tiny cubicle and it kind of had curtains on the inside of it.
And we, I found some shelving that someone was throwing out from another showroom.
So I put this little shelving in there.
We bought like a table and then I had a little roll-up mattress and I would sleep in the showroom under the table each night because there's no other room to sleep.
So I'd unroll the mattress under the table, sleep in that and then I'd wash in the little bathroom in South Sea Centre.
in the morning, but I had the showroom and I start kind of realizing that the buyers come to Hong
Hong Kong in January and October every year. So that was good because now I have this kind of
like base to like invite people to. So I get, you know, I get Walmart to come in. I actually
got a guy called Frank Demico who is from Walmart Canada. And I'll never forget because he came
in and I think he was so shocked that had given me a meeting when he saw this two meter by two
meter showroom and he came with this two merchandises. I went to shake his hand, didn't shake my hand.
He didn't even sit down and he just yelled at me.
He goes, quotes across the table.
And I'd filled out the quotes around two or three products at the stage.
He kind of reads the quotes.
And I'd filled something out wrong.
And he just throws the quotes down on the table and just walks out and leaves his two
Hong Kong merchandises standing there, staring at me.
I think that was my second ever meeting.
And I'm just like, in shock.
I'm like, wow, where it's going to be.
And he just storms out.
And then I contacted his boss and said, hey, I had this really like bad experience.
I just got Frank.
I genuinely think he was really rude.
at. And his boss made him make me again in their procurement in Walmart's procurement center in Shenzhen.
So I was like, screw this, I'm going to go up and meet him again.
Then he per second time and he ended up ordering. And at this stage we had a night ball along
with our night of Frisbeck. But I think he ordered us $70,000 of this night ball.
But it was another good example of persistence. And then I remember one day I had a men
that came out of Australia, but I was sleeping under my table and the door's only about a meter
from my head because this is such a little small
showroom and the buyer came an hour
early and I was still asleep
under the table and
she was knocking on the door and I'm sort of
like there like looking at her feet under the door
thinking shit I'm still in bed under my
table so I had to wait for her to go
away and the messenger afterwards and say hey you didn't
shut up that 10 o'clock meeting she said oh I thought it was
9 a.m and so I had all sorts of experiences but I used to crash by as
hotels I used to post samples under their
you know under their hotel room doors but really
really we did what it would take
The first break we got is, and this was a crazy story, is there was a, I was in the UK at a company
called Recreation and they were selling our night sports balls at the time.
So we had developed this other product.
It was instead of our night Frisbee, we'd made a night football, it lit up at night and a
soccer ball.
So it sold to this company called Recreation.
I met a guy called Sean on their booth and he had developed a soccer Tamaguchi.
And so it was kind of like a Tamaguchi, but you trained your player and then through
infrared, you could play against.
each other and he had like the Manchester United license and it was selling reasonably okay
in the UK but he was having troubles of manufacturing and I was like we can make that for you
like no problem and he was like great great great you guys could help me make it because we were really
you know anything was sort of winked at the time we were trying to find a way to win anywhere
so we're like sure we can make this and then we started talking well maybe you know David
Beckham he's moving to the US to play in the US what if we get the David Beckham license
and we could try and sell this in the US and he thought this is a great idea so we went and pitched at
time. I think it was Simon Fuller who started an Eric and Idle had the David
Bickham rise at the time. And I'm like a super young kid, right? And they said, well,
we'll give you the David Bickham license, but it'll cost you a million and a half dollars.
Of course, we don't have a million and a half dollars. But then we go to Walmart and Walmart,
the buyer, her name Danielle Primal, and never forget it. She loved David Bickham and he was
moving to the US and she was just obsessed by David Bickham. And we probably
blew a few bubbles. But anyway, as it turned out, Walmart turned around and ordered 2.2 million
units of this David Beckham, Tamaguchi, which I think they were like 14 bucks, 50 or something.
It was almost 30 million US dollars. So keep in mind, we'd probably never had an order more
than $70,000 at this point. And our total revenue is like in the hundreds of thousands.
Suddenly we get this order for almost 30 million US dollars. And then we're like, holy shit.
we thought we were going to make a lot of money because we had huge margin.
We were making this thing for $3 and we were going to make this thing for $3,000 or $3 20 or whatever
it was and sell it for $14.50.
So we were sort of counting our pennies and super excited.
We didn't even understand that sell through was a big thing.
But then we were like, oh no, we have to work out how to make this product.
Like, you know, we've got our tiny little factory with, you know, 20 people and there's
no chance we can make 2.2 million units.
So when I'd first gone to China, I've been on a tour with, he's one of the wealthiest guys,
in Hong Kong like in Francis Choi,
he owns Early Light International,
the other contract manufacturer
for Hasbro and Mattel and all the toy companies.
One of the first factories I ever toured,
I somehow got in touch with his
two I see, I called Wilson,
and he'd taken me on a tour as an 18-year-old of their factory,
and you can imagine me coming from New Zealand
and then going to these factories
with hundreds of thousands of people
and just being like, oh, what, this is like insane.
So I still had this contact with Wilson from Early Light.
So I got a meeting with Wilson,
I said, hey, we've got this huge order.
2.2 million pieces, can you help us make it?
And he said, yep. And then I said, oh, and by the way, can you also pay for us as well?
He said, let me check with Francis. Come back to you.
Came back to me and said, yeah, if you transfer the liver of credit to us, you know,
will help you pay for it as well. Great.
So we start making this product, 2.2 million ICs, 2.2 million LCD screens.
So all the components, and then Walmart turns around and cancels it from 2.2 million pieces
down to eight no one point two million pieces and I was like no no no they can't do that we've got a
letter of credit they've made it all and then I'm flying back and forth at this point Sean's kind of
like in the background on this like I don't know 20 year old and I'm thinking there's no way but I was
thinking well it's still fine one more two million pieces we've got so much margin in this we can still
make like good money out of it but then they turned around to cancel it all the way down to
three hundred thousand pieces yet Francis was making all of this product and I was just like
oh no that's or I'm going back on forward it reads like some kind of soap opera because Danielle got
fired obviously part of this was part of it and with Francis I was like there's no way I can tell
Francis that you know that I've cancelled this many pieces and he's paying for it all so I'm going
back and forward to Walmart and I calculated that if I get the order back to 800,000 pieces we could
still pay Francis off because we had so much margin and still make like a million and a half dollars
and eventually I commits Walmart to get the order back to $800,000,
that's $800,000 or 900,000 pieces, whatever it was.
And we shipped this prolite.
And it was a disaster.
Like it hit the shelf and it was culprit on the shelf.
Like no one would buy it.
I think they retailed it at $30.
They discounted it to $25.
Then $20.
Then $15.
No, I would still buy it.
Then $10.
No one bought it.
And then they eventually sold it to the dollar and discount channels for like 50 cents.
on it like 50 cents apiece.
And then of course,
Walmart came back to us and said,
you have to fund all the markdown money
from $30 to, you know,
50 cents.
And we were like,
what's marked down money?
And we were determined to keep our little bit of margin
and refused to give them any money back.
And so we were like,
no,
but you cancel these pieces and like,
this huge thing.
Anyway, we got Blackball from Walmart
for like five years.
We never did business with Walmart after that.
And it was not two years later
that I met Danielle's boss.
at New York Toyford, dear, Laura, Phillips.
And I wrote this big, long email of everything that happened and we started to work together again.
But that was sort of our, as crazy as it was, that crazy story was our first break to actually
make a little bit of money.
And then from there, I started doing deals with US companies that only sold product in the
US, but didn't sell internationally.
So I started doing deals with them because we were really bad at designing and the Vulcan toys,
terrible in fact.
So we needed good products.
so I could open up these channels.
So I'd do these deals with American companies like Zing or Zokka.
I did deal with the Australian company called Yoho to take their products and sell them internationally.
And that kind of, and I'll tell a big story that I can get their products in everywhere.
Then I have to go out and hustle.
So we had a product called Zedis, which became really successful.
And a product called Snooks, which was out of Australia, that became really successful.
So we started kind of taking other people's products.
How did you figure out that model?
Because, you know, did you see somebody else doing that?
and you're like, oh, that's much simpler than what we're trying to do, or did you fall into it?
Like, it seems like you didn't use a lot of like mentors.
You did a lot of running around with a fork sticking it into outlets, trying to figure out, you know, which ones are working.
That is a great analogy.
That's exactly what we did.
We just, to be honest, we were making these products and the second product line we made were these night balls.
But the product was so bad.
Matted with Murfactory by the stage.
and the engineering of them was so bad
that they had these sort of foam EVA patches
glued into this frame
but the production
I actually was getting quite a few orders
I was hustling around and getting orders
but Matt couldn't produce them
because the production was so hard to do
and I get so mad at him that at one point
I said I'm coming back from Hong Kong
I was living in my show room
and then from there I upgraded I was living in a dorm room
with 18 people overplace with puncture mansions in Hong Kong
so wasn't exactly living the life in Hong Kong
and I was getting these orders
and my brother couldn't produce them
So I was like, I'm coming back to like to China to take over the factory.
And I were two words of Chinese.
One was Kaiman, too slow.
And one was quiet a year.
Let's go faster.
And we ended up like, I was like on the production line, pushing to get these balls out the door.
And I remember they were coming off the end of the production line half mangled.
And I was just like, ship them.
Just ship them.
Ship the balls.
We've got to ship them.
But I remember years later, like you'd see these things on shelves and all the air had gone out of them.
All the EVA patches had peeled off them.
and now just these shrivel up little prunes
that it called the sheer health.
I love that you're honest about it
because there's so many people
because it's a very sexy thing to be like,
you know,
all that mattered was product
and we really just built a great product
and then everything worked
because we built a great product.
And like, I know I've been there.
It's like, dude,
the first version of all my products sucked.
In fact, the 10th version still kind of sucked.
And I love that you're kind of unabashed
and honest about like,
look, we weren't super innovative.
We saw shit working.
And then we were like,
cool, we could do lights on a frisbee,
lights on a ball like that, okay, let's copy what works. And that your product kind of sucked. And you were
just like, basically you just kept doing door to door to sales even like at a global level.
You just started doing global like door to ourselves. And literally it sounds like it was like
distribution and salesmanship and marketing that was keeping you afloat at the time.
Yeah, well, we would sell, I would sell a product to someone. And then we wouldn't get a reorder.
We didn't know what a real order was because the product would sell through. And then we just
sell a new product to a new customer and we wouldn't get it and I just held another customer.
And we didn't know for probably seven or eight years what a reorder was.
Like we had a product actually sold off the shelf and the customer came back to buy more of them.
But we could like continually hustle to all these different customers.
But we did crazy things.
Like we, like a little back on it and it was kind of nuts.
Like we sold this product, the night ball.
We got a distributor in the US called Spin Master.
They're one of the biggest toy companies in the world.
Yeah.
Very similar story to our own.
Free Canadians built this.
this toy company, very similar to us.
And Spin Master had agreed to take our night sports balls for distribution in the US.
And I'd kind of hustled a few retailers.
And so it was this, it was this, should we sell the Rick to retail?
Should we use Spin Master?
They'll really put lots of TV marketing on.
TV marketing at the time was the thing.
And they said, well, we'll run this test in Cincinnati.
So we'll put your night balls into all the Walmarts in Cincinnati,
and we'll run media in that city.
And then we'll decide whether to roll this thing out.
And whether or not it was dishonest, I think it was more desperation at the time.
But of course, I flew to where the test was.
I got to New York and I couldn't get a flight to Cincinnati.
Well, I could, but it was too expensive.
It was summer holidays.
I went down to the bus station.
I remember the bus station in New York at the start of summer holidays.
It was like nothing I've ever seen.
It was absolutely chaos.
But I got a Greyhound to Cincinnati.
I think for like 30 hours.
It broke down.
It's got different places.
A greyhound to Cincinnati.
Stayed in this absolute, like, horrific place.
but every day, and yes, this is a little bit dishonest,
but we were desperate back then, I would bus.
I'd get the bus schedule.
I'd bus to each Walmart.
I'd give people cash to go buy a ball.
I'd go out and buy them on different credit cards myself.
I was so paranoid that we'd get caught just to help our test sales go up a little bit.
And I'd buy all these night sports balls,
but it was a long day because the Walmart's were all so far apart.
And I was taking this bus schedule to get to each one.
I stayed there for a month.
and I almost got kills in a place called Over the Rine.
If you look it up, it was the most dangerous neighborhood in America at the time.
Over the Rine, it's like wild.
It was over these railway tracks.
And I managed to walk down there in the middle of the day.
And it was the scariest thing in my life.
I had a guy come up to me and he said, what the fuck are you doing here, white boy?
And I was like, I'm just a tourist.
And I hadn't realized I was in this area.
And then I managed to somehow, like, weeks later, walk into it.
I was walking back from downtown.
There's no such thing as Uber Bay.
there on taxi so I was trying to walk back to where I was staying which was very close to over the
rine and I walked in the wrong direction I walked in there in the middle of the night and I got
chased and had to hide that was very funny but yeah we were doing this to get our test results up which
we had a good test and then spin master rolled the product out of course it wasn't it it was a great
product in terms of its construction it was the same thing but my god do we have to hustle we had the
strap and fight so hard to like literally just to survive but we got to a point where we were we were
selling enough to each new customer of each new product and we weren't getting reorders but we were
profitable and it was actually funny because after the david beckham thing we made like that million
a half dollars or whatever it was we got a little bit fat and happy and we had a month where we lost
two hundred thousand dollars and i remember sitting we sat down and we were like oh my god we've lost
money this month and we were like from this day on we will never have a day a month a week a year
will we lose money like if we're losing money in a month we will like sit down we will like eat nothing
or we will like get rid of people or we will like live on nothing just to ensure that we're like
profitable because people wonder how do we get to you know a few billion and a few billion dollars a
year in sales now and we've built it completely organically and the truth is we just because we like
we're so frugal and we start building our business got more and more and more profitable just every
year for 20 years so it was almost this cognitive process to how do we remain profitable and then that's
just compounded over 20 years and we've just got more and more and more and more profitable
to the point where percentage-wise, by far, the most profitable point in the world,
where we run it like 40% net profits, which is unheard of in any profit industry in the world,
and their product industry in the world, let alone even software companies.
So we just built a very, very different model.
That's why I reflect on it now.
It's almost like we built something from first principles, the way we set up factories,
the way now we automate all of our production, the way we don't do domestic shipping.
We do all FOP, the way we centralize all of our content and data systems around marketing globally.
We've almost built this company from a first principles approach
because it's so different to how everyone else does it.
But we did that more through naivety than through planning.
So you're starting this kind of like 18 years old when you go to China.
Do you remember how many years it took you to get to your first,
where you made 100 grand or when you made a million dollars?
Like how many years was that?
Well, it was probably a couple of years where we started to make money,
but we still lived the same way because we needed that money to fund our growth effectively.
you can't grow to billions of dollars a year in sales organically without borrowing money or going
to a bank unless you're super profitable to continue funding that growth. And so we started to make
money, but we never spent it. We still lived the same way. I still lived in a dorm room in Hong Kong.
And so for years, for probably eight years. And as I said, Matt had, as we slowly moved and built
big up factories, Matt would always have a tiny little rude, like a tiny little room in the factory.
and that's where he lived in China
with no other like
no interaction really with anyone else
and we were going crazy in those first years
in China like I looked baffirn of it
and like we had some serious problems
and so you
you take it all the way
at some point you start figuring out toys that are
new novel good products
like I bought your bunch of balloon
products where you fill up I don't know if it's like
100 or 500 now like
100 water balloons at once
you can fill up and like it takes like 15 seconds
to fill them all up. So you eventually start making good products. How did that happen?
So we sit on a parallel path. We were taking other people's products and that was helping us
really open up distribution. I would hustle and get them into all the big retailers across all the
countries. There's an email that I've sent internally that I had for my 20 years ago and it kind of
lists every country in the world and all the retailers and distributors I was working with
at the time trying to sell the products too. So we're really like pushing out to everyone.
And at the same time, we were starting to learn how to make better products ourselves.
We were sort of building a team in China and engineers and like some designers and we're
starting to sort of parallel our path building our own products as well.
But I think our big break after ZEBs came when we did RoboFish and RoboFish is still, we still
sell about eight million of them a year today.
And this was a Chinese embenta.
We ended up getting sued for this as well.
We were a five year or soup, but a Chinese embenta called Xiaoping and I met a guy in Hong Kong,
a French guy who had a factory of China.
I was running a factory in China and he was doing some brokerings of some for some inventions.
And he showed me this robofish.
I actually didn't, I thought, and that's cool, didn't think too much of it.
Then he showed my brother and my brother loved it.
He was, we've got to make this robofish pomite.
And part of the deal was we had to make it in their factory if we licensed it from them.
So we licensed this fish and it was like it's got little carbon sense.
It's very, very clever design.
It has an electromagnetic coil in it.
So when it touches water, it's all micro.
It swims and looks like a real fish.
Swims in all directions.
And it's water active at it.
So we start making this fish and then the guy who was the inventor had worked in a US company before
and he had tried to sell the invention to them that said no, he'd signed a release on the
invention saying no problem you can go sell it to anyone else.
Of course, RoboFlish blew up, came on the best selling toys in the world and then he decided
that actually the inventor had designed some schematics or diagrams why who was under employment
and he would sue us because they were still on his computer systems and so we're in this long
on a lawsuit, but even worse, we finally had like this massive hit. It was like the number
one selling tour in lots of countries around the world. It took us to, I think we did like a hundred
million US dollars. So this was like a big break for us. But unfortunately, there's always a curveball.
The factory that we were bound to make it with, we'd bankrupt in the middle of production.
But we had to design so much specialist production, not just the tools, but all of these fish
were tested underwater for precious. They didn't leak. And there was just a,
There's a ton of like specialised equipment that have been built to produce a robofish.
They were all slightly that weights had to be perfect.
So this whole factory gets shut down.
And of course the wars in China mean that the factory workers are the first creditors essentially.
So they send the army in to like stop anything or any assets being taken from this factory.
So we're like peak robofish production, peak demand.
Finally we've got price that are selling and everyone scrambling.
There were retailers that wouldn't talk to me for like seven years.
actually one of my good friends today,
it's one of the biggest independent retail chains
in the UK could be entertainer.
And the son of the owner,
Stu, one of my closest friends today,
he wouldn't even even even talk to me for eight years.
Like, I couldn't even get an appointment with him.
But suddenly when robofish took off,
suddenly all these buyers were coming to us and, hey, like,
yeah, like that roberfish.
So you're going to imagine we finally had this momentum
and then this happens to the factory.
And we were like, we were like, shit.
And it was crazy.
we could not get into the factory.
So my brother, we had to do, and this, again, there's so many of these stories,
but we were like, we have no other option.
We have to get our tool and we have to get all our equipment.
We have to get everything out of that factory and relocated to another factory,
but the army was there.
Everyone was there.
You couldn't get in.
So in the middle of the night, my brother got like eight trucks,
got all of our team from one of our little factories, fill these trucks with people
in like two, three a.m. in the morning when there were less people, like, camped out,
at the factory, pulled up to the factory, paid a bunch of bribes to go in, took all the trucks
into the factory, all our people went in, ticked up all of the tooling and all of the
equipment, loaded up all the trucks in the middle of the night, left, and we went and relocated
to a new factory so we continued production. So it was crazy, but that was like, again, like
nothing ever happens without a hiccup, right? Like, it was sort of like, we finally felt like,
we had momentum and then this happened. So how old are you now?
39.
Okay, you're 39.
Do you still go as hard or like, are you still as nuts as the early version of you?
Like, do you still have the same drive or are you human and you're like, you know, yeah,
I used to really, you know, super driven, super resilient, going going really, really balls to the wall.
And now I'm, you know, tired and whatever, you know, I'm an old guy now.
Like, do you still have it?
I think we still have it.
I think we still are just as motivated today, if not more.
motivated than we have ever been. We see a pretty cool roadmap ahead of where we want to get
to over the next 10 years, particularly Zuru Tech and building houses on production lines and Zuri
Edgola. So let's talk about that. So could you just summarize, how big is the, how big is the
empire today? So there are over two out of a billion US in revenue, but we're drawing at about
25 to 30 percent year on year. So that's compounding. But I think the thing with us is, is,
our revenue is one thing. It's just how
profitable we've built the business.
And it's public or it's not a public company?
Not public. No.
Okay. So privately held
super profitable company. That's like a billion
dollars a year of profit basically
out of the toy business.
But then you have this diaper company.
You started buying other companies, right?
Not so much buying.
I actually got Crohn's, so I got sick
in China and Hong Kong.
And I had to have my bowel,
my large intestine remove. This probably has
something to do with living in China for all those years, eating incredibly poorly, I'm not sure.
But I had to move home to New Zealand to get surgery about six years ago.
And it ended up being a great thing.
So I was in Hong Kong.
I came home for the surgery.
I was meant to rest for a while.
And I was sitting at home and I was getting restless trying to rest as I had my bowel,
my large bowel moved.
And I had a friend who had started a small doctor business and he was doing like 50,
grand a year D to C in New Zealand. So really, really small,
who'd be mapping away at it for three years. And I thought, well, I may as well help with
this. But I'd always thought, like, Toys is this industry where there really is a ceiling
to the size of the business you can grow just because of the, you know, the addressable market,
the size of the market. Also, you've got brands like Hot Wheels, which is super hard to disrupt.
And I was looking at FMCG, and I started to realize that there's like nine companies that
dominate 80% of it globally. And when you build a toy,
business, you work in every material form, you work at speed. Like speed of innovation is your DNA.
You build this muscle for speed and working fast and innovating because you reinvent 40, 50%
of your entire product line every single year. But because you invent so much of your
product line every year, it comes really hard to keep growing, right? Because it's a reinvent
to catch up every year. And so I started to form this thesis about six years ago. I thought,
And we're so good at automating and we sort of, I would classify Zuru today as more an automation company than either thing else.
Like, deploy this almost secondary.
We build incredibly sophisticated automation.
We had a huge automation team.
So whether that's building a house on production lines with robots or a dart blaster with robots, it's a big part of what we do.
So, you know, I was like, we've built this automation muscle and the speed of innovation muscle.
And I feel like these big efficiency companies, one, they don't innovate.
Two, they have a lot of duopoly stuff.
If you look at pet food, it's Mars and Nestle.
If you look at Baby, it's Kimberly Clark and Prokner & Gamble.
If you look at personal care, it's La Real and Pocketa & Gamble, a little bit of Unilever.
So there's a lot of them, if you look at laundry, it's pretty much just Bokker and Gamble, a tiny bit of Unilever.
So all these duoplies and monopolies across the board.
And through that, they were delivering much margin to their retail partners.
They really held the power.
And I met, I remember mapping out Walmart's revenue.
And I mapped it against the top eight FMC companies in the world.
So Walmart did more revenue that all of them.
combined. What's that acronym you're saying? What MCG? What is that? FMCG, fast-moving consumer
goods. So FMCG, CPG, consumer package goods. So if I looked at Popper & Gamble, Nesley,
Mars, all the biggest FMCG companies, collectively their revenue is less than Walmart,
who does $611 billion. But then Walmart makes only a fraction of the profit. They're all public
companies, and their big FMCG companies make the lion's share 75% of the profits. So I thought,
is there a world in which we can be disruptive in FMCG, fast-moving
consumer goods? Can we deliver more margin to our retail partners? Can we innovate faster,
bring our speed of innovation mindset to these categories? And can we reach customer in a far
more efficient way? And can we move at the speed of culture? And obviously at the time,
digital and data-driven advertising was starting to become a bigger thing and, you know, targeted
advertising. And I was still looking at baby. And I was thinking, well, you've really got a mum,
a mum who's an incredibly targeted audience or a parent who's an incredibly targeted audience. How can we
serve them and ad every single day in a time and away rather than just like
wakent media so that's a super efficient way to reach our customer what if we
do the better product deliverable margin and position at a better price and that was kind of
my overall thesis can we do this and can we run our same kind of first principles toy model like
phob so we don't hold products super lean large amortizing dollars spent but in a really
centralized controlled way and I thought okay I can do this so I worked with my with my friend
and I said okay let's launch this diaper brand in New Zealand is
a test market and within one year I think we're taking 40% market share in New Zealand launching a diaper
and I remember meeting Greg Forrin who is CEO of Walmart at the time and he's a New Zealander
and I met him in New York and I was like Greg you know toys it's great and it's been this
this incredible university for us because it really allows us to you know it's bit we've built
skill sets that is very hard to build in any other industry and I said we're going to take on
dithers and he turned to me he said knit ever heard of coke and Pepsi like he was saying
that it was going to be that hard to crack.
Like, Pampers and Huggies are going to be that hard to go and disrupt.
And I said, I get you, but I think we can do this.
I'm going to give it a go.
So we launched in New Zealand.
The second biggest brand in New Zealand was Treasures.
Huggies was number one.
Treasures was a local brand.
Their share just plummeted.
They ended up going out of business and having to sell the brand for the pennies on the dollar.
And you're spending a ton on Facebook ads or what are you doing?
At the time, Facebook.
And then it progressed to Instagram.
Now it's progressed to TikTok.
Like, it sort of always progresses, right?
So you've got to move the speed of platforms, but you've also going to move at the speed of culture.
So how do you move at the speed of trends to build content to move at the speed of culture?
Was that a new, newish skill set for you?
Because it seems like the toy company was retail driven.
Yeah, well, YouTube was starting to kind of thing that it was mainly TV advertising for toys at that time.
So it was still TV was prominent and then it kind of switched to YouTube.
So today we don't speak any money on TV and toys.
It's all YouTube.
It's all YouTube shorts.
So it really like the platforms changed in how you reach people.
So I had this thesis, but we just quickly took all this market share in New Zealand.
And I was like, holy shit, we can make an incredible volite.
But to be fair, success is a bad teacher.
Like, we just got the success out the gate.
Raskill was just, we launched to be right.
It just took off.
And so I packaged up that case study.
We went to Australia, went to Coles, and I said, hey, look at what we've achieved in New Zealand.
Look at all the margin we're delivering.
Look at the category share we've driven.
We helped foodstuffs reverse their category share decline.
Like, they were getting hammered by the competitor to Woolworth's here.
We inverted that.
we took them the other way within one year.
So Coles was like, love it.
Launched with Coles, same thing.
We won Coles non-food supplier of the year award in the first year
and just help them take heaps of category share.
So I was like, wow, this really works.
Took that model, went to the US, went to Walmart.
It was like, hey, Walmart, we could help you disrupt, you know,
your two big suppliers here.
And they gave us a Dallas test.
Same thing.
We became actually last year Walmart's fastest growing brand,
total box all categories with Rascals,
which Target did the same thing with our brand Millie Moon.
Millie Moon actually just over to private label
and Highies is the second biggest subbrand in Target
in under or about three and a half years,
which is incredible.
So it was sort of this like wake up moment that wow.
And I think last year we produced two billion diapers.
And this is all in about five and a half years.
We've built this business.
So well over a billion dollars of retail sales last year
in diapers in five years.
So from start to go a billion dollars a year,
should I say, and growing incredibly fast.
like this year, it didn't grow 30% again.
So this was sort of an eye-bitriff for me, and I thought, wow, we can do this in all
FMTE categories.
So I started testing in New Zealand and losing, like we tested infant formula, didn't work.
We tried FemnCare, fails.
We tried like oat milk fail.
I did all these little things.
I started failing, and I was like, oh.
But my partner at the time, Jamie had a background of luxury PR and beauty and was huge
beauty enthusiasts.
I said, hey, don't do that.
Let's start a beauty brand.
And we started Monday hair care.
which is the little pink bottle Forbes called it last year,
the most famous shampoo and conditioner bottle in the world.
But we launched that peak COVID,
and that was the second one.
It just took off.
I think in Australia,
we won product launch of the year and we had five of the top 10 in total
hair care.
We over to Pentene and sales.
What do you think is the difference between the ones that worked and the ones that
didn't?
Is it category?
Some categories were just more ripe.
Was it you nailed the packaging and the positioning?
And that's actually the thing that matters most.
Is it luck?
Diapers was,
is driven by price and performance
and we were the first one in the world to take a China
diaper to the world and China's making the best diapers
in the world. So in China there's like a
thousand domestic brands all competing to the technology
and non-wovens and substrates and
SAP and machine technology has just gone like that
because of all domestic competition. So we took the best product
in the world to market at the desk price in a category
which is price and performance driven. So it's either you've got to be
price and performance driven in a performance driven
or you've got to be innovation driven. So we launched
Dummy Yum, which is super innovative
to victory product like really innovative and that was just pure innovation that made that like take off
so innovation or it's got to be design and creative so monday was you know it's still a bowl of shampoo
but incredible design and creative and then we just owned ticot as in it is the number one hair care
brand in the world on ticot and by a long way um and it was just the right design creative positioning
branding marthening and it just took off and i think last year in the u.s it was second only in total
growth in hair care to procter and gamble's total hair care portfolio, just the Monday brand.
And so then I started to learn kind of which categories would work for us.
And we've gone super deep in those categories.
And we've applied our same models.
So building all the factories and diapers, we built a factory.
I think it was nine months to reduce and we're doubling the size of it right now.
So we'll have four billion diaper capacity by next year.
In beauty, we built the whole factory everything under one roof, injection molding,
rotomoling, filling, mixing, all of it.
We built all the lab in Shanghai.
We put L'Oreal formulation specialist over,
you can leave a formulation specialist.
So as soon as we found something that was working,
so I was outboard sourcing to begin with,
then we do the Zuru thing,
which is go super deep, automate everything we possibly can,
put all AGVs in, so every little part of it
we want to like automate as much as possible.
And then pet food, I started at the same time.
I bought a young guy who won New Zealand's high school
entrepreneurial program out.
We got called Alistair, he's incredible.
I said, let's start a pet food business together.
Actually, we worked at the supermarket,
and we said, let's do pet food.
And so now we're getting a huge momentum there.
One of our brands, I think Bonkers,
was drove 30% of all cat treat growth in America last year.
And then we experimented in supplements,
which has been a little bit hard.
I built a brand with the Kardashians called Dosynco.
We ended up selling that last year.
It just worked everywhere else in the world.
It failed in the US.
And so as soon as we don't have the scale of the US,
sort of let's exit it.
And supplements, we've sort of struggled in with our brand habit,
which is sort of ticking away.
And then very much home care,
we're building a bunch of brands as well.
So we've sort of an convection.
So we've built this, what I call our five vertical strategy.
And we're going very, very deep within all of these verticals.
And I think all of them individually can be bigger than our toy company within two or three years.
What's the dream?
So why go so hard?
Why do so many?
Like you could, just off the toy company, you could be sitting on a boat you own,
looking at an island you own with a beautiful drink in your hand.
is that just you love the game you have some dream you want to be a hundred billionaire what's
the what's driving doing more more and more i think we love it number one love having a thesis
love competing for me it's it's sport right like it is sport having a thesis going into something
working it out and as we build these things you know toys business the edge business fmcg business
you know as you become more successful you think how can i solve bigger problems
And the same person, Greg Foren always said, you've got to wrap your business in a bigger purpose as well.
And I thought, well, we thought, how do we solve bigger problems?
Because we're almost in a privileged position now, right?
How do we go on and actually solve bigger problems?
Which is why we've studied building Zuru Tech over the last, what's actually been eight or nine years.
Can you explain what that is?
So it's a crazy moonshot idea.
I think you either have or are building the largest factory in the world period.
What is that idea?
What is Zuru Tech?
So ZuruTech, the thesis really was, if you look at the construction industry, it's been done the same for hundreds of years.
It's also the biggest segment or market in the world, construction and property development.
And the idea was, how do we build the first factory in the world that has a customized input, so the design of a building and a fully automated output?
So how do we build the buildings for a small fraction of the cost of what you build a building for today?
and and we're now we started off so we built our software which is called dream catcher
which is built on unreal engine it has an incredibly simple UI sort of user interface but the logic layer
or the coding layer below that is incredibly incredibly complex we've cataloged every building
code in the world so you can drop a pin on any location in the world that maps the terrain it does
the building code and then you can design your house or building or whatever building you want and
our dreamcatcher software. We've also built our own AI assistant or on our own large language model
called Quera, which is basically training. It's training our model on all the great architects.
So you can talk to your building and it builds it in front of you. You can put a 2D plan in.
You can decide on this room. I want it to be Stockholm style and furniture and it maps all furniture and
does it for you. So it's incredibly intuitive software. Basically a 10 year old can design on Dreamcatcher.
And then it does all the structural side.
It does all the EPP, the mechanical, the electrical, the plumbing.
It does it all in a super intelligent way.
Wherever you've dropped the pin where you're building the building,
it works out the orientation of the building for the sun.
It works out how many HVAC units you need.
It works out how many solar panels we need.
So basically then the software translates every part into our factory.
Our factory builds every single part and it's completely automated.
And the factory is designed from start to finish.
So originally we built a one fifth scale factory.
to test the software with the hardware
and how that all integrates together.
So it builds these mini houses,
that one-fifth in every dimension.
And then once we got that working,
we built it's about a three hectare factory
and it's a test production line.
And that right now is producing,
that's we're testing the software at full scale
with full-scale houses
and we're building a house
about every two weeks right now,
which is test and then we have like 100 little changes
and we go in software and changing it.
And then we bought a factory or a factory
or a building. It's 25 acres in size, which is our first commercial factory for reducing commercial
houses. And then phase four will be building one of the biggest factories in the world. I think
second only to Boeing is the plan. So that's all planned out now. But we are building a house
for $500 a square meter. And it's the best quality in the world, erratic concrete, ceramic tile,
but we have innovated every single part of the process. So we have the wall module, the tile module,
the window module, the lighting module, the smart home module,
and every single team, I think, is the best in the world of what they're doing.
So it is a huge project.
There's a massive undertaking.
I think we have about 700 software and hardware engineers working on it.
Are you self-funding this, or did you raise money for this?
Correct.
You know, we self-fund it.
So we're getting very close now to a final product.
We think we're five test houses away from getting it very close to perfect.
And then it should be transformational in terms of how the world builds.
And anyone can use Dreamcatcher the software.
So you could go on to Dreamcatcher,
and there might be a million different two bedroom houses
that have been designed by people on the platform.
And you can look through them.
You can put a price on selling your own design.
You can go through them in real time.
You can stage furniture.
We'll have a marketplace.
IKEA could digitally scan all of their furniture into our marketplace.
Artists could digitally scan all their artins,
so you can put it in your house,
so you can go out in real time and see it.
And so the software is really incredible,
you know, what we've built.
So super exciting that we're getting so close now.
And the houses that we're producing each couple of weeks are really incredible.
I mean, this is an insanely cool idea just to basically, it's like if you go to the website,
it looks like you're looking at the Sims, the video game.
Like you could just kind of like zoom around a house.
You can like move things, whatever.
But you're saying there's a button where you just basically click print.
And then the house gets built in an automated.
factory, which is just a kind of mind-blowing idea. How much are you going to put into this
funding-wise? Like, you must be putting hundreds of millions of dollars. Is that, is that right?
Or am I overestimating this? We're going to get into a lot for sure. So the software,
so we have three offices in India on the software side, Punei, Kakara and Underband. And we have two
in Italy, Milan and Mwana. The reason in Italy is we actually acquired years ago the software
part of it. It was two guys, Martin Aliccio, their pair of both architects, that decided.
that architectural software was built on incredibly old software stacks and so they were like
well gaming engines are like going like this and so they decided to build software or architectural software
on unreal engine and so we acquired them and that's sort of the reason i think we have about 160
or so people sitting in italy on the software side and then they work with india on the software side
and then in china we built all the hardware side out so we have three sides
where we're doing all of the hardware and automation development.
But we're kind of parallel to our automation team has sort of grown in parallel.
We, you know, they automate.
For example, we produce 57 million dark in waterblasters a year,
but we produce a dart blaster from a plastic granule through the finish product with no people.
Our competitors like Hasbro, they outsourced to factories,
who are to produce with drills on production lines.
We're now building our automation 2.0 where we're using vision and machine learning
so we can actually change out any model of blasts on the same production line.
It can see the mold and it can see the shape and where all the screw holes are,
and it adapts completely.
So we've kind of paralleled our automation with building a housing project,
but also taking all our expertise and building across our Zuri Edge and toys and toys,
and toys business which makes us so disrupt that.
But the big difference is when we automate a product in FMCG or toys,
you're making the same product over and over and over again with robots.
this is incredibly complex
because you're building a tailored
pilot for every building site
in the world and every building code
of the world and it's different every time
and so having that fully automated
output with a fully customized input
has never really been or has never been
done before in the world
dude you're a madman
do you even like who are your peers
like who do you relate to
do you just read like an Elon Musk biography
and you're like oh this is the only other guy in the world
who I have something in common with?
Is that somebody you admire?
We have a huge admiration for Elon
with the big Tesla backers and fans
for a very long time.
In fact, I would say my brother.
Do you know him?
I had a chance to meet him
and then I had to fly home for an emergency
and so I actually don't know him.
But my brother, my brother was very similar to Elon.
So my brother was sort of the driver
behind Zuru Tech at our building project.
He's very similar in his way of thinking, I think.
like Eon calls it the idiot index, for example, right?
And the idiot index is when you look at the cost of a rocket.
Well, he looked at the cost of what a rocket used to cost to build.
And then he looked at the cost of the materials.
And it's like, you know, hundreds of times the cost of materials to build a rocket.
And he's like, well, then he takes the first principles approach.
He breaks it out.
And he works out effectively, you know, how to build a rocket at a price that makes sense based on the cost of the raw materials.
I mean, we're having a similar approach to how we build a building, whether it's one story
a hundred stories, it's look at the cost of the materials out of the ground and look at the final
host of the building. The idea index is really high. And so it's the same or similar type of thinking.
So how do you go back to your first principles approach and do it from the ground up in a completely
different way? Did you see the other day, I think yesterday or two days ago, boom, supersonic,
did their first supersonic flight? I don't know if you followed this startup. I did, yeah.
He kind of had a similar story where he worked at Groupon, basically. And he's like, you know,
product manager at Groupon, selling coupons on the internet.
And then, you know, for fun was basically having a hobby of flying and then gave himself a year to, from a first principal's point of view, understand how planes work and figure out if there was some business he could build around planes because he just loved planes.
And while he was building his spreadsheet, he was just like, I don't get it.
There's no reason we shouldn't be flying supersonic speeds right now.
And then he took it to like professors and others.
He's like, where is the error in my calculations?
Because this is telling me we should be doing supersonic.
And they were like, no, there's no theoretical errors.
Just no one's doing it.
Like, there's no courage is the limit.
Not like, there's not a materials problem.
There's a courage problem.
There's an entrepreneurship problem.
And seeing that go, you know, yesterday to doing their first supersonic flight was super
inspiring.
Incredible.
So you're doing all this stuff.
Do you like have hobbies?
Do you do stuff outside of this?
What is like, what is fun for yours?
This is like, my cup is full with this.
Sport, definitely sport.
We just love competing, really.
So anything that has a competition element is something that I get a lot of enjoyment out of.
So you're certainly tennis, golf, just sport in general is something that enjoy doing.
But yeah, as you get older, like, obviously we don't, I used to think you wake up every day with that pit of your stomach
because you're wondering what's going to go wrong today and what do we have to solve today.
So, you know, obviously we don't have that issue any longer and definitely get to spend more time with family.
my first child last year. So that's a big change. It definitely changes your
perspective on things, I think, which is, which has been really good. I always sort of kick
the can, delayed it as long as possible. I think it would slow a bit out, but it's definitely
been one of the best things. So do you, when you start these new companies, because I always,
I always find this interesting. Whenever you have like a serial entrepreneur, people have different
approaches. So some people, they, you know, they have their main thing and they leave and they say,
I'm going to go on a sabbatical basically for a year,
figure out my next thing.
Other people, they take some percentage of their time.
They're devoting it to new ideas,
and they roll up their sleeves,
and they're super on the ground figuring out the new idea.
Other people, they recruit an operator,
and they just give the operator kind of like the idea,
maybe a little bit of a plan,
and then let the operator run,
and they kind of are there as more of a chairman
or a board member from afar.
When you did, like, the diaper brand and these other ones,
were you, like, boots on the ground,
like, every day figuring it out?
Or did you do the operator model?
What did you do?
Definitely books on the ground.
What I would say is in our business, there's a through line through it all, right?
We're essentially making a product where it was a house, a bowl of shampoo, a laundry pot or a dart blaster.
I mean, it's essentially still making product, building factories, selling it into retail.
So we've built such a big flywheel.
Like if you look at our chinsen office, we have three and a half thousand people there right, and it's such a big flywheel.
that it just becomes easier and easier to plug into that firewheel,
regardless of what category in.
Yes, they're all different industries,
but we're still effectively trying to make the best product in the world at the best price.
We set ourselves the goal of making a product to $0.
I know that's impossible, but that's our goal.
How do we make this product to $0 and how do we make it the best in the world?
So there's a through line through it all,
so very much your boots on the ground.
I believe leadership has to be on the dance floor.
Have to have your hands dirty.
That's where you get the most insights.
And in our business now, I'm, you know,
I'm a huge believer in firing bullets and failing fast.
So I always say, get an actionable insight.
Where's an insight?
Find an insight somewhere in the world.
And an insight forms a bullet.
And a bullet is a minimal viable investment into testing something.
And then at the bullet works, it's a cannonball and we invest and we build the recipe
around that.
And once the recipe is working, you can pull a lot more things into that recipe and
build that recipe out.
So our mindset around fast fail, we actually have what we call fast starts now in FMC.
so we're trying to build a minimal viable products to test quickly as fast as possible.
And so we can really speed, like speed of innovation is probably the biggest thing for us.
And we're trying to test more things in these categories faster and learn what works and what doesn't.
Because in my experience, things either just like hit the ground and start working or they don't.
And then we have a mindset around continuous improvement.
So we call it 2% improvement a week, the power of compounding.
I know 2% improvement a week is nothing you can measure.
But that's the mindset.
that's what we put into our DNA.
And we always say to the team, we suck now
compared to where we'll be in the future.
So we had this relentless mindset
and being able to look back on ourselves a year ago
and be like, we weren't even good then.
And I think that compounding improvement
is such a big part of what we do.
And then from, you know, when I look at team members,
I'm trying to, people say they try and build talent density
in their business.
Yes, we try and build talent density.
But for us, we're trying to build like grit density.
And I say when we hire,
we're looking for grit, smarts,
and someone with a biased action, like real doers, right?
People that just like, we fast bail, we go in, we do it, we are the winner we learn.
If it doesn't work, we're getting heaps of insights out of that on how to improve next time.
So our mindset or our DNA in the business works across any of those verticals or categories
in we have the same mindset and the same approach and the same DNA as to how we approach them.
If you were interviewing me, how would you figure out if I have any grit?
I think actually looking back at your history is we often find people at really great competitive
sports people and they really love to win and are highly competitive.
Like I want to understand how competitive you are, how much you really want something.
And to be honest, it can be really hard.
Like we've built this loop process in our business, similar to the Amazon loop.
So we're half we're hiring and looking at whether you fit and can do the actual.
job, but the other half is really do you align to our DNA. And so we have a loop. We have,
you know, eight people, you know, half of those people will interview or questions around,
you know, our DNA and really trying to go deep on understanding if that person fits our DNA.
And so we're really trying to build up, you know, not our talent density, but our grit density.
But certainly it's something that I find is really important. All our best people have just
incredible grit and incredible
by aspiration. Sure they're smart
but they just get shit done
and we decide something in a meeting
and they're already kind of actioning it
in that very moment and that's
kind of our culture.
It's kind of that saying
as well, right? That
lazy people work a little
bit and expect to be winning
whereas winners work as hard as they possibly
can and worry that they're being too lazy
and I feel like that's super true right?
like people that like work hard, they're always worrying that not doing enough or they're being
too lazy. And it's kind of those people that's kind of like the mindset we're we're looking
for. Yeah, I think Elon has a good question. He uses in interviews. He says,
tell me about, he just sits down and he just says, tell me about the hardest problem you solved
and how you did it. And, you know, you could get so much from one question because what's the
hardest problem they solved? You know, it will show you the scope and the trust they had.
in prior roles, like, were they just nibbling on tiny little issues or were they actually,
like, biting into really meaty things? Yeah, and like, yeah, can they talk about the details,
the paths that didn't work, the paths that did work? Because that's the person who was actually
doing the work. There's so much like resume lying where somebody says, oh, yeah, we did this.
Like, cool, tell me how you did it. They don't know because they weren't the one doing those parts
of it. Correct. Correct. Nick, this was awesome, man. I really appreciate you coming on.
I know you don't do a lot of podcasts, but your story is honestly incredible. I think,
As much as you're building in the factories,
I think you doing it at podcast like this
can build 10,000 new entrepreneurs with more grit,
with more resilience just by sharing the story
because you're showing what's possible,
you're showing what you did,
how it all turned out and how you approached it.
And so I think a simple hour like this can do a lot for a lot of people.
So I really thank you for doing it.
It was a lot of fun.
And yeah, I don't often share our story all that often.
But yeah, I totally agree if it can help inspire.
people and I always say it right it's not really how capable you are it's how willing you are
and I think it's the willing people that stick out up for a long consistent period of time and
continually improve that actually are the most successful it's not necessarily about how smart you are
it really is just grit and perseverance and you end up getting there so I think that's the big lesson
for any entrepreneurs out there really right on all right thank you so much that's a wrap
I can rule the world.
I know I could be what I want to.
I put my all in it like no days off.
On the road, let's travel, never looking back.
