My First Million - My decision-making framework for which ideas to chase
Episode Date: February 3, 2026Run your life like a $100M business. Get the system here: https://clickhubspot.com/ff97bf Episode 791: Shaan Puri ( https://x.com/ShaanVP ) and Sam Parr ( https://x.com/theSamParr ) tal...k about how to how to decide if an idea is worth chasing. Show Notes: (0:00) Basketball camp with billionaires (2:24) Irritation leads to innovation (8:30) the yes test (12:56) the bigger you go, the easier it gets (15:17) the product is you pushed out (25:28) doesn't matter how rich you are, everyone is a little kid (34:46) The guts of Steve Prefontaine (40:15) NIKE branding (46:25) The NIKE playbook broken down (58:26) An argument about values — 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 — Check Out Sam's Stuff: • Hampton - https://www.joinhampton.com/ • Ideation Bootcamp - https://www.ideationbootcamp.co/ • Copy That - https://copythat.com • Hampton Wealth Survey - https://joinhampton.com/wealth • Sam’s List - http://samslist.co/ My First Million is a HubSpot Original Podcast // Brought to you by HubSpot Media // Production by Arie Desormeaux // Editing by Ezra Bakker Trupiano /
Transcript
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Today's episode is about one word, excellence.
Whenever I hear these stories about people who are excellent
or what it took to become excellent
or what it took to make something happen
that was truly excellent,
it makes me want to run through a wall for the rest of the day.
So that's the gift to a listener.
If you listen to this in the morning,
you're going to want to run through a wall
after you listen to this.
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 looking back.
Would you like some FOMO pancakes?
Because I'm about to drizzle some fomo panjicakes right in front of you.
For some reason, what do you say the word drizzle?
I'm out.
You're out.
I've never been able to pull that word off.
Yeah, I don't think anyone has.
We, as you know, we're hosting our annual event.
Me and Ben host this annual event called Hoop Group with Mr. Beast,
and we're hosting it in about a week.
And I was just catching up with Ben.
Ben takes the charge on like...
Everything in your life?
Yeah, yeah, doing the things.
and I just like keep lobbying in ideas.
And then I'm basically the most annoying guy.
It's like he says, hey, here's everything we got.
And I'm like, can't we just make it better?
He's like, okay, well, how?
I'm like, I don't know.
Just think big.
And I say generic things like that.
And I'll be like, you know, I just got off the podcast with this guy.
What would he do?
And he's like, I don't know.
What did he tell you about?
Like, I don't know.
Go listen to that.
You get inspired.
But by the way, you call lobbying ideas.
Someone I said to my coach today and she goes,
that's called swooping and poop.
being. Yeah, when you fly it and you just leave a bunch of crap. Exactly. They've been working hard
and then you just swoop in and you poop. But I do it in the name of high standards.
And that's how you get away with anything. That's how you get away with being an asshole. You just
say, no, I'm not an asshole. I have high standards. But my standards have been exceeded by what Ben has
pulled off with this event. I just need to tell you some things about this event. For those
who don't know, for the last few years, every year, we host a basketball camp. So it's kind of like
a basketball camp for billionaires. It was the idea, the dream. There's lots of different
conferences. There's lots of different networking events. And I hate conferences and I hate network events.
And despite me talking a lot on this podcast, I'm actually kind of an introvert. I don't really enjoy going to events.
And we wanted to do something, but the idea of just creating yet another thing that was very much like everything else that existed was not appealing.
Well, you guys just sitting around. Are our conferences dub?
Well, it started with we should do one, man. We have a big audience. We know all these interesting people.
What if we hosted an event? And it's like, great. Like a, like, a, like,
a networking event, yay.
It's like, no, no, it could be like, I don't know, like people come and talk.
And we're like, oh, a conference, yay.
And so then I learned this from my first business.
This guy told me, like, irritation leads to innovation.
So back then it was a restaurant business and he was telling me, I was saying how much I hate
food delivery.
And he's like, well, that's the opportunity.
Make food delivery.
That doesn't suck.
And suddenly you'll take something that's really bad.
And just by like making it not suck, the gap between where it normally is and where
you are is really big.
And so similarly, the idea with this was, well, what would be a conference we would want to go to?
And so we just started spitballing with like a, you know, childlike energy where it was like, I don't know, like instead of icebreakers, like, what if you just, like, what if it was based around sports?
We love sports.
What if combined two things we really love?
Meeting interesting, inspiring business people, but then basketball.
And so the idea became we play basketball all day.
What if we got an NBA trainer to come train us like a fantasy camp?
and we invite people who are really, you know, successful and interesting, but they love to hoop.
And so we all, first we play basketball, it's the ultimate equalizer, icebreaker, people get to
know each other. And then at night, you talk shop in the kind of like, we all stay in a couple of houses,
and we all talk shop there. And you've been to two of these that we've thrown. So you, you kind of
get the idea. Yeah, that's great. 17 billionaires are coming to this event, which is pretty insane.
So I just wanted to tell you about, like, the first just give you a little bit of fomo because you couldn't
make it this year. So I wanted to give me a little fom on who's in the room. I think the only two people
that gave me true fomo there. So, well, first of all, actually, wait, actually, hold on, let me think.
Jesse Itzler is awesome. So I like him. I'm fortunate that I've been able to hang out with him,
so I have less fomo, but he is amazing. He was probably the best person I hung out with there last year.
But Jesse Cole and the Nick Mulberry. Is that his name, Nick Mulberry? Yeah. Probably those two guys.
Those two guys are who I'd want to meet most. Yeah. I also just want to see Shaq in person. I think that's just
going to be incredible. I don't understand. Shaq doesn't seem like a guy who
goes to sleepovers. Well, he's coming to ours, all right? Is he sleeping there, or is he
just popping in? Yeah, he's coming. He's an attendee. Okay, and so I bragged about how cool this
event is, but there are a couple of downsides. The first is the event is not a roster of names.
It's a vibe. It's how it actually feels to be there. And I'm really worried this year that
we might have screwed it up by inviting too many kind of big name people who are used to being
the center of attention. We got, I think, pretty lucky the first couple of years that all the
most interesting people were also great hangs, just really down to earth, really fun to be around,
which I don't think is going to be true for like your average billionaire, your average celebrity,
right? Like, I think people are just used to being kind of the center of attention and being a little
standoffice. So I'm really worried about that. I hope we didn't screw it up. I might be coming back
on here in a couple weeks and say, hey, look, you know, it was fun. But,
lesson learned, you know, too much of anything is a problem.
And the other thing is, you know, for everybody we got, you know, Ben reached out to maybe,
there's 20 people who said no.
And just the effort that it takes to get people to come and to feel comfortable and excited
to come to the middle of nowhere with people they don't even know.
You've never heard of me.
You never heard of Ben.
You don't know who any of us are.
So I appreciate the people who took a leap of faith, but also like, you only ever hear about
the hits and never the misses.
But for every hit, there's 19 misses.
on people that we wanted to come.
So I thought just to counterbalance it, that would be fair.
I'm eager to see where Shaq sleeps.
What does his bed look like?
Bunk beds, buddy.
He's on top. I'm on bottom.
He is the bed.
All right, so this episode is all about excellence.
A while back, I shared my personal framework for building excellence in my own life.
And the team at HubSpot turned it into a 30-day operating system you can check out right now.
It breaks down the systems it took me 10 years to figure out and shows how I actually use them day to day.
These are systems that genuinely changed my life.
So if you want to build a good life, scan the QR code or click the link in the description.
Now, let's get back to the show.
All right, so I just want to tell you a couple of the philosophies that I think other people could steal to make cool projects or events like this for themselves.
Okay, so I kind of wrote down because this is a point of pride for us.
I was like, man, this thing started as a pretty wacky idea that we tweeted out,
really didn't know where it would go.
And now this is the fourth time we're doing it.
And you were there the first year.
I mean, it was like mostly just our friends, sleeping in bunk beds,
no like programming or like idea of what we're supposed to do in the event.
It was janky, but still very fun.
And it was still very fun.
It was like there was a sauce of, there was a seed of something special,
but it was pretty janky relative to how it goes now.
It's funny.
The things that were unimportant were janky.
So the accommodations, a lot of people think the accommodations need to be nice.
No, they weren't.
I shared a room with four guys at a bunk bed perfectly adequate and fine.
Yeah, so we're, so here's some of them.
Okay, so the first one is what I said,
irritation leads to innovation.
So take something that bothers you or you think sucks.
And instead of just writing it off as, I don't do that, I don't like that,
being close-minded to it, just get playful with like, well, what version of this wouldn't suck, right?
You just take that as a brainstorm and like, I don't know, one out of every 10 times, you might actually come up with something interesting.
The second is what I call the yes test. So as you get older and more successful in life, you go from
opportunity scarce to opportunity abundant. Meaning, when you're young, you don't really have a lot of
cool opportunities or things you could say yes to. So you just need to be in the minds of saying yes to a lot of stuff.
Oh, this person wants to get coffee?
Yeah, I'll take a flyer on that.
Hey, this person wants me to attend this.
I'll take a flyer on that.
I'll go speak at this event.
I'll go do this.
I'll go do this.
And then the older you get,
both whether for family reasons,
your time gets a little more restricted,
or you just get more and more opportunities
coming your way and you have to go the opposite way.
You basically have to practice saying no.
And so this creates what I call the yes test.
And the yes test for me has become the following.
Would I do this thing for no money or losing money?
And the best project,
in my life have been things where I've said yes to things that I would be willing to do for free
or willing to lose money. This podcast is one of them. When I started this podcast, I wrote a Google
doc and I said the stated plan was probably nobody will listen to this and I'm probably going to lose
$10,000 this year in production costs, but I'll have, you know, 50 interesting conversations with
really interesting people back when it was more of a guest-centric podcast. And that was the stated plan,
but I was willing to go in and lose money doing it,
which is a good signal for like,
there's probably a lot of other intangible benefits of doing this
if you're willing to do it for a loss.
This event, we don't charge anybody anything.
We pay for it out of pocket.
It's going to cost us maybe a couple hundred grand to throw this event.
And so that's just cost we eat.
And so the good thing, the bad thing is you lose money.
The good thing is the event has to be something
you'd be willing to lose a couple hundred grand on.
Like how good.
must that need to be for you to say yes to that? And it's sort of this forcing function of like,
well, then we got to have a lot of fun, meet a lot of really interesting people.
It's got to be a real core memory. It's got to be something unique to our brand. Like, you know,
you have to get all these other benefits in order for it to be worth that. And so when I think
about the best things in my life that I've done, it's been things that I would say yes to
even if I lost money. And so this year, for example, playing the piano was a money loser,
but is one of the best decisions I made.
Coaching the high school basketball team has been, you know, food from my soul.
I've loved doing it.
And I have, you know, I make no money.
I lose money doing that.
So I wanted to share the yes test with you.
It's so funny because so many things in my life that I have been thankful for doing,
I only did it because it made money.
Or like I only did it because I wanted the end result.
Like I don't want to lose weight.
This sucks.
I don't want to eat this food.
I don't want to like exercise.
And I just want the result.
I call some of those win-lose, especially.
not things like losing weight or exercise because those are fully in your control,
but let's say it's like a business, right?
Those are what I call win-lose, which is, hey, if I get the result I wanted up front,
then this was worth it.
It was a win.
But if I didn't, I'm going to be kicking myself, right?
I'm going to feel like I lost.
I wasted my time.
And I think there are other win-win situations where you say, well, at the minimum,
I already win, right?
With the podcast, I was like, at the minimum, I'm going to have an excuse to go have 50
dope conversations with awesome people.
I'm going to learn so much.
I'm going to get to know them better.
And so it's already a win, even if nobody ever listened and I lost money.
But then in the long shot, which was people started listening to the podcast and it started
to make some money maybe from advertisers, well, then I win double.
Great.
So my two options were I win small or I win big.
And I just think that that's generally a better place to be when you actually are excited
about the small win.
Not like a moral victory or like, I guess, you know, could be worse, right?
Not that.
I'm saying you're genuinely excited even about the basic win, but then you'd leave yourself room for the upside.
So can you remind me? The pod was started, I think, in July, some type of late summer of 19, right?
Yeah.
I'm almost positive. I don't think it made more than six figures for the first year and a half, if I remember correctly.
Yeah, probably not. I remember doing the first ad read, and the first ad read was, this episode is brought to you by?
Nobody. But think about it. This could be you because I needed to sell one ad, you know, to pay.
I was renting a studio.
So I was like, can I pay for the studio time?
$100 an hour?
I don't remember.
I think it was like it didn't make any money for like a year and a half.
And then it made kind of a lot of money and then a lot more.
But which is pretty funny.
Okay.
And what are the second two?
Okay.
I actually have three more.
So one is the bigger you go, the easier it gets.
So there's a fallacy that people have, which is that going for big things is hard,
is difficult.
So going for smaller things will be easier.
But actually, whenever you're doing something that is like a new problem,
an event, anything that needs differentiation.
If you think smaller or you play more reasonably,
you actually are less differentiated or you're less interesting.
And actually, the harder it gets to people, let's just take this event.
Let's say this event was not about basketball.
It was just a normal meetup or event.
And let's say the guest list was a bunch of people you never heard of,
that were easier for me to get in.
Well, it would just make it harder for me to do everything that I'm trying to do with this.
It would be harder to get the next guest because why?
Why would I come?
There's nothing special about it.
this. This is true for business, too, by the way. The bigger your idea, the better people you can recruit.
Exactly. And then the better people you recruit, the easier it gets to do the thing, right?
That's the third part, right? And so having a bigger thing where it's like, yeah, we're going to get
the most interesting people that have like, you know, one name recognition. I'm only able to get
them because we're doing a unique thing. But because they're doing a unique thing and we get some of them,
it makes it easier to get more of them, which makes it easier to do a more unique thing because now you
have all these really special people coming.
And in your case, Shack, or not Shack, Mr. Beasts was like kind of the tent pole.
The anchor, the initial anchor, yeah.
How did you get in touch with Shaquille O'Neal?
Cold email.
Really?
Actually, sorry.
Shaq was through kind of a, it was like a cold request.
Ben saw, so the guy who started Ring, doorbell is coming.
And Ben doing Ben miracle things that only Ben does.
He was like, who are the investors in Ring?
And so he goes and he looks at who's the first investors in ring saw that Shaq was an early investor in ring and presumably made a bunch of money off of the ring investment.
So he's like, hey, you think Shaq would want to come to this thing?
I think I was like, hey, let me go.
Let me find out.
And so it kind of made the intro and then went from there.
But Jamie had never been himself.
So it's not like he could do like a hard vouch for it, but it ended up working out.
But he cold emailed a bunch of people that like, you know, the founder of Airbnb came because he cold emailed him.
And he knew, hey, I know growing up you were a ballboy for an NBA team.
So like I'm guessing you love hoops just like I do.
I was a ball boy too.
Dude, you should call this Camp Ben.
I mean, that's what this is.
Good job, Ben.
That's one of the principles is basically the product is you pushed out.
So my trainer told me this one time when I was like trying to figure out what to do.
Should I start this company or this?
Should I do this or this?
And I was just mentioning it to my trainer in passing.
And he goes, he goes, what do you mean?
You are the product.
I go, what?
He goes, you are the product.
He goes, the product is just you pushed out.
So just do you.
but like turn the volume knob up.
And so he's like, look at the podcast.
What's the podcast?
Do you have to think before you go on the podcast like,
oh, how should I act?
And what should I?
No, you just, you're just being you.
Right?
You and Sam, you just get on there
and you hang out like you and Sam would normally.
And he's like, so the product is you pushed out.
And that's what resonated with people, right?
That's the one that clicked.
And then he was showing me like,
and then another project that we did,
he's like, that's just, that's like you pushed out again.
And so with the camp,
the camp is basically like basketball,
which something me and Ben obsess over.
But it's basically the mix of like,
on my end,
it's like my version of like a TED conference
because we do these little mini talks every night.
And that's kind of like,
even my Twitter bio says,
I'm an idea dealer.
Like that's the thing that I get off on the most
is like the sharing of ideas and like wisdom
and like picking up these nuggets from each other.
And the thing Ben loves to do is curate really interesting people
and get them in a room together.
Like Ben is a,
he's not like a networker per se,
but he just loves to meet interesting people.
And he just gets lit up when he meets somebody
who's done something interesting.
who's cool. And so, anyway, I think finding something that's basically, if you just look at the
product and you say, that's me productized. I feel like the hustle for you was in many ways you productized,
big time in your writing voice, but also the sort of punk rock attitude, the name hustle,
the conference that you did. A lot of that was just your DNA. But you want to know where I screwed
it up. I built something I disliked. So, which I think that, have you ever done this with the company,
where you build a company or a project,
and then you go to dislike the people and the culture.
Not that they're bad, but for example,
when I started doing it, I was 24, 25,
and then by the time I was 28, 29, 30,
I was like, well, I'm a little bit different
or I care about slightly different things or whatever,
and it's neither good or bad,
but have you really built a project that was like your own prison?
Yeah, you can outgrow a project.
I think it's generally, usually an insecurity
leads you to make a decision
that's not in line with who you are,
and therefore you end up
You do that six times and you end up in an almost unrecognizable spot.
And it's sort of like boiling water.
Like you're in lukewarm water and it just is slow.
You don't notice.
You don't notice.
It's like it's too late, right?
Yeah.
And where did that poor decision?
Why did you start making those turns like down the wrong roads?
And usually the root of it is some insecurity.
So for me, when I've done this, this thing you're describing, it's I'm so afraid for this thing to fail.
And I so badly want it to win, I badly want to make money, that I,
I start just like trying to conform into like maybe that will work. Maybe this is the thing.
Yeah. Maybe this is the thing. And then suddenly I've built a live streaming app for Twitch
streamers, nor I do not stream video games. I don't play video games. I don't even watch Twitch.
And yet here I am. It's like kids, you might be wondering, how did this happen? That's where I
ended up out of that insecurity of I just want to be successful. I don't think that's bad by the way.
Like you were a mercenary, right? And in a way, I felt like I started as like a missionary
where I was like, this is my life, this is what I'm all about. And then it started working. And I was like,
okay, well, I have to hire some people and this person's good. And you sort of become a mercenary some
of the time. And so I still am envious of the people. So, for example, one of the reasons why people
are obsessed with Dyson, who you were joking about, why is everyone obsessed with Dyson, is he,
and Brian Chesky, another guy, Airbnb, they appears though they started as a missionary and
they've remained that way, where they are down for the cause and they refused to bend or in sacrifice.
But the thing is, is that you can get mildly or very successful even by bending and sacrificing.
You don't actually have to stick to your values all the time in order to be a commercial success.
And oftentimes, bending your values and doing what you think is expected of you, not what you want to do, is actually significantly more profitable.
And so there's been many times where I've made that sacrifice and I maybe got what I wanted financially, but I was pretty upset with what I gave into.
And in turn, the reality is I probably would have been significantly more profitable had I stuck the whole time.
It just would have been more painful.
Do that make sense?
Well, you're saying both things, right?
You're saying, I built something that I didn't even love, which is sort of a painful feeling.
So that's kind of like a bad outcome.
But it was a commercial success.
So it's a good outcome.
Yeah.
And so can you make a commercial success while being mercenary about it?
Absolutely.
Can you also make a commercial success?
while doing something in line with your mission or something that lights you up or something that you feel is like the type of thing that you, you know, you sort of, it's organic to you.
If you have good taste. Correct. If you have good taste.
But to me, I'm like, if I can, again, one is a win-lose and the other is a win-win, if win-win is possible, then I'm going to pursue that.
But it's not always that, dude. My point is it's not always that. I have so many, I went to Belmont University. It's a music school.
Or it's a school that has a big music department. I knew so many people that were, uh,
They're like, we're going to be musicians.
This is the stuff we're going to play.
And it's like mildly interesting, but it's not like a pop hit or anything.
And now we're all the same age.
I talk to them and they're kind of bums and they regret their decisions.
They're like, I wish I would have chased the money.
Casey Nyset has this funny thing.
Casey Nyset, did you know that?
So Casey Nyset got famous.
I believe when he started vlogging every single day, I think in 2015.
He did not turn on ads on YouTube.
He thought that that was ruining the art and he refused to do it.
And then he did a talk recently about.
about a year ago where he goes, how foolish of me, that would have added up to like $15 million
or something insane like that. And he was like, now my advice is the exact opposite. Take the money
when you could take the money. And so I guess this constant tension between like doing art
and doing what's cool versus taking the money. And so I think what you're saying is true.
And also it's maybe not true for everyone. So in that example you're giving, I think that,
so what are these called? These are called dialectics. It's like two opposite, two,
things at opposing ends of a spectrum, which can both be argued to be very true. And so you would think,
how is that possible that two things on the opposite end of the spectrum? So, for example,
patience is a virtue. But at the same time, a lot of entrepreneurs would not be successful if they
weren't very impatient at the same time, saying six months, how do we do this in six days? Right.
So, like, you have these opposite things. And then you find the way that they link together.
So, like, my favorite one with the patience, impotence, comes from DeVall, where he says,
impatience with action, patience with results. And you're like, ah, that's it, exactly.
Because if you're patient with your action, you just don't do shit. If you're impatient with your
results, you give up too easily, you get frustrated, it leads you to make short-sided decisions.
And so that's the right combo. And I think there's a version of that here with like,
to what extent do I build a thing that I think is interesting, that I think is cool, that is more
natural to what I want and be mission driven maybe to the impact I want or the type of thing I want to build,
the type of company I want to build,
the type of product I would have built.
And also realizing that the more commercially successful it is,
the more interesting people you're going to be able to hire,
which will make the product better,
which will let you do this for longer.
So there's a way where, like Disney said,
like, we don't make movies to make money.
We make money so we can make great movies.
Right.
And so you want to basically realize, like,
oh, this is, this money thing is important,
and we have to understand where it's going to come from
and how this is going to work.
We can't be blind to that.
At the same time, that can't be the North Star.
If it is, we're going to build something that's, you know, compromised in a way.
And I made that mistake.
I think I made that mistake of compromising because I've now done both.
Now, it might be argued that you do the compromise first and that gives you the freedom to take a bunch of shots on goal or gives you the confidence or it gives you the story.
Now you have the skills or whatever.
I don't know.
But if I could rewind it, I would go back and advise myself to just be like, hey, you should just keep building the things that you find most interesting.
Were you not interested at all?
And I mean, it's so funny.
You didn't play...
I was interested in them
because of their market potential.
I was like, oh, napkin math.
This times this times this equals this.
That's not wrong.
I mean, that's not fine.
I don't think it is ideal, right?
There's not right and wrong.
There's like, you know, there's good, better best, right?
There's different grades.
Like, for example, I think Mr. Beast is like, I don't...
I actually, that's an interesting question.
I don't know if he cares...
Does he care about making movies?
Or is he care just like, this was the game
that was set and set forth, and now I want to win.
Well, he is interesting, right?
because it's kind of both.
He was clearly,
he clearly loved to make content
and wanted to be a YouTuber,
almost like at an identity level,
more than anything.
That's why for six years,
nobody's watching,
and he just keeps making videos,
year after year,
12 years old, 13 years old, 14 years old, 15 years old,
16 years, 17 years, 18 years.
Nobody watched until he's 19.
And so, and even then,
it's not like it was huge or small,
even at that stage.
But he kept going and he had said up front,
like, okay, I'm either going to be a famous YouTuber
or I'm going to die making YouTube videos.
Like, I'm going to try.
I die trying.
And so, you know, in that way, he was pretty mission-driven.
And I don't think he was, you know, there was a lot of easier ways to make money
if he needed to make money, right?
Like, over time, he could have given up and gone towards other things.
And also the types of videos he made were videos that, you know, he obviously found interesting.
At the same time, you know, I think his, I think more than being an artist about, like,
what is the, what is the most artistic video I can make, right?
I think he's basically saying, I want to make the best YouTube videos and best is defined as
what people want to watch.
I like making things
that entertain the masses
that people want to watch.
That's the version he likes, you know?
I think the video he did the other day
got like 100 million views
in a few hours.
And for some reason,
Mr. Beast's videos never pop up in my feed,
but this one, like,
it had like all celebrities in it.
I didn't realize he was doing that.
30 celebrities fight for a million dollars.
And it's like Paris Hilton
and Kevin Hart and shit like that.
Did you see that?
Yeah, watch that one.
That's crazy.
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Yeah, I got two more quick ones. One is everybody, it doesn't matter how
rich you are, everybody's a little kid. So last year, for example, you know, you got this room full of
people who can buy anything that they want. What can't they buy? Right? And so we rent out this
stadium for the final game of our tournament at the camp and they walked in and there was jerseys
printed with their names. And like everybody was so excited like a little kid. And so it's these
little moments in between the big things that actually create the feel of the event. And so, for example,
this year we're doing this little touch where we play basketball in the morning.
We got to tell, wait, Shaq, cover your ears.
So we play basketball in the morning and then we go to the house for lunch or whatever.
And at the house, you'll already see on the TV screen like photos from that morning's game,
like little videos and photos.
Were you inspired by Steve Bartlett?
I heard he does that where you record a podcast with them and then when you're done with the podcast, he hands you a book.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's a photo album of the podcast.
Yeah.
very great touch. We stole it from K Academy, Coach K. Hedazis, and they have that there. And so we were like,
oh, that's a great idea. So little things. Like after the final game this time, we were like,
how do we make it fun? How do we give you that moment that you can't buy? Like, you know,
what's the fun thing that, like, would bring out the childlike energy in these people?
And so we were taking them to the locker room. And you know, like, in sports, like,
when you win a championship, do you, like, have champagne and, like, ski goggles in the locker room to do.
So we have that set up. So it's like the winners are going to get to go do that.
I don't know, just like have fun.
I think caring about these little details,
last time after the event,
we made this custom magazine.
It was cool with like photos of everybody
almost like Slam magazine back in the day.
And we sent it to each person.
It took me a week to work on that.
Like they were just like,
do you have a job?
What do you do?
You know me in life,
I'm pretty not a man of the details.
That's not where I'm from.
But with this event,
it's like pick and choose the few areas
where you're not going to 80, 20 in life.
Like, Pikachu's the areas where good enough is not good enough.
Like, okay, this is one project where we're like, we're going to try to go all out to a ridiculous degree.
And they're going to feel that.
They're going to know that we went all out for our own amusement and for our own like just to see what we could do if we really create something that's special.
And so I'm excited to do that.
Have you been working on this all year?
No, this is like the last six weeks, let's say.
Wow.
That's a lot you get done just in six weeks.
Is this, was this what you will focus on the whole time?
the whole six weeks?
No, I'm not focused on it really at all.
I just meet with Ben at the beginning.
So here's like, here's some ideas.
Here's what I thought was good last time, bad last time.
Here's some ideas.
Ben goes and does things.
And then we brought on some event organizers to help us this time.
And then every couple weeks, we just sort of check in on like,
he's not doing it full time either, but like, you know, a big chunk of his time.
Well, the hard part is just the inviting the right people and getting him to say, yeah.
What I was doing, so I told you I was trying to write that book.
So I was like, I've basically become that family guy meme.
I don't know if you've ever seen that episode of Family Guy where Brian's been writing a novel.
and Stewie's just trolling him.
He's like, how's that novel going?
Yeah.
Got some pages, some chapters,
beginning, middle end,
a little juxtaposition.
And he's like,
Brian's, like, classic writer
who's, like, just, like, stuck in the mud,
like, not making progress on this book.
It's, like, too big of a thing.
It's, like, intimidating him.
And so I've had this idea to write this book.
I've did all this research,
but I was, like, slowly, like,
I would draft chapters,
but I wasn't, like, writing the book.
I was just, like, drafting chapters.
You were pretending.
Yeah, I was, like, pretending.
So two weeks ago, I was like,
all right.
Who am I? Am I the kind of guy who's talking about this book?
Am I going to write the book?
And so two weeks ago, I decided I will have a prototype of the book.
So like not the full book, but like a cover, opening, intro, first chapter, second chapter, printed physical book to show these people in two weeks.
And in the last two weeks, I wrote it.
It's getting printed right now.
It'll be printed the day.
The last day of printing will be the day.
Is it any good?
I threw myself into it.
And it's good because it was such a good forcing function.
and there's a lesson I was telling Ben,
like Tony Robbins has this phrase.
He goes,
peers aren't just the people around,
like near you,
like just the guy you see to your right.
A peer is somebody who has leverage over you.
And it's like, what do you mean?
Leverage over you.
He's like,
a peer is somebody who you care about their opinion of you.
So they have some leverage over you.
And that can be a good thing or a bad thing.
But like the good version of that is
if you get the right people around you
and you care about their opinion
and they value the things that you value,
well,
you will sort of rise in accordance
with wanting to be seen well by your peers.
It's very hard to just become a monk
and renounce, be like, I don't care what anyone thinks
of me, right? Everybody likes to say that shit.
But then you're all on social media posting and trying to get likes.
Like, you know, come on. We all care what people think about us.
The trick is to pick who's going to care about you
and what those people care about.
And so, you know, if you're a mom
and you're around other great moms,
then you're not going to want to look like a bad mom.
And the result is good. It helps you be a better mom.
January is like the biggest month of, January,
in 20206 might be the biggest month
of your professional career in the last
five years. Definitely the most productive.
I mean, nobody tries to write a book. I gave myself two
weeks and then I went to the printer and they were like, hey, yeah, we need
seven days. I was like, oh, good, I got seven days to write this. Fantastic.
So I just pulled all-nighters for seven days
and pulled her off. Can I tell you
a cool story about excellence that I think is actually
related to this? Yes.
And it's probably the only time that
the sports that I'm
interested are going to overlap with sports in general that you might be interested in.
I guess, doesn't sport not involve a ball or a goal of any kind?
No, it's the only sports I'm into are people beating each other up or running away from each other.
It's chasing someone or what you do when you catch them.
So which one is this?
Is this a running or a fighting?
It's a running one.
More boring, but way more inspirational.
So I read this book a few years ago and I was watching a documentary on the same topic and last night.
And I really wanted to bring it up with you because I think you may be heard of it, but I don't know if you knew all the details.
So in the 1960s and 1970s, there was this coach.
His name was Bill.
He was a track and field coach up in Oregon.
And he was the man.
He had served in the military in World War II.
And he was this like tough guy and kind of sort of had this like scientists way about him where he was all about efficiency.
He loved efficiency.
and he was like, what's the best way that I can get these kids that I'm teaching or coaching
at the University of Oregon, how can I make them run faster other than making them train more?
And he got really nerdy on shoes. And so he started taking apart different shoes
and he started thinking, how can I make these shoes better? And originally, like, the lore or the
story is that he was like, well, if you're six feet tall, you're going to take this many steps per mile.
And if I can reduce the weight of the shoes by only one ounce, that's.
that's going to save you 50 pounds per mile.
That seems like a big deal.
And so he's hanging out with his kids one day,
and his kids at this point, I think are in their 20s,
but they came over for brunch.
And the wife, his wife, Bill's wife,
is making waffles for him.
And he was like, I got it.
I know exactly what to do.
So he steals the waffle iron from his wife,
and he pours liquid rubber into it.
And he folds it down, he folds it up,
and he's like, this is it.
And this was the soul for his new shoe.
And so he used that, and they called it the waffle for the shoe.
And it kicked ass.
And now I think you know who I'm talking about, right?
Yeah, Nike.
It must be Nike.
Yeah, Bill Bowerman.
Bill Bowerman was the co-founder of Nike.
The more famous co-founder was Phil Knight.
Phil Knight was actually one of his athletes at University of Oregon.
And Phil Knight had a class on an entrepreneurship class.
So are they like age-gapped by like 20 years or something?
More.
I believe, at least based off photos, I think he was probably in his late 50s.
And Phil Knight was in his.
his mid-20s. He had created the idea of Nike as a college student. But at first, when he started
the company in the 60s, he was basically just importing Japanese shoes. And he knew Bill like to tinker
with shoes, but it wasn't until about five or six years in to, did Nike actually start saying,
Bill, let's actually just make the shoes that you are already making, but they were partners.
Okay. So they were in parallel. Phil Knight is trying to start a shoe company.
Yeah. And this is like what is called blue ribbon or what's it called? Yeah, they were basically
importing Japanese shoes, and he called it Blue Ribbon. So he's importing other people's shoes.
And then Bill separately, his coach, is experimenting, tinkering with shoes, and then they come together.
What's the come together story? Do you know? Is there a story there?
Phil Knight was his athlete. And so Phil Knight wore some of Bill's prototypes.
But they were really rough. Like people used to complain that they were kind of rough, but they did work,
but I think they would only work for like two races. It's the shape of a circle from the waffle.
Yeah, it was weird, but it was.
really effective. And then so they teamed up and he was like, let's import these shoes. And then Bill,
you give them to the Nike guys or to the Oregon team. And we're going to go track meet to track
me. And it wasn't, it was a company, but it's almost like, it was almost like if I started
a honey company and I started going to like farmers markets. Like, and somehow that turns into
burp bees, but it, you know, it doesn't happen overnight. Okay, so that's not the story that I
want to actually bring up. What I really want to talk about was Steve Prefontein. Do you know who
Steve Prefontein was.
So he was a runner also.
Was he like the first athlete,
he broke some record, he's wearing Nike?
Is that his story?
Sort of kind of.
You're in the ballpark.
He lost a leg or that's the Canadian guy?
That's Terry Fox,
who I made fun of once in Canada
and they booed me on stage.
You're swinging to miss with some of these jokes,
all right?
Basically, Terry Fox was this guy
who ran across Canada with one leg
that he lost to cancer
and I saw a sign or like a statue
for him like all over like Canada
and Sean and I
did a live codfast, live podcast.
I was like, who the hell is this Terry Fox guy?
These everywhere.
It did not land.
The definition of punching down.
Yeah.
So Google Steve Prefontein.
We were talking about kind of like punk rock and not compromising.
Guy's a hunk.
He's a hunk, right?
Is this guy the hunkiest of hunk?
So Steve pre-Montaine?
I think, by the way, hunk pretty underutilized.
I think we should own that word here.
Is that what you want to be known for?
Is bringing back the word?
Amongst a few things.
I'd put that top five.
Steve Prefonteen, he was born in like a small fishing town called Cuspe, and he was badass.
It was badass in high school where he just like crushed everyone.
And at the time when he was, this was in late 1960s, Bill Bowerman actually basically pioneered the word jogging in America.
So running was not even a thing.
Bill Bowerman was like, everyone, you should run.
It's good for your health.
And that is when like housewives started running.
Because previously people would see someone running in the streets.
This blows my mind, by the way.
This is not that long ago.
What did you say?
It was like in the 60s or something, wasn't it?
The jogging revolution was in the 60s, and that's when steep, and then, yeah.
That's crazy.
That's like, you know, my dad is like a teenager or something.
Jogging seems like it's just been around since prehistoric times.
No, it wasn't a thing.
To me, that's an incredible marketing story, how they got, like, America to jog.
Do you know what to know what inspired Bill was he was in World War II, and he,
they were surrounded by Germans at one point, and Bill was in, was an outdoorsman.
He was into physical fitness and hiking, and he noticed that the more fit soldiers who he was around, they were able to survive longer.
And he eventually, like, overcame this German, they were surrounded by Germans, and somehow he conquered them and made them surrender.
But it was at that time where he's like, I realize how important fitness was.
And jogging is a really good example of how to get fit.
And so he's popularized jogging.
He wrote a book called jogging.
And it went viral.
It was on the cover of Sports Illustrated in the 60s.
That's how jogging is.
I've seen a newspaper article that was like, this strange person.
phenomenon taking place in the suburbs of America.
People are going outside and running.
Something's come over these people,
like an alien invasion has happened,
and people are doing the strange behavior now.
That was Bill.
So Bill popularized this,
and that's one of the many reasons why,
when Steve Prefontein was in high school,
running, obviously not very popular now,
unless occasionally you get like a freak like Usain Bolt,
and you're like, that's really cool.
Well, Bill Bowerman was sort of that guy in the 60s and 70s,
where people like, this guy invented jogging, how cool, he's kind of neat.
But then it wasn't like a cool thing, but it was like a neat thing.
But then this kid named Steve Prefontein, and he was the exact opposite of Bill.
And I'll explain in a minute.
But he just crushed all these kids in high school.
And then he got recruited to the University of Oregon to run for Bill.
Now, Bill is a very methodical, scientific guy.
And what that means is that he hated front running.
His whole idea was it's your goal to win the race.
Your goal is not to look cool.
It's not to lead the whole.
time, it's to do the least amount of work to get the desired result, which is to win.
That is not what Steve Fri Fontaine was about.
He said, he has this famous quote.
He goes, if I'm going to do something, I'm going to do it with style.
And his whole schick was that he would run the race from beginning and to end as hard as you
could.
He was short and he used to say that he wasn't gifted.
He was very gifted.
But he would kind of joke that he wasn't gifted.
And he would say, to give anything less than your best is to sacrifice the gift.
And he also, he had this other quote where he said, a lot of people run a race to see who's
fastest. I want a race to see who has the most guts. And that's what he was famous for,
was running all out as hard as he could. Hunk. Hunk, right? Like in the book...
Hunk-like attitude. Dude, it gets even hunkier. In the book that I read about him,
they used to talk about his gaze. I don't know. If you could Google, like, Steve Pryfonte...
I was giving a little too much now. Google, well, hold on. Google Steve,
this is important. It's actually about branding. Google Steve Pryfontein posters. And he's famous for
this, like, gaze. He would, like, stare really hard at things. And that poster is one of the most
famous posters if you are like a nerdy high school kid who cares about running like you have this
poster this guy was the boss and turns out in the 1972 Olympics in Munich he did his front running thing
where with like three or four laps to go which there's still a lot left to go he takes hold and he leads
the Olympic race for the 5,000 meters and it doesn't work out and at the very end the other guys out kick him
and he gets fourth and tragically he dies like a year and a half later in a car crash he was drinking
and driving. But he was Nike's first sponsored athlete. And what Phil Knight says is the, the,
even though that Jordan kind of made Nike most famous, that's how people know Nike now,
they say that Steve Prefontein was the soul of Nike, this idea of like fierce independence
of competitiveness. He goes, Phil was like, I didn't really have that. That was Steve. Everything Steve was
about, I took it from him and I made it into a brand called Nike. That's six. It's like if the man was a brand and
then they basically built Nike in that image, right?
Like that attitude.
It's badass.
Yeah.
So before Nike was Nike, it was called Blue Ribbon Sports.
Then they changed it to Nike.
And they were like, Steve is the brand that we're trying to be like.
And the reason I think this interests me is I love like these punk rock like Maverick
renegade guys.
But I also am interested in like stealing from the past.
So like finding good ideas.
And so I was thinking about Bill Bowerman and he has this famous book called The Men of Oregon and
Steve Pervante.
And I was like, what can I steal about?
his branding. He has a bunch of really cool branding. So, for example, when he was at his peak,
he was kicking everyone's ass. Someone made a shirt that said, go Steve go, or sorry, it said,
go pre. And he made a different shirt that said stop pre. Yeah, I'm looking at that right now.
And he put it on a stop sign. And these t-shirts got really popular. Stop pre.
Wait, why did he make the opposite? Because the first one's supporting him, but he just was like,
no. It was a joke, but it was just kind of like, like, I'm so good that people have to stop me.
And it's pretty cool.
And so, like, that actually, that t-shirt is really cool.
I love that t-shirt.
And then if you look at these quotes, look at this quote.
No matter how hard you train, somebody will train harder.
No matter how hard you run, somebody will run harder.
No matter how hard you want it, somebody will want it more.
I am somebody.
How good is that?
So he's got so many of these quotes.
When you get this combo, like, athlete poet, and you get Ali or you get McGregor,
or you get, you know, this, like, Steve Prefontein,
is the best.
And I think that you can have,
and so like a lot of times
people don't realize this,
but there exists
certain personality types
and attributes that supersede
a sport or genre or niche.
Totally.
I love this guy.
I don't even care about running.
You don't care about running.
But I would buy this guy's shirt.
Yeah, or like Lance Armstrong
was another one.
Like Lance Armstrong,
you're telling me this guy's
going to be the most famous athlete on earth
for a couple of years,
for a handful of years,
via cycling?
Are you kidding me?
Right.
And even,
frankly, I don't remember exactly, but when I was a kid, golf was a loser sport until Tiger Woods.
Like, it wasn't like that big of a deal.
Same with Serena Williams and Venus Williams.
It was like kind of interesting.
But then like that movie Marty Supreme came out and it's about table tennis.
And I remember watching that table tennis sport.
Like I'm like, oh my God, this guy's punk rock.
I love table tennis now.
Yeah, it's so good.
I love when people, like you said, transcend the sport.
Like I've told the story before, but I always remember it.
used to, at our company, we used to always like take breaks and just play FIFA or like any kind of
video game really, but like a lot of it was FIFA. And I told you that Steve Bartlett used to
work for us. And he used to always play my CTO Furkan like in FIFA all night. Like we used to play for
an hour as a break. They would play for an hour as a break. You'd go back to work. And then starting
at like nine or 10, they would start playing FIFA again and they would play till two or three
in the morning every night. And Steve, I think, was getting the better of Furcon a lot. And he used to talk
so much trash.
And the biggest, like, trash doc was he would say,
he's like, even when I leave,
even when I go back to the UK,
you're going to remember me.
Because I'm not a man.
I'm a concept.
I'm a concept.
I'm just a concept.
And he just kept saying,
I'm just a concept.
And I remember, like, just laughing because I had no idea
what he was even talking about.
It has nothing to do with FIFA.
But I've always remembered that.
Like, actually, that is the highest things when you're a concept.
You're not even in your physical form anymore.
To me, I'm like, I see Prefontaine.
I'm like, prefontaine is a concept.
And it's also, it's kind of messed up, but it's kind of for the story, it's better that he, I think he was 26, 25 when he died.
And there's a bunch of these guys who die at a very young age.
And I'm like, because they died so young, it makes them significantly more, the mysteriousness of it, makes it way more compelling.
And so Steve Preventin, I don't know if we have, we have a Billy of the week.
I guess that would be Bill Bowerman.
But Steve would be in that category.
Legend of the week.
All right, let's take a quick break because I've got to tell you.
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So why does Phil Knight get all the props? Is because Bill Barman's not around anymore,
or he took it over? Or what's the deal? Bill was never particularly active. He was sort of like
the Steve Wozniak of Apple.
How much did he own of Nike?
Did he like get to keep a chunk of it?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
They're multi-billionaires.
But he was much older.
So look at when he died.
Did he die in the 80s, I think?
99.
Oh, he made it that long.
Okay, I didn't even know he died in 99.
No, he, but he was out of the picture starting in the 80s, I believe.
At his passing, his stake was worth 390 million.
He sold most of his shares during the 1980s, but stayed involved.
He was like the genius who Phil, and Phil was the commercialization guy.
What's the genius of Phil Knight and what's more of his story?
I haven't read Shoe Dog, by the way, which I know is like supposed to be mandatory.
I started it and I was like, eh.
So I've only read Shoe Dog and I've read Bill Barman's book.
So I've never read too much about Phil Knight, other than that one Shoe Dog.
No, I think that, I think Phil Knight was a dog.
I think he was just like kept at it.
I think like he did not, he was relentless.
You know, Nike, the book, Shoe Dog.
it only goes for the first 10 years of Nike.
And the first 10 years of Nike
was from like 1968 to like 1978
to like 1978.
The Jordan shit didn't happen until the 90s.
I believe Jordan was picking between
Converse and Reebok
and those were the Nikes of the era.
And so my guess, from reading about him,
Phil Knight was pretty good at operating.
He was very scrappy.
He was good at hiring people
and letting them do their thing.
Have you seen Air,
the movie about the Jordan signing?
Yeah.
And in that movie,
they made Phil Knight kind of look stupid, which I think was very unfair.
I don't know if they've sensationalized.
I don't know how accurate that movie is to reality, but yeah, they made it seem like he
wasn't particularly involved or particularly helpful in, from what I remember, in the Jordan signing.
I think that also, like, to think, like, a lot of the people don't realize this because of,
like, Air Force Ones and shit like that.
Nike was explicitly a running company.
Like, it started in the not popular or cool niche.
I mean, I guess basketball wasn't particularly popular in the seven.
either, but it was a running company. And so I guess it took, like, Phil Knight to say, I guess
let's go after basketball, but I don't particularly think he was the most creative guy ever.
Who have you seen that does the Nike Playbook? So what made Nike such a powerful brand? And then
who's applied that in another space? What comes to mind? What would you say that Nike Playbook is?
Is sponsoring baller athletes? Yeah, so I think they did, obviously, it takes a thousand things,
and you sort of over, overestimate the credit to a small number of things.
But, okay, what seem to be the big levers?
Okay, so they fundamentally have, like, you know, a simple brand that can be, you know, international.
So the checkmark, small name, like, that's the, you know, the foundation of the brand puzzle is your actual brand identity.
Okay, then what comes next?
So then they basically went down the athlete route where they were like, let's get the greatest athletes.
The athlete is aspirational.
and if the best athletes wear nikes,
that will sort of trickle down
and then suddenly you have, you know,
the dad bods walking around the neighborhood wearing nikes.
Like, that's where you make your money.
You don't make your money off of the top prep athletes buying nikes.
You make your money off of everybody buying nikes.
And so how do you get them to do that?
And, you know, what they did brilliantly was they don't talk about the shoes, right?
So it's like counterintuitive, right?
The ads are never about the product.
They don't tell you how many, how many, whatever, squishes are in the air,
and how many ounces are on the toe
and how many millimeters wide the heel is?
They don't do any of that.
And so they focus on the feeling, the emotion,
the storytelling, and the simple fact that Nike celebrates greatness,
the great athletes use Nike.
And if you consider yourself who's trying to be great,
Nike will become a default for you.
And so who's applied that in other areas?
It's kind of interesting, right?
Like Apple, I think famously tried to do this
with the Think Different campaign.
It worked.
Right.
And it worked.
And he was like, you know, there's that great Steve Jobs speech where he's talking at some university or maybe it's a Apple brand meeting or something.
And basically he's unveiling the campaign.
I think Apple was sort of on the, on a bit of a down swing.
And, you know, Steve comes back and he simplifies the product line.
But then he also launches this brand campaign, which was like the Think Different campaign where it's like Einstein and Gandhi and like and all these like kind of rebellious, mischievous, like world changers.
the people who changed the world.
And he's like, they, you know, they didn't have computers, but if they did, they would use Apple.
And it was like, oh, okay, yeah, I get it.
You know, they sort of.
It's pretty funny, right?
That's like the greatest influencer campaign ever.
I'm just going to find people who are dead.
You can't say no.
Yeah, exactly.
Make them a deal they literally can't refuse.
Yeah.
And it's not even a deal.
I'm just going to say.
And so, you know, I think Apple obviously did a good job.
But those are sort of cliche.
You know, I'm seeing this a little bit in like the health space.
I think, like, I invest in this company's superpower,
and I think superpower is going to try to do this.
I think, you know, other companies probably in the, like, protein space
if I've tried to do this where it's like,
how do you create like a gym shark athlete, right?
Where you basically sponsor all these Instagram famous people,
because maybe that's where the attention is now.
And they don't have to tell you why that sweatpants is the best or whatever.
But you just know they are a, it's not like, hey, buy these pants.
It's I am a gym shark athlete.
I am a whatever, right?
Have you seen Nick Bear?
Do you remember Nick Bear?
Yeah, of course.
I don't remember if you were on the times that we talked to him.
I was, yeah, yeah.
That was years ago, I think pandemic time.
And he, there's a joke in his fitness world,
which is like this thing called the hybrid athlete,
which is basically like a big, ripped, yoked meathead looking guy
who also is really good at running.
And he sort of, in a lot of people's minds, kind of invented that.
and there's like this joke on Instagram,
like, don't forget your hybrid athlete kit.
And it's like they're all wearing the same hat,
you know, like the same shorts and they're whatever.
He appears to have done that quite well
with this hybrid athlete thing.
And Nix owns a company called BPN that sells protein.
And very rarely is he like promoting the protein or electrolytes,
but always promoting the lifestyle of lifting weights and running far.
Yeah, being a hybrid athlete and maybe even more like, you know,
sort of the grind culture of workouts where they're like, you know,
I didn't want to.
wake up today, but I do it. You know, that sort of thing where it's like, you know, I got it in today
under these circumstances. Raining, doesn't matter. Cold doesn't matter. You know, I wasn't feeling
good. It doesn't matter. That sort of attitude, right? So you can kind of elevate not just, hey,
we're athletes, but like, well, what kind of athletes? It's like, well, we're more in that David
Goggins sort of like, no excuses, athletes. And you could take something like that, right? Like,
what pre-Fontained in and you could do it in other spaces. I'm surprised this doesn't happen more.
I think it's hard to pull off.
Like, for example, like the people who you, but not just hard.
I mean, it's hard emotionally.
So, for example, you told the story where you're like, with my company, with your e-commerce
company, my business partner or my friend Suli told me, don't do anything except for spend
this much money on Facebook ads.
He didn't tell you to, like, do cool shit, like sponsor, you know, cool people.
He said, just do this because the ROI is instantaneous.
And you know within 12 hours, what's where you're going to.
and what's not, and you're going to make small, incremental changes. And you are willing to do that
because you have bills to pay, and it will pay the bills. But then just turning that off and doing
stuff that doesn't make sense on paper, but feels right potentially, but also feels like a huge bet,
that's a scary thing to do. Yeah. Yeah, it's true. I think it's hard and scary. But it's the big
prize. Brand is always the big price, right? Because brand is you living in the person's head rent free,
rather than you paying for every impression
that you get on Facebook or a billboard
or a display ad or anywhere else, right?
So I think Seth Godin has this great thing
where he talks about, like,
if I told you that Hilton Hotels was making a shoe,
could you even imagine what that would look like?
But if I told you Nike made a hotel,
you could probably actually imagine
what that might look like.
He goes, that's brand.
And I thought that was always a great differentiator,
which is they own a piece of real estate,
they own a meaning,
in your head, whether it's of quality, it's of design, it's of greatness, it's of excellence,
it's of health, it's of wellness, it's of recovery, whatever it is. Like different brands can be
about different things, but a simple test about the strength of the brand could be, well,
what if they went into an adjacent space? Could you imagine what they would do? And would you be
excited about what they did with it? That's actually really hard to think about and how to actually
pull that off. All right. So if you think about how to pull it off, well, you have tons of
employees, like for example, my company, let's say we have 25 employees. Like, how do I get everyone
to be consistent with the marketing.
It's actually really hard
versus just following what's profitable.
So, like, for example,
at your company,
at my company, if we're buying ads,
you meet once a week or every day
and you'd be like,
let's change this image to this other image
because the click-through rate will be higher
because we know this other company
is running a very similar image.
And you just are iterating you're there,
iterating yourself there
to wherever it is you're trying to go.
But at no point, do you say,
but wouldn't it be cool
if we did this other thing that is just cool.
Well, that's kind of what I'm saying.
Remember the thing at the beginning of like the opposites, right?
So it's like, on one hand, you have this extremely data-driven, measurable, scientific, small iterations,
let the data decide approach to building, to marketing, to acquiring customers.
And the other hand, you have the exact opposite.
It's emotional, not data-driven.
There's no scorecard immediately.
There's no immediate payoffs.
There's only long-term payoffs.
And yet, there's obviously examples of people who,
have been able to do one or the other or both.
The best companies obviously have been able to do both.
But you know what's cool is you were just,
so you're using Nike and we're using some other upscale brands.
You know what's funny is speaking of Shaq.
Shack does general insurance.
Is that what it's called?
1-800.
You know what I'm talking about?
I don't know.
So Shaq is a spokesperson for an insurance company called the,
the spokesperson is a general.
It's a little general.
You know the jingle?
It's like a...
It's called the general.
Is that the general? That's what I thought. Okay. So if I, if I, I'm almost, he's, he's standing next to this like mustache general. Okay. And so that little general, that company, I think it's like a low cost provider. And we've only been using fancy stuff. But actually, Shaq is a great brand. Because Shaq actually, he's famous for, I think he is a Walmart spokesperson. It's like for like. Icey Hot. Yeah, like people who don't have a lot of money that want to like acquire certain things. Like Shaq's like the guy. And that's pretty cool that he's able to pull that off.
So I guess it's not just examples of Nike or Ferrari or whatever.
That's who I was thinking of.
But Shaq does a good job.
Here's another one. Airbnb, I think, did a great job of this.
So Airbnb spends, you know, or spent at least in the past.
I don't know what they're doing now.
But they spend a lot of money on Google ads and things that you would need to do if you're in the travel space, right?
Like somebody wants to go on a trip, you need to be showing up as like a place to stay.
Fantastic.
You're competing against booking and Expedia and all those other things.
But booking and Expedia and those other kayak, you know, I feel nothing.
I feel nothing.
numb. I recognize the name, so it's not like they've done nothing. They've built a brand, right? I could tell you those names off the top of my head. Could I tell you what's different between Expedia and booking and Kayak? No chance. Could I tell you anything about them, anything about their story, but what they represent? About if I told somebody else that I use kayak, does that somehow accrue status or value to me? No, right? Airbnb did an interesting thing, which was Airbnb could have been couch surfing. That could have been, here's the cheap way.
to get a place to stay, sleep on someone's couch, their bed, their air mattress.
Literally it started Airbnb as air mattress, bed and breakfast type of thing.
And over the years, they actually built the brand around traveling like a local.
And they made a hotel, which is nicer, provides more service, is usually in a better location, right?
If you just look at a hotel, right?
Like, they have somebody who comes and cleans your room and tucks the sheets in so tight that you're going to have to kick them out.
And they do that for free every day.
and, you know, it's in a better location.
It's safer.
It's a more known quantity.
It's standardized.
There's a commitment to a certain quality that you're going to get.
And somehow Airbnb made them seem like the generic choice.
Like the sort of like, well, you could, you know, just choose to go stay in a box.
Or you could authentically travel, live like a local, right?
And they lean into like in the way that food does this too.
It's like you can eat from a chain.
Yeah, yeah, fast food chain.
Or you can eat from this local, you know, this local joint.
And Airbnb did a great job of basically like leaning into not the low cost sleep on a couch thing,
but traveling and living like a local when you travel and actually experiencing the city versus just being in the city.
And I thought that that was like a kind of a genius emotional thing because travel is escape.
And, you know, either it's to a place where everything is handed to you or it's to a place of authenticity.
right to actually experiencing the place you're going to.
It's like clean your own shit, pay an extra fee.
You don't know what you're going to get.
There's like all these downsides,
but they make that seem like the upside.
Like I talked to a guy who ran events and he goes,
dude, the best thing Burning Man ever did was something called radical,
what is it called? Radical self-reliance.
He goes, you know how smart that is from an event point of you?
It means we're going to do nothing for you.
Oh, you got lost?
Radical self-reliance.
Maybe it's not our fault, right?
We don't have lighting over here.
Radical Self-Reliance.
Oh, we don't have water fountains?
You got to figure out how to get it from the community.
Come on.
This is what it's all about.
This is the experience you paid for.
To get nothing.
I'm going to steal that for.
I'm still up stealing that for Hampton.
Like, oh, you...
At the office, bro.
Radical stuff reliance.
Dude, we're doing this thing.
So we're moving into this new office, I think February 20th or something.
And I'm implementing a new rule every Tuesday at 3 o'clock,
between 3 o'clock and 320.
We're cleaning.
I saw you posted this.
Who was it, the Japanese company?
The Rakuten.
Yeah, Racketton did it.
And I wanted to do it.
And I did it in my last company.
People freaked and it just did not stick.
But now we're moving into a new office because I hate clutter.
I hate clutter so much.
It like makes me anxious when there's shit all over and particularly in an open office plan.
And so I'm going to like hold myself accountable to like stick to this hardcore.
Dude, nobody is giving more thought to like their office and their culture than you right now.
I feel like you are really planting some seeds.
I'm very curious.
Either in two years from now, you're going to be like, I overindexed on that.
Some of it was helpful.
A lot of it was waste of energy.
I should have been focused on this.
Or you're going to be like, it was the best thing for me.
I wasn't sure, but I felt it in my gut.
I trusted it.
Because I refused to become.
It made no sense.
And in two years, you're going to be like, that was the best thing we ever did.
It's going to be one of those two.
I just don't want to make the same mistakes that I've done before where I created my own prison.
Do you know what I mean?
I don't want to do that.
And so culture is just an example or just a...
Yeah, but you're not being specific.
What was the prison?
What was bad?
Like, what are you going to change this time?
For example, I had a team, someone who worked for me, and they wanted to lay off someone
who worked for them, but they only wanted to give like two week severance or something for
this person that worked with us for a long time.
And they were like, well, that's like normal.
Like, that's like a fine.
That's fine.
Like, that's just, it was expected.
And I was like, but this person has worked here for two years and, like, they're a good
guy, they're just not getting results and this doesn't feel right to me. And I went along with it.
I did the two weeks and I remember that feeling it. I hated it. And so we got this value called
Bill with Pride, which basically the idea is like if I'm going to lay someone off and I do it actually
for two reasons. One, so I don't feel guilty. And two, like if you just have like this like halo effect of like
you treat people well. And I'm just going to shower you with significantly more severance than I
think is actually the industry standard. And so that's one example.
Okay. All right. I like it. Yeah.
very curious to see how what i i think it will definitely be good it's just a question maybe of two things
which bets have the biggest payoff i think you're going to come out with a bunch of learnings on that
like maybe it'll be the small things maybe it'll be the 10 minutes of cleaning a day maybe it'll be
you know this offsite you do every year or whatever i don't know i don't know which bets are
going to have the biggest return but they're not all going to be even so i think you're going to get a
good learning from that and then the other thing is um proportion so like seinfeld has this great quote
where he says
they were like,
why didn't you
do that one last season?
Because he holds the record
for most money
turned down.
Yeah,
for like the eighth season
or seven season.
I think,
yeah,
whatever the last season
was going to be
is 110 million.
He turned it down.
And they're like,
Jerry,
one more season.
Why didn't you do it?
He's like,
because in art,
it's all about proportion.
He goes,
too much of anything.
Too much cake,
too much jokes,
too much anything.
Too much of anything
is a bad thing.
And he's like,
the secret to making
anything great is proportion. And it's so true. Ever since I read that, like, I now see it
everywhere. Because, you know, I was more simplistic, just black and white. This is good,
and that is bad. But, like, too much affection is clinginess, is smothering, right? Like,
in a relationship. Too much space is distant, is cold. So it's not a question of, is affection
good or bad. It's how much. And you can use that in anything. You're cooking a dish. It's the
proportion that matters. And so I think I'm interested to see, did you get the proportion right,
of how much time, energy you're spending on, you know, the leadership and the culture and the
environment that you're putting together here? There also is a world where you think I'm spending
more time than I really am on it just because I'm vocal about it. But you could be right. Yeah,
I mean, we'll be interesting to see. You know, it would be funny is to see all these companies
who we think have crazy cultures, like the big guys, we should go talk to,
I've always been curious,
go talk to, like, the middle management
or, like, the new staff.
It's like, are you drinking the Kool-Aid?
What's the deal?
You know, like, like, Patagonia or something like that.
Right.
I had the same idea yesterday.
I was in a restaurant,
and I was walking out,
and I saw the values.
I had, like, a not-so-great experience at the restaurant,
and I was walking out,
and it was like, don't just serve.
Delight was on the wall.
And I was like,
I just had the opposite of delight in this restaurant.
Like, you know,
ordered something gluten-free
for somebody who's allergic to gluten,
they mess it up and then they were like refusing to like just give us the gluten-free version.
I wanted us to like pay again for that one.
I was like, what's going on?
You almost killed somebody just now.
Like, what are you talking about?
And I was thinking, I was like, it would be so funny to just go to 100 companies.
I guarantee you go to 100 companies.
And at every company, you just stand outside the office.
And you take a random sample, the first 50 people that come out of the building or walk into
the building in the morning.
And you just say, hey, we're doing it.
doing a little game, a little test, I'll give you $50 for every one of the values of the company
you can name. But you've got to get word for word, what the actual phrase is. And I was like,
I'm just curious how many people will know any of the values. And I think it's going to be this
histogram or this chart that's like, most people know zero or one, almost nobody knows two,
and nobody knows three or more. And I just want to have that for like,
100 different companies, because I just think values are probably the most overrated exercise that companies do, because if it's not in the people's heads, what do you, like, then what was the point? They're not doing it.
You want to know what's funny is, have you seen, you know how Netflix is famous for values?
I've heard, yeah, I've seen their culture deck, yeah. I was looking up, but I was like, what actually are the values? You should look up. It's like, I know one is like we're a team, not a family, right?
That's not even like, no, like, I mean, like, they literally have written out the values. And it's like 18.
of them and it's like kindness. It's like everything. Curiosity, courage, candor, selflessness,
judgment, creativity, inclusion, resilience. It's just a, it's pretty funny. It's just a list of stuff.
I was like, oh, they should just slip in like a derogatory term in there and just see if anyone
ever notices. Nobody would know. He's just slip in the F word in between courage and
inclusion and see what happens. Reed Hasing seems like a pretty big baller. He, um,
the CEO of Netflix,
or former CEO of Netflix,
and he was talking about the culture,
and I was listening to this podcast
with Patrick O'Shaughnessy about him,
and he was just, you know,
he was saying the coolest shit ever.
And then I go, I was like,
well, he's talking about values.
Let's go see what they are.
And I go to the website,
and I see like, this.
And I was like, huh?
Like, do what?
Like, that's way less intense
than he sounded.
Yeah, exactly.
It's only about actions, right?
Not words.
So the question really is,
what actions do you take
that are any different than anybody else?
What actions do you take
that are any different
than what my default behavior would have been
if I switched over from a
adjacent company to yours, right?
So, like, your severance example is a good one,
for example, right?
Like, if your value is treat people like family
or treat people well, whatever it is,
and you're like, cool, here's an action.
Here's default actions.
Our default actions are different
than the other default actions.
So maybe these companies do have great,
like, default actions, or they were able to...
I don't know.
Part of many things it's impossible to do that
when you get past a certain point.
We should actually ask Darmesh about this.
Darmesh wrote the...
culture code?
They all have to drink the Kool-Aid.
Nobody can be honest about this
when they're in their company.
Who's going to get out here and say,
that's all shit.
Nobody knows.
It's just a bunch of bodies to me.
If you come in and we look at revenue
and we try to figure out what's happening,
that's what we do.
Nobody's going to ever be honest about that sort of thing
until they're out and then they're like disillusioned.
And then they're seen as like,
they went crazy if they were to talk about it.
Well, what do we go from here?
Is that it?
Is that the pod?
Yeah, our value is the Irish goodbye.
And we talk, they laugh, and then we suddenly decide, I think I've said enough today.
All right, that's it. That's a pop.
I feel like I can rule the world.
I know I could be what I want to.
I put my all in it like no days off.
On a road, let's travel, never looking back.
All right, my friends, I have a new podcast for you guys to check out.
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