My First Million - The Step-by-Step Playbook We Used to Build a $100M+ Newsletter Business
Episode Date: April 4, 2025[free] Episode 693: Sam Parr ( https://x.com/theSamParr ) talks to Alex Lieberman ( https://x.com/businessbarista ) and Austin Rief ( https://x.com/austin_rief ) about how to build a profitable newsl...etter. — Show Notes: (0:00) Intro (3:12) 0 to 100K subscribers (9:18) Nontraditional hires (15:26) 100K to 1M subscribers (35:00) Entrepreneurs Operating System (43:27) 8-figure Exits (55:28) How to start a newsletter in 2025 (1:02:57) Newsletter ideas — Links: • The Hustle - https://thehustle.co/ • Morning Brew - https://www.morningbrew.com/ • Traction - https://tinyurl.com/5dfh3nx9 • Arena Magazine - https://arenamag.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 HubSpot Media // Production by Arie Desormeaux // Editing by Ezra Bakker Trupiano
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I still think the big opportunity in the media space,
if someone's take a big swing,
someone wants to go build a billion dollar company,
it's,
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.
So say, what were you saying earlier, how you hated me?
No, you didn't hate me.
No, I didn't hate you.
Like, I hated you.
Just to be clear, I hated you.
I did not hate you.
Like, I feel like also part of like my schick has always
been like I don't hate anyone. I try to kill people with kindness. I try like people have to feel
like douchebags for hating me because there's no way to hate me. Like I feel like that was my
M.O. for a while. But I remember, yeah, I remember being on the phone with Tim Shaw. And he was
investor in the hustle also, right? Yeah, I was so mad at him for investing in both of our companies. I was so
angry. Yeah. And I remember being on the phone with him. And I was like, we're talking about you for some
reason and I was like, yeah, like I would love to talk to Sam, but I don't know if he wants to talk to
me or us. And Tim was just like, yeah, I don't think he likes you guys very much.
And no, but anyway, I didn't, I didn't hate you, but I was jealous of certain things at the hustle.
And one of the things I was most jealous of was the welcome email. Like, I remember reading the
welcome email and being like, this is so freaking good. And I'm so angry that we don't have one that
is as good as this. I would have traded you the welcome email for your
guys's ability to be like financially like just you guys are far more than competent but I was barely
competent so I so like the envy went both ways. All right. So here's what I want to do for this show.
So here's the deal. So wait, do you guys say what you sold for? Is that public or not?
Yeah, we could say 75 million I think is the public number. So collectively the hustle and morning
brew we sold for like hundreds of millions of dollars and I we were sort of like the graduating class
of like 2020 or whatever.
We were the early people in the newsletter game.
We didn't like invent it, but we kind of helped pioneer
a little bit of what is popular today.
And now, officially, as of a couple weeks ago,
we are both, all three of us,
are officially out of our companies.
I've been out for a minute.
Alex has been out for a minute.
Now, Austin is out.
And we could finally reveal like a bunch of information.
Sorry, Sam, to be clear,
I'm technically executive chairman.
So I'm no longer day to day,
but I am executive chairman of Morningbro.
You are no longer operating.
But I think you guys, do you still have equity ownership?
No, we're both fully out.
All right.
So that's what I mean.
And so what I wanted to do was I wanted to go year by year when we each started.
And I wanted to explain to the listener what we were doing in that year, what our revenue
and profit was, what our subscriber growth was, things we learned.
And also, we have to add this, things that we would do differently if we were starting again
today and things that we wish we had done.
Does that sound good?
Yeah, sounds good.
I'm also excited for it because at the time, I didn't know.
any of your numbers. So this is like the first time I actually know your numbers as we were going
through it. I think I've like shared with Austin like my whole data room at this point. The cool thing
about having a data room is like you're supposed to have, you know, all the information that's
easily accessible so you can go back and look back. Yeah, but this is this is the first time it's all
been in one place. We've piece kneeled it, but I think it'll be fun to just side by side it.
So we, you guys started in 2015. What was the original premise? And weren't you guys both in college?
Yeah. So I was.
a senior at Michigan. Austin was a sophomore. I mean, both of us were kind of on the finance track.
The general premise, and it's so funny because, like, we've told this story so many times about
how it started. I don't know if it's actually the truth. It's just what I remembers the story,
but basically was I was helping students prep for job interviews. I would ask kids during these
mock interviews, how do you keep up with the business world? Every single student would say,
I read the Wall Street Journal, but my, but it's dry. I can't get through the whole thing. My parents
told me I have to read it. And so at some point I was like, this is crazy. These kids are about
to spend their whole careers in business yet they don't have something that they enjoy reading.
So I started putting together the kind of OG version of Morning Brew, which was called Market
Corner. And it was a PDF that I had attached to an email list serve every day. And Austin was
one of my readers. Can I tell you what I think the real story was? Because it's probably the same
story as mine. Sure. You saw the success of the skim and you just said, I'm just going to do this for
finance people or in my case, tech guys.
Definitely possible.
Yeah, I think that's partly true.
I do think Alex started the PDF version.
Like, there were two versions.
There was the market corner.
And then there was turning into Morning Brew.
The evolution of Morning Brew was totally inspired off of, wow, if these two women in New York City could get millions of people, I think maybe a million people at the time reading.
Like, why can't we do the same?
There's a bunch of, you know, at the time, we thought dudes in finance who wanted to read about the business world.
And did you have any.
revenue in year one? No. No. Which, by the way, I'll say it was a huge advantage for us that I don't
think you had with the hustle is Austin and I were still in school. So we basically had a year and a half
to two years of like fake timeline where we didn't have to worry about bringing in revenue.
So in 2015, I think I was 25. It wasn't the hustle. It was just an event called HustleCon.
And that year, I think it had made around $400,000 in revenue and like $200,000 in profit.
Like, it was like a good event, but we, and it was basically like a TED Talk for entrepreneurs,
but I was so scrappy.
And I honestly regret it.
One of my biggest regrets in life is buying the supplies that I needed for that event at Costco
and returning the stuff that we didn't use.
And I didn't realize that you throw things away once, like Costco throws it away.
and it was like the most shame that I'd ever felt was like being that like cheap and
horrible.
Was the hustle that profitable?
Like when you did it that first year, was it profitable?
Yeah, yeah, because it was just me.
And then I asked my buddy John to help and it was just us to.
And yeah, it made it.
So like when we started in the year 2015 or sorry.
So the next year in 2016, I started the hustle because I was like, conferences suck.
I want to create a newsletter because I'd saw the skin.
I read about thrillists on MixerG.com and a bunch of other and like a bunch of other newsletter
businesses.
And when I started that business, I had $500,000 in my bank.
And it was all from conferences.
It's pretty wild.
I think what you said is interesting about the math, right?
I think at the time, and we have a funny story we can tell now that we've held back for
a while about John Steinberg in our first interaction with him.
But so many people came to us and they would say, like, this is so stupid.
Why are you doing this newsletter thing?
It makes no sense.
But Alex and I would sit there every night and we can go through a spreadsheet.
And it was the most basic spreadsheet of, you know, newsletter subscribers grow five or 10% a month.
And CPMs stay flat.
And over time, you can get to hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars of revenue a month.
And I think it was really that simple.
I had the exact same spreadsheet.
I listened to every interview with Ben Lear and I'm like, tell me what the CPMs are.
And then I met with business insider reporters.
And I said, tell me how many people visit your tech part of your website, 80 million.
Okay, then yeah, like you're giving me some numbers to triangulate.
Yeah, and like at the time, everyone was spending millions of dollars putting video on Facebook.
And, you know, I don't think we were actually that smart.
I just think the people around us were really dumb.
I do think one of the big advantages, you know, they say in a poker table, if you look around and you can't find the sucker, you're the sucker.
Well, I think we picked the industry with a lot of suckers.
There were a lot of people who started five or 10 years before us, and they just weren't smart.
They were doing the same thing that they did for 10 years.
And even in 2015, 2017, we were like, PuzzFeed, it just doesn't make sense.
It's not worth a billion dollars.
And for five years, I think people didn't believe us.
And over time, I think we proved that our model, while it seems silly, it actually works.
It worked and it made us a bunch of money.
All right.
So fast forward to 2016.
Where are you guys at?
How many subscribers do you have?
what was your revenue in 2016?
What's the business?
Yeah, so 2016 was the year when, at this point,
I'm working full-time on Wall Street,
doing the brew in basically, you know,
let's call it 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. every night,
falling asleep with my laptop on my lap.
Where were you working?
I was at Morgan Stanley.
Was that miserable?
Yes, it was.
My entire life was, like, built up to that point.
Because remember, like, my dad was a trader on Wall Street for 20 years.
My mom was like, this is all.
all I knew, but it was horrible.
And going back to what Austin was saying about,
just like they're not being a lot of smart people in media,
I actually think the best thing we did is, like,
I call it like IQ arbitrage,
where I was on a trading desk.
Everyone was a PhD in math.
I was the dumbest person on my desk,
like not even a shadow of a doubt.
And just by moving to media,
I became not the dumbest person.
September of 2016, I quit my job.
Also, it was hilarious right before that.
I almost got fired from Morgan Stanley because they were worried I was insider trading through
Morning Brew's newsletter.
So they basically HR found out about Morning Brew, which I was supposed to have permission to work on.
The guy who was supposed to give me permission and told me he would got fired in a massive
layoff at Morgan Stanley.
So I didn't get permission.
And they basically had me meet with Morgan Stanley lawyers, two litigators that were defending
Morgan Stanley saying, you can never tell any.
about this meeting, but we are concerned that you are trying to make investment decisions
and get private information using your newsletter.
So that was kind of like the last draw for me, made me really not enjoy the job, quit my job.
We raised a small round in 2016.
2016 is also the year when we talked to John Steinberg as he was starting cheddar.
And John Steinberg is like a media executive.
Did you guys see the Facebook message that he sent me?
So this guy named John Steinberg, at the time I think I'm 26, and I'm just like a guy in a shitty apartment trying to do this newsletter.
And John Steinberg is the president or CEO of BuzzFeed.
And he's about to start a new company called Cheddar.
He was at BuzzFeed.
Then he went to Daily Mail North America that he was the CEO of.
He stepped down from Daily Mail.
And then he sent Austin and I an email.
Awesome.
What was the subject?
Like what did the email say again?
Yeah.
So it was from his jeet.
we had no idea who John Steinberg was.
We didn't know the media industry.
And we get an email from it.
It's like John Steinberg, some numbers at gmail.com.
And he emails us,
a subject line,
intro to founders,
body of the email,
like what you're doing, period.
That was the whole email.
So we looked the guy up on LinkedIn
and we're like,
holy shit,
this guy's a big deal.
You know,
we give him a call.
And I mean,
Alex can tell the story better,
but he turns it,
he flips on us.
He makes us think that he's excited in us.
He's going to invest in us
all this stuff. And then he brings Alex to his office and I'll let Alex take it away what happens.
Go ahead. Yeah. So I go to John's office, which at the time was a tiny like closet of a we work space.
And it was him, Peter Gornstein, who is his co-founder and the chief content officer. And I get there.
And I think the conversation is going to be about how John is going to invest in Morning Brew or how
Morning Brew maybe we'll have a segment on cheddar that would create, you know, audience and
distribution for us. Instead, he starts interviewing me. Yeah, because he wanted you to work there.
Yes. So he started interviewing me. He's like, okay, so Fitbit earnings come out. You need to get
an expert on the story to talk about what this means. Who are you talking to? How are you finding
them? Let's go. And I was like, well, I'm going to figure out a way to get to the CEO.
Oh, you fell into it. Yeah. And I was, and then at,
At some point in the conversation, I was like, you know, to be honest, I'm, you know, I'm not
interested in a job at cheddar.
Like I thought we were going to be talking about a partnership with Morning Brewer, you guys
investing in us.
And I will never forget this line.
Honestly, I have some respect he said this because he wasn't wrong.
He goes, to be totally honest, the cost of the legal fees to do this deal would be more than
what I would pay for you guys.
And I was like, damn, he's right right now.
I have a very similar story. First of all, related to John, I just found an old message on
Facebook that I got. Here's his opening two lines. Have we met? We should meet.
He's amazing. He's got like four or five times and that guy's motor just runs. Like he is just
unbelievable. So this is, we're in the year 2016. I get a email or maybe I cult email Ben Lear who
started this thing called Thrillist, which became Group 9, like a billion dollar company. And then
He's one of the co-founders of Lear HIPAA, which is like one of the most preeminent VCs in New York.
We start talking and I think he's going to buy the hustle right out the gate.
And I'm like, hell yeah, like $5 million.
That's how much I have right now already.
Like the offer is going to happen.
And he breaks in the president of the company and it turns into an interview, the exact same thing.
And I was like, oh, I thought you were going to buy us.
he's like, brother, this is a newsletter.
This will never make more than like $2 million a year.
And I was like, well, I don't know, man.
Like, if you do the math, he was like, no, like, you should come and join us.
Like, you know, we're a real company.
Like, if you want to like make this work, you have to join our company.
And I, forever, that has been a chip on my shoulder.
And just think about, like, how valuable it was that we were all kind of like,
both had conviction and were like irrationally confident in what we were doing.
Because, like, you could see so many other scenarios where someone's,
like, you know,
googly-eyed by someone who's super successful
and goes and joins their thing.
And then it basically cuts all of the possible upside
that, you know,
we ended up experiencing with our businesses.
So this is, all right,
so we're in the year of 2016.
The hustle launched on 42016.
And so that year, we did 400K in revenue.
I think we had, at the end of the year,
we had like 100,000 subscribers.
I had this strategy where I was writing these crazy blog posts
and getting like 500,000 to a million people a month
coming to our website.
And that's how we grew.
And I think of the 400K, I think 100,000 was advertising revenue.
And I think it was four of us at the time.
Where were you guys?
So that's amazing because in 2016, we did our first ad deal.
It was a watch brand called Emelheart, I believe.
It was about a $3,000 deal for three.
We used to call them exposures.
We were so naive.
We called an ad exposures.
It was three of us.
We had a writer who, ironically, we poached someone from BI.
I think, I'm not kidding.
I think he made it like 70s.
Like, he barely made it at the company.
He quit because we wanted him to work more than a nine to five.
But, you know, we did 25,000 that year.
You did 400,000.
We were three of us that.
I was still in college.
But ours were events, though.
It wasn't advertising, which is way less.
Yeah, but you guys did what?
Still 100,000 of ads?
That's pretty good.
Yeah, we started advertising.
advertising, I believe in June, and I looked at my first deal. It was $4,600. I cold email a guy named
Chris Martinez at Wealthfront. So funny. That's the funny thing is it kind of reminds me of like,
if you go to my LinkedIn and look at my DMs from last 10 years, I have basically DM'd every
human being that has worked in growth marketing or media over the last 10 years. And I remember that
name Chris Martinez because I probably emailed him 12 times over that year to try to get him to do a deal
with us. I don't know who Chris is anymore. I haven't talked to them, but if you're listening,
thank you. The things I would do differently from 16 is we raised a little bit of funding.
I would not have done that. I thought, and in fact, I tried to raise way more money, but no one
invested, which ended up being a blessing because I made a lot of money because I owned the majority
of the company, but that's what I would do differently. So if you're listening to this, if I were
starting today, I would not raise funding at all. Would you agree? I think raising funding is all about
your business needs, right? I certainly wouldn't have raised more money than we did, but we did need
the $750,000. I actually specifically remember, this is now fast forwarding 2017. It was December
like 27th, 2017. And I didn't realize that payroll goes out early if it's, if it's New Year's Eve,
because they don't do payroll on holidays. And I had a check in my hand that was going to make payroll.
And I had to sprint to J.P. Morgan because they were going to close at five o'clock. It was like
455 and you know people say you were you were close to missing payroll I was literally two minutes
away for missing payroll so we didn't need every penny from a cash flow perspective because obviously
media companies the accounts receivable and then you might you might need 30 60 90 or 120 days just
to get paid so we didn't need the money but yeah for a media venture I don't think you should raise
you should raise as little as humanly possible I will I will say there is one thing I would have done
differently and like one big lesson from that period in the raise the first is
is we had 28 individual investors.
So we had 28 people who wrote checks from $2,500 to $100,000.
Same.
If I was to do it again, I would have way fewer.
I would also try to suss out if these people are going to be difficult
because we'll fast forward at some point,
but there were some very difficult investors when we sold the business.
The second is time is a crazy thing in startups,
and you always think you can get more done in a shorter period of time.
and I remember we had a slide in our investor deck
that showed our one year plan to investors
and that slide,
looking back on it now, took us nine years.
We tried everything in that slide
and took us nine years to try everything
and most of those things did not work.
But yeah, it took nine years to accomplish our one year plan.
All right.
So now we are in 2017.
Do you remember we ended the year?
I tell the story differently.
I tell the story that we went from 100,000 to 500,000
in subscribers.
I think I missed a year because I went back.
In 2017, we ended the year with 250,000 subscribers.
We had 2.2 million in revenue.
400K was events.
1.8 was advertising.
And my big learning that year was hiring a sales team.
I think I did the first year of ad sales, and I was horrible at it.
I didn't realize how uptight you had to be.
You had to be like button up.
I didn't know.
I didn't understand this.
Where were you guys at the end of 2017?
Yeah, so 17 was the year that we were both full.
time or I was only full time half the year. We ended at 100,000 subs. We did $300,000 of revenue.
We finally started taking a salary. We were taking 60K each. But that was the first real year.
We hired Tyler Dank, who now is the CEO of Beehive. I'm sure everyone listening knows Beehive.
And he was transformational for us. What was his job? Everything.
Do you remember his first title, Austin? Do you remember?
No. Growth engineer. Growth engineer. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah, I mean, he did everything.
And between him and then we had Michael Schwartz, who also now works at Beehive, who was our first writer.
And then we had, he brought on Neil Freiman, who still works at Morning Brew today.
He is, I mean, like, look, Alex was the visionary of the Morning Brew voice.
But I do think Neil was really the executor and took it to the next level.
Neil is, I think I spoke about him last time I was in the podcast.
Neil was huge for Morning Brew.
He really did what Alex and I couldn't do, which was take this idea in our
head and put it on paper every single day, 365 days a year for now 10 plus years.
I also think Neil is a great example of what we did well at the brew and what you did
well at the hustle, which is I think about our first three writing hires, Neil, Michael Schwartz,
and then this woman, Nikki, and all of them were non-traditional hires.
Like I think both the morning brew and hustle were really good at finding undiscovered talent
and seeing a ceiling in them that other people didn't realize.
And it was the same thing for you.
Like, I remember, we'll talk about it later, but like, I watched your writers like a hawk.
I could read a hustle story and knew who wrote it without seeing a name attached to the story.
And I knew their backgrounds.
And none of these people were what media companies would traditionally hire as talent.
Dude, I tried to recruit media people.
And they laughed at me.
Like, I emailed this one famous journalist and she said, that's cute.
Thank you.
Like, I tried to.
And so the only.
people I could, A, afford and be convinced to do this stuff where, like, for example,
Lindsay Quinn was a blogger at like a procurement startup or something or I don't even, like,
she was not a writer, but she could write and wanted to write. And you sell them on the dream of like,
it wouldn't be fun if you could do this hobby all the time and make money from it. And that's the only
people we could convince to join us. She was, she was my writing hero. The number of times in my career
I've tried to poach her is very non-zero. Yeah, she was fantastic. And this really,
really fast-bored to 2018, but Alex isn't kidding. We knew every single writer you had. We knew,
and Alex in particular, knew every single story who wrote them. And we would come to work every day,
end of 2017, 2018. We would, for the first two to three hours, print out Morning Brew,
print out Axios, print out the hustle, print out the skim. And with a paper and pen,
and Alex led the charge, would go through every single story.
he'd circle what he'd like, he'd X out what he didn't like, and look, Alex is the most
likable person on the planet.
You now know this sale.
I'm sure a lot of listeners know how likable Alex is.
The only person on the planet I know who doesn't like Alex is our first writer because
Alex would sit there and just, you know, cross out half the words he put in the newsletter
and be like, look, Lindsay Quinn wrote this same story better than you did, like, be better.
And I mean, we were, we were, you know, we lost our minds to the game.
We were crazy about this newsletter thing.
And for the record, I didn't do that.
And that's a regret.
Like, now that I'm older and understand how company building works,
like, I would, like, if you told me you were doing that,
I'd be like, you guys are insane.
Just have fun.
Do it feels good.
But that does not, like, once you get past, I don't know,
$5 million in revenue or something like that,
you could, and that means you probably have some type of product market fit.
You could absolutely iterate your way to being like wonderful, you know,
starting like you're at a B or a C plus,
you can get yourself an A plus through iteration.
And honestly,
I think a lot of me being maniacal with the content
came from like what Austin had taught me along the way
around standard setting.
And basically the standard of your business is what you allow.
And so like if you allow suboptimal content to be written,
that is the new standard you set.
Like basically you're implicit by saying,
not saying anything to something,
you're implicitly saying that that is okay.
And to me,
that was my biggest fear is if I said okay to things that were not exceptional content,
that was the new standard of our business. How old were you guys during this era in 2018?
I was 22, 23, right? Yeah. And yeah, I mean, I'm what, a year and a half older than you?
Yes, you were 24. Dude, you guys were like I, I'm like what you guys are in when you were
22. Today I am now a 22 year old Austin and 22 year old Alex. Like, I totally buy in
to everything you're saying back then, I completely would have laughed at you.
And your way is 100% the right way.
Like being, it's crazy how mature you guys were at such a young age.
Yeah.
When we sat down at first to set our core values to, and at the time, I thought core values
were fluffy.
Now in hindsight, I actually regret that we didn't, you know, write those in stone and
keep those.
We messed around with them a bunch.
But two core values were really important was one, have an ownership mentality.
act like you're an owner.
And if you own something,
you're going to every day critique it.
You're going to give it feedback.
You're going to care a ton.
You're going to drive every single day to that.
And the second is underdog mentality.
We came into work every day,
a group of misfits,
a group of people who had no idea
what they were doing in the media industry.
And we just act like an underdog.
It's March bad at this right now.
And you just see the way these underdogs
show up to games.
They're loose, right?
They don't have this weight on their shoulders.
And every day we came into work.
And we were like,
screw it.
We are going to kick the shit out of all these legacy media companies who raised these.
Let's see, $100 million of funding.
Alex and I would sit down.
It's like, what could you possibly do with $100 million of funding?
And what they did is they burned it on fire and flushed it down the toilet and added no value to their companies.
Yeah.
I also just think it's like at the time, Austin and I, like we just had such a fire.
And I think for Austin, similar to you, Sam, like, Austin kind of creates.
like an opponent in his head.
And that is enough to basically just create this like insatiable drive to win.
I think for me, I actually have less of that.
But the thing that compensated at the time was like the two things.
It was like my dad dying and feeling like I needed to provide for my family.
And I told you this last time when we saw each other in person, Sam, like me being bullied from fifth grade to 12th grade and feeling like I just wanted to prove that I was like worthy.
That was more than enough where I think even when.
the brew is small.
Austin and I had this like deep in our bones feeling that we were going to Sateeb.
Like the business would ultimately sell and it was just a matter of time.
That's what I have always admired about you guys was you have this really cool combination of optimism and pessimism where Austin is like afraid all the time.
Yeah, like is logical enough to be like I'm going to do this, this, this, and then like the likely outcomes are A, B, and C.
I did not feel that way.
I was a scarcity mindset.
And so in 2018, you guys did 3.1 million in revenue.
You had 10 employees.
And how many subscribers did you have?
So 2018, we went from 100,000 to a million subscribers.
So in 2018, I think we ended the year at 500,000 subscribers.
We had 5.1 million in revenue.
About a million was from events.
And I paid my, we had 160 grand in profit.
And that was the first year that we,
we spent on advertising.
I went and looked back.
So we got to like 200,000 organically,
and then we spent money on ads,
and I spent a million that year.
Did you guys spend money on ads that year
to get to a million subscribers?
We spent every penny we possibly could.
I would track daily cash flow
to make sure that we had enough money,
and we put, I mean, 2018 was the year for us.
That was the year that, I mean,
there were days in 2018.
We were growing 20,000.
You know this.
We would do these MacBook giveaways.
we would grow 25,000, 25,000 subscribers in a day.
So yes, we spent every dollar we could possibly find.
And my only regret is we couldn't figure out a way to find more money to put more money into Facebook ads.
If I remember, by the end of that year, we were spending like 500K a month on ads, right?
Yeah, at least.
Yeah.
That's crazy.
I was being, I had such a poor mindset where I didn't look at it.
You guys, because you had this finance background and also I think you are,
or just more like this naturally anyway.
You had this mentality of like, well, I will spend $1 to make.
Like if $1 turns into $1.1, I will spend every $1 I have.
For me, it was like $80,000 a month.
That's astronomical.
It doesn't matter what the return is.
Like, you know what I mean?
Like, that was a failure.
That's an immature mindset.
I also feel like part of it was like Austin and I were younger than you.
We also like, you know, at the time we were only making 60K or I
think we had opt-our salary that year to 120K. And I don't like, I think part of maybe your
mentality for the hustle was like, this is kind of just like a cash flowing lifestyle business
for me that I'm going to just like I can continue to pull money out of the business as like
the vast majority owner of it. I feel like Austin and I at the time weren't thinking about
monetizing it for ourselves in the same way. Yeah. And Sam, I knew you thought that, right?
Because, you know, a deal in rippling, that whole thing just happened. And we certainly didn't
have someone in your slap. But we would talk to all your former employees. We would get every
bit of information we possibly could. And I knew that you had a profit threshold. You're like,
I want to profit this every month. And I said, well, that means Sam's taking his foot off the gas.
And so Sam's taking us off the gas. I'm going to do the opposite. Which is funny, we did,
I didn't make a lot of profit. I didn't actually make a lot of profit. Like we grew revenue like 50%
most every year. But like I did not. So I, yeah. And I think that you were talking about values.
I wish I would have, so, you know, I think, I think you guys matured earlier than I did. I was still
really immature. And I didn't codify my values and I didn't codify the culture. I started the
company when I was 24, 25. And I, I think I evolved to where I am today when I was like 31.
You guys were kind of like 31 year old Sam when you were 21. But had I done it over again,
and if you're listening, I would codify your values early on and stick to it. Also, what a lot
of people do is they buy ads. Because so back then, this was only, you know, a handful
years ago. Back then, it felt like buying ads was more, like there weren't that many experts now
to buy ads. It's like commonplace. Like you, it's way more common. And so, uh, uh, people buy ads
way earlier for their products now. And I actually think that's a huge mistake. Totally. Yeah,
I totally agree. I mean, that's the part of the story that, uh, we didn't talk about is like,
we didn't do paid acquisition until 2017, really. So 2015 and 2016 to get to 100,000
subscribers. It was entirely organic growth. So by the time we actually were paying for
subscribers, like, we knew we had a great product. We knew how long subscribers were staying. We also
knew how to like work within scarcity of not having money, but finding ways to grow regardless.
And I think that muscle, if you skip over it, is a really bad thing. Okay. And another thing that I
learned that, well, I learned, so I'll say it in 2019. So we're in 2019. You guys did $3.1 million
in revenue with $3 million in profit. 13.1.
Sorry, 13.1 million in revenue, 3 million in profit, a salary each of 250, a team of 25.
We did about 8 million in revenue, which with 640 being from events.
We did profit of 200,000, but we did cash flow of 1.6 million.
And we had, and I'll explain why.
So at that point, I sort of switched the business to caring about cash flow.
And I had subs of about 1.2 million.
And that year, we launched this podcast.
Sean, under the hustle name, launched my first million.
This year in 2019, the thing I learned was that you know how like a lot of social media companies
are like, who cares about revenue, who cares about profit, just grow your users.
This was the year that I learned that to be true.
That if you know that you make a certain amount of revenue per advertising, via advertising
or subscription per user, that's the only thing that matters.
It's just getting more users.
And I wish I would have understood that a little bit earlier.
Yeah, I think what we learned this year was we started to see.
see the plateau of not just newsletter growth, but of the economics of newsletters.
Morning Brew got to a point where we started to ask ourselves, how much could you make
on a single newsletter?
I think it was $18 for us per subscriber, right?
50 cents a month for advertising maybe?
That sounds right.
I don't know exactly.
Or 75 cents?
Something like that.
I think that makes sense.
But what we learned was at some point, and the answer ends up being far, far down the road.
But we start to ask ourselves, do we just want to be a single newsletter?
Or are we going to get to a place of diminishing returns from pumping more and more money?
And we were spending this year, we probably spent $6 to $7 million on paid acquisition.
So we spent what you did in, just pumping growth back in.
And we started to ask ourselves, does this make sense?
And that's where we learned about industry dives.
And we started to really take the approach of,
wait, our audience works in retail.
They work in marketing.
They work in as CFOs or in finance.
What if we took that path?
The CPMs are higher.
You don't need to grow as fast.
It's not a race to the bottom.
It's more of an engagement play.
And so that's when we went into our industry verticals.
Yeah.
And what I would say is also that year.
I actually think of all the years in the business.
2019 was the most important year.
Because that was the year when Austin and I,
I can't remember what month.
it was. But basically, I would say Austin and I really never got in big arguments or fights in the
history of the business. But in that year was the year that I could tell Austin was, or a single
day, Austin was most upset with me. Because basically what I remember is Austin and I were still
working in the business. Like, we were in the frickin mud. And all we could think about was like making
sure the newsletter went out tomorrow, making sure we were getting an ad deal for Friday.
Like we could not see a month or a quarter ahead of us.
That's a really stressful time.
Yeah.
And I remember one day we're in WeWork, I got a message from Austin on Slack saying,
hey, one of our investors who is this guy, Scott, who created this snuggy, and he has a bunch of other products,
he told Austin, because Austin had asked him about, like, what are things, what are resources you have
to, like, operationalize your business and run your business?
And he goes, I use this book traction.
And you're going to read it and you're going to adopt it in your business.
Austin read it and he gets back to me.
You messaged me in Slack.
And it's like, dude, you need to read this book yesterday.
And this is what we're going to do.
And I remember a day goes by and a few days went by.
And I didn't read the book.
And Austin messages me and says, did you read the book?
And I said, no.
And he says, it's something along the lines of.
I don't understand why you're not doing the thing that is the most
important thing in our business right now.
And I can tell for the first time that, like, he was actually pissed at me.
So I went that day and I read the entire book.
I did not work.
I went to the highest floor of our we work and just read the book.
And I think a few things happened.
One is traction was a game changer for our business.
I also think that really became the inflection point where Austin really took over as
CEO of the business in kind of, not in title, but in action.
and like I think it was a transformational year for the company.
I read that book around the same era and it had the exact same impact on me.
And in fact, on Tuesday, it's Wednesday, yesterday I hired an EOS implementer and I met with
him yesterday to implement it into Hampton.
And so for those listening, EOS, it's called Entrepreneurs Operating System.
It's a framework to run your company.
It's based off a book called Traction.
That's so funny.
that we all came across us at the same time.
Yeah, I'd love for you to do a full episode of my first million.
I think everyone was where you kind of do a post-mortem
and talk about how you implemented it,
reveal as much as you could,
because we didn't hire an implementer.
I thought it was a waste of time and money.
It's totally worth it.
And that's my biggest regret is not hiring an implementer
because I didn't want to be the bad guy.
I didn't want to be the bully.
You basically spend that you could say, I don't know,
probably thousands of dollars.
$60,000 is usually like the guy I talked to,
it's $60 grand a year.
Wow.
Which by the way,
which, by the way, is why it's an unbelievable business.
It's basically like a digital franchising business.
It's such a cool business.
Yeah, but it's worth it.
It's basically, it's 60 grand a year.
It's basically an executive coach slash organizer,
but it's so funny that it happens.
If you're running a company,
once you get to like the $5 to $10 million mark,
that's where it's like, all right,
what we're doing is mostly working at least good.
Let's do more of it.
And how do I do more of it without killing myself
and creating redundancies and building a company
and transition from going from a business to a company.
And that is where that book helped me.
100%.
Yeah, I kind of thought about it at the time as like,
first chapter of Morning Brew was newsletter as a hobby.
Second chapter of Morning Brew was newsletter as a business.
And third chapter was like newsletter business,
meaning multiple newsletters.
And there was no way we were going to be able to do more than one newsletter
unless we figured our shit out because we were two in the weeds.
How many subscribers did you guys have at the end of 19?
I'd say probably about.
two, right? We probably went from one to two, maybe from one to one point eight. But again, that year was
defined as us maturing as a business. So Sam, at the hustle, where were you in terms of maturation?
You were doing more than we did. You had events and you had an ad business and you launched
my first million. Like, how was the business actually being running? Oh, and I have to say,
we launched trends that year. And so trends was basically a $300 a year subscription where like I had this
woman named Julie and Steph Smith, write a weekly email, and then we had a Facebook group where
you could talk about, like, interesting companies. That's why we started measuring cash flow,
because I learned the importance of building $300 up front versus monthly. So at that point in the
company, I just had so many, like, demons that I was still just getting out of. And, like,
when I learned about running a company at that era was that the issues that you have as a person
transcend into, like, the company. And I didn't have, like, you guys had each other,
each other as like right hand man and i didn't have that like at the company where i could like confess
to someone all the things i'm nervous about and so i ran the company using eos and i had brad adam
ryan so brad did content adam did sales i think i had scott nixon who did growth and i think we had
one person who did events so i couldn't remember and then i had step smith who did trends so i had five
people who reported to me and i was kind of beginning to get a little checked out because i was so exhausted
at this stage. You know, exhaustion kicks in around year four or five, and I was starting to get
dead from running the company, and I just did not care anymore. Like, Sean came to me wanting to launch
MFM, and I was like, that's stupid. Like, I hated everything. And I was like, this is stupid, but if you
really want to do it, you know, we'll be the publisher, so we own it, but show me an episode. And he sent
me the episode, and I was like, fine, we'll do it. And like, but there was no, and I published it the next week.
There was no planning.
There was nothing.
And I really was immature for not doing planning, not having longer term thinking and for
exhausting myself out.
Yeah.
One thing I'll say is I think in that year that you kind of felt like mentally toast and like
a little lost, like that was the year that I felt the same way, I think for different reasons.
The other thing that's, I think just an interesting observation is like you mentioned like
Austin and I had each other as right hand people as we're going through the business.
And I think that's true to some degree.
but I also think Austin and my relationship has evolved a lot over the years because I think we started the business so young that the way like when I co-founded a company now and the kind of the level of direct communication and feedback to each other that I have with like even for StoryR, with my CEO, it looks very different than the way that Austin and I would give feedback to each other in the brew. And it's not because like it's not for any other reason.
other than we didn't have the maturity to speak with, like, radical candor and speak openly.
I think we were, like, afraid about critiquing each other, giving feedback.
And so I actually think, at least for me, a lot of my growth honestly came through, like,
things like therapy or, like, dealing with it on my own.
It's funny.
I think Austin and I as co-founders today will look so different than us as co-founders, you know,
in 2016 through 2019.
I will say, for me, I think my big maturer, like, I matured a lot during the sale
process. We dealt with so much and so many different stakeholders. And look, Alex and I are really
lucky. Like we grew up with nice families and we started this business. And basically from day one,
everything took off. Like we had no hardship. And the hardest part of running the business
professionally, the hard part running the business was when we had the sale process and we had some
investors who were pissed at us for selling too early, the same investors who six months early
were begging us to sell. We had employees who felt as if they didn't own enough of the company.
And what you learn is when you sell a company, there's a huge lump sum of money that's in a
paper. And when everyone sees that lump sum, everyone starts thinking like, oh, how can I get mine?
How can I get my money? Sure, I only own 0.25% of this company. But actually, I kind of view
myself as a co-founder. I kind of view myself as more than worth 0.5% of this company. And I think I
took that very personally. It was very hard for me. And at the time, I was a bull in a China shop.
And I remember taking these calls and my now wife was in the other room. And I'm on the calls
of these people. And my wife goes, Austin, you're an asshole. And I'm like, what do you mean?
She goes, you're a total asshole.
And I'm like, but I'm right.
And she goes, you're totally right.
But you can be right and not be an asshole.
And I was like, oh, I didn't know that's possible.
I didn't know.
You could feel like, that was that thing.
So I was the total asshole up until then.
And I think I've matured a little bit since then.
Well, you're still a bull in a China shop,
but in a great way that you know, what I was telling you earlier was I would never
want to have an argument with you.
I don't want to fight with you because you will win a lot of times because you're so smart
and you're just like intense.
And so let's go to the year 2020.
The year 2020 is the years we both sold.
I think my deal technically closed in February of 21.
But that year, you guys remember the first half of the year.
So the first Q1 of 2020 COVID hit.
I'm sure, well, actually, let's recap.
So 2020, you did 20 million in revenue, six million in profit.
We did 12 million in revenue.
and I forgot how much profit we did,
but we had about $3 million in cash,
and we had $1.5 million subs.
I think you had three.
And the beginning of that quarter, Q1,
we were probably in the same spot.
I thought we were going out of business.
COVID hit.
We thought, I thought it was over.
Did you think that?
Yeah.
I mean, it's very interesting.
Like, I can remember with these big moments,
like exactly where I was pacing in a room talking to Austin.
Like, I literally remember pacing back and forth
in my now in-law's main room talking to Austin.
We were talking about one of our biggest sponsors,
who is a financial services company that,
I can't remember the exact number,
but let's just say it was like,
they had a $75,000 sponsorship coming the next day,
and the day before, as COVID was starting, they canceled it.
So, right, $75,000 gone in one conversation.
And then basically the floodgates opened.
And I can't remember the exact amount,
but let's just call it like,
in a period of a few weeks, 30% of all revenue that we had booked vanished.
And I remember Austin and I going back and forth being like,
how the hell are we going to make enough money to just not fire people?
I remember the first lever we pulled is we basically turned paid acquisition,
paid marketing down to zero.
But him and I literally, like, we brainstormed everything from starting a Patreon
and asking people to donate all the way to our education business.
Like we ended up launching an education business at the brew, which we've since shuttered.
But the reason that started was to bring in short-term cash.
And that first education thing was a partnership with Scott Galloway when he was starting section for his section four.
We did the same thing.
We did like a course and it made $300,000 in one month and it helped save us.
And that was the year that I learned what the word force major meant.
And it was crazy.
I thought we were going on to business.
and I remember you guys had just signed like an $80,000 a month, like office lease.
And I was like, yeah.
I hope this breaks them down.
I hope this is their downfall.
And I remember during this era, I remember I got a one of our advertisers who we shared.
Because when we got going, something we didn't say earlier, advertising in newsletters
wasn't really much of a thing.
We had to convince early adopters to give it a shot.
And so we had a lot of this, we had shared.
advertisers and I would beg them like show me their click through rate versus our click through
rate and what I learned was like it was basically like the same for a lot like it wasn't like significantly
different but the first half of that year I thought we were going to go out of business the second
half everything fucking boomed yeah it was crazy that was it was crazy like the business was booming
like our trends thing was selling like crazy people were spending like crazy it was a boom and we ended up
getting, like I remember we got, what was that call where the government gave you money?
Like P, something.
Yeah.
Yeah, we like got some of that money because our events business got shut down entirely.
And I was like, I don't know how I'm going to make payroll.
And then it turned out, I'm like, damn, I kind of feel bad because we killed it.
We killed it that year.
Like, it felt great.
I remember the emotional journey of the acquisition was crazy for Austin and I, because our,
I don't know how long your sale process was, but our.
90 days. It was, it was L-O-I, L-O-I to closing was 90 days, but then there was like 30 or 60 days of flirting.
Yeah, so ours looked completely different. Our process, like end-to-end was 11 months.
So the first conversation with the person at, on the Axel Springer side of things, was November of 2019.
And I remember we first got deal terms. I can't remember when it was.
was, but let's just call it like January or February. March. From Axel, or from who?
Yeah, from Axel. Yeah. And I remember what happened was in March, world shuts down. There's a
period of three weeks where Austin and I are like, forget a deal. We don't even know if we're
going to have a business. And then after those three weeks, starting in April, everything ripped.
And we went from Austin and I being like, like, not that we don't even think we're going to have a deal.
we don't even know we're going to have a company after this too.
We're way underpriced.
We're doing so well.
Are we even being paid appropriately for how much the business is ripping now?
And that roller coaster in those three or four months was insane.
So we both sold that year.
The sales process, that was the most intense part of my life.
It was horrible.
Like it was so miserable.
I was so bummed for like almost every day for three months.
This woman who works with me, her name's Edie.
She still works at HubSpot, I believe.
I hired her earlier that year, or maybe a few months before COVID hit.
And she was probably 63 or 65.
She basically had birthed her daughter a little bit later in life in her 40s and was like,
now that my daughter is 20, I'm going to go back to work to prove to her that young women can kick ass.
And I was like, hell yeah, you're the best.
I would love to hire you.
And so she was like our HR person and our accountant person.
And she was great.
But then I learned during the deal process, like we would be on a meeting with like me, HubSpot, which had like six people, KPMG accountants, six people, and then six lawyers.
So it's like, that would have been like like a like a $20,000 meeting.
And I hear Eadie and I kind of see her bring her iPhone up and take a picture.
And I was like, Edie, what the hell are you doing?
And she was like, I don't know how to take a screenshot on my computer.
and they're talking about Dropbox,
and I don't know how to use Dropbox.
So I'm trying to like take pictures.
I'm like, Edy, I got a teacher how to use Dropbox, man.
So she's like brilliant.
She like nailed it and she was so good at her job,
but she didn't know some of the technical stuff like using Dropbox.
So I had to teach her during this process.
And I'm like, I can't tell them that.
Like, this is how scrappy we are.
Wait, did you use a banker?
Dude, I hired a banker.
So the first time I tried to sell,
I hired a banker and we ended up getting an offer from Vice.
and it was an all-stock offer, thank God, I didn't take that.
And I did that.
You'd be working at McDonald's.
Oh, my God.
Like, I went to tour the office and, like, no one was there.
And I was like, where is everyone?
And they were all in sexual harassment training because, like, incidents there were, like, so common.
I'm like, you guys suck.
And so I hired a banker for that, and I hated it.
And then I always thought that HubSpot or a company like that should buy us.
And they reached out to me.
And I was like, I don't need a banker.
I'm going to negotiate this.
When I started the company,
my goal was to make $20 million by the age of 30.
I was like, as long as I make that, I don't care.
And the deal allowed that to happen.
And so I didn't hire a banker.
And I actually talked to Kip, the CMO of HubSpot,
and he told me that he tried buying you guys.
And he was like, I wanted to buy both y'all
and own the business newsletter space.
And he's like, but they were too far along.
And you guys hadn't talked to anyone.
So I knew we were going to be able to buy you, but not them.
Yeah.
So I don't know if Kip is totally.
Totally being truthful there.
I think Kip wanted to buy us.
I got the impression at the time
that they were going to make a $120 million bet
on email newsletters.
They were really interested.
But because we did a better job of monetizing each subscriber,
you know, we were more expensive.
And the Hustle didn't care or HubSpot didn't care about that extra revenue.
Like, you know, okay, it's or profit, right?
What's $10 million a profit to the HubSpot?
they cared about our users, right?
The classic and vertical integration.
And I think that you, you know, you said you always thought you were going to sell the HubSpot.
I always thought we were going to sell to Fidelity or E-Trade or Robin Hood.
I thought it made so much sense as an acquisition play and as a retention play.
And, you know, we, we pitched, Alex and I were talking about this last night.
Sam, I don't think I've ever told you this story.
I definitely haven't told it on the podcast.
But we pitched SOFI.
And the CEO of SoFi at the time was formerly the CEO or CEO of Twitter, I think Anthony Nodo.
And he really liked us, or at least liked the business.
And we went, we pitched a group of executives at SoFi.
And it's over Zoom.
This is during COVID.
And I'm like, Alex, this is our pitch.
Like, this is our moment.
We're going to sell for hundreds of millions.
We're going to get all the stock in SoFi.
It was going crazy.
And we pitched them for 15 minutes.
And the woman, I'm not kidding, deadpans, looks at Alex and.
goes, I don't get it.
And I'm like, which part?
And she's like, why would we buy you guys?
I don't get the whole thing.
And I was like, well, you know, content of commerce, we have an audience.
And the other guy, like the head of business development, flips the background of his
screen and he shows SoFi Stadium, right?
He shows that their big stadium.
And he goes, 300 million eyeballs a year.
I'm like, what?
He goes, that's how many people see this stadium.
You think we want three million emails?
What are we going to do with three million emails?
And that was the entire call.
What a douche.
Your wife should have talked to them.
That's insane to me.
But I think, Austin, I feel like you made a good point about, like, just the lesson
and incentives there.
Yeah.
I mean, at the end of the day, we were telling the marketing team of a company,
we can market your product better than you.
than you can. You know, what CMO, what head of marketing is going to buy a company,
unless they have a ton of humility, if they believe that our pitch is weak into your job
better than you can. And I think this issue is pretty fearful. And so that's why that's why
that deal didn't go through. So, you know, and we couldn't even get in touch with the fidelity of the
world that each trades the world. They didn't, like that wasn't a conversation. So that's
when we went to more media buyers like Axel Springer, who already had made the offer and a few
others. And look, we shopped. I know about you. I'm curious how many conversations you had.
we shopped it to everyone and we got no
I shopped it to all traditional media
companies no one was interested
Hearst herse
hers wasn't interested
like New York Times
wasn't it no media people were interested
and frankly I hate the media industry
so I was kind of happy
yeah and that's part of the reason we sold is we were
we were I mean a couple hours before
we signed we were unsure I was talking
to all these people getting all this advice
but we came back to we own
the vast majority of the company and we didn't
get a single offer in right
from another company.
And that was just terrifying to us.
We said, what if Axel Springer goes away
and we're never going to be able to sell this company?
Of course, in hindsight, that's not true.
But at the time, you're so scared.
It was a, you know, we made a decision.
I think it was the right decision in hindsight,
but we did it partly because we were scared.
Can I, all right, I want to rattle off the,
so my story ends there in 2020.
We sold.
You guys sold half the company
and then later sold the rest.
I'm going to rattle off the future numbers,
But then I want to talk about, like, future stuff, like what people listening can learn.
So 21, you did 46 million in revenue and 10 million in profit.
22, 70 million in revenue, 10 million in profit.
23 was the same numbers.
And so I imagine the business now is in the 70, 80, 90 million range, something like that,
but you guys aren't owners anymore.
What do you think people doing?
Now newsletters are really popular.
So I remember when substack started, I thought it was the dumbest idea ever.
I chose not to invest in Beehive.
I thought that was a silly idea.
I was wrong about both of those things.
What do you think that the people starting now are getting wrong?
And where's the opportunity, in your opinion, in this space?
I think the number one thing that people get wrong is they view this arbitrage that we had in 2017.
And they think it exists today.
They think the same economics exist today because they read a blog.
post that Tyler Dank wrote in 2018.
The value of a subscriber is significantly less than it was when we started because there are so
many newsletters out there.
And people forget that the most important thing, it goes back to what did we do in 2018?
We printed the newsletter out every day and we were not maniacal over the content.
Every person out there I see now on Beehive, 99% like, oh, here's an untapped market.
Let me write like C plus or B minus content.
and let me use all these growth hacks,
and I'm going to get to a million subscribers,
and I'm going to sell all these ads,
and then they get to half a million or a million subscribers
that they can,
and their ads don't sell for $50,000,
they sell for $3,000.
And the economics don't work
because there's not enough engagement
because the content's not good enough.
And so just people aren't focusing on the content.
It's all about the content.
That'd be like selling a SaaS product,
and the code not being very,
or the product is not working that well.
Like you have to focus on the content first,
everything else follows.
Yeah, I would just add on,
and Austin and I have obviously talked about this at length,
but the more niche, the better.
Like the internet is just this long tail of millions of niches.
And the more niche you go,
especially if you pick the right niches,
not only can you get higher CPMs,
and I would argue that like in this advertising pullback
that has happened for like the brew
or just media companies in general,
B2B has been less impacted.
But the other part about it is, you know,
the trouble we had at Morning Brew, which I think you had less of at the hustle, is we didn't know
we could not figure out how to monetize our audience directly. We tried everything. We tried
selling merch to them. We tried the education product. We couldn't figure out a good solution.
For your audience, like I think Hossil Trends was a really smart product for your audience.
The more niche you go, I think the more clear it becomes how you can directly monetize your
audience. I think a big thing to learn for people starting now is my strategy was partially right,
partially wrong. The strategy that I had, I hated advertising. I remember, do you guys remember
how like the sales guys always wear jeans and a plaid shirt in these bright brown shoes?
I remember I bought a pair of those brown shoes and I wore them to one meeting in New York and I took
them off at the end of the meeting and I threw them away and I like went home in my socks. I was like,
I'm never wearing these fucking brown shoes that tech salespeople wear ever again.
I will never wear these brown shoes.
I just like distinctly remember that because I hated it.
And so I was like, I want to create products to sell to my audience.
And what a lot of people get wrong about that is they go outside.
So like, you know, I think Adam and Becca at workweek wanted to sell like software products or something like that.
and that strategy that they and many other people,
I don't even know if they did do it,
but whoever wants to try and do that,
it will almost always fail
because in order to make a business like this work
where you sell stuff to your audience,
you almost always have to be,
it has to be within your core competency of content.
And if the founder is not like what Mark Zuckerberg
was to Facebook of being like a tech wizard,
You need to be that about content.
Otherwise, it's not always, but almost always.
Otherwise, the business sucks.
And so I think that for the people listening, if you are going to build something,
go super hard on content, make money via advertising, which is the right thing to do.
And then if you do make money in other ways, you will almost always want to make money
in ways that fit within like the Iki guy of like your company's core competency
and what the world wants is some type of content-y media thing.
Yeah, we see it all the time where people start a media company.
They try to sell a product.
And it's really hard because you're pivoting from a content company to a product company or software company.
It's really, really tough.
It's like BuzzFeed like doing, haven't they tried like making ovens or something like that?
Yeah, with Tasty, they have like their entire cookware brand.
Yeah, I think at the end of the day, it's like basically you just are adding so much complexity to your business,
especially the more you get out of your core
because it's like a media company and content
like content is the product.
A media company is a business.
Then what you're basically saying
is you want to create an entirely different business.
And now what you need to figure out is
the entirely different business
is the product exceptional.
Do you have someone who understands it deeply
who can run it?
Then the media side,
can you keep that going in the right way?
And then also is there an intersection
where your audience not only trust you
but trust the thing that you're now selling them
that's a different product.
Like, there are so many more moving pieces.
What else for different opportunity?
You guys had on here that you being based in New York helped.
I agree with that.
It helped you guys a lot.
I think being like, if you are an AI company, being in San Francisco is beneficial.
If you are a media or content company, being in New York is beneficial.
I think that was huge for us.
I think if you want to build a big brand in media, you have to be where the ad agencies are.
And I mean, Alex was just grinding, going to ad agencies, meeting with people, talking to people.
If he lived in Austin, those people weren't there.
He was never going to be able to meet with them in person.
Yeah.
It's like your way, you're not in it to win it if you are not in New York.
Yeah.
One other thing I would say is like, I think actually, Sam, you and I feel differently about newsletters now.
Like I know kind of your perspective is like newsletters are so much harder you wouldn't necessarily do it today.
my general view is like, I feel like we're like past early of every media channel on planet
Earth.
Like I don't think anything is early anymore.
Like podcasts have been saturated.
YouTube's been saturated.
Newsletters have been saturated.
Like everything is harder in my mind.
So I think like the game overall has become harder.
That said, I still think there are going to always be opportunities, especially in a niche
that you know a lot about to succeed.
So like, I would say I'm, I am still bullish on newsletter.
as a way of owning your audience,
I just think the level you have to play the game
is higher than where we had to play the game.
One other, just random thought,
is I used to always hate the news business.
Like, I thought the news business was such a bad business to be in
because you need so many people to crank out content.
The economics are horrible.
I would actually argue with kind of where we are in society now
and, you know, like general distrust of news broadly,
of traditional news relay, I think there's a ton of opportunity to actually disrupt news as an
upstart. And I think we've seen that with like Barry Weiss in the free press. And I think we'll see
more of that over the next few years. So here's one in one of my takes on is for like where
interesting opportunities are. I would bet my life, I bet my life you guys agree with me.
Quarterly or monthly hardcover magazines or some type of physical newsletter.
Yeah. I love that.
I almost made, so we did money-wise a podcast about, it's like a personal finance podcast for
high net worth people. I almost made that. I was going to make it a $500,000 a year, shows up
quarterly in a manila envelope, stapled printer paper, but really well-written articles to
keep it like, like, to feel like a mom and pop type of like underground zine. That's what I thought
about doing. And I still think someone could pull that off.
Have you seen Arena Magazine?
Is that the thing you love?
Yeah, so I think it's really cool.
It's this guy, Max Mayer.
I believe he worked at 8VC with Joe Longsdale.
And he started this magazine.
It's quarterly now.
I can't tell you if it's going to be a big business,
but they tell the coolest stories, and it's beautiful.
Like this thing is done, you know,
like a magazine from 20 or 30 years ago
where you're selling super high gloss page
and the graphics are amazing and then you're probably charging a $7,000 CPM to some beauty
brand. It's amazing. And Stripe is making these really cool ads and ramp. It's awesome.
Everyone should check out Arena Meg. What I would do is, so you said beautiful. I would make it
the opposite of beautiful. I would pick an industry that has a lot of employees, whether it's like
the financial advisory industry or the advertising world industry, something where there's like a
hundred or a few hundred thousand people, but you are only one or two degrees separated from each
person. And the whole name of the game would be name as many names as possible and as many
companies as possible in it. And so you would want to like buy it for all of your staff and you
would have like rankings like the top this person, this quarter. And it would because it was
almost like the difference. Do you remember when Oscars started advertising in the subway versus on
like a computer? For some reason, when you see Casper out in the open versus on Facebook, you think,
oh wow this is like way more legit and exciting i would do that right now for an industry and i would
name as many names as possible so they would just be paying money an annual fee per year just to
have their name on paper yeah like that the par 30 under 30 something like that but for like
financial advisors or something but i hate financial advisors so it would be like like you all suck
but here's the least sucky ones uh any other interesting opportunities that you want to bring
I think that's, I mean, the media space, I think that's it for like the newsletter stuff.
I still think the big opportunity in the media space.
If someone's take a big swing, someone wants to go build a billion dollar company,
it's to do what we're talking about into or what the hustle did, right, use content to build
something like a trend, but do it to the extreme.
So I think the best example right now, look at what overtime's doing.
Dan Porter who's been on the show is amazing, right?
And for the first three years of this business, I didn't get it at all.
I said, over time.
I thought it was so stupid.
So dumb.
I was like, this guy's an idiot.
He left all these awesome jobs.
He could do anything.
And he built another company off a ton of funding.
And all he did was just put sports on social.
And next thing you know, he's doing basketball tournaments.
I'm like, that's like kind of cute.
And then he's running a league that's trying to compete with college basketball.
And I'm like, holy shit.
shit. This guy is on a different level.
He's trying to compete with the NCAA and the NBA.
That's a big swing.
Like, you know, if in a couple of years I build another big company, I would think like that,
right?
Whether it's, you know, basketball like that, or Padell, I think is really interesting,
or there's people now thinking about doing tennis.
There are so many interesting niches where you can go take a massive swing and try to
compete with, you know, the biggest organizations in the world.
Yeah.
I have a few on that on top of that.
The first is a media company focused on alternatives.
What's an alternative?
Alternative to what?
Like alternative investments.
So like real estate, private equity, venture, et cetera.
Like my whole thing is alternative investments are becoming a bigger part of people's portfolios,
but they're more opaque.
They're harder to understand.
But they're also really interesting ways to monetize people who are investing in alternatives.
I think basically a company that becomes like the go-to source for,
figuring out the complexity of investing in alternative assets is going to make a killing.
I think that's the first.
The second is basically for a long time, Austin and I talked about how an amazing way to monetize
our audience if we could figure it out would be like our version of Motley Fool.
And the reason we never did it is like Motley Fool's built an incredible business.
But don't feel good.
Yeah, but our thing was like,
Like, the marketing just does not feel good to us.
And so I think if someone can figure out how to support retail investors in a way that
makes them smarter about not losing their money in the markets and media is just like,
you know, the funnel to it, even like when we were at that newsletter conference two weeks
ago, right?
And James Altutcher was talking about what he makes on his premium thing.
He said he made a hundred, he did, he said it on stage.
He said, $120 million a year in revenue.
Yeah.
And so I think that is still a massive opportunity as well.
This is awesome, guys.
Thanks for doing this.
How do you feel?
Feel good.
That was like therapy for me.
That was the most therapy I've done in my life, I think.
But for the record, you know, I never hated you guys.
I hated the story that I made up of you.
And for the listener, over the past like three or four years,
Austin and I have become very, very close where our families are hanging out on Saturday.
Alex, you and our, we did a family hang two weeks ago.
I have nothing but love for you guys.
I consider you guys family and you're some of my closest friends.
And so it's been fun to get soft instead of like, you know, wanting to compete.
Because now that I know more about you guys over the past like 10 years, I don't want to ever compete against you ever again.
You guys are very formidable and not people I want to go against.
It was horrible.
Nothing but love from our side.
quite the 180 from 2018.
It was all the story, which by the way, I think if you're listening to this and you have a company,
having that story was so helpful.
Yeah.
Like having an enemy was so helpful, even if it's made up.
It's funny you say that.
I will use this time to plug my new newsletter that's launching.
And one of my first newsletters that I've written is about enemies.
And I think having an enemy, whether it's real or fake, right?
for us, it was the skin and the hustle. I think it's really, really important. You know,
Beehive has convert kit. And I think it just motivates everyone just a little bit more.
And I know Nathan, and he's the sweetest guy ever. I've gotten to know Tyler a little bit,
and he seemed like a wonderful guy. And I'm like, I'm not going to stop you guys from fighting
because I think a fight's good. And also, I know that you're both wonderful people and you would
love each other in a different world or when this is all done. But you have like, you have to have
that so I'm on board.
Just six,
six years from now,
one of them is going to have a podcast,
my first email,
and they're going to both be on it,
and it's going to be all hugs.
What's your thing,
Austin?
Where do they get it?
You can just find it my Twitter DMs.
Or sorry, my Twitter bio.
Well, I appreciate y'all,
and thanks for doing this.
If you Google your name, Austin,
by the way,
it's that stupid photo of you guys
on the white wall that you've been using
for like 15 years,
and it's your last episode
of My First Million.
So it's funny how we evolve.
come to work together. All right. We appreciate y'all. That's it. That's the pod. Thanks.
