TBPN - Alex Hormozi's Playbook for Building Billion-Dollar Businesses

Episode Date: July 7, 2026

This is our full conversation with Alex Hormozi.We discuss his philosophy on choosing the right business, the biggest mistakes entrepreneurs make with AI, why volume beats perfection in media..., how he built one of the largest business education brands in the world, what founders get wrong about personal branding, why opportunity selection matters more than most people realize, and how Acquisition.com is evolving from a family office into a brand-powered investment platform.TBPN is made possible by:Ramp - https://ramp.comPublic - https://public.comCisco - https://www.cisco.comConsole - https://www.console.comCrowdStrike - https://www.crowdstrike.comFigma - https://www.figma.comMongoDB - https://www.mongodb.comNYSE - https://www.nyse.comRailway - https://railway.comShopify - https://www.shopify.com/Codex - http://openAI.com/codexSign up for TBPN’s daily newsletter at TBPN.comFollow TBPN:https://TBPN.comhttps://x.com/tbpnhttps://open.spotify.com/show/2L6WMqY3GUPCGBD0dX6p00?si=674252d53acf4231https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/technology-brothers/id1772360235https://www.youtube.com/@TBPNLive

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 Grab that seat. Sit down for us. Do you still own Hummer EV? Yeah, we do. You do. Give us your review. We were just talking about the Fiat Topolino. I don't think you're going to be in the market for that. Neck and neck and neck. It's a thousand pounds. So I think what we could do is like if you just lined up like 10 of the Fiat, like kind of chariot. That's what I'm saying. That's what I'm saying. I could be my chariot. Imagine imagine if the Hummers literally nine of these of the Hummer is kind of the front of the train.
Starting point is 00:00:30 and then you have like you're you see the Hummer coming at you and then and then a bunch of the topolinos kind of pull out and like a Feeche and that would be that would be badass yeah take over the whole hot log how is how is life these days good is there a new book coming there is another book coming okay yeah do you have a strategy for book launch cadence is it an annual thing it's more like every 18 months 18 years okay but do you imagine that continuing for entire career? Every book I write I say is the last book I'm going to write and then I have like a six-month refractory period. I could I could write a book about something and then I just start writing again. What's the process like? I have a bunch of notes on my phone of a topic because right now I've have probably like 10 books that are at different stages
Starting point is 00:01:21 of so I just mind them wherever and then once there's enough stuff that I think this isn't like this is interesting I'll then start the book writing process but I'm a big believer in surface area of thought. Like if you were to sit down and say like I'm gonna write a book about this and then you have two weeks, it's like you don't have enough experiences that are diverse in a two week period while you're writing to like let the paint dry. Sure. So I kind of wanna like have, I wanna be in, you know, a totally different state, talk to somebody and be like, I didn't think about that. And then I add it to the book. And so then all of a sudden it's like the density of thought and ideas per word is much higher. But I think you just have to do it by like
Starting point is 00:01:52 spreading out the time that. So like at the time I'm thinking about a book is much longer in the time I'm writing the book. Is it purely thinking and you want a lot of thought to go into the different sections of the book or over the course of 18 months is there actually a benefit to going out and having real world experience oh that's I mean that's an anecdotes right it's a hundred percent because I'll have a working theory of like I think this is how you think people are missing this part of it yeah and then I'll kind of start battle testing it functionally and then when I realize that I'm using the same framework over and over again and successfully
Starting point is 00:02:21 overcoming some issue you know like this is it yeah and then that's what the book becomes how narrow do you want to stay how narrow have you been in the the surface area of thought around mainly the last three books. It's a really good question. Problem definition for the book, I think it is the hardest part of any book. The Leeds book, which is the second book, was the hardest book I've ever written. I'll never write a book that hard because I was like, I'm going to write a book on advertising. It's like, Jesus Christ.
Starting point is 00:02:45 There's so many ways to get leads. And I put it all in one book. It took 19 versions to get there. The Money Models book was the fastest book because it was really just about rappers for promotions. Super valuable, but really easy to consume and use. And so I was like, okay, this is the less. for me like an offers super narrow super narrow and that book too is like all three of those books started as one kind of gigantic thing and I gave it to somebody and they're like dude you cannot
Starting point is 00:03:08 yeah it was like I was like I'm gonna have a tome and then I decided to want people actually read it is there a itch in the back of your mind where you want to do sort of the Tim Ferriss thing where you go from four-hour work week a business book to chef body lifestyle, money management, personal finance. Like there's so many topics that you talk about and people are interested. And I'm sure you could sell those books and they might be edifying at a certain point because you're like, I've, I've scratched this it's three times, four times, ten times. But is there a level of focus that you have to discipline yourself or does it come naturally?
Starting point is 00:03:51 I only write about stuff that I feel like I have some unique take on. I think rewriting a book that already exists or people already know there's no point. especially if you're in the thick of it and you're thinking, oh, this has already been written before. It doesn't really motivate you. Like, I think, like, I want to write something that only exists because I made it. Same thing with businesses. Like, there's, I've had the experience of building a company or just, like, starting to work on a company being like, I can stop working on this and it will not matter at all.
Starting point is 00:04:20 Yeah, the world will be fine. The world will be fine. There's a bunch of alternatives. And you can make that case for, like, most businesses. Yeah. But there are some where you're like, if I don't build this, no one's going to build it, at least in the right way. Yeah. I have 100% that perspective when it comes to bookwriting.
Starting point is 00:04:34 Yeah. It's funny. As we talk about this, Jeremy Gaffon, I know he's a good friend of yours, good friend of ours. And every time he talks, people just listen. And he's somebody who I would love to write a book, almost because I just want him to go on another podcast. He got the proper podcast to her. He just kind of pops up, does invest like the best. And then goes dark for like 18 months.
Starting point is 00:04:57 but like it's somewhat of a tragedy that he'll probably write a book someday but it'll be in like 40 years so in the meantime you have to like in the meantime you have to just like you know take notes and and uh try to pick stuff up from from the podcast but there's so many people that like so many people that should be writing books just don't have the time and they'll eventually come and take like a victory lap at the end of their career yeah but i think it's like you could just do a lot of stuff other than write books uh but it's but it's it's it's very valuable to be like writing in real time versus like saving up a bunch of lessons and then kind of summarizing it at the end. I think you miss out on the wrinkles, like the tiny little details that, like, if you,
Starting point is 00:05:35 if you think about like the story of how you met your wife and you go back, like, you've told it a bunch of times, but if you told it the day after you did it, you'd have so much richer memory of all the tiny little things that happened. And so I'm a big believer of like, while it's wet, like paint it, and then let it draw over time. But that's why, like, I always want documentation to be as real as possible. Yeah, it's funny. The final book will actually be the easiest to write because you have all the books and
Starting point is 00:05:56 you're like, okay, what was actually like worth kind of... This is the greatest hits at that point. Yeah. Yeah. We had Mark Pankas on the show, founder Zinga. He wrote a book and he said that he thinks everyone should write a book in their life, but he also said everyone should build a house. Do you have any aspirations to build real estate physically?
Starting point is 00:06:17 Like me do it. No, no, not by hand. Not by hand, but just take a piece of dirt and turn it. You're working with an architect and team, but. But is that something that, you know, a lot of people that's on their bucket list, I don't know where you've been in your real estate journey, but how do you think about that as a bucket list item? It's not. Why not? I mean, we buy big multifamily that already existing and we do that.
Starting point is 00:06:41 But if there were an investment opportunity that made sense, I would. You're not interested because it's not productive. It's just not on my list of it. It's purely for like, you know, the satisfaction. If you're like, have you listened to, like, thought about listening to Beyonce today? I'd be like, not really. I mean, like, if it was on, sure, you know, I'm not against it. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:57 I think some people just have the itch to, like, customize their own living environment. And I'm curious about how you see your living environment. Because, I mean, from those first YouTube videos, like the monastic, what were you in closet? You were in a closet? Like, that was, I don't know if that was intentional, but it was, it was somewhat deliberate. You picked that space over a big living room, right? And I'm wondering how you think about your living space, your work space, your office space today. So I would say all of the time that when I work, I'm very intentional about that space.
Starting point is 00:07:34 When I'm not working, it's whatever Layla wants. I don't care. If she's 10% happier, I have like a percent to percent correlation to my happiness. And me being more comfortable has no correlation back. So like whatever she's good with, I'm good with. But in terms of like where I work, it's almost all, how do I, how do I eliminate every sense of distraction for me personally? And so it's like I don't have windows. Some people like having windows.
Starting point is 00:07:59 I don't think anything wrong with that. For me, it's like I need no stimulation because I'm very distractible. And so I have to have like ear plugs in, no light, all artificial. I have like soundproof. Like, you know, like I want nothing. Yeah. And then I can finally focus on what I'm trying to work on. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:16 Can we go back to the early. YouTube days on the latest channel, I think 2020 in that closet. We both launched YouTube channels around the same time and we were talking about this. You completely smoked me. It was insane. John is you know obviously pretty good at media and but and was like the his channel was like just following his interest like Silicon Valley history. The execution was like by all means amazing. I got to like half a million and I treated like a blog and you treated like a business. Yeah yeah and it was like but it was this much smaller Tam.
Starting point is 00:08:49 And like when you compare the two channels and like your strategy, the execution. It was like, it was like me and I had one remote editor for years. I was like not monetizing, not really thinking about it as a business. But I'm interested to know on day one of that YouTube channel, because I know you've done media stuff before, but like the current media business. What was the team like? What was the strategy? How much time were you putting into it?
Starting point is 00:09:15 Because I know you had exited some businesses. You had some space to breathe. But how serious were, and then what was the evolution of that? I'll walk you through as fast as I can. So the first thing was I found any media editor, like an agency. And they were like, three YouTube videos a week is what we do. And I was like, all right, then that's what I'll do. And so I just webcamed.
Starting point is 00:09:37 And I had a little suitcase that would open up so I could travel because Layla and I were traveling for the year to sale. And so that's what I did. Wherever we were, I was like open up. And then, because at that time, I didn't have really any work. So I had all these thoughts that I was like, I'm just going to get them. I'm going to dump them all out. And so that's basically what YouTube strategy 1.0 was.
Starting point is 00:09:52 Yeah. I had somebody call to reach out like legit to do when at right as short started. They were like, I'll do everything. You already have YouTube stuff. I'm just going to clip it. Just give me permission. Yep. And I was like,
Starting point is 00:10:05 you accidentally started clipping. 100%. And so that was like we were really early on shorts. So good. And then as soon as he did a pretty good job, he's like, you know, if I actually recorded you doing these,
Starting point is 00:10:15 they'd do even better. And I was like, fine, but I only want to do one day a quarter. And he was like, fine. So he'd fly out for one day and we do a hundred shorts in one sitting 100%. I would just do 100. And that kind of style of filming and recording is pretty much how I still kind of rock that way, which is like I want, I prefer a marathon day. Like I'd rather just start it, you know, six and then just rock until every ounce of juice is gone. And then it's like great. Yeah. We'll do it again in a week or whatever. Yeah, we're sort of like that's marathon every day. Yeah. Yeah. What are my questions is like, like, no, what goes into a two hour YouTube video? Because you'll do these like masterclasses two hours. And I'm like, that is insane. And then I'm like, I do three hours every day.
Starting point is 00:10:49 So, like, now it's become more possible. But I imagine that there's lots of scripting in your teams now. But the three hours was kind of like just going until we got tired. Yeah. Like, by three hours, we're usually like, okay, like, probably need to go to the bathroom. Yeah. Probably want to eat some food. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:11:02 And there shows much less structured. But when you're, when you're thinking about, like, the portfolio, like, you, the volume is just incredibly important to everything in media these days. You agree with that? Oh, 100%. Volume negates luck. What? Volume negates luck. Volume negates luck.
Starting point is 00:11:17 Volume is the answer. Yeah, that's like on our wall at HQ. What formats are you most excited about for 2026, 27? Live interactive. Okay. Separate and together. Okay. So just going live like with the audience, Twitch style, YouTube live style.
Starting point is 00:11:32 And that was the book launch strategy, right? Was that your first stage? You've done lots before. No, I've done lives before, but that was obviously intentional. And then interactive, which is not like sure there's chat interactive, but like, how do I bring the audience in so that we can talk? That's why you see the first it was cash cows now at scale or fail which is the show we just launched and we're doing we're doubling down really hard on that because if you think in a world of AI It's like what are the things that can't be faked? Yeah
Starting point is 00:11:57 It's people you know like I want stakes so for example like if mr. Beast store videos if it was not a real five million dollars Or not a real Lamborghini the stakes disappear now to be fair there's for sure other like a fictional story the whole thing we know is fake and we're fine with it and the story is the story and I will crush that yeah But people still want stakes like Right now chess is more popular it's ever been, but like humans haven't been able to beat computers for a long time. And so there are definitely these some areas where we want the drama, we want the stakes, and so I don't think that's going to change at all. I love the series that you've been doing with entrepreneurs that attend a conference, they stand up, they give you the, it's so, so good. I just love all those. Live interactive.
Starting point is 00:12:36 Live interactive. I'm interested to know how you think legacy media will fit into your media strategy going forward. Is it about prestige? Is there actually an audience there still? Because you're part of the new guard. And yet you signed with CIA. I'm sure you have the ability to walk into a large media company and get a TV show. Does that make sense?
Starting point is 00:13:03 Is that something that's interesting to you? What would the value be to? I think it's distribution that I don't have access to. So I think one of the biggest unspoken advantages that exist right now in media is Dave Ramsey has been murdering for 30, 40 years. So, you see a 600 radio station syndicated. Everyone's like, radio's done. It's like, he's murdering it.
Starting point is 00:13:22 And it's because no one's looking. So like, I'm an equal opportunist when it comes to attention. And so even if it's less or more, if it's something that's completely in this other bubble over here that I have, since you have no access to that. And the beauty is like, there's still like closer to, like, there's no monopoly online, right?
Starting point is 00:13:37 The feed is like, you can just get, anybody can log on and it's beautiful because anyone can log on. You don't have to have an audience. you can suddenly have an audience. Maybe it's one video, maybe it's a flash in the pan, but TV still, like, if you can figure out the right lane, you have this sort of like differentiated access to attention.
Starting point is 00:13:55 So it's like a different group of people and it's differentiated access that's not just like log on, immediately have access. And when something super pops, like you look at all the real estate shows that have come out, you've got Selling Sunset, Sir Han has his show, like there's a huge distribution base that they gain access to as a result of that.
Starting point is 00:14:11 All you have to do is look at those stars, look at their social media. And I would say, I say this lovingly, it's pretty weak in terms of what they're doing. Sure. But their following, exactly. But their following is still really strong because it's carried over.
Starting point is 00:14:22 And so I'm like, if those people actually tried on this side and had someone and per- It's like, how do we get it all? Yeah. And that's kind of the approach. I think this is just underrated broadly for mostly tech people. They see the trend of the internet growing exponentially
Starting point is 00:14:37 or e-commerce and they think, oh, well, in a couple years, like 100% of everything will be bought online. It's like, no, retail still exists. And, you know, for certain categories, you probably need to be in retail as well. And the same thing with, you know, the aging audiences on radio or TV, they're still there. They have, they still watch. And so, interesting.
Starting point is 00:14:57 What about the level of production polish? I imagine that there's a tradeoff there. If you go with something more produced, that's not just you opening your laptop and yapping, right? You can get stuck in like the production quagmire if you're trying to build the Mona Lisa or some incredible show. At the same time, there's prestige that comes with that. There's a new level of authority. How do you think about that tradeoff? I think it's barbell.
Starting point is 00:15:24 So it's either like make it the Mona Lisa and like play to win that game or you're in the volume game. And the volume is value per second and just trying to get as many of those seconds out as you possibly can. And like I just think it's it's both. And I think they serve different objectives to your point of like you gain authority in different ways. It's definitely there's an element that it shifts the brand. There's access to new distribution and eyeballs. All of that happens over here. But over here I think is where you get a lot of the closer to buying behavior, believe it or not.
Starting point is 00:15:51 And so I see this is more top of funnel and this is like closer to middle and bottom. Obviously you can get discovery building like this is full stack, but you get way closer to purchase it on the site. Yeah. Is there, can we offer you a Diet Coke? Can we offer you anything? We have a variety of beverages if you'd like. What's a category of business that you haven't built or invested in that you're excited to at some point? I'm still looking for the magical med spa.
Starting point is 00:16:17 I think medspaws are super. I love pseudometical because you have-maxing. Yeah, all of it. Well, think about it. Like, there's this aging population that has more money than anyone else. They don't want to age. They see the Brian Johnson's. Like, it is the zeitgeist of right now of like, I want to live forever.
Starting point is 00:16:34 I want to look beautiful and young forever. and they have all the money. And so if you look at the demand side of that, it's huge. And look at the supply, med spas are top. They're still wildly understaff. And I know this because I see business owners every single week. And so I've like, there's a handful of categories right now that I'll meet business owners and they're doing better than they should be.
Starting point is 00:16:53 Like there's some business owners I meet. I met a med spa owner when I first moved to L.A. They had started their business. And within a year, they were doing like 1.2 million of like straight free cash flow off of like 400. thousand dollars invested yeah it was like actually unbelievable yes the entrepreneur in this case was like very talented because he watches this and he's great no but this was this was you know years ago but yeah i'm surprised that also like differentiated shots at that category because if you look at like i would expect brian johnson to do something like this right because there's a lot of people that
Starting point is 00:17:26 follow him and he has you know as many maybe he probably has like 10 times as many like critics as he does people that are like, I'm going to do exactly what he's going to do. But that group of people that will just like copy what he's doing is actually pretty pretty meaningful. Right. And so meds, boss, you go into these like high ticket kind of like procedures, treatments, things like that. To me, that's where I think he could really start to print. He had 1,200 people apply for his million dollar per year thing. Twelve hundred. Do that math. Yeah. Real fast. Yeah. That's a lot of money. And then there was a $60,000 per year thing that was underneath and multiply that by just probably an order of magnitude greater. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:18:07 Wildly underestimated. So you take that and then you have these 10,000 or 15,000 med spots that exist. It's like it's nothing. And it's super fragmented because still no one's really like gobbled that up. Wow. Not that that I've seen. And to your point of like when I asked them like, hey, so what are you doing right now to get your six million a year top line and, you know, 40% margins? And they're like, kind of just, you know, we just opened up and put the sign up.
Starting point is 00:18:30 And you just did a good job. And you know, people, customers tell customers, like, you know, that's not how it fucking works. Yeah. And it's not how it's going to work forever. No, they're just in a completely supply-contrained environment. They just don't know it because when you're on the inside, you don't know, you're like, oh, I'm doing a good job. Is part of the problem that a lot of the med spa, like founders get a little bit too sucked into the biohacker nature of these things and it feels a little bit too scientific? I don't, I don't think it's that at all.
Starting point is 00:18:55 I think it's like it's so short term, a lot of the med spas, I think are like, like very short-term cosmetic driven. They're like, how do we make you look good for the next three to six months, which is not necessarily what makes you look good over the next three to six years or over the next few decades? So that's at least generally. There's a slice for Johnson to attack, which he obviously is. He's a very smart dude. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:20 How would you attack the problem? Roll up, find a bunch of operators, put them together, start something from scratch? I mean, yeah, I mean, the roll bottle would make the most sense. The thing is, like, de novo is not that expensive. Sure. Yeah. And if you are a good operator, you can go in to smash. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:37 Because when people are coming in, when you're, when you're cax zero and your gross margins on these services are absurd, the actual difficulty in that model right now is getting the talent for the technicians. Because because it's supply constrained at the business level, it's also supply constrained at the talent level. And it's so easy for them to open up a door. Exactly. They hang their own shindle. They take the customers. And like, that's the issue that those companies have. And so the key to really winning that game is having a really good talent strategy for how do I make their lifestyles?
Starting point is 00:20:05 How do I compensate them as directly as possible on what they're generating and get it to the point where my godfather is in wealth management. And he's a really cool model. He's managed several billion dollars, but he started at nothing and built it all himself. And his big thing was, yeah, and his big thing was basically letting the other person have a little more. And so it's like, he'll give you 51 so that you don't ever want to leave. But then you do all the work. Yeah, it probably looks more like a law firm over time. Yeah, 100%.
Starting point is 00:20:33 It's more of a partner. To be fair, if you've been to any of these, I would say it's a high touch service, they're not loyal to the business. They're low to the girl who does her injections or does their lasers or whatever. And so it's like we just got to tie those people in like a partner firm. Speaking of Brian Johnson, do you care at all about living forever? I don't even think about it. I expect to die. I would prefer not to, but like I'm good either way.
Starting point is 00:20:59 Like I think Marcus really has said the old and the young lose the same thing when they die, which is the present. That's all we got. So, yeah. I'm a similar way. I want to have a full life. But I never at any point in my life have I thought, oh, it would just be the best thing ever if I could never die. Yeah. Going back to sort of core audience, I think of like the sweet spot is like mid-Marmer.
Starting point is 00:21:29 owner, operator, founder types? Is that roughly after? Yeah, one to 50 million. One to 50 million. What is the expansion opportunity? Is there a business for you where you're giving keynotes at Fortune 500 companies, motivational speaking for like, you know, middle managers? No interest.
Starting point is 00:21:46 Or is it getting people on the founder journey who are leaving companies, breaking out into their own and going from zero to one million? What do you think? Well, from an expansion opportunity, like I think there's still plenty of people in a 150 million who don't know who I am and haven't consumed my stuff or whatever so like plenty there. But the like if I just focus there, I get the zero to a million. Sure. Anyways.
Starting point is 00:22:09 Yeah, yeah. Because if you're helping people go from one to 10, people are like, he can probably help me go from one zero one. Yeah, yeah. And so I'm super broadly assuming out. I'm a big fan of capitalism. And I think as many people as possible participating in a free market is a good thing for the country and for that person and for everyone else that they serve.
Starting point is 00:22:27 And so I would like as many people to take. taste that forbidden fruit as you can be possible. And so I try and make it as simple and as easy as possible for people to get started. What mistakes do you see entrepreneurs making around AI? Because I'll give you one. The small business owners that I know that get too into AI, and maybe they're listening to podcasts,
Starting point is 00:22:49 and they're on X, and we're- Orange glasses, ready to go. They'll like, they won't just apply AI to their business. they'll like start a new company that's like AI oriented. And, and I just think that's like the worst possible mistake because they end up doing something that like the model just does well. And that's like, okay, so you're going to compete just directly with like all the biggest companies in the world on something that you don't even know as well as the biggest companies in the world.
Starting point is 00:23:17 I have no data. When you could just like, and so there's like this like grass is greener thing happening where instead of seeing like, oh, I can just make, you know, these parts of my business, even if it's just 10% more. more efficient. I can I can you know keep compounding but what are you seeing? All right. One, they're using AI to do dumb things really fast. So they're doing the wrong stuff with AI. So even like they were like a small business owner that wasn't making money now still doesn't make money but has a lot more token cost sure than they did before. Number two, they're meeting meeting summaries. Yeah. Like I've never been successful like I've never. That was my bottleneck. I just need
Starting point is 00:23:53 to summarize. Yeah. Yeah. No, but it's one of those things like I think it's cool that these apps exist. I've never needed to take notes to achieve my goals in business. Like I'm just like, okay, what's the next most important thing to do? I'm gonna do that thing. Okay, what's the next most important thing to do? I'm gonna do that thing. I've never been like, okay, like, what did we say? I mean, and I've worked in like small companies, right?
Starting point is 00:24:15 That's only been a founder. But that's just such an example of like, yeah, my meeting note system is like so dialed. I'm like, okay, like, how much money have you made? Yeah. Okay. So I'll say to counter answer the two things that I think are the right way to use it, which is number one, how do we take every function of the business, take it from org chart-based thinking to workflow-based thinking, and then saying, okay, this editor used to be involved
Starting point is 00:24:41 in these six workflows. We actually only need them to be now involved in three of those workflows, and the other three, we can have AI do the vast majority of the work. And so all of a sudden, we can three, five-x output. And so revenue per head count on service-based businesses should decrease, which means margins should go up. Now there's this great opportunity window right now where prices aren't really going to adjust for a minute, which means that your margins get absolutely stupid. And so like, you should do that. So there's two flavors that. One is the, I'm an advocate
Starting point is 00:25:08 of like, don't tell people you're using AI. Like go, go have a service business that people think is all humans in the background and then charge human prices and then have costs of tech and have the scale and operational, the lack of operational drag of tech. That's the good game, right? Or take a department to by department so that you can just become more efficient at it. So those are, I think, the two good ways of doing it. To your point of, like, well, being distracted is still a terrible idea as a founder. And so this has just made it so much easier for people to get distracted because I could start a business on this or that or that. And it's like, yeah, but you still have your dry cleaning store.
Starting point is 00:25:41 Dude, like, where we can, like, and to be fair, if you have, if you want to be a trillionaire, you are going to need to get into bleeding edge tech and AI. Sure. But you probably should get rid of your dry cleaning store and go all in. And so they're trying to juggle two plates and not really succeeding it either. Totally, totally. Yeah, the dry cleaning example is like use AI to constantly be monitoring every possible new space that you could expand into within your area or in the county over, et cetera, and just do that, do that, do that. But it's like grass is greener. Like, oh, what if I, what if I made the operating system, the agent operating system for dry cleaners? It's like, no, just like, do the thing. Just win at dry cleaning because it's also so much easier to compete against other dry cleaning owners because you for sure know that they're not. not adopting it the right way because they're doing the same thing with orange glasses and
Starting point is 00:26:27 banging out their replicoded software, you know, like fine. There's also like a fair amount of AI that a lot of small businesses are probably getting for free just in the sense of like if you have a CRM that's sending emails, like that company has probably adopted AI and is doing somewhat smarter targeting. And so you might not need to go and build your own CRM that sends emails that are customized for every customer because like you get it for free out of the box. There's also this tendency to rebuild the existing software that you're using. So it's like, oh, I've got, you know, I don't need to pay Calendly, you know, $9 a month.
Starting point is 00:27:04 It's just like, oh, so instead you're going to use 200 hours to try and recode what they just did. And it breaks all the time. Yeah, there's an error, then you lose nine grand. Yeah, but like that is what I'm saying all the time. Yeah, we did have a Ben on our team here was having, had been, he does a lot of the automation that we do around like captioning videos. He had reached a point where all the existing software didn't do the thing that he needed to do, that he built something yesterday that now works and that it's saving him a bunch of time. So there is the, there are the edge cases.
Starting point is 00:27:32 It's very narrow point solutions for us. I think specifically. Tamig was one. Flip live streams very quickly with captions, with our ads added on at the end and it's saved a bunch of time in Premier. In media is huge, right? Yeah. Like we're using it. Like I'll give you two examples we're using.
Starting point is 00:27:47 On the ad side, what we did was we built this gigantic data repository, which by the way, I think that's what the big, the huge gap that small business owners are missing is they don't have a data layer. And so it's like if you want to have anything that's unique, it starts with data. If you want to build any kind of AI, right, that's actually useful. And so one is like how do we build a repository of all the data that we have in terms of sales copy, testimonials, videos, collateral, all of that in one place. And then have that get piecemealed out into ads in real time and then also match those to dynamic landing pages.
Starting point is 00:28:14 So we have that live right now at Acquisition.com in terms of how we're doing it. So we have several hundred landing pages that are being pushed against several hundred different ad ads that are going out all being done programmatically with AI which is really like we're we're not a we're not an AI company but we use the shoot out of it and so I think those are like those are the on the paid side where it's really really exciting yeah and then on the on the organic side it's like right now we started more mosey which is like the highlight channel yeah and I've got one one one cracked out teenager who's doing who's putting out 20 20 clips a day on his own
Starting point is 00:28:50 He's doing five mids. So like we call it mids, it's like, call it like three to ten minutes clips. And then he's putting out, I think 15 or something like that shorts per day on his own. And so he just takes all the time, if I'm talking to business owners, takes it, runs it through, it highlights the points. From there, he just basically just make sure that it's good, inserts automatically the CTAs that we want and then boom, it's all. What's your philosophy on bringing the cracked out teenager in-house, remote, in-person, versus agency versus platform where clipping can happen, a discord that just, you hear about these discords
Starting point is 00:29:26 with like 200 clippers and they all get paid on a CPM basis randomly. It feels deeply chaotic, but if you can harness that, maybe it's powerful, but what's your philosophy? Yes, that's 100% my philosophy. Okay. But like, are you an agency fan or in-house? It's like, I want three agencies working for me
Starting point is 00:29:43 and in-house team. Like, it's all the impressions are out there. Like, gotta catch them all, like go get them. You know what I mean? And same thing with, like, if I, I pay a lot of attention, especially on the paid side to e-commerce. I think they're almost always the most cutting edge. When it, well, porn's the most pay-mage, right?
Starting point is 00:29:56 Right? I'm being real, right? E-commerce is the second most cutting edge. And those guys are all completely, the ones who are crushing it going to zero to 100 million plus in call it like 12 to 24 months, like all the companies that are running the same playbook is decentralized UGC with kind of like AI back end for screening for control and then just letting it fucking rip. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:30:18 And there's obviously some considerations for brand. Sure. Right? Which is like, how do we make sure? But yeah, but I think- And you only put money behind the things that are, yeah, exactly. Yeah, it's probably pretty safe. Do you expect to integrate parenting content into your universe? I don't think everything that's not business has not been like super deliberate. I just don't hold back.
Starting point is 00:30:38 So if someone asked a question about it, I'll just answer honestly. Yeah. But everything, I try to think like the middle spoke is still, I'll use this area. The middle spoke is still business and then it's, you know, how am I seeing parenting through the lens of business? That's a business owner, if you want. How do I... You've got it over there.
Starting point is 00:30:55 Like, how do I see my relationship with Layla? But we're business partners, but we're also married. So it's always... I try to keep that at the middle. Yeah. But some people are like, I just want to talk about you. I'm thinking, you know, with Taylor and Travis, pairing up, hopefully they have children.
Starting point is 00:31:10 You guys having children. I think we could see a real baby boom. Yeah. But we need to get it out there. That's what we're doing. The Lord's work. Can you walk me through how... to sort of evolve a brand through what I expected to be more difficult, but you executed
Starting point is 00:31:27 it very well. The headline was, I have nothing to sell you. Now you sell books. People want to buy stuff from you. Obviously, sold a ton of books. But there's probably like, oh, I wasn't expecting this. How did you work through that? Because I think there's a lot of companies where the business model evolves and they need to change their communication strategy and they need to deliver Yeah, like an AI lab is like, we're not going to compete with it. What? That's crazy. Asking for a friend here. I'm such an, I think the absolute simplest media strategy for any kind of change is the whole truth, not half truth.
Starting point is 00:32:05 And I think if you just manage that, so it's like, I didn't have anything to sell. Yeah. And I was like, now I do. It's so simple. I love it. That's amazing. Wow. And if you don't want to buy it, here's the great thing about capitalism.
Starting point is 00:32:20 It's voluntary exchange. So you can just keep getting the free shit. Yep. All good. There's tons of it. There's tons of free stuff. Tons of free stuff. And we still continue to do that.
Starting point is 00:32:27 If you choose to want more help with stuff in person where we're limited, spend money. And we love to have it. Yeah. Yeah. It's fascinating. What is the term for like the economic ladder that you help build, help companies build? I feel like the first time I was exposed to this with Jocko Willink,
Starting point is 00:32:43 you get to the end of the show. And it's like, if you want to spend a dollar with me, I got something for you. If you want to spend $100 with me, I got something for you. If you want to spend $1,000, you can come to my conference, $10,000, I'll hang out with you for a weekend, $100,000. And that ladder of price discrimination is hard for a lot of businesses where it's not token-based pricing, where it's just, you know, consumption-based usage of the product, but actually getting the place where, look, if you have a billionaire in your audience who loves what you're doing, how do you actually get an offer to them that's the right size? Um, I'm a, so customers are super fractal, right? And so you can absolutely make the same amount from 1% of your customers as you can
Starting point is 00:33:23 from the other 99 and have half your revenue from a one. Um, and typically like at each level, you have another double. So it's like if you're at, let's say $100 a month price point, there's going to be another double of revenue at a $500 a month price point, another double of revenue at $2,500 a month, another double at, you know, whatever five or 10 times that is going to be. And so, um, I think making offers available to people. that is where business owners like struggle. They feel weird about it and they sell out of their own wallet.
Starting point is 00:33:49 When it's just like, just make them available and state the facts and tell the truth. So it's like if we had one big plaque in our marketing team, it's state the fact and the truth but it's the whole truth, which is, hey, we're going to do this thing. It's absurdly expensive. And it's only for somebody who if you're reading this and you're like, oh, that's not externally expensive for me. It's for you. And if you read that and you're like, oh my God, I'm offended by that.
Starting point is 00:34:10 Good news. We have less offensive prices that are lower. And for that, we do. all these other things that you're going to get way more people who are going to be doing it with you. But if you're special stuff like, we have special stuff like prices. I just don't think, and to be fair, you're not going to make everyone happy. Like there's always going to be trolls, there's always going to be people. But like, I think you have to make the decision of like, do I care more about the people I help
Starting point is 00:34:29 or the people who are angry at me for trying to help? What's your international strategy? I imagine the content goes everywhere. Yeah. At the same time, you can't be flying around the world constantly. How do you think about different countries? I struggle a lot with international. Because the business side of me is like I don't want them to clog up our funnels.
Starting point is 00:34:51 Oh, yeah. And like have people who can't speak English that well, talk to the team. And it's just like, it's like we don't have Italian versions of whatever. Yeah. Yeah. That makes sense. Right. So I struggle with that part.
Starting point is 00:35:02 On the other hand, we're taking steps now to have something to, you know, serve that audience. That being said, I don't think I'm going to be traveling internationally sometime soon. But having called services and offerings for that audience, I'm I'm more inclined to be able to. Yeah. How are you thinking about scaling Acquisition.com, the investing side of the business, raising outside capital, scaling up the fund.
Starting point is 00:35:23 We talked to VCs all day who are just like bigger and bigger mega funds. Yeah. We're like 30 days away from closing a gigantic deal. So, um, come back. Yeah. But like, I would say that what Acquisition. Notcom was when we started was a cash flow based family office at Layla and I ran. And that was honestly the chillest my life has ever been.
Starting point is 00:35:46 I was also bored to tears. But like a good life and probably might have been better for the season I'm about to get into. Sure. But it became apparent after we did something like 24 deals in 24 months. And these were not like VC style deals. They were like real, you know, purchases. That, you know, portfolio theory rules. And of the 24, like, you know, three-ish were like the really good companies.
Starting point is 00:36:09 And then on top of that, there was like our brand blew up in this time period. And so we had to basically have this recalculation of like, okay, well, these are all the resources we have at our disposal. We have cash, but like this brand is getting really big, even almost greater than the cash that we have access to, just our own money. And so then it was like, okay, well, we started the advisory practice in January of 24, and I think we did 36 million in EBITA, year one, just on that one unit. And so it was like, okay. And so, and then obviously, you know, the book launch last year, we did, you know, 100,000. And we still have the advisory practice which grew the next year and so I've we've basically we stopped doing Deals that we were just investors in and now it's brand plus capital plus work and I'd rather have fewer eggs that we're gonna get huge outsized returns on like school
Starting point is 00:37:02 Was junior 24 as well But school has you know we've 30 million users now And you know we've billion plus GMV like it's it's a very big platform and so So like, you know, Zuckerberg didn't have Airbnb's as side hustle. You know what I mean? Yeah. And so it's just like if you have a stallion, like, run it. And so I think that's where we're at where it's like we're being really, really specific.
Starting point is 00:37:26 I'm willing to put more capital at risk now because I'm going to put my brand behind it. Yeah. And make sure the product's exceptional. And that's, I mean, the bar is the product has to be fucking insane. Yeah. And then we bring distribution and cash. And like that's when it's like the Holy Trinity. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:37:40 Jeremy, our friend Jeremy has this idea that everyone is like pre or post fall. Where are you? You familiar with this concept? No. So, yeah, he says you can instantly tell if someone has had their downfall, had their darkest moment. You know, they've been through the ringer. They got chewed up and spit out by Silicon Valley or private equity or whatever industry they were in. And you can tell that this person is now, they've been humbled.
Starting point is 00:38:07 And so they're ready to build back appropriately, not get over their skis. And then you can also see the founders. It becomes a massive advantage. And then you also see the founders that are sort of pre-fall and they're doing a lot of things that you're like... Yeah, this is like the 24 year old who's like on a crazy tear has raised... Money showed up for free. They're spending it. And then suddenly like, you know, the business stops growing, like execs are leaving, things like that.
Starting point is 00:38:34 But I'm wondering if there was like this like crucible. moment for you before this latest run that you've been on. Two answers. One is I'll reject the premise. But just because I don't like to say it's super binary. Like people are either before after the hard thing in their life. It's like I think people have lots of hardship that happens at different seasons in their life. Like I've lost everything two times. Like big.
Starting point is 00:38:57 Twice. But like that then it's like okay, am I now post fall? It's like well I mean I hope that nothing bad ever happens to me again. But I'm pretty sure beth it's going to. happen to me again. And so I just commit to not stopping. Yeah, controlling the controllable. And that's basically all I can do. Do you have a good answer to pithy advice for young people? We got asked this on a podcast recently and it was like the closing question. It was like, you got one minute. And I was like, I could, you could talk for hours. Like, where do you even
Starting point is 00:39:28 start? How do you think about packaging information like that? And I actually want your your advice for young people if you have one thing. It's so hard to. It's so hard. Like work hard. It's like good general advice, but then I've been in points in my life and I know people that are like working hard on like the dumbest thing. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And like that is the worst thing that they can do. Well, I think, so what you accomplish is a direct output of the volume of activity that you do,
Starting point is 00:39:57 multiplied by the leverage of the activity itself. And so you have to pick the right boat. You have to pick the right opportunity based on your goals. Some people only want to make a million dollars. and be willing to make tens, we want to make a hundred, so we make a trillion. Like everyone has different. So like the leverage that, what's interesting about that is that you just get to pick and it's going to be hard no matter what.
Starting point is 00:40:14 I think Navaul said this thing where it's like, it's really hard to build a restaurant that's really successful. It's also really hard to build a billion dollar unicorn. They're both can be 80 hour weeks and so, you know, and Stuart Schwartman from Blackstone said like, you might as well play big because level 10 talent is only attracted level 10 opportunities. It's harder to attract good people for bad opportunity because then you're going to do it all yourself, which is why I have so much respect for some of the guys like, Peggy and Andrew
Starting point is 00:40:39 Turing, who are Mr. and Mrs. Panda, Panda Express. Yeah. Dude, deca billionaires selling chicken. Passing to royalty. Dude. But like, like, so much respect for that level of grit, 45 years selling orange chicken, right? All that to say, you will pick based on the level of awareness that you have at that time. Where it gets more difficult is that you learn more shit as you go and you realize that
Starting point is 00:41:04 there are higher leverage opportunities. The difficulty is that. that if you're four years into one thing, year five of an existing thing that you have four years of reps on versus year one of even a slightly better opportunity, you have to compare year one versus year five of the other one, not year one versus year one,
Starting point is 00:41:19 because time you can't get back. And so that's where the compounding of getting better at something at some point does have outsized returns, even it's an inferior vehicle. Yeah, talk about that idea of you're an A plus operator, but you're going after a C plus opportunity. How do you assess, your opportunity because I feel like I run into people who are working on A plus opportunities and
Starting point is 00:41:42 everyone will say that's the dumbest idea ever you're going to put couches it's going to be called A and B that makes no sense right and then it's a boom and it's huge and then simultaneously you can be working on a terrible idea but if you went and got you know a puff piece in business insider in Forbes it's like your parents are like oh it's amazing good job even if you're grinding and it's not going anywhere yeah the way the way I look at it is like in every single category there's an amazing business. And the funny thing, the funny thing everyone thinks about like Airbnb is like the dumb idea when it's like it wasn't a dumb idea. It just seemed ridiculous. Yeah. And that's very different than like somebody that like chooses apparel as a category, which everyone knows is
Starting point is 00:42:21 like structurally really, really, really challenging, really, really competitive. Yes, there's like a hundred companies in the world that absolutely print. And if you're one of those companies, then you're, then you're great. But some people like choose apparel and then three years and then they understand the competitive dynamics and they're like, I'm in a shitty business. I think that's very different than like choosing the thing that seems silly, even though Airbnb at this point is now like the best business, right? Sure, sure, sure. Massive scale, network effects, a great product, all these things. I think if you look at the marketplace that you're trying to get into, there's usually going to be a bolus of businesses at some part.
Starting point is 00:43:00 And that gives you some idea of where the difficulty that business is. And so like for example, if you're going to get into, I want to start a social media marketing agency. It's like, well, there's a bolus at the bottom. And then very few who ascend at the top. And it's because it's really, really difficult operationally because if you're really good at marketing, then you can usually make enough money to not work at one of those types of businesses. And so you're constantly, you have to be so good at ops and so good at marketing and sales in order to just slowly get these bigger and bigger accounts. And you kind of level up the types of customers that you can go after.
Starting point is 00:43:29 because all those businesses go after S&Bs and S&Ps are inherently volatile. And so even if you do a great job, they'll still cancel. And so it's just a turn to murder business. Yeah, not to mention your flagship client will eventually say like, hey, we're spending $100,000 on this service. We could hire five people that are the best in the world or what they do. And they'll just focus on us. Let's do that instead. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:48 Like there are there are impediments to that business scaling. Can you do it? Absolutely. But I've just a huge advocate of just like, just look at what the biggest version of that business looks like because this is obviously a more tech forward. forward show, but like the vast majority businesses are not tech businesses. Yeah. Right? There's like HVAC businesses all over the place. There's pool cleaners. Like there's a lot of shit you can do for money. And so I like unless you want to be a
Starting point is 00:44:11 trillionaire, like you can be a billionaire in just about any boring business. You look at, you look at, um, what's the name? Is it Brad Jacobs? Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Um, six times or yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, make a few billion dollars. Yeah, a few, and then he has a sequel, a few more billion. You guys are kind of, you guys are very, yeah, I never, I never thought of you as, uh, home building material. Yeah, there's just a lot of businesses out there. And so it just depends on like what the goal is, but any business done for like, zooming all the way out, if you do one thing for 40 years and you get better every year, you're
Starting point is 00:44:41 going to fucking dominate. And so on some level, going after the tech opportunity, though they're for sure are the big mega winners. It's easier to compete against the people who are going after the pool cleaners. There's just, there's less sophisticated players, just less capital. And so having a little bit of street smarts and a lot of work ethic can get you pretty far there. And you look at that compared to like, you know, you look at the guy who's doing seven million a year top line, two and a half million dollars in bottom line, doesn't really work that much, has a group of guys. Is that the life you want?
Starting point is 00:45:13 Yeah. Because there's nothing like there's nothing wrong with that. And so I think it's deciding first to the younger guy, like, what do I want or what is an acceptable outcome? And then what of the many, many paths that are ahead of me have the highest likelihood of me getting there. And then once you pick that path, know that if you stick with that path for 20 years, the likely that you fail is basically zero as long as you have some feedback loop for improvement. That's basically it. Figure out where you want to go, find the highest likely path of getting there,
Starting point is 00:45:41 and then do not let the opinions of strangers or people who do not have what you want dismay you from getting there. Yeah. What do you think about, there's this odd trend of entrepreneurship, like, I don't know, like mindset stuff where you got to be doing. doing sauna, cold plunge, meditation. And I feel like that only makes sense once you're successful. And then you look at the successful people and you're like, well, yeah, the rich guy has a sauna. But what was he doing when he was broke?
Starting point is 00:46:09 He was waking up and getting on his laptop. But how have you reacted? Rich people fly private, so I should fly private in order to get rich. It's it's conflation. It's, it's conflation. Okay. So at the most basic level, you have to do work. And if it is not the work, then you have to have a very strong argument that is going to
Starting point is 00:46:27 increase your output per unit of time, period. And so if you have a three-hour morning routine, and that's the first three hours a day when you're probably the cognitive, like the freshest of the most energy, you would have to have an incredible, do you curse on the show? We don't.
Starting point is 00:46:40 Okay, a credible darn argument. You're welcome to. Our kids are watching, but by all means. You have to have an incredible argument for why that's going to improve your output. And so, like, the morning routine that I'm a big advocate of is you wake up and then you caffeinate, you shut off your distractions,
Starting point is 00:46:55 and then you begin the work. and how much you can compress the time from waking to beginning work. Sure. Is the ideal. And you are the freshest whenever you are post-sleep. Yep. And so, like, if you want to do that stuff, I'm like, by all means, go for it. But, like, just understand, like, you can, plenty of people have hobbies.
Starting point is 00:47:14 You can have hobbies. Like, there's nothing wrong with that. It's just, is this actually. And you also didn't need to work 16 hours a day in order to get what you want. I have plenty of friends who are super successful and don't work that much. Now, did they work 16 hours a day to get there? Probably. And so this is the,
Starting point is 00:47:28 modeling the rise, not the plateau. And what's difficult is the plateau is what's more visible. Sure. You get there and then you can make the content. Yep. Right? No one's making this part. No, no.
Starting point is 00:47:36 What do you think about people sort of like staging out their sort of career as an entrepreneur? I was talking to a friend of mine who has a something like an agency business and fashion. He's going to do like about a million dollars this year of like profit. It's a fantastic business. he has he he eventually wants to have his own his own brand my my advice to him is like fashion is such a like bad business until it's a great business till you have like a flagship brand that takes 20 years to make uh i was like get your business to like a couple million a year get it like established a couple million a year of profit at least get it established get you know
Starting point is 00:48:21 10 20 flagship clients that are on sort of long-term contracts and then basically use that cash flow invest in your brand and like a lot of people would be like given the advice now of like just go all in on go all in on the brand like why are you wasting time with this other thing and I feel like that's very that that works super well like if you have a trust fund but for somebody who's like 27 let's assume they want to have a family in a few years I was pushing him to say like make this thing great even though you know it's not the thing that you want to be doing for that 40 year chunk of your career, but how would you talk to somebody in that sort of space? So I don't think there's a right answer because it's all dependent on risk, which is entirely personal. Yeah. And so if you
Starting point is 00:49:03 want to go balls on the line, that's not cursing. Then then do it. Go all in. But like just understand the risk that you're taking on. And so I would say that that's not a risk that I would take. I would say that I'm relatively. There's risk to being all in and then not having the capital to actually fuel the opportunity. Right. My point of you is like you're going to be way way way higher likelihood of success if you sort of build slow and you can put half a million a year of like outside capital into the business versus like trying to build this brand when you don't have a capital source depends on gold depends on risk tolerance like I want to be a trillionaire and then and I'm willing to take the risk then it's like it
Starting point is 00:49:43 I mean you should have started yesterday you know what I mean but my perspective is I would like to get my oxygen mask on personally and I was able to make I've been able to take significantly bigger and bigger bets in my career because I don't, they're free swings. Yeah. If I lose my life changes zero. Yeah. And so when thinking about big life changes, what's been really helpful for me is what is my, what tactically changes about my life.
Starting point is 00:50:07 Do I change what I eat? Do I change what I wear? Do I change where I live? Do I change the car I drive? And do these things matter? Right. Does it change who I'm married to? If none of these things change, then almost none of these decisions are going to actually have a huge
Starting point is 00:50:20 impact on my life, which then makes the argument for like, maybe I should take a higher risk adjust to return move. But I would say that from the emotional side rather than the logical side, it was, I have tried, I very quickly tried to have a nest egg to be like, I'm good. And that's what's allowed me to take really big bets. Like things like school, schools are a platform, but likelihood that. Oxygen mass is a great way to. Yeah, put that on. If you're going to be if you want. And if you have responsibilities too, if you're, if you're a parent and you've got kids and you've got mortgage and you want a certain lifestyle for them and certain schools that they, you know, that costs money. Um, then then you're also risking there.
Starting point is 00:50:53 futures to a degree. And so again, it's your decision, but just know what you're putting at risk. And how much is my life going to change? If I lose, Keith Cunningham has a great frame on this, which is just, what's my upside? What's my downside? And can I live with my downside? If you can't live with the downside, don't take the bat. You mentioned that, you know, the success and the habits are visible at the plateau, but not on the rise. And I agree with you. Like, you're not actually seeing the accurate picture of the up-and-coming entrepreneur. the future trillionaire as it's happening. But at the same time, a lot of businesses increasingly need to do some form of social media on their way up. And the risk there is like sometimes
Starting point is 00:51:34 companies just get sucked into just being full media companies or the brand value and the and the cash flow from the media business outgrows whatever they were doing originally. What is the right balance? How should entrepreneurs think in the modern era? Like if you're starting a company consumer product in 2026, what's the right level of social media? And and actual own content without it becoming like fake work. What do you mean by fake work? Fake work would be like you're, you're growing your following account, but you're not growing your cash flow or you're actually.
Starting point is 00:52:05 Yeah, there's a generation of entrepreneurs and like you're probably a huge driver of this that are like, I need to work, I need to build my personal brand. They don't realize that like if they just make an amazing product that millions of people benefit from, they just default get the personal brand and they could just, if you care about like attention, and being on camera, then you can just do that later, but maybe just make something amazing. And also your personal brand is an actual media company that has cash flow and is like a successful business.
Starting point is 00:52:33 You wouldn't be, I don't think you would be like on camera if you weren't making money. No, I hated it. It was like it was very hard for me to decide to do this. But there's a lot of people that are basically doing the media for the cloud and they don't, and they think, put it, it's fake work because they're saying, they're justifying the cloud chasing by saying, oh, it's marketing for my business. If what you do does not translate into the money that you make and money that you make is the goal, then you are doing work that is not effective.
Starting point is 00:53:01 If, to the example you gave earlier, if you start a business and you get better at media and the media is making more money than your existing business, then maybe you're better at media than you were at your business. And maybe that should be your business. And so I think constantly being flexible about reassessing what the market wants versus what you have. You know, I think basically says this, but, you know, determined on goal at, flexible on path or whatever way he says that. And he's also a great example of what's based on his personal brand? Well, everyone knows who he is.
Starting point is 00:53:27 Does he make a lot of content? No, why he just happens to own Amazon, right? And so I think it depends on what, what sphere you want to get into. This is kind of interesting. If you were to say, I want to be a big B to B influencer. You cannot be a big B to B influencer without evidence that you were good at business. Period. You could take, and there's plenty of people who take word for word, the stuff that I say.
Starting point is 00:53:50 Aren't there? There's probably some good counter examples to that. We don't need to name them. Yeah, you know, it's tough. Like, I mean, I would say the biggest, the big, I think the biggest B2B influencer right now is Elon. Oh, sure, sure. And he also has the biggest business and is the richest man.
Starting point is 00:54:05 Right. And so, and that I think that just cascades all the way down. The only reason that, so like, I was, I had a podcast that started in July of 2017. That's what I started. It was called Jim Secrets and I rebranded as just the game. The game. But the, as I continue to make it, uh, we went from like, you know, two thousand downloads.
Starting point is 00:54:20 a month to millions when I sold my company for 46.2 million. And then people were like, oh, this guy actually knows what he's talking about. And then the brand took off because I had evidence. Legitimacy. And so I think that the amount of legitimacy that you need to be an influencer depends on the risk that the consumer has in taking action on the nature of the content that you're making. And so if I'm a beauty influencer, if I buy lipstick or I do a, you know, a lash technique, I'm
Starting point is 00:54:50 get in the waters I'm not familiar with here. You paint your face in some way, right? The risk is relatively low. Sure. Right? Now you move a little bit over here and you got like personal finance. Well, it's like, who's the biggest there? Dave and then there's some of the new age ones,
Starting point is 00:55:02 Erica Culver. She's got hurt, but she was also, and there's Vivian too, I think. But like they have some credibility behind and like there's tons, like if a teacher is in her basement talking about how you should invest in the S&P 500 and says exactly what Warren Buffin says. And maybe they even say, little bit more compelling than the way that Warren Buffett says, they won't be Warren Buffett
Starting point is 00:55:24 because they just forgot to build Berkshire Hathaway. Sure, sure, sure. And so it's like the proof is the pudding. I think, at least my perspective on media is the proof is the pudding, but it varies in terms of how much proof you need. Now, if you're ugly as shit, very hard to be a beauty influencer. Yeah. But if you are ugly and then you paint your face so well that you become hot, then you
Starting point is 00:55:45 absolutely, yeah, because you have evidence, right? And you have a more dramatic point. 100% this is how it works yeah I like that talk about status seeking it seems like in Silicon Valley is often you know Naval talks about this like there's value just Silicon Valley well that's what I want to know in Silicon Valley there's a lot of trend chasing there's a lot of status seeking and there's value in like doing low status activities and I'm wondering in in mid-market entrepreneurship small businesses like what is the shape of that is it different than Silicon Valley is it less pronounced more pronounced like what is the version of look you just need to run a series of golf
Starting point is 00:56:22 courses and be happy with that that type of thing or whatever whatever the equivalent is I think it depends on who they compare themselves to you think it just comes down to that I think the tech guys compare to the tech guys and they want to prove from tech guys and sure they do the the activities that tech guys approve of yeah if you're an HVAC guy then it's gonna be you're gonna do the activities that HVAC people think are cool if they're the peer group that you actually compare yourself to sure which they might not be and to be fair I love the tech guys that that sell their business for
Starting point is 00:56:47 and then are like, I need a cash flowing lifestyle business ASAP. Yeah. I know a lot of them. Yeah, a lot. Like a crazy amount, like buying gas stations, like it's a lot. How bad is that? Bad, what do you mean? Like, because I imagine it's a grass is greener on the other other side thing,
Starting point is 00:57:06 where they enjoyed building their business, they sold it, they have all this cash, but they want cash flow, they want the stability of the cash flow. And so they want the idea of running a small business. Check every month. And they don't, exactly. But they don't think of. about what it means to like at 2 a.m. your gas station got robbed and you gotta go down there and sort it out with the cops or something like that.
Starting point is 00:57:23 And so I'm wondering about like, what is the actual lesson there for someone who's like about to get over their skis? Yeah, I think humans are inherently dissatisfied. Okay. And I think whatever you have you want, what you don't have. And so if you're married, you're like, ah, life would be different or single.
Starting point is 00:57:38 If you're a parent, you're like, can you remember when we didn't have kids? And if you don't have kids, you're like, if you're an employee, you're like, man, I wish I had an entrepreneur. And somebody you're an entrepreneur, you're like, man, it would be so nice to show up and clock out of five
Starting point is 00:57:47 Like we just always, we want to make, we want the benefits of a tradeoff without the negatives of the tradeoff. Sure. And so when guys are in the cash flow business, because I'll, because that's who I talk to the majority of the time is like what they're thinking about all the times is like, it's hard to sell this business. I'm not really building my net worth. The multiples that I'm going to get on this aren't going to necessarily be that high. I'm dealing with people all day. I've deal with low skilled labor and I've got, you know, turn issues or finding texts that aren't going to show up drunk on the job. Like there's like one of my favorite quotes of all time.
Starting point is 00:58:16 I'm gonna try not to cost on this one, but my CFO was deep south Texas when we were in Texas when we were building Jim Lodge. Suzanne Schifflett, shout out to Suzanne. She was the reason we were able to sell up to lunch. She had been she had been a CFO for four companies from one to a hundred million plus had done a five billion dollar exit and I think she'd she'd been either by side or south side over 20 times. Wow. She was just like she was a murk like just so weathered in a good way, right? And she said, you know what Alex? She's like, it's all shit.
Starting point is 00:58:51 She's like, it's all shit. Every business is shit. It's all shit. And I, and it was, but it was like, she said it was so much sincerity because I was like, at the time, I was like, man, be cool. We got this kind of multiple. And she's like, it just doesn't, it's, it all sucks. And it's just different type of suck, but it all sucks. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:59:07 Yeah. We're at time, but give us a pitch for scale or fail. If you like seeing entrepreneurs, try. they're absolute hardest and have a completely new paradigm shift in 90 days to scale their business the most, then watch the show. I meet with them for an hour, give them a whole blueprint of what I would do if I bought the business 100% today. And then they execute and they compete. Amazing. So it reminds me at PMF or die. We experimented with the show last year. It was like we put this team in an apartment in New York. They were not allowed to leave for 90 days until.
Starting point is 00:59:46 or until they build a million dollar air our business, it descended into chaos. It was Lord of Flies. That was totally crazy. And we were like, we don't have time to do this and this. But it had like hundreds of people watching it all times. It was actually gripping. And it was just a live stream of them in the apartment just like cooking. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:00:08 But one of them got really good at talking to chat. It was a whole thing. It sort of opened us up to live. That was a good example because like one of them clearly was like a gifted content. And the other one was like, why am I on camera? This is terrible. Did he become a content creator? We got to check in with them.
Starting point is 01:00:24 He took a big change and traveled a little bit after. Yeah, they both needed to like disconnect. But yeah, lots of success. So don't do the show live. Then people will actually go crazy. Yeah, yeah. Edit is a good sometimes. Yeah, dude.
Starting point is 01:00:36 This is. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. We'll talk to you soon.

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