The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - E24: Tom Bilyeu - From Zero Drive to a Net Worth of $400m
Episode Date: February 6, 2019In this episode of The Diary of a CEO, my entire perception of what an entrepreneur is, is completely turned on it's head. I travelled to a beautiful house in the LA hills to meet with Tom Bilyeu, the... founder of Quest Nutrition. In 2014, Quest Nutrition...
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Quick one, just wanted to say a big thank you to three people very quickly. First people I want
to say thank you to is all of you that listen to the show. Never in my wildest dreams is all I can
say. Never in my wildest dreams did I think I'd start a podcast in my kitchen and that it would
expand all over the world as it has done. And we've now opened our first studio in America,
thanks to my very helpful team led by Jack on the production side of things. So thank you to
Jack and the team for building out the new American studio. And thirdly, to Amazon Music, who when they heard that we were expanding to the United
States, and I'd be recording a lot more over in the States, they put a massive billboard
in Times Square for the show. So thank you so much, Amazon Music. Thank you to our team. And
thank you to all of you that listened to this show. Let's continue. entrepreneurs are born they're born naturally talented they're the brightest people in the room
they're naturally self-driven they're motivated by money no wrong
tom bill you is the 42 yearold American entrepreneur best known for founding the second
fastest growing private company in North America in 2014, Quest Nutrition. Tom started Quest
Nutrition with his mother and sister in mind who both suffered from obesity. He wanted to help them
find food that was good and healthy for you while still being delicious. After multiple rejections, his company took off, growing 57,000% in the first three years.
And in 2014, they hit $105 million in sales. Tom's story enormously changed my perception
on the notion that entrepreneurs
and CEOs are born. He didn't want to be an entrepreneur. He also wasn't driven in his 20s.
He tells me how he shamefully laid around the house for hours during the day without the drive
to get out of bed. What changed him? How did he go from there to an estimated net worth of $400 million? How did he save himself
from depression? Is it really possible to rewrite your own brain? Tom invited me to his beautiful,
beautiful home in the Los Angeles Hills. And we spoke honestly about his remarkable journey.
And because of that honesty, I can honestly say I I learned so so much. This is a really
fucking smart guy. Because of that conversation I know that I'll be a better happier entrepreneur
in the future. This is just a great story and a story I can't wait to share with you.
His latest venture Impact Theory is a non-profit media company that has the aim to end the poverty of
a poor mindset. He's already amassed millions of followers online and a lot of you will already
know him. And his ambitions for Impact Theory will seem unthinkable to some, but to those that know
Tom, and when you get to know Tom, you'll realise that those ambitions are just a matter of time.
So without further ado, this is the Diary of a CEO season two,
and I'm Stephen Bartlett. I hope nobody is listening, but if you are, inviting us into your amazing home.
It's an absolute pleasure to be here and to meet yourself.
You're a huge inspiration to a lot of entrepreneurs all over the world
and your content as well is hugely inspiring.
I was just talking to some of your team here about the impact theory
and the work that's doing as well.
And it's a real, it's refreshing to see someone like yourself give back in the way of like inspiration and knowledge,
because I'm sure there's other things that you could be doing.
My first sort of question that I wanted to know is we're in this amazing house in L.A.
You're a very, very successful self-made person.
I'm guessing it didn't always start this way.
So my question, I guess, is where did you come from?
Where did I come from?
Well, I grew up in Tacoma, Washington.
So it was really a pretty simple beginning.
My parents taught me to be a good employee.
So to keep my
head down, do as little work as possible and avoid punishment at all costs. And that really was,
that really was the beginning for me. Like I didn't think about being an entrepreneur from
the time that I was a little kid. I wanted to be a filmmaker. And that really was my beginning was
I wanted to be an artist. I wanted to be a standup comic at one point. That
was really like the driving force in my life was, um, I thought I was, and I think that everybody
sort of fills a role in their family and I'm not even sure how I became the funny one in the family,
but that really ended up being the role that I played in my family. And then I began to see that that was
a potential career. And then it's really interesting. Did you read Malcolm Gladwell's
Outliers? Yes. Yeah. So really fascinating thing where he talks about how he grew up in this really
small town in Canada. And it just so happened that one of the people in his town happened to be,
I think they won like a Nobel
Prize or something crazy like that. So he's like, I ended up having this teacher that was really
extraordinary. And you know, what are sort of the odds that living in this really small town,
I have this person and it goes on to have this huge impact on my life. Bill Gates ends up going
to a high school that had access to a mainframe computer when basically nobody in the country had
access to a computer. So you get these weird moments where it ends up being really transformational in their lives.
And that moment for me was my dad's company happened to have access to a video camera.
And so they would let the employees take it home.
And my dad brought it home.
And for whatever reason, I was just stoked on it.
And my dad and i think bonded
over film more than anything like my dad was really into cars and i hate cars in a way that
i can't tell you really yeah like totally so what car do you drive can i ask uh sure i drive a
mercedes but like i don't even remember what the letter combination is. So like, definitely not a car guy. My dad was in the
classic cars, but we bonded over film. And so between that was a way to connect with my dad,
and then he brings the camera home. And so I start playing with it, because I already have this love
for film. And then my dad literally makes an offhanded comment when I'm 12 that, oh, I think
you're actually better behind the camera than you are in front of the camera. And that one comment ends up pushing me on a path that now I'll say in the
beginning, it was definitely the law of accident, but now has become something that I really have a
deep and profound connection to. You talk about how one question I get asked all the time is,
are entrepreneurs made or are they, are they are you born an entrepreneur?
And you spoke there that you weren't entrepreneurial when you were younger, which kind of goes against what a lot of people I think believe.
They expect entrepreneurs to be these charismatic risk takers that, you know, were selling candy bars at school when they were young.
Yeah.
Is that not the case?
Not certainly not for me.
And I'm sure that some people are born entrepreneurs.
I just don't happen to be one of them.
Right.
So yeah, when I hear stories like that, I'm actually a little jealous, if I'm honest,
like that would be really cool.
I really wish I were a born entrepreneur.
That sounds amazing.
And it's funny how humans really have a bias towards natural talent.
Like even I, and I rail against it and I talk about my content, like
you don't need to be born anything, whatever it is that you want to become extraordinary at. If
you're willing to put in the work, if you're willing to push far outside your comfort zone,
get into an adaptation response that you can get great at anything. Um, but I still
get stoked on natural talent. It's really, it's a really weird bias that humans have.
And I don't even understand what the fundamental root cause of that is.
Um, but no, I, I'm not a born entrepreneur.
I had a paper route when I was a kid and they paid you in two ways.
One, there was like a standard payment that you got just for like having the route.
And then there was, but if you go collect the money, you get like double your money
essentially. the route and then there was but if you go collect the money you get like double your money essentially
and i was so terrified to knock on their doors that i never collected any of the extra money so
i literally did the paper out for like two years for half the money that i could have been making
because i was too afraid to go knock on the door so is it sometimes when you look back and i think
steve jobs talked about it in hindsight where you look back and you connect the dots and you say
well it's you know as you said that one comment from your dad what are the other things when you look back
on your childhood or your early upbringing where you think that's the reason why I am who I am
today that's the reason why you know you've had the success you've had are there key things to me
I can look back and I think you know if my mum and dad were ever around I wouldn't have been a 10
year old that was that could just leave the house for three days and do whatever he wanted to, which led to independence, which led to creating
a business. So it was almost the the flaws in my upbringing that made me who I was. Are there
things like that in your story, I guess? Yeah, for sure. So when I think about the things that
really, I think of as defining me, it's my work ethics certainly is one of the biggest things.
And I definitely would not have developed the way that I did if it wasn't for my wife, who I had ambition when I met her, but I didn't have drive.
So I had these big dreams, but I couldn't get out of bed.
So I would lay in bed for three or four hours at a time.
And it's really interesting, like even judging by your face,
people see the after photo of me as an entrepreneur. And so they completely ignore what I'm saying about who I really was into my twenties, into my mid twenties. Um, I had big
dreams, but absolutely no follow through. Um, I'm not the brightest person you're ever going to meet.
So anything that people misinterpret as raw intelligence, I'll just say is the sheer willingness to read an
unimaginable amount of books to ask a lot of questions, to not be afraid to look stupid.
Like that's, I'm the combination of all those things. So, um, asking my father-in-law for his
blessing to marry his daughter and being told no, that I didn't have his blessing.
That was certainly a big moment for me.
Being ashamed of myself because my,
my then girlfriend was working and I was staying at home and I would lay in
bed for three or four hours until the threat of her coming home at lunch.
Cause I had one job at the time and that was to make her a sandwich for lunch
when she came home.
This isn't your current wife.
This is your,
she's now my wife at the time. She's came home. This isn't your current wife. This is your current wife.
She's now my wife at the time.
She's my girlfriend.
But yeah, yeah, yeah, Lisa.
So when Lisa was coming home from working,
I would be just awash in shame
because I had wasted the entire morning.
And now I was in danger that if I didn't get up
and brush my teeth and all that,
like immediately I wasn't gonna even be ready for her
at her lunchtime. So like that period of, of finally not running from the
shame, but really letting myself feel it. That was transitional. Um, going to film school and
really falling in love and taking myself seriously for the first time. That was a huge transition for
me because up to that point, I wanted to be a standup comic. My style of comedy was all
self-deprecating. So I was just making fun of myself all the time and it was funny and it got
big laughs and I actually really enjoyed it, but it was definitely diminishing my sense of self.
Why did you choose to produce self-deprecating comedy?
I don't, I think that it's, I'm very empatheticetic I have a lot of compassion for people so it just
never sat well with me to make fun of other people to tear them down so but it's really
funny to tear someone down to point at the absurd things you know to have somebody who's the butt of
the joke so if you don't resonate with making fun of other people that leave society or yourself, right?
Society, so you can just make fun of it at like a general level.
But I wasn't smart enough to pull off jokes like that.
So that left myself.
When I think of an entrepreneur, like the stereotype, if I was to draw a picture, you think of someone that has always been driven.
As we said, like selling candy bars on the playground.
You think of someone that's always been super high confidence that's always kind of been you know the charismatic
person in the room what you're describing sounds the opposite in many respects i've never i've
never sat down with an entrepreneur and interviewed them and then said to me that through like the
early 20s or a period of their life they they didn't have drive yeah and that's that's really
fascinating to me
because for some people,
that'll be really liberating in a sense
because people will see themselves
in their current situation and think,
I can never achieve the success that you have
because of how I feel right now.
But so the combination of your wife,
the combination of going into school,
what else changed that for you?
Was there a break, a big break you got or um i think that it really is um misleading to look for any one moment it's really going to
be a combination of things that begin to change your identity and that was what so another big
one for me was i went to film school i was doing very well at the beginning of film school and was sort of the person to watch
coming into my senior thesis film.
So statistically speaking,
you're more likely to get into Harvard Law
than you are USC film school.
I got in.
That's a whole story unto itself
because I almost didn't get in.
And then out of the people
who finally get into film school,
only four get to direct a senior thesis.
And I was one of the four chosen to direct a senior thesis.
So it was like just a big deal.
And I really felt like, man, my life is going in the right direction.
I'm going to crush the senior thesis.
I'm going to graduate.
I'm going to get a three-picture deal.
Man, this is set.
I'm ready to rock.
And then I completely ruined my senior thesis.
And it was an embarrassing shambles.
It was just a catastrophe in every
conceivable way and it was a catastrophe because i had gotten arrogant and insecure at the same
time which is really weird like using the like i wanted to be the person that i was pretending to
be like really badly i wanted to believe that i was naturally talented coming back to that
that i was a naturally talented filmmaker and what i found in my and so
i was acting like it right it's acting like i didn't have to prepare that i could just roll up
and shine that i didn't have to like put any preparation into it and so that's how i showed up
and i had the very harsh realization which is i am not naturally talented certainly not a filmmaker
and so i i just got my ass handed to me and people were like cutting
little reels of my film together to make fun of it, to show how bad it was. It was really,
really emotionally a pretty brutal time. And so coming out of that, I needed something to
save me from depression because my life just felt completely broken. And I went from thinking I was
going to get the three picture deal when I graduated to realizing I had no idea how to break into the industry. And this is back in the late
nineties. So there's no YouTube. There's no, nobody's making films with video cameras. I mean,
that was, you know, way into the future. And so to even make a no budget film, you're going to
have to raise a hundred thousand dollars. And that might as well have been a hundred million
dollars. I didn't know anybody that had a hundred thousand dollars. I never grew up with people that had money.
So like that was so foreign to me.
So coming out of that,
the,
the sort of turning moment,
if you know,
we're,
we're going to narrow my life down to these,
these key moments was reading about brain plasticity and realizing that I had
a choice to make and I could choose to believe because it was really
debated in the late nineties. Now people just take it as fact that your brain can change and
develop even as you're aging. But in the late nineties, it was one campus saying that you could,
that you could learn anything at any time. And the other campus, like, are you out of your mind?
Like by the time you're 13, like you're not going to be able to learn new things and that the brain
is actually in pruning mode and you're removing connections, not making new connections.
And so I just said, look, I choose to believe that brain plasticity is real and that just because I'm bad today doesn't mean I have to be bad tomorrow.
And that decision really changed the direction of my life. was once I was in an entrepreneurial space and working in my first startup, I realized that I
was telling everybody I wanted to be rich, but I was acting like I just wanted to be right.
And so I'd gotten in this huge fight with the guys who would become my business partners at
the time. They were just my employers. And I was arguing for this idea because they were so much
smarter than me. And that really sucks. Like if you value yourself for being smart, being around
people who are smarter than you, like obviously smarter than you really hurts.
And I think this is where people get in a lot of trouble because they don't understand what's
really driving their behavior. So my behavior was being driven by being smart. I was the smart kid.
And so I was constantly putting myself in smaller and smaller rooms so that I could be the smartest
person in the room. And it, here's the really terrifying news. That's an amazingly good strategy if you just want to feel
good about yourself. It's a terrible strategy if you want to be successful, but it's a great
strategy if you want to feel good about yourself. If you want to feel good for being smart, surround
yourself by dumb people. It will work every fucking time. Good for the ego, right? A thousand percent.
And so that was the loop that I was in was I want to be the smart guy. And so I was putting myself in these ridiculous rooms
where I was the smartest person. And then I found myself because I really believed that I wanted to
be rich. And that was the driving force of my life. So I met these two entrepreneurs. They're
like, Hey, come with us, learn to get rich. And I was like, this is amazing. I'll be able to build
my own film studio. This is going to be fantastic. I'm going to go with them, get rich, take about 18 months. That was like,
everybody agrees, take about 18 months. And so I'm in this business now with these two guys that are
much smarter than me, much farther ahead in their entrepreneurial journey than me.
And I just felt stupid. And it was absolutely crushing my self-esteem. And so one day I was
arguing and arguing and arguing for this idea.
And I knew that it was wrong.
I knew that it would move the business backwards.
But I needed to win.
I needed my idea to move forward.
I needed people to say, yeah, this kid's really smart.
And when they finally agreed, and I'm going to guess that they agreed because I just wore them down.
Not because I actually convinced them that I had the right idea.
I had this moment of crisis where I realized that I'm saying I want to be rich, but I'm
not acting like it.
And so the one sort of piece of credit I will give myself, and I don't know where this insight
came from, but I said, look, don't judge yourself.
If what you really want is to just feel good about being smart, that's absolutely fine. And if that's
the life you want to live, that's absolutely fine. But you need to get out of this company
because you'll never be smarter than these two. Doesn't mean that I can't add value. Doesn't mean
that I can't add more value, but I'll define intelligence as the ability to process raw data quickly, which I can't do.
That is not like we all have our superpower.
That is not my superpower.
And so I knew that if I stayed there, it was just going to keep eroding my sense of self.
So I was like, I either need to leave or I need to build my self-esteem around something new. And that insight, that's the one
like sort of lightning rod moment, line in the sand, my life can be delineated into before and
after, was I didn't want to leave. So I decided that to stay, I had to start building my self-esteem
around being the learner. I had to stop valuing myself for being right. I had to stop valuing myself for
being smart. And I had to start valuing myself for learning and being willing to admit when I was
wrong faster than anyone else. And shifting my identity to that then began to drive behaviors
like the voracious reading, like being willing to admit that I was wrong, like asking questions,
never being afraid to look stupid, all the things that ended up being my superpower. You talk about your superpower there and you talk about, um, understanding why
you act in the way you act. And part of me just from meeting you for a couple of minutes thinks
that one of your superpowers is a pretty deep sort of sense of self-awareness and being able to like
analyze yourself in hindsight, why you performed X action and what part of your ego or
your, you know, heart or whatever your mind that came from. Is that fair assessment? Because I've
never met someone that's so good at talking about why they behave the way they did and what the
motivations were in their past. You're either writing a lot of stuff down or you're very like
sort of self-analytical. I'm very self-analytical i'm very self-analytical
so i won't say that the um the awareness is something that came naturally because i spent
decades playing the fool because i couldn't see that i was playing the fool so i i my behavior in
my entire life certainly up into my mid mid twenties, just embarrasses me to no
end. Um, because I couldn't see myself as others saw me. Um, so that came, that awareness came from,
I have a, I obsessively think about things. So that may be a mutation that may be in somebody else,
um, in somebody else's hands, a negative thing, because they'll let themselves loop over
negativity, which I certainly spent years doing, but I've leveraged that natural inclination to
loop over things, to loop over things that move me forward. Not always necessarily that are warm
and fuzzy, but that they move me forward, that they force me to face an inadequacy,
that they force me to face something ugly
or petty about myself.
And if I really had to say the thing
that sets me apart,
it's my willingness to stare nakedly
at the things about myself that are ugly.
And if you're willing to do that,
which I could not do
until I finally stopped valuing myself
for being good, and not like good, like, oh, he's a good kid, like being talented or gifted
at something. Once I let go of that, then it was okay to say, oh, you're really shit at that.
Like it was okay. Like 10 years ago, 15 years ago, more, let's say 20 years ago now,
because I probably started my transformation when I was about 24 in earnest. Before that, the questions that you're asking me, I would have answered in
ways that made me look cool. That would have been so important to me. I would have been absolutely
terrified to look stupid. So I would have tried to look cool. But getting on the other side of
that and shifting what I valued myself for, it just made it really easy. Then once I could stare nakedly at my inadequacies,
then you can let go of a need to be a certain way and you can just see how you actually are.
Then if you're goal oriented and you believe in brain plasticity and that you can change,
and that's a big thing for me because I don't believe that any negative thing about me
is a permanent state of affairs.
It's like, oh, well, I can change that.
So there's no reason to lie about it.
And I guess changing it starts with that honesty,
which is, you know, yeah, really interesting.
If it all feels kind of interlinked,
you talked as well about money
and about you being young
and thinking that the thing you wanted
was to get really rich.
I wrote in my diary at 18 years old
when I was living in a
very rough area um shoplifting that by the age of 25 I'd be and everybody's seen my diary a
millionaire I'd have a range over sport which would be my first because my dream car and a few other
things about my body and having a girlfriend but um upon getting to 25 and someone offering to buy
our business um 18 year old Steve showed up he was motivated by money because my family never had it
and I literally went online and looked at a mansion in the countryside and a Lamborghini 18 year old Steve showed up. He was motivated by money because my family never had it.
And I literally went online and looked at a mansion in the countryside and a Lamborghini.
And I,
just by looking at those things, I felt a sense of emptiness because for me,
I don't know if you've read a book called,
um,
a guide to a good life,
which talks about how like hedonistic adaptation and,
um,
chasing pleasure,
thinking it's happiness.
And that's never ending cycle of then, you know,
a week later, you're no longer impressed by the thing you've bought. My question is,
what role does money play in your, as a motivator for you in your career, but also as a,
in terms of your happiness? And this is a question I'm asking, because I want to know the answer.
I'm hoping you're, you know, ahead of me me so you can maybe reach back down and let me know the truth.
Yeah. So I wasted years of my life chasing money. Now, what I want people to understand is the
reason that people chase money is because money is real. Money is powerful. Money is more powerful
than you realize. It's just not at all what you've been told. So here's what I thought about money.
This is why I was chasing it so hard.
When I looked at somebody who had a big house and I looked at somebody with a fast car and I looked at somebody that was wealthy, I admired them.
I was in awe of them.
I just thought, oh, my God, like that would be so cool to be that person.
And I thought I would feel about myself that same way if I just had
those things. And I've had the very good fortune of the way that our wealth came is it was all in
the company. So for a long time, I had a good salary, but for a long time, it was, I was just
another guy with a good salary. You know what I mean mean so i wasn't like really wealthy even though on paper i was worth hundreds of millions of dollars in my real life i was living in a normal house i was
driving a normal car it was like there wasn't anything really fancy about my life and then
because we took an investment we sold a small piece of the company but the company was valued
over a billion dollars it's like all of a sudden the raw number of dollars is so crazy that you go from
a normal guy with like a good salary to like hitting refresh on your bank account a few times
because they're like the money's been wired and all of a sudden you've got a lot of fucking commas
and a lot of zeros in your account and it's so crazy and you have this moment of like whoa my
life is never going to be the same.
This is so bananas.
But wait a second.
I don't feel any differently about myself.
Every insecurity that I had before the money hit, I still have.
Like I feel exactly the same about myself that I did a year ago, five years ago.
I won't say 20 years ago because it's like you're doing all the work.
But it's like.
The money didn't change anything.
1,000%. And it won't say 20 years ago because it's like you're doing all the work, but it's like. The money didn't change anything. 1,000%.
And it won't.
It never will because you're not going to feel differently about who you are.
Now, here's the good thing.
I didn't feel badly about myself.
I felt really fucking good.
I felt like I was a beast.
But the money didn't change anything.
What changed something was I showed up at the gym every day.
I put in the work.
I did things I didn't want to do.
I was willing to suffer in service of a goal. And once you're willing to do that, once you're
willing to be disciplined, earn credibility with yourself, have a why, push towards it,
serve other people, like all of those things build your sense of self. And it's never going to be the
money. Now, the irony of ironies is that the money is going to be an outcropping of those things
anyway in this world, right? Because in this social age, baby, like the number
one marketing vehicle is to be a good person and to do amazing things for people and to add a
crushing amount of value to people's lives. Like the greatest marketing vehicle of all time now
is to be a good person, which is amazing, right? And I think like getting into my story, in fact,
here's another moment that was utterly transformational.
So I'm working in this tech startup with the guys.
They hired me as a copywriter.
They said, don't think of yourself as a copywriter.
You can have any job you want in the company.
You just have to become the right person for the job.
I spent six and a half years all into a level that most people just simply cannot comprehend.
Like only letting my wife pick an apartment that I could get to the guys who
are my employers,
just my employers at the time that I could get to their house in seven minutes
or less.
So she would find a place she would like,
and then we would get in the car motherfucker with a stopwatch and we would
drive,
time it,
drive back,
go to the other one and time that.
And if it was seven minutes or less,
then yep,
we can,
whatever apartment you want at that point.
But cause I wanted,
if they called me at 2am.m. on a Saturday,
I wanted to be there in 10 minutes or less.
So like that was my obsession.
Like I was just all in, round the clock.
For six and a half years, I didn't actually take a vacation.
I would leave the state, but I would have my phone.
I'd be watching the business on a camera.
Like it was crazy.
And finally, my wife had to pull me aside and say,
look, you're now damaging the marriage. Like this is just too much. You literally can't work. You
can't sustain 90 hour weeks for seven years. You just, it's crazy. So, but that's where I was.
And I was just hell bent to become something. I was hell bent to get rich. That was my focus at
the time. And it, for the first three years, I won't lie. It was awesome. And I was learning so much and I was growing so much. It was fucking rad. And there's
nothing anybody could have said to me to make me back off. And then it started to take from me
and it just was too much because I didn't believe in what I was building. And so at about six and
a half years, I was like, okay, I'm a multimillionaire on paper, which I hope everybody listening,
there's a difference between paper money and cash money.
But I was multimillionaire on paper.
And I was so profoundly unhappy that I was like,
this can't be real.
I'm living the cliche of money can't buy happiness.
This is such a joke.
I've heard this a thousand times.
So how am I being caught off guard by this? And I told my my wife because i had promised her i'm going to make you rich i told her dad who
the reason he didn't want me to marry his daughter was he didn't think i'd be able to provide for her
and so like i had so much writing on being successful and i went to my wife and i said look
i know i promised i'd make you rich but I need to do something that makes me feel alive.
I need to fall in love with life again.
This is so crazy and I'm so unhappy.
And I said, I will do it.
I will ultimately accomplish that, but I need to do it in something that I believe in.
And so she said, I bet on you.
And that has become sort of the foundation of our relationship was how ride or die she is.
And I went in and I quit. And I was telling the story now, it's such a powerful and cool moment,
but at the time I was deeply ashamed. I was like, I'm quitting. I'm a quitter. And I can't get
across the finish line, but I'm just that unhappy. And I know like where depression leads people. And that was obviously not somewhere I wanted to be.
Um, but they said, look, we could do this without you, but we don't want to.
And so I never quite made it home.
So I was literally driving back from having quit.
And they called me as I'm pulling into the driveway.
I'm on the phone with my wife saying like, I did it.
I quit like the hardest thing in the world.
These guys were the two closest people in my life outside of my family.
And I felt like I'd just let them down,
but I finally had the guts to say,
I just can't keep doing this.
And they called me and they said, come out to dinner.
I go out to dinner and they say,
look, we could do this without you.
We don't want to.
And it allowed me to connect to something
other than the money.
And I said, all right, I have to confess.
If we're gonna move forward together,
then we're gonna have to sell this company. We, I have to confess. If we're going to move forward together, then we're going to have to sell this company.
We're going to have to build another company predicated entirely on value creation, on building community, and not focusing on money ever again.
Like I'll never again make decisions based on money.
It's not that I won't be thoughtful.
It's not that I won't build the business in a way that makes sense financially.
But I'm never going to let that be the lead driver again.
So I have five drivers I think most people do. Um, money comes, it's one of the five,
but it's the fifth. And so the other ones, purpose and meaning autonomy and the desire for mastery,
like all of those sit in higher position than money. And so that became my obsession. Like I
want to do rad things for people and I want to be me. I want to be authentic. We didn't have these words back then. This is all
before social media was called social media. There was no influencers. No one was talking
about authenticity and transparency, but I came to it out of a, out of a place of absolute pain
and suffering. And when I finally got there and realized money is never going to make me happy,
that the punchline, and I want to just bring this mic close and eat it because I really want people
to listen. The punchline of chasing success is very simple. Success isn't money. Success isn't
fame. Success is not people thinking that you're cool. Success is very simply, I promise you,
fulfillment. That's it. Now I'll define fulfillment.
Fulfillment's what the ancient Greeks called techni.
Techni is having a set of skills
that are very meaningful to you
that you worked your ass off to acquire
and they don't only serve you, they serve other people.
That's it.
That's life.
Literally, I have the chills.
That's life.
Once you get to that place
where there's something you fucking believe in, man,
like you really believe in it and you're ready to commit to think about this you're in this crazy
mansion right now right i've got a lot of money i could have bought an island and retired but i
didn't i'm working harder now than i've ever worked in my life but i'm more on fire more excited more
energized because i believe in what i'm doing and because i know that the way that you feel about
yourself when you're all alone and it's dark
and there's nothing to distract you,
how you feel about yourself in that moment is everything.
And so when you're doing something that you believe in
and that serves, like that's a big deal
and it sounds super cheesy
and I wish those words weren't cheesy
because it's actually really powerful,
but there's something inside of all of us at the individual level we want to contribute to the group we want to do
something rad for people we want to see that moment where we're like whoa that thing that i
worked really hard for that just helped this person there there just isn't anything better
than that's why people like being parents amazing you built such a tremendous business with quest
nutrition that um i almost don't want to spend too much time on that even though it's a huge parents. Amazing. You built such a tremendous business with Quest Nutrition that I almost
don't want to spend too much time on that, even though it's a huge accomplishment and it's probably
what most people want to know most about. Man, we can dive in as deep as you want. Don't be tense.
After that moment where you talked about sitting with your business partners and saying we need
to build a new business, was that business Quest Nutrition? Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Quest was born
out of misery, man, in no uncertain terms.
So I told my partners what I needed to be emotionally excited.
And they were like, actually, we agree.
We feel the same way.
Like, let's really do something that we can believe in.
And like the really like non sort of condensed story is they said, all right, look, we've spent a lot of time on this company.
Give us six months. If we can get revenue to a certain point in six months, then we'll keep
going. And if we can't, we'll sell the company. And I said, okay, fine. So if we can build it to
that point and we get out of this rut that we're in and it's exploding, then great. At the six
month mark, we were still treading water because we didn't believe in it. So we didn't have those
passion-based insights. We didn't have that passion-based energy and enthusiasm and creativity that comes when you really believe in something
and that and then you created quest nutrition all three of you yeah yeah and how long ago was that
that was we started conceptualizing of it in 2009 so it's probably 2008 roughly that i went in and
said all right i can't do this anymore. Maybe early 2009.
And then we started thinking, okay, what's going to be the next thing for three very different
reasons. And I will definitely speak only for myself for three very different reasons. We
founded quest. And for me, I had grown up in a morbidly obese family. And so I wanted to find
a way to make food that they could choose based on taste and it happened to be good for them so that they would be around long enough for me to enjoy. And I was really afraid to lose
people that I love too early just because they couldn't do the eat less and exercise more. It
just wasn't a winning combination for them. So that was my passion. And I knew that there were
obviously hundreds of millions of people, maybe a billion plus people that struggled with food in the same way.
So I knew there was a sound business model there.
But there's an awesome quote often attributed to Mother Teresa, whether she actually said it or not, that says, no one will act for the many, but people will act for the one.
And that really resonated with me.
So I showed up every day in the times that it was hard and I was exhausted and all of that.
Because we were running the software company by day and building Quest at nights and weekends.
So it was just, I mean, you're just working around the clock.
And in those moments where I was just so fatigued, dude, I'm thinking about my mom and my sister, right?
That's super easy.
Those are people that I know and love.
And you can show up and fight for them in a way that you won't for that sort of amorphous they.
And where's Quest today as a business?
You said you took investment and sold part of the business.
Yeah.
So I exited almost exactly two years ago.
So I can give you a snapshot.
When I left, we were doing hundreds of millions in revenue, valued at over a billion dollars.
We had about 1,400 full-time employees when I left.
Just before I left, we also had another roughly 1,500 part-time employees.
So at the height, we had almost 3,000 employees.
So it was pretty bananas.
Why was Quest a success?
Other than your motivations and the reason why you showed up every day and in the hard times, what was the, you know, it's easy to narrow it down to, it's not.
I mean, I can get super tactical like
to not make it fairy tale like i want to know what why why quest succeeded yeah hell yeah so
first of all the most important thing to take away from me is there's always room for the best
and just because you're not the best today doesn't mean you can't become the best so people fall into
the same trap that i fell into you think well i'm either good at that or i'm not i'm either
extraordinary or i'm not we didn't know anything about food. We didn't know anything about
manufacturing. So of course we were clumsy. We were terrible, but we had the will to see it
through. So if you have the will to see it through, and this is the same thing with impact theory,
right? So our, our thing that we like trumpet everywhere we can is that we're going to build
a studio to rival Disney. Now that's so arrogant, but I know that I have the will to see it through.
Now I'm not the man that I need to be.
I can't rival Bob Iger right now.
Like if he handed me the keys to Disney,
I'd run into the ground.
I don't know what the hell I'm doing.
So, but right.
I don't,
I don't base my self esteem on being good or being right or being talented,
just that I'm willing to learn.
So when we came into quest,
it was just,
we knew we'd learn.
We knew we'd figure it out.
So when everybody else asked the same question,
hey, I want to make a bar that doesn't have sugar in it,
how do I go about it?
They ran into the same roadblock we did,
which is all of the equipment that was made
for the last like 70 years
was made in lockstep with the use of high fructose corn syrup,
which is not only delicious,
it's not only subsidized by the government,
but it gives products this amazing texture and allows you to run it through
machines.
And then on top of that,
they're designing the machines to use high fructose corn syrup based products.
So you get this industry that they're just in lockstep.
So the moment you take out the high fructose corn syrup,
all of the commercially available equipment no longer works,
which means you have to make your product by hand which means you can't scale
so when we ran into that instead of saying oh well i guess we have to change the formula which
is what everybody else did and they felt morally okay with it because they were like well there's
no equipment that exists so even though they really wanted to help people and they wanted
to make a protein bar and they didn't have any ill intent they put sugar in it just to make it viable from a production standpoint we didn't we became our
own manufacturers we designed our own equipment dude it was pure insanity everyone was like are
you out of your mind like you can't do that we didn't know what we were doing and the naivete
of being the beginner but knowing we had the will to see it through so we didn't quite know how
daunting it was going to be and we knew but no matter what comes our way, we're going to keep fighting. So as that madness
began to unfold and we realized just how hard it was going to be and that the equipment really
wasn't going to work and what everybody said was true, that we were never going to be able to
produce that bar. And if we could produce it, not at a cost that would make any sense, like
all those things began to come true. And then, um, one of my business partners who actually grew up on an
Iowa farm was like, I can re-engineer this equipment and literally cut the shit apart
and put it back together. And it worked. And we were like, Whoa. So right. As we had a product
that nobody else had created, we had a manufacturing, um, line that nobody else had made.
And then we were marketing in a way that was entirely socially based before social was a name.
So we were the perfect storm of out of, from my own perspective, out of suffering and frustration of the way that business was typically done.
We had completely abandoned all of that and said, we weren't, again, we weren't using these words.
But the words people would use now today,
we're being, we're gonna be authentic.
We're gonna be transparent.
We're gonna be all about value creation.
We're gonna be about community.
We're not gonna try to sell product.
We're gonna try to improve people's lives.
And if improving people's lives builds a business,
then we have a business.
And if it doesn't, then we don't.
But we are not going to do anything
that doesn't add value to people's lives, period.
Damn.
It seems that like delusional self-belief, a bit of naivety and determination are a pretty potent combination.
Yeah, the arrogance of belief, I think, is absolutely critical.
It's incredible.
So you exit about two years ago.
At what point do you make the decision that you're going to focus on impact theory predominantly full-time, I'm guessing?
Oh, yeah, 100% full-time.
That was why I exited.
So going back to the beginning of my story is you've got this kid, graduates from film
school.
He's teaching filmmaking.
He meets these two entrepreneurs, and they said the magic words that this became a really
important thing for me.
So the timeline doesn't quite add up.
It's so much easier to tell the story this way.
But in truth,
I'd already started on my entrepreneurial journey and was trying to be a
filmmaker at the same time.
And I had a film turned into,
or a script turned into a film.
And I was just absolutely mortified with how it turned out.
And I was crestfallen.
And then the words that they had said to me at the very beginning,
which was,
you're coming to the world with your handout. And if you very beginning, which was, you're coming to the
world with your handout. And if you want to control the art, you have to control the resources,
which was originally why I decided to get into being an entrepreneur, which was if I could
control the art or excuse me, if I could control the resources and I could build my own studio.
So that became my obsession was I was going to leapfrog not knowing where to get the hundred
thousand dollars by getting rich. right? So that was what started
in the beginning. So when I had taken all, when we had taken the money into the company and suddenly
I had, you know, enough money to buy an island and do whatever I wanted, it was like, well,
I knew what I wanted. I wanted to build a studio, but now it was infused with, I wanted to build a
studio that was going to change the way that people thought,
that changed their entire lens through which they viewed the world. And this gets into a very long
story about working in the inner cities and seeing how very extraordinary people will end up doing
nothing with their lives because they don't believe in themselves. But that became the
driving force behind Impact Theory. So I had the capital finally to create the studio that i wanted to have the impact in the world that i wanted to have what
is impact theory now it's so interesting i've had um we'll talk about this maybe off camera but um
yeah what is impact theory now now i'm intrigued so impact theory is it's a studio so we make if
you think of us as the next disney it's the easiest way to wrap
your head around what we do so just like disney owns marvel we start in comics it's a great way
to build intellectual property um and then we translate the comics into film and tv now the
reason that i want to do this is because um if you know you've all know a harari yeah so he has
three books essentially where largely the punchline is
humans are meaning making machines and narrative drives all of our beliefs and decision making.
Johanna Hartray.
Johanna Hartray?
Oh, right. Okay. Sorry.
What is that?
I thought you said Johanna Harari.
No, Yuval Noah Harari.
Oh, okay. Sorry. The last guest on the podcast was Johanna Harari.
Oh, wow. No, no, total coincidence.
So he wrote Sapiens, Homo Deus, and 21 Rules for the 21st Century.
So anyway, that's his thesis.
I totally believe in that to the core of my being.
It's the same thing that Joseph Campbell was saying.
It's the same thing Jordan Peterson is saying.
And I think that they're right.
What drives the way that culture builds itself up
is through the narratives that we tell. And Daniel Coyle wrote a book called The Culture Code. And
randomly enough in that book, it's got this whole section where he talks about the number one way to
impact somebody's decision-making and the beliefs by which they guide their life is through narrative. It just
is the way people are. We tell stories. We tell stories to ourselves about ourselves. We tell
ourselves stories about the world and the way that it works. We tell stories about our role in the
family, our role in the job, our role in society, what society is, what our friends are. All of this
is this narrative, this story that we tell about things. And so if you really want to change, and this was a direct quote from Joseph Campbell, if you want
to change the world, change the metaphor. And that played out in my life twice. So the first time was
Star Wars. So Yoda led me to Taoism because basically Yoda is just a sort of Buddhist
stroke Taoist, right? And Taoism led me to a growth mindset.
And a growth mindset is what made me successful.
And then again with The Matrix.
And The Matrix made me realize that the thing that will determine what you're capable of
is simply belief.
That's it.
And in the movie, once he believes in himself, he doesn't gain new skills.
But he's able to do new things
because he believes that he can now i don't think that we're actually living in a computer simulation
but the reality is once you understand that your brain is encased in total darkness light never
touches your brain sound never touches your brain what your brain gets are electrical and chemical
signals that it interprets and creates this world that you see
around you. Now it creates it well enough. You can walk around without bumping into too much shit,
but the reality is it's, it's all a construct. It's all fake. It's just your brain cobbling
things together in a way that allows you to move around without getting eaten by a lion. Okay.
That's essentially what it's so funny. I would get my laptop out, but my laptop is in that bag
over there and it's got a sticker on it. And the sticker says rewrite. And it's the name of the organization we started.
And the whole objective is it is as what it says in the tin.
It's aiming to help rewrite the stories that are holding young, disadvantaged kids back.
So every month I go to a number of schools with the rewrite banner and we speak to kids and try and help them rewrite those stories that we think might hold them back.
So, you know, you're speaking right to my heart there.
Listen, I could talk to you for hours and hours, but I feel like I'm, you know, I've got so much value from you that I'm so deeply appreciative.
And you've been even more of an inspiration than I thought you were when I sat down, and that was pretty hard to beat.
So I wanted to thank you for your time today.
Thanks for having me.
Where do people find you?
At Tom Bilyeu across all socials.
I wish my name weren't spelled weird.
It is.
But my last name is B as in Bravo.
I-L-Y-E-U.
I'm super active.
So by all means, come on.
Instagram and YouTube are probably my two most, what I consider important platforms.
So if you're trying to get a message to me, DM me on IG.
And then our hub of our content is YouTube.
Amazing.
Thank you so much for your time today, Tom.
I really, really appreciate it.
Thank you so much.
Thanks, mate.
Thanks.
My pleasure. you