The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Extended Moment: Guy Raz: Why 99% of Businesses Fail & This Secret Made Apple, Pixar, & Elon Musk Billions!
Episode Date: October 11, 2024In this moment, the host of ‘How I Built This’, discusses the lessons he has learned from interviewing over 20,000 people, ranging from global CEO’s, superstars to rural shepherds in Afghanistan....  Guy has built his career on the idea that every business is a story, and this business must tell this story to itself and others. He believes that all successful founders share common traits and outlooks, such as: fearing the regret of not trying more than the fear of failure. Believing in their product so much that they have almost superhuman endurance, and continue despite multiple failures. Guy also says that the most successful founders often don’t do it alone and have a co-founder to help them withstand the highs and lows of entrepreneurship. You can learn more about Guy’s podcast How I Built This, here: https://g2ul0.app.link/oj8DA9i7kNb You can learn more about the new kids toy line by Guy’s family podcast Wow in the World, here: https://g2ul0.app.link/vvcHFH16kNbÂ
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Guy, how many people have you interviewed in your life?
I would say over 20,000.
And you started a smash hit iconic show called How I Built This.
Why? What's the mission behind that show? I wanted to give people access to the greatest entrepreneurs I could find
in ways that they might not have access to them. And I wanted that wisdom and those stories to be
available to anyone at any time for free forever. Give me an idea of the kinds and caliber of people
that you've interviewed over those 20,000 interviews.
Oh, everybody from, you know, rural sheepers in Afghanistan
to soccer players in Europe
to celebrities in the United States,
world leaders, entrepreneurs and founders of businesses
to ordinary man on the street conversations. I'm really curious. You know, when we talk
about building something, the seemingly impossible, most difficult part of building anything seems to
be going from zero to one. And you've sat with people who have gone from having an idea to putting that
idea in motion. And it's not a huge journey to travel, but it seems like the hardest journey
to travel because it requires so much of a shift in mindset. It requires the confrontation of fear
and apparent danger. And there's something about these people that makes them decide that it's better than not
starting. Taking the action is better than not taking the action. Have you been able to figure
out what that is in people and how we can cultivate it? There's several sort of the Venn diagram of
founders coalesces around a few common traits that, by the way, many of us have intuitively, naturally, or can develop, right?
So curiosity is an obvious one. Just this desire to grow and to learn and to look around you
and to try and absorb the lessons around you. But the other ones are a little bit more hard-edged,
like a fear of regret, of not trying something. So many years
ago, I interviewed a guy named Jim Cook. I've actually interviewed him recently again. He
really kind of revolutionized the beer industry in the United States. Like the reason why Europeans
drink American beer today is because of Jim Cook. Like in the 80s, it was a joke, right? There's
actually a famous Monty Python sketch where it's something about
rather drink piss than American beer, something like that. Well, in the 80s, he kind of revived
the beer industry in the US with a beer named Samuel Adams. And he really kind of supercharged
what became this craft brewing industry in the US, IPAs and all these really interesting beers
that to this day are some of
the greatest in the world. He started his business, Sam Adams, in his 30s. He was a
consultant for Boston Consulting Group. He was making a good salary. He had a family,
but there was something about his life that felt unfulfilled. And part of that was he wanted to build something on his own.
He wanted it to be his.
He didn't wanna work for somebody else.
And he felt that if he didn't try,
if he just continued on at BCS,
he would make a lot of money.
He would make millions of dollars
and he could have a very stable, good life,
but he felt like he would be unfulfilled
if it wasn't his own thing,
that he had to try. So he took a risk. He left. But he felt that if he didn't take the risk,
it would be dangerous. And he actually uses this paradigm, dangerous versus scary. It was really
scary to leave his job at BCS, but it would be dangerous if he stayed because the danger would be that one day he'd get out of bed and he'd be 60 and he would regret not having tried.
And I think that's a big factor for a lot of founders, this idea that they don't want to feel intense regret.
And so they're willing to take the risk, even though it might be catastrophic.
The idea of building something, of owning something, of creating something yourself that is yours is a hugely powerful pull.
And that's, it's like, you know, that's that magnetic field that they're
all attracted to. They're all kind of moving in that direction. I think many of us who are
entrepreneurs or aspire to be entrepreneurs feel that magnetic pull. What role does self-belief
play? And what is that? Because in your book, you talk about how it's not always the case that they have huge amount of confidence and knowledge.
Is self-belief essential to get going? And from all the people you've interviewed that are widely
successful, did they have that self-belief or did they have something else that got them over that
first hurdle? You know, it's interesting. Sometimes there are people who are born sort of, um, they have this kind of
this natural confidence and you know, people like that, you've met them,
right? People that just seem to exude confidence and self-assurance. And I think those people are
rare in general. Most healthy entrepreneurs experience self-doubt.
It is a really natural and I think important and necessary trait to be able to sort of
in your mind say, am I doing the right thing?
Is this the right thing?
Am I making a mistake? The difference is that
while it's healthy to ask yourself those questions and to interrogate your decisions,
because it's going to inevitably lead to better decisions and force you to justify things to
yourself, you have to have a willingness to power through. That I think some people have instinctively, but there are other, you know, quite a few founders who are members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
Okay. Known, better known as the Mormon Church. It's not a term used anymore. The church
prefers to use the previous term I used. And there is a very strong tradition of entrepreneurship
in that community. We just interviewed Jason Worsland, the founder of Therabody.
You know the Theragun?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
He's also grew up in the church.
And I always wondered, what is it about these members of the church and the connection to entrepreneurship?
Well, virtually every young Mormon member of the church at 18 goes on a mission. They're sent
somewhere around the world with books of Mormon, with a suit, bicycles, and they go door to door
to door to door in every country around the world preaching the book of Mormon. Now, 99 out of 100
houses that you knock your door on, you knock on their door, slam in your face. But one door will open.
And after two years of having 99% of the door slammed in your face, you understand that it
doesn't matter. You're just going for that one door. And they come back to the United States
and they've developed this incredibly thick skin. They have withstood all of these no's for two years.
And so when they go to start a business,
whether it's Cotopaxi, David Smith,
or JetBlue, David Nealman,
or Joel Clark, Kodiak Cakes,
or Jason Worsland, Therabody, Theragun,
they've heard no for so long on these missions
that starting a business seems like a piece of cake because now they know that all they need
to do is withstand those no's. And no happens to be the most important word that an entrepreneur will ever hear. And I guess they also know how yes happens.
Yeah. And I think that's like, as you were saying, I was thinking about a lot of young people will
say to me, Steve, I've tried to get the job. I've tried to start the business. I sent 10 emails.
And they think, they assumed that the 10 emails or the five emails to the job they wanted
would be enough to get it.
But in that case, with the members of the Church of Latter-day Saints, they know that no comes anywhere between one and 100.
No is the default.
Yeah.
You expect no.
So they know that yes comes anywhere between one and 100.
Yeah, exactly.
There's a great story that I came across recently. It was an interview I did with a guy named Isaac Larian. Isaac is the owner of the largest privately owned toy company in North America called MGA. doll called the Bratz doll, B-R-A-T-Z, Zed. And that doll was the first doll to challenge Barbie.
Barbie had like 90% market share in 2000. And within three years, Barbie's market share went
down like 30%. Bratz became a $3 billion a year brand. It's an amazing story. Now rewind back to
the early 70s. He comes to the United States from Iran, penniless, two, 300 bucks in his pocket, no English, to Los Angeles.
He came here to Los Angeles where we're talking.
And he worked as a waiter.
Eventually, he started to import cheap consumer electronics from Japan in the early 80s and sell them to independent electronics stores.
So what he would do is he'd go to Japan
with a suitcase, he'd buy Sony Walkman, stuff his suitcase with Sony Walkman, come back to LA and
sell them for a 40% markup to consumer electronic stores. Eventually he got successful enough that
he could bring in shipping containers full of these Walkman, right? By 1985, 86, he was doing
four or $5 million a year in revenue. So he had a significant business importing Japanese consumer electronics and selling
them locally in the US.
He's on a trip to Japan in 1986, and he sees children playing these things called game
and watch.
It was a rectangular game with an LED screen and two buttons, and it was a craze all over
Japan.
And he said to himself,
I got to sell these in the US. So he gets on a train to Kyoto, takes a bullet train to Kyoto,
which is where Nintendo's headquarters are. He goes to Nintendo headquarters, and he asks the receptionist to meet with the head of export. And she looks at him, she says, I'm sorry,
I think his name is Mr. Kobayashi. I don't remember the exact name, but she said, he's not available.
You have to book an appointment with him three, four months in advance.
Isaac says, look, I'm here in Kyoto just for the day.
Can I just five minutes, have five minutes with him?
She said, impossible.
So he says, now remember, he's got a successful business, five, $6 million business.
He says, I will wait here in the reception.
When he comes out for lunch, can you point him out?
She says, I'm sorry, I can't do that.
He sits down in the reception and he waits and he waits and he waits.
And at 5 p.m., a man walks out of the elevator.
He whispers something to the receptionist.
He's been there for six hours, Isaac.
The man walks up to Isaac and says, may I help you, sir?
He says, my name is Isaac Larian.
I understand you're in charge of export.
He says, I am.
He said, I would like to get the license to export the Game & Watch.
He says, impossible.
We're not interested.
And who are you?
And you need to make an appointment months in advance.
He said, well, can we just have a quick chat?
He said, no.
He said, can I get your business card at least?
He hands him his business card.
Isaac goes back to the United States with this guy's business card.
He goes to his bank and he asks for a million dollar line of credit in the name of this guy.
We'll call him Kobayashi.
Sends him a telex, because there's no email back then, with a million dollar line of credit. And he calls him up,
has his business card. He says, did you receive my line of credit letter? And the man says, yes,
I told you, Mr. Larian, we're not interested in working with you. We're not interested in
exporting these toys. Not interested. He said, what if I pay all cash?
He said, we're not interested. He calls him again a few days later. He says, I want to order a
million dollars worth of these. He said, we're not interested. He said, please. The guy in Japan
says, we're not going to change these into English for you. He says, don't worry. Send them to me in Japanese with the instructions.
I'll repackage them.
Exhausted, the guy finally says, fine, one-off.
In year one, they sell $25 million worth of these game watches in the U.S.
Year two, $50 million.
Year three, $75 million.
I said to Isaac Larian, you walked into Nintendo.
You sat there. your dignity was challenged.
Your self-worth was challenged.
Your ego was challenged.
They said no to you repeatedly.
And he said, ego, dignity, self-worth, all that stuff is nonsense.
Pride, if that's what you care about,
you will never succeed. The minute somebody says no to you is the minute the negotiation begins.
And that's how I run my business. And that's how I have become the entrepreneur I've become. He's a multi-billionaire today. And an amazing example of why that word no is so powerful. Some people naturally can withstand it.
Some people have to develop the skill that it takes like those Mormon missionaries to hear no
hundreds, thousands of times before they have that thick skin and they can break through.
So interesting, so powerful and a wonderful reframing of what that
moment of rejection means that everyone will go through. And when I think about these other
entrepreneurs I've sat and spoken to who end up getting to where he got to, some of them have to
take what I call no man's land, where they start something, it appears that no one cares. They do
that thing for five years, sometimes 10 years, doesn't appear that anybody cares. And then,
I don't know, the world conspires or luck shows up or timing happens and that person has lift off. That's also a sort of similar path. Have you seen that in any of the people
you've interviewed in the stories you've seen? And what is the driving force that pushes someone
through no man's land for a couple of years, three, four, five, six, seven years when it's not working, but they have the something to persist regardless.
It's amazing because it does happen. I mean, again, going back to this example of Theragun,
this guy, Jason Worsland, came to Los Angeles to become a chiropractor.
And it was a difficult time in his life. His marriage had broken up. He
had two small children. It was very painful for him to leave Salt Lake City, Utah, to come to
Los Angeles to study, to become a chiropractor. Eventually, he got in a very, very bad motorcycle
accident and was badly injured. And he was a chiropractor. So he knew and understood what was going on inside his body.
And one night the pain was so severe that he decided to take a jigsaw. It's a saw that you use to carve wood. He took the blade and he bent it and he taped it up with duct tape.
And he thought, what if I just try this on my muscles? And he put it on his muscle.
And he started to pulse on his muscle and it actually felt pretty good
it actually that percussive feeling started to give him relief and
over the next several months he started to experiment with this on his patients
until it got to a point where people said, hey, you're onto something here.
It would be another seven and a half years before Theragun was actually marketed as a product.
And during that entire time, he worked, he talked to everybody he could about it,
but all they saw was a jigsaw with duct tape on it, right? They saw this weird product that just didn't seem like it was anything
useful, but people were feeling real benefits from it. So, he had on the one hand, he had people
saying to him, this is weird and I don't see a home for it. On the other hand, he had patients,
people he was working on who were feeling real benefits from it, real relief. And that was
driving him. He knew that if he could figure out how to find a partner, how to get the money,
he needed the money to launch this thing. Today, it's a multi-billion dollar business,
but it took seven years. And during that seven year period at any given time, because he was broke,
he could have just walked away and given up, but he had this feeling
and he had this feedback that convinced him there was something there. One thing you were known for
is asking people about luck and the role that luck has played in their lives. Do you think these
successful people believe in luck? What role do you think luck has played in making them
who they are? And what sort of trend have you seen? Because I believe you ask pretty much all
of your guests this question about luck at the very end of the interview. So you must have a
big data set to think about. Luck plays a really important role. Luck is a weird word because it's an intangible, and it's like a superstitious word. It's like fate, right? It's one of those words that I think
in our modern age of science, a lot of people are resistant to that word because we believe that we
can engineer outcomes, that humans through the sheer force of will can engineer an outcome. And that might be true in
some cases, but you can't discount this notion of chance or fortune or luck. You came to the US,
came to the UK when you were two or three years old, single mom, built a business. What are the chances of that happening? What are the chances of that happening?
The chances of you being in a different circumstance are greater simply because of
the statistical realities of that circumstance. But through sheer force of will and some luck,
here you are. You can't discount it.
So how do you think about luck? Because I've often pondered this. I've thought,
the luck in my life, where should I, where do I find it? As in, is it in the me meeting my girlfriend through some sort of chance encounter, or is luck much more of a fundamental thing in
the case that you've described with me coming to the UK? Because it's true, if I hadn't come to the UK when I was
two years old, and I was still in Botswana, everything's different. My education's different.
You might be very successful there too, but you just don't know.
It's probable that I wouldn't have had the freedoms in my life and the opportunities I've
had if I was still in Ramotswa in Botswana.
So as something that I didn't have any control over, because I was two, I look at that and go,
that's really fundamental luck that I had parents that loved me. They moved me to this country where you have healthcare and all these amazing things. That is lucky. Like that is just huge fortune that
I had no involvement in. Another kid could be moved to the UK at two years old and they might be in prison now.
And I'm trying to understand, you know, because it's funny because when I think really deeply
about it, I go, maybe I'm responsible for nothing in my life because it's all nature
and nurture.
It's my DNA and it's the circumstances that that DNA were put in.
It's the environment that DNA was put in.
So if you really think about it, maybe I'm responsible for nothing. You're responsible for a lot, and then you're not
responsible for some as well. And here's the thing. You didn't go to Oxford or Cambridge,
but you know a lot of kids who did go to Oxford or Cambridge, and they won't be a fraction as
financially successful as you might be, or or me or anyone else that they know.
And that's not because you're better than them or they're worse than you.
It's not that at all.
There are factors that we all, there are traits, there are circumstances that give everybody different powers. And having the right kind of personality is also luck. I mean,
you might be the smartest, most educated person on the planet, but if you cannot withstand hearing
no again and again, and you're trying to run a business, you're not going to make it. If your ego is so enormous that
it gets in the way, if your sense of dignity and pride is so important to you that it's an
immovable object and you can't see past it, then it doesn't matter how intelligent you are.
You can be a horrible student, a failing student, but have those traits, a personality that enables you to talk to anybody, an open mind, kindness, friendliness, and you will be 100 times more successful because the roll of the dice handed you those traits.
You might not be book smart,
but you got those other things. So there are all these factors that are intangible,
and we all have bits and pieces of these things. It's just a matter of how we use them.
You've interviewed Richard Branson, right? So have I. And one of the big things I took away
from Richard was, this sounds like a crazy thing
to say, but he admitted how many things he's really not good at. And he admitted that he's
only really good at a couple of things. And this kind of bucks the trend of what you think when
you think of successful people, because you assume that, especially CEOs and entrepreneurs,
are these sort of Swiss, amazing Swiss army knives that are just good at everything.
Everything they touch turns to gold.
Richard taught me that you don't actually have to be good
at that many things to be wildly successful.
You just need to be good at a very narrow thing
and then mitigate your downsides through delegation.
But that's what he's good at.
That's his talent.
Richard Branson's talent is in spotting talent in others and empowering them to go out and build and trusting them. I did a show for many years called Wisdom from the Top. You can still hear it. It's available on podcasts. And that show was a CEO show. I interviewed CEOs. And one of the CEOs I interviewed was a guy named Mark King,
who for years ran Adidas' North American operations. He ran TaylorMade, which is a golf
brand, and then Taco Bell. He was the CEO of Taco Bell. And Mark King made this exact point. He said, you know, I'm not the smartest guy in the room. I'm
not the most intellectual. I'm not, you know, the most capable and competent when it comes to,
you know, but I'm really good at finding the people with the answers. I don't have the answers
most of the time, but I'm really good at finding the people who can get the answers.
And that is what a great leader can do, CEO or founder, entrepreneur.
It's figuring out who can find the answers and inspiring them together around you.
This is one of the things I've learned really late in my business career.
I say really late, but I mean, I learned it probably at 28.
And then for the last three years, it's been front of mind is that the game I'm playing as a founder and entrepreneur isn't how smart am I and how hard do I work? It's about
realizing that I'm a recruitment company. Every business I start is a recruitment company.
And I have this like really crazy analogy I sometimes use where I say to people,
if you had hired Elon Musk and got the best out of him, right? So hired him and got the best out
of him, you would be worth trillions. Theoretically, you would be. If you'd hired Steve Jobs and got
the best out of him, you would have created an Apple or something else or a Pixar. And if you
think through that,
though it's an extreme, largely impossible lens to think through,
it illuminates the fact that much of the job of a founder
is to find these exceptional people and get the best out of them.
That is like the easiest path to value creation
versus hoping that you can become the best at design
and computer programming and all of these kinds of things.
And honestly, in my life,
it's been like this really big fundamental reframe, which has caused me to reallocate my time,
where now I'd say I spend 20 hours a week on recruitment. Whereas before, I might have spent
half an hour. And this is why I asked you earlier about like people, talent, and how important that
is to the game of building a company, which by definition is a group of people. And what you've seen in great founders there.
Have you ever spoken to Walter Isaacson? No.
The guy that used to follow Steve Jobs.
Yes, of course. I know he's a brilliant writer. Yeah, I haven't.
Yeah. He talks a lot about how Steve Jobs was exceptional at that. And I remember him saying
that before Steve Jobs died,
he asked him in his backyard,
what is the thing in your life that you've built?
What is the product that you're most proud of?
And Walter responded, the team.
Yeah.
And I see that now in great entrepreneurs. I see how obsessed they are with culture and people.
Yes.
I mean, as Peter Lynch says,
culture, you know, eats strategy for breakfast, right?
What is culture in your view?
I think culture is, it's many things.
It's a common mission. in a way of doing things, not in the way that there's only one way, but a way, which could mean
innovation, risk-taking, but a shared belief in a common mission, right? And now a lot of people
say, well, all right, well, what about Coca-Cola? What's the common mission there? You know, making a sugary soft drink, you know, a sugary beverage. And I would
venture to say that if you talk to somebody who worked for a company like Coca-Cola, they would
have probably a generally a common vision or a common view of why they do what they do. And it's not about a sugary soft drink or blah,
blah. It's about being part of something bigger that has impact. Strong cultures
are places where people feel like they're working towards a common goal.
We talked earlier on about failure and people's relationship with failure.
What about quitting? So failure is kind of like involuntary quitting. But quitting is like when
you make the decision at some point in the journey that you need to pivot, this is not working.
And it seems to me like in all the stories of the people that I've interviewed that have become
successful, there has been several moments where they've made a decision to quit something, which was either
objectively not smart or terrifying. But I've almost come to learn that I think quitting is
actually a skill that winners have managed to really sharpen. And obviously there's that phrase,
isn't there, like quitting is for losers. But
the more people I've interviewed, the more I've come to learn that quitting is a bit of a skill.
And I think recognizing when to quit as well. In my 20s, there were periods of time where I
was a reporter at NPR at the time, and there were periods of time where I was frustrated,
I didn't want to quit. But I didn't,
but really got close at times because I was covering the Iraq war in Afghanistan. I was in and out of war zones. I was scared. And had I quit at that time, my life and career would have
been totally different. I don't think it would have been as interesting. I think it's important
that I waited to the right moment when I did quit and
stopped working for a big organization and started my own business. I needed to have that experience
in my back pocket. I needed to feel like I was ready. Was it scary when I did it, when I left
the safety of a big organization with insurance and a retirement plan and a guaranteed income,
it was really scary. I had two kids. My wife had a small salary, but I felt like I could take that
risk because it was the right moment. There was something that told me it was the right moment.
So I think it has to be a thought through process. And a lot of times
people say to me, should I quit and start my own business? And I almost always say, no, start your
business slowly. So 99% with your job, 1% of your business, then 5% of your business, 95% of your
job, then 10% of your business and 90% of your job until you get to a point where maybe,
you know, your entire evening and weekend is spent on your side project. And then it's time.
Yeah. I've, I, I followed a similar, similar path in my life. And, um, I, uh, I've been quite
an aggressive, prolific quitter at the same time at at like really key moments. And I don't think I've ever really thought it through to a fault sometimes.
But sometimes it's just been a, it's like a feeling you have.
When you feel like you've reached the end of a flowchart of options.
And for me, it's like when I can't change it and it sucks, I have to quit.
Or when the effort it would take to change it isn't worth the reward on offer, so I have to quit.
So it's like this flow chart I have in my head.
And it's funny because throughout your story,
throughout this conversation,
you've cited these moments where someone was unfulfilled.
You said that three or four times,
like they were unfulfilled,
they knew they could do something better.
They knew the change.
I've wondered what the role is in reaching rock bottom
in your life as a catalyst for change.
And I've actually asked a few people whether sometimes we just need a bit more pain.
Yeah. And it doesn't sound like a nice thing, but.
I think that rock bottom or version of that is often a catalyst for change, right? It goes back to this idea of
framing. It's very hard. Failure or setbacks that are intense and severe are really hard.
But they are often necessary to trigger the change that needs to happen. I mean, I can tell you, I'll never forget the day.
It was 2011 when I found out I was still working as an employee at National Public Radio.
And I was told that I would not become the weekday host of All Things Considered. That was my dream.
I'd started there as a 22-year-old kid,
hoping that one day I'd be the main anchor. It's like the Today program on BBC, except in the
evening. And that's all I want. I was a foreign correspondent. I covered 50 countries. I ticked
all the boxes. I covered the Pentagon. I was the weekend anchor of the show. I did everything right by the book, everything I thought I had to do.
But when it came down to making a decision, I was not the person that they wanted.
And that was a low point.
I really believed my career was over. And during that time, while I was looking and searching for a way to leave
the news world, because I was convinced I was finished,
I had heard of an opportunity to create a show with the people who do TED Talks.
And I jumped at that opportunity and that changed everything.
That prompted me eventually to leave, to start my own business, to start creating podcasts.
I would never have been in the podcast world had I done that.
I would have been on the radio doing news today.
And without that low point, I wouldn't have had the trigger to force me to find the next thing,
to find something different and new. And that failure changed my life.
Partners, co-founders, people, talent. What have you come to learn about the importance
of finding a co-founder, finding people to go into business with as it relates to where you'll end
up? I'll be 50 this year. And a lot of young people ask me, younger people ask me,
what's the best piece of advice you can give me in life? And my advice is always the same.
Find a partner in life. Now, different from a business partner,
which I'll get to in a moment, but I want to talk about a life partner.
I believe that there is a partner for everybody, whether it's through Tinder or Hinge or Bumble
or at a church or at a bar or wherever. I believe there's a partner for everybody.
And I believe that you are much more likely, not just that I believe, but statistically it's true.
You're much more likely to be successful
if you have a partner to share and build a life with.
That is the single most important thing you can do
as you build a life.
Now, in a business, I give the same advice.
You can build a business as a solo
entrepreneur, and it's happened. And we have had many solo entrepreneurs on the show who've built
businesses by themselves. Well, with others helping, of course, but as the only founder.
It's harder, not because it's technically harder. It's emotionally harder
because there's always gonna be a point along the journey
and you've experienced it and I've experienced it
where you say to yourself, I suck.
I'm a fucking failure.
And there's no one else to say to you,
you're just feeling that today.
You're just feeling that now,
but tomorrow you're not feeling that today. You're just feeling that now, but tomorrow you're not going to feel that. And I, as your co-founder might feel that, and you're going to need to tell me
that I don't suck. That's the beauty and importance of having a co-founder because
they are there on the journey with you. You are going to go into a crucible of fire.
When you start a business, you are going to hit moments of incredible stress,
near failure, and you're going to need somebody to be there in the trenches with you.
Now, can you do it alone? Yes, you can. It's just harder. And the success rates of co-founder
businesses tends to be higher. It's why, and I mentioned this in my book that came out a few years ago,
the legendary investor, Paul Graham, one of his criteria for investing in companies is co-founders.
You have to have a co-founder because that is a stronger guarantor of success
than a solo entrepreneur. What do you think people should be looking for when they're
seeking a co-founder? You know, is it a personality thing? Is it a skill crossover? Are they looking
for someone similar than themselves? And, you know, and where do these co-founders come about?
Where do they, where'd you find them? It's a question I always get, where do I find a co-founder?
Yeah. I mean, I think it's like dating, you know, and oftentimes co-founders find each other.
Sometimes they know each other in college or university or school or they meet at a company. Sometimes they are looking for a co-founder and a marketing or operational co-founder, you know, or a fundraiser, co-founder, visionary, and then, you know, sort of the operational side. And that might be perfect, but they might have a
personality conflict. There might be a point where they have very diverging views. And so,
so much of it is about compatible personalities. It's like a marriage, by the way. You can marry
somebody, you can love somebody, fall in love with somebody and decide to
marry somebody who is going to be more of a nurturer. And you're maybe even more of a
disciplinarian when it comes to building a family or vice versa. Really compatible
sort of family building skills. But if your personalities aren't compatible,
over time, that marriage won't last if you can't grow together. Oftentimes,
co-founders, when they start a business, the most successful co-founders grow together too.
They start a business and then they grow it together and it becomes stronger over time
because they also grow together. They also learn mistakes together
and figure out how to recover from those mistakes together. And in some cases,
had a failed business before. We just had an episode of our show with the founders of a
breakfast cereal called Magic Spoon. These guys met at university, Greg and Gabby, and they decided to start a company together,
a protein bar company. Protein bars made out of crickets. It's called Exo Bars, E-X-O.
And it was an amazing idea because crickets are very nutritionally dense, high protein,
really good for the environment, don't require a lot of water.
You can turn them into a tasteless powder. And they really pursued this business for seven,
eight years together. And the business failed for obvious reasons, which is in our society, in the United States, in the West, we're not yet ready to consume insects.
There's a psychological barrier.
So that could have been the end of their partnership.
But they decided that they wanted to continue building something together
because they believed in each other.
And they moved on to a completely different product,
also high in protein, but breakfast cereal.
High protein, no sugar, low in carbohydrates.
So a keto kind of brand of breakfast cereal, which is now in 20,000 grocery stores in the
United States and may even be in the UK. But that's an example of a partnership where they
fail together, but which allowed them to then build something
that saw success.
One of the other sort of central questions I get
as it relates to that starting phase
is people are currently working in a full-time job.
They have an idea,
but they're not sure how to pivot
from the full-time job to the idea.
Do they quit their job and then pursue the idea?
Do they stay in their job and do it part? That sort of conundrum of how I go from idea to
execution while I'm in a full-time job that I need to keep the lights on. You talk a little
bit about this in your book as well, this idea of how you leave your comfort zone safely.
Yeah. I mean, of course it depends on the company. If you're coming up with a technology
and you're working at Google, it's probably a better idea to quit first because otherwise
Google is going to claim ownership over that idea. And many companies operate that way where
they'll argue that, well, if you work for the company and you have an idea, we own it.
So there are examples where you want to leave the company. But we have had so many examples on how I built this of founders who have kept their day job while pursuing this other idea.
Because they had to pay their bills.
They had to feed their families.
We did a story a couple years ago.
This is actually a UK-based company.
And it's an amazing story. It's a story of a guy named Christian Tapaninaho, who is from Finland, and his wife, Darina, who's Scottish.
And they were both sort of educational consultants in the UK.
They met at college, and they had like an educational consultancyancy and they had various jobs. But Christian was a tinkerer and he dreamed of building something.
He wasn't sure what it was.
It happens that he was a home cook and he had a problem because this is where all great businesses start.
I have a problem and maybe other people have that problem.
And if lots of people have that
problem, maybe I can solve it. His problem was he couldn't cook a pizza at home. Why couldn't you
cook a pizza at home? It has to be really hot. That's how you get those beautiful, crusty
Neapolitan pizzas with the blackened crust because they cook for a minute at very high heat.
Home ovens don't go that hot. What did he do? He started to pound some metal together and he built his own pizza oven that was wood fired. Well, today that pizza oven is
Ooni Pizza Ovens, one of the best-selling pizza ovens, home pizza ovens in the world. They're
between three and 500 bucks. They're pretty can, they've got wood versions, they've got gas, propane gas, they've got an electric version. These guys kept their day jobs
years into building this company because they didn't know if it was going to, if it was going
to work or not. That's a billion dollar company. An example of somebody who really didn't, you know,
had one foot in one place and one foot in the other place. And once this
other thing was real, they felt that they could take the leap and go for it. So here's the thing.
A lot of people assume that entrepreneurs are these kamikazes. You know, YOLO, I'm going to
jump out of an airplane, no parachute and go for it. And that's a myth, actually.
There are some who are like that, you know.
But in general, most entrepreneurs calculate the risk.
So they do take risks, but we all take risks every day.
It's that they mitigate those risks in different ways.
So in the case of Ooni, yes, I'm going to keep my day job for a little
while and build this thing. And then it is a risk to jump out of my day job and to pursue this full
time, but it seems now I can see where this is heading. And that's the moment where you can
take that leap. It's interesting as well, because that story doesn't fit the mold, because there was a lot
of patience. And the patience seemed to come from someone that was really focused on actually
solving a problem versus getting rich. And someone that's focused on getting rich would have taken a
much more kamikaze approach, I think, than someone who was really just focused on a problem they
genuinely wanted to solve. And you said, oh, it ended up being the best pizza oven. And it's probably because he was so focused on, as I said, that he
was so focused on solving the problem that he spent, I don't know, five, six, seven years making the best
pizza oven and worried later about whether people would want it or whether they would make him rich
from creating it. But typically it's the other way around. With entrepreneurs that come up to me when I'm in the gym or in the street, the focus and the priority is clearly how do I get
rich? I'm thinking of selling this or I'm thinking of selling this. And I guess this brings up the
question like the role of passion and genuine curiosity in creating truly valuable things that
the world then makes you rich or remunerates you for? So there's nothing wrong with wanting to be rich. There's nothing wrong with wanting to make lots of
money. It's an engine that powers innovation, right? I mean, incentives breed innovation.
And so there's a reason why the United States, for example, is one of the most, if not the most entrepreneurial society in modern history because there are incentives to grow your business.
That being said, I would say about 95% of the people that I've interviewed, founders of businesses, in virtually every case, are not primarily motivated by money.
Of course, money is important.
We all want to have financial security. But what they're motivated by is solving a problem they
have or looking for an opportunity in the marketplace to solve a problem that lots of
other people have. In virtually every case, because what I do and how I built this is I
mainly interview founders of consumer products, products that are either American sort of cultural icons or global brands.
And in virtually every case, it is somebody who's trying to solve their own problem.
I did a story last year about an amazing entrepreneur named Monique Rodriguez.
Her mom worked as an administrator at a hospital in the
South Side of Chicago. She grew up single mom. Her dad was in and out of jail on drugs. And she
managed to go to nursing school. So Monique became a nurse, which was a huge achievement,
raised by a single mom in a tough neighborhood in the south side of Chicago, becomes a nurse.
And, you know, within a couple of years of doing that job, was feeling unfulfilled.
But she was always dreaming of something.
And Monique had a problem, which was she could not find hair care products for her hair.
She was a black woman.
She wasn't able to find really good consumer products on the shelves. So she started to experiment with essential oils. And eventually she started to
mix essential oils and play around with her hair, avocado and jojoba and all these different things
or hoho, I can't remember how it's pronounced. And she started to make Instagram videos.
This is like early Instagram.
And she had it at the beginning, 10 followers and then 20 followers. And she would show people what
she was doing with the oils and use it on her hair and show how it was improving her hair.
Over time, people were writing in the comments, hey, where can I buy this stuff?
Well, after a couple of years of people saying that to her, she still was a
nurse. She asked herself the same question. Well, how can I do this? So with almost no money,
she launched a brand called Myel Organics, which was hair care products for women with textured
hair. Fast forward to 2023, she sold that business to Procter & Gamble reportedly for half a billion dollars.
This is a woman who started a hair care products company in her apartment in Indiana.
She was living in Indiana at the time with no experience in the industry, with no connections, but just a passion to solve a problem she had.
And that was the beginning of an empire.
And that's a story that I see again and again.
You can never, ever substitute passion with a desire for money.
Passion is always going to trump a desire for money.
It eats desire for money.
To paraphrase Peter Lynch, passion eats desire for money. It eats desire for money. To paraphrase Peter Lynch,
passion eats desire for money for lunch or breakfast.
What is passion doing that just a desire for money wouldn't do along that journey? So if we think about her in that apartment, if we take her and we drive her with passion and we see where she
ends up, $500 million, and then we take her and we drive her with a desire for money and we see
where she ends up, why would she end up in different places? What are the steps? Yeah. I'm not sure she would
end up in different places. There's no question that money can be an engine and a motivator, but
with passion and a belief in the thing that you're building, having the ability to solve the problem for many, many people.
If you're building something that just solves your problem, it's not enough.
That's not a business.
That's a hobby.
But if you build a product that solves a problem for millions of people or could potentially solve a problem for millions of people, and you have a passion to build it because it's solving your problem, that is going to drive you, that's going to
motivate you to keep moving forward. Whereas if it's simply a profit motive and it doesn't land
quickly, you're unlikely to keep with it. You're unlikely to have the patience. You're going to
move on and try something else, which is fine too. Which is fine too.
There's something in there and also the case of the pizza guy who made the pizza ovens,
because they're so passionate about it they understand the problem so deeply
that they're able to truly innovate whereas like if i was trying to start a pizza oven business now
frankly i've never experienced pizza ovens before never used one never failed at using one never
succeeded at using one so my information would have to come from Google.
It's one of the things that I see a lot in entrepreneurs is how they manage to think for themselves, the force that makes them think for themselves and not just accept the conventional
way of doing things. Like someone like Elon Musk is a prime example of a real first principle,
start from zero, sort of a blank sheet of paper, very hard to do because convention's like
filling all of our brains.
So very, very difficult to do.
I wish there was some way of teaching that.
Yeah, I mean, it is hard to do.
But I also think that,
you know, part of the process
and part of building something is a willingness, not a desire, not a hope,
not the enjoyment of, but a willingness to experience failure. That's really hard.
Elon Musk has experienced a lot of failure. I mean, put aside his quirks and his, I think,
challenging parts to him, there's no single person on the planet who I believe who's had a bigger
impact on reducing climate emissions. I mean, say what you want to about him, but between solar power and cars
that are emissions free, he has had a bigger impact on global climate emissions than virtually
any other individual on earth, which is quite a remarkable thing if you think about it,
because a lot of people really hate him. But at the same time, he's had a huge impact on the climate. He's also had a lot of failure. We did the story of PayPal on the show many years ago and told it in great detail. Max Levchin really was the creator of PayPal. He's now the founder of Affirm. And Max Levchin and Peter Thiel started PayPal, Elon Musk at x.com. They merged into PayPal and they actually kicked Elon Musk out of the company.
And Max Levchin tells the story about the day the board kicked him out as the head of the company and Elon was crushed.
Tesla for the first, what, 16 years of its life was a money losing business.
Nobody believed in it. And I think part of his bravado
and part of his, I think, maybe part of who he is today comes from those scars of people not
believing in him. I think that he, but he also was and still is prepared for failure. I mean, when a
rocket launches and fails, he doesn't like it, but he moves on and he goes, he continues.
I did an interview not that long ago with Hilary Swank. She was 17 or 16 when she came to Los Angeles with her mother
from Washington State to become an actor. Penny, I mean, literally penniless. They literally slept
in her mom's car for weeks at a time while she went to high school and then auditions. I mean,
they had no money. She went to audition after audition. We get bit parts here and there.
Only at the age of 25 did she get a breakthrough role on Beverly Hills 90210. It was in the 90s. It was the height of that show's popularity. And she finally gets a recurring role on a television show. It's a massive breakthrough. What happens? 16 episodes in, they kill her character. Her contract is done. She's out of work. Her entire career blows up and
she's finished. And she was devastated at the time. She thought her career was over because
that was the ticket to cruising altitude in Hollywood. A couple of weeks later, her agent
calls her and says, hey, there's an indie film. They're doing an open audition.
It's not a lot of money, but it's something.
Why don't you go do it for an audition?
So it's a small indie crew.
She auditions for the role.
And she gets it.
She gets offered the role.
And it's going to pay her nothing.
She's going to make like three to five grand on this film.
But she has no other options.
And she had the time
because she wasn't doing 90210 anymore.
So she could actually do this role.
Well, the role was as Brandon Tina.
The film was Boys Don't Cry.
She was nominated for the Academy Award,
became one of the youngest nominees
and then winners of the Academy Award that year
and was catapulted into global stardom.
And then a few years later, won her second Academy Award that year and was catapulted into global stardom. And then a few years later,
won her second Academy Award as best actress in the company of Meryl Streep and Sally Field and a few others. I mean, an amazing story. Had she not had that failure on 90210 or what felt like
a failure at the time, she would never have had the opportunity to audition
for this film. What can we learn from these stories and these people?
We can learn that failure can be a blessing, and it's all about how we frame it. Now, I'm not saying
I am perfect at this. I hate failing. When I fail, it's painful. When I have failed in my life and career,
it's been really hard. The hardest part about it is reframing it. And that's what takes all
of my strength, energy, I think for anybody to reframe it and to try and convince yourself
that there's a reason, there's a plan, whether it's God or a force or
karma or something, there's a reason why it's happening. And in my life, in every case of
failure, every case, it's happened for the right reasons. That an opportunity came about because that failure
moved an obstacle aside. Because of how you framed the failure,
because of what you did after the failure, because it's conceivable that if you take any one of your
big failures in your life and you had down tools, you'd let the failure get the best of you,
then it wouldn't have turned. And this is kind of what I was thinking as you're saying about, you know, the force or the God or whatever it's maybe, maybe we are the force and
we are the God. I don't know. I'm not meant to sound like narcissistic or anything, but it's
just thinking there's probably a couple of stories of people that had their character killed in a
movie that decided, forget this. And we don't tell those stories now because they said, forget this.
So they didn't get the Academy Awards. But in that story, she sounds like she was her own
force. She made the decision. And it's interesting because in that moment, when you find out your
character's killed and you come home and tell your friends your character's killed and you feel the
shame, there's no apparent light at the end of the tunnel. So it can't be that. It can't be that
that drives you on. It's got to be something else. It's got to be something else.
And it is, but it is a force.
I mean, you know,
this is not a show about faith or religion,
so it depends on what anyone believes in.
But I'm a believer in fate.
I believe in it.
I don't think that it happens
without intervention on our behalf.
Like, you know, that we put effort into it.
But, you know, whether you believe or not, whether you believe in a higher power or not, I believe in a force.
And it doesn't happen automatically.
We also have to engineer it.
But I believe that there is some kind of guiding force.
One interview I did about a year and a half ago was with Tom Hanks. And Tom Hanks is probably the
greatest living actor, maybe in the English language. He is the Spencer Tracy of his
generation. He's been in so many films.
He's won so many Academy Awards.
When he was ready to start his career, his acting career,
he desperately wanted to be in a very prestigious Shakespeare festival in Sacramento, California.
And that was going to launch his career.
And he didn't get any roles.
He didn't get a single part.
And so he had to find other acting roles.
One day, he finds out about an open audition for a new sitcom that ABC was going to possibly produce.
A pilot show based on two guys living in an apartment together in New York.
The show is called Bosom Buddies.
He auditions for the part.
Hundreds of people are auditioning.
Tom Hanks is a nobody.
He gets the part. Hundreds of people are auditioning. Tom Hanks is a nobody. He gets the part.
But now they're just going to make a pilot.
They make the pilot.
And the show actually gets launched.
But even then, there was no guarantee that after that show ended, his career would continue.
His co-star, Peter Scolari, did not have as
successful a career as Tom Hanks did. Tom Hanks was on that show, Bosom Buddies, for a few years.
It was moderately successful, but he became this superstar. And his career began as a series of
failures. And so, part of it is his own will, the sheer will of just keeping, keep on keeping on.
Part of it is fate, part of it is luck, part of it is God or whatever you want to call it.
There's something there that said to him, these failures are going to be important for you.
You're going to need them in order to get to the next place.
What are you thinking about the subject of work-life balance?
You know, you've interviewed a lot of very successful people, billionaires.
They apparently have it all as it relates to sort of material success.
But it must have sort of illuminated the sacrifices they've made in other areas of their life.
What have you come to learn is most important?
And what is the warning that you might pass down
the ladder to other people that are looking up
and thinking, I want to be a billionaire
like Richard Branson or someone else
that's wildly successful?
I mean, there's always the perception
that we have or outsiders have of the founder
and the internal perception that, you know,
within the family, right?
And so we saw Steve Jobs differently
than Steve Jobs' family saw him.
I think he was loving father and partner
and, you know, was seen not as Steve Jobs' founder,
but Steve Jobs' dad.
There's no question that in many examples, in many interviews I've done,
the sacrifices that the founders have made to build their businesses have meant that their
personal lives have been challenging. Their marriages have collapsed. They've had difficult
relationships with their children. It's happened for sure. Is this a big regret you see in the
people that you've spoken to?
Sometimes. I think sometimes there are some cases where there's a bit of regret around that,
around missing big chunks of their kids' lives. Isaac Larian, who's a wonderful man and very close with his kids, Because of the success of the Bratz dolls
and the threat that it posed to Mattel, he became the subject of endless lawsuits and then
counter lawsuits with Mattel. So he was wrapped up and tied up in court cases with Mattel,
the maker of Barbie, for virtually a decade. When he finally won on appeal, the last judgment,
I think he won about $300 million on judgment against Mattel, his son was asked by a reporter,
aren't you so happy that your dad won? And he said, I'm sad because I didn't have my dad around
for 10 years because he was wrapped up in this trial. And of course, Isaac was there for his family. But the point is that there are massive sacrifices.
And in my case, in a much smaller version of a business I run, I have always wanted to be,
and I've always tried to be there for every sports game,
for every school event, for every parent-teacher conference.
We, as a family, have dinner together every night.
We run a family meeting every Sunday night.
My kids don't love it, but we sit down
and we talk about the week ahead. We talk about
our goals for the week. We go over, it's just going to sound a little earnest, but
we have a codified list of family, our family values that we wrote down. We all,
four of us wrote them down and decided what our family is.
What kind of things were on there?
Gratitude, generosity, forgiveness.
So if, which just happened the other day with my son,
he got really mad at me because I yelled at him
and I apologized and I said, I'm sorry,
I had a stressful day and he was still mad.
And I said, hey, on our family values is forgiveness.
Remember it says forgiveness, accept an apology and move on.
Curiosity, respect, taking responsibility.
There's value in reminding yourself about the things that you aspire to be. And I think in the case of a family, it's
to build a strong family, it takes work and commitment and time. And that means that you're
going to sacrifice other things in order to achieve that. Why are you still doing what you're doing?
Because you're almost 15 years in, right? Into how I built this were eight.
Been podcasting. Yeah. 2012 I started. Yeah. I mean, I am really privileged because I get to learn every day.
I get to learn from people that I talk to
and exchange ideas with people.
And I'm essentially have created a life for myself
where I earn a living from learning,
which is an amazing place to be.
Every day is different.
And what motivates what I do is,
going back to the beginning of our conversation,
is knowing that I can create something of value for people for free.
You know, the impetus for how I built this
came from an experience I had now 15 years ago
when I had a sabbatical year.
And I took a business school class.
And on the first day,
they handed us a case study part A
and it was about Starbucks and Howard Schultz.
And I devoured it.
It was fascinating.
And then the story ended,
but you had to wait four days
for the class to come back to get part B.
And it was fascinating.
I didn't know about the case study method.
I didn't know that's how they taught business school.
What I realized soon after was two problems.
The first is the case studies were thin.
They weren't comprehensive.
And the second problem is they were only accessible to students at Harvard Business School
or to other business schools who were paying $120,000
a year. And I knew then at that moment that I could do the same thing as a storyteller for free,
make these case studies even better and make them available for free. And that was the
genesis of how I built this. It was never a show for entrepreneurs or budding entrepreneurs.
It was always a show for people who were interested in building a creative life.
It's always what it's been about.
And that's what motivated me then.
And that's what motivates me now.
When I hear from somebody who says, and I hear this all the time, I started a business.
We started to hit a really rocky patch.
We didn't think we would make it. And that week I listened to Tom Rinks of Sun Bomb or I listened to Ariel Kay of Parachute. I listened to whatever episode I listened to
and I listened to it and I felt exactly what she felt at that moment when her business was
collapsing, was crumbling. And I thought, okay, we can keep going. And I hear that all the time.
Because the show is not about heroes. It's not about superheroes. It's about ordinary people
who built incredible brands and how they did it. And they didn't do it because
they're superheroes. They did it because they're human. And I want everybody who listens to the
show to be able to relate to anybody on the show, whether it's Richard Branson or Howard Schultz or
Sarah Blake, whoever we have on the show, they're humans that are just like the people listening.
Who's been your, and I get asked this all the time and it's a bloody awful question,
but I'm going to ask you because I get it so often.
What has been the interview that has stayed with you in the most profound way?
Or the first interview that stayed with you in a profound way?
I have to qualify the answer because there are elements of every interview I do that stick with me, that are powerful.
You know, the story I told you about Isaac Larian and the No, or his childhood in Iran, or whatever it might be.
Elements of Gary Erickson's story, the founder of Clif Bar.
I mean, Howard Schultz's story,
growing up in a housing project in Brooklyn.
So it's impossible to tell you what's the one interview
out of 500 that stuck with me the most.
Because there are elements, there are things
that I remember and connect with about,
connect to with every interview.
And I keep in touch with many of
the founders who've been on the show. But I think recently, one of the most powerful interviews
we've done in terms of the scope and the creativity has been the story of Sun Bomb,
which is a suntan lotion. It was started by a guy named Tom Rinks.
And Tom wanted to create a suntan lotion brand that could be disruptive in the marketplace.
And he drew elements from all of these disparate influences, Japanese streetwear and
surfboard culture. And even though he was in Holland, Michigan, he got a mailbox in
Cocoa Beach, Florida, because he wanted to put Cocoa Beach, Florida as the address on the back
of the bottle. He was influenced by all these different things and put them all together to
build a brand that eventually sold to SC Johnson for hundreds of millions of dollars. It's stories
like that. And there's so much more to his story, but there's stories like that where
you begin to understand how people took all of their life experiences and put them together,
started to put the puzzle pieces together to build something enduring.
How many kids have you got?
Two.
How old are they?
12 and 14.
From all the interviews you've done with hundreds of people, you know, 500 extremely successful people, tens of thousands of others.
If there was just one message that you think would be most useful for those two young kids as they go off into their lives,
if they are to listen to this in 10 years time,
20 years time, what would that message be?
Find a partner to build your life with.
It doesn't have to be a romantic partner or a lover,
or it can be a sibling or a close friend.
But if you can find a partner to build a life with, somebody you can support and who can
support you, you are infinitely more likely to build a happy life.
I thank you. Thank you so much for so many things. Thank you so much for the inspiration. You've been
a huge inspiration to our show since the very, beginning in fact um my producer and the co-founder of this show jack who i started
this with he from day one has been talking about your show not just in a sense of learning from
a great podcaster who makes content in a really um value loaded way but from the stories you've
told because the stories you've told on your show as well have been, he, I mean, Jack and myself
have continually cited as,
have left breadcrumbs for people like us
that are building things.
Kind of like what you said.
They've given us key insights and nuggets
at certain moments when we're faced
with certain challenges on how to navigate.
And you'll never get to see the value
that that's given to so many people.
But I just want you to know that I'm one of them
that Jack is one of them
and that we're very appreciative for that
and also for your time today
so thank you so much Guy
Thank you