The Diary Of A CEO with Steven Bartlett - Money Making Experts: This 3-Step 'Offer' Formula Makes $20k Per Month! Alex Hormozi, Codie Sanchez, Daniel Priestley
Episode Date: August 7, 2025Could your first $100K be closer than you think? 3 renowned money making experts reveal the exact blueprint for turning $1,000 into $100K, building passive income, hiring A-players, and scaling fast! ... This Diary Of A CEO roundtable brings together contrarian investor and private equity dealmaker Codie Sanchez, entrepreneur and investor Alex Hormozi, and serial entrepreneur and business strategist Daniel Priestley. They discuss: The exact 3-step offer formula that can generate $20K/month How to turn any skill into a $10K/month business Why most entrepreneurs stay stuck, and how to break through The pricing secrets behind $100M+ business deals The #1 psychological trait shared by top performers in business How to double your income by hiring A-players You can follow Codie, Alex, and Daniel, here: Codie: Instagram - https://bit.ly/4om6aK6 YouTube - https://bit.ly/4fqsSwO X - https://bit.ly/3HcQick ‘BigDeal’ Podcast - https://bit.ly/3H018T3 You can purchase Codie’s book, ‘Main Street Millionaire: How to Make Extraordinary Wealth Buying Ordinary Businesses’, here: https://amzn.to/4meknHF Alex: Instagram - https://bit.ly/4frlQHZ YouTube - https://bit.ly/3UjUgCS X - https://bit.ly/4m3fe54 Alex Hormozi's newest book, ‘$100M Money Models’, launches at a live virtual event Saturday August 16th. You can register free, here: https://bit.ly/4m594BG Daniel: Instagram - https://bit.ly/4ldmKsY X - https://bit.ly/4lWW54O Website - https://bit.ly/41uNUEu You can purchase Daniel’s book, ‘Scorecard Marketing: The four-step playbook for getting better leads and bigger profits’, here: https://amzn.to/45hoRWM The Diary Of A CEO: ⬜️Join DOAC circle here - https://doaccircle.com/ ⬜️Buy The Diary Of A CEO book here - https://smarturl.it/DOACbook ⬜️The 1% Diary is back - limited time only: https://bit.ly/3YFbJbt ⬜️The Diary Of A CEO Conversation Cards (Second Edition): https://g2ul0.app.link/f31dsUttKKb ⬜️Get email updates - https://bit.ly/diary-of-a-ceo-yt ⬜️Follow Steven - https://g2ul0.app.link/gnGqL4IsKKb Sponsors: Stan Store - https://stevenbartlett.stan.store/ SimpliSafe - https://simplisafe.com/doac to claim 50% off a new system with a professional monitoring plan and get your first month free. KetoneIQ - Visit https://ketone.com/STEVEN for 30% off your subscription order Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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I've got three boxes here.
One of them contains $1,000, one of them contains $10,000,
and one of them contains $100,000.
And you three are the Avengers of Entrepreneurship on the Internet.
So you're going to tell me what you would do with that amount of money to build a scalable business.
So do I get to give the money? Is that how this works?
Yeah, yeah.
Okay, so I would...
Three highly successful entrepreneurs with three very different perspectives.
This is the ultimate masterclass in creating and scaling your businesses to make millions.
There's two paths to making money quickly if you don't have any.
And the first path is go find the best entrepreneur and go work for them.
Learn as much as you can.
Totally agree.
Like Kim Kardashian was Harris Hilton's assistant.
And she learned the playbook for being famous and then she took it to a new level.
And then the second way is high risk, but...
highest reward. Go do it yourself. And the first business that you start, you're going to be
learning the game of business even more than you're learning the business that you're doing.
Things like you wait eight seconds after you ask someone to buy, you close to 30% more sales.
And there are actual studies now that show that if I'm a woman, you make more money. If you do
one thing, you wear makeup, which is wild. And what about making content? Building a content
empire that builds your business. This is brand new to a lot of people. And so a lot of creators
online don't think about how do I monetize on top of this. Right. And I can name
some TikTokers with 50 plus million followers that have had failed launches because they have views,
but they have zero influence.
And in order to create influence, there's four things.
And number one is...
Okay, so let's go on to simple, actionable frameworks.
So I have a framework in order to raise money.
I have a framework for pitching.
And I have one that can increase sales by 20 to 40%.
And then if you want to know if your business is going to make you money or not, we use the moat strategy.
And there's a lot more.
So let's go through all of this.
Daniel, Cody, Alex.
I feel like I have waited a long time to have this conversation with you three,
because in my mind, you three are the Avengers of Entrepreneurship on the Internet.
And for very different reasons, you do very different things,
you have very different perspectives, you run very different businesses.
But that is why I've been so looking forward to this conversation.
Before we get into some of the technical stuff and really specific topics,
I wanted to start with a more broad question.
You're all entrepreneurs, you all speak to and educate middle.
of entrepreneurs on your own channels and your own rights. And the question I wanted to start with
is, from a psychology perspective and a mindset perspective, what does it take to be an entrepreneur?
And can anyone listening to this right now become an entrepreneur, a successful entrepreneur?
I'm going to throw that question across the table straight away to Alex.
So starting with the second question first, can anyone become an entrepreneur? At the basic level,
if a kid can go around a neighborhood and say,
hey, I will mow your lawn or I'll rake your leaves
or I'll babysit your kid in exchange for money.
Fundamentally, it's entrepreneurship if we're just taking it
at the most basic level.
And so what prevents someone from doing that?
Basically, if you can get a job,
then you can be a self-employed entrepreneur.
And so I would say that as like my baseline number one.
From a behavior's perspective,
then you get into, okay, I want to learn about the game of entrepreneurship.
And then there it's basically a lifelong journey
of how much leverage can I apply to this
at all pieces of the business.
even going around knocking on a door and say, hey, can I be a babysitter? You have all levels of
all functions of the business still exist there. They're just done a lot of times simultaneously and at very
low leverage. So if you have some level of advertising, you went up, you knocked on a door. You have
some sort of presentation that you give in exchange for money and they agree. Okay, great. We have a selling
component to it. Then we have some sort of delivery that's going to happen, which is like,
I might show up with my human body and then take care of this other human body and make sure they
don't die, right? And probably have a couple other things that I might clean the house while I'm here
it's a little value at. And then fundamentally it's like that's a complete, that's a complete
cycle of exchange. And then, you know, maybe they leave a review because you start to have a
website, but that starts create leverage and then then you expand from there. But I think
fundamentally at the most basic level, that is entrepreneurship. And then everything else is just
more. Cody. You can be an entrepreneur if you're willing to tolerate pain. I think being an
entrepreneur is largely a byproduct of three things. One being how much pain can you tolerate,
two being how consistently. And three being, can you take the consistent pain that you have and find a way
to decrease it, which just means can you learn from the things that you've gone through as an
entrepreneur? By and large, it is a hard path because at the end of the day, you can't blame
anybody else, and there's a scoreboard constantly behind you. And so, you know, if you have a job,
it could be the boss. It could be the other decisions. It could be somebody else's fault.
But if you are the entrepreneur in charge, there's nobody else. And the thing that I love about
entrepreneurship, and I think all entrepreneurs love, is you either win or you lose. In a lot of
ways it's a zero-sum game. And it's measured predominantly by, do I grow my profits and revenue
in the way that we set up the system today. So yes, I think anybody who is willing to tolerate
pain can become an entrepreneur. And I think it's actually okay to have pain in your life.
And you should seek it a little bit. Same thing as the gym. We don't go in there and think it's
going to feel great to have a workout and have our muscles literally rip apart in order to
rebuild. And yet, that's what it takes in order to get more fit. And so I think part of the game
of entrepreneurship is just like, can we increase pain tolerance over time consistently? And once you do
that, then the things that used to be hard today, you'll look back on and you'll sort of chuckle
because they will not be hard any longer. So there's various types of pain in my life that I'm
not willing to tolerate. And there's other types of pain that I've like volunteered to choose over long
periods of time. So I'm trying to understand, and this is just a question to all of you,
we'll get into Daniel straight after, is how do I know what pain is worth tolerating and
over a long period of time? Because some pain is not a good pain. Some pain is not worth it.
How do I know what pain is worth it? Well, I think that's what comes into that third level of
you have to be able to be on a journey to decrease the pain, which is learn. Like, that's what
learning means. Like, you try something, you touch the stove once, you realize that the stove burns you
when you touch it, you don't do it again. If you continue to touch the stove continuously over
time, then you haven't really learned. But, you know, I mean, there's lots of different types of
pain. There's acute pain, which is like you feel it in this moment really, really deeply and
intensely. And that in entrepreneurship often is things like, I've completely run out of money.
Nobody is going to fix this problem. I'm the last one on the line. And then there's a type of
pain that is low grade pain, so kind of consistent over time. I have to work harder. Every single
Friday, there's a, you know, a paycheck that I have to give somebody else. That's a,
sort of consistent pain. And I think in entrepreneurship, we should assume you're always going to
have some version of low-grade pain. I had pain when I worked in the call center, and I have
pain now. Did you have acute pain when you worked in the call center? It was just drudgery and boredom.
So low-grade. You are out of alignment. So when you have an origin story, a mission,
and a vision, and you feel an alignment between your past, your present, and your future,
and you feel excited about the future that this is working towards, then the pain becomes
meaningful. And what you're looking for is pain that is in alignment with origin, mission and
vision. So meaningful pain? Meaningful pain. What do you think about that same question about
can everybody be an entrepreneur and what does it take from a psychology perspective? I'm asking
this question because there's people at home that are going to wonder, they're in a job at the
moment, they're pondering a lot, they see people like you three who seem like you're a million
miles away. Yeah. But you didn't start a million miles away. So what does it take to be successful
at the highest level in the comments of every one of these videos is not everyone can be an
entrepreneur, not everyone wants to be an entrepreneur. Interestingly, the idea of a job is a very
recent innovation, if you take a long view of history. Jobs really only came into existence around
the 1850s, the idea of a wage. Prior to that, people got paid for tasks, and essentially
you completed a task, you got paid, and all sorts of levels of society. And that gave rise to
very entrepreneurial classes of people. You had to be quite entrepreneurial prior to the
1800s. So it's definitely built into us. I personally think that the human
brain has three kind of levels. The base level is very concerned with survival. It's fight,
flight, freeze, freak out. The next level up is just interested in status quo and it's interested in
repeating the past and doing what's safe and just doing what's comfortable. And then there's this
other part of us that is a visionary and it's interested in exchange, it's interested in empathy,
strategy, love, compassion, adding value to others. And it's a higher mind. It's a higher way of
thinking. Unfortunately, what happens in most of society, especially with a lot of social media,
and especially with the way we were raised through the schooling system, is that we keep just getting
dragged back into the autopilot and the reptile brain, as opposed to being able to have a little
bit of time for the visionary. And it's that visionary mind that makes you feel very entrepreneurial.
I have seen people who have never had a business, they've never been entrepreneurs, and they get around
a group of entrepreneurs and the buzz and the energy from that group of entrepreneurs becomes contagious
and they start opening up this other part of their mind and they go, oh, wait a second, I've got
an idea, I could do this, and they start thinking about what's possible. And I've watched people
go from, I could never do this to I could totally do this in a day.
Alex, you wrote something down there.
It was when you were talking about, you know, what kind of pain, you know, is there. I think
there's a classic example of when do I push and when do I push and when
by pivot. And so pivoting comes from, at least from my perspective, where you have an underlying
assumption that your original thesis was based on that has been disproven. So if I say, hey, I want
to start, you know, a doggy tooth brushing business, you know, there's an underlying assumption
that people are willing to pay for their dogs to get their teeth brushed, right? And within the
context of like I have presented this in a way that followed a normal persuasive, you know, taxes
of, you know, this is the benefit. These are the prices that I would need to charge in order
to make a profit, et cetera. If I find out that no one cares about this, then that would be a
moment where I'd say, I don't think you should push harder. I think you should consider
pivoting. The pushing scenarios is typically when your underlying thesis is still true. You have
not invalidated that. And so you just haven't figured everything out yet. And most of that is
where the pain comes in that Cody is referencing. No, I think the third door where it gets really
tricky is that there's opportunity cost. And I think this is where most entrepreneurs get trapped.
And in some ways, rightfully so, because it's very, very hard to build a successful restaurant that's
local. And if you want to be a trillionaire, it's probably not the way to do it. And so what happens
is you develop skills, you know, developing your first opportunity. You figure out how to do doggy
toothbrushing. You find out that people don't actually care as much about brushing their dog's teeth,
but they do care about their dog having good breath and being, you know, clean and groomed or whatever.
So you pivot a little bit, and then you're doing this thing, but then you have these big aspirations of being a trillionaire.
And you're like, I don't know if I can turn this into being a trillionaire.
But I did learn how to market.
I did learn how to sell.
I did learn how to manage.
And then you think, okay, well, should I start an AI startup?
You know what I mean?
As my next thing, because I did develop all these skills.
So now do I do.
Right?
And I think a lot of people are in maybe one step later entrepreneurs are in this camp where they're like, okay, I didn't understand the world as well.
Now I understand different opportunity vehicles have different returns, but also risk associated.
with them. All of them require pain and work. And so if pain is basically, I can only interpret
pain as one to 10, and 10 out of 10 restaurant days will still suck as much as 10 to 10 AI
software days, but this one has a billion dollar payout and this one has a $2 million
payout. Well, if I'm going to suffer either way, I might as well do the thing that gets me the best
return, which is good entrepreneurial thinking. But then so is focus and so is longevity. And so
then what do you do? Right. And so I just thought about that from a pain perspective because
you have, a lot of times the pain happens from insufficient volume. Like, you think that this,
like, this business isn't working, but it's realized it's usually because you're not working
enough. And when I said that, I mean, doing enough in it. So it's like, hey, I knocked on 20 doors
and, like, no one wants this. It's like, well, obviously, 20 doors, you'll have no fucking
idea if somebody wants it or not. It's like, knock on 2,000, you'll probably get a better
idea. And so, but most people, like, have never had rejection before. And so they think
20 is a sufficient amount. Or like, hey, there's no good, there's no good engineers in
Insert City. It's like, well, how many did you interview? You keep talking, and eventually it's
three. You're like, okay, well, no shit. I mean, if you're going to marry somebody, do you think
you'd only go on three days? And then just say, I guess I have to pick for one of these,
so it's probably not a good idea. And so I think the same idea of insufficient volume is one of the
things that can create pain, you know, for entrepreneurship. You have opportunity cost of like,
okay, well, now there's the grass is green over there. Should I stop what I'm doing now? Right.
And then you have kind of underlying thesis, which absolutely, if you have your underlying thesis
for the business that is disproven, then that's one of those times where it's probably worth
pivoting. But for anybody who's listening who's a newer entrepreneur, my, my big,
My ask to you would be, I probably wouldn't start an AI, startup, caveat, as my first business.
And what I mean by that is like, if I, as in building an actual tool now, if you want to, like, implement AI using other people's tools, that's a different thing.
But the first business that you start, you're going to be learning the game of business even more than you're learning, the business that you're doing.
And so then once you learn the game of business, then you start to see kind of, again, you start to see more clearly the opportunities that exist.
The next step for me in what Alex said was about how do I know,
which idea is worth pursuing. Alex was saying there, which I completely agree with,
is that the first thing you do actually teaches you the fundamentals of how business works,
team building, marketing, promotions, customers, customer service. But for those people
that are sat at home and they have an idea, and they're mulling whether that is the idea
worth pursuing, is there a framework for knowing if it's a good idea or a bad idea?
What we use, it comes from private equity. If you want to know if your business is going
to make you money or not, or investable or not, we use the moat strategy, which is basically
M stands for margin. So you want a business that actually makes you money, doesn't just generate
revenue. And so a good business typically has at least 15% net margin. So that's the money
you put in your pocket, right? So that's profit. Yeah. Exactly. And then the O stands for
operations. So operations being, can this thing actually scale over time, or will I really have a job,
not a business? And what's the difference there? The difference between the two is if you have a job,
not a business, that might be, for instance, without AI, if my entire business was just me talking
continuously to camera and I'm an actor. It's really hard to turn acting to a business, right?
You're trading time. Right. You're still an employee. You're just self-employed as opposed to a
business owner. And there's a real difference between a CEO and a self-employed person. And then the A
stands for advantage, which is, do I have an unfair advantage in my business? I think over time,
all arbitrage windows close. So if you don't have some sort of advantage, it's hard to stay in
business over a long time. An advantage might be, I have distribution because I have social media,
So I can get more eyeballs.
I can figure out how to talk to 2,000 people quickly because I can do it via a video as opposed to knocking on 20 doors.
Or it could be logistics or it could be 10 years of experience in an industry.
And then the T stands for TAM, total addressable market, which goes back to the doggy teeth issue, which is, you know, is this a real market that enough people are interested in, that I can build a business that is big enough for me.
And, you know, to Alex's point, I don't think everybody should try to play the trillion or billion dollar.
game. In fact, I think it can be quite miserable to strive for billions. And so the total
addressable market for your local fruit stand in your community may be a perfect amount of
income for you, but let's actually know what amount of income is reasonable for you. And the cool
thing about entrepreneurship in like today's age, the data is available everywhere. And so in private
equity, you would take this model like that. So you'd go moat. You would I take them. And for each
one, I rank them one to ten. And businesses, so margin, operations advantage, total addressable
market. Each one of them, a 10 is perfect. One is the worst you can have. And businesses that are
better than 30 across all four, well, that's a fund it. That's a fundable business model.
Businesses that are less than 30, but more than 20, that's a fix it. You've got some problems
in the model. And businesses that are less than 20, that's a flea it. This is probably not right for you
and a hard business to do.
I think it's not just the people who are looking for a new opportunity
or people who don't currently have a business.
I personally think at the moment every single person on the planet
who has a business should assume that their business is on borrowed time
because AI is going to disrupt everything.
And in that disruption, everyone has the opportunity to rethink
whether they want a different opportunity or whether they want to pivot.
It's the perfect time.
I look at simple things when I'm thinking about,
is it a good opportunity?
I think every good business is built upon somebody's case study.
So when I look at not just businesses as a thing on their own, I think businesses as a thing
on their own have to be taken in consideration with who's the entrepreneur.
So something that's a great opportunity for Cody may be just a disaster for me and likewise.
So I'm looking at the background of the entrepreneur.
Do you have a case study to leverage?
Do you have knowledge?
Do you have a network?
Do you have resources?
Have you got a reputation in something?
Because those are the things that we can then leverage.
And then I'm just going to have a look at three little things.
I'm going to say this idea that you've got going forward, does this address someone's pain, right?
Is there some sort of problem that this solves and that we could measure that, right?
Because people pay to move a metric.
They love to move some sort of a number.
So is there a pain that we can measure and can I take people out of that pain based on my story?
The next thing is does that type of person, who I'm going to solve that for, do they have money to spend?
Because ultimately, 60% of all the money is in the top 10%.
So the top 10% have about 60% of the available disposable income.
So groups that tend to have money is business owners, executives, people who've got accumulated
wealth.
So you're looking at like some sort of indication that you're selling to a group of people
who have money.
Underneath that top 10%, Amazon's already got them, McDonald's has already got them.
Like that's a saturated part of the market.
You're looking for that top 10% who've got disposable income.
And then the final part is passion.
Like, are you passionate about this?
And my definition of passion is a willingness to suffer.
So it's not do you get joy from it, not are you super happy from it?
It's are you willing to suffer for this?
Are you willing to have delayed gratification?
Would an objective third party who looks at your behavior,
who looks at the way that you show up in the world,
would they agree that you seem to be willing to push through difficult times in order to have this?
So those are some of the conversations I'd have with anyone,
and not just people who are starting out, people who have already got a hundred million
business.
It's like the adult marshmallow test, basically.
I think Cody had a great framework in terms of thinking about this from an investing
perspective for the people who are considering starting their first business.
I like the pain, passion, profession angle of, like, typically it'll be something that comes
from a personal pain that you overcame, whether it's you had an Indian disorder where
you have kids who have allergies and you figured out how to pack lunches or you figured out
to store stuff for twice as long because of some unique thing that you retrofitted a cooler
with, whatever.
some passion, which is just like a hobby that's you're deeply interested in, or it's a
profession, so something that you already currently do. Like, in a way, this is, I think,
one of the easiest self-entrepreneur, you know, self-employment path is just going from
employed to self-employed doing the same thing that somebody already pays you for. So, like,
you don't need to worry about, like, market risk of, like, I wonder if accounting is still
going to be desired by other people. Like, right now, because everyone's so interconnected,
like remote work and being able to be fractional, like many people can start kind of many
consulting business is doing, you know, because a lot of businesses and entrepreneurs are very
bad at allocating resources. And so they have a lot of, quote, full-time employees that are
working 20% of their effort and still keep, you know, keeping their paycheck. And at the end of the day,
like, they do enough to keep their job, but not so much that they are nearly at their full
discretionary effort. And so all of a sudden you think, okay, well, I could probably do the
same work for half the price and the entrepreneur be willing to pay it. But I could do that
same work for half the price for five times the people and make three times as much and do it
on my own time. And so that becomes, I think, a great, like, foray into entrepreneurship. Now,
what do you have to learn there? It's like, well, you already have delivery down because
you already do the job. You just have to learn how to promote. It's just like, how do you reach
out to people and ask them if they want what you have and then get them to trade your money for
it. That, like, at least takes half of it out of the equation. And almost all three of those
pain, passion, you already have kind of the back end. Like, you have the pain, you figure out
the thing. The passion, you've already spent all this time loving this thing. So you've already
done a lot of the work and research. And so really, you just need to learn the front end,
which is like, how do I promote and how do I sell? How to get someone to give me
for it. And then in terms of how much money you make, I think Jane had a great perspective of, like, you know, settle the rich, like they're the ones who have the money. And if you sell rich people, get to sell at rich people prices, which is more fun. And so, I mean, I'll give you a simple example. I have a CRO company that we do conversion and optimization across our sites and our portfolio. And so if that company works with the e-commerce business and they, you know, add 10% to, you know, top line and goes from $1 million to $1.1 million, they make $100,000 of value. If they work with a company,
an e-commerce business that's doing $100 million a year, and they do the same exact work,
and they add $10 percent, they had $10 million a year.
So it's 100 times more in terms of value that's being created.
And so fundamentally, you have the value to create, your ability to negotiate a slice of that pie,
how unique that is.
As in, for example, I could have plenty of sales guys who are like, hey, Alex, I could
sell millions of dollars of stuff for you.
I'm like, yeah, but so could every other salesperson.
So you have significantly less negotiating power, even if you have the negotiating skill,
just because many other people can do it.
Right? And then the final component is risk, and that's the one that I would multiply everything by, which is how much risk do you take on?
People often say this idea of selling to the rich, but as you explained it there, what it actually sounded more like is sell to the person who's going to yield the most returns from your skill.
And I reflect on this because I spent the first half of my career doing social media marketing.
Yeah.
I think I said this when we sat down, Cody, that I used to work with fast fashion companies or fashion companies.
and the net return for the client of me selling them more dresses was tens of thousands.
I then left that business and spent two years working in psychedelics in the biotech industry
where if this was around the game, the meme stock thing,
where if they could galvanize people on social media to care about their stock,
the upside, the swing was billions of dollars.
I was the only employee in this biotech firm but ended up listing on the NASDAQ for $3.2 billion.
dollars. And so their remuneration to me for the six months contract was many, many, many, many, many, many, millions.
Yeah. Because they made billions. So for me, they thought they were ripping me off.
Yeah. And I think about, funnily enough, when you put the same company on different stock markets,
the company is worth wildly different. And I think the same about our skills where think about
the stock market where you're trading your skills. I've got a small example of that, really small
example. There was a guy who we worked with who was an occupational health and safety
consultant. And inside the workplace, in a typical office, he would charge a couple of grand
a day to go in. And it was about 10 days, so about 20 grand to do an occupational health and
safety. And I asked him the question, what is the most dangerous workplace you've ever worked
in? And he says, well, there's this type of manufacturing that has lasers, freezing stuff,
boiling stuff, lava, you know, sharks, you know, the whole thing, right? Whatever it is.
And not actual sharks. But you get to the same. But you get a lot of things. But you're
the idea and I said do you know how to solve the problems of that workplace and he says yeah
I absolutely know how to fix those problems I said why don't you position yourself and why don't
you run a campaign that you're one of the best in the world for that and that you're actually
going to just run a campaign around that within a year his day rate had gone to 20,000 a day
from 2000 a day and a typical engagement had gone up to 400 grand mainly because he went from
you know, the same skill set, but he applied it to a much, you know, more valuable
environment. Podcasting is somewhat similar, you know, because if I podcast in the UK, the amount
of money I get per view from YouTube is half versus if I do the same activity, the same amount
of effort, same amount of hours in the United States, the platforms pay me double for the same
amount of views. And I think many of us are like trying to get a pay rise from my boss or whatever,
But actually thinking about, are you trading your skills on the highest return market is a great way.
We used to hire writers at my old company, and those writers would be paid, you know, $30,000, $50,000, whatever it was in the UK.
When I was working in biotech and we were looking for someone that could write about biotech, it was a quarter of a million in the salary.
It was five times more for the same fundamental skill of writing.
I think that a lot of times when you're starting out as a brand new entrepreneur, it's scarier to sell to rich people.
You're like, I don't know rich people.
I'm not a rich person. I'm going to sell to my friends. That is very normal. That's the people that you have the closest proximity to. But the problem is, is that means you have to play the volume game. The volume game is actually really hard. It's hard to get a lot of people to buy your thing. It's actually much easier to get a few rich people to buy your thing. And so, you know, we had this home inspection company. And I didn't know what at the time, but he was telling me they were having major cash issues in their business. And I could kind of tell because when an entrepreneur is under stress, like you can sort of see it, you know,
it's a visual thing too. And he was about 45 days away from running out of cash. And when I was sitting down and talking to him, I was trying to understand his business. Home inspection has been around forever. It's a normalized business. This business works. It functions. It has good margins. It's a roll-up for private equity. The business model is not the issue. So what was the issue? The issue was their clients and their pricing. So he was trying to be the home inspector for everyone at a lower price point. And what does that mean? It means it was actually really hard for him to advertise.
because he wasn't niching down. He was competing with all of the major players. And he had very
little margin because he was competing for people who couldn't afford very much in their home
inspection costs. We made one change, which is we just said in front of his business name and in all
of his ads, luxury home inspections instead of just San Diego home inspections or whatever
city he was in previously. And that one change increased his margins by 45%. And they saved his
business. He didn't do more volume. He didn't hire more people. He didn't get smarter. He didn't
get better. He just sold to rich people instead. And because that increased the surface area that
he was covering, so each house was like, I don't know, thousands of dollars instead of a couple hundred
bucks to inspect. His business was saved forever. And so I think protecting your profit is so
crucial when you start a business. And nobody tells you that because it feels safer to sell things
cheaply to people who don't have very much money. But there's that old adage, which is,
you know, try to work with a $50 client and they will say, I need everything under the sun
for this $50,000 I'm going to give you and then go to a $50,000 client and they'll say
why are sent. And so in the beginning, go for the 50,000. And the last thing I'll say on that
is also when you're a young gun entrepreneur, a lot of times people who have money, they got there
through business, nine times out of 10. They see themselves in you as a young hard worker.
You can often get away with things when you are young, working for somebody who is rich and sees themselves in you, especially in service businesses, that you just can't at volume when you're selling to people that really need that last dollar.
And so I think that's why most businesses go service-based business.
You trade your time for money in some sort of way.
Then you productize the service.
So now you make the service so other people can run it to you.
And then finally, you turn into technology software as a service.
You increase your margin at every single one or your profit in every single one.
But they're the same business.
You're just smarter.
You're a higher-level entrepreneur when you're able to create tech around it.
But really all tech is is process at scale.
And so it sounds scary when you're just starting out.
But it's really just the difference between 10 years in entrepreneurship and learning and not.
I think when you're starting out, a lot of times you sell out of your own wallet to Cody's point.
So it's like you have no dollars in your wallet.
So you assume everyone else has no dollars in their wallets either.
And you're so afraid of getting rejection that you continue to lower the
price until you get here to you hear people say yes. But it just as like a benchmark for people
we're starting out is that like usually you're appropriately priced when seven out of 10 people
are saying no. That's like about the appropriate price. So if you have like if I, you know,
see a business and they're doing 80% close rates, isn't like 80% of the people they talk to say
yes. They usually have a double or triple in pricing just sitting there. If they're at like 60%
close rates, they usually have a one and a half to two X price increase that's sitting there.
If they're at, you know, 40 to 50, they've got a 50% price raise in there. And if they're
right at that, you know, 30-ish, 35%, then they're usually appropriately priced.
And if they're at 20, they just need to learn how to sell better.
But fundamentally, I say this because usually, you know, in the beginning of entrepreneurship,
you're so afraid of hearing no.
But the reality of it is that you need to be hearing no more than you hear yes to know
that you're being appropriately priced.
Because, like, way back in the day, I had a gym, and I had, I can't remember how many
members it was, but I said, that's it, and I decided to triple my prices, which is.
It was a pretty big move when you have a recurring membership base.
And so I gave everyone a trial of the new level of service I wanted to give.
I wanted to go from large group to semi-private.
And I tripled the price alongside that.
And I lost one-third of my customers.
But I had two-thirds of the people at three times the price.
And so I made two-times the revenue, and I cut my costs by two-thirds.
And so I made a lot more money.
And it was probably better for your clients as well.
It was a more exclusive experience.
100%.
And it was like right as I was beginning to learn how, like,
pricing worked with profit in a business. And so, and by doing that tripling in price,
it didn't, like, triple my profit. It did way more than that. And so, like, when you have a
10% or 15% margin business, like Cody's saying, if you actually can pull off a double in
your pricing, it'd be a 6x or 7x increase in profits. So there's a lot more sensitivity to that
price number. What's interesting is that it's really just like, you know, a lot of people
like, how do I raise my price? It's like, you do the exact same thing you normally do. And then
right when you're about to say the number, you just add a zero. And then you just act the same.
Dan Kennedy had this great quote. He said, go as high as you can without cracking a smile.
And I think that's usually a pretty decent place to start.
Yeah. And if nobody is giving you push back on pricing, that means you're too cheap immediately.
Like, I mean, value metrics, I think, are so on. Listen, the thing is, like, if you're a serious business person, you want to make more money, pricing is going to be really interesting to you.
If you're not a serious person wanting to make a lot of money, pricing seems like such a boring conversation.
This will never go viral on the internet except for people who actually are in the game of business.
And they understand that pricing saves businesses.
And the thing that I learned that I thought was wrong at first, and I'd be curious if you guys were the same, I thought it was wrong to charge different people, different prices.
I was like, no, no, everybody gets the same price.
That's the right way to do business.
And then I realize there's something called value metrics, which is basically your prices should be a representative of three things.
Usage, so does somebody use this service a ton?
Then you should charge them more.
Do they have a lot of users?
Do lots of people use it on their behalf?
Or then finally, value, how much value do they derive from it?
Do they make a ton of money?
You know, can they have some sort of quantifiable return?
And if you're charging everybody 90 bucks a month for whatever your service is,
you are wasting a ton of money from a segment of your clients that would pay you way more.
Like type form is a good example.
I started using type form, started using it myself.
They charged me $50 a month.
Then I started running tens of thousands of surveys through there and I put my whole team on there.
Now I'm paying $1,000 a month.
It's the same.
fucking tool. Yes, it is. But I'm using it way more, and I've got more of my team using my
account as well. So they're charging me $1,000, just over $1,000 a month. And they only had to
acquire you, which is amazing. So from acquiring one person and your, like, you know, your cost
of goods, don't escalate at the same rate at all. So that's how these SaaS companies get this
80% margins. That's it. When you look at this little pyramid of customer segmentation,
you get 1% of people who have 15% of the budget, 9% of people have 45% of the budget,
90% of people combined 40%, right?
So when you actually break that down, you have one person willing to pay 15 grand.
You have nine people willing to pay 5 grand each, and you have 90 people willing to pay 445 each.
So you are almost always better off going, I think the best place for most small businesses to go is that 9%.
And the reason is the top 1% typically shop on pedigree.
They want to work with the best businesses out there.
They want to work with the ones who have won awards and the ones that have been around.
for long time. And through trusted relationships. The 90% they shop on price. They have a fixed
price and they only want to shop on that price. The 9% shop on passion. They want to follow someone
who has an interesting new take on things, who's putting together a group, who's done some
education or entertainment around it. So this 9%, I would call that the affluent niche. And that
affluent niche is really good place to start. And that 9% are the ones that are closest to moving
into the 1%, so you can grow with a client over time, which we saw a lot.
You could help get them up to the 1%, and then they'll take you and introduce you to all the
others.
This was one of the really fascinating things for me when I was running a marketing business, which
is, I think you referenced this, Cody, which is when I started the company, I was
working with founders who had a 10K budget, and the amount of times they would call me because
of that 10K budget, because that was do or die for them.
And then when we signed Uber and Coca-Cola and Samsung, the budgets are massive, and they call
me less. They sign things off quicker. The meetings are easier. Life is easier. And that's just
one of these sort of interesting phenomenons with client services, I guess, and service businesses
generally, is the bigger the budget. Typically, it requires the same or less units of effort to keep
them happy than someone whose life is on the line because it's their five grand out of their own
pocket. I think part of that you earn to as an entrepreneur, I think, I mean, I'll speak for
myself. You start out selling way too cheap.
because you also need the money.
Because as much as it's like a nice,
it's very comfortable for me to say,
like, yeah, you need to add a zero to your price stack.
If I don't get paid for the rest of my life, it doesn't matter.
And so I have a lot of leverage and people can feel that.
That's really interesting.
Right.
Whereas, I mean, this is also like, if you behave as if, right?
If I behave as if I have a significant amount of money,
then I tend to attract people who are going,
or basically somebody else who also has a lot of money
will recognize that behavior and say,
okay, this guy's a player.
And so then they'll be more willing to do business with me.
Now, it's tougher when you don't have,
that and you present that way, right? Which is, so I think that a lot of this kind of does become
earned because like either you're faking it, which is not my, not my recommendation, or you just
do a decent amount of volume and you realize you're like, you know what, I can't charge $99 a
month for this. It doesn't make sense for me. And then you have a different level of confidence
going into this where you just look at something. You're like, I just can't do it for that
price. That's the word confidence, isn't it? Yeah, well, that's how I had to find it.
And how does one build that confidence or portray that confidence when really they don't believe it
themselves. You outwork yourself out, right? You do so much volume that you get bored of it. Like,
when you can basically train out your affective response or your emotional response to a given
activity, then at that point, I would say, like, you are ready. And so whenever I hear
someone is like, how do you get rid of nerves? I was like, you're just not, you haven't done enough
times. Like, until you were bored and you hate it, at that point, I'm like, okay, now you're
ready. Is that what's like self-belief is to you? To me, yeah. There's two types of confidence.
There's a confidence that comes from repetition. Sure. And I think it takes courage
the first 30 times and then you get a little bit of confidence and then it takes courage and
then you get confidence. But I think it's like 30 little blocks of 30 repetitions and then
you get rewarded with a little bit of confidence upgrade. That's one type of confidence. There's
another type of confidence which is an abundance of options. So let's say you run a lead generation
campaign and you want to get 10 clients and you're hoping to sign up 10 clients and a thousand people
respond. You end up with this with or without you energy. And the with or without you energy is I'm going
to be fine with or without you. I'm going to definitely make my 10 sales. I've got a thousand
leads. I've got 10 sales I can make. So therefore, it's out of balance. I go back and forth on
this because the good thing about today, actually, is I think people do less than ever,
but think that they do more than ever in entrepreneurship. And so we have a lot of mental
masturbation that goes on. I've thought about this a lot. I've really pondered it. I've wondered
about this. I've worried about it, et cetera, right? I've watched all these videos. I've
consumed all this stuff, but I've actually done nothing.
the video.
Like and subscribe.
But, you know, if you take the quantity advice, then what you do when you try to go get a job,
let's say, whether it's a job that you have in your business or you're trying to get
an actual job, then you just go and you apply to 15,000 of them.
I actually think you'd be much better off by applying to five and doing as much work as it
would take to reach out to 15,000 to obsess on those five.
And so even if you haven't done 10,000 hours of painting somebody's house, if you go and sit down and you sit down with AI, get in front of perplexity, and you write down, okay, what is the average painting job cost? What are the problems that come up with painting jobs? Who is the most expensive? How do I upsell them? And you put together a package that is like, here is everything that you think you need to know data-wise on this job that I want. You will be the 1%. Nobody preps for anything anymore to the degree that you need to execute.
And so I don't think you always have to do the job if you do the preparation to show that you care about the job.
And just think about it.
Like how many times if we all had people reach out to us and they're like, I want to come work for you or I want to come get this job?
And they're like, hey, can I send you a video of XYZ?
And if I do it, then you'll hire me.
Or can I do a sales pitch for you?
You know what you should actually do?
Make the video.
Make the video.
Put together an entire prep document.
Put together a strategy document on why I should hire you.
and make it so that it is almost impossible for somebody to say no to you because it shows how
obsessed you are in a world of super curious, uninterested, not that deep obsession.
And I've hired, God, I probably've hired 15, 20 people solely because obsession is rare and
competence is rare.
And if you can show those two things, you can be people who have been doing it for 20 years.
Because I know many painters.
We own one of the bigger painting franchises in the country.
And I know very many painters that have all the experience, but they don't know how to
properly communicate it and show the preparation that they've already done.
Let's talk about them, because that's a function of really sales, I guess.
That's sales, that's marketing.
I was mulling the other day, because I've just hired someone called Harry,
who's our new head of happiness in our flight story.
And she didn't just make a seven-minute video.
She also sent the video via unsaturated, less noisy channels.
And it made me think about this framework of the resonance of the message and the high-signal-ness.
of the medium.
Because as you'll all know, you're getting DMs from people
that say, any jobs going?
That's like low emotional resonance
and a terrible medium.
So I think of it as like this four sort of square quadrant
where in the top right of the quadrant
you have message at the seven minute video,
but then figuring out how to get it round back,
pass the PAs, not into the saturated inboxes,
maybe into the post.
I think post is so unbelievably unappreciated
as a medium in a world of laziness
where nobody wants to, like, go to the postbox.
You're all on the receiving ends of thousands of DMs
and messages a month, and sometimes some of them get through.
Sometimes some of them result in someone being offered a job
or you're investing in their company.
So if I'm listening at home and I'm thinking,
okay, I've got four people here who get thousands of DMs,
what is the secret that penetrates your fortresses?
I would be careful reaching out to people who have millions of followers
because it's hard for you, if you've never had millions of followers
or even hundreds of thousands of followers,
It would blow most people's minds just how much traffic is moving in the background on any given day.
There are plenty of people who have 10,000 followers or 20,000 followers, or they've got a very successful business.
They don't get 1,000 emails a day.
They get maybe 1,000 emails a year.
So there's something that you can reach out with, which is called a proof story, which you mentioned.
And the format that I like to use is I did something special.
I recently worked with a extremely famous YouTuber
who has over 22 million followers
and we were able to spin out a new business
which became very, very successful and exitable
and that business got 10 million worth of revenue
in the first six months
and I project managed the whole thing
and I can explain exactly how we did that step by step.
So the format is I did something special
with a certain type of person,
we got a great result, here's what the result was,
and here's how I can explain it step by step.
And what's in that for me?
Or am I making the link?
So I'm reaching out to you with my proof story.
Yeah.
So I'm telling you, this is what I've done.
And are you asking me for something?
I'm saying, would you like to know how we did it step by step?
Now, the other way we can do this that works pretty well
is to do this in the public domain.
So, for example, you could reach out by actually posting a video
or a post on LinkedIn or on Instagram or on X.
And what you can do is have five, six, seven, eight friends who then jump in and start
commenting on it.
Now, for me personally, if you've tagged me in something in the public domain and people
are now commenting it so that the thing might be, I've got a little bit of advice for
Daniel Priestley.
And I go, ooh, what's going on here?
Right?
And then I see that there's a public video and I see several people commenting on it.
And then I look at the video and it's a proof story and it's really complimentary.
I really like your stuff and here's what he's going.
And here's my proof story.
and by the way Daniel I'd love to get in touch
to drop me a DM
I'm going to check that out because it's in the public domain
because it could be negative
it could be
I don't read it
I want to know what the heck's what's being said there
right I think the real thing is
don't confuse famous with rich
like you guys shouldn't care about us
and reaching out to us
there are people that are richer than all of us
even though we all have some means as far as I understand
There are people that are way richer than us that nobody knows, that nobody's reaching out to, that want to give you their money.
And so I think a lot of people spend time focusing on fame as opposed to rich.
And when you're young, who cares?
Like, if you can't eat fame, fame is not lasting.
We will all be totally irrelevant, probably sooner than we even want to.
Just speak for so crazy.
Like and subscribe.
Alex, we remember being 500.
Yeah.
So, like, you know, for young people, I do think sometimes.
because we get DMs, we think that it's important.
But if you're watching this, you should really be obsessed with just making money.
And then you can be sitting at a table like this and not worry about, you know, slipping into our DMs.
I mean, the richest guy that you know probably started a sprinkler head company, lives down your street in a big house.
And if you wouldn't ask, knocked on his door and asked him how he made it.
And if you could do a service for him, he would probably let you.
It's so true.
I wouldn't mess around with famous people.
The people that gave me my first leg up in the world of business were no one, they didn't have followers.
They were some guy who had built a business similar in the city and was now living out in Monaco, living in isolated life.
It was someone who'd sold some kind of company who was running, you know, some kind of marketing business.
But, and they were at that level.
They were probably at the $50 million level in terms of net worth.
And they were delighted to have an email from me tickling their ego.
Of course.
Because they see themselves in you.
I was reading their blog, etc.
Yeah.
It's very exhausting to do the very deep level of work that you do in order to get a high level client and then have no response.
Right.
That can be, that can be really extinguishing from a behavior perspective.
But if you do that work for, you know, Stephen Bartlett, and then you make the post and you say, hey, this is this, like, I'm a XYZ, you know, whatever designer, and I've worked with these types of clients.
And let me just show you my breakdown of what I would do.
I think his stuff's awesome.
This is just some stuff I would do.
And then I tag you, then I'll probably, like, things is enough people will see that that you'll get it sent to you from somebody else who you will answer the response from messenger messaging type perspective.
Like somebody whose DMs you will open will be like, hey, I don't know if you saw this.
A team member.
Right.
exactly. And you do respond to them.
I do, yeah. Right? And so all of a sudden, it's like, that's actually how you can get in.
But you also get all the free exposure of the work that you're doing. And then another person who might not be you and it might be me and saying, hey, I like Stephen's stuff too. And I thought this was a pretty good breakdown.
Hey, do you have services, you know, in exchange for money?
You can intercept my. Yeah, totally. I'm a nap that shit. And so, and so, yeah, I actually really like that perspective because it doubles, it allows the work that you do for your lead magnets to basically double as content.
And so it doubles us promotion.
And so you kind of get multiple bytes of the app, which I think is really good.
And I think if you do do it, though, be sure you're good.
Because, you know, the truth of this happens all the time with you and I.
I mean, we go back and forth because people will say online, like, I built everything that Alex Formosey owns.
Can I come work for you, Cody?
Oh, yeah.
You know.
I received those emails to you.
Of course.
He has the same people.
You know, I built everything Cody has.
And then, you know, kind of funnily, I'll be like, God, I did.
don't remember that person ever working for me, like, did this actually happen? And so I do think
this is just a little, listen, you've got to hustle when you're young, you got to do things
you're going to cringe about later. I am so on board for all of that, but also remember that
the world is small, especially with people online. I just want to pause on that, because I think
this is an important point, is all the people that have had the biggest net impact on my success,
my career in my team, they don't seem to have time to be telling the world that they did
everything. Yeah. I mean, Jack is a good example. Jack is, Jack was here from episode one of the
podcast. But Jack, in my view, is doing the least personal branding, milking the cow,
and he's, in my view, arguably the most responsible for all of this stuff. And there's almost
this inverse correlation between someone that works for you for three months and then builds
a personal brand off the back of that and is on stage claiming, you know, the success versus
the people in the trenches. In a circle, yeah. It's a bit of a side point. But one of the things
people are so fascinated by is this idea of passive income. And I think they're fascinating.
by it because it's a promise of big returns for no work.
And you talk about offers a lot.
That's like the perfect offer.
What's your thoughts on passive income, Alex?
And is it something we should be aspiring for?
So first, I think it'd be helpful for everyone to even define
in terms of how to think about passive income versus active income.
So one is that people often discuss it in binary terms,
passive versus active, when it's really more of a continuum of how passive is it versus
is how active is it, and that way it becomes way less black and white.
When I think about passive versus active, when people are starting out, I generally just
discard it entirely because they typically don't have sufficient capital to actually make
meaningful passive income, and they would get significantly higher returns on increasing
their active income.
And virtually every extremely rich person who self-made, as my asterisk, generally has
gigantic active income and only begins to look at passive when they have so much money from
reinvesting in their higher return things, which is what got them this very large
active income, that they're like, where else should I put it? And then at that point,
it's really a question of diversification, which is, like, how much more do I not want to
double down on the main thing? And that's a completely personal question. And there is no,
in my opinion, there's no right answer to that of, because that's a fundamental, like,
how much risk do I want to take, which I see is entirely personal. But I'll give you a very,
a real example of, like, an investment I made five years ago, which was, we did exit the
business. And I had more time in my hands. And I was like, okay, well, water
and I just start spending, you know, a couple million bucks a year on making content. Now,
that had basically zero return in that time period. But if I were to look at the return on capital
for that, you know, $2 million a year I did for the first few years compared to today,
it was probably the highest return capital that I made. But is that, was that a passive? No,
it's definitely not passive. It was 100% active in from an investing perspective. And so this
is when people were like, what do you mean by investing yourself? I mean that. Right. Like,
you're investing in either the skills that you're acquiring, the businesses that you have.
And a very simple investment, a lot of times, can get you ideally leverage on your time.
And so I'd rather think for the person who's starting out, not like, how do I make this passive?
I'd say, how do we get more leverage on my active?
And so, like, I could start by shoveling snow in the beginning.
And then once I save up enough of my shekels, then I'll buy a snow blower.
And all of a sudden, I can go from doing, you know, one driveway an hour to doing three driveways an hour.
And then, boom, I tripled my income.
Now, for that one week that my cash flow is down because I'd buy the equipment, I'll have made less money.
but then I'll very quickly recoup it.
Now, to the same degree, that's in a capital expense from an equipment perspective,
but you can do the same thing from a skills perspective of,
I give a classic example of a phobotomist as somebody who draws blood.
In the U.S., I think they make somewhere the neighbor of like $25 an hour or something like that.
It doesn't take very long in order to become a phobotomist and doesn't take a lot of money.
And so, you know, a couple weeks, you do the studies, you get your cert,
and then all of a sudden you take minimum wage,
and as long as you're not in San Francisco,
you will have double or tripled your earning capacity in just a very short period of time.
And so that's a very good return on capital.
And so that's where I think about the best investments for people who are starting out who have, call it sub $10,000, sub maybe $25,000.
It's like, I put all my money into how I get more leverage on my active, which is either going to be more skills or more actual physical equipment in order to get returns on the skills I already have.
Interesting.
More leverage on my time.
I personally like the idea of asset income versus passive income.
So if you actually look at what's really going on with passive income, it's that there is an asset.
and that asset is in some way generating income.
So, for example, you own a house and you get rental income
or you write a book and you've got intellectual property
and that intellectual property generates a royalty income.
So first there's an asset.
Income follows assets.
So the first thing you need is an asset
and then you get the yield from the asset.
And there's traditional assets,
which are very, very good if you've already made money
or you already have money and you want to park it somewhere
and you want to stay ahead of inflation,
traditional assets are terrible for trying to make money.
Give me an example of a traditional asset in this definition.
I think of something like art, wine, and watches as more like a speculation, or perhaps a store of value.
But then there's something else which is called a performance asset.
A performance asset is typically intellectual property, media, code, or data.
And when you have these performance assets, if you can build these, these are ones you don't have to buy, you build them.
So, for example, you could write a book and now you've got intellectual property.
you could build a system like a SaaS platform,
and now that SaaS platform is in some way an asset,
and you can rent that out to more people.
You could build a database of 1,000 people
and build a relationship with those 1,000 people,
and then every time you write one email,
it goes out to 1,000 people,
and they have a little newsletter,
so that's a performance asset.
So typically when you look at the people around this table,
we're very lucky to have a lot of performance assets,
big followings, lots of media and content,
content, books that we've written. So these are kind of like the performance assets that anyone
can create. It used to be until very, very recently, that you just couldn't build assets.
Like you couldn't, it was very, very difficult. But we live in this magical moment where almost
anyone with a phone and a laptop can start creating performance assets with intellectual property,
media, data, and code. And then you can basically start the process of building those assets
and then those assets produce more income.
Here's my conspiracy theory about passive income.
And I think that passive income, it's a tax code, right?
It is a real thing.
It exists.
You pay less money to the government if you have passive income than active income.
Like, that's where the word comes from.
But I think the reason that it's been so idealized is because there's an entire industry
where people have told all of us for decades that they are better at managing our money than we are.
That's the mutual fund industry. That's the investment industry. That's the real estate industry. That's the private equity industry.
And they have said, we are professionals, and thus we will charge you two and 20. We'll charge you an investment fee on top of your assets for you to give us the professionals your money to beat inflation overtime. The problem is, is that to your point, they will never make you wealthy. Investing overtime in those assets are great for beating inflation or making sure you have downside protection for your cash over time in order to allow.
it to grow and have diversification. But they're very bad if you want to get rich. If you want to
get rich, you're not going to get rich in mutual funds and sitting it in somebody else's private
equity fund. The people who get rich off those things, they do the active income. They're the
ones who are running the private equity fund. They're the ones that are running the private
equity companies, and they're the ones that are running the real estate. And so there's this
fascinating world we live in, actually, where people think that it is better and more sophisticated
to not teach you how to become capable of running your own business and creating active income,
but that instead you're more sophisticated if you're on Wall Street.
And so I think that passive income was actually in a lot of ways a way for the wealthy class
to gain a lot of our assets.
But people click it, and this is why there's a generation of younger people as well,
that are obsessed with trying to figure out how to make passive income.
It's clickbait, isn't it?
I think it's like, but I think it's almost deep.
than that. I think it is actually that it sounds, you know, if Alex says this, I say it too,
but like, invest in yourself. People are like, what does that mean? Of course I'm trying to,
but how do I invest in myself? That's hard. I don't know exactly how to do it. What are you trying
to sell me courses or tell me to buy your books or whatever? And that's the reaction.
But the truth of the matter is, is that you will never be able to have the return on investment
in somebody else's asset that you will in yourself. You just won't. Okay, so let's go on to
that then investing in yourself. If you were starting out in your career today, without the skills
that you have, without the audience that you have, and you had to choose how to invest in yourself,
what is that investment you would make in yourself today in 2025? I'm going to give two answers.
So I started at zero once and then I've lost everything twice. And so I have the, I have done that
three times now, starting from zero without a reputation or money. And so what I did in all
all three times was the same thing, which was the first thing I did was I learned how to advertise,
which is how do I let people know about the stuff I have? The second thing I did was that I went to
people who had an existing business, and I said, hey, for as little money as possible, what would
you do to fulfill your existing services? And then when someone, I would then use the advertising
that I had, so at the time it was Facebook ads, I would run ads, and then I would sell those leads
into that business based on the pre-determined price.
And so let's say it's a chiropractor, or for me it was a gym.
So I went to a gym owner.
I said, what would you take for a member?
And they said, you know, we would actually take them for,
if you can just bring them, you can keep the money.
We just want the customer for free.
And so I said, okay, well, the first six weeks of the time
that they spend money with you is mine.
And then after that, they're all yours.
And they said, that's fair.
And so then I just spent money and I sold into someone else's business
and I kept everything above the spread,
which since the basis was zero, I kept all of the money.
and I had zero cost of delivery.
So literally it was just cash collected minus cac.
All of that was profit.
And so when I started over from zero, the third time,
I was able to make $100,000 in the first month when I needed it.
Because you had that skill of advertising.
And so when we say, like, invest in yourself,
it's a very amorphous term.
But fundamentally, you have to learn the skills of generating money.
And so you're going to have to have some level of promotion.
You have to let people know about your stuff,
which is either going to be through content, through paid ads,
through outreach, right? Or it's going to be through affiliates. If somebody already has an audience
to negotiate some sort of thing with, honestly, so many businesses, like you can go to a
chiropractor and say, hey, you know, how little will you do 10 sessions for? And you'd be amazed.
If I say, hey, I can bring you 100 people, how little can you do 10 sessions for? They might
say 20 bucks a session. Now, I might sell it for 200, but that's on me. And I make my 90%
spread and I have to do anything. I just have to promote and sell. And so that is an example of
something that, like I have done and did do each of the times when I needed to make money in the
beginning when I had nothing. What skill that you currently have would get you back to being a
$100 million entrepreneur? So it's a really good question. I think it's actually stacking skills.
So a lot of times, like when this question gets asked, basically the assumption is that you have to
stay in the same vehicle. And so like the fastest way to make $100,000 is not the fastest way to make $10 million.
But I might make $10 million faster if I started with $100,000. And so if I have zero, then I'm going to do something
it costs zero capital in his pure skill, which is exactly what that was, right? Now, to make,
let's say, to actually start running those ads, I need $1,000. And so it's like, I might drive Uber
for $1,000, get my $1,000, then spend the $1,000 on ads to make my $30,000. And during that process,
I can reinvest that to get the $100. Okay, great, now I've got the $100. Now with the
$100, I can flip that into, and the key of each of those is that none of those are really businesses
per se, and that, like, I can just walk away from them whenever. I don't have ongoing delivery or
ongoing commitments. And so that gives you a lot of flexibility. And I mean, I think there are
a lot of entrepreneurs, at least the ones that I know, have had these moments where they needed
to generate a lot of capital in a short period of time and have a few kind of like fast money
skills that they don't flex normally because there's there's caps to them, right?
I think is cool about entrepreneurship too is we can all do it. You have to find your unfair
advantage. One of your unfair advantages is you're very good at paid promotion and getting to the
masses, right? That was never really my unfair advantage. I think there's two different ways you could do
this. One would be promotion. So are you an incredible salesperson to go direct to a ton of people?
The other way is partnerships. And I think you can think of these different ways. Promotion could be
B to C often, which is like going direct to consumer. Often partnerships is B to B, to going to a few
big people. I think of partnerships as employment, which is a very fast way often to make money, too.
Like Jack might make way more millions with you than he does individually. And so my
background when I didn't have any cash, I didn't know how to go to people directly. I didn't know
how to do paid ads. I wasn't sure how to do promotion, which is a volume game that you have to be
good at. So I went towards partnerships. I said I can get to fewer, bigger, faster. I can't get to
many fast. And so I think there's like two paths to making money quickly if you don't have any.
And the first path has less risk, but perhaps mid-sized returns. And that is go find the best
entrepreneur, founder, business builder you can find who you can still get to on a daily basis
in some way and go work for them. Learn as much as you can. Earn as much as you can. As you learn more,
ask for more continuously over time. This is how I mean, Cheryl Sandberg is one of the richest
people in the world and she's never had her own business, right? She's only worked for other people
and she's doing just fine. So I think that's the first way. And that would be what I would call
partnerships or employment. And then the second way is to go do it yourself, right? Which is
high risk, but probably highest reward. And in that instance,
you have to go and figure out how to get people to buy your things continuously over
time. But like when I didn't have money in the beginning, you know, I had just, I'd gotten
out of finance, I didn't want to work for somebody else again. I was pretty miserable. I had worked
for a billion hours for people in investment banking and asset management. And I had massive
golden handcuffs. Like I made a lot of money. And I had no brilliant idea. I didn't have a business
idea. I had no idea what to do next. And I'm pretty risk-averse, actually. I was like way too
scared to go do what you guys all did, which is start businesses from scratch.
And so instead, I partnered up. I went to another company that needed to raise capital and
get a few investments in it. And I went to them and said, I can raise money from a few of these
people that I know. If I do that, can I negotiate a little bit of equity in the company?
Can I negotiate upside return for the money and dollars that I bring in? And I want to be a
partner in the company. And so you don't always have to start your own thing. If you can
negotiate with partnerships, I think sometimes you can skip to the front of the line if you're
not a great natural salesperson, you know, or a marketer. And so you really just didn't need to
decide which one. And neither of them are better than any others. There's just better for you.
The amount of resources you have access to is a factor of knowledge, network, and reputation.
So at all times, you're trying to build your knowledge. You're trying to build your network.
You're trying to build your reputation. A lot of people are worried about the knowledge,
but they've probably done interesting things already in their history.
they're probably, if they looked over the last three, four, five years, they could say, actually,
I've done all sorts of things, but I've never told anyone about that, right? I've never actually
explained to, I've never posted on LinkedIn, I've never posted an update telling people what I've done.
So therefore, I've actually got things that could build a reputation, but I've never leveraged that reputation.
If you're a young person especially, network is actually, you've got a superpower with network.
And I'll tell you why, because if you go to a private bank that normally banks people with three million,
but you say, I want to be an entrepreneur, I want to come to some of your entrepreneur,
or events that you host, they'll bring you along because you're an ambitious young person.
If you go to a large accounting firm and say, do you ever host big events?
Could I attend some?
Can I jump on a newsletter that lets people know about the events?
They'll invite you along.
And I'm talking about like Ernst & Young and KPMG, every single week they've got some thing
that they're doing in their offices.
They've got experts, they've got rich people, they've got all that sort of stuff happening
there, and they'll invite you along.
So you've got this ability to build your network, you've got this ability to leverage your
reputation. I actually don't think that you can make good decisions about the knowledge
on your own. I think you need someone who's at the higher level to tell you this is the
skills you should go for. These are the things you should do. So, for example, at the time that
Alex did ads, it was a great time for doing ads. But now, fast forward to today, it's probably
better to study AI and to bring that to the table. So sometimes those things change. So let's say
you figure out what is your reputation, what can you talk about when you're in front of
people, you go networking, you go to a few of these events, you outreach, you get yourself
in front of some people, and you actually ask the question, what kind of skills do I need?
What sort of, I need to build my skills, I need to build my knowledge, what do you think
would be a valuable thing to do because people who are at that next level up, they're noticing
what they need, they're noticing what's hot, what's not, so they're going to be able to teach
you, or guide you, and to Cody's point, you know, you want to have a mentor in your life. You want
to have someone who's been there, done it. You want to, you know, partner with a bigger
organization and get some of those. Before Kim Kardashian was Kim Kardashian, she was Paris Hilton's
assistant. And she learnt the playbook for being famous, for being famous, and then she took it to a new
level. So she did an apprenticeship, and then she applied the apprenticeship. One of the things
that all of us have in common is we make content. And it's almost a bit of an elephant in the
room that no one's really doubled down. And when I asked what you guys think is the most
sort of like undervalued skill or the best place to invest in yourself, I was actually expecting
you all to say start making content for a variety of reasons, not just because you want to build
an audience so you have more customers, but actually, and I can see it on all of you,
it's helped you to think better. It's helped you to communicate better. It's helped you to sell
better. When you get that chance to sit down with that investor or that rich person, you said a
second ago, you said earlier that if I'd sat old Alex here, one of the big differences is this
one's much more focused, concise, articulate. So I'm wondering what you guys think of that,
content as a undervalued, unappreciated skill in the world we're heading in.
If I'm starting today, rather than when I head, you know, zero, there's still a huge
amount of attention that sits on social media, if not more. And there's even more demand for
content now than there was. And so you can supply that and get compensated for it. And you'll
have to do repetitions for a period of time until eventually you get good, and then you can develop
an audience, and then you obviously can't sell things to them. I think content, content's a little bit
of an interesting one, because content works when you've got intellectual property leverage. So I
remember Alex popped onto my screen the first time, and he says, I've sold my company for $40 million,
and I've got nothing to sell you. I'm just going to tell you how I did it. Cody's the same.
She's like, you know, I was working at Goldman Sachs, but then I left Goldman Sachs to earn more money
through laundromats. I'm like, that's interesting. That's fascinating, right? So I'm going to
watch that content because there's some interesting intellectual property there. My channel
took off when I started talking about, I've done seven startups that went zero to a million
in the first 12 months. So it's that ability to have some intellectual property that people are
going to want to get to. I can think of a bunch of examples of creators that hadn't done anything,
but their ideas were the value. So if you think of someone like George Mack or even James
Claire or lots of other of these sort of like Jay Shetty online writers who
Jay Shetty had a great one which was I've got monk wisdom for the modern world
and we've got Ali Abdul I left the I quit being a doctor to be a YouTuber so
there's these little hooks that work and does everyone have a you don't have to
have sold a business for tons of millions or made millions from I think there's some
intellectual property that you've got but bear in mind that there was a different time
where you could just burst onto the scene and
And we now have AI-generated content.
So if you imagine like airplanes and they're at the airport and the fog rolls in,
and if you're on the ground, it's very hard to take off.
But if you're already up in the air, it's very easy to stay up in the air.
And it's kind of like the AI content that's coming in is that fog, right?
There's just going to be thousands of AI-generated content pieces just flooding onto everyone's feed.
And if you don't have a really good hook, you're just not going to drown out that noise.
You guys must all be thinking about this.
I have so much.
All right, all right.
So one thing I think everyone has to decide on if they're going to start making content
is I'm an entertainer or am I an educator, right, right off the bat.
And so I think AI content, for sure, will have tremendous leverage on entertainment more so than education.
Because the big underlying thing that Daniel was hitting at is that you have to have proof.
Right.
Like an AI avatar cannot come in and say, I sold my company for free.
They can't.
They didn't do anything because they don't exist in the real world.
Which is why, in my opinion, like the absolute foolproof method for making educational content is do epic shit
and then talk about the epic chate you did, period.
And so, like, I'm in, you know, I'm in, like, yesterday, we also, we had the school games
winners come out with schools platform that host online communities.
And the winner of the last school games, so 90 days, he got to, like, 300 and something
a month from a YouTube channel that he started 16 months ago.
So he started 16 months ago making videos about AI.
Now, what was his interesting thing?
So he was just always into AI, learned about the tools.
And then he started helping small businesses for, like, $1,500, $2,500 a month, where he would
just help them implement these automations that would save them money in time. And then people were like,
well, how did you do that? And so he just basically would just explain each of the automations that
he made for each of these businesses on his channel. And he made one video a day explaining one
of the automations. And then he said, if you want, I have a group that's whatever, $300, 400,
$400 a month that shows you how to build the same automations. To your point about the education
is like, you just need some proof. And it doesn't, like, you don't have to, like, the bigger
the proof you have, the wider, basically the wider tam you'll be able to reach because more
people would be, I'll just put the words, impressed. If you just are in your 20s, and to be
very, you've just quit Goldman Sachs, it's like, that is enough of a thing that, because that's,
it's a 1% type deal, right? But you can also, you can 1% through achievement, but the other
side that I think people would widely underestimate is you can 1% through volume of work. So if I said,
I read 200 books last year, let me show you the 200. They're all dog, you know, dog-eared.
Let me tell you what I learned. Like, I'd be like, well, shoot, because I think everybody wants
a bargain on time, right? Like, I went on 100 speed dates. This is what I learned. It's like,
well, I don't want to go on 100 dates, but like anyone can do that. So it's either 1% achievement
or 1% effort. But this one you can do. And even if you have zero outcome, there's still
stuff that you'll learn. And then that will people find interesting that you can build an
audience around. And if you do that enough times, eventually you do achieve something that is
interesting. And then that kind of becomes permanent. At the end of the day, like, proof always
beats promise. I also think anybody can go viral online with one of two things. We've talked a lot
about experience. So if you do have experience, if you built a billion dollar in assets under
management business, gone to Goldman, built seven startups, that's incredible. That's not normal.
That's totally fine. But that means that you could just have the everyday other E of starting
the experience. I think we obsess on expertise. Expertise is the way to make content online
and make millions. But what about just the experience? You could say, actually, I've done nothing.
I'm a college dropout. I've fucked around a lot. I don't have much figured out. But over the
next year I'm going to try to make a million dollars. And you can go just as viral, if not more.
I mean, a good example would be like Ryan Trahan, who I love, who's in Austin, Texas, too.
And Ryan is just like, I'm trying stuff. And this might fail and I have no idea and you guys can
come along. The proof could actually be you just trying a thing and it not working one way or the
other. And so I think the only problem with this type, which is experience as opposed to
expertise, is that with expertise, you have attention and intention, aka intent to buy.
whereas if you're just experiencing
you might have attention
but what are you going to sell
because you don't have
like a value derived from it
where's your intent?
I mean if you think about
who are the biggest creators online
Only fans, the Kardashians,
you know, what are the biggest websites online?
Porn sites.
That's a lot of attention.
But the intent to buy
is going to be low
for any of those over time
writ large.
And so I think you have to ask yourself
okay, if I get a ton of attention,
let's make sure I'm really thoughtful
on what I get attention for
And then let's think about once I have that attention, where do I actually have some sort of expertise or value that I can trade in order for people to have intent to buy? And I think about it like this. Rihanna, huge star, right? Big celebrity. Billionaire now because of Fenty Beauty. Drake, giant celebrity, arguably more views, more hits than Rihanna, worth worth worth. Why? Because he has tons of attention, but he hasn't actually done much to get intent to buy.
from him. And so Rihanna's just categorically better, if we define better as a bank account
and scoreboard on net worth, than Drake is at monetizing their intention. And so I think that
a lot of creators online think too much about views, likes, subscribes, and don't think very
much about how do I monetize on top of this. Because nobody stays relevant forever online. And so I think
while you're in the spotlight, you do have to think about how are you going to convert that funnel
in some way. That's a really great point. A lot of the people you see blowing up online, they do have
a back end that monetizes it, because to your point, it costs money. You know, I probably spend
40, 50,000 a month just on retainers of people who are working on that stuff. And content-related
stuff. And, you know, because I have businesses that can monetize that, then it's worth doing.
But it's hard to compete with that if you don't have a back-end. The other option is to work
with someone who does have a business
and they do have experience,
they do have something to talk about,
but they're busy and they need someone
to project manage this.
Because one thing that's happened
is that to the traditional business owner,
this personal brand thing
and this building a content empire
that builds your business,
this is brand new to a lot of people.
So there are plenty of people
who've got a $50 million a year business
and they're going,
oh, should I show up online at all?
Maybe I should.
And they're just starting to tiptoe into the water
and they've got a story, they've got a back-end business, they can monetize it, they can allocate
budget to it, you could be the person who does that. And you'd be, if you did do that,
you would be one of the very special people in their life. I had a guy come to me a couple of
years ago and said, Daniel, I just cannot believe you've written five books at the time,
you've got seven different companies, you've got all this stuff going on, and you've got
a few thousand followers. And I've had a look online, you get like 10,000 views a month. And I'm
like, yeah, but I'm busy. I'm running my businesses. And he came to me and said, I will project
manage you into the millions per month. And he just literally picked this up, a guy called Martin, right?
And he just said, I'm going to do this. I'm going to turn up at your house, do a day of filming every
month. I'm going to edit it. I'm going to chop it all up. I'm going to do all this stuff.
And I'll project manage the whole thing. Now, the two of us are very close now. We've got a good
relationship. And he's now got an idea for an AI startup. And I'm going to back that.
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If you guys were starting from zero today,
with AI in the picture
and all of these platforms
and the way things are going
I've spent a lot of time
thinking about the next big opportunity
and content
and I think about the next big platform
where would you be starting today
based on who you guys are
and the skills that you have
and the things you're interested
and it's probably a better way of saying it
would you be on LinkedIn posting once a day
would you be on TikTok making videos
would you be on YouTube starting a channel
would you start a newsletter
and with AI in the picture
I think it changes the answer
because content is going to become very easy to make.
So where does the value accrue to?
Like, where does the value move to?
In a world where every kid in Mumbai could make a real
or a quote picture now with Chachy BT?
So where is the value going to accrue?
And how are you going to milk that cow?
How are you going to capitalize?
Like, what is the one thesis you have about the future of content
that you haven't told anybody yet?
Tell me.
I'll tell you mine.
I'll tell you mine.
I want to ask a question, too, for everybody at the end of my own.
I'll give you my quick thing.
One, I will say, like, and I'd be curious if you all agree, when I first started making
content, most people that I knew thought it was really cringe, actually.
They're like, why would you make content?
If you've actually had any success that you supposed to have had, why would you be so idiotic
as to be on the Internet making content?
It can't be true that you've done these things if you're making TikToks all day.
And I think they totally miss the boat that, like, the 21st century concern currency is
attention and attention could be bought with ads or attention could be bought in a different
way but through organic content creation and so you go like cringe to content to conversion
and actually I think all of us would probably agree it was a pretty good play but like I'm sure
did you guys all get laughed at when you first got on the internet of course yeah right never
I still get laughed at now I still get laughed at so like I just want to prepare if you get
online be prepared people will think you're idiotic and your friends and your friends
The shedding period where you transition to...
A hundred percent.
And people who are serious, for whatever reason, have not figured out that there is a huge
arbitrage opportunity with being known.
Even if you don't care about the views and all I have as something that's a differentiator
is that if I ping Stephen, you'll respond to me because somehow I have some preferences
online, same with Alex, same, you know, right, with all of us.
And so one, I just want to say that up front because it will suck.
You know, I'm in these creator groups and at some point, it just happened yesterday.
I'm in a group with some of the biggest creators in the world, and all of them were listening.
I mean, maybe 50 responses of a moment where everybody hated them on the Internet.
It was super dark.
You know, they couldn't stop watching and reading the comments.
And they felt like there was like a fighter flight situation from a bunch of strangers.
And so I think it's worth just saying content can have a little bit of a downside and you've got to, like, protect against that.
But, like, also go full fucking bore and do it because who cares, you'll be forgotten anyways.
and embarrassment is the price of entry as they say yeah and we've all all faced that and had to go through that to get to the other side now i want your content secret
we talk about social media and i think um there's been a lot of talk about it shifting really more to words interest media rather than social media right so i think this is extremely important because what what cody was referencing earlier is again entertainment versus education and so riana and drake i see both as entertainers now what's interesting is that where do they have influence so she's the word intent
but fundamentally I say, like, how do we increase the likelihood someone complies with a request or complies with a solicitation, right?
If I tell you to do something, one, I mean, we've all seen some creators who have tiny audiences, but if they say, hey, go do this thing, you know, they have 100% good, not really 100, but they have a huge conversion on a very small audience.
And then other people, you know, I can name some TikTokers right now that have, you know, 50 plus million followers that have had 13 failed launches because they have views, but they have zero influence.
No one listens to them for their advice.
And so in order to create influence, there's four things.
So number one is, and so I just remember SPCL, right?
So you have status.
So somebody who controls scarce resources.
So a bartender at a bar, there's alcohol behind them.
It's a scarce resource.
In the bar, they have status.
When they walk outside of the bar, no one cares about them.
But in the bar, they have status, right?
So they give influence.
The second is power.
And so power is basically say-do correspondence, meaning if I tell you to do something,
follow these instructions, and a good thing happens, then I'll increase the
likely that you comply with requests in the future. And so, like, for example, Martha Stewart
was the first self-made female billionaire. And I think there's a huge amount of reasons for that.
And one of the biggest ones is that she literally gave people recipes and they followed their
recipes and they had a good thing happen. And then people told them they were great and this cake
was great and this lasagna was amazing. Their family, their friends, they also got status.
So a massive good thing happened after following explicit directions. And so then when she said,
follow my next directions and by this thing, people said, okay, the last 10 times I did it, it worked.
I'll do this too.
And so that's why she had so much influence.
The next is credibility, which is, do you have proof?
Right.
Now, all of these can happen at the same time or separately.
So I'm trying to give more isolated examples for each of them, but one thing can check
multiple boxes.
So if I say, hey, I sold a company for $46.22 million, I have money, which is where
the status comes from, but I also have credibility that the stuff that I do works.
I wouldn't have power yet, though, until I say, hey, if you take what you're currently doing
and then add a bonus, urgency, scarcity, a guarantee, you know, think about a
value equation, all of a sudden, you can sell it for way more money, and then you follow
those instructions, and then you do make more money, then you're like, now I'll be more
likely to comply with this person's request in the future, and so that person gets influence.
And then the fourth, L is likeness, right?
Do they look like me?
Right.
Do they act like me, which is both physical but also psychographic?
Like, do they show the same values as me?
Are they similar?
And so if I have two people that both have SPC, so they have status, they have power of their
credibility, and then one of them just also looks like me, I'm more likely to listen
to that person.
So each of these are additives.
So if you have all four, you'll be more influential, right?
And so, laddering this back up to conversion, we think, okay, well, if I'm going to make content with the purpose of conversion, then I want to make stuff that demonstrates these four things, right? And so that is why educators typically have significantly smaller audiences, but can usually generate a lot more money than entertainers can. And entertainers typically can monetize almost exclusively through sponsorships as the most efficient means or vehicle. Now, where does an entertainer have influence? Rihanna is beautiful. And so she,
does have credibility in terms of beauty. She does have, and then especially if she starts making
content around that stuff, she takes her entertainment audience, but she's talking about something
she has credibility to, and then she can add power to that because people start following what
she does. Right. And then they start looking a good way, and then they say, you know what,
she really does know what she's talking about here. And then all of a sudden when she does point
people to a thing that they can buy, then they're more likely to do so. And so it's how do we
merge those two things together. And then when we're making the content, and I think a lot of people
we're starting out, are very obsessed with views, which I would strongly recommend, especially
in this interest media time, that it's so irrelevant. And what I mean by that is, if we think,
all right, I want to start a bait and tackle drop shipping business, whatever, right, for fishermen,
well, if I just start making videos on philosophy, I might get way more views than I do if I make
videos on bait and tackle stuff. But the likelihood that the people who are watching philosophy
also want bait and tackle is very low. And because the content is now the
targeting for social. Like if anyone's run ads before, you have to select, okay, I think I want
42-year-olds and I want, you know, men and I want, you know, whatever, right, as you go through
it. But the thing is, is that the algorithms are so good and the AI is so good at understanding
what the content is about. And they also know what type of people consume this type of content.
They just do the targeting for you. And so if you want to reach a certain type of person,
you just only make content that that certain type of person wants to consume. It's actually
easier now than it was before. And so you can have a 40,000 person audience, but that 40,000
person audience might be made up entirely of fishermen who buy tackle, which I'll bet you'll
crush. And so that is how I kind of see the quote future of media, at least, is that if you want to
have maximum persuasion or conversion power, we want to make content that is explicitly for a specific
audience. And we want to demonstrate the proof that we've done, right? We want to have things that
they want to have things that they follow, that good things will happen for them, and we want
to look like them. And if you do that, you have somebody who's going to make a lot of money from
an audience. That last point is super interesting as well. How do I make myself look more like my
audience and I think relatability and humanizing yourself is one of the great ways to do that.
I think it's a very fair point. I mean, I also think it's not just physical traits. So, you know,
let's say that you don't look like the audience that you want physically. What are the values
that that audience has that you can have them see themselves in you? And, you know, it's kind of like
whether or not you like the guy who cares, but let's say, you know, Trump, for instance, really
looks not a lot like his audience predominantly, you know, in suits and ties constantly, sort of
a blue blood billionaire from the East Coast. How does he associate with this group of people where
really he doesn't look like them on average? Well, it's because they believe that he has a similar
moral compass to them. They believe that he has similar ethics to them. And so I don't think that
creators have leaned into this enough. And I don't mean to become clickbait or political or
divisive or anything like that. I mean that it is rare to see people in business take a stance that
could hurt their business values, for instance. And Chris and I have a rule, which is we don't
have close friends that haven't done something publicly that could be against their best
interests. I just don't want friends that don't have that, that haven't done that. Because I think
that the world is really hard. And I want to see if somebody's going to have like moral fiber
before I become quite close with them. And so I think you could do that as somebody who is
a content creator today. Like be value aligned with your users and show that.
And that's rare.
Also to the point about the algorithm becoming about interest-based, it's also becoming
value-based.
We're seeing echo chambers emerge around ways of thinking.
Well, the content that I saw of you that most interested me was when you were talking
about how important ownership is.
And you were talking about just the philosophy of ownership.
And you said there's a group of people who want you to own nothing and be happy about it.
And I was like, I really resonate with that.
I want people to own their businesses and I want them to own their stuff.
And I liked the fact that you were standing in front of a huge audience taking that position
and everyone knew that it was a little bit of a position to take and it wasn't specifically
content about how to build a business, but you were sharing something about yourself.
I have a belief you don't actually ever sell anybody anything.
You only find those who are already predisposed to want the thing that you are selling.
And if you believe that, then I think your business gets easier too, easier to target people.
That's why I never kind of got off on that content.
You know, it's really big online on sales where it's like, here's how you close them.
You know, here's how you do this.
Here's how you switch them and you give them a hot dog, and then they buy the car because you gave him the hot dog because of reciprocity.
And you're like, huh, I've never bought a car because somebody gave me a hot dog.
But apparently this is what works on Instagram.
And so I don't think that's actually true.
I think you just find people at a trigger moment that they want something and then you give it to them.
Regarding content, for me personally, I find that the only reason I'm going to create content is if it's in alignment to a mission that I've got.
So I don't actually want to create content.
I don't want to be out there naturally.
I would much rather be a way more private person
and you won't find a lot of stuff about my family or my kids,
you know, very rarely do I post anything like any of that sort of stuff.
But for me, I do it in alignment with the mission.
I really believe that if you're on a mission,
you've got something you want to achieve in the world.
You're going to need other people to believe in it.
You're going to need other people to get involved.
You're going to want to hire talented people.
Those talented people are going to want to, you know, see you online first.
And it's all about the building relationships at scale
And content is just people discovering someone new like you would a friend
and then getting to know someone.
And I think the big play in a post-AI world
is having really deep relationships with a lot of people
using long-form content where you share who you are,
what you're about, what's your mission, what's your origin story,
what's your vision, what are your values?
And people then say in a very noisy world,
I will pay attention to what Stephen says.
I agree.
And so to give my answer to this question,
my thesis here in a world of AI is actually that if you look at who has the most loyal engaged fan bases,
it's not necessarily podcasters. We're doing pretty well, but it's not podcasts.
Podcasts can sell out arenas, and when they go on tour, they can sell out globally,
streamers. And I think it's because of this, the depth of the parasocial relationship is the equity value of the connection.
And I was sat with a stream who's 18 years old, massive in Europe.
And we were playing at Old Trafford for the soccer aid.
And I got just got to sit down with him.
So it's like, explain to me what you do.
He goes, so I wake up in the morning.
I go, then what?
He goes, I sit there.
And I go, for how long?
He goes, eight hours.
And I go, what do you do?
He goes, like, nothing.
And I go, how many people tune in?
He's like, 100,000.
I'm like, concurrently, 100,000 people sit there with you.
He goes, yeah, people are quite lonely.
I sit there.
And what we do is we watch TV together.
Now, so when we got to the stadium,
70,000 people in the stadium, we're playing soccer.
the stadium, when they announce your name,
the size of the cheer correlates to the amount of hours
you spend with your audience.
The streamers are the celebrities.
The podcast has sometimes come in,
but the actors almost, you know, it's quite,
but the streamers own the stadium when you play soccerade.
It doesn't matter how much money you've got
or how big you're following is,
the streamers are the ones.
The streamers have, this particular streamer has less of an audience than me,
but he sits with them for seven to eight hours a day.
Deep connection.
So if we think about depth as the,
as the metric that you can exchange on,
especially if you have authority in a niche
and you're educating, as Alex was saying,
that's why I think a lot about my behind-the-scenes channel.
I think it's, when we go on tour, it's so funny,
we did the tour in Australia,
and remarkably, I'd say about 50% of people
were talking to me about Dari-Rosio,
and then 50% of people were talking to me about behind the diary,
which is the behind-the-scenes channel
where you get to know me a bit better.
And that that channel has a fraction of the viewership.
And actually, that same thesis
is the reason I started podcasting,
I was doing Facebook watch videos.
They were getting tens of millions of views, which, by the way, no one remembers because
no one remembered any of them.
And no one came up to me in the street and said, I love that two-minute viral philosophical
video you made about motivational fluff.
No one ever said that.
Then I started this podcast and got a thousand downloads.
And it felt like I was like Oprah Winfrey, like people were coming up to me.
And I was like, oh, there's this interesting correlation between like the depth of the medium
and the resonance and the memorability and therefore the value.
So just pursue depth as much as you can.
the strength of the parasocial relationship.
The part of the brain that has short-term memory,
we've driven a truck through that.
You know, we've now got just hundreds of things a day that hit that.
But then there's this other part of the brain
where I've spent seven hours with someone.
And if that's the depth.
Are you guys thinking about that?
Because you all make content which is educational,
but is less personal.
And, I mean, you two podcasts, Alex and Cody,
you both podcasts?
You don't podcast yourself.
I'm a guest.
You're a guest.
but you don't like run your own podcast so are you thinking about a deeper format for
for yourselves what are you thinking about yeah well there's two things I want to talk about
there one I think it's it's depth but I would also wonder if it's not rawness like in an era
in which we cannot trust what we see anymore because of AI and anything can be recreated
reproduced and overproduced increasingly a stream is interesting because it is raw it is it is
for a thousand percent whatever is happening on there is happening in real time, and thus we can
actually trust it.
And so I think as, I mean, we've all seen it.
Content has gotten so produced and overdone, and that actually, I think, decreases trust
because we can't tell if something is real or not, because it's been edited and filtered
and overlaid, et cetera.
We say with our 40-person teams.
Yeah.
Great.
Yeah.
But it's true, right?
Think about the content, even like this is like sort of tactical, but maybe, um,
maybe a year ago, the big content change in video on Instagram was that you had a lot of
B-roll and images overlay it on top of videos.
And I don't know if you guys have noted, but that doesn't work very well anymore, actually.
The more that you have third-party assets in your video and it's been overdone, the less the video works today.
No more you're just walking along with your handout.
Right, because it's more real.
So I think it might actually be like depth and rawness.
Rorness, yeah. Authenticity, I guess that's not.
Yeah, I fucking hate that word.
But yes, yes. It's like 60 minutes versus Joe Rogan.
A hundred percent.
It's like just, it's just.
No cuts.
No cuts, yeah, yeah.
And then when it comes to, am I thinking about this for our channel?
Yeah, I mean, I think about it.
We have something that we teach everybody, which is like the marketing affinity loop.
And basically it goes like this.
I'll show the graph so you can see it.
But you start with awareness, right?
And that awareness is what we're all talking about.
How do we get more people to just see us?
And then we go to consideration.
Okay, maybe I like this person.
Maybe I'll follow them.
I'll give them a quick follow.
And then we go, well, I actually, I like them, I follow them, and I might buy something from them.
Okay, that's interesting.
And then I might not only buy something from them, but advocate for them, write a testimonial, a review, something like that.
And then finally, I might be loyal to them, aka, I'll refer a friend, I'll sign up for their year-long program, I'll buy again and again.
And so we go from awareness to consideration, to purchase, to advocacy, to loyalty.
And like if you can get most people stop at awareness. Very few people can get somebody to go from
awareness to purchase. Even fewer people can get them to advocate for them, leave and review. And the very,
very fewest refer a friend. And so like the holy grail of businesses always have your clients tell
other people nice things about you. And so I think in content, what I think about is I don't always
care that people buy things from me at this point. Like I love money. Don't get me wrong. I want to keep
making it. But I actually really care that they're loyal.
and they tell other people about what we're doing.
And that is something we now measure.
For videos, we can actually now measure with like a little UTIM link
how many of all of our videos get shared
and how many of those shares actually go to a purchase
or something that goes a little bit deeper.
And so I am thinking about that.
But then I think you also have to decide what's your personal line is.
So for me, I can't imagine wanting to stream all of my life continuously
because I'm not sure that's good for the audience, actually.
I think they should live, not watch.
So it's like, I just have a line that, like, I kind of don't want to cross.
And Chris and I actually have a rule, too.
We only post so much about our relationship.
We actually, because it always does well.
So the team's like, just full send, Chris, shirtless, nipples every day.
The internet loves it.
And Chris has been really good about saying, no, we have to keep something sacrosanent.
And so I think you have to decide how deep you want to go down the rabbit hole in order to win.
Yeah.
I've been the same with my kids.
It's their decision as to whether they want to build a profile and how they want to build a
build it, so you won't, you know, I won't put them in that position. The depth that I'm
loving is writing books because someone who reads a book, like you really get to go deep with
a book. And also live experiences. So every year for the last four years, I've taken about 80
of my clients to the snow and we go skiing. And those 80 clients who, if someone has gone on
my ski trip, the level of loyalty and depth, because we've shared fun together, I'm about to take 30
clients to Neckar Island and spend a week with Sir Richard.
And I'm convinced that just doing that with 30 people will build, you know,
lifelong, like, friendships.
So this idea that, like, you know, that you do stuff in the online and offline world,
you know, that you actually figure out who are the people who are at the core group,
those real diehard fans, and then let's do something together and do fun stuff together.
Go skiing, go to islands, go sailing, that sort of stuff.
Alex, I see you wrote, it looked like you drew the universe or something.
Oh, I was thinking about, again, it was just talking about, like, authenticity.
And so with each of the, like, SPCL, right, all of them exist in a continuum, right?
And so I can say credibility, I could say, hey, I sold a company, but if you see a PR article that will increase the credibility, if you were, some of you heard about it from somebody else that will increase the credibility of that specific credibility-driven event, likeness is the same thing.
And so I think, like, the connection between streamers and having huge information.
is that they have tremendous likeness, and that because they are, quote, authentic and that there's very few, there's very little ability to distort, you have basically when you, what you see is what you get. And so if you're the type of person who likes that particular streamer, then you'll have super strong affinity towards them and you'll be likely to, you know, comply with their request, like show up to a stadium so that you can support me. But, you know, even authenticity is, again, a term. It's like, how do you define authenticity, right? Which I see is how you act when you have no risk of punishment.
And so different way of saying this is like, how do you act when you're alone
when no one else is around.
And so I see the discrepancy between how you behave in public as basically your
authenticity, you know, score.
The question is, or the problem is that no one really knows how you behave when you're
alone.
And so...
Unless you're like streaming all the time.
Right. Yeah.
So you're saying authenticity is that there's not a difference between how you act
when there's no risk of punishment and how you act normally.
Right. Okay, got it.
Right.
And I think that also being, like, very candid for all of us is, like,
there are, like, sure, we have audiences that can punish us with their comments, I guess.
But our, like, we've all built enough of, call it a fortress, if you will,
of currency, network, relationships, et cetera, that, like, even within our companies,
like, if you go into the room, like, I can be really authentic in my company because no one can fire me.
Right?
Like, my risk of punishment is lower than, say, an employee is.
And so it's a relatively, I'd never use this word, but it's a relatively privileged, you know, position to be in to be more authentic because no one can really punish you.
And I think this is kind of the essence of the like, fuck you money that people want to get to, which is like, I just want to be me, but I can't be me because I have this risk of punishment.
And so since the degrees of freedom, basically, I think your happiness is very correlated with your degrees of freedom.
So Elon's authentic.
That's about to say.
Exactly.
Yeah.
I mean, I don't think anyone would argue that he's not authentic.
They might not agree with him, but I don't think they think that he's trying to pull one.
I do think that if you're going to go online, one of the ways to inoculate yourself against being canceled or to inoculate yourself against caring so much is to do ridiculous things every so often that are super authentic to who you are out loud.
Because then what happens is the people that hate you, they leave.
And the people that like you kind of like you a little bit more or trust you a little bit more for it.
So I think, you know, one of the things that I do, not really on purpose, but it is just like it's like getting a vaccine.
You go out on the Internet and you say something that you know other people are not going to like, but you believe strongly in.
And when you do that kind of consistently over time, I also think that increases your trust.
Because we've all met like other creators that you're like, ah, man, like you're just never going to say anything that's not PC.
Like I can think of two in my head.
I'm like, they're never going to say anything.
And if it could hurt their audience, they're not going to say it.
And that just decreases my trust level.
And I think the audience is really smart.
People are smart.
And so I think you should inoculate yourself more often.
Before we move on to a little game that I've prepared for us here,
you're all very good at pitching and you all have your own frameworks for pitching.
So I wanted to pause on that for a second.
What is, Daniel, what is your framework for pitching a business or an idea?
There's two things to start with, which I believe that entrepreneurship is the journey
of 1,000 pitches, that basically what we do as entrepreneurs is we pitch stuff into existence.
And the penalty for an average pitch is that you do a thousand pitches and you get nothing
to show for it at the end of it. And the payoff for a great pitch is that you do a thousand pitches
and you end up with $10 to $100 million. You end up with an amazing team of people and lots
of customers and everything is great. So I think treat entrepreneurship as the journey of
1,000 pitches. And also treat pitching as this magical thing where you get what you pitch
for and you can't switch it off. So, for example, if you say the economy's bad, the economy's
bad, the economy's bad, as if by magic the economy is going to be bad. If you say,
I'm seeing lots of opportunities right now, I'm seeing lots of opportunities right now,
you start conversations where people go, oh, I've seen an opportunity as well. So whatever
you're out there talking about, you tend to bring those conversations to the surface, and
it's a self-fulfilling loop. With that said, you have to have a framework for pitching.
If you're going to do a good pitch, it's got to be a framework. I've got social pitching
framework, scheduled pitching framework, and sales pitching framework. So social pitch,
name, same, fame, pain, aim, game. What's the social pitch? Social pitch is on social media
or in a social situation.
It's basically a situation
where you've got about 30 seconds
before someone thinks
that you're being too obtuse.
Okay.
Right?
So you've got about 30 seconds
of people's attention
and you're going to say,
what is your name,
what are you the same as
that they already understand,
what makes you famous or different,
what are you aiming for right now,
what's your bigger game,
or what pain do you solve,
what are you aiming for,
what's your bigger game?
So there's a few things you can put in there
and it rhymes so you can remember it
in a social situation.
Scheduled pitches, I always do something called capstone, and it's clarity, authority, problem
solution, traction, or the why, either way, opportunity, next steps, and an emotional ending.
So that spells out capstone.
Now, is that the best pitching framework?
Maybe, maybe not.
Maybe there's better frameworks.
But the point is that you've got a framework, that you're not just winging it, you're not
just randomly spewing words.
you've actually gone through the process of thinking through your pitch in a framework approach.
One thing that's really fascinating is the three of us have a framework for everything.
We're just like very framework thinkers, and I've noticed that with a lot of entrepreneurs.
Do you guys have pitching frameworks?
Be shocked if you didn't.
Yeah, I do.
I mean, I think I'm like lazy intellectually and frameworks help you remember things.
And so if you don't have very good memory, then it's just easy to put it in something that can make sure that you remember it.
What's why when we were in school, you know, they used to make us single.
songs about how to remember the DeVarion states. If I wanted to raise a bunch of money from other
people that didn't know me and I wanted to never have a problem raising money again, I didn't want
to use any of my money ever. I would use what I learned in venture capital, which is the
Midas touch. And basically, I think you need one of these four in order to raise money. You don't
have to have all four, but if you do, that makes it really, really easy. The easiest one is profit,
right? If you have a business right now that's making money, profit in your pocket, you can
raise capital. You can raise money from people as long as that amount that you're raising is
reasonable to the amount of profit. If you don't have any profit, but you have growth, let's say,
like Replit, we were talking about a big AI company. Great. You can raise a bunch of money
if you got growth, too. The third thing, if you don't have either one of those, you don't have
profit, you don't have growth, but you have a history. I've sold a company before. I've built
this before. You can raise purely on the fact that you've done this before. And if you haven't
done any of those three, you've done nothing in life, then you need a really good story.
And the story is something that you can often raise money off of. So I believe that we are going to create the next XYZ. And if we do this thing, then you will all make money. I will change the world together. And so I call it the minus touch because I think people who if you can accumulate this over your life, it's not that hard, right? So eventually at some point you'll have a history, which is your proof. Then you can craft a story. You'll get better at it as you continue to grow. You will learn how to get profit in some way. And because you've driven profit before, you'll know how to
how to get growth. So I think like almost any entrepreneur over time, if you focus on those
four things, can raise money. And you start with only the story when you have nothing.
Alex. I have a lot of pitching. Yeah. I'll say first and foremost, if you're trying to sell
anyone to anything, proof will always be promised. And I can say that a thousand times in a row.
Like you could literally say nothing, get on stage, and then just hit next on testimonials for 60
minutes and you will close a percent like literally the last slide just says like go over there to go
buy something and you could say nothing and you will you will sell why because i think um proof
acts as an approximation of something that would happen uh for the prospect and so like the only
reason that's like that proof works is that they think oh some element of this is like me and so if i do
the same thing that this person did and the closer the proof is to the prospect the more compelling it is
for that specific prospect which is like when we used to um you know
as for different markets, we'd go into, like, you know, an entirely black market.
And surprise, surprise, if we had black testimonials, the pages would convert better than if we
had white testimonials and then flip-flop in the other direction, too.
And so, right, and so we want to show as many different types of proof as we possibly can.
And obviously, not all proof is created equal.
You can have live proof versus recorded proof.
You can have a demonstration of something that, like, us using the thing is going to be more
compelling than not using and just describing it, right?
If I have a, like, and so there's a bunch of things on proof.
But that's just, like, big thing, number one.
And so that's why for me, if somebody's going to sell something, I recommend most people just get five or ten clients for free up front with the primary purpose of getting proof because you're going to make more money on the proof than you will have trying to, you know, just get the tiny amount that you can charge with absolutely no proof.
So it's like, don't do that.
Just get 10.
And on your 11th, you'll be able to charge 10 times more because you'll be able to say, hey, look at the 10 people that I helped.
And realistically, you'll get more out of that than they will because you probably suck.
Yeah.
So it's probably for everyone's best interest that you don't charge anything.
but from an actual closing perspective, and I'll talk about this from an appointment, I think,
to use Daniel's language.
I've taught the closer framework for a very long time, which is C-L-O-S-E-R, and so C is clarify
where they're there, which is, and typically anybody who's going to be in that appointment
has taken some action.
So whether that's, they responded to a post, they commented, they liked, they actually,
I mean, if someone's already set an appointment or they walked in the door, like, there's always
something, like, why'd you pick up the phone?
Like, there's always some reason.
Like, why'd you give me five seconds?
There's always something they've done that you could say, hey, so tell me,
why, right? And so then you're clarifying
why they're there or why they're still listening. So you
listen to them? Yeah. Because we often think about
sales as me just hitting you with
fucking... So the perfect salesman says nothing
and only ask questions. Because
there's nothing to disagree with.
And fundamentally,
they're going to believe way more of what they say than what you say
so you want them to say it, not you.
And so you clarify whether they're there, see.
It reminds me of spies. I've interviewed a couple
of CIA spies now and every single one of them. I was
expecting some incredible technique
or whatever. They all say, no, we just spend
six to eight weeks in the back of the cab
listening to the Iranian taxi driver
to figure out that his son
has a health issue
that we can then leverage later
to get him to turn against his country
but the first eight weeks are just listening to him offload
and they're like it's crazy how people
will just offload if you let them
everyone wants to talk
100%. So one is
clarify whether they're L is label them
with a problem that you can solve
so it's like okay so it sounds like you were here
you respond to my ad you DM me thing
or you whatever because of this reason
is that right? So you get confirmation
the problem, which is L. Then you owe, which is overview past experiences or past pain. So it's like,
what have you done so far to try and solve this? And this is important because motivation is the
equal opposite of deprivation. So the more deprive someone is of something, the more motivated they are
to solve it. And so like if you haven't eaten in an hour, you're probably not that motivated.
If you haven't eaten in two days, you're very motivated. If you haven't slept in, you know,
a day or you're normal motivated, I guess that was a bad one. But if you haven't slept in three days,
you'll be incredibly motivated to sleep. And so we want to find, we want to find what they're
deprived of, and then try to increase that deprivation in the conversation, basically make them
more aware of the deprivation, the things that they don't have, right? Then once we have, you know,
enough deprivation that's very clear, it's like, okay, this is, this is what, while you're here,
this is you agreed with, this is the problem that you want to solve. You've tried all these things,
and it hasn't worked for you. I can imagine how frustrating that would be. S, which is then you sell,
right, you sell the vacation, which typically is just three points. I usually keep it to three,
because most people can't remember more than that anyways.
And the three points are usually, you can always find three.
And if you need two, you can chunk up.
If you've got five and if you've got, you know, two chunked down,
as in like break into smaller pieces.
But like when I was in the fitness world,
it was fitness nutrition accountability.
If when I was selling mortgage leads,
it's like you want the leads to be unique,
you want them to be timely and you want them to be exclusive, right?
And so like, or qualified.
And so it's like there's always three things that you can usually triangulate.
But when you say the three points,
you don't then feature, you know, jarble about the points.
You then just usually in a one sentence analogy
of what that thing is.
So it's kind of like this.
And so these are like little 30-second sound bites
to make the three points.
That should never last longer than 90 seconds
because most people waste all this time
on the selling part, and that doesn't really matter
because the more we can talk about them,
the more they're going to want to buy.
And then E, like at the end of that, you say,
cool, ready to get started,
ready to rock and roll, ready to start on Monday,
whatever it is.
And then E and R around what happens if they say no.
You explain it with their concerns,
E, and the R is you reinforce the decision.
And so R was actually something added
much later when I was teaching.
many salespeople because after they would like explain away and then closed they would just like
see you later i got the credit card like you're dead to me um but the r is like no no like reinforce
the decision like i think it's a great decision i'm going to introduce you to polly
poly's going to get you onboarded and then polly also continues the r and being like you know jack
definitely helped you out let's get you all squared away there's no safe like simply safe
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I own can sponsor my podcast. A lot of people say that 70, 60, 80% of our communication is body language.
Do you think much about that? Alex, you have a with or without you energy body language.
It's a casual, it's a very casual body language, which in fact, reinforces.
is your authority in a way. So do you think about, if people are right, that 60 or 70%
of our communication is the things we don't say. Do you think about training people on how to
hold themselves, how to be? You kind of alluded to something there, which I think people don't
think about, which is actually the less you say sometimes, the higher conviction and the more
I believe you. Yeah. And some people can oversell because I'll, because I think getting,
so I'll just, there's so many variables here, but I'll just try and focus on the ones that
a lot of people sell over the phone. And even via Zoom, it's harder to see body language.
as well, which nowadays, I think a lot of selling happens in those two environments, even more
than in person, even though that's where I came from, which I actually think is the best place
to learn because you have to control every variable. And then you have far more leeway on the phone
or on Zoom than you do in person. And so to that extent, there's basically five things you can
control about how you talk. And so you have your speed of talking, like how fast you talk,
you have your cadence. You have your, basically your enunciation, like do I pronounce every
letter in the words that I'm saying. You have the volume that you speak at because if I talk
too low like you on a phone, it doesn't really matter because they're just going to increase the
volume. But if I lower what I'm saying right now, it sounds more important. In person, it's more
important. Volume is more important in person. And so those first three, I consider there's
kind of persuasive tone, which all three are constant. And the only point of those is to maximize
comprehension. It's just that they can hear you, that they can understand what you're saying,
because you're talking in a speed that they can understand. Like, I'm somebody who talks fast.
and I have to pull back how fast I talk when I'm in like a selling situation.
There's only two that I teach salespeople to try and actively control,
which is going to be pauses to draw attention.
And when do I raise my voice?
And the reason that those are the only two things you really need to teach a salesperson
outside of the persuasive tone, which is that you're going to talk at a certain speed,
which is usually about 150 to 170 words a minute,
because that's the amount of speed that most people can understand.
you're going to enunciate the words,
which is going to force you to actually speak at that speed.
And you're going to talk loud enough that can understand you.
This sounds very simple, right?
This sounds like so simple.
Like, I can't believe people don't do this,
except they don't and they don't close.
And so the only things that you have to teach a salesperson,
and these are so important, like there's been three independent studies
that are like massive meta-analyses of salespeople.
The salespeople who, one, speak less, close more.
And number two, the salespeople who know when to shut up,
most importantly, after you ask for the sale,
like if you wait eight seconds,
after you ask someone to buy,
you close 30% more sales.
If you wait eight seconds.
Yeah.
So you ready to start?
Okay, so.
And so people, like, they'll close themselves,
but the salespeople are so afraid of that silence
that they then jump back in.
It's like, you had the sale.
Just shut up.
And so I used to talk about how emphasis was super important.
And so, like, a very, very easy example to demonstrate this in terms of communication is that
if I say, I didn't say he hit his wife, I didn't say he hit his wife, I didn't say he hit his wife,
those all mean very different things.
But fundamentally, it's just because I change where I pause, right?
What word?
So I'm emphasizing a different word.
And so I used to talk about emphasis a lot, but I've trained more and more and more and more
and more salespeople over time.
I just say, when do you shut up and when do you raise your voice?
That's it.
The rest of this, we speak in the exact same tone.
And the reason that I feel very confident about this is that AI,
is doing increasingly good job at ads.
I don't know if you've noticed this,
but a lot of ads are just being voiced over an AI
and they convert higher because people can understand them.
I think a huge part of it is just they can comprehend it.
They can actually hear all the words
and it's set in a tone that's loud enough
and there's enunciation and they actually get it.
Because it's like one of the easiest ways
you can improve copy on a website
is just get it below third grade reading level.
Like 50% of people can't read above sixth grade in the U.S.
It's crazy.
So you're alienating 50% of the market.
Now, you might think, oh, well, those are the idiots.
No, I've no plenty of people.
I mean, like, I've got two friends who dropped out of high school
and are super, super successful entrepreneurs
barely can write their names.
And they make fun of it.
But, like, they're smart.
They just weren't educated, and those are different things, right?
And so I say this to say, like, if you're in these selling situations
and you're like, because what happens is you get nervous, right?
You can this fight, flight, freak out the ones the day I was saying earlier.
And so your adrenaline kicks up.
And so you want to talk faster.
You want to talk louder.
You interrupt the other person.
And all those things are antithetical to closing.
And so just teaching someone to be okay with pauses can increase the likelihood that people pay attention to the words that they say.
Because all we do is we draw attention when we pause.
So you have short pauses, they draw attention.
And then you have long pauses, that's solicit response.
If I pause long enough, what do people do?
They talk.
And I just think of someone as being higher value if they're taking pauses.
One of my great mentors early in my career, there's something about the way that he spoke.
he was incredibly slow with the way he, he was like that.
And the minute he started speaking,
when my company were over there
and having these mentorship sessions with him,
everybody would stop and just like was fixated on him.
And then I remember this girl who worked my New York office.
He was opposite.
And it's just the use of this instrument.
Yeah.
Do you think much about that?
Do you think much about how you present yourself?
Do you think much about your body language?
I think it's natural.
I think more important is the distinction
between are you coming across as a newbie? Are you coming across as a standard worker bee,
or are you coming across as high status, key person of influence level? And each one of those
has body language associated. It has different ways of presenting yourself. But it's a self-identity
thing. And if you can shift that self-identity, you can naturally become more of a key person
of influence. When we meet someone, within a few seconds, we evaluate their status level relative
to us. And you can't switch it off. And there's plenty of evidence to say that, like,
unfortunately, you just do it automatically.
I've seen people completely change their life
by just simply changing the way that they pitch
from a newbie, worker bee, to a key person of influence.
I can think of an example.
This is this woman who I asked her, what do you do?
And she said, I'm a financial planner.
I can help anyone with their financial planning.
If anyone wants to talk about their wills
or any of those sorts of things,
then that's what I can help people with, right?
And it sounds workerby.
And her body language was kind of like this.
I asked her a question.
I said, when did you do something special that was really transformational?
Something important.
She said, last month, I went out to the countryside.
I worked on a farm, and I worked with the owner of the farm and their kids and their
grandkids to get alignment between the three generations.
The farm was going to be sold off to private equity, and instead, I helped them to get
alignment as to how they're going to keep the family farm.
And I said, how did you do that?
And she said, well, I used to be a city girl, and then I married a country boy, and I learned
how to do it.
I got her to change her pitch, and I said, pitch yourself as a key person of influence at that.
So she stood up in front of the group, and she said, for the last 20 years, I've been working with rural families who own farms, and I help them with their financial planning, and I secure their family farm for the next two generations.
And her body language just went, like key person of influence, and everyone just responded differently.
And when I asked the audience, in the first instance, what do you think her day rate was?
Everyone said $500.
I said, in the second instance, what do you think she charges per day?
10 grand.
And it was just the ability to pitch herself as that key person of influence in the room.
You know what's fascinating is there are actual studies now that show for women in particular
that you make more money if you do one thing, which is you wear makeup, which is wild.
So they did.
There's three studies that have been done, totally different groups, one by Harvard, one by Stanford.
And I can't remember.
It was either Oxford or Cambridge.
And the studies showed that women who there was no attractive,
differential between them, but one wore makeup consistently at work and one didn't. They made
anywhere from 20 to 40 percent more money inside of this study. What I thought was really interesting
about that, because I'm not really historically a makeup girl, although being fully face-painted
for this, is that that actually makes sense in a lot of ways because we do have this initial
reaction that we always have with people. You know, we judge somebody like you talked about almost
immediately. And so when I saw that study, I thought, well, first of all, that's interesting. You
don't have to be smarter, better looking, or anything else, and you can make more money just
by the way you present yourself. And so I thought, well, what about the way that you dress?
Is that also the same? And there are studies that back this as well, that in fact, you can make more
money as a man for dressing one way and as a woman. And women are interesting because you are not
the norm. What am I missing? You got the lumbajax down. I've got 20% sitting on the table
right. But what's fascinating is, you know, I like things where you don't have. You know, I like things where you don't
have to, you don't have to be better than anybody else. You can just use human psychology to make
more money. And so if I'm a woman, I know that the way that I dress, so when I pay attention to my
dress and dress professionally, whatever that means in this instance, in the study that I saw,
it was like, you know, what I would have on a blouse, a suit, something like that. Women make
two times more than men when they dress, when they dress better. Men, it actually is less important.
Still more important, though. If you dress professionally in a suit and you don't have all the other
proof and things you have, you have this sort of interesting thing that's like a, you have sort of
diametric opposition. I make a lot of money, and yet I care so little about money that I dress
in a wife theater. Yeah, exactly. And so men make somewhere between 15 and 18 percent more when they
dress in suits. So I think there's a real argument to be made for if you're going to pay attention
to the way your voice sounds, that takes some training. It doesn't take much training to change the way
that you look professionally and how you dress.
And the only other thing that I would talk about on sales and pitching is we tell all of our
company people, the line is, show, don't tell.
We increasingly do not believe the things that were heard.
So, like, think about a sales pitch that goes like this.
You know, we, for instance, have a lot of home service companies.
So these home service companies are selling a homeowner on, let's say, landscaping.
And so I'm going to come, and we're going to clean up your lawn, and here's what we're going to do.
And this is how much it's going to charge.
in a charge and this is how long it's going to take. And you can tell the client that we're an expert
at this. I've been in business for 42 years. We have 1,000 reviews on trust pilot, et cetera,
or you could do something that'll double your conversion, which is simply bring a phone or an iPad
with you and say, can I show you what we did for your neighbors on the street? And just show them
the image of it. Just go, we do have a thousand trust pilot reviews. I don't remember right here.
We could see what the last one said. Click on it. Show them the trust pilot review. You don't have to
train that. And I really like my salespeople to not have to become experts, but to be enabled by
what's called sales enablement or technology just to show because we are a visual species. And so
wherever possible, if you want to increase your conversions, I tell my team you are not allowed
to close a sale without showing something. Some visuals. You have to have a visual because it's
just a trust transfer and a higher signal. What's wild now is that in that same business, you can take a photo
just right there in chat, GBT, say, do the landscape gardening, and then show them,
this is your house, fully landscaped.
People are, 70% of the brain is visual processing.
Exactly.
And then you believe it, and then you've already seen it happen.
I work with a lot of entrepreneurs, and I get them to create a brochure, like a physical
brochure for their business.
And people are like, what on earth am I creating a brochure for in 2025?
Because the act of creating a brochure gets what's in your head, out of your head and into a
document we can all explore.
and I still think a brochure is actually one of the coolest things
that an entrepreneur can do as an activity
to really just solidify what they do.
I saw you scribbling again, Daniel.
Oh, I have lots of things.
But yeah, I was thinking about like makeup versus suits and whatnot.
And so, you know, one, it's like if you have zero status,
you have no credit, like SBCL like we went through,
then it's like, well, then what are the smallest versions of that that you can demonstrate?
And so I would also bet that if girls did makeup, like hooker makeup
and then you also do like professional makeup,
I'll bet you there's a very different outcome that happens
because if you have understated business makeup,
then that probably signals a certain level of status.
And they will treat you like other people
that they have treated in the past
because that associates with the status those people had.
Same thing with a man in a suit,
like literally fancy pants, right?
It's like, this guy's got fancy pants,
therefore he must be 15, 18% better on average.
Now, to comment on Cody's point earlier,
it's like I have other status-inducing points
that are superior to a suit, and so I don't need one.
Right?
So, like, how do I get away with that?
It's like, yeah, like, having a suit only means that you have $500.
But billionaires don't wear Leviton, because in the status game they're playing,
that would be an inverse signal of wealth.
Exactly.
And so, yeah, who you're trying to.
And then, to Cody's point about proof, like, proof is always number one, right?
And so, like, trust pilot reviews is a kind of proof.
Somebody down the street is a closer approximation, which is a higher form of proof.
And so proof is always going to be number one, which you can lead with.
You can almost immediately in any sales process, if they don't have one,
of these, just implement a video sales letter and increase sales by 20 to 40 percent with
like really doing nothing else, sometimes more. And so that typically is like, okay,
what's the promise that we're going to, you know, what do we do? What's the pain that we're
solving? What is the plan? So what is the proof that we have that we can solve it? And then
what is the plan for the rest of this video? And then typically, after you have, you demonstrate
each of those peas, you then say, great picture number five, which then gives you kind of
the visual roadmap. And then after that, I typically like to have people just respond to all of
the biggest objections that people have around whatever the specific service is as the main
points of the video. And then after that, you just make your call to action or you just reinforce
the appointment and say, hey, like, if you like this video, text me this keyword, that way I
know you watched it and we'll give you an extra 5% on whatever. And that way the salesperson knows
the person watched it. And it gives them incentive to do so. So it's like, hey, if you watch
the video, you get 5%, it's like, oh, shit, that's amazing. But then that way, they know that they
actually watched it. The one other thing that I've found that is the most powerful sales closer
is to pitch the assessment. And to pitch the assessment is, I don't know if I can help you,
but if we answer these 40 questions and we go through this assessment, then we'll figure out
whether we can help you or not. So it's kind of like if you went to the doctor and said,
I don't know whether you need anything, but we'll put you through a blood test and an x-ray,
and then we'll see. So one of the biggest way, I've scaled multiple companies where, you
you pitch the assessment. You don't tell people whether you can or can help them. You just simply
say the next step is to take an assessment. And when we do the assessment, it will tell us whether
I can help you or not. That's one of the best sales closing techniques. There's a lot of psychology
around that. They did the study where they had the boring focus group and they had one group of
people who were allowed straight into the boring community group. And then they had the other group
of people who had to take a survey to get in. And the group of people that took the survey to get
into the boring community group, all said that it was great in that.
So much better.
And there's something about how friction upon entry makes you value the thing more.
A zillion percent.
Like, I can't, I cannot, I can't emphasize this more.
Like, in every single CRO split test that we increase friction or increase the quality of leads,
we make more money.
CRO split test.
So a conversion optimization test that you'd run across a landing page or funnel or sales motion,
like, when you add more friction and it's good friction, ideally,
meaning you're not getting out bad people.
You're getting out good people, which is bad friction.
You want good friction, which gets out bad people.
You will typically always increase the cost per action.
So your lead cost will go up, your cost per call will go up,
but your show rates will go up and your close rates will go up,
and your cash collected will go up.
And it seems counterintuitive to apply friction to a process.
And I can almost promise that I have so few examples where it didn't work
that I almost believe that it's law at this point.
and I think it's law because it's so counterintuitive
because it's scary to add friction
because you know that you're actively
decreasing your lead flow and increasing your cost per lead.
You're decreasing your calls,
you're increasing your cost per call.
Like, that is frightening for just about every business,
which is usually why it works.
At the Louis Vuitton store,
they put a security guard to keep you out.
And then it pushes the prices up.
Yeah.
Like they, after COVID, none of them stop doing,
because they're like, oh, wow,
we made more sales during COVID
because we had people wait in line
and showed scarcity.
It's like working, isn't it?
You don't even get to pick the bag you get.
and you have to join a waiting list.
Then they interview you to buy the bag.
Yeah.
And then they decide whether they should let you have.
What do you bring to the table?
It's crazy.
That's how Ferrari works.
You're not allowed to buy Ferraris unless you go through this list.
And if you're ever shown to flip them or sell them, you'll never buy another Ferrari again.
So.
You're going to pick a suitcase, and you're going to tell me what you would do with that amount of money,
if you were starting with that amount of money today, to build a scalable business.
Do we keep the money?
He wants to buy a watch.
I'm like, I'm feeling 100,000.
All right, what do we got?
I have a thousand dollars.
So do I get to give the money? Is that how this works?
Yeah, you can keep it.
It smells like money.
Okay, so I have $1,000.
So I would take the $1,000, put it in my pocket, do nothing with it, and I would watch YouTube videos on AI integration into small businesses, and then I would go to small businesses, and once I had a specific integration that I would do, which I would probably bet would be around likely email list activation, because that's typically like fastest, easiest money that most business owners have is their contact list. So they've got, you know, they've been in business 10 years. They've got, you know, 8,000 customers they've sold over that whole time period, and maybe a list of, you know, call it 20,000 leads.
that they've had, they never email them ever. If they do, it's just like, here's our random
discount that we send once a quarter for Christmas or whatever. And I would say, hey,
I will email those people and I will get everything approved by you and don't pay me anything.
Just pay me a percentage of the sales that we generate afterwards. How's that sound?
And that offer tends to do well. And I know that because I've done it. So that's what I would
do. And the $1,000, I would go buy Layla something for a little bit of time so that you can
stay with me until I make the money from my email reactation campaign.
See what I get?
I got the 10K.
All right, we're going around the circle here.
I like it.
I would find the person who would buy what I was selling for the highest dollar amount humanly possible,
which means I would probably go to private equity companies.
So Alex gave me the idea for Main Street.
I know that Main Street businesses are like often cash crunched, right?
They don't have a lot of money, and they often cannot extract enough value from a lead that I need them to.
So Alex, we need to find the perfect company to do that, and there's lots of them.
Or he would build his own, which would be great.
I think in my specific instance, I want to go to the people who are already good at extracting the most value humanly possible.
So I'd probably try to go to a private equity firm.
And what is a private equity firm?
It's basically a fancy way for saying that people use their own money to buy businesses as opposed to public equity, where people use the stock markets dollars to buy business.
And so examples would be like, you know, KKR, Carlis, or some of the biggest in the world.
So they go around buying people's businesses with their own money?
That's right.
Yeah.
They find entrepreneurs right about the point where they cannot take it anymore and they buy those businesses and then they grow them hugely.
And again, because I'm better at partnerships, I would want to go to them and I would want to say, and really what's interesting is I bet all of us are going to be really similar.
The money actually doesn't matter.
And so even though I have $10,000, $10X, what Alex has, it doesn't actually matter because what I would do still, $10,000 is not enough for me to make a couple million, which is what I would want to do with this.
So what actually is the differentiator?
What is the business model I choose?
Who do I go to sell it to so that I can get the most value out of it?
And with these PE companies, what I would do is I would go to them and they're buying companies all the time.
And so there's two ways to sell to a PE company and I'd see which ones I could get them to sign up for.
On one hand, there's something called a deal sourcing fee, which is if you can find companies that are in the niche that P.E. companies want to buy, they will pay you for sourcing the company. And I know this because I pay deal sourcing fees. And so I would go to private equity companies. You're not going to be able to get to Cerberus or the big guys. So I'd go to the ones in my local neighborhood that you could find by searching on AI to say local private equity companies buying these types of companies. I would reach out to the GPs. Those are the general partners of the company, the guys who run it. And I would say what type of companies are you.
actively purchasing right now. What's your investment thesis in deal box? And if I could get them
to respond to me, great. If not, I'd search what do private equity companies typically want to buy?
What is the deal box or investment thesis of a private equity company? I would find that deal box.
And then I'd play the game of door knocking. I'd go to a bunch of these businesses and try to find
companies that wanted to sell. And then when they tell me they want to sell and I have a buyer,
which is the private equity company, the private equity company will pay me either a percentage
of the sale or a flat fee for sourcing it.
What might that look like in terms of a percentage and dollar number?
Yeah, I mean, if you're like a non-institutional player doing this, I think you would go to them and say,
can I get like 10K for every company that I source you that's over a million dollars in revenue that's profitable and within your deal box?
They'd probably say yes.
The normal sourcing fee is somewhere between 3 and 5%, but you're not going to get that when you're brand new.
But I like the idea of making 10K on one deal to start.
Then what else am I learning while I'm doing this?
I'm also learning simultaneously, how do you buy businesses, what type of?
businesses. How do you find businesses for sale? I think this is the highest leverage
activity. I know how to do. I know more how to buy a business that's already making money
and make it make more money with a higher degree of certainty because if it's already profitable,
it gets out of the valley of death, which is where a company starts and never actually makes
any profit. And so I would start there. And then what would I do for that? Well, the second that
they see that I'm good at sourcing deals, they're going to be throwing offers at me. But what I might
do instead is go to those GPs and say, hey, I'm pretty good at doing the hardest part of
private equity, which is finding the deals. Why don't you guys back me for me to find the deals for
you? Maybe they'll invest in my company for me to then run a private equity firm, or maybe they'll
say come work for me. Then I can make a couple hundred thousand dollars. I can learn what I think
is the best skill out there to learn, which is dealmaking. And I can use my leverage, which is knowing
what a company's worth and how to buy it using other people's money in order to increase
my earnings. And that's what I would do. You'd both use the money for personal things,
probably just pay your rent or take your partner. It doesn't make a difference.
at that level. And I mean, even the 100 is close to, I mean, it's more than 10 and 1, but.
Yeah. And it's just one idea. I think there's so many things you could do with one.
But they're all very similar in their fundamentals.
Well, you go to find something, like, the leverage comes from tapping into existing networks.
You find an existing business and either you're selling the business as the product or you're selling the product of that business.
Right, exactly. So you're selling either way. And all of it is promotion. You're selling.
And you're trying to get a percentage of upside. I'm getting a percentage of, because like,
To Cody's point, a lot of mainstream businesses don't have money.
And you're like, cool, pay me on money that I make you.
And they're usually very, very generous with money they don't have yet.
Same, same, same for, you know, a deal that we haven't made yet.
I'll give you, you know, a fee for those things.
Again, it depends on the timeline.
If I have 30 days, then, like, getting a deal done in 30 days will be tough.
But, like, getting a brick and mortar, it's like probably do that in 48 hours to get somebody to say yes to free money for, like, no risk and I do all the work.
It's an easy offer.
So, again, I think it depends.
That's where, like, the constraints of the initial prompt is, like, how much money and how much time?
If it's a year, it's, like, all of this changes.
If it's 30 days and I have nothing, it's like, well, then we'd want to generate as much cash as we can at a little time as possible, no risk.
Yeah.
Daniel's about to invest in the S&P 500.
He's like, I take your $10,000 and I raise you, yeah.
So I have 100,000.
So.
He's living with it.
This is a dangerous amount of money.
Yeah.
This is the worst-case scenario for most people.
Because if you have 1,000, you know you don't have money.
If you have 10,000, okay, you might get a cleaner.
You might get an assistant.
You might do a few little things with it.
The danger of 100,000 is you can kid yourself into thinking that you've got money.
And it will make your head spin how fast you can blow through $100,000 if you don't know what you're doing.
If you give me a Formula 1 car and ask, what am I going to do with it?
I'm going to crash it, right?
If I can get it even started in the first place.
So I've got to come up with something that the first problem that I have,
is I don't have the knowledge, I don't have the network, I don't have the reputation.
So here's what I'm going to do.
I'm going to leverage Cody's.
I'm going to go to Cody and I'm going to say, Cody, can I do a deal with you?
I would like to start a business.
I know you've got lots of ideas that you just don't have time for.
I'm going to invest $100,000 as debt for equity for 10%.
So I'm going to put $100,000 in and that'll come out of the business at some point,
but debt for equity on 10%.
And I'm going to do sweat equity for 10%.
And you keep 80%.
And it's your idea and it's your network and it's your reputation.
but I'll be the person who's heavily invested in this.
And the only condition is that as the business becomes profitable,
we can repay the $100,000.
And then once it's repaid the $100,000,
either you buy it or we can sell the business.
Now, what I'm doing there is I'm basically acknowledging,
I don't know what I'm doing.
I'm acknowledging I don't have the reputation,
I don't have the knowledge.
All I have is this $100,000,
and I have a very strong desire or will to be an entrepreneur.
Now, what's going to happen is that probably within an hour of Cody's time per month,
she's going to be able to say, here's the idea, here's my CFO, talk to my CFO.
Here's my head of marketing, talk to my head of marketing.
Here's my friend who's actually got even more money and wants to invest.
And she's just going to fire off a few emails, and she's going to love the idea because
it's her idea, and I'm going to work hard, right?
And what's cool is that when the time comes that that business becomes valuable, I've got
one buyer on the table.
Cody's either going to say, hey, look, I'll buy you out because it's only 20% and now
I own the whole thing. Or we go to market and Cody will know someone who can buy the business
and I get 20% of the exit. But the key here is that just that acknowledgement, that it's really
it's the knowledge, the network and the reputation that is the valuable bit and the money is a bit
of a red her. And you're going to get Cody's skills because you're going to be in her
proximity. You're going to get a little bit of her reputation. At the end of that deal, I will then
have knowledge. I'll then have reputation. I'll then have all of those things will have leveled up
for me. You know what else is interesting, too? It's really what you're proposing is something that I
used to not like and since think, and since think that when you find the right ones, it's really
fascinating, which it's a franchise model. You're essentially saying, which is what you do when
you come to a franchise. If you come to Resi Brands, you go, okay, I have $75,000. I don't know
anything about window cleaning. I don't know anything about running a business, but I do know that you know
how to do it. And I know that you have all these case studies, okay, proof of other people just
like me that have done it. So I'm actually going to pay you for this business, for the right
for you to take a percentage of my ownership forever in perpetuity. But I will teach you how to,
or you will teach me how to run the business. And so I think that's actually, I think, I used to
think that franchises weren't good for entrepreneurs because I am relatively unemployable and I don't
like to be told what to do. But for people that have never run a business before, like,
What you're saying is, like, I'm paying you for the right to learn because you have a proven
system that if I use it over time, I have a lower likelihood of failure because we know the
truth, which is 90% of startups fail.
Most startups never make any money.
You pay for the right to maybe potentially one day make money.
And so I do think stealing other people's homework is real and valuable.
I wanted to ask you all a question, which I have an answer to.
So I assumed you would, but maybe you don't, which is what is the one thing about entrepreneurship,
wealth creation, finance, that you think most people undervalue that you put a disproportionate
amount of weight on. So like, for me, I can think of a game in business. I think of business
as a set of games we're playing. I can think of a particular game in business that I don't think
other entrepreneurs understand the value of. And I'm wondering if you all have an answer to that
as well. Is there one game in this game of business, one fundamental game, that you think most
entrepreneurs listening now don't appreciate? And they should. From the entrepreneurs you've worked in
invested in and Bing one yourself?
Well, I think I'll say one that everyone here at the table will agree with, but I think that
brand and distribution is still wildly undervalued.
I mean, I think that's the reason that all of us decided to get into it is because
you just, I mean, at least I saw just the wild discrepancy between the cost of a building
brand and building distribution versus the value of that distribution.
And, you know, the primes, the luncheys, the, you know, some of these insane zero to many
billion dollar case studies, Taramana, Hooda, Huda, beauty.
proper whatever it is for, yeah.
Like there's so many examples at this point that it's almost trite.
I still think it's undervalued.
Distribution, which is building an audience that you own.
That has a high likelihood of complying with requests.
AKA brand.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, well, I think that's a very good one.
And the reason that we know that it's so undervalued is we're all offered things all the time that do not.
I mean, I remember talking to my president of my company and I was the former president of Mr. Beast.
It was interesting, as he said, like, every deal we looked at, we almost regretted doing it.
Like, we couldn't – I think you and I talked about this.
We couldn't do a deal that the other party fully understood the power of our distribution up front.
We almost had to, like, prove it, put in a bunch of milestones on a later date because the deal is so good.
And I found the same thing in the deals that I did.
Like, we've talked about.
Like, I mean, I did a bunch of deals early on where I bought businesses and they couldn't benefit from distribution.
All my laundromats, my car washes.
Like, it doesn't matter that I have a big audience.
online. And so the leverage wasn't there for me. So I think distribution and brand are huge.
The secondary thing that I do not think most entrepreneurs understand is financial engineering.
The richest people in the world are rich. If they didn't get it from Daddy and Mommy,
and they didn't get it from investing in third-party companies, they got it from owning companies
and buying them over time. Like every billion, there is not a billion dollar company that exists
that hasn't bought other companies.
It doesn't exist.
When you say financial engineering,
how do you simplify that for someone that's 16 years old?
Man, understanding how to get other people's money,
to say it really simply,
like how to get other people's money,
which sounds a little scammy except it's not.
You know, most businesses are bought with the SBA loans,
loans from the government that allow you to buy a business.
Businesses need lines of credit.
That's just money from the bank for a future state.
So, like, if you actually understood
how money and finance works in your business,
it's harder to die because cash flow is what keeps your company alive. And also, it's easier to buy your competitors because whoever is most funded wins, typically. And so I think more entrepreneurs need to obsess on the thing that isn't the magic. Like the magic is coming up with an idea, having the grit, doing the brand, doing the distribution. That stuff's actually really, really hard. Financial engineering is modelable. It's just it's the same every single time. It's just been gate.
kept by Wall Street. Money games. I had this, I had such an epiphany moment when I was like
23, 24 years old when my, a German group had basically brought the majority of my company
out, and I got to spend a lot of time because we didn't have this German office, so I was there
a lot. And I just observed this one individual who I shan't name. And I'm there building this
business and pitching to clients and doing all this hard work. And I met him and he says, I don't
want to do any hard work. I just want to do deals. And I was like, tell me more. And I learned
and I'm like, what do you mean deals? Because I'm like, I'm not sleeping here. And this guy,
looks like he's sleeping, like, tremendous amounts of hours.
And he was like, I just want to play money games.
I want to be in the middle of the transaction of the deal and taking some.
But then he's also, when he says money games, is like leverage and arbitrage.
Raising money against an asset, overvaluing that asset, and buying lots of cheaper assets
with the value of the expensive asset, and he made a lot of money doing exactly that
and almost never working.
Because he understood exactly what you're saying is that really, really rich people understand
money games. Just how to use money and leverage to make more money. Look at the Forbes 100 list.
It's all comprised of people who do financial arbitrage in one way or not. How do I go learn
that skill? Do I have to go work in finance? No, you don't have to work in finance. But I mean,
the best business school is always be in business. So get into business and then obsess on one,
like, I think it's like tiered. Bottom level is like understand a P&L. Most entrepreneurs don't
have a profit and loss statement. They don't actually track their profit and loss statement. I mean,
we invest in a $60 million a year business.
The guy didn't have an up-to-date profit and loss statement.
It's incredibly common.
I'm sure you see it.
You look at a bunch of businesses, too.
Second level after a profit and loss statement is, do I understand where my financing
is coming from?
All you need to do to understand that is talk to your bankers.
Like, do you have a bank that will lend you money?
Understand why.
Explain to them what you do and see if they understand it, how much money they'll give you.
And then the third level of the game is go and talk.
Every learning that needs to be done is just getting in the room with other people
who have their Tuesdays are like your dream days. So I think, you know, you want to get in a room
with a bunch of people who are doing deals. That's how you do more deals. When I am, I told you
earlier we were talking about psychedelics before we started recording. Yeah. When I left my last
company, I had that year and a half where I invested in this massive psychedelics company and it was
the pandemic. So we're working from, everyone was working from home. I was working from the
billionaire's apartment in London. And I got to see in the lead up to the IPO. He did 10
IPOs a year. So I got to sit in his kitchen and he used to work over there. And I just got to see
what was going on. And all he was doing was making phone calls to people with lots and lots of money
and he was giving them access to the IPO before it IPO at a valuation, which we all knew
was going to 10x. And I just thought, oh my God, like, this is how rich people make money.
They have some kind of access or arbitrage, and they move money around to capitalize on
these multiples. And I thought, fucking hell, like, that's, get around billionaires. I know it's
a crazy thing, but you've all said this.
Start a podcast.
I'm slightly older than you guys.
Like I remember before the internet,
before YouTube, before all of this sort of stuff,
there was no access to this information.
You couldn't get this information.
And now you can listen to podcasts.
You can chat to chat GBT.
You don't even have to get in the room.
And like it's all on the internet.
And it blows my mind because I remember a time before that.
I love what you said.
I totally agree with what you said.
I'm going to go with the one game
that most people don't understand is bananas.
That's the end of the podcast.
In lesson one of every economics class, they say,
if you've got 10 bananas and 100 people want a banana,
you're going to have high prices and profit, demand outstrip supply.
If you've got 10 bananas and only one person wants banana,
you're going to drop the price of those bananas
and you're going to make a loss and your business is going to go badly.
And what most people do not understand is that the whole game
relates to constrained supply and excess demand.
And if you can't constrain the supply and create excess demand,
demand, you won't get a profit. You can take something like Google Maps, which probably
costs 500 million to set up and launch satellites and everything. They have to give it away for
free because they have infinite supply. They can supply everyone on the planet with Google Maps.
So because there's infinite supply, they just give it away for free. But Google ads, there's a limited
number of people who can advertise on every search. So because that's limited, the price goes
up. So I have a client who saves lives and they do first aid training and they're an amazing
person and they literally save children's lives and all this sort of stuff. She's telling me,
you know, why aren't I able to charge more money? I'm literally saving lives. I'm a really good
person and I'm very valuable. I say because the whole game, no one, that's not the game. The game
is demand out strip supply. So you need to constrain the supply of something and you need to
manufacture excess demand. And unfortunately, as much as you might be the most amazing human being,
if you can't manufacture demand and supply tension, you can't make a profit. I was hoping and thinking
someone might say, hiring. Because for me, my answer is hiring. That's the first thing I go to.
I remember Richard Branson sitting me down when we spoke in New York and saying, listen,
I built one of the biggest groups in Europe. And my CFO pulled me out the room and said,
I don't know what net profit is. And he says, my CFO got crayons and a piece of paper.
and drew fishes in a net in an ocean and said, Richard, that's your net profit.
And then they walked back in the room.
And he was at the time running one of the biggest groups in Europe.
So when he said that to me, I was like, well, he was like, you don't really need to know much
if you're a really masterful delegator.
And he said I was a dyslexic thinker.
So I was always forced from the very beginning to just find someone to do it.
That was exceptional.
And actually, the further I've gone in my career, the more just like you figure out with
like this game, that it's actually just a couple of fundamental things that sway the outcomes.
Like most of the returns come from like a couple of things.
in business, I've just come to learn the further I've got that my returns come from
truly exceptional people, buying them with a culture and then setting them the sort of strategy
or more technical things that...
I would agree with that, and the reason you can find such amazing, talented people,
and so could Richard Branson, is because first he could create excess demand for that role,
and then you could choose from that list.
So I go back to when I was 18.
I was 18, broke, drop out at university, parents aren't speaking to me, shoplifting food.
I managed to get a guy called Chris
who was running a business
to stop his business
he was double my age and successful
to stop his business
and to decide to come and build a social network
with a kid who was stealing Chicago Town pizzas in Manchester
who had never built a technology company before
I couldn't pay him
in exchange for 30% of the company
and this goes back to this whole thing about offers
my pitch my offer at that time
I was trading in future money
equity and he believed in the value of the
future money. So I say the kids all the time, actually, you don't need to be in my position now.
You've all got future money, and the future money is determined by how good your pitch is, your
sellers. But I think that goes back to that, like, how I talk about pitching for money.
That's your might as touch. You didn't have profit. You didn't have growth. You didn't have a track
record. What did you have? An incredible fucking story. Yeah. So if you got nothing else but a
story, then you can hire people much smarter than you. This actually brings me to a point that I
haven't told the world about yet. I've just built something called culture test. You can find
at culturetest.com. Essentially, the thinking is that one bad hire, as I'm sure all of my guests
here, will agree, can ruin your business. It can ruin your idea. So culture test helps you
figure out and spot red flags and people you're thinking of working with or currently do work
with by making a personalized culture test survey. And it scores that person in terms of how aligned
they are to you and your mission. It has been a game changer for my business. We've culture tested
about 40,000 people.
And I just wish I was doing this before.
Check it out, culturetests.com, make your own culture test, use it, and thank me later.
Alex, you've got this book about to drop called 100 million money models.
What is the one money model in this book that's added the most to your net worth?
So it's more the concept.
So each of the offers had the value equation, which is kind of the core concept that the book was built around.
The Leeds book was about the core four.
the ways to promote anything.
And so a $100 million money models
is about client finance acquisition,
which is fundamentally, how do you get customers
to fund your own expansion?
And so Cody said this earlier,
but depending on the source,
it's roughly like 80% of businesses fail
because of poor cash flow,
or they just don't have enough money.
And the other 20 is probably just people just give up.
And so as long as you don't give up,
the reason that you go to business,
you just don't have cash flow.
And so that book solves cash flow,
which is why the sub headline is how to make money,
which is pretty on the nose.
But fundamentally, like, each of the examples that I had in my business, and I define that within client finance acquisition as I define it when you have like $100 million money model, is that we're able to get a customer to pay you twice as much as you spend on them in the first 30 days.
And by doing that, the more specific equation would be that your 30-day gross profit from a customer exceeds two times KAC plus COGS, meaning KAC is in cost to a car customer plus COGS, which is cost of goods sold.
So how much does it cost me to get them?
How much does it cost me to deliver them times two?
If I can get that from one person, then for the rest of my expansion,
all the customers finance the acquisition of the next customer,
and then cash flow is no longer a constraint of the business.
You'll still have constraints.
You'll still have supply constraints, still have hiring constraints.
You'll still have other constraints, but cash won't be one of them.
And so as a result, you can grow pretty much as fast as you can handle.
And so that is how I've grown all of the companies that I've started without funding
and been able to grow very fast in each of them is with that core concept.
Thank you. Thank you for choosing to be here today. And I invited you here because you're the three people that guide me that I listen to that I think have the most credible, important information that can guide my audience. And I know who they are. They're people that want to improve their lives and some subjective medium to that the North Star that they have. And you all represent different perspectives and also different strategies. But there's so much, so many overlaps that I think actually getting three people like you around the table to understand where we overlap and where you think the same is incredibly powerful. I highly
recommend everybody that goes and reads Cody Sanchez's book, Main Street Millionaire,
how to make extraordinary wealth buying ordinary businesses,
which is really what, you know, one of the things Cody has pioneered the idea of
and made accessible to the masses, because most people didn't think you could do that.
So many of my friends are now buying boring businesses, as Cody says,
because Cody has laid out a framework to do that and to create wealth in this book.
And my favorite book of Daniel so far is oversubscribed,
how to get people lining up to do business with you.
And there's so many that I could have chose from.
But also, you all have YouTube channels, and your YouTube channels are amazing.
So I'd ask my audience, I'm going to link them all below to go and check out your YouTube channels.
Daniel, you're just starting out on YouTube.
You're getting your feet wet in YouTube.
But Cody and Alex have been making so much incredible, actionable content.
I love one of your new formats where you sit with someone and you sort of redesign their business with them.
And Cody's been making some of the most entertaining and informative content on how to get going with simple companies and businesses for the longest time.
So please go check out there.
their work, and go follow them on social media.
These are three of the people that I admire the most in this space.
And if you like what we do here on the Dyeravis here, you're going to love what they do.
So thank you so much, everybody, for being here, for being so generous with your time.
I hope we'll do this again sometime soon.
Thank you.