The Game with Alex Hormozi - Cashflow, Unit Economics, and Bootstrapping $550M ButcherBox with Mike Salguero | Ep 819

Episode Date: February 17, 2025

Want to scale your business? Click here.Check out ButcherBox here. Welcome to The Game w/Alex Hormozi, hosted by entrepreneur, founder, investor, author, public speaker, and content creator Alex Hormo...zi. On this podcast you’ll hear how to get more customers, make more profit per customer, how to keep them longer, and the many failures and lessons Alex has learned and will learn on his path from $100M to $1B in net worth.Follow Alex Hormozi’s Socials:LinkedIn | Instagram | Facebook | YouTube | Twitter | Acquisition

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Hey guys, welcome back to the game. Today I have a special episode where I talk with Mike Salgaro, who is the founder and CEO of Butcherbox, a subscription service that sends meat to people's doors. They do north of $550 million a year. And we broke this into probably like two halves. I'd say the first half, we talked kind of the story of getting there on some of the lessons. He's learned along the way. And I'd say the second half of the podcast, we go really deep on tactical stuff that has materially improved the business. get some of the unit economics. So for those you who are a little bit more advanced, I think you
Starting point is 00:00:33 will probably dig it a lot. Or hopefully, you'll enjoy it as much as I enjoyed talking to Mike. And with that being said, let's dive in. Everybody, welcome back to the game. I got a special episode for you guys today. I am here with my soon-to-be friend, Mike, who owns Butcher Box, which is a company you may or may not have heard of, but you will have heard of it very soon as we go through a deep dive on the business. And so I'll say unlike some interviews with business people, I think a lot of it is narrative. We'll have a little bit of that in terms of the story of the business. But I want to dive into the actual unit economics, like how it works, how it scales, what's your cash flow cycle. I want to get into the nitty gritty. And then as Mike's going through
Starting point is 00:01:15 it, I'll try and kind of encapsulate some of the pieces that I think could apply to any business, kind of like through lines that anyone can use from it. So that's the plan. And that may not at all happen. So we'll find out. But Mike, welcome. Yeah, thank you. So before you had Butcher Box, you had another business. Do you want to do a quick, like, how we got here and some of the lessons you learned from that business, the failure? Because I love hearing about failures because the lessons that we get from them, I feel like every entrepreneur is always like building, like, all of the businesses prior are stepping stones to the business you have today. And then maybe someday this is the stepping stone to the next, the future version of Butcher Box or whatever.
Starting point is 00:01:56 Yeah. Yeah. So, I mean, I could talk about a tremendous amount of failure in between college and my first business, if we want to go there. But my first business was a company called custommade.com. And my best friend, Seth and I bought the company. We had approached a guy to sell us customade.com for $140,000. We didn't have any money at the time. So we gave them a check for $2,500 for a deposit. And then it had 90 days of due diligence, which is where you're supposed to figure out what happens at the company.
Starting point is 00:02:26 and we took all that time to go raise money. And so we raised 500 grand. And the whole... Oh, okay. Yeah, the whole thing was we were both working in real estate, and we called it a shack in Manhattan. So this is 2008. Custommade.com got a ton of inbound traffic.
Starting point is 00:02:42 Yeah. From people typing in custom made. And it was filled with woodworkers who had their projects and stuff on there. And when you talk to these woodworkers that are like, I get all my money from custom made.com, and I pay $35 a year for my subscription. And they had to like email the owner to like upload their content. So we were like, this is like a shack in Manhattan.
Starting point is 00:03:04 We're just going to buy it. We're going to like overhaul it. Turn it into they can log in and manage their own content and jack up the rents. Um, so people, you know, thought that was a good idea and give us a great narrative for raising money as a sign. Just even though like as a shack in my head like everyone's like, okay, I get me through it. Yeah, yeah. Of course, this was 2008 and in Boston in real estate and everyone had to do.
Starting point is 00:03:26 just lost their money because Bernie Madoff just ran off with everyone's money. Did something happen in 2008? Yeah. Oh, no way. Okay, crazy. Yeah. So Bernie made off around for everyone's money. We heard a lot of nose, but we cobbled together around.
Starting point is 00:03:40 And then we got going and things were working and we raised another $500,000. When you say things were working, what did you mean? So like you were starting to make more, like you were able to grow the revenue. Yeah. So we had pivoted the website. You could now log in. We made a ton of mistakes, but we built a sales team. We had people calling to get makers to sign up for like an annual subscription or a monthly subscription.
Starting point is 00:04:00 We hit about $60,000 in revenue a month. Okay. What was it doing prior? $35,000 a year. Oh, geez. Yeah. So you cry. I mean, you did an amazing job.
Starting point is 00:04:10 Yeah, yeah. Yeah. But we were still losing a little bit of money and whatnot. Also a great frame for him who was listening to this is the idea that, like, I had a mentor say this. He's like, right before you go to take your business to market, he's like, switch sides of the table. And then try and say, like, you just bought your business today. What are all the things you'd fix about it? It's like, well, maybe just do those first.
Starting point is 00:04:31 And so I think it's just a great, like, perspective on any businesses. Like, if I bought everything today, how would I, it's like a different lens at least. Anyways, for me, it's been helpful. But it was, please continue. Yeah. So at the time, it was like 2010, 2011, everybody in tech was raising money. Mm-hmm. And so we were looking at tech crunch and looking at all this stuff.
Starting point is 00:04:50 And at that time, there weren't like all these accelerator programs and all these things that now exist to help people. And so by co-founder and I looked at each other, we're like, we have a good business. Why don't we raise money? And so we ran around town, again, raising money, this time trying to raise from BCs. And we got first round capital, which is a very well-known VC in New York, and then we got Google Ventures to invest in our company. It was a, we raised $1.9 million at like a $7 million pre-money.
Starting point is 00:05:21 That's where things started like falling apart. So most people told us no. We went to raise money and people are like woodworker listing site. Like hell no. And I was in a meeting at this VC benchmark. And I said, I was like, we built this function where somebody could post a project and makers could see them coming in and then they could bid on them. And I was like, pull up the job board. And this thing was like live action.
Starting point is 00:05:52 we wanted to make it exciting. And they're like these jobs rolling in, like custom coffee table, custom. I was like, all we have to do is stand in between these transactions and we'll be the largest marketplace for custom stuff. Yeah. It was 2011. As soon as I said the word marketplace, everyone wanted in our deal. We went from no, no, no, no, no to like marketplace. You could be the next Airbnb.
Starting point is 00:06:12 And we're like, yeah. You bet. Sure, we can be whatever you want. Just give us some money. And so we raised the money on the premise that we were going to. create a marketplace and stand in between a custom transaction, which wasn't the best premise, but people loved it. We raised 1.9.
Starting point is 00:06:30 Six months later, there was one VC that we left out of the first deal. We're like, we don't want to raise more than 1.9, so you can't participate. Six months later, they're like, we'll give you four on 16. We're like, okay, we'll take more money. So we took four. And then we did an 18. So now you've diluted, because now you're at, because you had the 1.9 on 7. So that was 20 or 2%, something like that, right?
Starting point is 00:06:54 I don't know the math somewhere there. Yeah. And then you did another quarter, so 25% with the second round. So you're, you guys are sitting a little bit above 50. Yep. At that point, just from the two rounds. Yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 00:07:06 And then we're giving out equity and all of our employees and all that stuff too. I'm highlighting this because I know, I think I have some perspective on where you go later. There's a different, there's a different path. No, no, yeah. Yeah. So, and then a few years later, we did a $10 million round on. $30 million. It was actually $18 million. It was 10 of equity, four of debt, and four of secondary. So you got some money off the table. So we got some money off the table. You were like reading
Starting point is 00:07:31 the tea leaves and you're like, you know, there's no way we're going to make anything with this. Yeah. We got all of our original investors got three X their money. If they wanted it. Many cashed out. My mother did not. She's like, I believe in you. Yeah. They used to cash out, mom, but okay. You're like, I took secondary. No work. Yeah. Like I sold. So by the end of it, I mean, what really happened at the company, the big lesson I learned is, so Google, they have incredible services for entrepreneurs. So if you're an entrepreneur and they invest in you, they can help you with a whole bunch of stuff. You want to, like, manage your AdWords account. It's like, go talk to the people that run AdWords.
Starting point is 00:08:14 By the way, here are some gift cards and like, do all sorts of stuff to help you. They're like, do you want us to come and look at your? website and like get under the hood of your technology and we're like yeah of course Google come on in and i i mean literally the guy did this like week long deep dive came out and was like that's the worst website i've ever seen he's like i can't believe we invested in this like so our investors how does this even make money how is this like and these guys like yeah and so what ended up happening over the court so immediately we're like we have the wrong tech team that our investors were like, you have the wrong tech team, you have to get rid of them.
Starting point is 00:08:53 So we got rid of our tech team. And then it was like, you have the wrong product people. And then you have to get rid of the product people. You have the wrong marketing people. And what ended up happening over the course of about a year is I took all of the people who helped me build this company to help me like hack through the jungle to get to like the road. And we fired all. As one does.
Starting point is 00:09:13 And I was left with a company of new hires. New hires, people that didn't fit the culture. Mercernaries. I hadn't written down the cultural values. Yeah. And I just have this vivid memory of sitting in my car in the parking lot being like, I can't go in. Like I can't, I don't even want to go to work. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:35 And I had a good salary, but by that point with all the dilution, I owned like 8% of the thing. Right. Which I could go get a CEO job doing something. It was just like this, like, what have I done? Yeah. And I let go of all my friends. It was bad. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:09:48 How many years was this? eight years of working on it. Yeah, 2015 or sorry, 2008 through 2015. So we just, we covered eight years in a pretty short, short little window just for anyone who's listening. And I bring this up just because like when you, when you hear the stories or you watch the literally the 60 second short about someone's career, you know, you see the highlights and the low lights, but a lot of it is just kind of like the mundane middle of just dealing
Starting point is 00:10:15 with the stress of every day. There's always fires. and there's a permeating level of baseline stress that doesn't really go away. Yeah. And so, I mean, one big lesson was like, don't listen to investors. When I started Butcher Box, which I'll get into, I didn't want to take investment. There was also, like, I lost myself. I lost my team and I lost myself.
Starting point is 00:10:36 And when I looked at the shambles that happened, it was like, I don't want to. Did you shut it down? Yeah. So we actually foreclosed on it because we had some venture debt. There was a little bit of debt. Our bank account got below what we owed, and they were like, we're taking it. So we actually did what's called a friendly foreclosure. They took it over.
Starting point is 00:11:00 My co-founder stayed and is still running it. Oh, it's still going. Yeah. Is it doing okay? It's now a jewelry company, and it's just, they just do everything. There's no maker. There's no, like, no marketplace. The big problem that we had was you can't, like, these custom, if you want a custom
Starting point is 00:11:15 coffee table or a custom piece of jewelry, there's like, there's like, like 60 back and forth to talk about every detail. Yeah, there's specs and like, yeah, right. And we had to stand in between that in order to get our fee, which was like 10%, which is a nightmare. It was a bad business. But we, because we sold everyone in marketplace, when we were like, this isn't going to work, people are like, well, that's what I invested in. So you need to keep going. So doing the other version of, so, because I think about this sometimes as like the path not taken. So if you had, if you had not raised really any of the money besides the amount that you needed to, kind of acquire the business. So at that point, what did you raise the five,
Starting point is 00:11:51 you raised the $500 when you did, you didn't go through the due diligence that period where you raised the 500? What was the, what was the, or how much equity did you give away for that? It was a convertible. So it converted into the, the next round like a safe round. Yeah. Oh, great. Okay. So that ended up being like five or six percent. I mean, well, a little more than that. So like seven percent of the business. Yeah. Um, which should have been a pretty, a pretty good, a pretty good move effectively. Yeah. And if that business at the time said it was doing $60,000 a month, right? So 720-year-ish in terms of run rate. If you had stuck with the original model and just been like, I'm not, I don't have to pursue this, not as an insult, but like cockamini
Starting point is 00:12:27 business model, basically billy or bust business model is what I mean to say. It probably could have just been a very profitable. I mean, going from 35,000 a year to $60,000 a month in like 12 months is great growth. Yeah, totally. And was it profitable at that point? It was almost profitable. Okay. Like you could have made it if you wanted to. We could have been profitable. And that's one of the reasons why, like, I want to be here today. And I like talking to people, like, you who talk to entrepreneurs about a different path and raising a bunch of money, diluting yourself, having people who tell you what to do and losing your culture in the meantime and losing yourself. Every business I've had has been bootstrapped. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:13:01 I mean, I mean, I mean, so when I started butcher box, so I took the, we closed the business. We let go of 50 people, shut the doors. I literally close the gate and put the lock on. But then your partner was like, I'm still here, though. And we're still going to keep. Yeah, they like spun it out. Are you guys still friends? Yeah, we are.
Starting point is 00:13:18 Oh, good. That's cool. Yeah. It was a little rocky for a couple of years, but yeah, we're good friends. I took the weekend off. It was Memorial Day weekend, so it was a long weekend. And then I started Butcher Box on Tuesday. And I had known in the final year at Custom Made, it was very clear to me that we were going to hit a wall.
Starting point is 00:13:38 And there was like no stopping it. My co-founder had become CEO in that last year because he just like loved the distressed. He wanted to be the What was revenue then? So we would only talk about GMV because it was platform. So our GMV I think got to like three or four million
Starting point is 00:13:57 a month. Okay. But you know, then we took a 10% but actually because of, I forget all the reasons it was like 7%. Yeah. So like 200,000. 200,000 a month. We at our height were burning 500,000 a month.
Starting point is 00:14:14 That is. Yeah. healthy burn. Yeah, healthy. Right. Just like, never saying anything like it. Yeah. Yeah, there's a bank account, just a road. Quote from Reid Hoffman. I think he was talking to Elon or Peter Seal or something. And he, they were on the roof of the building that they were at for PayPal. And he said, if we were one at a time lighting $100 bills and pulling them off the building, he said, it wouldn't be as fast as we're actually burning money in this company. And I, like, I just saw that was such a visual of like, I could burn $100 bills slower than we're actually
Starting point is 00:14:49 burning the money in this business, which I thought was hilarious. Yeah. No, it's wild. I mean, you start adding a bunch of people and then you add managers to manage those people, and then you do a bunch of marketing, and all of a sudden you're just like losing, losing money. And when you raise, especially when you raise something like an $18 million round, they want you to spend the money as fast as possible. And the thing that they don't talk about with venture is venture capitalists get paid when
Starting point is 00:15:14 they put money out on the street. They take a management fee. And so they have, everyone around the table has the incentive to like put as much money as humanly possible into these deals. And so you really, when you go, like people are like,
Starting point is 00:15:27 how do I figure out what my valuation is? It's like, no, no, no. Just tell them how much money you can spend over the next 18 to 24 months and just argue for a bigger number. We're like, we can blow through 10 million. They're like, great, here's a check. So, yeah, it was...
Starting point is 00:15:42 Which is counter to how like business works as side note. So it's interesting because it's the collision of two different business models and the one who has the voting rights is the one who wins. But like their business model is deployment of capital and management fees. By and large, obviously there's carries and things like that. But there's that component. And then there's the business model of the actual business,
Starting point is 00:16:02 but the person who actually calls the shots is the largest, the person who makes the most money from the business prevails in terms of who has leverage in the conversation. Yeah, and we had all the rights. So we negotiated really, really well. We had all the rights in our documents. My co-founder, Seth, was just like a phenom at that. So they couldn't overthrow us.
Starting point is 00:16:22 They didn't have any management decisions, et cetera. But it doesn't matter. Like, at the end of the day, when they're like, you're going to be blackballed if you don't. Yeah, like the pressure. Yeah. You know. So at the end, it was like, we're going to sell the company.
Starting point is 00:16:34 We're going to bring in a different CEO. We're going to do all these things, none of which worked. Yeah. I knew the writing was on the wall. And so I'd been playing around with like, what am I going to do next? And I had a few ideas. I had a billboard company
Starting point is 00:16:48 I was really interested in starting. I had a bond company I was really interesting and starting and I had this like shipping meat in the mail. Interesting. And the quick backstory, my wife has an autoimmune disorder.
Starting point is 00:17:02 We were following these elimination diets to like clean up our diet. We were trying to find grass fed beef. Couldn't find it. Huh. Okay. And I just got obsessed with like, where do you find grass fed beef?
Starting point is 00:17:12 Yeah. Why is this a hard thing? to find. Yeah, why is this hard to find? And I ended up, like, meeting a farmer in a parking lot and buying trash bags full of meat and being like, this is weird. And I started selling steaks to my buddies because it was like too much meat. And one of my buddies was like, this would be so much easier if it was delivered to my house. Yeah, I don't want to like meet you at your house to pick up the meat in a bag. I was like, just ship it to my house. And so I was like, okay, how do you ship meat in the mail? Yeah. I couldn't figure it out. This is all while I was
Starting point is 00:17:38 like still at customate. And then I met. This is while you were at customate. Well, it was like the tail end. You were having an affair. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Things were closing down. And then I reached out to the former head of operations of Omaha Stakes, which at the time was like the big me and mail company.
Starting point is 00:17:55 And he's like, yeah, like my non-compete's over. Oh, great. I can help you. That's amazing. And so he made all these introductions. Yeah. Pro tip right here, just for everyone listening, find the person who has built the business. Yes.
Starting point is 00:18:09 Already. Very near. It's, you know, from an entrepreneur's person. I think the beginning is always about how, like, you know, you're very tactic-obsessed, and obviously I talk a lot about tactic stuff on this channel. But I say beyond a certain point, it just becomes a lot about who, because the leverage is in not having to live the 15 or 20 years or however long this guy had been in the stake business. You're like, you can either relive his life and then be 20 years older. It's like, or you can just find that guy, and then
Starting point is 00:18:37 he doesn't have to live your life either, and then you combine and everybody wins. And so I think in the earlier stages of my career, I thought way more what and how than who. Yeah. Also, the way that I structured it, so I had a whiteboard. I had the three ideas. And I had like the kill shot, like the thing that if I didn't figure out this week or this month, like, you don't have a business. So for the bomb thing, it was like a legal thing.
Starting point is 00:19:00 And for the, for butcher box, it was like, how do you ship this? Yeah. And so I actually like, every time I went to the bathroom, I'd be like, or how do you ship me? Yeah. Like reaching out to people trying to get somebody to, to, to help. He finally said yes. And so fast forward to close the doors at Butcher Box, or sorry, at Custom Made. And it was pretty clear that like, why don't I just like spend the summer messing around with this idea? So my intention was to build a hobby business. Like I was I was very enamored by like Tim Ferrars four hour work week. Like, you know, build something that runs in the background and then you can go live your life, you know, passive income. and that was like I thought if we had a thousand subscribers and we made a $20 profit on each subscriber, it's $20,000. So if you customer service, if you outsource that and if you build Tech Easy, like you could have like $10,000 a month.
Starting point is 00:20:00 And so I built, it was like WordPress on top of Stripe, which nowadays there's Shopify, which is incredible. but like WordPress on top of stripe, which we basically ran with until last year when we moved to Shopify, and then we outsourced everything, and it was like, okay, this is going to be a hobby business. I want to pause on something because I think it's such an important thing. So like I have had such a similar experience to I think what you just walked through from a narrative perspective, which is that every time I've tried to like build a business, it doesn't work. For me, it hasn't. And I've failed a bunch of times on businesses that I was like,
Starting point is 00:20:36 I'm building a business. When I was like, how do I make some money that doesn't take a ton of my time? I end up building a really good business. And so it's just like an inch, again, it's these like these, these frames of questions. And I think this at any level, you could ask it from a product line perspective or a new division perspective. But it's, it's like I have, I've had these like romantic ideas of like this big thing that I want to have happen rather than like, you know, I just, I just want to make some money in a really easy way. And then when what's interesting, though, is that you're basically so I call it solving. for zero, which is like, how do I solve for like no time and profit? But when you solve that problem, when you have no time and profit, it also scales a lot easier because you already started with the premise of how do I have it, put no time, not be as risky, and be profitable.
Starting point is 00:21:23 So, sorry, pick back up. Yeah, no, that's right. If you build something to be a hobby, it can remain a hobby. And I'll talk about our backbone now, but it's very similar. Everything is third party. We have really tight specs on everything. But we took the perspective that I started with, I won a hobby. And nowadays, I took the perspective of like, we're not going to learn how to ship boxes better than a company that's been in the business for 75 years. Like, why bother trying to do that? So anyway, we started with an intern and we decided that we were going to do a Kickstarter campaign. Or is Kickstarter or Indiegogo at the time.
Starting point is 00:22:01 This is 2050. Also, different way of raising money, by the way, from who is listening. Pre-sales, though. Yeah. So it's not raising money. You're just selling your product. And you're seeing if there's a market and you're getting money up front. So my first gym, I saved all my money to start.
Starting point is 00:22:16 As soon as I, and I wanted to start the gym as fast as you as possible. Because I thought if I started the gym really quickly, then I could start making money. Every gym after that gym, I had multi-month pre-sales that would pay for the, that would finance the entirety of the gym off of people pre-buying memberships and pre-buying weight loss challenges and things. And so, like, this is definitely like a 101 to 201 entrepreneur. Like the first one, you know, you're taking the outside capital. You're like, you know, I'll bet you I could just get my customers to just pay on different payment terms and just get.
Starting point is 00:22:43 And then it's also also a great product market fit test. If no one wants to buy your pre-sell, then thank God you didn't like raise money for it or something like that. It's like we actually know people want to buy it and they're willing to pay for and wait. Exactly. That's the great thing about Kickstarter is people are used to waiting a really long time to get their products. And, you know, we basically started.
Starting point is 00:23:02 We hadn't launched yet, but we went out and showed our page to, people. And the first thing that we learned was people were like, I don't need that much beef. We only had grass-fed beef. We're trying to sell people eight to 10 pounds of grass-fed beef for $129. People are like, I don't eat that much beef. I would never buy this. And we're like, well, what have we put in chicken and pork as well? They're like, oh, totally. Can you make it at the same standard? Like, can you find chicken that's like raised better and pork that's raised better? And we're like, yeah. So we started with a box beef, chicken, or pork, and launched our Kickstarter. And I think one of the, you know, one of the things that we've done well as a company is found arbitrage opportunities.
Starting point is 00:23:42 Yeah. And so the first arbitrage opportunity was with Kickstarter. Okay. So back in 2015, Kickstarter had this verified badge. Like if it would be like Kickstarter verified. And so what we did is we watched these campaigns to see like which campaigns got the verified badge and then tried to reverse engineer like how did they get the verified badge. And it was one part early momentum, you know, sales coming in. I tried to reach out to all the founders and be like, oh, we're doing this thing. I did whatever it took.
Starting point is 00:24:14 And so we went out to raise $25,000 in sales. Yeah, pre-seed, right? Yeah, right. And we ended up selling $40,000 in boxes in the first day. Oh, geez. And then we got the Kickstarter verified badge. And then we ended up doing $210,000 in pre-sales, which was 1,100 boxes. of meat.
Starting point is 00:24:36 Going, you know, the first, the beauty of Kickstarter is if you get that verified badge, it's no longer, you're no longer just asking your friends and your audience to shop. It, like, goes to everybody. They'll push it out, yeah. And so it was a lot of random people we didn't know. Just, I want to double click on the offer real quick. Offer is part of what we talk about. So what ancillary benefits or bonuses did you give to people beyond just the box?
Starting point is 00:25:01 I mean, was there anything else that they got for being, you know, early participant? Yeah, good one. So we offered, the way that you do with Kickstarter is you try to activate the people who have bought to let go be your ambassadors. So we said if we hit $100,000 in sales, we'll give everyone free bacon in their first box. And that, like, people went crazy. They're like, I want the bacon, you know, and started like promoting it, putting it on their Facebook pages, all of that. That was it, though. That was the offer.
Starting point is 00:25:31 Our products. She had a referral bonus. Yeah. Really interesting. Our product was really hard, is still, really hard to find. Yeah. So we're dealing with people who, like, want to eat healthier, feel guilty about the meat that they're eating, and we give them an answer to that. And so there was, it was really clear that we had struck a nerve really quickly.
Starting point is 00:25:50 Yeah. And so then during the Kickstarter campaign, so we signed up like 1,100 people, during the Kickstarter campaign, the most interesting thing that happened was there was a, we were like writing on Twitter to anyone. who did Kickstarter, like anyone who talked about grass-fed beef to get them to talk about us. And this one nutritionist. So you're like, you're reaching out to them. Yeah, just like, hey, we're launching this thing. This is warm outreach. Or sorry, this is cold outreach to affiliates fundamentally that you'd either pay for,
Starting point is 00:26:20 through sponsorships with money or free stuff or both. And then I don't know if you gave them affiliate links or it was just like, hey, just talk about our thing. At this point, it was just talk about everything. So like, I'll send you a free box of meat if you just talk about it kind of thing. Yeah. a great way to get started early from a capital perspective. So it's like both of the examples that might talk about first is like, okay, if there's
Starting point is 00:26:40 platforms that'll give you free reach, figure out what you have, you know, reverse engineer what free reach looks like. And they're just getting you customers for free. And I think some people, especially, this is weird, but like a lot of small business owners will like obsess about like, they charge 10%. It's like they charge a commission on customers. They get you for free. Right.
Starting point is 00:26:55 Totally. What are we talking about? And then with the affiliates and influencers that that you're out to another way to basically, like, if you factor in the cost, it's like literally just the hard cost of the box of meat is your advertising cost and everything above that is basically freebie. Right. And so both of these are super low capital ways early on to get those initial sales going. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:27:19 So this nutritionist in California, this guy Chris Cressor tweeted, like, this is an interesting, you know, I've told you to eat grasswood beef. This is an interesting place to get it. That's all he did. And we saw a flurry of activity from that. And by flurry, I mean, there was like seven people who signed out. But at the time, that was like, holy, like, what just happened? And then we were like, you know, to what you were just talking about, we're like, we need to do more of that.
Starting point is 00:27:44 Like, we need to go find every influencer who's ever talked about grasswood beef and get them to promote, to promote us. So we finished the Kickstarter. And then we immediate. And that was the CTA. So when you're pushing out to them saying, hey, promote our Kickstarter, basically. and they could send their traffic to your Kickstarter to, you know, the seven buyers that came in from that. Yeah. Is that how, that's how the money came in?
Starting point is 00:28:07 Yeah, well, so Kickstarter will tell you, like, where, like, where did this come from? Okay. So it came from Twitter. So we were like, oh, that was, but you were still in pre-sale mode for this whole thing. Yeah. Okay. Yep. Great.
Starting point is 00:28:17 Because we wanted to be capital efficient, the whole idea was we're going to send you the butcher's selections. Okay. So I didn't want to hold inventory because I don't know how many rib-eis we're going to sell. and this is really expensive inventory. So the idea was we'll sell a bunch of stuff and then we'll just decide what to put in the box. Yeah. So we sold a bunch of stuff and then it was like,
Starting point is 00:28:38 okay, we have 1100 boxes. We talked to the place that we were working with. They created, you know, these different parts. Did they have all types of meat the one place that you want to? They did. Wow, that was fortunate. Yeah, we started working with this company in Wisconsin that did, they had a cutting facility
Starting point is 00:28:51 and a pick pack ship facility. It was like they did everything. So they just had it and they had no marketing, basically. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. And so we shipped out all these boxes. And then called every...
Starting point is 00:29:05 We shipped them out really quickly. It was like a week. And they were throwing them for Kickstarter. Yeah. Wow, I got my box already. And then we called them, hey, how are things going? Do you need any recipes? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:29:14 Would you like to become a subscriber? Yeah. And signed up like 40% of the people. Amazing. So right away, we had like... Well, you didn't just send an email to 1,100 people? Wouldn't that have been easier? Nope.
Starting point is 00:29:25 We had a guy, Nikki Graham, who picked up the phone and just, like, pounded the phone. and he was like $10 an hour plus like a $5 spiff. I just want to hit on this just because like it was nice is that you're hitting all these really clear milestones that I feel like are just forgotten. Which is like just the elbow grease of what I'll consider like unsc scalable work or unscalable effort is like a lot of times early on everyone's looking for like, I don't know if that scales. It's like, well, I mean, you know, we hand wrote 1,1100 cards and we manually reached out to every single person and we had conversation with them and we asked them if they knew anybody. else would be interested. Just like the basics, everyone's like, oh, I'm sure that would work. It's like, right, but it would just be work. And you did it. And obviously, it worked. Yeah. Well, and one thing that I think is important is I knew that I couldn't do that.
Starting point is 00:30:12 Yeah. Like, if you put me in a room with a phone and said, call 1,100 people, no way. Like, the business wouldn't have gone anywhere. And so it's good to know what you're good at and what you're not good at, what you're willing to do, what you're not willing to do, and invest in the areas that you're not willing to do. Because if you believe in the business, there's a guy who for $10 an hour is just like, okay, well, just, yeah, he's thrilled. And he was good at it. And like, then I didn't have to do it. But I think too often entrepreneurs take the approach of like, they need to do everything. Yeah. And like, I mean, the business would not exist if we hadn't made those phone calls. But if it was up to me, I would never make those phone calls. Was there an offer
Starting point is 00:30:50 that you gave them for the subscription, the 40% aside's like, hey, want to sign up? I don't remember. Like get your next box, $10 off your next box, or you get bacon for free in your next box if you subscribe. There must have been, but I don't actually remember. But what did happen was we launched butcherbox.com. So in the background, we signed up these people, and we realized affiliates was the thing. So we started working on that. We launched butcherbox.com to the world. And there were many people who were trying to get in on the Kickstarter and they let you put up a link.
Starting point is 00:31:24 So they were coming to our website and they were buying. So right away, we signed up like five subscribers, 10 subscribers, like on the first day. Yeah. And what happened was we had a little tech issue. So when those new subscribers signed up, they got free bacon in their first box because we built the tech to be like bacon's going in every first box. And two weeks in, I got a call from the tech guys. They're like, we have a really bad problem on our hands. I was like, what's going on?
Starting point is 00:31:52 They're like, we've been sending bacon to everybody. And I was like, oh, my God, this is dad. And then my marketing guy was like, why don't we just tell people sign up and get free bacon? And it was like, oh, well, we can't shut it off anyways. Let's do that. The thing's broken. Yeah, it's broken. Like, we can't fix it.
Starting point is 00:32:08 So we're just going to, that became the, that became the option. Because I know that one. And like, I knew that before even, like, heard of or met you or heard the story from Harley and whatnot. So, again, like, Grand Slam offers. Like, and, you know, the free box of bacon. I think like, I've heard of that. Yeah. And so sometimes these happiness things were-
Starting point is 00:32:25 It started with get bacon in your box. And then two years in, we created this bacon for life offer. Yes. And that really took off. That ripped. That was like, that was a ripper. Yeah. So you just won up to an already really good offer and said,
Starting point is 00:32:39 not only do you get it in the first box, you'll get it in every box, as long as you stay a subscribe. As long as you stay a subscriber. And, you know, ultimately the bacon costs $4. And the box, you know, you're making your profit off of. So it's like you're, it's not that big of a deal. And you definitely acquire customers for less than four, like the arbitrage on CAQ or, you know, CPA, depending on what industry you're in. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:33:00 Cost you require customers significantly higher by, basically, said differently, if you add bacon for life in, your cost to require customer drops by more than the cost of the bacon. More importantly, they stayed longer. Really? Yeah. Oh. Because now you have your free bacon. You don't want to get rid of your free bacon. And so they can't come back.
Starting point is 00:33:16 Well, now you can't. If you quit, you lose your for-life offers. But we have, we've built a whole thing around these for-life offers. Our top people have been with us from the beginning, have like six or seven-and-for-life offers that they get every month. And they're like, why would I ever go anywhere else to buy my meat? Like, I have all these for-life. Okay, talk to me more about this, because it's really interesting.
Starting point is 00:33:38 So how can they stack multiple for-life offer? Like if I'm one of the 40%, right? So I signed up on my subscription and I still have the tech malfunction. So I get free bacon every month. Okay. How am I getting these other? ones. Well, so pretty soon after, I mean, this is several years in, this was like, you know, we're fast forwarding like five or six years. We started offering like, okay, free bacon for life is
Starting point is 00:33:59 kind of getting overused, let's try ground beef for life. Okay. And then people were signing up on ground beef for life. But then our customers, our current customers are like, what the hell? Like, I want ground beef for life. So then we just started selling ground beef for life to our customers. So we're like, okay, for $50, we'll sell you. One time? Ground, yeah, ground beef for life. So we just stacked all of these, like, offers on top of each other. Very few people.
Starting point is 00:34:28 So your gross margins went down on some of those people, but, like, they're just, they're just the base. They just, like, never. We've gotten smarter at being, like, it's for a year instead of for life. And it's like, we've gotten a lot smarter and you lose them if you leave. And, like, but, yeah, bacon, bacon really built this. We built this business on bacon. So there's one channel, well, I'll just say, yeah, there's the influencer channel, which we can talk about. The other thing that, so it went Kickstarter, Arbitrage, influencer arbitrage, and then Facebook video arbitrage.
Starting point is 00:35:03 Okay, because I want to talk about, I'm guessing paid ads became the next, like, big thing. After influencer. Yeah. So how long did you do influencer? So, okay, I'm going to retrace the steps real quick. So we had Kickstarter, and then you officially open the site. Kickstarter had a backlink to you so that people would go to the Kickstarter because they'd get SEO and good SEO and get rankings, whatever, and so then they'd find you. You started getting sales every day.
Starting point is 00:35:22 You have your mess up on bacon, but you're like, you know what, screw it. Let's give everybody bacon. And so the influencer strategy worked well for the Kickstarter. So you kind of double down on that and say, how do we get every influencer on the planet to talk about Butcherbox? Yes. So did you go like Instagram, Twitter, like you just went across the different channels for influencers? No. So what we did was we figured out that there's a company Thrive Market. They're a big like online. Thrive had done this had done this thing where they
Starting point is 00:35:49 had all these influencers and they gave a lot of them equity in the company to like actively promote Thrive. They were like kind of the first ones to unlock influencer. And so first we reached out to like everyone who mentioned grass-fed beef. And then we realized that there's like a lot more people
Starting point is 00:36:07 in health and wellness. And so we like Thrive Market its URL was like slash partner slash one. Okay. And then slash two slash three. And so we just like catanated all the URLs and just like took every single person and then found their website and their contact information. Oh, so you didn't go to Thrive.
Starting point is 00:36:27 You just reverse engineered thrive. We reverse engineered all their influencers, got a lead list of 400 people. And then I think you'll like this part like because it's the offer. That's a good one. That's a good way to get your warm leads. Well, how I got my first leads for gym launch was, um, pay to VA to go to CrossFit's website, sorry, CrossFit, and literally look up every single affiliate, the affiliate box that they had. And so, because, and gym owners usually put their
Starting point is 00:36:55 personal cell phone numbers, their personal email as their actual, like, thing on the, on the CrossFit set. But they wanted to get listing because they're paying $3,000 a year to get the listing of saying, I'm an official CrossFit. But for me, I got like, at the time, this is super early. You know, we had like 1,600 names on this list, but it was enough for Facebook to make a look like audience off of that. that and that single look like audience is like what built gym launch like I didn't like I tried to hit all these different audiences and nothing work and as soon as I hit the ads to that audience it was like ding ding ding I was like oh my god yeah amazing so so you reverse engineered your list also elbow grease for both of these right like you just look at the side look at the directories and manually like paste this stuff over yeah but again you know like you used a VA I use a VA as well I use somebody in the Philippines who for like 20 cents a record it's just like here you go and you sleep and it's like there Yeah, exactly. So the way that we reached out to these influencers, I thought was pretty genius.
Starting point is 00:37:47 So we had this box, right? We're shipping a box of meat. And at the time, there was like Blue Apron and HelloFresh and all these companies. And they all even still. Blue Apron's gone, right? Are they're... 2015, they were hot. Yeah, I remember that, yeah.
Starting point is 00:38:01 Blue Apron is now was purchased by Mark Lorry who did Jet.com and they're trying to like make it or something. And then HelloFresh was a darling a little later than that. Yes. And HelloFresh is still a little bit. around. They're okay. Yeah, I'm not running on.
Starting point is 00:38:15 So at the time, Blue Apron and Hellifresh would include a recipe in the box. Okay. And our customers were like, this is really great, but I'd love a recipe. Yeah. And so what we did is we reached out to these influencers and we're like, hey, we started this company on grass fed beef because we believed in, like, eating grassfed beef. And you've talked about grassfed beef, and but we didn't see a source of where to buy it. So we'd like to be that source.
Starting point is 00:38:40 And by the way, we're shipping a. out all these boxes and we don't have any recipes. And what we'd like to do is include your recipe on and the VA would like, you know, find Taco Bowl. Yeah, yeah. Steak, whatever. And we'd love to include that in our box. And so these influencers who like trade on influence are like, of course, yeah, use my recipe,
Starting point is 00:39:02 no problem. Are you going to like link to my website and all that stuff? And we're like, yeah, yeah. They're like, by the way, what's butcher box? And we're like, perfect. Let's talk. So that was like, that was like, we called it the Trojan horse because it was like, not only do you get the recipes for free, but you also get, you know, you get in contact with all these, you get them to reply to you. As soon as they replied to us, then it was like, let's talk about Butcherbox.
Starting point is 00:39:25 So I want to double click on that real quick. So if you're dealing with influencers, you have to think about the currency they care about most. And a lot of influencers care more about fame than they do about money. And so you were able to deal in the currency they preferred. So just as like for any, any big. business is like, is there a way that we can do this that's realistic, that like actually provides real value to them in the way that they want to get value, which I think is actually like a really brilliant, like little nugget.
Starting point is 00:39:49 This is 2016. So this is a long time ago. At the time, the influencers, especially in the health and wellness space, like, didn't really know their value. Yeah. And so we were able to go to those influencers and say, look, like, we don't have any money. We can't pay you up front. I'm not paying you like $5,000 to send an email.
Starting point is 00:40:06 What we can do is we'll pay you $10 or $15. per subscriber for every month that they remain a subscriber. So for life? Yeah, that's great. Bacon for life? Yeah. Commissions for life. For missions?
Starting point is 00:40:18 Commissions for life. And people said yes. They started, yeah, I'll do that. I'll do that. And so we figured out that, you know, tweets didn't work. Facebook post didn't work. The thing that worked was a dedicated email blast where they would be like, here's Butcher Box.
Starting point is 00:40:34 Let me introduce this to you. And then ideally with a last chance, like a last chance thing. And there was always an offer, $20 off, free bacon, whatever it was. And because we're only paying these influencers $10 or $15 a month, we could do all of this and be box one profitable, meaning we still made money, because we started with a $20 profit, we still made money on that first box. Or at least it was like we made a penny.
Starting point is 00:41:01 Is the, so let's talk about, now that we're here, let's talk about the box economics. Yeah. So you're profitable on box one, which if we're juxtaposing with custom made, right? I always fundamentally, like, there are some business. It's basically, I think there are significantly fewer businesses that actually rely on outside capital to work than people, like, if you want to build rockets, it's probably
Starting point is 00:41:24 tough. You probably have to do that. But so I see a lot of businesses that, like, even that hit me up and they're like, hey, you know, I'm raising capital for my insert normal business. And I'm like, have you considered just making money? Right. No, but like for real, right? It's just like the perspective, right? And so box when you're profitable. So walk me through like with the standard box, like that most people, you know, what the cost is and all the cost associated. I know you really obsess about the box. Yeah. So the Omaha Steaks guy who introduced us to the place in Wisconsin that we worked with. It's massive, by the way. The one nugget. Yeah, he like opened the whole business. That's why I was like, I need to start now. The one nugget he left me with, he's like, listen, all we care about at Omaha.
Starting point is 00:42:08 mistakes is dollars per box. I was like, what does that mean? He means everyone at the company knows when a box comes off the line, how much money are we making off the box? And so that's how I built the business. I started the business, right? So we were charging $129. We were trying to make a $20 profit. We were only shipping from Wisconsin, which is a nightmare for California. But it was like, so we were losing money on California, but we're like, whatever, it averages out to 20. Hey guys, real quick, this podcast only grows from word of mouth, quite literally. There's no other way to grow a podcast than word of mouth. If there's some element of this that you think somebody else should hear or would be relevant
Starting point is 00:42:44 to them, it would mean the world to me if you shared this via text, via Instagram, via DM, via whatever way you like to share stuff with the people you love. Thank you. And it kept our focus. So, like, when I talk about $20 a box, I mean, like, all in because we put all the the costs associated with it in. Yeah. So you, like, fully loaded the box in terms of,
Starting point is 00:43:04 of cost. So it was $20. Card card fees. Net profit. Yeah. Rather than gross profit per box. We're saying gross profit. Gross profit. Okay, got it. Because we, again, it was hobby business. So, like, it wasn't our labor. It wasn't our. So this is pick pack. So like putting all the stuff in from our distribution center into a box. The cost of the meat. The cost of the box. The cost of the box. The cost of the dry ice that goes in the box. The credit card processing fees. the tape that goes on the box, like all of those things. And because we just became doggedly focused on dollars from her box.
Starting point is 00:43:40 And what I love about this business, even to this day, is that we get to focus on like, you know, the minutia like negotiating the price of tape. And they're super creative, like, how are we going to get our next, you know, 500,000 customers? And we get to do both.
Starting point is 00:43:56 But we just started with a DNA of like, we're going to negotiate every single line item in this box. So what is the gross margin percentage per box? Currently or they? Yeah. Oh, well, both. Sure.
Starting point is 00:44:08 Like 30% is a healthy gross margin? Okay. Yeah. We definitely want to be around or above 30%. Got it. One of the challenges that we have as a business is that, at least currently, so we're looking at pricing model change. Currently, you pay $169 and you choose six items in the box.
Starting point is 00:44:27 Okay. And so it's kind of an inflationary disaster because the prices of meat, fluctuate, wait all the time. So if you stack it with rib-eyes, you're way less than a 30% gross margin. If you stack it with really cheap stuff, you're way more than a 30% gross margin. That's an area where I feel like we're in, like, not in alignment with our customer. So I want to change that over time. But yeah, currently we're looking at a 30%. So what are net margins? They're like six. Okay. Got it. Got it. We did like six and a half last year. And certainly not a content business.
Starting point is 00:45:04 Very different. Yeah. We see six and a half, what, million? Oh, yeah, percent. I was like, that is a, okay. That was, that was making sure. And you did. And the big, the big line item, so these businesses, like, I've seen so many of them,
Starting point is 00:45:16 30% gross margin. Yeah. You got 10% to operate the place. That's salaries, technology. So the third goes to ops of your gross margin. Yeah. And then you got 20% left over for marketing and even. and EBTA, or in profit, right?
Starting point is 00:45:34 And so these businesses at scale, what they do, what you do is you market, market, market, market for years, build your name and then just try to collapse your marketing and take it all in it. And hopefully get enough word of mouth, you know, from those customers that it can at least stave off turn. Yeah, that's the CPG playbook. And that's what a lot of these companies are doing.
Starting point is 00:45:57 It's a tough business. It is a tough business. Like, I mean, it's so, it's interesting because in so many ways, it's like software. Yeah. With the exception of, like, rather than doing with development, you're doing with supply chain, that's your big, like, I said like, I'm sure. I know there's more fires. But like if I had to, if I had to simplify it into like the big buckets, most of the time, I feel like that's where, well, won't you tell me. Oh, that's. Yeah, no, I agree.
Starting point is 00:46:18 I mean, so, you know, that was a blue apron's whole thing. They raised a whole bunch of money. And it was all like, we should be valued at a software multiple. Yeah. Nowadays, box subscription companies are not valued. software multiple because there's like actual physical product being sold. And I don't think stick is as high as like a, I don't know, well, a consumer, you know, consumer tech company, like Shopify, for example, they have 60% annual retention for like new,
Starting point is 00:46:45 new customers, right? I would imagine that if that in the consumables business, that that would be unbelievably good. Yeah, yeah. What's your retention on like a year one customer? Gosh, it's not how we look at it. Okay, interesting. Yeah, probably around 60%, so many percent. Yeah, and that's like best, I mean, those are like best in class numbers.
Starting point is 00:47:06 I mean, there's a reason that you're doing. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Is it 600 now that you guys are doing? Yeah, well, it's like 550. Okay. Yeah, the 600 has been out there, but it's really 550. So, yeah, we're, you have 550 million profitable since day one. And you own 70%?
Starting point is 00:47:22 Yeah, so I gave equity to most employees, like early. Like a soft work. Like a venture-backed one. I was like, oh, this is what you do. You give out equity. Which... Are you happy about that? In many ways, yes.
Starting point is 00:47:37 Like, the people who helped me build this business, the people who help me hack through the jungle are all millionaires. And, you know, that's cool. That's, like, really neat. But also, we have... If you don't want to raise money, which I don't. And you don't want to go public. which I don't, and you don't want to sell, which I don't.
Starting point is 00:48:00 It's like, how do you cash people out? Yeah, right. That has been, that is a concern of mine all the time. It's like, so every year we've actually done a, we've taken profits and repurchase shares. Got it. For anybody who wants it. Yeah. And so then you basically set the valuation every year.
Starting point is 00:48:17 Actually, we do, yeah, we, there's a, there's a 409A about, somebody comes in and does a valuation. Yeah. We also have done this thing, which is, I don't know if your listeners are interested, but we, we've done this thing. This year, which is a reverse Dutch auction. Okay. So we are like, we're going to allocate this much money to buy shares. And then people can say what they're willing to sell at.
Starting point is 00:48:38 And then we bought them that way, which is pretty interesting. That's awesome. Yeah. That's very interesting. Yeah. It's a really, it's actually more common now. And it's a really great way to get like what the actual market value is. Because when you do a valuation is like not.
Starting point is 00:48:52 It's like, dude who makes it up. Who knows. Yeah. So, yeah. So, I mean, you know, just on that point. What did you, what was the reverse duct auction valuation of the business? It was like 50% of the, what the, um, 498 was. What was the 49A?
Starting point is 00:49:09 They have one valuation and then they do this control premium that they take off. But the, the valuation is about a one, one for one with revenues. Okay. So like one X. Okay. Got it. Uh, which is probably low. Who knows?
Starting point is 00:49:22 I mean, it doesn't matter. Yeah. Because you're not trying to sell. Yeah. Yeah, one for one with revenues is what people. Yeah, I'll give $1 so that you have a trillion dollar valuation. Yeah, exactly. 0.0.0% percent, right?
Starting point is 00:49:32 Thank you. Yeah, so, you know, the 30% that other people own is it's a $150 million problem. That's a big problem. Yeah, yeah. Do you see this a problem? I don't. I mean, you have to get comfortable with telling people to be patient. Right.
Starting point is 00:49:49 Right. It's like, look, we're not going to spend $150 million here. No, this is super relevant for me. Yeah. And, you know, so during COVID, COVID was, we grew the business tremendously and we almost shut off marketing. So, I mean, we just made so much profit. And then we bought all these shares and we just started buying and buying and buying. But then inflation took over. And so our inflationary disaster, like our margins just got super compressed. We went from like a 30% gross margin to a 25% gross margin after doing two price increases. After two. So it was like there was no money. Yeah. And we never like, ran out of money, but, you know, we're all looking around being like, dude, we just, like, did a share buyback, like, for $20 or $30 million over the past, like, three years. Yeah. I'd really love that money right now. Yeah. That'd be nice. So, hey, can I, uh, in no Indian universe? Yeah. Do you want some shares? Yeah. All right. Well, did you, so with, so this is, this is a great
Starting point is 00:50:44 follow-up question. So do you take regular distributions from the company, or have you just been, like, kind of like, you took once or twice, and that's like my, you know, my family set and now everything's still like. Me personally? Yeah, yeah. I take a salary and a bonus. And then very early on, because we started as an LLC, I owned all of the technology and employed everybody. And the company bought that from me. And so there's been distributions to cover that.
Starting point is 00:51:12 And you controlled both companies. So you got to pick what that was valued at. That had to be third party. Oh, was it? Okay. Got to be fair to this. I'm not all you, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:51:22 Okay. So when you've been doing the buybacks, were you at like 50-50 and then over time you've kind of like bought your way back to 70-30 or? Yeah, I think, I think, yeah, I think it was like 60 and now it's, well, originally the Omaha Stakes guy and there was also a brand guy. My biggest mistake when I started the company was I valued the company at a stupidly low rate. And so I had just raised $10 million on a $30 million valuation. Right. I started this and I'm like, it's going to be a hobby.
Starting point is 00:51:54 be. This isn't going to be anything. So the Omaha States guy is like, I can make all these connections. I can do all the stuff. And it's a $75,000 worth of work. And I'm like, well, I don't have that. So it could be equity. And he's like, okay, great. How much is the company worth? I was like, 750 grand. So he took 10% of the company. So he's what he's a 10% stakeholder? Not anymore. I bought him out. And then there was a brand guy, which was the same thing, 10% of the company. And as we got going, it was like, ah, that's like way too much. And they're not doing anything. Right, yeah, yeah. They did one-time work. It's like one-time work, right. And so we bought them out, we bought them out when the valuation was $48 million.
Starting point is 00:52:31 Well, I'm sure they were thrilled. And it was, yeah, they got $200,000 a month for two years. Okay. I'm sure he was still thrilled, you know? Right. Probably more than he made at Omaha. Totally. Yeah, way more. One good phone call for him. Yep. Right. A little bit of work.
Starting point is 00:52:45 Yeah, yeah, yeah. Except for life. Man, there's so many directions I want to go. but to put a button on on on the story and then I want to go back and kind of unpack some numbers and things like that yeah yeah if you're not going to IPO yep and you're not going to sell the company and the CPG playbook is that at some point you turn off the marketing when is that yeah um not anytime soon okay so you just want you you want to keep growing for a minute yeah so um have a goal like a billion a year in sales or i mean a billion uh i'm very goal oriented so I do have a billion on my weightboard, but I recognize that before that I had a million and before that I had a 10 million and then 100 million. So it'll be enough for sure. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:53:28 Totally. Then it'll be enough. Yeah. And then you'll be happy. And then you'll be happy. You know, I'm just listening around. Yep. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:53:37 I would like, I think running this to a billion of revenue would be a lot of fun. I don't know how fast that's going to be. We've definitely learned that it's gotten a lot harder. Like, as you grow, you just lose more people. And, you know, it's just harder. Yeah, 1% on how many customers do you have right now? Like 430,000? Yeah, so 1% on 430,000.
Starting point is 00:53:58 It's like, oh, all of a sudden, that's just, you know, 4,300 customers that we just have, if we lose 1%. It's like, okay, that's a decent amount of our customers. And you're like, well, if it's 10% churn annually. Yeah. And you said, I think you were keeping, well, 60 of you're one or something like. No, I mean, our churn is like 3% a month. Right. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:54:13 So that's 30-ish percent or whatever. It means you have to sign up 12,000 people a month before. you stop treading water. Just a chill. Just, yeah. Yeah. So it's like it's, those numbers just get bigger. It's 400 a day. Yeah, just like, they're leaving, they're leaving. Yeah, they're leaving. Yeah, they're falling out right. Don't leave people. Yeah. We have a great
Starting point is 00:54:31 product. Dude, you have bacon for life. What are we talking about? Yeah, you're losing your for life offer. Yeah. I really do love the, um, the lifetime, the lifetime offers. Um, yeah. I have a book that's coming out that talks about this, this particular offer structure. So, um, a lot of fun. Yeah, lifetime offer. people getting a box of meat seemed really magical. Like, it was like, wait, this is going to show up. It's going to be frozen.
Starting point is 00:54:54 Like, I don't trust it. So money back guarantee, like, no questions asked. We'll just refund you. Let me talk to some of the fears of business owners around money back guarantees because I talk about them want to. What percentage of customers do you get who ask for refunds on like a monthly basis? Oh, gosh. I don't even, like, so small I don't even know the number. Right.
Starting point is 00:55:13 And the conversion increase is certainly worth having. For sure. For sure. Also, like, you know, one of our core values is being customer obsessed. Like, we actually want to deliver you an amazing product. Right. And so if we fail at that, you should get your money back.
Starting point is 00:55:29 Yeah. That's like, and it's like, well, I'm worried about that. We'll fix your product. Right. Make your product better. Like, spend time obsessing over your product. And you'll do very well with money back. It's like dollar per box and then also like happiness per box.
Starting point is 00:55:43 Like the customer side, like your delight per box. Totally. Yeah. I mean, it's all about your, well, the metric that commonly uses the net promoter score. So it's all about your satisfaction with the, and we're constantly asking. What's your NPS right now? It's like a 63. That's great.
Starting point is 00:55:59 Yeah. Yeah, we're pretty happy with that. We want a perfect experience every time. Yeah. And when you're shipping multiple species, you know, you had 12 to 15 species. Do you use fish now? Yeah, we do seafood. How did that, how did you get, was that just a whole other, have to find another supplier?
Starting point is 00:56:15 Yeah, I mean, we don't use any of, you know. that so basically we got going we'll go all the way back we we got going we're shipping out boxes we're making $20 a box the influencer thing is working that we get to about 6,000 subscribers and it was clear to me that we had no idea what we were doing it was like okay we've been faking it that's great but like we need somebody who knows how to buy an adult yeah we need an adult right there and so again I went to LinkedIn usually while on the toilet and I reached out to this guy who lived in Boston and ran meat and seafood at one of these big grocery chains. But he had
Starting point is 00:56:56 retired. And so I was like, interesting background. Let's talk. Pulled him out of retirement. And he came and started purchasing meat and seafood for us. Meat and then seafood. And I mean, the saving, my whole thing was, okay, we're shipping 60,000 pounds of meat. I've got, all I have to believe is that somebody can save me like 25, cents a pound and this is like worth it right so um he came in and just he's like you guys are paying he's like second day he's like you guys are paying enough in chicken breast that you could send people three pounds instead of one pound do you want me to do that and I'm like yeah yeah that'd be great yeah yeah yeah 25 cents was the target and he was like I can give you a buck and a half yeah I mean multiples of his of his salary back and you know I think it's really important to that
Starting point is 00:57:44 you hire experts in certain areas at the right time, but in certain areas. I want to, so I want to hit on the meta part of this, which is like, all right, like the big, the big turning points because I like, I like, like, what are those, those inflection points in the business? So it's like, all right, you switch from raising money to pre-selling. That's probably, I feel like that's like setting yourself up on the right path. Okay, so that was number one. Number two is you realize this influencer thing has some legs to it.
Starting point is 00:58:09 And then you go hardcore on getting influencers. You also reverse engineer somebody else's database, which I highly recommend if you're trying to reach out to people to find the high, like I call them HVTs, but high value targets. Like how do we how do we find the HVTs and then and then grab them? Okay, so you do that. You have a happy accident with free bacon that ends up being a core component of the offer. And then later, you turn on the lifetime version of that and then you do that across kind of horizontally across the box. You obsess about gross margin per box or whatever your unit economics are of the business. So you got super dialed on that and just want to make every single penny count because you're on the same side of the table figuratively as the customer.
Starting point is 00:58:50 You got experts in at the right times, the branding person up front, the Omaha Steaks guy, later the meat purchasing guy that all came in at key points to like unlock, you know, levels of profitability and growth. What are some of the other ones that that might have been skipped over in the- She's, man, that's good. Just like boil it down in a good way. I think working like so our backbone today, we still don't own our backbone. So distribution, we don't do. We don't own our own farms. We don't own our own.
Starting point is 00:59:20 Do you want to? No. Okay. Because we believe that it's better to work with partners. It's kind of like the Toyota approach. Work with partners. Hold them, hold their feet to the fire, hold them to a tight spec, have them do things they're not doing for anyone else, but trust that they know better than me.
Starting point is 00:59:38 I don't know anything about farming. I don't know anything about slaughterhouses. Like that's a bad place for me to spend my time. The only piece of our entire backbone that we control is dry ice. We have two dry ice plants. And that's because if you don't have dry ice, you can't ship a box. And so we were like, it's like a great insurance policy. Everything else.
Starting point is 00:59:58 Because if you lose that, revenue goes to zero. Yeah. Right. Everything else is like not, I don't think it's worth us taking. And so, and I think that's like, one. common mistake in box subscription companies, in overfunded companies, and just with the entrepreneurs in general is- Pretty good, yeah, you need to, you need to like own everything. You need to control all of it. And that has been a huge, it's actually been a huge part of our success. Well, then let's,
Starting point is 01:00:24 so, because I'm sure you've had partnerships that didn't go well. Yep. And you've obviously been really good at building these relationships. So to the greatest degree possible, do you have any kind of test for how you judge a partner's ability to fulfill on their promises before you've started working with them because obviously you know you're bringing a huge amount of business there's a significant risk that you take on by having a partner do something bad
Starting point is 01:00:51 there's obviously with food there's huge liabilities of a whole you know a whole state has rotten meat it's like I mean it's a it's more of a PR nightmare I mean it took Chipotle years to to live down the salmonella issue that they had as a micro example yeah so I mean on the on the meat side we do robust safety audits and you like we're not working with you unless we've done a whole bunch of audits on the other partner side we're generally trying to work with the best best people like best in class so you just look at an industry and say okay we we want to find okay so of all the
Starting point is 01:01:21 different farms in the u.s that are grass fed who's the biggest and the best and you just trying to deal with them yeah i mean you're you try to balance like um helping small farmers right um and working with big farmers because a small farmer might have 50 head and we might need like 100,000 head. Right. So we can't work with 2,000 small farmers. We generally work with collectives that would then work with the farmers. So we're working with that collective saying this is what we want. This is our spec.
Starting point is 01:01:52 This is how we want to raise. And then they go and find the farmers. And again, it's like we don't want to be on the ground. You know, I love meeting with farmers and doing all that. but like that can't be what we do. Inspecting hoves is probably not here. So it's like really important to know what you're good at and what you're not good at. And anything that you're not good at,
Starting point is 01:02:11 including picking up the phone 1100 times, like just don't do. Try to get someone else to do it because you can't, I don't think you can build a business unless you're feeling that flow and you're feeling like really engaged. And that can only be done in the work that you're really good at. You've been really good at picking those people, though. So like what's your,
Starting point is 01:02:29 obviously there's the reputation of the company. Yeah. But also you're really good at picking, like, the Omaha Steaks guy and the branding guy that you picked out. And even Nick, who did those first, you know, 1,100 calls. Like, it's an uncanny trait. Like, you've been really good at it. Just, I'm just, like, listening to the story. I haven't mentioned, I'm sure there were some horror stories.
Starting point is 01:02:46 But, like, it seems like you've had a huge amount of success. And I feel like if I had had a different entrepreneur in the chair, I would have, I could totally hear the total other side of the story. I went to a couple partners early. And what I learned is you got to control everything. If you want, you know, like, I've, you know, like, I've heard that side. And so you're obviously better at picking partners than most people. So, like, what do you think about in trying to isolate, like, this person will work? I mean, so early on when you're talking about your first employees, I have this analogy, I think I stole it from someone, but, like, building a company is, like, hacking through the jungle with machetes.
Starting point is 01:03:24 And so you're just like, there's, you're just dropped in the middle of the jungle. You have a machete. you're like, I don't know where we're going. At that point, you need people who are just going to hack day and night with you. Like, you just, and it's grit. Yeah. So I'm looking for athletes. I'm looking for people who have failed at something.
Starting point is 01:03:39 I'm looking for people with a chip on their shoulder, you know, daddy issues, all of that. Because I've got all that. So, like, you know, I want to, you know. As all great men do. No. Yeah. I, uh, that's the type of person I want. And then as you grow, uh, you realize that like, okay, we need some experience here.
Starting point is 01:03:57 And how do we get experience? One thing, this doesn't totally answer your question, but one thing that we did that was like, I think pretty, I thought was pretty smart is I call it the barbell strategy. We hired people like out of retirement because there were so far along in their career. And we found that the middle, like so really young and really old, worked incredibly well. I would say personally, I've had a lot of experience with that too. Yeah. And the middle is like they're super busy. They've got kids.
Starting point is 01:04:25 They've got all these commitments. They want this to be like the one mark on their career. career the career like careerists rather than people who want to do the work hunger hunger yeah it's interesting because the people in the very beginning want to work all the time because they want to learn a lot the people at the end want to work because they have nothing else to do and they want to in some ways like have their experience be used like they want to be useful legacy right and that both of those are actually concentrated on the work itself rather than the label ascribed to the work totally and everyone a lot of times people in the middle are it's like you're three years on my resume uh and i want to you know just
Starting point is 01:04:58 leverage this brand. I need to go from director to VP and then I need this and I need this. And yeah, we just found that people on the ends were just like so grateful. And so like my title obsession. Yeah. Yeah, I hate it. My meet guy, I just remember this dinner I was at. And it's like, my me guy and blue aprons meet guy was there. And blue aprons meet guy is like 32 years old and like skinny jeans and a nice best. And my meet guy's is like grizzled like 65 year old. It's like, who do you think is buying chicken? for cheaper. Yeah. Like, my guy looks like me.
Starting point is 01:05:32 Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like, yeah. I mean, so I don't really, like, I don't really know what's happened here. Like, I like to say, like, the business wanted to be something way bigger than I expected. Interesting. And I just honored that as like, some of these people just kind of fell into my lap. Yeah. But I definitely, my first company, I knew people were off culture and I hired them anyway.
Starting point is 01:05:55 And this time around, we wrote down our core values and we're like, okay, this is what we're hiring for. One of our core values is relentless improvement. And to your question about partners, any partner you work with, there's going to be problems. Sure. And we're just not afraid to talk about them. We do quarterly business reviews.
Starting point is 01:06:16 We're like, you know, auditing. We're doing a whole bunch of stuff and telling you what you're doing wrong so you can fix it. Because most partners don't want to like just. They want to fire the relationship or not talk to you. It's like, no, let's just keep getting better. Yeah, let's just get better. Like, we want to lock arms with you and get you better. And so we're also, because we're trying to build a long-term thing, like, we're just locking
Starting point is 01:06:35 arms with partners and trying to just move forward with them. Talk to me. So given the growth rate that you had, so it was like, was it, it was like $5 million was the first, like, or second year, I think, of business, right? Yeah. So we started in September of 2015, and we did like 200 in the Kickstarter. We did like 500 grand. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:06:53 And then we did $5 million and then $303 million. And then $105 million. 220, then COVID hit, we went to 450. Yeah. And then 500, and then 500-ish the next year? 450, 550, 550, 550, 5-70. Yeah. And then last, two years ago, so 2023, we went down for the first year.
Starting point is 01:07:13 Okay. Which was pretty heartbreaking for a team that, you know, prize ourselves on growth. So talk to me. And then last year, we started growing again. Okay. That's good. So I have two follow up. So first one is talk to me about rush.
Starting point is 01:07:26 Like, what's your, because, like, you grew, really fast. Yep. And then you were essentially flat for like basically four years. Yeah. How does your perspective on where you want to take the company affect how you run the company with regards to growth's rate? Yeah. And like rush around goals. Yeah. I like talking about a rush a lot because I think it's where all mistakes happen. And you grew really fast without the intention of growing really fast. Yeah. Which I find has happened to me multiple times. Yeah. You know, I think that we, as So we grew, obviously, we grew incredibly quickly. The biggest mistake that we made, the biggest rush that we made was we, the wheels kind of felt like they were falling off the bus at like $450.
Starting point is 01:08:15 And we decided to bring in a whole bunch of people to help, like, fix the wheels. We need bodies. We need bodies. We need bodies. And we need managers. We need people in the middle. The middle. Right.
Starting point is 01:08:28 Yeah. What was head count, just so I have context, what was head count at that? At, like... I mean, going into COVID, we're 85 people. So doing 200 going into COVID with a head count of 80. Yeah. That's great. And then coming, like, at end of 21, we were at like, two...
Starting point is 01:08:48 Like, maybe 160. And then we got to a height of 240. Yeah. with designs on, you know, we're going to be like 300 people. Yeah. And now I'm like, you know what? Like 150 sounds really good.
Starting point is 01:09:01 Right. Yeah. So, yeah, we currently have, we have 25 associates in our drives facility and then like 170 people outside of that. And so the rush was we hired a lot of people. And what happens to companies, and apparently I've learned now that this is a classic $500 million trap. So you can add a book to your thing later.
Starting point is 01:09:21 The $500 million trap. is something bad happens. You hire a bunch of people because you don't know enough. And everyone starts saying no. Yeah. And you go from capital E entrepreneurship, like a bunch of pirates, like very little process.
Starting point is 01:09:37 We're just going and growing and like to like, oh, we need process. Like we need capital P process. And entrepreneurship needs to come way down here. And that's what happens. You guys are a bunch of kids. You're a bunch of kids like you, Mike, are like, you know, have all these ideas and like we need to come. Rew to you.
Starting point is 01:09:54 And that's what happened. And at the meantime, I broke my arm. Like, everything in my life kind of fell apart at the same time. And it was, it was a slog. And I'm really proud. Like, last year we grew like 6%. And I'm like, fuck out. Like, we'll take it.
Starting point is 01:10:11 Yeah. And, you know, so sometime along the journey, I went from like, this is a hobby to, I'm going to just flip this thing. Like, let me build this up and sell it for $100 million. And I went on a couple meetings and I was like, it just doesn't feel right. Interesting. And then I just, it just kind of over time came to me of the meat industry is broken. Animals are not being treated well in this country.
Starting point is 01:10:40 And that's like hurting the health of like people who are eating it. And it's like, I just wish there was a company that like wasn't funded, had no one breathing down their neck who could just take the play the long ball. And just like, this might take 25 years, it might take 100 years, but who cares? Like, we're in it for the long time. And then after a while, it was like, after pointing on everyone else who should be doing that, it's like, oh, maybe that's me. Yeah. And so I have no idea if this is what's going to happen.
Starting point is 01:11:08 But the plan is to build a multi-generational long-term hold. If you look at food companies in the U.S., many of them are family-controlled, multi-generational, long-term holds. and so that's kind of like that's how I've built since the past few years while reinserting myself and becoming a
Starting point is 01:11:29 pirate organization again does it feel better? Yes I mean we we did a lot of work in the middle layer like a lot of directors a lot of yeah at our height we had 230 people and 85 managers
Starting point is 01:11:48 so like the average person and have like one person underneath them. I just equated to like the restaurant worker where the receipt comes out and they grab it. And they're like, where's the chicken parm? Yeah, yeah. On their phone. Like chicken par.
Starting point is 01:12:02 You know, it's like, dude, what do you do all day? Yeah. And so we've done a lot of work in, like, retasking people and just making sure that people are in the right seats. Doing things. Doing things. And it feels much better. We're moving much quicker.
Starting point is 01:12:17 We're growing. We're, yeah. So you're losing 12,000 customers a month. Yeah, something like that, yeah. Do you have any idea what the split is of new customers per month in terms of where the sources of customers come from? And is there an acquisition channel that you have not mentioned so far that has, that majorly contributes to that?
Starting point is 01:12:38 Yeah. So right now we're, we're heavily on referral and heavily on meta. Those are like the two areas of it. So ads and referral, like meta ads and referrals. referrals. What's the split? We're like 30% referral. Okay. And then I don't know what meta is because it's, you know, there's also organic and Google and whatnot. Let's say 30% meta and 20% organic affiliate, all the other. Yeah, influencers are 10 or whatever it is. Yeah. Referrals been really interesting. We now, if you're a member, you can refer a friend for a trial box and it costs $20.
Starting point is 01:13:16 And we've just seen that work really well. Does the refer, what does the refer or get? Nothing. Okay. Yeah. We tried a whole bunch of different things that you get $50, you get this, you get that. What they, what they like the most is giving their friends a box that's almost free. They just pay for shipping and handling.
Starting point is 01:13:34 Oh, so like a free plus shipping, basically. So it's like boxes free. It's $20 for shipping and handling kind of thing. Yeah, exactly. Interesting. So that's another offer. Yep. And that's worked really well.
Starting point is 01:13:43 Like the, you obviously get a lot of people who just take one box. They're like, sweet, free meat, and then they cancel. But, you know, executed well, you see a lot of people stay, and then they just become great customers. And if you, yeah, if you like a referred customer is a better customer. And so we've really leaned into that as a program. Because it compounds at scale, which is why it's so great. Yeah, exactly. Yeah, we've shipped a box to 1.7 million, 1.75 million households in this country.
Starting point is 01:14:11 And so at a certain point, you're like, how do we inspire those people to do the sales? on our behalf rather than us trying to like, you know, retarget people on meta. Yeah. So there's two things that I wanted to get into. So one is the ad strategy. And second is, if I'm not mistaken, you guys did a media play, correct? Recently. Yep.
Starting point is 01:14:35 Yeah, I want to talk about that. Okay. So I think that's really cool. So let's do media play first. Okay. Yeah. Yeah, we bought a company called Truffle Shuffle. It's these two guys.
Starting point is 01:14:43 One's actually in Vegas. We're going to see him tonight for dinner. And they raised money on Shark Tank. And during COVID, they decided that they were going to sell truffles direct to consumer, these little mushrooms that are hard to get. And then once they started selling truffles, they realized that no one knows how to cook them. And so they started doing these instructional videos. Yeah, you have my dejorno, and I'm just putting my truffles on top.
Starting point is 01:15:04 Exactly. People are like, how do I, what do I do with this? And that took off. And this is like COVID where. Everyone's at home trying breastpieces are bored. All these corporations are trying to like treat their staff well and do them stuff and whatnot. So they ran a pretty interesting business for a while. Great content.
Starting point is 01:15:24 Thousands of classes where they're teaching people how to cook and inspiring people live. Interesting. Also recorded, but live. Yeah. And they just like that they're experts at hosting a live class to cook. Yeah. It's virtual. Virtual.
Starting point is 01:15:42 Yeah. Our biggest challenge. as a company. If you look at our churn, the people who are leaving, our biggest challenge as a company is how do I inspire you to take the meat out of your freezer? Yeah, they put it in there and then they're, oh, I've got two months worth. Like, I don't need any. Right. And people think of their freezer as like a savings account rather than a, like, so when you say what's for dinner, you open your fridge and look inside or you look on your phone and order something. So how are we going to like inspire you? Well, one way to do that is if we do cooking classes. So we, you know, really like the founders, Jason and Tyler. and just decided that it was a good fit. We got it for, you know, like a good price. And we ended up ingesting them. And so now we're doing cooking classes for our members. We're doing it.
Starting point is 01:16:26 And that's included in the subscription. Yeah, including the subscription. Do you do, so how much of it is public and, like, available for people who are not buyers? We're trying to figure that out. Okay. Because I'm so, like, yeah. I don't know how big of a media company in terms of, like, you know,
Starting point is 01:16:41 impressions they do, but like, because my whole, My whole business model around content is just demonstration, right? It's just like show, don't sell. Yeah. And then the selling will occur. Yeah. And so like whenever you have the opportunity, in my opinion, that's the, that's the most elegant, you know, way of selling.
Starting point is 01:16:58 Yes. And so like these, you know, high-end chefs having these really engaged high-end, you don't mean, obviously. They are relatable. Yeah. They're high-end. Yeah. Because on one level, there's the retention piece.
Starting point is 01:17:11 But I have this theory around the idea that this is, this is. I don't have a double-blind placebo test here, but this is Alex's opinion. I think that you retain customers that pay for a subscription with free content. That's available for everyone for a couple of reasons.
Starting point is 01:17:27 Number one, a lot of people don't log in the stuff. It's just like, you're not like, oh, I'm going to go log in. What's my password? And then it's already, you're already like gone. It's not going to happen. So the reason that I have like all my questions on my site are all free and also available with no login is for that purpose. And it's certainly been a significantly better thing than me trying to hide it behind, even an opt-in wall, just to collect people's emails. You can watch them.
Starting point is 01:17:52 And then at the halfway point or whatever, it just says, hey, you can opt in if you want. You can also not opt in and keep watching the video. Yeah. And it's been exceptional for lead generation. And so the thing one is that I don't think a lot of people, I think the utilization is not as high as I would like it to be, even when you make these really high-end things. The second is that it certainly doesn't drive. I think that you will drive more, not you, but like one, anybody can drive more sales with making the media available to everyone.
Starting point is 01:18:21 It also makes it more shareable. And I think that spins the referral machine. You get the media machine from platforms. And then that will drive top of funnel sales and awareness. And I think that maybe you put a handful of them behind a paywall if you want to as a membership benefit. I'd be curious to know if, because if we're thinking about like how do we solve the problem, Sorry, this is me. Like, how do we solve the problem of the customers I have bank too much meat and don't cook it because they're not inspired enough to cook?
Starting point is 01:18:52 So it's like, okay, so we're trying to maximize on consumption in two ways, consumption of meat, but consumption of meat cooking so that it leads to consumption of meat, right? And so if you were to pre-educate, right, where people watch some show about some truffle meat dish and then purchase, they're purchasing with intention. to make a specific dish. And I think it's almost like it, it like colors them a different type of customer because their consumption experience was pre-framed with recipes versus I'm going to buy meat because this is good quality meat and it's a good deal and I'm getting free bacon.
Starting point is 01:19:30 This is me just, I'm totally spitballing here. But like that was, that was, that was, when Harley told me that you bought that media business, that was immediately where I guessed or where I thought you were going on. I was like, that's, that's brilliant. Yeah. Like, push as much of that as seemingly possible out, incorporate the product
Starting point is 01:19:47 into everything. Way more eyeballs come in. Existing customers still attribute the benefit of their subscription to the show because they're still going to consume the meat. Right. And so you still get the positive brand association, even if it's free for other people.
Starting point is 01:20:05 Right. And that was something that actually, like, I stumbled upon that. So, because I've had media business is, right? And there's always this big fear in anything media related, especially if you have memberships and things behind paywalls, that what if I give away too much for free that I upset my paid customers? But in my experience, it hasn't been the case at all, one, because basically no one logs into anything. It's big, you know, big thing, you know, big point number
Starting point is 01:20:33 one. But secondarily, that I think the human brain has a very hard time attributing whether the content they watched was behind a paywall or not behind a paywall, I think we zoom out and say, has Butcher Box provided $129 of value to me this month? And you think about the one meal that you cooked, whether from a recipe that you found, whether it was your recipe that was behind a paywall, not behind a paywall, or just that they saw on a cooking show and used your meat, right? That wasn't even associated with the truffle hustle. Was that what it was? Truffle shuffle. Truffle shuffle. Yeah. Yeah. And so anyways, that's my genius. Two cents.
Starting point is 01:21:13 Yeah, that's more than two cents probably. That was probably worth more than two cents. I'll come back in a couple years and we'll, you know, I'll have crossed off the billion. Still won't be enough. But yeah, I mean, that's the beauty of owning content is pushing it out more, doing more with it, serving our member. But I think that gives me a lot to think about in terms of like,
Starting point is 01:21:33 how are we pushing it to non-members? Because we've definitely been careful. We've been like, well, this should be a benefit for our members. Yeah. I would just, I'd be curious because I think that because the math problem, right, is, is solvable of does the increase in conversion and retention on members with this added benefit, which I'm sure you've measured like now that we added in the box, has it measurably reduced churn or has it measurably increased conversion rate on the page, whatever, versus the amount of new customers that come in with first, second, third, third, touchpoint via content. Yeah. And my bet would be that you would, this is my bet, obviously.
Starting point is 01:22:12 I don't know, I don't know. But my bet would be that it'd be more on the top end. And then from the ads perspective, because I know you run a ton of advertising, I'm sure. It's like, I feel like that kind of content taking them, because if you have it public, then you can let the algorithm tell you which pieces are the fire, fire pieces of content of the cooking and then push that out as top of funnel awareness ads, you know, retarget people who are at, you know, do 50%, 75%, whatever it is, with now your conversion stuff, but they have positive brand sentiment because like, now they're like, they're in, they're in
Starting point is 01:22:45 the market. You know what I mean? They just consumed this. They're literally, they were watched enough to be inspired. They were inspired enough to watch. And so now we just want to see if they're inspired enough to buy. Love it. Just, you know.
Starting point is 01:22:55 Love it. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. What they found was they put up all these ads like billboards and stuff trying to get new customers, but they found that it actually drew.
Starting point is 01:23:05 drove more repeat orders. And so that's similar. Like if we put out content to the- They'll be reminded to eat. Yeah, they're meat. That's right. Right. I think it's brilliant.
Starting point is 01:23:16 And I think that, like, I'm really excited to see what you do with it. How long ago was the acquisition? We bought it in June of last year. Okay, so it's really, still pretty recent. Yeah. We just launched a spice line with them. We've done a bunch of social content.
Starting point is 01:23:30 But yeah, I think, you know, making more of it public would probably be a good thing. And so the last piece was the ad strategy for Facebook. So what do you, what's been your thinking process for generating probably the amount of creative? I'm assuming, I mean, you've got to, I mean, yeah, you probably have to put out 50 pieces a day in order to maintain that kind of. And you probably have gotten a crash course on running ads if you're the CEO of this business. Yeah. So we've, we've gone all sorts of different ways. We have had ad agencies work on our stuff. So buy our ads and, you know, update and whatnot. We've done in, in, house, we've gone back and forth. We're currently outsourced on our ad buying. Interesting. So outsource media buyers? Who does the creative? They do as well. They do the creative too. We do some. We give them guidelines, but there you do it. The reason why was we weren't moving fast enough. So it has become, as you said, yeah, it has become a game of, it's like an arm's race. You've got to like be changing your creative all the time. And we noticed that there were
Starting point is 01:24:31 multiple, multiple meetings to like talk about and obsess about all these things. It's like we, this isn't going to work. We can't do this. So we, you know, we've made a hard pivot. I imagine at some point we'll come, we'll be like, okay, we're paying way too much. We need to like do it in house. But the speed is they charge a percentage of aspen? Yeah, they do.
Starting point is 01:24:50 Yeah. But so when you're spending a lot, that's a lot of money. Yeah. And that's baked into the cack. That's based into the cac. Yeah. Yeah. Have you done multiple different agencies over time? We have. I mean, there's certain agencies that work well at a smaller size and certain ones that work at a bigger size.
Starting point is 01:25:09 We haven't been able to grow with like one agency. Okay. You've had multiple at... Yeah, at different times. Okay. But you have one right now. It's not like you have four running for you. Yeah. Got it. Okay. Because I had a buddy who had a really big company and he had four different agencies working at the same time. And he was like, yeah, the world. world's big. I need all of them just fully focused. And I was like, are you worried about like, cross over? And that was the kind of the response was just like, well, there's 300 million Americans. Yeah, there's a lot of Americans. I'm not giving them. No one's getting any other access besides like pixel
Starting point is 01:25:44 traffic. And so they can make their own lookalikes off of whatever they think is going to, going to convert. And if there is some overlap, there's probably overlap with 10 other thousand companies that are also advertising. And so it's more because I think the deficit, like the constraint is more the creative power and mental and mental bandwidth and attention and skill than um then then really anything else and so like what like one team and you probably know this from the from from the companies or at least you've experienced this to so I have um there's this law I can't remember what is Tom Billy talked about it but basically the square root of every company does 50% of the value creation so it's like if you have 100 employees 10 people do 50% of the value creation and I like
Starting point is 01:26:25 I thought about it. I was like, that sounds about right in terms of like where's the contribution towards revenue and all that kind of stuff. And so when you think about that from the agency owner perspective, it's like, I'm getting these four really good people from this agency on my stuff, but I also want the four really good people from this company and the four really good people from this company. So it was just like a interesting thing. So you had, you've had one agency that runs all of it. They're doing, I can't believe they're doing, they're doing, they're doing really everything. So how, like, they're going out to farms. I mean, we do some stuff internally as well. But they're going to like, so they're like, so they're like,
Starting point is 01:26:55 going to farms and capturing stuff. No, we have all that B-roll. Because you have B-roll. We have all that. So they're not really taking any, they're not going all the way of shooting. We have all that content. And yeah,
Starting point is 01:27:09 I mean, I think Facebook has been a wild place for the past few years. It's like either working really well or not working at all. We've also had more competitors come into our space. Hello Fresh launched company. That is like,
Starting point is 01:27:24 Hello Meat. Hello Meat, yeah. Is it really? No. I was like, I was like, I don't even want to mention their name. Okay, no free press. Yeah, no free press for them.
Starting point is 01:27:33 But, you know, everyone's copying us. Everyone's advertising against us, which I think is a good thing, but it's like, here's why we're better than Butcher Box, you know, and it's a different world. You know, I think there's been a lot of conversation about this on Twitter recently around, like, Facebook is great for retargeting. Somebody comes to your website, great. Top of the funnel? little bit harder. Top of the funnel, meaning like you're exposing your brand to new eyeballs.
Starting point is 01:28:00 That's where I think, you know, in order to grow from, to just continue the growth, which we have to do, we have to have 12,000 to 15,000 people a month, like, at least. We just need a lot more top of the funnel awareness. And one of the challenges I've had is driving top of the funnel awareness has been really hard. It makes sense for the media acquisition. That's why I, like, I heard that was like brilliant. Yeah, yeah. So we've done other things. Like we've, we've tried to do a lot of like brand top of the funnel stuff that has not worked. I'm hopeful on the media thing. But really we're trying to like get the word out about what we're doing. We're trying to change the industry. But the, yeah, Facebook has been, I mean, you could see it in our numbers. We were like grow, grow, grow, grow, grow. And then there was the iOS change in 2021. And it's just like. And then inflation. Yeah. Made for a business is easy. Yeah, super easy, super easy.
Starting point is 01:28:55 Yeah, yeah. I mean, I think that like, um, focusing on the fundamentals is so important for people, uh, like, you broke down the business into like these moments and fundamentals along the way. And, um, you know, yeah, business is hard. It can be really challenging. But if you just focus on the things that matter and know the things that matter, um, it can be a lot easier. And I think, oh, a big, this is me just saying from outside perspective, I think a big part of of the success has also been that like you haven't had a mental option for pulling the ripcord. Uh-huh.
Starting point is 01:29:29 You know, um, and so when problems come, it's like, well, I'm not going anywhere. So you just kind of take it one bite at a time, you know, and I think that when you, when, it's almost like, uh, in a marriage, if you like, if divorce is an option in your mind, then maybe you don't feel like having the conversation. It's like, you, you know what? Screw this, right? Um, but if it's just never an option and you're just like, um, I'm, I'm in, right, under that hypothetical guise or premise, then it's like, that's the, that's the premise that you approach all the problems within the business. It's like,
Starting point is 01:30:00 well, I either die or we keep going. So we keep going. I'm still alive. Therefore, we will solve these problems one at a time. Yeah. Yeah, it is really interesting with the top of funnel component. I feel like, I feel like the content is the ultimate is the ultimate top of funnel because it's the, you know, you can harness the algorithm finding all those people because it'll serve the, your meat stuff to the people who really want meat. And you don't have to figure out with the perfect look like audiences. Like, they'll do that. And then then you have this massive retargeting audience
Starting point is 01:30:32 where you can spend the amount of money you're spending now, but it's all warm traffic because you're getting a billion impressions a month on all this content being pumped out, which I think is so cool. I think it's just a brilliant acquisition. Thank you. I think I can say on behalf of all the entrepreneurs who listen to the game,
Starting point is 01:30:51 thank you so much for sharing. the story of Butcherbox, Bookshar Box 2 of Billy and beyond. But thanks so much, man. Yeah, thank you. Yeah, thank you.

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