The Money Mondays - Building a Business When You Don’t Feel Ready 🏭 EP139
Episode Date: September 15, 2025Like this episode? Watch more like it 👇Watch ALL Full Episodes Here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLs0D-M5aH-0IOUKtQPKts-VZfO55mfH6k---The Money Mondays is a business podcast here to teach... you how to make money, invest money, and donate money by showcasing some of the world's most successful people and how they do the same. Hosted by serial entrepreneur Dan Fleyshman, the youngest founder of a publicly traded company in history, this money podcast gives you an exclusive behind the scenes look at how the wealthiest celebrities, entrepreneurs, athletes and influencers make, invest and donate money.If you want to learn more business and investing while you work to improve your financial life, you're in the right place! Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/@themoneymondays?sub_confirmation=1Dan Fleyshman,The Money MondaysLearn more here: https://themoneymondays.comWatch all the podcast episodes: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLs0D-M5aH-0IOUKtQPKts-VZfO55mfH6kLet’s Connect...Website: https://themoneymondays.comPodcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-money-mondays/id1663564091Twitter: https://twitter.com/themoneymondaysLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-money-mondays/about/TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@themoneymondaysFB: https://www.facebook.com/The-Money-Mondays-110233585203220/
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Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to a special edition of the Money Monday's
podcast where we cover three core topics.
How to make money, how to invest money, how to give away to charity.
This next guest has built up a very, very impressive company, so much so I actually
joined as one of the executives to help on the advisory to help them scale because I was so
impressed with everything they were doing.
So we're going to go into how to scale a company, how to raise funding, and
A lot of things of why he even decided to build this company because what's really important
for you is these podcasts are not just for you.
It's people in your past, present, and future.
You might be at a lunch, you might be playing pickleball, and someone wants to learn about
building a tech company or being in a course or creator, or someone wants to understand
how to raise money or exit a company.
You might be able to share this podcast with them.
So don't just listen to these podcasts for yourself.
Think about the people in your life from your past, present, future.
The whole reason for this podcast is we grew up thinking it's rude to talk about money.
I think that's ridiculous.
We have to have discussions about money for your finances, taxes, FICO score, should I rent, should I buy, should I lease?
There's so many questions that we have that are part of our daily life.
This is how you take care of your mom with their medical bills or your friends or your kids or dinners, lunches.
There's so many things that you just spend money on that we need to have a discussion about it.
There's nothing rude about it.
We have to be able to talk about it.
That's why this podcast has done so well because if you guys liking, commenting, subscribing, sharing, etc., that's helped us drive us to be staying consistently in the top.
50 podcasts on the planet.
It's because of you, so I want to thank you guys for that.
Now, without further ado, as you guys know,
these podcasts are under 40 minutes because the average commute to work is 45 minutes.
The average workout is 45 minutes.
This episode will be between 32 and 38 minutes for your listening pleasure.
Yash, if you can, please give a quick two-minute bio so we get straight to the money.
Yeah, absolutely.
One, I appreciate you having me on.
Of course.
So a quick background on myself.
I'm the founder and CEO of Fan Basis.
I've been a serial entrepreneur, started multiple different businesses.
I've had some sort of business running since I was about 13 years old at any given point.
Prior to starting fan bases, worked in the venture capital space for a few years,
and then also built another startup, which I was able to exit at a pretty young age right when I was in college.
And after that, I had a lot of experience in the info product and agency world as well.
I've had my own info products and agency specifically on the marketing side.
So, very, very well-versed in the Internet economy space and how to make money online space,
which is kind of what led me to, you know, start FanBasis.
What the heck is FanBASIS?
So it's a good question.
Basically what FanBasis is is the all-in-one tool set to sell digital products, services, and communities.
The best way to think about us is we've created the Shopify for selling anything online,
where not only do we handle your payments and processing,
give you the ability to collect as much cash as possible,
but we give you all the tools you need to actually host your business online,
whether it be your course, your community,
or integrating with about 10,000 different software platforms,
like a Discord or a telegram.
And on top of that, you know, what we love to do is help everyone that's on our platform
make more money.
So we give you all the tools to build out an affiliate program
or, you know, increase conversions on your checkout funnel.
Our whole concept and mission is to help digital entrepreneurs
make more money and streamline their operations.
So, you know, we see a lot of people that join our platform that are already generating
hundreds of thousands of dollars or millions of dollars a month online.
And our mission is to, you know, have it so that we can enable them to double the size
of their business after being on our platform for 12 months.
So who is the perfect avatar?
Like, who is the perfect person that should be on something like fan bases?
There's three types of users on our platforms and sellers.
The first is someone that's got a personal brand in an audience where, you know, they might be a
quote unquote influencer, but they're not the influencers that you grew your career working with
that have the managers and the agents. Instead, they have a CEOO, they have a head of sales,
they have media buyers, and they're running their personal brand as a true business,
where all the content they're posting is kind of funneling towards whatever offer
and business they're hosting on our platform. So that's one, which is what we call like the
creator or the internet entrepreneur. Second is more of a community-based business where they have,
maybe they have no face to the brand, but they have a large social media presence and
they have hundreds of thousands of followers across Instagram, YouTube, TikTok, think like a
crypto trading group or a sports picks group or something along those lines where there is a real
community there and they've built a really solid platform and they utilize fan bases to monetize
all of that and help them make more money. And then the third type is more of a just an online
business of some sort where it could be a marketing agency, it could be a faceless YouTube
consulting channel, whatever it might be, you know, they're selling digital products and
digital services and they can utilize fan bases to not only handle their payments, but everything
else in between as well.
So you are spearheading the new world of making money, which is the main topic at the beginning
of these podcast is about making money.
There's 15-year-old kids and 22-year-olds, et cetera, that are making real money from selling
things online, whether it's what's in their mind, what's in their hearts, what they're
passionate about and they're teaching people and making serious money. They're, you know,
making courses. They're creating amazing content, etc. Walk us through the new age. When you see
these 15-year-olds and 22-year-olds and 25-year-olds, et cetera, start making $500,000, $46,000,
$120,000 in a month, what changes for someone as a young kid as they start making that kind of
money? So it's really, really interesting because we have a very unique perspective on
on how people make money online.
We have a bird's eye view on how tens of thousands
of different businesses are operating.
And we also know what the guys that are making,
you know, one to $10 million a month are doing
compared to the guys making $10 to $20K a month they're doing.
When it comes to this younger generation, it's crazy.
There are, like, there's 15-year-olds
that are on our platform generating six figures a month.
One of the hardest negotiations,
our chief growth officer had was like three weeks ago,
So he was speaking to a kid that was a sophomore in high school.
He was selling a program on how to build an e-commerce business, doing a phenomenal job doing that, generating about $60,000 to $70,000 a month, was giving him...
15 years old.
Giving him an extremely hard time about the rates on every single...
No, can't be 2.6. I need 2.44.
Exactly.
So it's wild.
I think, you know, there's been a shift, right, where you've been...
in the space for a while. Info has been something that's existed for 15, 20 years now,
and it's obviously evolved over time. I think post-COVID, and this is when I kind of got
involved in this space, and I didn't even know what info products were until, you know,
probably 2021. I think post-COVID, there was an actual shift in not only the way people
consume knowledge from, you know, utilizing the internet or, you know, what really I think
caused that was TikTok, where, you know, people became really addicted to short-form,
content, and we're consuming information very quickly. Before ChatGPT, when I had a question
about something, I'd honestly go on TikTok before even anything else. So I think what that's done
is also made it really, really easy for people to acquire audiences. And some of these younger guys,
it's not like they're going, they're like, oh, I'm going to build up my audience to sell
something online. You know, they're already building something online, and then they share their
story utilizing different social media platforms. And people that are younger than them, even older
than them, can relate. And they're like, wow, this 20-year-old kid can do it, or this
18-year-old kid can do it, I want to learn from them and be able to do the same thing.
And they're able to really cause a large ripple effect and get thousands of people the
information and knowledge they need in order to build their own business and potentially
change their life.
So you've scaled this company every time I talk to you, go from 40 employees to 50 employees
and 60 employees.
And every time I go there, I see there's just more and more employees.
How do you attract employees to come work at fan bases?
How do you keep them?
It's a great question.
We've actually never had anyone quit.
Wow.
Yeah.
Wow.
I think that's really rare in tech space, by the way, because everyone gets poached and recruited
and they're constantly getting messages in their DMs and LinkedIn.
Like, come, come on, come work for us.
Yeah, it's really funny.
I mean, you know, one of our competitors that is also in this space, you know, probably
on a weekly basis, desperately tries to offer one of our employees half a million dollars
or a million dollars a year.
A million dollars.
No one's ever going to take that, though, and leave.
What I think we've done a phenomenal job at is creating a culture that I've never seen
before. One, the average age at our company is about 25 years old, 26 years old. On our growth
team is probably like 22, 23, which is crazy to begin with. It's crazy to me that half the
people that we have at our organization are younger than myself. So that's one. And then second
is, you know, anyone that's been here for more than two or three months has seen growth and been
able to contribute towards explosive growth that they wouldn't be able to replicate anywhere else.
and everyone knows that.
So, you know, I think what we do a really good job at is before someone joins the organization,
we filter out tons of people that, you know, might have the right talent,
and they might be a good fit for the job on paper.
But we know there's, you know, they're not that individual that wants to be with fan basis
until, you know, exit or IPO or the next 10 years where they're coming.
We don't really like to hire people that just want a job.
We want to hire people that want to be a part of what we're building.
Very cool.
So as people start making money, and you go from making $60,000, $120,000, $150,000, $200,000, et cetera,
when is it time to start to consider, maybe I should start to invest my money rather than just keep hoarding in putting my savings account?
I think, you know, this is the most fundamental flaw that I see with some of these younger info guys.
I have friends that just have like $5 or $6 million sitting in a checking account.
That's it.
I tell them all the time, like, hey, I'm going to make it because of my introduction.
for you. They just know they're really, really good at making money, but they don't like to do
things they don't understand in a lot of cases, and that scares them. So I think one piece of
advice I would give to anyone that's under the age of 30 that has generated over seven figures
or even over half a million dollars and has that sitting in a bank account is start learning how
to invest that, because you can compound interest is a real thing. Like you can get a lot of money
over time. I think that is a huge gap. You know, there's a info product to be built just here
alone on teaching other info guys and agency owners and how to invest their capital and make more
money with that. Yeah, I mean, that's my main speech. It's called 40, 40, 20, low risk investing,
medium risk investing, high risk investing. I walk people through during my speeches from stage.
Why you should invest to make 5 to 9% a year on your low risk investing, just to fight with
inflation? Someone you mentioned has $5 million in their savings account.
That means next year, that $5 million.
The next year it spends like it's $4.1 million.
Three years from now, it spends like it's $3.6 million.
It's literally losing value.
It'll still say $5 million in his savings account, but it spends less.
8% to 9% a year, less.
They go try to buy a Ford truck.
It was $50,000, now it's $54,000.
They go try to buy this microphone.
It was $200.
Now it's $240.
They don't realize everything got more expensive,
and it's happened year after year after year.
No matter who's the president in between,
and it's still been around 8% or 9% a year.
And so you have to invest to fight with inflation.
And on the medium risk side,
that's where you can make that 10 to 30% a year
on like real estate, business,
you know, cash line businesses, and the stock market.
A lot of people think of the stock market
as the super risky thing.
I look at it for the basics.
No, rocket science.
Do you shop at Amazon?
Maybe you should buy some Amazon stock.
Do you have an iPhone?
Maybe you should buy one of the best performing stocks
in human history, Apple.
it's the Warren Buffett model
he invests in things that he uses on a day-to-day basis
he likes Coca-Cola so he owns a lot of it
yeah right he likes chocolate so he bought a huge
chocolate company right
it's I think what happened
or what happens is some of these guys go and they're like
okay I'm going to invest in stocks they go on Robin Hood
I've seen it firsthand right and they'll go
and degenerately gamble
you know $100,000 in a random company
lose 30 or 40 grand and now they're like oh
and they try to trade it and then it goes back up
and they try to buy it again and they sell it when it goes down
and it's called catching a knife like
They're just like going through the roller coasters.
I invest into things that I never plan on selling.
That's, yeah, that's exactly how, you know, my dad taught me how to invest as well.
Why would I ever sell Amazon stock?
Yeah.
But I think Amazon's going to slow down next year.
I think Apple's going to not be as good.
The iPhone 17 came out.
What happened?
It's three hour waits outside of the store.
I want to own that stock.
Yeah.
Right?
If Netflix, everyone we know is watching Netflix, I want to own Netflix stock.
I don't have rocket science to my investment theory.
I just look at companies.
I see Tesla everywhere, I'm going to buy some Tesla stuff.
At the very, very least, get a private banker.
If you have seven figures in an account, you'll get a private banker at any bank that you're at,
and they'll be able to help you at the bare minimum, get into a money market fund or an ATM.
The 5% a year or something, just something, because it does compound, especially when you start to make and have a real capital.
All right.
So on the investing side of things, you can get bombarded with options.
Real estate, stock market, cash line businesses, angel investments, cryptocurrency, NFTs, investing into your buddy's restaurant or nightclub.
There's so many things that people can do.
How do you decide when there's so many different options what you like to invest into?
So one, it really depends on the deal flow that you have access to, right?
That is the most important thing.
It's like I can't tell someone, like I personally like to allocate, you know, 10% of my funds to more like angel and venture style deals, which have astronomically high returns.
Get it right, yeah.
Yeah, but it's, you know, way, way more risky.
I worked in VC.
The whole strategy was you invest in 10 companies hoping that one succeeds and you expect
the other nine to fail.
That's kind of how it works.
Now, the issue that people do is like, oh, I want to start angel investing, and then
they have access to shit deal flow.
And, you know, it's not like I'm investing in one out of five deals I look at.
It's more like one out of like 50 to 100, if that, where you need to have connections
in the space that can get you access to these opportunities.
that makes sense. And if you don't, go and invest in a really good fund yourself. And don't,
you know, don't try to be, this is way more risky than being a stock picker, you know,
try to do it with people that are, you know, professional investors. So I think, you know,
angel and venture, that's something that a lot of guys in our space also, like, really get excited
about and look at. It's very difficult to do that well. Most people end up losing money because
they don't have access to good deal flow. They also don't know what to look for. If you,
It's hard to, now as a, you know, someone that's been in the tech space and has built a tech company for many, many years, I understand what things to be looking for, because I've also gone through that myself.
I've made those mistakes.
You know, I can see when, you know, is this founder the person that's going to be able to build this into a nine or ten figure business?
But, you know, most of the time you're not able to really do that if you haven't had those experiences.
If you build an info product, the same knowledge that you have doesn't really relate to building a tech company.
You don't know about raising capital.
You don't know how to burn capital and invest that properly in growth.
So, you know, I think it's important for anyone that's in the Internet economy space that's used to building cash flow businesses to understand that there's a lot more risk when it comes to angel and venture investing.
Outside of that, personally, you know, I like to have my different private bank set up.
They, you know, the other thing about private banks is, obviously you know this, but most people don't realize it's not like they're just investing your capital.
capital into the markets. They have their own different products that they give access to high
net worth individuals for and that they have, you know, allocated towards only a select group of
people. So I like, you know, opportunities like that because some of them are very, very exclusive
and have, you know, basically like nothing has guaranteed returns, but, you know, this investment
bank is putting multiple billions of dollars into their own product. You know, I'm okay with putting
a couple hundred grand into it. Right. Yeah. So, you know, I personally am not fully invested in
in real estate or anything like that.
My father has a larger portfolio,
but I like to stick to things that, you know, I know well.
So on the raising capital side,
I saw a press release that you guys raised $20 million
from some cool people like Ryan Sourhant,
venture capital firms, et cetera.
Why raise capital, walk us through the concept of raising capital
of someone listening that might want to raise capital.
What should they be thinking about?
Yeah, it's a great question.
So you have to think about it differently
depending on the phase that you're in.
When you're at a pre-seed or a seed,
you know, round. Basically, at this point, you've gone some sort of initial traction or if
you're pre-seed, maybe you just built the product out. The people that you're going to get
to invest here, they're investing in you. That's purely what it comes down to. They like the
idea that you have, but you have to sell them on yourself. You know, this is, you're not betting on
the horse, you're betting on the jockey. That's just how it works. Mostly friends and family.
Yeah, exactly. For pre-seed, friends and family is the best way to go about it. For seed,
try to get strategic investors. I found a lot of
success with that. And they, one, if they're strategic, they'll understand what you're building.
Second, if they're strategic, they'll also be much more likely to invest if they, if you show them
an opportunity and you show them that you're solving a real problem that especially they've faced.
When it comes to raising a series A, you know, in our personal case, or my personal case,
we are at the point where we are cash flowing pretty significantly, which means we were profitable.
We didn't have to raise around. It was more of, you know, with the competitive landscape that we had,
Some other companies raised a lot of capital.
We don't want to be outgunned.
And then at the same time, we had a plan for how every single dollar was going to be allocated
to turn us from where at that point we were maybe an $80 to $100 million company.
We saw a real opportunity to, you know, take a little bit of dilution on, take $20 million
in, and grow it to a multiple billion dollar business with just that round alone.
So, you know, you really have to understand the ROI.
I see a lot of founders make mistakes.
Really a lot of founders, even now, especially now, are making the mistake of just raising
too much capital for the sake of raising capital, and they want to announce around and get
the PR headlines.
Like, that can't be the reason that you're doing it.
You know, you really have to have a really solid plane in place and show, okay, like,
now don't skip out on that financial model, invest in that properly, understand like where
every single dollar is going to go and how you're going to make sure you get to that next
goal.
How do you decide when the right time is?
The best time to raise is when you don't need a raise.
You know, that is really what it comes down to.
And I've gotten that advice from a few people.
You know, we were cash flow positive.
We had 20 investors knocking on our door that wanted to lead our Series A.
When, you know, you have two months of runway left and you're burning a million dollars a month.
It's a little bit tougher to raise around at that point because you're not as attractive of an asset.
And even if you like to invest in momentum.
Exactly.
And maybe you do have that momentum, but you didn't plan properly.
Now you're going to get screwed on your terms.
you know, you're in a position not of power, you know, that's really what it comes down to.
So the best time to do it is like if you, you know, you see that you have like 12 months
of runway or 16 months of runway left, assuming your burning capital, then, you know, this is
where you start planning for this.
At least have those conversations.
Maybe you can, like, I, you know, I think a good approach is also going to these VC funds
and say, hey, we're not raising right now, but it's still good for us to connect.
And then, you know, show them what you're building, get them excited about it.
And when you, you know, everyone wants the, everyone wants something that they can't have, right?
So if you can position yourself as that hot girl in school, they're going to be following up with you for months and months and months.
And then when you are ready to raise that round, you know, instead of taking a whole three-month process to go and speak to every single fund, you'll already have 10 people that are ready to write you a check.
Also, I think something that's a huge win is if you can give them projections that, you know, at that time when you connect, that you end up beating.
We were the first company that left lane invested in, or I don't know if the first, but they told us we were one of the few companies that gave them projections that we absolutely blew through.
And this is not like, I mean, one, we did this before we raised from them.
We connected with them about seven months prior and we gave them those projections then.
But also, the model that we built out, I mean, we beat our own projections for the sake of doing that.
We look at our projections as like worst case scenario.
This is what we, you know, we have to hit.
And then we have our own internal projections of like what we actually want to achieve and do.
This is something we're like, if VCs don't see that very often,
so if you can show them projections that you're able to beat
and then you actually stay true to that,
they're going to be so impressed with you
that they're going to prioritize your deal.
So someone is built up a following.
They're listening.
They're like, you know what?
I have 55,000 followers.
And my girlfriend or boyfriend, they have 100,000 followers.
At what point can someone start making money
as a coach, course, creator, or influencer?
So I think the first question you have to really ask yourself and understand is, am I a good
operator? Do I know how to build a business? Because we see a lot of cases where you might find
someone that has two or three million followers, has hundreds of thousands of views and likes on
every single post that they have. And they're only making 50 to 100 grand a month. And I'm saying
only making 50 to 100 grand a month because it's all relative, right? You know, 50 to 100 grand a month
is a lot for a lot of people. But if you have 4 million followers and you're only making 50 to 100
a month, you have a serious issue with the way that you're building your business.
At that point, you should be generating minimum seven figures a month.
So what that comes down to is the ability of that individual to be an operator, right?
Do they have the ability to put the right people in front of them and, you know, around them
to lead their sales team, lead their marketing initiatives, create funnels and ideas?
I think, you know, you don't, and then at the same time, I was just telling you about a guy
that's generating, you know, over a million dollars a month.
he's got 6,000 followers on Instagram and 70,000 subscribers on YouTube.
It's, you know, it can scale very differently.
It's how strategic you can get with it.
So I think the best way to look at this is if you have a following of,
call it 50 to 100,000 people on whatever social platform it might be, you know,
at the end of the day, Instagram and YouTube are probably the two best.
One follower, Instagram is worth 10 followers on TikTok.
That's the kind of the rule of thumb.
you have to evaluate.
Do you think you're the person that can be a CEO?
If not, find someone that you know that can be actually leading the business endeavors.
And you can be that marketing engine.
You just need to really be true to yourself and understand what are your skill sets and what are not your skill sets.
That's what a CEO does.
At the end of the day, with what I do, you know, even for fan basis, is I bring in the best people that I can find for leading my sales team, leading marketing, leading customer success.
They're all hopefully better than me at all of those things.
If not, I didn't do my job well.
So that's how everyone that's building any sort of business should be thinking about it.
And at the same time, something that we've been seeing work really, really well,
and we're actually productizing this right now, is if you have a large following,
say you have 100,000 followers in the fitness space.
In the fitness space, we see this all the time because you get a lot of meatheads
that actually do a good job.
They post interesting content, but they are not.
the guys to run their own business. What you should do is find people that you see having
a ton of success. And instead of building something completely on your own, partner up with them.
Do a JV. It's called a joint venture, you know, where they've already built the infrastructure.
They have a sales team. They have a marketing team. They have leads coming in.
Instead of building everything from scratch, when you have to be true to yourself and no,
I don't have the ability to do that on my own, you can partner up with someone else and then
be an extension to their business and split everything 50-50.
And then eventually you can start your own business.
So that's kind of, I think, the two best ways to think about it.
So why invest so much money into the tech, right?
Not like come up with your four or five main features, scale the business and have this
lean, mean machine.
Why go out and scale all the different versions and verticals and things that people
asking for for fan bases?
Yeah, it's a great question.
And there's kind of two approaches that people take.
you know, up until probably two months ago, three months ago,
we were trying to just get every feature that everyone on our platform needed.
What is a must-have?
Where these are the things that they need to have in their business
to be able to operate it and scale it efficiently.
Now the way that we're thinking about it
and where a lot of the investment is coming from
is what can we add into the product that people don't know they need?
And that's where real innovation comes.
That's what Steve Jobs' whole,
thesis was, is how can we innovate, you know, and tell people and show them what they need. So that's
how we're thinking about it. And the real advantage that we have over really anyone else in the
space is we've, our whole team is built from people that come from the space. You know, we've poached
some of our clients that have joined and joined our executive team and leadership team. And, you know,
we've partnered up with individuals like yourself that can give us that advice that we need for
everything that we're thinking about. So we can validate the, you know, market for, you know,
every single idea and product that we have before we actually build it. And then when we release
features like that, that's where we get insane customer loyalty. Because, you know, if someone's making
$100,000 a month, for example, and they come and join our platform and they're making $100,000 a month
for the next six months, they're like, okay, great, you know, I'm using this service. It works. It's
getting the job done for me. But if we can show them ways to get from $100,000 a month to $200,000
a month, that's where I can charge them whatever fees they want. They're not never going to leave
because, you know, we've been able to provide them with an immense amount of value.
So that's how we're, you know, that's where all the investment is coming in,
where we're spending millions of dollars.
But we're also making it back on the back end because it's helping all of our sellers
make more money as well, which comes back to us eventually too.
Right.
Let's talk to me about the charity side of things.
Why do you think that a company like yours should have either a charity event or go
or support a charity, go to a homeless shelter, go to a children's hospital,
go feed at a senior citizen or a homeless shelter?
like, why do you think that companies should have some type of charity component,
not necessarily the check, but getting the people together?
Yeah, I think it's super important.
One, you know, we'll be supporting your toy drive as well, so excited about that.
But the actual original version of fan bases, we used to host a lot of charity sweepstakes.
So we partnered up with people like Dennis Rodman, Mandy Sacks.
We did an event with Floyd Mayweather, where, you know, a good chunk of that all went to
to charity. One, it obviously was for those individuals wanting to support their causes as well,
but we wanted to enable all of that and be able to spread those messages across. The way I really
look at it is, you know, I've also grew up from, I grew up in a way where I understood the
importance of giving back pretty early. My dad, for example, when we were growing up, he would
never do anything fun on his birthday. He'd always go to the soup kitchen, which when I was a kid,
I was like, what the hell? Let's do something fun.
But now I get it, you know, and it's, it was inspiring as I grew up to like think about things
like that. So, you know, I see a lot of people that are very, very charitable and they're silent
about it too, which, you know, I think it helps you, one, humble yourself and also give you
more satisfaction in the long run and just better karma. You know, anything that you put into
the world always ends up coming back to you. So there's only one question I ask.
every episode, and I've never gotten the same answer in 200-plus episodes,
fan basis becomes a multi-billion dollar company.
But you're young, so you might start another company and another company,
and you might invest into a lot of other companies.
And so you end up becoming this multi-billionaire over the course of time.
At the end of the day, you finally pass away.
What percentage of your net worth do you lead to your children?
that's a good question um you know there's a few different kind of models i've seen some multi-billionaire's
take at the end of the day i think the most important thing for anyone raising kids because i you know
i went to private schools growing up and i saw some people that were absolutely spoiled for sure and were
driving bentley's in you know in high school yeah um and uh you know my and people that their families
were very very wealthy but they were all very humble and their kids were raised properly um i would want
to put my kids in the position to be able to you know have everything that they need go to the best
schools and you know be able to live comfortably to where you know when they're in college you
don't need to worry about working for jobs to be able to pay for it and things of that nature
and be focused, but they need to have that level of ambition.
So I think, you know, I can't give you an answer on that right now because I don't know
what my kids are going to be like yet.
If I raise them right, then I'm more than happy to give them all of my wealth because,
you know, I know that they're not going to be motivated by my wealth.
They're going to want, you know, have their ambition, their own ambition to achieve things
that are much further beyond what I've been able to achieve myself.
But if that's not the case, they're not getting anything.
You know, everyone needs to earn it.
All right.
So where can people find fan bases, you?
Tell us everything.
Yeah, absolutely.
Anyone that's looking to build a business online, go to fanbases.com, go and sign up.
You'll be able to hop on with one of our, a member of our growth team.
Put referral code, Dan Fleischman in, and we'll take extra good care of you and make sure you get the best rates.
Just as a favor for anyone that's listening to this podcast.
And then on top of that, you know, what our team likes to do is not only help you get set up and run your own business.
on our platform. But like I said, many times, we want to help you grow your business and get to
that next level, whether it be at $20,000 a month or a million dollars a month. And you can also
find us on Instagram at fan basis or my personal Instagram at Yash Daftry, always looking to connect
with like-minded entrepreneurs and people that are interesting to have a conversation with.
All right, guys, you're listening to the Monday Mondays. And again, the concept of this podcast,
when you hear something like this, there might be someone in your world that wants to start selling a course.
to be a creator. They want to start selling how to do stock trading. They want to start
teaching how to make custom sneakers. They want to start teaching about food, diet, fitness,
health, et cetera. You might be able to send them here and then they can learn about fan bases
and all of a sudden they have one of the best companies as their platform all because of
your referral, your recommendation. So keep your ears out. Keep your eyes. When you're seeing
people on posts on social like looking for a new company to work with on this, this, this and this,
you might be like, oh man, I remember fan bases. Hey, I'm looking for this, this, this and this.
wait a minute, and you then you forward them a website or you forward them this podcast episode.
This is really important.
Your sharing of information in that communication, the butterfly effect can literally change
their world and a lot of other people simply by you helping them with referrals.
So, as always, liking, comment, and subscribing is what helps us stay on the top of the charts.
So I appreciate you guys for doing that.
It really helps us.
When you're checking things out, check out some entrepreneurs like Yash.
When you see their social media, when you see the company that they built, watching those
type of things, watching that type of information will help you learn compared to a lot of the noise
and a lot of the bad stuff that people are following on social media.
Try to filter out the same way you filter out what you eat, what you drink, filter out the things
that are going into your mind.
So you can focus and learn for people that you are inspired by here at the Money Mondays.
And we'll see you guys next Monday at the Money Mondays.com.
Gentlemen, welcome to the Money Monday's podcast where we cover three core topics, how to make money,
how to invest money, how to give away to charity. As you guys know, I keep these podcasts to under 40 minutes
because the average workout is 45 minutes. The average commute to work is 45 minutes. This episode
will be between 32 and 38 minutes for your listening pleasure. Now, this is very important.
When you listen to these podcasts, keep in mind it's not just about you. The things that you hear
and the people that I interview might be for someone from your past, present, or future. We have to
think about and talk about money because it's part of our daily lives.
We all grew up thinking it's rude to talk about money.
I think that's ridiculous.
It's part of your rent, insurance, taxes, medical bills for your mom, kids, friends, employees.
So many things come up with money.
It is not the root of all evil.
It is part of your daily life.
And it's really just a utility and a tool, the things that you want in life and the things
that you need you in life.
And we grow through inflation and all the things that are going to be happening in our society,
you're going to need more and more capital.
So we have to have blunt discussions about how you can make more money.
invest more money. And so without further ado, I'm going to have Mr. Dr. J. Feldman give a quick two-minute
bio. We'll get straight to the money. All right, Dan, let's have some fun. Thanks for having me.
So a really quick bio. Went all the way through medical school. Parents pushed me to that direction,
probably because of money, money and respect. That's pretty much guaranteed as long as you make it through.
About halfway through medical school, I started a supplement company. Supplement company took off,
got really good at marketing, started a marketing agency. By the time I graduated medical school my fourth year,
We were making more than most of the doctors were making, and they were miserable.
Every day I would show up to the clinic and just be surrounded by people that hated their lives.
So I was distracted, became a family medicine resident, which was a three-year track, only did the first year, and then left to pursue marketing full-time.
Started a PR agency, Otter PR.
We grew that to 60 employees, eight figures in three years, and then I started teaching a lot of what I was doing to market that PR agency.
So now if you Google me, you'll probably see me as LeadGenJ on YouTube.
We teach B2B lead generation and we install cold outreach systems for SMBs and medium-sized companies.
Okay. What is LeadGen?
LeadGen is making people aware of your product and offer that don't know who you are in the first place.
That's the difference between lead generation and sales, essentially.
Somebody who doesn't know who you are versus somebody who knows who you are.
We handle that top of the funnel, people who have never heard of you before.
put your product, your offer out in front of those people.
What percentage of entrepreneurs and business owners should have some form of lead generation?
150% if there was. I'd say it's the biggest pain point in most companies, is how do you market?
How do you get people to know about your thing? Some of the best companies and products in the
world are, you know, go under the radar because they don't know how to get people's attention.
So we've gotten really good at that and doing it at scale.
So let's say entrepreneur, business owners listen to this podcast, and they're like, you know what, I do need PR, but I want to hire in-house.
What's the difference we're hiring someone to work in-house versus hiring an agency like Otter?
Sure.
So now we're talking about PR.
And this is true of everything, lead generation, PR agencies.
If you hire an agency, you're usually hiring years of experience and processes and relationships, and you're hiring all of the mistakes that they've made with past clients.
So if you bring someone in-house, you better hope that they're going to be able to do everything
and they're not going to build a fall back on people with more experience.
So by hiring Otter PR, my PR agency, you know, we've got 60 employees.
A lot of our publicists have 20, 30 years of experience.
Yeah, we've got a whole staff of writing staff.
We've dealt with clients across multiple industries.
We've got publicists that specialize across multiple industries and have relationships at media channels that cater
specifically to those industries. So if you hire Otter PR, you're hiring all of that.
Versus bringing somebody in-house, you'll probably end up paying about the same, that you would
pay the agency. So although that one person is dedicated exclusively to you, are they going to be
able to deliver the same results that an agency of 60 people and, you know, 200 clients and all
of those industry relationships are going to be able to deliver? Sometimes. So oftentimes I say
when someone wants to hire in-houses, when you want someone for paid media or PR,
especially like dealing with meta and Facebook ads,
someone that's really good at it doesn't need to work for you.
They can make $2,000 a day selling pillows or tables or microphones or water bottles.
This is the problem with hiring people for the lead gen agency.
Sure, right?
Yeah, you want to find people who are good to work for me?
Good luck.
They're already making a killing on their own.
It's the same thing across every other marketing.
So I'm often, almost always, recommending agencies because wisdom of the crowd.
When you've got 60 employees, it's not just the fact of one employee or one good person.
There's a lot of people in that room, and you get to deal with your hundreds of clients.
You understand and learn from what it worked for them, what was bad for them, what sucked for them, what was great for them.
And so when they start running ads on TikTok or Facebook or press or whatever, you know which ones are working because you have the wisdom of the crowd from all that.
that experience.
Alex Formosie actually made a good point here.
What he does is he hires an agency and is very transparent with them at the beginning.
He's like, I'm going to hire you.
I want to know exactly what you're doing.
I want to learn your processes.
I want to be involved every step of the way.
And he's intaking all of this and he's training somebody in-house to eventually take
over from that agency.
And I actually really like that model and I've done it a few times.
The risk is you train someone in-house on what that agency is doing.
Now you make that person ultra-valuble.
They're going to go start an agency.
They're gone.
They're for sure going to start an agency.
And if they go start an agency, I'll invest in them because they're so well-trained.
Yeah, exactly.
So it's making somebody ultra-valiable and marketing is hard.
So that's why I feel like the job of marketing usually falls on the founder.
So I have an influencer agency, and I have the exact same employees for five years, eight years, 12 years, and some of them in the full 14 years, that still work for me.
I've only ever had two people leave, and I forced them to go.
Good, yeah.
Because one of them was to go work for ClickUp.
four billion dollar company go i get it yeah and another one wanted to go start a company and i was like
i'll be a investor or a partner or send you clients and they went and did that and outside of that
everyone's the same like i named them off the top of my head all day long like family because it's
been with me for so many years how do you hold on to them there's a couple of key things one is
compensation but it actually isn't the number one driving force right paying someone 80 grand versus
92 grand is not like oh my god they're going to leave me right away now if i pay them 80 grand
someone offers them 120, I better step it up, right?
Because they should leave.
I understand if there's that big of a gap.
Having some way to either have equity or some way to earn compensation based on their work.
So if they can get some type of percentage for something that they're doing or something
that they're creating, that very much incentivizes them.
And the third thing is they're inspired to work there.
Yes.
Right?
Either I inspire them, the brand inspires them, or they inspire themselves.
Their work creates something.
Their work creates magic.
Their work helps their clients.
There is another fourth, which is the community, which is the other staff, but that's not always the case because there could be working remote or working in a silo.
So it's not always getting to work with a bunch of other people.
And if you do those things, and if anyone is missing, you might lose them.
But I've been really focused on having all four things all the time.
I'm constantly inspiring them and constantly giving them ways to make extra money.
I'm constantly like, I want them to win.
And also, I will say, if you give them respect and autonomy, they definitely don't want to leave.
Right.
Because they don't expect that are other companies.
I've learned that a lot through the lead gen J brand.
Both companies are very separate, Otter PR and Lead GenJ.
Otter PR is very much not like a hiring machine.
We've got HR, we've got a whole recruiting arm.
And all the publicists, you know, they're paid what publicists typically get paid.
And we have a lot of turnover.
We're always trying to get them to stay by giving them raises.
The inspiration piece isn't quite there the way that it is for my lead GenJ brand.
And I feel like a core piece of that, and you can probably attest to this,
is the personal brand.
They want to work with Dan Fleischman.
They want to learn from you.
So as long as they feel like they're learning
and they're a part of your inner circle, your team,
I feel like that's a big drive to draw them there
and to keep them there.
I felt like that's the case with the lead Jen J brand too.
I've built such an amazing team,
and they don't go anywhere.
On the make money side of this podcast,
there's a question I'd like to ask,
which is, what do you think people are held back by
from making more money?
Why do you think people go through life
and they're making their 40 grand or 50 grand, 60 grand, 100 grand, and they're just complacent.
They don't want to go to 120 or 150 or 200 or they don't want a side gig or a side hustle.
What do you think holds people back from making more money?
I mean, they always say you're the sum of the people you surround yourself with.
I think that's the number one thing holding people back is they see what's around them and they don't feel
inspired.
They don't feel like it's possible for them to go make more money.
If you want to make more money, surround yourself by people who are making more than you.
I think that's the ultimate principle here.
And I know it's probably everyone says that.
It's true.
by me sitting here with you, you make more money than I do.
That inspires me.
That shows me what is possible.
Like, what are you doing to make that money?
Things that I never even imagined were, you know, ways to earn.
What you're doing with your companies is unique.
So I'm now made aware of new ideas, new models.
And when I think I'm killing it and I surround myself with people who are at that next level,
now I know it's possible.
And now I know I have a trajectory to get that.
there. If you're surrounded by people who are making minimum wage or people who are working in
your office job and everyone's under 100K, you don't see the ways people are getting, you know,
making a million dollars a month. Right. They're not talking about tax strategies. They're not talking
about investments. No. You don't even know how to get there. You don't know the channels to
listen to. You don't know the Make Money podcast. So if you're listening to this podcast, it's probably
a good, you know, indicator that you're well on your way. So the biggest thing is changing who's in the
room. So at what point for a company is it time to like start doing meta ads, start running ads on
TikTok or go TikTok live or start doing PR or start doing SEO? There's so many different options of
marketing that are out there. How do you know should you just do it on one or when is the time
to start building omnipresence and start spending money across the board? It's funny. It's actually
the theme of my book that I'm in the process of writing. It's the marketing playbook, like which
place to implement when. There's so many free ways to get exposure now that you should start
with those. Make yourself searchable. Make yourself findable. Every social media platform now
is a search engine on Instagram, TikTok. All you got to do is optimize your profile and
your videos, and now people will start finding you for what you're doing. Obviously, making
content is great for driving free traffic. So do the free things first. And then once you've
got a good way to predictable revenue coming in, then you can start experimenting with marketing
budget. And I think some really good ways to experiment are meta ads and Google ads.
Obviously, that's changing a lot now with AI. Cold outreach is another really good way for B2B
companies to scale top of funnel marketing, make people aware of your offer for the lowest
possible price. Then there's some like-to-haves. I'd say PR is one of those things that you probably
shouldn't start with, but it's going to enhance all of the other forms of marketing.
It's, if you get featured in Forbes, that itself isn't going to drive you business.
What's going to drive you business is saying featured on Forbes and all your meta ads.
It's going to be posting it on all those social media platforms.
So all of the marketing channels then work symbiotically once you implement them in the right
orders.
So what Jay's talking about is called the Halo Effect.
The halo effect is, I see you in the press, I see you pop up on a podcast, and then when I
see your ad, I want to buy for me more. There's some reason that I remember you, whether I saw you
on the billboard, the podcast, the press, et cetera. When I then see your ad or I see your call to action,
I'm more inclined to buy from you. There's a famous quote or theory or statistic that may or may not
be true, but maybe it's kind of close is you need to see something seven times before making a
purchasing decision. Whether that number is four times or 12 times, who actually knows,
let's just say seven times is the number. If I need to see you seven times, well, you got to
advertised to me a lot. I might not see your ad seven times. That's why you want to build
omnipresence and pop up in that article, be on the news, beyond the podcast. And a lot of these
things you can do for free, but it'll ultimately help you on the places that you spend money on.
Yes. And just to add to that really quickly, I think a big missed opportunity that most companies
miss out on is that retargeting traffic. Sure. So the hardest thing to do is get people to your
website for the first time. Get people to your social media account for the first time. People do
need to interact seven times is according to that study before they make a purchasing
decision. The easiest and cheapest way to get them back to your site, back to your social
channels is retargeting ads. You're haunting them. Follow them everywhere, the omnipresent
marketing. So set them at free targeting ads up everywhere. Facebook, Google, Reddit,
Cora, TikTok, Snapchat, all of these platforms you can retarget on for pennies on the dollar
compared to running top of funnel marketing campaigns. All right, let's put on our investor hats.
Investor hats. We've been making money.
building up our business, we went from 1 million gross sales to 3 million. At what point
do I start to look at what the heck to invest into? There's real estate, stock market,
cryptocurrency, angel investments, S&P 500. There's so many things I can invest into,
cash flowing businesses. There's so much. How do you decide when there's so many options
what the heck to invest in to? That's a good question. I'll tell you what's worked for me and
what doesn't work for me. So I'm probably a little bit in my earlier stages of making money. We've
been making real money for about five years now. I feel like when I started to have an overflow of
money, meaning there's so much coming in that I can't invest anymore in my business without just
wasting it. Like I'm not going to hire these like $500,000 employees. I don't have any big
machinery to buy. So I started investing it into the stock market. And what I learned quickly by
doing that, I was on Robin Hood, just pushing buttons and buying stocks, listening to YouTube
videos and listening to other people on what stocks to buy, did not work out well. I told
took a bunch of margin because Robin Hood made it really easy, and then stocks crashed, lost all my
money.
Brought in my friend, who's a financial advisor, and what's worked for me to this day is any overflow
I sent to him.
Like, ready for another stack?
Yeah, cool.
Take another stack.
And he puts it into specific stocks that we pick every two weeks.
We put it into a couple safe ETFs that we've picked.
And that's been really effective.
Our money's grown.
He protects me from myself.
And his full-time job is figuring out where to put my money.
And I get all these inbound, I'm sure you get them more than me, people asking for investments
in, you know, random real estate deals, investments in these random companies.
I haven't done any of those yet, but I just run them by my financial advisory, tells me
this is good, this is risky, this is eh, and I trust him.
He protects me.
I know a lot of people who have gotten involved in weird deals and now their money's locked
up and they might never see a return.
So as you're getting started, I think you should put all of your money back into your business
to a reasonable degree, as long as you have something that you think is going to grow the company
or make you more successful in the long run. The best thing you can invest in is yourself and your
business first. Then bring on a financial advisor to help guide those investments. And now I'm at a
point where it's like, crap, I'm going to have to pay a ton of money in taxes this year.
My tax bill's looking real scary. So what do you do about that? Bonus depreciation. You buy real
estate, short-term rentals, and every year, I guess you find a new project to do that with.
And that's kind of where I'm at this year.
We're buying real estate and we're taking bonus depreciation on it to mitigate my tax
liability.
Love to hear what you're doing.
That was a fantastic breakdown.
Thank you.
So what I preach on stage and on social is the same thing over and over and over for many,
many years.
It's called 40, 40.
I do 40% low risk.
I want to make between 5 and 9% for the year.
I do 40% medium risk, where I want to make between 10 and 30% for the year.
I do 20% high risk.
I'm crossing my fingers.
I want something crazy to happen, 400%, a thousand percent, something crazy.
And if this doesn't work out or it takes a long time, I'm hoping that this and this covers the high risk.
And so what happens is the low risk sounds boring.
So I actually call it the boring side.
Five to nine percent seems boring.
It seems boring.
Until you take out a compound calculator.
Right.
If anyone's listening right now, after this show's over, look up compound calculator.
There's a joke that Albert Einstein says, compound math is the eighth wonder of the world.
Compound interest.
That was an Einstein quote?
I don't think it actually was, but that's what ever said.
When you look on Google, that's what it says.
Don't believe everything Google says.
But that theory is put in your age, let's say you're 34 years old, and put it when you want to retire.
Let's say it's 74 years old, so 40 years.
Then put in a number like 8% a year.
If you now contribute to $10,000 and you do that for 40 years,
it is staggering what that number is going to be.
It's not 500K, it's not a million dollars.
It's literally going to be three to five million dollars,
depending if you put 8% or 9% or 10%.
One little percent difference over the course of 40 years
and compounded will literally blow your mind.
And so just put in your age, put in when you want to retire, put in how much you can contribute.
And by the way, you want to get really crazy?
What if you went from 10 grand to 11 grand?
What if like seven years later you had a little more money, you put in 13 grand that year, 14 grand.
What if you have a four-year-old child and you put in a thousand bucks a year for that child
and throw in two grand or three grand, four grand, four grand, for that child, and they're four.
What happens when they retire?
They will have five, ten, ten, fifteen, twenty million dollars.
It's not fake numbers.
These are very real with just that six, seven, seven, seven, seven.
an eight, nine percent type of interest rate. And so that's the low risk side. So that's for me
is the S&P 500. Right. That's CDs at your bank. Cs at your bank are paying four or five percent now,
which is crazy at household name banks. We're in a municipal bond ETF. There you go. Yeah,
tax free and it's earning like five, six percent. Perfect. In the middle side, it's real
estate, stock market, and cash flow and businesses. Those three main categories. Real estate,
there's a lot of options that would take me hours to talk about all the different options.
But essentially, fix and flipping, long-term holds, or cash flow like Airbnb and rentals.
The cash-in-line business side, to me, it's Everbull.
I invested a lot into Everbole in 2018, raised a bunch of money in 2019, bought a bunch of locations in 2020,
sold the locations back to them in 2023.
I'm very active in Everbal because that's a cash-line business.
I invested when there's 13 locations, now there's 104, and one-to-one every six days.
I invested when there's a 10-20 million valuation, now it's 175 million.
and growing. And so to me, that's an angel investment, but also cash flowed business. On the
stock market side, I just invest in the same 10 stocks over and over and over, no plans of
ever selling ever. Why would I ever sell Apple? But I think it's going to be bad next year or the
year after? No. Why would I sell the stock? Why would I ever sell Walmart or meta or household
names like Tesla and Amazon? Why would I ever sell my Amazon stock? Is that five? Will you give
The other five?
Yes.
I'm curious.
There's just the household name companies.
There's no rocket science to what I invest into.
It's Amazon and Tesla and Walmart and Shopify and meta and Google.
I'll think of the, I'll pull my phone up and find those.
Those are good.
You don't pick new stocks based on what the economy market's doing.
I don't look at things like Individia, which amazing what it did.
Yeah.
But it was also around for many, many years where it didn't.
All of my losses in 2022, countered by my choice of Individia.
Yeah, we held that notes, don't crazy.
Yeah, it's been fun.
And so I don't look at the shiny objects.
Yeah.
That's key.
Yes.
Super key.
Don't get distracted.
I'm not a day trader.
Right.
I want to buy things that I invest into or I'm a buyer of.
I have Netflix stock.
Why?
Because I spend money on Netflix for the last two decades.
And so do you.
So does she.
So does he.
So does he.
Everyone does.
Yes.
And more and more people are going to.
If everyone in the world is spending 15 to 20 bucks a month,
I want to own this.
that. Right. You know that the number one performing stock of all time is Monster Energy Drink?
No. Really? More than any other company on the planet, Monster Energy, which is called Hansen's, the
parent company. Why? Because they're in hundreds of thousands of stores, probably a million and gazillion
stores by now. They've just been doing the same thing for 25, 30 years, and they're in all the stores
on the planet. That's it. If Red Bull was public, it'd be the same story. Right. And so my stock
market is very, very simple and very straightforward. If you shop on Amazon, you should
consider some Amazon stock. If you own a Tesla, how dare you not have Tesla stock? Agreed.
You're listening to this on an Apple product, a laptop or an iPhone or AirPods. What on earth are you doing
not having some Apple stock? That's all. I noticed a lot of my biggest losers were companies that I had
no idea what they did, no interactions with them. And some of my biggest winners have been the
companies I interact with and spend money with. So that's a really good philosophy. And then the last
part is the high risk. And to me, it's just angel investing and cryptocurrency. And really on
crypto. It's just Bitcoin Ethereum. I've been saying the same thing since 2014 and 2017 for
Ethereum. I've just been saying the same thing over and over. I bought it at Bitcoin of
$300 and I'll buy it now at $115,000. I'm still a buyer. I made the very first news article
about Ethereum when it was $19. I'm still a buyer at $4,500. Are you dollar cost averaging
into those things? I just buy because Bitcoin is inevitable. The supply is getting less and less
and less because people die, people lose their phones, they lose their wallets, they lose their
laptops. And so as more people lose their lives and lose their phones and lose their
their wallets, less of that 21 billion Bitcoin will ever exist, will ever be in circulation.
Less quantum computing cracks the network. But that's, we got other problems at that point.
Exactly. You need guns and water at that point. And on the other side of it, the demand
keeps growing, growing, growing, growing. The people that have always liked Bitcoin buy more,
people that get attracted to it, start to buy it.
And so if the supply is getting less and less and less,
and demand gets more and more and more,
that's why Bitcoin is the number one performing investment asset in human history.
I was interviewing Gary Cardone, Grant Cardone's twin brother.
He's the biggest Bitcoin bull that I know.
And we were talking about investing in Bitcoin.
I'm like, man, I sold it all.
When Voyager went down, I lost all my cryptocurrency.
I think Bitcoin is at like $30,000 at that time.
It makes me whip out my phone on the podcast.
I'm not saying another word until you start buying some Bitcoin.
So I whipped up my Coinbase and I set up a recurring purchase for Bitcoin at $30,000.
And it was probably the highest yielding investment I've ever made.
We're still dollar cost averaging in now.
It's like $115,000.
Okay.
Let's focus on you again.
So on the investing side, people have all these different options.
You started to deploy capital.
What happens is you get to a point where,
You can't invest back into your company, or you've got too much cash sitting in the bank.
What people don't realize is they get this idea, like, I want to have millions of dollars in the bank.
You've heard myself, Grant Cardone, and so many people, we never have a lot of money in the bank
because we're deploying that into investments.
And here's why.
Anything over six to 12 months in the bank is losing money to inflation.
So let's say you did have a million dollars in a bank account.
next year it spends like 980,000
right the year after it spends like 830,000
so it still says one million in your savings account
but it spends like 920 it spends like 830
spends like 740,000 the value of that million is going down correct
you try to buy a Ford truck for 50 grand
now's 54,000 you try to park in valet
it was 20 bucks now it's 24
you try to buy muffins it was $4 now they're $5 all these
5% increments increases makes your dollar
literally spend less and so that's
why I'm so adamant and so many wealthy people are adamant about the concept, make that million
go to $1,050, $1,100,000, $1.115. Just those small increases will fight against inflation.
Yeah, that's, I think, we're a financial advisor so helpful because we have the, not millions in the
bank, but it's a lot. And I'm worried about losing the value to inflation. It is happening.
But there's options. There's money market accounts that are essentially cash that have been earning
5%. Sure. Yeah, we're now on municipal bond
UTFs. That's also running like 5, 6%. So you have access to it
and hopefully it's growing with compounding. I would have no idea what to do with that
if it weren't for a financial advisor. Just be sitting there.
Right. Yeah.
Okay. Let's talk about the charity side.
Yes.
From a PR side, why do you think it's important for personal brands or for companies
to have some sort of philanthropic, whether they're part of every charity or get
their people, their family, or their employees?
to be involved in charity?
From a PR side, it's an easy answer.
It's actually one of the first things we do for some of our clients.
If they're not otherwise interesting or doing anything really impactful that the media is going
to take interest in, well, like, we need to do some charity work for you ASAP.
We need to find a cause and throw an event or do something to make you philanthropic,
make you interesting.
That way you've got a story.
You've got a company doing some good in the world.
So that's super important for PR.
Most companies aren't interesting.
A lot of them aren't.
aren't doing anything media worthy.
So you want to do something media worthy,
get some media attention,
do something philanthropic, find a charity.
So from PR side, easy win.
There are millions of charities out there
on a personal level or for your company level.
How do you decide what you would want to be involved
in whether it's financially, time, or energy with a charity?
Totally separate from PR.
How do I decide what I want to invest in?
First, it's personal.
So is there anything in my life or people that I really want to take care of?
And that's kind of where I'm at now.
And then there's the, what is your cause?
I think people need to have a cause that they're investing in and working towards
to make success more than just collecting money.
So on a personal side, I was this year, I was finally able to retire my mom.
She was going to the office, working in a cubicle with a bunch of 20-year-olds every day.
And I had offered a year ago, but she's like, no, I'm not ready to be retired at
feels weird. And then probably two months ago, she hit me up. And she's like, is the offer still
on the table? Like, I'm miserable. Like, can you help? So my mom's now on payroll. It's tax deductible.
She helps me where she can. But I was able to retire my mom. And the thing that I'm doing with her
is the philanthropy side. So my cause is animals. I've always been an animal guy. I know you love
animals too. But I grew up with, you know, a whole garage full of rabbits, mini kangaroos.
prairie dogs. Animals are very close to my heart. And it's all because of my mom. She loves
animals. So me and my mom together are opening a rescue. Oh, really? Yeah. That's going to be her
new projects. One of the stipulations for retiring my mom is you can't sit on your butt. Like,
we need to find you a cause. We need to find you a purpose. Yes. So I think this makes a lot of
sense. It's going to be a great funnel for a lot of my overflow money that's going to fulfill my
purpose and her purpose, which is help animals. So I think when you're deciding what to invest in,
it's going to be what's closest to you so that you can feel the impacts of your money and your
investment. I think donating to some random charity that you heard of that someone says is good,
I think is going to not have a long timeline on it if you can't immediately see or feel the impact
of your money. The reason I started my charity was that exact moment. Many years ago, 2009,
2009. I threw a charity poker tournament at my store in San Diego. I had 150 people show up.
It's a thousand bucks each. Some people put it a little more. So it was like, we had to present
this big check for like, let's call it $165,000. Post the picture the next day. Everyone's like,
wow, it's so cool, 165,000. So other people started donating. So they actually get like a quarter
million because everyone saw it. Super exciting. A few days goes by, I never hear what happens with
the money. A week goes by.
don't hear anything two weeks goes by they're not saying they did anything nefarious but
i got nothing to report back to all my friends i invited to my store to play in this trade
of poker tournament what happened right what did the kids get or what happened with the homeless
or what happened like what happened and so i decided to make very visual charities i mean i make
backpacks for the homeless with 150 items inside it's been 15 or 16 years now called model
citizen funds world's largest toy drive that's been 12 years now we're going to our 12th year now at the
Heat Arena coming up soon. Like I created visuals, toys, backpacks for the homeless,
things that you can see, feel in touch. You don't even have to donate to my charity. You can
go donate toys. You can make backpacks for the homeless. You actually don't have to send us
money to do that. You can do it. We're just efficient at it if you want to do it at scale. Right.
And more importantly, I want people to be a part of it. I'd rather you show up. Right.
I'd rather you bring out 60 staff with you. I'd rather you tell your 200 clients, hey, let's all bring
toys to the Miami Heat Arena, that's more than you throwing in a $1,000 or $10,000 or whatever,
you know, like rather than the money part. And so I wanted to create charities that people
could see, feel in touch for exactly what you said. And sometimes you just donated, you know,
you swipe your credit card. That's easy. Right. You donated 500 bucks to this charity and you feel
good for seven seconds. And then you don't even think about it because there was no like emotion
to it. You give a kid a toy. You give a homeless person a backpack with supplies. Poof.
Right. Tangible. Yes. You can feel it. Yes. And I've seen the toy.
drives you guys do a great job of showcasing like where the money is going and who you're helping yes
i think that's so important i call building in public i want them to see like we just got the
stadium here's us at the stadium all right this is when the setup is going to happen here's how we're
going to walk it in here's when the trucks are going to come in i'm showing it so either people can
replicate it on their own yeah do their own toy drives or they know that the work it takes to execute
it and they feel a part of it when they show up they feel a part of it they're they're
they're wrapping toys for nine hours.
They're there walking around with the kids and their parents.
They want to feel a part of it.
All right.
So there's only one question I ask on every single episode,
and I've never gotten the same answer before.
We're at 200 plus episodes now.
You build up your companies.
You build up your investments.
Your stock portfolio becomes worth hundreds of millions of dollars over the course of time.
You build up all these different companies.
You do joint ventures.
But at the end of the day, at some point, you finally pass away.
What percentage of your net worth do you leave to your children?
It's the ultimate dilemma, right?
Do you spoil your kids rotten?
Or do you give it all away?
Depends on what net worth is, I think.
If it's billions, do I want to leave them half?
No.
If it's a 10 million, then you want to leave them half.
I think the goal is to make your kids independent
and don't give them enough to live on
because that's when you really, I guess, ruin,
any opportunity of them learning and building for themselves.
I want to leave them just enough to be able to accomplish their dreams,
to build their future, to build their company,
but not enough where they never have to worry about money again.
And I don't know what that number is going to be by the time I pass.
Hopefully it's at 150 years old with modern technology.
I plan on it being, if they can keep me alive artificially, I'll do that too.
I want to give them enough to accomplish their dreams and no more.
So I open up my speeches with what you just said.
I scare the audience by saying
raise your hand if you have kids
most of the room raises their hand
and say your children are likely
to live to over 100 years old
our parents typically live
to 73 to 77 years old in my era
at your age they probably live
to 83 to 85 years old
85 and a half technically for women
your children will probably live
to 104, 112 and some of them
120 plus
and here's why
When I grew up, there was 7-Eleven from Jacking the Box and McDonald's.
There was no Whole Foods and Arawan.
There was no smoothies.
What do you mean smoothie?
We had slurpees at 7-Eleven.
There was no such thing as a smoothie with fruit in it.
There was no cold plunges and saunas.
You'd be a laughing stock if you'd gotten to a cold plunge.
We'd think you're insane to get a cold plunge when we were kids, right?
And now it's cool.
It's fun, right?
And now saunas are part of life and we realize the health benefits.
Modern technology.
Think about the difference.
15, 20 years ago, there was no smartphone.
So think about what our parents and what our families went through
when they were trying to get medical advice
in the 80s, 90s and 2010s.
That sounds like a long time ago.
That was 20 years ago.
Right?
And think about what's going to happen in 10 or 20 years
and 30 years and 40 years for our children.
From a medical perspective,
this is the only part of being a doctor that I stay very involved in.
It's the new science.
that's emerging. You open my refrigerator, it's just all vials of peptides. On my couch,
I've got a $50,000 pulse electromagnetic frequency unit. So there's some technologies and
medications and pharmaceuticals coming out that are just next level. We're going to be growing
and harvesting organs. There's DNA treatments that are going to cause you to be able to bulk.
Steroids are going to be gone. Just really unbelievable things that I completely corroborate.
120, 130, 140 is going to be very viable in our future.
We're not even talking about the AI side of it.
Right.
I'm not talking about robot doctors.
We're not talking about those things.
I firmly believe that some of the major, major, major diseases that will be eradicated.
Yes.
I can almost guarantee it.
There's some that won't like cancer because it's, you know, it's trillions of dollars.
So maybe there's some controversy there.
There's some like AIDS, which obviously have been managed.
Pretty much eradicated.
Look at Patrick Johnson.
He got like 30 years ago.
40 years ago, and look how healthy and amazing he is.
But I believe that the brain ones will be gone.
I think the things that my grandparents,
both of my grandparents, pass away from,
like Alzheimer's, will be eradicated.
I hope so.
I have a grandfather, too, 10 years.
Very bad Alzheimer's.
Half of my family's in danger.
And so why I say that, why do I lead an investment speech
with that?
The average person currently has $5,500 saved up in America.
What if your kid wants to retire at 74 and lives to 104?
They need 30 years of money saved up.
What if they want to get by on 5 grand a month?
I'm not talking about inflation or medical expenses.
Let's just say 5 grand a month.
Well, 5 grand a month times 12 is 60 times 30 years is a lot, $1.8 million.
It's a scary thought.
So just get by.
Right.
Well, unless you want them to be 84, 10 years later working somewhere to make 5 grand a month,
who knows if they'll have those type of jobs then because of AIs and robots and things like that.
And so I literally try to scare the audience at the beginning by saying...
I'm scared. Just sitting here.
Yeah.
Yeah. It works.
That if your kid's going to live to 104, they need to have money.
And we need to be able to bluntly talk about it, which is the whole point in this podcast.
All right. Tell them where they can find you on social media.
Where can they find your companies? Tell them everything.
All right. On social media, either Dr. J. Feldman or lead gen.
Gen, both on Instagram,
LeadGenJ on my website
or otterpr.com.
I'm everywhere.
If you search Jay Feldman, I'll pop right up.
I love it.
Yeah, it's been a lot of fun.
All right, guys, this is truly important.
The reason that we're doing so well
on the podcast charts is you.
Liking, commenting, subscribing.
When you're in the situation,
you're out of lunch, you're at dinner
with your friends playing basketball,
and they talk about a certain topic,
you're going to hopefully remember episodes like this.
When it comes to someone bringing up
lead gen or PR, you're like, oh, yeah,
you should follow Dr. Jay.
Oh, this happened here.
Boom, oh, you should listen to this episode.
I remember they talked about this.
It's not just about you.
These things are going to come up in your life all the time.
People are going to bring up things about paid ads, real estate, the stock market, health,
and all the things in between.
So when you hear guests on podcasts, whether it's the Money Mondays or different podcasts,
make sure you are referring these things to your friends to help make their lives better too.
I appreciate you guys.
We'll see you next week on Monday on the Money Mondays.com.
Thank you.