The Money Mondays - Founders, Creators, & Communities 🤝 E159
Episode Date: February 9, 2026On this episode of Money Mondays, Dan Fleyshman brings the show’s core theme—how to make more money, save more money, and invest more money—to life with Fanbasis founder/CEO Yash Daftery and Fou...nders Club co-founders Chris Meade (CROSSNET) and Aaron Spivak (Hush). They dive into practical ways creators and internet entrepreneurs can turn audiences into real revenue through digital products, smarter payments, and higher AOV, plus what it really takes to build a high-trust founder network that unlocks better relationships, deals, and opportunities. You’ll also hear Dan’s takes on investing discipline, evaluating opportunities, and giving back in ways that create visible, meaningful impact.
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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.
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We're going to dive right in.
I'm going to have you, Ash,
give you guys the quick two-minute bio
so we can get straight to the money.
Thanks for having me on, Dan.
Quick bio myself.
I'm a serial entrepreneur.
I've built multiple different businesses
in the info product space.
the agency space and have been involved in the startup space for a while as well.
Worked on the venture capital side for a few years when I was a little younger.
And since then, I'm the founder and CEO of fan basis.
We've built the Shopify for selling digital products, services, communities, memberships,
and virtually anything online.
We give a full suite of tools to essentially help people make as much money as possible.
We have really, really strong tools around payments, access to buy, now, pay later products.
high ticket payment processing.
And then everything from hosting a course to a community to building an affiliate program
and a lot of other tools that can help you unlock new revenue.
So unlike traditional platforms that just want you to host your business on their platform,
we come on and say, okay, if someone's coming to your fanbases,
how can we help them double the size of their business by, you know, the next year?
How did you get the idea to start fanbases.com?
Like, where did that come from?
So it originally was a little different.
we were a celebrity fan experience platform.
So we were like a cameo on steroids.
We had a couple thousand celebrities, athletes, influencers that would sell anything from a
virtual meet and greet, you know, with Dennis Rodman, for example, or a cooking
lesson with a master chef winner, an Instagram followback from a social media star.
And, you know, we built that to a point where it was generating revenue.
We were profitable.
It just wasn't scaling as quickly as I wanted it to.
At the same time, I also had a lot of experience on the agency side and also on
the info product side. So I recognize a lot of gaps. And two things kind of happen at once.
One, you know, on the payment side in particular with the other businesses I had, we're
facing difficulties with the traditional payment platforms. And at the same time, with the version of
fan bases that we had at that point, the top performers on the platform were selling more
scalable digital products and services where, you know, it's easy for take a reality TV star,
for example. So what we would do is we would go to all these reality TV stars after the season of
The Bachelor ended or Love Island or whatever it might be.
And you would see a really interesting concept where, you know, say there's 10 people that we get on from Love Island,
nine of them will come on.
They'll make a couple thousand dollars in the first month.
And then after that, it kind of dies down because they become irrelevant.
And there'll be one person that's making six figures a month because they're selling something that's actually real, you know, a digital, like a fitness routine workout program.
You know, anything along those lines that's actually giving like informational value to,
their customers. And we started seeing this trend industry over industry over industry where
even athletes like there's only so many virtual meeting greets that Dennis Rodman is going to be
able to one sell in a month and then second actually do, you know, getting him to do 30 virtually
increases a pain in the ass. But, you know, there's other athletes on the platform that would be,
you know, selling sports picks for example or, you know, training programs or whatever it might be.
And that's where we realized, you know, the real money and opportunity here is to create the first platform that actually, you know, not only hosts everything in one place because they could use, you know, Qajabi to host their course, teachable, you know, discord for their community or, you know, stripe for their payments.
But there's nothing that was kind of allowing them to have like that central operating system.
And none of those tools actually allowed them and enabled them to make more money.
It really just was something that they had to pay for to actually host their business.
So that was kind of the major gap that we were able to fill.
So on the make money side of the Money Monday's podcast, what do you think holds people back
from making money?
They got a little fame.
They got 10,000 followers or 50,000 followers, or maybe they're on a TV show.
They got a little bit of things going on, but they're not actually making money from their social media.
What holds them back from that?
Is it the tools, is the resources, the product?
What is it?
So taking it from the lens of like a creator, quote unquote creator, right?
You know, the traditional influencer is making money because they have an agent or a manager that's getting them sponsorship deals.
They get a bikini brand to sponsor them or, you know, a drink company, for example.
That's where we see, you know, one of the major gaps for creators to make money because they get, they think that as a creator, that's how they have to make money and that's the only way to do it.
When obviously everyone that's actually making, you know, generating real revenue has some sort of business built around their brand.
and they use their personal brand as the face for it,
but they're actually hosting, you know,
another business on a platform like ours.
And all of their content and everything, you know,
creates that top of funnel audience to drive into whatever digital product
or service that they're actually selling.
So what's holding them back is just thinking that, you know,
them not building a business,
like them focusing on more of just being an influencer rather than being what we consider
to be like an internet entrepreneur, you know.
Like, for example,
lot of the people that we both mutually know, some of the guys that you have on your podcast
as well, like a Garrett White, for example. You know, he's, yeah, he's technically an influencer.
He's got probably millions of followers across different platforms. But he's an entrepreneur.
Like, he's an internet entrepreneur. That's, you know, we don't, when I think of someone like that,
I don't think they're an influencer. He's built a personal brand as a marketing engine and a tool to
connect with its audience, provide value. But at the end of the day, everything kind of, you know,
funnels back into the business that he's hosting, selling these digital products, coaching,
things of that nature. And, you know, that's what separates the guys that are making 10K a month
or 20K a month from the guys that are making, you know, 500,000 a month or a million dollars a month.
So let's say someone is making money. There's a lot of options. They could sell business products,
apparel. They can try to do, make their own custom things now because there's a lot of white label
things. Like when you've got infinite options, how do you decide if you're going to sell beauty or makeup or
hair or fashion or fitness and da-da-da-da-la like is just kind of finding what matters to you or what
matters to your clients and audience i mean if it doesn't matter your clients and audience no one's
going to end up buying it so you know i've seen that so many times too i'm sure you have as well
you know where people want to do a passion project and then it's like hey no one actually gives a
shit but um you know sometimes it doesn't work that way which is always great but uh realistically
it's seeing you know what have you built your brand kind of being an authority figure on because
that's what your audience will actually trust you for.
Right.
You know,
if you're selling something that's a digital product,
like you have to be an authority in that space
or start to establish yourself as an authority in that space.
Some of the most,
you know,
going back to fitness as an example,
some of the best fitness coaches we've seen,
like they were extremely fat,
you know,
and that's,
and they built their whole following around them having that transformation
from being 300 pounds to,
you know,
150 pounds and having an eight pack.
And,
you know,
now everyone in that follows them knows that,
oh shit, you know, I'm, I relate to this story. This person actually did what I want to do.
And they're more willing to buy from someone like him than like a traditional fitness coach that
looks like, you know, they've been taking steroids for like the last three years.
And I've always been in shape, which is super interesting. So like that relatability aspect is,
I think the most important part of like whatever you're going to sell to your audience, can they
relate to you on that topic? If the answer is no, then you're not going to capture a majority of them.
You might be able to generate revenue. But, you know, what we also see is like some people
have a million followers and they're only able to get after 10,000 of their followers, which,
don't get me wrong, 10,000 followers paying you, 10,000 each, you know, can generate you a decent
amount of revenue. But, you know, if you can tap into what are 500,000 of my million followers
actually going to care about and what can I action them to do, that's obviously a much, much larger
opportunity. So who is fan basis useful for? Like, someone that's going to go to fanbasis.com and
apply or want to work with the company. Like, who is it for? Like, who are the main characters?
So we have multiple different kinds of businesses.
When we originally started, it was more focused on those internet entrepreneurs where you
have a personal brand and you're building a business around that.
Now, you know, we're about 30 to 40% of our client base is what we consider to be an
internet entrepreneur or a creator.
But we also have agencies on our platform.
We have membership, you know, communities like Founders Club, for example.
We have software companies and startups that utilize our tech.
So we've built enterprise solutions out to where really anyone that's selling something that isn't a physical product.
If you're selling a physical product, Shopify is the best place to do that, to be honest.
Anything outside of that, you know, our platform is really built for.
And our whole goal is to, you know, with the payment suite alone, can get you the highest authorization rates,
access to buy now, pay later products to help you, you know, double or triple your AOV and make it accessible to a lot more customers.
And then also if you have subscription related businesses, we give you the highest rebuild rates.
for example and also allow you to kind of manage everything from A to Z.
So really anyone that's selling a digital product or service of any sort can utilize our
platform.
So you said something like AOV.
Can you explain what is that concept?
Yeah, average order value.
So that's something that, you know, is probably one of the key metrics any business
owners should be looking at is when a customer comes in through the door, what is
the average customer going to be spending?
You know, you might have one customer that spends $5,000, but, you know, if the rest
of them are spending only $100, you need to be optimizing for kind of what that AOV is.
So, you know, what we try to help people do is increase that AOV as much as possible because
that means every customer that interacts with you, you're typically making more off of them.
And there's a lot of different tools to do that.
Buy Now, Pay Later is one of the best ways to do so where, you know, say you're, especially when
you're selling a high ticket product where say you're selling something for $5,000, you might have
two products, one that's $1,000,000, one that's $5,000.
You know, if you come in and you're just selling this to a mass market audience,
majority of people don't have $5,000 just laying around, right?
So they're going to go and opt for that $1,000 product where they might be interested in the
5K1, but it's just not accessible for them, even though that could be potentially a much
better service for that individual.
So with Buy Now Pay Later, what you can do is allow them to finance that over, you know,
6, 12, 24, 36 months and turn that $5,000, you know, program into 150 bucks a month.
So it becomes super affordable for the customers.
now your AOV, maybe it was $1,500, can jump to $3,000
because majority of people want to buy the 5K,
they just weren't able to.
And you know, you're most likely adding,
what we see is if someone isn't using Buy Now Pay Later
within 90 days of joining our platform and getting access to it,
they're typically seeing about a 38% increase in their top line revenue.
Whoa.
So it's massive, especially for a business making, you know,
half a million or a million dollars a month.
It's a huge lift for them.
Wow.
And, yeah, at the end of the day,
it's, you know, even that $1,000 product in my example, now becomes available and affordable for,
you know, 90% of people that exist in the U.S. because they can finance that for 50 bucks a month,
for example. So it's a huge, it's a massive tool that obviously everyone's heard of, you know,
a firm and Klarna and companies like that over the last 10 years, 15 years, but a lot of
businesses have still not tapped into it. And we see this on a daily basis. And, you know, it's
created some of the best customer loyalty for us because we put them, you know, we give them
the ability to have access to these products where you typically wouldn't be able to access
it without a company like ours. And now they're seeing a massive increase in their business.
They're able to start reinvesting all that cash into growing much, much quicker, reinvesting
back into their customer experience, expanding their team. So not only are you seeing an immediate
revenue lift, you're able to grow the business much more than that 38% on average because of the
fact that you have a lot more capital and, you know, capital to spend on in reinvesting back
in your business. So let's talk about the investing side of the podcast, except I want to ask a
different style of question. I watch you go from 30 employees to 40 employees to 50 employees
to 60 employees, 70 employees. Why is it important to invest into people? People is the best
investment. This is something that, you know, I'm 26 years old. So it's, it's, it's, I have a unique
perspective on it, given that, yeah, I started this when I was, I really started working on this
business when I was like 21.
And I started building out the team.
You know, like over the last year, really, we went from 18 people total to now.
I think, you know, as of this week, we may have just crossed 100.
Oh, wow.
Yeah.
And it's been exactly about a year since that's happened.
It's really interesting.
Our core team, they're the most driven, ambitious, bought in people that I could have
possibly imagined to have on the, you know, on our founding team.
And it's not something that, like, I went out.
originally with intention and I was like, hey, like, I'm looking for this exact persona and profile
of person. It's just more of what we attracted. You know, when you're having an early stage
business, you really need people that are bought into the vision of the company. Um, because if
they're not bought in, then they're just an employee that's doing a nine to five. They're doing a
task, but they don't give a shit. Having them care about what you're building and make them feel like
and give them some sort of equity sake and make them feel like, you know, they're also building it
because they are at the end of the day, um, is super important. You know, so those, my core team,
they they love fan bases as much as I do if not more in certain cases then after that you know it was
how can we as we start to scale now I need to start scaling quickly because we're just growing the
business so quickly right you know if we get another thousand employees a thousand clients I need
to have the bandwidth to make sure they're getting the best experience possible so it's harder
to be as selective as I used to be you know when we didn't have that level of growth and I was looking
for just only purely the right fits and you know
made some mistakes and also learned some extremely valuable lessons of we got lucky with making
some of the right hires where we had to okay i need to bring in someone to be or had a revenue in
the next 45 days i interviewed 30 40 people have recruiters involved you know we got lucky by finding the
right guy to kind of lead the whole department there but in certain other cases we weren't able to
where it's like okay you know getting someone that's been working in a corporate environment for the
last 15 to 20 years where they've had a chain of command in a hierarchy to have them come in and
lead a whole department. You know, they may have been the head of something, you know, at their last
company, but it doesn't translate to being at a startup where, you know, they had a process from
9 a.m. to 5 p.m. They knew exactly what was happening. They had access to all the data they needed,
you know, having them come and create processes. In a lot of cases was, you know, it was a harder than
we expected it to be. Because you guys have 1046 p.m. like we're hacking. Oh, yeah. I mean,
you know, we're at the office still 2 a.m. last night on a Friday.
Right, you know, and there was a dozen of us there.
So, yeah, absolutely.
And that mentality is something that, like, it is really a lot easier to get.
And, you know, the best, the best employees that we found have been, like, failed, quote-unquote, failed entrepreneurs or people that tried the entrepreneurial path and just didn't really like it as much.
And they wanted to be a part of something bigger and a much larger vision.
Interesting.
Because they don't have those same constraints in their head of, like, a nine to five.
They don't think about things.
that way. They think about, you know, we have a goal that we want to accomplish. How do we get to that
goal as quickly as possible and as efficiently as possible? You know, and you're finding someone from a
corporate background. That's just not something that they've ever really had exposure to or thought
about. So rewiring someone's brain is very difficult. You know, they need to have it in them.
But realistically, you know, the way that we've been able to find the right people is like,
and one of the mistakes we made was we would sacrifice culture in certain cases for talent.
You know, take like product, for example.
Like there was this one product person that we were like, you know, she was not the typical profile of someone that I would, you know, like.
But we were like, okay, she's really cracked at product.
She's really, really good.
She comes in.
She's doing a phenomenal job at her job.
But now she's not meshing well with the rest of the team, causing issues where other people are not able to do their jobs.
And there's ripple effects and how people are going.
And, you know, in the middle of the day, talking about what happened and their interaction with this person.
And it's like, okay, I hate any sort of bullshit that's going on.
Yeah, I need to cut all of that out.
So, you know, we realize really quickly that getting people that are, you know,
there needs to be a really fine balance of like we want the best people at the job,
but we also want people that, you know, care about the company,
care about the vision and are bought into it.
They're not here for a paycheck.
They're here because they want to be a part of something bigger and want to be in at the ground level.
And at the end of the day, we'll fit in with kind of the rest of the team that we built.
And I think the culture that we've built at fan basis is probably the best culture I've ever seen at any company.
So years from now, you get acquired by, let's call it Shopify or Amazon.
And one of these huge companieside that we're going to, private equity is going to come in and buy you for billions of dollars.
And one of your employees has one percent.
And all of a sudden, they've got $14 million, boom, one wire in their bank account.
How do you set that person down when they're going to get bombarded by all their friends?
They might only be 29 years old now.
and everyone's hitting them up to invest in their restaurants, invest in my nightclub,
invest in my record label, my music, my this, my that.
How do you talk to them and say to them about investing, whether it's real estate,
stock market, cash-line businesses, etc.?
Yeah, no, it's a great question.
And frankly, too, from, you know, a lot of people that I went to college with, for example,
you know, and just friends that I've had over time, like I've kind of been in that similar
position already even without a massive exit.
And it's, you know, one, I think you have to be really smart about things.
I try to take emotion out of any investment decision that I make altogether, whether it be investing
in a stock in the market.
You know, I'm not going to go and just invest in a, and buy a bunch of stock of a company
that I like because I had a good experience with the product, right?
You have to do actual diligence on everything.
The biggest mistakes I've seen angel investors make.
And I've interacted with some of these guys that have written us checks too.
And it's like, hey, like you literally do zero due diligence, you know, like you don't know anything
about what we do besides a quick couple conversations that I had with you.
So, you know, you'll see, like, for us to raise our Series A, that was a three-month process of them doing due diligence back and forth.
They understood more about the business than I did, I think, you know, after they dove through everything.
So doing due diligence is the most important part about any investment, you know, as I'm sure you know.
Now, outside of that, I think having a diversified portfolio is important, but figure out what you're actually good at and what you're not good at investing in and bring in advisors that, you know, are valuable.
I have so many friends that, you know, have multiple millions of dollars and they don't have a wealth manager or anything along those lines because they're like, oh, I made a couple million dollars in crypto. Like, you know, I've been able to get 70% returns year over year. You know, wealth managers are only getting, you know, 10 or 15% returns and they're, you know, how am I going to take advice from someone that's not wealthier than me? It's like your whole ideology behind this is extremely backwards. It doesn't make any sense. Like, you know, you're, if you go and work with someone at Morgan's, you know, you're, if you go and work with someone at Morgan's, you know, you know, you're, if you go and work with someone at Morgan's, you
Stanley, for example, like they have a multi-trillion dollar business that they're able to utilize
and they have data that they're spending billions of dollars on getting to help you make the best
decisions possible. And as you generate and accumulate more and more network, you know, a lot more
exclusive opportunities come your way as well, where, you know, there's a lot of investment
opportunities that are not available to the actual public that those are the best ones to tap into,
obviously doing your due diligence properly. But it's really, you know, diversified in a way that
actually makes sense for you. Don't start doing 50 different things at once just for the sake of
diversifying an asset portfolio. You know, figure out what you're actually good at, what you're
interested in investing in, you know, try to have fun with it as well. And, you know, it's okay
to gamble a little bit every once in a while, but it needs to be a really small allocation that
you're kind of, you know, putting into your portfolio. So you mentioned the Series A. When someone
gets approached to invest into a company and says, hey, we want you to invest into our Series A,
what are some of the questions that they should be asking if, you're not? You know,
cutting that check.
As in from an investment perspective?
I think for a check that that's that large where it's over, you know,
five to ten million dollars.
So they're just going to be throwing a couple hundred grand.
They're just,
they got approached about investing into a series of.
Oh, got it.
Like a co-investment.
Yeah, I see, I see.
So I think the main things are,
one, you know, go get the cap table,
figure out the org structure.
Let's understand exactly who owns the business and what's going on.
You know, you might really like a founder,
but if they only own 20% of the company, you know, how vested is their stake, right?
Figure out kind of what the progression of the business has been.
P&L, balance sheet can tell a great story.
At this point, too, you can use AI tools to really analyze that and help break it down.
If you're not someone that's super savvy when looking at financial statements.
Now, figure out where did this jump come in, or is this business growing at 5% or 10% year over year where you're seeing a big number,
but you're like, okay, this is going to be a, you know, they want to sell for five,
million dollars this is going to be a 20 year long investment or you know is this something that they can
possibly achieve in the next year to two years um so you know the the financial picture always paints
you know the most telling story out of anything and then outside of that you know obviously figure out
like you know do research online figure out do they have any adverse media go on twitter look at
the you know what are people saying about this company make sure you're doing your due diligence on
just the you know the intangible piece of the company to see what the sentiment looks like something
I think is super valuable to is doing customer research. So when you do a series A or series B,
they're probably not going to tell you or sometimes they ask you for references and intros to
your clients, but usually a lot of the times they hire companies like Alpha Insights, for example,
to go and reach out to a bunch of your clients and essentially interview them, pay them $1,000
to hop on a call and do a quick interview. That's the most telling way to figure out exactly
what's going on in business. Talk to some of the customers. Don't ask the business about it,
because obviously if you ask the company about it,
they're going to give you the best references that they have, right?
If someone asks me for a reference,
I'm telling them to talk.
Yeah, talk to you.
But, you know, figure out, you know,
look at the people that maybe even wrote bad reviews online
and ask them, or the three-star reviews,
and ask them like, hey, what was your experience like with this business
for X, Y, Z reasons?
And figure out what the actual pros and cons are
because, you know, when you're speaking to the founders,
obviously it's their job to paint the best story possible.
And if they're introducing you to someone,
they're going to be really strategic with the way that are doing that.
they're not, then that should be a massive, massive red flag, you know, on its own. But, you know,
I think that's probably the best way to actually figure out what is truly going on with the business.
You know, what are the different products that people are actually utilizing and what's, you know,
the real value for this company being created on? So I've done 43 angel investments. And the last few
years, I raised $56 million for food and beverage brands and consumer products. And I have four people
you have to get by for me to say yes to an investment. I call it the four horsemen.
first is my accountant, which is my older brother, so good luck.
Second is my attorney.
Third is my CEO.
Again, good luck.
He's got 30 years in the TV game.
Their job is to protect me and to rip you to shreds.
And fourth is an advisor, but the advisor changes.
So the first three people are the same.
Accountant, lawyer, CEO, those stay the same.
The advisor changes because if it's a tech founder or tech company, I might say, hey,
yes, we look at this and see if you say they pass.
if it's a new snack company,
I might ask someone else
that's deep into that category, right?
Right.
I want to ask someone
that's in that category,
so the advisor part changes.
Why do I have the four horsemen?
Because I might get excited
when you pitch me your brand.
It might get excited when you pitch me
your deal.
It could be an elevator you pitch me.
It could be at an event and you pitch me.
I might get excited about it,
but I need to understand,
does it pass accountant,
lawyer,
business, and advisor?
So finding those type of characters
in your life
to have your own version
of the four horsemen.
What happens is oftentimes,
we just get excited because our friend pitches or something or we don't know how to say no.
I'm going to give you one quick trick on how to say no.
Ask them for their financials, investor documents, wiring instructions.
Their basic information for the most part, they don't have their business plan.
And so just by you saying, hey, send me your business plan, your financials, and your investor documents,
most of them disappear.
They just don't have it.
And the ones that do actually go have the paperwork, you can actually start to consult.
investing into before you start the stages of getting someone else to look at the deal.
All right.
Final chapter of the podcast.
Charity side.
Why is it important for brands to get involved in some type of charity philanthropy for
their customers, clients, employees, etc., to see them actively involved in charity?
I think it really depends on, you know, the value that you get out of it depends on
the kind of business that you have.
Obviously, you know, if you have something that's super mass market and you're appealing to, you
know, millions of people having a charitable approach definitely can help those guys have a great
perception of your company, relate to your brand a little bit better, especially if you're solving
problems that they've seen in their own communities or helping with problems, you know, they've seen
in their own communities. You know, if you have a business that's more focused on, say, you're only
dealing with Fortune 500 companies, you know, having that, one, being involved in charity can get you
in the right rooms in a lot of cases, just thinking about it from a business perspective and not
you know, purely from a giving back perspective. But, um, outside of that, uh, you know,
it creates kind of this basis where you can relate to other people. And, uh, you know, if there's
someone like, there's conversations, my father, for example, when I was growing up, on his birthday
every single year, he would go to the soup kitchen. And that would be like his birthday, you know,
experience, which like, I was really annoyed about when I was younger because like, hey, we could
be doing something fun. But, um, you know, looking back on it, like, I remember one time I was with
him at a I was out of box at the Yankees game in New York and there was someone else that like
owned one of the soup kitchens you know in in New Jersey that you know he would go and volunteer
at that he just ran into didn't know they didn't know each other at the time and uh they ended up going
you know co-investing on like three deals afterwards and they that was the basis of how they
were able to form that initial relationship and um essentially you know relate to each other
with some sort of common ground so you know it enlocks a lot of different kind of opportunities like
that. And obviously, you know, there's, it shows a whole other side of a person when it's not just
about how can they benefit from every single relationship. It's, you know, it, it, uh, tells you a lot
when someone's looking for ways to kind of give back and make just the overall community stronger.
Would you like to have children someday? Uh, probably. So there's only one question I ask the same
question on every single episode and I've never gotten the same answer. So you build fan basis up to a
multi-billion dollar company, get acquired, the 3.1.1.com.
billion dollars you start another company saw that one for 1.2 billion and you are a serial entrepreneur
and so let's say 100 years from now a long long time from now unfortunately time for yash to pass
away what percentage of your net worth do you leave to your children it depends on how my children
turn out you know if they i would assume that i'm going to raise them right and um they're great in that
case i would probably leave them yeah at least 90% of my net worth um if you know but the the way that
I was raised was when it came to information and relationships, I had access to everything
that I ever needed when it came to capital, you know, and having to build businesses.
Like, I had to go through kind of the, you know, the A to Z on that. There was nothing that was
ever handed to me. So I'd probably want to replicate a similar environment because that
brought out a lot of hunger. I grew up with a lot of wealthy kids as well, that majority of them
either working like some sort of like basic job right now or they're like you know are doing essentially
like fuck all because um they just had everything handed to them it was super easy to begin with so there's
nothing that really created that inner sense of motivation and drive um where you know i have other friends
as well that you know maybe some of them had wealthy parents some of them didn't and they're some of the
most successful people that i know um because of the fact that they were raised the right way and
nothing was ever handed to them they were always you know hey this is what's positive
for you to achieve, you know, you have to go and claim that and figure out a way to get there
and figure out your own path to get there. So I think, you know, that's probably the most
important part is kind of, you know, giving them the resources that they need, not just not capital,
though, to, you know, achieve whatever their goals are. But, you know, realistically, I would
hope that there's a scenario here where I can give the majority of my net worth.
Where can people find you, find fan bases? Tell them all about it for social media, websites,
everything. You can find us on fanbasis.com, F-A-N-B-A-S-I-S-com, and find me on Instagram at
Yash Daftery. All right, guys, when you listen to these podcasts, keep in mind it's not just for you.
It could be for your friends, family, or followers, and it might happen six months to 12 months
from now. You're out of breakfast, you're out of lunch, et cetera, and someone's talking about
something and then bam, you remember what Yash says. So it might be from someone from your past,
present, or future. When you listen to the Money Monday's podcast, there might be characters that
on this show like yash that might be useful for someone else that you could forward this episode too
the reason that we need your help is liking commenting subscribing and sharing it helps us stay in the top 50
of all podcasts in the world we are able to then provide a free platform for you guys to listen to
this podcast in a nice 30 to 40 minute type setting appreciate you guys make sure to check out fanbasis
com we'll see you guys next week here at the money mondays dot com 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 it away to charity. Normally, I have individual guests, but this company is too cool,
so we're doing a double guest episode. As you guys know, this episode will be under 40 minutes
for your listening pleasure because the average workout is 45 minutes. The average commute to work
is 45 minutes. This episode will be between 34 and 38 minutes, so you can listen to this
on your drive to work or while you're at the gym or running around town. Now, as you guys know,
this is very important. I've been running this commercial free for years and years and years,
so you actually listen to it. We have what's called a 93% listen through rate, which is helping us
on the charts. There's no commercials here. I do work with fanbases and fanbases.com because I
actually use them, but you don't hear me saying some fancy code for that. Just go check them out.
I work with high level. Go high level as a company I've been using for many, many years.
Same concept. No fancy codes. Just go look at high level to help back end your coaches, courses,
agencies, whatever's going on in your world. Outside of that, there is no commercials.
I just want to talk very straightforward about money because we grew up thinking it's rude to talk
about money. I think it's ridiculous. We have to talk about accounting, loans, finances, taxes.
Should I lease? Should I buy? What happens with my friends borrow us 400 bucks? How do I get it back? These are real life things that go on in your lives
So you have to be able to talk with your friends your family and followers about money
Without further ado, Chris and Aaron each of you give us a quick two-minute bio
So we get straight to the money. Let's go. Thanks for having us
Yeah, Chris Meade co-founder of the founders club started a company called Crossnet the world's first four-wave volleyball game
About 10 years ago broke speaking of money on a farm in Connecticut
and desperately wanted to change my life.
Did not want to get to the end of my life
and be working in nine to five
and look my kids in the face and say,
Dad didn't do it.
Dad didn't try.
And so I had a good idea one night.
I just went for it.
Worst comes the worst.
I was going to go back to my full-time job.
Here we are on the pot.
Aaron Spivak.
Also previously had an e-commerce D-C company called Hush.
We brought the world's first adult weighted blanket back in 2017.
I was very young. It was only 21 years old. We scaled that up over four years. We went from zero to
$50 million a year with about $4,000 of DJ money that I saved up over the weekends. And we've
had a top 10 Kickstarter of all time. Exited in 2021. It took a couple of years off to figure out
what we wanted to do. And that's when Chris and I came together and had this incredible idea
to build essentially a modern day YPO, which is the Founders Club. Very cool. Explain
Founders Club.
I love it.
Founders Club.
Essentially, as Aaron said, a modern-day YPO,
but in entrepreneurship, club or community
or fraternity or sorority
for modern-day founders.
And there's a different value prop.
The way you talk about it depends on the
angle you take it. But for me, I think
of it as an insurance policy.
In the next 12 months, you're going to go
through some shit. For sure. Whether it's
personal, in business, want a divorce,
you want to buy out a partner, you're scared
about inventory, you need money.
instead of going to somebody
and like begging for help
before the problem actually happens
before it's too late
you now have in the palm of your hand
or in your community
1,200 plus founders
who are equally stoked,
equally yoked, bigger and better
and have those connections.
So the goal is to have a resource
for any type of problem under the sun.
And we also take it a step further.
It's not just a business community.
It's a life community.
And I'll say, Dan, I'm going to make you richer
and happier.
My goal is Dan, I'm going to make you happier.
Your life is going to get better
because you unlock all these days.
I'm not giving you a 10x ROI on your investment.
Your life is going to be better because you're a member of the Founders Club.
What's your version of it?
Yeah, I mean, for us, it comes also from like our own journeys being young
entrepreneur trying to figure it out, you know, for both of us, like our parents did not
create multinational corporations.
My dad wasn't able to give me the resources and the advice or his best friend couldn't
connect me with anyone.
We always had to figure it out on our own.
And I thought that was just unique to us.
And what we realized was that's actually unique to majority of entrepreneurs.
You know, at the time, our exit was the third largest DDC transaction in Canadian history.
Wow.
The joke of it was that I found my lawyer on a Google search.
I literally Googled M&A lawyer and like whatever ad popped up was what I clicked.
And in hindsight, like that was the stupidest thing I could have done.
What I should have been able to do was go to a group of people that I trust, that have been through it before, that have sold.
There's been many companies that have sold for way more.
and said, hey, I'm going through this for the first time.
You have a couple of people you think I should speak to.
For sure.
You know, I read an NDA for the first time.
I said, you couldn't tell anyone.
I literally didn't tell anyone.
I didn't fully understand what an NDA man.
Right.
You know, let alone an L.O.I.
Let alone what, you know, we sold to a publicly traded company, what that means, what fiduciary duties means.
Like, all these things I had to learn and make mistakes for the first time.
And we saw that every modality in life has community.
Religion.
If you're into yoga or Pilates, whatever you're into, you can find.
your jam. There's people out there that you can go and be in that community with because we believe
that environment is way stronger than willpower. So when it came to entrepreneurship, all the
communities that were out there, we felt they were a little bit outdated, felt they were an old
style of entrepreneurship. Most of them were just boys club. And we created a modern day version of that
that brings curated connections to a whole new level where people never have to feel like we felt,
which was lonely entrepreneurs. Who's the avatar? Like what size business are they? What?
What age are they?
What part of their career are they?
Like, where are they?
Yeah.
So right now, our average member is about 35 years old.
They have about $14 million a year in business.
Our demographic, 65 to 35% male to female.
And month over month, it's just getting stronger and stronger.
We had limited beliefs two years ago.
We couldn't service brands past 10 million.
And now every single week we have billionaires joining the club, which is just fascinating.
Like, it is literally fascinating that people that you would think have their life figured out.
It's so far true.
Like there are problems.
Even you have problems, right?
Like you have a whole new set of problems with a new family, children,
like you're going through something.
So at every stage of life, people need connection and need help.
And that's what's really happening right now, which is really, really cool.
There's also like the side of things where we feel that, you know,
one thing about our average founders, you know, about like 14 to 20 million.
That's without the billionaires.
They skew it.
They skew it.
Yeah, exactly.
We don't do that.
But, and the reason why we say that is to give people context, but a big reason for that is because they're growing.
Right.
And next year, you know, we're trending closer to be 25 to 15 million as an average.
And that's, yes, our bigger brands, bigger founders joining.
Yes.
But what's actually happening is our entrepreneurs, our founders are growing.
Right.
Because our definition of success isn't just money.
For many it is, and I totally understand that.
We go back and forth all the time on this.
But for us, our three virtues are mind, body, and business.
And no one's perfect.
We don't expect anybody to be perfect.
But for us, if someone were to apply, they have a $100 million company, which is great,
nine-figured operation, but they are lying and stealing from their friends.
Nobody talks to them.
They have a horrible relationship with their partners or their kids.
They're not good community members.
They only take.
They never give.
They have no charitable asset.
They don't care about their health whatsoever.
but they got a really good business,
those are not Founders Club members.
Founders Club members are ones that want to maximize
and live life to their fullest potential,
which is, like if you ever look at Mazel's hierarchy of needs,
it's self-actualization,
which is hard to achieve,
but it's way easier to achieve
when you're surrounded by like-minded people.
So you know what?
I might be eating really unhealthy this week,
and I'm off and I got a lot of shit going on in my life,
but if we're hanging out and you're on your health kick,
the likelihood that I eat healthy because of you
is way higher than if we weren't hanging out.
And vice versa, if you're struggling with a relationship or you're avoiding a tough conversation,
I'm feeling good, I can be there for you and push you to go be the best version of yourself.
So we always say that we're curating all day long these curated environments for people to step into and reach their highest self.
So is it a couple of events a year?
Is it pods?
Is it one big, Q mega conference?
It never ends, man.
All the above.
So the way we look at it now, we have six core chapters, Miami, New York, L.A., all.
in Toronto and Vancouver.
And there's pods within them.
So each of those chapters have about 100 people.
That's how this podcast out, maybe it grows 120.
They have assigned to vetted mastermind groups.
So it's a peer group of eight people that look the same, feel the same,
but maybe they're in different stages.
They meet monthly for peer development,
whether it's business, life, coaching, whatever.
Outside of that, we have activities on a monthly basis
that are more revolved around the mind and the body.
So last week, we just partnered it with F1, a big F1 event.
Next week we're going out of our boat, right?
So those type of community events may we rent out of the box at the heat gamer and MSG.
And then annually, we have what we're working on now, what you're speaking at, the Founders Forum.
Nice.
So the forum is our large Super Bowl event.
I look at it.
It's like my, it's my entrepreneur.
It's my festival.
Nice.
where we were planning out the dinners based on concerts
and snowboarding events that we wanted to go around.
So for two years, we traveled the world.
We saw a concert, we hosted a dinner, we flew back with a cool memory
and 20 new friends.
So the forum is our one large big event.
I trade in all our favors.
We have incredible speakers come out.
And it's a destination wedding for 500 plus members.
So 500 people start as strangers, leave as best friends.
And they're just so amped for the next one.
So that's our big event that we're working on right now.
Yeah, I think like one thing to note also is, you know, what we really strive for is a curated connections.
So when it comes to events, like we do 150 events a year.
We do them all over.
150 events a year.
20 to 30 a month.
Whoa.
All over all over all the cities, core cities, non-core cities as well.
So if you're anywhere in North America, basically, you can definitely join the club.
A lot of our events also have it virtually as well.
So we have weekly master classes that are being taught by experts.
a lot of them are members.
So members that raise their hand and say,
hey,
I've spent 12 years,
you know,
building out a way to save 30 grand a month using AI.
Let me show you how I do it for free.
There's never a catch.
We don't allow people to sell.
There's no soliciting.
Absolutely.
If you get caught soliciting one time,
you are kicked out for the community.
Strong.
No refund.
Nothing.
It's just super important.
But like then we have obviously
the masterminds that exist virtually.
Some people who,
you know,
don't live in the core cities.
Also,
there's some people that fly in every single month
to a course city just to sit with their group.
And that group is super unique
because we spend, it's almost like creating the perfect wedding seating, you know?
This person likes this person, like, who's perfect to sit besides each other to have an amazing night?
We do that for entrepreneurs.
And some people think like, oh, I want to sit with eight people.
This is what everyone says, right?
They go, I want to sit with eight people who do exactly what I do, but are just a couple steps ahead of me.
And it's like, yeah, no.
Because why do they want to sit with you?
But what we've realized, we call it the FC Secret Sauce is like we spend a lot of time and we also leverage
J-I because we do about 150 minutes of interviews before we even offer you an application to join the club.
We get about 3,500 applications a month, we accept less than 4.5%.
Now, 3,500 are all qualified? No.
About 65, 70% of them are.
Right? And from that percentage...
Out of 2,000 people, you're just picking 50 to 100 people?
This month, like 95.
4%.
Yeah, super small.
We allow.
Yeah.
We're disqualifying a lot.
We qualify a lot.
We want to be aspirational.
You know, like YPO, you meet somebody YPO, it's a badge of honor.
And we're in year three of founders club, but this will become a badge of honor.
And you're like, shit, that person's in Founders Club, they must be legit.
And the moment we start letting in one to two or three of the wrong people, the whole thing goes to hell.
It takes a lot of time.
Just background checks.
We verify revenue.
Like, a lot of people lie.
They show up with something they're not.
Like, we want you to know that if you're in and you come to one of our events,
you join one of our masterminds, and you take three hours away from your family and the people you love that you can be doing, you're running a business.
If you're in the club, you're running a business.
You've got a lot of things going on,
and we're going to put you in a room with no phone
to sit at a table with eight other people
with a guided discussion to go deep and be vulnerable
and share some of your dark, deepest, darkest secrets.
You have to trust us that those seven other people at the table,
we did the work to make sure that they're not going to potentially hurt you
or you're vulnerable or you'd be exposed.
These people need to meet the criteria.
So we take it super seriously.
And you said there's no phone during those three hours?
No, no.
No phones allowed.
I think also we didn't even touch on our, like,
We found ourselves Seekers Sauce and all the other communities can steal it.
It's like when you look at a YPO or EO, they're mostly segregated by the city.
So it's like the New York chapter, the L.A. chapter.
Us is global.
So with all those events, Dan, if you're in L.A. or in New York this weekend, you could pop into
those events 100% for free.
Like this morning, we did a 5K run club with a bunch of the Miami members.
We had an L.A. member fly in.
Not for the event.
He was just happening to be here for meetings.
But he plugged in.
He came in.
He had an entire time.
We did breakfast together.
And now he left with four friends.
Exactly.
I love that part.
The idea is to truly have a global network.
If you go to Marbea in Spain and you're like,
what's the best coffee shops or where should I take my family
or what's a good beach to go to with a young kid?
Don't use GBT because it'll tell you whatever someone programmed it to.
Like the local that lives there, you can just write in the group.
And not only that, they'll probably take you out
because we encourage people that they must,
one of our code of conducts is you must give before you take.
I love that.
We have some people that go in and they just only ask questions.
They never answer.
They only ask.
And we keep tabs on all of that.
And we let people know.
You've been asking a lot of questions.
Like you can't answer anyone.
It's like,
oh,
I only jump in when I need something.
It's like,
there's tons of groups out there.
There's so many groups out there for that.
For us,
it's a give first community.
That way the bowl,
the container is always overflowing.
And that's why people,
when they leave an event
or they leave a mastermind.
Or they leave a paddle tournament
that we do.
No matter what we do,
they leave with energy.
They leave full.
They don't leave like someone just sucked blood
out of them.
I'm like, oh my God, I'm never coming back.
But, dude, since I've known you, like, you've embodied that, right?
Like, you connect me with Chris from ClickUp.
We just had a great breakfast last week, but you don't want anything from that.
The world just goes in a circle.
And it's like, we're looking for people just like that.
Yeah.
And just want to make the world a better place.
And it all comes back full circle, you know?
So it's interesting.
I've been throwing masterminds for years.
And I'll go get fancy celebrity or big performance or rent out a stadium or something crazy.
Yep.
The number one thing on the exit survey when the members leave is the breakout session.
Yeah.
Yeah, who should meet?
The three hours you talked about, we only do 90 minutes or two hours, because it's three days in a row.
But the three hours you're talking about is the most important thing.
Literally like, did you like Mark Wahlberg and Chris Jenner and Shaq or blah, blah, blah?
No, no.
The breakout session.
We don't really even announce, like, speakers.
Well, one is like ours are members only, so we don't like necessarily use it.
But like our members sign up for it without even knowing who's speaking.
Yes.
Yeah.
Because they just want to meet other people.
I don't even let my staff know who speaking.
Exactly.
And we actually, we had three, so the event coming up in March, we had three stages.
We actually just removed an entire stage and made a curated connection stage.
So all day long, you have an hour block.
You're assigned to that hour block.
And you're going to walk away with 10 new friends.
And you know what?
The feedback's probably going to be better.
All the paid speakers, everybody that we have there.
They're going to like that stage the best.
For sure.
For sure.
Okay.
So let's talk about the entrepreneurial journey.
You sell the company.
You sell the company.
But you also didn't mention, you have the,
Pilate Studios.
Oh yeah.
You have multiple location of Pilates Studios.
How did that come to Brise?
Yeah, I met my wife here in 2018, and she was amazing.
She was smart marketer, really great girl, and we were just starting CrossNet.
I was living on unemployment.
I remember, like, sitting on my first date with her, like, she's on the left side of the Uber.
I'm like, when we get to 10 sales a day, babe, we're going to be rich.
And she started, like, I'd always ask her for copyrighting help, and eventually COVID happened.
Yep.
And she lost her job.
And I was like, yo, come full time and help Crossnet.
So she became employee number one.
Wow.
She worked with us, ran our marketing department.
And I looked at her and was like one day,
she gave up her corporate America job for my dreams.
And I respected that.
And in 2021, we were getting married.
And it was either get married or open the studio
because she really wanted to open a studio.
And we didn't have a lot of money back then.
And we're like, all right, we're going to get married first.
One day we'll live your dream.
And I never wanted her.
I grew up in a house where my dad would sit at the kitchen table
and tell us all about the dreams he never lived.
And I really, I started, I started, I never wanted to be that father, but I never wanted
her to be that mother.
And to know that life happens quick, if she had a kid, never got to live the dream,
there's no perfect time, but now is the perfect time when we don't have a family.
So we opened up the studio last year, February 3rd.
She's the operator, just as the supportive moral husband.
I've made a very strong commitment to Aaron that we're full in on Founders Club.
I can't escape the Pilates talk.
I'm so proud of her.
But it's incredible.
Yeah, she has two locations.
We just signed two more.
She's going to be opening up 12 locations in 2026.
And, yeah, she's building a juggernaut, dude.
Yeah, today there's, I saw there's 297 spots today in class.
There's only four available.
That's wild.
It's a beast.
And I'm so proud of her.
That's amazing.
Yeah.
Okay.
You sell a company.
One of the biggest transactions in Canada.
Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
Why go back into this?
Like why dive into something that takes a lot of work, time, and energy to step around the country
and now internationally to do it?
I think it's funny you ask that.
I think one thing most entrepreneurs don't realize about selling a business,
specifically when you started it.
When you invest in a company, it's like, that's like a transaction.
But when you start something with your nails, with the dirt.
Blood sweat and tears.
It's very much like your baby.
and it's a part of you.
And little do we realize
like how much our identity is trapped into it,
how much our joy,
our fun.
Like we used to be on Shopify,
like the number of dings on my phone
was like dictating my happiness for the day.
Right.
You know,
like that's how connected I was,
you know?
It's like I could be the worst day ever,
like three nice dings.
And like it's crazy, right?
They should do a study on that.
But my point is when you sell your business, you think that is the final ding.
That's the ding that's going to last forever.
Right.
And that's not true.
In fact, it's the opposite.
You feel like you lose your identity.
You feel like you lose your purpose.
And sure, you got money.
Great.
You can buy some stuff.
But we all know that doesn't last too long either.
So I was very scared.
I was very worried.
I didn't really what I wanted to do.
But the one barometer that I really wanted to.
proceed with was the same barometer I had in the early days of building that business was I wanted
to have a lot of fun right it's like one thing that like Chris and I like when we first started this like
he mentioned before like concerts and and snowboarding like I've been to more concerts and I had not a
ski I never been to ski like I've skied I visited I now like no like raising canes and the soda shops
like I was from Toronto right never traveled like we've traveled over 35 cities I've had dinners with
over 6,000 founders.
Wow.
We have so much fun.
And still today.
And like when we tell like our team and like when it gets intense and it does get intense
of course, we have a lot of shit.
There's 1,200 souls, you know?
For sure.
There's no joke.
Like, and it gets too intense.
We'll stop them and be like, we're going to remind you guys.
Like this stops being fun, we're out.
Right.
Like this is fun only.
And fun first is really our mentality.
And they appreciate that.
fun with our team. We have a lot of jokes. We would mess around. We make mistakes. But that's it.
Like there's, I couldn't imagine not like doing this. I would go as an entrepreneur as I, I, now after
11 years, I consider myself a pure red entrepreneur. Like I don't know what else I would do.
Yeah. I think some stupid shit probably. Also, I think the magic, Dan, it's like we didn't sit at a
kitchen table. We're like, you know, let's start a business together. This was like a complete accident. And we're
very much like happy to own that. Like we were hosting dinners. We would have sponsors that would
fortunately sponsor my newsletter, Aaron doing a selfie on Instagram. We convinced them to pay a little
bit money to come out. And eventually it just better lifestyle. I want to go to this concert. Cool.
This sponsor will pay for us to come out and we connected people. But after two years of doing that,
we'd come back to a place. And it started as a place to just fulfill our travel needs. But the people
we'd sit down would be like, yo, I don't think you remember this, but you sat me next to this person.
we've now become roommates.
We've now started the business.
We're now dating.
Right.
We're like, look at our baby.
It's crazy,
like members are dating now.
They're buying each other's businesses.
Yeah, they're requiring businesses.
I came to your dinner and now
I'm an exited founder.
How?
Well, the guy, you said, like, what?
It's unbelievable.
And so that just like happened
and we did that for two years
and everyone were like,
yo, what if we just launched this community?
And for me, I was the exact opposite of Aaron.
I was never investing in courses,
was never in community, like never had paid for that.
So I was like, if we're going to do this, it has to be fun.
It has to revolve around having as much fun as possible with really amazing people.
And everything doesn't have to be about business.
But if me and you hang out, we're naturally going to do business because we're good people
and we have similar interests.
So the community started like that.
We got the first 50 people a couple of years back.
And Dan, it's growing like crazy.
But we've never lost a fun element.
it.
When you close your eyes and you think about 2027, 2028,
2029, is there, this is a worldwide thing?
Are you?
Absolutely.
Oh, certainly.
Yeah.
We have demand.
You know, our,
biggest fear is just not building the infrastructure to support, like,
the demand.
Sure.
You know, one of our members, like, brought up a point not too long ago,
and he was like, hey, can share something with you?
I was like, yes.
And he's like, I'm worried that at one point there's going to be too many members,
the community, which they really stuck with us.
We're just like, oh my God, do we cap it?
You cap it at 1,000, 2,000?
Is there a number?
And what I later realized, it's, there's no, this community, as long as it remains
vetted, and every single person that comes in meets all the criteria, it's only more
powerful with more people.
I go into my phone and are asked questions channels.
It's insane.
Some of these, someone asked for a German lawyer that can help transfer money through
like this, the most complicated question I've ever seen.
I was like, there's no chance.
three minutes.
Someone's like, I have the perfect guy.
I'm like, what?
It's like, unbelievable.
So yeah, if there's 3,000 people,
as long as they'll remain the same,
it's even more powerful.
So I think the number grows.
We have so much demand in Europe
that we've yet to really build
the infrastructure to support
like 30, 40 a week
coming in from Europe.
So we'd really love to do something.
How are they coming in?
Are you running ads?
Are people talking?
Is it social?
Like what's happening?
It's like all the above.
A lot of organic.
What we're seeing now,
which is the best,
is we're getting member nominations.
Like yosh, right?
The podcast for this.
It's like, yeah, I got two or three members for you.
Like those are perfect
because once they have a good experience,
they will also have members.
Yes.
So the spider web just continues to grow,
but it all starts with leaving a great first impression
and then them getting value out of it.
Yeah, because like my group's $100,000
so I don't run ads.
I have to have referrals.
Exactly.
I need to create the best experience humanly possible.
Yeah.
Because me running an ad,
I call whale hunting.
Yeah.
It's definitely a product first engine.
and, you know, it's also three years, right?
So it's like, it took us pretty much two years to get to like 150 members.
Sure.
And then we went from 150 to 1,200, like really really fast, right?
So.
With turning down thousands of people.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Very selective.
And this year we'll go to 3,000.
Yeah, we've been raising the price every single month with the value.
We're pretty capped on the price right now.
We're happy at.
And it's a nice grandfathering people in because they've seen the maturity of the business, right?
The value.
I think you're at the perfect price point.
because it's easy for someone to.
We just had the event at Grutman's house.
We're just stacking good stuff,
and members keep appreciating it.
Yeah.
But, yeah, global network,
2027, we're still having fun,
and we're traveling the world still.
Yeah.
So there's something that I do at some of the events
where we have companies present
and we're raising capital for those companies.
Are people ever pitching at your events?
Is that something that you guys are against?
We don't allow it,
but there's definitely a group of,
people that would love we set up some sort of like deal flow channel for them that's the biggest
thing they keep asking i think we need to organize it in a great way that's my retention my retention
is that sorry to cut you off yeah my biggest retention is my syndicate so a lot of my matchment members
you don't care about the 100k because they get to invest into deals yeah and because they
invest in deals they know they're going to make more hopefully not know for sure but of course
they'll make ROI on it yeah and so they like to plug in i have members that literally
are paying for that because they're getting access to deal flow that they know that I'm
vetting it and our circle is vetting it and we're co-investing to the deal together so we do small
rounds we do three to six million per deal and I do one every six to eight weeks okay it's
56 million in the last three years three to six million bucks at a time 18 companies we just find
products that are in our system food and beverage CPG etc i just think that you're going to have
thousands of members as long as you're strict about vetting it I also have a minimum requirement
They do five to 20 million because it reduces my risk.
What you don't want to do is raise.
Someone's life savings.
Yes.
So everyone's a credit investor.
We don't do big rounds.
So I'm not raising $37 million for one deal.
It's just $3 to $6 million per deal.
Most checks are small, $25K, $25K, $150K, $150K,000 to $500, but a lot of $50K, $100,000.
But the retention rate is a lot because of that.
And there's a communal part.
Now, the concern is, what if the company fails, right?
you get egg on your face if it does.
Of course.
You don't really have much backlash if it's a successful company,
meaning you raise money for a $16 million food brand and it goes bankrupt.
They're not mad at you for that.
You raise money for a startup and the guy takes off with the money.
Now you have egg on your face, right?
And so it's just something to be thinking,
but I'm talking live on the camera,
but like it's something that I've,
my elevator syndicate now has 1,100 investors in it,
outside of the mastermind.
Wow.
And so I can fund a company in 15 days.
What's the infrastructure look like for,
free running out. So we utilize Angelist in our back end. So AngelList handles everything in the
backend. Let's say it's a food brand, right? We're raising money for skinny pasta, which we raised
three million for them twice. Everyone gets a text message and email, but first the founder
does a presentation at a live event. So you throw your live event. So there's 500 people, for example,
a founder can present as long as obviously you vet the whole thing ahead of time, blah, blah, blah.
Let's say this pasta company presents and is for 30 minutes. They are presenting. They are presenting,
in a learning style fashion.
So you're not just getting pitched.
You're learning about it.
And we do what's called a soft touch.
Everyone's going to get a text message.
Hey, Skinny Pasta is raising $6 million.
Reply back if you'd like the paperwork.
If you don't want anything, say nothing.
So if they say nothing, they don't get another text.
So they're not going to get bothered like 15 times sales reps calling them.
It does not happen.
It's one message.
If they respond, yes, pasta, they say the word pasta back.
We'll now send them the deck, the financials, the wiring info.
and everything in one shot in the financials.
And so they can make a decision
and not have to ask any questions.
Why does I do that?
It removes the back and forth
and it makes it a seamless process.
They then say, okay, 50K.
It's all done through Angelist.
They sign and wire.
That's it.
By doing this, I can't even explain.
We did it for a candy brand.
We did $4 million and an $18 million valuation.
They just raised $30 to $1.35.
number two in Target, like it's great candy brand.
We did it for icon meals.
We did it for Everbull.
We raised for them.
There was 17 locations.
Now there's 104.
But during those years, all the members are part of it.
They're all franchisees, buying franchises, investing more money.
Like things happen.
You have the most perfect group in the world for it.
So just keep in the back of your mind, not now, but whatever in the future.
Again, as long as you are vetting the group, which I know you guys will because you're
vetting the members.
And you bring them offerings, they want it bad, especially for your exited founders.
Someone sells a company for 26 million.
They're like, what do I do now?
Yeah.
Having people talk about money and investing, there's a lot of things are going to happen
in your founders' lives.
Your guys are going to go from 29 to 33 to 37.
What happens there?
They're building a company.
They sell a company.
They get married and have kids.
You need to talk about that.
You need to teach them about family.
You need to teach them about things that are going on in their life.
You need to teach them how to protect themselves and their finances, wealth managers?
It's like a combination of the NFL combine and like, how do you protect your members?
Everything.
Who's going to cancel?
I'm leaving your group.
Yeah, exactly.
So we say we're building for every season of your life.
I love that.
That's reality.
That's reality.
You need different things at different times.
We already have father chats, mother chats.
There's father getaways.
There's mother gets away.
It's like we're building for stuff that doesn't even relate to us right now.
But it's there when we get to that season.
Absolutely.
That's kind of cool.
Because those founders, they turn 42 and they have their second kid and like they want to hang out with your other members.
Yeah.
And they want their wife and kids to do it too.
Exactly.
Right.
And like that is a big deal.
And you're, again, I don't see people canceling your group.
It's the right price point.
You vetted it hard.
It's the right members.
And you're making it fun.
Why would you leave?
They don't.
They don't.
They don't.
At least not yet.
They don't.
Yeah.
I just, I know it.
And because you guys are enjoying it and you guys are young,
it's unlikely you're going to want to exit because it's fun,
unless someone makes you a crazy offer.
If they make you a crazy offer,
you'll probably still stick around and do it.
Exactly.
They'll give you golden handcuffs to keep running the thing.
Right. Because there's a lot of groups that, you know,
in the event space and the membership space,
the ones that stand out, we can all name, right?
There's a company out of San Diego has 52,000 members at 8 grand each.
Ooh, right?
That's a lot of revenue, as you can imagine.
And you obviously mentioned YPO.
Like there are groups that have tens of thousands of members at that 8K to 12K
price point.
Well, holy smokes, these are not small numbers.
And the deal flow that happens with inside of that is wild.
It's insanity.
And what will happen is as you evolve, you're going to start to see what can we do
to provide value for the members?
Do we have like a dedicated partner that's like helping with merchant processing?
We have a dedicated partner that's like Gary Breka for
health or something.
Like, do we do a deal with Gary Breck to teach everybody about blood work?
You know, like, you start to think about what do these people care about?
What do they spend money on?
Is it accounting, taxes, life, travel?
Can you get them a fancy credit card deal, discount?
Like, things start to evolve because you've got the perfect members for it.
Okay.
Question.
On the charity side.
Why is it important for brands or for people as individuals to have some type of charity
component into their life?
you want to say something something we haven't done yet to be honest we haven't done it yet with the
forum it is charity yeah for sure i think to be honest and i want to get there um for me if we do something
my problem with charity and maybe you could help me is i never actually get to see when we do donate
the cause or the money right and for me like i lost my dad to alcoholism when i was 18
does nothing do with errands charitable cause but like for me if i give back to people that are
struggling with alcoholism, get them, make their life better.
Yes.
I don't know the right charity yet, but it would be very interesting for me because
made a very big impact on my life.
For sure.
Yeah, if I could give back, I know it has nothing to do with the Founders Club, but it has
something to do with me personally.
No.
For me, it's like, it's just like standard for me.
I guess just because I'm a Jewish guy, so I've just always kind of donate 10% of everything
I've made.
Yeah, it's not complicated for me.
That's what I do.
It's just, I've been doing it for a really long time,
so I don't really feel it, I would say, as I used to.
I feel like a charity is kind of like a muscle, you know?
It's like you got to like continue to have that like natural tendency
and certainly have been burned in the past.
Like I know what Chris has certainly been burned many times.
I don't know.
I think it's hard to question.
And either you're the errand route with the 10% of your earnings or whatever.
And it's me.
I grew up in Connecticut on a farm.
Nobody was giving me charity.
I didn't have charity.
Like, it's hard for me now to be on the other end being like, I got to find a place.
And that might be shitty to say out loud, but I need to find something I feel connected to.
Absolutely.
But it starts with the operator to know where that money actually is.
Yeah, absolutely.
The reason I started my charity was that exact scenario.
Yeah.
I did a charity poker tournament in 2008 in my store in downtown San Diego.
I had all these football.
players, business people, big charity poker tournament.
We raised $165,000.
Percent of the big check. We're super excited.
Monday became Thursday. Thursday became next week.
West week became next month. I never heard from the charity again.
Not that they did anything nefarious. I don't know.
It was bad, good. What happened? But I couldn't report back to my friends that all just
paid a thousand bucks each to be in my charity poker tournament.
What happened? They wanted to hear stories.
So I made my model citizen fund, backpacks for the homeless with items inside.
So I wanted to cause an effect. I knew that a
If I gave out backpacks with homeless, there was 14 pounds of supplies in it.
Start the toy drive.
You can visually see when I do my toy drive, I'm going to fill up an arena or stadium
or building whatever and give out toys to children.
You're going to see children walk in, leave with toys.
I want to make it very visual because of what you feel.
Is that sometimes you just donate 10 grand or $1,000 or $100 a million, you just don't
know what happens with it.
And so what I would say to you is to get over the hump is it has to be something that
you care about or someone in your circle, someone that you are close with, right?
that they went through homelessness or they like to want something with leukemia or breast cancer.
Something has to be meaningful to them that makes you passion about it until you find what matters to you.
And it doesn't have to be money.
Time and energy is also very useful.
Like you might not want to cut a check to something with alcoholism, but you might go to a sober house once a month and spend a couple hours with them and talk to them and teach them or something like you might get connected that way where you're not just donating a thousand bucks or 10 grand, whatever.
to them, sometimes it's just the time and energy.
Like you get the founders club to go to the beach and clean up.
There's no money involved in that.
Of course.
It's just cleaning up a beach.
And you can see the cause and effect of it.
But it creates experiences.
It creates memories.
And so I like, obviously, I'm a very big pusher of charity,
but I'm also trying to change the narrative of what you feel inside of like,
I don't want to donate 10 grand because I don't know they're going to run off with the money.
At what level of wealth or time in your life did you start getting involved in it?
Or you felt like it was the right time.
So 2008.
is when I started throwing the charity events.
And I was throwing them with other people's charities at first.
I didn't have my own.
And then I finally started my own and that's when it changed.
And it wasn't that I was donating a ton of money to my own charity until I had a big
amount of money.
And then I started deploying a lot of capital through it.
And then I was just self-funding most of it for many years.
Like if you look at the toy drives, for the first like eight, nine years, I just paid for
it all.
Yeah.
And me and my partner did everything and I had some people volunteer and donate a little
bit, but like, I really just paid for it all because I didn't want people to feel like that.
Now I'm mentally obsessed with getting more and more people to donate because they can now see
I'm the vehicle to give out toys effectively and efficiently. And so the money part, the number
doesn't actually matter, meaning it depends on the financial journey, whether you donate
a hundred bucks. That's a huge deal for some people. Of course, right? Family of four or $100 could be
humongous deal for them. A thousand bucks could be a big deal.
10 grand the math doesn't actually matter them's taking the time money and energy is what
actually creates the emotional relationship and you'll see if there's something that they can do that
your group can do to like we're going to go build a school or we're going to go clean up a beach or we're
going to go do this this and this you have so much power building up you have 1,200 members now
you're going to blink your eyes and have 3,000 3,000 people doing 14 million dollar averages a gazillion
dollars and it's hundreds of thousands employees yeah what happens in 2029 yeah when they have
1.9 million employees amongst them and you can do push a button and everyone knows about this breast
cancer charity or this beach cleanup or let's all get together around the world and we're all going to do
this thing for children or homelessness like you the power you guys are creating is staggering yeah staggering
because of the people that you're bringing in okay I know you mentioned you don't have children do you want to have
children? Absolutely. For sure, yeah. Okay, sure. So there's only one question I ask on every single
episode, and I've never gotten the same answer before. As you guys build this company,
founders club grows to 10,000 members and worth a bazillion dollars later on in life, and you do all
these other ventures, you join advisory boards, and you both become multi-billionaires.
What percentage of your net worth do you leave to those future children? I'd say the biggest
challenge I have in my mind is like my relationship with money growing up was
so sparse. So how do you flip the coin on the children to have those same values around alcohol,
around money? I have a good friend who actually works with us in the founders club. Dad died early.
One of my best friends. And he receives a monthly stipend until he's like 35 or 40. And the stipend is
nothing crazy, but it's enough for him to live a sustainable life and live a good life and not have
fear, but also not turn into an arrogant asshole. And at 40, he unlocks that money. And I think for me,
if that was the relationship I'd set up.
By 40, you kind of develop who you are as a person,
as a man or as a female.
So I think that's a good system,
whether it's 90% or 100% who knows.
But I love the way of drawing it out.
Yeah.
No one big, here's a million.
No, I think that would be.
I think that would be ironic.
I mean, I don't have kids.
So it's like I don't have like the emotional like cloud right now.
So without having that cloud and maybe
this will change, but personally, I don't see myself leaving any money behind.
I mean, no, I think I, you know, my kids will enjoy all of the resources and the connections.
And I actually have the best example ever, what my financial advisors act on the other day.
And he goes, can you get me Kevin O'Leary?
And I was like, for what?
He's like, one of my clients is a billionaire.
And every six months or twice a year,
he does a family retreat with his three sons.
And he brings in a speaker to hang out with them
and to teach them on different aspects of wealth.
Because his whole thing is like,
by the time I die,
I want them to be like at the highest level of like understanding
and have the most amount of connections
because that's how they're going to operate in life.
So like I'll do things like that
because I think that is so cool.
Like put them in the right rooms,
give them the leverage,
never make them feel disconnected.
But I don't, I wouldn't want, at least without a kid right now,
to having that emotional,
I wouldn't want to leave a whole bunch of money.
My goal is to, you know, maximize this whole lifetime.
Yeah, but you also never know when you're going to die, right?
So if you haven't educated them on, like that was his position.
He said, if I died a plane crash and my kid's got a billion dollars.
My daughter's won.
So my, yeah, when my dad died, he was 18,
our family split $30,000.
That was all he had.
So I got $10,000.
Greg got $10,000, my mom got $10,000.
My 10,000 went to a camera.
I was in film school.
So I used that camera to,
I spent $7 grand on the camera
and $3,000 for my credit card debt.
And that camera got me through college
and got me my first jobs after college.
But like, in that situation,
I love that my dad keep it a tagger.
Because I'm glad it didn't get siphoned out.
But it also depends on the level of wealth.
But it is important to get a little cushion at first.
A couple of bucks
It's not a
Ten million dollars
Maybe a little bit different
It's crazy
All right
So tell them where your socials are
Personally and also for the company
Yeah Chris Mead on Instagram
LinkedIn Twitter
Foundersclub official
com
And founders club on all social
Just
Spivak
Spivak
SPIVa K on Instagram
And yeah
LinkedIn connect with us
Or yeah
Founders Club
Founders Club official
com
Yeah you can pretty much
hit us up anywhere
All right, cool.
Yes, sir.
All right, guys, as you're listening to this,
keep in mind, it's not just for you.
There might be a founder that you know
that I'd be doing $14 million revenue as well,
that you want to introduce to Founders Club,
whether it's now, later in the future,
this group and company will be going on for years and years and years.
You might be sitting on a lunch or dinner like, wait a minute,
this friend is doing $27 million in sales.
He should join Founders Club.
Oh, this girl's doing $13 million,
maybe she should join Founders Club.
Just keep this in mind for the future
that you might want to forward this podcast
to someone that's in their entrepreneurial journey.
I appreciate you guys.
We'll see you guys.
here at the money mondayes.com.
