The Money Mondays - How We Went From a Beat-Up Van to 200+ Franchises w/ Nick Friedman & Vince Ricci 📈 EP113
Episode Date: March 18, 2025Breaking from the usual RV setting, this episode features exclusive finance discussions with two successful guests who runs multi-million dollar companies specializing in hauling junk and the creative... studio industries...---Nick Friedman is an entrepreneur, public speaker, and co-founder of College Hunks Hauling Junk, a rapidly growing junk removal and moving service. With a passion for leadership and personal development, Nick has built a successful business by focusing on customer service, innovation, and a strong company culture.---Vince Ricci is the founder and CEO of Hubble Studios, a creative agency specializing in brand strategy, design, and digital marketing. With a passion for storytelling and innovation, Vince has built a reputation for helping businesses craft powerful and impactful visual identities. His expertise in design, strategy, and creative direction has led Hubble Studios to become a trusted partner for companies looking to elevate their brand presence and reach new audiences.---Like this episode? Watch more like it 👇The Business of Live Events & Tony Blauer's Self-Defense Philosophy: https://youtu.be/FaSrgPK23FkWhat Does It Take to Reach a Billion-Dollar Valuation? w/ Albert Preciado: https://youtu.be/rOFamvnu4qgThe MARKETING Expert's Guide to Making More Money | Neil Patel: https://youtu.be/DcE0V0rVTbkCan Anyone Become a World-Class Salesperson? Jeremy Miner Reveals How: https://youtu.be/m07lSVAoZpIWatch 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 the Money Mondays.
Now as you guys know, over 110 episodes have happened inside of the RV Motorhome, but we're
in Miami.
Wanted to do something different.
There was just through six events over the last three days and I wanted to bring people
together that happened to be in town and our next guest actually flew into town, which
is really exciting because this guy has a $300 dollar a year company with over 200 franchises so for him to come out here and
spend some time with us i'm very excited what i'm going to do is have nick friedman give a quick
one-minute bio so we can get straight to the money awesome so i'm the founder of college hunks
hauling junk and moving we've got over 200 franchises as you mentioned started from really
humble beginnings a beat-up cargo van that we borrowed when we were in college.
I describe it as a 20 year overnight success.
At the beginning, we were doing all the work,
answering the phone, driving the truck, hauling the junk.
People would call to complain about driving.
I'd be in the driver's seat answering the phone.
So it's been a fun journey,
and we feel like we're just getting started.
So as you guys know, on these podcasts,
I cover three core topics.
How to make money, how to invest money, how to give
away to charity. So we're going to go over these different
topics over the next 32 to 38 minutes. The reason we keep the
podcast under 40 minutes is because the average workout is
45 minutes, the average commute to work is 45 minutes. So this
podcast will be under 40 minutes for your listening pleasure. We
are trending as the number one entrepreneur podcast right now.
So we got to hit it while it's hot. This podcast is gonna come out this week.
So, Nick.
Number one spot, baby.
Got lots of love up, so we gotta stay number one.
Ready for this?
That's right, ready.
When you were first building up,
did you actually think you'd become 200 franchises,
300 million dollars?
Did you have a vision in your mind,
or were you just like,
I'm gonna do a truck or two and see what happens?
So at the beginning, it was like,
I didn't even know what an entrepreneur was. It was actually my friend from high school,
his mom had a beat up cargo van.
She let us borrow it to stay out of trouble
before our senior year of college.
And she looked us up and down.
She goes, you guys can be like college hunks who haul junk.
And then that actually put the vision in my head.
As soon as she said that, I was like, that's catchy.
That's a pattern interrupt.
That's not what people associate with moving and hauling.
It's more clean cut.
It's funny, It's catchy.
So from that point on, after we graduated college, I knew I didn't want to have a regular
job and we had very aspirational dreams really at the time.
We didn't want to be just two guys driving around a truck all day.
So we envisioned, imagine if we could land in another city and see our trucks driving
around and now today it's, people are texting me photos of the truck anytime they see it.
I think I got a text from you as well.
And so I think having that lofty aspiration
was part of the foundation of what got us really excited
at the beginning.
It got us motivated.
And we actually pursued franchising as a way to expand.
I think we had a little bit of a naive view
of what that would mean.
We thought it might be an easier path.
There's no easy path in business.
And so we had to become students
of entrepreneurship and just, you know, grind it out.
So on the make money side, franchising,
why does someone go franchise from college hunks
versus just go buy a truck or two
and go do it themselves with their own brand?
So I think anybody who starts a business,
they have to learn very quickly
how to work on the business, not just in the business.
And in our case, you know, like I said,
we were answering the phone, calling the junk,
people would call to complain about driving. I'd be the one answering the phone in the business. In our case, like I said, we were answering the phone, calling the junk, people would call to complain about driving,
I'd be the one answering the phone in the driver's seat.
I think anybody who started a business can relate
to doing every single thing from top to bottom.
But if you want to grow a business and not just be
self-employed by your own operations,
you've got to learn how to create systems and processes.
And so we read a book called The E-Myth Revisited
by a guy named Michael Gerber,
talks about people not failing, systems failing,
and creating those systems and processes so you can scale.
And it talked about franchising and this franchise model.
And I think a lot of people maybe have,
like we did, a naive view of what franchising means.
Really what it is, it's a way to expand the brand
without having to deploy your own capital
because we didn't have capital,
we didn't have a lot of human management personnel
that we could deploy,
but we did have this lofty vision of taking a brand
and making it nationwide.
So in order to package up what we had made successful locally,
we went down the franchise path
where every time somebody purchases a franchise,
we get a small injection of capital
that we can reinvest into building out the infrastructure,
the support, the branding, the marketing,
and everything else that goes along with the business model.
And so that's the path that we chose,
because again, we wanted to expand the brand quickly.
We wanted to give people an opportunity
to own their own business,
and we didn't have the capital to do it.
So I think what people don't say about franchising though
is you need at least, I would say,
30, 40, 50 franchisees for it to make sense,
because the royalty stream doesn't really aggregate until
you've got a critical mass number of franchise owners.
And as the franchisor, our responsibility is to help our franchise owners be successful
because if they're unsuccessful, they're going to blame us.
And sometimes when they are successful, they might resent us because they're paying fees.
And so I'm almost kind of like the government.
You got to make sure you're providing the right goods and services that they can appreciate
if they're investing in your concept.
For sure.
So to give you guys a breakdown on franchises, they can range in fees of anywhere from 6
to 13%, depending on the type of brand, company, service, or product.
So if you have a restaurant chain, if you have a dry cleaning chain, or you want to
go franchise like a Century 21 or an insurance company, typically they want 6 to 13% of gross
sales and 1 to 3% of what's called a marketing
fee that helps go to the budget to do nationwide or worldwide marketing that'll help the franchisee,
which would be you in this example.
Also it can range anywhere from zero to $150,000 on average.
Typically around 50K is kind of like the normal deposit for a franchise.
Now if you're going to get McDonald's, that number is much bigger, right?
It could be hundreds of thousands,
if not $1.5 million in some cases
for really big name franchises.
What you want to think about when you're researching is
what type of product, brand, service,
restaurant, trucking company, et cetera,
do you believe in the brand, has experience?
I don't recommend going to franchise
someone that has two or three locations.
That happens often.
Someone who opens up two or three locations,
they're like, we're gonna start franchising, rolling out.
They don't have their systems in place yet.
The reason you would want to franchise
is someone that has a really good brand
and really good systems.
Those are called SOPs, systems and procedures.
And you need those things to happen,
otherwise I'd rather you wait until they have five, 10, 15,
20, 30 locations where they really have experience.
All right, yeah please. That's right. You hit it on the head.
I mean, when we first started franchising, our early franchisees were kind of the early adopters
and we were still building the plane in flight. We didn't have it all figured out.
And so they were kind of taking a bigger risk.
And we actually had to give them a little bit better deal than we do now because we didn't have it figured out.
We didn't. We were confident it was going to work, but we didn't know.
And they didn't know it was going to work.
There's actually 3000 different franchise opportunities out there
across all the different industries and sectors that you mentioned.
A lot of people think a McDonald's or a Burger King.
But, you know, there's not just restaurants, there's retail, there's service,
there's aesthetics, there's real estate.
And if somebody's got a great successful business their own,
they could become a franchisor where they develop it.
But there's a lot of heavy lifting involved in that.
Or if they're thinking about a business opportunity,
like you said, they might invest.
But spending the time talking to the existing
franchise owners to see would they do it again?
What would they do different?
Are they making money?
Because there's a lot of sizzle out there,
but you gotta have the stake behind it.
For sure.
Yeah, so I invested in one called Ever Bowl,
the Acai Bowl chain.
I first invested, there was 13 locations.
I threw in 500K, they went to 17 locations,
21 locations, 25 locations, bam, bam, bam, scaling, scaling.
Me and my friends, we raised at our mastermind
five million dollars for the company.
Boom, 27 locations, and then March happens, 2020.
Oh no, all the restaurants in the country are closed down.
Most of the world is closed down.
And what was cool is the owner, Jeff Enster,
went and signed over 300 new leases.
Why?
Well, because while everyone is retracting
and no one's signing leases,
he went out and negotiated six months of free rent,
12 months of TI and tenant improvements,
like 100K free build outs.
And now it's sold 400 franchise
and then I think there's 96 locations now.
It's awesome.
By fighting through the struggles,
fighting through the hard parts.
Like you guys did, you're on your 20 year anniversary.
Talk us through like the journey of like beginning,
middle and now being in the 20 years.
Well, I kind of share the startup piece.
I will tell you when we started franchising
was 2008-2009
timeframe. And if you wanted to pick a time to launch a home services franchise, the start of
the housing crash was probably not the right time. But kind of to the example you just gave from your
guys at the Ever Bowl, I think it made us better entrepreneurs, better business owners, because when
times are good, anybody can win. When times are challenging,
it exercises the resilience muscle.
You gotta get smart, gritty.
You gotta learn how to survive.
And it felt like we were pulling an anchor through the sand
or running up a snowy hill,
whatever analogy you wanna use.
So that was probably the biggest test for us
where we were like, is this thing really gonna make it?
But at the time we were younger,
again, we were just so passionate
about trying to make this thing work
that failure wasn't an option. We became students of entrepreneurship. But at the time we were younger, again, we were just so passionate about trying to make this thing work that
Failure wasn't an option. We became students of entrepreneurship podcast didn't exist back then
Social media was really kind of in its nascent space So, you know, we'd go to our entrepreneurship conferences and mastermind groups and just try to learn as much as we could from the franchise
industry from peer groups like entrepreneurs organization or young presidents organization or or some of the newer ones that have popped up.
And we finally got cranking, got things on track.
And then of course, nothing is linear
because then COVID hits.
And I think to myself, wow,
we're gonna lose everything
that we spent our entire life building.
We got a nice little COVID snap back
when people started moving again and buying houses.
And there was a little bit of a post-COVID boom.
And now we're kind of in a challenging time again
with the high interest rates. People aren't moving as boom. And now we're kind of in a challenging time again, with the high interest rates,
people aren't moving as much.
And so we have to expand the sandbox.
I always say, look, if there's three months of no rain, that's called a drought.
And you're like, okay, we're gonna just wait till it starts raining again.
But if it's three years of a drought, you live in a desert now, the environments,
the climate's different.
So how are we gonna survive and thrive in this environment, not hope that something's gonna come
and it's gonna rain again.
And so I think that's kind of the mindset
that we've gotta have is understanding the environment
that you're in, what's gonna suit the customer,
what's gonna suit your team, and how you can adapt
as the environment changes as well.
So can you give us ballpark numbers?
Like what does someone need to have
when they're thinking about getting a franchise?
Should they have like a 50 grand nest egg saved up
or 100 grand or 200 grand?
Should they be planning for more money
than just the deposit to go get the franchise?
What should they be thinking about
when they're going to get a franchise?
Yeah, so it's a wide range.
I mean, you mentioned McDonald's,
you're gonna need over a million dollars
to be able to invest in.
Our concept is probably between 150 and 200,000
because you need trucks, you need warehousing,
you need deposits on insurance and things like that.
But there's actually a low cost franchise I'm invested in
called Kiddokinetics where it's a work from home,
youth sports enrichment franchise
where you need less than $80,000,
including the franchise fee to get up and going.
And there's even smaller ones, I think,
vending franchises and training franchises,
promotional product franchises
where you need even less than that.
There's another company I'm involved with
called Franchise 123.
It's a website, uses AI, where you can put in
different criteria, investment levels, industries,
and it'll help you sort of compare and contrast
what concepts are out there
based on those different investment levels.
Generally speaking, the amount of the investment
is usually gonna be somewhat congruent with the type of return that is usually going to be somewhat congruent
with the type of return that you might want to be able to get.
So a really low investment franchise may have limited upside unless you own multiple or
unless you really blow it out of the water, you become an empire builder as we call them.
But if you've got a great amount of capital and you can buy kind of a blue chip franchise
concept as long as you get the right location and the right team in place,
then you should be able to make your money back as well.
We always say, franchising isn't a guarantee
you're gonna make money.
It's an opportunity to make money.
It's a playbook, right?
And if you get the keys to a race car
and you don't follow the instruction manual
on how to drive it,
you're gonna crash into the wall
or drive it very slowly and not get anywhere with it, right?
And so, we say it's really critical
that you got the right systems,
but then also the right operator
to be able to execute the playbook.
Very cool.
So someone is, they're in, okay, I got it,
I've saved up some capital,
I've been working at my core job for four years,
I got an extra 200K put aside,
I'm ready to get a franchise.
How do I now decide from all, you know,
3000 different options, what's right for me?
How do I go down the rabbit hole
and figure out what fits for me?
Yeah, I mean, we always say the fit,
family, financial, and fun.
So the fit is do I have a relevant experience
or background that would allow me
to have some sort of applicable skill set
in this business model?
Hair salons, restaurants.
Right, like in our business, you don't need moving experience, but you need some sort of applicable skill set in this business model. Hair salons, restaurants. Right, like in our business,
you don't need moving experience,
but you need some sort of leadership acumen
or ability to develop leaders
because you're hiring guys to go out
and provide a service to the community.
So you got to be willing to build leaders in doing that.
So do you have a skill set
that you could apply to this business?
Is your family behind you in this idea?
Your spouse, your friends, your neighbors, your parents,
do they believe in this concept that you're excited about?
Can you make the return on the investment?
That's the financial side.
And then the fun factor is, or fulfillment factor is like,
life is short.
Is this something you can see yourself getting up every day,
even if things are challenging to do?
And so I think talking to some mentors,
there's actually franchise brokers
that are kind of like real estate agents,
but for the franchise industry,
we work with a lot of them in our business
where they'll do personality profiles
and background assessments to identify,
let me present a couple different concepts to you
based on your background, your interests,
what you said you're not interested in,
and help people kind of land on the decision
of the type of concept they might be interested in and owning and running.
The other thing I'll mention, you know,
a lot of times this word comes up in franchising
called absentee ownership or semi absentee ownership.
And I will tell you, it's a buzzword,
it's somewhat cliche, especially in the broker communities.
Everybody wants passive income, but it's not easy.
There's, in my mind, you know, very, very few business ventures are truly passive unless you have a significant
amount of capital and somebody, a CEO that's going to execute.
Ask who, not how.
Who's going to do it if I deploy this money?
So the franchisor is not going to do it for you.
So you've got to have somebody that's going to run it, who you can trust, that you know
is going to produce the business. Can you make a it for you. So you gotta have somebody that's gonna run it who you can trust that you know is gonna, you know, produce the business.
And can you make a return if you're paying him
on top of that?
So I have this rule that I won't invest in any company
or do any partnership or deal without a quarterback,
without someone running that business.
So people say, oh, you've got 43 investments
and all these companies are doing,
you're posting about mortgages and sports cards
and Ever bowls and blah, blah, blah, blah.
Sports cards as a CEO, elevator mortgage as a CEO,
elevator funding as a CEO, my live events as a CEO.
Dan runs a bunch of group chats.
I'm not out there trying to run every single company.
I'm involved in the group chats, I'm giving my advice.
I'm there to give the sizzle to the steak when they need it.
But ultimately, every company I just mentioned
can run without me.
I'm gonna help them, it's my company, I'm gonna help it.
But ultimately, I won't even do a deal,
like if Nick was like,
hey, let's start a brand new vodka company.
All right, who's gonna be the CEO?
Oh, we'll figure that later.
I love Nick, he's got a humongous company,
but I don't wanna run that,
and he doesn't wanna run it, we're busy.
So if there's not a CEO or a quarterback to run it,
I'm not in.
I think that's something I wish I had learned a lot earlier.
I think entrepreneurs, we all have a little bit of ADD.
I call it all damn day, because you can't turn it off.
And so you've mastered this notion of,
I'm going to tackle multiple businesses,
stuff that I'm excited about, or want to be involved in,
or put money into.
But you know that you're not going to invest in it
unless you have somebody you trust
that is going to be able to execute,
that you can hold accountable, and that's going to invest in it unless you have somebody you trust that is going to be able to execute that you can hold accountable and it's going to, you know, be
a good steward of whatever that venture and idea is. And like you said, you're going to
be a facilitator or consultant, a visionary with the team and with that particular channel.
I think in my early stages, I would chase a lot of shiny objects and shiny ideas because
they sounded good, they sounded exciting, or maybe they sounded, in my case, might be easier than what I was doing. And I never
really mastered the notion of talent acquisition and talent alignment with partners that could
go in and pursue that. And I think, you know, learning early on, if you are going to diversify
or do other businesses, and it's something that you're taking, you know, your eye off
the road of what you're already doing,
you can only divide yourself so many times.
You can't ride multiple bicycles yourself.
You gotta have somebody else that's gonna ride that bicycle
and report back how it's going or where he's going.
Let me give you guys a real life example.
Let's say Nick and I decide we're gonna open up
a chain of gyms called College Hunks.
And we're gonna place them at all the colleges
around the country.
And we put up a million dollars each,
and we're like, okay, let's do this.
And we open up four locations, right?
250K, 500K per location, got a little bit of operating
capital, everything sounds good.
And we go out and crush it and do $4 million revenue
the first year.
And the next year, we do $12 million revenue.
Holy smokes, we're on pace for something crazy.
Do you know how much money that Nick probably lost
by spending time and energy on this company
doing four million and then 12 million?
His company's doing $300 million in sales.
And so you can factor that in for yourself.
If you've got a business doing a million dollars,
two million dollars, two million dollars in revenue,
and you go spend time on the shiny object,
you're taking away money, time, staff, energy,
and resources over here on the shiny object and not fixing the core thing
that you could be scaling.
Yeah.
There's a compound effect of focus.
We all know that, whether it's a specific fitness goal you have
or a specific business or financial goal,
it's grooving those habits.
And I have a saying that I'll bring up,
because my business partner and I will come up
with ideas all the time if we're out and about
or having a drink or whatever.
And I'll pause for a second
I'll be like you know we could make tens of dollars doing that. You know there's
a lot of great ideas but you know like what's the time worth what's the energy
worth we've got a platform we've got a something that's compounding any energy
and effort that I put outside of my $300 business is taking away from it becoming
a billion dollar business at this point and And so, yeah, I couldn't agree more on that notion of,
you know, focus on what you think is gonna make things
happen and double down and let that thing compound over time.
I would say urgency of effort, patience for results.
Because a lot of times we get very impatient,
especially in this, you know,
immediacy world of instant gratification.
You know, we wanna see something happen overnight.
And, you know, I think you hear about the unicorns too, the glamorized billion dollar, you know, immediacy world of instant gratification. We wanna see something happen overnight.
I think you hear about the unicorns too,
the glamorized billion dollar brands
that become unicorns overnight.
That's like getting drafted to the NFL or NBA
or winning a lottery.
Yes, it can happen, but the reality is
most business successes are probably like mine and yours.
It just happened over decades of time
that took hard work, people don't see behind the scenes how much losses
went into the early days, the investment that went into it, and eventually you come out
the other side and everybody touts you an overnight success, but they don't realize
how long it took you to get there, how much learning took place along the way.
Absolutely.
All right.
So let's talk about the real life of the business.
What does it cost for someone, a customer, to come rent from college hunks?
What's the cheap side and what's the full size?
Hey, I'm moving a big house.
Yeah, so we pride ourselves on being a,
I would say, premium style experiential brand.
There's a book I read called A Purple Cow by Seth Godin.
He says, if you're driving down a country road,
you see a bunch of brown cows, you've seen it before,
you're not going to notice it.
If there's a purple cow in that field,
this was before social media that the book came out.
He says, you're gonna pull over, it's remarkable.
You're gonna tell your friends and neighbors about it,
talk about the dinner table, put it on social media.
And then it goes further to say,
we talked about this a second ago,
it needs the sizzle, which is the brand image,
the name, the colors, but it also needs the steak,
meaning the service has to live up to whatever promises
that you're making to the customers or the team members.
And so, we're the only one stop solution
for both moving and junk removal.
We say we help people move the items they love,
get rid of the stuff they don't.
We leverage our trucks and labor
to deliver donations for folks,
install furniture and so forth.
And so pricing is hourly for the moving side of things.
Call it a two man move anywhere from 100 to 150 bucks an hour.
Obviously if we add a third or fourth guy can increase from there.
Junk removal is volume based, how much space the items fill up in the truck.
So if we're cleaning out a, you know,
a whole garage that takes four to five pickup trucks worth is which about the
size of our trucks would be like five, six, 700 bucks,
depending on the geography, but that includes all the labor, the disposal,
the loading fees. And so, you know, the moving industry is antiquated, right?
I mean, we didn't invent moving.
It's probably been around since the wheel got invented.
And so we took a simple concept,
put a creative image on the external side of it,
a very focused, intentional on the inside of it.
And so we're not the cheapest.
Probably somebody could find a less expensive move
on Craigslist or Facebook Marketplace or what have you.
But we say, look, there's a lot of options
to go buy coffee, right?
You could go pay four or $5 for Starbucks,
or you could go pay 50, 75 cents at the gas station,
but it's a very different experience between the two.
They may even taste somewhat similar,
but the experience is very different.
So we made HUNK's brand promise, it's an acronym,
Honest, Uniformed, Nice, Knowledgeable Service.
Because with moving, you're letting a complete stranger into your home
Sure, you're there handling your personal belongings
Even if they're getting rid of your junk
These might think have things that you have emotional attaches to attachments to or grandma might be moving into assisted living and these are her
Lifetime belongings that are being hauled away to be donated. So you need somebody that's empathetic and mindful
So that's what we're always consistently training our frontline guys on is how we can be different,
how we can be the Starbucks or the Chick-fil-A
or the Ritz of moving and junk removal.
So surprisingly Starbucks is not a franchise.
That's right.
That's mind blowing how big they would be if it was
but they want it.
It's a very fascinating business model.
In-N-Out is not a franchise, a lot of people think it is.
There's certain brands that are not a franchise
and then you go to Chick-fil-A,
and you've got to have millions of dollars,
you have to work there for a year.
It's very fascinating,
but they go do eight million a year on average,
if you own one, and then you have to own one
before you get your second one, and it's like a very...
Yeah, they're very discerning and disciplined
as to who they'll align with,
because they want their brand to be upheld,
they want everybody in those Chick-fil-As to say,
my pleasure, instead of your welcome, and they want the experience to be upheld. They want everybody in those Chick-fil-A's to say, my pleasure instead of your welcome.
And they want the experience to be different
than your typical fast food experience.
A lot of people will come to me
when they have a successful small business and be like,
hey, can you help me learn
how to franchise my business the way you did?
And I'll actually spend maybe the first five, six minutes
talking them out of that, saying, you know, listen,
to be a franchisor, it does cost money upfront.
It costs a lot of headache and injury,
trying to get those first five, 10, 15, 20 franchises
off the ground.
And a lot of people don't make it to the other side
where you've got 40, 50 to the point
where the brand is recognized,
the royalty stream is sufficient.
So I sometimes encourage them,
open two or three or four locations yourself,
get the model proven.
And maybe you won't need to franchise or maybe you'll bring in some investor capital to go
and open more yourself and you don't have to have that extra layer of complexity.
So there's a reason in and out or Starbucks maybe chose not to, they didn't want that
extra layer of liability or people dynamics that has to be dealt with.
And it's just really a crossroads, like an expansion strategy.
Do you want to build these and own these yourself?
Do you wanna bring in investors to help you do it
or do joint ventures?
Like Outback Steakhouse, believe it or not,
it's not a franchise.
They have a similar to Chick-fil-A,
a managing partner model.
So all their general managers of the restaurants
have a percentage of equity of that restaurant,
but they didn't actually buy the franchise,
but they run that, like it's its own small business.
Oh, interesting.
2006, I won something called the CEO poker championship and the guy that got second
place was the head of Outback steakhouse.
Oh wow.
There you go.
I haven't heard the name of it so long, but it was funny because just seven
years before that I was applying to work at Outback steakhouse as you know.
Wow.
I was working at Ruby's diner and I was hoping to get the job at Outback steakhouse.
That's awesome.
17 years old and I ended up starting my clothing company.
Then you meet them in the World Series of Poker.
On the investing side, so you're building your business.
It's 2008, 2009.
You go the franchise model.
Now you've got 30, 40, 50 franchises.
Now you start making some serious revenues, some serious money.
When you decide, okay, I'm going to invest into these other, you mentioned three or four
brands you've invested into or maybe advising for. When you decide, okay, I've invested a into these other, you mentioned three or four brands that you've invested into or maybe advising for, when you decide, okay,
I've invested a lot of capital into my core business,
I can take some money and throw in 25K, 100K,
a million, whatever the number is, into something else.
Yeah, so early on when we were in the business,
of course, I started reading different books.
Robert Kiyosaki's Cash Flow Quadrants was one that I read
where he talks about elevating from employee to self-employed
to business owner to investor.
And so in my mind, I was always kind of like,
that's the gradual elevation and transition
that I want to get to.
So once we had enough capital,
once I wasn't as active in the day-to-day business,
I started thinking myself as an investor.
My very first successful investments was real estate.
And I'm still a big believer in that as an asset class.
One of the quotes I've heard and used regularly is, don't wait to buy real estate, buy real
estate and wait. And, you know, obviously, you know, if you look at it year by year,
it may fluctuate, but at the end of the day, it's an asset, you can rent it out, you can
fix it up, you can sell it, you can live in it if you need to. And so we did that early
on and we own probably 20, $30 million worth of real estate at this time, maybe more at this point,
but our commercial properties
and our few residential rentals and so forth.
I'll say when I started investing in businesses,
I had some skin knee decisions.
And I'll say the reason is because to a hammer,
everything looks like a nail to an entrepreneur,
everything looks like an amazing opportunity.
Like we're very, I would say optimistic by nature
because, and that's what helps us be successful
when we pursue our own vision,
because we believe it's gonna work
even though others may not,
or even though it may be against all odds.
Now, when you're investing in other people,
you have to realize you're not just investing in the idea,
but you're investing in the person too.
And actually, I don't think I mentioned this earlier,
we were on the very first episode
of the very first season of Shark Tank.
Awesome experience, kind of maybe my first experience
pitching to investors.
We didn't end up taking a deal, by the way.
And quick side note, we were pitching a sister company.
We were gonna call it College Fox's Packing Boxes.
Yeah, the sharks didn't think that was a great idea either,
but that's another story.
But nevertheless, I think what I did learn
from that experience and what I've learned
and talked to some of the sharks
from the show since then is majority of the deals they do
on television don't actually take place
after they stop videotaping.
And the ones that do take place after they stop videotaping,
less than 20% of those actually have been successful
or money makers.
I thought it was really fascinating.
And so recognizing that early stage investing,
small business or venture is very risky
and you've got to be willing to spread ships out
across a lot of different, you know, ventures.
And also I think it's important to invest
in stuff that you know,
stuff that you can influence or have a pattern recognition of.
Like I said, I'm invested in some franchise concepts.
I understand youth sports. invested in some franchise concepts. I understand youth sports.
I understand the franchise model.
I have become versed in real estate.
So I think those sorts of things have allowed me
to have successful investments.
If I'm just sort of taking a, you know,
writing a check on a tip, whether it be publicly traded
or it's some private business that somebody told me about
might do well, it's like going to Vegas and rolling the dice.
You really don't have much influence on it.
So there's a famous theory that 90% of startups fail,
which is true.
The reason for it is they have lack of capital,
lack of experience, lack of knowledge.
And so what I do is I focus on companies
that are doing at least $2 million revenue up to $20 million.
The reason I like that $2 million and $20 million is they got past the hardest part.
Going from zero to $1 million, super hard.
Major failure rate.
Most people don't want to do it.
$1 million and $2 million is where you're like, okay, getting some operations.
I'm finally making some hires.
I'm getting a better lawyer and a better accountant and a better executive.
That $1 million and $2 million is where you start to really kind of like, you can hear
that like it's, you're figuring it out.
We start to get to three million, five million,
seven million, okay.
Now we're getting a swing of things here.
And so I raised 56 million the last three years,
all three to six million bucks at a time,
and the company's doing two to 20 million.
So Elevator Syndicate, our concept is,
find business that are already doing five million,
12 million, eight million, 15 million in that range, and we pour gas in the fire.
There's amazing startups out there, even with amazing founders, and we don't do it for a
couple reasons.
One is it typically takes five to seven years on average to have an ex-wit or liquidate
event.
And so if I come in on year two, three, or four, I've shortened my time span as an investor.
The first couple years, I can help too much from like scaling, but at the first couple
years, I can't help too much because you're just getting their systems and operations
and making your first relationships at conventions and trade shows.
Like you're still figuring things out.
I'm going to help you way more if you're doing six million revenue to get to six million
going to 13 million.
Not hard at all.
Yeah. Zero to one million, super hard.
So Elevator Syndicate, our concept is get guys like us.
I've got 960 investors.
So guys like Nick, hey, you throw in 25k, 100k, 500k, whatever the number is, we'll
all pitch in together.
But this company is already doing nine million revenue.
How can Nick help?
How can Dan help?
How can the other 32 investors?
How can we all pitch in and help this business? You might find investments that you can do
with some friends, co-investors. That's why people ask, who are the other investors? Because
if Nick was already an investor in a company, I'm more inclined to want to invest, right?
Because him and his circle have experience. They built a huge business. So when people
pitch you, because they're going to pitch you, people pitch you, ask them some key questions.
Where their revenue at?
What's their actual experience?
Who else is involved?
Who's on the advisory board?
Who's an actual investor?
There's a big difference between advisory board and investor.
Someone that cuts a check just puts their name on it.
There's a lot of differences.
Just ask a lot of these questions before you make your investment, because when you get
it right, you can have a 6X, 12X, 20X. When you get it wrong, which is gonna happen,
you're only having a 1X loss.
That's why Nick mentioned you gotta have multiple
investments when you're taking angel investment risk.
You can't just do one angel investment.
You gotta do three, four, 10, 20.
I've done 43.
43 sounds like a lot, but it's been a decade.
It's really only four or five a year if you think about it,
because I'm seeing 200 deals and I'm picking four or five.
All right, Nick, so you're investing a lot
back into the business.
A lot of people don't realize
someone goes and does 10 million revenue,
they're probably broke, right?
They're in debt.
Sounds good, revenue is vanity, profit is sanity,
cash flow is king.
That's something I learned after a few years.
We used to tout our revenue numbers,
and yeah, even at the beginning of this,
talking about what we're doing in Topline,
it's exciting, it sounds like a big impact,
but to your point, especially in the early days,
you're plowing that money back in,
and you're making small bets,
and sometimes big bets along the way,
and not all of them pay off.
So, in this scenario, there's very, very, very, very, very,
very, very few companies that go off to do $300 million revenue.
At what point do you think about,
should I exit the business?
Should I go acquire a bunch of other companies
that are in the moving space?
Should I do other ancillary companies?
Should I become like a trucking company here?
Or should I do a, you know,
should I be a box manufacturer?
Because you probably go through millions of boxes.
Like, what are the things, should we do, like the wrapping tape? Should you have a box manufacturer? Because you probably go through millions of boxes. What are the things, should we do the wrapping tape?
Should you have a wrapping tape company?
I could sit here and rattle off
and I'm sure you guys have thought about all of them
over 20 years.
Sometimes when you have a core business,
what they're doing for the moving space,
sometimes you think about what are the vendors we use?
What do we spend money on?
If you're spending money going and buying tape and you go through freaking
I can't even imagine how much tape you go through to tape up the boxes. Maybe we should do that
Yeah, when you go through literally millions of boxes, maybe we should have our own
Boxes and sell the boxes to our customers or to our franchisees talk us through that concept
Yeah
So so the short answer is yes to all the above
All of those thoughts that you just rattled off as the stuff that wakes me up in the middle of the night
and I got the hamster wheel running.
It's like, oh, we could do this, we could do that.
We should do this, we should do that.
There's a Jim Collins quote, I think, where he said,
once companies hit levels of success,
they don't die of starvation, they die of indigestion,
trying to do too much.
And so I think the idea is identifying that list,
and we charted out on how much money can you make
on one axis and how much heavy lifting money,
resources, time, distraction is gonna be on the X axis.
And if something is really high earning potential,
doesn't take a lot of effort, that's a no brainer.
And I'll give you an example of something we did was,
or we're doing now long distance moving.
You know, we just, we've got the trucks,
we've got the labor, we've got the network now
with 200 locations, we can start offering that
and leveraging our network.
Or we started an accounting service,
bookkeeping service for our franchise owners
that works so well, we're gonna offer it
to other franchise systems as well,
because we already got that set up.
We were doing, it doing something we were doing internally
as an internal service.
It's a no brainer for us to use AI and offshore VAs
to be able to offer it to franchise systems
to have clear, transparent books and accounting.
But then there's stuff that might be a little bit more
far reaching, truck manufacturing or truck sales.
Like I don't know the first thing about truck sales,
aside from when we buy them
and trying to negotiate a good rate and a good rebate.
So to your point, having a quarterback,
if we were to go down that route,
we'd have to find somebody who understands
truck fleet management.
That could be our quarterback or CEO
of our trucking division.
They could help us source inventory, floor plan,
and sell in or lease them to our franchisees.
So that's something that we've thought about,
talked about, talked about.
It's on the vision roadmap, but we haven't pursued it yet just because we've got kind
of the lower hanging fruit in front of us.
So I think that's the way to approach, you know, when you've got these different opportunities
that present themselves, make some small bets.
And then if it's something that's going to take a heavy lift, you've got to have somebody
that's going to do it, or it's going to distract you or your team from your core that's already working.
So as you go from 300 million to 340 to 400 to 500, is there a number in your head that
you're like, okay, this is my goal number?
Or does the goalpost always move?
Also yes, the goalpost always moves.
But I will say we took some chips off the table.
We did a minority private equity transaction shortly after COVID. And the reason for that was,
COVID was such a wake up call for me.
I had 99% of my net worth in one asset,
which is our main business.
And I was like, man, if something,
a black swan event like this happens again,
it could wipe out everything I've worked for.
So let me de-risk, take some money out of the business,
bring in an institutional partner
that can help give us some infrastructure
to help prepare us for the future exit and just quick side
No, the guys that we that invested with us is these three self-made billionaires that are actually the largest shareholders of tik-tok
Here in the US these three dudes up in Philadelphia
I think their net worth went from five billion to fifty billion as a result of their tick-tock investment
But anyway, so whatever they're invested in, college hunks is a rounding error for them.
So they're not too worried about how quickly we exit.
So which is a nice partner to have
from a minority standpoint,
because they're not pushing us for an exit anytime,
you know, it's our timeline, not theirs.
But I do think at some point,
we'll look to recapitalize the business,
you know, as I approach, I mean, my early 40s now,
if I could get to 50 and have another meaningful transaction
to be able to be more of an investor and facilitator
for other businesses, I think that would be exciting also.
And so I think that's all part of the journey.
But this brand still remains kind of a part of my identity.
And I think a lot of times, as entrepreneurs,
especially in the early days for me,
I was approaching business from a point of scarcity.
If I could just get to a million in revenue, if I could just get to a million in revenue,
if I could just get to 10 million in revenue,
if I could just get to 100 million in revenue,
if I could just get to a million in profit,
you know, we'd be good.
And every time we hit those milestones,
it's like you said, the goalpost moves.
And I feel like I'm just chasing this,
something that's always out of reach.
So I've had to reframe and realign my mind
from a paradigm standpoint,
because as you get more successful,
you get surrounded by more successful people,
and everybody's got a bigger boat,
somebody's always got a bigger plane,
and it always makes you feel like you've gotta
get to that person's level.
And I think unless you're Bezos or Elon,
it's gonna be hard to not be always looking up
at who's ahead of you.
So we think of things from a point of abundance
and say, okay, look how far we've come to where we are.
That doesn't mean we're gonna stop and get off the ride.
We wanna keep pushing and growing.
And I think what excites me and gets me excited
and passionate as opposed to feeling like
I'm missing out on something is this notion
of potential maximization or optimization.
Like how could I maximize my potential as a leader,
as an entrepreneur, as a father, husband, business owner,
all of those categories that I'm, you know,
I guess you could label me as,
but also how can I maximize the potential of this brand,
this platform, what it can do in the communities
that it services, what it can do for the franchise owners
who invest in it, how much it can allow them
to provide for their families, how much it can employ
into our overall employee community as well.
And so that's the stuff that keeps me excited and going,
no matter how far reaching the goalpost
keeps extending from a number standpoint.
Because once we hit a billion in revenue,
I'm gonna wanna hit two billion or three billion.
And so that never stops,
but taking it from a point of abundance
and not feeling like I'm missing out or lacking,
that makes the journey that much more exciting, I think.
So let's picture this.
It's your 50th birthday.
One billion dollars gets wired in for the big acquisition,
for 80% of your company.
You get to keep 20% because they want to give you
what's called golden handcuffs.
They want to keep you on.
They need you for the next couple years.
What do you do the next day after one billion dollars
shows up on the Monday morning?
What do you do on Tuesday?
Oh man.
I guess I would pinch myself first,
then I'd probably look at my bank account about 25 times
just to make sure it was real.
And I think shut my phone off and just take a moment
to like breathe and soak it in
and spend time with the family, the wife, the kids,
fire up the jet and go around the world
for a couple months.
And I think that'll be allowing me to just sort of reflect,
have that little mini sabbatical moment.
And I think I would get bored out of that very quickly
and say, what am I coming back to do
and how can I be more impactful on this next go round?
I've never met an entrepreneur who has officially retired.
They may not be grinding it out day to day
like they did at the beginning,
but they're still involved in something
because the moment you stop growing,
you're dying in all effects.
And so I met 80, 90 year old guys
that are still grinding.
I met a guy, one of my neighbors,
he's got a big horse farm now.
And I was like, oh, that's an interesting hobby.
He got very mad at me.
I said, that's an interesting hobby.
He goes, no, it's a business.
It's not a hobby.
And I was like, oh, gotcha, my apologies. this guy's in is, you know, almost 90 years old
He's got all these horses that he's breeding and selling but it's he's running it just like a business and he's you know
Just as fired up about it as he was the publicly traded company that he grew as well
Yeah, my ranch is not a business. That's right 140,000 month of feeding animals
They're very hungry. That's right
Well, there's not profit benefits as well out there that you can get involved in too.
No margin, no mission.
So if you didn't have a successful business, you couldn't do things like that.
They weren't businesses that were nonprofit or community driven initiatives as well.
All right.
Last two questions.
On the charity side, so make money, invest money, give away to charity.
Why do you think corporations,
when you start to get hundreds of employees or thousands of employees, etc., why should
they have some type of philanthropic component to them, not just the money part, but why
should they have some type of philanthropic initiative within the company?
Well, you know, there's a quote we always say, you know, don't chase the money, chase
the dream or the purpose of the impact. Chase something that's broader than just making
money because money is a powerful tool. It's a facilitator. It can create your lifestyle, chase the money, chase the dream, or the purpose of the impact. Chase something that's broader than just making money.
Because money is a powerful tool, it's a facilitator,
it can create your lifestyle,
but it can also create impact for the people
that you care about, whether it's a community,
your family, or your employees.
And so having some sort of purpose-driven impact is critical,
but without margin, there's no mission, like I just said.
So you've got to have a profitable business.
You don't want to donate yourself out of business.
I tell our early franchisees that a lot. Like, don't just start giving free moving or free junk removal because people are asking you because you've got to have a profitable business. You don't want to donate yourself out of business. I tell our early franchisees that a lot.
Don't just start giving free moving or free junk removal
because people are asking you because you've got trucks.
You've got to build a business first
and then you can create a give back program.
And the reason is, to answer your question,
because people are passionate about making an impact.
People care that they mattered
and that they made a difference.
And if you're getting up every day
and your pure motivation is making money,
you may be disappointed several days out of the year
because not every day is easy.
Not every day did you make the money you hoped to make
personally or professionally.
And so for us, we have a two for one giving campaign.
We obviously borrowed it from the Tom Shoe's concept.
We said, well, instead of one for one, let's give two for one.
We donate two meals for every completed job
that we've completed.
And we started that a few years ago. We've donated over five million meals to U.S. Hunger.
We also, during COVID, saw the reports of the domestic violence that was happening,
people being stuck with their sort of abusers. And we offered free moves for survivors of domestic
violence. We've done over 150 free moves for survivors of domestic violence. And so, and it
doesn't have to be something financial or pro bono like that.
Through our junk removal, we've formed partnerships with nonprofits where we donate over 70% of
the items we haul to Goodwill, Salvation Army, Habitat, just to be able to try to keep the
stuff out of the landfill and give it into a reuse cycle as well.
So it motivates, inspires your employees.
They're going to want wanna be part of something bigger
than themselves, bigger than the business.
And I think that's why social initiatives
and giving is that much more critical.
So the last question is one question
that I ask on most every single episode
and I've never gotten the same answer once.
All right, so let's go to the 50th birthday concept.
You get the $1 billion, but you got 20%.
So then later you get another couple billion dollars,
and all of a sudden, many, many years from now,
you finally pass away, and you've got billions of dollars
you've accumulated over this long career.
What percentage do you leave to those children
when you pass away?
Ooh, great question.
Well, hopefully my parents, or hopefully my children,
are adults by the time I pass away,
and so I've been able to at least steward and observe their ability to be high functioning
members of society, not degenerates or whatever other bad paths.
In some cases, you fear your kids could go down.
Given that they're assuming that they're high impact, high performing members of society, I don't
think I would be afraid to bestow them my estate to invest and to
impact and to give how they would see fit.
100%, let them ride.
Yeah, I mean, obviously, maybe not 100%, I would allocate a significant
amount to charitable causes that I'm passionate about or charitable trusts
that would have a trustee to help disseminate over time.
But yeah, I think the ability for your kids
to carry things forward is important.
The Mike Tyson quote recently I loved,
he was getting interviewed by a 13 year old girl,
he just goes off the rails, he goes,
legacy is another word for ego.
And I thought that was interesting,
because a lot of people talk about wanting to make,
leave a legacy.
And when he said that, it actually made me think
a little bit, like, is it really,
am I trying to leave a legacy that,
just so people remember me,
or am I trying to leave a legacy of actually,
making an impact and helping empowering others?
So as I think about what that future looks like,
stuff that I'm passionate about,
entrepreneurship, building leaders,
lifting up empowering communities
that maybe don't have the opportunities that we all had,
whether it's through mentorship or investment,
then I think those would be the channels
that I would deploy money to,
and then hopefully my kids are good stewards
and would wanna start businesses
or make a difference as well
with whatever there is left for them.
And of course there's the Bill Perkins concept,
you know, spend it all before you die.
And I don't know if I subscribe to that totally,
but I get the point of, you know, you're not going to be here
and you don't want people to mismanage it while you're gone,
so why not be the steward of it while you're here?
Yeah. Well, I think what you framed it as is basically
if your kids are high impact and they know what they're doing,
then you let them run, you let them run the world.
That's right.
Compared to, I'm just gonna leave my kid $30 million
or $100 million, $200 million,
and they don't have the experience or the know-how,
I could put them actually in a predicament.
A lot of people think that when they hear
somebody very wealthy not leaving a lot of money
to their kids or a small amount of money to their kids,
they think that it's rude or why would you do that?
But we've had answers from 0% to 100%.
Yeah.
And they have very passionate reasons why.
I'll say my answer today will be 50%.
I'll split the difference on that one.
I like that, it's a good number.
All right guys, if you can, if you could tell everyone,
where can they find you on social,
where can they find college hunk on social,
if they're considering a franchise,
how can they research things like that?
Yeah, so my personal social is Nick Friedman,
the number one, and so Nick Friedman one,
and our business social is at College Hunks.
You can visit collegehunks.com,
you can visit nickfriedman.com.
Both of those sites have information on franchising,
on moving or hauling services, on connecting with me,
just for business advice or otherwise,
and I'm here for it.
All right guys, you're listening to the Money Mondays.
It's mission critical to have conversations
with your friends, family, and followers about money.
We grew up thinking it's rude to talk about money.
I think that's ridiculous.
We have to have discussions about accounting
and finances and taxes, and what do you do
if someone borrows money from you?
How do I sign a contract?
Should I get a loan?
Should I refinance? Should I lease a loan? Should I refinance?
Should I lease a car or buy a car?
There's so many questions that we have and we think that it's rude to talk about it.
It's crazy not to talk about it.
You have to have discussions because that will lead to so many things in your life where
you don't pay the dummy tax or you have a very big problem later because you didn't
do your taxes or you didn't save up money for your thing or you didn't understand that this lease is
very, very expensive or this contract is done this way because you didn't ask
your family, your friends about it.
Have discussions, do your research, check us out on the money Mondays.com.
And we'll see you guys next Monday.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Monday Mondays.
As you guys know, this podcast takes place inside of an RV motorhome, but we're in Miami.
Since I have someone from Los Angeles in Miami, I want to do a special edition episode.
We're just throwing six events over the last three days.
The whirlwind is complete.
I wanted to grab Vince Richie before he flies back.
I want to knock out a podcast with him. And so Vince has created Hubbo Studio.
He's done over 5,000 photo shoots there.
It's nearly 60,000 square feet with multiple buildings.
He created Balance, a brand that we're going to get to talking
about shortly.
Just created a whole partnership with The Wind doing branding
and marketing with them.
And he's the founder of Trinus Kids Foundation.
I've been helping him along this journey for the last 11 years.
We raised hundreds and hundreds of thousands of toys, almost 200,000 toys just last year
in December, doing 11 cities in 17 days like psychopaths flying around the country together
to go make sure we give the toys out in person all over the country.
Now I'm addicted to it, so I'm going to be flying around to toy drives, I don't know
for how many more years, but it feels like we're going to be doing it for decades.
So without further ado, I'm gonna have Vince Richie
give a quick two minute bio
so we can get straight to the money.
So my name is Vince Richie from the Bronx, New York.
I'm an Italian American, and I always like to preface that
with kind of really diving deep into my culture,
and that's what gives me a lot of integrity,
why I work so hard, my legacy and my family,
why I care to do what we do.
We created Hubble Studios over a decade ago.
Kind of took off super fast with the level of people
we were working with because we were dead smack
in the middle of Los Angeles.
Vogue, Disney, all these other commercials.
Apple started coming to us and then we decided
to make Hubble Agency, which was then
the full-time production company that stepped in
to produce whatever they needed from A to Z.
We could either do just A or we could do all the way A to Z.
Then under that, we became kind of a venture studio that started to find deals that we
liked and invested into the deals or provided the service in exchange for equity.
And we all know a lot of those deals, they're really, you're going for a grand slam.
You're really hoping, just like any other venture.
Now, our entire business is a mix of all of them,
but our main business is producing content,
is producing high-end valued content.
We are a branding company.
We help make sure that this brand is congruent,
this content, the assets that we're building are congruent,
and you believe what we make is real.
And that's ultimately what we do.
So you have everything from can be a kid's clothing brands to cannabis brands, casinos
that you're working with, throwing events, toy drives, there's a lot of moving parts.
How do you manage this whole world of things you guys are up to?
I think a good work-life balance, you know, Jack Welch talks about there's no worse life
balance there's work-life decisions, there's work life decisions.
And because so much of my business is loosely coupled
in the creative agency side,
where we're making decisions, we're being creative,
we're letting it speak to me,
paying attention to what billboards draw your attention to,
what other assets draw your attention to,
what's trending right now,
that has to fill my creative void.
And then when the cannabis side,
or just the operations side of business
is very tightly coupled, it's centralized to me as a CEO,
I get to make very strategic decisions.
Those decisions happen between 7 a.m. and 10 a.m.
Then I take a little in between when I'm working on both,
and then anything after 3 p.m. is a super creative decision.
It's one of them, one from the day.
And able to deal with it.
I go home, I see my daughter, my two daughters,
and it gets me creative.
And then by the time 7 p.m. rolls around,
they go to sleep, then I can really open up
my creative juices.
So it's able to really use the whole day
because I'm using different parts of my brain.
So on balance side, there's thousands and thousands
of cannabis and CBD related companies out there.
Yours is ultra premium, high quality look and feel.
How do you stand out from this ocean,
this big sea of different brands?
Really maintaining quality, going after a boutique customer.
We have this certain niche because Balan's,
we were kind of ahead of the game in 2018
when we created our logos, our branding.
It was very cartoony and compliance stopped people
from being able to brand like that
because it felt like it was going after kids.
We were super premium, super makeup looking
because I came from the beauty industry
of shooting so much beauty content.
Then I knew that our product really had to back that up.
So I really dove back deep into operations last few years and maintaining one going after
really high-end botanists and high-end plan out specialist people, then letting
them know this is how we structure our company. This is organizational in short.
This is how we work and we're chasing one thing to be the Yankees. We're chasing
one thing to be the best of the best. We're not growing just to grow mass market ahead
a small midsection price point.
We wanna have the best of the best.
Now are the people better?
Of course, there's a bunch of small growers
at a super boutique that are selling,
it's like selling $30,000 handbags.
These other companies doing it, not just Birkin,
no, well, Hermes.
And we'll kind of find that niche of being like,
not the top, top, top, top guy,
because they just, like such a small market,
but right there, where we're like A plus in quality,
and you really can't tell the difference.
You know what I mean?
But it's the top, top, top.
So on the creative agency side,
you have someone like the Wynn Casino.
This is literally the most premium brand
in the casino space in history, and you have
such a long legacy there.
It looks great, it feels great, it smells great.
Everything about the Wynn is already a high level brand.
Why does something that has such a high level brand then spend the money and choose you
guys to go out there and make them even better?
I think because we were already working with them in the beginning, shooting a ton of stuff
for Marshmallow, shooting a ton of stuff for marshmallows, shooting a ton of stuff for their artists,
and then they got exposed to us as a company.
And then they got exposed to a little bit
of the legacy brand of Hubble.
Hubble started making clothes in 2015
just to distinguish who we were as staff.
One day somebody on set asked to borrow a shirt.
We gave them a shirt.
They wore another photo shoot somewhere else.
This one wore it, that one wore it.
You know, I don't know if this is your name.
Every single, every single high end celebrity
you could imagine of the top, top tier was wearing it.
Almost to where I couldn't believe it was happening.
And then they were like,
oh, now we have to make clothing brand.
I was like, well, let's keep it small
because it still keeps the culture of the studio
of what we create here.
And the clothing was a reflection of our perception
of what was hot at the time.
We were behind the scenes on every Apple commercial,
Nike commercial, a ton of other, every Vogue shoot.
Some of the highest end Vogue shoots
that are like the most controversial ones
in the last 10 years were shot at Hubble Studio.
And we were behind the scenes on how it happened,
how we made that production.
So then when we made things,
it was just super in line with what was trending.
So then people seen that and the win,
there's some people on the creative team at the win
that knew about it and then they came to us and said,
hey, we want to create the same thing for the win.
Win has a legacy brand, it's amazing.
They have all these celebrities that stayed there,
all these people, but nobody knows about it.
Nobody's dying to wear this exclusive Wynn hat.
Now imagine there was only certain hats
that were from the Wynn that you could only get
a certain way if you were gifted and you wanted,
people would be, they'd be craving it,
they'd be dying over it.
And that's what we're trying to create.
But also in fashion you have a kids line with Cambia Kids.
Why do you create a kids line when you've got high end fashion, cannabis, Hubbell Studio,
you've got all these things, why now have a kids division?
So to truth be told, when me and my wife got together she came over to Hubbell, grew in
the ranks, now she's the director of Hubbell Studio, she runs the agency.
She had created the kids line when she was in college at FIT.
She cut and made the patterns on my floor in my apartment in New York City when we first
started dating.
We made a mess everywhere, literally.
And she's seamstress.
She made all patterns herself, did it.
She understands the brand top to bottom, exactly what blends are in there.
I learned it because when we first started dating, I was going with her to all these
places.
And it just worked.
It was the best.
It was a bamboo blend.
It was just the best quality.
I only want to put my kids in ours stuff,
not because it's ours,
because it really feels the best and looks the best.
It looks so swaggy.
Then with Hubble, she was able to work with Kardashians,
this one, that one,
and have all these people in this stuff.
There was a quarterback that won the Superbowl.
He had his kids on the field with him.
I'm not going to say who it is.
And he was holding his kid and they weren't, it can't be a set at the Superbowl.
And it's like, it's the way that culture just touches so many different
people on such a high level.
So in between all these things, you also, 11 years ago, create Trina's kids
foundation, can you walk us through when you're already so busy with all these different businesses,
why create this foundation?
Why not just donate to other people's charities?
So I wanted to create a foundation that we were making a direct impact from the Bronx,
New York.
It came from a very low income area.
I was affected by alcoholism, drug abuse.
Not myself, I was never addicted to anything, but the impact it makes on you from
being surrounded by you.
And all these kids in these areas, whether it's East LA, certain areas in San Diego,
certain areas obviously in Miami, everywhere, every single city deals with the same thing,
are impacted by drug abuse, whether they know it or don't know it.
So I wanted to affect those kids.
I wanted to show them that people care, especially you bring know, you bring in so many different groups of people,
different minorities, different races together,
and you bring all these high-end people
that work with the studio,
and then you bring the whole inner city youth
to come in and everybody, you know,
they deal with each other, they talk,
and it's a little piece of your heart
when you're extending yourself to them.
Ultimately, I really did build it
because of our first meeting, me and you.
And I didn't believe that it could ever be as big
As it was until I met you and then you came and helped me do the whole thing
So why are you crazy enough to go to 10 11 cities now?
For the toy because I have a crazy partner Dan that then does it and convinces me even though I'm in the back end
Yelling at Roger like this is never gonna work. It's not gonna work. The production's not gonna work
You're the one who, you know, you, the real,
you know, it's almost like the American dream.
Sometimes I say to this guy,
Dan, he's either naive and doesn't know
what's really gonna happen, or he really does believe it,
and somehow we pull it off.
We've filled stadiums, we've filled arenas,
we've filled thousands of toys,
tracked the trails, going all over,
and I'm dying in the background
because I'm an operations guy.
I'm like, it's never going to work.
It's like, don't worry about it.
You're like, the event's tomorrow.
It's in an arena.
It's at the Miami Heat Arena.
We don't even have a run of show yet.
Yeah, nothing.
You're like, what time did everybody show up?
You're like, oh, who knows?
I'm like, oh my God.
But.
Then a thousand kids showed up.
Yeah, literally.
We had way more, we had way more volunteers
that we even needed.
Thousands of kids showed up, it was amazing, it was great.
It was a great experience because you're so ambitious
and then couple that together with some ability
to do operations very fast on the spot and it works.
So besides the toy drives,
which we've done for 11 years now,
people you can check it out at Train His Kids Foundation, trainhiskids.org. The toy drives, which we've done for 11 years now, people, you can check it out at Trinus Kids Foundation,
trinuskids.org.
The toy drives, you have that part,
but also inside of your own building at Hubbell Studio,
you've got report card day, back to school day,
Thanksgiving food drive, like walk through,
having and inviting over 400 to 1,000 families
multiple times a year,
literally inside of your place of work.
You know, I come from an events background also.
I worked at a catering hall when I was younger.
It's just drawn like any other event.
You know, you have to be extremely hospitable.
Everybody comes in the door.
I care about every single person that walks through the door.
They get the same exact experience.
They get greeted with a smile.
They get greeted with love.
Whatever they need, we handle.
And because these people know that I'm welcoming them in, and now it's been so long, they kind
of already know they're not skeptical of us.
They come with such a warm heart, so it's gotten a lot easier as the time has went on.
And it brings a community together.
When I invite our clients down, I invite other producers, other celebrities, other people
down and I see them walk through the door and they listen to me and you get on stage and speak, what we're
about to do, what we're about to do, about extending your heart. And then they do it
and they give back. It really brings that community together. And now that this client
is not just a client, they're a friend. They believe in what we're doing. And that builds
the culture of what we do.
So how do you get the streets involved? You know, like you're getting the people to come show up
You're getting the word out the police are there to help protect it
They're also out there to help donate and you know be literally serving food. The local vendors are coming
There's a lot of moving parts. How do you get so many different people involved to support you in your mission?
I'm gonna say a line and tell me what movie it's from get on the phone and start dialing. Yeah, get on the phone and start dialing. Get on the phone and start dialing.
I'm calling, I'm calling, I'm calling,
constantly calling.
The local police department, I just funded their race
to Vegas literally two days ago.
I'm just constantly involved in the community
because I care about the community
because I'm a part of this community.
They've embraced me and I've came
and built my business there.
So I just, I call them, I constantly call everybody,
hey, you coming, you coming, you coming, you coming,
let's have it coming, oh, bring more people,
oh, can I bring this person, yeah, of course,
oh, you got more kids, 50 more kids, okay, of course,
all right, 60 over the limit, sure, why not, bring them.
Oh, we got no more toys, all right, we'll find more toys.
We'll figure it out, because I love the growth,
I love the game, and me and you do such a great job
of doing that together, we just kind of want to build,
build, build, build
and make more of an impact.
All right, we'll take off our charity hats
and put on the Hubble Studio.
Why build 10,000 square feet, then 20,000 square feet,
then 30,000 square feet, then a fourth building,
50 or 60,000 square feet, I can't even count anymore.
There's so many buildings across the street
and over here and over there.
Why keep building and expanding Hubbell Studio?
Because I felt like, well one,
when downtown Artisticia is right next to the warehouse area,
it's multiplying exponentially.
Every single big clothing brand is down there.
Everybody's located down there.
I move and shake with all the best people down there.
Have we had time to take over new buildings?
I had to take it.
Because if I didn't take the opportunity,
I would have missed the opportunity.
And the building, the business was growing
because we only could have so many stages.
If you filled three stages, tomorrow,
and Nike calls you up and says,
oh, I needed 10 days, but I'm literally packed in the middle.
I just can't do the job.
But as we grew more stages,
we had more opportunity to help more people.
And it's, you know, when you're producing on one stage,
one thing, you know, three times a week, it's cool.
When you're producing on four stages, five stages,
digital room, this, every single day,
it's so much more fun.
It's, for somebody who's creative like me and my team,
we get to execute so many different things every day.
It's like you get home and you don't have this buildup anxiety
because you've fully let off all your creative juices.
And I work with my wife, so it's not like a normal relationship
where you go home and you say, oh, what did you do today?
If my wife had dared ask me what I did today,
I'd be like, you knew what I did.
I was with you all day.
We spoke all day.
But I love that.
If I come home and we have this transparent relationship,
and that's the way our entire team works,
we have radical transparency at work.
So what's the goal for Hubba Studio?
Is this a business that you build up to exit one day,
or is this a business that you just keep integrating,
adding, becoming a venture studio,
and keep doing all your own divisions?
I think that we had an opportunity a few years ago
with somebody big to acquire a portion of the company.
I decided not to do it.
We spoke about that.
Why I decided not to do it was because I still
feel like I have so much control over the company
and how we could pivot.
We're very agile and we can go into what we want.
And I didn't want any other business's reputation
to affect the culture of what we do.
Now, if Nike bought us, for instance, as a creative agency,
Adidas will never shoot with us again.
Adidas shoots with us.
None of these other shoe brands will shoot with us.
Represent probably won't shoot with us,
and Represent is a huge emerging company
that is killing the fitness space
with their live activations and their content.
They're great, nothing bad to say about them.
But they'll never shoot with me if Nike bought us.
So we really have to be open to everybody
and I love being that person for this community.
I'm such a fan of the arts, I'm such a fan of fashion
that being who we are for them,
I couldn't have asked for a better job.
And I love it.
I have no plan on exiting anytime soon.
So if someone has a brand, a product, a service,
and they're thinking about booking a studio
for a photo shoot, but they don't really understand
why they're able to charge 400 bucks for the hour,
1,000 bucks for the hour, 10,000 or 20,000 bucks
for the day, can you explain the behind the scenes
how there's lighting, equipment, staff,
experienced people that are actually running the show,
why it's so expensive sometimes?
So when you're creating these high end assets
as opposed to just user generated assets
or just something simple,
you got to keep every single detail in mind.
One, it has to be formatted to every single aspect
that you're going to be able to market it.
You know what I mean?
Whether it's phone, digital, whatever way.
You got lighting crews, digital crews,
post-production crews, in-house crews,
then you got 60 people on set,
you have to feed all these people,
you have to handle that,
then you have to create this environment
that everybody feels super creative.
That's a whole different experience,
and when you're creating like that,
and your photographer alone is a celebrity
within themselves because they should be.
You're housing this magical moment that'll create this thing that will live in time.
When Billie Eilish shot in lingerie,
she literally has only shot like that one time,
that was there.
It was a whole moment, it was weeks in advance of planning
to make her comfortable, to make the team comfortable,
make everything happen,
to add the highest end production possible.
But it was a moment that will live in history.
You know, we were a part of that.
So to create that moment, it costs money.
It's a luxury tax.
And you're guaranteed to get exactly what you want.
You get married at the Beverly Hills Hotel
because you get exactly what you want.
You're gonna pay, but they're gonna do everything for you, and you're gonna get exactly what you want you get married at the Beverly Hills Hotel because you get exactly what you want You're gonna pay but they're gonna do everything for you and you're gonna get exactly what you want
That's what it's like coming up with studios. We give you exactly what you want
So if someone is trying to figure out I want to hire an agency
How did they decide between this agency that agency versus like a premium one like yours?
You know, it's really there's a lot of great people
out there doing great stuff.
I don't knock on these other agencies.
You go with someone who understands branding.
You know, I wouldn't say that we should
digitally market your stuff.
I would push them towards you or a handful of other people
that were on the panel yesterday.
We build brands because I understand what's real
because I'm paying attention to what's real.
At any given time, I know what companies are doing well, what companies aren't doing well, what's real, because I'm paying attention to what's real. At any given time, I know what companies are doing well,
what companies aren't doing well, what's hot,
why someone's wearing the Meary shirt or a Rivington shirt.
I think that Meary's great.
He was one of our first clients 10 years ago.
I think we did our first few photoshoots with him for free
because I believed in him.
Now we do everything for him.
And he's got more global sales than Saint Laurent.
It's because we're paying attention to who's good,
so I'm going to put you in line with what's going to work,
and I'm going to give you advice as a company and say,
I truly believe this is going to work.
You may like that, you may like that canary yellow shirt,
but not many other people are going to like it,
so let's not make you packaging that color.
You know what I mean?
And making it congruent with what's happening
and picking us as a company and believing in us as a team.
That's why you're gonna go with us.
So the packaging design for Cambia Kids, Hubbo Studio,
your agency, all the things, Balanced,
all the things, the different products that you have
is very, very, very high quality.
Why do you think it's important for someone
to consider to go with an expert
to actually make their brand rather than just do it on AI or try to BT or hire some someone
off the fiber for 100 bucks? Why should someone consider going with the high end version of
their brand product or logo?
I'll give you a perfect instance. Ask me what the best coffee is in New York City. What's
the best coffee?
Nine Street coffee. You want to know why? Because I bought a t shirt from them 10 years
ago and I liked the quality so much that I've
worn that t-shirt to Craig's out for dinner multiple times.
I've wore it out and it just says Ninth Street Coffee on it.
But the placement, the logo, everything was great.
And then I was watching Billions and they talked about Ninth Street Coffee.
Then I was reading Unreasonable Hospitality and he talked about one of the best espresso
pools in New York City.
It was Ninth Street Coffee.
If I never bought that shirt,
when I watched it on the TV show,
I read it in a book, it would have been irrelevant to me.
I wouldn't have remembered.
But because I had something that I picked up every day
and wore it, it makes it more sticky.
It makes it where now I believe in this brand.
I've reached for that.
I've worn it, I've bought into the culture.
It's part of who I am now.
It's weaving into the fabric of me right now in my life
and what I like to wear.
That's branding.
How you make somebody feel.
When you're making things for someone to wear, especially,
or packaging for them to pick up,
like nothing feels good as opening
that brand new iPhone box.
When you peel the little thing and then you pull it off,
you know you have a brand new phone,
but the packaging is the experience.
You're selling someone that experience
and they feel better about themselves and happier
because they got it.
That's why you pay for that.
And that's why you pick high-end for that.
So you read a lot of books on business.
A lot of times people think that they're either
too good for books or too good for masterminds
or too good for events or too good for courses or too good to keep
learning. Why is it important for you to keep learning? Why should people consider spending
more time investing into their minds?
Because it's like if I'm going to scale the Alps, there's so many people have done it
before me. They know the exact routes to take. Let me go through it. It's always going to
be different. There's going to be different weather. You may not be able to take that route.
It's always gonna be a little different,
but they've made their way through.
They can give you advice.
That's why I talk about loosely coupled
or tightly coupled businesses is because I read it.
Because I read a lot of these management ideology books,
a lot of these CEO books,
and they've built behemoths of companies,
and they've went through a lot of the same problems
that me and you both go through in building these companies,
and it gives us the confidence to know
that someone else has did it,
and they're paving the way for us.
I have more mentors that I've never even met
that don't even know that I look up to.
Michael Ovitz talked about when he built his agency,
he was so behind the scenes of the movie industry
that he's seen what was coming out before it did did and it made me even more convinced that I had a
build-up agency because I was on set every day for the best of the best stuff
I was behind the scenes if I never read Michael Overt's book I would never know
I would never I would never have seen that vision you know I mean and you read
all these books you do these things if you don't think that you need to and your arrogance or your hubris is going to just
say that you just know exactly how to do it, good luck.
You may be the exception that gets through, but most likely the person who studied and
learned is going to do better than you.
I'm going to give you guys a real life example.
Let's say I want to start a clothing line and Vince wants to start a clothing line.
But Vince hires Damon John. And Damon John has done almost $4 billion in clothing sales.
Vince has experience with clothing.
I don't.
If they go out and decide which manufacturer to use,
Vince and Damon are going to be texting the manufacturer,
hey, Robert, can you do this clothing for me?
Hey, tech pack designer, can you design this tech pack for me?
What am I going to be doing?
What is a manufacturer in Los Angeles? Sorry, doing? What is a manufacturer in Los Angeles?
Oh, sorry, sorry, who is a manufacturer in Los Angeles?
Wait, what is a tech pack designer?
Oh, here's a bunch of websites.
Hello, tech pack designer?
I'm gonna be paying the dummy tax
because when I call them or I email them,
they're gonna charge me full price or more.
When Vince and Damon John call them,
they're gonna get discounts and things
for free and friendships and favors because Damon's been doing it for decades. Vince has
been doing it for decades. They have the experience. While I'm trying to figure out how to start
a clothing line and I'm like, should I order small, medium, large, XL, XXXL, XXXL, XXXL,
quadruple XL? How many should I order? Should I order 3,000 samples or 1,000 samples? Wait,
I only need 40 samples? I'm going to be paying dummy tax. How many should I order? Should I order 3,000 samples or 1,000 samples? Oh wait, I only need 40 samples?
I'm going to be paying the dummy tax.
You know how I know?
When I was 18 years old, I paid the dummy tax.
I paid $36,000 for 12 sweaters.
When I was 18 years old, I paid $36,000 for 12 sweaters.
And a leather jacket manufacturer
charged me $21,000 for 12 jackets.
Why?
I was 18 years old, so they saw me coming from all the way.
I had just done a million in sales.
I was on pace to do nine million in sales, and so we had some money, and I was a kid,
and I went to these manufacturers, bright-eyed and bushy-tailed, and they just overcharged
me.
And I paid the dummy tax.
And then later, it led me to my real manufacturer, Christopher Wicks, who I'm still friends with
today, and he was the guiding light to help me with every little detail to save me 10 cents on things
Every little reason why the plastic should be this way why the box is this way?
Why is the hanger this way?
Literally they other way quick side note if you sell the Walmart and your hanger is facing left instead of right
They'll charge you 25 cents per unit
So if you ship them 120,000 units
They just send you an actual bill to pay them back 30 grand because your hanger's
the wrong way.
So every little detail you learn in this example
where Damon and Vince, for example,
are having the experience is why books are important.
It's why masterminds are important.
It's why video courses and YouTube.
There's so much information for free that you can consume
to help you not pay the dummy tax.
All right, Vince, go ahead.
Well, also real quick, if you're utilizing your time,
if you're an entrepreneur,
what's the best use of my time, right?
Are you either gonna drive and listen to music
or you're gonna drive and listen to an audio book?
Or you're gonna drive and listen to a mastermind
that you're watching or something like that?
Your entertainment, your new entertainment
should be watching masterminds and learning.
Why not?
It's the best, I drive 35 minutes to work
and 35 minutes back I listen to audio books.
I don't listen to music anymore. I only listen to music if I want to go out.
I want to get into a good mood.
If I'm going to work, I want to get thrilled
about being at work.
I want to be inspired, excited.
Ooh, that's a good idea.
I'm going to apply that today.
This is great.
Use your time wisely.
Because we only have a few years doing this.
You know, ultimately, with a 40 year run
within just doing business,
how can I use every single day?
The last question is related to charity. Why do you think it's important people to have a
you know charity philanthropic part of their company their brand or with their employees?
Why is it important for the culture to have some type of charity component?
Because you got to feel like you're giving back because it's the right thing to do. I don't care what Bible you read
You know if it's the right thing to do. I don't care what Bible you read, you know, if it's the Torah, the Quran or the Bible,
it all talks about giving back.
You have to give back.
It's part of your soul, you know,
it just makes you feel more fulfilled.
We are so stressed out the month of December, right?
It's literally going nuts.
We had three hour meeting arguing in Vegas
about the Miami Heat Arena, what's gonna happen?
It's so stressful the morning of the day,
if we don't have enough toys, this happens.
But the minute it ends, and we walked out,
and we went and sat down in Carbone,
so many smiling faces, so many kids, so many things,
and everybody came together for one cause.
If you build that, that's building a culture,
and that's what changes people's lives.
And when you do that together with your team
They want to be a part of it. They feel good my holidays
You know, I've buried both my parents
There is no going home to the Bronx that that that part of my life is gone
But the new part of my life is me and you and my kids and your daughter
Going and our wives going out and doing these together and our kids are gonna grow up
No, and the holidays are not about what we get
It's about what we give back and how we give back.
And there's smiles that we share with everybody
and we share that with our employees and our business.
It breeds life into it.
And it makes it fun, it really does.
So where can people find you?
And this is gonna be a lot of different companies.
Where can they find you, your companies, the charity?
Just give us the quick breakdown.
My Instagram is at VinceRitchie, R-I-C-C-I, my last name.
Trina's Kids is at Trina's Kids.
Hubba Studio is at Hubba Studio,
and Balance is at Balance Los Angeles.
You can pretty much navigate from one to the other
from there, super easy.
All right guys, really, really important
to have discussions with your friends,
family, and followers about money.
We all grew up thinking it's rude to talk about money.
I think that's ridiculous.
You have to have discussions about accounting, taxes, loans.
What happens if I don't pay this?
What happens if I borrow money from my friend and I don't get a contract?
Should I split the rent?
Should I split the bills?
It's real life.
Bills are your real life.
Medical bills, insurance, these are all part of your daily life.
So you have to have discussions with people around you from your past, present, and your
future about money things so that you can be ahead of the curve and you don't pay those
dummy taxes.
Every single year, you've seen us for the last two years now, not having sponsors, not
having logos, not reading you long commercials.
So I want to give you direct information.
We have a 93% listen through rate.
And right now, this week alone,
we are rated the number one entrepreneur podcast
and we are trending as number one.
So we need your help.
Like, comment, subscribe, share.
Check out Vince Rich across social media
and we'll see you guys next Monday on the money Mondays.com.