The Money Mondays - Why Your HOBBY Could Be the Secret to Making a Fortune w/ Josh Luber & Noah Neiman 💵 E97
Episode Date: November 25, 2024What do Josh Luber and Noah Neiman have in common? They turned their hobbies into million-dollar businesses. Watch until the end if you want to learn how to build a business around your hobby... --- ...Josh Luber is the co-founder and former CEO of StockX, a popular online marketplace for buying and selling sneakers, streetwear, electronics, and collectibles. The company revolutionized the sneaker resale market by creating a transparent, authentic, and efficient platform for buyers and sellers. --- Noah Neiman is the co-founder of Rumble, a fast-growing fitness company that focuses on group fitness classes based on boxing. Rumble combines high-intensity boxing-inspired workouts with strength training, aiming to provide a full-body exercise experience. --- Like this episode? Watch more like it 👇 Michael Sartain & Michael Mojo: What Stops MOST Entrepreneurs from Succeeding: https://youtu.be/t3xxrCNBTRg Peter Voogd & Dan Zrihen: Sales Strategies That Made Them Millions: https://youtu.be/HlT3MVS1jig Greg Kimble & Kevin Peake: Making Waves in Education and Healthcare: https://youtu.be/eTAtkEJ5nvI Christian DelGrosso & Marshall Sylver's Social Media SUCCESS & Building WEALTH: https://youtu.be/h6ToLKH7Y5Q Watch ALL Full Episodes Here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLs0D-M5aH-0IOUKtQPKts-VZfO55mfH6k --- The Money Mondays is a business podcast here to teach you how to make money, invest money, and donate money by showcasing some of the world's most successful people and how they do the same. Hosted by serial entrepreneur Dan Fleyshman, the youngest founder of a publicly traded company in history, this money podcast gives you an exclusive behind the scenes look at how the wealthiest celebrities, entrepreneurs, athletes and influencers make, invest and donate money. If you want to learn more business and investing while you work to improve your financial life, you're in the right place! Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/@themoneymondays?sub_confirmation=1 Dan Fleyshman, The Money Mondays Learn more here: https://themoneymondays.com Watch all the podcast episodes: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLs0D-M5aH-0IOUKtQPKts-VZfO55mfH6k Let’s Connect... Website: https://themoneymondays.com Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-money-mondays/id1663564091 Twitter: https://twitter.com/themoneymondays LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-money-mondays/about/ TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@themoneymondays FB: https://www.facebook.com/The-Money-Mondays-110233585203220/
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At the end of 21, after we got our licenses, we did a round that valued the company at $10 billion,
and I was the only employee of the company. When I left StockX, we had 1,400 employees.
What? Yeah. I've been in this industry now for 10 years. I mean, all these things are the same,
right? Sneakers, trading cards, watches, handbags, toys. And so now, after having run a marketplace,
after having run a brand and licensing, I get to create a brand myself and then take all the learnings
from sneakers and from trading cards and apply it to collectible toys.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to a special edition of the Money Mondays.
We have our RV Motorharm parked here in Beverly Hills, California, but our guest flew from
across the country.
So I'm really excited to have him here.
He has an illustrious career and a lot of the same exact categories that I've invested
in, I've spent a lot of time in.
And so with these podcasts, as you know, we keep them under 40 minutes because the average
commute to work is 45 minutes.
The average workout is 45 minutes.
So this podcast will be between 34 and 38 minutes for your listening pleasure.
We're going to cover three core topics,
how to make money, how to invest money,
how to give away to charity.
Now along the way, this guy's worked on some
of the most household name companies in history
and he's building a brand new one right this second
which you might be able to see if you're watching on YouTube
right next to us, his next company.
So without further ado, Mr. Josh Lubry,
please give us a quick two minute bio
so we can get straight to the money.
Thanks for having me. I didn't know I was doing a two-minute bio. We do the 30-second bio. I am an entrepreneur. I've started and run many companies. The two that are most well known are StockX,
which we started in 2016 and I left at the end of 2020. Fanatics Collectibles, which is the
trading card business with Fanatics, which we started in 2021 and I left at the end of 2022.
And currently running the newest and what I hope will be the longest ten-year business,
which is GoStraight.
Bam!
Look at that.
That was quick.
We got right into it.
Amazing.
GoStraight is a collectible toy company, not dissimilar to Bearbrick.
But we'll get into a lot of the
details but the the idea is that I've been in this industry now for 10 years I
mean all these things are the same right sneakers trading cards watches handbags
toys and and so now after having run a marketplace after having run a brand and
licensing I get to create a brand myself and then take all the learnings from
sneakers and from trading cards and apply it to collectible toys
So I love it. That's it. All right, so we're gonna get back to ghost, right?
We're gonna go step by step along the career journey of Josh Luber walk us through
What was before stock X and then how did you decide to start?
When I'm wearing sneakers from stock X right this second by the way
So walk us through before stock X and then get into that. You know, like you, I have the privilege of getting to speak
at a lot of different places for a lot of different reasons.
And one of the talks that I give is the everything
but all the ones that failed before StockX.
The short version of that.
But the short version is that I've always wanted
to be an entrepreneur and early on you don't know how to.
I mean, I graduated college in 1999
when the word entrepreneur barely exists,
the internet barely exists, there were no apps,
there were no iPhones.
No smartphones.
No, and so all the businesses that I started before,
none of them had anything to do with sneakers.
Almost intentionally so, almost like intentionally avoiding
trying to create a business that was just an excuse
to play with sneakers.
But in between everyone, I had a corporate job. You know, the fact, I mean,
Money Monday is like, this is the place to talk about the fact that, you know,
you have to still be able to pay your bills and take care of your family.
And I started my first startup when I was single, second married with no kids,
third married with one kid, fourth married with two kids, right? Every time the risk
profile changes, your obligations change. And I was very fortunate that that fourth one was stock X, and then, you know, it changed
the financial profile afterwards. But I was at IBM, I was what I thought might end up
being my career as now I have have have a kid, and, and just trying to figure out how
to, you know, how to make ends meet. And I started working on Campus on the side.
Campus was the sneaker price guide
that would become StockX.
But that never happens if I don't go take the job at IBM,
if I'm not there as a consultant learning about data
in the weeds and then on the side,
trying to find projects and being in the sneakers personally.
So those things came together.
My work and my personal passion came together at IBM, which led to creating CampList, which
led to StockX.
So this is an important topic. Josh mentioned being able to pay your rent along the way.
A lot of times people on social media like to say, just quit your job, go be an entrepreneur.
And what they're missing out and not telling you to do is, even if it works, let's say
Josh and I start BlueHats.com. And Josh and I it works, let's say Josh and I start BlueHats.com
and Josh and I are like,
Hey, we're gonna do BlueHats.com.
And we go out there and crush it.
We do $1 million in sales our first year.
Do you know how much Dan and Josh made our first year?
It rhymes with zero.
And if any profits happened,
what do we do with that money?
We pour it back into the business
because we're hoping to do $3 million next year
on year two, which sounds fantastic.
How much did Josh and Dan make on year two?
It rhymes with zero.
You get where I'm going?
When things are working, how dare you take any money out
because every dollar you put back in scales the business.
If you're pulling money out,
you're literally hurting the business.
And if it's not working, you're not getting paid.
So no matter what happens, you're not getting paid as a CEO and entrepreneur. Now, I'm not trying to scare you
away. It's a reality check is that what Josh mentioned is that if you can have income along
the way and work a nine to five and make your three grand, four grand, five grand, eight grand,
10 grand, whatever it is a month you need, depending on your city location. Obviously,
it's more in New York versus Alabama or Texas, wherever. Like as long as you
can cover your overhead, you can run your business from 5 o 1 p.m. until nighttime if you have to
and work on the weekends. Too often there's people just saying tell your boss to screw off and just
go jump into that. Definitely not if you have kids like Josh just mentioned. So Josh Luber,
you can get to StockX 2016, you're growing, you're scaling,
and all of a sudden there's an inflection point.
Like this is a multi-hundred million dollar company
about to be a billion dollar company
if not multiple billion dollar company.
Like what happens along that journey going from fun idea,
oh shit, we got 10 or 20 employees,
oh well we have 50 employees, oh boy,
we're a hundred, 200, 300 million dollar company.
Yeah, first of all, I agree with
Everything you just said a thousand percent over that is exactly true
I mean stock X I started working with Dan Gilbert and moved to Detroit in the summer of 2015
We launched in February of 2016. I was living paycheck to paycheck until 2019 Wow, right?
So it you know, like everyone sees the public success of StockX and the business blew up
in holidays of 2017.
So 18 months in the business blows up and, you know, StockX becomes what everyone knows.
But internally, VCs are putting money into the company, not into my pocket.
Right?
And it's still about growing the business and you make those decisions.
And it's only truly because of the generosity
of the VC community and Dan Gilbert
and people that understand entrepreneurs
that you get to a certain point and they say,
hey, we're gonna do this next round,
but we are gonna carve out 10% of this
for the early employees to take money off the table
so you can stop living paycheck to paycheck
and you can have a little bit of, you know, yeah.
And so, you know, and that's what, you know, obviously things have continued to go well
and that business has been great.
But yeah, it's not even remotely overnight.
In fact, it's, you know, years later that your life changes.
Even when it comes to like that, Josh was talking about doing tens of millions of revenue,
if not more, it's still not time to pull money out.
So Josh, talk about the change as it
goes from like you and your buddies and going to like 20, 50, 30 employees until like now you can't
even name the employees because you get to 100 employees, etc. Yeah, I mean look, when I left
StockX in the end of 2020, we had 1400 employees. What? Yeah. And you got to remember StockX, in
addition to the core business, we also had, I think maybe they were up to maybe nine or 10,
but at the time I think we had seven authentication centers
around the world.
Each of those has a couple hundred employees in it.
So yeah, it was massive.
And in the beginning, there were five of us.
We sat right outside of Dan Gilbert's office.
And then there were seven and eight,
and you slowly build, and all of a sudden,
you gotta get a different part of the office, you gotta have your own floor.
And you look up one day and the only way to manage that size of a company is in theory.
You can't know everybody, you can't touch everybody, you can't know everybody's job,
you have to hire people to run it.
And it's just a much different business than like it goes right right now, it's me and
ten other people. And by the way way they're all people I've worked
with before they're all people that I know personally and have worked with
many times over but at that point you're learning on the job how to run a large
company and frankly that's not what I was interested in I never thought that
I would be in that situation and one day then then you are right so so on the
make money side on the first segment,
we like to explain to people the realities.
When someone wants to become an executive or an employee
for something like StockX, how can they make a decision
before they dedicate the next one, two, three, four, five
years of working with a company that's scaling?
Yeah, well, what's interesting about being a part of a startup, whether you're a founder
or an early employee, everybody takes a haircut.
Everybody takes less than what they could go make if they were working at Facebook or
IBM or whatever.
When I hired, I brought in the guy who would become the CTO at Finax Collectibles and then
CTO with me at GoStripe,
he had been a startup engineer for a while
and then he left and he was working at Facebook.
Mid-level engineering manager making $1.2 million a year.
Come on.
Swear to God, right?
And this is-
I gotta go guys, I'm gonna go become an engineer.
Exactly, right?
What?
And so to convince somebody like that,
to give up that pay to come and work for
Yeah, you know and sure there's equity and maybe you'll make more money
But you know it's truly about at that point is truly about lifestyle and you ask people that they live like that lifestyle
It's rough. It's hard. You know it is growing and everything every bad trope
You've heard about startup life and bureaucracy and politics like that's that that. That's what you're paying for. And that's why you get
paid that because those companies need every great engineer that exists. And so like, that's
the extreme. But that's the conversation you're having with every person is you're, you're
convincing them to come work with you. It says, Hey, yeah, I know you can make a little
bit more over here, but you are now going to have all this autonomy to do great work and to do it on your own.
And we can go down this path, but I found that more than anything, like great people,
they want to be able to do great work.
And you know, that the end of the day, a difference of 10 or 15%, you know, dollars one way or
another, they would much rather have the autonomy every day coming into work, do great work,
and, and, and as opposed to being micromanaged
or being constrained by budgets
or plans or whatever like that.
So anyway, that's the conversation
that you have with people.
And by the way, I spent six years where all I did
was try to convince people to move to Detroit
to come work for StockX.
Now post pandemic, that's all a little bit different.
But at the time, it was important for everyone
to be together because that's how we were able
to have that environment to be able to do great work.
When did you realize that sneaker flipping was an industry?
What's interesting about now being the founder of StockX
and meeting people, I mean, we're here in LA
because I'm speaking at a USC business
school later today. Last week I spoke at Emory business school and at Georgia tech. And every
time I speak at a school, there's a line of people afterwards and they are not there to
take pictures. They're there to tell me, Hey, I made my first $10 selling sneakers on Stock
X or I I'm paying for my education because I was flipping sneakers in high school.
Like 90% of them are.
That is awesome.
That is the coolest thing.
We actually, at StockX, we created what we called
StockX Day in our second year, where all we did was
just invite people to come, our top customers,
mainly our top sellers, to come to StockX,
to be able to have that conversation with everybody.
So, I mean, it was going on well before StockX,
but StockX go, you know, those companies
that made it so easy to sell,
and we can go down that path if you like,
like that's what the real business of StockX was,
to make it as easy to sell a pair of sneakers
as it is to buy, and that enabled it to become an industry
because it became so much easier
for everyone to be able to sell sneakers.
So during my speeches, I talk about the economy.
And oftentimes people think about every eight to 12 years,
there's a recession.
Well, our last recession was 2008.
And that was also big because of the mortgage industry
situation and the banking situation.
The difference was, and why we didn't have one,
what I say in between 2016 and 2020 is
the smartphone.
Never before 2008 did you have a smartphone.
Now people can become an Uber driver, Postmates, Lyft.
Now girls can sell their clothes on Poshmark.
People can sell their shoes on StockX.
And I literally, that's part of my speech is StockX.
Explaining that before you had, if you lost your job during a recession, you had no other way to make money back in the days.
2005 technically is back in the days.
Totally.
Right? Like you didn't have all those apps.
You couldn't go work as a postmage driver, a Lyft driver, an Instacart driver.
And now you can literally make money from your phone.
15-year-old kids can make six grand a month just buying and flipping shoes,
making 200 bucks a day.
And so I look at it as literally changing the economy
Yeah, I look at companies like stock X as literally change the economy where
15 year old kids I see them at sneaker con. I was an advisory board for sneaker con
12,000 16,000 20,000 sometimes showed up to show there's 450,000 people the shows last year
Yeah for sneakers. Yeah. Yeah. It's become this mega type.
And look, people love sneakers,
but most of the people there, to your point,
are some form of a small business.
They are there because they can either buy or sell
on one side or the other.
Because you can buy sneakers at StockX,
you can buy them on eBay,
you can buy them in a million other places, right?
It's about being a part of that live marketplace
that's happening at that moment in that place. That's why they're there. It's almost like the old
like trading pits, you know, the New York Stock Exchange, right?
Ebay's who bought SnickerCon. Yeah. That's who came in. Yeah. All right. So along the
path, when did sports cards, comic books, when did that become part of your life?
Yeah. I mean, like, like all of us, right? I I mean I collected cards as a kid. You know I am 46 so
1991 was my bar mitzvah and as my bar mitzvah present for my parents was 1952 tops Willie Mays
So that was kind of like you know the peak of my my
Childhood, but you know I was like everyone collected cards are in the junk wax there
Etc put them all away when I went away to college and and you don't kind of always sat in the back of my parents
closet at stock X put them all away when I went away to college and you know, kind of always sat in the back of my parents closet.
At StockX, we launched in 2016, blew up the end of 2017,
2018 was about growth.
2018 was about, okay, what other products can we put
on this site to grow the business?
And so I was just always looking for what other products.
We added collectibles that year, we added Bear Bricks,
we added Supreme, Streetwear,
and I started looking at trading cards.
I started looking at cards myself personally
and for the business.
Being in Detroit, I had been talking to all the people
in the industry and Steve Sloan, who at the time,
I think was the president of PSA, says,
"'Oh, you're in Detroit?
"'You gotta meet this guy, Jason Coons.
"'He lives in your backyard.'"
And so, you obviously know him well.
And he became my Sherpa back into the industry.
You know, he'd obviously been collecting cards
this entire time.
And I was like a kid in a candy store again,
to just like get back into cars.
I started like opening up packs of cards at my desk
in meetings at StockX.
Everyone thought I was nuts.
And so I started collecting stuff myself,
but really it was like, got serious when we were trying
to figure out can this be a real category
in StockX for growth.
And I was just very fortunate to be ahead of that curve
a little bit, so then I started buying cards myself,
and those things snowballed.
Yeah, I mean I bought a lot.
I bought three dozen Bear Bricks off StockX,
and I've also bought a ton of cart, mostly boxes.
Boxes, right.
And look, the reason why StockX isn't a leader
compared to eBay or Golden or PwC or Fanatics
or all from a marketplace standpoint is the StockX model doesn't work very well for singles.
Works great for boxes, but not very well for singles, and that's just a limitation of the
StockX model.
So around 2020 I should decide, okay, I'm going to retire, take a break, maybe figure
out what my next move is.
And then boom, I see all over the news as the CEO of Fanatics Collectibles.
Talk about that transition journey.
Why jump back in the saddle?
So pre-pandemic, I was, it took me about a year.
So back up the summer of 2019 We do our billion dollar rounds. I also stepped down as CEO
We bring in a you know, professional CEO to start
Moving the company towards an IPO and growth and it took me about a year to realize that just because I started the company
doesn't mean I can't leave and
So that that whole next year which obviously then leads in the pandemic, you know, I was sort of feeling my way around, still looking for other products, other categories, and
I really wanted to try to grow sneakers, excuse me, trading cards at StockX.
But it just wasn't a priority for the sort of crazy ideas that I had about could we go
out and get licenses, could we make trading cards?
Like I just, it was clear that that industry was going to be something more.
Pandemic happens.
Everything obviously changes.
And during that time, I just started having conversations with everyone else in the trading
card industry.
And I left, partnered not with Michael Rubin, but with another organization who were going
to fund me to go after the licenses for trading cards.
I just thought that was where the opportunity was.
We spent about, I left in September of 2020.
We spent two months together and this group said,
you know what, Michael Rubin's probably a better partner
than we are.
He's been asking about trading cards,
maybe you should meet with him.
And we met in right before Thanksgiving of 20
and I sat down, I told him what I thought this thing can be
and he's like, I can get the licenses, let's go.
And we spent all 2021 going after licenses.
It was extremely organic.
There was never any plans to end up
on the other side of that.
I mean, at the end of 21, after we got our licenses,
we did a round that valued the company at $10 billion
and I was the only employee of the company.
There was no company.
It was me, all the licenses, right?
And then we had to go and run
I was like, holy crap, you know, so it's the whole
Stock X is amazing. It was a rocket ship. Phonetics collectibles is crazier bigger by every metric you can imagine. Yeah
Okay, so
End of 2022 you're like, okay, I'm good. I'm gonna take a break again
Why instead of jump back into a saddle?
And I don't know if there's any saddles left
that are that big,
because you're talking about two of the household
named brands and industry,
decide I'm gonna do a startup
and start making my own version
of the bigger, better version of Bear Breaks.
Yeah.
Unlike StockX.
You just like the pain?
You just like the pain of startups?
Yeah, that's the fun part.
That's so much more fun.
The more pain is sitting in budget meetings
and trying to- For sure.
Yeah.
Actually got cringed when you said that.
Yeah.
And look, big companies have to be run a certain way and I get that, but it doesn't mean that
I need to be the ones doing it.
What was great and it's crazy, you look back on the just serendipity and the similarities between working with two different billionaire MBA owners,
Dan Gilbert and Michael Rubin,
and being at the center of these two industries,
which is very just fortunate for me.
But what Rubin understood when we started
was that I'm an entrepreneur,
and if that business got as big as we thought it might be,
then he didn't need me running
it.
I didn't want to be running it.
And so we were, we were a hundred percent on the same page.
So once we acquired Tops and ingested their 800 people and we hired some other people,
including a CEO, he and I were on the same page.
He's like, yeah, if you want to leave, great.
And so I, I planned the whole time.
And so like October of 2022, I left specifically to make Ghost Right because
it was the same idea. At StockX, at Finitex Collectibles, the through line of all this
is what we call market-based pricing. The idea that these are all products that aren't arbitrary
retail price, but they're products that are driven by supply and demand,
by the community, by resellers, by collectors, right?
The market sets the price for these products.
They're products that are equal parts consumer good
and financial asset.
And, but all the sort of big crazy ideas
that you might be able to do with that concept,
sort of gets stymied when you have to deal
with the biggest companies in the world.
Sneakers, you have Nike and Adidas and Foot Locker.
Trading cards, you have the NBA and NFL and Fanatics.
So trading cards, excuse me,
collectible toys were this Goldilocks industry
where it was big enough to matter,
it was big enough to work with all the most important brands
and artists and companies, right?
I mean, Chanel has done a Bear Bricks, right?
But it was not so big that you have
these monoliths in the space.
In the collectible toy space, you have Funko,
you have Medecom, which makes Bear Brick,
and that's kind of it.
And both those are relatively small companies.
Hasbro and Mattel and Lego, that's different, right?
So it was a really this sort of like perfect place
to go after this idea that we'd always had
around the different ways that you could buy or sell
these products, these sort of hype economy products.
And so it really was this like perfect transition
for me to be able to do this.
Look, today we have to make collectible toys
and it's a toy business, but underneath it,
it's this idea of how the hype economy grows,
these toys, collectibles that are financial assets.
So there's a lot to it, but the short version is
it's actually the same idea for me as an entrepreneur,
the same big idea that I've always wanted to go after.
Now I get to do it on my own.
I don't have a billionaire MBA owner as a partner.
That's good, maybe that's bad, we'll find out.
But anyway, I get to go after it, and most importantly,
I get to work with exactly who I want to work with.
It's me and 10 other people.
They're all people that I've worked with before
at one or both the other companies.
And a business is just people, man, like that's it.
And so I get to work with the people I want to work with.
So on a personal level,
why not go be the CEO of Funco or go buy Bearbricks?
Well, I actually tried to buy Bearbrick.
I tried to buy MediCom.
I was, I'd heard they were sale.
Yeah, yeah.
I really think that Bearbrick has this sort of perfect product that they've been making, MediCom, the Japanese company that makes Bearbrick, they've been making
for 25 years. And Bearbrick, the whole rest of the collectible toy industry, it's all IP,
it's characters. It's Spider-Man, it's Astro Boy, it's Kaws, it's Iron Man,
but the Bearbrick is just a shape.
It's a blank canvas, it's human body with a bear head,
and so because of that, it gives them
this much wider aperture to work with
all the most important brands, right?
You could put Iron Man on a Bearbrick,
or it could be a Warhol painting,
or the American flag, or whatever, yeah.
And so, and by the way, that's what a trading card is.
A trading card is a blank canvas. It can be Wemby, or it could be the backup, shorts up for the twins, and so you know and by the way, that's what a trading card is a trading card is a blank canvas It can be Wemby or it could be the backup shorts up for the twins and the value of that is is depending on who is
On that blank canvas, so I always thought there was all this you could do with with bear brick, but they are very
Japanese company they've stayed very much in their ways
They've done the same thing for 25 years and so I thought I was like you have this iconic brand
You know maybe I kids were and you what? They just really weren't interested
in having that conversation.
So great.
So then we had to figure out
how do we create our own blank canvas?
I left Fanatics Collectibles in October of 22
and we spent eight months designing the shape.
A ghost, like a bear brick, is a blank canvas.
There's no face, there's no gender.
Like the ghost itself is not a character.
It's about how it takes to skins. And it took a while to get to a shape that wasn't too much
of a character, but also, you know, really took well to skin. So, so yeah, so I absolutely,
you know, considered it, but like, this is the better path to any and you get to start all this
from scratch, right? You get to build a company from scratch, taking everything we've learned.
And you can look at 25 years of MediCom,
things they've done well, things they've done poor,
and you don't have to correct it,
you can just start new.
So that's pretty great too.
So walk us through Ghost right now.
Like how do people buy into it?
What do they do with it?
What's the plan?
Well, also under the category of funding the company yourself
and not having to answer to investors or
billionaire MBA owners is we started making Ghosts in August of 23.
So we spent a year, all we did is make Ghosts to give them away.
So we ran a company with 10 employees making products in China and all we did was give
it away.
So under the money part of this, and I thought did was give it away. So under the money
part of this, you know, and I thought that was important from a brand standpoint, from
building the credibility within the industry of partners who might want to work with us.
And we finally started selling Ghosts in August of 24. We've done four releases so far. We've
actually done three. The fourth one is currently ongoing. And this was the first one.
Everything, all the ghosts, same three sizes of bear brick, which is you have a, I have
this is actually a gift for you.
This is a sample of 100%.
This is one of the first 3D printed samples.
It looks like drugs, it's not drugs.
So this is 100%. This is usually for blind boxes and we can talk
more about that. But this size and then which we call the 100%, the 400% which is this size
and then the 1000% which is about 28 inches tall and here this is for you.
These basically don't exist by the way. These were internal samples.
Only one has been sold.
We sold it at Vcon live with the VFriends guys
and it went for $510.
Yeah, so.
Thank you, thank you.
And then, so the third size is 28 inches.
So the three they released, all this size,
which is 11 inches, all sold on stock, excuse me,
on Ghost Right as a blind Dutch auction, which means that we don't set the price, the market
sets the price.
This one, there were 20 units sold, sold for $1,026 a piece.
The second one, which was with Rocky's Matcha, which is a local matcha company here in LA,
there were 20, excuse me, 30 units.
Sold for $500 with a clearing price. And the third was Eastside Golf, which there were 30,
and that one sold for $300.
And so this is what we do.
We get to make ghosts, and the flagship and the core
is this size, 11 inches.
But then as we evolve on, the 100% size, the blind boxes,
that will really be the future of the company.
What is a blind box?
So blind boxes are trading cards.
You open a pack, you open a box,
you don't know what you're gonna get inside.
This is the first time that I'm showing the WNBA blind box.
We have licenses with the NBA, with the WNBA,
with Major League Baseball,
and all three players associations. And this is the WNBA blind box League Baseball and all three players associations.
And this is the WNBA blind box is going to come out in December.
There are 16 players.
Here's a checklist that I'm not showing on camera, but includes people like
Caitlin Clark and Asia Wilson.
And then it has parallels that have all different color crowns the same way
that, say, Prism works, where you have your base color and then you have gold number to 10 and you have you know black one of one and all the
different things.
I mean we get to take everything we learned about scarcity and collectability and creating
brand and creating demand and trading cards and apply it to just a different blank canvas.
We didn't make any of this up.
All we do is just copy how the stuff works great over here and apply it over here. So we're fortunate to have the licenses with these three leagues because of my history at Finanx Collectibles
Creating the trading cards there and when this comes out in December, we think this is gonna be a big deal
We're gonna have
Well, we think this is gonna be a big deal. So we'll see what happens
We got to actually, you know run the company and grow it.
I think I have one of the others here to show you.
This is because we're in LA.
This is the first time we're showing Lisa Leslie.
Oh, cool.
There's a Lisa Leslie ghost.
So there's 12 stars, there's three retired players, legends,
and then there's one actually famous fan
that we'll surprise people with later.
But anyway, so this is Lisa Leslie,
the first of one that we're sharing here.
That's really cool.
There's a famous book called Steel Like an Artist.
And the concept of what Josh is talking about is
you don't have to necessarily reinvent the wheel.
You can make it faster, more efficient,
and take all the things that you learn
to make a bigger, better mousetrap.
You don't have to.
And in my career, that's what I've done.
There was 900 energy drinks when I started Who's Your Daddy.
I just wanted to make the first zero sugar,
zero carbs, zero calorie one.
All the other cans were black and silver.
I made bright yellow, bright red.
They were 2.99, I was 1.99.
Remember with McDonald's and McDowell's?
I was about to say the same thing. You sound exactly like James Earl Jones right at this moment.
Yeah, they got the golden archers. We got the golden arcs.
Yeah, and coming to America. And so we went out in one flavor of the year.
And that was my schtick versus 900 drinks.
There was hoverboards. There was two companies, $1,800, $1,500.
And I was like, that's crazy.
What if you've got two kids like you do,
that'd be like three or $4,000 to buy two toys.
Yeah, right.
I don't care how rich you are, that's a lot of money.
And so I made mine for less than half the price.
They didn't have speakers.
I put speakers in them.
They didn't have lights.
I put in different lights.
You could change the colors.
And they took four to eight weeks for shipping.
I did same day shipping.
So I just fixed the thing.
I didn't create hover boards.
Mine went off to do millions of dollars in sales
right away because I was just faster, better, more efficient.
Online poker, 550 poker sites.
I go get Dan Bilzerian, Steve Aoki,
bunch of Playboy playmates,
and Trevor was traveling around the world with us,
2008, nine, 10, 11, and we made a poker site. There was 550 sites.
I just made us the cooler site.
And so throughout my career,
I've just gone by this exact same methodology
and theory is just like,
I'm just taking what someone else is doing
and make it better, more efficient, faster, et cetera.
Okay, as we go into the final part,
we talk about how to make money,
talk about how to invest, talk about giving it away.
Why do you think that people or brands should have a charity component to their lives?
Well, from a, let's just talk about the company first of all. I think too much is put on the sort of obligation to have that. If there's not something actually that's core to the founder
or the company itself,
it's pretty obvious when it's just sort of tacked on at the end, you know.
We at StockX were
part of Dan Gilbert's
organization in Detroit.
We live the revitalization of Detroit. Everything that we did was Detroit focused. Still today at the bottom of StockX website,
it says, you know, made in Detroit or whatever the language is right. So all of the charity components were tied
in to Dan and the things that he cared the most about and he's put his money where his
mouth is for decades and so that was a very obvious one for us. At the NAICS collectibles
to be honest I don't know if they ever got there. I don't know. We were so new and it was so fast and I was so, you know, I was such a brief part of it. I can't even
tell you what that is. So again, like, like every part of running a business, right, it just has to
be authentic to what you're doing and why. On a personal side, there's a moment when you're gaining
wealth that you look yourself in the mirror and you're
like, this is just nauseating.
Like not from a dollar amount, but from like a distribution wealth.
Because no matter how rich you are or where you come from or who you hang out with, there's
always people that you know that you grew up with or family members or whatever that
have significantly less and are in a different place.
And so if that doesn't happen,
well, we can put that aside if that doesn't happen.
But at some point that happens and you're like,
oh shit, like, okay, I need to start thinking about this.
And you have to think about strategically
because what happens is the flip side of that
is as soon as people know that you have wealth,
everybody comes out.
And I'm not just talking about like people
that are like give me money,
but you know, like the schools that I went to,
they send me more emails
and then they call me more often than they used to, right?
You know, I spoke at Emory this past week
and you know, there were meetings that were put on
on my calendar with different people
in the organization there that wanted to talk to me
about that.
So it's important that if you don't have your own thing,
then people will make their thing your thing.
And that's important for it.
I met my wife in law school.
My wife is the first person in her family born in America.
Her family is from Chile.
And we met in law school.
And I went to work for the largest law firm in Atlanta.
And she was an immigration attorney,
family-based immigration attorney,
which is basically one step above pro bono.
And she doesn't work now,
she stopped working when we moved to Texas.
Her mother lives with us and they take care of her mother.
But what we're trying to figure out is
can we create some sort of organization
for Hispanic immigrants that she can spearhead?
That is something that is personal to us that we're trying to figure out how to do, but I never had
something that was as personal to me that made sense for otherwise you're
just doing it to check a box. So again I think it's an organic thing that
happens naturally and but again if you don't have something structured
yourself then people will put it on you for sure. Yeah, so
So there's a question that I ask almost every time and i've never gotten the same answer. This is also a personal question
100 years from now with modern technology. Let's say 150 years from now when it's finally time for josh limber to pass away
Those two kids maybe have more kids
But let's say there's those two kids and you acquire or accumulate
a billion dollars, two billion dollars, who knows what could happen over the course of time.
It's a lot of toys.
It's a lot of toys.
What percentage goes to those kids?
Oh, that is an interesting question.
Um, I mean, obviously the smaller the numbers is the higher the percentage, right?
I mean that's just math.
I think it's pretty small.
I think it's probably in the like, I don't know, 10 to 15 percent range.
You know, there's something that's there,
there's some sort of nest egg,
but they're already fiercely independent.
They're 12 and nine.
And I'd be pretty shocked if they grew up to a place
where they either expecting or want that money.
So I don't know, but I mean,
there's no way that you're not
going to create some sort of nest egg
and some sort of way to do that.
So I don't know.
Let's say like 15% each.
So 30%, and then 70% is not to them.
Definitely not the same answer we've heard.
It's so across the board from 0 to 100.
And the reasoning behind it is always very different and
also the the trigger points of like oh if they do xyz they can get it unlocked or if they have a fun they can do this
Or this or we can have it managed and then they can get it
Oh if they get married they can have this or if they go to college they can do this
In fairness, my kids are 12 and 9. I think if you ask me when you know, they're
24 and and and 27 I might have a much different answer right of you know
We're at a different stage of our life and you know seeing where they're at in their life and what they do whether they're married
What kind of career they have what they've chosen to dedicate their lives to?
You know, but you know again it it's so early to even think about that for
but You know, but you know again, it's so early to even think about that for but
The flip side is is you know, obviously the way the will set up right now
If I got for bit something happened to both Patricia neither to get all the
All right last question as we go into 2025
This last this summer and especially actually just this week, it feels like sports has taken over the world.
It's the best time of year, it's the best.
I mean, two days ago there was, I think it was
12 hockey games, Monday night football,
World Series baseball, like all the same night, right?
And then two days before that was UFC, boxing,
like sports is on fire right now.
Where do you think we go from here now
that finally like sports is like,
sports always been around but now it feels like it's the dominant force of television.
Well it's not changing right? Who was it? Alexis Ohanian who's been on the soapbox about you know
that you know sports are basically the future business because of AI and the other things that
will change so much other parts of business. I mean it's not wrong right? You look at fanatics
and look at just the state of Fanatics business today versus five
years ago and how it's evolved.
And we still have a long way to go.
Yeah, I think that it's only going to become a bigger part of the economy, bigger part
of, you know, of culture and content.
Right.
I mean, it just is. I also think, by the way, this is why,
and you probably know a lot of these folks as well, there's a lot of people trying to create
large organizations around sports other than baseball, basketball, and football.
Right, for sure. I have a friend who is trying to-
Football, and Cadell. Yes. Well, not even that, but I have a friend who's trying to create a real
organization around track and field. How do we make track and field matter other than once every four years?
Because those athletes are extraordinary, right?
And so I do think that those sort of areas of sports
will also continue to grow and become more prominent.
Very cool.
All right, everybody.
I'm gonna try to get Josh back on here
if he's ever traveling back to Los Angeles.
We'll take this motor home wherever he is
to visit him and try to get him back on this podcast.
But follow him on social media, check out Ghost Right. What's the website?
It's ghostright.com.
That's very simple, very easy. I like the branding.
Make sure to watch what's going to happen here. Each of his releases obviously has been selling
out. I've been buying them without even telling him. I've just been buying them
because it's fun to collect and I just believe in his vision and what's happening.
Thank you.
The characters are cool. It's fun to have and I enjoy the process of what he's doing
because I've been buying Bear Bricks for years
and so why not buy the next best thing that's coming out
and doing all the new better features
and the concept behind it and now jumping into WNBA, et cetera.
So check out GhostRide.com,
check out Josh Luber on social media.
And as you guys know with the Money Mondays,
it's really, truly important
to have these discussions about money.
We grew up thinking it's rude to talk about money.
But as you guys know, I think it's rude to not talk about it.
That's part of why a lot of our community just doesn't have money or they're in bad debt.
They don't know how to pay their taxes. They don't know how to do loans.
They don't have to pay for their apartments, their lease, their cars, their what happens
when their friend borrows 400 bucks.
They don't know how to talk about it.
Like they think it's rude to talk about money.
I think it's ridiculous.
We have to talk about it. We are z's rude to talk about money. I think it's ridiculous. We have to talk about it.
We are zillions of dollars in debt because of this situation and we need people to talk
about it.
So, liking, commenting, subscribing, sharing, that's why our podcast has stayed top 10
for 84 weeks in a row is because of you guys.
There's no ads as you notice.
I'm here to support and I want you guys to really have the discussion with your friends,
family, and followers.
So check us out on themoneymondays.com and we'll see you guys to really have the discussion with your friends family followers So check us out on the money Mondays calm and we'll see you guys next Monday
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the money Mondays podcast
We are sitting inside of an RV motorhome parked in the streets of Beverly Hills right next to our next guest
Location, but he actually has like 80 plus of these locations. We just happen to be next to one
of the locations that we co-own together on the corner of Sunset Boulevard here in Beverly Hills.
Now, as you guys know, on the Money Mondays, we keep these podcasts to under 40 minutes because
the average workout is 45 minutes. The average commute to work is 45 minutes.
So this episode will be between 34 and 38 minutes for your listening pleasure.
Now, we all grew up thinking it's rude to talk about money.
We here at the Money Mondays think it's rude to not talk about it.
You've got to talk about credit, salaries, loans, finances, credit scores,
all the things that come along with the real life because it's real life. There's nothing rude talking about reality
These are the things that have to happen with your friends with your family with your followers and so thankful to you guys
We have been the top five in the business and entrepreneur category for over 84 weeks in a row because of you guys
Liking commenting subscribing and sharing and with our guest, who's helped build this franchise from scratch,
you're going to want to listen to this episode and like, comment, subscribe, and share with Mr. Noah D. Nyman.
You didn't tell people it's a hot ass RV. This is like your version of Hot Ones.
Absolutely.
It's just, it is about 105 degrees in here.
So as the, as the interview progresses and I I'm sweating it's not because I'm nervous. I'm excited to be here. So thank you for having me
I forgot I forgot to tell you in his bio that he's an exaggerator
103 okay, it's beautiful. Listen penny safe. There's a penny earned gas is very expensive
So we're keeping expenses down and revenues the noise the air conditioning is noisy and you like it you like saunas
I do I do I paid to sweat
The Huberman podcast you're like, all right, we need 20 minutes on 20 minutes off
Okay
So what I would like for this to happen right now if you can do a quick two-minute bio so we can get straight to
The money. Oh wow
That's you're putting me on the spot here. So names no one even, Noah Neiman. Thank you for your time, effort, and energy listening to me. Um, so I actually started out as an accountant and
like most other people, first off, I don't like how you looked at me and we're
like, this kid does not look like an accountant at all. For those of you
watching YouTube, I read books too. I don't just lift the weights. I read some
books. So I started out, I was actually a very good accountant too. I worked for
shout out to Jay. This has never happened in the world. Shout out, J H Cohen, midsize accounting firm in New York city. No, I was actually a very good accountant too. I worked for, shout out to, this has never happened in the world.
Shout out J.H. Cohen, midsize accounting firm
in New York City.
No, I actually learned a lot about being an entrepreneur
and managing the books through that.
But I was a, no, but also, you know, throughout the work,
I would run into the bathroom and I'd be calling my family,
like crying, like, this is not what I'm destined for.
I can't be destined to, you know,
take the L to the F train and the F train
all the way up to 46th street and 6th Avenue in New York and get out and
sit in a cubicle and have to go to Wilmington, Delaware and count mattresses. So I always
had this potential energy and I felt it. And there was always a disconnect between where
I could place that energy because I'm a creative at heart. I'm a storyteller at heart. But
as you know, an accountant is very data drivendriven, analytic, there's not much room for creativity.
So through a series of misfortunate and fortunate events,
I ended up almost ODing on drugs,
which my family will say is the best thing
to ever have happen to me.
And I know that that's dark
and I know that's kind of privileged to say,
because I had a great support system
to help me get out of that hole
and to help me support my fight.
And I ended up in New York City, a friend asked me if I wanted to go to this bootcamp to kind of get out of that hole and to help me support my fight. And I ended up in New York City,
a friend asked me if I wanted to go to this boot camp
to kind of get out of my own head.
He knew I was going through it,
suffering with these depressive and anxious states
coming out of that situation where I almost died.
So I went and I remember going through this class
for the first time and looking at the mirror and smiling.
And that was the feeling right there, being in that first time and looking at the mirror and smiling. And that was the feeling right there.
Being in that dark state and looking at myself and getting lost in the music and
the workout and the physicality of what I was doing and finding salvation in that
moment. I knew that that was my purpose from that moment on.
And I knew that I had to scale that and bring that to as many people as possible.
So that got me actually working at that space for a few years, five years,
as I built up my own brand through, I was very fortunate.
It was right around the time where Kim Kardashian was talking about her favorite workout
and all the celebrities now, it was cool to talk about working out and training.
So I built up my brand with them and Vanity Fair and Harper's Bazaar and Bravo gave me a show.
Just because I had this boundless energy powered by knowing that this was my purpose that saved my life and I know
that there's others like me that are probably going through what I went
through and if I can create that environment that I know I'm gonna be
giving something back and instead of taking things which was kind of my
career trajectory before what can I take what can I you know consume what can I
buy as opposed to my
favorite Ali quote is, service to others is our rent for our room here on earth.
So building up my own brand within the constraints of another brand left me a little unfilled
as well.
So I was posting all these Facebook videos of me boxing while I'm still at this other
space and my now business partner who the co-creator of Rumble, Eugene Rem, who I'm
sure you know from catch restaurants and from some of the most iconic nightclubs in New and my now business partner, who the co-creator of Rumble, Eugene Rem, who I'm
sure you know from catch restaurants and from some of the most iconic nightclubs
in New York City. He created 10 June, which is any given Sunday you'd see, you
know, Jay-Z grabbing the mic. This is pre-Instagram when, you know, clubs were
actually fun and celebrities and people let loose. And yeah, you weren't on your
phone like this, you were more just like, you know, trying to shake. He came to me
and he was like, listen, do you want to start something?
And I had already known in my heart of hearts
what my version of a group fitness experience was gonna be.
So after a few back and forths of me initially saying no,
cause I was scared, I ended up, you know,
locking down with him and starting rumble.
And you asked for a two minute bio
and that was about 17 minutes.
So I apologize.
Brevity is not my strong suit,
but I'm trying to get the story out.
It's important.
Thank you guys for listening to Money Monday.
Yeah, that was the whole podcast.
I'll see you later.
Okay, rumble boxing.
Rumble boxing.
When?
Always be Brandon.
Here it is.
I love it.
There's my dog Oz.
This is version one of a new retail drop
and actually new company that I'm dropping correlating with rumble called Knuckle Therapy. Knuckle Therapy. That's my dog Oz. This is version one of a new retail drop and actually a new company that I'm dropping
correlating with Rumble called Knuckle Therapy.
Knuckle Therapy.
That's my dog Oz.
So this is version one.
Reed Hastings famously said,
"'If you're not embarrassed by your version one
of your product, you've launched too late.'"
CEO, co-CEO or founder of Netflix.
And this is not what it's gonna look like,
but this is kind of a prototype, unleashing it here first.
I like it. Unseen from the world yet.
What is knuckle therapy?
So knuckle therapy, I told you that moment where I looked in the mirror and I was going
through such mental anguish and I was suffering panic attacks and I was doing everything that
I thought to get out of that space. I was talking about it all the time and I was what
I didn't know is through talking about it, I was actually reinforcing how I felt about
myself and I was putting out in the universe how depressed I was, how lost I felt.
So, you know, there's a famous Stoic quote that says,
I train the body rigorously so that it's not disobedient to the mind.
So, and that works as a one way street.
You know, you can't wheel yourself into a healthier body.
But when I took control of my physical body, and I became present with that rigorous
physical effort, I was able to better control my mind and I started thinking clearer. My
creativity came back, my wit came back, my soul came back into my body. So, Knuckle Therapy
is a brand that's going to start in merch that embodies that, but will eventually be
subscription workouts and podcasts talking about those principles that saveodies that, but will eventually be subscription workouts and podcasts, talking about those principles that saved my life, especially men's mental health.
And my dog recently passed away, 18 and a half years old, Oz.
So this is honestly, yeah, 18 and a half.
I rescued him from North Shore Animal League.
He was left by the side of the road.
He survived tumors and infections.
And he was one of those key people, key things,
key spirits that taught me a lot about myself
and was very therapeutic for me.
So this is kind of honestly just a healing part for me
because I'm really shaken up about it.
I'm still really torn up about it.
So I wanted to create something in his image
that would live forever,
that would help spread kind of the gospel
of these principles
that helped me when I was in my darkest hours.
So it's the same as Rumble.
Why I created Rumble was it got me out of a hard spot.
It really saved my life.
It got me out of my own head and it put myself in these physical endeavors like a boxer.
What's more analogous to life than fighting?
Getting hit on the chin, getting knocked down, having your corner support you, having your
cut man there, having your coach.
But at the end of the day, it's up to you to knuckle up your fists.
So Rumble embodies that and now knuckle therapy is going to be a tangible way to breach the
four walls with the ethos of Rumble and kind of what has saved my life.
But obviously bring it to the masses. In Oz's honor.
So, that's my boy.
So you opened up location number one of Rumble Boxing.
When you decide, you know what, I'm going to open up locations number two and three.
When did you decide that this is going to work?
We were very fortunate because when we launched, we had launched with almost 100 pieces of press already.
We had the right people involved.
We were so confident in our product and presentation
and the why, like literally this thing saved my life.
So there's no greater why than this was my literal salvation.
So we were so confident in that.
We knew we could have fun in the margins,
which is where greatness happens.
So the public responded to that.
Also, we always talk about networking
and why your events are so impactful
because you get incredible creatives
and the best in the world and their industries
in a room together and magical things happen.
So when Eugene and I,
who is probably one of the greatest restaurateurs,
one of the greatest hospitality,
I hate the word guru, but I mean, he's a sensei.
He's a senpai of hospitality.
And then you got me who was probably arguably
one of the most impactful group fitness coaches
and most notable group fitness coaches in
the market at the time.
We already had eyeballs on us.
So we knew we could have some fun.
So when we launched January 9th, 2017 we instantly, within, I'm talking weeks, were put into the rafters
with the Barry's Boot Camps, the Soul Cycles, because of our ability to execute
on our ideals and present it in a unique and novel way. But then also how we made
people feel. You know, we traded in feeling. So when you walked out of Rumble,
all you wanted to do was get on your phone
and tell the world.
It helped that we had the Justin Bieber's,
the Selena Gomez's, we had Scooter involved,
and we had all these big celebrities involved,
obviously to amplify.
But at the end of the day,
if you pay to play with these people,
and then the product or service isn't credible and it doesn't have that impact,
then you're going to have this huge customer churn.
So not only were we getting great eyeballs and great hype, our follow through,
our meticulous ability to consistently deliver on the promise that we were going to make you feel like a fucking rock star
every time you put those gloves on and every time you saw that brand logo,
that's what shot us to Meteor Heights. And I mean, through a pandemic now, like I said, we just opened up Tokyo, we opened up, we're opening up Dubai and we're entering the Middle East
all from one little shop, 23rd, 26th and 7th, 6600 square feet. That used to be an old traditional
gym, which I think is really cool. It used to be called Steel City Gym. And I remember when I was touring the space with Eugene
before we picked it, I walked down to this little basement
and I made a left and there was this,
she must've been 75 years old, this woman.
And she was in posing trunks.
Definitely like geared out of her mind,
like all the steroids and everything,
but she was ripped and she was posing
and she caught eyes with me and I caught eyes with her and she gave me like a little like,
yeah, and I was that moment there where I was like,
this is the space where we bring in and usher in this new era
of fitness, where it's much more obtainable,
it's much more digestible,
and it's gonna be our point of view.
And we executed and we consistently, you know,
kept the trust of our customer and the customer
thanked us by blowing us up.
So then you get to 11 locations, 12 locations, 13 locations, 14 locations.
Why do you decide to work with private equity?
When is that turning point where you're like, you know what, maybe it's time to bring in
some capital or other partners to really scale us from 14 to now 80
and even growing faster than that, farther than that.
Well, complete transparency.
I think the pandemic, it didn't force our hand,
but it definitely persuaded our hand
in a different direction.
Cause we actually had no plans.
We wanted to keep it small, tight, corporate free.
Because when you're dealing with the brand
that has such a unique identity and presentation and soul,
like Rumble does, and the execution is so important, and the people involved driving that execution are so important,
oftentimes when you throw that to a corporate machine, a lot gets lost in the sauce.
But with that being said, we are coming out of the pandemic, we were getting back up to our pre-pandemic numbers,
and some studios were actually doing better,
but there was still that uncertainty.
We had been told, you know, we're open, we're closed,
50% capacity, 30% capacity, social distancing.
I mean, I remember filming in a,
this is a group fitness, a live experience.
I remember filming like a podcast style audio
to play over the loudspeaker so two customers could sit
in the physical space while the workout and the trainer played over the audio
it's just like but that's what I'm saying like we're fighters we learned
how to pivot I mean talk about knuckle therapy like I apply a lot of fighting
principles into my entrepreneurial and personal life because we had a pivot so
we launched a digital channel called rumble TV which helped us gain
international you know,
viewership. So now everybody across the world, not just nationally knew about Rumble, and that
garners the attention of exponential fitness. So we at the time, again, we didn't have as big of
a runway and a war chest, but we had this incredible brand. So we needed to add gasoline to the fire.
So I would say that it worked out because, but that was never our goal. So we needed to add gasoline to the fire. So I would say that it worked
out because but that was never our goal. So sometimes you just got to roll with the punches
and we rolled with the pandemic punches, so to speak. And that led us to negotiations
with exponential. And now they've kept our signature stores, but we've rolled out this
boutique model, which is the big signature stores in New York, LA, San Francisco, DC, Philly, Chicago.
Those are our 6,600 flagship,
6,600 square foot flagship stores.
That's where the soul of the brand is really built
in these big cities.
And then we scaled out the franchise model,
which is a 2,200 square foot, smaller footprint,
a little bit more financially digestible for these franchisee owners.
But we've in my job now is to keep that soul alive as much as possible as we scale.
So it was a way where we could, again, for me, I want to bring this to every household.
I want to bring it to every neighborhood because I know the emotional and physical and the
benefits that it brought to me.
So I want this everywhere.
So then you go from 14 to 80 ish.
And then how you've got potentially 200, 250 locations on the horizon.
What changes in a corporation when you start to get from the crew, right?
The crew that's building 14 location that you can name them all to becoming
a large scale corporation.
You use a lot of corny office jargon. I'll tell you that.
Thank you. Yeah. No, but it's necessary. I get it. Listen,
we got SOPs now before when it's 13 and then your boys just doing some cool
things like, Hey, what else up here? Yeah, that's what I'm saying. So like,
you know, now you just have to have much more structure or, you know,
you're going to end up like McDonald's selling hot dogs, you know,
at the McDonald's and obviously there's going to end up like McDonald's selling hot dogs at the McDonald's.
And obviously there's going to just inherently be some dilution, but it's to me, my main
mission is to keep it as authentic as possible so that we honor the original promise of what
Rumble was built off of.
Because trust is a huge thing for me, and especially in business.
I want people to come into this space feeling what I felt
when I first entered my group fitness experience
that got me out of my own head.
So I think the only thing that changes is now,
instead of being able to make instantaneous decisions,
you gotta have a meeting about the meeting,
and then you gotta have a meeting about that meeting,
and then you have a four hour meeting
to talk about the recap of the meeting that you just had
before nothing gets, no, I'm kidding. Things things get done so there's a much bigger timeline and obviously it takes much more
momentum to steer the ship you can be much more nimble when you don't have these corporate
constraints but then again like i said i would never be able to scale to sure you know tokyo i
would never in a million years without them thought that we were gonna be,
that I was gonna be walking past the Sydney Opera House and I hear, yo, Noah, I used to
take class in New York in 2017, I moved out here and now I heard Rumble's opening in Bondi.
Like I OD'd on drugs and now I'm walking past the Sydney Opera House, like one of the wonders
of the world in magnificence beauty and splendor and
People are screaming my name not because of me
But because of how something that I helped create impacted them so profoundly and positively fuck
Everyone needs to fight for that
everyone
So I don't know where I was going with that, but I just know that like that needs to remain as much as I can the soul of the brand. And I'll do my best to work within again, a corporation to still keep that essence alive.
Why are group fitness classes important for people to consider to add to their workout schedule each week? Because we're tribal creatures. And I think social media has made us as connected as ever,
but more disconnected than ever.
So there's a lot to be said about just getting together with a collective
group of people and amplifying our own energies.
So, you know, there's this African proverb that Nike likes to say a lot.
It's like, if you want to go fast, you know, go alone.
If you want to go far, go together. So I think that there's a certain
intangible innate kind of
thing at play with group fitness that allows you to
come into this space,
know that you're surrounded by some people that are probably like-minded, that you can feel supported by, and then, you know,
it's like the bodegas in New York City,
need a penny, take a penny, have a penny, leave a penny.
So you're being amplified and you're losing yourself in this crowd
and the music and the lights are low and you're doing more
and you're training harder than you ever would independently
because you're surrounded by this dope collective of people.
So that was important to me.
And also, to be honest,
I've created things very selfishly.
So when I was going through those dark moments in my time,
I was sitting by myself in a basement,
which me and Oz literally just thinking
about all my problems.
And I was looking at my phone,
just praying that somebody would call
to like ask me out somewhere to go to a movie.
So I created a space where no matter how you're feeling and what's going on in your individual
life, you know that you can come to rumble.
And like I said, you can get out of your own head.
You can get out of that basement where I was and you can find yourself catching yourself
in the mirror and smiling, maybe for the first time that week or that day.
But if I can kind of scale that feeling,
that I know the business is going to be rooted in something that's positive and I know that it's
going to be, it's going to last. So let's say there's someone out there that's a personal trainer
and they want to raise their price, but they don't know how they're charging 60 bucks a session,
but they want to charge 80 or a hundred, maybe even more. How do they talk to their clients?
How do they build their brand? How can they justify and value to charge 80 or 100, maybe even more. How do they talk to their clients?
How do they build their brand?
How can they justify and value to raise their price
from let's call it 60 to 80?
Well, listen, I mean, there's a reason why, you know,
an Hermes bag is pricier than, you know,
the Ikea shopping bag, although Balenciaga did
turn that Ikea bag into a month.
But anyway, that's capitalism, baby. You have to
give the value and not just give that value, you have to be a storyteller. So you have to,
and you talk about this a lot, you have to put your value out into the universe consistently.
You know, Steve Jobs famously said in a Pixar meeting with executives that, you know, the world
is ruled by storytellers. Your profession is going to be ruled
by the storytellers of it.
So if you can show how your energy is infectious
and how you're gonna be reliable and show up
and how you've amassed all this energy
that's gonna get your clients to the goals
as quickly as possible.
And to be honest,
you gotta be a person that somebody wants in the room no matter what the profession
is.
So if you're putting out your brand consistently, people are gonna see that value.
You should never have to manipulate your way into a higher billable rate.
You should be so undeniably good and position yourself as a premier product or service by
who you're associated with.
It helps if you have, you you have the celebrity clientele,
but it's not necessary, but obviously it does help
because everybody wants the trainer
that is in their favorite sitcom,
who's getting trained by them, they look great,
who's Jessica Alba's trainer, I want them.
So that helps, but again, it's not necessary.
But what you do have to do is again,
tell your story consistently and show not just tell show people
Why you're more valuable than anybody else?
So someone's building up their career and they want to stand out there's tens of thousands hundreds of thousands of personal trainers
How can they make themselves stand out if they want to become a more known personal trainer?
You get tattoos you get a nice watch,
you get a beautiful dog.
No, to be honest, you just, you gotta know yourself.
They always, people are always like,
you gotta know your customer.
And yeah, identify your customer,
but you have to know yourself.
And if you know yourself and you present yourself
to the world, again, consistently,
and with energy and passion,
you'd be so surprised at what you naturally attract as opposed to you know being insidious
and trying to again I call it manipulation, manipulating people to work with you or deal
with you.
So you should create a personality and a presence in an educational wheelhouse that's so undeniably powerful that it ain't
what you say, it's how you say it.
So if you can be confident in that, you're going to stand out naturally.
Can a personal trainer become bigger than the gym that they work at?
Absolutely.
I mean, it happened to me.
So I mean, I'll shout out Barry's Bootcamp because I would never have a platform.
That's the gym I was talking about before.
I would never have had a platform, but it was that, it was a platform.
And now I chose to work seven days a week.
I chose to make sure that I was in the right rooms with the right people.
I remember teaching a Saturday class with this guy, Michael Rourke, who was the founder
of Hudson Media.
And I made sure that, you know,
I always took care of everyone,
but I really made sure to take care of the people
that I needed to take care of.
He was a big producer.
And I didn't expect anything,
but I just made sure to always make sure
that his Saturday's with me,
those Saturday mornings at 7 a.m.
He was walking out buzzing.
And then one day I got a call,
hey, I'm filming this series for GQ.
Never been on camera before. I'm filming this series for GQ called Fighting
Weight. Would you want to be in it? But if I had tried to manipulate him into
all right I'm gonna see how I can finesse myself into getting into this
show it never would have happened it would have come off as disingenuous. So I
believe you know the podcast right before you know it talks about give that
value.
I chased relationships and not checks, where I think a lot of people go wrong. And it's
very important on Money Monday's to say that. Chase relationships and not checks. Checks
will get you the short term, you know, I call it the crypto money real quick. But if you
chase those relationships, you're gonna build lasting wealth in those people
because of the value that you gave them.
They're gonna wanna authentically help you.
And you're gonna be top of mind for other projects
that maybe you didn't even think.
Because again, I never thought
that I was gonna be in Vanity Fair.
I never thought I was gonna have a show on Bravo.
But what I did do is every day I showed up
and gave that same energy.
So I think that that's really important and underrated as a trainer.
If you want to break the four walls of where you're at, you have to be special.
And sometimes just that that specialness is just that consistent energy
that makes another person feel incredible when you're around.
And, you know, you never know when you're going to get your next investor
that might invest in your own gym, that might invest in your own fitness platform,
your own line of merch or clothing or supplement line.
But you can't go about it with the angle of,
this is why I'm doing it.
You have to go about it as,
this is the value that I've created,
and this is the value that I wanna give consistently
to every single person,
whether they can do something for me or not.
And you'd be surprised, you'll find those people that can do something for you, and they can do something for me or not. And you'd be surprised,
you'll find those people that can do something for you
and they want to give it back to you.
Why do you think that people should incorporate charity
into their lives, whether it's their family or their office?
I mean, I think we said it before,
service to others that are rent for our room here on earth.
So incorporating a charitable component
is really the
bedrock of society. You know, we're tribal creatures. We have to look out for one
of, you know, each other. So for knuckle therapy, the first thing that I started
with was how can I use this brand to help animal rescues and lower-income
families with veterinary services.
Because for me, there was when Oz was 15, he had internal bleeding, he had a tumor that
I didn't know, and it bust.
And I rushed him to the hospital and the surgery was like, you know, $10,000.
And they told me they're like, listen, we can do this surgery, chances are 50 50 is
not going to make it through.
And this dog saved my life, like I'm serious.
Like the times when I was like going through panic attacks
and he would come put his head on my thigh
and just let me know it's gonna be okay.
How could I not?
But I was fortunate enough because I had those finances.
If not, I would have had to make the terrible decision
to just literally let him pass.
And now he ended up living four more years almost.
So three and a half more years.
So I wanna provide that for family.
So if you can have those charitable elements
authentically laced into your brand or your service,
then I don't know,
that's just another point of differentiation
that's authentic and it's not disingenuous.
And it showcases who you are
because it's almost
unimportant what you do.
There's a thousand garments that are the same.
There's a thousand workouts that are the same, but having a really strong charitable component
laced into the business model is going to be one of your authentic points of differentiation
and it shows that you're a human and not some amorphous soul-sucking brand. So a hundred something years from now, it's time for Noah to pass.
Maybe a hundred, maybe 200 years from now.
It's time for you to pass and you go from 80 locations to 250 locations to
two thousand five hundred locations and you've got like Scrooge McDuck money.
How do you decide what percentage to break up amongst family friends charity? No one everyone. What do you do?
You remember that scene in the Joker where he just lights it all on fire. Yeah, you're on your own suckers. You earn your own shit
No, I'm kidding. Um, I
Don't have any kids. I will eventually
but to be honest I
Don't I Want to be honest, I don't, I wanna give away.
I mean, that's my plan right now.
Even if I have children,
I wanna make sure they're okay with school
and they, but there's something about earning your own
and finding your own way
that I think was really impactful to me.
And I've been around a lot of people
that have been given a lot of things.
You know, they have the McLarens and they have it, but they haven't earned it.
So they are left feeling super empty.
I have to do some deep soul searching when the time comes.
But I plan on giving a ton away to probably dog shelters, dog sanctuaries, dog charities.
Because again, I don't know if I'm here talking to you without Oz.
I don't know. I don't know if I'm here talking to you without Oz. I don't know I don't know
I mean, I obviously have a loving family that that helps but
I'd want to do more for for animals. So I think that I don't know who's cat I think it was
Lagerfeld's cat is worth like 300
Like million or something like Carl Lagerfeld's cat, look it up.
I think I have two dogs, Tyson and Zo.
They're gonna be.
The zillionaires.
Yeah, they're gonna be quadrillionaires.
I love it.
So yeah, I'll give a lot away,
but again, I'm gonna have to do some deeper thinking
about the ramifications of leaving a fortune
to your loved ones.
Where can people find you, the brand,
the business, talk through it?
At Noah D. Nieman, it's a lot of UGC,
it's really just me and the dogs and some workouts.
So at Noah D. Nieman, N-E-I-M-A-N.
And I still teach, I'm in New York, I'm in LA,
I'm all over, I might be in Tokyo, in Bondi,
so I post my schedule a lot and kind of where I'm at.
And that's it, I mean, I'm out in the streets.
I mean, hit me up online, DM me, and just say what's up.
All right, guys.
So it's really important for you to discuss finances,
money, situations, accounting, salaries, credit,
all those things with your friends, family, and followers.
These discussions have to happen.
There's nothing rude about talking about reality.
Money is reality.
It helps pay for health care, rent, food, a lot of great things.
Have you ever tried desserts?
Like, you need money for desserts.
Have you ever tried like a smoothie?
I like smoothies.
But they're eight bucks and 10 bucks and seven bucks and 12 bucks.
You're not going to Airwan for the $25 Haley Beaver smoothie.
Come on now.
We're in Los Angeles.
And so those things that you might want, take money,
and it's not rude to talk about it.
We have to be able to discuss it with our friends and family,
and it has to be part of our society,
because it's a daily life when you have credit cards
and debt and situations and rent and leases
and borrowing money from your friends for 200 bucks.
Like those things are real,
and we have to be able to talk about it with our people.
And that's why we've stayed so consistent,
up on the charts with the Money Mondays because of you having those discussions
and sharing our clips with your friends, family,
and followers.
So visit us at themoneymondays.com
and we will see you guys next Monday.