The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - Humanoid Robots, Building a Service Business, and Why CEOs Won’t Save Democracy
Episode Date: November 7, 2025Scott Galloway answers listener questions on the humanoid robotics boom and why real adoption is still years away. He then shares advice for a young entrepreneur starting a services business, explaini...ng why relationships, talent, and overdelivering for clients are key to success. Finally, Scott calls out corporate America’s moral decline and argues that defending democracy will fall to citizens, not CEOs. Want to be featured in a future episode? Send a voice recording to officehours@profgmedia.com, or drop your question in the r/ScottGalloway subreddit. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome to Office Hours to Prop G. This is the part of the show where we answer your questions about business,
pick, tech, entrepreneurship, and whatever else is on your mind. If you'd like to submit a question for
next time, you can send a voice recording to Office Hours of ProptoMedia.com.
Again, that's Office Hours of Prophthymedia.com.
Or post your question on the Scott Galloway subreddit,
and we just might feature it in our next episode.
First question.
Hey, Propjee. Franco calling in from Madrid, Spain.
I'd love to get your take on the humanoid robotics market.
There's been a lot of movement lately.
Tesla pushing with Optimus and VCs pouring money into players like Figure A,
and Unitri in China.
The technology seems to be advancing fast with AI,
but what do you think will take for humanoids
to move from controlled environments
into truly production-ready autonomous tech?
And do you see this becoming a real business
within the decade,
or more like another moonshot,
like autonomous vehicles?
Huge fan of you and all the ProVG shows.
Thanks for all you do.
Morgan Stanley projects this could be a $5 trillion market by 2050
with roughly one billion humanoid units in use.
In other words, that's them saying
they have no fucking idea. By 2050, by 2050, we could collide into Pluto. I love these things
that are like, in 20 years, it could be a $1 trillion. I mean, the analysts writing that is going to be
dead probably in 20 years, so who cares? They see adoption ramping up slowly until the mid-2030s
and accelerating as cost-fallen AI capabilities catch up. Goldman is more conservative. They
estimate the humanoid market will reach $38 billion by 2035, with roughly 1.4 million robots shipped
once hardware cost declined about 40%.
For context, there are already more than
4.5 million industrial robots operating today,
and that base grew 9% last year,
so the broader automation trend line is strong.
Component makers are also gearing up.
ID TechX expects a 14X expansion in humanoid parts
and sensors within the decade,
roughly a $10 billion market,
just for the guts of these machines.
On the funding side, venture money is also pouring in.
China's taking the lead here.
unit trees low-priced models
and government-backed manufacturing
given an edge of a U.S. rivals, at least for now.
And then with respect to Tesla and their optimists,
Musk has said that Tesla could start selling optimists
by the end of 2025,
even talking about thousands of units next year.
In some, he's full of shit.
I don't even know he's full of shit.
I know he's not full of shit here.
I don't think he's ever talking,
weren't we supposed to have a million autonomous taxis
by like 2021 or 2018?
Elon Musk is engaging in this ultimate weapon of mass distraction.
Don't look at the fact that I have the most valuable automobile company in the world,
and yet my automobile company is declining, is eroding revenues faster than any automobile
company in the world.
And I'm getting my lunch eaten by everybody, including BYD, which produces a Tesla-like vehicle
at about 40% of the price.
So I'm going to do all these jazz hands and say, look over here, robots, robovin,
X-A-I, look anywhere.
But at the fact I'm wrapping steel around an engine or a battery, and I'm trading.
and I'm worth more than every automobile company of the world, which makes no fucking sense.
So he's trying to say anything to give people the illusion of distraction.
That'll be something else.
Anyways, back to robots.
Most analysts expect real commercial traction before 2035, primarily in warehouses, logistics, and manufacturing,
but not our living rooms.
The trillion-dollar promise is still decades out.
Within the next 10 years, we'll likely see humanoids doing repetitive labor instruction environments.
My viewpoint on this, as someone who doesn't know the space very well, is the following.
I think in B to B, B, B, B, C, it's going to fall well short of expectations.
I don't think people want to, I don't like having a nanny in my house.
I just don't, and the idea of a robot having any sort of context or nuance to go get me my tea and cookies, maybe, I don't know.
But if you look at these data centers, if you look at some of the factories, the forward advanced manufacturing factories in China, they say they don't even to turn the lights on because there's no humans in them.
So I think, I'm roaming around the house, I don't know, maybe they'll take your dog for a walk.
I don't know, maybe those things that deliver your food.
I don't think it's going to worry.
I think there's going to be a lot of military applications.
They're going to be fucking frightening in space age, but they'll be very effective.
But the idea that we're going to have robots walking our dogs and hanging out with us and bringing us our dinner.
Yeah, I just don't.
I don't think so.
Anyways, that's my view.
Question number two.
Hey, Prophegee. I'm 20 years old, living in Vancouver, Canada, and I'm currently three
quarters of the way through an electrical apprenticeship. Because the trades pay so well, about a year
and a half ago, I was able to buy a condo and utilize it as an investment property.
Currently, I'm in the process of starting my own electrical company while I'm still an apprentice
so I can be up and running and ready for business when I finally get my license in about a year.
Do you have any tips on how to run a services-driven business and how to differentiate?
shape from all the other businesses that are around. Additionally, what advice do you have for a young
entrepreneur slash landlord who doesn't want his 20s to pass and buy by growing up too early?
It's worth noting that although I don't drink or do drugs, I took the money that I would have spent
on nights out partying and bought a speedboat with it. Thank you for all the content you put out.
Connor from Canada. I like the speedboat part. Okay. Point of demonstration between a product
business or a product-based or manufacturing-based business, we have a physical thing you can touch,
and a services-based business is one word, relationships. I have run services-based businesses my whole
life. I started a strategy firm when I was 26 called Profit, and the last firm I sold was a firm called
L2, which was basically another. We called it Business Intelligence, which is just a fancy word for
strategy. Those companies are based on relationships. And the reason why Profit did well was I had
a strong relationship with the CEOs of the CMOs of Levi's, William Sonoma, dryers. These were
my first clients. And it was sort of everything. And because there's a lot of good firms out there
doing good work, but they want to work with people that they like, they feel. My advantage was
I was 26, and I developed sort of these proxy, big brother, little brother, father, son
relationships with people who wanted to help me and like me and thought I was smart. And you have to do
good work. That's table stakes. But then it's all about relationships. And it's no accident in the
advertising or the consulting business, the people tend to be very good-looking and very charming.
So the first thing is you have to be very social, get out there, and have the ability to establish
relationships with clients in the services industry. That's just kind of everything.
The second is a product-based company is about, obviously, people and engineers, but it's a lot
about your IP and distribution and capital arrays. Services business is really the team of the
players wins. So as the head of a services company, you are constantly thinking about recruiting.
And that is you meet someone who's smart and good. What do you do? Would you be interested in coming to
work with me? And then if you are fortunate enough, if you get your first six or ten people,
if there's two or three, hopefully, that are really good, you give them one, three, five, ten percent
of the company and you say, you're a partner in this business now, and I need you to do really well.
But I made sure that all of these people felt like they were owners in the business, because if you're fortunate to find someone who's really good, that's everything. Because their ability to really wow the client and build strong relationships is everything. So one, you have to be very good at establishing relationships and spending a lot of time fostering those relationships. Two, you really do need to think a lot about finding that initial team of really outstanding people. That's what a services company lives and dies on, full stop.
And then what else would I say about the services business?
I'll give you the upsides.
It doesn't take a lot of capital.
You make good money.
It's an incredible training.
I'll give you the downsides.
It's really tough on your relationships.
It's very demanding.
It is hard to make money in your sleep.
I used to get on when I was running profit.
I used to get on an Audi was like one of our biggest clients.
He was going on a plane from fucking San Francisco to Munich and then get in a car and drive to Engelstadt, which is the armpit of central Europe.
and then do a meeting the next day
and try and convince them
that the Audi brand identity
should be the modern art of motion.
I came up with that and I thought it was great
and then they would tell me
there's no real word for modern art or motion in German
and I'd have to fly back and say I'm just going to hit the drawing board again.
And on the way over,
I would literally be in the back of the galley of the coach section
because it was my company.
We didn't have any money with a bunch of kids
trying to pull together slides
and then figure out where the Kinko's was in Munich.
This was I'm dating myself to go print out.
I mean, it was just so fucking stressful.
Oh, God.
I'm literally getting hard palpitations just thinking about it.
A ton of stress, really hard on your relationships.
And that's why I sold in my first room.
I wanted out.
I was sick of managing people.
I was sick of managing clients.
I found, Jesus Christ, I'm getting a headache just thinking about it.
So real upsides, real downsides.
But again, just to summarize, you've got to be social, got to have the ability to create really strong relationships.
Got to over-serve your first three clients.
they need to be evangelist for you.
I mean, they just got to feel like you'd do anything for them.
You would jump on a grenade for them
because you want them to be evangelist for you.
Those first three or five clients are kind of everything.
Spend a lot of time trying to get to three or four outstanding people
then give them big chunks of the firm such that they won't go anywhere.
The only way to get people to act like owners is to make them owners
and also recognize the upsides and downsides
of what it means to being a services business.
Go Canada!
Thanks for the question.
We'll be right back after a quick break.
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Welcome back onto our final question, which comes from Reddit,
user sincerely true asks.
Hi, Scott.
I recently finished
why nations fail
and there's a section
on preventing authoritarianism.
They recommend mobilizing
a broad segment of society
including unions, churches,
and business organizations.
How can the Democratic Party
or other movements
better mobilize business organizations
and leaders in the fight
for democracy
when so many have backed Trump?
Oh God, I wish I knew.
I have been shocked
at how little resistance
and pushback
there's been from the corporate world.
And I'm not sure
you're going to find it
from corporations
because in America, it is so tempting to just try and get from a million and worth to three million to five million from one billion to a billion.
America is just all pretty much about how much stuff you have, because how much stuff you have is really the health care you can provide yourself and your children, the opportunities you can provide your children, how hot or not hot your husband or your wife is, how interesting a parties, how nice a vacations.
The market has become so satisfied.
When I was a kid, my dad's boss had a slightly bigger house,
but kind of lived in the same neighborhood,
and we all were at the same summer club or country club.
He had, you know, he had a Ford Thunderbird.
My dad had a grand tourine.
I mean, it did slightly better life,
but it was in striking distance.
Now, you know, people who don't make a lot of money
are flying Spirit Airlines and watching drunk people
physically abuse each other
and then having to deplane while everyone
while this guy gets escorted off by airport security
and really rich people get to fly on a Gulfstream 650
where they can watch Netflix and do FaceTime on the plane
and have some really hot dude bringing the mimoses on the plane
and oh, if they're 30 minutes late
because they want to grab an additional 30 minutes
with their kid over dinner, they just text their pot.
I mean, the delta between what it means to be middle class
and what it means to be rich in this country
has gone from three inches to,
fucking two million miles. And so the incentives to make the incremental decisions to become
wealthy are just so incredibly dramatic. And one of the best ways to get wealthy right now is
to play into the authoritarian's handbook. People start showing up with golden craved tacky
trophies and saying, we, I love spending time with Melania. Jesus Christ, Tim Cook. What a fucking
coward you are. Literally, what a coward you are. Right up there with Bob Iger. Literally,
Neville Chamberlain in a cashmere sweater, minus the dignity, all these people bending a knee.
And now, why do they do it? Because they feel a lot of responsibility. Their fiduciaries for their
shareholders and the temptations to make more money are so huge. And Trump, to his authoritarian credit,
has created a bright blue line path between kissing his ass and ignoring democracy and not engaging
in capitalism and engaging in cronyism because you will get richer. Right. So these guys,
If we're waiting on the better angels of companies of CEOs to show up, don't hold your breath, you know, Sam Altman, all these fucking douchebags showing up and bending a knee so they can get richer so they can get their eighth billion instead, you know, from seven billion. I've been hugely disappointed. What can they do? I don't know. I don't think it's up to them. I think it's up to us. I think seven million people showing up for protest is important. I think voting is really important. I am moving back to the United States early because I want to be in the fight. How am I going to be in the fight? How am I going to be in the fight?
If I'm going to use my social media platforms and this platform and my writing to try and inform
people around what I think is going on, why I think it is wrong in methods for pushback.
I think donating money to candidates, I'm going to try and bring a bunch of candidates on my other
podcast, Raging Moderates, to elevate their profile.
I'm going to give some money.
I'm going to do a tour and try and bring attention to Democratic candidates for Congress.
I don't think we can rely on the better angels of companies.
I think it has to be voters.
I think it has to be citizens.
I think it has to be protest.
I think it has to be talking to your friends about what's wrong with this.
I think it has to be, I'd like the idea of a national economic strike
where people stop buying shit on a certain day or targeting certain companies with specific ass.
So I think there are things we can do.
But I think waiting on the better angels of CEOs, don't hold your breath.
It never fucking happens.
We're always hoping that Cheryl Sandberg is different because she cares about gender balance.
She wrote a book about it, despite the fact she came up with a business model to encourage teenage girls to start cutting themselves.
She cares. And then it was Sam Altman with his hush tones. These are fears we worry about.
Thank you, Senator, for the question. Fuck you. With your synthetic relationships and deciding that porn's okay. By the way, the collision of porn and synthetic relationships for young men is a disaster waiting to happen.
What happens when a 15-year-old boy approaches a girl at the cool kids' table and gets rebuffed?
And there's a word for that.
It's called being a 15-year-old boy and decides, you know what?
I have this incredible synthetic AI brought to be my Musk or Sam Altman that will perform erotic acts for me and tell me I'm great and it's funny and knows exactly how to keep me glued to my computer.
And before I know it, I lose all mojo to talk to strange women or spend money trying to take a woman to movies.
I don't talk to my dad.
I don't talk to my sister.
and I wake up fucking 30 years old in a basement playing video game obese and anxious.
That is literally where we're headed.
Too much? Too much?
So I think it's more vocal pushback, but boss, if we're waiting on corporations,
the army isn't showing up.
Thanks for the question.
That's all for this episode.
If you'd like to submit a question, please email a voice recording to office hours ofprofitmedia.com.
Again, that's office hours atproptuMead.com.
Or if you prefer to ask on Reddit, just post your question on the Scott Galloway subreddit
and we just might feature it in an upcoming episode.
This episode was produced by Jennifer Sanchez.
Our assistant producer is Laura Janair.
Jouberos is our technical director.
Thank you for listening to the PropGPot from PropG Media.
