The Tim Ferriss Show - #496: Marc Randolph on Building Netflix, Battling Blockbuster, Negotiating with Amazon/Bezos, and Scraping the Barnacles Off the Hull
Episode Date: February 1, 2021Marc Randolph on Building Netflix, Battling Blockbuster, Negotiating with Amazon/Bezos, and Scraping the Barnacles Off the Hull | Brought to you by Wealthfront automated investing, Helix... Sleep premium mattresses, and Athletic Greens all-in-one nutritional supplement. More on all three below.Although best known as the co-founder and first CEO of Netflix, Marc Randolph‘s (@mbrandolph) career as an entrepreneur spans more than four decades. He’s founded or co-founded half a dozen other successful start-ups, including, most recently, Looker Data Sciences, which he sold to Google in 2019 for $2.6B. He is currently mentoring a handful of other early-stage companies and advising hundreds of other entrepreneurs. He is also an active seed investor in startups all over the world, author of an internationally bestselling memoir, and host of the new podcast That Will Never Work, where he dispenses advice, encouragement, and tough love to struggling entrepreneurs.When not surfing, mountain biking, or back-country skiing, Marc is a frequent speaker at industry events, works extensively with young entrepreneur programs, sits on the board of the environmental advocacy group 1% for the Planet, and chairs the National Outdoor Leadership School‘s board of trustees.Please enjoy!*This episode is brought to you by Helix Sleep! Helix was selected as the #1 best overall mattress of 2020 by GQ magazine, Wired, Apartment Therapy, and many others. With Helix, there’s a specific mattress to meet each and every body’s unique comfort needs. Just take their quiz—only two minutes to complete—that matches your body type and sleep preferences to the perfect mattress for you. They have a 10-year warranty, and you get to try it out for a hundred nights, risk free. They’ll even pick it up from you if you don’t love it. And now, to my dear listeners, Helix is offering up to 200 dollars off all mattress orders plus two free pillows at HelixSleep.com/Tim.*This episode is also brought to you by Athletic Greens. I get asked all the time, “If you could only use one supplement, what would it be?” My answer is usually Athletic Greens, my all-in-one nutritional insurance. I recommended it in The 4-Hour Body in 2010 and did not get paid to do so. I do my best with nutrient-dense meals, of course, but AG further covers my bases with vitamins, minerals, and whole-food-sourced micronutrients that support gut health and the immune system. Right now, Athletic Greens is offering you their Vitamin D Liquid Formula free with your first subscription purchase—a vital nutrient for a strong immune system and strong bones. Visit AthleticGreens.com/Tim to claim this special offer today and receive the free Vitamin D Liquid Formula (and five free travel packs) with your first subscription purchase! That’s up to a one-year supply of Vitamin D as added value when you try their delicious and comprehensive all-in-one daily greens product.*This episode is also brought to you by Wealthfront! Wealthfront pioneered the automated investing movement, sometimes referred to as ‘robo-advising,’ and they currently oversee $20 billion of assets for their clients. It takes about three minutes to sign up, and then Wealthfront will build you a globally diversified portfolio of ETFs based on your risk appetite and manage it for you at an incredibly low cost. Smart investing should not feel like a rollercoaster ride. Let the professionals do the work for you. Go to Wealthfront.com/Tim and open a Wealthfront account today, and you’ll get your first $5,000 managed for free, for life. Wealthfront will automate your investments for the long term. Get started today at Wealthfront.com/Tim.*If you enjoy the podcast, would you please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really makes a difference in helping to convince hard-to-get guests. I also love reading the reviews!For show notes and past guests, please visit tim.blog/podcast.Sign up for Tim’s email newsletter (“5-Bullet Friday”) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss YouTube: youtube.com/timferrissPast guests on The Tim Ferriss Show include Jerry Seinfeld, Hugh Jackman, Dr. Jane Goodall, LeBron James, Kevin Hart, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Jamie Foxx, Matthew McConaughey, Esther Perel, Elizabeth Gilbert, Terry Crews, Sia, Yuval Noah Harari, Malcolm Gladwell, Madeleine Albright, Cheryl Strayed, Jim Collins, Mary Karr, Maria Popova, Sam Harris, Michael Phelps, Bob Iger, Edward Norton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Neil Strauss, Ken Burns, Maria Sharapova, Marc Andreessen, Neil Gaiman, Neil de Grasse Tyson, Jocko Willink, Daniel Ek, Kelly Slater, Dr. Peter Attia, Seth Godin, Howard Marks, Dr. Brené Brown, Eric Schmidt, Michael Lewis, Joe Gebbia, Michael Pollan, Dr. Jordan Peterson, Vince Vaughn, Brian Koppelman, Ramit Sethi, Dax Shepard, Tony Robbins, Jim Dethmer, Dan Harris, Ray Dalio, Naval Ravikant, Vitalik Buterin, Elizabeth Lesser, Amanda Palmer, Katie Haun, Sir Richard Branson, Chuck Palahniuk, Arianna Huffington, Reid Hoffman, Bill Burr, Whitney Cummings, Rick Rubin, Dr. Vivek Murthy, Darren Aronofsky, and many more. 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This episode is brought to you by Athletic Greens. I get asked all the time what I would take if I
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What if I did the opposite? I'm a cybernetic organism,
living tissue over metal endoskeleton. The Tim Ferriss Show.
Hello boys and girls, ladies and germs. This is Tim Ferriss. Welcome to another episode of
The Tim Ferriss Show, where it is my job to interview and attempt to deconstruct world-class performers from
all different avenues, all different areas of life, whether it be business, military,
sports, or otherwise. Now, today we have a very special guest. Although he is best known as the
co-founder and first CEO of Netflix, Mark Randolph's story has a lot more to it. His career
as an entrepreneur spans more than four decades.
He's founded or co-founded half a dozen other successful startups, including most recently
Looker Data Sciences, which he sold to Google in 2019 for $2.6 billion. That's with a B,
billion dollars. He is currently mentoring a handful of other early stage companies and
advising hundreds of other entrepreneurs. He is also an active seed investor in startups
all over the world, author of an international bestselling memoir, and host of the brand new podcast, one of my favorite titles for
a podcast I've seen in a long time, That Will Never Work, and we're going to talk about
why that has some relevance to a lot of his story.
In that podcast, he dispenses advice, encouragement, and tough love to struggling entrepreneurs.
When not surfing, mountain biking, or backcountry skiing, Mark is a frequent speaker at industry events,
works extensively with young entrepreneur programs, sits on the board of the Environmental
Advocacy Group, number one for the planet. I'm laughing, folks, because I just retook that about
17 times, and shares the National Outdoor Leadership School's Board of Trustees. You
can find him everywhere on Instagram at thatwillneverwork, Twitter at
mbrandolph with a ph, Facebook at markbrandolph, LinkedIn, Mark Randolph, and website, where I'm
sure you can find everything, markrandolph.com. Mark, welcome to the show.
Well, thanks, Tim. That was quite a mouthful. And I struggle with advocacy group as well,
too, so don't worry about that. Too many consonants and vowels. I want to start perhaps in the midstream of your chronology of
sorts, a little in the earlier chapters, and that is at 21 years old. So you were kind enough to
send some notes to me, but they're sufficiently cryptically written that I don't know any of the story,
which is perfect. And that's what I like. So this alludes to surviving on the streets
of Hartford, Connecticut for three days without money, watch, wallet, food, etc.
Can you please tell me this story?
Yeah, it's an experience that probably you wouldn't find happening today. It kind of
begins verging on something almost illegal.
But I was working at the time for a program which took young people from urban backgrounds,
sometimes adjudicated youth, as they call them. And we used to call it hoods in the woods,
but took them out into the back country to try and really stress them a little bit and help them
learn about themselves. And it was a pretty powerful experience for them. And as the training for us, they wanted us to have an experience where
we felt similarly disoriented so that we could understand what they were going through. And of
course, all of us were pretty comfortable campers, hikers, backpackers. So they had to find something
a little different. And the experiment they came up with involved taking us to an urban area, and for me it was Hartford, Connecticut, taking away our watch and our wallet and our ID and dropping us off on a sidewalk at about 10.30 in the morning and saying, we'll be back for you in three days.
And they had us write an emergency phone number on our arm with a Sharpie, just in case. And we were on our own.
Dog tags, but cheaper.
Exactly. But listen, I was probably more likely to chew my arm off than I was to call that phone
number. I was going to make it through this thing. And it was pretty fun for a while. And then,
of course, being a 21-year-old, you begin getting hungry. So your first chore is to find food. And my first tactic was, it's a little embarrassing even to say this, but I would go
to the food court and I would hover until I saw someone get up from their plate and walk away with
food still on it. And then like a seagull, I would swoop in and finish the food on their plate.
That worked. And then I began saying, listen, I should maybe cut out the middleman.
I wonder if I can get some money
and I can buy my own food.
And I came up with the idea
that I would panhandle for it.
And I thought to myself,
well, how hard could that be?
And the answer is really hard.
I don't know, Tim,
whether you've ever had to walk up to a stranger
and put your hand out and ask for spare change,
but there is something
deep in us, in our pride, that makes that really, really hard. And I tried for hours before I get
the courage to even make my first ask. And of course, the person just looks down and walks
past you and you just feel like nothing. But little by little, you kind of begin to hone
the ask. You know, what do you say? How do you approach someone? What kind of person do you
think is more likely to give you money? And after a handful of hours, I kind of had gotten the hang
of it. And the interesting thing, what worked for me was complete sincerity. At the beginning, I was trying, you know, bullshit.
I was, you know, I've lost my wallet.
I had it taken from me.
And after a while, I just looked people up, walked up to people and say,
can you spare some change?
I am really hungry.
And they could see it in my eyes and see it in my face.
And that ended up being the most effective thing.
And I have never, ever forgot that experience of begging for spare change on the streets
of Hartford, Connecticut, because as an entrepreneur, it's part of the job description that you're
always asking for money.
And I just have to say that when you have begged for spare change on the sidewalk, that
asking a VC for $50,000 is nothing.
So that is a great story, number one. Number two, if you're ever a professional wrestler or
MMA fighter, I think Mark the Seagull Randolph is a great option for you. And even as early
as the panhandling experiment days, you were already split testing. And I think we're
going to come back to that, but I want to first go to the wilderness experiences or those types
of experiences that you alluded to. Was that organization, the National Outdoor Leadership
School, or was that a different organization? Yeah, that was a different organization. During my summers, all through late high school and certainly all through college,
I would spend three months a year basically leading, either going on or later leading these
backcountry expeditions. And two months of the year, I would do them for the school called the
National Outdoor Leadership School. And then one month a year, I would do it for an organization called the Wilderness School. And that was the one that was actually not done
in the Rockies like Knowles was, but it was done down the East Coast in the Berkshires and the
Catskills. And that was the program that was for the adjudicated youth where I had to do the Hartford Urban Immersion Program. What did you take from Knowles?
And maybe you could elaborate a bit on that experience,
the National Outdoor Leadership School.
What did that provide you?
I mean, just to jump to the punchline,
pretty much that taught me almost everything I know about leadership.
It was a very special way of learning leadership.
And just for some quick background,
for those who have never heard of Knowles, it's a leadership school, but it uses the wilderness
as that classroom. And the format, although course lengths are different, are pretty basic,
was they take a handful of people, they bus you to a trailhead, they drop you off, and off you go,
and you're out in the mountains for 30 days,
and there's no contact. You're not coming back into town. You're a self-contained group,
and then you get picked up in the 30 days, and the course is done. But the learning methodology here
is each day, they break the group, which might have 12, 16 students, into small groups, three or four,
and they appoint a leader of the day, and the leader 12, 16 students, into small groups, three or four, and they appoint a
leader of the day. And the leader of the day has responsibility for that group, what time they're
going to leave in the morning, what the route is going to be, when they're going to stop for lunch,
how long the rest breaks are going to be, whether they stop when someone's complaining about a
blister or say, let's push on. And trailing behind you, of course, is one of the instructors, one of
the leaders of the
whole group. But they're not saying anything. They're just watching and trying to make sure
you don't end up being eaten by a bear or falling in a river. But I started doing that as a student
when I was 14 years old. And this was this opportunity to have real leadership responsibility,
to make real decisions with real consequences. But the most
incredible part was you found out hours later the results of your decision-making. You found out
what happens if you don't leave until 10, 30, or 11 in the morning. You found out what happens if
you let the break linger for an hour and a half for lunch. You find out what happens if you take the wrong trail.
And you begin learning even more subtle things.
You learn how to communicate with your group,
how to communicate with confidence and clarity,
decisions about things you're really not that confident or clear about,
when you need to ask your group for input and when you don't.
And I was learning that when I was 14.
And each time you do that, you're given a bit more responsibility. And I ended up coming back and being an instructor
for the school. So all of a sudden, I had a higher level of leadership. And eventually, I was a course
leader where I was in charge of the entire group for the 30 days. And so for me, by the time I
actually entered the workforce, became an entrepreneur with real stakes, I had been doing those things already for years.
And it was this chance to learn leadership by doing it, not by studying it, not by talking about it, but by actually doing it.
And that ended up being the most incredible preparation for the career that I ended up choosing.
Several follow-ups here, because I'm fantasizing about John Rambo, first blood, developing my skills.
Not just communication, but practical wilderness skills.
That's partially tongue-in-cheek, but not entirely. Does the National Outdoor Leadership
School offer programs or extended programs, so not just a long weekend, but a week or two for
adults? I remember when I was working on one of my books looking at different schools, like BOSS,
the Boulder Outdoor Survival School, and I'm sure Knowles, if it has an adult program.
For an adult who would want to experience
something like this, are there options at your work? Absolutely. Because you can learn leadership
at any age. And certainly the format is slightly different. But there's courses which are, for
example, as short as three days. There's courses that are as long as an entire year. There's
semesters. I mean, the one I described is kind of the core offering,
which is one month.
But of course, it's unreasonable to expect an adult
who has a job and a life to detach for an entire month.
So yes, there's great programs for adults.
And they're given not just in the United States,
but all over the world with varying degrees of difficulty
depending upon what your physical appetite is for
that type of thing. Let me ask you about communication, because you mentioned
communication and how much that changed your communication with groups about decisions, say,
throughout this entire process. And it makes me think of Warren Buffett, who will often say that
his best investment was in a Dale Carnegie course on public speaking,
because it just, it puts everything else that you do on steroids if it's done well.
How did your communication change over time when communicating these decisions? In other words,
if you were to look at the before shot, you have some audio of your first maybe kind of awkward
attempts at communicating, and then you flash forward a few years and look at the after.
Could you give us an example or describe how those would be most different?
Yes, certainly.
You're actually very astute to pick up that leadership is a hugely communications-driven thing.
And people are looking to you to, as I said, communicate with
some confidence and clarity where we're going. And there's lots of ways to do that. And one of
the things that experience teaches you, one of the things that Knowles teaches you is that we all
have different leadership styles. And you have to find a leadership style that works for you.
I mean, some leaders work much better by leading
from the front. So when they're communicating, it's really here is what we're going to do.
But other leaders are much more collaborative. They're one of those leaders where it's never
quite clear who's making the decision because they're so good at soliciting opinion and having
it come out as a group opinion. It's also leadership is highly situational. If we're just going for a
hike, I'm more than happy to sit and let's talk about where we're going and where do you think
and how's everyone feeling today? But listen, when the shit hits the fan, when things are really
nasty, when you're high in a peak, when the weather's coming in, there is no time for that.
In that case, you have to shift and realize now I have to basically say, do this now.
And that people recognize in my voice the urgency of this, that there's not time to
challenge this.
There's not time to question this.
If we don't go now, someone's going to get hurt.
I've spent pretty much my entire life continuing to work on communication skill.
When I look back at college, the two most valuable classes that I
took was a writing class and a public speaking class. And I use both of those skills almost
every single day. And I've also kind of realized that you never finish getting better at them.
Writing a book, wow, that required all kinds of
understanding of how much more complex this was than I ever imagined and all the things that I
had to learn. And as I began getting into public speaking six or seven years ago, where I had to
do this not in front of five or 10 people, but in front of five or 10,000 people, it just steps it
up incredibly. But that's what's fun. I mean, learning a craft, that's the best.
So let's hone in on what appears to be
one of your superpowers and certainly a craft,
and that is split testing, iterating.
We talked about the panhandling
and as also an aspiring busker.
So not only do I want to beat John Rambo,
but also busker at some point
who like drums on the sidewalk
for money anonymously,
pseudonymously at some point.
I see a reality show in that somewhere, Tim.
When did you profession?
I do.
The masked busker.
Oh my God, is that Tim Ferris drumming?
Just, if I'm looking for other ways
I can self-immolate publicly, I will definitely jump on more reality
television. But when did you first cut your teeth, or how did you most effectively cut your teeth
professionally? And you can take that in any way that you like with split testing and iterating.
And maybe you could explain what that even means for people who may not know the term.
Sure, and this goes way back.
I mean, to the very roots of entrepreneurship,
you know, I guess probably the first thing I did
was I did candy arbitrage,
you know, where basically you recognize,
wow, I can buy a bag of candy for a dollar
with 20 pieces in it, and I can sell each of them for
a dollar at school. And you realize that there's this opportunity, and you jump in. And that's what
I did when I was probably in fourth or fifth grade. But the iteration comes from, what can I
get away with? I mean, at first you buy it for 10 cents and sell it for 20. And you go, that was easy. Maybe I can sell it for $2. And of course it doesn't go so well.
But little by little, as you keep trying different things, you hone in on the one that actually has
the best return for you. I also sold American seeds, which is probably the closest thing that
America had to indentured servitude back in the 60s when I did
it, where basically you went door to door selling seed packets. And if you sold 7,000 or 8,000 seed
packets, you could win a 15-cent whistle or something like that. But nevertheless, I was
into it because I'd go up to the door and I'd pitch it and it wouldn't work. And then I'd have
to try at the next door. And little by little, again, you're trying different things.
And what happens if I say, I've put together a combo pack?
Or if you buy three, I'll throw in a fourth for free.
And each trying all those little things to find out which ones work best.
Which ones work best for you?
Which one works best for the product you're trying to sell?
And we can jump into this.
This is a big piece of my life.
Before I really
became a tech entrepreneur, I was a direct marketing guy. Junk mail, direct response
television, catalogs, mail order, magazine circulation. And that is entirely about testing
things, trying different things and seeing which ones work, which ones don't. And for ones that work,
what works better? So I'll share something that I don't think I've ever shared publicly before.
One people may have heard, which is I, in college, applied to a few different jobs. One was Trilogy
Software, which I was very excited about. Didn't get the job, ultimately. The other one that I was excited about, which I also did not make the final
cut for, was working at Capital One. Capital One, for people listening, you might recognize that
associated with credit cards. At the time, they were one of the most sophisticated direct mail
outfits. They were extremely analytical and very, very good at split testing. And I, as someone as a kid who had terrible insomnia and watched lots of infomercials, was fascinated by all of this iteration and the idea that you could, over time, determine exactlyo, a quote of yours that is a sharp contrast with there are no bad
ideas. It is there's no such thing as a good idea. Could you speak to that and also maybe give us
examples of some ideas that started off really bad in your life?
I'm not even sure where to start with this, such an overwhelming
collection of bad ideas. Over time, I've migrated and I've moved from thinking, oh,
you know, there's no such thing as a bad idea into, well, there are some bad ideas. And now
I am firmly convinced there's no such thing as a good idea. Every idea is a bad idea. No idea
performs the way you expect once you collide it with reality. And the more I learn, the more I
believe that it's true. And what that has forced me to do is say, I've got to stop thinking about
things and I've got to just begin doing them because that's the only way I'm going to figure out whether it's a good idea or a bad idea. And that's hard for us.
It's hard for people because people don't like to fail. They want their experiments to work.
And so they do this terrible thing where you keep it in your head, where it's safe and where it's
warm and where you can embellish it. And it's safe and where it's warm and where you can
embellish it. And it's a great idea as long as it's all imaginary. And in the safety of your head,
it can grow and you can add on divisions and you can pivot it in the new areas. And you've built
this huge castle in your mind. And then of course, if you ever decide to do it, of course, it's way
too big and too complicated to do. So it's all about taking these bad ideas
and colliding with the reality as quickly as possible.
And I will give you the classic, classic idea.
And this is actually the Netflix beginning.
And it came from when my Netflix co-founder,
a gentleman named Reed Hastings and I,
you know, we're both out of work
trying to figure out what do we do next.
And I knew at that point that I was going to start another company.
And Reed was going to go back to school, but he was going to fund this startup we were going to do.
We had to find the idea together.
And there's a bunch of crazy ideas, which I probably should go into with you just to give you.
Actually, I'm going to take a second and do it if that's okay.
I want to tell you some of the crazy ideas that actually might've been Netflix,
because they're examples of bad idea, good idea, who knows? So one of them was personalized shampoo
where, and I had this great idea and I pitched Reed that, okay, here's how it goes, Reed,
you're going to cut off a lock of your hair, You're going to mail it to us. And then our team of ace hair scientists is going to formulate a custom blend
just for you. And then you're going to subscribe to it. And then Reed thought that was pretty
stupid. So that didn't go any further. So then the next day in the car, I was carpooling to work
with him. I go, okay, here's the next one. Custom dog food. we're going to formulate a custom blend just for your pet
for its breed and its gender and its activity level or its climate or whatever and he didn't
like that either and then the other one was video rental by mail that wasn't quite as bad because
video rental was a six billion dollar category but the problem was, this is 1997, video rental was on VHS cassette. You may
remember it was big and awkward and expensive. And we bagged that one. And now here's the thing
I was talking about, about good ideas, bad ideas. We one day heard about this technology called a
DVD. And we were in the car talking about DVDs and it it's small, and it's light, and it's thin.
And then the idea popped in our head that maybe we could mail DVDs to people, that this might dust off that old video rental by mail idea. But rather than saying, what a good idea, let's do
some research, rather than rushing to the office and working on a business plan, rather than putting together a
pitch deck. We just turned the car around mid-commute and drove back down to the town we
lived and tried to buy a DVD. And of course, there weren't any. It was in test market. So we bought a
used music CD and mailed that to Reed's house in Santa Cruz for the price of a postage stamp.
And the next morning, we learned, is it a good idea or a bad idea? Because he had gotten this CD that had got to his house in less than 24 hours
for the price of a postage stamp.
And that was a way of knowing, is it a good idea or a bad idea?
And I have seen that play out a thousand, if not a thousand, a million times.
We are constantly surprised.
The one you think is great constantly surprised. The one you
think is great is terrible. The one you think is terrible is great. It's impossible to know
until you try it. So personalized shampoo, custom dog food. Were there any non-negotiables
or non-negotiable aspects, characteristics of the ideas that you brainstormed. So for instance, listening to just
the very short list, one of the questions that popped into my mind was what percentage of these
businesses that you're brainstorming were subscription-based, right? Like were they,
was that a prerequisite? Were there any prerequisites or was it all just blank slate?
I think you've touched on one of the greatest ironies of the
entire Netflix story, I think. Yes, there was absolutely prerequisites. And just to back up
the story a hair, I mentioned earlier that I had spent 15, 20 years as a direct marketing guy.
I had done everything in direct marketing. I had done catalogs. I'd done mail order. I'd done magazine circulation, in other words, subscription business.
And so when in 1996, 97, the internet was just starting to take off and there was this
little company called Amazon, which was actually starting to show some promise in selling books.
I immediately, immediately saw that this was
incredible. This was direct response on steroids. This was the most incredible tool for someone who
was a direct marketer. And so one prerequisite absolutely was I was going to do e-commerce.
One of these ideas, it had to involve selling something on the internet.
The second prerequisite, as you probably picked up from the personalized shampoo,
custom dog food, another one was custom sporting equipment like bats or surfboards,
was that I wanted it to have a high degree of personalization.
I mean, I had been at the cutting edge of direct mail personalization,
but that was lame. The best we could do was, dear Tim Ferriss, won't all your friends and neighbors at 27, you know, Crescent Circle? It was just so ridiculous. And I immediately saw
that with the internet, we could create a custom page just for
you. So that was a prerequisite. And yes, I wanted subscription. I wanted a recurring revenue
business model. I wanted to sell once and then just fight to deliver a product that everyone
wanted to keep. And this great irony is that Netflix started without subscription. I thought there's no possible
way I can do a subscription business in video rental by mail, but it was so compelling on the
other dimensions. It was so compelling in terms of personalization, in terms of what we could do
as an online site relative to what a bricks and mortar store like Blockbuster could do,
that I decided this was worth pursuing, even though it didn't have subscription.
And just to get the punchline here, the reason that the book was called That'll Never Work,
the reason that the blog is called That Will Never Work is because that is what every single
person I pitched that idea told me. My investors, my employees, my wife told me that'll never work.
And they were right. It didn't work. And it took us a year and a half of one failed experiment
after another, one test after the next. And the thing that eventually turned it around was
subscription. I'm kicking myself even now. Yeah. You guys had due dates, late fees. It's all a
cart. Absolutely. Just a quick thanks to one of our sponsors and we'll be right back to the show.
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You iterated. What did the approach to iteration look like? In other words, did you have a system? I think a lot of people test, but it's in a pretty ad hoc way. Maybe they keep good records, maybe they don't. How did you approach these tests over a year and a half? Well, it evolved, and it evolved pretty quickly. You know, we launched
this great excitement. It was April of 1998, so, you know, 23 years ago. Wow. And almost immediately
realized there was good news and there was bad news. And, you know, the good news was we had a
$100,000 month, but it was all selling DVDs. And that was kind of almost this last,
almost an afterthought of selling DVDs. And the rental was sucking wind. We were doing about 2%
of our revenue in rental because nobody would do it. And we go, okay, we got to try some new things
to try and unlock this rental business. And the problem wasn't that I didn't have ideas of things I wanted to try.
I had tons of ideas.
The problem is that back then I was a bit of a perfectionist.
And so the tests we'd put together would be these mini works of art.
We'd do custom photography or we would lovingly craft and argue all the copy.
We would spell check it and have copy editors review it. And we would stress test
the site and check every link. And as you can imagine, that would take two weeks to put together.
And then the test would fail. And we'd look at each other and say, we just wasted two weeks.
And we'd say, okay, faster. And we'd cut some corners and do a test a week. And it would fail.
And then we'd cut some more corners and we'd begin to do a test every other day,
and then pretty soon a test every day.
And soon we were doing four and five tests in the same day.
And as you can imagine, they're getting pretty sloppy by then.
You know, there's misspellings, there's the wrong image,
the watermark is still in it, we're crashing the site,
and the links don't work.
I mean, it is so sloppy.
But this learning, it was incredible because we realized it didn't make a difference.
That no matter how crappy this test was, that it was still going to surface things.
So in other words, if it was a bad idea,
even these beautiful two-week tests
didn't make it a good idea.
But if we had stumbled on something interesting,
even with these unbelievable mistakes
and crash sites and dead links,
people still would raise their hand.
They would shine the spotlight.
They would call us.
They would come to the door.
And then you saw as plain as day
what was working and what you had to then fix. And it always surprised us. And so this insight
informed everything from then on. And this insight was that it was not about having good ideas.
It was about building this system and this process and this culture for testing lots of bad ideas.
And Netflix has never turned back from that.
I've never turned back from that.
I've realized that the key to being successful is not how good your ideas are.
It's how good you are at being able to find quick, cheap, and easy ways to try your ideas.
That's what I look for now in entrepreneurs.
That's what sets apart the good ones from the mediocre ones.
So let's double click on that because this is exciting territory.
So if we just grab sort of an analogous, let's say, it's a comparison, it's a metaphor,
choose your word.
But in the world of science, scientific research, the scientific method, really, it's like science per se, isn't this kind of God with a lab coat on, but the scientific
method is a way of testing hypotheses, but the scientific method itself doesn't generate good
hypotheses, right? So there's something to be said for certain assumptions that are made,
certain assumptions that are tested that come up then with the ideas
or the statements to be tested. And when I'm listening to you describe this story, I would
imagine there are many entrepreneurs who, after a period of time, when they look at their revenue
breakdown and they see 98% DVD sales, 2% DVD rentals, they say, you know what? Great. We're going to double down on
DVD sales because that is the signal we are getting. That is the product market fit that
we are seeing. And they would have become the, I don't remember the exact name of the Columbia
records or these various outfits that would sell music by mail, right? So you'd become the equivalent or sort of the Amazon of DVD sales. Why didn't
you do that? You know, doing a startup is kind of like riding a mountain bike downhill, which
you've got to spend like 95% of your time staring five to 10 feet in front of you. But every so
often, you've got to look up and see where you're going. And we were basically struggling to hang on to doing that $100,000 first month.
But every time you looked up, you did not like what you saw.
Amazon, which right then was just selling books,
had made no secret of the fact that they wanted to be the everything store.
And we knew that the next category they was going to go into was music and movies. We knew
that pretty soon once DVD got a foothold, that Walmart would begin selling DVDs, that Kmart would
begin selling DVDs, that PetSmart would sell DVDs, that everybody would be selling DVDs. And we
didn't think we could or want to compete and it was essentially going to be a commodities
business.
So the challenge was, wow, how do we get out of this?
How do we jump from a dead-end business, which is paying all of our salaries so we can ride
it for a while, but how are we ultimately going to make the rental part successful because
that's the only one which we think we can sustainably maintain. And the challenge here was doubly bad because doing both things at the same
time was really nasty. I mean, selling and renting was confusing to customers. It was really hard to
describe what we did clearly. And operationally, it was complicated. I mean, the checkout process
was really complicated. Our metrics and analytics were all confused. The warehousing, the inventory.
And the insight that came here was that we couldn't do both. That if we were going to be
successful, we had to pick one of them. And so the challenge for us was like, which one? And as you mentioned, the temptation,
the easy path was basically to say, well, let's stick with sales. It's paying 98% of our revenue
and we'll figure it out. But on the other hand, if we could get rental to work, that could be a
huge business. And one that we could probably own because it was so operationally complex, because the margins were so good. And it points to this other incredibly important attribute for entrepreneurship,
besides this predisposition to action that I was talking about earlier, which is courage.
You have to have the willingness and the confidence to walk away from sure mediocrity to bet everything on the long shot
of a big success. And that's just balls. You've got to say, I'm going to bet we can figure this
out. And so let's bet. And in Netflix's case, we did that. We almost six months in decided that all the things that were happening with sales was
just making it harder.
And so we stopped in a single day and walked away from 98% of our revenue and said, if
we're going to make it, we're going to make it as a rental company.
Was part of that predicated on thinking of your, now this is not quite the right term,
but kind of exit strategy and the type of business
you were building in so much as thinking about kind of go big or go home. This is either going
to be a publicly traded company or it's going to be zero. This is not a lifestyle business.
We don't want a lifestyle business. Therefore, we're going to bet on this. We're going to bet
on that 2%. We're going to bet that we can turn that into 100%. And was any of that predicated on the possible outcomes that you had seen as your menu of options?
That's really, I wish I could have, wish you could have seen my face as you were asking that
question. Because I sincerely don't think I ever, had ever crossed my mind one way or the other. Seriously. I never was thinking,
oh, there never was an exit strategy. I never at Netflix or any of the other preceding startups
that I did thought about that. This was all about solving a really interesting problem.
And the path to solving that really interesting problem led through having to be willing to walk away from the sales because that was not helping us solve the big problem.
There are realities to the business, of course.
You need financial permission to keep going.
But I certainly wasn't thinking, oh, mediocre success could be a nice lifestyle business. It was more that I was caught up in the excitement and intellectual stimulation of saying, wouldn't it be incredible
if we could figure out a new model using the internet to be a better way for people to rent
movies? And that's what I thought about every morning when I came to work. That's what I thought
about all day. That's what I thought about when I went home. That doesn't
lend itself to thinking, oh, I could probably get out easy here, or I could return money to
the investors and go home. It's never part of the plan. How did you think about naming the company?
What were some of the best, worst ideas that you or anyone else had? Yeah. You know, naming a company is brutally hard because the
criteria for a good name has a lot of elements to it. I mean, for one, you would like something
that was evocative of what you were trying to do. You want it to be easy to spell. You want it to
have the.com available and maybe the.biz and whatever
the other possible things. You want to make sure you can also get alternate spellings. You want to
make sure it doesn't mean some terrible obscenity in Lithuanian. You want to make sure you can get
a trademark. Now you need to make sure, can I get the Twitter handle? Can I get Snap?
Can I get TikTok?
I mean, you need to cover all these bases.
And it's really hard now, and it was really hard then.
And it's so hard that, well, so when you start, when you found the company, when you actually
incorporate and you say, okay, now I've got to begin paying people.
I need to have checks.
I need to enter into contracts.
You're not ready to go through that huge uphill battle to figure out your name.
You just come up with what's called a beta name.
It's the name you're going to use while you're kind of getting ready to launch.
And our beta name at Netflix, this is kind of a little Netflix trivia, was actually called
Kibble.
We were kibble.com, like the dog food.
You'd been infected by the custom dog food idea.
That's great.
Yeah, and I just happened to own Kibble,
probably because I was so excited about the custom dog food idea.
But the thing is, I had a person who was one of my early investors at Netflix,
as a matter of fact, but on board, but also a friend of mine who I had done a startup with in the past, who gave me the advice.
And he said, Mark, when you're picking your beta name, pick something so bad that when you finally get to the point you're trying to pick your real name and you're really struggling, you won't be tempted to use your beta name.
So that was the other advice.
That's good advice. So we were struggling, of course.
So we're getting to the end. We're getting probably only two or three weeks away from launch,
and we still don't have a name. And so we go, okay, we're going to have to force this one.
And we got everyone in a conference room, and we, on a whiteboard, made two columns. And in one, we brainstormed every possible word that was evocative of the internet.
You know, net and web and E. And in the other column, we brainstormed words that were evocative
of video or rental. And then began drawing all the, you know, the crisscrossing lines between them.
And, you know, some of them were, I thought, pretty good. My favorite actually
was replay.com, which I thought, oh, that's pretty cool. But replay was available, but it cost $40,000.
And they may as well have quoted me $40 million at that point that I wasn't going to pay $40,000
for a domain name. Another one was cinemacenter.com.
And then we had all the other variations. We had Webflix. We had Netflix with a CKS. We had,
you know, all these crazy names. And Netflix was far and away no one's favorite. And I don't know
whether you remember this, Tim, but back in the 60s and 70s,
the nickname for porno used to be a skin flick or skin flicks. And everyone's going,
we can't call it flicks. And that X, that X is even worse. But after a while, you're going on
the list and you go, I can't get the domain name, I can't get the trademark,
well, this is already being used in Canada,
and then finally you go, okay,
listen, we've got to make a decision,
and Netflix was a little porny,
but it was the best we could do.
And I just want to underscore one thing you said
that's really important,
likely, at least at the time,
available as a trademark across the board, right?
Domestically and internationally. If you look at something like replay.com or even Netflix with a CKS,
you can, stretching a little bit here,
but you can get into kind of descriptive, murky territory.
And like you said, there are these checkboxes
that are really important to look at very closely.
A friend of mine, because we're recording this
during the GameStop mania and excitement,
a friend of mine was thinking of using
the sort of WSB, Wall Street Bets, et cetera,
for a sort of spinoff business of sorts
and he was about to put a bunch of money into developing it
and I said, before you do that,
make sure you go to uspto.gov,
take a look at who owns any trademarks. And you may just dodge a massive bullet, which he
ended up doing. So Netflix. So we have Netflix. Now you've invoked a name, and the name is one
of the demigods, maybe even a major, not lesser god of e-commerce, and that is Jeff Bezos. So less than a year into
this Netflix, little porny but effective journey, you get a call from none other than
Jeff Bezos inquiring about potentially buying the company. Can you tell me about your trip
to Seattle or anything else about that exchange? Well, you've got to understand how it
felt for me to get a call from Jeff Bezos. I mean, this was two things. First of all,
this was the idea that everybody said, that'll never work. This is the idea that no one had
confidence in. And to get a call from Jeff Bezos, I mean, the pioneer, the king of e-commerce, oh my gosh,
the validation. It was like, okay, someone, not just someone, not just anyone, but Jeff Bezos
sees potential in this. So it was this tremendously exciting moment. And when he called,
he was a little cagey. It was like, you know, listen,
I'd love to come on up to Seattle. I'd love to meet you guys. Let's just come on up and we'll
get acquainted. So we didn't come out, write out and say he wanted to buy the company,
but it didn't take, you know, rocket science to figure out that's what this meeting was going to
be about. As I mentioned earlier, they were just books at that point. And we knew that video or music or both was next on
the list. And so it was pretty sure that Netflix was a candidate to be a make or buy evaluation.
In other words, maybe you could jumpstart into video by buying us.
So Reid and I flew up to Seattle. And this is pre-Ways and pre-Google Maps.
We had printed out the map from a site called MapQuest.
MapQuest, I knew it was coming.
If you can remember those days.
And I was so sure that Reed had fucked this up, if you'll pardon me.
Because we were in a pretty sketchy part of town.
I mean, we're walking past, there's broken glass on the sidewalk.
There's people sleeping in the doorways.
There's hypodermic needles.
There's sex shops.
And I go, there's no way that the pioneers of e-commerce are here.
But yes, you turn the corner and there in this old warehousey building
through these dusty plate glass windows, I could see in and see that there was a sign,
lo and behold, Amazon. And we go in and you can't picture this because it is jammed to the gills with people and dogs and pizza boxes and printers stacked on top of piles of books.
And people are crammed in five or six to a cubicle.
They get ushered into this conference room.
And the conference table is four doors that are obviously not in doorways.
They're on sawhorses.
We pushed together to make a conference table.
And in fact, as you're walking in,
we had noticed that every single person
was working at a desk made out of a door.
And it was, wow, this is pretty crazy.
And we had this great conversation
because Jeff and I kind of were
totally riffing on this excitement of starting these companies. And he was talking about when
he had rigged up a bell that would ring every time an order came in, which is exactly what we had
done. So we had this kind of opening day excitement stories to tell. But of course, we got down to
business. And in fact, yes,
they were interested in perhaps using Netflix to jumpstart into video. And they talked to us,
understood everything. And on the way out, we had the CFO of Amazon escorted us out and kind of
did the hints. She goes, you know, in the event this happened, which is to set expectations,
it's probably going to be in the $10 to $15 million range. And that wouldn't
have been so bad for something I've been working on for less than 12 months. And at the time,
I owned 40% of the company. But it was really interesting what Reid and I talked about in the
flight home. Because again, this is the company that everyone had said will never work. But we had managed to put together an e-commerce website. We had managed
to find a copy of every single DVD available at the time. We had forged these partnerships with
all the DVD player manufacturers that were bringing us in customers. And it felt like at that moment that we had got it all figured out.
And we kind of looked at each other and said, I don't think we're ready to hand someone else the
keys. And so in some ways, this wasn't a trip up to sell the company, or maybe the trip up was to
sell a company, but on the way back, it felt more like a commitment ceremony, where we kind of had to look each other in the
eyes and say, are we in or are we not in? And I think luckily for the rest of the story, we were in.
So you've described the flight out. I would love to hear you talk about the flight in,
and maybe part of this extends to well before that, but how did you prepare for
or strategize for the Amazon meeting? Oh, the depths of...
And the reason I ask in part, sorry to interrupt you and me both, but part of the reason I ask is
that you mentioned a term that I think is really important, and that is the
buyer build decision, right? So Amazon can use you to jumpstart their video business, but they could
also choose to build it themselves. And sometimes big companies, I'm not saying this is what Amazon
did, but sometimes big companies will invite smaller companies in to have them open the kimono, so to speak, and share lots and lots
and lots and lots of details, sometimes undercover of due diligence, so that they can then go ahead
and just build everything a lot faster internally, right? That does happen. I'm not saying with
Amazon, but it does happen. So I'd love to hear how you guys prepared for this meeting? So, you know, I'd been in Silicon Valley for 10 years by that
point. I knew that was certainly one of the components of someone's interest. I knew there
was always the chance that they'd just pick our brains and do it themselves. And so that navigation
wasn't particularly tricky because we knew going in what to expect.
But I much prefer to be pretty forthcoming.
And I've always believed it's better to assume good about people than to protect myself from
bad.
I'm willing to get burned because normally it works better for me if I go in being vulnerable
and honest.
But the real story of the preparation, you know, I laughed when you mentioned that,
because it really is, in some ways, maybe it's a flaw of mine,
but the best is that I am a ridiculous over-preparer for important things in my life.
And just to give you a really quick example of this from way earlier in my life,
you know, I was a second baseman when I was playing high school baseball, which is the,
that was the basically the end of my baseball career as far as I got. But I thought I was a
pretty good high school second baseman. And one of the jobs of a second baseman is to back up
first base when a throw goes to first. And there was one particular game where all of a sudden, a throw came to first base and missed first base. And amazingly enough, I happened to be back there
and snagged the ball and threw the runner out at second. And when I came in, the coach was going,
that was amazing. How did you know to be back there for that play? And it was puzzling to me because I said,
I am back there every pitch. I run behind set for a space every pitch. And that's how I treat
these kinds of negotiations. I'm ready for pretty much anything. I think deeply about what could
this meeting be about? What are the questions they're going to ask? What do they really want
to know? What are the best way to position our company favorably? What are the questions they're going to ask? What do they really want to know? What are
the best way to position our company favorably? What do I need to understand about Amazon to make
the decision about whether I might want to have the company sold to them? And then I go through
what my answers might be. And of course, you've prepared a hundred different answers and you only
end up using eight of them, but that's okay. That just means that it comes off more positively for
you. Don't try this at home, folks. Yeah. Yeah. So that'll never work. You heard it over and
over again from possible sources of financing, from everybody left and right. With respect to
Netflix, what were the biggest things that people missed or got wrong in terms of assumptions about
Netflix that led them to
conclude that'll never work. And I'll give just a quick example with, say, Uber, for instance.
Early on, they were turned down by everybody for financing, just about, because it was assumed that
whatever market they had, their total addressable market, it was a fraction of whatever the current
on-demand black sedan car service market was.
And that was an incorrect assumption
because ultimately Uber Black ended up funding the R&D
and subsidizing what later became UberX.
And before you know it, the market expands exponentially.
So what were people missing or getting wrong
that led them to say that'll never work?
There was two reasons that almost everybody drew on to conclude that'll never work? There was two reasons that almost everybody drew on
to conclude that'll never work.
And the first was Blockbuster.
That here we were, this tiny little upstart,
everyone said Blockbuster is the problem.
And that just makes sense because Blockbuster at the time
had 9,000 stores.
They had 60,000 employees. They were doing $6 billion in revenue. And the thought that we could get a foothold against that, and worse,
it wasn't just getting a foothold against a bigger company. It was basically saying,
we're proposing a model where you come to the internet and you order a movie and we mail it
to you. And it's going to take anywhere from one to four days for that movie to arrive.
And people could not get their hands around how that could possibly work when you could pretty
much throw a stone from any place in the United States and hit a blockbuster. Why would anybody
do it through you when they could just drive five minutes and rent a Blockbuster. Why would anybody do it through you when they could just
drive five minutes and rent from Blockbuster? And they had a point. We did have some things up our
sleeve. Basically, the fact that everyone hated Blockbuster. You always want to compete against
someone that everyone else hates. But we also... Why did they hate Blockbuster?
Blockbuster, part of it was Blockbuster's attitude.
Blockbuster did not believe that they were in the customer service business.
And so people were frustrated with the experience.
They also relied in their business model on late fees.
Late fees.
Oh, I remember that.
In fact, they actually had an internal term for it,
and they called it managed dissatisfaction. Oh my God, that's great. And you always want
to compete with someone whose core tenet is managed dissatisfaction. They also had a problem
that because they were really in the demand fulfillment side
that they had this new release issue where a new release would come out and people like lemmings
would all flock to the blockbuster and they would all want the same movie and of course
blockbuster can't afford to buy enough copies to satisfy every single person who wants it on day
one because their whole model is you buy it once and then you turn it 20 or 30 times.
And so what they have to do is basically say, we're going to have a lot of people not getting
the movie they came in for. And that will force them to come back again and rent it next week or
the week after so they can get the turns out of it.
So all these things were fundamentally frustrating to customers.
And discovery.
You know, the reason that everyone flocked to new releases was it was so hard to find something else to watch that you would do that. If you may remember this, you go to the store and you basically begin doing this pacing like a tiger you see at the zoo,
up and down each aisle, just hoping something leaps out at you that you haven't seen before,
that you've heard of, that you want to watch. And so you naturally gravitate to the new release
wall, not because they're better movies, because it's a higher percentage of movies you haven't
seen yet. Anyway, lots and lots of reasons we go, this should be disruptible.
But Blockbuster was just one reason. The other reason everyone said that'll never work was the
fact that the DVD was digital, was a digital medium. And everyone said, well, just a matter of
time, months before this movie can be downloaded or streamed, Who's going to want to get it on DVD
when they can just stream it to their house?
And they were right about that latter one.
We thought they were wrong about the timing,
that it would be a long shot
if it was going to happen in a few months.
We thought it was going to be years.
But nonetheless, both of those were very reasonable objections
about why this business would never work. And we really had to attack both of those if just amazing in and of itself. But two years in, the perfect storm of bad news, as I have it here,
led you to fly, not to Amazon, but to Dallas to try to sell Netflix to Blockbuster. What happened
there? What was the bad news? And how did that trip to Blockbuster go? These stories have such twists and turns and ironic moments.
You know, we spoke earlier in our conversation about the struggle to find the, as they say,
repeatable, scalable business model.
How when we launched, it didn't work.
How we had to figure out how to get rental to work, and how we struggled for a year and a half,
and that eventually the thing that worked
was this completely irrational combination of things.
One of them, as I mentioned before, was subscription.
But the other thing was that one day I was in our warehouse,
and at the time we probably had several hundred thousand DVDs in the warehouse.
And I remember looking around at these full shelves and thinking, what a shame.
They're doing us no good sitting on the shelf.
I wonder if there's some way to store these movies at our customers' houses.
Let them just keep them.
And maybe they do, I don't know, peer-to-peer exchange.
Maybe they keep it as long as they want.
When they want another one, they mail it back and we'll replace it.
And that idea, when combined with subscription, was worth a test.
And when we tested it, finally, after a year and a half, it worked.
And it worked remarkably well.
It took off.
I mean, people were signing up in droves, thousands a week for this new no due dates,
no late fees subscription video rental program.
Now, that's a great story.
But as you may know about the subscription business,
it has some great things about it
and some bad things about it.
And the great thing about it is it's recurring revenue.
Once you've acquired that customer, if you take good care of them, they pay you month after month after
month for years if you do a good job. The downside is all the acquisition costs takes place up front.
All the money you spend on marketing and fulfillment and customer service, to get that customer is out the door.
And it's usually a number way in excess of how much they pay you that first month.
It takes having them be a customer for six to 12 months or even longer sometimes to recover
that marketing expense.
So when orders are flooding in the door, on one hand, you're going, this is fantastic.
But it also means that money is flying out the door. And that is not so fantastic. And it's especially not so fantastic
when you get to April of the year 2000, when all the wheels suddenly come off the cart
of the dot-com bubble. If I can mangle two metaphors there, sorry. In other words, what had been easy in March,
basically, we just go outside the Netflix headquarters, we'd wave the green flag,
and the big dump truck full of money would back up and dump it into the driveway, and we'd send
everyone out with the wheelbarrows to bring the money in. All of a sudden, you get to April,
and the drivers are putting their head down and averting their eyes and speeding past you. There is not a cent to be had, especially not for a
company with.com in its name. So we're desperate. We have finally cracked the code. We're succeeding,
but we're going bankrupt in our success. And that was probably the lowest moment.
And we, Reed and I i looked at each other and basically
decided this is the time to as they refer to it time to pursue strategic alternatives
which is the silicon valley expression for basically you've got to sell this sucker
you know and fast and the obvious strategic alternative at the time was of course blockbuster
um but you know they were huge.
They were $6 billion in revenue.
We were $5 million in revenue.
We were 100 employees, and they were 60,000 employees.
So, you know, we tried getting this meeting, nothing.
You know, wouldn't return the calls, wouldn't respond to the emails.
So this is all preamble to this meeting with Blockbuster, but it's such a crazy story.
The time they chose to call happened to be, we were doing this corporate retreat at a place
called the Alisal Ranch, which is in the foothills outside of Santa Barbara. And as you can imagine,
it's pretty casual because not only we're casual at work. So when you go to a retreat,
you got to work at it. And I had brought nothing but t-shirts and flip-flops and shorts. And that's when they call
and say, we'd love to see you tomorrow morning in Dallas. And we're looking at each other and
going, there is no way we can't get from this ranch in Santa Barbara to Dallas by tomorrow
morning. And so we did the thing that you would prudently do when you're many millions
of dollars in the hole,
which is we chartered a corporate jet to fly us to Dallas.
Oh, this is perfect.
So I'll share with you one more piece of Netflix trivia.
So that jet was owned by Vanna White.
Okay.
Didn't see that coming.
Yeah, me either.
But anyway, we fly to Dallas.
We end up being ushered up into this big 17 or 18-story glass and steel skyscraper,
and they bring us into this conference room, which is the size of a football field,
and this beautiful endangered hardwood conference table.
And I remember sitting there going, oh my God,
every place has like paper and a pen. And they're like, they've got extra office supplies. This is
something. And then in come the blockbuster guys and they're in their very expensive clothes and
alligator shoes, which is in contrast to me, who's in a t-shirt and shorts and flip-flops.
I was jealous because Reed had on a Hawaiian shirt. He had buttons. But anyway, we make our
pitch. And we're going to combine forces that we will run the online part of the business.
Blockbuster will run the stores.
We laid out all the incredible synergies that come from having this blended model business.
And then we'd all live happily ever after.
And it was going great.
You know, they were leaning in.
They were asking good questions.
And then they asked, of course, the obvious question,
which is how much?
How much are we going to pay for you guys?
And we had obviously rehearsed this one on the plane. So Reed screwed up his courage and kind of leaned in and said, $50 million? And they laughed at us. I mean, maybe not out loud, but I swear John Antioco was like trying to hold back a laugh. And as you can
imagine, the meeting went downhill pretty quickly after that. And it was this long, quiet ride in
the cab back to the airport and an even quieter ride back to Santa Barbara on the plane. And it was a crushing moment because we had finally gotten
this meeting. It was self-evident to us that this blended model of online and stores could be an
incredibly powerful force and Blockbuster hadn't seen it. And so now, rather than this being the,
you know, as I say in the movies, the deus ex machina moment
where the heroes are backed up against the cliff
and the Indians are lining the cliffs
and there's sudden death
and all of a sudden in comes the cavalry
and plucks them to safety.
But unfortunately,
not only was Blockbuster not going to save us,
Blockbuster was going to compete with us.
And wow, that was sobering.
And as we got back and said to ourselves, what's going to happen?
It was this realization that this was one of those problems that there wasn't going to be a shortcut.
There was not an easy way out.
There was not something we missed.
That, you know, as my dad used to say to me sometimes, you know, Mark, sometimes the only way out is through.
That we were going to have to confront this head on and take on Blockbuster.
And, you know, it took us, I don't know, 10 plus years.
But eventually, you know, the company that had 9,000 stores is down to one.
And the company they could have bought for $50 million is now worth $250 billion.
It's such an amazing turn when I think back to that moment to where Netflix is today.
But Tim, the amazing thing here is that when I tell that
story to people, there's this dichotomy of reactions. Because for the people who are the
entrepreneurs, they're going, oh, this is so inspiring. You know, like a handful of people
with no experience in the video industry took down a $6 billion company. But sometimes I tell that story to corporate audiences
and for them, it's a very different message
because then it's basically,
you have no idea who's coming after you
and they're going to come after you
not doing the thing you do well.
They're going to come after you doing the thing poorly
or you don't do at all or you're scared to do.
Watch out for the people you consider rounding errors.
Touche.
As one Yahoo executive said to a friend of mine,
Alexis Ohanian, who co-founded Reddit,
he said, oh, you guys are rounding error in a meeting,
looking at their traffic.
Didn't turn out so well for Yahoo.
I love that.
Question I have, so I can see it
from a number of different perspectives.
And first question I'd like to ask is related to your reputation for not accepting no as an answer.
So I'm trying to zoom in because hindsight 2020, of course, it makes an excellent story.
But there are lots of startups that go out of business.
There are lots of startups that don't survive the existential threats and the economic meltdowns. They just do not make it
through. So when I go back to that point in time, you guys offer or suggest, propose 50 million.
They basically laugh. Why didn't you keep dropping the price until you found a price
they would accept? I'm not saying you should have done that. I'm just wondering, it must have been a whole mix of emotions. Why not look for the soft landing at a lower price or find a price
that would finally be a yes? I think there was a couple of things. We hadn't picked $50 million at random. On one hand, it had no underpinnings in valuation.
This wasn't based on multiples of next 12 months revenue
or anything that you'd normally use to value a business
that you were trying actively to sell.
It was based on two things.
It was based on, number one,
we had raised $50 million to date and had spent most of it. And this was a way for Reid and I
to make our investors whole. And that if it was going to be dramatically less than that,
we were less interested. The other one was the reasoning we thought that would make $50 million reasonable was not what was Netflix worth to someone as an ongoing Netflix, but what would it be worth
to Blockbuster, to their $6 billion in revenue, to have a team of people who were deeply involved
in the technology of video rental, which quite frankly, Blockbuster wasn't.
And so we thought that them recovering their investment many times over purely by getting
a small bump in the $6 billion revenue would make it work. But neither of those reasonings
for them resonated. And so I don't think this was a question of, well, maybe 40, maybe 35.
I think they would have gone back to some cash flow analysis or some next 12-month revenue,
and that would have been dramatically, dramatically less. Sufficient that it wasn't worth us
recovering pennies in the dollar for investor. Better for us to say, well, screw it. Let's prove these guys wrong.
So next I want to bring up,
I would love to hear you explain
something that I see referred to
as the Canada principle.
Now I'll just gonna,
I want to read a line here,
which is from, it's on bgr.com.
But this is a quote from you.
Please feel free to correct me if I'm wrong.
I'd certainly be extremely surprised
to ever see ads on Netflix,
only because Netflix is so focused on the Canada principle.
What in the hell is the Canada principle?
So the Canada principle,
when you're starting out, as we were in the United States,
and you're starting to get a little bit of traction.
So this may be we're past the blockbuster thing.
Our subscription, no due dates, no late fee program is doing gangbusters.
And people say, you should go into Canada. That'd be an easy 10% bump in your revenues.
Because Canada is approximately 10% the market size of the United States. At first you go,
well, that's kind of interesting. Yeah, that'd be a pretty easy way just to get a quick 10%. But then you begin to think about it and you
go, I'm not quite so sure about the easy. I mean, for one, they do have a different currency.
Some of our DVDs have different rights arrangements in Canada than they do here.
There's this little issue of language that part of Canada actually speaks French,
and in fact, legally mandates that the materials are
in French as well as in English. And you begin accumulating all these small things, which under
some circumstances, you might go, that's not a bad price to pay for an additional 10% bump in your
revenue. But what we realized is we were growing so quickly at that point that were we to take the
exact same effort, as minimal as it might be,
that it took to get into Canada and just apply it back on our core business, we would get a way
bigger bump than 10%. And what the Canada principle really says is you've got to focus,
that the real key is picking the two or three things that are the most important,
that if you get those right,
nothing else matters, and allocate all of your resources to that. And you have to very, very
consciously choose not to do things which appear easy. You've got to say, oh, oh, there's Netflix
clones launching in the UK. Should we enter the UK to try and stamp them out to beat them to the
punch? And you have to say, no, we are way better taking the distraction that would occur doing that
and doubling down on the things that we're already good at because that learning, that acceleration
will just pay dividends down the road. And we eventually do decide to enter the UK, for example.
But that focus, that's at the heart of, I believe, what
makes any startup successful is not getting distracted. We used to also call or refer to it
as scraping the barnacles off the hull. Because as you're moving, you're testing things and you're
trying things and you're slowly but surely accreting new features to your business.
And of course, you have a new thing you want to try, and all of a sudden, it's got to be
reverse compatible with this.
And you want to change the price, but you go, wait a minute, what about that small group
who have this different offer?
And you have to consciously go into a meeting wherever you discuss what you're going to
do next, and at the same time, discuss what are we going to stop doing.
All those things designed to make sure you're putting all of your attention on the things
that really matter. I love that expression, the scraping the barnacles off the hull. It's so true.
I mean, this is particularly true in, well, it's true in many things, but software development,
I mean, you get paid for adding features features or you get rewarded for adding features as a programmer, seldom rewarded for removing features, which is how you end up with a lot of
kind of bloated, over-featured software. One of the quotes from the same piece that I mentioned
that I really like is, these things which seem like low-hanging fruit never are. Ads are a
distraction, never an additive thing. So the follow-up to that that I have for you is,
what were some of the most tempting opportunities
that in retrospect were most important to say no to?
You've mentioned a couple, right?
Canada, you mentioned entering the UK.
Were there any other temptations or internal pressures,
anything that in retrospect were really important to have said no to?
There was certainly the temptation to do soft core or adult, not hardcore stuff, but adult content,
only because that's such a huge driver of new technologies. And that took some discipline to say, we don't want to get entangled up in that. And not out of any moralistic preaching about what's
appropriate or not appropriate, but purely because being a company which was pretty much had customers
in every single county in the United States, we just didn't want to leave ourselves vulnerable
to a particular district attorney who was behind in the polls someplace and wanted to
take down the smart-alecky e-commerce folks way back in California.
That was one we dodged early on.
Games.
People talked about we should do games, but it didn't take too much thinking to realize
that games do not have the shelf life that movies do.
Able to dodge that one.
Probably the closest we came to getting distracted was as we approached what was going to be
our first shot at an IPO,
we had decided we were going to become a portal
because portal was the business model du jour at the time,
which basically said, no, no, you're not a movie rental site.
You are everything movies.
You're going to be where people come for showtimes.
You're going to come to get reviews.
You're going to be able to buy tickets.
And we actually started down the path of building that out. And we put in place our
IPO prospectus based on the fact that we were going to be a portal. And when the bubble burst
in April of 2000, and we had to pull our IPO, that was such an unbelievably lucky break.
Because if we had ended up going public as a portal, we would have been committed,
and we never could have made that work.
You know, a friend of mine, I'm blanking, it might be Mike Maples Jr., said to me,
or actually, I think it's Brandon Stanton of Humans of New York fame,
but he said, sometimes you need life to save you from what you want to give you what you need.
Something along those lines. I'm paraphrasing, but yeah, sometimes those catastrophes are lucky
breaks. I want to talk about something that is a bit of a 90-degree turn, but we've been, I think, talking
a lot about strategy, about the business, about Netflix, and that's certainly on one side of the
ledger. But while this is all happening, you have a personal life to think about, to manage well, poorly, or somewhere in between. And I want to read a paragraph about
Tuesdays at 5 p.m. And then I'd love to discuss this because this is something that my girlfriend
and I would like to work on. And here it is. And feel free to fact check. I vowed early on I was
not going to be one of those entrepreneurs who is on his sixth startup and his sixth wife. So we had this tradition that every Tuesday without fail at 5 p.m. I left the office and
my wife and I did a date night. And at first when you announced that that's going to happen,
everyone goes, yeah, yeah, yeah, sure. But I was serious. If there was a crisis, well,
we're going to resolve by 5 p.m. Okay, you have to talk to me. Great. On the way to the car,
fantastic things happen. Can you please speak about this decision and how you stuck to it and implemented it?
Because I know a lot of couples, and I'm part of one of them, who have kind of committed to this,
but then it falls by the wayside. This happens a lot. And I would love to hear you tell your story
and share any advice that you have for people who might want to emulate this.
I've always had my priority to be balance.
And like everyone, I screwed it up.
But I was able to self-correct right about when I turned 30.
So of course, during my 20s and late 20s, I worked like a dog.
And my girlfriend then, now my wife, I think that was hard on the relationship.
The fact that I would go and work on weekends. I would be there till 8 or 9 o'clock at night, essentially squeezing in my relationship
in whatever spare time was left from the business that I was working on.
But I was also shortchanging not just her, I was shortchanging myself.
My passion is outdoors.
My passion is backcountry skiing and mountain biking and surfing and kayaking and alpine
climbing.
And these are not things that you can squeeze in between your 11 o'clock and your one
o'clock calls. If you want to be able to continue to do those, you've got to make space for them.
And so I kind of had this moment where I said, I am not going to lose these two important parts
of my life and began compartmentalizing. And that's when the date nights started. And it was not just Netflix,
it was other companies prior to that where they saw this happen. And people talk all about
corporate culture. And they write manifestos, and they put together slideshows, and they carve it
in their building cornerstone. But culture is not what you say, it's what you do. And so people all preach about, we believe in balance and take
care of yourself. And then they don't act it. And what was so fascinating about me having that
discipline that at least one night a week, I would leave at five o'clock, no matter what was going on,
is that once I got through the first two or three months of it,
it got immeasurably easier because people stopped asking. They stopped trying to put
meetings on the calendar after five on Tuesdays. They realized they were going to have to resolve
this crisis on their own or do it before five if they wanted me to help. And the best part, the best part was that everyone
else began realizing that they could do this, that they could not only leave at five o'clock
on Tuesday because they realized there was nothing that I was going to drive that was going to pull
them back. I was modeling how I really wanted the culture of that company to be. And I'm still
pretty busy, but I still manage to get away
and go for a five or six day backcountry skiing trip. I still get to fly up to, you know,
Northern Alaska and do two weeks in the Noatak River because I make space for that. And I
prioritize that space and the things I have to get done. I make sure I get them done before I leave
and they're prepared to get picked up by someone else while I'm gone, and then I can jump back in when I return. And it's hard, but it's important.
It does not happen if you wait until, let's see if I have enough time. It only happens if you
make that time. How did you land on Tuesday nights? And did it start off on a different night and just not work to end up on
Tuesday? I don't remember. Yes, it moves around and it moves. So, you know, the shorthand every
Tuesday is probably a little bit just making it a simpler story. The point is, it's every week.
And a lot of times the babysitter can't do it on a Tuesday, so fine, we're going to do it on a
Thursday. But it wasn't so much the discipline of that. It was the fact that this is going to happen.
And this is going to happen before anything else gets scheduled. But I would say by and large,
it was Tuesdays or sometimes Wednesdays. Could you tell a story of a time that it was stress tested,
where there was a crisis that was large enough or a situation that seemed important enough where
you're like, God, I really, it would
be, it would probably be best for the business for me to push date night. Are there any examples of
how you've navigated that, that you could share? Yes, of course there are. The founder of Knowles,
a guy named Paul Petzl, used to say, rules are for fools. Because in the mountains, things happen. And even though
all of your processes and systems, they do it one way, sometimes you got to do it a different way.
And it's also like people I know who are really disciplined about their eating. Listen, once in
a while, you got to let loose. You've got to be able to fall off the eating well wagon and have,
you know, six slices of pizza.
But it's fine as long as you get back on the next day.
It's one of the core principles of meditation is that, oops, I've gotten distracted.
Let's get back to it.
So yes, there were certainly circumstances where those Tuesday rules got broken.
But they were dramatically the exception.
And the trick was when recognizing when it happened and not to have that be the camel's
nose under the tent, but to say that was a once in a long period exception. And certainly things
that happens when Netflix went public, when we were fighting for our life with Blockbuster, when there's personnel
crises that I just have to be there for. But it's certainly, it's something that my partner,
my best friend can understand because she sees that the consistency is there on the other side
of it. And that if I'm saying this one time, I need to do this,
that I'm not just making it up. Not an excuse. Can you make any recommendations? So number one,
I love the expression, camel's nose under the tent. I've never heard that before in my life.
It sounds amazing. Sounds like the good title for a parable of some type. And the question I have is,
what advice could you give to people who want to implement a date night?
Like, what are some tactical pieces of advice or best practices, recommendations for those who are starting off with some training wheels?
They don't even know what to do.
Does that mean watching a movie and eating popcorn?
Is it going out and having dinner?
Let's pretend that COVID doesn't exist just for the moment.
What are some of the things you've learned over time?
Any recommendations? Yeah, absolutely. First of all, these aren't one size fits all.
This worked for my wife and I. This worked for the type of business I was in where I was the boss,
and I could do this. Obviously, you may not be able to do this if you work for someone else.
You can't just go, I'm leaving at five o'clock. Thanks very much. It's recognizing the principle behind it and saying, what would work
for me? That's part one. Part two is do not design a New Year's resolution with 18 different things
in it. Any of us who've made resolutions know you're lucky if you can make one of them happen.
No less trying to have this
aspirational list of all the things that you think would be wonderful if they happened. So start
small. Say, I'm going to put my phone away every Saturday from nine in the morning until Sunday
morning and be present and see how that feels. I mean, in other words, take steps which are possible.
Take steps which are manageable.
And then the third thing I'd recommend
is I'm a big believer in establishing habits.
And this, of course, has been beaten to death,
but doesn't make it any less true,
is that pick something and try to stick with it.
It is more important to find something
that you can reasonably do over the long haul than
it is to make this a huge jump but not be able to hang on to it.
And it's with practice, with realizing that, wow, if I don't do email all weekend, the
world didn't end.
Or if I say I'm going to do it from after five on sundays that no one
Freaked out
Maybe I can try something a little bit different in a few months
That's all
Doesn't need to be what i've done or what worked for me. It's what works for for you. It's the principle. It's that
business is
Secondary and I really believe that you know, you can have all the money in the world,
but if you don't have a strong relationship or you're not doing the things that make you happy
when you're not at work, what's the point, you know? Let's talk about that type of clarity.
And specifically what I have down here in my notes as a moment of clarity that you experienced
through which you found your purpose in life. So that's a statement I definitely want to unpack.
And that seems to have led to writing your book
and ultimately to your new podcast.
What was this moment of clarity?
What was the purpose that you found clarity around?
I've had two big phases in my life.
And I have to briefly, I have to give you the first piece
because that'll explain what happened in the second one. And I've always believed that if you get older, you are incredibly
lucky if you find out two things, two important things about yourself. And the first is, what are
you good at? And the second thing is, what do you enjoy? And I was remarkably lucky early in my life, in my early 20s,
to discover those things. And even more lucky that they were both the same thing. And it was
early stage stuff. It was entrepreneurship. It was starting things. I love it. I love that
challenge. I love the problem solving. I love sitting around the table with the smart people
solving really hard problems. And here's the immodesty alert.
I'm actually really good at it.
And just because I have some of those innate skills, maybe it's from all the direct marketing
stuff.
Maybe it's just that I'm really good at focus or have an innate sense of triage.
But I've been incredibly lucky that I've gotten to pursue that for 40 years.
And I started a bunch of companies,
all of which were so exciting and so fun, and two of them, which did remarkably well economically
too. And that was my purpose for the first 50 some odd years of my life. And then I had left
Netflix, and I had left Netflix back in 2002, no, 2003.
So quite a while ago.
And I was drifting a little bit.
I mean, I was pretty fulfilled because I was mentoring other early stage companies.
I was working with entrepreneurs.
I was kind of getting my fix.
And then I got invited to come to Necker Island, which is Richard Branson's, you know, founder, virgin, billionaire, his private
island in the British West Indies, to come for four days and hang out on the beach and kite surf
and party. And that's pretty special. And I said, no, thank you. And that decision lasted about as long as it took to tell my wife about it.
And then all of a sudden, no, I'm canceling my boys' mountain bike week
that I had planned for that same time, and all of a sudden we're buying sunscreen.
But it wasn't all going to be this fun and games.
I was going to Necker Island because they wanted me to do a 40-minute presentation on turning dreams into
realities for a conference of women successful business owners. And the title of this conference
was Finding Your Purpose. And I was going to my wife. I go, ah, we'll go. I'll do my bit. And then
we'll spend three to four days on the beach. Not so bad. I went, gave my speech, and I decided I'd hang out and listen
and find out what this finding your purpose stuff is all about. And I listened to the first speaker,
and then I sat down in the chair again. And then the second speaker and put my towel under my chair.
And one day led into the next, to the next, and pretty much I had realized I had dramatically overbought on sunscreen. But it made me think, what is my purpose? I was here as a speaker, but it was
speaking to me. And I was going, I have this amazing platform because Netflix has done remarkably well,
largely since I left for the things that have nothing to do with me, except perhaps my DNA
and the foundation I established. But because of it,
people will, I can get 10,000 people to come sit and hear me speak for an hour. I can get thousands of people to read things that I've written. But what am I doing with that? What's
the point? What do I really believe in that I want to use this thing for? And it was that,
like you said, that moment of clarity where there was where I was not doing the right things with it. And I had to change it. And what I decided simply
was this, that all this 40 years of being an entrepreneur and all these tips and tricks and
secrets that I learned to get startups off the ground were, not surprisingly, the exact same tips and tricks and secrets and
approaches and attitudes that you could use to get any idea off the ground. And that all of us
have these great ideas, but that most of us never act on them. And I decided then and there that
that was my purpose, was to give people that nudge, give them that support, give them that encouragement
that says, I can do this. I can have this idea. I've always wanted to do this. It doesn't need
to be a business. It could be, I'd love to live in the city, but I can't afford it. Well,
how can I figure this out? I'd love to change jobs. How can I make that happen? How do I start?
And it led to the book, That Will Never Work, which on one hand is the starting and growing
of Netflix, but it's really more
fundamentally these lessons about how do you take an idea and make it real? For years, I've been
mentoring early stage companies. I've been doing these hour-long advisory calls when people write
me and go, I'm struggling with this, with that. And I say, let's get on the phone for an hour and
let me see what I can do to help. And about a year ago, I began recording those calls because
I thought this might be interesting to somebody. And it was remarkable because when I did play
these tapes for people, it totally resonated with them. They empathize with the protagonists who
are struggling. Some of the tips I was giving them, they could apply to their own stories.
And that fundamentally is what led to me saying, this is an opportunity to actually make it
even more broadly available, which is what led to the That Will Never Work podcast, where
it's basically not me interviewing people.
It's me just doing what I do all the time, which is helping other early stage entrepreneurs
take that idea and make it real, or take the idea they've already made real and
bring it to the next level, or turn their side gig into a real gig. It's been remarkable. And
it's just so fulfilling. And to be quite honest, it's not entirely altruistic. I still get now
to sit down with people and sit around that table and solve these really interesting problems, But I don't now need to stay until one in the morning working on it.
So that will never work, the podcast. This is where you dispense the advice, encouragement,
and tough love to an assorted cast of characters, including struggling entrepreneurs. Could you
give us a teaser of the format? It sounds like it's
conversational, just like these phone calls that you recorded. Can you tell us about any of the
people who make an appearance or the types of people? Well, what's really fascinating is when
I started doing this, I kind of thought, I'm going to run out of topic, that we're going to hear the same things over and over again.
Do I do an app or how do I raise money? But what you realize is everyone's struggling with
something different. And they're all coming with these incredibly fascinating businesses.
One of the young women that I interviewed early on is that she worked for a pickup artist for 10
years, the kind of people who train men to pick up women.
And she finally said, this is totally awful. And she started a business that helps people
find genuine connection, men and women, and is running these seminars to do that,
but was struggling with how to build the funnel to end up making this an economically sustainable business. Well, that was a fascinating business. Another woman runs, and this is not the theme, so don't
draw too many lines between these. She runs an erotic art gallery online and selling very,
very high-end quality erotic art. But of course, the most obvious place for her to promote
would be social media, but she keeps getting banned.
And so she's struggling with how do I walk that fine line?
How can I perhaps lean into this problem and become maybe a spokesperson for unreasonable censorship?
Another person is on the verge of breaking ground on a 60,000 square foot indoor adventure park in Texas
with things like zip lines and repellings and beer.
Now, what could go wrong with that? But what he was calling about was he realizes that once this
thing is open, that's an 80 to 100 hour work week. How is he going to maintain balance in his life
with all of this happening? It's just, they've been, they're remarkable stories.
They're interesting people.
They're funny.
And I learned things and I'm hoping that people who are listening will
not only be entertained, but also learn something as well.
Sounds incredible.
I can't wait to listen.
And That Will Never Work can be found wherever podcasts are found,
or is there a particular outlet?
Is it exclusive anywhere or is it a particular outlet? Is it exclusive
anywhere, or is it non-exclusive and ubiquitous? Well, we're trying to make it ubiquitous,
but I'm pretty sure unless you have some very obscure podcast platform that you prefer,
well, you'll find it in all the obvious places. Perfect. Well, I just have maybe one more
question. One or two more questions for you. And this has been so much fun.
So this is a question that sometimes leads to a dead end.
So it's not always easy to answer,
but I'll try it anyway because it's fun. And that is, if you had a billboard, metaphorically speaking,
on which you could put an image, a quote, a question,
a fortune cookie, mantra, anything to get that message to billions
of people, assuming they would understand what's up there, what might you put on such a bill?
Oh, God. Oh, this question, you're not going to believe. Oh, this is really, it's, well,
you know, we, early on, we said we, I would be very transparent and vulnerable, because I actually, I've had this discussion with my family before.
And a quick background on this.
Doesn't have to be quick.
I've got all the time in the world.
Okay, good.
Me too.
Take your time.
So four or five years ago, maybe a bit more, maybe 10 years ago, I was driving, I live in Santa Cruz, California,
which is pretty much the most politically
left-leaning city in the most politically left-leaning state. And I was driving by,
and it was one of those things where everyone was protesting. And I can't remember what the
issue was, but it was one of those things like, you know, honk if you're for this. But everybody was for that.
And I go, why are you,
if you really believe so strongly in change,
why are you doing it here?
That issue is going to win 99 to 1.
Why don't you, why aren't you going and doing that on the corner in Arkansas,
whatever the politically opposite,
polar opposite is from California, from Santa
Cruz. And it gave me an idea, as always does. Usually when I come up with something that's a
problem, instantly comes up with the idea. And I was going, what if you made a platform that allowed
people to do that? Which is they have an issue they feel strongly about. How could they now
express that concern,
but do so in a place where it actually might make a difference? Try and advocate for the issue you believe in in a place where that is actually being contested. And I don't mean presidential
swing state things. I mean small issues. And then I go, well, a cool thing would be if these were
crowdsourced campaigns. And I think the way to test it is to do billboards,
that we will do a crowdsourced contest for this issue
of what the billboards should say,
and then people will vote with their dollars
on which billboard,
with the understanding that whatever billboard wins,
that all the money flows to that billboard,
and then the money goes to actually running that billboard
someplace else in the country or in the world. And of course, that idea didn't go anywhere. But one of the things we were
joking about is what would be the universal billboard to put up? And my family loves these
types of exercises because they very quickly veer toward the absurd. So the reason I was so
embarrassed that you asked this, and I will confess what the billboard we decided we would
put up everywhere would be. And it would largely be to support horse owners that we know. And
it would say hoof, okay, and then a big heart, and then ED. You know, hoof-hearted.
That is the billboard.
I can't believe I said that.
Well, you know, I'm being transparent.
Hoof-hearted.
Or hoof-love erectile dysfunction.
Or there are so many different ways to read this.
I like that it's kind of a... You're going to have to write it out.
It's kind of a Rorschach test.
Yeah, it's kind of a Rorschach test.
It's like a license plate.
It's a hoof, H-O-F, then a picture of a heart, and then E-D.
Hoof-hearted.
Oh, I get it.
Hoof-hearted.
Hoof-hearted.
Hoof-hearted, yeah.
I know.
I haven't lost hope in this billboard, universal billboard idea.
Mark, I would expect no less from mark the
seagull randall and uh this has been so much fun i really appreciate you taking the time uh and
i've greatly enjoyed this is there anything else you would like to say or share or request of this
audience before we wrap up any closing comments at all that you'd like to make?
Certainly, I would really have missed my chance
if I didn't say something to the people
who are listening here.
I talked before about what kind of my whole purpose
is trying to give people this nudge.
And all my years as an entrepreneur,
all my six, seven companies,
all the people that I've worked with,
all the companies I've coached,
the most fundamental thing I've learned that separates the people is they start.
They stop thinking and they start doing. And if I could encourage every single person here who has
an idea, and I know you all have an idea. I know everyone who's taken a shower has had an idea.
But what really separates people is the ones who actually get out of the shower and do something about it, to paraphrase Nolan Bushnell. And so I would just say, think about that. Think
about the next time you have the idea that you don't make an excuse, that you don't say, well,
I need a co-founder. Yeah, I need an MBA. I need financing. That's ridiculous. If you have an idea,
the only way you're going to find out if it's a good idea is to do it.
So take that swing.
Here, here, take that swing.
Markrandolph.com,
at thatwillneverwork on Instagram,
Twitter, mbrandolph,
Facebook, Mark B. Randolph,
LinkedIn, Mark Randolph,
and of course we'll link to all of these things
and more in the show notes
at tim.blog forward slash podcast. Mark, thank you so much for all the time.
Tim, it was such a pleasure. And thank you so much for the time. I really appreciate it.
And to everybody out there listening, thank you for tuning in. And until next time,
get out there in the world, take that swing. Hey guys, this is Tim again. Just a few more things before you take off.
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