EPISODE
17

#17 - Keto Ceral, Specialized Job Boards, Digital AA Meetings

Oct 13, 2019·25:00·Sam & Shaan·Listen·AppleSpotify
0:0012:3025:00
15 moments · 164 paragraphs · synced to the second
SHAAN

Oh, really? Yeah. Okay, wait, we gotta do that. We are here. It is, I don't know what the name we're gonna choose for this, but right now it's called Million Dollar Brainstorm.

SAM

I had people tweet at me. Yeah, what'd you get? Using that name.

SHAAN

That name, okay, good. I think the expectations are a little high. I want these to be ideas that may or may not be million dollar ideas, but we're back. We got good feedback last week, so we said let's do it again. The idea with this is every Friday morning me and Sam get together And instead of getting breakfast, we sort of shoot the shit on different ideas, different trends, different businesses that are cooking in your brain.

SAM

And so you and I have access to a lot of people that quote, normal people don't have access to just because we— and so let's just use the stories that we're hearing and we can kind of put two and two together and tell everyone else who doesn't have the same access.

SHAAN

Yeah. Before this one, I was like asking for permission from a bunch of people. I was like, hey, can I talk about that idea you said? Or this week I'm not going to do those, but by next week, hopefully I have.

SAM

But we have friends who run or own multibillion-dollar companies or companies that have sold for no big deal. Yeah. Like these like huge, they're either friends or acquaintances enough that we like are like, oh, I heard this guy's trying this thing.

SHAAN

Those guys that I call friends and they like half remember my name.

SAM

Yeah. Yeah. Well, but we definitely have insider information that we can kind of, uh, share.

SHAAN

Okay. So what is this box you just put on?

SAM

Yeah, I just put a box on Sean's desk. It's my sperm. Uh, so last week, last week we talked about sperm banks. It's all clean.

SHAAN

Okay.

SAM

So you can open that box up. It's clean. I, everything's Everything's good. It's called Daddy.

SHAAN

Is this real?

SAM

Yeah, so take that white bit off. Okay, and then you can open the box.

SHAAN

Oh man, this is a total unboxing. This is great.

SAM

Okay, open the box. Okay, now don't touch that thing.

SHAAN

Okay, I've reached the final boss.

SAM

Yeah, so I went and tried it. It's gonna be $100 a year.

SHAAN

$100 a year called this service called Daddy. D-A-D-I-S-S-E. Yeah, and this looks good. This looks like an Apple product here. Looks like a pair of headphones or something. Yeah, and so inside is your sperm and You're gonna freeze this for how long?

SAM

I don't know yet. I just, we talked about it last week and I think it's a really good idea, so I'm gonna try it. Okay. So we'll see. I'll know maybe in 2 weeks.

SHAAN

What did you see in there? Did you see a bunch of other people? Were they all people of different ages? Like, did you notice anything else while you were there or?

SAM

Oh no.

SHAAN

Oh, they mailed this to you.

SAM

They just mailed it to me.

SHAAN

Oh, okay. Even better.

SAM

Yeah. And I actually talked to loads of men who are my age or even younger and a lot of 'em are doing it. So I think that this whole sperm bank thing is actually way bigger than I actually anticipated. I'm gonna pay $100 a year for it. I went into it thinking to pay for 20 years.

SHAAN

Right. Okay. Wow. All right. Awesome.

SAM

Okay.

SHAAN

So that's one. That's a, that's a follow-up from last week, really.

SAM

Yeah. And I have one more follow-up from last week. So, okay, great. We talked about looking at competitors. So there's this woman on Twitter, her name is Jane Wong, but her handle is Wong M Jane. So W-O-N-G-M-J-A-I-N-E. A-N-E. All she does is she reverse engineers apps.

SHAAN

Yes. She's, uh, like Facebook's kryptonite, right? She always finds the new Facebook features before Facebook rolls them out.

SAM

Yeah. She's great. So that's a good follow. My friend Patrick texted me and showed me that. And then another great tweet that I found, there was a study. I found it again through Patrick and, and this guy named Cameron tweeted it out. So they did a study, I think tens of thousands of men, most men above age 50 claim they felt masculine. Most men below age 35 said they do not feel masculine. And we were talking about TRT stuff and I think I was like, I think this stuff's gonna get more popular. Yeah. And I think that's one data point that shows that it might be bigger than we had said. Yeah.

SHAAN

You know, not all the ideas that we say on this are like great ideas. That's like, you know, it's a brainstorm, but unless the sperm bank for me, the TRT one, I'm like, oh my God, that, that is a great idea. There's another name that I wanna find. So I'm gonna try to half Google while I'm doing this. There's somebody on Twitter who is, you were talking about competitors. There's a woman on Twitter who talks a lot about e-commerce stuff, and there's a lot of accounts on Twitter that are sort of like, I make 6 figures doing dropshipping, you should too.

SAM

Like scammy stuff.

SHAAN

She's kind of like that, like she sells guides, but she puts out a lot of free content on her Twitter that she tries to sell more of on the guide, and her free content's actually pretty good. So she was talking about like, how do you find who supplies the brands that you buy? What she was showing was, you know, they all get manufactured outside of the US usually, so they have to come in through customs. So you actually go to these 2 customs registries You search the company's brand name and you can see who they're receiving shipments from. You go look those companies up and oh, what do you know? These tend to be the manufacturers of that product. I would love to see that. And so you can go work backwards. You could find those exact suppliers and it's pretty clever.

SAM

So, and a lot of times I've noticed you can do that when you, so I'll like want to know who a supplier is and I'll buy the product.

SHAAN

And if you look inside the box, right, you read the label, you try to find it.

SAM

Yeah. If you look in the box, like in the cardboard box, a lot of times, or you can reverse search the sender mailing address. Anyway, there's a bunch of really cool things that you could do. We should actually talk about that. Okay. Uh, another time.

SHAAN

Yeah. Cool. All right. What else you got? We got, cuz we gotta go quick today. We only got 20 minutes left.

SAM

Okay. So some new ideas here. You wanna talk about that? Yes. Okay. Oh, first of all, we had a ton of people sign up for Trends after this and I got in trouble for giving out a code when I shouldn't have.

SHAAN

Okay.

SAM

So if you use that code, you better hurry up and use it now.

SHAAN

Otherwise it's gonna go away.

SAM

It's gonna go away. And if you wanna sign up, we put a special offer at trends.co/million. Okay. And so we'll be in there, or I'll be in there. I think you are too. And we'll be talking, but that's like a, a special discount code for people. Otherwise use the other one, but I'll get in trouble that we said last time. Okay. So two things happened over the last week that we had written about in Trends. The first thing, or like a follow-up, the first thing, RigUp.

SHAAN

Yes.

SAM

Okay. So I have had this hypothesis for a few months now that I think hyper-focused job boards, there's a huge opportunity. The reason why is in 2011 or '09, or Fred Wilson wrote a post saying that indeed.com was one of the best companies he ever invested in. I think he said it was the best.

SAM

Yeah. Okay. Indeed. And he was explaining the mechanics behind job boards and it was pretty amazing.

SHAAN

And so, and what's the mechanics? It's just, here's a bunch of job postings.

SAM

So the way a job, a lot of people don't actually understand how a job posting works, but basically there's like 2 or 3 models behind it, but they're all great. The first one is, so as the job board, you have to attract traffic. Yes. So you need people who are looking for that job to come to your website. Okay. To make money, what you have to do is you do a couple things. The first thing, which is what Indeed does, I think they mostly do this, is an employer will sign up and for every click or email that they get from a high-intent job seeker, they'll pay Indeed a certain amount of money.

SHAAN

Right. For every lead, basically.

SAM

For every lead. Yeah. It's a lead gen site and a lot of people don't even know how that works, like lead gen site, but that's basically how how it works. So as a business owner, I own a business, I'm more than happy to pay money to get people to my careers page or to send me their email of highly interested people. And then if they send me 50 people, I can pay them $50 an email and then I can go and try and close a handful of them. Right. The second way it works is, and I think this is how it works in Behance, is they pay a subscription.

SHAAN

The company itself pays a membership basically.

SAM

Yeah. So you pay $500 a month to have your job posting on there and they promise a minimum number of email sends to an email list.

SHAAN

Right. Okay. So job boards are good, been around forever, but RigUp, it seems like, is a, like a, it's a job board just for one niche. I believe it's in the oil and gas industry.

SAM

Oil and gas industry. And here's why that's interesting. I think that the formula for finding a job board that would work, you gotta do an equation. This is how you'd rank what's interesting, which is how many openings there are available in the field. Okay. So how many openings there are in a field multiplied by the salary of that job multiplied by the amount of friction it takes to get that job. Okay. So for example, self-driving car engineers, right? They might make on average $500,000 a year. That's probably on the high end, but let's just say that that's true. Okay. So if they make $500,000 a year, what's the supply of those folks? How many of those people are there in the world? Probably not a lot, right? Person hiring a self-driving car engineer would probably be willing to pay $100 or $200 just to get an introduction to someone who is open.

SHAAN

Yeah. Much more than that.

SAM

Much more than that.

SHAAN

Yeah, right. Thousands of, thousands of dollars. A company who's Google, when they hire a self-driving car person, you know, the base recruiter fee is like $30 grand if they place the person. And I think for niche jobs like this, it can go upwards of $50, $100 grand.

SAM

So maybe they would pay $1,000 a lead. Yeah. So if you can create the, the idea here now is if you can build this audience of high-intent self-driving car job seekers, if you can build that audience, you can earn for this argument, and it might be true, $1,000 per applicant that you send. And they're not— they don't have to land the job. They just have to show that they're interested in the job. Right. And so you have to do this math to figure out what's interesting. One thing that's incredibly interesting, and I said this was interesting a few months ago, was the oil field industry. The reason why that's interesting is you can have minimal education. I don't think you need a bachelor's degree. There's a whole bunch of those jobs available and the salary is like $100 grand. That's amazing. So high amount of supply, huge demand, pretty good salary. And so RigUp came along and they created a whole bunch of tools to attract these job seekers. And now they're charging the companies on the back end and they just raised maybe 3 or 4, like hundreds of millions of dollars from Andreessen Horowitz at like a multibillion-dollar valuation.

SHAAN

Yeah. Shout out Jeff Lewis. The original investor in RigUp is one of the best unknown investors or underrated investors out there. We're not really buddies. He wrote a term sheet to us. He was the first guy. You know, we did a— it was Christmas Eve or something like that, which everyone says investors, you know, they go away for Christmas. Yeah, they do. But if they're interested, they'll hunt you down. I was in Argentina. You know, we did a Skype call and 24 hours later he put a term sheet down. Like, this guy moves quick. He was at Founders Fund at the time. Now he's got his own fund. We didn't end up taking it because we had a cheaper source of capital. But I remember being very impressed with him and he's built a badass portfolio. He's got Wish, Lyft, Tilray, which is like this company in Canada that's, it was a weed company that went public already, unless I'm mixing up the names.

SAM

Jeff Lewis?

SHAAN

Yeah. Lambda School, RigUp, like this guy's got a killer portfolio. Anyways, so.

SAM

Good on him.

SHAAN

RigUp's good. Also Incredible Health, which was, Iman was on the podcast. That's a vertical, that's a niche job board like you're talking about where nurses is her field where.

SAM

That's another great one. Good pay. Nurses is a great one.

SHAAN

Huge demand.

SAM

And so a lot, well, but the thing is, is that a lot of people will see these companies and they won't actually understand what they're doing. They're like RigUp or Incredible Health, they're just offering all this free stuff. How the heck do they make money? Right. It's on the jobs. Right. Um, like that is on the job. So let's talk about other jobs that are interesting. Okay. Okay. Airline pilots.

SHAAN

Mm-hmm.

SAM

I was doing research. I think there's a nice size shortage of airline pilots. They're gonna exist for a long time. There's not that many of 'em, but, and I don't think there's a significant amount of people studying them as well as the job boards that I looked at seem pretty antiquated.

SAM

If you go to, you can go to Tinyboards. So tinyboards.co, it's my friend Andrew. He has done this for designers. He's done it for like 4 or 5 different verticals. I don't remember all the verticals. I think AI engineers. And he says it's doing wonderful. Excellent. It's doing great. Okay. Okay. So pilots are interesting. Construction workers I think are interesting because the average pay I would imagine for a construction worker is at least $25 an hour. Yeah. You need a lot of construction workers to get a project done. I imagine Rig Up would actually go down that route. Yes. And then finally, something that I've actually tested is truck drivers.

SHAAN

What do you mean you've tested it? You've actually tried this out?

SHAAN

Hmm. And how did your experiment go?

SAM

It made money. So I do all these experiments all the time. I rarely do I actually like follow through, follow, like make 'em big. Right. Because I already have a job and I'm happy, but I like to do these things for fun and sometimes maybe we'll hire some people to run 'em. But anyway, so I went and contacted people who could buy the leads and I go, okay, how much would you buy leads for? They said, we'd buy this type of lead for $10, this type of lead for $100. So I got a range of $10 to $100 for truck drivers that have commercial licenses. If you read about— there's a huge truck shortage right now, truck driver shortage. There's a reason. The reason why there's a truck driver shortage is they're not making a ton of money and it's a really hard job and young people aren't doing it. And so that definitely puts a kink in that idea. But if you think about what America does, one of our biggest things is logistics. We have a huge country and as commerce goes up, that's going to just grow with it. Right. And my father owns a company that works with truckers. I have a lot of insight to this. So trucking is incredibly interesting to me. Okay. So, all right. So we're going to put a pin in this.

SHAAN

Next one, specialty job boards. Interesting idea number one. Give me another idea.

SAM

Did we talk about paywall software last time? No. Okay. I'll reveal some stuff. Okay. So at The Hustle, I think we're paying $3,000 a month for a paywall software. It is awful.

SHAAN

What does this do?

SAM

Okay. How does this work? So there's Substack out there. Substack is cool. They just raised money. They are a paywall software for newsletters. So you can really easily collect money and send people exclusive newsletters for a monthly fee. Right. Great. I talked to the founder. I go, hey, are you gonna open this up to web-based stuff? 'Cause that's what I need. He said no. And so the idea here is if you go, go to the New New York Times and you'll see how some stuff's paywalled and some isn't. They built that software from scratch. I think they built it from scratch probably because they were using the provider that we're using now and they realized how horrible it was. I went and spoke to Business of Fashion. You know, Business of Fashion?

SHAAN

No.

SAM

It's a great website. They just raised money from financialtimes.com. They had to build their own. Wall Street Journal built their own. The Economist built their own. Like so many people are building their own. TechCrunch, I've heard, is spending north of 6 figures in software fees in order to use this vendor that we're using as well. Wow. It's a pain in the butt.

SHAAN

And so, so it's asking for a challenger.

SAM

Oh my God. It's so like, I will give someone right now $5,000 a month if they made this to try to, to try to start this. Yes.

SHAAN

Right. Okay. Love it. What else you got?

SAM

AA. We wrote about this a while ago. Okay. There's something like 20 million people in AA. I got to go look at the exact stats, but we wrote about this idea of AA. There's so many Alcoholics Anonymous. Of course. The amount of people that have a drinking problem in America is huge. AA is the biggest one. They have tens of millions of members. If you've ever gone to an AA meeting, it's intimidating and it's old school. I mean, it's just a bunch of people who come from various walks of life who are all screwed up and they're just sitting in a room, a circle of 10 people explaining why they're screwed up and helping each other. It seems it's pretty effective. But we wrote about this company called Tempest that is creating an online version of this that costs a fee.

SHAAN

So it's like an app.

SAM

Yeah. And they just actually raised a round of funding, I think, in the last few days. I'm quite interested in this whole addiction thing and how we can help people get through that. The problem is, is if you have an addiction, there's like a huge barrier to entry in order to try to fix your addiction. Right. And that barrier to entry is mostly embarrassment or having to go to like the sperm bank because that's like weird. Right. Right. And so what I'm interested in is how will that be solved for digital?

SHAAN

Right. Can you do it more personal, more intimate? More sort of frictionless, more conveniently.

SAM

Yes, I think that's going to be interesting. And I didn't realize how big the demand was.

SHAAN

Yeah, either as a replacement or a supplement to the in-person stuff.

SAM

Yeah. And what you can do is you can go to AA's website and you could see— I'm almost positive they might have like 50 million members. Then when I think of ideas, one of the ways that I think of ideas is I look at where's demand and work backwards and work backwards. There's a ton of demand there.

SHAAN

Okay, I got an idea for you. Came from the Trends Facebook group, so Shout out to Ben Curtis and Alan Tucker. All right. So they brought up this idea of a hunting and fishing D2C brand. So you posted about MeatEater. MeatEater. I had never heard of this. Huge. Of course, because I'm like, you know, snowflake in California that doesn't know anything about any of this. My testosterone's low. I don't— I don't go hunting.

SAM

I looked at their traffic. Their traffic's not big. I have to figure out where the revenue is coming from.

SHAAN

But they have a lot of revenue.

SAM

You're saying they raised money at a huge valuation. And I talked to people who were investors and they said the revenue was big.

SHAAN

Okay, so that was kind of interesting. I didn't know about it. And then these guys brought up in the group, they were like, hey, hunting and fishing is this underserved category asking essentially for a D2C brand. So go back and listen to the podcast with Moise, who started Native deodorant, and basically think about, okay, that appealed to a certain set. You know, Native is mostly for women who are, you know, health conscious and don't want to have aluminum in the deodorant. The hunting and fishing vertical, which is very much brick and mortar today. Can you create a digital brand that sells either accessories?

SAM

And Yeti did it.

SHAAN

Yeti did it. Yeti built a phenomenal success.

SAM

They built a $3 billion company for a hunting cooler.

SHAAN

Right, coolers, exactly.

SAM

Specifically like a hunting and fishing one.

SHAAN

And what these guys were pointing out was that you could first just make content, and so this is kinda like our buddy Ramon who does this with Facebook, how he did it with Facebook pages before he, he's got an episode 2 I think where he talks about how he built fan pages about soap operas, then built a blog about soap operas, and then sold that for $9 million. Same sort of thing you could do here. You could build fan pages around the hunting and fishing lifestyle, and then start to sell products into that group. And this is very much a middle American thing.

SAM

So which categories?

SHAAN

I don't know enough about hunting and fishing to know what is the, what is the product, but I would just, you know, go in what you were saying, go from the demand and work backwards.

SAM

Well, do you— that's what I would do. Do you know, guess how many Americans consider themselves hunter or fishers?

SHAAN

How many? Okay, I'm gonna say 15 million.

SAM

Okay, according to some preliminary research that I've done, a third.

SHAAN

Oh, so like 100 million.

SAM

105 million. Wow. Yeah, we were talking about this at our company and some people who are hunters and fishers said I said, I can't believe this is such a—

SHAAN

same number of people that drink water every day.

SAM

Right.

SHAAN

What's going on?

SAM

I was like, I was like, this is such a small niche. I can't believe they— and they're like, no, it's not small. And I'm like, well, it doesn't seem big because I live in San Francisco. Of course they go. And they were— did some research right there. And some studies said 105 million Americans. Yeah.

SHAAN

This is a— it's like a mega niche. It's like I work at Twitch right now and Twitch is, uh, it's this niche product, live streaming for video games and gamers. It's a mega niche, but it's a mega niche cuz there's so many gamers that you can do hundreds of millions of monthly users. Off of just gamers, which is crazy. Yeah.

SAM

And if you wanna learn more about this, there is this guy named Ryan Dice who I know— this isn't the same category, but there's a lot of survivalists, like people who, A—

SHAAN

that's the niche within hunting and fishing.

SAM

Yeah. Like this survivalist category, they think that the world's gonna end or they just don't wanna rely on the government. And so they wanna like prepare for apocalyptic, like type of things. And anyway, he built this blog for survivalists and it crushed it. If you don't believe in that type of stuff, I personally don't believe it. I respect you if you do believe in it. I don't. And so I would never wanna like make that stuff.

SHAAN

Okay. I wrote down another pseudoscience sort of one like this that you guys wrote about, which is this Ghostbusters thing. Did you read the story?

SAM

Yeah.

SHAAN

Yeah. Yeah. So the story was basically there's a service, there's like, I think it's an insurance service and one of their sub-offerings is a Ghostbuster service. If you believe that there's, your house is haunted or there's a ghost, they will come to your house. Yeah.

SAM

That's stupid.

SHAAN

And they will check and they will do the methods that don't, you know, don't mean anything. And people are paying for this because a lot of people are spooked. A lot of people believe in ghosts. And I just had to—

SAM

How many people do you think believe in ghosts?

SHAAN

Dude, I think it's the same. I think it's like a third of people believe in ghosts. I don't think they're all afraid of ghosts or think their house is haunted, but I think a third of people believe in ghosts.

SAM

It's crazy. That's crazy. I don't. I'm not part of that category. I believe in aliens, but not ghosts.

SHAAN

Okay. Tweet at me if you believe in ghosts. That's what I want to know at the end of this.

SAM

Or if you'd be willing to pay money for someone to come and get rid of ghosts.

SHAAN

But I just had to like pay respects to the person who was like, you know what? Let's do it. Let's sell Ghostbusters.

SAM

Well, and you know, that's actually true is because One of the most popular shows on TV for a long time was the Paranormal Activity shows on TLC.

SHAAN

Yeah, exactly. It's entertaining. It's a very entertaining thing. Okay. And the people who do believe, they're going to pay, right? The people who believe that their house is haunted, they're going to pay because it's like this, you know, incredibly like tense and stressful thing.

SAM

You just got to get in that televangelist.

SHAAN

Like, it's like, okay, give me another idea. We got 4 minutes left. Okay, let's get 2 more ideas on the books.

SAM

A company just launched 2 months ago and we covered it and on trends. We, I, I think we actually wrote about keto cereal before it launched. We looked at the search traffic and keto cereal was climbing like crazy. Magic Spoon. Have you heard of Magic Spoon?

SHAAN

I've heard of this cuz I've tried keto 3 times.

SAM

Magic Spoon. It's a cereal. I have a friend who, like a friend of a friend and they told me their stats booming. So I looked on LinkedIn. This is, this is not insider information. Anyone could do this. I looked on LinkedIn, looked at what the founders were doing before. It was something like a, a D2C thing that from the outside it seemed like it failed and then they like pivoted. And I have seen the traffic for keto cereal surge, like the amount of people who search it as well as the amount of posts on Reddit. Super fascinating. If you go and read P&G, Procter Gamble, or who all the other— Kellogg, all the other cereal makers— cereal accounts for like huge— I mean, I imagine like, like it could be like $50 billion a year.

SHAAN

Yeah. And it's like soda where the actual thing costs so little that all the money, the cost is all just marketing. Yeah, and so they marketed it through TV ads and everything else. And so the modern-day version of TV commercials is Facebook ads.

SAM

And I know people who have done this. So someone who spoke at HustleCon, which a lot— actually, a lot of these people who are talking about are gonna be at HustleCon. You should come. Like, for example, we're having the guys who started Method Soap and Ollie Supplement, and so we'll talk about this stuff. But anyway, this Magic cereal, I went to their website, super basic, slick but basic website. I think that thing's gonna that's going to crush, right? So Halo Top only raised $1 million. I think they're going to do— right. I think they're going to do north of $1 billion in sales this year. They paid off dividends to their angel investors. Wow. One of my guys who I'm buds with told me that he, like, made a living off that dividend.

SHAAN

Yeah. Halo Top is huge.

SAM

I think this keto cereal thing will be in the same category.

SHAAN

Yeah. And it might be that there's other things like this. Like, my wife is vegan and so we buy all this. Like, there's this candy company called Unreal that's all vegan candy. So it's like, you want Reese's, but you're vegan now. Well, guess what? We made the closest taste to Reese's that's vegan. And same thing with M&M's and same thing with other candies. And so vegan candy, keto cereals—

SAM

M&M's even has dairy in it.

SHAAN

Chocolate, milk chocolate, right?

SAM

I know, but that's what I don't know if it's real chocolate.

SHAAN

I didn't know, but it's not considered vegan from what I understand. And so even if it is technically vegan, it's sort of— a person who's vegan, it says something about their lifestyle. They usually don't want to be holding a bag of M&M's even if it is vegan, even if it, even if it technically is. And they would prefer to have these sort of more organic the more made of real ingredients version of it, willing to actually pay 3 times as much as M&M's for it. And so I wonder, you know, paleo, keto, vegan. I wonder which lifestyle you can piggyback off of and make one of those products that they repeat purchase all the time, like cereal.

SAM

I think this Magic Spoon thing, like my early results show, I think this thing's going to go to the moon.

SHAAN

Cool.

SAM

I like—

SHAAN

I have one more from trends that I like, and then you're going to finish this up. So miniature cooking set. I saw this on trends. It made a lot of sense to me because people love the miniature version of anything. There's something to seeing something that's, you know, you normally see at full size, mini pots and pans. And I think that as more people live in apartments and condos that are smaller and smaller, especially in cities, and people want to cook. And as the, you know, I think Tasty came out with their own skillet to pair with their recipe book.

SAM

And we wrote about that.

SHAAN

Yeah. And that was a clever idea. But I really like this idea of miniature modern cookware. I think something can be quite big there. It's not the business I would start., but it's one where if I see that product, if I see a good product that fits in that, I'm gonna, I would invest in that because I believe in the premise and I believe that anybody who does something innovative in cookware will be, will stand out from the pack because everything is so bland.

SAM

That's a big business. I think too, it's just creating really high quality cast iron skillets and things like that.

SHAAN

Absolutely. All right.

SAM

Last one. Can I say one more? Yeah. Okay. We have Wade Foster speaking at HustleCon. Wade started this company called Zapier. I call it Zapier, Zapier, something like that. Yeah. Million dollars raised. I think they're in the $60 million ARR.

SHAAN

Yes.

SAM

Which means they could be worth a lot like $500 million. Correct. It's only 4 years old, but this whole connecting APIs and this no-code economy thing, this whole no-code economy thing, if no-code's huge, if we want to call it no-code economy, whatever, that's gonna be bigger than the sharing, this whole sharing economy stuff. There's Webflow, Zapier, If This Then That, all these things.

SHAAN

It's, we should, we should do, we should do a whole, a whole sec section on no-code next time. Next Friday we'll do it.

SAM

I think it is just the coolest thing I've ever seen. And no-code websites still suck.

SHAAN

And shout out to Cindy, big listener of the podcast and original investor in Zapier and talks about it all the time cuz that company's kicking ass.

SAM

I love it. We, we just give them more money every month.

SHAAN

Yeah.

SAM

Great.

SHAAN

All right, Sam, we gotta run. Let's get back to life. Hopefully you guys like this and also we're gonna do a Q&A episode. So if you made it to the end of this, you're probably Hardcore. We're doing a Q&A episode, so I want you to email me your questions. It's puri.shawn@gmail.com. Send in your listener questions. We're gonna do a full Q&A on those. All right, we gotta go.

SAM

See you. Thank you.