"Sara's List" Update: 12 Startups Where Stock Grants Will Make You A Millionaire
So he lives in India and he is a one-man company that makes something between $15 and $30 million selling simple plugins for Google Docs.
If you, if you have $20 million a year of income, that is a huge unheard of sum. All right, we live. What's going on?
All right. I got a couple interesting things for you. Um, I'm going to start with this one-man company. So I got a, I saw a tweet, I got tagged in a tweet a bunch of times, the exact same one. And I think we should talk about this because this was very, is it the Google plugin guy?
Yes.
Yes. So, all right. So this guy, John Davids, uh, tweeted out a great thread and his handle is real, real John Davids. So shout out to him for doing this. And he's basically like, Dude, I discovered this guy and let me just tell you some things about this guy.
So how funny is it that something like this happens? And I, I know exactly what you're talking about because we, I got DM'd the amount, the same people probably DM'd me.
Well, that's when you know you're doing a good job when people see something and they think of you. Um, I tweeted this out. I go, people think you create content like a podcast or a YouTube channel to become well known, right? Oh, you want fame, you wanna become well known and Some people want that and there is some benefits to that, but that's not my goal with this stuff. My goal is to be known well, which means people know you really well. That means when they see something, they'll know to send it to you. They'll show it to you, they'll share it with you. They'll invest it with, they'll tell you to come invest in this deal with them. When you're known well, it's because you've put your brain out there on blast. People know how you think. And so when they see something that they know you'll love, they immediately think of you and they come share it with you. And so I would say the, even if you create content and you're never famous, it never takes often to become well known, you will become known well, and that alone is a big enough benefit to justify, um, creating content. All right. Anyway, so we were known well because these, uh, a bunch of people tagged us in this, this guy. So this guy, uh, what is his name? So his name's Amit Agarwal. So he lives in India and he is a one-man company that makes something between $15 and $30 million selling simple plugins for Google Docs and Google Drive and the Google, the G Suite of apps.
This is crazy. I didn't know that, that, that, that is, that is, that is sh— dude, making, if you, if you have $20 million a year of income, that's like the equivalent of, I would have to think about this and maybe someone who's thought about this is gonna say I'm an idiot and I'm getting it wrong, but making $20 million a year in income is probably the same as being worth like $500 million. Uh, lifestyle-wise, it definitely is like, like it's a huge, that is a huge unheard of sum.
So this guy, basically he's a, he goes to IIT, which is like the Harvard of, of India. He's a computer science guy. He moves back to his hometown. So he goes to the big city, comes back to his hometown, and in 2004 he starts off as like a tech blogger. He's just writing tips and tricks on how to use G Suite, and he creates a Gmail plugin that lets you do what's called a mail merge. A mail merge is basically like you want to email 100 people the same thing, but not in one group email and not even as a BCC, cuz you want to customize some component. Yeah.
I'm a paying customer of this product.
And so he created a plugin that just lets you do that in Gmail cuz there's a lot of services that will let you do that outside of Gmail. But like a lot of people just wanna run it inside their inbox and not like use some third-party app to send, send emails. So he creates this thing and that's, I think, his biggest hit. But he just starts writing go, like, you know, how-to guides on his website. His website's called Digital Inspiration. And so it'll be like, you know, how to calculate the percentage score in a Google Form, how teachers can email your parents, the, uh, email parents using Google Forms or something like that. And it's free, but then he has like a paid tier, $39 a year, $79 a year to get rid of like the branding and stuff like that. Email., you know, go past a limit of emails, something, something like that. And so his main mail merge thing has been downloaded 7.5 million times. And so if you assume like a, you know, 5% conversion rate to paid, he's doing $1.5 million in ARR just off of that one plugin. And he's got 13 more plugins. So he's got like his whole set of things. He's got this document management app called Document Studio and it lets you create documents, certificates, invoices using Google Sheets. And it's $79 million a year. 6 million downloads. He's got a notification app, $49 a year. He's got 10 million downloads. He's got a YouTube app, 8 million downloads. And then he creates one-off apps for big companies like Airbus, LinkedIn, Disney. Even the US Embassy has paid this guy to create custom G Suite things just for them. Like if you kind of blend this all together, you start doing some estimates. Like I, I, I DM'd the guy. I was like, hey, can you confirm what the number is? I don't wanna say the wrong number, but I'm gonna tell the story on the pod. He didn't. He didn't reply yet, but he, um, it's pretty safe to say this guy's doing more than $10 million a year and it could be as high as $25, $30 million if you're like really aggressive with how much he's getting from the enterprise customers. And, um, but somewhere between $10 and I'd say $25 million is a, is a fairly safe bet. How does he have, and I, and I see that he's doing simple, useful things.
He had 100,000 followers on Instagram. Is he famous for some reason? Like what, what's, cuz a guy like this seems under the radar.
I think his blog has a good amount of, uh, traffic. So I'm going to go open up his blog. Yeah. So his blog gets about 150,000 hits a month, uh, visitors a month. And so I think he probably just says, hey, this is made by me. And then people go follow him or something.
What's the tax rate in India? Do you know? Is it comparable to America or is it way worse or way better?
I don't know. But I, I remember hearing at one point that only 2% of the Indian population paid taxes. Really? The majority of the population just simply didn't pay taxes. This is a big problem in India because they're not banked either. So it's like, there's no way to track of things. Cash economy, you don't have a bank account.
It's like, there's like, not exist. Yeah. Taxes, no, it's not for me.
Yeah. It's optional. Uh, but I think that might have changed. This was like 10 years ago. I heard that stat and I was like, what the hell? Uh, so I'm sure that's changed over time.
Dude, what a baller. You know, this is so great. I think that the reason it's great is because it kind of breaks your frame on what's possible because these, like when you're in Google Docs, there's so many times where I'm like, man, I wish I'd just do this one thing. This just is one very, very specific thing. And I would never think this should be a product because I'm like, it's just me experiencing one tiny issue that if I learned how to program or learned how to do like, uh, this other thing, it would work perfectly fine. And this little, you know, thing is only gonna save me 5 minutes. It's not a big deal, but this is a good example of that. Um, that's sick. I use some of his products. They're really good.
By the way, now that the paying rate, I think is 6% of the population filed the tax return. And, uh, when was this? This was 2020.
So you think, wow, well, good for this guy. Hopefully he's one of the 94%.
Even if he is, dude, if you have like a million dollars in India, like you're a king. Um, you know, you don't need that much money to just ball out in small towns in India. Like you are set.
Well, I like this guy. What's the, uh, who's Carl Allen?
A billion dollars.
This story is kind of incredible. Also came to me from a, uh, a Twitter DM. Um, the guy's name is kind of like hard to It's not like his real name. I want to give him credit, but like, you know, I don't know what to call him. His Twitter handle is @EuroRepe, R-E-P-E. So @EuroRepe, he goes, I got a billionaire of the week for you, Carl Allen. He goes, sold a garbage bag company for $400 million.
I got this one too. This is so funny. I got the exact same one.
Now a full-time treasure hunter in the Bahamas. Okay. So who is this guy? You know, like the, uh, I don't know if you watch Game of Thrones, but in Game of Thrones, it's like, um, A Song of Ice and Fire. This is a song of garbage and treasure. This is, this guy basically is kind of an insane story. It's very hard to even find information about this guy. I don't know if you looked him up, but there's not a lot.
The only thing, like they didn't cover his business. They covered the fact that he was buying like a huge yacht, which is a great sign.
All of it's about his yacht. Yeah. So, so, all right. So, so here's what I do know. All right. So Carl Allen, he basically, he starts off working at this company called Heritage Bag and Heritage Bag makes plastic trash bags. So like they do it not just like normal trash bags, but like for medical waste or like hospital waste. But they'll make like anything that's like, uh, you know, ice bucket liners. Um, you know, the, like they'll make takeout boxes, anything that's like mass production manufacturing for, for like this really core utility, very similar to like eggcartons.com, the, the story that we told on the pod before. And so medical waste bags is, is their thing. He actually started off just like working there and he worked kind of like, it's like one of those stories where he worked his way up from the mailroom. He had like one job, then he climbed up, then he got into business development, then became the director of business development. Then eventually he becomes the CEO and eventually he buys the company. And I don't know how he pulled this off. I tried to find this. I could not find how this employee ended up owning the company, but he did. He ends up owning the company and it's a bit, a boring business based in Dallas, sell, you know, selling trash bags. And then he sells it for something like $300 or $400 million to, I think, a private equity firm.. So they've, they've got 800 employees. They've been around for 30, 40 years, something like that. And they sell. And, um, and so they, you know, they do this and then he's like, all right, what do I do with my life now? And at the age of 12, he had visited the Bahamas and he was like, wow, I love the Bahamas. This is just a magical place. He always had this idea. And so he, he looks at this place that, um, this island, and he calls up the owner and he's like, hey, You know, are you— would you ever be interested in selling? They're like, no, we've been asked before. We won't sell this thing. It's a 92-year-old woman. She's like, no, we won't sell it to some big corporation that's just going to ruin it. He goes, no, no, no, ma'am, I'm not a big corporation. I'm a family guy. I'm a family.
I'm just a rich guy.
I'm just a guy with a handful of yachts and I need a place to park them. And basically he convinces this woman to sell. They sell 50 years after they had originally bought it. He buys this island. He turns it into like his own little fishing, boating, and exploring place. So he's got now 3 parts of his business. He's got philanthropy, he's got his family office where he invests, and now he's got his island business, his yachting business, his fishing business. And he owns a handful of yachts.
He's got like, I think it's called a yacht, an 80-foot yacht. He calls it an exploration business.
Well, he's got his, yeah, he's got his exploration business, but I think he also calls his investing his exploration business. I don't know. It's a little confusing, but Alan Exploration, I think, is one of them. But either way, go to his YouTube channel. Did you watch any of his YouTube videos?
Sick. Yeah, the guy's amazing. Let me tell you a story about a young man with a dream, a dream of sailing the sea, living life with the ones he loves, discovering all the world has to offer. A dream of exploration. It only has 41,000 views.
41,000 views. And it's basically his channel where he is— he believes that there are billions of dollars of lost treasures in the sea. He's like, there have been 3 million shipwrecks. He's like, and when something is lost at sea, it's not lost, it's just at the bottom. Like, he's like, it's still there, it didn't go anywhere, it's still there, and we just have to go find it. And he did this because he met some guy who was a treasure hunter who had made millions of dollars finding treasures in the ocean. And he was fascinated by this guy and he's like, let's do this. I want to do this. And so he started doing this and he's looking for like these treasures where it's like King Philip from Spain had this like, you know, Armada coming over and it got lost at sea back in the whatever, you know, the year 1200 or whatever. And he's like, we got to go find that because there were these like crazy gold things and whatever. And he wants to create a museum of the things that he finds. And he's found a bunch of treasures. He's found this long gold chain. He's found like, all kinds of stuff down there. And he puts it in his little museum on his island in the Bahamas. And it's just like a— and it's a public— it's a private island. I mean, he owns it, but he keeps it open to the public. It's not like nobody can come. And so people can come, they can visit, they can park their boats there, all that stuff. So isn't this kind of amazing? Like, what a dope life this guy is living. It's—
this is amazing for a couple different reasons. One, it's so fun to give in to these obsessions. So you say like, well, what's the point of spending your life looking for treasure? It's like, because it's sick.
Because it's awesome.
Right? Like, it's exciting. That's an exciting chase. You should do that. And it is actually, I'm sure there's some like historical value. Uh, I actually had a guy send me a pitch deck on investing in his like hunt. And I was like, no, I'm not even gonna invest. No way. Yeah. I was like, not, not a chance. Like, I, I don't know anything about this. This sounds like this, of course this sounds intoxicating and I love it, but like, I, I have to avoid that. But number 2, I've been thinking about this phrase, make the— make 12-year-old me, make 12-year-old Sam proud. And because I remember like making some money and I remember someone being like— and I was like, was fretting over like doing one thing or the other thing. And it was an awesome thing, but I was like, it costs too much. And someone's like, yeah, but it's sick. Like, it's awesome. Like, what? Well, like, you know, when you were 12, this is what you always wanted to do. And I'm like, you're right. Why am I being such a boner? I should just do this thing. And, and now like I do think that's a good life motto, which is like whatever 12-year-old you wanted, not all things, but some things you got to give in to those indulgences. And this guy is awesome. I'm a big fan of—
well, we get this question a lot. Oh, what would you go back and tell your 20-year-old self, right? Well, if you were 21 again, what advice would you give your 21-year-old self? And you hate that question.
I know you hate that question because I say no. They say if you had to start over again, what would you do? And I'd be like, I would have done the same thing because that's what I'm skilled at. That's what I'm good at. You want— you want me to give you an easy answer? Like, I don't know what you're good at.
Yeah. Right. And so you're like, that's the question people always ask, but I, I'm with you. I want the opposite, which is what advice would your 21-year-old self give you? Because it's very easy to lose the plot. The older you get, the more responsible you get, the more, um, practical you get, the more like you get lower energy, less risk, all that stuff. And there's like a version of you that's like, I don't know if it's 12-year-old or the 21-year-old, but in either case that like The goal was to have the most fun and do awesome things. And it wasn't thinking about like how to save for retirement. That's not, that wasn't on your mind back then. And so I think that for most people, the risk is not that they're playing life too risky, it's that they're playing life way too safe. And that the 12-year-old view or the 21-year-old view, you would look at yourself and be like, oh man, I grew up and I got kind of lame. Ah, damn. Like, I'm just kind of like this outta shape guy who complains a bunch and like, You know, it's like saving money for when they're even older. Like, dude, you're already old. And so like, you know, I, I think that for most people, they actually need to go the other way. They need to have more fun. They need to live more childlike. They need to have just more silliness, fun, adventure in their life, and they need to take a little more risk and play less safe. Um, I, I would say that that is the majority of people and actually people treat it like it's the opposite. They think, I need to, they think that the, they think the advice is you need to be responsible. You need to play it safe, right? Life needs to be more serious. And it's like, no, actually life needs to be way less serious in my view.
Have you ever seen, uh, that one of the very, it's about 10 years old. So it was one of the early viral YouTube videos. And this, this guy, he's in his 30s at this point, in his 40s. He, when he was 8, he recorded himself saying, hey Jonah, what's going on? And he, he's like, as an 8-year-old anticipated that he wanted to make a video in his 30s where he was gonna have a conversation with himself. Himself. And it's, you know, older and is now, uh, at the time, 30s Jonah having a conversation with 8 Jonah. He's like, hey, what's going on, Jonah? And he's like, are you still playing with this? And he like held up a toy and he was like, and the older Jonah was like, no, I'm not. And he's clearly sad. And the younger Jonah was like, because you really love doing this and we love drawing it and we love reading cartoons about this. And right now I think I want to grow up and be a cartoonist where I talk about this. And the older Jonah's like, Oh man, I, I kind of like quit doing that when I didn't have time, but I actually still love it. And it, this video went viral and I believe it kind of kicked off his career where he was able to start making movies and cartoons like he used to be into. And, uh, I, whenever I watch that video, I get inspired. I'm like, what would, when I was 8, like, what would he say? Like, whoa, you said you were gonna do this. Why aren't you?
Right. And I, and I actually, I don't think the answer is you do what the 12-year-old you wanted to do. Cuz maybe 12-year-old you just wanted certain dumb things or only knew about certain things, but it's more like, if I was just explaining this to the 12-year-old me, would they nod and be like, okay, that's dope. I didn't know that. Hopefully, you know, that's crazy. But like, that makes a lot of sense. Like, that sounds awesome. That sounds fun. Versus like, just do what the 12-year-old wants. And I think you're, you're absolutely right that like, people in general, the happiest people are the ones who are most childlike. Why? What are the traits of a child? A child is generally very curious about the world. They don't just like think that they know it all. Right. Um, a child is generally like looking to have fun. They're looking to play, not just work and grind. Right. Like, you know, like there's, I've never heard a 12-year-old on that grind set, you know, like 12-year-olds are looking to play. They're looking to have a blast and like, guess what? That's what you should be trying to do too. And, um, and so, you know, everything I think about, like if I went back to the, to the 13-year-old me and I was like, dude, this is our wife. And they'd be like, what? It's like, yeah, yeah, we get to be with her. Like, she, she likes me. And he would be like, oh dude, awesome. Like, this is really— wow, this turned out amazing. That would be like something I would brag to my 13-year-old self. Like, dude, we pulled this. Like, that would be so sick.
You get to have sex.
Yeah, exactly. Yeah, dude, it happened.
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Uh, yeah. Okay, so the last one I wanted to do was an update on Sarah's List. Okay, so for those who are new to the pod, back, I don't know, how long ago was this? Like a year ago?
Something like this? Only a year ago. I was in New York. Yeah, it was a year.
So let me go look at this video. So we did a, a video, it's on YouTube, September 7th. Oh, almost exactly September 17th, 2021. It's September 19th today. Wow. So two, you know, basically a year to the day. Um, we did this thing, 12 Startups Where Stock Grants Can Make You a Millionaire. And this was inspired by your wife, uh, Sarah, who basically was a self-made millionaire. And we said, oh, how'd she do it? Did she invent the next big thing? Did she make this crazy investment that paid off? And you're like, no, she just like worked at good companies and like a good job. Not, she wasn't CEO or C-suite.
Yeah.
She was just like normal job, normal job at a good tech company. And like, yeah, like think about it this way. Like, you know, they give you, uh, a job offer that will pay you, you know, let's say $50K, just to use round numbers, $50K a year in stock compensation. So you maybe you make $150K, then you get $50K of stock. So over 4 years you got $200K of stock. Well, if that company goes up 5x in value during those 4 years, which many tech companies do, it's $1 million of stock that you got. She's a self-made millionaire.
And a lot of, a lot of, and a lot of these companies will give you like maybe $100,000 a year in stock. And exactly. In Airbnb's case. That I don't know what it went up, what, but I think it probably went up 5 or 6 times. I don't remember.
And your wife had done this at Facebook. She worked at Facebook, she worked at Airbnb. Did she work at another one or were those—
she worked at Everlane, but I don't think they've had an exit yet.
And so, uh, she had done this and I was just like kind of— and it's also like, dude, those were obvious. It's not like she was like, oh, she was one of the first 10 employees at Airbnb. It's like, no, she joined and Airbnb had how many employees? It was like Hundreds, if not thousands, right?
No, it was, I, I think it was either 900 or 1,000. It was 6 years ago maybe. So they, they weren't new.
And do you remember the valuation at that time? Like roughly it was worth, I think it was 18.
I think it was 18 billion. And when they IPO'd at the peak, I think it was worth 110.
Okay.
Yeah.
100 billion. So, so let's say 5X there, um, at, at that peak. And so anyway, so she had done this and I just thought that was amazing. I thought this is like the most underreported story in like, you know, podcasts or tech news or—
well, you're missing the—
no one talks about this.
You're missing one of the big parts was the reason it's underreported is it's not that unique. You know, there's thousands of people who work here. There's hundreds of thousands of people who collectively work at— maybe it's millions, actually millions of people who work these types of gigs.
Uh, by the way, she's not a programmer either. She's not like an engineer and there's not like some barrier that you needed. Oh, I can't do it. I don't know how to code. I can't work at a tech company. No, she was a non-technical person. She's skilled, but she's non-technical. Totally. At a tech company. And so anyways, we were like, we basically made a list called Sarah's List, which was what are the, what are the dozen companies that we would bet on today that we think if you just went, you got that job, you got that stock package that's worth, let's say a quarter million dollars today, that that can 4x, it could turn into a million dollars over your 4-year vest.
So are we gonna recap this and, and see how we did?
Yes. So I have the numbers. Great idea. I have the numbers here. So I'm going to read you the companies and then I'm going to read you, uh, where we were right, where we were wrong. Cause one of the companies on here just got acquired. So the reason this came up was Figma just got acquired and Figma was on our list. It was number 7 on our list. They weren't in order. It was just like one of the ones we listed and Figma got acquired just now for $20 billion. And when we had done the the thing, Figma was at $2 billion. So that was a 10x.
Was it really?
Yeah. Figma was at $2 billion later, like, uh, like 12 months later it got valued at, um, uh, or sorry, in between it had also gotten valued at $10 billion. So it kind of depends on the timing, but when we did the pod, the last known valuation was $2 billion, I believe. Wow. And so, um, that was their Series D. And so, so yeah, so basically that's a 10x from where we were at. So you go get that, $200,000, uh, you know, stock package, which is now sitting on—
yeah, it invests over 4 years. So to a $200,000 stock package is $50,000 a year, which is incredibly reasonable for—
that's like a, yeah, more like an entry-level, that's table service, junior position there. Whereas you can get $100K a year. So you might've had $400K in total stock. That'd be $4 million that you're sitting on. It's so hard to make $4 million in cash. Like it is not that easy. And this is one of the, like, you know, easier ways to do it. So, um, so I think that's kind of underrated. All right, so let me give you the companies on the list. We had Flexport, Zapier, Uniswap, Anduril, the defense company, Replit, the developer tools company, or the developer, um, company, Airtable, Figma, Rippling, Open Store, FAIR, NexHealth, and OneTrust. Okay, so those are the companies. Now I'm gonna read you where they were at and where they're at, where they are, where they are now. Um, out of the 12, I'll just tell you right now that all but 2 of them, I believe, yeah, all but 2 of them are up. Um, and the other 2, it's just they haven't raised another round, so we don't know, but there's reason to believe where they might be up. One, Uniswap might be down just 'cause crypto has like gone down in total value. Um, so you, Uniswap might be down, but, uh, only Zapier and Uniswap are not marked up. So already you're up if you're, if you're in any of these.
So, and Zapier's not marked up because they Their whole shtick is they don't want to raise— they're like, we bootstrapped, we raised this one round of funding, we're not raising anymore until we go public.
Exactly. So you're still likely up, it's just not marked. Okay. So Flexport, when we had done it, it was at $3 billion. It's now at $8 billion. So almost a 3x markup. Um, okay. Zapier and Uniswap we talked about. Okay. Anduril, when we talked about it, it was at $4.6 billion. Now it's at $6.6 billion. So not, not a huge markup, but you're up, you know, whatever, 50%. Um, Replit. Replit, when we had done it, um, when we had talked about it, I think the last known valuation at that time was $200 million. It raised again at $800 million. Uh, I invested in that round. So I, and, and so I know that it's actually worth more today because I get emails and phone calls from these groups that are trying to buy my Replit stock. They're like, hey, we are willing to buy $5 million, up to $5 million of your Replit stock. And so I think that Replit's probably valued today on the open market more than $800 million, but that's the last one they, they've known at. So at least a 4x markup, likely more like 8x is my guess on Replit. Um, Airtable, Airtable was at $2 billion when we did it, $2.3. It's now at $11. So a 5x, 5x jump on, on, on Airtable. Um, Figma, we just talked about $2 billion. Now it got bought for $20. So 10x. Um, Rippling, Rippling was $6 billion when we talked about it. It's now at $11 billion. So double. Open Store was $250 million when we talked about it. And that was the only exception. It was the one that was lowest when we talked about it, uh, as a valuation. It's now at $750 million.
What was it? What was it when we started? $250 million.
And now it's what? $750 million. Wow. $750 million. Um, Fair, Fair was at $7 billion. It's now at $12.5 billion., so a little under double. Um, Next Health was at $400 million, now it's at a billion, so a little more than double, 2.5x. And OneTrust was at $2.7 billion, now at $5 billion, uh, $5.3 billion, so another, another 2x.
Pretty good. We did good. Yeah.
All right, good. Yo, get— where's my Larry David clip? Pretty good.
It's pretty, pretty, pretty, pretty Pretty good.
Pretty good.
Keep in mind, we made these predictions at the beginning of like the best tech bull market, not of all time, but a really good one. So a lot of these valuations could be completely nonsense. You know, like at that time we could have thrown at a dartboard and picked 10 random startups and the likelihood that they would raise.
And now it's down. But the valuations I'm giving you, the afters are all 2022 valuations.
Wow. All right. So a few takeaways. One, exponential growth, hard to completely understand. Like thinking like, can this 2 or 3 or 4x? For most people, myself included, it's a, it's an exercise to understand what that means.
I don't know if I can read.
Well, they're publicly available. Oh, they're out. When this deal came out, they came out.
All right. Keep talking and I'll find it.
Okay. So basically, uh, you're right. Exponential growth is, is like astounding. And so you look at these companies, I, I've talked about this before where, um, when we were getting acquired, we had a chance to get Discord stock and it was like, oh, Discord's valued at $2 billion. Wow. It's already at $2 billion. It's like, well, what would we need to believe for, for us to take this deal? It's like, well, we need to think that it's gonna get over $6 billion. I don't know. Its last valuation was $15 billion. So even me who's in the, in the industry. In the space. I am a tech investor. It's just hard to fathom these companies becoming worth not just billions, but tens of billions, not just tens of billions, but even up to $100 billion in value. So it's just very, very hard to fathom.
Here's Figma, Figma's growth. And the reason why this is astounding is because I heard what their valuation was, which was $10 billion. I thought, that is ridiculous. I heard these numbers, right? And then I thought, huh, that's actually not that crazy. So in 2017, they started charging customers. In 2018, they're at $4.1 million in revenue. In 2019, $23 million. 2020, $77 million. 2021, $100 million. And check this out, 2022 goal, and they're on pace to hit it, $450 million. So in the course of 6 years, they went from $0 to $450 million in very recurring, sticky, sticky revenue. Like, and their product does everything. They built a product.
Look at some of those jumps. What were the first jumps? So it goes $0, then it goes from $0 to what, $2 or $4?
So here's the order: $4, $25, $75, and then this sucked, $100, and then $450. 100 to 450 is astronomical. That is huge.
I don't know if you've seen this, but basically they like triple, triple, double, triple, triple.
Well, they did more than a triple. They did from 4 to 20 something. That's 5x. So they did more than a triple. Then they did 20, 20 to 75, 25 to 75 or whatever. So they did a triple for 5. 5x triple, and then they did double, and then they did another double, then they did another 4.5x. So it's just kind of insane.
It's crazy.
So, uh, and obviously helped by like, you know, remote work, cause you like, Figma is basically like a tool for designers and product people to share designs. Um, like, you know, a designer will send me a mockup. I add my comments. I can move stuff around. I could see their mouse moving. It's almost like we're working on the same thing together, right next to each other. Even though we're miles and miles apart. And, uh, and by the way, amazing story. This is also another Thiel Fellowship, uh, win. And so it's crazy. This guy started this thing when he was 21 years old, like 19, 20, 21 years old. And, um, you know, was, has been building this. There was like a 5-year buildup where he, they didn't make any revenue. He was just building the product slowly but surely and then got to a private beta and then a public beta and then finally started charging people. You know, I think the company was founded in like 2011. And then it started making money in 2017. Even if I had this idea, there is no way 5 years later I'm still doing this idea. Yeah. In the middle of that, by the way, there was the ICO boom in, in crypto in 2017. You know, guess where my head would've turned? I'd have been like, oh, whoa, I should be doing that over there. Right? In between then there's like, you know, just waves and waves of other interesting, exciting, sexy things that, and he just didn't take his eye off the ball. They just kept going. Kept building, and they won.
So the two more things that are hard to understand— the, the first one I said was it's hard to understand exponential growth. Number two, it always seems late. So if I bet a lot of reactions, if we go and read the comment section, was this seems overvalued, this is already too big, you know, there's no meat left on this bone. It always seems too late. And that goes back to exponential growth is hard to understand. So like, if I told you like your home that you're in right now might be worth $10 million in 20 years, you'd be like, there's no way. And you say, well, that's just like, you know, 4% growth for the next 20 years. And it's already grown 4% for the trailing 50 years. Like, and like, okay, I understand logically, but like when you say that number, it's quite hard to understand. And the last thing, which is every startup we named, it's not like they're unknown. They, it's all pretty obvious shit. You, if you Googled best startups to work at, I bet you 6 of the 12 that we named were on some type of list. Um, and granted, we're not playing with our lives here. We're just naming 12 things and we got 10 outta 12, right? You know, like, uh, if you're in that 11th or 12th one, that might stink, but like, we're not that smart. We're 7.5s out of 10 in terms of industry knowledge. And, uh, we got it. Like, it wasn't that hard.
Yeah, totally. And so I think, uh, I think there's a couple, couple other takeaways with this too, which is you said, you said it right. Um, it's really easy to think you're too late on these tech winners. And what I would say is when there's actually a tech winner, when they, when they actually have the fundamentals, they have a great product. And they're winning in the market and their growth rate is like, you know, real, uh, these things can get a lot bigger than you think. I remember reading when Facebook got valued at $15 billion by Microsoft and they had like no revenue at the time, very, or they had like, I don't know, maybe a few hundred million in revenue, but it wasn't like, uh, it just seemed like how big is this social network thing gonna be? And like, if somebody at that time was saying,, and I'm sure there were a few people, but some of the time saying, yeah, this is gonna end up being a trillion-dollar company. I'd be like, there's no, you know, is there such a thing as a trillion-dollar company? That's insane, right? Like I've told this story before, one of the biggest mistakes I made, one of the worst investments I made was an investment I made right. And that means I invested in Tesla when Tesla was at $2 billion and I put all the money I had straight outta college. I put it into Tesla at $2 billion and I rode it up till it was at $7 billion or something like that. And I, I cashed out at a 3x.. And I remember at the time thinking, okay, General Motors and these other, whoever the biggest ones at the time, I think they were at 20-something billion, maybe they're 25 billion. I don't remember the exact numbers, but something like that. And I was like, one day Tesla could be, you know, half as big or maybe even as big as those companies. It just seemed like that was the roof, that was the ceiling on how big these could be. And then Tesla went up and became at one point a trillion-dollar company. Now it's come back down to like, you know, whatever, half. But, um, My $2 billion could have become a trillion, basically, in terms of what would you have made, you think?
How much did you put in? $25,000?
Yeah, I had like $25 grand in it.
And so what's, what's that? Something like that. Is that $100? I can't even do that.
Is that— I had done the math at one point, and this wasn't the peak, but at one point it was like I would have had $6 million from that $25K. It was like a great angel investment. And again, this felt late. Like Tesla was already out successful. Elon Musk was a he's not what he is today, but he was a known person, right? Like, I'm talking about, this was back in probably 2013-ish, 2012, 20— something like that. Maybe.
Dude, we should do another one of these episodes cuz I think there's a lot of great companies right now that valuations are low where in 10 or 15 years when there's another great market, things will be drastically different. Yeah. You know, this will be one of those things where you say in 10 years you're gonna wish you would've done what we're suggesting. Right. And we should do another one of these.
Yeah, I think we should. I even had people build me like a website for this, like a sick looking website. I think we should do this. Me and you, I think, should own a job board called Sarah's List and we should just keep this updated.
What did you think that I tweeted? I tweeted out, I was like, yeah, like, uh, I think this is a great way to make wealth. Where's like, but like researching these is a bit challenging. And that tweet got seen by millions, not millions of people, many hundreds of thousands of people and a lot of really good replies. And there were some cool things, uh, startups that were mentioned and different job boards, but nothing where it's like perfect where I, where I, where, where, where I think it needs to be. But yeah, I agree. All right.
I think that's it. That's a wrap.