EPISODE
410

Rapid Fire Business Ideas, How to Buy a Public Company, and Mastering Your LinkedIn Profile

Jan 24, 2023·94:00·Sam & Shaan·with Suleiman Ali·Listen·AppleSpotify
0:0047:0094:00
16 moments · 162 paragraphs · synced to the second
SHAAN

Every time I've had a company sale, when we sold Bebo to Twitch, when we just sold to Milk Road, you have been our, we would call the deal doula. You help us, you know, go through that labor process and come out the other side with, you know, the, the happy ending, I guess. Suli, welcome to My First Million. Uh, You're subbing in for, for Sam Parr today and like every substitute teacher, it's always the best when they're there. Um, we, we're gonna do a bunch of things. We're gonna talk about some of your, the companies you started, the companies you've invested in, things are, you know, some ideas you have. You were the first ever episode of the podcast, so if people wanna hear your life story, that's the place to go. Episode number 1. Um, we've come a long way from there. Did you think this is what would happen?

I always knew the podcast was going to be big. And I think from the very beginning you were like, let's do Barstool except for business. And that's what it's become. And it's huge. And I actually think it's going to be way bigger in a year than it is today, like 3 times the size a year from now than it is today.

SHAAN

Yeah, I hope so. That's the, that's the goal. We did the kind of Barstool thing except without hiring anybody. It was like, okay, we will just be the jackasses and then like, let it go from there. Um, all right. So I got, you sent me this doc, which is great because there's a bunch of topics on here that I kind of want to jump into. You, uh, I guess we should set the, the, the, the like groundwork here. So I'll give you a very short life story so people understand who you are. You, um, you worked at a job for like a couple of years. You did like the traditional path. You worked at Microsoft, you quit, you decided to start your own company. This is right when the Facebook app platform comes out. So you start building. Like silly Facebook apps that go viral. So, uh, think things like Superlatives, which was, um, like, which of your friends most likely to do X? And, uh, it would invite those friends to like do it too. And it grew like crazy, but it was like a silly Facebook app. So you didn't know what to do with it, but you ended up selling it. So you got, that was your kind of my first million moment. So you sell it. Um, you're how old at that time? Like 24, 25-ish, 26 maybe?

Uh, yeah, 26.

SHAAN

26. Take that and you go on the next big wave, which is, uh, mobile apps are going to be a thing. You are creating games, I think maybe first on Facebook and then on the iPhone. When, when the iPhone App Store comes out, you're like, oh, this is going to be big. You create a company called Tiny, uh, or TinyCo, and, um, end up somehow— you raise money from Andreessen Horowitz, you're living the dream, Things go south as the economics of that business change. And then you go all in, in this Hail Mary strategy, which again, episode 1 for the whole story, you go all in on this Hail Mary strategy of like, we are gonna get the rights to Family Guy. And you end up somehow as a startup that nobody's ever heard of, getting the rights to the license to, to make the Family Guy mobile game. You did it for Harry Potter and a couple other big IP things, sell that company. Um, and then that, I met you after that. So I met you kind of when you were selling that thing. We met at a, a dinner that Sam was throwing cuz you were speaking at HustleCon and immediately we hit it off. We were, we made some big plans. We were like, you know, you were talking about Tony Robbins. I was like, oh, I'm a Tony Robbins guy. You're like, really? I don't even know about Tony Robbins. Tell me. And I started gushing about my experience there, whatever. And I was like, yeah, we should do that here in San Francisco. Like, let's do it tomorrow morning. Let's have a, our own power session with people like us who were just, you know, electric.

And, uh, yeah, we were like, uh, Tony Robbins is amazing. Nobody is doing this, um, in this kind of modern way. Let's put up some Facebook ads today. Um, and then tomorrow let's have 50 people in here and try our hand at like being Tony Robbins for a day.

SHAAN

We did the thing where you spent 20 minutes being like, this is great. This is a great idea. This is, this is a no-brainer. And we just keep talking about how much it's a no-brainer, how much it's a slam dunk. We're gonna do it. We're using all these terms. Never did it. 10 years later, we still never did it, but we became good friends along the way.

I still think it's a great idea. Yeah. And it would be the most fun weekend ever.

SHAAN

Yeah. I think, I still think we should do it. We, uh, but then we, you, we kind of got, uh, I guess from there you, you did a couple things. So your brother started Native Deodorant. You kind of helped him with that. You started another company, which we don't really talk too much about. Then I was starting my e-commerce brand. You have helped me out a lot with that and are kind of a, a shareholder in that business. Um, and when we were, every time I've had a company sale, when we sold Bebo to Twitch, when we just sold to Milk Road, you have been our, we would call the deal doula. You help us, you know, go through that labor process and come out the other side with, you know, the happy ending, I guess. Um, so that, that's kind of like how our interactions have been like on a business side and then become great friends, uh, since then. So that's my intro. Did I miss anything?

Um, I love being the deal doula, by the way. Uh, when we sold TinyCo, we had this banker named Dick Filippini, and he, uh, ran— he was our banker, ran the transaction for us. And I told him that I loved what he did so much that I just wanted to work for him for free for 6 months after this so I could see all of the deals that he was doing. And, uh, he did not accept my offer and said, no, you, you can't do this.

SHAAN

Dick is great. He helped us for free when— because Bibo was— the Bibo deal was going to be too small. He does bigger deals I think like $100 million plus type deals. Um, it was too small, but he got on the phone with me several times throughout the process, talked me off a ledge multiple times when I was like, I'm just gonna say this. He's like, no, well, you should probably just wait and see what they say. Um, and his advice was basically just like, don't fuck this up, you know, son. And he was totally right. He helped me a ton. And actually I still feel the guilt that I didn't like send him a gift afterwards. I think I even texted you like a year later. I was like, what's Dick's address? I didn't send him a gift. I can't believe I didn't. And here I am still, 4 years later, have not sent that gift. Dick, I'm so sorry. You were so helpful.

SHAAN

Well, they got the best of both because they, whatever the company was putting in, I think it was $1.6 was the original, $1.4, $1.6 was the original purchase price. And they were going to put in a few hundred million dollars to own 70 or 80% of it. And then instead it was like the year went by, nothing happens. And so with that anxiety came this big payoff because the business grew like crazy in that time. So they're like, hey, okay, same deal, but now you own like 20 or 30%. And so they got the money, they got liquid on that. but they only had to give up a tiny fraction and then they sold it, then they went public, um, you know, later for, for way more. So that turned out, you know, pretty much as good as it could go, right?

Like they got both.

SHAAN

Uh, just had to wait a year. Um, speaking of kind of like acquisitions, I got a, I have a Milk Road related question for you first, which is, um, you saw, you saw both the acquisitions that I did, uh, from like sort of start to end and I shared, you know, It's like in high school when it's like, the boy texted me this, should I reply this? Should I say this? Like, no, no, no, that looks too needy. Say that, like, change the period to a comma and then just, you know, cut that last line. Like, it's that level of help that, that you were doing with me. Um, what's your, I've given kind of my debrief of the acquisition. I'm just curious, what's your, uh, what was your takeaway or what was your, what are some nuggets that, that you would, you would share from, uh, from watching that go down?

Um, I love the deal structure that, uh, Milk Road ended up with, which was a bunch of cash up front and then a bunch of equity in the new company where those two guys are wanting to grind it out for years and build a giant business. And, uh, those guys, in my head, you know, some percentage of the work that they do is just creating value for you and Ben, and that's awesome. So I love that deal structure. The, in my head, kind of having been through this a couple times, I feel like a lot of the, you know, text, the nuance of words that you care about when you're trying to sell your business, the buyer doesn't care about that much. And it's more of an emotional thing than a practical thing where practically the buyer is like, I want to buy this business because of the strategic reason and the revenue and the profit. And a lot of the things that you can be squeamish about or uncomfortable to say or not sure how to say things. I think a lot of that stuff doesn't matter. One of the things that I learned actually when I was trying to sell TinyCo was we ran a sales process where I was trying to sell the business and we talked to a bunch of acquirers, and we got pretty far along with one, um, and then the deal didn't happen. Uh, and then a year later we went and sold the company, um, successfully. And the, um, there was a bunch of stuff that I was trying to keep close to the chest and I was like, oh, people aren't going to want to hear this. People aren't going to want to hear that. And what was great about a banker and some, somebody like Dick was, he was like, no, actually this isn't a big deal. Just tell these guys this and, uh, they're not gonna care about that. So it took, uh, this kind of un— discomfort I had around like things I thought were secrets that I needed to take to the grave with me. And he just made me comfortable telling them about them.

SHAAN

Right. Sam, Sam did something for me in this process. So as we were selling the Milk Road, I was like, yo, uh, any kind of tips or advice you've had? And when he sold to HubSpot, he goes, Oh, on that same note, he goes, just do, uh, just tell them upfront all the shitty things about your business that they, that might scare them away. Cause guess what? They're going to find those anyways when it comes to due diligence and you're just going to be, you know, 4 weeks in or 6 weeks in emotionally invested and it's going to get ugly later and they're going to feel like they just found some like, you know, big wart on the deal at that point in time. Um, And he goes, just tell them all the skeletons in your closet now and be like, here's all the reasons you shouldn't buy this company. If these bother you, you now know them and you can decide for yourself, you know, if that's a deal breaker for you. This was like not the very first thing, but shortly after, like we went to a dinner and everybody was interested. We hadn't even fully negotiated the deal, but I just said, they were like, you know, any questions you guys have or, you know, any, any concerns? I said, well, you know, I wanna make sure like you fully understand this business.. And you know, I've been through this a couple times and I just, I know like, it's better to just be fully transparent. So I said, you know, here's all, I made a list of the reasons why, you know, you shouldn't buy this. Here's all the skeletons in our closet and you can look at these today and you could, you could decide if this is too, too concerning for you, you know, let's talk through these now. And we did it. And later, after the deal was closed, we did a debrief and they, they basically, this is how you know they're smart. They were like, what could we have done better in the acquisition process? Like, Um, you know, from your point of view. And we asked the same.

Amazing.

SHAAN

They asked that. It's like, how was that for you? Uh, was that good for you? It was good for me. And it was like, we, we told them, uh, they told, they gave me that feedback. They were like, you know, you said something at this dinner where you were just like, here's all the ugly parts of our business and like, let me just tell you about them and we could talk through them. They go, that built so much trust because we didn't know you very well. And immediately we were like, oh, okay. We feel, we felt at ease and Um, we felt like we could trust you guys going forward. And so that turned out to be a big win. And that's the exact opposite. My, you know, I think the entrepreneur's instinct is hide that, you know, as far, put it behind your back. You know, if they, if they, if they ask for it, you show them, but like, don't scare them away. And, and, and in fact, what you want to do is like find out as quickly as possible if there's a real match here or not and use that as a tool to build trust., versus to build distrust by not disclosing it up front.

SHAAN

And so what's the way to say yes without seeming desperate there or seeming too, too eager to sell? Because you don't want to do that either.

I think the way I've done it before is, um, one, when I was ready to sell a business, I would, uh, find somebody that I knew was interested but wouldn't have a good offer and get them to make an offer and then say, cool, uh, go. That enables you to reach out to other people and say, hey, We have an offer to sell the business and we're thinking about whether or not to do that. And you are somebody that we think there's a great strategic fit with. So we thought to talk to you before we did something else.

SHAAN

Yeah.

Yeah. So that's kind of one way to do it.

SHAAN

If they come inbound, it's sort of like, you know, we have had interest and nothing, you know, nothing felt, felt right. You know, we really like our business. 'But you know, we respect you guys and if that's something you, you know, we, we obviously be open to listening.' Uh, you know, we, we, we owe ourselves that, right? And so, so you kind of, you just say, 'We like our business. We had interest. It hasn't, we, we didn't really, nothing went too far cuz we weren't very, you know, weren't too keen on it, but you know, really like you. If you want to talk, like we're open to talking. There's nothing, you know, that's fine.' Yeah.

Um, yeah, I think that's a good setup. And, uh, I think buyers who are experienced can kind of read between the lines pretty quickly. Uh, because what you just said is like, I'm wide open, somebody please ask me out for a date. I'm ready. Uh, you know, and I'll be a cheap date.

SHAAN

Sign me up. Exactly. But like, it's the signal. It's the signal that I'm interested without like, um, without begging you. Uh, but it's like, to be clear, I'm interested.

Yeah, yeah, it's perfect. It's like looking at somebody across the bar and catching their eyes, um, their eyes for one second and then smiling and looking away.

SHAAN

There was another meeting. We won't talk, we won't name the name, but you were a part of a few of the meetings as we talked to different people from Milk Road. And it was the first meeting with one of the buyers. And you, you immediately called me afterwards and you were like, wow. And then you said, uh, there's this phrase, a fool and his money are easily parted. And you immediately sniffed out that this person was sort of an idiot, um, and like, you know, would, would, would be. And sure enough, they made the, by far the largest offer, um, and, you know, turned out to be, you know, they turned out to be not, not exactly who we— we didn't go with them because of that. But of, of the 3 or 4 people that we talked to, this was one of them. But you sniffed that out immediately. What, what tipped that off for you? And, uh, what can you say without getting us in too much trouble?

Um, you know, there's a lot of people who are charlatans nowadays, and, uh, they'll often lead with a lot of like flattery and not substance. Um, like it's very easy for me to tell when somebody is like, hey, this is who I am, I've done X, Y, I started this company, I sold it, I started this company, it didn't work out. They're just like honest about their resume and there isn't tremendous amounts of puffery that with a couple Google searches you can be like, actually, that's all not True.

SHAAN

Right.

Unless I haven't with that.

SHAAN

You've said a lot of words, but you haven't said anything yet. Okay. That is, uh, you know, either I'm not understanding what you're trying to say or you have nothing to say basically.

Yeah, that's right. And they don't lead with like numbers and information. They lead with, uh, like flowery language that doesn't go anywhere.

SHAAN

So I'm curious. Um, What are some business ideas that, uh, you think somebody could start that would be successful either at the smaller scale? Like, I think this can be, you know, like a clear business that'll make a few million bucks. And I just think, you know, if somebody out there is looking for a way to get financial freedom, this is a way to— here's a big idea. Somebody who is willing to grind that out should go do this.

Um, the big idea that I like the most right now is, um, Robinhood for real estate. So, uh, you know, Robinhood makes it easy to invest in, uh, the stock market. Um, and the way I've thought about this is I've got a ton of friends who are, you know, in their 20s that work at Facebook or Google and they make a ton of money. But, uh, what they do with it is they just stick it in their, uh, bank account or in a savings account or a CD. Sometimes they'll invest in the stock market. I think it's so hard to be able to invest in real estate, and if there was a turnkey way through a mobile app to be able to invest in real estate, I think that would be huge. And I think it's really different. You did this investment, and I followed you, in a company called JAR in India. And so they make it super easy to invest in gold. In India. And so you can invest with $1 or $50 or $5,000 and just buy gold through like a one-click.

SHAAN

It's just, if you believe that gold is a good thing to invest in, we'll make it easy for you to do that thing that you already think is a good idea.

Exactly. And so it's a one-click thing of like, how much money do I want to invest today? And then, uh, they, the best way to do it is to kind of set up a subscription where every month you're like, cool, I'm buying $200 of gold every month. And 10 years from now, it's going to be worth millions of dollars. I think the same should happen with real estate. There's a bunch of companies that are like Cadra and Fundrise or CrowdStreet.

SHAAN

Yeah, whatever those are like. But you have to look at the individual deals.

You have to— they're targeted towards people like me who like investing in real estate and who are sophisticated about it and want to know what the cap rate is and the location and the year of construction and all this stuff. Um, I think there should be a one-click way to be able to go buy equity in rental properties that generate income. And, uh, it should be marketed to, um, people in their 20s. It should be marketed through Facebook. It should be set up so that every— you basically log in and are like, cool, you want to invest in real estate? How much do you want to invest every month? $200? Great. $200 is now happening in real estate. You're now investing $200 in real estate every month, and boom, it does an ACH from your account every month on, on the customer side and invests in that real estate. And the income that gets generated goes back and reinvests in more real estate, and that's it. And so it shows, uh, this is how much you've invested so far, and here's how much it's worth. Boom.

SHAAN

Okay, love it. Give me more. What else you got?

Uh, what else do you got?

SHAAN

Hey, hey, hey, hey. Whoa, whoa, whoa. What's going on here? This is the, you're the, you're the guest of honor here. I got, uh, I, I'm dumping ideas every week here. I'll give you one that like, I think is, I, I'll give you one that I get asked a lot, which is not actually what's a big idea, but what's the easiest way to get to like a million dollars? Um, And I always think that like the easiest way to get to $1 million, if I'm, if I need to get to $1 million right now, here's, here's what I would do. I would, um, I would create an agency that's going to target a really specific part of a business that makes money already and just figure out how to make more of it. So for example, email marketing for e-commerce brands or conversion rate optimization, CRO, for, for companies. So you basically say, hey, visitors come to your site, we can help you convert more of that traffic into sales. And I think there's such an easy play where you basically just create content. So you create content that basically just says like, here's the before and here's the after. Look, I changed these 3 things because I call this my, you know, my hot, cold, hot method. And, um, we boosted revenue by 32%. By the way, if you want somebody to boost your revenue by 32%, Work with me. And I think that this is like a, such a bootstrappable, easy way to get to $100K a month in revenue, right? Like you get 10 clients paying you $10K a month. It is not hard to get 10 customers to pay you $10K a month when it's, um, a part of their business that's already gonna produce, like already producing hundreds of thousands or if not millions of dollars of revenue. And you're gonna provide, you know, the turnkey service. So you take it off, you take the headache off their plate., but you do it better than they're doing it because you're, you get seen as a thought leader by putting out like 10 of these case studies. And this happens all the time with ad agencies, um, email agencies, conversion rate, uh, optimization agencies. But you could do this with anything. You could do this with site speed. You could do this with like any number of things. So I would just go, and you could start with, start at zero and become a quote unquote thought leader expert just by publishing like very simple before and after, like kind of case studies. And you start by not even having a client. You say, hey, if I was this brand, here's what I would do. Look, when they do this, it sucks. You know, they— this is a dead end for them. Or, you know, they should steal this good idea from this other company. And so you could put together case studies without even having clients. And so to me, this is like the easiest— like, if you are willing to work hard and you feel stuck at a job that maybe pays you $100K a year and you're looking, how do I go from $100K to $900K? How do I go from $100K to, you know, $750K a year? This is the, like, all, all it takes is hustle, uh, approach to, to that side of type of business. And then those businesses can be sold. So like your job, you can't be, you can't sell your job, right? Like if I write a book, I might write that, that might be the title. You can't sell your job. Just like my, my one-line case for why you should start a business instead of have a job. And if you get a business like this to $900K and you know, 60% profit, you could sell that agency or that consulting business for maybe 2 or 3 times, you know, EBITDA. And so you could sell that, you could make $600,000 to $800,000 a year and then sell it for $2 or $3 million, um, you know, after a couple of years. And so that's a very easy pathway to financial freedom. Easy, meaning it's simple. Not, not that it's no effort, but easy that like anybody can do it. And it doesn't take being the genius with the one idea who beats all the competitors in the space.

Yeah, I totally agree with that. I think there's a bunch of other examples in my head, like, um, just setting up a Facebook pixel and doing it in a way that's actually optimized, um, and perfect and following all the Facebook guidelines. I think that's super hard, and I think there should be some guy who's like, I'm the expert at this, right? Um, and I take care of that for you.

SHAAN

And I gave a brand of e-commerce, but like, you can also do this for just, hey, every legal practice, every dentist. You need websites? I make websites for dentists, right? So it doesn't even need to be like, you're the best at doing growth for D2C brands. It could be like, hey, in Minneapolis, Minnesota, I make the best websites for restaurants in Minneapolis, Minnesota, or legal practices, whatever. And just through cold email, or, you know, some combination of cold email, LinkedIn referrals, you can like get 10 customers to pay $10K a month.

Yeah, I think you could pick any of these, um, big sectors of the economy like accounting, law, medicine, dental, um, be anything, senior living, whatever, you know. Yeah, yeah. And I'm just gonna go and build an online thing that, um, makes their life easier through marketing to them, making it easy to make a website. Uh, it's insane how many of those old-world businesses are still like, don't have a good website, right? Don't do any Google Ads. So I think there's some stuff like opportunity there.

SHAAN

Our friend Nick Huber does this thing where he's like, he basically has a playbook to make a self-storage unit run better. And so his thing is like, I'll buy it at some multiple, but I know I can run it at 30% more efficiently or 40% more efficiently. So I'm getting value. I know within 9 months I have a turnkey process to make this thing generate 30 or 40% more EBITDA. And so he does that buying the properties. But you could also just take that playbook and say, hey, Self-storage owner, I will do this for you. I'll do it risk-free for you, meaning you pay me nothing unless I deliver this outcome. If I increased your revenue by 30% or your, your, your net profit by 30%, that would be, you know, that would be great, right? And here's my playbook. I do these 3 things. You would agree that you're not doing those 3 things today very well, right? Okay, fantastic. How about I deliver those to you risk-free? And when I do, I get to keep, you know, half the value for the first year and then it drops down to 10% after that. And you could do this for senior living. You could do this for self-storage. You could do this for any business that's like out there. Once you find a good, like whatever best practices, this is what Alex Hormozi did with his gym launch thing. He was like, hey, gym owner, you want more customers? Like he used to own his own gym, developed best practices, and then realized the, the value was not in his gym being run with best practices, but taking the best practice and selling it to all gym owners. And so that's what he, that's what he did. And I think you could do that with like pretty much any any niche business.

What do you think about niche content creators and kind of trying to build the same thing by creating content in a specific niche, like, um, you know, eco-friendly, sustainable products, that kind of thing?

SHAAN

So what would somebody do there? So I'm a, I'm a content creator. What am I doing there in this example?

Um, making YouTube videos, Instagram video, Instagram Reels, and TikToks about, um, that content.

SHAAN

For the business, to marketing, to business owners as like, hey, business owner, here's what you should do, or to—

No, not to business owners, to consumers. Just being like, this is how I live a sustainable lifestyle. Um, kind of pick anything that you're passionate about and make a bunch of YouTube videos about it or content about it. And I think that can be a big business, like, you know, Doug DeMuro with cars.

SHAAN

Right. Um, see, I, I don't like those as much because I, A, I think it's a good thing to do because good things come of it. I don't think they're very reliable at creating successful businesses. Most content creators don't make successful businesses, right? So if you just look empirically at the numbers, you're just like, okay, of the 2 million Twitch streamers and of the 10 million YouTubers, like, who's making over $10K a year? And the number's like astronomically small. Um, and so, you know, the problem with those is that everybody wants to do that and there's not a clear way to like get the value out. Um, it is good to do because you will learn, you'll become good at content, you'll meet cool people. It'll lead you to the thing most likely, but it's not usually directly the thing. Um, when it's consumer facing, if it's business facing, I think it's pretty easy then to say, oh yeah, I market to the owners of self-storage units. I create the best content for them. You know, you could go, that, that's what Nick Sharma did, right? Nick Sharma was like, hey, I'm gonna write the best newsletter for an e-commerce store owner and I'm just gonna put together awesome information, case studies, deals, whatever for them. And like, that's not for the consumer, it's for the business owner. And he created, you know, what, what should be like a $5 to $10 million a year business when it's fully mature, doing just that. And I think you could do that for basically the owner of any business, construction businesses, you know, whatever, any, you know, doctors, lawyers, whoever, any, any type business. If you, if you focus on that and you, you get good at doing that. So I think that one I I don't like the consumer-facing one as much because I think the numbers would show that they don't make very much money the way that they currently do them. And like, you know, I have this problem too where it's like, um, what's the most competitive thing is like being like a content creator. What, what are most people doing from like, you know, even like a 12-year-old can do it. And I have this problem myself where I'm like, oh, I want to create a bunch of YouTube content. And then I'm like, man, This, you know, I'm competing with every 15-year-old in America and they're better and faster and have more time and have nothing to lose and are willing to do way crazier stuff. Like, wow, that this might be the wrong game to compete in. And I, you know, I'm still trying to square that for myself. Like, is this the right game or the wrong game to even compete in? Um, I could have said that about podcasts in general too. Right. So like, you know, some of the best things I've done have been like in that category and it worked out. Just fine. Um, but it does feel a little strange. It's like against my own business advice to like, don't compete in the thing that everybody is trying to do because most likely, you know, you're just playing game, the game on hard mode.

Yeah. The way I've seen it done well is like, um, there's this guy who's a realtor in LA and, um, you know, small-time realtor and he started making these YouTube videos that were walking through mansions. Yeah.

SHAAN

I watched that guy. He's great.

Yeah. And so he just like made 10 of them and was like, this is fun. And then he got access to more and more places and just made really high-end video walkthroughs of LA mansions. And, you know, his job was already to be a realtor. So he was doing this as a way to get new clients in LA. And then, um, as he did it more and more, it became a business of its own and he stopped being a realtor. And now will fly around the world because people will be like, I'm trying to sell this house, make a video of it, and I'll go make a video and a million people will watch it in 3 days because he's got so many YouTube subscribers. So I think where you're combining it with like a profession that you already have, it probably is a good fit. Like there's some guy who's SMB acquisition attorney on Twitter, and so it's just a great way for him to get lead gen. Yeah. New customers.

SHAAN

Well, I also think like, um, I don't know if there's a good thing or a bad thing, but it's that, it's that 30s age thing where it's like, I used to think about a business and only look up like, wow, the skyscrapers are huge in this field. I'm, I too am gonna build a skyscraper. And now I'm like, cool, before I do that, let me just go quickly look at the graveyard of people who have tried to do this. And like when I was in my 20s, there was no graveyard. I didn't think about the graveyard. I'm like, Music startup. Love it. Everybody loves music, right? Like, what could go wrong? Yeah. And then when you're in your 30s, you're like, don't touch social network startup. Let's do it. Yeah. I did social networks for like 7 years or 6 years, uh, of my 20s because it was like the skyscraper was so attractive and like there is some beauty in just doing that. Not even paying attention to the graveyard. Like I think the people who win will just do that and it'll work. And their success formula was like, yeah, I didn't worry about the graveyard. Why would I do that? Um, but as I got older, I was like, man, you know what's more fun than trying to build a social network? Like winning is really fun. And so like, let me just make sure that whatever I'm doing, like the odds are not like 99.9% chance of failure. Um, like, yeah, that's be— and if I'm gonna do it, okay, I'll go in eyes wide open. I'm gonna look at the graveyard and say, I'm still gonna do this. That's kind of what happened with the podcast. It's like, you know what, I'm still gonna do this even though I know that most podcasts nobody ever listens to. Whereas before I did not even pay attention to that and I didn't, you know, but I don't know if that's a net positive. It might be a net negative actually in terms of like how, uh, the, you know, the, the, the strength of that kind of like the ignorance.

Yeah. There's this guy Bobby Kotick who's the CEO of Activision and, um, he's like, I can be CEO of anything. I could be CEO of a toilet company or CEO of Campbell's Soup. The thing that matters to him is success and momentum. And, you know, there's so many people who are like, you're the CEO of a games company. That's what I, my entire life would be made if I could just be that. And he's just like, success is what matters more than anything else. And I'm kind of closer to that as I've gotten older where I'm like, um, success is the thing that brings me joy more than the specific category or product that I work on. The thing that I think you've done really well, Sean, is you've seen friends who will have a successful business and you're like, let me just clone this business in a different category. Like, you know, you did that with Sam and the hustle with Milk Road, and then you saw an e-commerce business with Ramon and the way that he was doing it, and you're like, I could do this too. So I think that's a really good way to do it. That's like kind of underrated., and most people don't do where they're like, I see this person is successful. Um, I'm just going to do the exact same playbook, but in a different product category or different sector.

SHAAN

Yeah. I call it having a blueprint. Like if I don't see that there is a blueprint of success in a category and that it is replicatable, like, okay, I can look at how the guy started Snapchat, but if that doesn't seem very like, I can't replicate that. And so, but when I saw an e-commerce or I saw, oh, the newsletter business, I thought, okay, not saying this is easy, but I like, I understand this. This is simple enough for my dumb brain to get how a business like this works. What is the cost? What is the, where's the revenue come from? Where does the growth come from? Got it. Um, did they have some unfair advantage? Did they, did they start at the right time? And that there's now is like, you know, not the right time or whatever. I try to just figure that out. But if there's a, and so now with new things, I just look for that like first. We're gonna go searching for a blueprint. I'm gonna talk to people until I find a blueprint. Like, okay, I wanna, uh, buy companies. Cool. Andrew Wilkinson is a good blueprint. What does he do? How does it work? And then do I wanna like, do I believe that I could replicate that in my own way, in my own sector, my own style? Um, and if I don't see a blueprint, I don't really get that excited at this point because I'm like, why would I do it without a blueprint when I can do it with per— Personally, I'm like that. Or same thing, if I'm gonna do it without a blueprint, all right, that's cool. But I'm gonna make the announcement, hey, I'm choosing to do this without the blueprint and I gotta go in eyes wide open on that. So like all, all of my rules I break all the time, but I say them and I do them because I'm like, I'm cool violating this rule, but I just, I'm not gonna do it subconsciously. I'm not gonna do it blindly. I'm gonna do it knowingly and I'm gonna make that trade, you know, knowing exactly what I'm trading off by making this decision. Versus, uh, you know, how I, you know, used to do it where I didn't really underst— I didn't even know what I was looking for. Um, you know, when it, when it came to that. I wanna finish with some rapid fire. Can I do some, some quick ones? And then I just want you to say your reaction to this. Okay. So I'm gonna say this first category is things you've told me that I thought were funny, and I want you to just like react or elaborate, sort of like explain this tweet. Um, I don't know what the hell mental models are. I used to think I was dumb for not knowing what mental models are. 'Now I think everybody else is dumb for thinking about Monte Carlo.' Some version of that.

Yeah, that's right. Um, in Silicon Valley, it's so in vogue to be like, 'Oh, I'm applying the, you know, this cognitive bias theorem to this situation.' Um, and, you know, everyone in Silicon Valley that's smart talks like that. And so I was just like, 'Why do I— when I see something, I don't see it in that same way.' And I just thought I was an idiot., and I always solve a problem like from scratch, like tabula rasa, like it's the first time I've seen it. And I just like that way of doing it. So I gave up trying to find mental models.

SHAAN

Um, all right, another one. You started your first two businesses on what I'll call waves. So like the Facebook app platform, I think launched the same day you like had quit your job and were like, what can I do next? Let me just do this. Um, you saw the announcement, you're like, I'll just do that. I have nothing to lose. Um, same thing with the mobile app store launch. I think you were one of the first big iPhone games. Um, what are the waves today? What would 22-year-old Sully be doing now?

Uh, probably something in genetics or, um, AI. Uh, yeah, probably one of those two things. I think that's the biggest sectors.

SHAAN

Okay. What, um, you, uh, 7 years ago we were at dinner and I was just asked you a question. I was like, why haven't you— were like, I want to build like a big company, a billion-dollar company. I was like, like, why haven't you done that already? Uh, you, you're so smart, you're so great. Why, like, what's, what's gone wrong? And you said to me, I don't think I understood what a billion-dollar company was before. What did that mean?

Uh, I think you need to have a certain moat, and, uh, there's a bunch of things you need to get right to build a billion-dollar company. You need to have a big market, you have a clear way of getting customers that, um, makes economic sense, and you need a product that's really good. So even today, I feel like I've got a very clear path to be able to build, you know, $100, $200 million businesses, but I haven't quite figured out how to build a billion-dollar business outside of taking 5 or 10 $100, $200 million businesses I think there's a different code to build a billion-dollar business than a $100 million one.

SHAAN

Excellent. Uh, what would you do if you were MrBeast?

I would start a Y Combinator for creators and maximize the, uh, basically find, uh, the next Kim Kardashian, the next MrBeast, and support them and own a piece of them and be a kingmaker where I'm making other kings.

SHAAN

Um, you did a lot of startup investing. I think you've pulled back some from startup investing. Give me the, uh, the, the bullet point version of your take on startup investing.

Um, I think startup investing, uh, I think competing for deals sucks. I hate trying— I find it very demeaning trying to convince somebody to let me invest $50,000 in their round. A friend of mine was raising money and got a term sheet from Andreessen Horowitz and Bill Gurley at Benchmark and went with the Andreessen Horowitz term sheet. And Bill Gurley was so mad that he called the founder up and like yelled at them for 2 hours and sent them 15 angry emails. And Bill Gurley is one of the most successful people in the industry, and the fact that he still has to do that made me be like, this is a industry with no moat. I don't want to like have to go kind of beg or try to twist people's arms to let me invest in their startup. The other thing that's happened is trying to turn $50,000 investments into $2 million over a 10-year period doesn't really do anything for me anymore. So my first startup investment ever was a $100K investment in a company called Chartboost in 20— 2011 or 2012, and then the company sold in 2021, and I made $2 million. So that was a 10-year time span. Um, so I, I think having to wait 10 years to get, uh, cash out is really annoying and makes me like it a lot less. I think the valuations have also gone really crazy, um, and companies are so much more competitive. Like, uh, there's a company called Divi Home that raised at a billion-dollar valuation, and there's 4 other Divi Homes out there, um, that are competitors to it. So the combination of high valuations and increased competition makes it really hard to make any money as an investor. And I've evolved from being interested in kind of making these $50K checks into trying to buy a majority interest or a 30-40% interest in businesses that have revenue and profit or a path to profit. I think that's a better way to invest for me because I'll see money back and be able to take that money and reinvest it in other new businesses.

SHAAN

What's the biggest investment miss you've had and biggest hit you've had?

Um, biggest miss was Coinbase. My, uh, at TinyCo, we had this guy who worked for me named Adam Merber. He was roommates with Fred, the, um, Coinbase co-founder. And so Brian Armstrong and Fred, um, were fundraising for their Series A. They got a term sheet from Andreessen Horowitz and, um, Benchmark and a bunch of other firms. And so they called me and said, hey, should we go with Benchmark? Should we go with Andreessen Horowitz?, you know, we at TinyCo raised money from Andreessen Horowitz. Marc Andreessen was on the board. And, uh, I was like, go with Andreessen Horowitz. Here's what's awesome about them. And, um, on that call, if I was like, hey, by the way, can I put in $25K into this round? Uh, I feel like they would have said yes. And that $25K at their IPO was worth $200 million. I think it's probably—

SHAAN

did you not ask because you didn't believe, or you didn't ask because you didn't think about it?

I didn't ask because I didn't believe, actually.

SHAAN

That's the honest answer.

Yeah, crypto, Bitcoin— these guys are building PayPal for crypto and Bitcoin. That's silly. That's just PayPal.

SHAAN

Um, what about biggest hit?

Biggest hit.

SHAAN

Well, let me ask you, you wrote something on here. You said could have invested in Facebook stock. I thought you— I read something that you had bought after you sold your company that was on the Facebook app platform. You had bought Facebook secondary shares. Did you do that or, or am I missing that?

Um, I did this really stupid thing, uh, that I'm still embarrassed of to this day, which is I, uh, signed a contract to buy some Facebook stock, like $150,000 worth. And the stock price, you know, it was private, but in the private market, the price went down by 50%. And I called my father and was like, oh, you know, this happened to me. And he was like, don't worry about it, just buy it and you'll be fine. It'll go back up. And instead I didn't buy it. They, I think they might've sued me and said, hey, you signed a contract to buy this. And then I said, okay, fine, I did. And I paid them $75,000 to not buy it.

SHAAN

Versus $150K to buy it?

Yeah, yeah, it was $150K to buy it. So I paid them $75K to not buy it. And I was gonna go buy some from somebody else who was selling it. And they backed out, so I didn't end up buying it. And then while I was buying it from the other guy, somebody else came to me and was like, "Hey, I've got Facebook stock to sell too." And so I hooked up a friend of mine with that Facebook stock and he bought $50K worth of stock and that $50K ended up being worth like $8 million, uh, for him, which is kind of amazing. Um, and, uh, I was actually raising a fund to be like, we're just going to buy Facebook stock.

SHAAN

That's what I read. I, after we had very first met, I was like, who is this guy? And I Googled you and I saw some article where you had sold your app on the, your Facebook app. And you were like, it was like, what are you going to do now? And you're like, actually, I think Facebook is the good investment, not like my app. And you're like, I'm going to just buy like millions of dollars of Facebook stock if I can. Um, and I was like, wow, this guy's super aggressive and interesting. Like I, what a great, in hindsight, well, this was now many years later. So I was like, you know, wow, that must've turned out amazing. I didn't, I never asked you about it. I never knew the full story.

Yeah. This was in 2008 during the great financial crisis. So everyone was running away from everything and Facebook was valued valued at $2 billion in the private market at the time. Um, and, you know, hadn't IPO'd and was unclear when it would IPO. Um, was, you know, probably at $100 or $200 million MAUs, something along those lines. Um, and actually I met this guy who's, uh, in New York City and was like, hey, I'm trying to buy this stock. And he's like, that's a brilliant idea. And I was like, yeah, I'm trying to, you know, get the best price possible. And he's You idiot. Don't worry about what price you're getting. Just buy from everyone who's selling it. Go buy it. Um, because this price is so cheap that it doesn't matter. Matter. Don't worry about whether it's $2 billion or $3 billion or $4 billion. Just go buy it, buy it all. And, uh, I just kind of fucked it up.

SHAAN

Yeah. Easier said than done for sure. When those moments happen, uh, it's happening right now in crypto. It's like, I know so many people that were like, ah, ah, I missed it. I wish I got in blah, blah, blah, as it was going up. Crashes back down to, you know, ETH's at $1,000, Bitcoin was at $16,000, you know, like a month ago. And it's like, hey, you know, if you did want to buy, like, now would be a pretty good time to buy probably. And they're like, ah, I mean, this thing is, uh, who knows now? And they're the same people that 3 years from now are going to be like, I wish I had bought again. And they're still, they're just never going to buy. They're just going to constantly sit on the side and wish that they were buying. And never buy at the times they should and always wish they could buy at the times they shouldn't.

That's me right now, because I've got like $40 million or $50 million in US T-bills that like mature every 30 days. And, um, I'm keeping them on in like short-term T-bills because I'm like, I'm gonna find some other investment, whether that's the S&P 500 or something else. There will be other investments, and now is the time to go buy them. Um, the, a couple months ago, the S&P 500 was at like 3,600 and that was my trigger to go buy it. And I was like, ah, it's going to go to 3,500. I'm going to wait till 3,500. It never hit 3,500. I am still sitting on those T-bills, did not buy S&P 500. Yeah.

SHAAN

Very, very hard to do this sort of thing. But like, uh, maybe this is where the mental model works, the cognitive bias or the whatever, whatever bias this is. I got it. You know, if there's someone out there who knows all these biases and they're right, I have all of them.

SHAAN

And what's the line there between degenerate gambler— because I've done that too when I'm losing money and playing poker or blackjack or whatever— what's the line between degenerate gambler and genius? Maybe there is no line. Maybe it's how the result turns out.

Yeah, I think it's a result, but also it's the psychology going in where you're like I know this is going to go down. I don't care because I, I know I can wait 5 years or 10 years and this will go back up. And he was like, this is below replacement costs. So if you were to build a new home right next door that was the same home, it would cost you 4 times as much as I'm paying for it right now.

SHAAN

So yeah, amazing.

Our software is the worst.

SHAAN

Have you heard of HubSpot? See, most CRMs are a cobbled together mess, but HubSpot is easy to adopt and actually looks gorgeous. I think I love our new CRM.

Our software is the best. HubSpot, grow better.

SHAAN

You have a very honest LinkedIn, and I saw a guy who I think one-ups you, and I actually want to tell you about this business in a second. Amazing. So Google this guy, Justin Yoshimura. So Justin and then Yoshi M-U-R-A. So I want to read you this guy's LinkedIn. He goes, I'm currently the founder Founder, chairman, and CEO of CSC Holdings, one of the dime a dozen quote unquote unicorn startups. So already I'm like, wow, wow, who is this guy?

Unicorn startups, dime a dozen. I'm trying, I've been trying for 15 years to make a unicorn. He's like, these are dime a dozen.

SHAAN

And then he goes, after being told that nobody would ever hire me, I quit the bureaucracy and the negativity of Palos Verdes High School. So already just like holding a grudge against his high school to start a marketplace for unlocked cell phones. Anybody who sells cell phones, ringtones, or any of that shit, they're like the best. They're great hustlers. So already, you know, bonus points. So he's got 2 points. First, making fun of the fact that he owns, he's a CEO of a unicorn. Second, high school, dropped outta high school and sold unlocked cell phones. He goes, which was acquired by a family office when I was 19 years old. More recently I started 500 Friends, a marketing loyalty thing. We merged with whoever and eventually acquired by whatever. And then he goes, I angel invest $50K to $1 million in interesting companies run by interesting people that he names a bunch. When he names the companies, he names the round he invested in. Another key, another key thing that only real investors and honest people do, um, which is that they, you know, you know, I invested in Mucks in the seed round. I invested in this one late stage, right? Versus what most people do is they'll go buy, you know, Airbnb shares in the public market and call themselves an investor in Airbnb. Right. It's like, we know, we know what you're doing here.

I've seen big venture funds do that too, where they're like, uh, this is a hot company. We want to invest in the secondary, in the Series D, a couple million bucks just to be able to put on our website.

SHAAN

Small amount at any valuation. I'm just buying a logo basically.

Yeah.

SHAAN

Um, so then he goes, besides, uh, besides business and things I shouldn't be discussing on LinkedIn, I love animals, dogs, many cats, especially Persian Himalayans, dolphins, whales. He names like 10 animals, manatees, turtles. Then he goes, despite this, I'm not a vegetarian, mainly because I lack self-discipline. However, I do want to clarify, I don't eat any of the animals above and I would judge you for doing so, especially considering that the prevalent belief is that eating wild animals at wet markets is what caused COVID. Where is this LinkedIn profile going?

Is this—

SHAAN

then he goes, I've been included in many vanity lists such as Forbes 30 Under 30, Inc. 500, whatever.

Yeah.

SHAAN

40 Under 40. But thankfully I stopped advertising these on my LinkedIn headline when I was 19 after realizing I was being a douchebag. For a formal bio, go to my Wikipedia. So First, just a deep breath to digest this guy. Do you know, have you ever heard of this company, CSC Generations? It's, it's pretty interesting. So what he did was he started buying up all these like kind of antiquated furniture companies. So it's this, it's this kind of hush-hush thing, but they own Z Gallerie, which like half my house is like from Z Gallerie. Um, he owns, uh, what are the other ones here? One Kings Lane. He lo— he owns Sur La Table. Uh, La Tabla. So he's bought like Sur La Tabla for $89 million, Z Gallerie for $20 million, One Kings Lane. And then he started making offers to buy— I heard about him because, um, my— our buddy, I don't know if you know Metab, but Metab, uh, sent me this link. He goes, this guy would be great for the pod. And Metab's like 100% signal to noise ratio. If he sends me something, a book, I instantly buy it. So this was like instantly, just put it on the list, do research on this guy. So this guy's 32 years old. And he is built basically like a, sort of like a billion-ish, let's call it, dollar company rolling these up. And what he is doing is he's making them more like e-commerce and digitally like savvy. Uh, so he'll close down half of the retail locations that aren't performing. He'll get the e-commerce side to build up. He'll take all the customer data that they have and he's like, dude, they, they have like years of customer purchasing data, but it's in a machine that's like 20 years old. That they can't even like literally extract and like put into an email database or like find it, you know, put it into Facebook ads or anything like that. So he's like, we take this, he's like, we build a system to buy these companies. And he's trying to build like what Constellation Software did for small SaaS companies. He's trying to do that for large furniture companies. He's like, he's like, that's my model. They built an amazing intake engine to buy like 30, 30 software companies a year and like unlock more value from them. I'm trying to do the same with furniture companies. And this guy gives like no interviews. Um, he's just this one guy. And the reason he's on people's radar now is because he started making these wild public offers at these old school furniture companies. So he went to them privately. He's like, I'd like to buy your company. And they're like, you know, they're in Nebraska, they're 65 years old. They're like, you know, my father's father built this table in this furniture store. Like, what are you talking about? And he's, here's this 32-year-old kid who lives in LA. And they're like, no, we don't, we don't want your kind here, basically. So they don't like his offer. So he's like, okay, this is getting me nowhere. So he just started releasing press releases saying, I'd like to buy this company for 20 or 30% over the public, you know, share price right now. Please respond, board. Uh, you have not been productive. You have not responded to my offer in private. You have not told me a counteroffer. You've said neither yes nor no. Your shareholders deserve this. Um, publicly. So he's publicly making offers on these two public companies. And that's how he's like now on people's radar because he was like pretty much doing this under the radar before this. What do you think of this, uh, this guy and this idea?

That's genius. Uh, I love it because there's just so much unlocked value in these businesses and he's focused on a specific vertical, furniture. I have no idea why he's focused on that vertical, but just that kind of focus will allow him to be able to, um, take the same product, sell it across a lot of these different retailers. Get crazy improvements in margin by combining the scale of all of these. And the idea of doing it, going after publicly traded companies that are like undervalued, so good.

SHAAN

And so he said, so they're doing, they're doing over a little over a billion in revenue now out of their thing. And he said he's targeting furniture because they're undervalued. They lag. They're like kind of like, there's sort of like lagging and they, they, who could benefit the most from like a digital glow up? He's like, it's these companies that are like basically not participating in the right way in like the digital world and the economy and e-commerce and, and whatnot. And so, um, he goes, a lot of these old school furniture companies have a ton of customer data. It's in an old physical server in their warehouse. Software's 30, 40 years old. The company that made the software's out of business. You can't even like get them to update it. He goes, um, I'm just trying to get it to be modern. We've built a platform and a process to unlock the value of this customer data. I'm always a little, a little, uh, skeptical of that type of claim, but, um, he goes, I have, I have no desire to have my own brand. Um, he goes, Constellation Software has no brand. They're just a $40 billion company that grows 33% a year. 10 years ago, the stock price is $100. Now it's $2,000. They created a platform to buy these companies and unlock the value and tuck them in. They have the infrastructure, people, and process. They created a machine to unlock value in this category. I don't think anybody's done that in retail. Uh, that's what we wanna become. Wow.

Uh, first of all, I just love the tone with which he speaks and like the humility and is just kind of like, this is what we're doing. It's simple. There's no magic to it. Um, it's obvious. In fact, why isn't somebody else doing this? Okay. Nobody else is, we'll do it. And that's kind of amazing.

SHAAN

So I bring this up for two reasons. One, on the tone, uh, he reminds me of you. Your LinkedIn is the same way where you'll be like, I invested in this company, kind of got, it was kind of like a Yelp for this-ish. I don't know. I, these guys can explain it better. And like, no, no investor would write that on there. Or you'd be like, yeah, I kind of got acquired, acquihire-ish. I don't know. Good outcome for the guys. You know, okay for me. Um, you're, you're very honest with like your portfolio, which I thought was good and unique. Nobody writes on LinkedIn like that. LinkedIn is basically like, you know, it's like those dog shows. It's not like owning a dog. It's like those dog shows. If you watched a dog show, you'd be like, is this what owning a dog is like? It'd be like, no, that's nothing like what owning a dog is like. Um, so I, I thought you liked that. You also, when I started my e-com biz, you sent me a one-line email. I don't know if you remember this. You go, you go, with my last business, we realized that we just have to do this one thing differently than everybody, than like the current status quo, and it would work. We didn't need magic. It didn't need like 10 genius things. We just needed, we just had this one fundamental thing. What's the one thing you're gonna do that's gonna make this work? Um, and like, you know, that one question, I was like spinning for like a week cuz I was like, ah, I don't know. I don't have a good answer to this question. Does this mean my business is going to fail? But this is a great question and I stashed it in my great questions list. I thought, okay, I need to find that for this business, but also for every business going forward. What is the one thing that needs to be true or like, you know, is true about this? Do you remember sending me that?

No, not at all. But I think that sounds like the sort of thing I would do. It— for some reason it reminds me of my first company I started. Uh, I started with a friend of mine from college, um, and we sold the company and after we sold the company, we got into a fight and, uh, he sent me this email that was like 50 reasons this company succeeded despite your existence. And I was like, ouch. And so I went and read it and, uh, you know, he got to like 25 good reasons and then, uh, 26, he was like, you get the gist. And For a little while, I read that email like every day for like the first year that I got it. And then after that, I read it like kind of once a year, every year, to just be like, what is it that he said and what was the truth to it? I don't know why it reminds me of that, but that was such a great—

SHAAN

Great email.

Great email. There was some truth to it, enough where I could kind of be like, cool, let me just take this feedback and action it in the future. Um, and it was also ironic in that, um, you know, he, uh, he didn't, he kind of gave up the startup game kind of shortly after that.

SHAAN

Man, you really broke him as a partner.

Well, he actually tried to do a couple other startups and then I think, um, and I think got into YC and did a YC-funded startup. Um, But I think it's, you know, startup game is a hard game. And so he was just like, this, this game isn't for me after some number of years. Um, and the other thing that's crazy actually is, uh, so, you know, I started that company, then I started TinyCo and we were raising our Series A from Andreessen Horowitz and he found out and, um, he sent them an email saying, you shouldn't let this guy, uh, you shouldn't invest in this guy, call me. And so they called him and, you know, he was like, basically read that list of 50 things. And, uh, you know, it almost killed the, killed the deal. Cause they were like, yeah, we're worried about investing in this deal because of this. Um, and, uh, it's funny because there's so many things that, um, people, uh, there's so many things that people will like admonish privately, but, uh, but kind of celebrate publicly, like Travis, the Uber CEO, when he heard that some company, some VC fund was investing in Lyft, he stopped what he was doing. He drove down to that VC firm and said, here are all the reasons you shouldn't invest in Lyft. Right. And that seems crazy. Uh, but because he was successful, brilliant. And, uh, there were a couple other things with like Mark Pincus and Zynga where he did the same thing. So, um, it was just a funny experience going through that with him and the kind of Andreessen Horowitz Series A. And, uh, it's funny now because somehow, uh, 10 years later we're, uh, great friends again. And, uh, you know, he got married and I was like the best man at his wedding, which is insane.

SHAAN

All right. Happy ending to this. You, um, you also have been talking about this kind of like buy a public company thing. So, cause I'm like, yo, what's next for you? What do you, what's the next big swing? What are you excited to do? And, uh, you've talked about this, so let's, let's go into some of those, that idea, cuz I don't think most people in the startup game think or talk about going and buying a public company or, or, you know, sort of a hostile takeover or what, what have you. Uh, what's the idea here and why might you do it?

Um, yeah, so I've been kind of trying to figure out what to do next. I think after TinyCo, I was like, wow, startups are hard. I'm gonna try to take it easy. And, uh, now gotten to a place where I'm like, cool, let's do something big again. Um, and starting a new company from scratch is really hard. So I've just been like, is there a public company that I can acquire, um, where I don't go through that zero to one phase that everybody loves, but is really difficult and go to a place where something's already at a five or a 10. And, uh, can I then take that and scale it as an as a way of kind of running a business. So to me, the perfect business out there to acquire is this company that was— that's— this is number 1 on my list— is a company that was a $3 billion— that's currently a $3 billion company, but in the private market was $10 billion. So it was worth $10 billion before, and now as a public company, it's worth $3 billion. The company is Squarespace.

SHAAN

Squarespace ad. I feel like every— the only time I ever hear Squarespace is in their ads now.

Yeah, Squarespace spends, uh, so much money on these like podcast ads, and, uh, you hear about them everywhere on podcasts or, um, places that you wouldn't really— you don't see companies doing like direct response advertising. Like, I never see them on Facebook, but I always hear about them on podcasts, right? And so the stock is down, you know, 50% since the IPO. They're at this like kind of $900 million revenue run rate now. Uh, it's a subscription business with more than 4 million subscribers. Um, I'd love to buy it because I think it's a great company that's super undervalued. Uh, it's not being run to maximize profits, so it's being run in a way that keeps it at breakeven. So I think you could run it to maximize profits, get rid of those podcast ads, focus on direct response Facebook ads to get new customers.

SHAAN

So where's the fat in their, in their spending?

They do a ton of like, uh, non-direct response ads that are like TV ads or podcast ads that I think are great to have this like halo effect around the brand. But I don't think those are the optimal way to maximize return on ad spend.

SHAAN

Right. And so they do, I think, $300 or $400 million of marketing spend. So that's one. You could make that more efficient or cut that down. Where— what is the, the other? Is it like, like, you know, like Elon buys Twitter, he fires half the staff type of thing. There's like a huge headcount or what else is like fat in their system?

Yeah, I think they've got a ton more people than they need. Their headcount costs are like $225 million a year. And their headquarters is in New York City. And I think you could just cut that team materially and, um, you know, get rid of the New York City headquarters because it's super expensive to be there. Yeah.

SHAAN

Sam was talking about, I remember back in the day, like, uh, one of the earliest podcasts, talk about Casper. And he's like, Casper, you know how I knew Casper was going to fail? They had like 150 employees in New York. And it's like, why are you, why are you hiring all these people in New York? You don't need, these people should be sitting in like, you know, South Carolina, Omaha, and like, you know, these other places. Like, why is your customer support, you know, somebody making, you know, all this money in, in New York? He's like, that's the first thing you gotta do is just get rid of New York. And he was like so adamant about it. That was like his number one rant. And this is at a time when Casper was still like seen as like kind of like one of the like rising stars. Like now I think Casper's just kind of taken a beating in the, in the market and all that stuff. Um, I think it might have gone private again. Um, because it's—

yeah, Casper went private.

SHAAN

Couldn't last publicly, I guess. But, uh, but I remember that was his like number one thing. He was like, uh, say no more. I don't need to read the P&L. Uh, I just saw how many employees work in New York. I could tell you this business is mismanaged from day one.

There's this great Carl Icahn story where he buys a business, uh, that makes like, um, subway cars. And, uh, they've got a huge team in New York. And a team somewhere in Middle America. And he goes to the team in New York and is like, there's 3 floors of them in some fancy Midtown building. And he's like, so what do you guys do? And, uh, you know, they show him all these presentations for 2 days and he's like, okay, I saw the presentation. So what do you guys do? And they're like, we just told you. And so there he's like, all right, let me go visit the guy who runs the Middle America thing that actually makes the railroad cars. And so he goes to visit them and he hangs out with the guy, and the guy's super charming. And at the end of the day, he's like, so, uh, you know, there are these guys in New York. What do they do for you? Uh, do you need them? And he's like, no, those guys don't do anything. In fact, I got 4 guys that are just there to manage those guys and all the questions that they bother us with.

SHAAN

Firewall.

Yeah, if you get rid of those guys, I, uh, think the business will continue to grow and, uh, we'll be fine. And so the next day he goes back to New York and fires 3 floors of people.

SHAAN

It's like that scene in Entourage where Ari Gold just walks in with the paintball gun and just starts blasting everybody. That's basically like the New York, uh, the New York firing by Carl Icahn.

Yeah, he tells this story with such a smile. And, um, actually he tells it as like This was pretty early in my career, uh, so it took me like a couple months to do this. If it was now, I would buy the company and fire them like the next week.

SHAAN

And so how would, how does somebody actually do this? How do you go buy a $3 billion company? Because you're rich, but you're not $3 billion to spend on a company rich. So how does somebody do this?

Yeah. Um, I think $3 billion, the $3 billion thing is probably too much for my, uh, you know, personal balance sheet. But the way you would go about it is just like the guy at CSC Generation is doing, which is, um, make a public offer. It's the same way Elon Musk did it. Uh, you first make a private offer, then you make a public offer. You, um, make sure that all your financing is lined up when you do the public offer. And, you know, the way that the US stock market works and, um, shareholder rights laws work is board has to respond to that offer and they have to have a really good reason to not take it if it's, if it's at a material premium to the current stock price. Otherwise they're going to get sued out the wazoo by shareholders. Right. And so, yeah, that's kind of how you do it.

SHAAN

Okay. So that's, that's one way you— let's do some of the other things. Let's do— so that's from big idea to fun smaller ideas. So you, uh, you were telling me something like you helped your buddy, your, I don't know, high school friend or college friend or something like this, sell their dental practice. What, uh, tell us, teach me about that. I don't know anything about that.

Yeah, uh, this was a chance for me to be a deal doula. So this friend of mine called me and was like, hey, I got a quick question for you. Um, somebody— I, I started this dental practice, you know, 10 years ago. Somebody, um, came in to make an offer. Should I take it? And, you know, I thought it was going to be one phone call. It ended up being like 60 hours of work with a bunch of phone calls with him and, and the buyers of the business. Um, and it was super cool to see the inside of a dental practice and how, uh, the P&L looks and how a company gets acquired like that. So he has a dental practice that's massively profitable, that he runs in a way where he's optimizing for his lifestyle. So he does 7 figures in EBITDA, has a 50% net margin, all while working 3 days a week. And I was just like, oh my God, he's working 3 days a week.

SHAAN

What is he doing the other days?

He is making up new hobbies that he's getting excited about. Like, he's never gone fishing before. And he's like, I got all this time to kill because I don't have—

SHAAN

I bought all this gear. Now I have to learn this hobby.

Yeah. So he'll go find a new hobby and like buy the gear, find somebody in town who is good at that hobby and go with them. So actually, I hung out with him recently and he's like, let's go fishing. I was like, when did you take up fishing? He's like, I got so much time. So he works 3 days a week and, uh, he's not optimizing the business for EBITDA. He has a big waiting list of patients who, uh, want to become patients, but he doesn't have the time to see them. He has one dentist that works for him and a bunch of dental hygienists, but none of that is being done in a way where he's like optimizing for revenue or profit, just optimizing for his quality of life. So this private equity firm is doing a roll-up of all of these dentists in that area. And it's super interesting how the private equity— so they've got a company that's going around and doing this roll-up of dental practices. The company is run— has a CEO which is a dentist, super nice guy, uh, super well-known in the area and admired by— admired and liked by all of the other dentists in the area. So he's kind of like the figurehead of the company. Good cop. Good cop. Then they've got a COO who is this hardened guy who's bought tons of businesses and worked for a bunch of private equity firms and is an experienced acquirer. And you don't even like talking to him after, you know, 5 minutes. And he's the bad cop. So good cop and bad cop go in and, you know, good cop does all the charming. Saying, this is going to be a great acquisition, look at how it's turned out for me. Bad cop does all of the numbers and negotiating. So they bought this business and they bought it with a really simple premise. They bought it for a 7x EBITDA multiple. And they're like, we're going to go buy all the dentists in this area that we can. And we'll sell it at a 15x EBITDA multiple because we'll get to a scale of, you know, $20-30 million in EBITDA.

Yeah, exactly right. So that's one aspect. And then the other aspect is they were like, there's all these things that we can do to increase revenue for this guy's business. One, we're going to add another dentist, eliminate the waiting list. Anyone wants to see a dentist, they're going to be able to see a dentist within a week. They added another dental hygienist chair. So the dental hygienist chair costs like $10,000. And, um, my buddy, uh, just didn't go buy one and, uh, kind of put a dental hygienist there to increase dental hygiene revenue. They even told him that there's all these things they can do to maximize, to increase the amount of money they get from insurance companies. So they were like, there's this one instrument, whenever you're doing a cleaning, just pick this instrument up. You don't even have to put it inside the mouth of the patient. Just pick it up for a second and then put it back down. And then you can claim at this higher insurance code and we're going to generate more revenue. So he called me and was like, you know, is this moral or is this immoral? Like, can I go back to these guys and say, hey, I don't want to do this, this doesn't seem right?

SHAAN

He said, as he's holding the tool up for 45 minutes just to see what happens.

That's right. Uh, and then because they bought all these other dental practices in the area, they're able to take one dental practice and say, oh, um, you need braces, or you need a root canal, or you need whatever 'Uh, oral surgery procedure, we're going to refer you out to somebody.' And so they used to— he used to refer to people who are just kind of third parties, and now he gets to refer to people that are in the network already owned by the private equity firm.

SHAAN

Nice. Yeah, okay, that's great. So you see that machine and you're like, 'Wow, this is amazing.' Uh, what's your kind of like big takeaway from that experience? Because I think most people wouldn't take the time to go do that.— you did, and I think you probably got something out of it. What was your big takeaways?

Well, I thought it was amazing. That was a win for the private equity firm, and just being able to see the roll-up strategy and how good it was for them upfront was awesome. I also got to see it from his perspective, and from his perspective, it was also a huge win. It was an easy transaction. He didn't shop it around. Um, it was a way for him to retire and become the richest person that he knows. He owned the real estate of the dental practice, so he got to keep the real estate. And now the acquirer pays him rent every month for the real estate that he owns. And, uh, now he gets to go— because he was working 3 days a week, which is a lot— he now gets to take month-long vacations to Europe or Africa or wherever he wants to go for fun with his whole family.

SHAAN

Yeah, that's amazing. I also like the, I'm the richest guy I know. I think that's a funny thing that actually does happen in a bunch of like, especially smaller towns and, uh, like niche things. It's like if you can make $8 million or something like that, you are, you, you know, you're done. Like you don't need any more. And you, you feel like there's a beauty in that. Like if you're in Silicon Valley, you could build a billion dollar business and like, You might not get invited to the big boy table still, uh, right? Because it's just like everybody knows 50 people that are more successful, younger, smarter, and, uh, you know, more ambitious than them. And so there's just this never-ending, you know, like race that you're on if you're in Silicon Valley, New York, LA, and that's just not true in these other places. And I think there's some, there's something great about that.

Yeah. It's amazing. The only way to win the rat race is to opt out of the rat race. And, uh, he has opted out and, uh, has thereby won the rat race. And it's so funny to compare my life to his because, um, I spent so much more time working and, uh, you know, have made a bunch of money so that maybe I don't need to work as hard or at all, uh, and yet I continue to work and he's like, I'm chilling.

SHAAN

And, uh, you've thought about that or no, it's like just not your nature?

Um, I have— one of my goals for 2023 is to like take it a lot easier work-wise and spend a lot more time, uh, doing as many fun things as possible. Like I'm in LA right now, they have this thing called the Porsche Driving Experience. Uh, so you go and go with a bunch of friends, uh, they've got Porsches and a racetrack and you get in a Porsche and just drive it around the racetrack as fast as you can without killing yourself.

SHAAN

We, you know, when we got back from the weekend getaway that we did, I gave a debrief and I talked about this one observation I had, which was that at that thing there was peop— we met people or we were hanging out with people that were of like 4 or 5 different life phases. So there was like, um, you know, uh, you know, Victor and Jude, basically like, you know, 12-year-olds and their mindset was like, yo, wake up, it's time to play. Like they literally woke us up with a boombox by the window just playing like, you know, Tiësto or something like that. And they're like, come on, the pool's already warm. And then we can go to the sauna, then we can play golf, then we can play wiffle, we can play this, play that. Like they were just, and like from the moment they woke up to the moment they went to sleep, they were like, let's play. So that was like the, you know, 12-year-olds. And then it was like the 20-year-olds we met that came over that night that were basically like building the NFT projects or doing the like TikTok, the TikTok DTC brand that was just taking off. And they were like, I don't know how to describe it, but they were kind of like in that hustle of like, they kind of thought they had it all figured out, but they don't, but they don't realize that yet, but that lets them do some cool shit because they don't know what they don't know yet. So they were just like young stallions, like just full of exuberance and didn't understand where the limitations were, what the drawbacks were, but that's okay. They'll run headfirst into that wall when it comes, but they're having a good time doing it. And then there was like me, Ben, like we're like in our 30s and it's like, you know, the 30-year-olds are sort of like, like, okay, I'm, I'm, you know, I still have enough energy to do things, but I'm not dumb enough to just do them blindly. I don't have that, that, that great ignorance yet. I, I really like kind of overanalyze things almost. And so the whole time we were like trying to think through our next project, trying to like sit down and map it out and pros and cons and all this stuff. And, um, and then there was you guys who were in your forties and you were like, yeah, uh, you were like, and Ramon. Yeah. Yeah. You're like, oh, Ramon's like throwing out his back back playing pickleball and like, you know, you guys were basically some combination of like, let's have fun. Like, let's go surfing. Let's play sports. Like, yo, seize the day. I don't know how much longer I'm going to be able to do all this stuff constantly. Like I'm doing it. And, you know, like, I guess like there was like an element of like, you know, yeah, business stuff is cool, but like life is a lot cooler than business. Um, where the 30-year-olds and the 20-year-olds were like, no, winning and business is a lot cooler than life. Yeah, and like, I remember just continually trying to be like, hey guys, all right, you guys want to just sit down and just whiteboard for a minute? And it was like, you know, just sort of like I was feeling this urge to do that. I feel you guys with this urge to like, the sun is out, let's go outdoors. And like, but let's wear our sunscreen because like we don't want to die. It's like this element of like, I want to live and I don't want to die. That's where you guys were at. And then we hung out with like a 70-year-old guy and he was just sort of like, oh, I want some action. I'm bored. I want some action. And like, you know, I want to contribute. I want to give back. And like, that was like a big focus. And like, you know, it's just fun to have like this energy around me. So that was kind of one observation I had. Hey, is that accurate as far as you read it or am I making stuff up here?

Yeah, it's super accurate. Ramon and I were like, it's Saturday night and we have a bunch of entrepreneurs who are just like, trying to sell us on their business and just like get themselves excited and meet people and network. And me and Ramon were like, it's 9 o'clock. I think it's time to go to bed. And these guys are like, no, let's stay up till 2 AM. Let's talk about business ideas. Let's start a new business tomorrow. Oh my God. This guy's selling mini katanas on the internet through YouTube and TikTok. Wow. So it was a real funny thing. And then, you know, you and Ben were like, let's talk about new business ideas. Here's a new business idea. What do you think? What do you think? What do you think? Oh, what about this? What about this? And Ramon and I are like, how about we jump in the pool?

SHAAN

Yeah. Like just take an ice bath.

Yeah. So it is funny to see these different seasons of life and, Yeah, I'm trying to kind of adjust to this new season. And, uh, for example, now on Saturdays and Sundays, I try not to touch my laptop at all and be outdoors and with friends as much as possible.

SHAAN

Well, that is— it's hard to make that shift in that season. I mean, even at the beginning of this podcast, like, I'm gonna buy a public company and take it to the moon, and then it's like, actually, I'm gonna like enjoy life and like, you know, whatever, you know, do family things and things like that. It's It's hard to even be congruent in a 1-hour podcast with like, you know, a kind of like direction. Um, so, you know, I think that's, that's, I've observed that amongst many, many people. It's like very hard. It's very hard to stay congruent. Uh, I noticed this about myself. Like I'll be like, oh, I love this content podcast thing. This is great. I think I could be the best at this. And then, uh, then I get all this positive feedback where it's happening and it's like growing and people like it. And then I'm like, yeah, but should I start this business doing this B2B thing? And then it's like, wait, what happened to the whole, like, I wanna do this content thing. It's like, ah, I don't know. Like, I just, it's hard to be congruent and it's very easy to get distracted and get off kind of like mission when you're used to doing one thing and you know, you can always go back to that well and do it. And there's this new thing that you think might be the right thing for you, but is different and maybe a little unfamiliar, a little less familiar.

I met this guy who started a company called Solo Stove and sold it, um, and it then later went public, uh, named Spencer. And, um, he was like, I started this company, I worked really hard, I sold it, now I made mega bucks, and, uh, I'm good, I'm financially independent. I, um, he doesn't invest in any startups, he doesn't invest in any private equity funds or VC funds. He's like, when people are like, do you want invest in this, that, the other thing. He's like, no, I'm good. He takes all of his money and puts it in the stock market in the Vanguard VOO, the Vanguard S&P 500 Index. Doesn't think about it at all. And he says that everyone else who is like this, is an entrepreneur, starts a company, makes it, and then goes back and starts another company, they're only starting another company because that's the only thing they know. And he's like, they just keep building a new prison for themselves that's bigger and brighter, but it's still a prison. And why would you do that? And so I had this call with him. And then for a week after that, I was just like walking in circles, like muttering to myself, what am I doing with my life? What am I doing? Why am I starting new businesses? What is all of this? Um, so it's really interesting to see people on the other end of the spectrum.

SHAAN

I think I told you that once when we, I remember we were at, uh, some park in San Francisco and you were telling me about your new thing and it was working great. And I was like, I was like, that's, I was like, that's great. And I'm like, uh, I admire that you do this with such ease. It's like watching Steph Curry shoot 3-pointers. Like, wow, you just can start a business and it just works like this. That, that, that, what happened to all the hard gritty stuff that I feel all the time? Like you're just doing it. That's amazing. Um, but then I also told you, I was like, I feel like you're playing the same level of the video game again. And like, you know, you kind of beat this level. Like, shouldn't you just like go to the next level? Uh, I don't know what that level even is. I don't even know what that means. Maybe it's not even business. Um, but like, you know, I said that and I felt like a real dick afterwards. I was like, that was a stupid thing to say. I remember like feeling like, you know, that I was, I first felt really bad. I was like, that was just kind of like a, a, I don't know, like like, that probably didn't feel good to say that or to hear that. And then I was like, also, like, I was like, well, do I believe it? And like, you know, would I want a friend to tell me that if they felt that about something I was doing? And I was like, yeah, I think I would. And I was like, I think he doesn't take that stuff seriously, so, you know, that's no problem. Um, but, you know, like, I've felt that, and I've, I've felt, seen that now in many people, the same, like, build a prison of your own making. And like you said, the only people who win are the ones who sort of opt out of the rat race. And it's really jarring when you see that and you're like, wait, what? You're leaving? But you could do— we're still here. And they're like, yeah, we're still here. And they're like, yeah, that's great. Um, I'm going to go wander over here. And I'm like, oh my God, you can leave this room? Like, I didn't know that was possible. It's like, it is honestly very jarring when you meet the like 1 out of 100 people in Silicon Valley who do that.

Yeah, it is, uh, stunning that people do that. And, um, It's so interesting when you meet people who do that and like what they choose to do with their time. Like you were telling me about that Braintree guy who's like, I'm trying to maximize my life. I'm trying to reverse my biological age. Yeah. Yeah. And so I change my diet. I've got like a team of doctors, nutritionists, physical therapists, trainers, and I'm reversing my age. And that's what he's doing with his time and energy and money. It's super interesting to hear when people Yeah, the thing I've seen— I now have this thought, which is that my life is actually limited by my imagination. And growing up, I always assumed it was limited by, you know, money or resources. And now I realize my life is just limited by my imagination. And one of the things that made me do is I'm trying to hire a chief fun officer. My definition of fun is often like, let's work. And let's grind it out. I'm trying to hire somebody who's the exact opposite of me to be like, no, that's lame. Uh, here's like 5 more fun things you could be doing right now. Go do those instead. And I will literally close my laptop and just go do one of those 5 things in response to that.

SHAAN

That's amazing. You, uh, that thing you just said, that my life is limited by my imagination, I think that's probably like— I don't know how many minutes into the podcast we are, but that's a, that's like a golden nugget right there. Like, that's something I'm gonna think about a lot. What, uh, say more about that, like either how you thought of that or what's an example of that?

Yeah. Um, you know, it's funny cause I'm living with my brother right now and the two of us wake up and we're like, it's Monday morning. Let's go. Let's grind it out. Let's go. Let's win the ball game. And, um, yesterday we like played paddle tennis for 4 hours until our limbs fell off. And that was way more fun than whatever work we're going to do today. Um, and so I just want somebody to, uh, like, I don't spend enough. I spend all this time being like, actually what's happened for me is as I've seen more businesses and gotten older and more experience, I feel like this is a little bit of a hyperbole, but I feel like Neo in The Matrix where you show me a business and I can like see through it and actually see the fundamentals of the business and have an opinion. About whether it's a good business or not, or I see opportunities where I'm like, there's a $100 million business here, and it's just a matter of like doing the work and executing it, and it could be a real business. Um, so I spend my— so much of my brainpower thinking about that stuff and very little of my brainpower thinking about how to have fun and like other cool things that people do in life. I spend a ton of time reading the Wall Street Journal and talking to entrepreneurs, but very little time talking to, uh, Instagram influencers or just people who are like balling out and having a great life. Um, and so I just want to spend more of my time and energy imagining fun things to do. Like, I love magic. I would love to have a magician show up randomly in my week. Um, like while I'm at a restaurant, a magician shows up and is like like, hey everybody, I got a magic trick for you, and then does a magic trick at the table.

SHAAN

I—

a friend of mine told me that him and a bunch of guy friends would go to Vegas every year, and one year, um, this guy was in charge of planning it and he hired, um, like 5 little people in, uh, tuxedos to follow them around, and then a bunch of, um, like the Brazilian Carnival dancers to follow them around the whole weekend. And so everywhere they went, everyone was like, who are these guys? They got into every club, they got free drinks, they got all these people coming up to them, and they had a dope weekend as a result. And, you know, lots of people just go to Vegas and like go to the hotel and gamble. And these guys, just through their imagination, had a better way of doing it.

SHAAN

Yeah. Amazing. All right. This has been good. Where do people find you? You're— you started tweeting, so shout out your handle and then we can wrap it up.

Yeah, uh, my goal is to get to 100,000 Twitter followers by the end of the year, so I'm going to be tweeting a bunch more. My Twitter handle is my full name, uh, S-U-L-E-M-A-N-A-L-I.

SHAAN

Yeah, Suleiman Ali. All right, great. Thanks for coming on, man.

You bet. Thanks, Sean.