#98 with Ryan Begelman - How to Bootstrap Buying a Mountain
Sean couldn't make it today, had some type of thing he had to deal with. Okay, so this is Sam Parr. I have a guest today, his name's Ryan Beagleman. We're going to talk a little bit about who he is and we'll get in some— I get to some ideas right away. Um, this guy who's here, his name's Ryan. I've met him, we had a bunch of friends of friends. I met him recently Uh, uh, when did I meet him? Uh, like online, like only 2 weeks ago. He joined Trends and I met him there. And I'm on this road trip right now. So right now I am, I'm living in Utah for a week and then I'm gonna live in St. Louis and then New York. And it was a coincidence that Ryan works here and lives here. And so I'm staying at his house. And so we're in this huge house that he rented out and it's lovely. And, uh, we're gonna get into it. So Ryan's kind of a weirdo in the best possible sense. He's done a ton of stuff. He had this company called BizNow Media, which actually was a huge inspiration for my company, The Hustle. He started this thing called Summit Series. Then they bought this $50 mountain called Powder Mountain, and they've done a ton of other stuff. And he's only 37 and he did most of this by 30. Super fascinating, all bootstrapped. Let's learn about it. So, Ryan, what do you say is your— is your story? Where did it start?
Well, I grew up outside of Washington, D.C., went to school in the Midwest, always wanted to be an entrepreneur, and you know, did the typical Wall Street banking, private equity thing, worked at the Carlyle Group. This is, you know, one of the world's largest private equity firms. And while I was there, I was looking for real estate to buy on the side. And so I started reading this little newsletter called BizNow that Mark and Elliott BizNow had founded. Mark was the father, Elliott the son. And I cold outreach to, to Elliott, the son. Because I was thinking, shoot, I wonder if I could buy this company or join or, you know, buy into this company. And that would help me leave Carlyle and start my journey of buying real estate and owning a cash flow positive, you know, news and media company that also had influence in the real estate world. And so I ended up striking up a relationship with Elliot, and we ended up figuring out this deal where basically we would buy a big chunk of the company from his dad. And, uh, and we would expand the company into new markets. So his dad was in DC. We would expand it to New York and Chicago and eventually 28 metro markets. And so I basically bought into the company and over 7.5 years, uh, we bootstrapped the company to 28 metro markets, becoming the largest commercial real estate, uh, publisher and conference business in North America and eventually the United Kingdom. And in 2016, uh, I sold the company to a private equity firm, but—
You sold it for $50 million too, which is a pretty huge win.
Yeah. And we were always, you know, we were profitable pretty much from the jump. And so, you know, it's a really, I think it's a really cool story because we did it all bootstrapped. Like, you know, Elliot and I each put in about $50,000 at the end of 2008. So a little over $50,000 total. And, you know, and over the course of 7.5 years generated over $1 billion of, of distributions either from profits or from selling the company. Not, not all of that, you know, we got to keep, there was, you know, a management team and others. But I think what's unique about it is that there was no venture capital. There was no, no lenders, no, no syndicate. We just did it all through profitable sales.
So basically, like, I mean, a lot of people who listen to this are Hustle readers. And the reality, it was we— I copied you guys, but for their perspective, it was like The Hustle, but for real estate and in different cities.
Yeah, exactly. It was an email newsletter, like super, you know, it sounds old-fashioned to make money off of email news, but— and the real moneymaker of the business, you know, advertising was a small portion of it, but it was all about events. And our events were these kind of like hyper-local commercial real estate events for, you know, brokers, developers, investors, lenders, architects, anyone who's interested anyone who's doing business in commercial real estate. And what was unique about it was we could deliver an audience of like 400 to 1,000 professionals every day, 300 conferences a year, almost every business day of the year, somewhere in North America. So like, you know, maybe today we've got an event in Dallas on, you know, office buildings. And then next week we've got an event in Brooklyn and it's about, you know, hotels in Brooklyn. And perhaps kind of the crazy thing is at the same time we built a few other companies. We built Summit, which you mentioned, which is this gathering for all kinds of leaders from, you know, artists, academics, to scientists and entrepreneurs, and anyone doing something really interesting that we think is a kind-hearted person.
Abrey, have you heard of Summit Series? Summit, Summit Series?
Yeah, you guys mentioned the last podcast.
That's where I heard it. It's pretty nuts. It's like this 4,000 or 5,000 person event that costs 3 to 6 grand, and they do it in like rural areas or on a cruise ship. It's pretty— it's like TED Talk for 28-year-olds, but experience like in a secluded area. But you— but here's what's cool is they would do it outdoors or whatever, and then eventually they said, well, they found this mountain and they bought this mountain. So Ryan and his buddies bought this mountain for $40 or $50 million, and I'm on that mountain now. Like, I went up there yesterday it's crazy. It was like an all-dirt mountain and they built all this infrastructure around it. But right, so like you had BizNow, you're running that, you took a few months off to start Summit Series, then you took a few months off Summit Series and bought this mountain. Is that right?
Yeah. So we got to this point where BizNow was like maybe 30, 40 employees and Summit had, you know, maybe 20 employees. And, you know, they each had this growing audience and my business partner Elliot, he fell in love. He loves skiing and he fell in love with this place called Powder Mountain, Utah, and that this, this other guy that was an attendee of Summit, Greg Morrow, introduced him to. And it's kind of this like hidden gem, like the guy who created Powder Mountain was this really adventurous guy who was a sheepherder, and he built the first chairlift in 1972 in here at Powder Mountain in Utah. And so we came along in 2012 and bought the ski resort and 10,000 acres. It's actually the largest ski resort by skiable acreage in the United States. And I think now Canada as well with Whistler. So it's huge. It's bigger than Vail, but it's got 7 lifts. And I mean, we didn't know anything about ski companies. We didn't know anything about building roads or development or how to build a brokerage company to sell land. But in 2012, we learned all of that, you know, bit by bit as we went. But once again, I think what's kind of cool about the story is that we bootstrapped it. You know, you would think normally for a project like that, you know, you'd go to Blackstone, you'd raise $100, $200 million, you buy the land, and then you'd spend, you know, $50 to a few hundred million dollars on infrastructure and lodges and hotels. And, and instead, we went to the Summit community, to people that we loved and trusted and who believed in us. And we said, hey, come out, experience a free event at the mountain. We hosted, you know, about 1,000 people over 10 events. And while we had the, the mountain under contract, and we said, look, put up $1 million to $2 million. And once we own the mountain, we'll develop roads, we'll develop utilities, and we'll give you a lot. And you'll build a beautiful house on that lot, and you'll bring your family there, and it'll be this amazing second or primary home. And after we saw our 250th lot, you'll get your money back. And so you'll basically get your lot for free, um, and be a part of this amazing new community. Um, and so that's, that's how we financed buying the mountain and, and building the initial infrastructure and lodging.
How many, how many summit events had you done up until that point?
I mean, we were doing basically 1 or 2 big ones a year for 4 years, plus a lot of like little events.
So then at that point, maybe you had had 10,000 or 20,000 attendees throughout at all your events.
Yeah, that's probably right. Something like that.
Okay, let's say it's 10,000 and you just called all as many 10,000s as you think you could. And you're like, you tried to convince 50 of them to give you $1 million each and you promised them, I promise you're going to have a house on this mountain. And then you, and then you convince those 50, 50 people to each give $1 million. And then you went to the guy that had the property goes, all right, here's $50 million, we want it.
Yeah, that, that's pretty much it. Only there's a cool little element to the story. We, we had a big event, um, that we were already planning to do in Tahoe in 2000, I guess in 2012. And, um, it was called Summit Basecamp. It was actually a skiing event. It was an event where we would take people to go skiing and we had about 1,100 attendees at the event. And we went around during the event to the 50 people that we knew really well and that we thought would love to be a part of this project who really were adventurous. And, uh, and, and we said, and we gave them this little, this little kind of like business card that said like, show up, cancel your flight and be in the lobby on the final day of our event. And on that final day, we chartered a, a big Boeing aircraft and we had a bus ready and we took everyone onto this plane where we had like a comedian perform on the plane. We did this whole fun kind of experience and we brought everyone to this crazy place, Powder Mountain, drove up to the top of the mountain. You were, you were up there yesterday. You know, it's insane up there. You can see the Great Salt Lake, you can see Wyoming, you can see Idaho, you can even see Nevada. And, and we took them and we said, we're going to build the future home of Summit here and we want you to be a part of it. And, you know, it's going to cost about $1 million and ultimately you'll get that million dollars back. And, you know, and that's kind of how it started.
That's awesome.
It's pretty wild. And I went up there and I like, I was like, wait, who on earth would trust? Because Brian, you were like in your late 20s and your partners were a little younger than you, right?
Yeah, I was 29. I think my partners were 27, 28.
And you're like, well, we've never done anything like this before, but we're going to bring you this mountain. Give us $1 million. And I promise that in like 10 years, I'll probably hopefully be a thing.
Yeah, it was, it was, it was definitely the boldest, most ambitious thing. You know, we have this slogan at Summit, make no small plans, and this definitely was that. I mean, we, you know, we had thought we were kind of known for doing crazy shit like this. Like, we had, we had taken over in, uh, the year before, in 2011, an entire cruise ship, which I've never heard of at that time anyone doing anything quite like it. And, um, you know, that was pretty insane. Like, we took, we had to we had to— unlike a hotel where you can pay in deposits, you know, the cruise ship, you have to put all your money up. And so that was like literally every dollar that we had in the company and every dollar that me and my partners had in our personal bank accounts.
How much did you have to put down for it?
I think that first cruise ship we had to put down like, like, I don't know, like $2 to $3 million all, all like. But what's crazy is like it's all before you even sold, like, you know, you're just starting to sell tickets, like before you sell a ticket.
Was the event business profitable?
Yeah, the event business was profitable. As we got bigger, we actually became less profitable and more focused on this like super long, super like many decade approach to building community. I think our passion was really about building an awesome community and living like a really interesting lifestyle as we did it. Biz Now, on the other hand, that was always much more focused on like, how do you build a great business that's profitable and also serves the community? Community. And Summit was a little bit more about, you know, how do you optimize for community first.
Great. Um, well, uh, so Ryan, you, you, what do you say? You, are you retired at the moment or in between stuff?
You know, I think I'm in between. I'm looking for my next adventure. I've been looking a lot at, you know, kind of micro private equity, buying companies that are about $300,000 in profit to $3 million. You know, you had Andrew Wilkinson on your show from Tiny, you know, basically doing something kind of similar to that is something I've been kind of obsessing about lately.
This is the most like me thing to do, but I also think it's the most like me and you, Ryan, the type of people who we are, which there are many of us, like we just meet randomly on the internet and then go and hang out. And so I'm up here, me and Sarah, my wife, and just Ryan are in this massive house. And for the last 3 days, All we've done is brainstormed on interesting ideas. And Ryan was friends with Adam Neumann, the founder of WeWork. He's friends with all these people who have come to his events, like ranging from like world leaders like Bill Clinton and like Richard Branson to like the founder. And like if you name a company of a billion-dollar company, he's like, yeah, they spoke, like I talked to them. So his perspective is interesting and all we've done is go through ideas. So let's just do it. Uh, oh, and by the way, your specialty, by the way, it seems is like bootstrapping. Like you don't want to raise any money, but you want to build— well, you want to build pretty big businesses, right?
Yeah. I mean, I hate this, you know, this term lifestyle entrepreneur, but I feel like we could rebrand it as maybe holistic entrepreneur. And, um, you know, you and I have been arguing about this over the weekend, but like my, my philosophy is that most entrepreneurs have been fed this kind of this, this reasoning that they should build a disruptive company and that, you know, TAM, total addressable market, is super important. They should go after like a billion-dollar concept and build a unicorn. And, and, you know, I have so many friends— I've had a front row seat, like you said, to tens of thousands of entrepreneurs. And so many of them end up in this situation where they're like, you know, 7, 10, 12 years into their business. They've only made a salary the entire time. And their business's only potential for making them like real money is to sell to a strategic. Because they're bleeding cash so they can't sell to private equity. They, they're not going to do a management buyout. They can't borrow against the company because it's losing money. And so they have to go public or sell to a strategic. Most are not big enough to go public. And, you know, usually there's only like 3 or 4 strategics they can sell to. Like a software company can maybe sell to, you know, Salesforce, Facebook, Google. Like there's just not that many. And there's only a couple of decision makers at each company that make those decisions. And you know, they, they might just change their strategy any given year. So I've seen a lot of people live with a tremendous amount of stress, you know, focusing on growth. And my point is there's a, there's a lot of ways that you can just build a company to accomplish your actual goal, which for me, you know, I think for many entrepreneurs is, is making just like a reasonable amount of income. And so I think there's ways to reverse engineer how to do that. And so a lot of my ideas are around bootstrap businesses, businesses that you can start with little to no money and, you know, and get up to making yourself, you know, half a million, a million, $3 million a year. And then if you want to sell, you know, great, you could also always sell your company. And if it's profitable, the good news is you could sell it to a private equity firm. And so, you know, my thought on that is, one, don't build capital-intensive companies. Two, like, build companies that have positive working capital. You know, companies like The Hustle where you sell advertising and then you deliver it later. You sell a ticket, you deliver it later. Um, and then, you know, there's riches in niches. So like, don't worry about giant addressable markets, like all the venture companies tell you. And, and then, so then, you know, how do you find these, these kinds of companies? Well, you know, one, you can look at who private equity firms are buying because they're generally buying profitable businesses and then figure out a smaller version of that business to start.
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Um, you know, I love like your, I love your show because you guys talk about frameworks. You want to talk about frameworks for a second? Yeah.
I mean, Sean is like, I told you, and Abreu will say this, Sean's like the framework king. He like hones everything into a framework.
Yeah. I love frameworks too. And I've been studying your framework. Of course, unbundling is an excellent one. You know, look at Reddit, take one thing that's working well on there, you know, look at Fiverr, et cetera. You know, another one I've been thinking about on my, my last, you know, 6 months off is think about like 3 columns. You've got all your marketing tactics in one column that you could study, like pay-per-click advertising, SEO, et cetera. And then you've got another column for like monetization methods, right? You could like sell tickets to an event, you could sell courses, like there's all these ways to monetize an audience. And then third are markets and like, you know, go study a bunch of markets. And once you've studied all these 3 columns, then you just cross-pollinate them a bunch and you come up with just different permutations. And I, I've been doing that 'cause I'm looking at buying companies and I want to be able to look at a company and say, okay, here's a great company, but here's 3 ways of marketing that they're missing. Here's 2 monetization tactics that they haven't thought of yet. And like, here's another market that, or another audience they could go after with their product. And all I then have to do is buy that company. Which I can do by raising a little bit of capital or borrowing from the SBA and just make those improvements. And it's a really easy way to make a decent living or a lot of money. And so I've been thinking about that. I think another fun way to go about this is just get into different interesting hobbies, especially hobbies that people in San Francisco, Austin, and New York and LA are not doing. So pickleball is really big in a lot of America, just as an example. But you can get into like, you know, a friend of mine just is getting into learning how to rescue people who are in trouble, like in the mountains, which is like part of the fire department. And so, you know, you learn a really niche hobby, and then you see niche problems in that hobby. And then you just come out with little products for that little niche and test different things that are, you know, generally cash flow positive early on. So, you know, like those are some of the things I've been thinking a lot about lately.
All right, well, let's get right into the ideas. What interests you?
I mean, so again, I love these ideas that can be, that can be profitable really quick, but can scale kind of limitlessly. So, you know, like just like a random one would be, you could build MasterClass for doctors. So, you know, you could basically film a bunch of the top doctors, most famous doctors in, in America, and you could, you know, create a series like MasterClass where people can pay a subscription. Doctors can pay a subscription to, to learn from other doctors. How do they build this super successful practice? But the way to get that off the ground initially without having to raise venture, like Masterclass raised a lot of money, is you go around and you persuade 20 doctors to pay, you know, $4,000 or $5,000 to be a part of a live Zoom meeting interview with other doctors that have built more successful practices than them. And you use that initial $80,000 from those first 20 doctors to start to build your service or start to build your offering. I, I saw you do this kind of with your, your idea course, for example.
There's a company related to this, but not it. And I'll let you know if it, it like, and like, it's kind of cool. So HealthStream. Have you heard of HealthStream?
No, I don't know that one.
It's publicly traded. So let's see what their tagline is. So they say HealthStream is dedicated to improving patient outcomes through development of healthcare organizations' greatest asset. They are people. And so what they— if I had to dumb it down, I would say that it's a video program that hospitals buy for their nurses and their doctors. Just it trains their nurses on like up-to-date stuff. And it's just a video, really, like a video thing, like a video system. And it does about $300 million a year in sales and it's publicly traded at like a multibillion-dollar market cap. No, no, no, sorry. $700 million market cap. So there's totally demand for what you're describing, I think.
Yeah, we, we had a, we had a BizNow Medical newsletter for a period. And I mean, there's just tons and tons and tons of doctors out there and it's a very splintered market and they need to learn how to build their practice. And so, you know, I think there's a bunch of education products there. Another area that I've been really fascinated by is drop servicing, or some people call it productized servicing. Have you heard of this?
No. What's that mean?
So, okay, you know what dropshipping is, right?
Yeah. Yeah. What, wait, say dropshipping, you said?
Yeah. Like, okay, so dropshipping, right? Yeah. Is, is basically I don't own or make the product. I don't keep inventory of the product, but I build a beautiful website. I go on Facebook, I push a bunch of, I push a bunch of marketing. I get people to come to my website. I, my website talks about, say, I don't know, a vitamin. I have a company in China that manufactures the vitamin on order whenever I have orders. I'm basically just a marketing funnel. And every time I get an order, I call up that company or, you know, I push it to them and they ship the product to the customer. And I basically make the margin between what it costs to buy it from the manufacturer and my marketing costs. And so that's pretty cool. And that's been around for a long time and it's a very competitive market. But a newer market that I think is going to get much, much bigger is drop servicing, where you basically, you go on Fiverr. Or you go on Etsy and you look for services that exist on those platforms and you pick one of them. So say like, I want to create a service. It's like, hey, we can, we make logos and we're a great logo maker. So I built a website that's like, we make the best logos in the world. I go on Facebook and market my website, and then I go on Fiverr and I hire contractors around the world to actually fulfill the orders and provide that service., and I'm essentially this like middleman. But you know, the buyer doesn't know that. The buyer thinks that I've got, you know, my designers working in my office, you know, in Manhattan, but they're really in Ukraine and they're really just contractors.
What, what's preventing you from launching this right now?
I mean, I've been actually looking at acquiring some, some companies in this area. Like, like, you know, you could, there's companies that are doing pretty cool stuff. Like, you know, maybe you want to have, um, you, you know, I don't know, a drawing of your wife for your wedding. You know, you want the husband and wife drawn for like a card. Like we could have, we could launch like, you know, weddingdrawings.com where we make, you know, a really cute drawing for your wedding, you know, whatever, hundreds of thousands of people are getting married, however many people are getting married every year. We're going to own that niche every time someone Googles that. And we're going to target people on Facebook, et cetera. And so like, you know, this is, this is, this is a really great business and you can start it with basically no money.
So I, um, I know two guys who did this. The first is WP Curve. So WP Curve, uh, and you know Design Pickle, right? You said Design Pickle. Yeah. So Design Pickle is started by this guy named Russ who I'm friends with. I think he does like $15 million a year in sales. They do what you're saying, which is like you need a logo, they make you logos really quickly, and then they do any like design work you need on demand, but through a subscription service. Well, when they started it, they were heavily inspired by WP Curve. It was started by my friend Alex. And if you Google WP Curve revenue, what you can find out is they would reveal their revenue and profit every single month. And they— and it's kind of interesting. So they were at like, let's say, it looks like $85,000— they were at $120,000 in monthly revenue. And what they did is they just had a team of WordPress people on staff, just like you're describing. And anytime you had a small WordPress problem, You paid a subscription and you would get to, uh, uh, have someone fix whatever was broken on your WordPress site. They eventually sold it to GoDaddy for a good amount of money or a small amount of money. But what you're describing, that service, one of the issues I think people have with it is you, it, I, there was problems with scaling it. Like of how do you, like, let's say you have like 10,000 orders a day. How do you fulfill all that? That was, I think when I talked to my friends, Alex and Russ at these businesses, That is the downside of this. Would you agree with that or no?
Yeah, although I see that as an opportunity. So the barrier to entry in the business is building a great order management technology platform, which you could build with a handful of coders, you know, that you hire abroad for a relatively small amount of money. But, you know, basically what you need to design is a great order management platform because ultimately what you're doing is you're managing probably, you know, 50, eventually to a couple hundred contractors around the world. Now one way to make this simpler, by the way, is you hire agencies. So, you know, a lot of the things you see on Fiverr, they look like an individual, but it's actually an agency that's, you know, propped up in, you know, wherever, you know, say Ukraine, for example. And maybe they've got, you know, 30 employees that are managing. So you go and make a deal with them that you're going to bulk buy from them and get a great rate and that, you know, you're going to pay them whatever, $30 to make your logos that you sell for $200. And so, but yeah, ultimately what you need is a great platform where, where the creators on your platform, the consultants can go onto the platform and grab the order. And you have to create like rules and parameters, like, you know, hey, if I put this up here, I need someone to grab this within 72 hours and fulfill it. And so it comes down to like fulfillment, you know, the challenges around hiring service contractors and of course quality control and customer service, but those I think those are relatively small challenges and, and I think that those challenges will at least create some barrier to entry.
What me and Sean always talk about, or we talk about lately, we're like, there's some businesses like we were talking about this railroad guy who I'm obsessed with and he's like, you're not actually in the business of like making cool-ass trains. You're in the, you're in the real estate business. And what you're describing is like, you're not actually in the logo business, you're in the operations business of like just How do I make this? How do I like— so that the, the skill set that you need and the temperament and the things that you want to care about when going into this is just how do I make something that like this smoothly operate, not how do I make like the best logos for people.
Yeah, totally. And I mean, I mean, look, you'd also make like awesome design guidelines for your artists and you would do things to make the logos great. But you're absolutely right. You're basically, you know, you need to be a great marketer, good at customer service, automated hiring and you have to build some proprietary tech, you know, to do the order management part. You should throw you another, another idea I'm excited about.
Yeah. You see what I'm highlighting here?
Yeah. Yeah. So subscription memberships. So I love subscription memberships. A friend of mine, I'll give him a shout out, Joel Holland, who I really admire. He's been coming to Summit from day one. He acquired a business from kind of like a mom and pop who had built this great membership where it allows people to park their RV. At wineries. They have like 1,400 wineries around the United States. And if you have an RV, you can park at any of these wineries for free. And the wineries like it because the people who park there buy wine and go on tours and they already have the space anyway. And the RVs love it because it's like a more creative place to stay than your typical RV park. And so Joel bought the business and they weren't doing a lot of online marketing. And so he just, he improved the website, he improved the online marketing, but Ultimately, what he has is tens of thousands of RVers, you know, and what I love about this story is that Joel had sold his first company and bought an RV and traveled around the country. And so it's a good example of getting into like a hobby that people in Silicon Valley are not paying attention to.
What's it called? Harvest Hosts.
Yeah, Harvest Hosts.
And how big is it?
You know, I think they're doing— I know that at one point they were doing over 7, you know, they're doing a low 7 figures in profit. I don't know exactly what the revenue is.. And you know, it's a, it's an amazing, it's a very inexpensive, it's $80, I think it's like $60, $80 a year depending. And, uh, yeah, it's a membership company with low churn and super happy customers. And, you know, Joel runs it with one full-time employee and a handful of contractors, and he lives in Vail, Colorado. And like this, by the way, this is the kind of entrepreneur that I feel like should be our heroes. Like, you know, we, we like to talk about the Musks and the Bezos, but like those people live, you know, these extreme lives that are awesome to write books about. But it's really hard to do that and like invest in your marriage and like, you know, in your children and have a nice life. Whereas Joel, you know, is working from Vail, Colorado with his wife. He's about to, you know, have his first child and he's running this great business making 7 figures.
Why do you like that more than— so like you said, you knew Adam Neumann and you've hung out with him a lot. And when you— Adam Neumann's the guy who started WeWork. He's got like this huge— I mean, WeWork's massive. And then you were joking around that like he's got these side projects which are also just freaking massive. And when you talk about that, it sounds so exciting. Why are you not more interested in some of these bigger things versus some of these smaller things?
So I think like step one is just try to free yourself. I see entrepreneurship as like a vehicle for creating freedom, freedom to decide what time you want to wake up, what you want to wear to work. Freedom to work with like, you know, friends of yours. And, you know, like Summit is a great example of this, like, and BizNow. We've spent the last 12 years living all around the world, hanging out with incredible people and building something that we really enjoy and love. And so I think Joel is a great example of that. And whereas if you're, if you're Adam Neumann or if you're, you know, Bezos, like you're, you're basically trapped in the growth game. Like you have to grow or your investors are not going to be happy and you're not going to make real money.. And for every Adam Neumann, you know, I, I can tell you from being around all these people at Summit, you know, there's, I think at most like 1 outta 10 make it. I mean, the venture firms that are backing these people expect only 1 in 10 to make it, if, if that. And so for one, most of them don't make it. And then the ones who do make it, like if, you know, I've read, you know, I don't know, 100 of these billionaire biographies, they usually end up divorced, not that happy. Their children don't know them well. Like, and so that's why I, I really admire these people who build, you know, these smaller businesses and, you know, and small businesses drive the American economy too. But however, you know, if you wanna look at my story, another way to do it is get one business going like you've done with The Hustle. Get yourself to profitability, get yourself to the freedom from working for, you know, working for your, some sort of employer. That's developing real wealth. And then if you still want to do your crazy fun project or moonshot, set up a separate LLC, hire better management for your existing company so that you're not working full-time on your company that makes you your living. And then, you know, go buy a mountain, go launch WeWork, you know, whatever that is.
What else interests you? What other ideas?
Well, I'm also, I mean, I love, of course I love like you, I love newsletters. So I've been, you know, there's all kinds of niches there. Like recently I was, I was talking to a friend about, you know, like my, my mom has, uh, has Crohn's and colitis, which is like a chronic disease that affects a lot of people and there's no good newsletter for it. And so I was thinking about, you know, could you build premium subscription newsletters for, you know, different diseases, um, that, you know, have millions of people who suffer from these things and they need to be updated on the latest treatments and things and things of that nature.
So I've also been thinking about, uh, these newsletters, by the way, So there's these people, I've seen these people do this and it's almost like, do you remember that book called What to Expect When Expecting?
No, I don't know that one.
Okay, so it's a book written in 1984. It's called What to Expect When Expecting. And it's like a, it was a massive hit. It sold 15 million copies. Let's see, 90% of all expected mothers, 90% of all expectant mothers who read a pregnancy guide read What to Expect When Expecting. So it's like a huge, huge deal. And so some of these, some people have created these email newsletters that are quite large. And what they do is like you sign up and you say how far along in your pregnancy you are, and then you get newsletters based off like what to expect now and this week and then this week and then this week. And then they sell you products that might help it, like help, you know, I don't know anything about pregnancy, but you know, this week you might be struggling with this thing or this thing. Here's like some drinks that help. Alleviate that. Are you talking like you would do that for illnesses? Like if you're this far along in cancer, like you might be struggling with this. Like some people say that like this type of stretch helps alleviate some of the pain.
Yeah, I mean, I think there's, there's just all these chronic diseases out there and you need to keep up with the latest research, the latest medicine, who are the top doctors in the space. Um, you know, a lot of these things you can even get like some government aid if you're, if you don't have the money to afford some of the treatments. And so there's just a lot to learn. Like I've just seen a number of my friends get afflicted with something, you know, whether it's cancer or chronic disease and, um, and, and they've just had this huge learning curve and then every year they have to stay on top of it. And, um, and there's just not, from what I've seen, great news and updates for that sort of thing. And I think people would happily. Pay a small subscription fee for that.
I agree. My wife had this thing where she had this illness or whatever, and she didn't know who to turn to. And she found this group on Facebook with like 10,000 women who suffer from the same thing. And that's been like her peer group on how to— like she has her doctor telling her one thing, but she's like, I need to— I want to talk to other women who are going through this. And so she uses this Facebook group constantly. So I totally understand the need that you're describing and you could actually 100% add operations around this and like make it proper.
Yeah, one thing I love that you said there too is I really like where you can combine content, community and experiences. And I think you've done a great job of this with Trends and I think BizNow is a good example of this and Summit and you create this great content, people like to subscribe to it. You could have a freemium model where they get, a million people are buying,, you know, have the free subscription newsletter and a small segment of them pay for the premium newsletter that has better, you know, updates and, you know, research or what have you. But as part of that, they get access to either a physical or online or, or both community. And then you could create experiences where, you know, everyone who's, you know, suffering from, uh, you know, colitis gets together once a year and they do a charity walk or, you know, things of that nature. And so you can create all 3 of those.
Great. What else?
Well, another one that I got really excited about some years ago is I love experiences and I really like cheap amusements and I'm obsessed with like, you know, different versions of like small-time versions of like, you know, Disney. And so I really got into haunted houses for a period and looking at building them and buying them and basically rolling up the haunted house industry.
Yeah, I'm obsessed with Meow Wolf.
I've heard of the name. It's like an attraction somewhere, right?
Yeah, go say what it is.
Yeah, so it's, it's, it's part of this whole trend of reinventing the museum, right? Like, you used to go to the museum and the museum was like, you can't take pictures, you can't touch anything. And of course, like, that doesn't, you know, create any traffic for them online because no one's taking photos and it feels, you know, not very interactive. But Meow Wolf came along and they got artists to come together and build these incredible spaces, these really immersive artistic rooms where you can walk through and touch and feel kind of like what you can do with art at Burning Man and experience art in this really dynamic way and take pictures. And then the pictures of course get posted to things like Instagram and that just does free marketing for them. And, you know, now they're expanding. Um, I forgot, you know, Sam, where did they start?
They started in either Vegas or Phoenix. I forget which one.
Yeah, they started in Phoenix and now they're launching Vegas. And I just heard that they're going to launch in Washington, DC. And yeah, it's just a great concept. And there's a number of those, you know, there's 29 Rooms by that media— what's that media company that created 29 Rooms?
What is 29 Rooms?
So 29 Rooms is a pop-up that travels around the country before COVID of course.
Oh, Refinery29.
Yeah, Refinery29. This is absolutely— dude, Sam, you will love this one. So because this is— this combines selling sponsors and tickets. It's like, it's like the new event model. So they go to, say, Brooklyn, they get it, they find a cheap warehouse that's empty and they lease it for, say, you know, I don't know, 3 weekends. And they announce on through their newsletter and online, hey, we're coming to town, we're going to be in Brooklyn. Tickets are like, you know, whatever, $50. And there's literally the tickets sell out way in advance. And you show up to this kind of like red rope event, like you're walking into a nightclub and they get 29, usually like local cool artists to pop up a room and build this immersive experience. But each room is branded with a different sponsor and has some sort of like meaningful thing. So it's like, you know, maybe it's like Reebok talking about, you know, curing cancer And so it's like, you know, this amazing immersive art experience that's got like Reebok in it. And then everyone takes pictures. Oh, and here's the genius part. They light it like it's like, like you're on a studio. Like they light it with like, so that every picture you take is the best picture you've ever taken, which is really genius. It costs a bunch of money to rent all the lighting equipment, but that's what creates a lot of the free marketing for them. And so, and then on top of it, they sell drinks. So they sell alcohol and, it's just, it's a really fun experience.
The Museum of Ice Cream was, was recently, uh, said there was a deck that went around where they were raising money at like, you know, a 9-figure valuation. I believe that that's another similar concept.
Yeah, it didn't, it didn't work out obviously because of what's going down now, but yeah.
So I, I learned a couple of things about this business. One, if you can serve alcohol, which is super high margin, then the business is better. And the second thing is if you can sell, if you can sell corporate events, so if like you can have like a law firm come and host like, you know, an outing for their firm or for their clients, if you can add those two components to like a cheap amusement business, then the business goes from like a 10% margin business to like a 30% margin business. And So I'll tell you, I'll tell you one other thing that I think is cool about this is, you know, Sam, you and I were talking this weekend about, about structure and how I think that if people understood what private equity firms understand about structure, then they could get a lot wealthier and build firms that don't require venture. And so an example of this is like, let's say I wanted to open up like a hatchet throwing bar, you know, again, post-COVID. I, you could create a holding company that you own 100% of, and then you could create a new LLC and that LLC raises a couple million bucks and it launches the very first of this, you know, hatchet throwing bar concepts in, you know, wherever in Charlotte. And then you raise money against that. So the, the investors are banking on making money on that first location, but you then license the brand from your holding company. And all the IP, the concept, the best practices, the systems from the holding company to this new LLC. And so you charge that new LLC like maybe 5% of revenue. This is kind of how McDonald's works. And so you make, make each location its own LLC with its own investors, but, but you ultimately own 100% of the holding company and you're making a percentage of revenue off of every single location.
So what value does the holding company provide?
The holding company has all of like the design, the, all the methods. It does, you know, it manages all like the, the location. So it's basically like kind of like, like what Marriott is for like a developer. It's basically the brand, it's the marketing company, it's the systems, etc.
Where— okay, so we had on Brian Scudamore, who did this with 1-800-GOT-JUNK, and, uh, it sounds pretty great. You're customers are ultimately the franchisees, which is good and bad. It's not like your customers aren't always like the person buying the stuff, right? But this is what Virgin did, right? This is what Virgin did, or no?
Yeah, it's a little bit like Virgin. I mean, and it's not really a franchise model. You could also make it a franchise model eventually. In fact, you could do both. But what it is, is each location you say, look, I'm going to put in $100,000 into the first location or into each location, and I'm going to raise, you know, $900,000. Let's say it costs $1 million to open a location. And so, and by the way, after the investors and I each get back our money, after I get back my $100,000 and they get back their $900,000, then because I'm doing all the work and the sweat and I came up with the idea and I found the location and everything else, I'm going to go from owning 10% of this location to owning maybe 30%. I'm going to get an extra 20%, just like a venture firm or a private equity firm gets an extra 20% after they return the money plus a return. So now I own 30% of every location, plus I'm charging each location, like, you know, say 5% of revenue. And so over time, my holding company is becoming increasingly valuable. And on top of it, each location I own 30% of. And so now at any time, if I want to sell a whole location to another owner and make some money, or if I want to sell the holding company, I can do, I can do either one of those things. And so I love, I love creating flexibility and structure and managing risk and upside in this way. And I, whereas what most people do, right, is they, they create one concept and they spend 10 years hoping that it makes them money and it might not.
Okay. So what's the alternative then?
Like, like what's like the franchise model alternative?
Is that what you're asking? No, you're saying they hope that this one concept works. What's the alternative to that?
The alternative is like I'm saying, like, let's say location 1 is only breaking even. You could tweak things and then you could open up location 2 and you could improve things and you could raise money against each LLC separately. And maybe, or maybe you open up a location in Charlotte and it fails because the market didn't have like a product market fit. There, but then you open it up in another neighborhood that's more appropriate for the concept and it takes off there. And so you're basically protecting yourself by having these various entities, but at the same time, you're creating value up in the holding company as well. And so I just like this kind of way of thinking about having separate LLCs and structuring things in this kind of way. And again, McDonald's, Marriott, a lot of other companies have a model kind of like this.
Well, we did do some version of this. I mean, it's not quite the same, but we had different companies. So we had BizNow, we had Summit, Summit Powder Mountain was a separate company. We had a $30 million venture fund called Summit Action Fund, which is a totally separate venture. And if Summit Action Fund only breaks even, But, you know, Summit Powder Mountain is profitable. Like, you're basically over time created these different entities, but it's not a perfect example. Eventually, a better example would have been how we turned Summit into more of like a Virgin, where we go to other entrepreneurs and say, hey, you know, you know, Gary, like, take— let's say I went to Gary Vaynerchuk and I said, Gary, you don't have an experiential agency, right? But Summit knows a lot about experiential and is well known for that. Why don't we joint venture? I'll license this new entity, the Summit name, and you'll spin up a company that runs it because you're better than us at running an agency. And we'll just take 5% of revenue in exchange for our name and we'll source deals for you and, you know, we'll help get this thing started with you.
Yeah, but if I was Gary Vaynerchuk, I would say, fuck you. I don't want that Summit name. I'm gonna do it on my own and keep 100%. Why? What's preventing anyone from doing that?
So Gary's probably not a great example because he's so well known and he could do that. But, you know, say that you're just like a small, like, uh, design agency. Like you're really good at running, you know, a web design agency, but you have this thought like, wow, imagine if I could build an experiential agency. Like maybe you have a client, like maybe one of your clients is, you know, HBO. You're designing like, you know, websites for their new shows and HBO comes to you and says like, wow, you've done a great job. We, we wish you could do something for our South by Southwest, you know, festival, and we have a $10 million budget to build like a pop-up experience there. And, you know, normally you just recommend that to your friend's agency that does experiential. You could come, like, we could come to you and say, look, we'll help you figure out how to build that experiential agency because we know a lot about experiential and we have, you know, thousands of clients. Like Hustle has a lot of followers who believe in Hustle. Take our brand and leverage our brand to build an experiential agency. It's, this is essentially what Virgin does. So like Virgin will go to, okay, take, take Virgin's, uh, new cruise company. So Virgin will go take this, a former CEO of a major cruise line. Like I think their CEO is from Disney Cruises and say, look, like we have a, we have this huge brand and following people who understand what the Virgin brand means and want to go on Virgin products, whether that's an airline or a balloon. You know a lot more about the cruise ship industry than we know. Let's joint venture. We'll license you the Virgin brand name. We'll take a percentage of revenue. And in Virgin's case, they also take Branson's family office and they invest and help get the thing started with their capital. So like, you know, Hustle tomorrow could spin up a private equity firm, like raise a, you know, a $50 million fund. And go around and find people who want to build like other kinds of hustle products and want to leverage your audience. Like maybe you want to build the Hustle Hotel chain. And so like you could go to a hotel development company and say, look, we don't know anything about hotel development, but we have this— we have 2 million readers who understand that the hustle stands for X, Y, and Z, and we've got a $50 million fund. We will give you the capital and we will market and we will give you our brand. And we want 5% of revenue and we also want to own, you know, 30% of the equity. And you guys build the hotels.
How did you learn? Like someone like me, I'm pretty like simple where I just think like, I'm going to make this cool thing. I'm just going to sell it and make money off of it. Whereas you've got all these like really interesting financing schemes. How do you— how important do you think that is? And where do I learn about that?
Yeah, I mean, I think if you Google like waterfall, equity waterfall, that would be a really good thing to learn. And, you know, I think there's probably, I bet if we, if you Google like, you know, private equity structures, um, and study venture capital and private equity structuring, or if you just call people who run private equity firms or real estate firms, like this, this is kind of how kind of like old school real estate entrepreneurs work. Like if you look at like, you know, companies like Related Group, like, you know, big real estate firms that also own operating businesses, they generally are working around structured kind of waterfalls, like I was describing. A waterfall is basically a way of sharing profits. And I think if you study, you know, waterfall and things like that, you could learn a bunch of this.
I feel like I need to learn a lot. All right, let's do 2 more ideas. What— let me pull them up. What interests you?
I mean, on the fun ideas, I love— I I mean, one crazy idea I really like is, is building Burning Man for the South. So, you know, I've been to Burning Man the last 5 years, and every time I go, I'm like, this is basically a giant tailgate. And, you know, I've spent some time in the South and I'm like, I think people in the South actually are already much more into this kind of thing than all these crazy people from San Francisco. You know, they already have RVs much more prevalent, prevalently in the South. They already like to tailgate. They like to make things and co-create things. And, you know, and, and, and so I think that there's like a really cool way to build Burning Man. And what's cool about Burning Man is you could bootstrap this business. So all you need is a location to host it in that's outdoors, like a farm, where you won't be able to disturb the neighbors with their loud music. And then you just need a bunch of camps. And the genius thing about Burning Man is that they don't actually build almost any of what you see at Burning Man. All they build is the— they, they, they mark out the roads and they build a giant wooden man that they burn at the end of the week. But all they've done is they built this platform. It's kind of like a software company, like, like a platform, like, like Salesforce, where people build apps for it. And so you basically would go to 20 people and convince them to build a camp and get them to sell tickets to their friends, and they then bring everything and they build things that are good for the overall community.
Community. All right, I'm looking at Burning Man's a nonprofit, which means it's all public. How much— I'll tell you, but guess— how much revenue do you think they make?
Well, they're doing about 70,000 tickets times like $400, so I don't know, you tell me.
$45 million in revenue. And then it's a nonprofit, they about break even.
Yeah, I mean, they break even because they do a lot of awesome stuff all around the world that's not involving Burning— like the thing you think of as Burning Man. You know, they do like regional events all throughout the year. But I think there's a way to build, you know, at least a 20, 30% margin and build kind of a new way of doing a festival or an event where you get the people in the community to build awesome things like art or to build a really delicious, you know, barbecue that they're going to give away. And everyone just hangs out together, like kind of like a giant tailgate.
My issue with that is I think a lot of people Don't really, like most events are wildly unprofitable and so hard to do. It's so stressful. It's so hard. You should only do it if you are like either a really good operator or you have meaning besides money for doing it.
Yeah, no, you're definitely right. It's death by a thousand cuts in events. If you don't operate everything very efficiently and you can easily lose money on them. But on the other hand, you know, I ran an event company that had nearly 30% margin and produce 300 conferences a year. So it's, it's totally doable.
Uh, all right, let's do one more. Let's hear which one interests you the most. And obviously we're, we're going to have to have you back because Sean's going to want to geek out. And right now I'm looking at this document that Ryan has that's got like, it's like 30 pages long.
Yeah, I, I have an idea journal kind of like Sean does, and every time I have an idea, whether it's crazy or whatever, I just write it down and say So, uh, I've been doing that for like a decade. So I, another one that I've always really liked, again, sorry to keep picking on event ideas, but I love the idea of building the, a new Westminster Dog Show, but for rescue dogs only.
Oh yeah. You told me about that.
And I just, I think it would be like a, a huge marketing coup because you could basically launch, you know, 6 months before the event and say everybody who has an adorable rescue dog that can do something clever. Send us, you know, a little video and you could create like an amazing, you know, Instagram account and start building the buzz and say that, you know, hey, we're going to pick the top 100 videos and your dog is going to be on display and be a part of this event. And of course, you could partner with all the, you know, the nonprofits and the ASPCA that want to promote the idea of rescuing a dog. And you could sell, you know, I think tens and tens of thousands of tickets to to the event.
Who owns Westminster Dog Show?
I think it's the— like, isn't it like the American Kennel Club? It's not— I'm assuming that's like a trade association nonprofit.
Are you sure?
No, I'm kind of guessing.
What's it called? The AK— what's that thing called?
AKC.
AKC. Let's find out. That's crazy. Oh my God. The American Kennel Club has over $100 million in revenue.
Yeah, it's— I mean, it's basically like building a giant trade show because not only could you— and I love trade shows, they're, they're like usually like 50, 60% margin businesses and scale and have huge barriers to entry because not only— it's kind of, or it's kind of like Comic-Con, you know, once you have the dogs are like the attraction, but then all around the place where you're hosting that event and filming it, you would have a huge exhibit hall where you'd have like, you know, Chewy and every dog product on the market., that's trying to promote their, you know, their, their items. And so I, I just think it's a really fun, heartwarming, and profitable idea.
God, that's crazy. I never would've thought that this would be that big. Let's look it up. So, uh, I love, so like there's this whole, there's like a whole bunch of nonprofits and I don't know anything about that world that are like, they should be maybe, I mean, I don't know the pros and cons of profit versus nonprofit, but all nonprofits have to reveal their, their, their numbers. So you know that they're, you know, not making, or they're reinvesting their profits. So American Kennel Association, oh my gosh. Yeah, this is a huge, it's huge. I never would've thought that in a million years.
Yeah, and Sam, did you know that trade associations, which are nonprofits like this, have been known to sell their trade shows to for-profits? So like there's a company in Washington, D.C. that's a really big company called Hanley Wood. That BizNow used to have?
Yeah, I know those guys. They were, they're a B2B publisher.
Yeah. So like, I think they bought like, I'm forgetting the one, but maybe like Concrete World. And they would just, they would go to like the, you know, the Home Builders Trade Association that has like, you know, whatever, 100,000 home builder members that has some big trade show. And because they're a nonprofit, you know, they don't really run it as efficiently or as well or as creatively as they could. And they would buy that trade show and just be be a lot more creative with it and grow it.
Hanley Wood. And then Hanley Wood. What Hanley Wood was is they owned publications for concrete workers and they do these trade shows. They were sold for close to $400 million and they had $70 million in revenue with $35 million in EBITDA.
Yeah. The guy who was CEO is now doing it again. He's at Government Executive, which is basically he's going to do the same thing for government workers and government, you know, contractors, publishing and trade show.
Why would he ever name his company Government Executive? That's what it's called.
Well, it's actually been around forever. And, uh, and, and it was acquired by the investment banker, the investment banker who sold, helped me sell BizNow started a private equity firm. And he and the guy who used to be CEO of Hanley Wood bought Government Executive and are now just improving it.
Um, all right, Ryan, thank you. This is sick. Uh, how do people— how should they contact you? I, I, I showed Ryan yesterday how to use Twitter, so I don't know if he's gonna do a good job at that, but how else can people reach you?
Yeah, so just because of you, I threw up a website, ryanbeagleman.com. Not the easiest name to spell, but I'm sure they can Google, you know, ryanbeagleman.com, B-E-G-E-L-M-A-N, ryanbeagleman.com. And you can find, uh, my email on there, ryan@ryanbeagleman.com, and, and hit me up. And, you know, look, the thing I'm really interested in is if, if anyone out there has got a company that doing, you know, $300,000 to $3 million in profit, it might be a company I'd love to, uh, partner with you on or acquire. And I'm also really interested in building new companies around newsletters, podcasts, webinars, digital events, online courses, masterminds, and anything else that's community content or experiential. So if you're interested in any of that kind of stuff and you just want to geek out about it, shoot me an email. What kind of companies are you looking to buy, Ryan? I mean, really, I'm actually pretty open-minded to all kinds of things, but they have to be at least $300,000 in profit. They've got to be around for at least 2 or 3 years. And I'm looking for, you know, frankly, they don't even have to be high growing. And it'd be a little bit better if they were, you know, in something related to content, education, you know, online communities, something of that nature, because I obviously know those businesses better, you know, events, etc. But frankly, I'm open to almost anything at the moment.
Who made this website? It's so cute.
I made that just like in an hour just the other day while having dinner.
On what platform?
It's like the cutest website I've ever seen.
Yeah, I'm not savvy like you on, uh, I pretty much never open Twitter, Facebook, or Instagram, but because of you, I'm gonna start to try to check on, uh, on my Twitter feed at least.
Bye, you guys.