SPEAKER_03
This is the most popular episode we do every year. It takes weeks of planning. I'm out 50 bucks because I got this new jacket on.
We're all dressed up and why? Because it is the Millie Awards. It is our end of year episode where we go through about 15 categories, right? Actors, they got the Oscars. And musicians, they have the Grammys.
Well, what do business people have? They got the Millie Awards. And this is where we share a bunch of different categories like our best and worst investments of the year. You know, where do we take a big L on an investment? What have we went on? Or we'll do a category like person we would most bet it all on.
Who would we, if we have to invest our whole network on somebody, who would we bet it on? We got me, Sam, and Andrew Wilkinson. We're all here. We've been doing this for three years now.
These episodes are always the favorites. This one went long. We're gonna do it as a two-parter.
So in part one, we have categories like Billy of the Year, Best Business that we think somebody else should go do, our favorite moment from the podcast this year, and the biggest change that we are making personally in our game for 2024. And in part two, we have a whole bunch of categories like our favorite unsexy business and wild predictions for next year. So enjoy the Millie Awards 2023.
SPEAKER_00
I feel like I can rule the world. I know I could be what I want to. I put my all in it like the days off on the road.
SPEAKER_03
Let's travel. Okay, what's up guys? It's my favorite episode of the year. Andrew Wilkinson is here.
Sam is here. Sam, you looking dapper. Andrew, you looking dapper.
Sam, I gotta say the whole dressing well thing. I'm bought in now. I see it.
You don't look like a science teacher. You don't look like you're from a different era. You just look sharp, my friend.
SPEAKER_01
Yeah, I couldn't find my cuff links. I thought I was gonna look like a farmer on this thing. Thank God I found them right before we started.
Do you guys remember how Trump had like the Clemson football team into the White House and they used like the Lincoln gravy bowls for like barbecue sauce? That's how I feel right now with this person who bought me Tiffany Crystal for my wedding. This is the first time they're being used and they're being used for Whole Foods brand Lacroix. So shout out to that person.
Andrew, you feeling good? You ready to do this thing?
SPEAKER_02
Feeling great. Yeah, this is the best I've dressed in years.
SPEAKER_01
We're happy that you did it here. All right, so this is the Millie Awards. We've done this.
This is now Sean, four years running. We've done this. Or is it three?
SPEAKER_01
Maybe three. I think it's three. We've got 11 or 12 or 13 categories.
We're gonna do favorite MFM guests. We're gonna do Billy of the Year, biggest change we're making for 24. The person we bet it all on.
We're gonna do a bunch of different stuff. All right, everyone, a quick break. Did you know that HubSpot launched an AI chat bot that helps you build awesome campaigns at scale with just a few prompts? It's called Campaign Assistant.
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com slash campaign dash assistant. Now back to the pot. All right, everyone, a quick break.
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So AI your way to the most effective campaigns at hubspot.com slash campaign dash assistant. Now back to the pot.
And we're gonna try and go somewhat fast for each category, but I'm sure we're gonna have interesting stories for each one. Sean, you wanna kick it off? Where do you wanna go?
SPEAKER_03
Yeah, category one, this is the million award for our favorite MFM episode or guest of the year. Sam, start us off, who you got?
SPEAKER_01
All right, this was a tie. No, it's not a tie, we're not gonna have ties, but I'm gonna say the top two that I had was Scott Galloway. So by the way, we have a clip that's gone viral on YouTube where it's a clip from the Scott Galloway pod where he's talking about how much he made, I'm talking about how much I made and people are just ragging on us both so hard because they say that we sound so depressed.
But I'm gonna give it number one to Kevin Ryan. Kevin Ryan's the founder of Guilt, Business Insider, MongoDB, I think Kevin Ryan was the best episode. I think he was the most wise person and well-balanced person we've had who's had crazy success.
SPEAKER_03
You know what else he did that I liked at the end of the episode? He was like, here's how I set up my company to maximize kind of the gain I get out of these companies and pay the least taxes. And I'll tell you what, no rich guy ever says that. No rich guy ever tells you, this is the structure I use.
And he said it on air, he's like, here's what it does, it lets me live in a high cost state and I'm effectively only paying 14% and my kids are only paying 0% on what they're getting out of our capital gains due to QSBS. So he owns the share, he's like, I only work on projects that are QSBS eligible and long-term capital gains. I'm not looking for cash flow or income because he's like, I got to a point where I have that, like day to day need settled too.
So you have to get to there. He's like, but once you're there, he's like you, you take your QSBS, you live in a high cost state, you then gift your stock to your kids' trust. So you set up kids' trust, you gift your stock to them before you raise a financing round.
So you're taking only like, let's say 100K out of your lifetime gift tax and your kids now own QSBS eligible stock. When you sell, you're gonna end up paying only the state tax, so you'll pay 14% California or New York, you'll pay no federal, and then your kids will pay 0% wherever, likely whenever they get it out of the trust at their given point of time. And you're getting QSBS, the $10 million tax free for you times each of your kids.
I can get to 50 million tax free if I got three or four kids or whatever.
SPEAKER_01
And I was like, I don't think they've got, I don't think they have QSBS in Canada land, do they?
SPEAKER_02
No, we don't have, there's all sorts of other stuff and benefits and stuff, but there's a great saying on this stuff, whales only harpoon, whales only get harpooned when they surface, right? And he just surfaced in a really obvious way. And you know, there's just some anal retentive IRS guy listening to the, I'm actually striking that off on the record.
SPEAKER_01
What's yours, Andrew?
SPEAKER_02
My favorite was Sarah Moore. So Sarah Moore, she's a crazy story. She had a really troubled childhood, basically got adopted by this wealthy family.
They ended up putting her through a Harvard Business School and she went out and she bought this business called eggcartons.com. And this story was just incredible. I feel like so many people hear these wild stories about tech bro billionaires raising a bunch of money and hitting a big, making trillions of dollars.
And I think her story is much more realistic for a normal person, anyone, she really kind of is a testament to the fact that anybody can teach themself business and can go buy a business that is really not rocket science. And I loved how simple and tactical all of her stuff was. She's so honest that I love that story.
SPEAKER_01
I'm trying to stay low key and under the radar. And I think it's been one of our most downloaded and viewed episodes with like 500,000
SPEAKER_03
listens to that episode. Whoops.
SPEAKER_02
Well, so the smartest thing she did is she like, she did the Michael Jordan, like I'm retiring. This is the last thing like, you know, I'm never going out again. And now she, it immediately, as soon as you said that in the intro, I was like, I have to listen, right? There's definitely episodes I kind of check out of
SPEAKER_01
or don't do that made me lean in. I think that's a great one.
SPEAKER_03
By the way, there's a quick follow up to that. Cause that story, the Sarah Moore story was falls in the category of kind of like too good to be true. So, you know, look at all the elements.
It's basically like, here's this super hot woman who grew up, you know, super poor, couldn't even get into college, somehow ends up at Harvard Business School. There must have been something happening there. A family, if I get adopted her along the way, that's like the plot of the movie Blindside.
Then it was buys a business, but has no money, remember? Cause she grew up super poor. So bought the business with $0 cash down. How she found the business was she, you know, hired 50 interns off of Craigslist and like snuck them into the Harvard Business School library to work with her on this and you know, buys this business egg cartons.
com for million, it's a million, multimillion dollar business, super successful. There's no pictures of her on the internet. There's no interviews of her on the internet.
Right? We're like the only guys who have like done this. So there was a lot there that like, I came out thinking, did I just get Elizabeth Holmes? I might have, oh God, this, I might be part of the documentary here. All right, let me, let me at least make sure I look good.
If this is going to end up on Netflix one day. And she flew out after the episode. She's like, I gotta meet you.
So, okay, why? And she's like, I just, I need to know who I'm dealing with here. And so she flies out. We go get lunch here in the Burbs in California.
She flies all the way from Boston and everything checked out. It was, if she is Elizabeth Holmes, she's the greatest Elizabeth Holmes you've ever seen. You know, she looks like what she shows like.
She told the story. She showed me the old photos. So, you know, she, everything.
And she's like, I'm so glad, you know, people have been pretty respectful because I said on the episode, please don't bother me. And we did a form instead of her like email address. Like here, type your questions in this form
SPEAKER_01
and then we'll answer the form. How many, how many messages did she get?
SPEAKER_03
A lot. She had said after the first appearance on it, she got like, like the Netflix Bravo, like other people had reached out to be like, can I do, we want to do a show on you or a movie on you.
SPEAKER_01
Wow. All right. Well, Kudos to Sarah Moore.
What's your Sean?
SPEAKER_03
All right. My MFF guest here, this is going to surprise you guys is Connor Price. And Connor Price is a, was a guy who was working in a warehouse.
He was stacking boxes in our friend's warehouse in Ramon's warehouse. And he was like a wannabe rapper, white guy. And you know, like that's kind of cliche, but he actually made it.
And he made it in a very interesting way. He figured out how to go viral on TikTok. And he was not a social media guy.
He refused to even post on social media. He was too shy. His wife was like, you got to do this.
It's a great way to get the word out. And let's just have some fun with it. She kind of became his manager and they now have racked up, I don't know, like a billion views on TikTok going viral.
And the reason I say Connor Price is not just because that's an inspiring story, but I took away one big lesson. Like the, it's like, I realized that the puck has moved. And I'll give you guys the short version of it.
I think era one of marketing was sort of like, let me interrupt your programming in order to tell you about my product, right? That's commercials. That's like radio ads. That's how things used to work.
Era two became, hey, let me send this to an influencer. They'll kind of hold up the product and make a post about the product. So now I'm not interrupting your programming.
I'm kind of using this trusted influencer, but it's clearly, you know, still an ad. The content is by this product, it's great. And what Connor Price is doing is a little bit different.
He creates a little skit and in the middle of the payoff of the skit, the hero of the skit, the one that saves the day is this dope song and the 15 seconds of the dope song. And that gets people to go and actually want to go find the product. And now I see this everywhere.
This is how Mr. B sells chocolate too. He doesn't hold up his candy bar and say, this is a delicious candy bar.
You should go buy it. He says, I recreated Willy Wonka's chocolate factory. And inside this factor is he makes, like the product is baked into the content.
The content is entertainment around the product. And now that I see that, I can't unsee it. I see it everywhere.
And it's part of my kind of core business strategy now. Even our own ads, we change like that. Instead of saying, we're going to stop and we're going to tell you about this thing.
We created a segment called the thrill of the shill. We teach a lesson or an entertaining story. And then we tell you about the product in that story.
And that's how I think marketing goes down.
SPEAKER_01
Connor Price talked about it. And what he got up to is a wife too, just a total shark in the best possible way. Yeah, she was hardcore.
All right, you want to move to the next one? Billy of the Year. How do we describe this one? Just a billionaire who's fascinating.
SPEAKER_03
This is someone who's balling out of control. You don't even have to be a billionaire. You just have to have that billionaire strut, the ability to walk with Sub-Swagger and play the game a little differently.
So it's somebody who is super successful, but in a way that we really respect. Let's go with Andrew first, who you got?
SPEAKER_02
So mine is very obvious. It's...
SPEAKER_01
Sorry, the landline over there? You still have a landline?
SPEAKER_02
Dude, you go public and you just install a landline. The gate of my house is like the super old school system. So I have a landline just for that.
SPEAKER_03
Dude, you better only be talking to presidents on that thing.
SPEAKER_02
It's red, it's red, like the bat phone. So mine is pretty obvious. It's Charlie Munger.
I think we all know who he is. For those of you that don't, he's Warren Buffett's longtime business partner. He just died last week.
I think he was 15 days or something short of his 100th birthday. He was 99 and the guy was completely sharp to the end. I think a week before he did an interview with Jesse, or what's her name, Becky Quick from CNBC.
And I just want to tell you a story about this guy. This is how sharp this guy was. So Chris and I were having dinner with him one night and all of a sudden this guy burst into the room and he's like, Charlie, I got it.
I'm doing a deal right now. I need to know an answer to something. And this guy walks in, he's like 30 years old and he just starts rattling off a bunch of questions.
He's like, okay, we need to do it at 5.6% interest for this many doors. And Charlie just asks a couple of questions and he says, okay, good, cool.
And then the guy just like says bye to us and leaves. And Charlie explains that it's this neighborhood kid who he is a Hasidic Jew, tried to convert him to Judaism 20 years ago, going door to door with the Bibles. And they ended up becoming friends.
He mentored him. He started buying apartments. Charlie backed him on this.
And now they own a billion dollar real estate portfolio of Los Angeles apartments. And he's just this neighborhood kid. His name is Avi and they built this huge business together.
And Charlie started doing this and he was like 90 years old.
SPEAKER_03
His 90 year old side hustle is a billion dollar real estate portfolio. God damn it.
SPEAKER_01
Andrew, is this gonna be like a couple that's been married for 80 years and they both died at the same time? Is Warren gonna, like is he distraught you think in the same way a marriage would be?
SPEAKER_02
I don't know. I mean, yeah, Buffett's really old too. And I think if you think about the actuarial tables, they really don't have much, or Buffett wouldn't have much time left, but hopefully he keeps going for a couple more years.
SPEAKER_01
Yeah, I think he named to, or he said he has a successor and everything lined up. But I wasn't sure if it was gonna be like a marriage where like he's gonna go like next week, but I guess we'll see.
SPEAKER_02
It's funny is they've had successors since they were like 60. Everyone's been saying they'll die at any time. So they've gone, they've cut a lot longer than everyone thought.
SPEAKER_01
All right, mine's Palmer Lucky, the CEO of Andrew. So we had Palmer Lucky on, I think two years ago now. It was an amazing episode, but here's why I like Palmer Lucky.
He says what you wanna say if you were a billionaire, but you'd be too afraid to say it. And so he has got a lot of really good quotes of him. He's kind of a loose cannon in a few ways, like him and Jason Calcane has gotten into it.
But frankly, I love it. So he's got this great thing that he did. He spoke at a conference recently and he goes, do you guys know what the number one profession that children wanna be? It's social media influencer.
The next is professional gamer. The next is a YouTuber. And the problem is that you can't tell kids to follow their dreams when their dreams suck, which is like a great lie.
And then he goes, do you know what the number one dream for kids in 1971 was? It was an astronaut. We had just gone to the moon. These guys were fighter pilots, PhD mathematician, supermen who all were also really good looking and well-spoken.
It was the ultimate American hero ideal for a kid to see that and say, that's what I wanna be. Okay, then I say, yes, we should tell kids to follow their dream. But when it's social media influencers, we should tell them their dreams suck and don't follow their dreams.
So he's got these really like articulated, wonderful points that I appreciate. He dresses silly, he's got a mullet. I'm a big Palmer Lucky fan.
All right, everyone, really quick. So a few years ago, I hosted this event called HustleCon and I got to hang out with one of the speakers. His name's Tom Billu and he sat down and he told me about how he built his business from zero to a multi-billion dollar exit in like four or five years.
And it blew my mind. And what was even more impressive was he had some ideas on like strategy on business, but also strategy on life. And he just had a great attitude and it really impacted me.
And Tom actually has a podcast called Impact Theory where he dives deep into different entrepreneurs who have built really big businesses, who have written amazing books, authors that I read all the time, folks like Tony Robbins, Simon Sinek, Tim Ferriss. He goes super deep into their stories. He extracts wisdom and strategies, have shaped their extraordinary lives.
And also he gives his intel and his opinion on what they're doing. And it's a really fascinating podcast. It's called Impact Theory by Tom Billu.
You can find it on Apple, Spotify or whatever you get your podcast, check it out.
SPEAKER_03
Yeah, I like that one. That's now two years in a row. Andrew gave him the nod last year for Billy of the Year.
And now Sam comes in again with Palmer. I love it. He's, we gotta get him back on, man.
He was really good on the pot. He had super interesting ideas and also like he said, speaks his mind.
SPEAKER_01
He says that he flies commercial and that he prefers to sit by the bathroom. He goes, because my grandpa was a pilot and I just love being around everyone. I don't truly believe that, but he continually claims that's true.
What's yours, Sean?
SPEAKER_03
All right, my Billy of the Year is gonna be an entrepreneur who I think has a, I don't know how close they are to the Billy number. I think they're probably close when you include their wife. That's a little hint for you.
I wrote down a couple of bullet points on why this person is a badass. And you know you're a badass when your couple bullet points goes to the Roman numeral 13. Let me just read these off in rapid succession.
Okay, this person has been a rapper, an entrepreneur, an investor, an author. They are a motivational speaker. They have a badass wife who's even more successful than them.
They somehow married up even though they're super successful themselves for kids. And when I called this person to prep for the podcast, they were on their way, like taking care of the kids, taking them to their soccer game, yelling at him, where's your shoes? Where'd you put your shoes yesterday? And that just told me they're plugged in as a dad versus four other people are raising their kids. They own an NBA team.
They're part owner of an NBA team. They built a coconut water brand, a private jet company. They discovered David Goggins before he was David Goggins.
They actually invited David Goggins to live in their house and train them every single day for 30 days. They like running, so they created a running festival. They like pickles, they're creating a pickle brand.
They created a fake Mount Everest because he's like, I can't go climb Everest, but I'll take this mountain, I'll climb it 14 times and it's the same height as Everest. He came on the pod and had one of the all time classic lines about some other competitor of his. Here he goes, keep the money warm.
Thank you for keeping the money warm for me. I'm coming and keep the money warm has just, it warms my soul. He is just having fun out here.
He's got great life philosophies about having adventures multiple times a year to have a life where lived.
SPEAKER_01
He also got angry at me for asking him what his monthly burn was.
SPEAKER_03
Yeah, he called Sam out for badgering him. We had to cut it out of the episode
SPEAKER_01
because he got so awkward. I did badger him. I did badger him.
I said, I'll ask whatever I want and I respect your, I respect you to say no.
SPEAKER_03
I'll ask the same question seven different ways until you finally wilt. He didn't wilt. He was like, that's personal shit, Sam.
You're pissing me off. And he is Jesse Itzler. That is my Billy of the Year.
SPEAKER_01
That's a good one. Yeah, I had him on my list. I thought you were gonna pick him.
So I backed off. I think Jesse's an amazing person. He also has this calendar.
I keep getting Facebook ads for it and I'm gonna buy one where he like, what do you say? He goes, I'm 50 years old. I only have 30 summers left. I'm planning exactly how I'm gonna spend them.
It is good episode.
SPEAKER_03
Yeah, exactly. I think it was called Big Ass Calendar. All right, category number three.
What is the biggest change you're making for 2024? But before we do it, we have to say what we said last year, Andrew, you said, being better at responding to iMessage. You were like, I've gotten my email system underwrapped, but you're like, I have so many text messages. I'm bad at replying.
It makes me feel like a bad person and a bad friend. Sam, you said, I'm gonna be less of a dictator. You said, I'm gonna lead this company without being a dictator and being less metrics obsessed.
I'm gonna be more vibe driven, more calm.
SPEAKER_01
I nailed it, by the way, just for the record.
SPEAKER_03
Yeah, I was gonna say, and I said, I know, I'm, I don't know why I said, I think I said something else, but I think I said, knowing when to use my impulsiveness and when to ignore it. So those were our three. Sam, you wanna go first? So you said you nailed it.
SPEAKER_01
I nailed it. I've been way less metric focused. I try not to talk about sales or anything like that.
You're a vibe CEO? I'm a vibe CEO. I'm not the CEO, but my CEO is metrics driven, but I'm not as much. So I calm down and I think I'm very easy to be around at this moment.
But next year, so I'm making a few changes. One, I'm gonna move eventually. I think I'm gonna do the most tuxedo guy, tuxedo thing ever.
I think I'm moving to like Greenwich, Connecticut. That's not a joke. That's serious.
So that's gonna be a big change. But you know what I'm gonna do in 2024 is I'm gonna get, I'm trying grade scale. You guys know what grade scale is? It's when you, there's like a, if you go to just Google it and you'll see the directions on how to do it.
But if you type in on your phone like color, you should see it where you can switch your iPhone to only be black or white. So I'm doing that right now because I've been using my phone to read books to my daughter and I hate having that bright all those colors because she stares at them. But the bigger switch I'm gonna do is I'm gonna get a dumb phone.
Have you guys seen dumb phones? It's like a Nokia or a light phone. I cannot stand phone addiction. It's really bothering me.
I'm totally addicted. I'm afraid to set a bad example for my children. So this year I'm gonna move to a dumb phone, which is similar I guess to what you're saying, Andrew.
You're breaking up with email.
SPEAKER_02
So two, well two thoughts on that before you jump to that. So one, the bright light you get at night, you wanna actually, Peter or Tia recommends switching your phone so that it's a red screen instead of gray scale. I can teach you how to do that.
You tap your power button twice and you can make it a shortcut to make your screen red and red light doesn't affect your night vision. So that's what I do. That said, there's been studies on color and if you decolorize your phone, if you make a gray scale, it's less stimulating.
You're less likely to click into stuff. What I've done is actually installed something called freedom and freedom plus screen time basically block everything.
SPEAKER_01
I've been doing that, but with Opal. You know Opal, I think it's the same thing.
SPEAKER_02
Yeah, similar. So it's like, I basically have no ability to get through it. Like there's, I have not been able to figure it out.
And so I have no email on my phone. I've blocked a lot of texting. I've blocked every basically, basically every fun app.
And I feel like an addict. Like I feel like really irritable. I'm going through withdrawal right now, but the change I'm trying to make.
So I nailed texting last year. I got this amazing app called text.com which is basically like super human for texts.
SPEAKER_01
Dude, you've been tweeting out like lakes. You're like, you're like refer by people and you get a T-shirt or something.
SPEAKER_02
I love it. I absolutely love it. But the problem with that is that I've now gotten so responsive with texts.
I'm so good with texts that I'm getting more texts. So, you know, you send more emails, you get more emails. I'm now getting too many texts.
And because I built my email system last year, I don't respond on email as fast. And so I'm getting more and more texts. So I have that problem.
The big thing I'm trying to do this year is I'm trying to break up with email fully. So what I've been doing for the last two weeks is I can't access my email and my assistant sends me screenshots, literally of any important email that she thinks I need to respond to. And I just tell her what to do with it.
And what's interesting about that is when you're in a flow state, when you're working or writing or doing something, you'll often have the thought, oh shit, I have to remember to send that email. And so you jump over to superhuman, you send the email, and then, you know, you might see 10 other subject lines. And before I know it, I'm like down a rabbit trail, reading like a Paqui McCormick newsletter or responding to a problem or something like that.
And so what I'm hoping is that this new system will only be the things that I absolutely need to respond to, and there's no additional distraction. So we'll see how it works.
SPEAKER_03
Let me just tell you two wonderful rich guy things that Andrew just did that are true rich guy things, not these fake ass, not these wannabe rich guy things. First thing is, he said, you know what Peter Retea recommends? Which is great, because he didn't say, you know what my doctor Peter Retea recommends?
SPEAKER_01
He recommended it to me.
SPEAKER_03
Yeah, he recommends to me when I see him, because again, he's my doctor. So that was the first great thing he did. You didn't brag when you could have bragged.
It's the words not said. It's the dogs that didn't bark, right? That you really gave yourself away as being truly comfortable with yourself, secure person, and I appreciate that. The second thing, you're basically at the stage of Trump and others that are just like, I just get my email printed out and put on my desk, and I just quickly mark with a pen, and then somebody goes, what is email actually? I actually don't understand how the system works.
It just shows up on my desk. You're basically at printed email, and printed email is like, you got Louis Vuitton, you got like Birkenbags, you got at the very top of the luxury pyramid is printed email, and you're basically there.
SPEAKER_02
You know, it's crazy though, it's really not, it's not an inaccessible thing. So I have an assistant in the Philippines, and it's like $1,000 a month, and she does it, right? So it's like, it is something that a lot of people could be doing.
SPEAKER_03
It's not that it's inexpensive. It takes a certain level of confidence in your lifestyle that you're not missing stuff, right? You are not lacking something, and so you're able to do this type of system.
SPEAKER_02
So what's interesting though is I've done this, I've been in this cycle for 15 years, right? Of getting overwhelmed. Usually once a year I get overwhelmed, and I doll everything back. And Sam, I've actually had a flip phone, I've tried the dumb phone.
At the end of the day, you need to order DoorDash and Uber and do basic things. So it didn't work for me, but I had this moment where I was going through one of these cycles, and this was in 2010, and my friend asked me out for sushi. So I live in Victoria, Canada, and Vancouver is about, I don't know, a 35 minute flight away, or a two hour ferry away.
And so I go up for sushi with my buddy, and I'm in this mode where I put my phone in my car, and I don't look at it. So I go have sushi, we have a great time, we're catching up. At the end of the sushi, I get in my car, and I look at my phone, and I've received an email from Mark Zuckerberg.
Mark Zuckerberg at the time was famous, but not famous, famous, not like he is today. And I emailed him because I heard he was coming to Vancouver, and he didn't respond for two days. And then at eight o'clock at night, or seven o'clock at night, I got this email that said, hey, do you wanna go for a drink from him, from Zuck? And I checked this email at eight, 30, or nine, and there's literally no way to get to Vancouver after nine p.
m. The ferry leaves at nine p.m., there's no flights, et cetera. And so I missed my opportunity to go out for a drink with Mark Zuckerberg one-on-one, while he's out of his element in my hometown.
And so I always think about that story. Whenever I block my email and do all these things, I still always think about that.
SPEAKER_03
That's so funny. Imagine somebody who's like, yeah, I really wanna make this lifestyle shift, it'll be good, I'm gonna get off my phone. But you know, what if Mark Zuckerberg just emails me, and I happen to be at sushi, and I missed the one time he's in my hometown in my neighborhood, you know? And then like Jessica Beale was there after, or is it she wanted to hang out, but then I just didn't have my phone on me.
SPEAKER_02
But it actually happened to me, that's incredible. It's a very sad story, it's very difficult life.
SPEAKER_03
Have you tried to like, catch up with him and be like, Mark, hey, you know, I was doing a dumb phone thing, you know how it is. I'm walking around Menlo Park until I see you.
SPEAKER_01
You have to do the, Andrew, what I want you to give up next year, at least when you're around me, maybe Sean as well, is that stupid thing you and Chris always do, where you make everyone put their credit cards in at the end of a dinner. You did that with B, Sean, and I won't name the other person, but the dinner that one time, it was probably $600. And I don't know this person's finances, but I know they aren't where you are.
And this guy had to pay for like a $600 meal, and I don't want to be a bitch and be like, call everyone out.
SPEAKER_03
The funny thing is, we were at sushi, and this person doesn't eat fish. So they paid for the meal, with an only pizza.
SPEAKER_02
I think it's just awkward, it's born. So basically the story is, we were all out for dinner, and Chris and I said, hey, instead of fighting over the bill, let's just all put our credit cards in, we'll let the waiter choose the card.
SPEAKER_01
I wouldn't have fought you. We didn't have to fight. Yeah.
SPEAKER_02
What I noticed, one of the weird things about making money is that there's this weird dynamic that happens where when the bill comes, if you pay the bill, you're showing off, or you're implying they can't afford it. And if you don't pay the bill, you're an asshole, because you can afford to. And so that's why we do that.
SPEAKER_03
Well, so Canadian of you. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01
Well, all right, Sean, what's yours?
SPEAKER_03
What am I on? A biggest change? Okay, biggest change I'm making. This is something I started to do, but I'm doubling down on it. So this year, I turned off two profit streams that I think combined, we're making like 1.
2 to 1.5 million a year of profit. I just turned them off.
Nothing was wrong with them. I just turned them off. I lied actually, there was something wrong with them.
They were just okay. They were just okay. Meaning it wasn't something I really loved to do.
It wasn't something I hated to do. It was making good money, but it wasn't making amazing money. Can you say what those are? Yeah, one of them was my course.
So I was teaching this like power writing course. And I was only teaching it basically two to three weeks out of the years, roughly 10 days on average a year, but it would generate whatever million bucks a year of profit. And, but I didn't like being a course sales guy.
Like I like teaching, but I'd rather just kind of like maybe just do it for free on the pod or something like that. Do it, do like a masterclass episode instead. So I just decided I'm not doing it.
And I was like, okay, that's just like less coming in this year, all right, then that matters to me. So I'm like, well, but I'm willing to do that. And I also just announced that I'm shutting down my rolling fund.
So I'll only be investing personally now. I'm not taking any more outside money. Just because it was like kind of another thing to manage.
Like here's a group of investors, kind of like these updates. I got to keep it like, you know, I got to keep it organized. Oh, should I do this deal? Should I not do this deal? I just decided I'm just going to invest my own money.
I don't need to do this anymore. And with that comes like a steady stream of fees and carry that would come with a fund. I turned it off again.
Didn't have to turn off, just chose to turn off. And the reason why was I realized I was talking to somebody that was, I had one day like, you know, what's that like a Christmas Carol movie where like he gets visited by the ghosts and they're like, they kind of tell him the story. Like I talked to one friend who's in a bad relationship and they're not getting out.
And I'm like, dude, this is not what you want. And they're like, yeah, but it's not terrible. I'm like, but not terrible isn't your goal.
And they're like, yeah, but like, you know, I don't know who else is out there. When if I meet somebody else, then maybe, you know, I'll feel, and I'm like, you're just not going to meet somebody else because you're dating this person. And then I met another person who was in a job.
They did like same thing. It wasn't a terrible job. So they didn't quit.
And they would, they'd be open to a better job, but they weren't seeing a better job because they were so occupied with the one that they had. And so I just kind of realized, if you want something great, you got to make space for great. You can't just wait till your current thing gets so bad that you have to end it, or that those new amazing things shows up at your doorstep and it'll be obvious to switch.
And you got to just say no to some, some things that are just okay in order to literally create space so that a better thing can come and land in your lap and be there. You have the time, you have the mind share, you have the availability to take the meeting, and something better lands. And that's exactly what's happened this year.
Better things have landed because I've done that. And so now I'm like, next year, what else is there that's like kind of in that middle tier, it's good, not great bucket that I should just, I should just get out. What's it going to be? I'm thinking about what that might look like.
I don't want to say just yet, but yeah, there's maybe some other things I could do to free up more time or create some space.
SPEAKER_01
So you may know this, but my beginning in business was being a copywriter. It just basically means figuring out what motivates someone and how to use the written word to take an action, get them to take an action or to think a certain way. And the way that I learned how to copyright was, I did this thing called copy work.
And copy work is this famous technique that's not really popular anymore, but it used to be really, really popular. And you basically take writing that is great writing that you love and you write it out by hand and you copy it and you make notes of what particular thing that that writer's doing that makes it special. That's how I learned how to write.
I locked myself in a room for six months and I just did this for many hours a day. I created a program to make it easy so you can do that. It's called copy that copy that.
com. You can go there and you can check it out to 10 day exercise to make it really easy to learn how to write. If you want, you can just go do this on your own.
You can find great writing and just literally copy it by hand. I know it sounds crazy, but it works really effectively, but I made something that makes it a little bit easier. So check it out copy that.
com and back to the pod.
SPEAKER_02
What do you think about that, Andrew? Well, it's funny you mentioned that. So one of the problems with having a fund or raising money is that you owe people things, right? There's people that are giving you millions of dollars. And I actually had a moment yesterday where I had a really busy day and I woke up and I actually felt really excited and creative.
And I made this big list of all these things I wanted to dig into that I was excited to learn about and work on. And then there's a really wonderful guy who invested in a fund that we raised and he gave us I think five million bucks or something and he wanted to get on the phone and understand what was going on with an investment that we made. And so me and Chris had to stop everything we're doing and talk to him and we had a really nice chat with him, but it interrupted my flow state.
It interrupted what I really wanted to be doing in my day. And the problem with raising money is that at the end of the day, there's people who can call you and you owe it to answer the phone and they can interrupt you at any given time. And especially in a rolling fund, there's like 50 of those people.
And so I feel the same way. I really think that when you give your time to something like that, you're taking away from something else.
SPEAKER_01
But that's, we're gonna get to best investment. Maybe we can go right there, but some of the things that you're doing contradict that and same with me.
SPEAKER_02
Totally. Yeah, like I'm doing the Twitter subscribers for example, but the thing about it is that I actually enjoy, A, I don't, nobody can email me and say, I'm a Twitter subscriber, I demand your time. I've made it very clear that I'm only doing an AMA once a month.
I don't respond to tweets, necessarily I don't guarantee any response. And so most months I spend an hour doing an AMA that I find really fun anyway. So for now I'm gonna continue doing that, but I've certainly considered that.
SPEAKER_03
Oh, by the way, I have an update on my biggest change from last year that I had said where I was gonna be less, I was gonna learn when to use my impulsiveness and when not to, totally failed at that. There was a business idea that we had that we were like, oh, maybe we should do this business. And I was like, here's the reasons why, I'm super excited about it.
But I was like, you know what? Old Sean would have just started it now. New shot, here's what I'm gonna do. This business isn't going anywhere.
I'm gonna give myself a two week cool down period where I've done all the meetings, I'm kind of like, I know what's there, I have the information I need, but I still have to decide, is this a business? Because you don't date a business, you kind of marry a business for like at least a couple of years. And so I said, let me give myself a two week cool down period to get off the impulsiveness. And I made it two days into the impulsive just period before I had my first customer and I was running and it was so good.
And I was like, oh, I definitely didn't do the thing that I would have advised me to do, which is to say, if you still wanna do this in two weeks, then you know this is a great business for you. And I kind of failed at that, I gotta admit. So still working on that one.
I'm gonna keep that one on the list for this year.
SPEAKER_01
It didn't possibly shut down your rolling fund. Let's do person you'd bet it all on. So mine was between two of our guests actually, Jason Yanowitz and Austin Reef.
Jason Yanowitz started Blockworks. It's a crypto media company. I don't even like crypto, but I love Jason and I love his media company.
He's scaled it to, I don't know, tens of millions in revenue. And then Austin Reef started Morning Brew, who was my competitor. Now I've gotten really close to him because he's in my core group at Hampton.
But I'm gonna give it to Austin because he's already sold most of his business Morning Brew. I think he was 26 when he sold it at a $75 million valuation. The company now is doing high eight figures in revenue.
I think whatever Austin Reef does, I would blindly put money in. I would invest in him blindly.
SPEAKER_03
Wow, that's not who I thought you'd pick. Austin's amazing, but that's it. You've come full circle.
Your former competitor now turned, dare I say, hero?
SPEAKER_01
Well, look, I love these people that have the perfect balance of optimism and pessimism. You know, like they're like optimistically pessimists, like where they think something amazing is gonna happen, but they're fairly conservative and they plan for the downside. So he's interesting to me.
SPEAKER_03
Cool, who you got Andrew? Who would you bet it all on?
SPEAKER_02
So mine's not really a business person necessarily. You know, I've been thinking a lot about like AI disruption. And I think that if I had to bet it all on one business, that would be incredibly hard.
Cause I think in AI, there's so many second order and third order consequences and levels of disruption. So my thought was actually, if I could just be an investor in a podcaster, someone with a personal monopoly, and my idea was Andrew Huberman. So I think he's got a incredible brand and he's doing the thing that he loves and is kind of made for.
He's insanely likable. He loves talking about all these interesting people about all these interesting things. People have this incredible affinity for him and they will basically do anything that he says.
If people advertise with him or he talks about a product, everyone will buy it. Which means that his ads, like we tried to buy an ad for Aeropress a year ago. We just got an ad for Aeropress literally yesterday.
And I think we paid some, you know, very high number because his audience is huge.
SPEAKER_01
Did you see results from it yet?
SPEAKER_02
I don't know yet. I can report back. But anyway, his business, I'm like, that is a completely undisruptible business unless he gets hit by a bus or something.
SPEAKER_01
The best line was from Rob Deirdeck. We asked him how much it costs to advertise momentous on the pod, on Huberman's pod. And he goes, I don't remember how much it was, but I could tell you whatever it was, it probably wasn't enough because he moved the needle for us that much.
SPEAKER_03
Yeah, that's amazing. All right, my person I had been at all, Sam, are you sitting down? Yeah. It's you, bro.
It would be you. It would be you. And let me tell you why.
Let me tell you why. Not just for the reasons that you think you're talented, but there's a lot of talented people. You're smart, but there's a lot of smart people out there.
I this year have really come to appreciate more than ever. And I think it's because I've moved out of the, I'm gonna be CEO and operator role to more like I'm gonna be investor and trust other people to operate, you know, these businesses that we own. The underrated trait that I had been severely underweighting in my little mental model was like, is this person gonna be focused? Are they gonna get distracted? Is this person gonna be loyal? And are they gonna take this seriously? And when it comes to that, like, we have a lot of friends that are, you know, they're talented and they're successful, but they have shiny object syndrome.
I'm one of them. We have a lot of people that will, if they do something, they kind of know they got 10 more shots on goal. And they're just gonna keep trying different stuff until they figure out the little thing that works.
Every time you talk to them, if you catch up with them every quarter, they're gonna have a new narrative. You're not like that. And I've now learned that people like that, they just win.
And the people who are steady and solid, and I feel like to have a certain level of seriousness about them when it comes to doing something, like I don't really care what it is. Like when you were writing your blog posts for the hustle early on, even before the newsletter, just like, yeah, we're gonna write a blog post that needs to get a bunch of people to subscribe and follow us. And you took it incredibly seriously.
And when you were hosting events, you took it incredibly seriously. And when you're doing Hampton, you take it incredibly seriously. You do one thing, and you take it very, very seriously.
And if I'm gonna bet it all on somebody, that's really what I want is a certain level of seriousness. It's something, it's a trait I've come to admire. Like we hired a CMO into our e-commerce business.
And this guy, Chris, and he's amazing, not because he's the most talented marketer. And like if you go on Twitter every day, there's these like e-com guys, I don't know if you guys see this, it's just my feed of guys just bragging about this, like campaign they did, and this new ad technique they did. And he's not like that.
He's just blocking and tackling every day with a certain level of seriousness. And the beautiful thing is, I know this guy's gonna stay focused and only work on this. He doesn't have three side hustles.
He doesn't have his own podcast and rolling fund. He's just gonna stay focused on this for the next four years. And when he does that, and he takes it seriously, and he's gonna like do all the obvious things, he's gonna win bigger than the kind of like talented person who's all over the place.
And I know that's a big contrast to me, because I'm more of the talented person who's all over the place, but I've seen the value in the other side now, and I'm like, that's who I need to surround myself with, because those people win.
SPEAKER_01
Well, I appreciate you. I love the love, and I love you for saying that. That's very kind.
I, we had a, like we did these MFM meetups recently, and I called in one to one last night, Sean. And apparently the thing is, is they put on their badge who they like more, you or me.
SPEAKER_03
They'll never tear us apart, bro. I don't even wanna know the results.
SPEAKER_01
They'll never tear us apart. Obviously every brown person, every Indian person had Sean, but I was shocked. Maybe I shouldn't have been shocked.
You were a fan favorite. So by you liking me and them liking you, they are now my fans too, maybe I hope. But I appreciate that.
Thank you very much. I think that focus will change your game, Sean. And if you want, you know, like, this is a little crude, but you know what I'm supposed to rub one out before you have, before you like do something bad, which is something that you're not supposed to.
If you want, you can do that to me. I will help you. I'll be your hand.
I'll keep you focused.
SPEAKER_03
I don't know what that offer was. That was kind, I think.
SPEAKER_01
I just offered my hand to you. Yeah, I got you. All right.
All right, what's the next one? Best business for someone else to go into.
SPEAKER_03
Yeah, what, what's a great business idea that someone else should go do?
SPEAKER_01
Do you know what we said last year? I think mine was a washer and dryer that's two in one. Andrew said empty leg flights. And then Sean said school for starving artists, like turn art into commercial things, for example, photographers.
SPEAKER_03
Yeah, all right. So I don't think anybody did any of those three. So what do we got this year, boys? We gotta step it up.
SPEAKER_01
All right, I think it's practical. So since the beginning of this patch on, I've said that I think privacy is gonna be more important. And that's just a mega trend.
I said that things like DuckDuckGo are gonna get a lot bigger. I think they have gotten huge, but not as big as I thought because it hasn't been easier than, it's been more like a vitamin, not necessarily a painkiller. I still think it's gonna get big, that space.
And I think in particular, what you're gonna see is companies who are tailored for, it's gonna start with first like executives and people like us who have audiences. And it's gonna be something like where they protect your information online. So I've gotten, like, I've signed up for a few of these services and I'm alerted if one of my passwords gets hacked, or they'll say like, hey, we know where you live because we saw you post a picture of your car and then we did Google Maps and we see your car in front of the house and we just predicted where you live.
And so I'm using a bunch of these, I'm testing a lot of them out. I think these are gonna be really popular. So for example, cyberhealth.
co, I've not used these guys yet, but I liked the premise that they provide. But I think what's gonna happen is there's gonna be, it's gonna start with like $5,000 or $10,000 a year services that are a little bit more towards executives and then it's gonna trail down. And I think Gen Z is gonna be all about privacy in the next 10 years.
So that's what I'm interested in. Dude, that's a great one.
SPEAKER_03
I like that one a lot. I totally agree with you. This feels a little semi-glutiety.
Like, hey, wait, is Sam onto something here? I think you might be onto something. Andrew, what you got? What's the best business for someone else to go do?
SPEAKER_02
So I love this one. I think I would do this if I was gonna start a business. And my idea is AI Tinder.
So imagine you go on Tinder. And so what got me thinking about this is Dolly and all these image generation tools can now create photo realistic images. And I don't know if you guys have seen them, but there's now Instagram influencers who are beautiful men and women who make $10,000 a month on Instagram.
SPEAKER_01
Dude, I just kept getting this. I kept getting this lady come up on my Twitter and I'm like, this lady is very attractive. What's her story? Like, why do I keep getting this same person going on in my story? And they don't say she was fake, but I'm like, this is definitely fake.
This person is not real. Then I had to Google it and she was fake.
SPEAKER_02
Yeah. And basically, you can look at the image and almost not know. So here's my idea.
So you basically generate like thousands and thousands and thousands of fake digital men and women. And then you have Tinder and you basically, you make it like a casino, right? So you're swiping and let's say you match with a really hot digital girl and then you have to text with her. And there's some sort of algorithm where you have to win her over to exchange photos and start talking or whatever.
And I just think if you gamify dating, right? I mean, it's kind of, it's something that like, you know, people and relationships can even do this, right? It's just kind of like scratching an itch. I think that's something that would just absolutely blow up.
SPEAKER_03
But you're saying they know it's fake, right? You're saying the game is, it's almost like, you know, flirting as a series.
SPEAKER_02
You're getting better. And like people might see this as like creepy. And it's like, no, these bots can train people how to not be creepy, right? Cause you're never going to get another photo if you're creepy.
SPEAKER_01
We've talked about replica. Do you remember replica? It was like a digital girlfriend or a boyfriend. And they like changed part of their algorithm or something about like what they allowed people to talk about.
And one of the guys killed himself. Like one of the customers killed himself. Like these people fell in love with these women, these fake women.
So it's pretty wild.
SPEAKER_03
Yeah, that's crazy. All right. Best business for someone else to go do.
Okay. I had a couple ideas. I think anything in the guns and ammo space, I think is a great one.
But I didn't want to pick that one. I think Distress Venture Capital, Andrew, I think you guys are on top of this, which is a bunch of companies that are good products, have revenues, but they are not going to be able to raise their next round and they're going to go die and creating a business around that is good. But the one I picked is TikTok shops.
So I don't know if you guys are paying attention to this. What? The number one book in the world right now, do you know what it is? It's the Shadow Work Journal. Number one book in the world.
What is the Shadow Work Journal, you ask? Well, it's this goddamn book that you can't, it's just going crazy on TikTok. It's basically, and what it is is TikTok, not just launched the ability to shop, they'd launched the ability for anybody to be an affiliate of any product without having a relationship with the company. So it created this giant network sales thing.
It's almost like an MLM. TikTok has turned into a giant MLM. So basically you can, as a creator, just find a product in the shop that's eligible for commission, you make a video about it, and you get a commission every time they go by it.
That's why this journal is the number one product in the world, it's sold over half a million copies of this journal.
SPEAKER_01
Yeah, it's sold, and TikTok tells you how many it's sold, half a million, this is crazy.
SPEAKER_03
And that's through the TikTok shop. Then you have Amazon, it's the number one book on Amazon too. So you add another half a million on that, right? That's easily a million copies sold of this one journal.
And this is like in a two and a half, three month span. It's not very long. And I'm the type of person where I meet people, like I meet Mois, and he's like, yeah, I did Facebook ads for native deodorant.
I was like, okay, well, what worked? It's like, yeah, back then, the clicks were just super cheap. There weren't very many people advertising on Facebook, especially a product like this. It was just mobile games or something.
And you're like, damn, man, that was the glory era of Facebook ads. Now it's all so expensive. Now it's so competitive.
But if I was doing this in 2012, that was the time. And, oh, I wish I bought Bitcoin back in 2011 or 2012 when my friend first mentioned it back in, you know, $130. That was the time.
And I always wish I was there back in time. Well, guess what? There's a golden arrow that's happening right now, and it's TikTok shops, right? TikTok shops is currently in that like, it's very cheap. It's not that saturated.
And TikTok is very motivated to promote these things. And TikTok customers are not like, fully acclimated to the fact that now a bunch of the TikToks they see are selling products. And so the conversion rate's gonna be higher.
And these windows don't last for very long, but they do last, you know, and when you can go make hay during these periods. And so I think if I was, you know, 23 years old, there's nothing else I would rather be doing than trying to create something that's gonna sell through the TikTok shop platform. TikTok is even paying for like, they'll subsidize your product.
So if you have a $60 product, it'll be for sale for $30, but you're still getting 60 because TikTok is subsidizing products that they wanna promote and giving you the full value of them. So you're getting TikTok to pay for half the product sometimes or 30% of the product sometimes. It's pretty insane.
SPEAKER_01
Yeah, this is wild. And I see that guy, Isaac from Minikotan or whatever, what's it called? Katana, yeah. Minikotana, like sharing all of his TikTok shop details and it's wild.
It's pretty crazy.
SPEAKER_03
Kind of like when the iPhone came out, people start making apps for the app store, but you could see the charts, you could see what's getting downloaded. The same thing with shops. You can go see what's selling well and how many units it's sold.
And you can kind of either use that to either create a competitor or like just sort of like abstract away and be like, oh, it's this type of product that's doing well at this price point that's doing well on TikTok. Let me go, let me go after that. All right, that is part one.
I gotta go take a pee break, get some water, take a rest, but we got so many trophies still on the table that have to be given out for the million awards. We got six or seven of my favorite categories. We saved the best stuff for last.
So after this, go listen to part two of the 2023 million awards.
SPEAKER_00
I feel like I can rule the world. I know I could be what I want to. I put my all in it like no days off on a road.
Let's travel never looking back.
SPEAKER_01
Hey guys, listen up. If you're listening to my first million on Google podcasts, we want to let you know that that will no longer be an option soon. The reason being is Google is sunsetting its podcast apps sometime in early 2024 in favor for YouTube music.
And we want to let you know and give you a heads up before it's too late. So my first million is available anywhere you get your podcasts like Apple podcast, Spotify, you know the drill. If you're using YouTube music, we're gonna be there as well.
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