My First Million: #167 - Answering Your Questions On Investments, Businesses and Life

Hubspot Podcast Network Hubspot Podcast Network 4/5/21 - 9m - PDF Transcript

All right.

Quick break to tell you about another podcast that we're interested in right now, HubSpot

just launched a Shark Tank rewatch podcast called Another Bite.

Every week, the hosts relive the latest and greatest pitches from Shark Tank, from Squatty

Potty to the Mench on a Bench to Ring Doorbell, and they break down why these pitches were

winners or losers, and each company's go-to-market strategy, branding, pricing, valuation, everything.

Basically all the things you want to know about how to survive the tank and scale your

company on your own.

If you want to give it a listen, you can find Another Bite on whatever podcast app

you listen to, like Apple or Spotify or whatever you're using right now.

All right.

Back to the show.

You would know more than I am, but this guy's Tim and his brother, I'm not that close with

them.

I'm friendly with them.

I'm friends with them, but I'm not that close.

If you told me that they were worth over $150 million, I wouldn't be surprised, and they

still act like they're poor in kind of a funny way, which I enjoy, and they're invested.

Well, they're super humble, and they're super hardworking still.

And they invest in everything.

Today, we're going to answer a bunch of questions, but did you see Trong's tweet about the guy

selling the card?

No.

What is it?

Trong tweeted out this video that he found from probably the 90s or probably from the

2000s, early 2000s, and it's a guy who's trying to sell you on his business card.

That's a big square, and you open it up, and it's a pop-out, and he's just really intense.

But the video got...

It's funny.

You haven't seen this?

No.

Well, this won't be any good then.

But the video got like half a million views, and people are making websites about the video

based off of his tweet.

It was just funny.

He got half a million views now, or he tweeted something that already had half a million

views.

No.

It did now.

Oh, wow.

Trong is a master of finding great content.

That guy is really good.

I have this apprentice who's working with me, Chris, for content, and he's basically...

The red-headed guy?

Yeah.

Yeah.

He's kind of shadowing me, and he helps me produce my content, and he's learning as

he goes.

And I told him, I was like, success is being Trong, so that's the level.

That's the top bar.

That's what you need to measure against.

Here's five examples of awesome things he's done, and so he called Trong, and he was like,

what's your secret?

What's your process?

Basically, Trong was like, I kind of browse the internet a lot, and there's no way you

can...

It's like asking Michael Jordan, how do you jump so high type of thing.

It's not easy to describe how you do the thing that doesn't feel like a real process for

you.

You're just doing it intuitively.

He's a machine.

One time, I called him at 11 o'clock his time.

He's in Vancouver, and he was at the park playing with his son, and I was like, Trong,

like, I'm not trying to get on you because I'm not your boss, but don't you have work

to do?

He was like...

And he was like, bro, I got up at 5 a.m., and I already wrote tomorrow's email already.

I was like, all right, sounds good.

He's a machine.

So I didn't see this video.

Is it worth talking about, given that I didn't see it, or what?

It's too long to go through now.

Basically, people and myself, let's go to Twitter after this, and let's go to TrongTFan,

I think is his handle, and go look at his thing.

And the funniest thing that he's done lately is he owns OnlyFans.com.

Dude, that slayed me.

It was so funny.

So he has OnlyFans, but he spells fans, P-H-A-N, like his last name.

And it's just a network for only people with the last name, Fan, and I just found it so

funny.

Oh, that was funny.

For some reason, it's funnier when I think that he came up with it, I'm afraid.

Yeah, and now we don't like it so much.

I'm just joking.

Stupid ass idea.

All right, today we're going to answer questions.

We got six pages of text questions, so dozens and dozens of text questions, and then we

got a few dozen audio questions, like people calling in, but some of the text questions

were good.

I'm going to start off, I'm going to read a few that I think are cool.

Let's do the first one.

One of them is Johnny Volk, he asks, what are you both personally investing in right

now?

By the way, do you know Johnny Volk?

Do you know who this is?

I talked to him on Twitter, and he's Joe Spicers, buddy.

He lives out here in the Bay Area, he lives like, I don't know, 15 minutes away from me.

He's a super successful e-commerce guy, been in e-com for 10 years, sold his company like

a month ago or something for tens of millions of dollars, and he's a big investor in my

rolling fund and several other rolling funds, and really like ultra nice guy.

This guy's super legit, so he's asking, what are you both personally investing in?

You want to go first?

I think your answer is probably more interesting.

I'll go first.

Right now, the bulk of my liquid net worth is in publicly traded companies.

I own a bunch of HubSpot right now, I own a bunch of Airbnb.

Besides that, I don't own anything else above $50,000.

It's all in...

So you're super concentrated in those two companies, basically?

Yeah, but then I have more money in the S&P 500, so like the total stock market index.

I'm going to invest around $250,000 to $500,000 in the next probably 18 months in startups.

I own six figures worth of into a variety of real estate funds, including sweaty startup

Nacouber, and then I own my house, and I'm in the process of buying multi-family properties.

So I would say I have...

If you just broke it out, you're like roughly, you're like, okay, 70% is in the stock market

really in the two companies where my wife works and when I work, something like that.

Well, no, I own way more just S&P 500 than I do HubSpot and Airbnb, but I would say that

90% of my net worth is in the S&P 500.

Yeah.

Oh, wow.

S&P 500.

Okay.

So just low-cost index fund, basically.

Vanguard fund.

Simple stuff.

And then my goal was to invest somewhere around 1% to 3% of my net worth over a period of time

into angel investments.

Gotcha.

Cool.

And then some real estate mixed in, real estate being the house you live in and some other projects

other people are doing.

You're not currently buying and owning real estate at the moment.

I own my house, but I want to buy 16 units.

I also have...

I mean, I'll say half a million dollars in cash, just sitting in a checking account,

which I think is too much money, but when I bought my car, I just paid cash out of there.

And then I own six figures of Bitcoin and Ethereum, of which I owned most of that Bitcoin

from 2013, and I just bought $75,000 for the Ethereum a few days ago, because you and

a few others told me it was interesting.

Nice.

By the way, we got some constructive criticism, I would say, which was like, oh, the last

few episodes feel like rich guys talking about ways to make a bunch of money, which, honestly,

good description for the podcast.

But I get what the person's saying, because they're like a fan, and they're like...

That's me raising my hand, because I think I basically was like, oh, this BitClop thing

is cool, and it sounds like a total Ponzi scheme.

And so people are like, we're talking about Jack selling like an NFT for like $70 million.

So it just sounds like a little bit crazy.

So I think, although I think your answer is great, because I like knowing how people

invest their money.

I think most people are very closely guarded with that info.

People don't tell you what the hell they're doing.

So you're kind of on your own to figure stuff out.

And you don't really have any data points triangulate, because all the wealthy people

don't want to talk about what they're doing with their wealth, unless it's with other

really wealthy people.

And so I think it's great you said that, but I'm also, as you were saying it, that was

just ringing in my head of some guy being like, why are you guys just talking about money?

But it's like, well, that's also the theme of the podcast in a way.

And that was also the question, and I'm trying to answer it truthfully, but also when we

started this podcast, when you started this podcast a year and a half ago or two years

ago, it really wasn't a bunch of rich guys talking about...

It was a bunch of hopefully soon to be rich guys talking about stuff.

We've been talking about the same stuff the whole time.

Yeah.

You mean us?

Yeah.

At that point.

Yeah.

And also I put this out there in the manifesto when I started this thing, which is I think

it's unfortunate that talking about money and how to make money and what you do with

money to make, how you make your money, earn you more money.

I feel like it's unfortunate that that's taboo to talk about.

It's like low class or something to talk about because look, the reality is most people want

more money and people try to signal and say, oh, it doesn't matter and all this stuff.

I know a lot of people that want more money.

Most people in my life, if I had the option, would you like more salary or less?

Would you like more in your bank account or less?

The answer is more.

And if all the people who have money are really guarded and don't talk about it and don't

want to seem like they're bragging, well, what that really does is it kind of like just

traps the information from others.

So that's kind of like my overall view of it.

I know you're similar because I remember being kind of stunned when we first became friends

and you just Facebook messaged me, you're like, like, how much do you make?

I was like, whoa, whoa, bro, like what's going on here?

But I was like, okay, you know, ballsy question.

The reason why that I actually dislike that view that's or if someone criticized you for

talking about money, it's because they are making the assumption that because you have

money or because you don't, you are somehow better or worse.

And in my opinion, like I don't just because you have money, you have no intrinsic value

to me.

Like you either are interesting or you are not interesting.

And what makes you interesting to me is that people are just, they try ambitious stuff

and they do neat stuff.

Oftentimes that's correlated with money, but it's not always like, I knew this lady who

would do these amazing art exhibits where she would like paint gold phones and like just

do interesting stuff.

And I was like, wow, that's super badass.

I'm so bold of you to try that.

She wasn't wealthy at all, but I thought it was so cool.

So to me, it's about just being an interesting person.

I don't really care if it's money related or not, but oftentimes it is right.

For me, I have like three or four different life games that I'm very interested in.

Like let's say right now I'm interested in the fitness game and I'm a total beginner.

I'm a white belt at the fitness game.

And so I have a trainer.

He's like more like a black belt, you know, look at his body, look at his lifestyle.

He's extremely healthy.

And so I want to learn about the fitness game.

I like learning about the happiness game.

How do you be like a happy person?

How do you control your mood?

How do I master my mood?

I'm really interested in that.

And I think about that a lot.

Talk to people about that.

Then there's like the money game.

And then there's like the making things that people want game.

And I like all these games and I admire the people who have done well in them.

And I'm better at some than others where I'm like a total beginner.

And in some I'm like, you know, a blue belt or a purple belt where I've done something,

but I'm by no means at the end.

So anyways, that's a tangent.

But to answer John's question, did you want to say something else about that?

No, I answered to answer John's question.

I'm kind of similar.

I I tweeted out my like holdings a while back.

Maybe I'll do that again.

I need to go back and recalculate.

But I tend to hold about 10% of my wealth in cash.

I think cash is being devalued and I don't want to hold cash.

Cash doesn't earn cash.

Something in the bank is nice for a rainy day, but it doesn't earn you more money.

The 0.001% I get from Wells Fargo or whoever is not going to like help me.

I have a good sized stock, you know, basically, I would say beyond that it's almost like 5050

of public equities, so stocks and, you know, crypto right now.

And and then angel investing.

So I'm angel investing currently through the rolling fund four million a year, but that's

not my money.

That's mostly other people's money and I get a carry on that I get a 20% carry of the

profits.

So that's kind of like investing, but I'm not investing my own money there.

And I'm looking at real estate right now, but the problem with real estate for me has

always been a I'm a beginner at that game and B I don't want to sign up for more work.

So I'm looking for ways to get real estate that's I directly own, but I don't have to

do a ton of work.

And those two are kind of at opposites with each other.

I don't invest in other people's real estate funds right now.

Has your net worth or like your total portfolio increase a significant amount since your deal

because it seems like you've like weren't very active before and now you are very active

and has that helped you?

It has increased because, you know, the stocks stock market's been doing amazing last few

years.

And then with the deal, you know, like where we when we got bought the Amazon stock price

was 1850 Amazon stock price today is 3100.

So just while working there, you know, you can get pretty significant gain in your holdings

there.

And because we got bought like a large chunk of the RSUs were just in that one company.

So that did well crypto is Bitcoin is an extremely well Ethereum has done extremely well.

So those have like really worked.

And then kind of like the side hustle money from podcast, email newsletter, stuff like

that sponsorships that sort of thing has been really nice.

So that's that's actually picked up as well where I wasn't doing that before.

So it's a yeah, but I would also say what really changed was my attitude like I just

started acting like a guy who's got 100 million bucks for better and for worse.

Like I take like bets that are kind of too big for my bankroll sometimes and that's a

risk and I might pay the price.

But I sort of just started carrying myself and acting like and basically making decisions

like what if I wasn't worried about money, but if I wasn't worried about, you know,

going from A to B, you know, like what if I just knew that I'll get to be pretty much

regardless?

How would I bet if that was the case?

And so I started making slightly larger bets and just being more active.

Whereas before I was a little more conservative with how I was investing, which is a huge

difference in our philosophies.

I'm way more conservative than you.

Way more conservative.

And I don't think I was telling the brain you he was like, because I told him I started

angel investment and he was like, who do you think's going to have a better portfolio?

And I was like, that's kind of interesting.

And I and the answer was like, my answer to him was, I think my portfolio has a higher

chance of being pretty good, whereas Sean's portfolio has a higher chance of being amazing

or zero.

Right.

Yeah.

That's true.

That's definitely true.

I guess like the style of who you admire sort of dictates what blueprint you create.

So like, for example, I was really inspired by like Chris Saka's approach to how he went

from like, you know, he's like me, he's like a bit of a degenerate gambler.

Like he went, you know, he took like his law school money and then like was day trading

in the stock market during the dot com boom, wrote it up to like a 10 million, like took

25,000 and turned it into like $10 million and then went in the whole $4 million.

Like that was like a crazy degenerate gambling run.

If you haven't heard me talking about my bets in crypto and, you know, I used to play poker,

like I'm obviously I have a gambling problem also.

Right.

And so, you know, I have that risk and reward profile.

But then the other thing he did that I thought was pretty inspired by was he, you know, he

bet on somebody who he believed in, which was Ev Williams when he started what became

Twitter.

And then when he saw that it was a winner, he like went all in in a way that most people

do not.

Most people would have let their 25 K checks sit and been really excited and fingers crossed.

I hope Twitter becomes a thing.

He likes started to quit his job because he started showing up at the office every day

being like, how are we going to make this thing grow?

I want this thing to grow.

He went and personally was fundraising for the company, even though he wasn't even a

part of the company, but he was out there pitching investors to invest in Twitter.

And then he ended up buying billions of dollars of Twitter stock before it went IPO and was

there's I think first or second largest shareholder at IPO and made billions of dollars off of

his Twitter holdings because he knew when you have a winner, you got to go all in.

So what I've seen is in technology, the winners get really, really big.

And so you kind of want to like play small bets initially and then follow on really

hard.

And like when you see something that actually works, be really bold in the way you approach

it.

And like, Hey, if you strike out, I kind of just think about it like this.

I have a lot of faith in my skills.

Even if I went to zero today, I think at three years, I'd be right back where I want to be

right back where I am today.

So like, I don't feel like there's a huge risk in terms of that.

Anyways, that's a little bit off topic for one question.

All right.

Let's do the next one, which was a question that I actually have for you as well.

Update us on your rolling front fund.

Is it what you expected?

Are you more or less bullish on it?

Is not what I expected in that.

I didn't really think too much about it before I started it, to be honest, which is, you

know, I'm kind of impulsive.

I was just like, Oh yeah, that sounds like a cool idea.

Let me try it and see what happens.

But I thought, okay, I already angel invested.

This is just going to be that with some bigger checks or, you know, do a few more deals.

But I would say now that I have to deploy a million dollars a quarter, I actually have

to carve out more time.

I have to like consciously go and invest in more companies.

So it's more work than I thought initially.

But I brought on Romine, I brought on Zach, Ben helps me with it.

And so they do a lot of the heavy lifting.

Like for this week, this year's YC batch, you know, Zach himself referred in 22 of the

companies.

And number one, I think refer into YC.

So he knew a bunch of the YC companies before they even got in.

We looked at those deals.

And then Romine basically and him went through every single deal on an air table, vetted

them, made a list of the interesting ones, did meetings with them and then brought the

like most interesting seven to me and we're like, Hey, we think these are the ones to

do.

And so that, that like, I've been able to handle the additional.

So it's more work than I thought, but I found really good people.

So that's helped.

Who's this guy, Zach?

Zach is a young engineer.

He was a YC founder himself.

That company didn't work out.

He currently, so I met him because he listens to the pod or I don't know, I don't know how

we reached out, but he's like, Hey, I heard your thing about rolling fund.

I'd love to help.

I just want to see a bunch of startups and help a bunch of founders while I think of

my next thing.

And, and it just turns out he's just like super well connected with the like young founder

community.

And so because of that, he's like referred a huge number of people into YC and into on

deck.

And so he's got this really great network and he's like able to like see things earlier

than most.

And so I brought him into the fund and, and gave him a chance to say, Hey, now you can

have some upside in this, in this thing.

That's bad ass.

And then are you more bullish or less?

More.

Yeah.

Like the same.

I don't know.

I was, I have a friend, we have a mutual friend, Sully, who he wanted to get involved in a

business of mine.

And he goes, he said, he texted me something because I was like, I was like, kind of, I

don't know.

Is this, I don't want to give up equity, but like, you know, I think you're good.

You're worth it.

Yeah.

So, so basically he goes, he goes, look, if I try, I win.

And with this, I'll try.

And so I just loved it.

I was like, I've just got to learn a lot from this guy's philosophy in business.

He just has zero of the doubt and fear gene.

And I think that's true experience.

You would know more than I am, but this guy's Sully, it's him and his brother.

I'm not that close with them.

I'm friendly with them.

I'm friends with them, but I'm not that close.

Like if you told me that they were worth over $150 million, I wouldn't be surprised.

And they still act like they're poor and in kind of a funny way, which I enjoy.

And they're, they're super humble and they're like, super hard working still Sully is super

humble.

Yeah.

And they invest in everything.

So these guys are interesting.

They're two brothers.

Yeah.

And Sully is the same way.

Actually, when I first met him, I met him at, you, you hosted the hustle con dinner at

my office.

You hosted the world works.

This is like one of those, you can't connect the dots looking forward.

You can only connect them when you look back.

You reached, you cold emailed me saying, Hey, I want to host a dinner at your office.

I didn't know who the hell you were, but you made a strong pitch.

You said, I'm going to have all my speakers for my conference there.

You can, you can meet all of them.

I was like, all right, fair deal.

You can use my office.

At that dinner, I made Sully Sully is now my best friend.

We've done tons of deals together.

You know, like that wouldn't have happened if I hadn't said yes to something that was

kind of a random thing.

That's funny.

At that dinner, I was like, dude, this guy's amazing.

I've never heard this guy's name before.

Why don't people in Silicon Valley know this guy?

So I started Googling him.

I find the story that back in the day, he sold his, he had this company that was like

building Facebook apps and he sold it for not a ton of money, but like, you know, good

for any normal person.

Like 2 million or $3 million or something like that between one and $3 million is kind

of what it sounded like.

And, and so, and then what did he do with the money?

He was like, he had been building on the Facebook app platform.

So he had been seeing that like his app was growing really quickly and his app wasn't

a great business.

Like, you know, those like silly Facebook apps, but he's like, Facebook is not silly.

So he basically took a bunch of that money and just he was like, Chris Saka, he aggressively

started buying up Facebook stock back then before it was public.

And then he went to, you know, in Florida and he bought a bunch of real estate.

And I just thought, wow, this guy's really like conducting himself.

At that time I was just kind of like, I thought of myself as an entrepreneur, but I acted more

like an employee.

Like I wasn't playing the game to win.

I was playing with these like invisible handcuffs on me.

Like I saw these companies that were awesome.

I didn't even go try to invest in them.

And like when I saw that this guy, when he knew something was good, he was like, how

do I take all the money I have and put it into this Facebook thing I believe in this?

And simultaneously, I'm going to build my next business now, you know, right away.

And so I just really admired him and I thought that that was a great example to follow.

He's a hustler and I like him a lot too.

Let's go to the next question, which is, we'll answer this one quickly.

But do you not talk about or do we not have the chance to talk about because low priority

or off topic that you wish you could talk about?

For me, it would be, I love talking about UFC.

I'm a big fitness guy.

So I love sports.

I love weightlifting and I like running and I wish we could talk more about like fitness

stuff, but I don't think it's on topic and I'm not an expert on expert on it.

Yeah.

If I could do a podcast shooting the shit about basketball, the UFC, that'd be awesome.

But nobody cares what I think about the NBA or the UFC really.

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So that's one.

And the other one I think would just be like, I do kind of bring this in sometimes, but

like it takes up a lot more of my life than I let show here on the pod, which is like

on the pod.

I'm just talking about a bunch of different business ideas, ways to make money.

In reality, I'm not just like doing that all day.

What I spend a lot more time thinking about all day is like my mindset.

So what is my life-operating philosophy as I go about my day to be like the happiest

and best person I can be?

And it's just kind of cheesy to talk about.

And like no one kind of gives a shit, but like I give a shit a lot about it and I care

a lot about it.

And I think a lot about it, but I don't really talk a lot about it.

I do.

I think about that stuff too.

Yeah.

But it is silly to talk about.

And it could be embarrassing, particularly if you're still working through stuff.

Right.

It's cool to talk about that.

I found when you're in a small group of people or you're in front of, if you're in person

with some people, because you can get a sense for, do they give a shit about this or not?

And it's also like kind of personal.

On a podcast, you might record that thing for an hour and you're like, I have no idea

if even one person is going to like want to hear that or maybe they'll just all turn

it off.

But you guys are awesome at coming up with incredible ideas, knowing how to execute them.

What would it take for one of you to pull out of Twitch or I guess they meant in my

case HubSpot now and pursue it full force?

That's actually a great question.

And I have a, I think is a good answer.

Go for it.

Which is, first of all, starting a company is really hard and I've like joked, but I'm

kind of serious.

I don't know if I'm ever going to do it again.

Maybe, maybe not.

Right.

Or at least like who knows what I'm going to do.

But you know, I've thought it would be cool just to like retire and not work.

And we'll see if that's cool or not.

I don't know.

But I think that the answer far or the answer should be, but it is not enough of, I just

think this is cool.

So like, why are you doing this?

Cause it's fucking cool.

And I think that when I find something where it's going to be like, oh, this is badass.

This is cool.

Like there's not like, for me, there's often not like a mission where it's like, let's

save the world or let's, it's like, ah, it's just kind of badass.

It's just awesome.

Like there's not, there is no logic other than this is, this is, this is cool to me.

And when I found a few things that fit that, but I'm still on a mission with HubSpot and

I want to make it great.

And after that, then I'll pursue the next one.

I get, I don't like doing what, I think Sean, you do this a little bit and a lot of people

do it.

I don't like starting lots of little stuff.

I prefer to dedicate my life to something.

And I'm very cautious about what I'm willing to do that with because you probably can only

do that three to four times in your life.

And so, um, there's a few things, but I'm not, I'm not finished with this chapter yet.

And that's why I haven't done it.

Yeah.

That's a great answer.

Um, I, uh, similarly, I basically was like, all right, well, what's this chapter of my

life about?

And, uh, so when we got acquired, I was like, well, I want them to feel like, like glad that

they did this acquisition.

You know what I mean?

Like I want them to be like, yeah, that was worth it.

You know?

I was like, well, cool.

This is like a transition.

Let me like try this new thing.

Let me work at a big company.

Never done that before.

Let me have this like big cushy salary type of thing.

Like never had that before.

I was kind of just eating shit, you know, like doing my own, my own startup, like sleeping

on kind of an air mattress before.

And so, um, so basically I was like, all right, if my 20s were about starting my own company

and just trying to figure out how to be an entrepreneur, uh, what are my 30s going to

be about?

And I've decided it was two things.

I said, I want to, you know, uh, live a great life like with my family.

So you know, popped out two kids in the last like 18 months.

And so that, that's actually like my project is being a dad and, and having kids and spending

time and just being there, you know, for that and not trying to be like, oh, I must, because

like you said, now I know what it takes to start a company.

I know how all consuming it is.

So you've got to choose wisely.

The second thing with choosing wisely is my 30s are about building a family and then it's

building a project I don't want to sell, which is basically like, I totally agree.

How do I build my next thing?

Same thing you said that this is something I want to do.

I'm not doing it because it's the best business idea or it's the hot opportunity or whatever.

But what, you know, something that I just want to keep doing that I don't want to get

rid of.

I don't want to sell it.

I just want to build it and let it compound for 30, 40 years and I love doing it.

It's the thing I'm uniquely good at doing and I thought, okay, maybe I'll dabble in

some different things to figure out what that is.

And I feel like I found it, which is like ironic.

I found it where I wasn't looking.

I started this podcast for a different reason, but I, what I realized was, oh, I really like

this thing where I can be kind of like perpetually curious, like I could just be curious about

the world.

I can learn a bunch of shit and then I just share what I'm learning and I'm kind of like

a teacher and through the podcast, the email newsletter, through experiments like all access

to the past or I'm going to launch some courses in the future, like my launch school, like

basically I want to do things like that.

Something that lets me just be really, really curious and learn a bunch of things and try

a bunch of things and then share as I go, because that's what I would do if I, if I,

let's just say if work couldn't pay you money, how would you spend your time?

That's how I would spend it.

So might as well just do that as my work.

And so that's what I think I'll do next, which won't look like a traditional startup

or company.

And I agree with that.

I want to do something that I never want to sell.

So I'm in the same boat.

The question is directed towards you, but I'll give you my answer really quick, which

is Sean, how do you balance side hustles while performing at Twitch?

My answer to that, and I've said it before is I don't bow.

I don't do anything on the side and frankly, I have no idea how you do it.

Our good friend Ramon is able to do it really well.

I get some people can do it.

I personally can't do it and I don't even try and I'm not ashamed about that.

Yeah.

Yeah.

There's different ways to like kind of organize your time.

Like you see this from Elon Musk or Jack Dorsey running two multi-billion dollar public

companies at once as CEO, right?

Like kind of a crazy thing that kind of seemed impossible before.

And I would say I do it two ways.

One is I throw more hours at it.

So like I don't take weekends off.

Like I work seven days a week.

I don't work all day, all seven days a week, but my weekend is just like my weekday.

They're the same construction.

So all of a sudden I got an extra 16 hours on the weekend where I can do things.

Same thing at night.

Like I don't watch a bunch of like TV.

I stopped watching NBA games, stuff like that.

Like I basically was like, look, I can cut that out and that's two hours a night that

instead I can create content, right?

Or like when I do the podcast, everybody else, back when we started this, everybody would

go down to the cafeteria at Twitch for lunch.

I would walk across the street, the studio was, your office was literally like 50 steps

away from, from Twitch, I would walk 50 steps away, go to the hustle office.

We would record from 12 to one.

Everybody else is eating lunch.

I'm recording a podcast.

Cool.

I'll eat lunch on my desk like later.

It doesn't matter, right?

So there's these little pockets of time you can unlock.

That's the first bit.

Second bit is hiring.

I bring on people.

So when I say I'm doing X, it's really just me doing X.

It's like Ben or Zach or Ramin or Chris or I have a whole bunch of people that I say,

hey, I'm doing this interesting project.

Who wants to do it with me?

And they're like, I find great people who want to do interesting things together.

And I say, cool.

What's in it for you?

Do you want money?

Do you want learning?

Do you want like, you don't want to build your network?

What do you want out of this?

I'll make sure you get it.

And they let me, like I said, be in two places at once because I can be doing this and they

can be doing that.

What's your burn on all that?

Cause whenever I hear you say you got all these people, I'm like, damn, yeah, that's

must be a lot of monthly.

My burn is expensive, but things now bring in money.

So it's okay.

It offsets it.

But like,

But the angel investing doesn't bring in money and that sounds like

Angel investing.

I don't pay salaries.

It's only carry.

So it's splitting the upside.

So they have, they, they get, they, I took some of my, my 20% carry and I took it down

and let them have more carry.

So which, you know, for them is fine because they make money doing other things.

So they're like, cool.

This will pay off in five years.

That's great.

And I get to like learn a bunch about investing.

I get to put together a portfolio.

If I want to go get a job doing this, or I want to start my own fund, I'll have a track

record to point out and say, no, I, I did these investments before I've been doing this

for years.

So that's kind of like what's in it for them.

So I do have a, you know, significant burnout say it's like 200 to $300,000 a year of like

people costs to do these things.

My goal is for them to break even.

But if not, like that's what money is for money is to be invested in things that will

grow.

And so I kind of like just look at it like an investment.

And it's worked out so far where the side hustles more than pay for the money I put

in.

Now, the last thing is basically an acknowledgement and I talked, I was pretty transparent with

the people at Twitch, which was like, look, I operate not on a nine to five like strict

schedule.

Like, cool.

I'm just going to punch the clock for 40 hours a week.

No, no, no.

I'm here to do this mission.

You want this job done.

Great.

I'm going to get that job done.

Here's the trade.

I can make sure this job gets done.

You don't ask me how and when and where and why and how, you know, like all the 10 questions

like that in such a like confrontational way, but like it's an understood agreement.

Like they know what I do.

I'm very open about like, Hey, I have a podcast.

I have a newsletter like the CEO of Twitch subscribes to the newsletter and like will

DM me about it.

Like sometimes, right?

Like I'm not hiding any of these things.

They know I do these things.

They know they take some time, but they're okay with that trade because I deliver the

goods in my projects.

And so my trainer told me this one day because I told him, I said, I'm feeling a little bit

guilty.

Like, you know, I wonder, I really like these people.

I don't want them to feel like I'm short changing them.

He goes, well, do you deliver the goods?

I was like, well, yeah, like I'm, I perform like they get the results they want.

Okay.

Well, you're that dude.

And I was like, what do you mean?

He's like, he's like, they don't pay you to sit in your chair for certain hours.

They pay you to deliver the results.

And so just make sure you deliver the results.

And if you're delivering the results in less time, that's because you're that dude.

Maybe not everybody could do that, but you could do that.

And I was like, oh man, what a pep talk that was, you know, made me feel good about something

that I was feeling, you know, uncertain about or uneasy about before.

And you're on paternity leave now, right?

Yeah.

So that helps too.

Yeah, exactly.

Yes.

And that's, you know, like big companies understand like, look, you, if you have a kid, my first

kid, I only took 10 days off, which I really regret.

I should have, I should have took the whole leave.

And so this time I decided I'm going to make sure I take some off.

And this time my family actually really needs me there, whereas the first time I was like,

I don't know what the hell I'm going to do here.

My wife's kind of got it under control.

Let me go back to work.

And so this time I kind of realized that the idea of like, oh, this project is so important.

And like, if I take this time off, then, you know, let me do it, I'll take time off later

and later never came.

And that was a big lesson for me.

Like don't, don't put important things off till later.

Do them now.

Who's the worst person?

This is such an interesting question.

I'm a laborer.

I bet you I know who that is.

Who's the worst person you admire?

Do you have one for this?

That's a good question.

Yeah.

Well, like I, it's a great question and it's, you can get in trouble answering this one.

I'm going to tip to a little bit around it because it's just weird, but I actually love

learning about dictators.

I like, I read a ton about dictators.

There's actually a podcast called Dictators.

So like I like learning about Benito Mussolini.

I've read a lot about Hitler.

I've read a lot about Fidel Castro.

Who else?

So I think I got in trouble with this before because I remember I was in school and I took

a history class and the question I asked the teacher was, look, this sounds so messed up.

What was going on back then?

This sounds totally screwed up.

Like how did this guy come to power?

And he explained like, well, here first you have to understand the state of Germany at

the time, blah, blah, blah.

He goes, the other thing was that like, honestly, he, I forgot who Hitler's second in command

is, but he's like kind of like a famous guy for like his, almost like his persuasion

prowess, like his, his marketing prowess.

Yeah.

Uh, Joseph, uh, yes, he's like the head of propaganda.

He made movies.

What's exactly?

I forget his name.

Yeah.

He's a famous guy.

He's like his number two guys, the head of propaganda.

Exactly.

And they did very simple things.

Like everybody else was putting out like, I forgot, like their flyers when they were running

for whatever present, whether they're equivalent of president was, was like all in color.

So he did everything in black and white to stand out.

Or if everyone was black and white, he did color.

Like he just did a whole bunch of things.

I found it really interesting.

Like, Oh, yeah.

Go, go goals.

Dr. Goals.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah.

So, so they had movies made and they used entertainment to kind of like get their message across, get

the story across.

They had like a whole bunch of like distilled down their philosophy into these like really

catchy nuggets.

And so there's all these things that I thought, wow, that's like, if you just abstract good

and evil away, the skill of accomplishing a very hard thing, which is like getting millions

of people to follow you, there's a lot to be learned from that.

And I kind of was like, Oh, that's really cool.

And people were like, dude, you said Hitler's cool.

Like you're, you're, you're basically, you know.

That's the point I'm getting at, which is like, it's so fascinating that someone can

convince.

And in my opinion, like a lot of dictators, I'm like, man, if they like just like move

that early on, like clicked it a few notches to the left and then that trajectory would

have like put them in a totally different atmosphere.

I'm like, man, it like, but it is fascinating how someone can come from nothing and just

create something, whether it's an idea, a business, a piece of art, whatever.

Like I love that like idea of manifesting.

And even though it's horrible and the worst thing on earth, and I wish it never existed,

I always have been fat, fascinated by like a guy like Che Guevara or someone who like

was this like, or what's his name, uh, Benita Mussolini, who I just read about.

Like this wasn't like a, supposed to be a poor kid.

And somehow he convinced all these people these to do all this horrible, horrible stuff.

And that like to me is fascinating how he just bent the world around him.

And like, that's just crazy that a people buy into that stuff and it's crazy that someone

that he had the courage to do that, which sounds like I'm glamorizing these people.

I'm not at all, but hopefully you guys understand the nuance here and why it's kind of intriguing.

Yeah.

Uh, this took two things, one, um, when I met, I've talked a little bit about my friend

Vishal, the guy who's kind of like a young guy who I'm like, this guy's definitely gonna

be a billionaire.

And he's also kind of like totally hell bent on becoming a billionaire and he lets every

part of his other life go like what we were talking about earlier where I was like, well,

on the podcast, I talk a lot about business and money, but like in my real life I'm doing,

I'm really actually more passionate about these other things I spend more time on.

He's the opposite.

Whatever he talks about here, he's 10 times more obsessed with it outside of this.

And I love him for that.

And I remember when I met him, he was, he, he was like, send me this documentary about

like this like warlord in Africa who just like, just like the absolute like gang gangster

shit this guy did.

He's like, Oh, I love this movie.

I love this guy.

I was like, Oh, it's kind of like heinous crimes, you know, he's like, Oh no, it's crazy.

They told me the story about this guy who became the emperor of China and he started

off like as a like, uh, an orphan, like servant and then ended up by the end of his lifetime

as the emperor of China.

I forgot his name, but like one of the ancient emperors of China was like started off as

an orphan boy with not a dollar to his name.

And then like rule.

I mean, it sounds like a Genghis Khan or something.

Yeah.

And he was like, and they like, not just like got there, like it's not just a hero story.

Like he also like, you know, like slayed his enemies and like enslaved people or I don't

know what he did, but like it wasn't all, you know, just like underdog, you know, it

wasn't just David and Goliath and he told me that story and I was like, you're a maniac.

But you know, I actually would love to invest in you because that's the kind of like maniac

you want being a founder of these companies is like somebody who is wired a little bit

differently.

And as I remember hearing that, but anyways, the phrase you say that's like every great

man is also a bad man.

Yeah.

That's kind of true.

Everybody I like my favorite comedian is Louis CK, who I believe is currently canceled

for, you know, like doing something gross in front of a bunch of women or whatever,

you know, like, and I don't think that's cool, but I love Louis CK and I still love Louis

CK.

And like, I think he's awesome.

As a comedian, I didn't say he's an awesome character, you know, as awesome human being

and I want to be like him.

No, I think he's an amazing comedian.

And I love his comedy, um, Conor McGregor, you know, I had a poster behind me of him,

you know, painting that I had made of him behind me for half these podcasts.

He's been accused of sexual assault.

He's been, you know, he, people say he's on drugs and he's kind of a asshole and like

other things too.

He's an amazing fighter and I love his drive of how he went from like a plumber on welfare

to the wealthiest fighter of all time.

And he said the whole time from the very beginning, that's what it's going to be.

He called it and there's videos of him when he's alone in his bedroom, not even a professional

yet.

And he says, I'm going to be the greatest and here's what I'm going to do.

I'm going to do XYZ.

He did it all.

I admire that.

But I also think he's does a bunch of scumbag shit and like, I'm okay with that trade.

You know, so there's like a bunch of people that are like that.

I was driving me and Sarah one time we're driving by a Chick-fil-A and we're like, I want to

get that.

Do you want that?

And she was like, yeah, I want that so bad.

And we were, and she was like, but do we want to support them?

This was right when they like did some stuff, uh, and we were like, well, my taste buds

don't really know if you're homophobic.

So I think we'd be, it's okay.

I think we could like the chicken, but also it was something, maybe we were at some place

and they had the chicken there and I was like, I don't think my taste buds could tell if

you're homophobic or not.

So we could probably eat it.

Um, all right, let's answer a video question.

I've been thinking about trying to hire my friends as operators of sorts and I'm just

worried about like damaging that relationship.

Like I think it's an awesome idea of being able to choose who I work with.

I'm just concerned that all of that friendship could go away when there's something as important

as like business and money involved.

I have a pretty strong opinion on that, which is no, I think you actually shouldn't in most

cases don't do it.

In some cases it makes sense, but in most cases I actually think it's a bad idea and

I also have myself failed at doing this a little bit, but I actually don't think you

should be friends with your coworker or your friends with your employees.

If you're a manager, you shouldn't be friends with your employees.

If you're a business owner or CEO, I actually don't think, I think you should be friendly,

but I think you should be really careful about being friends with your employees.

And so my opinion is no, I also think that like you probably disagree, Sean, or maybe

you do, but like even if you're worth your coworkers and anytime in the evening an alcohol

shows up, I think you should leave.

I don't even think you should be in the same room.

So I'm pretty strict about that, although I am friends with a lot of my coworkers,

so I don't exactly follow all of this, but I think that I'll might regret some of that.

We're opposites on this, so you know what's funny?

I always try to be friends with my employees and I feel like they don't want to be friends

with me.

So I'm like, yeah, I'm trying to be friends with them.

And then I'm like, oh, that's weird.

You guys all got together this Saturday and like, oh, yeah, I was just at home.

Could it come over?

Yeah.

Well, what's funny is like when you like start a business and you work a lot, like you don't

really have that many friends.

Like I'm friends with you and Jack and Ramon and like four, I've got like four friends,

but my coworkers are like, I'm like, will you guys be my friends?

I'm with you all the time and I don't get invited to anything either.

Yeah, so I realized pretty quickly, they don't want me around.

And I was like, but it's weird.

I'm such a good guy.

And so anyways, that part didn't work.

Not because I didn't intentionally try not to be friends with them.

They just didn't be friends with me back.

That's okay.

The main thing for me on the hiring side is I would say hire your competent friends.

So my very first business I started, I started with two of my best buddies from college and

we were just like, yeah, we're going to do this, you know, well, there's no CEO, there's

no hierarchy here.

We'll all just make decisions together.

We'll all split the equity perfectly equally.

We didn't really like put too much thought into it because we were just like 21 year

old kids.

Didn't really know much about anything.

And like fast forward a year later, we had to have like a very uncomfortable conversation

with one of them guys, which was like, Hey dude, like I feel like you're not pulling

your weight.

And he was trying, but like we were just like, you're kind of just doing this part.

And like we're, we feel like we're doing these other eight parts.

And in retrospect, I don't even know if that was really true, but it definitely was an

uncomfortable conversation and I could see the downside of it.

But what I would say is like the, the saving grace for me has always been, I only have

hired my competent friends and competent friends do two things.

One is they perform.

So you don't have this, you're not just hiring a buddy because you're your buddy, you're

hiring this person because they're good, but you only know them because they're your buddy.

The second thing is they are reasonable and they will understand, they will understand

if you're really clear up front about like, look, here's the dynamic.

Like we're buddies, but sometimes I'm going to have to tell you if I feel like job's not

getting done.

And I actually, I want you to tell me too, if you think that's true, like, are we okay

if it's going to be kind of uncomfortable?

Like we're not just going to be able to just shoot the shit.

Like we got to also have these two modes that we can operate in and I want to make sure

like you're on board with that.

So I'm, I think with it, with a little bit of good communication up front, you can get

the big benefit, which is it's way more fun to do stuff with friends.

Like companies are hard, they take a long time.

It's like a really long road trip and you want to be in the car with people you really

like.

And so whether those were new people who you just happened to enjoy, great, or they're

people you already enjoyed, who you invited into the car because they're your buddy and

you want to do this company with them.

I think when it works, when you do it with your friends, it's the best.

And when it doesn't work, it's even worse than if they were, they were not your friends.

So you got to take the good with the bad, but we had a podcast with this guy on the

feed called Mike Brown.

You introduced me to him.

I met him at your office.

Yeah.

He said, he had a successful business and he bought both of his brothers on board and

I was like, why did you do that?

Let most people say, you know, don't do business with family.

It gets messy.

He's like, these are my brothers.

I love these guys.

I want to see them every day.

I want to hang out with them.

I want to win together.

I want us all to win.

He's like, I, if he's like, I feel blessed that I got to set this up where I get to do

business with my best friends.

And I was like, well, when you say like that, like what the hell am I thinking about?

That's obvious.

That sounds great.

I don't think there are downsides, but I'm of the mindset of if you pick competent people,

you won't regret it.

All right.

We'll do a couple more fast questions.

Someone asked who could squat more weight.

I think, I think me, Sean, definitely you.

I have, I have Osgood, Schlotters in my knees.

If you, if you have it, you know, if you don't have it, you don't know.

But because of that, I don't squat.

I can't squat.

I never squat in my whole life because of that issue.

Okay.

This is a deep one.

It's cool.

We'll answer it.

What are the biggest insecurities both, what are the biggest insecurities both of you struggle

with?

I'll say, I'll go first.

Sometimes I'm, I get incredibly insecure that anything I make won't be good enough because

I've moved too fast and I just do surface level shit and I don't treat it like a craftsman

enough and I don't like think things through.

I get pretty self-conscious when I meet really smart people who I meet a ton of them through

this job.

I'm like, oh my God, this person's IQ is just like, they are so much smarter than me.

I just cannot keep up because, so I'm insecure about that.

I'm insecure that I, like I didn't go to Stanford or like a fancy school.

And when I meet people in the in-crowd, like when we meet guys like Andrew Chen who, who,

who works in injuries and Horowitz, I'm like, dude, like, I kind of want to be in the in-crowd,

but like, I don't want to work that hard to do it.

And I just don't care that much, but I wish I did, but I feel a little insecure about that.

And I feel I get insecure because I'm pretty loud and that sometimes makes people not take

me as seriously as I think they should.

So those are mine.

Those are really good ones and I think very relatable probably for most people.

Mine I would say, I don't know if it's insecurity as much as like, because when people say insecurity,

it's usually like, what's something you worry about, but it's not really true, but you kind

of worry too much about it.

I think mine like is true, more like, here's your weakness, here's your, you know, your,

your weakness or your, your flaw.

I would say like, and something I kind of worry about, which is I don't really filter myself.

And I, so I just talk a lot and I don't really think about it before I do it.

I don't really think, I don't even filter myself with actions.

Like, like I said, with the rolling phone, I was like, oh, that's cool, let's do it.

Can we do it today?

Let's do it now.

I don't want to think things through.

And so I would say that fear I have and the insecurity I have is around actually like

hurting people's feelings.

Like sometimes I could say stuff that's inconsiderate or, or hurtful in some way, or like, you know,

too opinionated and no, they didn't, nobody asked for your fucking opinion type of thing.

So I'm kind of conscious of that.

Like I would say I'm pretty self self-conscious about that.

That that's the word, not insecure.

I'm self-conscious that while I do that, and I don't really like that part of me, that

like, I will say things and do things that I don't really think about how that, how others

will feel about it.

And also like, when I meet people like our friend Ramon, who's so considerate, I just

feel so inconsiderate in comparison, and I'm like, oh, I want to be that way.

But man, I'm like the opposite.

And like, you know, I'm like a knuckle-dragger, I'm just like a neanderthal.

So I feel really bad about that.

And then I would say like the other minor insecurity is like, am I just wasting my talents?

Like, so when I meet people who are doing really amazing things like Scott Harris, and

you know, he's been on a 15 year mission to bring clean drinking water to the world.

I went with him to Africa, and we went to a town where they had installed one of the

water wells.

And literally the town was like, it was like a parade that Scott was here.

They literally thought this guy was Jesus.

And he kind of like looked like Jesus in the moment.

I thought he was Jesus in the moment.

And like, he's totally humble, he hated that they were celebrating him.

He was there like not for that reason.

But that's the reality of the impact of his work is he literally changes like the lives

of entire like towns, essentially in Africa.

And so then when I see that, I'm like, what am I wasting?

Do I need to do this silly e-commerce thing?

Do I need to do this newsletter who gives a shit?

You know, and so sometimes I feel really small about the way I decided to use my time and

my talents.

I completely agree with that compared to other people.

Last question.

When are you guys going to do since COVID is pretty much in the past?

When is the next meetup going to happen?

I'm actually doing a meet.

So I'm driving to St. Louis to spend a week with my family there.

And I'm stopping in Oklahoma City because that was just like the middle ground.

And I tweeted out.

So I've got like 30 or 40 or 50 people.

I forget how many people RSVP for a breakfast in Oklahoma City.

And if you're down, Sean, although you just had a baby, so imagine we're going to have

to wait a little while.

I would totally be down of doing like a two week tour or something where we go from place

to place to place.

I don't know if we could drive.

I don't know what you'd want to do, but I'm totally down like a two week thing.

Yes.

Totally agree.

I think like if we just said, all right, this fall, we're going to go on tour.

We're going to go to these seven cities, seven cities and seven days or seven cities

and 10 days or something like that.

And we just like set up the events.

I would love to do that.

I think that would be amazing.

We just hired a community manager.

Her name's April.

And she set this event up for me.

I just said, Hey, I'm going to show up in Oklahoma City.

Can you get like, can you book me a hotel and set up like an event, right?

And I'll tweet it out and we can have her do that and help us do that.

You do something really great that I think you should tell people, which is when you

hosted events, but you make the themes great.

So like you used to do this thing called pizza and 40s.

So can you give me, I don't even know what other ones you've done, but like tell the

people of some of the different events you've done, because I think it's really smart.

When you set those events up, people want to come and they behave differently because

of the theme of how you set up.

Cause I've been to a lot of Silicon Valley networking events are boring as shit.

You don't want to go.

And when people go, they're all like surface level level, like they, you know, it's not

a fun place to be.

They don't let their guard down.

Your events are very different.

So can you, what are some of the different themes you've come up with?

Like, do you have a theory on why that works?

Yeah.

No, I don't have a theory.

I just think it's fun.

Uh, I do it for the, what I said earlier in the episode, I just, cause it's cool.

That's the only reason why.

So I do the anti MBA.

That's a book club where we get an expert to come in and discuss the books topic.

Um, I've done, this sounds douchey to say, but like, I don't even drink.

So it's why it's funny, but we have this thing called pizza and 40s.

So the speaker gets a 40 ounce beer cause a 40 ounce beer takes like an hour to drink.

And as, and so we only would have pizza cause we were poor and that's all we could afford.

And we would give the speaker a 40 ounce beer.

They've got to drink the beer and when the beer is done, the talk's done and the answers

get a little bit wilder as they get deeper into the beer.

Um, we did two X, which was focused on women telling their story.

It stands for two X chromosomes.

Um, we had like, did you go to the one that we had in the marina?

No, was that, um, we used to do two X at this thing called Palace of Fine Arts and we had

like literally 2,000 women there in San Francisco.

It probably was like the largest contingency of like, uh, uh, tech women probably in the

world or in the country.

It was kind of interesting.

Um, so we did that.

What else did we do?

Hustle con con con, uh, which is con con is the startup that the content conference.

I thought con con was a funny name.

What else?

Anything else?

Have you, I feel like you've done some breakfast thing before.

Have you done a breakfast thing?

Oh, rice and grind.

Yeah.

We did rice and grind.

Um, which was, we would talk about different stuff in the morning over and like a grind

like coffee, like coffee, but also like work hard.

You're good at this.

You're good at coming up with kind of a catchy name and a catchy theme for people to get

behind.

Uh, and the vibe is very different.

So I think that's, if somebody's doing it, like that doesn't take any extra money.

It just takes like a little creativity and you've made your thing better and cooler,

more fun for you to do, more fun for people to come to, more fun for speakers to attend

because it's different than, uh, the average thing.

So long story short, uh, maybe late summer.

If you're down.

Yeah.

I'm definitely down.

All right.

Great.

That's it.

I feel like I can rule the world, I know I could be what I want to put my all in it like

that.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah.

Yeah.

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Sam Parr (@TheSamParr) and Shaan Puri (@ShaanVP) answer your questions:

(3:40) What are you both investing in?

(16:16) Please update us on your rolling fund. Is it what you expected? Are you more or less bullish on it?

(21:25) What do you not get a chance to talk about (either because it's off-topic/lower priority) that you wish you could?

(23:08) You guys are awesome at coming up with incredible ideas and knowing how to execute them. What would it take for one to pull you out of Twitch and want to pursue in full force?

(27:24) Shaan how do you balance side hustles while still outperforming at Twitch?

(33:06) Who’s the worst person you admire?

(39:29) Should you hire your friends?

(44:19) Who can squat more weight?

(44:40) What are the biggest insecurities, both of you struggle with?

(48:30) Since covid is pretty much a thing of the past...when will the MFM meetup be?

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