All right, this is going to be a special episode. I think that the best episodes we do are the ones where we highlight a business or a person who is amazing that you've never heard of. And that's what today's episode is. The person that we have on Jess Ma, she has built herself, I don't know, 10 companies that have combined, you know, they're worth $950 million. And not only that it just has, she made a bunch of money or been successful with business, but
She's just a force of nature. People that I respect think she's one of the best entrepreneurs in the world. And that's kind of amazing for somebody who you don't know her name. You've never really seen her do interviews. Paul Graham, when he met her and she was at YC, put her on the very short list of a couple people with Sam Altman and a few others as the most impressive people. The people that he thought 30 years from now will have done the most and gone the furthest. I was at a dinner. That's how I met her. And a friend of mine pointed out he goes, is that woman over there?
is the best entrepreneur I've ever met. And he's lived in Silicon Valley for 15 years. And to say that, that's high praise. So I had to have her on the podcast to talk about everything from her beginning, where she was basically a loser amongst losers in school. She talks about like, you know, not only was she not cool, even in the computer club, she got bullied and didn't really fit into school, didn't get good grades.
really like was just kind of like school wasn't for her. She ended up dropping out of high school because school wasn't for her. She's, but she started a business and it started off as a very, and you know, when she was a teenager, she ended up making hundreds of thousands of dollars on this little server business that she was creating, just paying for her own video games. We talk about that all the way to where she is today, building these biotech companies that are doing crazy stuff. Uh, and I asked her, I was like, were you like a science genius? Hi, how did you know to go with this? How did you have the confidence to go into a space like that?
I think we all I think there's a part of all of us that wants to go do the big bold crazy change the world thing but we're afraid like who am i to go do that at least that's a thought i've had and it was kind of amazing to hear her talk about she felt the same way like she's like i gotta see minus in biology and now have like a.
nine figure, you know, $100 million plus bio company, like that's crazy to do that and how she approached that. How did she meet these scientists? How did she get the funding? How did she actually talk herself into doing that from rock bottom where she was completely depressed and didn't know what she wanted her to do with her life to now, you know, living the kind of life she wants. The other thing that's in this episode that I think you're going to like is,
She talks a lot about the lifestyle and financial stuff that come from people who are already really successful. I'm going to give you a trigger warning now. She talks about, yeah, I hop on my jet. I bought this jet. I bought it for this reason. Here's the text right off that I got.
She's very open and very clear about the stuff. And I think for some people who are at the very beginning, it's going to feel unrelatable, or it's going to feel like, oh, yeah, you know, the classic YouTube comment guy who's like, easy for you to say you're already rich. But I think the important thing to figure out is.
She's successful because she always thinks this way. She talks about her mindset and that's why she was able to do this. And also, I love when people talk about money stuff. I love when they're open and honest. I hate the billionaire who downplays it and pretends like, you know, they're flying coach and, oh, you know, money's no big deal. And I don't really do anything with my taxes. No, I like to hear what people actually do, how they use money to improve their life, how they architect their businesses. She does that. She's very open about it. So that's all in this episode. I think you're going to enjoy it.
This is an episode with Jessica Ma.
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All right, it's good to see you, good to see you again. I want to tell people the story of how we met, which is not like this extravagant story, but it is one that I don't know. It's like, it's this thing that happens that
I would have bet anything that you're an interesting person just on the way that this meeting went. So we got a dinner together. So that's like signal one. A friend hosts a dinner, and it's like only friends inviting friends to this thing that's going to be like some sort of founder or investor type of dinner. So already you got filter number one. Filter number two is I'm sitting at one end of the table. You're sitting at the far end of this other table.
our mutual friend, Siava, tells me, he's like, I was like, oh, what's her name? And he's like, oh, yeah, that's Jess Ma. He says, and he's like, yes, she is the most impressive entrepreneur I've ever met. And I was like, okay, I didn't even ask. And he just says that. And he's basically gives you this extreme compliment. And I was like,
That's extreme. And he's like, yeah, she's extreme. And I was like, OK, I got it no more. So already I got a signal. Next thing I noticed that you had your dog in the restaurant. And I was like, OK, that's awesome. Love dogs, dogs here. And later I was like, is this like a service animal? Because it's kind of like a nice restaurant. And you were like,
Yeah, Amazon, you could buy this for $10 this vest and like, look, and you flashed me like an FBI badge that was like a service dog thing. And I was like, did you buy that? And you're like, yeah, this is great. And I was like, wow, this person is just, you know, so there's a little signal, somebody who rolls by their own little rules. My friend telling me that you're, you know, one of the most baddest people that he's ever met, literally in the game of entrepreneurship. And then when you did your intro, you said something, you go,
Yeah, I'm working on, like, I started this thing in De Niro, which I've heard of, and you were like, you know, it started that. And now I said on the board, like, you know, whatever, 10 companies. And we do like bold science bets. And you didn't even explain it. And I was like, okay, well, you have my interest. What's a bold science bet? And you're like, you know, like,
curing cancer, but not like the typical way, like this other path to curing cancer. You're like kind of nonchalantly gave you some answer as to what a bold science bet would be. And I was like, okay, say no more. I need to meet this first. I need to get to know this person. And I've gotten to know you a little bit now. And yeah, you are just that impressive. So this is my buildup. That is my perception. And tell me what that feels like to hear because that's people never tell you their actual perception, first impressions as they remember it, you know, in their own head.
That's amazing. It was super fun to have that dinner and meet you. I just had a good feeling that we were going to have a fun time. Normally, I don't go out. I'm like a loner. I like to be at home and just take it easy after work. It's a lot to deal with. Ten companies were going to add more companies this next year.
I'm trying to figure out, like, Virgo, I want to spend my time as an entrepreneur. And that's an ongoing question. I'm sure we'll talk about that. But I've heard about you. You know, I've seen your podcast and your famous. So it's kind of an honor to get to be friends with you too. So well, the other thing that's cool is you have a hold co and like, you know, if I was going to say, what are some of the themes of like, on almost like entrepreneurship trends, like it was fashion trends, but now there's entrepreneurship trends. One of the entrepreneurship trends is
this personal holdco model. But what most people are doing with the personal holdco, I would say, is kind of like small boy stuff. It's like, we acquired this little sass app or like, you know, I'm going to, I'm going to buy this, this plumbing business and I'm doing this holdco to roll these up. And you kind of have a holdco, but you also have the big venture.
change the world kind of thing inside of it, which I find really fascinating. So you're like, yes, I'm doing a holdco, but the holdco is going to be all sort of game changers type of like go big or go home type of bets. I find that really interesting. I also think that another entrepreneurship trend is doing hard stuff. So I think Elon really popularize like.
Yeah, you can create the next kind of app, and that's cute, but I'm going to make rockets and electric cars, and then, you know, then you have AI and Sam Altman, and that's like, you know, the kind of cutting edge science do hard stuff movement. And I think you're a part of that too. And so I really like that you're here because you represent, you know, some intersection of these trends, and there's very few people that really play that game. And that's what I wanted to learn from you today is, is why do you play that game and how do you do it? But let's give people like,
I guess the quick background of you. How do you introduce yourself when you're trying to brag a little bit about why anybody should pay attention to what you have to say?
I'll be honest, I'm really shy and it's hard for me to talk about these things because everyone I need is so impressive. So no matter what, I feel like the dumbest person in the room and the least successful person in the room. And so that's really hard for me to talk about still, but just to catch everyone up.
I'm an entrepreneur. I've started so many companies now. My first company was called Indidera. In Indidera is a financial sass company. We do accounting, tax, build fee management, software, and services for businesses. Our customers were companies like Slack, Shright, Pinterest, DoorDash, Instacart, Coinbase. I started that street after college. I studied computer science at UC Berkeley.
And when I was a senior at Berkeley, I was running in the computer science club. And I brought in these speakers. And one of the speakers I brought in was this kid named Sam Altman. He was building a company called Looped. And I'm like, hey, Sam, what should I do at your college? And he said, oh, you should do I see and you help review my application and.
And then the rest is history. So I did that for 10 years through that to a few hundred people valuation and the hundreds of millions of dollars. But the way I built that business was I didn't raise traditional venture funding. So I didn't bring in VC capital. I only brought in some angel investors. I was able to retain most of the ownership in the company.
And it's a cash flowing profitable business to this day. So that was kind of my first foray into business. And lots of ups and downs and being weeks away from insolvency multiple times over. And I think it's because we were under-capitalized. And I always ran things a little too close to the edge there.
And I was pretty public about that. I mean, if you Google search me, you'll see that I survived a bunch of near-death experiences with that business. And eventually, I realized I didn't want to be a CEO anymore. I grew up with this mindset of, you have to be the operator. And if you're not the CEO and make a company at Unicorn, you are a failure.
I just didn't, that didn't land well with me. I, I Google searched, you know, the world's billionaires and I'm like, how do these people become billionaires? And most of them.
built companies, a lot of them were diversified holding companies. And they held on to these companies for decades. And a lot of them, they weren't the CEO or the operator. They were more like investment manager. And I mean, Warren Buffett's a great example of this, but there are many, many more like that. And so that kind of got me thinking, hmm, am I doing this wrong? Am I just listening to Silicon Valley rhetoric that's pointing me in the wrong direction?
And then a few years ago, I went through a really tough experience where my boyfriend who I was living with died very unexpectedly. And I was going through a really dark period after that where I was not able to work. I just couldn't, I woke up in the morning and I'd be super depressed and I didn't want to do anything. And I thought, what would I do if
if I was going to die this year. If this was my last year here because I'm so depressed and I have to make myself happy, what would I do? And running a company was not on the list. So I immediately hired a CEO for Nanaro. I had another company that I had started that I brought in a friend to run.
It's a litigation fintech company, and that company originates and funds lawsuits. So, you know, like the personal injury billboard you see on the side of the road, we do that in a very sophisticated way. A lot of details I really would wish I could talk more about, but I don't want to invite competition there.
And then I've started a bunch of other interesting businesses like that, which also, if you go look at my website, myway.com, I don't go into much detail. Actually, I don't mention any of the detail on these businesses for the same reason. I'd rather build quietly and come up with these really interesting ideas. Find someone to go build those businesses.
And a good chunk of them are businesses that would just print cash, but a lot of them are more bold. And that's why I got interested in the biotech stuff. I just thought, what would I do if I wasn't scared of failure? And after my boyfriend died, I thought a lot more about that. I thought, like, I shouldn't be scared of trying and failing because
I've seen rock bottom. My life can't get any worse than it is today. So I might as well try something. And that's where I landed with that.
That's an amazing story. And that question of like, what would I do if I wasn't afraid of failing is like up there in the pantheon of great questions. I asked myself that same question and it changed. I wouldn't be doing this podcast if it wasn't, cause I had three paths that I had written out. I remember I made a Figma file and I was like drawing like a flow chart of my life. And I was like, I could start a company and maybe it'll be this, maybe it'll be this. And that was like you said, the Silicon Valley rhetoric. Cause.
What gets written about is the visionary CEO founder who creates the next big thing. And that's the movies are about social network. And you know, the tech crunch articles are about that. The VCs want you to be that because they're like, yeah, sweet, I get to write a check and chill. And like you go do the like, you go win the lottery and do all the hard work at the same time, like do the low odds hardest thing you can do, you know, over there. So I was like, I could go start a company.
I could invest and just kind of like be on the other side of that. That's, I don't know if that would be the most fun thing that I would do. And then I was like, and I literally wrote, or I could be Tim Ferriss. And I was like, I think I want to be Tim Ferriss. I was like, well, why don't I just do that? I've been thinking about this for like seven years in the back of my mind.
I was like, well, because what if I'm not, what if it doesn't work? Then I'm just a guy with a podcast. It's cool to be to Ferris. It's not cool to be the guy with a podcast, like a podcast, just normal podcast with 100 views or listens for episode or something. And I was like, all right, so am I just going to not do it because I'm afraid that I might fail at it?
Like, what's the worst I can have? And I had this whole talk with myself. You know, the most important talks are not with mentors or the talks with yourself. And it sounds like you had one of those two where you were like, what would I do if I wasn't afraid to fail? Can you just talk a little bit more about that talk with yourself? Cause I think everybody should have that, some version of that talk with themselves.
Yeah, I think just expand on that. A big question I asked myself was also, how will I deal with the insecurity of feeling like a beginner and terrible at something? Despite the fact that for the past 10 years, I got pretty good at being a CEO and running a business.
I'm sure you felt the same way, right, where you're a great entrepreneur. And then now you're getting into building content and interviewing great folks. And that's the new skill set that you had to become good at. But for a while, it's awkward. And I'm sure your first videos were not nearly as good as the ones that you posted over the past few months, right? And so that's a lot of this I'll talk. It's like, oh my god, I didn't do a good job. I still don't know what I'm doing. People don't take me seriously. Do I even take myself seriously?
and meditating on that and thinking, you know what? It doesn't matter because I'm having a great time. I'm learning a lot. And the outcome will work itself out. That's how I deal with it. But how about for you? What are your other best practices? Yeah. So being a beginner, being OK, like that mental prep for yourself of I'm going to be a beginner at this, I think is also a very important part of that conversation. I'm glad you said that because it's one thing to just say,
What would I do if I wasn't afraid? But then like, the fear is still gonna be there. It's not just gonna disappear when you ask that question. And the fear is what? The fear of being wrong, failing, looking dumb, all those things. And so that beginner conversation is important, which is cool. If I go into this, I'm gonna start as a complete beginner.
I'm going to get better over time because I'm good at learning and I'll try. And I don't need to become the world expert at this, but I need to become competent at this. And that might take me six months to a year. That's a reasonable expectation if I really put my mind to this. It reminds me of this story I've told on the pod before of Moyzali who created Native Deodorant. And Deodorant's not curing cancer or whatever, but it is still a totally different space. And so when he told his friends, he's like, I think I'm going to create a Deodorant brand.
And they were like, cool, random. Do you even wear deodorant? Do you know anything about deodorant? And he's like, today I know nothing about deodorant, but in six months, I'll know everything I need to know about deodorant.
And that idea of like writing yourself a blank check, I think is really important to starting anything. And you told me this when I was like, dude, you're like working on crazy science stuff. I like that idea and I wish I could do that, but it feels above my intellectual pay grade.
Are you just a science genius? And you were like, no, I got like, you were like, I got like a C in biology in school. And then like, you know, you're like, I hired a tutor to like, as an adult to like learn about this. And I watched TED Talks and podcast and then I flew out and I met the scientists and talked to them. You just did all of the like.
normal blocking and tackling, I feel, with like just like, is that how you would describe it? That was totally different for me. I just put you on a pedestal. I was like, oh, maybe she's doing it because she's just smarter than all of us. And that's why she can do this and nobody else can.
No, I still have leisure and security used to doubt about this. In fact, last night I dreamt again. This is a recurring nightmare where I am getting seas in school and I am very close to flunking and having to repeat a grade.
And I got seized in by, and also in biology when I was in high school. So I thought I could do a lot of things with my life, but anything related biology is not one of those things. And then when I was, so I was on the cover of Inca Magazine a bunch of years ago. And there was a woman who was on the cover a month before me, her name's Elizabeth Holmes.
And obviously, y'all know what happened. And so when she got, you know, when third dose went under and the whole thing happened, I thought, wow, bio is really hard. And I would be so paranoid and scared of doing anything in biotech, because I don't want to go to prison. Now, obviously, you know, there's more to the story there. And I don't think I'm going to go to prison.
But the thought crossed my mind. I even risked my life and my career. If everything's OK, why do something hard and where the last woman who tried to do something here got totally destroyed by the media and is now in prison? That's not really good inspiration for me to try to be the next Elizabeth Holmes, but you didn't fuck up as bad. So that went through my head, and I had to overcome that.
And then eventually I decided, you know what? Flock it. I want to give it a try. I want to, you know, just learn. And so I hired a biology tutor. I like digested all the information. And I brought in people who've been running biotech companies and who had been part of big bio. So.
That's really how I operate. It's just bringing other people smarter than I am. Another question I would want to ask you, and it's something I ask a lot of my best friends, is what would you do if you were a billionaire? And if you had like billion in hard cash in the bank account,
And you are not allowed to do what you're doing today. How would you devote your life? And it's so fascinating to hear the answers that I get from my friends. And I'd say occasionally I'm doing what I'm doing today. I would just keep on doing that. I hear that from my more successful friends. But from people who hadn't made it per se, it's very thought-provoking.
That is a great question. I can tell a quick story and then I'm gonna answer that question. So the quick story version is when we got acquired by Twitch,
I grabbed, I was like, first day, what do I want to do? I was like, let me go find my people. Cause I went into this, all of a sudden I'm in a company of 2000 people who, you know, each are doing their little function in this company. And I was like, where are my entrepreneurs at? Like where are the people who like to like, you know, make should happen? And so there was a company that had gotten acquired a few years earlier and three years earlier and they got bought for like, I don't know.
I want to say like $100 million. And the founder was one of the founders was still working there. And so I, we go out to lunch and I was like, hey, can we meet? He's like, yeah, let's go to the cafeteria. I was like, no, no, I just need to leave this building. I'm having like big company, claustrophobia. They need to get out of this building. So we go to a lunch and I say, um, why are you still here? And he's like, Oh, what do you mean? Like it's going great. We're working on stuff. I'm like, yeah, but like, uh,
You know, is this what you want to do? Like you're three years in and I'm looking in the mirror thinking, you know, do I want to be here in three years? There's no way I want to be here three, four years from now. You're going on to year four and you're drinking this company Kool-Aid. What happened to you? Why are you still here? And he was like, you know, slightly offended, but he was like, no, it's great. I'm having fun. I'm learning a bunch. I go, let me ask you the question differently.
It sounds like what you're saying is you don't want to be doing anything else, right? He goes, yeah. And I go, so let's say that I had put $100 million in your bank account tomorrow. Would you show up to work?
And he's like, well, no, like I'd be, I'm like, okay, so you're doing it for the money. Okay, now we've established that because if I, all I did was I changed the money part of the equation. And now your answer is very different. And he's like, well, I would buy a ranch and I would, you know, I have four kids and we'd be outside all day. But then on the side, I'd be building this type of project. I was like, okay, so that's what you really want to do. I'm not saying you have to go do that, but let's at least be honest. I didn't like the part where you were telling me this is exactly what I want to be doing with my life. And
I can say today there's things there's a part of my life like this podcast part of my life that is exactly what I would be doing regardless of what the number is in the bank account. And there's a part of my life where like we spin up companies but like we spin up companies like for example we just spun up a company that is
I would say it is opportunistic. It's not the most fun sexy company in the world. I don't want to operate it forever. I'm like, oh, this business will work. It'll be successful. It'll have a great exit. It'll provide a great return. It'll, you know, uh, it'll put, you know, millions of dollars in people's bank accounts in the next three to five years. And that is
good. But if I was totally post economic, there's no way I would spend an ounce of my energy doing that company, like just the reality of the situation. So I'm like, you know, partially following that, that philosophy, but not all the way yet. And I'm kind of honest with, at least I'm honest with myself of like, yes and no. But my answer to the question, if I was totally post economic,
you know, I have more money than I'll ever be able to spend. The thing that I would do is I would teach and I would either just teach in the way that I do today, like podcast, write a book, you know, just basically be curious, go learn something and then explain what I learned to people who don't have the
12 hours to go down the bio electricity rabbit hole, you know, you know, but that's what I would do. Or I would extend that if I wanted to be a little more ambitious than I would actually create a campus in a school for people like me and be like, cool, let me create the ideal school that I wish I had when I was younger and do that. I just don't know how much.
I don't know how much that would be fun, like the kind of reward versus extra effort that that takes versus creating content online and doing the same thing but not having any of the like students and physical campus and stuff that I need to deal with.
You know, you should talk about that sometime because I've thought about that as well. I wish there was a better school for me. And for people like us who are, you know, we're creating an advanced, very all quirky and the traditional school system does not like satisfy our needs. And what's cool about it is.
You know, if let's say we came up with a concept for how we would do this, like I would just put my whole team behind it and then we'll find a way to find the money and then it will just manifest. Like these things don't have to wait until you have a billion dollars in cash is the point. And but I asked you the question because I, I found that bio was on my list. Like, oh, I would do more bio stuff. I just fund it and like, but I know people who could fund it. So I could just call them and have them fund it and I, I don't need to fully fund it and I'll manifest.
And I think a lot of us have so many of these things that we want to create in the world and it's dangerous to we eat because
life priorities change. And I think that I see this with many of my friends, you go on to get married, have kids, you get comfortable, they're building their ridiculous house. And then, like those buy and they never go through this lesson, it always stays a dream or an aspiration. And I, I just couldn't allow that to happen to myself. And I'm so glad that you're, you know, doing most of the things on your list.
Hey, let's take a quick break to talk about another podcast that you should check out. It is called The Next Wave. It's hosted by Matt Wolf and Nathan Lance is part of the HubSpot podcast network, which of course is your audio destination for business professionals like you. You can catch the next wave with Matt Wolf and he's talking about where the puck is going with AI creators, AI technology and how you can apply it to your growing business. So check it out, listen to The Next Wave, wherever you get your podcast.
That's a great phrase. It's dangerous to wait. Because I think most people feel like it'd be risky to go do it. And I think they vastly underestimate the risk of allowing yourself to just wait on the things you really want to do in life. Because actually what happens is you accrue this like
it's not like by waiting you get closer to the goal by waiting you actually get further away from the goal because you add all this space that gets filled up with other activities other responsibilities thoughts you know you train yourself to not take action on the shit you actually want and to like go down this like long winding path i remember when i was um
back to when I was working at Twitch, there's a guy, Dan, who's now the CEO, at the time he came in as like, I don't know, chief prosecutor officer or something, he became my boss. So we go into this like one on one and he's like, so like, what are your like career, you know, what's your goals for yourself here, you know, at the company? And I was like,
Um, well, I have two options here. I mean, they're going to lie to this guy and say, oh, I can't wait to get promoted from L seven to L eight to L 10. Like, you know, like this, like the ladder, literally it's a ladder and you that's your goal. That's five angles. And I was like, I'm either going to lie about this to him because he's all, you know, he's my manager. I guess that's what I'm supposed to say or I'll tell the truth. And so I told him the truth. And I was like,
Yeah, I can't wait to go build another thing or just go on my own and like I don't see myself being here and long-term and he was like, okay, well that's But he didn't get I thought like that's gonna put him in an awkward position But he was like, you know, he's the experienced guy. He totally you know rolled with it He's like, okay, great now that I know that and I was like, you know, I don't want you to totally write me off because I said that like I
I do think I'll be here to earn out this part of the deal. I think I can do good work while I'm here. I think you'll get value from somebody with my talents being here. So I hope you don't just say, oh, this guy's not here for the long haul. I'll write me off, but that's the truth. And he was like,
Done, I appreciate that. Now let's talk about the thing you really want to do. What is it that you really want to do? And I was like, oh, I want to do this as this. But before I do that, I need to kind of like, I'm trying to save up enough capital because that's going to require a lot of capital. And I'm going to learn some things. I'm going to build my network. And he's like, yeah, I'm not really a fan of the like, I want to do X. So I'm going to go do A, B, and C before I do X. He's like, you're better off usually just going ahead and trying to do X.
And I was like, all right, you're right. That's true. You don't even need to say anymore. You're right. I was bullshitting myself a little bit. Thank you for saying that. That's actually a really valuable piece of wisdom. And it reminded me of, there's this Tony Robbins TED talk. Have you ever seen the one time Tony Robbins went to TED? Yeah.
He's like on stage and he's like, I spent my whole life basically studying what stops people from having what they want in life. And he's like, what do you think it is? What holds you back? And people are like, oh, for whatever it is you want. You want a better relationship, you want a better career, you want more money, you want better health, whatever it is.
And people are like, oh, I don't have the time. And other people are like, I don't have the knowledge, the skills, and the people of the crowd are saying it, and Al Gore is there. And this was like right after Al Gore had lost the presidential race to Bush. I think there was like a runoff, like they had to recount the votes in Florida or something. And like, they went to the Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court ruled that whatever Bush won. And so,
He hears this voice that says, I didn't have enough Supreme Court justices. And he's like, what the hell, what do you mean? Like who's, oh, Al Gore's here. And Tony Robbins gives this like one minute thing that like actually kind of like bit slapped all their answers. He's like, you know, everything you guys just said is a resource. You lacked money, time, capital, Supreme Court justices. That's a thing you lacked. Supreme Court justices. Yeah, that's a hilarious example.
He's like, the only thing you actually need is resourcefulness. He's like, that is the master skill, the ability to go get the resources you need when you need them for the thing you're trying to manifest. And he's like, if it isn't not true that if you are motivated enough, charismatic enough, playful enough, convincing enough, you know, like determined enough and charming enough, can you not get everything that you want? Like,
Is it really anything that is outside of you if you really put your all into acquiring that resource? Could you not have gotten the time, the money that that works, all of those things? Al Gore, if you were not more passionate when you were on that stage in that debate, would it ever ever even come down to that Supreme Court justices? No, right? Like you would have just won in a landslide if you had acquired the things that you actually needed to get there.
And that's kind of what you're saying of your little manifestation studio type of class. I love that because it's like you are completely striking out from the thought process of an entrepreneur. They're like, do I have what it takes, either personally or financially or knowledge and skill wise? You're like, well, if I want to start a bio company, I'll go recruit the best bio people.
and then I'll go raise the funding. So that'll be that, right? You say, like, you don't have enough time or money. Those are always excuses, but you create the time by hiring other people to do the work who are better experts at whatever that thing is. And you manufacture the money by raising the money. And in my case, I've got a multi-person investor relations team. They have connections to tons of billionaires and family offices.
We're trying to like place these deals with our family office connections. And that's going to be, you know, within the next year, that's going to be a four person team and a capability I had. So instead of being a hold show, let's treat manifestation.
That's what I'm talking about. I mean, right? I mean, you coined it. It's the manifestation count. And, uh, cause now if it could be a profitable endeavor, great. Sometimes it won't be. And for the point is all of us have that thing you want to see in our, our life and we want to have the ability to do that in a way that's painless, fun and exciting for us as the ideator. What about like, um,
you know, crazy science dreams you have. You said you have ideas or you're talking to scientists all the time. What are some things that are, you know, in the future that you're excited about that is not just a pipe dream, like there might actually be a pathway to do it. Like, you know, I don't know if the, the Grow Test Tube baby in a Vat type of thing, like I don't know if that's like just a dream or there's actually people working on the, that that might be scientifically possible or practical. Can you tell me about some parts of the future that I should be excited about or my kids might get to experience?
I actually think that is very viable, the test tube babies. I know of, I've taught to several scientists who are doing the portion to like, for example, let's say you wanted to be the mother of a child, not the father, and we could take your genetic material and treat an egg out of that. I think that we're going to see that within the next five years.
And then the converting, you know, having a artificial embryo generated avatar style, that's a little harder to do. I met scientists who've been able to get to maybe six weeks before the whole thing falls apart. And that will get better and better over time. But the implications there are huge. Like for women, imagine not having to deal with this and not having to do egg extraction.
if you're, you know, if you're having trouble conceiving. And then what's also realistic, I think, is extending your lives by 30%. I think we need to be prepared to live till we're 120 or longer. And right now, the upper limiter head is, oh, I'll probably die when I'm 90.
We're not thinking about the exponential rate of change here. And I am talking to a lot of longevity scientists. I'm seeing the data. It's compelling. I think we're going to live longer and we need a plan for that future. What's the short version of how we get that extra 30%? Is it drugs? Is it diet lifestyle changes? Is it reversing aging? Is it getting blood from young baby seals? What are we going to do to make it happen?
It's probably going to be a combination of multiple factors. All these projects fall under what you call bold science. Can you define bold science? What does that mean?
Yeah, they're just so many companies working on very incremental, you know, companies where it might extend your lifespan by three months or six months. That's not a great outcome. Like you're gonna be going to the hospital and taking chemo drugs for another six months before you're dead. What do you do? That's like, I'd rather go to hospice than prolong my suffering. But if you could, instead of patching,
The problem, like putting a bandied on a gunshot wound is the analogy. What if you could get to the root cause and reverse cancer, for example? So right now, everything we do within cancer is the map. Trying to kill the cancer cells through chemo, radiation, surgery, CAR-T therapies are super hot and trendy.
But that just basically involves using your immune system to target and kill your own cancer cells. But what if killing cancer is the wrong approach? And actually, cancer happens because your cells are trying to protect themselves in some way. And if you could train them and coach yourself, killing them, what's readability? Get them that integrate back in with their surroundings. Then you could fix cancer. And so we're working on a company around that.
That's what I mean by bull science. That's that's a that's great. So it's basically non non incremental a big leap in function or leap in quality of life. So like, you know, a step complete step change. And usually that's going to come from taking a different approach than like, you know, or taking a different point of view on the problem, looking at it through a different lens. And you've
What you do is you partner with scientists to make that happen. One of the things you said that I liked when we were talking before was, you're like, I get on the plane. I get on the plane every time, yeah. And I don't know exactly what you mean by that, but talk about that because I think that's just an entrepreneurial, as part of the manifestation studios, you got to just get on the plane sometimes. What do you mean by that?
I have a real example. I have, there's the successful entrepreneur who I'm sure you've heard of. You even interviewed him. He lives in Vegas. I live in LA and I just said, hey.
Tell me a time and place on Sunday and Monday, and I will fly to Vegas and I will meet you. I will literally take my plane and fly there just for the meeting and then fly home afterwards. And then Tuesday, same thing. I have Patrick Holston from straight bass me to hang out with him and have dinner. And it's like, all right, cool. So I'll just get on my jet and go see him and then fly back and be back in my bed after dinner, you know? Does that only work if you have a jet?
No, buy a Southwest ticket. I mean, just get creative about it. I do it so often though that it is really nice to have my own airplane, but like, I think that it doesn't matter. Like if I have to fly to London and see someone, I will, I'm glad you know, book a ticket and do that. And I think that it really, you know, I had a billionaire do this for me where he literally flew in from South America and he went straight from the airport to dinner with me.
And that was the first time I had a one-on-one meeting with this person. And it really made an impression on me. I'm like, wow, this guy went out of his way. He was planning to go to some other city. Instead, he came to LA to meet me just for dinner. And he's more important than I am. By a million miles, he's so much more important than I am.
I believe you want to be friends with this person. And I have another billionaire who I hit it off with. We hung out for drinks. We were part of a bigger group. And we had two hours where we just talked about the meaning of life, all of his regrets, all the things he do different. He's like this 70 something year old dude. And he's like, yeah, everyone wants me for my money, but no one just asks me these questions that you're asking me about life advice. And I'm like, you know what? We should continue this.
Where do you live? I'll visit you. He says, I live in the Bahamas. I'm like, great, I'm visiting you. And we booked the time. I'm seeing him for dinner in three weeks. And I want to literally go there just to see him. And he's so happy about it. And I want to get four hours of downloading this man's wisdom. And it's, it's super cool.
I think it's massively underrated. My uncle calls it meeting belly to belly. He's like, you got to be belly to belly in business. And he's in the real estate game. It's a totally different game, but I loved it. I was like, not face to face. We're going belly to belly. And I just think that that was like, created such a good visual in my head. If you were going to score it, let's say, if I gave you one point of like,
trust productivity relationship building for a Zoom call versus meeting belly to belly. If one is the call, how much is the in person?
I mean, I would think that the other way. I mean, it's just, they're totally opposite ends of the spectrum. Like a belly belly, like, flying out to see you thumb is the ultimate 10 out of 10 weight engage with someone. There's no better way than to say, I'm flying five hours out of my way to see you and to spend, you know, dinner with you. And a call is definitely a one and a assume call is maybe a two. It's like, that's how wide the delta is.
Right. And the other thing I want to mention is that even I think a lot of people think, oh, but just like you've already like needed a bit. So of course, people want to hang out with you. Well, I was getting meetings like this when I was 16 and I knew nothing. I cold emailed the Reddit guys. I cold emailed Justin and Emmett from Twitch.
I guess it was Justin.TV back then. And I said, hey, I'm this idiot 16-year-old. I think you just put it on the table. I'm an idiot. And I think you are brilliant. And I'm willing to fly to you. And I just want to be a fly on your shoulder and see you do your work. And just follow you around for a day.
And so if you pull up the Justin dot TV archives, you will see me driving him around San Francisco and going to a poker game with him and like all this random stuff just because I was going to do that. Mark Benioff replied to me also. Again, I'm an idiot, 16 year old. This is when you're a teenager. You also told me because I asked you because
I think one of the valuable things in life is to study like to become a good evaluator of people. Like if let's say you're an NBA general manager, you need to be able to spot talent. I think any business person or investor needs to be able to spot talent and ideally spot the difference between good and great, great and the best in the world. And when I met you, I really felt like, oh, this might be somebody who's one of those like elite best in the world at what they do. And they're going to just do special things that are beyond even what
really great smart, you know, intelligent people are going to do just because they seem to be operating differently. But I need to understand them a little more. So I asked you a question when I was getting to know you. And I was like, if I met you when you were younger, like 13 years old.
what would I have seen and would there have been any signals for this? And I said, you know, and I will say on my side, I was a totally unimpressive 13 year old, you know, you know, there was no signals that I was going to do anything out of the ordinary, you know, forget like being great at something, just like out of the ordinary, beyond average. And so I wasn't that way, but I've met a lot of people who were, you know, they're like teenagers, they were flipping things like, you know, on eBay or they were,
building a product of some kind or whatever. You have an amazing kind of backstory. Can you tell it? What were you doing? What was like your first interesting little business you were doing when you were a teenager?
When I was 13, I started a dedicated server and colocation business because that's what I thought you did in high school. That's just, I don't know why, but I thought it was kind of normal. And I grew that, set out a few hundred grand in revenue. Did you know somebody else doing it? Why would you think that's normal? I don't know. I was talking like the internet forums. You know, there are lots of people who do this. So I thought, okay, this is like a commodity business, but I could probably figure out how to do it and make a few bucks and offset my
gaming server expenses. That was the goal. I just wanted to make like $10,000 a year to offset my own costs and buy some clothes and not have to like go work at the shopping mall or like rake leads or shovel. So you're like, I'm playing video games. I want to scratch my own edge, be able to play my own video games and like, you know, pay off that buy some clothes. Were you cool in school? Were you like a smart popular kid or who are you? Total geek loser. I was so lame.
I, so I had no friends. I went to the computer club at my high school, which is all the nerds who also had no other friends. So you have to be friends with each other. They were making fun of me and they were bullying me. I was literally on the bottom of the bottom.
That's how I knew it was really bad. I had to get out of here as soon as possible. So I ended up dropping out of high school halfway through my sophomore year, but I got into this really cool college program called Simon's Rock. Simon's Rock and going to college really, it really seemed me because I was born in high school. I wasn't doing well.
I was getting terrible breeds because I was uninterested and because I had no friends and I felt like I couldn't relate to anyone. All other girls and guys just like were interested in things that I had no interest in. So when you said, hey, I would love to create the school for people like us.
I just thought, holy cow, I want to treat that school too. We can make this happen. Let's do it. Let's brainstorm it. Let's set aside some time and other day. Let's just go meet up for dinner. I'll come wherever you want. Any day you want it, I will fly to you and we will put together a game plan for what this would look like and how we would manifest this without having the wheat. So we're sitting out a billion in cash.
Yeah, okay, done. I love it. Belly-to-belly booked. Did you make the 10 grand off that?
I was making like hundreds of thousands of dollars a year off of it. I was thinking more money than my teacher. I remember in biology class, it's EDM and I can't pay attention and I'm like doing like the biology teacher clearly isn't like me because she knows that I'm high potential that I wasn't doing well because I was up till three in the morning answering customer service and sales emails. So of course, I only had like five hours of sleep.
And when you're 13 and you're operating on five hours of sleep, you're not going to do well. And but to make myself feel better, I thought, well, at least I'm making more money than my biology teacher. Honestly.
the moral victory. So when you were meeting these people, because you were like, I'm a dumb 16 year old college kid. You're college because you're 16 because you dropped out of high school. Yeah. And like just went to college. You met Justin Kahn. You met Mark Benioff. You met, you know, these different YC founders. Did you do learn? Did you learn anything? Did they stick with you? Was there a story that like you remember? Like, what did you get out of those meetings?
Yeah, what I got out of it was that, holy cow, there are other people like me who are a little crazy who are willing to approach life and entrepreneurship in an unconventional way and who are willing to do a hard thing. So when I saw Justin and when I saw Steve Huffman read it,
I realized, wow, I don't need a wait till I'm older to start doing this today. And I also don't need to have money. I don't have to have a job to demonstrate success first. So it was more of a mindset. I would say it's always a mindset in psychology, more than tactics when you're meeting these people that I focus on. Yeah. Yeah. And you also told me you had met these other people when I was like, oh, what's
I was like, I think I was asking you what you do with your money and you were like, you said one interesting thing, you were like, you know, taxes, people, I think I was asking you something about taxes and you were like, people don't spend enough time on taxes. So can you tell me, we'll put this in the bucket of
billionaire secrets. You said you've met a bunch of successful super rich people and the way they think is a little bit different than the way everybody else thinks. And I'm interested in that gap. What's different about the way that the most successful, the richest people that you know think? What is it that they're thinking about differently? One of the things was taxes, but you had a few more. Can you tell me the taxes point and anything else you kind of remember on that?
Yeah, tax optimization is a really big deal because if you think about it, if you're spending, if half your money is going to Uncle Sam, it's really going to impact your compounding. Do a compound interest calculator and you'll see the delta is very wide if you're starting at age, say 30. And these billionaires employ the best tax strategists in the world. So eventually I said, hey, could you introduce me to
your tax person. And that person, of course, works with like 30 other billionaires and has saved them, you know, collectively $100 billion in taxes. And then I've gotten enough of these tax professional intros where now I have a whole collection of them I call and I can buy that advice from multiple tax professionals and merge it all together.
And I think that's the next level. Most people just pick one person. They say, oh, I've been working with Betty as my tax accountant for the past 10 years. Well, Betty doesn't work with billionaires. It's time for a new tax accountant. I literally had this conversation with someone over lunch last week. And he texted me right before he got on his call saying, oh, my God, like, this is going to make me millions of dollars more over the next few years.
Well, this is so true. I feel when I like I have like a lawyer and a tax person and I feel like if I talk to another tax person or a lawyer, I'm like kind of cheating on them. And it's like, that's so silly. That's so dumb of a way to think about it. Like, first of all,
It's your job to get the best opinion possible. It is. Because the best answer, the best answer is not going to come necessarily from the one person you know who you picked one time five years ago without vetting anybody else. They may also not specialize in other stuff you're doing. Oh, now you're doing real estate deals where they don't know anything about real estate deals, or you're doing, you have an exit, an M&A. They don't know anything about M&A. So, you know, you should be talking to people who really understand that stuff.
A teen, multiple opinions is better than one. Specialties matter. Also, when you said that it reminded me, I was like, oh yeah, the person who I have doing tax strategy stuff, they stopped giving me strategy after year one.
The bulk, if I've had a pie chart of 90% of the strategy convos we had were at the very beginning. And then like, now I'm just like the client that they stamp the thing on like every year, right? That happens naturally. Same thing with legal stuff. And so you kinda need to keep dating in order to have like fresh ideas or advice coming in from that perspective. And you also said like, there's a certain amount of time you think people should spend on, or like,
Maybe not should, but the math tells you you should be spending a certain amount of time on taxes and actually what people actually do is maybe less than 1% of their time. Yeah, exactly. Less than 1%. Way less than even 0.1%. Because if taxes impact half your income, potentially, if you invest just even 5% or 10% of your time, this year it's a finding 5 amazing tax strategists get all their advice and figure out how to apply it 10% of your time.
as the upper bound here. And you're making way more money as a result. It pays for itself like a hundredfold. It's the highest IRR investment you can make. And it's way better than investing in the stock market with the money you're paying these tax people. No, that's so true. Because your tax is always your biggest expense. And if you're a business person, you have your business tax, then you have your personal tax, you have investment tax, capital gains tax. You have all kinds of taxes every single year. The same dollar gets taxed a bunch of times.
So you're right, basically it's the biggest expense. Even 10% sounds absurd because I'm like, oh, that's 36 days out of the year. That's over till. You don't need that much time. I mean, even 5Ds in the year to do this gets you a lot. No, but you're right on the math. You would be justified spending 36 days out of the year. You would be justified spending 10% of your time in intellectual mind share on your biggest expense. That's going to compound.
every year for the rest of your life. Of course, that would make sense. So that is a kind of like aha moment for me. Right. What about like coaching or some sort of like what is your like basically if the studio, the manifestation kind of like vehicle here is an extension of you and your brain and your dreams and your desires and then like getting the brain to be like functioning well seems important. Do you do anything whether it's
therapy, nutrition, morning routine, do you do anything like that to make sure the psychology, the little voice in your head is saying the right stuff? Yeah, for sure. I have two different coaches I talk with each month. And I think if it is going to the gym or taking a shower, even if I think I'm happy or in a good mindset, I need to still go see them to make sure that my head is re-on properly.
And yeah, it costs me a ton of money, but it pays for itself right away. I also have my CEO group. I visit once a month. It's kind of like Alcoholics Anonymous for CEOs. I'm in Waikio, a young president's organization, but there's also entrepreneur organization and this stage list goes on and on. And there, yeah, you think, oh, I don't have time for it, but I actually think you don't have time not to do that.
That's a good way of putting it. Also help stuff. We don't think about that. What if you could optimize through better nutrition and new tropics and through IVs? You're not only your longevity, but your mental acuity.
So I work with five times here, which doctors to come up with my own custom plan. And I'm actually going to put something together that I could share with all my friends. So anyone I love can get on the same program. And it includes the supplements, custom compounding my own supplements into just two pills. So it's a little easier. And then doing the access to my V's once a quarter, which I'm a huge fan of.
And what is that? What is that word you just said? What are you doing? Exercise IVs. And yeah, I mean, it's still the science on it's still a little up in the air. So I just want to be good on the disclosure there.
So it's not necessarily the phantom of youth, but there's the belief that if you're bringing in stem cells through an IV, it will help you lower your biological age, give you more energy, and help you with
with your autophagy. So basically your body's the ability to get rid of old and dying cells. And if you do that, then the thought is you're going to have more energy. More energy means more brain power, more brain power means more ability to manifest and create great things in the world.
And so this is another area where let's say you were able to improve your mental function and your energy by 25%. By the way, if you do all these things, you could probably do like better than 25%. Is that worth $15,000 a year? Which is roughly how much I spent on this. Maybe I spent 20 or 25 grand on it. It's not a lot of money. You don't need to pull a Brian Johnson where you're spending a million dollars a year to get 80% of the results. This is the 80, 20 rule of Brian Johnson.
Yeah, that's what I need. Good. I'm gonna hit you up for some recommendations on that. I'll send you some referrals. And then yeah, I'll eventually pull less all this feedback to make it so that we could share it publicly and for free. So you guys don't necessarily need to pay for your own concierge doctor to do this for you. I think it's ridiculous that like all the work I'm doing here, I'm spending this money on it. Like this should be like a public service that's offered.
Yeah, because it's not so personalized to you, basically. No, it's not that personalized. 90% of what I'm doing, like anyone else should just be able to do on their own. It's just not this whole longevity optimization arena is so new. And in order for other folks to monetize on it has to feel bespoke and unique to you when
So give me the quick rundown. So you spend this money, you have this program that you're doing. You said you do this exosome IVs. OK, great. If you were going to go from most impactful to whatever fringe stuff, what's the most impactful stuff you're doing?
Again, I'll be super honest. It's hard to know where the impact is. Just what you kind of believe in or what you would recommend to your cousin or your friend, who you know, who you're like, look, we get all the disclaimers. You're not a doctor. There's not, you know, bulletproof science. Cool. Okay. Amongst friends, what your opinion is.
I'm a friend of EG1. I'm sure people have talked about that on your pod before. I'm a fan of adding in other, there's this whole list of supplements and new tropics that I can't even recite the name of for you, but I could publish the list for you if you'd like. And then having them all, again, put together in a few compact pills that you could take.
Um, and then I have a friend who does that. You, you like go to a compounding pharmacy and you're like, Hey, can you make these pills for me? Pretty cool. We'll have like 32 pills delivered. Like how does that work? Yeah. I have a friend who actually has his own. So I did it at cost, but my plan is to work with him to create it so that he can make some profit. And then my friends will have basically what I take and
Not how to be marked up too much. Like all these other scumbag internet companies are trying to do. Shout out to the scumbags out there. Keep doing your thing. That's it. And that's all I know. That's the vibe you saw when you sat up. And then there's also.
Um, yeah, I mean, there are a bunch of peptides as well as you want to do the more advanced thing. Um, and on the peptides, you know, some of them are injectable. Um, so, you know, that I would consult a doctor on, but the supplements you could probably just do. Right. And I would benchmark, I would take, um, the true diagnostics.
Um, biological, you know, each test just to see how you're doing before middle and after. And, um, yeah. So that's another. So taxes, health, um,
coaching in mindset. What are the other categories for, you know, billionaire secrets we haven't covered? Um, I think those are the big ones. I mean, the other one is what you talked about, which is, um, being non operational. Yeah. Create a vehicle that's going to create all your other vehicles, um, and, and be able to recruit talent that's going to be able to put the pieces together. The way I look at it is like,
Every project needs kind of like a vision, it needs capital, it needs an operator, it needs, you know, whatever, what does it need? Okay, I'm going to be able to create those packages. And so that's, I think that's what a lot of them do is they, they get out of, I'm going to go every day and work on this one business and toil away, like turning the crank myself. And you know, that's the higher leverage way that they operate is, is like that. Yeah, exactly.
So here's the deal. I made most of my money from a newsletter business. It was called The Hustle. And it was a daily newsletter at scale to millions of subscribers. And it was the greatest business on earth. The problem with it was that I had close to 40 employees and only three of them were actually doing any writing. The other employees were growing the newsletter, building out the tech for the platform and selling ads. And honestly, it was a huge pain in the butt.
Today's episode is brought to you by Beehive. They are a platform that is built exactly for this. If you want to grow your newsletter, if you want to monetize a newsletter, they do all of the stuff that I had to hire dozens of employees to do. So check it out. Beehive.com. That's B-E-E-H-I-I-V.com. Yeah, I think that's great.
I think also billionaires have a different mindset when it comes to buying expensive things. So you think, oh, they have so much money. Why would they lease that on the boat or the plane or the exotic cars? And the truth is on a lot of that, it's taxes.
So I have a friend who's buying a $30 million yacht right now and he found a way for it to give him a $30 million right off. He's gonna charter that for a bit, but like he saves more money on taxes than while he's spending on the yacht and his bank will finance 80% of the yacht. He's only putting 20% down. So it's net net cashflow positive for him to buy the yacht, ironically. And the operational costs are offset largely by the charter.
And you don't think that, but it pays for all his costs. And people do this with airplanes too. I did this with my airplane. I mean, I had to figure right off from buying an airplane, then when I put down and cash to buy the airplane. So... Can you give the quick math on... It doesn't have your specific plane, but just like, just the general maths that people would know, like, how does the bioplane work from a tax perspective?
Yeah, well, the rules are changing, but I closed online about a year ago. And let's say you buy a plane, it's $5 million. And you're being fully in finance most of it. So you put a million dollars down.
Um, but you get a $5 million right off on the plane. And it's a year one right off, right? That was a accelerated bonus depreciation year one. Um, but now the problem is this year, it's only 80% you could deduct upfront next year at 60% and then 40 and then 20. Um, yes, it's getting worse and worse, but.
But the point is, you do get a tax benefit for buying these assets. They are financed. And then also, if it enables you to do war what you want, then there's that like, incapable benefit that you receive. See with excited cars, a lot of people I know, you have excited cars. Their excited cars are worth more than what they pay for them. So they buy the car, they drive it for a year, and then they sell the car.
at the scene cost or a higher cost than what they paid for it because other people can't they want to have access to that car but they don't have a relationship with the manufacturer and they weren't willing to wait for years on the leading list to get that car.
Yeah, I was surprised to learn that, that the, there's just a whole class of really expensive cars that you basically get to drive for free. It's like putting a deposit down. So you go buy this car. I don't even know if this would classify, but like our friend had a McLaren and he's like, yeah, it's great. I'd driven it, you know, for a few years and I'm going to sell it for exactly what I bought it for. It doesn't depreciate or it's up, you know, I'll make 10, 20 grand on this thing.
for the privilege of driving this around and there's a whole bunch of these like rich get richer style setups like you know where
If you once you start to play, it's like a snowball. It's like you use the money to buy something that's going to make you more efficient and have more fun or, you know, do better business. And then that also is going to save you on taxes today. And then it also going to hold value because it's a rare asset. And so you're going to, you know, if you ever sell it, you didn't lose anything just for holding this. So, you know, you get all these like gains and then they start to accumulate once you start to get there. And I think that's a
Um, a real advantage and you know, some people who I think are on the other side of that hate that and they feel like that's so unfair and unjust. Uh, you know, I don't really give a moral opinion either way. It's just that is what it is. And, uh, you know, you could choose to either, um, benefit from that. You can choose to ignore it or you could choose to be upset about it. You have many choices on how you're going to react to, uh, you know, a bunch of these things that, that come with, you know, the snowball of, of, of, you know, wealth.
Yeah, I think it's easy to heat on it. But what's cool is that people could learn about mindset and how to get there. And that's what you're doing with your pod. You're very specific about how to do these things, I've noticed. And this was not available to people five years ago.
Well, it's funny because money is this taboo thing. We're all supposed to not share anything we know about money, how much we make, how we invest, what the returns are, what taxes, what do you do with your taxes? Everybody plays closed guarded on that. And that's a real shame because it means it's very hard to learn until
That gets cracked open and somebody starts sharing and then more people start sharing, then you start to learn faster. And there's this great Conor McGregor quote where he talks about like Conor McGregor went from plumber to highest paid athlete in the world in a span of five years.
And along the way, he was higher paid than any UFC guy ever was, faster than anybody was. And there was a lot of guys who had been paying their dues for 15 years, fighting for, you know, going out there and like fighting in a cage match for $20,000. And then they have to pay for their flights or hotels, the medical bills, and they are left with two grand at the end of it. And they were very bitter. And someone asked him in an interview, they go, Connor, you know, do you ever think about kind of toning it down? Because, you know, there's so many people that are, you know, get upset when you talk about
You call your shots, you say how much you're making, you wear the nice watch, you wear the nice clothes. And he goes, no, that says something about them, not me. He goes, some people see this and they take inspiration. And that's who I was. I saw people doing things and I took inspiration. And other people see things and they get bitterness and they will end up bitter. It is not my job to figure out, you know, they get to decide if they're going to go on the bitterness path or the inspiration path, you know, the right people will get inspired.
And that actually kind of freed me up in this podcast to do things that I think, you know, ask questions or talk about things that I think are you're supposed to downplay everything. You're supposed to not talk about, you know, certain stuff. But fuck that, you know, that does
doesn't seem like, when I was growing up, I couldn't wait to get a little more information or any inspiration or hear that somebody, oh, this guy has a private chef, damn, that'd be awesome. I don't feel bad that I don't have one now. I now have a new thing that I've decided that would be really awesome, fun to work for and a great, like, a way to improve quality of life that I had never even thought about. And thank you for putting it on my radar. Thank you for putting it in my, in my, you know, in front of me that I now wanted to go do that.
I love that. Yeah, I think it is difficult to struggle with the feeling of jealousy and aspiration. And another trick that I'm not sure if this came from Tony Robbins or someone else, but if you're surrounded by people who are more successful than you instead of envying them,
We could interpret it as, hey, this is a great sign because this means more success and more happiness is coming my way. Now that I'm able to surround myself and attract these people into my life, how awesome. And I remember having to deal with that a lot, especially when I was
a up-and-coming entrepreneur and I knew absolutely nothing and I have, you know, Drew from Dropbox and Sam Altman coming to speech me and these like CS students, right? Like, we didn't know anything. And the GATT felt very wide by just having them there to spend some time with us and to say, hey, we're open to
Like just email us if you have any questions about what it's like to be a founder, we're gonna be there for you. Just feeling like all of them are approachable and accessible. I think made it easier for me to focus on the education instead of the entity.
Right. That's a great way of putting it. Can I ask you one thing before we go? Because I know it took too much time. Sam Altman is now like this extremely interesting public character. Very few people actually know him. Sounds like you've had interactions with him in the past. Can you give me your impressions or any story you remember of Sam Altman? Because I remember reading Paul Graham's essays like 10 years ago where he's like,
of the five most impressive people I've met, Bill Gates or whatever, Larry and Sergey and Sam Altman. That's when he was doing looped and nobody, there was no tracker, he was just very apparent in meeting him at that time that this guy's gonna go on to do great things. Did you get that sense or I don't know how much interaction you had with him? Yeah, I actually
I mean, this was probably 13 years ago now, but I had a one-on-one with Paul Graham. And I asked him to share, like, who do you think the most successful people you've ever met? Like, who will that end up being 30 years from now if we have another one-on-one like this? And Sam was on the list. I'm not going to share a few others. We're on that list. But they're all also doing extremely well.
What a question by you, by the way. Fantastic question. Yeah, and I asked Paul, what are the things in common with these people? What, what did, by the way, he put me on the list on the worst one by far. So I'm embarrassed. I felt like I disappointed him, but we'll see that for another day. And I asked him for like, what are personality traits you find in these people? Like how, you know, what do you see and
For him, it was less about the intelligence, actually. It goes back to this common theme you've had throughout the past hour and a half year on grit and being willing to be unconventional and to try different approaches.
you know, to collect ideas from multiple species and merge them together to come up with something even better than what a domain expert in anyone field would be able to come up with on their own. And just like how they show up and what they're willing to do to meet the right people was a big part of what makes that also reinforce my wanting to have this policy of just get on the plane.
because that's a treat that successful people perceive will lead to you being destined for greatness, so to speak. Well, I don't think I'm destined for greatness, but what if I could manufacture making other people think I'm destined for greatness? Maybe I'll actually treat that reality somehow.
Yeah, eventually, you know, it walks like a duck, it talks like a duck. Hey, it became a duck, you know, by the end of it, actually. So, so those traits you said just now, sorry to recap was grit or resourcefulness. No, like, you know, the willingness to make things happen. You said, um, uh,
going into being able to collect ideas from multiple spaces and synthesize it so that you actually might create something more than any domain than the individual domain experts had been able to reach. You get to a new ceiling from that. That was like the second thing you said. Third was wanting to meet the right people, ask the right questions, and being willing to go to certain lengths to kind of meet them, right? That was the third one. Did I miss one that you said? Yeah, just to build on that third one is that how can you meet yourself
interesting enough at a dinner party so that they would want to invite you back to spend more time with them. How do you broaden your field of knowledge to be able to be an advisor, you know, someone that, you know, a king or president would want to call upon for feedback? And, you know, you had a program SaaS or this was years ago before you left for the UK.
He has a huge library of books and he's read most of these books and he's just fascinated by so many topics and that also left an impression on me. Okay, we should just learn about random things that have nothing to do with our day-to-day business because they'll help us with category number three on that list. Right, right.
Yeah, that's such a good call. I went to a farming conference last year, like two years ago, like just a farmer. And it was the best conference I had been to in like five years, because I'd only been going to tech conferences.
And I'm not learning anything at these tech conferences. I'm adding the same incremental knowledge, and it's the same thoughts and philosophies and same types of people in that bubble. And there's nothing wrong with that. But there's definitely, you want that 20% total changeup that is completely at a left field that's
Wow, these guys talk about different things, think about different things, have a different perspective, live in Kansas City. You go to a different place and you have a totally different perspective. And I literally started a company while I was there because I was piecing together two ideas, one from the tech world and one from this farmer that we had met. And that was when we created the Milk Road. And even the name, Milk Road was like,
because we're at a freaking farming conference and there's like a dairy farmer next to us, you know, like it all kind of played into having that. If, you know, we hadn't stirred the pot in that exact way, you know, maybe you would have come up with a different answer.
Yeah, that's super cool that you did that. And I'm curious to download from you what is also on your list of the next areas you would want to learn about. And I think it's actually a good exercise for me, too, to think about. Because for me, it's been bio lately, but I would like to broaden it even more.
So give an example of one of the bio companies that you founded. Give us the high level of the problem, the solution you guys are trying to do, and the rough stage where it's at.
Yeah, at a high level is I set up a holding company for biotech, a venture creation centered around the scientist named a Mike Levin. If you search Mike Levin, he has a TED talk. He has a three and a half hour interview with Let's Freedman that I highly recommend you watch and you will get sucked in because
He's a scientist who studied, he has PhD in genetics at Harvard, and then now he's devoted his entire career to basically proving the fact that genetics are actually not that relevant in the whole scheme of things, and that it's this other thing, bioelectricity, that dictates how long we live, whether or not we get cancer.
how our limbs and body shape forms. It's actually not as much genetics as you think. And genetics is like the hardware level of biology, whereas he says, by which is he is like the software.
So you told me this, you were like, we have one company's astonishing labs. It's about bioelectricity. And I was like, I've never even heard this word. And you said it in a really interesting way you go. People think that it's like genetics is kind of like what your genes say or your DNA says is kind of like what ends up manifesting. And you're like, turns out it's not that at all, which already I was like, oh, that's a kind of narrative violation. What do you mean? That's all I've ever heard. So what is the answer?
And you were like, yeah, there's this idea of bioelectricity. And I went and I watched his TED talk. And he talks about like, you know, they're able to like, you know, grow an arm on something's on an animal's back. They're able like to grow a third eye, right? They're able to do all these like show all these amazing like phenotype outputs without any genetic modification. And so can you just like, explain that a little bit more about like, you know, the kind of the layman's version of it?
Yeah, well, I'm honest. I don't even fully understand the science of it, but that's everything you said is correct. Like if you manipulate the bioelectricity on an animal, you can create weird outputs like this. So when they saw that a tadpole was growing in eyeball, the bioelectric signature of the cells in that area changed. And so the question was, oh, what if he created that same bioelectric signature, but on another part of
the body, what will happen? Will it grow an eyeball? Not only does it grow an eyeball there, but it grows connection to the spinal cord. And so you don't have to micromanage biology. If you try to change that through modifying the genome, how would you do that? There'd be no way to do that is the answer.
And so if you just think about it logically, genetics are there for not the end all be all. So anyway, I heard of this. It blew my mind. And I said, this, this is brilliant. Like, is he, does he have it from our flight station partner? What's the status of it? And the answer is.
It's still in the lab, and there was no one commercializing this yet. And Paul Allen was funding in the whole lab, and then Paul Allen tragically passed away, and then the funding dried up. So he needed money. He needed people to help him make it a real biotech company. So I come in and I say, I know nothing about biotech. I know a lot of rich people who would love to fund crazy stuff like this. Wait, wait, wait, wait. You just say, I came in. That means I called, emailed him, I called him, I met him. What did you actually do?
I met him through a friend, so I had a friend who was telling me about Mike over lunch and I thought, this is brilliant, this is amazing. Could we fly out and meet Mike next week? Like I'll literally clear my calendar and I'll spend a few days and I will get to know him and figure out what we could do with this. And so I met Mike, spent some time with him and realized that this is really compelling and
We could do something cool out of it. So I hired this guy named Tom. Tom had taken a drug called Alzheimer's from lab all the way through FDA approval, full approval for $16 million, which is absolutely crazy in the drug world. Like normally it takes hundreds of millions of dollars to get something approved by the FDA. But his drug actually worked. It was putting patients in full remission, the first eight out of nine patients,
Normally, they would be dead within months with his drug. They were, they were going into remission. So I brought him in to go do due diligence on all my clevens science and figure out a strategy for turning these into real biotech companies. And so my contribution was,
I have 18. I have 12 people who work with me at my holding company or whatever you want to call it. I don't really think of it as a hold toe or a venture studio. For me, it's just an extension of me, where if there's something I want to manifest in the world, I have a team of brilliant people who will figure out how to help me make that happen. That's amazing. So you do that. What is the product or what are you guys actually building?
We are building several companies under this whole code. So the first company we created is called Seljado. And it's essentially a company that will help overcome drug resistance. And how do I make this more concrete? If you're taking drugs for your leukemia or you're taking chemo drugs.
It might be effective and work for a while. You have lots of drugs that are effective and work, but then one day they stop working. And when they stop working, unfortunately, there are sometimes no other viable options for the patient, which means they're going to then die.
A month earlier, the drugs were working, and they were fine, right? So that's one company. There's another company that's developing for grammable human biobots. And in fact, there's article about this in Nature as of today. And that company is called Antrobots. Wow. So I'll send you a word on that if you're curious. That is really cool. I think CNN is going to post their interview with Mike today about that as well.
And so is all your bio stuff under this lab with Mike Levin, or are there other bio bets too? Because you've talked to me about, at that dinner, we were talking about, I don't know, like pregnancy or something like that. And you said something kind of in passing, you're like, yeah, in the next, I don't know.
At 10 years, women may not need to birth a baby. You'll be able to just essentially grow a baby. And I was like, what? Like, advertise. Talk about that. How cool would it be if you could see a baby growing in a fish tank. And all you have to do is I could swab your mouth and swab my mouth, put it in the machine, and then a bee will start to grow out of it. There's no... Let's just get the genetic material, no sperm and egg.
No sperm, no egg, just raw genetic material. And yeah, I think that will eventually be in the future. I don't think that's going to be the next 10 years, probably not even the next 20 years. But I have ran ideas like that this. And I think how cool it would be to find who's doing that research and
And if I find people who are, then I might support their work and fund it. If not, then I'll put together my own team and go try it ourselves. And it's likely you want to lose money and fail and not work. But this is fun. Not everything has to be for the profit. I know your whole pod is all about making money. And all the old shows are about how to compound fast flow and blah, blah, blah.
But like, why if we could have fun doing this and by having fun being mission oriented, you think bigger, you think more grand about what the world to become one day and then you're more likely to end up like Elon or whatever. Like, that's kind of the direction I'm going with.
with my company here, which I realize it's not as sexy. It's not as compelling as saying, you know, we're, you know, making money. Well, you know, maybe more sexy. I don't know. Like, you know, when, when Facebook was going public, Mark Zuckerberg wrote this letter to like the potential shareholders that were going to buy the stock.
And it was like, I think it's called the hacker way. It's a really great thing. I know people are very skeptical of Zuck, but I think a lot of the stuff he does is pretty awesome, including this letter that he wrote. And he described the way that they do things. And one of the things he said is like, we don't build products to make money. We don't build products to make great money. We make money to build great products. That is the core of what we're doing. I think Google had said a similar thing when they went public.
I don't think it's one or the other, but there is a first order bit and second order bit, meaning like if the first order bit is we are trying to fund bold science that might change everything, even though it has a high likelihood of failure, even though it might take many years and a lot of money to get there. But we think that advancing the research and ultimately trying to commercialize the research is the way.
That to me is the version of like, we don't do that to make money. We make money so that we can do that. So I think in a way, it's a lot more attractive and sexier to most people. I think if they step back for a minute, a lot of the like,
money first comes from the insecurity, right? Just the sort of wanting that success, wanting that win under your belt, wanting that safety in the bank account, that's where a lot of that comes from. I don't think anybody really, if they looked at their life would say, I'm so glad I devoted it to maximizing how much money I made. That's a very unlikely scenario. I think a lot of people would actually be more
inspired by, you know, the way you're doing things now, which is like, what's fun, what's interesting, what gets me out of bed in the morning that's exciting, that will, if done well, can like, you know, change, change, change the world. And in the non-cliche way, because the stuff you're doing actually is more changed the world than like, then, you know, the Indian arrows of the world where it's like, we're going to change the world one set of books at a time. And it's like, well, maybe, maybe you're just doing bookkeeping, actually.
Yeah, exactly. That's how I felt. I literally had this nagging feeling in my soul that I was wasting my capability. And I'm sure a lot of people feel that way. Awesome. Well, sounds like we got another couple of conversations I have. Thank you for coming on. Thanks for having me. First, if people go find you, reach out to you. Where do you want to direct people?
Yeah, I mean, I'm on, you know, my websites, mawaii.com, and I've got a Twitter at jeskama, at jeskama, official on Instagram. And if people want to reach out, you could either guess my email address, which is what I've done with Mark Benioff and everyone else.
That's a good filter, actually. You don't want the inbound that's easy. You want the inbound of at least you're at least able to guess an email address. It's not that hard. Just like I hadn't like I really emailed like Mark at sales first mark that Benny off and Benny off. You know, like every permutation I could come up with and most of them danced and one of them worked. So.
awesome. Thanks for doing this. You're awesome. And yeah, that's a great episode. Yeah, great. Great time hanging out with you. Thanks for having me.