From Dad’s Basement to Selling Two Companies — 4-Hour Workweek Success Story
Tim Ferriss
0:00 Because when you're first starting out, nothing's working.
0:02 Almost by definition, like you're starting something new.
0:04 At least in my experience, when I'm starting something new, nothing's working.
0:08 And then when something does, most people are like, "Okay, that works.
0:12 Now, let's go something else." But instead, you should just take that niche.
0:16 It's almost like a little niche when you're rock climbing.
0:18 Just take that niche and just double down, triple down, quadrup.
0:21 It should really be like 10x down on what works
0:24 because it's so rare that you find something that works.
0:26 And honestly, in most businesses,
0:27 if you can find one thing that works and scale it up,
0:30 that can get you pretty far.
0:32 Brian, nice to meet you finally.
0:34 Thank you for taking the time.
0:36 Hey, great to be here.
0:37 Brian, where should we begin?
0:38 I'm thinking maybe because the impetus for this is
0:43 somewhat around the connective tissue of the 4-hour work week.
0:47 Should we just begin with how on earth you and the 4-hour work week intersected?
0:52 Maybe we start there.
0:53 So, it intersected at a really weird and sort of low time in my life
0:58 where I had just started a PhD program at Purdue and I basically hated it.
1:05 It was just overall not great experience.
1:08 I went in gung-ho.
1:09 I'm going to be a scientist and all this stuff.
1:11 And then the hard reality of pipetting in a lab
1:14 and having an adviser breathing down your neck was like,
1:17 I can't do this anymore.
1:18 I'm out.
1:19 So, my plan was to get a job because I had a had a degree.
1:23 I was like, "Let me get a job as a dietitian." Unfortunately,
1:26 that didn't really work out and I ended up in my dad's basement.
1:30 What was the timing of this?
1:32 This was what year roughly?
1:34 This was 2008.
1:35 So, I think the book was relatively new then.
1:37 Yeah, 2008.
1:38 That would have been a year after publication, let's just say.
1:40 And also not exactly the hottest job market for people who may not recall.
1:45 It was a tough time overall because of the financial crisis.
1:47 totally unbeknownst to me as a you know going to graduate
1:51 school spending most of my time at bars drinking the great
1:55 financial crisis was like over my head never heard of it
1:58 [laughter] until I tried to get a job and suddenly it became
2:01 very real very fast so basically I was in my dad's
2:04 basement broke no girlfriend obviously no real prospects like I'm just kind
2:11 of lazily applying for jobs every morning and just sitting around
2:14 and watching Jerry Springer in the afternoon that's pretty much my day.
2:19 And then one day, I have an idea.
2:20 I'm like, I I should start something.
2:23 I don't know where this came from.
2:24 I'm like, I should start a search engine for nutrition questions.
2:30 When people ask like, how much vitamin C is in a carrot?
2:33 It'll just give them the answers.
2:34 This is like basically what an LLM would do way before
2:38 and someone that's not remotely qualified to come up with something like this.
2:42 So, I was like, how do I start a business?
2:44 I had never crossed my mind before.
2:46 I literally thought starting a business was like in the office
2:49 when Michael Scott gives this lecture and he's like,
2:50 "First, you need a building." So,
2:52 I'm thinking, "This is this huge undertaking I'm about to do." So,
2:56 I go to the bookstore to find a book to help me get started.
3:00 And I basically saw the 4-hour work week,
3:02 grabbed it, and it just sort of spoke to me.
3:05 What happened after that?
3:06 I blew my mind.
3:07 I read the book.
3:07 I'm like, "What?
3:08 I could start a business?" It's like it
3:10 was just a crazy mindblowing concept that me,
3:14 someone who has no experience, was totally broke, could start something.
3:17 Not necessarily be a smash hit, but you could start something.
3:20 So, basically, I just followed the book exactly as it was written.
3:25 I mean, I was like, I literally had notes in the margins.
3:29 You had those little Q&As's at the end or little steps at the end.
3:32 I would make sure I wouldn't go past that page until I did everything.
3:35 my dream reader.
3:36 [laughter]
3:37 I was like, I'm not going to go to the next page until I'm good and ready.
3:40 So, basically, I followed the plan and then created an ebook about nutrition.
3:46 How to help your back pain with nutrition.
3:48 We have so much to cover.
3:50 I I know I'm cheating a little bit,
3:52 but I I think it's fair to say that your first attempt
3:57 did not turn into the mega hit that you might have hoped.
4:01 [laughter] No, turns out it's hard to get traffic, right?
4:05 Or it can be hard to get traffic.
4:07 And if you don't have a budget for paid ads, well,
4:12 I guess necessity is the mother of invention or at least learning.
4:17 And just I want to add a sidebar here, which is this is so[ __] common.
4:22 It is incredibly common, right?
4:24 That you basically have your sort
4:26 of first love relationship seldom works out, right?
4:29 [laughter] But you learn a lot and that leads to something else.
4:33 But tell us about kind of what you learned and how you adapted
4:39 to that first experience.
4:40 I spent all this time on creating a product that I thought was helpful.
4:43 I thought was good and then it was like now what?
4:45 You know, how do you get people to actually see this thing?
4:48 Mhm.
4:48 And like you said to him, there's paid ads,
4:50 which wasn't really something that I could do considering I was broke
4:54 in my dad's basement having Dinty Moore beef stew for dinner every night,
4:59 or so-called free traffic, which I was like, "What free traffic?
5:02 How do how does that work?" So, of course,
5:04 I like went all in on that and eventually
5:07 sort of stumbled on this thing called search engine optimization,
5:10 which was like you can rank in Google
5:12 and people who are searching for what you sell, you can get in front of them.
5:14 And I was like, "Oh,
5:15 I use Google." And I never really like understood that there was
5:18 this whole world behind the scenes like figuring out how it works,
5:20 trying to game the algorithm and stuff.
5:23 And that sent me down the path of learning this thing called SEO.
5:26 Also, I would say just to paint a picture for folks
5:29 cuz I remember looking at this when I started my first,
5:32 let's call it real business.
5:34 Also, out of necessity when everybody
5:36 at my the startup I joined got fired in 20201.
5:41 Not a great time for most.com companies.
5:44 [laughter] So, I was working off of my soon to expire
5:49 Cobra Healthcare in California and eating also microwave dinners or I
5:55 remember there I had a couple of favorites at Jack
5:58 in the Box which was in the parking lot of a Safeway.
6:01 So, that was my nutritional intake.
6:04 Very similar it sounds like, right?
6:07 But slowly figuring out the mechanics behind
6:10 these things that we use every day, right?
6:12 and you took it certainly a lot further than I ever did.
6:15 It's the wild west.
6:16 I mean, SEO can be, especially those days, kind of the wild west.
6:20 So, you built up a huge kind of portfolio of domains.
6:27 It seems like something like close to 200 or over 200.
6:31 What was what was the game plan like when
6:35 you started getting into SEO and then flashing forward?
6:40 What was the sort of plan in terms of revenue generation?
6:44 The idea was you'd have these onepage websites rank
6:46 and then you'd have AdSense display ads on each of those.
6:51 And back then it was sort of a loophole
6:54 that if you had a domain that matched the keyword exactly,
6:58 then it was a massive advantage in the search results.
7:01 So I would have likeshampoo.org And [snorts] I would just write
7:05 like a thousand [laughter] words about why L'Oreal shampoo is great,
7:08 which I obviously don't really know a lot about.
7:10 For those who can't see the video, we are both completely bald.
7:13 Yeah.
7:14 [laughter] And yeah, then putting AdSense ads on the pages times 200.
7:21 And the idea is that you scale up enough and you know,
7:24 next thing a few steps later, you got a private island or something.
7:29 [laughter] Right.
7:30 That was the plan.
7:31 Rough rough island, right?
7:32 ABC dot dot dot and then private island.
7:37 Yeah.
7:36 So, [snorts] let's backst step for a second because
7:39 we can talk about the business and the business
7:42 experiments and adventures which we will and misadventures aka
7:46 panda death [clears throat] which we'll probably get to.
7:51 But if we're looking back to your reading of the book, right,
7:55 there are a couple of different directions
7:58 as a chooser and adventure map that you can take.
8:02 And part of that often times is figuring out your target monthly income,
8:08 doing exercises like dreamlining,
8:11 which people can find for free to figure out exactly what it is
8:15 that you are building as a lifestyle and the things you want to do, etc.
8:19 and you come up with this very precise,
8:22 not necessarily accurate, but it's a starting point number, right?
8:26 Where were you when you're going through all of this?
8:29 Because you can build a business for the sake
8:31 of building a business and generating all this cash,
8:33 but then the question is, what do you do with that, right?
8:36 How does it inform your life?
8:38 Were you thinking about that stuff at the time
8:40 or was it just get out of the basement,
8:42 need something besides have a proper meal?
8:45 Yeah, exactly.
8:45 [laughter] Have a meal that's not out of a can.
8:47 So I just wrote that in the whole streamlining section.
8:50 That was basically what I [laughter] wrote.
8:52 But it morphed a little bit.
8:53 At first it was that and then building the 200 websites.
8:56 At some point I was in Asia backpacking
8:58 and then my whole world changed to 3k a month.
9:01 I was like if you can get 3k a month in Thailand, you can live like a king.
9:04 So my whole goal just became to get 3k a month passive income.
9:08 That was like my entire focus.
9:10 So it sort of shifted once I had sort of a lifestyle that I tried and liked.
9:14 I was like I could live like a backpacker.
9:15 I can do this.
9:16 So then it just became 3K a month for a long time.
9:19 Did you hit the 3K a month before the Google slap,
9:27 which may be one and the same as the the Panda update.
9:30 I'm not sure.
9:31 May maybe those are two separate things entirely.
9:34 But where were you before things got pretty strongly corrected?
9:41 I was maybe at 3K a month around there for like a couple months.
9:44 Yeah.
9:45 had a good ride and then it kind of got slapped.
9:47 Didn't last long.
9:50 Yeah.
9:49 The first was a Panda update as you
9:51 mentioned which was a very content focused update by Google.
9:55 By Google.
9:55 It was an update that basically was if
9:58 your content is thin or repetitive or not helpful,
10:01 we're going to wipe you out.
10:02 And it was like a one day they push a button
10:03 and you know thousands of websites get completely obliterated including mine.
10:08 That's a rough Where were you when this happened?
10:10 Do you remember when you got the news?
10:13 I got slapped twice.
10:15 The first time didn't scare me straight enough,
10:17 so I went back to the I was like, "Oh,
10:19 I'll just do a different type of black hat
10:21 SEO and I'll get away with it." It didn't work.
10:23 So, that one I think I was in Thailand when it happened.
10:28 Mhm.
10:27 Let's then go to You get scared straight as you put it and you build your first,
10:33 as you as I think you've put it,
10:36 real site, right, which isn't la'.org, it's something else.
10:41 when you decided to hop to the white hat side of things,
10:45 what did you end up doing and why?
10:47 So, there was that first update and then a second update where
10:50 I was in Spain in Granada and I went to my hostel,
10:54 I checked the laptop and it was like again,
10:56 it was like a repeat of the Thailand experience.
10:58 Everything dropped.
10:59 This was a different set of websites that got
11:01 knocked out and I was like, you know what?
11:02 This is crazy.
11:03 Why am I doing this?
11:04 This is an insane way to live.
11:06 So then I was like, I'm going to build
11:07 this one real website and and I was kind of inspired
11:10 because there were these forums at the time
11:11 with these marketing people and they're basically like spam, spam, spam.
11:14 And there was always a there were a couple
11:16 voices in there of people who were like,
11:17 "Guys, you were, you know, build a real business.
11:19 What are you guys doing?
11:21 Like build something real that's durable that's not 100% rellyant
11:25 on Google." And I was kind of ignored those people.
11:28 And then once I got hit that second time, I was like, "Okay,
11:31 it's time to build something real." So I basically built
11:34 a sort of real site in the personal finance space.
11:36 Wrote real blog content.
11:39 Didn't do any shady spammy stuff and tried to keep it on the up and up.
11:43 So what is the bridge or what happens between that and then building back linko?
11:50 Like how do you end up segueing?
11:54 I mean I guess this could be like a very fast
11:55 montage in the sort of fictionalized movie of your life, right?
12:00 But [clears throat] what happened right to go from there to Back Linko
12:04 which ultimately you ended [clears throat] up
12:07 getting acquired what transpired between those two.
12:11 So once this site started to get a little bit of traction,
12:15 I was like, "Wow, this is a whole world I didn't know about.
12:18 Real marketing why SEO like and it was fun.
12:21 It was working and it was more enjoyable because I
12:24 didn't have to look over my shoulder that I was going
12:25 to get hit with an update next week." And it was
12:28 cool because I'm I'm reaching out to other websites and like,
12:31 "Oh, this is really helpful." And they're linking to me.
12:33 I'm not paying for links.
12:34 They're just like naturally doing it.
12:36 And I'm like, "How do I learn more about this?" Like this whole world opened up.
12:39 I'm like, "How do I get better at this?" And all the advice
12:43 that I read on all these white hat SEO blogs were basically vague advice.
12:48 Create great content.
12:50 Build relationships with other people.
12:53 You know, market your site, lead with integrity.
12:55 You're like, "Okay, what's my next step?" Very unclear.
12:59 Exactly.
12:59 It was as vague as you can imagine.
13:01 So then back linko is a case of sort
13:03 of creating the thing that you couldn't find.
13:06 Exactly.
13:07 One thing that I saw here in the prep notes which I was like, "Oh,
13:11 that's so smart and I wanted to highlight it is
13:18 and there there are a number of things obviously that you
13:20 ended up doing really well that that seem to have
13:24 set the stage for a lot of things that came.
13:26 One of them was digging through Google patents and engineer statements."
13:32 And I'll come back and sort of expand on why this is smart,
13:35 but it'll probably become very obvious once you explain why you did it.
13:39 Like why were you digging through
13:41 Google patents and and then engineer statements?
13:44 Are those part of the patents or those something separate?
13:49 Separate.
13:48 Okay.
13:48 Could you explain what you were doing?
13:51 When I launched back linko, I was like,
13:53 there must be other people like me who are getting into this whole world ofio.
13:57 They want to learn more about it
13:58 and they're disappointed about what's out there.
14:01 And it turned out there was.
14:02 I just didn't know how to reach them at first.
14:04 So I basically followed the same advice that I read for starting a blog,
14:08 which was, you know, you need to publish every week or every other day.
14:12 And that's how you build an audience.
14:14 You just publish and pray that people come.
14:16 So that's what I did.
14:17 People still give that advice.
14:19 [laughter] Publish and pray.
14:20 Yeah.
14:21 Exactly.
14:22 So yeah, I did that and bang my head
14:23 against the wall and I was like, you know what?
14:25 I have an idea.
14:26 I came up with a a actually creative idea for a post that would be
14:29 really special instead of just the stuff I
14:31 was putting out every week, which was good.
14:32 It was definitely actually decent to to give myself some credit,
14:36 but it wasn't anything that's going to grab you by the shirt and be like,
14:39 I need to read this.
14:40 It was just slightly above average than what was out there.
14:42 I was really going on that consistency play like
14:44 if I do this consistently over time there'll be
14:46 like a secret society that will just send me
14:48 traffic as a reward for [laughter] being so consistent.
14:52 I didn't really have the whole thing planned out to be honest.
14:54 I just thought I just knew consistency equal traffic
14:57 at some point and it honestly didn't for me.
15:00 So, I had this idea for a post which was
15:03 Google recently had said that there's 200 ranking factors in the algorithm.
15:07 So, I was like, let's just try to find them.
15:09 Obviously, a lot of it's going to be conjecture and guessing and speculation,
15:13 but let's just do a list of 200 instead
15:15 of the list of 10 or 20 that I'd seen out there.
15:18 [snorts] And then I got to like 55 and I'm like,
15:20 man, you have to really dig to find some of these.
15:22 And that's when I went through the Google patents.
15:24 And also people would interview Google engineers or they would give statements.
15:29 They'd be at a conference and they would give a talk and you
15:31 know one of the slides would mention a ranking factor that they're considering.
15:34 So it took a lot of digging.
15:35 It took like 20 to 25 hours to complete this single post.
15:38 And that's really why I was digging into all this stuff.
15:41 I [snorts] just want to add an addendum to that which
15:44 is people who have not heard of this approach.
15:47 For some folks they'll be like, "Oh,
15:48 I I've or someone else has done that." But it is incredible
15:52 what you can learn through reviewing patents and looking at very niche events,
16:01 industry events for videos and transcripts of presentations.
16:05 Right?
16:06 This was incredibly valuable when I was getting started as well,
16:09 mostly looking at at kind of closed door
16:12 or very small event presentations and things like that.
16:17 Mhm.
16:17 All right.
16:18 So, that was sort of a massive post that you really invested in.
16:24 25 hours.
16:25 It's not trivial, right?
16:26 I mean, that's that's a lot more presumably than
16:28 you're putting into the kind of publish and prey consistent
16:32 approach to just sliding a plate with like content
16:35 salad out the door and hoping that, [laughter] you know,
16:38 a leprechaun is going to show up and trade for a pot of gold, right?
16:41 So, what was the response to that post?
16:44 massive traffic and controversy.
16:48 Kind of everything you want in a piece of content to be honest.
16:51 I mean, you had the traffic, you had the wow factor,
16:54 and then you had the controversy,
16:55 which is like, those aren't Google's 200 ranking factors.
16:58 You know, no one knows those.
17:00 [snorts]
17:01 And then people saying, well, this is at least trying to come up with something,
17:04 and then people saying, well, it shouldn't do it.
17:06 So, there's like perfect little debate around it that was pretty lightweight.
17:09 You know, it's not anything super controversial,
17:11 but just enough to get people's attention.
17:13 So yeah, it brought in I mean I would
17:15 say I was probably getting like 150 visitors a month.
17:17 That probably brought in a couple thousand when I first put it out.
17:21 It's brought in millions since then.
17:23 What did you then follow that up with in terms of lessons learned coming up
17:32 with new rules for yourself in terms
17:33 of how you were going to approach the business?
17:37 How did that inform things going forward?
17:39 Once once you saw that response,
17:41 I just threw out the whole playbook I was doing.
17:45 Yeah.
17:44 Like I was using this consistency thing.
17:46 I would even have on Fridays I would have like a Q&A.
17:49 I would just put five questions and answer them.
17:51 And of course I wasn't getting any questions.
17:53 So I just completely made them up and then answer [laughter]
17:56 my own questions just to have something to put out there.
17:59 And I'm reading it.
17:59 I'm like why would anyone want to read this?
18:01 So then I [laughter] just scrapped the whole thing and was like,
18:04 I'm just going to put out something once a month
18:07 and it's going to be the best thing
18:08 on that topic that's ever been written by 10x.
18:11 And that was sort [clears throat] of how I
18:13 totally changed my content focus to quality over quantity.
18:17 You had a fun YouTube video on ultimately the acquisition of Back Linko
18:23 and [laughter] you got I guess the original email you got was like, "Hey,
18:27 we'd love to connect to like collaborate." And you're like, "Well,
18:30 that smells like every[ __] spam email I've ever received." So,
18:33 you just ignored it, right?
18:34 Yep.
18:35 [laughter]
18:35 As I remember, and we won't spend a ton of time on this, but what is Semrush?
18:40 This is the acquirer ultimately, but for people who don't know, what is Semrush?
18:46 They're essentially a marketing platform that help
18:49 you get better results from SEO, pay-per-click, and also now AI search.
18:56 And are they private, publicly traded?
18:57 They're publicly traded, right?
18:58 Yeah, it looks like on the New York Stock Exchange.
19:01 They got acquired by Adobe last year.
19:04 So, they will be part of Adobe I
19:06 think sometime this year when everything goes through.
19:09 Got it.
19:10 And they acquired you ultimately while they were public, right?
19:15 Yep.
19:14 I mean, there's so many good aspects to this, but do [laughter] you
19:18 want to do you want to tell the story about flying to Boston?
19:21 And I mean eventually this contact I can't remember his name
19:24 but since you ignored the first email he wrote and basically said
19:27 hey look we might be interested in buying your company like let
19:30 me be direct and you're like okay I'll reply to that one.
19:33 You told the story of flying to Boston.
19:35 I think it's pretty funny.
19:36 I also liked in your video and you said you know up
19:38 to that point I hadn't sold anything except for maybe a used car.
19:41 I think you said something like that.
19:42 I was like that's a pretty good line.
19:44 So the first Boston trip what happens there?
19:48 Like what's in your mind?
19:49 In my mind, I'm like, we're gonna close this thing.
19:52 Like, let's go go go to Boston.
19:54 It was really a meet and greet where the executive
19:56 team just wanted to meet me and chat about, you know,
19:59 see what I how I could help them,
20:00 how Bank Linko could fit into their their platform and their business.
20:05 And so, I spend the day with them in the office
20:08 and then afterwards we all go out to drinks to celebrate the deal.
20:11 And I'm like [snorts][ __] myself, right?
20:14 I'm like, what?
20:14 We're celebrating the deal now?
20:16 Like I didn't even see a I never saw a contract or an agreement or anything.
20:19 I'm like, "We're going to sign it like tonight." So,
20:22 we go out and we're at Legal
20:23 Seafood [laughter] in the Provincial Center taking shots.
20:27 Yeah, this is great, Brian.
20:28 This is going to be the best thing ever.
20:30 And I'm thinking, where's the contract?
20:32 When are we going to sign?
20:32 Like, I really thought right there.
20:34 They're going to Did I miss something?
20:36 Did I black out?
20:36 What happened?
20:37 Exactly.
20:37 I'm like, did I agree?
20:38 Like, is a verbal agreement enough for a deal like this?
20:42 So, yeah, I was way off on that.
20:43 It took two more months of due diligence
20:45 after that meeting for the deal to actually close.
20:48 You said two months.
20:50 Yeah.
20:50 Which for people who have never gone through it, right?
20:54 That can be very challenging if you don't have your ducks in a row, right?
20:57 Which almost nobody does unless they've kind of been through this before
21:01 or are venturebacked and they have people overseeing all this stuff.
21:05 Two months is pretty good, right?
21:06 Like it's painful but like man like due diligence can go on forever.
21:12 For people who are starting a company maybe they
21:17 never intend to sell it but hey you had not
21:20 gone into Backlinko thinking that you were going to sell
21:22 it right but they want to preserve the optionality.
21:25 I remember coming across and I haven't read it in a long time
21:27 but a book by John Warllo called Built to Sell which talks a bit
21:31 about this and I thought it was actually very good like a very
21:34 I don't want to say basic but pretty sort of foundational primer for some
21:37 of this stuff but what advice would you give to folks I mean one
21:41 comes to mind which I have also had to learn the hard way about
21:45 independent contractors but what are some
21:49 of the like tenets or sort of commandments
21:53 of like hey just in case one day you want to sell this thing.
21:56 Here are a couple of things that I learned.
21:58 Anything come to mind?
22:00 Independent contractors for sure.
22:01 Maybe you can expand on that, Sim, cuz you've had experience with that.
22:05 Look, if you ever want to sell something,
22:07 the the acquiring party is going going to want to know with some assurance.
22:12 And they'll have reps and warranties in the agreement that basically say, "Hey,
22:15 if you're if you miss something or you're not telling us the truth,
22:18 like there's going to be a world of trouble
22:20 and we'll probably be able to back out of the deal
22:21 and take all the money back." But they want
22:24 to know that everything they're buying is free and clear.
22:26 Right?
22:27 So if you've had, as I have and as you have in some cases,
22:31 well, I'll just speak personally, always maintain a very small full-time team,
22:36 but have used dozens and probably hundreds of certainly
22:40 hundreds of contractors over the span of decades.
22:43 And if you're building something and they want to see
22:47 they meaning the acquiring company every single contract to make
22:51 sure that someone isn't going to come out of the woodwork
22:53 and say hey I own a part of that.
22:55 Hey I contributed this and therefore I am
22:59 entitled to a piece of equity yada yada yada yada which if the deal is big
23:05 enough come out of the woodwork no matter what.
23:06 You see this with a lot of like tech IPOs and stuff.
23:09 As soon as they file the S1 getting ready to IPO,
23:11 then some rando comes out of the woodwork and says,
23:13 "I'm the seventh co-founder." And you're like, "What?" Like,
23:15 "No one's ever heard of this person."
23:16 And they just want nuisance money to go away.
23:19 So that's the relatively short and sweet on independent contractors.
23:24 This is going to be true also with pretty much any agreement or contract, right?
23:30 You just want to document, document, document.
23:34 Make everything formal.
23:35 no verbal, no handshake if you want to preserve the option
23:39 to cleanly and hopefully relatively quickly sell a company later.
23:44 Anything else that you would add to that, Brian?
23:47 If you don't have your finances in order, like you don't get P&Ls.
23:51 Yeah, that is something they obviously will care a lot about.
23:53 Luckily, I had a good accountant that did that stuff, so that wasn't a big deal.
23:56 The number one time sync for me was the independent contractors.
23:59 I mean, I'm like you.
24:00 I hired so many people that did one like
24:04 created like a blog post image or something or like
24:07 a social media image once for like 10 bucks and I had to go try to find them.
24:13 Basically have to hire like almost like a private investigator
24:15 to find these people cuz you don't even barely remember them.
24:18 Even people that ghosted me.
24:19 I had people that I paid like a deposit for work and they never even replied.
24:24 They totally they ghosted me and I still had to reach out to those people.
24:28 Of course, they're not going to reply.
24:29 But you have to show that you tried.
24:32 And then obviously since this experience,
24:34 every contractor that gets hired signs an ironclad agreement
24:37 that says you don't own any of this work.
24:40 Once you're paid, it's a property of blah blah blah.
24:44 And that [clears throat] made things a lot easier the second time.
24:46 But I I had no idea this independent
24:48 contractor thing was so important to the acquirer, but it absolutely is.
24:52 Yeah.
24:52 So, we we won't spend a ton of time on sort of what followed,
24:57 but there was one funny anecdote about the public announcement.
25:01 Could you just explain that [laughter] given the time zone differences?
25:06 I just I thought that one was great.
25:08 Time zone differences.
25:09 And I like I'm like early to bed kind of person.
25:12 So, they told me that, hey, Brian, you know,
25:15 we're going to announce this tomorrow and we're
25:17 going to announce it at 5:00 p.m.
25:18 Eastern.
25:20 And I'm like, "Oh man, I don't know.
25:22 Can you send it?
25:22 Is it possible to send it earlier?
25:24 That's like 10 p.m.
25:24 here.
25:25 I'm already kind of getting ready for bed." Basically say,
25:27 "I'm in my PJs at that point.
25:28 Is it possible to push this earlier?" And they said,
25:31 "No, because it's a public company.
25:33 Due to SEC rules, we have to make
25:35 these announcements after the markets close." [laughter] Yeah.
25:38 I was so embarrassed.
25:40 I was like, "Oh, yeah, right.
25:41 I forgot the like the league I'm playing in here." So you
25:47 sell the company presumably there's some type of [sighs] earnout or period
25:54 of time for which you're required to still work on backlinko right
25:59 who knows what the exact terms are of that but for people
26:02 who've never gone through it right you can have a vesting period
26:04 you can have an earnout where you get x percentage of the total
26:07 purchase price based on hitting or exceeding x y and z metrics
26:10 or whatever right so there's a period of time like that postacquisition,
26:16 let's just say because I know that was very stressful and you started grinding
26:19 your teeth and that kind of evaporated as soon as the deal was done.
26:22 Let's just flash forward like 2 or 3 months after the acquisition.
26:25 What does your what does your life look like?
26:27 Like what does a week look like for you if you remember?
26:31 It's honestly not that different because I had
26:33 another startup that I was already working on.
26:36 [clears throat] So I I was basically running on a treadmill and then I just
26:39 hopped onto another treadmill that was right next to it and just kept going.
26:43 So there wasn't a whole lot of downtime to really
26:47 reflect or analyze that one day that the announcement was made,
26:51 especially the next day because it was late here.
26:53 So like the next day was really when I was
26:55 sending messages to people and stuff and getting congratulations and whatnot.
26:59 But after that day, I was pretty much back working on the next thing.
27:04 Like didn't [clears throat] reflect too much on it.
27:07 So my life was more or less the same one day after.
27:14 [laughter] Looking back, are you basically like, "Hey, I'm a border collie.
27:17 I need to work or I'm going to go crazy." So, I'm glad I did that.
27:21 Do you wish you had approached it differently?
27:23 I kind of wish I approached it differently.
27:25 Yeah.
27:25 And looking back, I was wish I took some time off.
27:28 It's just tricky because you know how it is when you have a startup.
27:32 It's kind of a strange situation.
27:33 Like I had a new company that was growing.
27:36 at this old company that I sold and it felt weird to say to the new team like,
27:40 "Hey guys, I need to reflect about how great my life is.
27:44 I need to chill out.
27:45 You guys still work though.
27:46 Like you work your asses off.
27:47 I'm going to I'm going to chill on the beach
27:49 for a while." So it felt a little weird.
27:51 I felt like I kind of had to go back into the trenches with them right away.
27:54 Almost even more so to prove like look, I'm not done.
27:57 Like I'm not going to rest on my laurels.
27:59 We're still in it to win it.
28:00 financially at that point were you focused on the new company exploding topics
28:06 because you wanted to get to that sort of big pot of gold
28:10 at the end of the rainbow like what was the driver behind
28:13 that right I don't know to what extent you were sort of financially stable
28:17 had savings we don't have to get into all the nitty-gritty if
28:20 you don't want to but I'm just curious what was driving the involvement
28:25 in the new company for you it wasn't really 100% financial When I
28:30 sold back Linko before then I was probably okay for most of my life.
28:36 Then when I sold back Linko, it was like, okay, I'm probably good for forever.
28:39 And then I wouldn't have probably started
28:41 something else right away if I hadn't already.
28:44 So towards the end of Back Linko, when I was involved with it before I sold,
28:48 I was honestly getting a little bit bored with it.
28:50 Like I was bored talking about the same things,
28:52 writing about the same things, doing the whole course launch thing.
28:55 And I kind of wanted something new.
28:57 and I saw an opportunity where there were more trends than ever,
29:02 but I couldn't find a good tool for curating them that was
29:05 like here are all the trends in this space right now.
29:07 There was Google Trends, which is fantastic if you know about a topic
29:10 and you want to see how it's trending,
29:12 but what about a trend you've never even heard of?
29:14 And that's sort of where I realized the opportunity was.
29:17 So, it wasn't really purely financial.
29:19 It was more like this is kind of exciting and new.
29:22 I think it's a good opportunity as well and it'll
29:24 give me something to do between these sessions with back
29:26 linko which was it was also boring because it was
29:29 so optimized like I work like three hours a week.
29:31 It was like four-hour work week honestly at the end
29:33 like it was getting so much traffic on autopilot.
29:36 The launches were really easy to do.
29:38 Even courses were easier to create at the end
29:40 because it just had it all down to a science.
29:42 Even it was a totally different topic.
29:43 I knew exactly how to create a course.
29:45 So the challenge wasn't really there and this was
29:48 like okay new challenge new space and that's basically
29:52 it wasn't so much financial it was more just
29:54 to freshen things up and to try something new.
29:56 Yeah.
29:56 And you'd also already committed to other people right with this new startup.
30:02 So it makes a lot of sense when you had with backlink go so much on autopilot
30:08 the 3 hours per week right what were you doing
30:11 with the rest of that time because the most and we don't
30:16 have to dig into the the book too much here but if
30:18 I had to point to one chapter that people pay no
30:21 attention to because typically they're like oh yeah that'd be
30:23 a nice problem to have and they like forget about it is
30:25 the filling the void chapter filling the void chapter 4 work
30:28 week is really important so you don't go into like psychological freefall
30:34 [laughter] among other reasons.
30:34 But what were you doing with the rest of your time if Back Linko at one
30:39 point right when the flywheel was really spinning
30:42 was only occupying or requiring 3 hours a week?
30:46 I was bored.
30:46 Honestly, I wasn't filling it well.
30:48 I wasn't filling the void.
30:49 I was basically going to the gym, reading books, playing video games, nothing.
30:53 And that I think that was part of this and we this boredom was
30:57 I needed to reread that chapter
30:59 essentially and fill this with something meaningful
31:02 and I think that's why I was seeking another startup project.
31:05 Yeah.
31:05 100%.
31:06 I need to work.
31:06 I need to build something.
31:07 I'm not building this.
31:08 I'm just maintaining it.
31:09 Mhm.
31:10 [clears throat] So that's really what got me into exploring topics.
31:12 So honestly the filling the void chapter the whole
31:14 filling the void concept I really only took seriously recently.
31:18 Mh.
31:18 But before [clears throat] then I basically filled it with sort
31:21 of nonsense to be honest and then started another startup.
31:25 What were some of the things you did differently
31:27 with exploding topics after all the experience with back linko?
31:32 Maybe things that in retrospect you're like wow that was
31:35 a really smart decision and change and maybe somewhere like
31:39 okay lesson learned right would probably if I were starting
31:43 from scratch with exploring topics I would have done it differently.
31:46 anything come to mind in terms of good and quoteunquote bad decisions?
31:50 We can start with the bad one, which was how to monetize this site.
31:54 I had this very strange idea that we're going to create this awesome
31:59 free resource that anyone can visit and just see trends right away.
32:02 They can filter.
32:04 They can go by category.
32:06 And you think, oh, how you going to monetize that?
32:07 Logically, you think SAS, an upgraded version of what they're seeing for free.
32:11 And for some reason, I was like, a paid newsletter.
32:14 like let's create a paid newsletter.
32:16 So we created this paid newsletter that was
32:20 granted helpful in in like objective terms
32:23 but not necessarily for that person who
32:25 wants to see trends in their particular niche.
32:27 So we would send them a trend on like some sort of face cream and then on like
32:32 a car and then a battery and then a tech
32:34 startup and they would be like what is this?
32:36 People were I want just trends about e-commerce.
32:39 I just want trends about this one thing.
32:40 Like why are you sending me all this stuff?
32:42 And then people would also sign up thinking it's SAS
32:44 even though we said everywhere like paid newsletter, paid newsletter.
32:46 And they'd be like, I thought this was SAS.
32:48 I thought this was SAS.
32:49 That was our number one complaint.
32:50 And yeah, sometimes you just need to like get
32:52 that bean over your head because I was like, "Oh, SAS is so complicated.
32:55 I I mean, my co-founder was a coder, but I'm still like, oh,
32:59 we're going to have to hire developers
33:00 and I don't know anything about this whole
33:01 world UI." And for people who may be listening who don't recognize the term,
33:06 a lot of people will, but software as a service, right?
33:09 Think about Dropbox.
33:10 Maybe not the best example, but I mean Dropbox is a great example.
33:14 But with a lot of these products, there's a there's a premium version.
33:18 There's a version that you get to use for free and then
33:20 if you want a bunch of additional storage or features or access,
33:23 whatever it might be, then you pay $9.99 a month or whatever.
33:26 And there's like the basic, intermediate, advanced version, enterprise, etc.
33:30 That's SAS.
33:31 Sorry to interrupt.
33:32 I just want to define that.
33:33 Yeah.
33:34 But if you had told me that before we started, I would have been like, "Oh,
33:36 logically then we should have the premium advanced enterprise version
33:40 in the back end instead of the paid newsletter idea."
33:42 So that didn't really go well until we ultimately shifted
33:45 to what we should have been in the first place.
33:47 So that was sort of the bad decision.
33:50 Mhm.
33:49 The good decision was definitely investing in this data,
33:54 publishing data early on.
33:56 So with back linko, this is something I only
33:59 discovered after like five years of running the site
34:01 and then with exploring topics I was like
34:03 day one we're going to publish tons of data.
34:05 We're going to be the source that's another
34:08 strategy like be the source that of information
34:12 on technology software e-commerce trends anything trend
34:17 related we are going to be the source.
34:19 We're going to have the latest data.
34:20 we're going to have the best visuals and we're
34:23 just going to be the source for that information.
34:26 As opposed to writing how-to content, we really focus on datadriven content.
34:30 Did it work right out of the gate or was there a formula
34:34 that you realized worked after you
34:36 had a particular well-received publication of data?
34:41 It took a while to get going.
34:42 A lot of mistakes, a lot of posts
34:44 that weren't great or the topic wasn't a good choice.
34:48 What really helped us, what was sort of the smash hit were
34:51 these very specific stats that people look for.
34:55 So what I discovered through this process
34:57 was this stats page idea is nothing new.
34:59 Like people write, you know,
35:01 the biggest stats around the fitness industry or LinkedIn stats or whatever.
35:06 And those are fine, but usually journalists aren't
35:10 looking for LinkedIn stats or Tik Tok stats.
35:13 Some of them are and that's fine,
35:15 but most of them are consuming very specific like how
35:17 many users does Tik Tok have or how many people
35:21 use LinkedIn every day like daily active users or how
35:23 many posts are on LinkedIn every day like it's super specific.
35:26 So if you're able to find a credible stat around that then
35:31 you can crush it even if you're not the one that developed it.
35:34 Like a lot of times these are also buried in like PDFs
35:36 or white papers or again interviews that you have to pull out.
35:40 Like one of our biggest smash hits in this area
35:44 was how many users a chat GPT have.
35:46 Granted, we publish this early.
35:48 That's another thing that can help a lot.
35:49 If you publish one of the first or the first specific stats page,
35:55 then you get into this virtuous cycle where
35:57 you're very visible when someone's searching for that topic.
36:00 Then they link to you, they mention you, makes you more visible,
36:03 and then you just are like in this massive flywheel.
36:06 So, one of our best pieces was how many users does chatbd have
36:11 and every once in a while Sam Alman will give a talk and he'll
36:15 mention it or when they raise a round they'll mention it and all we
36:18 did was just document their user growth
36:20 based on these statements that they made.
36:22 The initial post probably cost hiring a freelancer
36:25 like 200 bucks and then to update it every couple months is like another
36:29 50 and it's been referenced like 3,000 times.
36:33 It's absolutely insane.
36:34 [laughter] they'll have the effort to reward ratio is nuts on that.
36:38 And of course, it's just like part of it
36:40 is is some pieces do better than others,
36:44 but we've noticed that that formula tends to work well.
36:46 If you can find a trending specific stat that bloggers
36:49 or journalists are looking for when they write about that topic,
36:52 they're very likely to reference you.
36:54 So, I read I'll give credit here.
36:55 This is on growthmanifested.com.
36:57 Found this doing research.
36:58 You were interviewed towards the end of that interview by Alex.
37:04 He asked you what the best piece
37:05 of business advice was that you've ever received.
37:07 Now, this may have changed and there's probably more,
37:09 but it was Noah Kagan advising you to double down on what works.
37:15 Could you expand on that?
37:17 And then I'm wondering if there are any
37:19 other sort of mantras or short pieces of advice
37:23 that you would also put on like the Mount
37:26 Rushmore of your best advice that you've received.
37:29 It sounds so simple,
37:31 but it's one of those pieces of advice that's simple but hard to follow.
37:35 Because when you're running a business,
37:37 there's like a million things to worry about, to focus on.
37:40 There's new opportunities, new challenges, other competitors,
37:43 you have an employee that's sick.
37:45 It's hard to really focus on like that little thing that works.
37:48 But I think this is especially important when you're
37:50 first starting out because when you're first starting out,
37:52 nothing's working almost by definition.
37:55 Like you're starting something new.
37:56 At least in my experience, when I'm starting something new,
37:58 I don't know, like nothing's working.
38:01 And then when something does, most people are like, "Okay, that works.
38:04 Now, let's go something else." But instead, you should just take that niche.
38:08 It's almost like a little niche when you're rock climbing.
38:10 Just take that niche and just double down, triple down, quadrup.
38:13 It should really be like 10x down on what works
38:16 because it's so rare that you find something that works.
38:18 And honestly, in most businesses,
38:19 if you can find one thing that works and scale it up,
38:22 that can get you pretty far.
38:23 Mhm.
38:24 Aside from the 4-hour work week, right, which was,
38:26 I suppose, a catalyst of sorts in the beginning,
38:30 were there any other Have there been any other books that stand
38:33 out or resources when someone comes to you and they're like,
38:36 I'm thinking about starting a business, right?
38:38 I'd like to start a business.
38:40 Are there any books or resources that you tend to recommend frequently?
38:46 For people that are just like, I want to start a business and they're like,
38:49 I don't know what to do, how to do it.
38:51 They're like totally green.
38:52 Then Ready, Fire, Aim is usually the book that I recommend.
38:55 You familiar with that one?
38:56 I've heard of it.
38:57 Michael Masterson.
38:58 [clears throat] What leads you to recommend this book?
39:00 It gets people into the action mindset,
39:03 like leaning towards action instead of analysis.
39:06 Mhm.
39:06 I was guilty of this when I first started
39:08 doing a lot of spreadsheets and analysis and business cards,
39:13 registering a company,
39:14 all those things that you can do later that don't really matter.
39:17 This gets you going on like the most important things
39:21 and then later you can always change course right but the key is
39:25 really like starting starting starting or like
39:27 Paul Graham says action produces information.
39:30 So if this is book basically will hopefully give people a kick in the butt
39:35 to get started instead of analyzing and then being like okay now I'm ready
39:39 just be like start today and then like change as you go.
39:42 I feel like that book is almost a litmitness test.
39:44 If you read that book and at the end you don't do anything,
39:47 then you're probably not ready.
39:51 Yeah.
39:50 The whole point is to get started and like it it gives you advice
39:53 on how to know you've got traction and what to do once you get traction.
39:56 So, I feel like if you just read the book and you're like,
39:58 "Okay, what's the next book to read?" [clears throat]
40:01 It's probably not the best approach.
40:02 So, that book is hopefully the the kick in the butt that someone needs.
40:06 This might be a tough question to answer,
40:07 but how would you define the startup costs for Back Linko and Exploding Topics?
40:15 Like in the first 3 months of those two companies existing,
40:20 how [snorts] much money was invested in each of those?
40:23 Like how much money was required slashinvested?
40:27 For Back Linko's case, a few hundred bucks at the most.
40:31 It was like domain, WordPress.
40:34 I probably hired someone to create like a basic blog design theme for WordPress.
40:42 Don't remember how much, but like if I spent a thousand,
40:45 I would I say that's a lot.
40:46 I was probably more like 500 bucks.
40:50 Mhm.
40:50 Because it's a blog.
40:50 I mean, really, at the end of the day,
40:52 there shouldn't be a lot of cost involved at that.
40:54 Exploding top was a lot different because I acquired
40:56 like a prototype version from someone for 75,000 to start
41:02 with and hire them as part and they
41:04 that that was part of their pay package as well.
41:06 So just on day one I was in with that much.
41:10 And then it was a redesign and a rebrand adding
41:14 more trends hiring a couple people to do some basic things.
41:16 So that was probably more like 90,000 something in that range.
41:20 Mhm.
41:20 [clears throat] But it was a unique situation cuz it wasn't built from scratch.
41:23 was acquiring someone and then that was also paying for some of their time.
41:26 It was kind of like hiring them as part of the acquisition
41:30 and that was paid out over the course of a few months.
41:32 So, I'm not exactly sure how much would be like in that first couple months,
41:35 but it was in that range.
41:38 Why did you acquire something and what
41:40 was the the deal structure of the acquisition?
41:43 I acquired it because I was trying to build
41:45 this exact thing myself and just stumbling and, you know,
41:49 stubbing my toe over and over again.
41:51 So, I knew that there was a an opportunity
41:53 for this like trend like I couldn't even describe it very well.
41:56 It's just basically you want to go to a website
41:58 and just shows you trends in whatever niche you're interested in.
42:01 And that sounds so simple, but nothing existed like that, believe it or not.
42:05 And I hired someone to build something like that.
42:08 And it was horrible.
42:09 I used Reddit, so we'd look at subreddits and we would see
42:12 how many times a word was mentioned or something and found nothing valuable.
42:16 The signal to noise ratio was completely backwards.
42:19 It was like for every 200 hits, one was like decent.
42:24 And then one day someone forwarded me this random
42:26 site this guy started and I'm like no this like this is exactly what I want
42:30 but it was even better than I had imagined.
42:34 Mhm.
42:33 So then it reached out to him and then
42:35 the deal structure was essentially buy it 100% straight up.
42:40 part of the acquisition cost will be you'll get paid that and then
42:44 on top of that if it goes well over the first
42:46 I think couple months then we can set up some sort
42:49 of part-time deal and if that goes well we can do full-time
42:52 and he would be helping you throughout that entire period of time
42:55 to determine help you determine if it's going well or not.
42:59 Exactly.
42:59 And he was the coder and developer behind the original version.
43:02 So he was best qualified to to continue to work on it
43:05 and improve it rather than hiring someone random to come in.
43:08 He it was his vision to start with and then I said basically if it goes
43:13 well with full-time for I think another month
43:15 or so we'll basically be co-founders on this thing.
43:18 The only rub will be if you want to want a lot of equity
43:22 then you know you're going to have to put money in to fund
43:26 this thing or if you prefer that you get more cash then you
43:30 can just get a proper salary and then I'll own most of the business.
43:33 So that's basically what we did.
43:34 He chose more money and then he owned a part of as equity in exploding topics.
43:42 How did you end up in Europe?
43:46 Love to be honest.
43:47 Yeah, that'll do it.
43:48 Yeah.
43:48 I mean, my wife, we met in Thailand many
43:53 years ago and then [snorts] we moved to Berlin.
43:56 This is actually a funny story partially from the 4-hour
43:59 work week because you mentioned Berlin as like this cheap place.
44:01 So, we're in Thailand looking at Craigslist [laughter] and looking
44:05 at all these apartments that are like palaces for €300 a month.
44:09 And we're like, Tim was right.
44:11 This is amazing.
44:12 Like, you can live like a king in Berlin for nothing.
44:14 So, as we're like flying there,
44:16 we send out all these emails like we're gonna and of course they're all scams.
44:20 It's like I'm lost and like I oh I'm out
44:23 of town but if and I lost my passport but if
44:26 you leave like this money into this Western Union like
44:29 oh we show up to Berlin we're in a hostel
44:33 for [snorts] like €8 a night in a 12 bed hostel while we
44:37 realized that this whole thing all these ads we're applying to is a scam.
44:40 No one uses Craigslist in Germany.
44:44 So then we eventually found apartment lived in Germany and she's Portuguese.
44:48 Mhm.
44:49 So we visited Portugal a number of times
44:50 while we lived there and eventually was like we
44:53 could freeze our asses off or we could live
44:54 in the sun like so much like the sun.
44:58 So yeah, that's basically how we ended up here.
45:01 [laughter] Yeah.
45:01 The thing about the 4 work week, right?
45:04 The principles and frameworks all still work.
45:06 Obviously some of the tech tools since they were last updated in 2009,
45:10 most of them are completely irrelevant.
45:12 Probably not going to use go to my PC at this point, right?
45:15 access your home computer remotely to do the work you need to do.
45:20 But the the pricing examples obviously have changed
45:24 right since it was first written in 2007209.
45:27 So the the principle the idea of geo arbitrage and applying that to what
45:34 you earn and how you pay contractors
45:37 employees and then your sort of living expenses.
45:40 It applies, but [snorts] definitely for anybody who's who ends up picking it up,
45:46 if if you read that doing something in Buenosares costs A, B,
45:50 and C, [laughter] I would go online and fact
45:53 check that because it's probably changed a little bit.
45:56 What are other sort of lessons learned or things
45:59 that you would like to share with folks?
46:01 Could be about your journey,
46:02 could be about mistakes along the way, really anything at all.
46:05 Because part of the value of these conversations is
46:08 that we can get into a lot of specifics
46:12 that are omitted in the magazine profiles of people
46:19 that end up reading like [snorts] a list of highlights, right?
46:23 And there's obviously a survivorship bias to begin
46:25 with if people appear on magazine covers.
46:28 I know that's an antiquated example to use,
46:33 but what else would you like to share with folks or anything else
46:35 you'd like to add just about the about the journey cuz it's not over.
46:39 It still goes.
46:40 One thing that I've discovered recently that I
46:42 wanted to share would be actually filling the void.
46:47 Mhm.
46:46 I felt the void after selling exploding topics
46:48 and and how I was able to fill the void.
46:51 Yeah, please.
46:52 So, set the stage for you like I sold back Linko and then
46:56 about two years later sold Exploding Topics
46:59 and was just kind of going full-time,
47:02 not super crazy working all the time because I was fairly efficient,
47:06 but still working all the time and then
47:07 went from that to like basically stopped to zero.
47:11 And a lot of people I think they have this feeling of listlessness,
47:15 no direction, maybe a bit of depression.
47:18 For me, the symptom was stress.
47:20 Like I think I was wired for stress not only just in general but also because
47:25 of the sale process is stressful and then
47:27 just because the sale is done your body and I think part of your like reptilian
47:32 brain doesn't really recognize that and it still
47:35 is looking it's looking for threats and it's
47:37 looking for opportunities and it's just not chilled out.
47:40 So I struggled for like two months with stress on my aura
47:44 ring my stress was like 2x baseline from after I sold.
47:49 And you'd think it'd be the opposite.
47:51 You'd be like, "This is great.
47:52 Like, I sold two companies.
47:53 I'm good for the rest of my life." Like,
47:55 "What is there to be stressed about?" And then
47:58 I realized what I needed was a hard reset.
48:01 That was the first step.
48:02 We went on a trip, got away from the environment,
48:05 got away from the day-to-day life,
48:08 and then it somehow was able to hack my brain to be like,
48:11 "Okay, you're safe or like things are chill now." So,
48:15 when I went back home, the stress was gone.
48:18 It was like back to baseline or below baseline.
48:22 What was the trip?
48:23 It was a trip to the south of Portugal to the Algarve.
48:26 Yeah, it's a nice spot.
48:27 So went to the beach.
48:28 Nice oranges.
48:29 Toasty.
48:29 Yeah, good orange.
48:30 Yeah.
48:32 [laughter] So spent some time down there and that was just like the hard reset.
48:35 I think you just need to get out of your environment.
48:37 But then when I got back, it was like stress is gone,
48:41 but now feeling a little bit bored.
48:44 Like that boredom was coming back.
48:45 And I was tempted to start another startup and I read
48:49 this someone sent me this who another friend who had a big acquisition.
48:54 He sent me this thing I think it was in the Yale School of Management
48:57 and it was basically they interviewed founders that had
48:59 just exited and they asked him their advice.
49:01 What was it like?
49:02 What were the good ups and the downs?
49:04 And they basically said when you sell
49:06 there were like psychological dangers that can occur.
49:10 One is that you lose your sense of structure.
49:13 The other is you lose your sense of purpose
49:15 and you lose your sense of connection with your team.
49:18 It all goes away like you have it and then one day you literally don't.
49:21 So different people react to it in different ways
49:23 but they warned that the a lot of case
49:25 studies in this paper were saying people that started
49:28 companies within a year of selling usually regretted it.
49:31 [clears throat]
49:32 So basically take a year and don't make any major commitments whatsoever.
49:36 So that's what I did.
49:37 It kept me from starting these I had all these ideas I'm going to start
49:40 a soccer and then I would be like wait a year wait a year
49:42 wait a year and then by the time a year came around I didn't
49:45 really want to because I was able to fill the void largely with tennis
49:49 for me tennis has been one activity checks all the boxes and fills this void
49:55 it's amazing then because if you think about it like if you want to have
49:59 fun you play video games or watch TV or something if you want to have
50:05 socialize you go out drinking if you want to exercise, you go to the gym.
50:08 If you want to get fresh air, you go for a walk.
50:11 Tennis has all these things like in one activity.
50:14 And if you want a community, you need to like whatever.
50:17 I don't know.
50:18 I mean, I actually don't even know how to do that outside of tennis.
50:20 That was the thing that changed was what I joined a tennis club
50:24 and [clears throat] there's a lot of other entrepreneurs there.
50:26 A lot of Americans, man.
50:27 It's like the 51st state over there, to be honest.
50:30 [laughter] It's getting a little crazy.
50:32 But [snorts] anyway,
50:33 so I filled the void with this community of people that are playing tennis,
50:37 trying to improve, obsessed with the game,
50:39 like watching YouTube videos, reading about it, practicing all the time,
50:43 and now I don't have that same sense of like wanting to start something new.
50:47 I love that.
50:48 And just a few observations since, as you would imagine,
50:52 since the book came out in 2007,
50:54 I've had the opportunity to sort of vicariously watch a lot of people
50:59 grapple with this and having worked with so many startups in angel investing,
51:05 granted in a kind of venture-backed environment,
51:08 but the a lot of the challenges are the same.
51:10 Yeah.
51:10 Whether you're coming out of for instance, you know,
51:14 I know guys in special operations, if you're coming out of running a company,
51:18 if you're coming out of starting and running a company,
51:21 when you lose, as you put it,
51:23 and I really liked the categories [clears throat] you mentioned, right,
51:26 when you lose the structure, when you lose in a sense,
51:29 the identity, when you lose the connection to team,
51:34 you can end up with a severe degree of vertigo, right?
51:38 and a a very precarious paradox of choice and something
51:45 like tennis and some people listening might think like what tennis
51:49 [laughter] probably even if it's not the forever solution
51:54 and the end all be all what it does just like getting
51:58 your your recommended daily allowance of essential amino acids and vitamins
52:04 and so on you're getting just enough that it provides
52:08 ides you with the psycho emotional sort of health and space
52:15 to think about things more clearly instead of being reactive.
52:18 You know what I mean?
52:19 Like you you're getting enough of all of those things and it provides you
52:23 with a buffer and a certain equilibrium
52:28 that allows you to think about things more clearly.
52:30 And furthermore, this is not necessarily a problem
52:33 you have to solve after everything vanishes, right?
52:37 You can you can think about this in advance
52:41 and experiment with things so that when you have like
52:46 a a real phase shift which in the context
52:49 of the 4-hour work week isn't necessarily selling a company.
52:51 It's just like once you get it to a high degree of automation
52:54 where it requires 2 3 hours a week if that to manage
52:59 which is more common than people might think what you do
53:02 with the rest of the time is a tremendously big question right.
53:06 Yep.
53:06 So, I love that.
53:07 Makes me want to go back to the Algarve.
53:09 Also [clears throat] can get a little toasty.
53:12 Could be worse.
53:12 Let's put it that way.
53:13 Yeah, it's a good country for tennis.
53:15 Brian, this has been super fun.
53:17 Where can people find you online?
53:20 Let's start with YouTube.
53:21 That would be the first place.
53:22 And then LinkedIn.
53:23 Brian Dean on YouTube and Brian Eden on LinkedIn.
53:28 Perfect.
53:28 That other Brian Dean must have grabbed that one.
53:30 [laughter] Brian, is there anything else you would like to say?
53:36 before we wind to a close.
53:39 This has been great.
53:41 That's it.
53:42 Thanks, man.
53:43 I know it's late, several time zones away,
53:45 and I appreciate being flexible on the timing.
53:47 So, thanks so much for taking the time, everybody listening or watching,
53:52 we will link to everything we discussed
53:55 in the show notes as usual at tim.blog/mpodcast.
53:59 And until next time, as always,
54:02 be just a bit kinder than is necessary to others.
54:05 and also to yourself.
54:07 Thanks for tuning in.