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3 mindset shifts from billionaires (you won't find in books/videos)

42m 29s9,692 Wörter1,329 segmentsEnglish

VOLLSTÄNDIGE ABSCHRIFT

0:00

All right. You just got done hanging out

0:01

with some big ballers. It wore off on

0:03

you to where you think you have the

0:04

audacity to wear a varsity jacket.

0:08

>> I have a stylist now.

0:09

>> Is it Marty McFly from Back to the

0:11

Future? Is [laughter] that your stylist?

0:14

>> It's AC Slater from Save by the Bell.

0:24

>> We just threw uh one of our annual

0:26

events. It's our basketball camp for

0:28

founders. what Forbes calls the

0:30

billionaires basketball camp. They never

0:32

covered it, but I did pitch that to them

0:34

in an email that they didn't reply to.

0:36

And yeah, so we did this thing. It was

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amazing. And uh I guess what you want to

0:41

debrief? Should we What? What do you

0:42

want to know?

0:43

>> Yeah. Yeah. I want to know everything.

0:44

So I've gone two out of the four years.

0:46

And it seems like each time the average

0:48

net worth has gone up, like you've added

0:50

a zero to it. Because I I think I heard

0:52

you did this event this year in uh

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Greenville, North Carolina, I think,

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which is a very small town, and there

0:59

were 17 private jets in town that

1:00

weekend. [laughter]

1:02

>> Yeah. Out of like 25 guests.

1:05

>> Yeah, it's pretty crazy. So, okay. So, I

1:07

I wrote down some learnings because I

1:09

don't want to tell you too much about

1:10

the event.

1:10

>> Well, can you give some background to

1:11

it? The 30 secondond description is I

1:14

hate conferences because networking,

1:17

suits and ties, ice breakers, awkward

1:19

forced social interactions. Don't like

1:21

that part. But I also do love meeting

1:24

new interesting people. So the idea was

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like, can you have the good without the

1:28

bad? Can you have your cake and eat it

1:30

too? And I've learned in the past that

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basically every time you complain,

1:35

you've planted a seed of an opportunity.

1:37

So like my complaint about conferences

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signal to me that maybe there's an

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opportunity to reinvent this, right? In

1:42

innovation comes from irritation. So my

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irritation at conferences led me to ask

1:46

a different question. What would be the

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type of conference that I would love to

1:50

go to? And so we kind of architected

1:53

this thing that's basically just the

1:55

three things we like the most put

1:56

together. So it was, well, what if we

1:58

got together and instead of being in

2:00

like a a ballroom sea of the hotel and

2:04

we're all just standing around

2:05

awkwardly? What if we got to what if we

2:08

got together and we played sports? So

2:09

what if we played basketball? So the the

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the ice breaker is when you get to the

2:13

event, you get put on teams and within

2:15

an hour we go play b pick up basketball

2:17

together and you get to know each other

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that way before you do small talk and

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all this other stuff.

2:22

The second part is so you play

2:24

basketball and sort of sweat all day and

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then at night we all hang out in a house

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and we do like impromptu versions of TED

2:31

talks. So the idea is everybody in the

2:33

room is world class at something. It's

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like that guy knows more about how to

2:39

sell on TV infomercials than anyone else

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and this guy could built the largest

2:43

company in X category. This guy built

2:45

the largest company in X category. And

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so you pop them up and you say, "Hey,

2:49

tell us, you know, teach us about that."

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and they have little like rough slides

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that they that they take a 10-minute

2:55

talk about. So, that's the idea of the

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the event is two days with 25 of the

3:00

most interesting people in the world.

3:02

You play sports and it feels you have a

3:04

summer camp vibe, but then you get the

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sort of lessons learned of a TED TED TED

3:08

Talk event

3:08

>> and you're you're hosting it um

3:11

co-hosting it, I don't know how you

3:12

describe it, with Jimmy aka Mr. Beast at

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his campus. And last year, and I think

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every year, you get like a tour. One of

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the activities was like a tour of his

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movie studio, if if that's what he calls

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it. And it's pretty

3:23

>> this year is cool. We actually played a

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Mr. Beast game. So like we they thought

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they were going for the tour, but we set

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it up so that he's like, "Well, I could

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show you this. You want to do it?" And

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he had the cameras and the microphones

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set up and so everybody got to play this

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game. And they made a video that's like

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private just for like it it won't go out

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on YouTube, but it's like just for the

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group. It's like uh the rich man version

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of of like going on like a Six Flags

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ride and they take a photo of you on the

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ride. [laughter]

3:49

>> Yeah, exactly. [clears throat]

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I was like, "Have you ever done this

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before?" He's like, "Yeah, we do this

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for the Makea-Wish kids." [laughter] And

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I was like, "Oh, perfect. This is

3:56

great."

3:57

>> And so, do you want to can you say who

3:59

was there or is that what you

4:00

>> uh I don't want to talk too much about

4:02

who was there, but I'll give you a

4:03

couple of stories. So, I I just wrote

4:04

down three little lessons learned. I'm

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trying I'm going to try to keep this

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short because I can go all day about

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this type of stuff. I have like pages

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and pages of notes that I wrote

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afterwards, but I'll give you three

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things that I thought stood out. So,

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this is my lessons from billionaires.

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Number one, intensity is the strategy.

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So, here's one of the things that

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happened at the event. We had, I think,

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five people who owned NBA teams at this

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event, which is crazy. That's like, I

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don't know, one sixth of the league. And

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we were like, "What's the hardest part

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about owning a team you didn't really

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anticipate before you bought it?" Right?

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You've been a basketball fan your whole

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life. And he was like, "Well, the

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hardest thing is that here's a guy on my

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team who's got a 5-year $150 million

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deal guaranteed. So he plays good, $150

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million. He plays bad, $150 million. His

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knee feels sore, he's got a boo boo, he

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wants to sit out, $150 million." And

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he's like, "It is very hard to lead an

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organization where your upside and your

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compensation is guaranteed regardless of

5:00

performance." And he goes, "In my life,

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I'm on a day-to-day contract with

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myself. That's how I've always been.

5:07

Let's fast forward about an hour. Now,

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people have broken up into smaller

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groups and two two rich guys in the

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corner are talking and I think they're

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about to get in a fight. They're talking

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so loud and so passionately. They're

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like nose tonose almost. [laughter] I'm

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like, "Oh [ __ ] I got to get over

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there." So, I walk over. I'm like, I

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don't know what to do here. Turns out

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they're not fighting. They're just both

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so passionate about this one idea, which

5:31

is about living in the details. So, one

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of the guys was a NBA team owner named

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Matt Ishbia. He owns the Phoenix Suns.

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He also owns one of, if not the largest

5:40

mortgage company in the in the country.

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So, he owns United Wholesale Mortgage.

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You know, he basically took over this

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business from his dad. It was like a dad

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his dad's side hustle and had 12

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employees when he joined it and probably

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did, I don't know, like singledigit

5:55

millions in in revenue maybe at that

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time. And you know that was you know

6:00

whatever 2004 they did like 45 mortgages

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you know not not huge volume 2005 still

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slow 2006 still slow. Then 07 0809 it

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starts to take off because other

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mortgage lenders during the financial

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crisis the subprime mortgage crisis they

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went under because they were writing bad

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mortgages. He was not. And so they

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picked up tons of business. So they grew

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literally 10x in those years and grew

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and grew and grew. So now they do like I

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don't know over 200 billion in loans,

6:27

two billion a year in profit at the

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company level. So he's one of the

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wealthiest, you know, 50 wealthiest

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people in the country at this point.

6:34

>> Was his dad's company big or was it like

6:36

was it a subsidiary within a successful

6:38

company or he

6:38

>> No, it was just his own 12 person, you

6:41

know, side hustle.

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