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The “Boring” Business Model Making Regular People Millionaires

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Franchising is one of the most

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overlooked paths to [music] wealth in

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America.

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>> That's a very bold statement.

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>> They said the most

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>> the most overlooked.

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>> There are more millionaires generated

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from franchising than all combined

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players ever in the NFL. And there's a

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number of private [music] equity family

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offices starting to get further and

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further into franchising. And they're

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buying both large franchises or they're

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doing roll-ups.

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>> You made this bold claim and I wanted to

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fight you about it. Now I'm totally on

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your team. Traditionally, franchising is

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looked at as like, "All right, it's

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either McDonald's and Subway, and you

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got to have $3 million to do it. So,

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only the wealthy can actually [music] do

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it." But there's 4,000 franchise brands,

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and if you're willing to do the

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research, willing to do the work, there

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are a lot of hidden gems of brands and

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industries that are really taking off.

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>> So, explain the path. What's the game

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plan?

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>> This is such a good hidden gem. I don't

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want to talk about how I did this.

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>> All right. What's up? Welcome, Alex.

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Alex is the franchise guy that we have

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invited on the pod. So, I don't know if

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that's what you normally get called, but

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that's what we're calling you. So, this

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podcast called My First Million, one of

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the re reasons we originally called it

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that was because there was all these

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different ways people made a million

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dollars. And in my first 10 episodes, I

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think I had a guy who did it in real

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estate, a guy who did it with Amazon

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FBA, a guy who did it playing poker, and

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I was very fascinated just to hear all

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the different ways you can win in

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business for two reasons. One, I wanted

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a menu of options I could go choose

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from. How can you know which one sounds

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most appealing to me? Which one sounds

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like it fits me? And the second is I

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like just hearing that you could be do

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it in all these different ways because

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it makes the impossible feel extremely

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possible. I remember when I was sort of

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pre- success, it felt like winning was

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like just this needle in a hay stack. I

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couldn't find it. And then as I've been

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doing this podcast, I realized it's a

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hay stack full of needles. You there's

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so many to choose from. There's so many

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different ways to win. You're going to

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talk about kind of retail and

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franchising. Did I do did I do you

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justice there setting that up? Yeah,

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absolutely. I honestly up until four or

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five years ago was a bit of a I think

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franchise hater and thought, "Oh, you

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that's is that really entrepreneurship

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or is that you are there viable paths

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there?" And the more I've gotten into

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it, the more I've realized it's probably

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the most overlooked path to wealth

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creation in in America and I've become a

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big statement. That's a very bold

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statement. Most

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>> overlooked overlooked. [laughter]

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>> All right.

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>> Yes. Well, let's let's start with who

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who you are. So you're you're a guy who

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made your initial wealth in laundry in

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the laundry business. So can you give us

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the fast forwarded quick version of your

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story?

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>> Yeah, I'll try to be try to be short. So

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I'm originally from smalltown Minnesota,

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town of 15,000 people. Uh ended up in

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North Carolina for college. Went to uh

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to Wake Forest, studied finance, was

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about to have a pretty kind of boring,

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plain life, and then bought a laundry

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business my freshman year of college. um

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did seller financing. Had to learn what

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that was at at 18. Uh learned what a

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discounted cash flow analysis was at 18

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just talking to, you know, business

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school professors before I got into the

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BIS school. And I ended up buying that

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business and learned more doing that

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than any class I took at Wake. You know,

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we ran it, we grew it, we sold it for a

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little over 10 times what we bought it

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for and had an exit uh our senior year

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for about 10 times what we bought it

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for. And that set the path to complete

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addiction. Why? Why did you buy a

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laundry business as a college freshman?

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Who does that?

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>> So, I was I was working for them. I was

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working for them as a way to make a

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little extra beer money and and was

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hooked. I was like, "This could work at

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Duke and Chapel Hill and Vanderbilt and

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you guys are graduating. I want to buy

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it." And they asked for 30 grand and my

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jaw hit the floor. I was like, "That's

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the most money I've ever heard of." Uh,

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and I had maybe two grand saved up. So,

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had to get creative and figure out how

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are we going to buy this and structure

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it. Well, that's sort of like one of the

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one of the three businesses college kids

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starts. It's usually like some type of

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like app or something where like college

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kids could sell stuff to other kids. Uh

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or a roommate matching app, which I did.

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Or like a like a laundry map. Uh a

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laundry business. I know Blake Mioski, I

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think that's his name, the guy who

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started Tom Shoes. That was his first

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business was the laundry business.

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[laughter]

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>> What were you doing? You just go pick up

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the laundry from students dorm rooms.

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You said like, "Hey, you you know, I

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remember when I went to college, I

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didn't know how to do laundry. I'd like,

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you know, grown up and my parents did my

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laundry and so by the time I got to

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school, I was a little confused. My

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roommate had to teach me like what is a

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dryer sheet and like why do you use

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this? What are all these different

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components? How long do you leave this

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in?

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>> Yeah. So, Tuesday was pickup day. You'd

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leave your stuff outside your dorm room

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door. We'd have runners, you know,

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mostly football players that could hold

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like 200 lb of laundry at a time. They

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would just, you know, run up and down

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the hallways, grab your bag. We'd

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partner with vendors off campus. They

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would clean it. We'd return it Thursday.

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But the big unlock for us was kids

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aren't paying for this. You know, it's a

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bunch of broke college kids. It's their,

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you know, affluent parents or, you know,

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parents that are worried about them, you

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know, being at college not knowing how

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to do laundry. And so the big thing that

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changed it for us that allowed us to go

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from, you know, call it 30-ish,000 in

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revenue when we first bought it to just

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under 300 grand a school year in revenue

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was get a booth at orientation week. And

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for whatever reason, Wake gave us a

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booth next to where you got your meal

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plan, where you got your parking pass,

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where you got your keys to your dorm,

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like all the like marquee things you

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need to do. And we went full Shamwow

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guy. Like I was like, "Step right up.

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We're the premier laundry service at

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Wake. You got your kids got to have it.

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You don't want them to go, you know,

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clothesless. You got to sign up for

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this."

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>> Yeah. And they loved it. They thought it

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was like the cutest thing. And they're

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like, "Yeah, that's true. My kids, you

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know, screwed going here and not knowing

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how to do laundry. and I want them

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studying or you know having fun or

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whatever it was. And so we went from

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yeah 30k a year in school year to like

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280,000 our first year. Is this still a

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business that any college kid could do

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today? Like has this been a solved

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problem or does every campus just have

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kind of like a version of you who's who

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hustles and makes the the campus the

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freshman laundry service?

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>> Yeah, I think Sam's right. Like the

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number of people I've met that have gone

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on to be serial entrepreneurs that were

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like, "Oh, I did that in college, too.

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like I thought I was so cool and special

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and unique that I meet like 30 other

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college kids that had a laundry business

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at their school. So I don't think it's

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