TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

Level Up Your Life In 2026 | Shaan Puri

1h 4m 48s15,962 mots2,309 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPTION COMPLÈTE

0:00

The biggest risk you have is spending

0:02

your life trying to do a really good job

0:03

at the wrong thing.

0:04

>> Yeah.

0:05

>> Idiocrity is the real

0:06

>> for any person with high potential cuz

0:09

it'll sap you. Sap your will, sap your

0:11

time, sap your resources, slap your

0:13

energy, sap your belief in yourself.

0:14

>> This is Sean Puri. He sold his company

0:17

to Amazon and Twitch for millions. And

0:19

he now runs one of the most successful

0:20

business podcasts in the world with

0:22

millions of listeners.

0:24

>> I know this cuz I spent 10 years doing

0:25

things only for like, oo, if this worked

0:28

it'd be amazing. The work has to be the

0:30

win.

0:30

>> Yeah.

0:31

>> The win can't be some future

0:32

hypothetical payoff. Because you enjoy

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it, you do it all the time. Because you

0:35

do it all the time, you get really good

0:36

at it. Because you get really good at

0:38

it, you do get the results,

0:39

>> right?

0:39

>> That's the flywheel.

0:41

>> In this episode, we talk about what it

0:42

takes to be successful, how to work

0:44

smarter, not harder, and how to live a

0:47

good life.

0:47

>> I think hard work is over. It's probably

0:49

maybe the fourth or fifth most important

0:51

variable. Mhm.

0:52

>> You know, I think the very first one is

1:00

All right, today's a special episode

1:01

because I'm the guest of today's

1:03

episode. Normally, we have guests on and

1:05

we ask them all about their life, their

1:07

philosophies, how they work, how they

1:08

did it, how they made it. But this time,

1:10

I'm the guest because my former intern

1:13

Walter uh created his own podcast. He

1:15

used to work for me when he was, I don't

1:17

know, 18, 19, 20 years old. he was in

1:18

college and he's gone on to create a

1:20

cool podcast and he asked me to come on

1:22

and so I went on one of the first

1:23

episodes of his thing and I watched it

1:25

and I was like this is actually a really

1:27

good interview and the reason why is

1:28

because it's a lot of information about

1:31

before we ever made any money. So, um,

1:34

you know, how I was thinking when I was

1:35

in my early 20s, the ups, the downs, the

1:37

indecisions, the uncertainty of do I go

1:39

this way or this way, and how I thought

1:40

about it, I think it's going to help a

1:42

lot of people, specifically people who

1:43

are, you know, you haven't quite made it

1:46

yet. Maybe you're young, maybe you just

1:47

haven't, it hasn't all clicked for you

1:49

yet. I think there's some very useful

1:50

philosophies in here. So, I hope you

1:51

enjoy. This is an episode where I got

1:53

interviewed by my former intern, Valter.

1:56

>> You had a great life um, seemingly. So,

1:59

why did you end up moving and what was

2:01

that year of being strategically broke,

2:02

right?

2:03

>> Yeah, strategically broke. That's what I

2:05

called it. Uh,

2:06

>> I think most people just call it

2:07

unemployed. Uh, but you know, why not? I

2:11

I I put a luxury brand on it.

2:13

>> So, basically what happened is I

2:14

graduate from college and I get a great

2:16

job. I got a job paying me $120,000 a

2:19

year to go work in a boring industry

2:21

that I knew nothing about, didn't really

2:23

care about. Mhm.

2:25

>> kind of stumbled into a a a job that I

2:28

thought was too good of money to pass

2:30

up.

2:30

>> Yeah.

2:31

>> So, I go and I work for this guy and um

2:34

sure enough, I'm like pretty bored

2:36

actually. I'm like, "Oh, you know what?

2:37

Like, I can do this job, but I'm fairly

2:41

bored." And at and it was a fork in the

2:43

road because before I took that job, me

2:45

and my friends had had this business

2:46

idea.

2:47

>> Uh the idea was to create a sushi

2:49

restaurant chain um called Sabi Sushi.

2:51

It was supposed to be the Chipotle of

2:52

sushi. So, the way you have Subway for

2:54

sandwiches and Chipotle for burritos,

2:56

the idea was we were going to do that

2:58

for sushi. Okay. And we win this

3:00

business plan competition. So, on one

3:02

hand, we get $25,000 of prize money.

3:04

>> Mhm.

3:05

>> That the three of us are going to live

3:06

on. Um or I could take this job for

3:10

$120,000. So, I took the job. Within a

3:13

month, I'm like, "This is lame." I just

3:15

looked at my life and I was like, "This

3:16

is I made a lame choice."

3:18

>> Yeah. Um,

3:20

the good thing about me is I don't

3:22

really make great decisions, but I make

3:24

great reversals of decisions. Like once

3:26

I realize that I have made the wrong

3:28

decision, I'm not one to linger in it,

3:30

>> right?

3:30

>> Um, mostly because I just can't like

3:33

tolerate it anymore. Like if I was

3:34

dating somebody, I remember I was dating

3:36

this girl and I realized like, all

3:37

right, she ain't the one.

3:39

>> Um, I like just called her and broke up

3:41

with her. Oh, you know, 10 minutes later

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after thinking about it, I was like, I

3:44

what am I supposed to if I go hang out

3:46

with her now, this will be unbearable

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now that I I know what I can't unsee

3:50

what I've seen. I can't unknow what I

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know. And so I'm pretty quick to cut

3:54

things off when they're not working.

3:56

>> So I I quit my job after a month and a

3:59

half and I tell him, "Hey, I'm going to

4:00

go work on my sushi restaurant." He's

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like, "What? Uh, okay." So I fly back

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and I meet up with my friends. And so we

4:06

got 25 grand, three people. So we're

4:08

basically $8,000 each

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>> for a year

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>> for to live for a year. And um I was

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like I don't know that I don't know how

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much I don't even know how much life

4:16

costs. I'm a college kid, right? When

4:17

you're in college, everything's just

4:18

provided for you, right? Like you swipe

4:20

this thing and you get meals. Yeah.

4:22

Things just like happen.

4:23

>> Uh like my parents paid for the for the

4:26

dorm or something. You pay up front. I

4:28

just didn't understand. Like you don't

4:29

know what it's like to pay rent and

4:30

bills and laundry and all that stuff.

4:32

>> So I um I like how I threw laundry in

4:35

there. It's like a dollar$1 dollar 25 a

4:37

week or something.

4:38

>> Um

4:39

>> so I don't really know even how much

4:40

8,000 is, but I know it's low, right?

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cuz all my friends got good jobs and

4:43

nobody's making 8 grand a year. So I

4:45

decided, okay, I'm either going to every

4:47

day wake up and feel worried and shitty

4:50

about money

4:51

>> or I'm going to commit and say I'm going

4:53

to try to spend this year strategically

4:55

broke. So instead of being I looked at

4:59

my friends like investment bankers and

5:00

they were money rich time poor.

5:02

>> Yeah.

5:02

>> And that's what I was when I had took

5:04

that job. I was money rich time poor. So

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I was like, okay, if I'm going to be

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money poor, I'm going to be I'm going to

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make a choice to be rich in other areas.

5:11

So it's like I need freedom and

5:13

flexibility of my schedule. So I'm going

5:14

to be time rich.

5:16

>> I'm going to be adventure rich. Like I'm

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going to travel with my friends. We're

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going to do fun stuff.

5:20

>> Yep.

5:20

>> I'm going to be learning rich. So it's

5:22

like, how do I learn? If I'm making 10

5:25

times less, 12 times less here,

5:28

>> I got to be learning 12 times more than

5:30

I would on the job there. Right now, the

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good news is that's not that hard of a

5:33

bar. you don't learn that much on your

5:34

like entry- level jobs, you know, or if

5:36

you learn you learn kind of the same

5:38

task. You're not learning like a wide

5:40

breath of stuff, right? Whereas with the

5:42

business that we were doing,

5:44

>> I'm learning about sushi and restaurant

5:45

operations and how margins work and what

5:47

a P&L is and I'm learning to pitch

5:48

investors. Then we're negotiating a

5:49

lease and I'm figuring out what how how

5:51

real estate works. I'm looking learning

5:53

learning how I remember we went to the

5:55

city like the city area and we were

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