TRANSCRIPTIONEnglish

How To Make $1M So Fast, Your Accountant Gets Nervous.

53m 21s12,149 mots1,689 segmentsEnglish

TRANSCRIPTION COMPLÈTE

0:00

How long did it take for you to get to 1

0:02

million in revenue?

0:03

>> Took about us about a year to get our

0:05

first million.

0:05

>> If I copied step by step what you did,

0:08

could I do the same?

0:09

>> I think most people could replicate the

0:11

same strategy that we use.

0:18

>> Tyler, what's up, man? How are you?

0:21

>> What up? How's he going? Did you see the

0:23

YouTuber, I think his name is Lab Coats,

0:26

who copied, he figured out the Coke

0:29

formula from scratch after two years of

0:32

testing. Did you see this?

0:33

>> No. No.

0:34

>> Okay. So, the Coke formula uh the the

0:36

the flavor for Coca-Cola is top secret.

0:39

There's like I don't know a handful of

0:42

people in the world who have ever known

0:43

it at Coke. They never patent it because

0:46

if you patent it, you publish it and

0:48

then other people can clone it. And so

0:50

this YouTuber after 2 years of

0:52

scientific testing, flavor testing, made

0:55

a chemically uh identical formula for

0:58

Coke. So he literally like got it

1:00

exactly right. And people are worried

1:02

for this guy. They're like, "Dude, you

1:05

know, you need security. Uh you know,

1:07

Coke Coke does not take this lightly."

1:09

Um but it's a pretty remarkable thing.

1:11

And I feel like what you're giving us

1:12

right now is the sauce just like that.

1:14

It's like brick by brick way that you

1:18

can build, you know, that get that get

1:20

those first 100 users, then those first

1:22

thousand users, then that first 10,000

1:23

of revenue, and get to the first million

1:25

of revenue, and then now you're at 30

1:26

million of revenue. And I'm kind of

1:28

wondering if we can kind of remix what

1:31

you did. How long did it take for you to

1:33

get to 1 million in revenue?

1:35

>> Took about a year to get our first

1:37

million.

1:38

>> Okay. So, it took you a year to get to a

1:39

million in revenue. By year two, where

1:42

were you at? about five million in

1:44

revenue. So 5x in year two.

1:46

>> And now where are you?

1:48

>> We just did about 30 million in revenue

1:50

last year which was our fourth year in

1:51

business.

1:53

>> Yeah, your growth is bananas and you

1:57

know you're one of the investor updates

1:58

that I like to open up. But what I

2:00

thought would be cool and we were

2:02

talking we were like what would be fun

2:03

to talk about here? Really I think it's

2:04

about growth. I have this book um that's

2:07

on my bookshelf called Steal Like an

2:09

Artist. And this book is basically about

2:12

how most of what we think is original is

2:15

this is a remix or a straightup copy of

2:18

something that came before it. And I

2:20

feel like you kind your story is kind of

2:22

like that. you were at Morning Brew and

2:25

you made you helped make Morning Brew

2:26

the fastest growing newsletter and you

2:29

know it got to 75 million in revenue and

2:31

it exited and all this good stuff and

2:33

then you took kind of like the learnings

2:35

from that you remixed it into a product

2:37

so that anybody could grow their product

2:39

and I'm kind of wondering if we can kind

2:42

of remix what you did and see if we can

2:45

extract the basic principles so that

2:46

anybody who's out there trying to you

2:49

know get to that first million in

2:50

revenue can copy what you did. So, I

2:52

want you to walk me through what did you

2:54

do to grow and not like the high level

2:57

like build a great product, but like the

2:58

real the real [ __ ] the specific stuff

3:00

that actually worked.

3:02

>> Yeah, let's get into it.

3:03

>> What was the first thing that worked?

3:04

You're ground zero. You have no

3:06

customers, no revenue. How did you get

3:08

going? Yeah, I actually think you

3:10

already hit on it a bit of like I think

3:12

about founder market fit a lot and the

3:15

morning brew story of actually and

3:17

you've talked about this before of

3:18

taking something you did at a company or

3:20

something you've learned previously

3:22

become an expert in a low-risk way as an

3:24

employee and then apply those learnings

3:26

to start a new business. I think in in

3:28

the founders that I've backed and seen

3:30

become extremely successful, there's

3:32

typically a through line between them

3:34

doing that previously and then launching

3:36

again. Quick story that that I've never

3:38

actually told before is while I was at

3:40

Morning Brew, crypto between 2017 and

3:42

2020 was the biggest thing ever. I

3:44

didn't even own any Bitcoin. I had no

3:47

business starting a crypto business, but

3:48

I wanted as like a founder, I wanted to

3:50

get into crypto. And so I found this

3:52

like open- source library of like a 3D

3:54

model of like a cold storage wallet. I

3:56

sh I went to found someone in China who

3:58

could make them. Bought a thousand of

3:59

them, shipped them to New York, and then

4:01

like on day two started just trying to

4:03

sell cold storage crypto wallets. No,

4:05

I'm the crypto guy.

4:06

>> And I I didn't know a single person who

4:08

owned Bitcoin. I didn't know crypto at

4:09

all. I wasn't in any Discord channels.

4:11

And like the point of that story is like

4:13

I thought I could will myself into being

4:14

a founder in the space that I had no

4:16

credibility whatsoever. I had no

4:18

connections. Um I just wanted to be a

4:21

crypto guy. Lesson learned. I sold three

4:23

of those and I still have 997 in my

4:26

basement at my house. In complete

4:28

contrast to that, what you alluded to at

4:30

the Morning Brew story, like when I

4:31

joined Morning Brew as the second

4:32

employee, I had built the referral

4:34

program. I had built the growth

4:35

mechanisms. I've seen what success looks

4:37

like from the inside of that business.

4:39

And Morning Brew became this golden

4:41

child of the newsletter ecosystem. And

4:44

as newsletters became more and more

4:46

popular, I became like the newsletter

4:48

person out of experience and

4:49

credibility. So, I preface all of that

4:51

of like what is the first step there?

4:53

One was like actually just having the

4:54

experience at Morning Brew and being

4:56

able to lean in that credibility of I

4:58

have done this before and now I'm

5:00

building something that I think we could

5:01

quote unquote democratize access to the

5:03

same tools that Morning Brew had.

5:05

>> Right. Right. So you you needed a story

5:07

at the beginning. I was uh given a talk

5:10

and I call this the marketing killshot.

5:13

So some guy stood up and he I go tell me

5:15

about your business. He says, "Uh, we're

5:17

a marketing agent, uh, we're a marketing

5:19

agency for CPG companies, usually DTC,

5:22

CPG." I'm like, "Bro, this guy just

5:24

throw an alphabet at soup at me." And

5:26

then he goes, "You know, we help with

5:28

copywriting, packaging, design, you name

5:30

it, we could do it. We do everything."

5:32

And I was like, "Okay." So, you threw an

5:34

ac, you know, threw six acronyms at me

5:36

and then said, "We do everything." All

5:38

right. I said, "Let me ask you this.

5:40

When you're pitching your company, who

5:41

are you trying to get on board, right?

5:42

And some new brand you want to work with

5:44

you." And I said, "If you couldn't tell

5:47

me all that junk," and you only could

5:49

say one sentence, but off that one

5:51

sentence, I had to want to work with

5:53

you, what would that be? And he started

5:55

with, "We do like uh marketing for

5:59

consumer companies." And I was like,

6:00

"Cool. You and any you and a thousand

6:02

other companies out there that did that

6:04

didn't do it for me." And I go, "What's

6:06

the most impressive thing you've done?"

6:08

And he goes, "Well, we helped launch."

6:11

And he named like, I don't know, Poppy

6:12

or like some like huge consumer brand.

6:14

We did all the all of Poppy's initial

6:16

branding, marketing, positioning. And I

6:18

go, "Why didn't you say that?" Cuz

6:20

that's the kill shot. If I'm a new

6:22

consumer brand, and I meet you and and

6:25

all you say is

6:27

we we help brands like Poppy launch with

6:30

their packaging, their positioning, and

6:32

their copywriting. And then I'm like,

6:34

"Oh, I want to be like them, so I'm

6:36

going to work with you." It's a

6:37

immediate credibility and proof that no

6:41

general marketing claim could ever

6:42

touch. And I feel like credibility and

6:45

proof is so massively underrated. And I

6:48

like this forcing function of coming up

DÉBLOQUER PLUS

Inscrivez-vous gratuitement pour accéder aux fonctionnalités premium

VISUALISEUR INTERACTIF

Regardez la vidéo avec des sous-titres synchronisés, une superposition réglable et un contrôle total de la lecture.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

RÉSUMÉ IA

Obtenez un résumé instantané généré par l'IA du contenu de la vidéo, des points clés et des principaux enseignements.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

TRADUIRE

Traduisez la transcription dans plus de 100 langues en un seul clic. Téléchargez dans n'importe quel format.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

CARTE MENTALE

Visualisez la transcription sous forme de carte mentale interactive. Comprenez la structure en un coup d'œil.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

DISCUTER AVEC LA TRANSCRIPTION

Posez des questions sur le contenu de la vidéo. Obtenez des réponses alimentées par l'IA directement à partir de la transcription.

INSCRIVEZ-VOUS GRATUITEMENT POUR DÉBLOQUER

TIREZ LE MEILLEUR PARTI DE VOS TRANSCRIPTIONS

Inscrivez-vous gratuitement et débloquez la visionneuse interactive, les résumés IA, les traductions, les cartes mentales, et plus encore. Aucune carte de crédit requise.