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Two Millionaires on the Worst Mistakes They Made Early

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0:00

All right, it's a new year, but it's the

0:02

same old us. And we wanted to do

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something for you guys. So, we wanted to

0:05

do a mailbag of fan questions. So,

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people have written in questions. We are

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going to answer them. You ready to jump

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in, Sam?

0:13

>> Yeah.

0:19

>> All right. Here we go. Question number

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one. What is the biggest mistake you've

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made in your business that you have not

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spoken about publicly yet? And how has

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it shaped your decision making? Man,

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I've got a great one for this. Tell me

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if your experience has been with this.

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So, I tend to hire ambitious young

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people and I take chances on them. And I

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hate to say it, but the majority of the

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time that is a horrible plan. And it's

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significantly better to hire more

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experienced people and pay them a lot

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more money and I get way better results.

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>> So, uh, when was this mistake? Is this

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like I've been making this mistake

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forever or this is forever?

0:54

>> Man, look, this is like my mistake. It's

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like the American dream, you know, like

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give me your your your broken, your

1:01

weak, and your and your like ambitious

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young

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>> I can fix him.

1:05

>> Yes. And like I always want to do that

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because I'm so, you know, I'm into the

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romantic idea of that and just I uh

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recently, you know, uh at our at

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Hampton, we've hired like significantly

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more experienced people and they cost

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like two or three times more than a

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young and upcoming person, but the

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results are like five or 10 times

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better, right? and and and I just make

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this I always in my I get so emotional

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and I always find the people say hire

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high agency people or hire these people

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whose growth rate is really high but in

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general it's just kind of better to say

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hey you already did this at this other

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company do do it here please

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>> so we were just going through a hiring

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process I wanted to hire somebody on my

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content team and um we found this kid

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who was great and he sent in this like

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wonderful video like he made this video

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application that was super funny and it

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was well done and I was like yes this is

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my kind of guy young green yeah he used

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to do this you know he just graduated

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but like this video is amazing I got to

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talk to this guy talked to him I like

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him good dude and right before we hired

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him you know we asked a very simple

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question which is like so we want this

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to go well right we want this to be

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great and we want this to work and so

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like does it make sense to just go with

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somebody who has never done anything

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even remotely like this or are there

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people in the world who have done very

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similar things that we could go talk to

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first and should we not like lean in

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that direction and as soon as we had

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that like very simple sanity check cuz

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I'm like you I fall in love with the the

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sort of angel investing in people idea

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it's like the like the raw upandcomer

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never done anything found this diamond

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in the rough why do I like that it's not

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for generous reasons it's cuz it's like

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I feel cool that I found that thing

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right it's like finding a needle in a

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hay stack the diamond in the rough. Um,

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but that's in it is like I have such a

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low hit rate with that, right? By

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definition, you're going to have a low

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hit rate with that strategy. And if it

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matters and if there are people who have

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done it before that are way more proven

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in this category, like why are you not

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going in that direction? So, I've

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definitely had that that same mistake

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sometimes. It can work. And when it does

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work, it's the best story. It's the

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best. But like check this out. This

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strategy that I've been doing, it's been

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working well. So, I love hiring

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consultants and agencies, but I'll say,

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"I'm only going to hire you for 2

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months, and I'm going to you're going to

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do the work for the first 30 days, but

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then the second 30 days, it's just you

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teaching me what to do." Uh, and so I

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have found experience of like getting

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like a young, ambitious, high agency,

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green person and teaming them up with an

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agency, and I have had some results with

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that. But in general, just hiring more

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experienced people and paying them more

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money, it's just typically the way to

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go. And that sounds so duh, but I that's

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the biggest mistake that I've made.

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>> Well, most of business is just figuring

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out what are your own leaks in your

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bucket. And then of course to other

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people who don't have that leak, they're

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like what I mean obvious, right? But you

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have to know what are my biases and and

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in your case your biases are like I like

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to be cheap as hell when I build my

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companies. This was like how you were

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before with the hustle at least. It's

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like,

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>> of course,

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>> get the cheap office, put the, you know,

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get the free desk off Craigslist. You

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know, our dog will be security and, you

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know, like you're like, I'm going to

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build this the frugal way. And then

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secondly,

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>> what if I found a guy like me, just a

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lovable [ __ ] who could be fixed? And

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it's like, you know, so those are biases

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that would lead you too far in that

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direction. It's not to say you never

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hire a junior person, but too often

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defaulting to that. And so you got to

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know your bone biases.

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>> What about yours? Do you have one? I

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wrote project selection. So my the my

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theory is this. If you are hardworking

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and you are sufficiently talented, then

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the only variable that matters is

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project what project you pick to work

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on, right? Because if you're going to

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work really hard on it and you're

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talented, then either you're going to be

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a 10 out of 10 person working on a two

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on a two out of 10 opportunity or a 10

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out of 10 person working on a 10 out of

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10 opportunity. And uh I think I have

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picked some real dog [ __ ] projects in

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the past. So, I tried to start a sushi

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restaurant chain, which like restaurants

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are one of the worst businesses. Sushi

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would be one of the worst types of

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restaurants to do. And by the way, that

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makes no sense for me as a person to do.

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The second one, I tried to make the next

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hit social media app. I tried to make

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the next Twitter, the next, you know,

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Facebook, the next Snapchat, and I spent

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six years going after that as a project

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to select. And God, that is hard to do.

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>> You try to make a hit social media app,

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which frankly, you don't really use

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social media. used Twitter, but like

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seldomly to be honest, even though

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you're good at it. And two, you

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eventually made a streaming video game

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like or that's who your market was.

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Neither of us know or play video games

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or like streaming

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>> or had ever streamed a video game in my

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life, dude. I made a I made a craft beer

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app for craft beer enthusiasts. Dude, I

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can't spell beer. Like, you know, like

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beer is gross. It makes me burp. I don't

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know. Like, I don't like it. So, I just

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picked all these terrible projects that

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were bad founder fit,

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>> just weak mark market opportunities in

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general, right? So, this is like very uh

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very poor projects. I started my

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e-commerce brand is a clothing brand.

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You've seen

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>> clothing. You love clothes.

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>> You've seen me dress.

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>> You know what I'm doing? And that one

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worked, but it's such a grind cuz ecom

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and fashion and apparel and inventory.

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It's like, dude, one of the like worst

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projects you can select. I think I've

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been together. Just those projects I

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just mentioned, and by the way, those

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are just the the ones I remember just

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off the top of my head. There's some

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other doozies in there, those are 10

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years of my professional life. I've only

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had 17. So, the the majority of my

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professional life has been spent on

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really poor project selections. And and

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