The "No BS" version of how startups are really built, taught by actual startup Founders who have lived through all of it. Hosts Wil Schroter and Ryan Rutan talk candidly about the intense struggles Founders face both personally and professionally as they try to turn their idea into something that will change the world.
Welcome back to the episode of
the Startup Therapy Podcast.
This is Ryan Rutan,
joined, as always by
my friend, the founder,
and CEO of startups.com.
Will Schroeder will you and I
both know the trap visibility
feels like momentum, but
attention isn't exactly
traction in most cases.
I think today we talk
a little bit about this
trade between applause.
Outcomes and maybe
make the case for less
performing, more building.
And will, this is nothing new.
You can go back 20 years.
Uh, and, and you've got a story
about a particular investor
who called you out a little bit
and they, maybe we start there.
Yeah.
Yeah.
This whole concept of.
I wanna be as popular as
possible and build my, my brand.
I went through it before
social media existed and,
and I did it like, like
the old fashioned way.
Right.
And so, um, are you mailing
people letters?
Actually, I wanna, what
was the old fashioned?
They had work, right?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So I, um, I'm living in
Santa Monica and this is
like 2007 ish Uhhuh, and
I was just over the moon.
So I had three companies
that I was running.
I had, you know, a couple
that are, were venture
funded at the time, like I
was so on top of my life.
Right.
And at the time I was so excited
to finally have lots of peers
because remember I was coming
from Columbus, Ohio, which is
awesome, but not a lot of peers.
Yeah, I feel that right now.
I feel that right now.
How's that?
Just, just left Antigua,
Guatemala for Oh yeah.
Right, right.
So right now
I'm out seven nights a week
and I remember like uh, Sarah
and I, in the first full
year that we were in Santa
Monica, we hosted over a
thousand people at our place.
I mean, it was just nuts.
I'm gonna go out on a limb here.
And guess the place wasn't
all that big either, so
that was a lot of events.
Oh, no know what it was.
Or two big ones.
We were in a building that had
the most amazing rooftop pool.
Okay.
And so, so we would rent
the whole rooftop and
have events up there.
It was bananas,
but, but gimme a
sense for frequency.
'cause a thousand people, like
So you fit a thousand up there.
We're not talking
one night though.
I I, oh, we were talking
every other night from
this period in time.
So like, yeah, it was
every night nonstop.
But that's okay.
This is, this is
a perfect setup.
Because that's where
my focus was, Uhhuh.
Right.
And to be fair, these
were some amazing events.
I mean, we had incredible
founders, like a lot of the
founders that are well known
in the startup community.
Uh, guys like Sean Rad from
Tinder, you know, who started
Tinder, Jamie Simoff, who
started Ring, et cetera.
Those were all the guys
that were at the parties.
Yeah.
Uh, and these were all the
guys that I was meeting for
the first time and having
an amazing time with.
Anyway, we, uh, uh, you know,
we're doing all these events
and I'm doing yet another
speaking event where it's some
startup event and I'm up there
talking about my business,
but really about startups
and, you know, whatever.
As I'm kind of networking after
the event, one of my investors
in, in this company called
Afford It, uh, walks up to me.
He's this great guy.
He's a Persian guy named,
um, Cameron Poor and Johnny.
Right.
Uhhuh and Cameron, who's
very forward, right?
Very forward.
Cameron sold price grabber to
I think Experian, if I recall.
It was a long time ago for $300
million, I think in cash, and
you became an angel investor.
Invested in my company.
He walks up to me, doesn't
skip a beat, and he says, what
the fuck are you doing here?
I was like, whoa, dude.
Right?
I mean, not even a
high will, right?
Yeah.
I was like, come again.
Right.
Uh, I was scared.
I was like, what just happened?
Yeah.
He's like, I just put
money into your company and
every night I see you at
another one of these events.
What are you doing here?
Why aren't you back at your
company, building your company?
I was like, damn, dude.
Yep.
The problem was he was right.
He was right.
That's
a thing.
That's a thing.
Yeah.
High level thinking.
High level thinking.
When they said engage in
high level thinking, high
level conversations, they
didn't mean just being
on a rooftop near a pool.
That wasn't quite
what they had in
mind.
You know what's so funny, right?
I was just thinking about this.
I think about how many
times it would have been
awesome if someone had
pulled me aside and said,
what the fuck are you doing?
Yeah,
it was a gift.
It was a gift.
Doesn't feel like it for
the first 10 or 15 seconds.
It's not, maybe not even
the first 10 or 15 minutes,
but a couple days later
you're like, you know
what?
Well, the, there's
something, well, the
reality is I had no answer.
Right, right.
I was like, well, I mean,
I'm technically, you know,
talking about the company,
but I'm really personal brand
building and just having fun.
Right.
Yeah.
I was doing it because it
felt good I was doing it.
'cause it felt good 'cause
yeah, I, I'd, I'd get up there
and, and people would clap
when I talked and you know,
people would invite me over for
dinners and high-fived and all
these things and everybody kept
saying how great my business
was and all these things.
And I realized that I was
getting more addicted to
the validation then any
level of productivity.
I think that's
tension's a sugar high.
It
is, right?
It is.
But
unfortunately it comes at
the cost of, uh, progress,
which is probably more of
like a slow burn protein.
Right?
Gotta be real careful there.
How far we shift that diet.
Yeah.
And, and so I, I looked at it
and, and I really analyzed it.
I mean, Cameron really did
me a favor, and Cameron,
if, if you're, if you're
listening, watching, thank
you for doing me that favor,
please be more kind next time.
But also thank
you for the favor.
He's like, wait, what
do you mean I didn't
shove you into the pool?
So I like being kind.
Anyway, so we ended up, you
know, we don't like saying.
We've gotta change our focus.
Uhhuh our, our focus was,
again, me getting out there
and me doing the events
and things like that.
And I remember around this time,
this is sort of related, right?
There's a guy that you
know of, uh, Dharmesh Shaw.
He's the co-founder of HubSpot.
Sure, and I've known DMH
for a really long time.
Uh, not super well, but like
we started kind of the same
business back in 2004 and that's
how we got to know each other.
I remember around that
time that I was doing my
publicity tour, DMH was just
heads down building HubSpot.
I remember what he told
me what HubSpot was.
I still had no idea what it
was back then, but I remember
around that time he started
to just arc hard 'cause
Dartmouth was actually working.
Right.
Like where I was out, like
shaking hands and high fiving.
Yeah.
He was back home working.
That's the thing, man.
And, and those, like, when
you're doing it though, it's,
it can be so confusing because
those likes can feel like lift.
Right, right.
Like again, like
applause is not a KPI.
Right.
But it can feel like it.
Right.
Right.
It can feel like lift.
Until you check the runway
and then all of a sudden
it becomes very apparent.
It's like we don't seem to
actually be lifting off and
the end of the runway's getting
closer and closer and closer.
Here's where you see
it now, here's the
modern day equivalent.
Social media, obviously.
Yeah, a hundred percent.
And, and, and that's why I
said likes feel like Lyft.
I was thinking
like, right, right.
Bringing the modern context,
but I was like, oh, but there
weren't likes back then.
Sort of kind of,
you and I don't spend enough
time on social media, and I
assume you, you, you could make
that as an argument for the
better argument, for the worse.
However, when I'm on there,
all I keep thinking is.
Who has time for this?
Who has this, this much time
for this and at what expense?
That, that's always my thought.
Social media for
me, man, it you'll
appreciate this.
It started to feel
like the new version of
meetings about meetings.
It feels like what I'm doing
when I'm not working and I just
can't, I can only tolerate a
little bit of it at a time.
I'm like, I know I
need to be out there.
I know I need to be
engaging and I want to be.
Yeah, I legitimately do.
And yet every time I'm on there
it, one of two things happens.
Either I look at it and I go.
No.
And I run away or I get sucked
in and I go down the rabbit
hole and then I come up like
a day and a half, two days
later and I go, holy shit.
A lot of engagement
happened and nothing else.
Like Right, exactly.
I'm behind on all the other
stuff I was supposed to be
doing and it never feels right.
And I'm not saying it's
impossible to do both.
A, a good example
who, of someone who
I think is superhuman
is David Meyer Hansen.
He is all over x. 24 7 all
the time on a million topics,
and the guy's releasing
product all the time.
Now he also built his
business 25 years ago.
True.
So he's got a bit of a
headstart on this one.
But you know, he and Jason Fried
have always been out there,
you know, always been, and,
and they're, they're phenomenal
marketers in that way, but
they also get shit done.
Yeah.
They get shit done.
Uh, d HH is also like winning
races in a car simultaneously,
while, while tweeting and,
and building a business.
I don't understand how
Yeah.
That guy's, the next level, you
get that Elon Musk level, right?
Where somebody who's just like
so invested, uh, can do both.
Yeah.
But, but I think
that's incredibly rare.
I think most of what I see.
Are people that are wildly
focused on that attention.
And again, I wanna say I get it.
I mean, I, I've lived it.
I get it.
We're in a business that is
just riddled with insecurity.
Riddled with insecurity.
Oh, for sure.
Right?
For sure.
So like everything
about what we do.
Lacks validation, whether
it's, Hey, is my idea any good?
Am I any good?
Did I get anything
useful done today?
Yeah.
When I post something,
whatever, it's, and I get
likes and comments and
validation, which is really
what we're talking about.
It makes me feel good.
It makes me feel good
at a time when I'm not
feeling particularly good.
And I think that's where, that's
the where the trap starts.
That's exactly it.
That's, I was getting ready
to say that's, that's the
glue that, that's that
that sticks us to the trap.
Right, right.
When we can turn.
Uncertainty into a
validation, hit however
small or however useless.
Right.
Simply by getting those likes,
getting those high fives, it
makes us wanna stay there.
Right.
As opposed to just running
back into the abyss.
So I'm not curious about why
it happens, but I think we do
need to shine the light on it
and make sure that people do see
why it happens and understand
that they do need to be careful
how much time they're spending
there and, and whether or not
they're, they're actually.
Getting stuff done, you know,
because I think there's, we
can run into this thing where
it's like a performance mindset
versus a a builder mindset.
Who am I spending my
time for right now?
Right?
Am I spending my time doing
something for my audience?
Or am I doing something for
my, my users, my customers,
my clients, and I, I think
that's where we have to be
really careful not to say
that balance.
Right?
Right.
Exactly.
And I think for a lot of people
it, it becomes a bit of like
a self-propelling PR machine.
Yeah.
Like you're more focused on
how is the PR performing Sure.
Than how is the
business performing?
Yeah.
I see this a lot really
with funded companies where
they get to a point where
they're like, everything
has to be, how does it look?
Yeah,
yeah.
Let's release this product
or make this statement.
Not necessarily 'cause
it's the most important
thing, but because it'll
attract more investors.
Let's do this because
it'll get better attention.
Let's post this because it'll,
it'll, we think it'll go
viral on, uh, social media.
And I look at that and I'm like,
okay, but is that really the
best thing for your business?
Like, is that actually
gonna build the business?
Yeah.
And the answer is usually no.
Which I think is interesting.
Yeah, for sure.
I, again, like, you
know, popularity
doesn't equal progress.
High fives don't equal
product market fit.
And I think there's something
else that's really dangerous
that can happen there is
it can actually lead you
in in the wrong directions.
Right?
Right.
Instead of really validating
stuff with the people
that that matter the most.
Right.
Not that having an audience
is a proxy isn't a bad thing,
but I think there are times,
and I've certainly fallen,
uh, prey to this where because
I started to get validation
around a concept or something,
I started double down on that.
Because it's happening in
social or it's happening in,
in, within my audience or, or
my network, as opposed to I've
tested this within the actual
user base, within our customers,
within our clients, right?
And it's achieving the
results we want there.
You can actually start building
the wrong stuff simply based
on that signaling, and that is
super, super dangerous.
I remember watching this
in real time years ago.
The fact that you probably
don't even remember this company
is, is such a perfect why.
It's gonna be a perfect example.
It, it was called Quibi.
Okay.
And a lot of people won't
remember this, but this was,
this was co-founded by Meg
Whitman, who was the rockstar,
CEO of eBay back in the day.
There we go.
Yep.
And Jeffrey Katzenberg.
Right.
You know, actual, uh, total g
within the, in the media space.
And it was supposed to
be short form content.
I guess in retrospect,
it might've been what
TikTok is now, you know,
minus the social network.
Ryan, they raised 1.75 billion.
Dollars, billion dollars.
Right.
At a time when that
was absolute bananas.
Right.
That was the rest of what
got funded that year.
That's a lot now that, that
was all the money back then.
Right.
And the reason I'm bringing
this one up, it's not to,
to knock a failed startup.
It was all Quibi ever
was, was a press release.
It was, it was a $1.7 billion
press release that never
became an actual company.
Right.
And that's where the, the press
and the tension and everything
else becomes the product.
And I think when that happens,
it becomes real dangerous.
And I see this within
startups and like I said a
moment ago, where they're
like, they're posting
everything on social media.
I'm like, okay, but are
you getting anything done?
Like what's happening
behind the scenes?
Right.
We went viral.
Yeah.
Okay, cool.
But did virality net
you any customers?
Because if, if your viral
moment led to zero customer
acquisition or zero growth
in any other way, then what
are you actually doing?
I'm not worried about making
the viral, I'm making worried
about making the payroll.
Yeah,
let's focus on that.
Perfect.
Yeah.
Right.
And, and I think what happens
though is that as you start to
invest all of this energy on
what I'm gonna call popularity,
it comes at a tax of focus.
It comes at a direct tax.
And I, and I witnessed that
firsthand when I was at
that, you know, whatever
that event was that, that,
that Cameron approached
me at and I was giving
whatever speech I was giving.
I was not at the office that
I, I was taking that time and
that energy away from what I
could have spent at the office.
And, and incidentally,
that business failed.
Did it fail because I
was at networking events?
Maybe not.
Right?
Maybe not.
But it didn't help.
It certainly didn't help.
Right.
It's not where I needed to be.
Every event, every post,
every, every one of these
activities has a price.
Yep.
And you, you pay for it in
things like product, you
pay for it in things like.
Revenue in hiring in all these
other places where you're
just not spending your time.
Right.
I mean, it really
is just that simple.
There's a, there, there, you
know, we're playing a zero sum
game when it comes to our time.
Right?
And anywhere else we're
putting it means we're not
putting into those places
that might might matter most.
Now again, this isn't,
this isn't a case
against social media.
This isn't a case
against publicity.
This isn't a case against being
out there and, and gaining
some visibility in the world.
But it is a cautionary
tale against creating
some balance there.
You know, something
that's really.
Funny about everything
we talk about here is
that none of it is new.
Everything you're dealing
with right now has been done a
thousand times before you, which
means the answer already exists.
You may just not know
it, but that's okay.
That's kind of what
we're here to do.
We talk about this stuff on
the show, but we actually
solve these problems all
dayLong@groups.startups.com.
So if any of this sounds
familiar, stop guessing
about what to do.
Let us just give you the answers
to the test and be done with it.
I feel like you get
to play that game.
You get to play the
brand building game.
When you've earned it
from, from productivity.
Sure.
Yeah.
So, so going back to the, the
example I gave with Dharmesh
at, um, at HubSpot, Dharmesh is
on social media a lot, but the
dude's a billionaire now, right?
He does much money
as much as he wants.
He already won.
Right?
And so, like when I see somebody
do it after the fact, right?
You know, our, our,
our good friend here,
uh, Dan Martel, right?
Dan.
All over social media now.
Right.
For, for folks that don't know,
uh, reason, we know Dan, uh, we
bought one of his companies, uh,
clarity that fm Dan, uh, we've
known Dan for a long time, but,
but Dan's all over social media.
But to Dan's credit, the reason
he can be all over social media
is because he already built a
successful business behind it.
Correct.
Right.
So like, Dan paid his dues and
now he's going for the views.
Right?
Yeah.
But he's actually
on the right order.
Where I get concern
is when you flip it.
When you're like, I wanna
be really popular and maybe
I'll build a business.
Yes.
In that end,
poorly, most of the
time it does, man.
It does.
I I think that brand building
is almost a pure cost center
until the product starts
to print proof or profit.
Right.
One of the two.
And ideally profit.
Right.
I, and again, like nothing wrong
with doing some brand building,
but I think it, it cannot be
the center of the universe.
It cannot be your, your sole
focus until you're, you're
further along to your point.
Building on that some more,
like this happens a lot with
venture funded companies
because they get into this
moment where all of a sudden
they have money and validation.
Yeah.
But they haven't
had to produce yet.
It's a very dangerous trap and
maybe where I was when I was
out giving those speeches, we
had just raised some money.
Yeah, I was gonna ask.
Right.
Not crazy money,
not Quibi money.
Right?
Right.
That'd been cool, but,
but you get to this thing
where big name investors
just put money into you.
Right.
So you're feeling pumped
and validated about that.
Right.
Okay.
You want to go out and
you want to tell that
story, which makes sense.
There is some value
in telling that story.
However, there has to
be a part of us that
at the same time says.
Right now, this is just
a honeymoon period.
It means nothing.
Right.
Right.
This doesn't actually become
real until we show up with
the revenue to back it up.
Right, exactly.
And they're after, you know,
profit and sustainability.
Yeah.
And I think for a lot of
businesses they, they can't seem
to get the importance of that.
Front and center.
Yeah.
I raise money doesn't equal,
I've built a business.
Right.
Correct.
That comes later.
Correct.
If at all.
Yeah.
But I think when we're
in that, I raise money.
I feel great going
out on social.
I feel great going
to the conferences.
I feel, you know, great.
You know, running around
town telling everybody how
much, how much money I've
raised and I, and I get it.
I get it.
I did it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But at the same time,
it's like, yeah dude, but
you also have to show up.
Right.
And it's kind of hard to show
up and build the business.
You, you're telling everybody
you're, you know, you've raised
money to build without actually
being at work, doing your job.
Yeah.
And, and I think honestly,
like there's, there's an
exponentiality to this trap
too, because the inputs start to
multiply with your popularity.
Right.
Mm-hmm.
Because now all of a sudden,
like as, as it starts to
work and you start to get
into those feedback loops,
and all of a sudden you got
dms, you got invites, you
got panels, you got all these
other things you need to do.
Absolutely.
Which is constant
context switching.
Right.
Which is just, it's, it's such
a killer for, for founders.
And we get so caught up in
these external optics and saying
like, well, how will this look?
As opposed to,
what will this do?
Right.
And I think we gotta be
super, super careful when
we start to tow that line.
I also think at some point
all that investment can
also build the wrong brand.
Lemme give you some examples.
Sure.
Right.
So I, I think for some folks
they get into this and a lot of
social media anymore is personal
social media, which is good.
Which, which is authentic,
you know, which it should be.
The problem with that
is it makes it harder
to differentiate.
So if, if I'm getting tons of
likes about my political views.
Right.
Awesome.
Your personal brand is, you
know, really getting solid, but
is that helping your business?
You know, I, I've watched
this in different ways.
The founder and CEO of,
uh, of Coinbase, Brian just
blanked on his last name,
was very staunch about being.
Republican conservative views.
I mean, from the start, he
has been, um, unflinching.
And while I don't agree with
all his views, I respect the
fact that that, you know, he's
willing to stand in front of
it, but now he's taking his
personal views at the expense of
Coinbase, right at the expense.
You wanna take that
to another level?
Elon Musk, right?
Look at the damage he's
done to Tesla building
his personal brand.
I, I still don't understand
how there haven't been actual,
like, settled lawsuits outta
some of the stuff he's done.
Like it, he's definitely
crossed the line.
Like I get, like there's a
time where like sometimes
you see the founder is
like the star of the show.
Mm-hmm.
And all of a sudden the
product is just a prop.
But he's taken that to
an entirely different and
very uncomfortable level,
which, you know, statistically
absolutely none of us
will ever get to soon.
Right.
The only comment for a
very long, we should have
so much to risk.
Right?
Yeah, exactly.
Exactly.
So.
What I'm saying there
though is there is a point
where your personal brand
building is mis pointed.
Either it's really about you
and your businesses happening
to benefit from it, or you
don't realize the correlation
between the shit you say online.
And how that affects
your business.
Right.
There's an, oh boy, I, I'm,
I'm trying to remember the,
the name of another, it
was like a, um, an online
screen printing business.
And this was like
earlier in the year.
Yeah.
And they took a, a really, um,
tough line with voting Trump
and a bunch of other, like
pretty significant stances.
And again, this, this had like.
Whether you're on either
side of whatever party
you're with and whatever.
Uh, this isn't, this
isn't commentary on that.
I'm saying when they took that
stance, I remember watching
the comment thread after they
took that stance being like.
I've been with you for
years and I'm leaving.
I'm blah, blah, and I'm
thinking to myself, dude,
there is a point where your
personal brand or your personal
feelings has a detrimental
effect on your business.
Now, some people will say,
that's okay that I'm willing
to bear that cost from my
beliefs, and you know what?
I will, your business
do, you will standing
on my principles.
True.
You, you, you bet.
And I get that.
And, and again, I'm not
really trying to, to push
back on standing up for your
principles, but I am saying.
These are examples of
where your personal
brand, so to speak Yeah.
Can affect in a negative
way your business or said
differently where you're
building you and your business
happens to be tagging along.
Yeah, that's what I was saying
before, like the founder is
the, is the, as the star and,
and the, the, the product just
becomes a prop at that point.
There's a fair amount of
people who don't even know that
these people have a business.
Ask nine outta 10 people, you
know, I'll, I'll pick on Dan.
Ask nine outta 10 people what
Dan's actual business is, and
they probably can't tell you.
Yeah, they're like
something to do with abs.
I'm guessing maybe,
I don't know, like
probably we probably, we
could never stop
picking on you anyway.
Anyway, my thing is that for
those folks that are out there
in their, their brand building,
and again, I think it's a lot of
attention seeking in validation,
seeking behavior at some point.
You gotta be like, damn,
dude, if, if all I'm doing all
day is just kind of building
my brand or reinforcing my
insecurity, really, where
does my business benefit?
Right.
What, what, what
is happening there?
Yeah.
Yeah.
And I think it is, it is tough
too because then to some degree
it's like, well, can you even
really separate those things?
Right.
Does that just mean that
founders of, of companies,
of certain sizes.
I can't really have a personal
brand that is maybe at odds with
the, with the company's brand.
Right.
And, and certainly you see
this in corporate, right?
Like there, there are very
few corporate CEOs who are
allowed to have their own crazy
ass personal brand, right?
And, you know, we're, you
know, but we're still IBM.
On this side of the fence.
Right?
You just don't see that, right?
It's not the way it works.
Uh, so corporates
figured this out.
Startups still haven't, right?
We've seen this play
out for the worst.
I agree many, many times ever.
Well, on the corporate side
too, they've had, in some
cases, decades of being able to
establish a brand or establish
the culture, establish the
presence, and when A-C-C-E-O
comes out and goes way off
the mark, now again, it's
different if you are a.
Wildly successful.
CEO I'm not saying you can't
do damage C Musk, I'm, I'm not
saying you can't do damage,
but like you've already done
the productivity part, right?
Right.
And now you wanna have a
voice, you wanna change
politics, you wanna be Reed
Hoffman at LinkedIn, you
know, standing up for the
Democratic Party, so be it.
Right?
Yeah.
But re, Reid Hoffman's
already put in his.
You know, he built
freaking LinkedIn.
Right, exactly.
He's good for the rest of
us who haven't built shit,
we're not in that position.
Like, like when we are out there
kind of, uh, championing, we
are not building our business.
You know, we are not
like laying those bricks.
And when I'm out there,
you know, I don't on
social media, which isn't
enough, I'm being honest.
I feel guilty the entire.
And I blame Cameron Pours and
Johnny, by the way, right.
Whatcha doing out here?
Yeah, exactly.
When there's that angel and
devil on your shoulder about
Uhhuh, you know about decisions.
Cameron is definitely the devil.
He is like, what the
fuck are you doing?
Get back to work.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And he is not wrong man.
To what extent do you think it's
a, an order of operations thing?
Like more of a timing thing?
So like, is it just that
at, is it necessities that
at the beginning we sort of
have to choose company brand?
Over personal brand
until product market fit
retention, you know, are
undeniable at that point.
Right.
Is that, is, is
that the case?
I think a couple things.
Is the business sustainable
are, are you making more
revenue than you have costs?
That's a cool time to
start changing focus.
Right.
Which most of us aren't
at that point yet.
I think another part of it
too is being very cognizant
of the cost of that activity.
Again, there's benefit to it.
When I look at, um, you know,
what, what Sam Parr has done
with both the hustle, when, when
Sam was running the hustle and,
uh, now with his podcast, now
he's running Hampton, et cetera,
Sam's outside personality is the
product, is the brand, right?
It it is.
And so it works.
But in that case, that's an
a wildly aligned composition.
And Sam knows it.
He's very good at executing.
Yeah.
I would argue that very few of
those exist where, where that
even can be the case, right?
Correct.
There's just gonna be
certain types of brands where
it's like, it just kind of
doesn't work here, right?
Like there isn't a personality
type that just aligns with
the SaaS that we're building
in a way that actually
makes it, makes it matter.
You bet or look at
another personality
like Jason Kanis, right?
Jason has mostly throughout
his career, and I known
Jason for a very long time,
um, throughout his career,
has been a media guy.
You know, when he was Silicon
Alley reporter, like in the late
nineties, um, he did web blogs.
Like a lot of people
don't remember this.
It was like the core, like
he sold it for like $20
million back in the day,
maybe more to like a OL.
Jason was a media guy.
Now here's an interesting thing.
In the mid two thousands,
Jason did a little bit of
a pivot, and he started a
company called Mahalo, right?
Mahalo was supposed to be a
human powered search engine.
It was actually a great idea.
It was a great idea at
exactly the wrong time.
Right.
And it was basically
going head to head with
Google, which was ballsy.
And so, you know, Jason
was doing that, but Jason
was still doing what, what
became, um, this weekend?
Startups.
We shared office space
at the time with Jason.
He let us use some, some, some
desks, you know, where we needed
in Santa Monica and Jason was
in there every day recording
and, you know, building the
Jason were in the media thing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But he's always, that is
the business, correct?
Well, but Mahalo failed.
Now, did Mahalo fail?
'cause Jason was in the
other room interviewing
Mark Seus for about vc.
Maybe not.
But it wouldn't have hurt
again.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I I I can't imagine you're gonna
try to outrun Google.
It probably should be the only
race you're participating.
Exactly, man.
And again, I, I'm
not knocking Jason.
I, Jason's a super introspective
guy and, and I'm sure he's had
his own thoughts about what
it was, and I'm sure Pride has
done his own podcast about it.
But even when I was sitting
there right, watching him
record, I was thinking to
myself, you should probably
be in the other room, dude.
Yep.
Don't you get Cameron
Pour and Johnny.
Oh, funny thing is,
uh, I'm Jason's board.
Elon Musk.
Talk about a guy who had, have
no problem telling you how he
felt about getting back to work.
Yeah, yeah.
Especially back then.
Anyway.
I'm sure
he heard about it.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But, but I think about that and
I think, man, this attention
seeking behavior, you know,
has a certain cost to it.
I think it's, you know,
part of it's a balance,
but I feel like, and, and
I'm curious your thoughts.
I feel like, like we talked
about, there's a threshold
where you've paid your
dues and you get to be out
there, social opinionated
person, and then there's
a part where you haven't.
Yeah, and I think part of
that is a, is a function of,
of focus and, and just being
able to like, like we were
saying before, like you,
when, when you no longer need
to spend every waking second
figuring out how do I get
this thing to profitability?
How do I make payroll?
How do we get the
product actually launch?
Yeah.
Well listen, once
that's behind you.
You've got a little bit of
tailwind, then you can choose
how to spend the extra momentum.
But until you, until
you do, I, I see.
Because we work with founders
from, you know, cocktail
napkin idea all the way
through, through publicly
traded companies and at
the early stage of that.
So if you're still, you know,
waving that cocktail napkin
around, trying to get the
ink to dry, and I see you
putting a lot of energy into
trying to build momentum
around the personal brand.
Even if it's sort of kind
of aligned with, it just
still doesn't feel right.
Right?
Like there are times where a
little bit of thought leadership
if you're trying to, you know,
grab some clients and, and that
is an important piece of that
and that's been identified and
it is a marketing activity.
Sure.
Yeah.
But so often it just feels
completely dissociated with it.
And I, I don't think
that that's the right
time or place for that.
I do think you have to.
Earn it in a sense that, and
it's, it isn't about, I don't
want people to mishear me.
This isn't earn it in the
sense that like, well, you
have to become something before
you're worth listening to.
It's not what I'm saying.
It does help though.
I'm saying I don't want to see
you spend your booster rocket.
Yeah.
Launching the wrong damn thing.
Right.
Meaning your personal brand
or just some notoriety or
some publicity as opposed
to your product, your
customer, your service.
Right?
Like that's where I want
to see you put that energy.
The way I look at it is for
folks that are out there
building a real company.
Yeah, they're usually too
busy building a real company.
Yes.
Like, because it takes
incredible amounts of focus and
time and it's nearly impossible
to envision that intense level
of focus while responding to
comments on frigging TikTok.
Right?
Yeah.
Like again, I understand
like for some folks they
pull it off beautifully.
I think very few of them,
and the people that I do
see pull it off beautifully
are freaks of nature.
Right.
Almost like, like
business freaks of nature.
Right?
Yeah.
And, and they can do it.
I'm not one of them.
Like, I'm a pretty productive
dude, but if I'm on Reddit
arguing with people over, you
know, whatever topic, I'm not
back home building product.
It's that simple.
I've gotta choose a
place to put my time.
You do.
And I think you have to be
really careful here too.
And if we think about what
the kind of the difference
between popularity and progress.
One of those is a
fairly durable good.
The other one is not.
Right.
Popularity is super perishable.
It has a shelf life
by nature, right?
You can be popular one minute.
If you don't keep working at
being popular, you're likely to
become unpopular just because
somebody else is gonna step
into the limelight, right?
Even if you try to stay popular,
it's still very perishable.
Um, we've seen plenty of people
push the line and go from, from
popularity into inanity, right?
And that can happen
really quickly too.
I've always just had this
feeling that, you know.
Quiet work ages well.
Right.
The things that we're
doing, the real magic that's
happening off camera is where
most of, I mean, it's where
all of it happens, right?
You can go talk
about it on camera.
Yep.
But are you really doing
anything that's of note
of meaning to the company,
to the product, to the
customers that that's
happening out in the world?
Generally speaking, in
my, my experience, no.
Look, I think for a lot
of founders, like they're
out there and they can,
they have a choice.
They can either
spend their time.
Building the business or spend
their time building their brand.
Yeah.
You usually can't do both
with the same veracity.
And so I think in the
early stages, you have to
look at every one of those
external interactions.
You know, every, every post,
every comment, everything that
you're doing, uh, in building
that brand, every networking
event, uh, every trip to be
at a conference, et cetera.
I think you have to
look at that as a cost.
As a tax.
I know people think of that
as an investment, and maybe
someday it becomes that,
but not when you still
have a company to build.
The most important time
spent is investing in the
company, in the product, in
the people in management,
not building externally.
Once you've made those
investments and hopefully
you get those returns, then
you can reap the rewards of
going out and building your
brand and telling the world
about how great you are.
But until you've built.
The product at home.
Until you've built a
sustainable business at home,
you haven't earned the right
to spend all of your time
externally, brand building.
And I hope that changes.
I hope one day you do
make that investment
and you get that reward.
And maybe both of us can
be online all the time
talking about our successes.
Until then, get back to work.
Overthinking your startup
because you're going it alone.
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you shouldn't because instead,
you can learn directly from
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Connect with bootstrap
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