Hi there.
Speaker:You're listening to gift biz on rapt episode one Oh six,
Speaker:Anything that's worth being talked about.
Speaker:Anything that's worth doing in life.
Speaker:Anything that's meaningful at all,
Speaker:some people will hate.
Speaker:That's why it's meaningful.
Speaker:Hi, This is John Lee,
Speaker:Dumas of entrepreneur on fire,
Speaker:and you're listening to the gift of biz unwrapped.
Speaker:And now it's time to light it up.
Speaker:Welcome to gift biz,
Speaker:unwrapped your source for industry specific insights and advice to develop
Speaker:and grow your business.
Speaker:And now here's your host,
Speaker:Sue Monheit.
Speaker:Hi there.
Speaker:It's Sue and welcome to the gift biz on wrapped podcast,
Speaker:whether you own a brick and mortar shops sell online or
Speaker:are just getting started,
Speaker:you'll discover new insight to gain traction and to grow your
Speaker:business. And today I have joining us max Tempkin with cards
Speaker:against humanity.
Speaker:I really struggled with how to introduce max.
Speaker:He's a man with numerous successes,
Speaker:seriously, too much to mention in this intro,
Speaker:but I'm going to highlight just a few.
Speaker:Max is one of the creators of the wildly popular game
Speaker:of cards against humanity.
Speaker:He is a co-founder of black box,
Speaker:which you guys might be interested in.
Speaker:It's a shipping company that helps independent artists send physical goods
Speaker:to their customers.
Speaker:The boxes,
Speaker:by the way are blue.
Speaker:He's the guy behind crazy stunts,
Speaker:such as digging a hole to nowhere and the 32nd Superbowl
Speaker:commercial featuring a potato that simply says advertisement.
Speaker:He's been featured on fast company business,
Speaker:insider, and last year with Forbes 30 under 30 today,
Speaker:we're going to focus on the development of cards against humanity
Speaker:and the creativity behind what he puts out to the world.
Speaker:I honestly have no idea where this talk is going to
Speaker:go. So buckle up and let's take this ride together.
Speaker:Max, welcome to the show.
Speaker:Thanks for having me.
Speaker:I like to start out as you have just found out
Speaker:by having you describe yourself in a way behind a motivational
Speaker:candle. So if you were to describe that for us,
Speaker:what color would your candle be and what would be the
Speaker:quote on your candle?
Speaker:What's a motivational candle.
Speaker:I know this is going to be a stretch,
Speaker:but let's say you walk into a gift store and you
Speaker:see a shelf full of candles.
Speaker:And these candles have SANEs that relate to people that motivate
Speaker:them or speak to who they are and they buy the
Speaker:candle then because it has that sane on it.
Speaker:So I'd be curious which candle you would pick based on
Speaker:the sane.
Speaker:I'd like to do the color too,
Speaker:because colors indirectly describe people.
Speaker:And it's kind of interesting what colors people will say.
Speaker:Oh, I see.
Speaker:Well, I don't know that this is a product that I
Speaker:would license my name to.
Speaker:Well, let's go with,
Speaker:what is your favorite color?
Speaker:Well, it's interesting because my trade is as a designer,
Speaker:but I never,
Speaker:I don't have any like formal education.
Speaker:So I never went to art school and I almost all
Speaker:of my work I'm pretty of color.
Speaker:So I tend to work a lot with black and white
Speaker:and then I'll,
Speaker:if there's a color,
Speaker:I usually pick one color as the brand color and a
Speaker:work with black,
Speaker:white, and one color.
Speaker:So that's kind of a,
Speaker:so I'd have to go with,
Speaker:I'd probably have to go with white.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:So you're a black and white kind of guy and white
Speaker:would be your color.
Speaker:Yeah. That's kind of the predominant color use in most of
Speaker:my work.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:So Let's talk about cards against humanity.
Speaker:Yeah. We were undergrads in college and cards expanded.
Speaker:He was just the latest in a long line of games
Speaker:that me and a bunch of my friends from Highland park
Speaker:made together.
Speaker:We just have a long history of making improv games and
Speaker:drawing games and card games and all kinds of different activities
Speaker:to do.
Speaker:And usually they were pretty bad.
Speaker:So it was just something that would sort of fill an
Speaker:afternoon and then we'd be done with it.
Speaker:But cards was the first one where we made it for
Speaker:like a new year's party.
Speaker:And we woke up the next day and we were like,
Speaker:man, that game was really fun.
Speaker:We should probably keep working on that.
Speaker:So you were just doing it on the side for fun.
Speaker:And this is really helpful to our audience just to understand
Speaker:how a concept can then lead into a product.
Speaker:So you were doing this just for fun.
Speaker:Did you all go to the same college then too?
Speaker:Y'all have known each other since like elementary school,
Speaker:but we all went to different colleges.
Speaker:One of the main motivations,
Speaker:honestly, of working on cards against humanity was everyone was going
Speaker:to different schools living in different cities.
Speaker:And we wanted a project that would bring everyone together so
Speaker:that we would stay in touch and have a reason to
Speaker:have a meeting every so often and,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:have this thing that would continue to keep us in touch.
Speaker:And it's been incredibly successful at that.
Speaker:Like these are the,
Speaker:all of these guys are still my best friends.
Speaker:We have one business meeting a week for cards against humanity,
Speaker:but we've had that meeting on Monday nights for six years
Speaker:on interrupted.
Speaker:Oh, Wow.
Speaker:So you see,
Speaker:after this new year's night that this is something that was
Speaker:really fun.
Speaker:Maybe this can turn into something bigger.
Speaker:What are your next steps?
Speaker:What did you start doing to build this actually into a
Speaker:real physical game that people could buy?
Speaker:We never anticipated that it would be something that people could
Speaker:buy or be a physical game.
Speaker:We just thought it was funny and it made us laugh.
Speaker:And so we posted it for free online.
Speaker:So, I mean,
Speaker:there was even an intermediate steps of like,
Speaker:we all brought it back to college with us and our
Speaker:college friends liked it.
Speaker:And you know,
Speaker:we would get back together and be like,
Speaker:man, this game that we're playing people really like it.
Speaker:So Ben and I got together and just made a website
Speaker:and we bought like cards against humanity.com
Speaker:and put the game up as a free PDF.
Speaker:We just posted on different,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:whatever forums or wherever we were hanging out online.
Speaker:And we'd be like,
Speaker:Hey, here's the thing we made.
Speaker:Maybe you guys will think it's funny.
Speaker:So there was never any intention to sell it or produce
Speaker:it in any way or have a company or anything of
Speaker:that. But indirectly little,
Speaker:did you know you were testing the concept,
Speaker:you were seeing that there was a lot of receptivity to
Speaker:it. People were enjoying it.
Speaker:And then at what point then did it turn to wait,
Speaker:maybe we should be doing something more with this.
Speaker:So we had an email form on the website so people
Speaker:could send us their card ideas or tell us what they
Speaker:thought. And one of the most frequent messages that we got
Speaker:was people would say,
Speaker:Hey, I really want to play this thing.
Speaker:Or I heard a good thing about this game.
Speaker:I want to check it out,
Speaker:but I don't want to print it out myself and cut
Speaker:all the cards out.
Speaker:Would you just print it and cut it for me?
Speaker:And at that point,
Speaker:that was where we started.
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:I don't know,
Speaker:maybe a couple of hundred of those messages.
Speaker:And then we were like,
Speaker:this might be worth doing.
Speaker:And we had always imagined it,
Speaker:I think as like a one-time printing,
Speaker:like something that we would do once for all the people
Speaker:that had signed up.
Speaker:And that would sort of put an end to the project,
Speaker:but it didn't go that way.
Speaker:Obviously this was around 2010 and I had just come off
Speaker:of the 2008 Obama campaign.
Speaker:I took some time off of college to work on the
Speaker:campaign. And as a designer on the campaign and the design
Speaker:director of the Obama campaign in 2008,
Speaker:this guy,
Speaker:Scott Thomas was a mentor to me and someone I really
Speaker:look up to at a time when I don't think a
Speaker:lot of people appreciated how important the design of the Obama
Speaker:campaign was and how extensive the work was.
Speaker:He had made this book called designing Obama.
Speaker:That was sort of an art book showing the process of
Speaker:everything that got made and the fan art and the whole
Speaker:Obama movement as a visual identity.
Speaker:And he made this thing that it was literally the most
Speaker:important book in the world.
Speaker:To me,
Speaker:I would do anything to have this book.
Speaker:It was the thing that was the most important to me
Speaker:in my life,
Speaker:but there was like no market for it,
Speaker:right? No one is trying to buy a coffee table,
Speaker:book of the style guide of,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:Obama for America and the sort of nerdy inside baseball information
Speaker:about like the fonts that we used.
Speaker:He knew that he guys who started this website Kickstarter,
Speaker:which is the first crowdfunding site and Scott put the book
Speaker:up on Kickstarter.
Speaker:And it was pretty amazing that this niche book that like
Speaker:really was appealed to like me and a few thousand other
Speaker:people, it found this fan,
Speaker:following people could say how much they loved it.
Speaker:And most importantly,
Speaker:they could put their money into it so they could put,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:I don't remember what it was,
Speaker:but like 50 bucks on and get a copy of the
Speaker:book. And then Scott was able to produce it to this
Speaker:day. It's one of the most beautiful art books that's ever
Speaker:been made.
Speaker:It's, it's an incredible piece of work.
Speaker:So I saw from Scott's Kickstarter,
Speaker:I was like,
Speaker:this is an amazing tool because it gives you a couple
Speaker:of things.
Speaker:It lets you take a really niche product that most people
Speaker:won't like and connect with an audience that's willing to pay
Speaker:for it.
Speaker:And more importantly than that,
Speaker:it puts you in total creative control.
Speaker:So nobody can say no.
Speaker:So like the other thing I learned from Scott was we
Speaker:were constantly plagued on the Obama campaign by that deep blue.
Speaker:I don't know if you remember,
Speaker:there was like a deep,
Speaker:like a Royal blue color that was the primary brand color
Speaker:for the 2008 campaign.
Speaker:And it's a notoriously difficult color to print when you print
Speaker:it using process colors,
Speaker:it comes out as a Brown.
Speaker:You could never predict on your home printer for example.
Speaker:And so it was a really striking color.
Speaker:You don't see it all that often in the world because
Speaker:it's so hard to work with.
Speaker:But also it meant that most of the time when people
Speaker:were using it on the campaign,
Speaker:it was wrong and it constantly plagued us,
Speaker:drove us insane.
Speaker:So when Scott was doing the book,
Speaker:he decided he wanted to bind the book in a fabric.
Speaker:That was the correct color of Royal blue.
Speaker:And there was no one in the market who made that
Speaker:fabric. So he did a backer update in his Kickstarter one
Speaker:day and he said,
Speaker:I'm flying to Japan to go to a silk factory.
Speaker:And they're going to make the silk binding for the book,
Speaker:just for the book,
Speaker:with the exact shade of blue,
Speaker:that's the official brand color for the Obama campaign.
Speaker:And I'm going to go there myself to supervise to make
Speaker:sure that the color is correct.
Speaker:And I was like,
Speaker:that's no publisher would let him do that.
Speaker:No one who is investing in this book would say that
Speaker:that makes financial sense or that that's a good decision.
Speaker:But like,
Speaker:of course that's the whole point of the book.
Speaker:That's why the book is good is because the book is
Speaker:the art object that exemplifies principles of the campaign design.
Speaker:So that was the other piece of Kickstarter that blew my
Speaker:mind was I was like,
Speaker:well, this puts you in the driver's seat creatively.
Speaker:Like nobody can tell,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:you're able to creatively express this project in the most authentic
Speaker:way and there's not any,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:no suit or business person or producers going to come in
Speaker:and say,
Speaker:Oh, you have to save a nickel here,
Speaker:a nickel there and compromise the idea.
Speaker:So I had just seen Scott do that.
Speaker:And that's where my head was as we were getting these
Speaker:emails of people saying,
Speaker:Oh, we really want to play cards and we're going like,
Speaker:well, this is games,
Speaker:never going to get a publisher.
Speaker:Like no one's ever going to put it's too crazy for,
Speaker:for any sort of like mass market audience.
Speaker:But maybe Kickstarter's the tool where we can connect with the
Speaker:audience and not have to creatively compromise it or give up
Speaker:ownership too much.
Speaker:Kickstarter was just to put it.
Speaker:It was just a first printing.
Speaker:So it was to take the game that we,
Speaker:that was already done and,
Speaker:and free online and just print it out for people.
Speaker:Got it.
Speaker:And so then,
Speaker:as I recall,
Speaker:because you'd only print it up when you finally got there
Speaker:to the point of printing,
Speaker:a limited amount,
Speaker:people were trying to buy this on eBay and such for
Speaker:the couple hundred dollars,
Speaker:And this was never any part of a strategy or anything.
Speaker:We just,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:like I said,
Speaker:when we did the Kickstarter,
Speaker:we were like,
Speaker:well, that'll put this to bed,
Speaker:we'll print it out for people and we'll do a printing.
Speaker:We never,
Speaker:again, there was never any intention of this being a business
Speaker:like, well,
Speaker:we didn't even plan a printed on playing cards.
Speaker:Like it was originally going to be printed by like a
Speaker:local printer in Chicago on business cards,
Speaker:because it was much cheaper.
Speaker:And I knew how to do it from working on campaigns.
Speaker:I knew specialty printers.
Speaker:And after the Kickstarter,
Speaker:there was just continued demand.
Speaker:Like we just could not make enough of these things for
Speaker:people. And for most of the history of cards against humanity,
Speaker:we've been sold out.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:it's been very difficult to get the game.
Speaker:So people have had to go to the website,
Speaker:join a mailing list,
Speaker:wait for the new printing to come out and then like
Speaker:jump on Amazon or jump on our website really quickly to
Speaker:get a copy.
Speaker:So demand because you had unintentionally created scarcity was huge.
Speaker:The one thing if biz listeners that I want to make
Speaker:mention of,
Speaker:and max is demonstrating this perfectly here is how one thing,
Speaker:when you start with one thing now,
Speaker:they weren't even thinking of cards against humanity as a business.
Speaker:But one step leads to another leads to another.
Speaker:I talk about this all the time.
Speaker:They recognize different areas like Kickstarter might be something let's just
Speaker:print this up and get it out.
Speaker:Then there's the demand and it keeps going and it keeps
Speaker:going. Max,
Speaker:give us kind of an overall summary of where cards of
Speaker:humanity is today.
Speaker:Oh, I don't even know where to begin with that.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:we have an office and people work there every day and
Speaker:I don't know,
Speaker:we write jokes and people buy the jokes.
Speaker:The business model is we sell a game for money and
Speaker:then we spend less than we make.
Speaker:And it's,
Speaker:it's going well.
Speaker:Like we'll be able to work on this for a long
Speaker:time. Perfect summary of the right business plan,
Speaker:sell something and then be making more than you're putting into
Speaker:producing it.
Speaker:Of course.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:So let's move on to black box.
Speaker:I understand that black box kind of came as an extension
Speaker:of a need that you found from cards against humanity in
Speaker:terms of being able to ship quickly.
Speaker:Yeah. So a lot of this comes from our ignorance and
Speaker:not really knowing how things were done when we started cards
Speaker:against humanity.
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:we didn't completely understand all the resources that were out there
Speaker:and how you're,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:quote unquote,
Speaker:like supposed to ship a product when you make something.
Speaker:And part of the fun of cars is we just figured
Speaker:all that stuff out for ourselves.
Speaker:We liked the challenge we liked figuring out like,
Speaker:okay, we're going to print our game in China.
Speaker:Like how do we get it to the U S and
Speaker:once it's in the U S how do we get it
Speaker:on a truck?
Speaker:And how do we get it to the warehouse?
Speaker:And how is the customer going to buy it?
Speaker:We liked working through that in a kind of a systematic
Speaker:way. The main place that cards is sold is we use
Speaker:FBA fulfillment by Amazon.
Speaker:So we own the inventory.
Speaker:It's our product,
Speaker:but it's sold on Amazon.
Speaker:So you can find if you just search Amazon for cards
Speaker:against humanity,
Speaker:we show up and you can buy it.
Speaker:But what's nice is you're buying it directly from us and
Speaker:Amazon is shipping it.
Speaker:So we don't have to answer any customer service emails.
Speaker:We don't have to put anything in any boxes.
Speaker:We don't have to pay for any postage.
Speaker:The issue with this is since the company started to get
Speaker:bigger and bigger,
Speaker:and we had employees and it was becoming a bigger part
Speaker:of our lives.
Speaker:We were like,
Speaker:we don't necessarily want a 100% dependency on Amazon.
Speaker:That's a pretty crazy core competency of our company to completely
Speaker:outsource to Amazon.
Speaker:And Amazon is not known for their consistent policies and loyalty
Speaker:to their Right.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:if something changes that you don't like,
Speaker:you could be in big trouble,
Speaker:There's nothing you can do.
Speaker:Right. So changes on Amazon every day.
Speaker:And it's like,
Speaker:well, there's not even a phone number to call.
Speaker:It's just like,
Speaker:Oh, okay,
Speaker:well that's my life now,
Speaker:Amazon changed it.
Speaker:So we were like,
Speaker:well, this is a pretty bad total dependency for our company.
Speaker:That if Amazon kicked us off the platform,
Speaker:we'd just go out of business.
Speaker:It became a pretty high priority for us.
Speaker:We were like,
Speaker:all right,
Speaker:we got to figure out how to also sell stuff on
Speaker:our website.
Speaker:So if something ever happens with Amazon,
Speaker:we have a solution.
Speaker:We didn't want to operate a warehouse that seemed like a
Speaker:really bad business.
Speaker:So we figured out how to use commercial warehouses and build
Speaker:software that communicated to the warehouse and sent the orders.
Speaker:And we built this whole network.
Speaker:And we sort of did it as a challenge because we
Speaker:wanted to learn how it all worked and do it ourselves.
Speaker:But it turns out I think that we built it in
Speaker:a much better way than exists in the market.
Speaker:Currently. Now we've spun that off as its own company called
Speaker:black box.
Speaker:It's just a service that,
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:we use it for cards,
Speaker:but it's open to anyone else who is an independent artist
Speaker:who makes a product and wants to sell it to their
Speaker:customers. So,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:the name black box has meant to communicate that it's pretty
Speaker:opaque. You don't have to worry about a lot of the
Speaker:details. You send us your products,
Speaker:and then we send you a button and you put the
Speaker:button on your own website and the customer uses the button
Speaker:to buy your product.
Speaker:And then we handle everything else.
Speaker:We ship it.
Speaker:We do the customer service.
Speaker:We pay your sales tax.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:all those little details of doing online commerce,
Speaker:our philosophy with black boxes,
Speaker:that artists shouldn't have to worry about.
Speaker:That stuff you shouldn't be worrying about.
Speaker:What's the best postage rate or what kind of labels should
Speaker:you buy,
Speaker:or how to deal with an angry customer.
Speaker:When to issue someone,
Speaker:a refund,
Speaker:as we say,
Speaker:a cards that's like a buy,
Speaker:not to make decision fabulous,
Speaker:because as artists,
Speaker:People want to be focusing on their art,
Speaker:not on all that logistic behind the scenes type stuff,
Speaker:is there a minimum of product that goes through and is
Speaker:accepted when you want to sign up for Blackbox?
Speaker:The company is very young and we're sort of figuring out
Speaker:all these policies as we go.
Speaker:So there's not a number in place right now.
Speaker:We've figured out with people on a case by case basis,
Speaker:if it financially makes sense for them to use black box
Speaker:based on the costs.
Speaker:But I would say like,
Speaker:if someone is making one of something,
Speaker:so like,
Speaker:if you have an Etsy shop where you're selling a handmade
Speaker:thing, Blackbox is not a good solution because the cost and
Speaker:time to integrate each product and the black box would not
Speaker:be worth it for something where there's only one of them.
Speaker:If you're making a thousand of something,
Speaker:that's certainly enough.
Speaker:So I would say the number is somewhere in between one
Speaker:and 1000.
Speaker:Okay, perfect.
Speaker:I'm guessing a website for that is black box.com.
Speaker:Is that right?
Speaker:No. It's black box dot.
Speaker:Cool. Ooh,
Speaker:black box dot.
Speaker:Cool. So gift is listeners.
Speaker:If you're interested in learning more about that,
Speaker:jump over to that website and see what that's all about.
Speaker:Max. I know you do nothing traditional,
Speaker:which has already been demonstrated as we've been talking.
Speaker:Why is the black box blue?
Speaker:Or we thought it was funny,
Speaker:that's it?
Speaker:Yeah. Well,
Speaker:so the other thing is on cards.
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:now I'm very lucky.
Speaker:We have an unbelievable design team.
Speaker:It's a,
Speaker:it's actually like for me,
Speaker:it's like one of the greatest guilty pleasures of getting to
Speaker:work on cards is I've gotten to hire designers that are
Speaker:much better than myself and learn from them.
Speaker:It's cool for me as a designer to get to work
Speaker:with them and improve my own skill,
Speaker:but also to see things and opportunities and possibilities that never
Speaker:would've occurred to me.
Speaker:So the blue Blackbox brand was put together by our design
Speaker:team and it's something I would have,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:like I said,
Speaker:I don't like working with color for me that comes out
Speaker:of not having gone to art school.
Speaker:Like I don't really understand color theory.
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:It's just a comfort level thing,
Speaker:but it's been a fun experience.
Speaker:And so the cards brand is all it's completely black and
Speaker:white. There's no color in it,
Speaker:but for black box,
Speaker:like it's full of color.
Speaker:And the blue was,
Speaker:it was just really lively and exciting and different than everything
Speaker:else we did.
Speaker:And it was an opportunity for me to like push myself
Speaker:and get to learn from all this amazing design team that
Speaker:we have some new skills,
Speaker:some new tricks,
Speaker:Perfect. And give biz listeners.
Speaker:Remember you don't have to know everything.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:max is talking about how he reached out to other people
Speaker:because that's a way for him to learn as well.
Speaker:But as an entrepreneur,
Speaker:you don't have to know everything nor can you,
Speaker:so one of the reasons to reach out and have other
Speaker:people help you with your business is what max is describing.
Speaker:The other is so that you can stay with your product
Speaker:or with your art.
Speaker:Particularly if you're an artist,
Speaker:you can continue doing what you love and then have other
Speaker:people come in and take care of some of the business
Speaker:end. All right.
Speaker:I have to ask you and understand what is behind some
Speaker:of these crazy stunts.
Speaker:You're doing talk a little bit about the digging the hole
Speaker:to nowhere.
Speaker:Sure. So cards has a long history now of doing funny
Speaker:things on black Friday,
Speaker:sort of stunts on,
Speaker:on black Friday,
Speaker:mainly as a protest of black Friday.
Speaker:We really hate black Friday,
Speaker:but we're sort of forced,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:if you're,
Speaker:if you're in the retail business and you're making toys and
Speaker:games, yeah.
Speaker:The holidays are to put it lightly.
Speaker:It's an important time of the year and you kind of
Speaker:have to sell stuff then,
Speaker:but we truly hate having to compete on black Friday for
Speaker:attention with everyone else.
Speaker:And it's,
Speaker:it's really,
Speaker:it's a disgusting holiday.
Speaker:Like if you've ever stopped to think about what black Friday
Speaker:is, it comes after this day where you're supposed to spend
Speaker:time with your family and be thankful for the things that
Speaker:you have.
Speaker:And then there's this repulsive orgy of like people elbowing each
Speaker:other in the face to get $10 off of TV at
Speaker:best buy.
Speaker:It's really shameful and disgusting.
Speaker:Some that comes from Americans with black Friday is crazy.
Speaker:I totally,
Speaker:yeah. I agree with you also,
Speaker:like how dumb are people who are these deals for obvious,
Speaker:like, listen,
Speaker:that's my it's not losing money.
Speaker:Like it's meant to get you in the store.
Speaker:So you spend money.
Speaker:I don't understand the whole logic of these like coupons and
Speaker:deals and doorbusters.
Speaker:You understand you're part of their strategy.
Speaker:They're making money on you.
Speaker:Anyway, the whole thing is insane to me.
Speaker:So we just resent like having to participate in it.
Speaker:But we have to sort of do something to get attention
Speaker:on black Friday.
Speaker:So these black Friday pranks just come out of our,
Speaker:it's sort of like our protest of black Friday.
Speaker:And sometimes it works for,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:it gets some attention for cards.
Speaker:Sometimes it doesn't work that well.
Speaker:The first one we did,
Speaker:we did like a special sale work cards against humanity was
Speaker:$5 more.
Speaker:It was cards against humanity is black Friday,
Speaker:one day only $5 more sale.
Speaker:And everything in our store costs $5 more on black Friday
Speaker:only what happened to the sales.
Speaker:And they went way up,
Speaker:people loved it.
Speaker:And then the next day it was hilarious.
Speaker:People were complaining.
Speaker:They were like,
Speaker:I can't believe I missed it.
Speaker:I wanted to spend $5.
Speaker:That is crazy in a way you got it.
Speaker:How did you think of this?
Speaker:And I want to hear a couple of the other black
Speaker:Friday things,
Speaker:but from a creative standpoint,
Speaker:did you guys on your Monday night call brainstorm ideas or,
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:cause you have the craziest most fun,
Speaker:interesting ideas.
Speaker:How do they come to be?
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:the honest answer is it's a lot of hard work,
Speaker:so there's eight of us who make cards against humanity together.
Speaker:And we discovered early on that we like working together in
Speaker:sort of short bursts of intense energy.
Speaker:And that came about just sort of organically because we would
Speaker:all come home from college and,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:work in our parents' basement over like winter break from school.
Speaker:And then,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:we, we knew we had this deadline of like,
Speaker:we've got to go back to school so that week or
Speaker:whatever we had to work together,
Speaker:it had a kind of intensity to it that we really
Speaker:liked. And we all live in different cities.
Speaker:We're all over the country.
Speaker:So we do these retreats now about four times a year
Speaker:where we pick a city somewhere interesting.
Speaker:We try and go somewhere remote,
Speaker:not like in the middle of a city.
Speaker:And we get like an Airbnb and we go stay at
Speaker:a house for like a week.
Speaker:And then we have,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:whatever, five or seven days.
Speaker:And we have these projects,
Speaker:it's like,
Speaker:we got to get these projects done,
Speaker:but it's also all we're doing.
Speaker:We're very intensely working on these problems.
Speaker:So the first black Friday sale came out of one of
Speaker:these retreats.
Speaker:And you know,
Speaker:we were trying to figure out,
Speaker:we've got to do something for black Friday,
Speaker:but like we have a long standing policy that we'll never
Speaker:do any coupons or discounts or deals on cards against humanity.
Speaker:And to this day we never have,
Speaker:we decided early on the price of cards against humanity is
Speaker:$25 and it's worth $25 and it's never worth another price.
Speaker:Like it's always worth that price.
Speaker:So if we sometimes sold it for $23,
Speaker:then we felt like,
Speaker:well, that undercuts the belief that this is the value of
Speaker:it. So we just sort of planted our flag in the
Speaker:ground and we were like,
Speaker:that's what we're doing.
Speaker:So it made it really tricky.
Speaker:So we were like,
Speaker:well, what do we do on black stuff?
Speaker:We can't do a dealer,
Speaker:a discount.
Speaker:Like, what do you do on black Friday?
Speaker:So we came up with the idea of doing a coupon
Speaker:for 1 cent off and it was funny.
Speaker:It kind of made us laugh,
Speaker:but then we were like,
Speaker:yeah, it's still like a coupon.
Speaker:It's not a good one,
Speaker:but it's still a coupon though.
Speaker:It's still a deal.
Speaker:So then we,
Speaker:I don't know that just sort of,
Speaker:we, we just sort of went down that road and we
Speaker:were like,
Speaker:what's an even worse deal.
Speaker:And we're like,
Speaker:what if we charge More?
Speaker:And it worked,
Speaker:clearly it Worked.
Speaker:Yeah, it did really well.
Speaker:We got a lot of attention for it.
Speaker:The other thing I was gonna mention is just in terms
Speaker:of the creative process of this,
Speaker:we'll come up with 30 ideas and say no to 29
Speaker:of them.
Speaker:Like most of coming up with a funny idea or something
Speaker:surprising is not stopping at the first thing you come up
Speaker:with. That sounds plausible.
Speaker:And also nobody likes walking into a new problem where you
Speaker:don't know the solution.
Speaker:And then going through that,
Speaker:like dark night of the soul,
Speaker:where you have no idea what you're doing and there's no
Speaker:clear answer and you have no idea.
Speaker:If you're going to come out alive on the other end,
Speaker:it's horrifying and scary and uncomfortable and makes us nauseous.
Speaker:Like every time we sit down and do it,
Speaker:and we've been doing this for,
Speaker:at this point,
Speaker:almost a decade,
Speaker:working on the game and we go into the problem and
Speaker:we're like,
Speaker:okay, well we don't know what we're going to do,
Speaker:but here's what we're trying to accomplish.
Speaker:Let's talk about it for a couple hours.
Speaker:And the temptation is you get to the first idea.
Speaker:That sounds pretty good.
Speaker:It works,
Speaker:it solves a problem.
Speaker:And it's like,
Speaker:the relief is palpable.
Speaker:You're like,
Speaker:Oh my God,
Speaker:a solution we're done.
Speaker:And you have to not stop there.
Speaker:Then you have to go back into the darkness and be
Speaker:like, okay,
Speaker:we need to like rethink this.
Speaker:That solution's not good enough.
Speaker:We've got to keep going.
Speaker:Sometimes you do come back to that first solution,
Speaker:but usually we'll try to get 20 ideas on the table
Speaker:before we commit to anything.
Speaker:And sometimes some of those ideas are useful later.
Speaker:Sometimes we throw them all out.
Speaker:Sometimes we never solve the problem.
Speaker:And then we just don't do it.
Speaker:But to me,
Speaker:I think that's like the thing that's like emblematic of like
Speaker:the cards against humanity process.
Speaker:It's true of our writing too.
Speaker:Like for every card that makes it in the game,
Speaker:there's probably something on the order of 1000 to 5,000
Speaker:cards that don't make it into the game.
Speaker:No kidding.
Speaker:Yeah. That's a lot of writing,
Speaker:testing, arguing evaluation,
Speaker:and then you put that one idea in the game,
Speaker:but then when you play it,
Speaker:the cards that are,
Speaker:there are really special.
Speaker:They're one in a thousand ideas,
Speaker:they feel really sharp and funny to be Right now for
Speaker:a while.
Speaker:You were doing custom cards too.
Speaker:Are you still doing that?
Speaker:Tell me what you mean.
Speaker:One of my girlfriends has a card.
Speaker:It's either a card or a response.
Speaker:That's her name.
Speaker:Oh, Okay.
Speaker:So this was the thing we did.
Speaker:And it's like a subscription where you give us $10 and
Speaker:we just send you 12 mystery gifts for the 12 days
Speaker:of Christmas.
Speaker:Or we did like the eight days of Hanukkah last year,
Speaker:or what was that two years ago at this point.
Speaker:And one of the days that we did for one of
Speaker:these was we sent everyone a card with their name on
Speaker:it. Got it.
Speaker:But it was just a random gift that they got it.
Speaker:Wasn't like a product that anyone could buy Really interesting and
Speaker:really valuable information max,
Speaker:in terms of how you go and continue driving down,
Speaker:driving down,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:not stopping at the first idea to get to some of
Speaker:these crew really super creative things.
Speaker:And I would suggest now you guys are known for,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:it's like,
Speaker:what's the next thing that they're going to do.
Speaker:That's crazy,
Speaker:I guess.
Speaker:Yeah. The best thing to do,
Speaker:gift biz listeners,
Speaker:if you're interested in knowing a little bit more about digging
Speaker:a hole to nowhere or this other one,
Speaker:which I do want to get into for a second,
Speaker:but you can Google most likely these names and then the
Speaker:whole story will come up.
Speaker:If you're interested in hearing more max,
Speaker:give us just a little bit of the behind the scenes
Speaker:of how you came up with and why you did the
Speaker:Superbowl commercial first.
Speaker:Explain it.
Speaker:And then what was the purpose?
Speaker:Sure. So we are in a super commercial this year.
Speaker:That was just a picture of a potato.
Speaker:That's an advertisement.
Speaker:And then the next day we did a medium post that
Speaker:was got wire,
Speaker:Superbowl commercial failed,
Speaker:a medium post.
Speaker:And this came about because someone from Fox Chicago emailed us
Speaker:a rate sheet for the super bowl and it was pretty
Speaker:cheap. I think it was 50 grand or something like that.
Speaker:And we were like,
Speaker:Oh, for a media buy that scale that we do.
Speaker:Like that's actually a fairly good price.
Speaker:And we didn't really care that anyone sees the ad.
Speaker:We just want the publicity,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:after the super bowl,
Speaker:there's this whole cottage industry of the ad analysis.
Speaker:I'm sure you've seen this of like the 10 best Superbowl
Speaker:ads. So the winners and losers of the Superbowl,
Speaker:they're playing right into the strategies of all of these companies,
Speaker:but there's this huge after the fact analysis of all the
Speaker:advertising and the super bowl.
Speaker:And we were like,
Speaker:we could probably get into that for pretty cheap if we
Speaker:do this ad on Fox Chicago.
Speaker:So we bought an ad during the super bowl and we
Speaker:plan for it to be sort of bad and confusing.
Speaker:And then we're at a whole sort of satirical blog post
Speaker:about the mistakes we made and what we learned from it,
Speaker:which was also fun.
Speaker:It was also sort of a parody of the,
Speaker:all the,
Speaker:like, why,
Speaker:I don't know if this is as much of a thing
Speaker:in the gift business,
Speaker:but in startups,
Speaker:it's basically a genre at this point of the why my
Speaker:startup failed posts.
Speaker:And these posts are hilarious because they're people who have failed
Speaker:because they didn't know what they were doing.
Speaker:And they have no humility from the experience they come out,
Speaker:the other end of failure and then they presumed lecture everyone
Speaker:again. And they're like,
Speaker:no, no.
Speaker:Now I know exactly what I'm talking about.
Speaker:And here's the 10 lessons that you can learn from how
Speaker:my company failed.
Speaker:That's like,
Speaker:wow, I actually take a break for a minute.
Speaker:You know what also,
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:this is all about attention too.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:the interesting thing that you're just talking about now is you
Speaker:are doing this for a purpose,
Speaker:obviously to get the attention afterwards and it's all about attention
Speaker:and the way you're doing it is just challenging the systems
Speaker:and doing something that is notable that's worth talking about.
Speaker:And then you're following up and doing all the analysis,
Speaker:like with the medium post and all that.
Speaker:Yeah. I mean,
Speaker:that's the business of cards.
Speaker:That's how found out about cards is just people talking about
Speaker:it. Honestly,
Speaker:I don't actually believe that advertising really works.
Speaker:Like I don't think it's actually worth anyone's time or money.
Speaker:I don't think anyone really pays attention to advertising.
Speaker:I don't actually think it sells products.
Speaker:Okay. Yes.
Speaker:Gift biz listeners.
Speaker:You heard that,
Speaker:right? Max does not think you need advertising to sell product.
Speaker:We're going to take a break right here and get back
Speaker:to this conversation in just one minute.
Speaker:But before we do,
Speaker:I have a question for you.
Speaker:Do you know that you should be out networking,
Speaker:but you just can't get yourself to do it because it's
Speaker:scary. Are you afraid that you might walk into the room
Speaker:and not know anybody or that you're going to freeze?
Speaker:When you get up to do that infamous elevator speech,
Speaker:where you talk about yourself and your business,
Speaker:while I'm here to tell you that it doesn't need to
Speaker:be scary.
Speaker:If you know what to do to help you with this,
Speaker:I would like to offer you a coffee chat for the
Speaker:price of buying me a cup of coffee.
Speaker:We can sit down through an online video and I'll tell
Speaker:you everything that I know about networking and how I have
Speaker:personally built two businesses,
Speaker:primarily through networking to learn more about this opportunity.
Speaker:Just go over to Bitly forward slash network Ninja.
Speaker:That's B I T dot L Y forward slash network Ninja.
Speaker:Now we're going to get back to the show,
Speaker:but first a caution max has some very interesting thoughts that
Speaker:are a lot different than what we've ever talked about here
Speaker:on the show.
Speaker:He also definitely has his own political opinion.
Speaker:Although gift biz unwrap does not support one position or another
Speaker:politically. I elected to keep some of this in here because
Speaker:the underlying points that he shares are really valuable.
Speaker:We're going to pick pack up here as max is talking
Speaker:about his thoughts on advertising.
Speaker:Yeah, someone who's needs the internet to work for like my
Speaker:career and my happiness.
Speaker:It actually greatly concerns me the sort of current ad tech
Speaker:bubble that we're living in because people don't understand how much
Speaker:advertising doesn't work.
Speaker:If you're purchasing Facebook ads or purchasing Twitter ads or purchasing
Speaker:Google ads or any,
Speaker:whatever, any of this stuff,
Speaker:it doesn't work like it does not convert.
Speaker:It doesn't do.
Speaker:It does not.
Speaker:Ultimately it's not worth your time and money.
Speaker:The only thing that works and convinces people is people talking
Speaker:about it.
Speaker:You have to do something good enough.
Speaker:That's worth being talked about.
Speaker:And everybody intuitively knows the kind of things that people talk
Speaker:about when you go to a dinner party and people are
Speaker:like, so what's new.
Speaker:And you're going to tell them some story of what's happening
Speaker:in the world.
Speaker:People sit down and they go,
Speaker:Oh my God,
Speaker:did you hear the crazy shit that Donald Trump just did?
Speaker:Or they go,
Speaker:I saw the craziest product online or whatever.
Speaker:And you just have to think to yourself,
Speaker:well, what can you do that is interesting enough or meaningful
Speaker:enough that people would mention it in that setting.
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:when they're standing around the water cooler at work or in
Speaker:the car with their friend,
Speaker:how do you do something that's being talked about?
Speaker:We put a hundred percent of our energy into doing something
Speaker:worth, being talked about and 0% of our energy into buying
Speaker:ads. In fact,
Speaker:other than for the purposes of the joke,
Speaker:like the Superbowl ad cards against humanity has never purchased advertising.
Speaker:We've never spent any money on advertising in the history of
Speaker:our company.
Speaker:And I can see why,
Speaker:because exactly what you're saying,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:doing something that's worth being talked about when people are at
Speaker:the dinner parties to use a similar scenario,
Speaker:they want to have good information to share.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:that puts the attention on them.
Speaker:It spreads the word about you.
Speaker:And that's a great filter and give biz listeners,
Speaker:think about that.
Speaker:What are you doing that is making you stand out and
Speaker:be different?
Speaker:And a lot of the things you're doing Macs don't even
Speaker:relate to the game at all.
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:it's interesting now that I think about it,
Speaker:I hate to give it up to the guy,
Speaker:but Donald Trump is so good at this.
Speaker:He says these crazy things,
Speaker:but he does it for attention.
Speaker:He does it because you know that we'll talk about it.
Speaker:They don't want to give anything up to that guy for
Speaker:doing good job,
Speaker:but it's an incredibly effective strategy.
Speaker:It again,
Speaker:proves the point that you're just talking about is giving people
Speaker:something to talk about.
Speaker:They're not going to create something themselves as a business.
Speaker:You have to present that to the world.
Speaker:That's absolutely right.
Speaker:You've got to have some story to tell,
Speaker:like I said,
Speaker:in cards,
Speaker:we come up with a thousand ideas and say no to
Speaker:999 of them.
Speaker:And when we're evaluating an idea and we're like,
Speaker:should we do this idea or not like one of the
Speaker:questions we say is why would people talk about this?
Speaker:Why would people tell their friends about it?
Speaker:Why would anyone post on Twitter about that?
Speaker:And if there's not a sort of a clear answer,
Speaker:if we're like,
Speaker:Oh yeah,
Speaker:like I,
Speaker:it would actually be pretty hard for me to see people
Speaker:posting on Twitter about that.
Speaker:We don't do it because that's not a good use of
Speaker:our time.
Speaker:Also. I'll say sometimes the reason people post about something or
Speaker:talk about something is because they don't like it or they're
Speaker:mad and that's okay.
Speaker:Anything that's worth being talked about,
Speaker:anything that's worth doing in life,
Speaker:anything that's meaningful at all.
Speaker:Some people will hate.
Speaker:That's why it's meaningful.
Speaker:You're putting yourself out there.
Speaker:And you're saying,
Speaker:this is what I believe about the world.
Speaker:And this is how it is.
Speaker:When we do jokes about black Friday,
Speaker:it pisses people off.
Speaker:They say,
Speaker:why aren't these people playing by the rules?
Speaker:Why are they being disrespectful during this important day for the
Speaker:U S economy and for commerce?
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:if people get mad at us,
Speaker:but we don't care.
Speaker:It's just not that they're not our customers.
Speaker:They don't have to like us.
Speaker:It's okay to risk.
Speaker:Disapproval. The thing is the only things you do are the
Speaker:things that everybody likes will,
Speaker:no one will care about them.
Speaker:You're then vanilla.
Speaker:Exactly. If it's everything to everyone,
Speaker:then it means nothing to anyone.
Speaker:I absolutely agree with you.
Speaker:They're really,
Speaker:really great information,
Speaker:max. I really appreciate all of that and the direction you've
Speaker:taken this.
Speaker:I want to get a little bit more information from you
Speaker:that could be helpful to our listeners,
Speaker:right? As we're winding down here,
Speaker:you have your Monday night calls with your original eight.
Speaker:You have a team now I think you're downtown Chicago.
Speaker:So you've got,
Speaker:I don't know how many people you have working for you
Speaker:at this point.
Speaker:So you're working a number of different angles all the time.
Speaker:Is there something that you use like a tool or some
Speaker:way that you keep everything organized or communicate some type of
Speaker:thing that you can share with our listeners that helped you
Speaker:keep everything together?
Speaker:Sure. Do you mean me personally or the whole team?
Speaker:Either one,
Speaker:whichever you think is the most valuable.
Speaker:Sure. So the company On Slack,
Speaker:I dunno if you're familiar with Slack,
Speaker:but it's pretty,
Speaker:yeah, it's pretty,
Speaker:pretty big in the,
Speaker:in the tech world.
Speaker:And Slack is kind of just like a chat room that
Speaker:your whole community can go in and there's a free version
Speaker:of it.
Speaker:That's fine for anyone.
Speaker:And you know,
Speaker:until you need to basically do like records or compliance and
Speaker:you're making money and then you should buy it.
Speaker:Slack is great.
Speaker:Like if you have a small team and you need to
Speaker:stay in touch with each other,
Speaker:it's just a chat room.
Speaker:It goes on your computer,
Speaker:your phone,
Speaker:we use Slack a lot.
Speaker:One thing that's important is we don't make important decisions in
Speaker:Slack. Like Slack is really just for little,
Speaker:check-in staying in touch,
Speaker:like sharing links,
Speaker:whatever. During the day,
Speaker:Slack is a really bad repository of information because it just
Speaker:scrolls, you know,
Speaker:we're in our co-working space and we have like a hundred
Speaker:people in the Slack.
Speaker:And it's just like,
Speaker:if you go in the main room of flack at the
Speaker:moment, it's just like immediately gone,
Speaker:whatever you type.
Speaker:So it's a horrible place for retaining information.
Speaker:So I definitely recommend that people use some sort of form
Speaker:of to-do list.
Speaker:That's basically the most general term I can come up with
Speaker:for it.
Speaker:That's not Slack and not your email.
Speaker:A lot of this I've learned from my friend,
Speaker:Merl, man,
Speaker:who's written and spoken about this a lot,
Speaker:but it really was life-changing for me,
Speaker:it's like kind of the only way I can keep my
Speaker:head on.
Speaker:But you know,
Speaker:most people inadvertently use their email inbox or their Slack as
Speaker:their to-do list.
Speaker:And what I mean by that is when you don't know
Speaker:what to do,
Speaker:if you have some free time or you have a break
Speaker:in your day,
Speaker:you open up your email,
Speaker:you open up Slack and then you do whatever.
Speaker:The top thing in there is.
Speaker:Well, this is no way to live a life.
Speaker:If I said this to you,
Speaker:if I said,
Speaker:would you accept an office where you sat in the middle
Speaker:of the office?
Speaker:And at any point during the day,
Speaker:it literally anybody who knows who's ever met you or knows
Speaker:you could come up behind you and tap you on the
Speaker:shoulder and tell you to do something for them.
Speaker:Would you like working like that?
Speaker:Every single person would say it would be unbearable,
Speaker:but that's what you're doing.
Speaker:When you work out of your email list,
Speaker:when you open up your email and you do the top
Speaker:thing in your email,
Speaker:literally any single person,
Speaker:any more on can send you something in your email,
Speaker:just because it's in the top of your inbox or they're
Speaker:complaining the most,
Speaker:does not mean it's the most important thing in your day
Speaker:or what you should be spending your time on.
Speaker:Going through my email for me is like,
Speaker:it's not something I do.
Speaker:Ideally like throughout the day,
Speaker:I actually have a calendar appointment.
Speaker:I make time at,
Speaker:I sit down for an hour or two every day I
Speaker:do my emails and I just like process the inbox.
Speaker:I take everything in the inbox and I turn it into
Speaker:to do items.
Speaker:So if it's quick,
Speaker:if I can do it in five seconds,
Speaker:I reply back to someone with like a quick reply.
Speaker:But if it's a lot of work,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:solve this problem for someone or write this memo or do
Speaker:with this thing,
Speaker:it goes on my to-do list.
Speaker:And then every morning when I wake up,
Speaker:I can look at my to-do list and I can ask
Speaker:myself, what am I going to do with my wife today?
Speaker:I can take a holistic look at all of the projects
Speaker:that I need to do.
Speaker:I sort of exercise some control of my life and have
Speaker:some priority and say,
Speaker:okay, I know this person is yelling at me the most,
Speaker:but actually the most important thing is this.
Speaker:And if you're just working out a Slack or your email,
Speaker:you'd never realize that.
Speaker:And then in terms of like specific tools,
Speaker:like I'm a hundred percent Mac ecosystem,
Speaker:there's very powerful and somewhat intimidating tool on Mac called OmniFocus
Speaker:OmniFocus is based on the getting things done system.
Speaker:But it's just a very robust to do List.
Speaker:Is that what you're using for your to do's?
Speaker:I use it for my,
Speaker:to do's and my whole life is an OmniFocus.
Speaker:I have just have too many things going on to hold
Speaker:it in my head.
Speaker:So whenever anything comes into my head,
Speaker:I immediately put it in OmniFocus and then I have different
Speaker:context projects,
Speaker:ways to file things and focused so I can decide every
Speaker:day what's urgent.
Speaker:What do I need to do today?
Speaker:Highly recommend people check out Omni focus.
Speaker:If you sort of have the business case for it.
Speaker:In addition to that,
Speaker:there's David Sparks at max barky has a great field guide
Speaker:that will teach you how to set up OmniFocus and show
Speaker:you how to use it.
Speaker:It's like a page,
Speaker:a video tutorial,
Speaker:but that was how I learned how to use it.
Speaker:That's probably my most important app across all of my technology
Speaker:that I use.
Speaker:And where do you go for business advice?
Speaker:What is business advice?
Speaker:Well, it's something that you are going to try and contradict
Speaker:with your black Friday or something like that,
Speaker:but you know,
Speaker:is there someone you look up to in the business world
Speaker:or you listen to,
Speaker:or any books that you've read or anything like that,
Speaker:where you're getting additional information that you might contest,
Speaker:but, Well,
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I have,
Speaker:so I've read some business books and stuff.
Speaker:Okay. So there's basically like two books that I've read that
Speaker:I think were worth my time or interesting or honest in
Speaker:any way,
Speaker:the co-founder of base camp,
Speaker:Jason freed wrote this book rework that was really valuable to
Speaker:me. It's a lot of,
Speaker:sort of counter-intuitive but interesting business advice.
Speaker:So one thing that was in there,
Speaker:he talks about stopping to ask what's the ideal size of
Speaker:your company before you get too big.
Speaker:And that was a really important thing for us to understand
Speaker:as we were growing cards against humanity.
Speaker:And the other book is ed Catmull's book creativity,
Speaker:Inc, about how Pixar works,
Speaker:their history and what their creative processes.
Speaker:And I thought that was very helpful.
Speaker:Listen, nobody knows anything about business.
Speaker:Everyone is doing poorly.
Speaker:So don't listen to anyone like if they're so smart,
Speaker:why isn't their company doing so well,
Speaker:just figure it out yourself and make the decisions contextually based
Speaker:on what serves the artistic ends of your work.
Speaker:It's not rocket science And everyone's different too.
Speaker:So you can't just take one space and say that that
Speaker:is actually cookie cutter going to go and work for you.
Speaker:That's awesome.
Speaker:Noxious genre of business writing or whatever is anyone who succeeded
Speaker:in business basically got lucky.
Speaker:That's the truth of that.
Speaker:Nobody knows what they're doing.
Speaker:If they were so smart,
Speaker:they'd keep doing it over and over,
Speaker:but they can't because they're not that smart.
Speaker:And they don't know what they're doing.
Speaker:You're in the right place at the right time.
Speaker:That's what happened with cards.
Speaker:Like we got extraordinarily lucky,
Speaker:but then these like business guys,
Speaker:they make some money and they're like,
Speaker:I am a genius because I made the money.
Speaker:And the secret to my success is that every morning I
Speaker:wake up and have a bowl of oatmeal.
Speaker:And if you wake up and have a bowl of oatmeal,
Speaker:U2 will build a successful business.
Speaker:Like you have no idea why you showed up.
Speaker:Usually when people are successful at business is inherited a bunch
Speaker:of money or someone gave them some opportunity.
Speaker:I love the oatmeal analogy.
Speaker:That's perfect.
Speaker:No, and I don't.
Speaker:And that's applies to me to listen.
Speaker:All the co-creators of cards against humanity were extraordinarily privileged.
Speaker:We all went to great public schools.
Speaker:We all got a college education for me personally,
Speaker:what allowed me to work in cards against humanity?
Speaker:The true business advice of cards against humanity is that I
Speaker:was working on political campaigns and going broke.
Speaker:So there were two things.
Speaker:It was one Obamacare passed in 2009.
Speaker:And I was able to stay on my parents' health care
Speaker:for just a couple extra months.
Speaker:And that was what I needed to get a company off
Speaker:the ground.
Speaker:And to my parents,
Speaker:like gave me money so I could buy groceries.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:it wasn't,
Speaker:I didn't get like a business loan,
Speaker:but I got,
Speaker:I had that network where I could be like,
Speaker:I cannot afford food.
Speaker:I need help.
Speaker:That was it.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:now there would be no cards.
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:I would've gone back to working at radio shack or whatever
Speaker:I was doing before,
Speaker:if that was not available to me.
Speaker:So that's not me being a smart businessman.
Speaker:That's having access to money.
Speaker:That's privilege,
Speaker:it's wealth and opportunity.
Speaker:That's not available to most people.
Speaker:So this is the whole advice of like,
Speaker:Oh, like you got to take risks and believe in your
Speaker:dreams. It's like these people had so much opportunity that to
Speaker:not count that as even the primary factor of their success
Speaker:is just intellectually dishonest and not,
Speaker:not helpful to anyone.
Speaker:Good point.
Speaker:And the idea of just taking it yourself and figuring it
Speaker:out for yourself is going to produce in the end a
Speaker:different type of a business too,
Speaker:because you're not,
Speaker:like I said before,
Speaker:just mimicking what someone else said with the hope that you're
Speaker:going to get the same result,
Speaker:because rarely would you.
Speaker:Other piece of this that's very important to me is there's
Speaker:been a boom in my worlds of technology and art and
Speaker:games in the last five to eight years,
Speaker:there's been an unprecedented boom in independent artists being able to
Speaker:make a living.
Speaker:Like I think that's been pretty well covered in the media.
Speaker:The idea that there's all these kids who were able to
Speaker:make a start-up or there's this whole independent games and like
Speaker:art games movement that didn't even exist five years ago,
Speaker:that's now become like a pretty big deal.
Speaker:Tabletop games obviously are becoming a thing and people are starting
Speaker:to buy and play tabletop games.
Speaker:I would say there's really one factor that made that possible,
Speaker:which is the passage of Obamacare in 2009.
Speaker:Let's say that you're the best game designer,
Speaker:the best comedian,
Speaker:the best artists of your generation,
Speaker:but you have some minor medical condition that would lead you
Speaker:to be denied health coverage.
Speaker:It's not an option for you to quit your job at,
Speaker:you know,
Speaker:your nine to five at like whatever.
Speaker:It doesn't matter what you're doing at Starbucks to go make
Speaker:art. I agree with you there.
Speaker:You know,
Speaker:you can't do anything unless you're physically stable,
Speaker:have your health,
Speaker:et cetera.
Speaker:And there's a lot of factors that lead into that.
Speaker:For sure.
Speaker:Before we finish up here,
Speaker:I just want to make mention that I will have links
Speaker:to many of the points that we've talked about here over
Speaker:on the show notes page to access that you just go
Speaker:to gift biz on rapt.com
Speaker:forward slash cards against humanity.
Speaker:All right,
Speaker:max, at this point I would like to have you dare
Speaker:to dream.
Speaker:Are you ready?
Speaker:Probably not.
Speaker:Okay. I'd like to present you with a virtual gift.
Speaker:It's a magical box containing unlimited possibilities for your future.
Speaker:This is your dream or your goal of almost unreachable Heights
Speaker:that you wish to obtain.
Speaker:Please accept this gift and open it in our presence.
Speaker:What is inside your box?
Speaker:Have you ever seen Aladdin?
Speaker:Yep. This is where Jafar went wrong as he wished to
Speaker:become the most powerful Jeannie,
Speaker:but then he was a slave to the lamp.
Speaker:So have we learned nothing from Aladdin?
Speaker:You can't open the box.
Speaker:So the box just sits there,
Speaker:I guess.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I don't even know.
Speaker:What does that mean to have your craziest dreams or are
Speaker:in the box?
Speaker:Are you looking for five years down the road?
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:I like reading a good book and taking a bath.
Speaker:Somehow I expected this type of answer from you max.
Speaker:Right? What do people say for this?
Speaker:What do they say?
Speaker:Like a big diamond?
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:No. A lot of people will talk about going back to
Speaker:their businesses and some of the things like they,
Speaker:a lot of people actually want their businesses to be so
Speaker:successful that then they can give back all different types of
Speaker:answers. But really,
Speaker:No, I don't know.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:what do I want to,
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:I hope that I get to wake up every day and
Speaker:decide what I do that day.
Speaker:That's, what's meaningful to me and I've had a lot,
Speaker:most of my life.
Speaker:That's not the case.
Speaker:I would wake up during the day and someone else would
Speaker:decide what I had to do that day.
Speaker:And I don't feel happy with that.
Speaker:So it's an incredible privilege for me right now to get
Speaker:to wake up and decide what I do today.
Speaker:I just hope that that continues.
Speaker:That's a perfect answer.
Speaker:And that goes right back to the whole conversation we just
Speaker:had about goal setting and doing what you think you should
Speaker:be doing.
Speaker:Not what's the first thing on the top of your email
Speaker:list or whatever.
Speaker:Max, thank you so much.
Speaker:I really appreciate your taking the time.
Speaker:I'm super excited to see what other crazy things out of
Speaker:all the hundreds of ideas you actually bring to the world
Speaker:so much success to you as you continue and may your
Speaker:candle, that white candle of yours continue to burn bright.
Speaker:Okay. Still confused about what a motivational candle is.
Speaker:Okay. Okay.
Speaker:Well, when you figure it out,
Speaker:come see me in Highland park,
Speaker:come drop by and say hi anyway.
Speaker:I'm right in downtown Highland park.
Speaker:What's your favorite bagel in Highland park?
Speaker:My favorite bagel is an everything bagel with type cheese.
Speaker:Oh, once upon probably.
Speaker:Yeah, that got to go with once upon.
Speaker:Have you ever had the,
Speaker:okay, hang on a second.
Speaker:We can't finish it out.
Speaker:Have you ever had the egg white salad at once upon
Speaker:a bagel?
Speaker:No, it's I,
Speaker:I, it does not sound like a good food.
Speaker:It's like not a food I would ever pick to eat,
Speaker:but it's inexplicably the best thing at that restaurant.
Speaker:I'm obsessed with the egg white salad at once on a
Speaker:bagel. It's one of the greatest foods anywhere in the world.
Speaker:All right,
Speaker:I'm going to have to try it now.
Speaker:I usually go for breakfast and I get their Spanish omelet,
Speaker:which is to die for it's the best time I've ever
Speaker:had. I've literally never had an anomaly once upon.
Speaker:Alright, new goal.
Speaker:I got to try it.
Speaker:Yeah, you should.
Speaker:W w so you tell me how that is and vice
Speaker:versa. How about that?
Speaker:Okay. All right.
Speaker:Where are you in your business building journey,
Speaker:whether you're just starting out or already running a business,
Speaker:and you want to know your setup for success.
Speaker:Find out by taking the gift biz quiz,
Speaker:access the quiz from your computer at
gift biz quiz or from your phone by gift best ways
Speaker:to four four,
Speaker:two, two,
Speaker:two. Thanks for listening and be sure to join us for
Speaker:the next episode.
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