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Eric Jorgenson: Becoming A Self-Made Author
Episode 65011th March 2025 • Hustle & Flowchart: Mastering Business & Enjoying the Journey • Hustle & Flowchart
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In this gripping episode of Hustle and Flowchart, we delve into the remarkable journey of Eric Jorgenson, the mastermind behind "The Almanac of Naval Ravikant." Eric, now the CEO of Scribe Media, shares an extraordinary tale of revival from chaos, rebuilding trust and redefining how books are crafted and self-made authors are created. If you've ever considered writing a book or are intrigued by pathways to personal and professional transformation, this episode is a goldmine. Buckle up as we explore Eric's world, where opportunities are seized, and traditional publishing norms are shattered, all while drawing inspiration from the wisdom of Naval Ravikant.

Eric's Role at Scribe Media

Eric Jorgenson serves as CEO of Scribe Media, where he juggles different projects. He admits that managing these tasks is challenging but focuses on synergies rather than distractions. Opportunity well handled, he says, leads to more opportunity.

The Story of Scribe

Scribe Media was co-founded by Tucker Max and Zach Obront. Tucker, a well-known author, originally used his talents to help others navigate the confusing publishing world. Scribe grew rapidly, but when the original founders left, mismanagement led to bankruptcy. Eric, having published his first book with Scribe, found himself caught up in the chaos. He felt a responsibility to save the company that helped him so much.

Trust Building Post-Bankruptcy

Eric emphasizes that trust can't be asked for, only earned. The focus for Scribe is now to do stellar work and let that speak for itself. He believes in rebuilding trust by doing what you say you will do, consistently. This isn't about asking for trust, but rather earning it through actions and reliability.

The Model of Scribe Media

Scribe Media takes the opposite approach of traditional publishing. Unlike big publishers that offer advances and retain most rights and royalties, Scribe charges a flat rate. Authors make the creative decisions, keep all rights, and retain all royalties. This means more royalties for the author in the long run, especially if you sell many books, like David Goggins. Instead of relying on media appearances, books now are sold primarily on platforms like Amazon, highlighting the significance of authors owning their work.

The Importance of Books in a Digital World

A book can act as a powerful marketing tool. It allows professionals to demonstrate their expertise and connect with potential clients. For instance, Paul Franco used his book to reach a niche audience, leading directly to business opportunities. A well-written book goes beyond mere sales. It offers credibility and establishes authority.

AI in Book Writing

AI can assist in the initial stages of writing but isn't perfect for long-form prose. Scribe helps authors by interviewing them, pulling out stories and key points to capture the book’s essence. While AI can pose as a support tool, Eric believes that human touch is still pivotal for creating truly impactful content. AI offers options like proofreading and brainstorming and can accelerate the drafting process.

Naval Ravikant's Influence

Naval's perspectives deeply influence Eric. He appreciates Naval’s view that happiness is a skill rather than just a choice. Eric has adopted these nuggets into his daily life, like appreciating simple moments. However, he also notes areas where he might diverge from Naval, particularly around the responsibilities we hold towards other people's happiness.

The CEO Journey and Personal Fulfillment

Eric has held multiple titles, including author and investor, and has learned to focus on being continuously “in motion.” There’s no finish line, only a state of being content and peaceful amidst activity. He wishes to become better at balancing productivity and peace, aiming for a fulfilling life journey rather than just reaching a destination.

In this episode, Eric shared his journey, his role in saving Scribe Media, and the considerable impact of having a book written. Whether you're considering writing a book or developing personal philosophies, this episode offered rich insights into how books can serve as both professional tools and personal reflections. For those looking to better understand the business and personal satisfaction, Eric’s path provides a lot to learn from.

Connect with Eric Jorgenson

Two Other Episodes You Should Check Out

Connect with Joe Fier

Thanks for tuning into this episode of the Hustle & Flowchart Podcast!

If the information in these conversations and interviews have helped you in your business journey, please head over to iTunes (or wherever you listen), subscribe to the show, and leave me an honest review.

Your reviews and feedback will not only help me continue to deliver great, helpful content, but it will also help me reach even more amazing entrepreneurs just like you!

Transcripts

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there is no amount of marketing that overcomes.

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A bad product.

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even if it's true for that, some, you know, 3 months, 6

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months, 12 months, like over the very long period of time,

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you know, the reputation in the product is the ultimate,

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you know, determinant of value

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impatience with action, patience with results, I think that

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like defines the trust thing.

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Authors now have their own audience.

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They can sell directly through their website or, you know, link

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people directly from their social media, their newsletter, whatever.

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they may give away a thousand books.

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Exactly.

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But they'll get $10 million in business to their core business

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or raise a hundreds of millions of dollars as a result of

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having that book out there and getting it into the right hands

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show me another marketing channel that like makes you money,

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builds trust at a deep level and creates like high intent inbound

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Eric, it's good to have you here, brother.

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and I'm happy we get to connect and I've been reading this, this

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is actually, this book here has been by my bedside for years now

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since it came out The Almanac of Naval Akan, where you, I dunno

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if you, yeah, I would, maybe you were the curator of that book.

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the

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I never, I never really know what, what verb to use, 'cause

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write doesn't, you know, write, build, edit, curate,

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create whatever you want to do.

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But you're obviously doing a lot more.

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But that's, that was the first time, you know, I was introduced

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to your way of thinking and just like the sheer massive,

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like just the work that would go into something like that.

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I would love to dive in later on that, but I mean, yourself,

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man, you're doing some, some very interesting things.

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You know, scribe media is, is, you're the CEO over there.

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So I mean, I guess how are you doing, you know, how are,

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how are things right now?

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Let's start there.

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Like,

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I'm, I'm learning to juggle.

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I'm learning to juggle.

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It's, you know, it's, it's hard to, Split your attention across

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a handful of different projects.

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But, it's also really fun.

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And I think, you know, you, you just try to stay in a place

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where you take the perspective, you know, look for synergies,

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not, not distractions.

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so find ways that things can like feed each other

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and stack on each other.

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And, you know, my, buddy David Center's got a great line.

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It's like opportunity, well handled leads to more opportunity and

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true.

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Yeah.

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as sort of you, if you do something well, it unlocks new

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opportunities and, The opportunity cost of your time should

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continue to go up over time.

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Like that's a good problem to have.

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And yeah, you just end up with a lot of balls in the air.

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Yeah.

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And you probably get used to it just even more and more.

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I hope so,

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one day, one day.

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one day.

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Well, I mean, I'm, I'm so intrigued by the story.

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Like I was mentioning, you know, I've, I've known about

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Scribe for a lot of years.

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I've seen, you know, Tucker and Tucker Max speak about it.

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I think he was one of the founders, right?

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Or co-founders.

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Founder.

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Yeah.

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Tucker and, Zach Obrat were the co-founders of Scribe.

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that's right.

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Yeah.

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So, I mean, interesting story.

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I would love for you to break things down, but you're

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at the helm right now and.

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I guess, yeah.

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Where would you wanna start with that?

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'cause I have some, I have some questions and thoughts, but I mean,

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like this episode I feel like is, it'd be a great journey about what

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you've gone starting as an author, a writer, and now wrote thing.

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Yeah.

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Cool.

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Yeah, so I'll, if I do maybe the story of Scribe and the

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story of Eric and they'll, they'll merge, in the third act.

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But, we've got, like you mentioned, it's the right place to start.

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Tucker Max and Zach obrien and Tucker is, you know, for people

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who haven't heard of him, a very successful author, he's one of the

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original like, blog to book guys.

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I mean, millions and millions of copies sold multiple times.

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New York Times best seller.

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and so he got all these calls from friends, so

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hilarious, hilarious guy.

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like pathologically honest.

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just a really, really interesting dude.

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And, he's, you know, we were sort of reading each other's blogs

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early on as he was starting Scribe.

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So I also had been following Scribe since the very beginning.

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And I think the vision that they had for where publishing was

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heading was incredible and even more incredible 10 years ago.

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And they've really like the, sort of the increased rise in hybrid

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and people leaving the traditional.

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You know, leaders leaving the traditional publishing and setting

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up their own kind of more unique models that are closer to what

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Scribe has done are all like really interesting sort of proof

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points of their original vision.

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And, you know, over 10 years they built up this

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really impressive company.

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you know, they, I think it was originally it was like bootstrapped

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and grew like crazy, grew up to, you know, tens of millions and,

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you know, dozens of employees.

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And after eight years or so, they were.

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You know, they're founders and they're ready to go do other stuff.

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Tucker has a family and he's, kind of ready to retiring, go do his

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ranching and write his memoir.

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And, and, and Zach on the other side is like a super genius and

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he went off and did, he became one of the biggest like bug bounty

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hunters in the Ethereum ecosystem.

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So he's like in the crypto world and they totally

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went different directions.

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Like both brilliant and interesting and awesome guys.

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And, as they stepped back from the company, the guy who, who they had

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hired as CEO before and who sort of took sole control of the company

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after they left, I, it went off the rails a little bit, like, and

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a little bit turned into a lot and there's a very, like Tucker wrote

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an incredible kind of postmortem about this whole thing and some

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of the psychological he did in that post where I think no other.

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Business case study I've ever read has done, which is understand the

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psychology of the leader that led to the mistakes in the business.

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And then ultimately the, you know, the outcome that,

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affected so many people.

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It, it ended up being, quite an ugly bankruptcy actually,

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which I got caught up in.

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so

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an author right?

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At the

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yeah, so, so that's like smash cut back to like act one of Eric.

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like I, you know.

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Came from the venture backed startup world.

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I've always been a, a, like a big reader and writer,

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and I love, like tweeting.

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Turned into blogging.

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Blogging, turned into writing this book, the Almanac Naval.

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And, since Tucker, I'd been reading his blog and following him and, he

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was just one of the first people I reached out to and I was starting

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to talk to authors about, like, I.

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How do you navigate this world of publishing?

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What are the options?

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It's very confusing.

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It's only gotten more confusing.

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so he was kind enough to take some time with me and lay out

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the options and talk to me about my book and help kind of really

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develop it and move it along.

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I. And so I ended up, publishing that first book with Scribe

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as an author in 20 19, 20 20.

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And I had an incredible experience.

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Like the team was perfect.

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I learned so much.

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It was a, a remarkably like, transformative experience.

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And that book changed my life, you know, and, and as a model,

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I thought Scribe was just so, I thought it was dead on.

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I thought it was so correct.

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I thought they were very, They were just really honest about

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like, look, you as the author, the CEO of the book, like

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you're going to front the cost.

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You're gonna take the risk, but you also assume full

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control of this thing.

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You get to make all the final creative decisions.

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You get to craft the book the way you want to, that serves your goals

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and your life, and you're gonna get the full upside, which especially

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in from a book like Naval, turned out to be life changing,

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Yeah, that was what?

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Million plus copies, right?

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Yeah, I think we're, we're at a million and a half.

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I think.

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you know, all, all formats, all languages like worldwide.

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so it's, it, you know, it's a big world, but, you know, not a

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lot of books make it there, man.

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it's, it's crazy.

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I. You know, people.

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Thank you.

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Thank you.

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I mean, it's, it is a testament to like Val's wisdom, I think.

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And you know, the word of mouth around it has been just crazy.

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So, I, I don't think it's, you know, I worked hard on the book,

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but I don't think it's like, it's not some genius marketing

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hack that I have, right.

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It's just like a good product that changes people's lives and a lot of

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people can get something from it and it's just, you know, had wind in its

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sales very, very luckily for months

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It's value, it's value packed, man.

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Like, there's no, there's no fluff in there.

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Like, seriously, if you don't have, I'll, I'll be linking it

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in the, notes, all that stuff.

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Easy

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Thank you.

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I loved, I love to see a copy that's just Yeah.

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Beat to shit that's got highlights on every page.

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It's all dogeared.

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Yeah.

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It's been in and out of the backpack a thousand times.

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or, or like you said, people are like, yeah, you,

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you've been in my bedroom.

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It's been sitting next to my toilet.

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You know, whatever the,

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Whatever it's seen, you know, so you're top of mind and it's true.

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Yeah.

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Yeah, it's perfect.

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I love to hear it.

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or yeah, being gifted, like, I think being gifted is the best compliment

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a book can receive, right?

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So, when people are like, I gave this to my little brother, it

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changed his life, he changed his major, dropped outta school

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or quit med school or whatever.

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The thing is that,

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Yeah.

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you know, sort of wrapping your head around some of these

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principles does for people, so.

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I, I immediately, I mean, especially with a book like that, I, and

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an experience like that with Scribe, I immediately started

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writing my second book, and which was the anthology of B and

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that came out, like late 2023.

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But that was the book that I was publishing with Scribe also, and

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got caught up in this bankruptcy.

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So, you know, when the, the sort of the house fell, You know, I took

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a loss just like everybody else in that, but I also was like, man, I

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feel like I owe this company, you know, something like, some level

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of effort to save them after, you know, the, all of the good

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that I got from them and all, you know, the wonderful experience

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I had with the team and the respect I had for everybody there.

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and so I started just making some phone calls and I, lucky enough

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through just conferences and Twitter and friendships to know

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people who buy companies, or, or.

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You know, work in private equity or permanent equity.

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Yeah.

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So I started making phone calls and I found these guys, Eva

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and Xavier, who run Enduring Ventures, who I'd met a few

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times at, you know, at Berkshire Hanaway conference and, I think

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Capital Camp, but a few others.

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And, yeah, they're just good news.

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They do, they run a long-term holding company that's so,

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it's not a fund, they're not trying to flip companies.

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They, they buy and hold for the long run and they have a background in

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publishing and, and a background in, you know, distressed situations,

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which like this definitely was

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so, they, they knew the, the now situation you're in, but they also

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had that long-term vision that, you know, they'll stick around with.

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Yeah.

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And they saw, they saw, you know what I saw, which is

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like, this is a unique model.

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It is.

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It had been a great brand until this very moment, which basically

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one guy like screwed it up.

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and, you know, they're, they're just long-term thinkers

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and so they, they saw the potential, I think, and they, I.

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We're willing to, do some of the really messy, heavy lifting to like

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try to, you know, in situations like that, there's no perfect solution.

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There's no, everybody's gonna end up angry about something.

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and there's a lot of pain to go around, like economic and emotional

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yeah.

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supporting what, thousands, I think what you have to say,

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like 2000 plus, authors, right?

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I don't know what was going on at that time, but trust, you

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know, like there's a lot of that that probably is lost and

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you're just like, oh, shoot.

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You know, it's caught in the middle, right?

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There were, there were hundreds of active authors and, a, a lot

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of people got, It just ended up in really unenviable situations and

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I've heard some, some horror stories and, I've been trying to like, have

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conversations with those people and make up for that and do what we can.

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essentially what ended up happening is we started a brand

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new company, hired over some of the team and basically bought the,

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the IP from the bank that, yeah.

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So the, the kind of mechanics are, are interesting.

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It's not my expertise, but, to my surprise, they called me after and

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said like, we, okay, we got this new thing and we need somebody to run

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it, and we think that should be you.

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So I was like, all right, let's give this thing a

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you, you raised your hand, man.

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I mean,

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Yeah.

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that's like 90% of the battle right there.

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Maybe more even you.

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Yeah.

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Yeah, and it ended up being a very interesting, like, you know,

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most people I know who are CEOs either built their business from

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the ground up or spent 15 years there and got hired into the role

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after sort of working their way up.

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And so I think, you know, there, there's this sort of, Search

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fund and small business and small business acquisition and like

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private equity world that, is full of kind of these weirdly

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interesting, almost one-off stories of like, you know, seller

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finance acquisitions and or, or privately funded or search

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funded or independent sponsors.

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And this ended up being like a very weird combination of all of

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those, like kind of by accident.

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But it's a very, it's a cool, it's a really cool world and very

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interesting stuff happens in it.

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Man.

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Well, I'm, I'm, I'm thinking of like the moment when you

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stepped into the role as CEO.

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Like, was there, I don't know, like was there, what was the

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feeling that you had at that point?

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Because you obviously probably learning a ton and things that you

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didn't totally know about, like.

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Was there something that maybe your gut was feeling that

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like spreadsheets and all the numbers really weren't talking,

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like there had to have been something happening there?

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It's a lot.

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I mean, you said it right?

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It's a lot of learning.

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It's a lot of getting oriented as quickly as possible, to,

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to a lot of things, right?

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Like you are meeting the whole team, you're meeting the customers, you're

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trying to understand the processes.

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there's so much to wrap your head around really quickly.

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And, friends who've been through this before warned me, they're

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like, you will get asked to make a decision in the first week

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that you don't think you'll be ready for, for six more months.

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And like, you just have to do the best you can with what you have.

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So it's a very, it is a very like seat of the pants experience and,

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but I, you know, all, all you can do is kind of keep doing your best.

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And, you know, I'm 18 months in now and I, I'm still like,

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I'm still trying to learn.

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I'm still, there's so much, you know, you can't

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possibly know enough.

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And every additional piece of information helps, like every

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customer you can talk to.

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trying to understand your whole team's roles ever

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more deeply and how they all fit together and the co.

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Changing environments, you know, the different offers, different authors,

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different tools, different vendors.

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True.

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so yeah, it's, it is already a dynamic environment and

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then you're trying to play catch up on top of it.

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But, it's also kinda what makes it fun.

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You know, it's a very fun, I. It's fun to kind of be the, like, to

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some extent, the nexus of all of that information and have it all

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kind of like feeding into you.

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It's a lot to process, but,

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it's, it's very fun.

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Like for, for somebody who's deeply and, endlessly curious

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and hungry to understand all of this, like, it's fantastic.

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right in the middle of it.

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Yeah.

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I mean, I see a bunch of books behind you, so it's like

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you're literally surrounded by authors all day, every day.

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Yeah, dude, it is.

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I tell you, it is brutal to like have, you know, six to eight

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author like meetings with authors a day who they, they explain

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their book Heidi, and you're like, shit, I wanna read that book.

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And then half an hour later you're like, that sounds amazing.

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I would love to read that book.

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and

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having podcasts like this, like, I'm like, that's a great idea.

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Shit.

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Nope.

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Don't focus, focus.

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yeah.

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Yeah.

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It's, it is very easy for the, yeah, the, the opportunities

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and ideas and, reading material in particular to stack up.

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I bet.

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Yeah.

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Well, walk me through, there's like two, two ways I want to go

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and I don't know which way it is yet, but like, maybe start

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with the rebuilding trust.

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Like, 'cause I was thinking the trust with existing authors, maybe

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ones that, you know, and this leads me to like the model of scribe too.

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I want to make that very clear.

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I don't know which way, that goes because.

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Yeah, I don't know.

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I'll just leave that to you.

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Yeah, I, let's, let's start with, the trust is the

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foundation of everything.

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So I think starting there, you know, I, I wrote in the, wrote

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the first like annual letter, recently to kind of like the

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community and the, the team and, I. I, I think this first year was

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all about just rebuilding trust.

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And I don't think, you know, it's not something you can ask for.

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It's something you have to earn and it takes time and repetition and,

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like to be trustworthy, you have to be reliable.

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And to be reliable, people need a sample size.

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And you know, there's some element where you can't speed that up.

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You just have to be.

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Conspicuously doing the thing that you are expected to do,

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that you promised that you would do over and over again.

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And, you know, if you're greedy for trust, it's much more, you

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know, it's, it's, people hesitate.

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It's a very, like, that's why I say you can't really ask for it.

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You just have to earn it.

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It's like, like they could smell it out that you're wanting

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it maybe more or you know,

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Yeah.

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Well, when people like proclaim themselves to be

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trustworthy, it's almost always a counter signal, right?

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Like if they're leading with like, conspicuous, oh, like,

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and, and frankly, the guy that used to run, scribe did this.

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you know, he, he would do like lots of claims about transparency

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and honesty and integrity and, You know, I, I, my focus

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for the team was like, let's just go back to fundamentals.

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Let's just focus.

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We have to be flawless on the fundamentals of what we're doing.

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We don't miss deadlines, we don't ship mistakes.

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We just do the work.

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And the best advertisement is the work on our desk.

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And we're in the business of rebuilding a reputation like day

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by day, week by week, book by book.

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We're not gonna shout about it.

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We're not gonna ask for it.

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We're just going to do the work.

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And, you know, I, I've never been one to like.

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I do not like to advertise myself.

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I'd rather like just do good work and let the work speak

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for itself and let others sort of, if they feel comfortable,

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you know, recommend tell other people that we did good work.

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It's pretty, it's like a testament of what you did with,

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with, the Naval book, you know?

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Yeah.

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I think, you know, you, you can't, there is no amount

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of marketing that overcomes.

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A bad product.

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and e even if it's true for that, some, you know, 3 months, 6 months,

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12 months, like over the very long period of time, you know, the

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reputation in the product is the ultimate, you know, determinant

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of value and that's just the right place to keep the focus.

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I like that.

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No, I would say like, you know, 'cause I was thinking is there some

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kind of trust hack or anything, but it's, it's really doing

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what you say, you know, because most people don't even do that.

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Maybe, do it in a concise or effective manner that

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helps everybody and, and just, just keep doing it.

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Keep showing

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up.

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Like, don't

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any, any trust hack I think destroys trust.

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You know, it, it's kinda like, you know, I think we've all had

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experiences with somebody who like overdosed on how to win

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friends and influence people, and they're like, Hey Joe, it's

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really great to see you, Joe.

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How's your wife, Joe, Joe?

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Like all of the like hacks that you're like,

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we've, we've met one time.

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Like, just be a human.

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and like let, let the relationship develop normally.

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so it's a very, yeah, I think it like you just.

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You just gotta be the kind of, be the partner that you would want

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That's good.

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to be seen as.

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Yeah, just walk the, walk the walk and keep your mouth shut

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and, let it take care of itself.

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Be patient.

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Be patient.

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Be patient.

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man, patience is probably the, it's the toughest, but it's, it's true.

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You just gotta let stuff develop as

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I, I mean, I, I, I will quote Naval at least five times in this episode.

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'cause it's an occupational hazard for me.

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But, you know, impatience with action, patience with

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results, I think that like defines the trust thing.

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Like you must be obsessive and impatient about doing good work.

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And you have to be patient with allowing that reputation

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to, you know, catch up to the work that you're doing.

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'cause it's always gonna be a la a lagging indicator.

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Yes.

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Yeah.

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And that's layer, layer, everything with naval quotes.

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'cause I know, I mean, there's old book obviously, but people love him.

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So, and if you're not following Naval for whatever reason, and

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Eric like, go find him on Twitter.

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I'm sure it's probably the best place or X whatever.

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So, but let's go to the, the, the model of scribe media.

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Like, did things change from before?

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I guess break it down in general.

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'cause I know a lot of folks listening, watching.

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Maybe have a book or thinking about a book.

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I mean, let's be honest.

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We'll, we'll address the whole tech thing and how there's

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tools like AI now that could speed up their writing.

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So people thinking, Hey, I could just do this myself.

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Like, why would I go to Scribe and, you know, work with you guys?

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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So, the, I'll give you the, like the context f first is that the

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whole history of publishing is basically, 150 year old business

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model that the presumption is that most books are sold in bookstores,

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that they're physical books.

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the presumption is that they're marketed through

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centralized media like TV and newspapers and magazines.

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The presumption is also that you need like a big capital

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investment upfront to like do a big print run of books and get

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them all distributed in order to.

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Sell books.

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And when all those things were true a hundred years ago, even 50 years

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ago, it made a ton of sense to have a traditional publishing model.

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And where, you know, they give authors advances, they take control

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of the copyright, and they basically manage the book in the inventory

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of the book for a long period of time, and they just pay the author

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some royalties for having written the thing in the first place.

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And what is obvious to everybody living on the internet now

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is like all three of those have actually flipped 180.

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Like most books, this is not obvious, but most books, physical

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books that you use now are print on demand, like almost

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everything you buy on Amazon.

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Like, so there is no need for a big upfront investment.

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There's no physical inventory.

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It's basically like selling a digital product and just like

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Amazon takes care of printing and distribution for you.

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The other is that most books are sold on Amazon or on other

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websites, and so you don't actually need a huge, you know,

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proprietary distribution network.

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they still exist and people still buy from bookstores, but like the

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majority of them are sold either digitally or through Amazon, even

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when there are physical versions.

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And third, like.

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You don't need, you know, going on the late show or

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the morning show doesn't move a ton of copies anymore.

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It's like going on podcasts, newsletters, and being

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recommended on social media.

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and so through with all those as sort of givens, the model that

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makes the most sense is actually like authors being in full control.

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Authors now have their own audience.

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They can sell directly through their website or, you know, link

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people directly from their social media, their newsletter, whatever.

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the authors have done all the work to de-risk the book, essentially.

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the, the authors in many cases, like make more money from other

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sources, you know, whether it's coaching, speaking, consulting,

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you know, a, a fund, like whatever the business model is.

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There's usually, especially for like non-fiction business authors

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that we normally work with, lots of ways for them to win, other than

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selling a ton of books and making money from the royalties themselves.

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so there's a few authors that we've worked with that are like that.

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So, David Goggins is, is the most.

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Famous, and the highest selling, I mean, one of the

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bestselling memoirs of all time.

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And he, he basically couldn't get an offer that he was happy with

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from a traditional publisher.

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He's like, you guys are under undervaluing me, and, you know, if

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you're not gonna pay me what I'm worth, I'll, I'll go do it myself.

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And so he, he worked with Scribe and published, Can't Hurt Me

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and Never Finished both with us.

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Which means, yeah, both incredible books.

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and he just went to war at like, only David Goggins

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can like selling that book.

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Right.

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So for years and years he, he just like would speak and

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market and go on social and talk about that book and sell

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that book and go do interviews.

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And he sold five, I mean the la this is an old number, but

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it was in 5 million plus, you mean by closer to 10 by now.

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and because he published with Scribe, you know, he paid us.

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A few tens of thousands of dollars to do all of the publishing work,

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but he kept all of the rest of that upside on millions of copies.

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So he's gotta be one of the highest earning authors of all time.

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He's out earning many authors who are actually traditionally

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published, but even sold more books just because of how he went

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about it and the risk that he took initially to get his full upside.

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Wow.

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Okay.

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That's cool.

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And thanks for breaking down all the different elements

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of like ROI of a publish, you know, a published author,

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Yeah.

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Yeah.

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So, so I should say like, scribe's model is like the opposite

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of traditional publishing in that we don't offer advances.

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We actually just charge a clear, fixed flat rate for the work that

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a traditional publisher will do.

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So you bring a manuscript to us.

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we'll copy edit it.

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We'll proofread it, we'll do cover design.

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We'll do page layout.

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We'll do illustrations.

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We'll design all the final files the way you want.

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We'll help you get uploaded for distribution and launched,

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and then you make all the final creative decisions.

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You keep all your rights and you keep all your royalties.

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It's, which is for one, for people like me and Goggins who

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are gonna go sell a lot of books.

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That's a huge ROI on the royalties 'cause we're earning

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two to four times as much as a traditionally published author

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would on a per book basis.

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But the more important thing is actually that there are thousands,

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millions of authors that would, a traditional publisher would never

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even consider because they'll only sell a thousand books or 10,000

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books and they're trying to find people that'll sell a hundred

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thousand books or at minimum 50,000.

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Otherwise, it just doesn't make sense for them to take

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the risk and do the work.

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But I talk to authors every single day who wanna write a

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book for their own reasons, just to impact the social issue.

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Or they want to take the they, they want to get their message out there.

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They want to claim like they wanna increase their credibility.

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They want to tell their story, they want to give back to their industry.

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They want to, Really connect deeply with their clients

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or their potential clients.

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And they may, you know, there's people that'll

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only sell a thousand books.

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They, they may give away a thousand books,

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Exactly

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but they'll get $10 million in business to their core business

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or raise a hundreds of millions of dollars as a result of having that

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book out there and getting it into the right hands and building trust

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on a very deep level through the means of this like very important

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timeless medium that is just really difficult to fake, like.

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It really, you can't,

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yeah, if you, you write a great book, like you probably know what

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you're talking about, you know?

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It's still more important.

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Like I, I love your thoughts on this because you know, you have AI

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and everybody feels like, you know, information's at my fingertips.

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I could be, you know, knowledgeable in seconds on

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whatever topic I, I want.

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Or I can look up this person's book and get the summary of everything.

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And the answer I would say is yes to that.

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But the value of a book, like, I would love to hear it even more

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from you going down this vein of.

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You know, the ROI are the reasons why people would publish.

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It's, it's kinda what you're stating here.

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It's like you can make it your own on the front end, but there what

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a business model should be defined on the back end, I would imagine.

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And yeah.

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Any thoughts on that or how scribe kinda steers people do that process?

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Yeah, I mean, we like we talk to everybody.

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We try to get an idea of what the context is that they're

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publishing this book into.

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So there are people who come in and say, I truly just

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want to impact this issue.

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And if I, you know, like one, author that I remember is, the

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issue that they wanted to impact.

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They're, they're retired.

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They did it very well for themselves, and they're like, I

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am dedicating years of my life and a large amount of money

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to impacting gay teen suicide, and if I can save one life.

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This will be worth it.

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And I do not care about anything else.

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I don't care if I sell like copies.

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I don't care if I give 'em away.

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I don't care like what it costs.

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Like if I, as soon as I reach that threshold, I'm great.

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I will keep reaching for two and three and four and a hundred.

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But like, that's my, my measure of success.

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And no traditional publisher is gonna care about that.

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like that's a big risk to take.

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But if that's important to you, and I think that book could

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be good for the world who's, who's not gonna support that.

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but mo most importantly, like if you just have a vision like

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that, we will help you do it.

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But different example, along similar lines is like, Paul Franco wrote a

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book called, Successful Successions.

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And it's a very, very targeted, and we, we often coach authors to do

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this, like uncomfortably targeted.

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So his book is for, Certified financial planners who own

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their own firm, who are retiring within the next five years

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Okay.

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and they don't know, and they're like not sure how to transition.

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They're not sure what a good transition looks like.

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They're not sure what their options are.

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And Paul's business is to buy those trans, the firms from people

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transitioning out who are like retiring and just ready to be

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doing a different chapter and.

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So they search for this problem.

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They see his book.

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Amazon is a very underrated as a search engine.

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so they search for it, they find it, they buy it, they read

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it, and then they pick up the phone and call Paul and try to

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see if he'll buy their firm.

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'cause they like how he thinks and they trust him.

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And they just had this experience of like understanding his

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philosophy and his expertise.

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And you know, as far as marketing goes, like you just

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made, you know, four bucks.

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To spend 10 hours with this client in this very high leverage way

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that now they pick up the phone and call you and ask you to buy it.

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It's not, there's no other,

Speaker:

Hmm.

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show me another marketing channel that like makes you money,

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builds trust at a deep level and creates like high intent inbound

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Absolutely.

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And I see it.

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yeah, I'm partnered with, one of my partners is Mike ings here in San

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Diego, and we, yeah, I'm, I'm one of the, the fractional, AI officers.

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We consult ton of businesses, but you know, this program we do on

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the back end, it's high level, you know, almost $10,000 thing,

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but it's all driven by the book on the front end, and we see

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where all the leads are coming.

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It's all from the book.

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And everyone I talked to.

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Yep.

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Read the book and like not even all the way through

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and invested or needed.

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I knew I needed you guys.

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I'm like, there it is.

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it's incredible.

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It's so difficult to create that level of trust, and there's

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so few mediums that can do it, and if you're out there like

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dropping a bunch of paid ads.

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It's that, you know, back goes back to that level of trust, like

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when you were asking to be trusted instead of just doing something

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and letting yourself be evaluated, as high, trustworthy or not.

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it is just a very different, it's a very different kind of climb.

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yeah,

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yeah, it's, it's interesting.

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I'm glad to hear you having a similar experience.

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Absolutely man.

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And there's, and yeah, I'm not gonna say, you know, paid ads

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are evil or anything, but I think the big thing is, like you

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said, like be in a place where people are looking for you.

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Amazon, you know, don't gloss this over.

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I know you didn't, but like for anybody who might've missed

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it, Amazon is a search engine.

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I don't know where they rank with everything, but

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it ain't going anywhere.

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And they're.

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Apps, you know, integrated now with even, you have all the AI

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stuff, you know, like they'll point there as a source too.

Speaker:

Like there's so being there, you need a book or some kind of product,

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but yeah, why not give 'em the book?

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Yeah, it's, it's, it is an incredible thing and, and the fact

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that you need to have written a book to get a search engine results

Speaker:

page on Amazon is a very high bar.

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There's, there's authors with us who are selling software

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like B2B SaaS software, like big contracts through a book.

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and because they're some of the only ones with a book out there about

Speaker:

it, and we work with it quite a few.

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Organizations actually like publish a book as their organization or

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have a systematic thing where like one of their executives publishes

Speaker:

a book every year that helps sort of build their mind, share each

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in different ways That attracts, sometimes it's to attract employees

Speaker:

or partners or customers or investors, like whatever it is.

Speaker:

It's a very, you know, because it's not a traditional marketing channel,

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I actually think it becomes really

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Yeah.

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I think so, man.

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Well, with, and I want to go to go to ai 'cause I, you know,

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it's obviously a hot topic.

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It's only getting more hot by the minute, it seems

Speaker:

like when everything's getting cheaper, faster, you

Speaker:

know, tools for everybody.

Speaker:

of course you could write a book very quickly with ai, but I. I

Speaker:

wouldn't say it's all about speed.

Speaker:

You can write an effective book as well.

Speaker:

Like I'll, I'll say an example.

Speaker:

I'm an advisor of a company, called delphi.ai, and one of the

Speaker:

use cases, lesser known, is you can write a really solid book or

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at least start the process because it's all based off your knowledge.

Speaker:

Like this digital mind,

Speaker:

we trump it.

Speaker:

So you can like literally pull in quotes and all that stuff from like

Speaker:

this podcast, I can make a book.

Speaker:

And that's actually the plan.

Speaker:

It's like, why not?

Speaker:

It's almost like a Tim Ferris's tribe of mentors

Speaker:

kinda style, you know?

Speaker:

But like how would you, I guess my question would be like,

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how do you guys have people use AI or some tools to kind

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of get that manuscript, the initial draft out of them?

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'cause I know that's the biggest hurdle for most people.

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Yeah, I mean the, the advance in transcription tools has been

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huge over the past few years, which helps a lot because a

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big part of our method, is actually interviewing people

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and writing the book for them.

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Like there's a lot of people have, you know, writer's

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block is a real thing.

Speaker:

Talkers block is not a thing.

Speaker:

true.

Speaker:

Yeah.

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so if you're sitting, if like part of our, you know, our, our scribes

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that we, that our people sort of create a partner in writing their

Speaker:

book are not just great writers and not just thoughtful about

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structuring the book, but really great, great engaging interviewers.

Speaker:

And so they'll really work with you to position this and outline

Speaker:

it and understand what you wanna accomplish, and then they'll.

Speaker:

it'll feel like a friendly conversation.

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They just pull the information, the stories, the important principles,

Speaker:

the the key quotes out of you.

Speaker:

And that's the process for running into the book.

Speaker:

our, we are always like experimenting with ai.

Speaker:

It is still, I, I think it'll.

Speaker:

The end result will be to make the great people more prolific.

Speaker:

and there are things that it speeds up, but not, it's still not great

Speaker:

for like long form pros generation.

Speaker:

It just doesn't quite have the, like, the touch yet, that you want.

Speaker:

And so it, there are advantages to it, but it's just, it's

Speaker:

sort of a different trade off of like you spend more time

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editing because you can't.

Speaker:

The first draft is a little further off.

Speaker:

and the, especially when you're trying to build a very long,

Speaker:

very thoughtful like thread of continuous ideas, it's much

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easier for it to lose the threat.

Speaker:

And it's much harder to find when the threat is lost.

Speaker:

So you just have to, like, if you did AI generation, you have

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to spend a little more time in editing and be a little more

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concerned about the structure and the linearity of the thoughts.

Speaker:

But I think to your point, like depending on the kind of book that

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you wanna write, if what you wanna write is a very disjointed tribe

Speaker:

of mentors thing where you're just like, here's an episode,

Speaker:

condense it down, plug it in.

Speaker:

I think those will be very commoditized relatively quickly.

Speaker:

I. Not that that makes it a bad format.

Speaker:

It could still be a great format, but like AI will unlock that one

Speaker:

sooner than a novel, for example.

Speaker:

but we, I've seen really good, like, it's just a great sounding board.

Speaker:

I mean, it's a tireless, tireless sounding board and,

Speaker:

proofreader and editor and it could just be a really good way.

Speaker:

actually I did a great, One of my very smartest friends about AI and

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usage in general is, Sean Devine.

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And, I had him on, I had him on my podcast, smart

Speaker:

Friends, and he was like, this was a year and a half ago.

Speaker:

And he's like, it's comp AI has completely changed how I hire.

Speaker:

I now hire for, two traits, which is like curiosity and endurance.

Speaker:

Hmm.

Speaker:

Yep.

Speaker:

Like the, the, the, I could be, I could be, misquoting that, but like

Speaker:

endurance or something very like it.

Speaker:

He's like, this is the most important thing.

Speaker:

Like you now have not just a bicycle for the mind, but like a nuclear

Speaker:

reactor for the mind, but it only really operates as long as you do.

Speaker:

Like, you have to keep the, you have to keep hitting

Speaker:

the ball back because it, it will iterate instantly.

Speaker:

And so if you're not re like feeding it something.

Speaker:

If you're not reacting to it, if you're not, continuing

Speaker:

to push and refine it, then like it stops working.

Speaker:

And so, you know, can you put in a 12 hour day with like a relentless

Speaker:

volley partner who's just like hitting the ball back instantly?

Speaker:

It's like playing speed playing, right?

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

It's like playing chess against the computer.

Speaker:

Like it moves instantly and you're like.

Speaker:

Fuck.

Speaker:

I need to think.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

so, you know, that, but for all work is like a really

Speaker:

interesting psychological shift and knowing that, you know,

Speaker:

this is another one that Sean mentioned that's counterintuitive,

Speaker:

but like options are free.

Speaker:

I. When we're working with a human, we're used to being

Speaker:

like, gimme three good options.

Speaker:

And I'll pick one because saying, gimme a hundred good options, and

Speaker:

I'll pick one would be psychotic.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

and so, so like, but with AI you can say, gimme a

Speaker:

hundred, gimme a thousand.

Speaker:

I hate all of those.

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Gimme 2000 more like, okay, now rank order them.

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Now throw away anything like.

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It's very, there's some counterintuitive things about it

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that, you know, a lot of writers I think are relearning how to write

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and with, with new tools and, you know, I like, I very much love my

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job and I love talking to authors all day, but I've also like, shit, I

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wish I could just, I block off some time and really like wrap my head

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around working with these tools.

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Oh, I bet, man.

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I mean, it's a, it's a monumental task and it's, it's good that,

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yeah, I position at least myself in a way that I can monetize that

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and be the source of that truth.

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but yeah, man, I mean, it's, it's changing and the thing I always just

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say is like, just get your hands on something that you can stick with

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and really understand and grasp and, and like you said, be curious.

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You can keep going down the rabbit hole.

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yeah.

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I mean, I'll, I'll just plug this here.

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I know at timely, you know, deep seek is, is like making

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all the, the world news it seems like, but perplexity is

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like my go-to research tool.

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But when you hook the two together, which you can now,

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it's like insane amount of real time searching plus reasoning.

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And it's, it's talk about like deep research in seconds

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very cool.

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Try that out.

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Yeah,

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All right.

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it's, it's pretty sweet.

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But, how about like Naval?

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I wanna, I wanna bring out some philosophy, like some

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things that have impacted you through, especially through

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this journey of, you know, becoming the CEO of Scribe Media.

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What, 18 months ago?

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And like, one of the quotes that Naval just sticks out to me

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is that happiness is a choice.

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And I, I genuinely believe that's true and that's

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kind of, I don't know.

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Some people feel like happiness shouldn't be the thing that

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you strive for, but it's like, why the hell not?

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Yeah.

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I don't know what else is there?

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And, and yeah.

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So how does maybe that quote or something like that from

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Naval helped you through?

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I'm sure like burning it out throughout the nights,

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you know, figuring it just the stressful times.

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Yeah, I think, You know, choice is almost, he has said it's a choice.

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He has also said it's a skill.

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And I think like skill is actually a more useful frame because you don't,

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when you hear happiness is a choice, it's almost, it almost makes you

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feel guilty, you know, or something.

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It's like,

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Yeah.

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just choose to be happy, dumbass.

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Like, what's wrong with you?

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Don't, you know, there's a switch you can just flip.

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And like, while that.

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Like, wow, that's probably true.

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You have to do some work to build that switch, right?

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or remember that it's there or you know, have it

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in arm's reach, you know?

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So I think the skill framing.

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Reminds you that it'll take time to get better at, and that you

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should expect to have to work at getting better at every day.

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But it also, you know, it will yield to effort and intention.

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And if you work on becoming happier, you can become happier.

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I also remember, I've been following the ball for long enough to know

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that like he wasn't always happy and he didn't always focus on happiness.

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He didn't always value happiness.

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and so saying that it's a, you know, a, a choice is

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not to imply that it's easy.

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but that you, but that it is.

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Something that you can control with effort over time.

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and it's funny, you know, he's, I think he spent a long time

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being unhappy while getting rich and then got rich and is like,

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Hmm, that didn't make me happy.

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maybe that's a different quest.

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And so like, I think not that many people.

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That, you know, I know some really happy people.

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I know some really rich people.

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I know very few, like very happy and very rich people, especially,

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you know, Naval who went on the quest to become both of those.

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It's not like he was born happy and happened to become rich.

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It's not like he was born rich and happens to be happy, like he

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started without either of them and deliberately built both.

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And so this book is very much like.

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Here are the principles and the tactics and the mindset

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that he used to go from, you know, not that, to that.

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And, you know, he, he's got an interest.

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Like, his description of this is like, if you wanna know how to lose

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weight, you don't go ask somebody who's been skinny their whole life.

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They're not even gonna know what you're talking about.

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Like, you, you don't find somebody who was, you know, got up to

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600 pounds and then got back down to, you know, 1 50, 1 60.

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Like that person knows what they're talking about.

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'cause they've been on both sides and they've had to

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fight the fight to get.

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You know, to, to overcome the thing a bigger, they, they beat a bigger

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dragon than you're trying to beat.

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And like that's the person who can teach you.

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and so I think, you know, when you're filtering for people to

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read, people to emulate heroes, you know, there's a lot of people,

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talk in a game that, they learn from somebody else, not firsthand.

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And that's just a different, you know, there's a different level

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of knowledge that comes with that.

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that's a good frame.

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Yeah.

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And.

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Yeah, that, and I know Naval, you're absolutely right.

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Like it, it's cool to see that progression.

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And I know you outlined that a ton in, in the book.

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Like is there something that you, either from the Almanac

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or, or just studying naval, that keeps you grounded?

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Like is there a tactic that you go to often?

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I, there's a lot on the happiness side.

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There's a lot of little ones that just became habits, that, that

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I think he, I mean, he's such a good distiller and he comes

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up these sticky little phrases.

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And so, some of these seem very small, but if you do them every day,

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if you do them multiple times a day,

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It does, I think, meaningfully change your, like, base

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level of happiness.

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And so, two in particular, there's one that, you know, I drink coffee

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every morning and he's got one that says like, if you can't be

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happy with a cup of coffee, you won't be happy with a yacht.

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I

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Which is, which is a beautiful encapsulation of everything

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that you need to know about, like learning to appreciate

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the things that you have and.

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Take it.

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That reminds me, and I think about it on my first cup of

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coffee every single day and just like take a second with the

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steamy mug before your first sip.

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And you're just like, this little thing is a fucking miracle that

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I can just really appreciate.

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And if I can't learn to appreciate this, there's no point in

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striving for anything else.

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So like practice appreciation with this thing in this moment, this

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humble thing, and let that be like a moment that is complete of itself.

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It's like very mindfulness.

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It's like that moment of zen that that you just

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carved out for yourself, you

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Yeah.

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And, and you can, I think he had another one about a toothbrush.

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that's like whenever he is brushing his teeth, like he, he uses

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that as a moment to just like, concentrate on the feeling, like

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how good the toothbrush feels.

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Like don't look at your phone.

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Don't think about the tasks that you're supposed to be

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doing, like, or could be doing.

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Like, just be very present.

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and having those triggers that are things that will

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happen to you all the time.

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And another one is, when you feel the sun on your

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skin, look up and smile

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Hmm.

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and just like tiny thing.

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I mean, you live in San Diego, so you'll, you'll have

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to stop doing that at some point and go get some shit.

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Go get some stuff done.

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Yeah.

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don't stare right at it.

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Important,

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Yeah, Huberman sets to stare at it, but it's gotta

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be low on the horizon.

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I know we're all doing that these days.

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But yeah, just little, little things that stick with you.

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so yeah, I, some of those are, have worked their

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way into my daily life and

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that I, I really appreciate.

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yeah, thanks for Sha.

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Is there one that hasn't worked?

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Like, or one that you just like, all right, Naval, that sounded really

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good, but it's fucking useless.

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one, one that I'm still struggling to implement, that I think Naval

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is probably better at than me is, is just like, He's got a

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very, it's almost a Buddhist, approach of the, like, only the

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individual ascends or transcends.

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And that it is a pretty hard line on like, you're

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not responsible for other people's feelings or happiness.

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and that's just a really difficult thing in practice

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day to day, you know,

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Yeah.

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you've got people you love around you all the time and you

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care about how they feel and how their experience is going.

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And, and I'm not actually sure that it's like ideal.

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To totally separate, you know, it is not ideal for your relationships.

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It might be, you know, if you want to go become a monk and like take

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complete, perfect accountability for your internal state, and you're

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just observe, observing like the objective neurochemicals in your

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brain and how much dopamine you get, maybe, yeah, it is optimal to like.

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Totally separate from all relationships, but that's at least

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not the way I want to live my life.

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And so there's a lot of times when, you know, that is just

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a, a messy area of trade-offs, I think, around relationships.

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And when you, when you do choose to take on other people's emotional

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states to show empathy and work through something together and,

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you know, or, or share, you know, share pain, share experiences,

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And not jump to conclusions too quickly or try to solve

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it for someone else, or maybe even yourself sometimes, you

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know, just like let it simmer.

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Something usually connects for, for

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yeah, yeah, and, you know, but he's, he's decades into this

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journey, so it's possible that I, that's just a naive take from me.

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But, it is, I, that is an extreme.

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I think he's got a relatively extreme stance, and it comes

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from the philosophies that, you know, that he's right in some

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of the extreme, some of the philosophers are extreme by nature.

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so I, I don't disagree with it so much as like, have chosen a

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different path or at least live a different path in the moment.

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And, yeah, we're, we're all, we're all on different paths

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at different places, so,

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Absolutely, man, different upbringings and all that.

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So, you know, gotta keep that in mind.

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We're all starting in different places, which is totally fine.

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Give yourself a break, everyone, please.

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So I, well, that leads me to this thought of like, you've had a,

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you've worn a lot of hats and still do, you know, author, curator, I,

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I call you an author, obviously.

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and, you know, founder, investor, podcaster, you know, and all

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these things Now, CEO, like.

Speaker:

I'm thinking of fulfillment, like that's the frame I have here.

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So is there like a, a myth, almost like a toxic myth

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that you think that you had to unlearn in this process?

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You know, for as a C or any of these hats, like has

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something come up that you've reframed over that those years?

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I want to say I've sort of given up on the concept of done.

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Like there is no, there is no finish line really, like any, any

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given finish line is arbitrary and,

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I, I will always be working on something and just trying to find

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good way, high leverage ways to like, make the future better.

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and.

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That, that work will never be done, and I'll never be

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quite satisfied with it.

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And that's like I have to learn to, learn to exist in a state of

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happiness without anything being like done and complete and at rest.

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so, you know, there's another, there's a neval that's like,

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happiness is peace and motion and peace is happiness at rest.

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mm-hmm.

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Yeah, that's a

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And so learning to become like peaceful and in motion.

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At the same time, learn to be happy and satisfied without feeling done

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'cause, you will never be done.

Speaker:

is is a constant quest.

Speaker:

and I'm not good at it, but I, I feel lucky to have at

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least learned that that's.

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Something that I need to get better at.

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and try to, you know, refocus on and just, you know, live in that space.

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And some of the people that I admire the most are

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really, really good at that.

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You know, they even under high stress, you know, heavy fire, they

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can be peaceful and productive.

Speaker:

And I think that's the mindset to have to stay in the game for

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a really long time, which is what you need to do if you're gonna

Speaker:

have great compounding results and great relationships And,

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You know, easier said than done, especially when you hold yourself

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to high standards and you care a lot about, you know, what you're

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doing and who you're doing it with.

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But, that's, that's a goal.

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That's a focus.

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I love it, man.

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I kind of want to end it right there 'cause that's, it's impactful.

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Thanks for sharing.

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Definition of done.

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Yeah.

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What is that?

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Yeah.

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Make, yeah.

Speaker:

So thanks for, thanks for sharing, man.

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And yeah, who, I guess a couple things, like who are

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you following closely now?

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Obviously Naval, Balaji.

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I think you have something with Musk coming up here, right?

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Yeah, I'm working on Elon Musk, very like, tough to pit

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down, but I'm very focused.

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I'm, I'm focused on the like.

Speaker:

First few decades of building that he did, and like what

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makes his mindset and his approach really unique in the,

Speaker:

the scale of problems that he tackles and how the intensity

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with which he tackles them.

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I think there's something for all entrepreneurs to learn in that.

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And so that's really the book that's coming together, this year.

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Yeah, I'm, I'm excited about it.

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I hope that it'll, I hope it's helpful.

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I hope it helps, you know, birth another, a generation

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of a thousand Musks and, you know, usher in a golden age in

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the next industrial revolution.

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That's the, that's my humble hope for this book.

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Nice.

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I love it.

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Yeah.

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yeah,

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yeah.

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I, I follow, I, I think, Casey, er is, is a little more technical

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than like naval or Musk.

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but I think he's an incredible talent, un

Speaker:

underrated, under followed,

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Very, very much in the tech world, but like brilliant.

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brilliant guy.

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I don't follow 'em, so that's great though.

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Add 'em to the list.

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Yeah.

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Hi.

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Highly recommended.

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Cool.

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Awesome, man.

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Well, Eric, dude, this has been a pleasure and thanks

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for being so open, honest.

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I know you are.

Speaker:

And first time we chatted, but like yeah, we, we went there.

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So

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Cool.

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Of course.

Speaker:

Tha thank you for having me.

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This is, very fun.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

In scribe media.com, is that the best place?

Speaker:

Or where else should they find Scribe and then also find you

Speaker:

Yeah, if you, if you're thinking about a book, if you think a book

Speaker:

can help build your business, if you've got a, a strain

Speaker:

notes app full of book ideas,

Speaker:

or Otter

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Perfect.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

so come, come just chat with us.

Speaker:

and we're happy to like, take you through that, scribe media.com.

Speaker:

Just get a, a consult with somebody on the team and, yeah,

Speaker:

all my personal stuff is at ejorgenson.com and I'm on Twitter

Speaker:

X all the time, at Eric Jorgenson.

Speaker:

So happy to, to DM or, you know, get you on the newsletter and

Speaker:

Yeah.

Speaker:

whatever el whatever else you're interested in.

Speaker:

Go check it out, the podcast and everything.

Speaker:

We will link everything, show notes, description, make it easy for you.

Speaker:

So Eric, thank you my man.

Speaker:

Mm-hmm.

Speaker:

Appreciate you.

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