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cover of episode Breaking the System: Shaahin Cheyene's Journey from Teenage Hustler to E-Commerce Innovator

Breaking the System: Shaahin Cheyene's Journey from Teenage Hustler to E-Commerce Innovator

2024/5/28
logo of podcast Escaping the Drift with John Gafford

Escaping the Drift with John Gafford

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Shaahin Cheyene:我从创办Herbal Ecstasy(年收入超过十亿美元)到开发数字雾化技术,拥有丰富的创业经验。我15岁时开始创业,通过各种方式赚钱,包括销售酒类和杂志。后来,我创造了一种合法的摇头丸替代品,并通过地下渠道进行销售,年收入超过十亿美元。之后,我进入电子烟行业,并创办了一家上市公司。我还涉足亚马逊电商领域,创办了亚马逊课程和代理机构,帮助品牌在亚马逊上销售产品。我的成功秘诀在于:抓住机会,创造自己的运气;了解规则,并利用规则来获得优势;创造价值,并讲述更好的故事;借用其他平台的受众来推广自己。 Jon Gafford:Shaahin Cheyene 的创业历程非常励志,他从一个在90年代电子音乐场景中挣扎的青少年,成长为一个成功的企业家。他的故事告诉我们,成功需要打破常规,而不是墨守成规。他善于抓住机会,并利用规则来获得优势。他还强调了品牌价值的重要性,以及通过讲述更好的故事来吸引客户的重要性。他认为,在亚马逊上取得成功,需要创造价值并讲述更好的故事。他还分享了他如何教育孩子,并培养孩子的韧性。

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Shaheen Cheyene shares his incredible journey from immigrating to the US with nothing to building a billion-dollar business at just 15 years old. He discusses his early hustles, the challenges he faced, and the drive that led him to create "Herbal Ecstasy." Shaheen's story is a testament to the power of resilience and innovation in achieving extraordinary success.
  • Shaheen's family immigrated to the US from Iran with limited resources.
  • He developed a knack for making money at a young age, engaging in various small hustles.
  • At 15, he created "Herbal Ecstasy," generating over a billion dollars in revenue.
  • The success of "Herbal Ecstasy" attracted attention from various agencies, including the FDA and FTC.
  • Shaheen faced threats from international mobs due to the product's popularity in Japan.

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I went from herbal ecstasy, which created over a billion dollars in revenue, to creating all the technology for digital vaporization. All the vapes that you see now derived from technology that I built and patented.

And now, Escaping the Drift, the show designed to get you from where you are to where you want to be. I'm Jon Gafford, and I have a knack for getting extraordinary achievers to drop their secrets to help you on a path to greatness. So stop drifting along, escape the drift, and it's time to start right now. Back again, back again for another episode of Escaping the Drift, the show that gets you from where you are, man, to where you want to be.

And I got a dude today that's been a lot of places, man. This guy's been at it since he was young. It's funny because the whole concept of our show is taking that time of your life when you're drifting along with the currents,

and showing you how to get out of that. And I got to tell you, I don't know that this dude has ever done this because he's been at it, man, since he was like 15 years old. I mean, when he was 15, he created something that might be a little controversial. They called him the Willy Wonka of Generation X. He's the number one bestselling author of the billion, How I Became the King of the Thrill Pill Cult.

He is the CEO and founder of Podcast Cola. He has done all kinds. This guy has just been, you know, forget escaping the drift. He's been rolling with the trends, man. He's been just riding the wave of the trends as they go off. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the program. This is

The Shaheen Cheyenne. Shaheen, how are you, buddy? Yeah, dude. Great, John. Thanks for the amazing intro. That's super fun. I pride myself on the best intros in the podcast business. That is what I pride myself on because I got to pump you up, dude. I got to get the energy high, got to get the level. It's late in the day for me here. Where are you? Where are you right now? I am pumped. I'm in sunny California, Los Angeles, Venice Beach. You're in Los Angeles.

Okay, Venice Beach. So you're Pacific time too. So it's wide. You're in California though. You probably quit working like three hours ago, but I'm just saying. For the rest of us, it is a long day here as we get to the end of us. But it doesn't matter, man, because the listener don't care. They don't care what time we do this. They got to feel it when we come. We got to come strong with it. So let's get started with you, dude, because you started at an incredibly young age. I mean, obviously, you know, normally I ask this question, like what was the first hustle to high level entrepreneurs? And it's like,

Like, you know, Bradley talking about selling chocolate bars door to door when he was seven, saying, you know, they're going to bounce shop the ceiling to people, you know, hustling. I had somebody here said that they were so at four years old, they were selling their own drawings, which I thought was really genius because who's going to say no to a four-year-old's drawing on a door, selling those door to door. But you're at 15, built a really substantial business. So-

Before that, what was the first hustle? Were you coming out of the womb trying to sling shit? What was going on? Yeah, man. We came here as refugees, immigrants. We immigrated to this country from Iran. I was born in Iran and my family left Iran to come to the United States. We came here. I didn't speak a word of English. We were poor. We didn't have any money.

Somehow my parents managed to gather up enough money after a couple years to buy a house in an area that became up and coming. And they bought the cheapest house on the best block they could afford and the area just blew up. And I was going to public school, barely spoke English, trying to figure out what to do with myself during Iran-Contra where they hated Iranians. And what happened was I started realizing that I was very good at making money.

So I did all kinds of little clandestine things as a kid. We would go into the liquor store and I had this little Greek kid that would come out with me and he was cute. And so I would talk to the people at the front. Nobody expected anything. He would take the little bottles of liquor and the nudie magazines back when people had nudie magazines. And then we would sell them at school.

Fact was really good at making money, really bad at crime, like really bad. Like I kept telling myself, like, dude, we should not be doing crime because we are always getting caught. Fast forward. I'm 15. I've seen all this wealth come up around me, but we're still poor. You know, my dad's working at a dry cleaners. Mom, stay at home, mom. We never had new clothes.

All the clothes we got were clothes that people left behind last year at the cleaners. And they went around the thing and after a year they would donate them. So we would get them and that's what I would wear. Never ate at restaurants, none of that stuff. But the kids around me were doing that. And you know, they're turning 16 and, and daddy's buying them a brand new Mustang. Remember those 5.0s and vanilla ice car, vanilla ice car. Right. And later on, I went on to make a movie with vanilla ice, which is really funny. Well,

Well, five, that's another story. But so I'm 15. I'm like, man, you know, I'm hanging out on the beach. I'm looking around. I'm like, wow, look at that guy. He's got this beautiful car. He's got this beautiful girl. Man, look at all this wealth. I want that. How do I get that? So I go home, ask my parents. I'm like, mom, dad, you know, look like this life sucks. Like that guy, he's figured it out. How do I get that?

And they're like, well, you know, Shani, go be a doctor. You have to be a doctor. It is the only way to get wealth. And I was like, oh, fuck. Okay. And then somehow in there, you know,

uh in their middle class minds they were like well the only way up for us is to become doctors because doctors seem to have money so go talk to the guy next door i go next door to talk to the iranian dude next door who seems to have money and i'm like holy fucking shit dude is bald dude is fat he looks miserable he's smoking a cigarette out of each ear the wife comes out she's bald she's fat the kids come out they're bald they're fat everybody's fucking miserable and i'm like bro like

If this is what it takes to get to that, I'm out. So I bailed. I bailed. I left everything I knew with nothing but a backpack and went out in the world to find my fame and fortune. So you split on the family. I got to tell you something, man. I'm going to throw this out there. You probably heard this before.

I got a, I got a reoccurring theme on this show. I've had Ari Rastegar, who's the Oracle of Austin. I've had a bunch of dudes that have the same story as you from Iran, the same story, right? It's the same thing over and over and over this story. And it makes me wonder something that I got to kind of say aloud.

How in the fuck did they take over that country from all you hardworking people? Like how, how does that even happen? Because dude, everybody I know that came out of that situation, right. That just told the same story you had that said it's, it's always like this. It just, it lit this unbelievable fire of desire to be successful inside themselves, man. Bro. Look, I got a friend who's got a kid and,

And this kid is good looking kids, smart kid, nothing bad to say about this kid, but you know what he is? He's comfortable, John. He's not rich. Oh yeah. He's not poor. He's comfortable. He knows that at any time he can walk out that door and go to Chipotle and get one of those burritos and sit there and just watch people go by unambitious, but comfortable. That is rich.

a luxury that i did not have the pleasure of having and so in lieu of that i had hunger a lot of us did if you look at people coming out of southeast asia vietnamese people pakistani people indian people persians like me a lot of us came from nothing and we came from a place where

whatever we achieve, we were going to have to do on our own. Nobody fucking handed it to us. Nobody handed me shit. Nobody ever gave me anything. If anything, it was the opposite. They told me I couldn't do it and I used that as fuel to make it. So when it came time to seize those opportunities,

that's where we are. Your question about the country is a much more complicated question having to do with geopolitics. In general, you can think of it like this. No matter how ambitious you are, a syndicate of criminals is always going to be more ambitious than you. Sometimes you have to ask yourself if by means of violence and doing unfair things, if you want to be

taking control or if you want to go around and this is a very interesting concept so I really enjoyed learning about you and your show and the stuff that you talk about and I was thinking about this and I was thinking about leprechauns right and this is kind of this new concept that I'm playing with here right all right what what's a leprechaun guy gold pot of gold it's got a pot of gold right and how do you find the pot of gold

Where's the pot of gold? In the rainbow. The rainbow. What's that mean? I thought about this for a while, right? And I looked at Irish mythology and the whole story of the leprechauns, right? They're hardworking. They're obsessed. But this rainbow...

is what people follow but in the story of the leprechaun nobody gets to the gold the rainbow isn't what you think the rainbow is the story that they tell you that you have to believe the things they tell you you have to do to get to that pot of gold but you never get to it it's the you have to go to school you have to become a doctor you have to play by the rules but you and me both know

that nobody who plays by the rules ever makes it. The big companies, the biggest companies that we know in America don't make it by playing by the rules. They make it by breaking the rules. They make it by apologizing rather than asking for permission. And so in that analogy, right,

The pot of gold is there. It's fucking there. But the leprechaun is guarding it with the fucking rainbow. The rainbow is like, hey, look at all these colors. It's amazing. You do these things and you'll get to that. But you never get it. He always tricks you.

right the people who make it the successful people like me like you like brad like a lot of the people that we know just walk around you can walk around dude and if you know how to do that if you know how to break the pattern how to walk around you can get to that pot of gold and i teach people how to do it every day on amazon my amazon course which i i'm happy to drop a link for i'll give it to everybody who's watching for free but in general

That's the concept. So I feel like that's what I did. So I'm going to take that one step further because you say you can't get there without breaking the rules. And I'm going to lean to the other side of that pendulum.

I think the people that excel become experts at the rules, not at breaking them. For example, for example, one of my favorite things to do, and my kids will not play with me anymore because I'm an ace. I can tell you right now that I win every game of Monopoly you ever play. I'm going to tell you. I put this in my book and it's secret will be out. This is how you win every game of Monopoly ever. It's not cheating.

Right? Here's what you do. You do whatever you can to beg, borrow, steal to get the first three piece set. And then you put four houses on every single space. Beg, borrow, steal to get the second set. Put four houses on every single space. You never, ever upgrade to hotels because here's the deal.

In the rules of Monopoly, it says you can put a house on a space and you can trade four houses in for a hotel. Game of Monopoly comes with exactly 32 houses. It does not state that anything can ever be substituted by a house. So if you never upgrade to hotels, you create a housing shortage, you fuck everybody else up, and then you just sit there and collect rent. And it takes a long time, but it's impossible to beat somebody that just sits on all these houses.

there you go buddy you're going around the rainbow i'm just saying but that's manipulating the rules that's utilizing just like okay just like um tim ferris in his book for our work week which is the bible for most entrepreneurs or at least at one point in your life it was tim ferris talks about winning uh the the thailand kickboxing match not because he knew how to kickbox but because he read the rules and saw if you push the other guy out of the ring three times you automatically win and he's like i don't know how to fight but i don't cut weight

He's like, cut weight like a mother trucker, weighed in, rehydrated, and just pushed the other dude out of the ring. Much to the chagrin of all of the people in the audience. But hey, man, that's the rules. That's it. So yes, circumventing the rules can be advantageous, but I think the way sometimes can be through the rules.

Yeah. Yeah. I think we're talking about the same thing using different words. We are. We are. We are. We're not debating that fact. I think we're just adding a little bit more on top of it. But let's talk about, so at 15, you founded this smart drug thing. What year was this?

Yeah. So I was hanging around the rave scene, the electronic music scene. What year is this? What year is this? This would be the nineties, early nineties. Yeah. Okay, cool. Cause I remember this. Yeah, I remember it. Do you remember it? Okay. Yeah. So it was hanging around the rave scene, the electronic music scene. And I was looking around and going, man, who's, who's making money here at these clubs?

not the people who do the clubs they're broke ass not the djs also broke ass back then now they're rich and who's making the money oh it's the drug dealers fantastic okay well that's there's my answer that's all i gotta do they've got the money they got the cars they got the girls they got all the things and it's fast perfect and then i looked back and remembered

that I was really bad at crime. You're the worst criminal ever. I should not be doing crime. So I decided that's not going to work. And it was in that moment when it hit me, if I could come up with a legal version, the big party drug at the time was ecstasy. If I could come up with a legal version of it made with herbs, because I knew there were herbs that could replicate some of the effects, I could get rich. So I went off and

Somehow beg borrowed steal. I had that drive, that determination because I was sleeping on the beach on couches. I was the definition of hungry, both literally and figuratively, and I just wouldn't take no. And I managed to create a formula.

and get it out there through the club scene, distribute it through the clandestine drug dealers at the time that were out of inventory. I was at the right place at the right time. And that's another thing that I believe that if you put your mind to it, you can put yourself at the right place at the right time and create your own luck, which is what I did. And again,

walked around the fucking rainbow. Nobody knew that you could utilize a clandestine operation of drug dealers across the country as distribution for a legal pill. And we created over a billion dollars in revenue, well documented. And it's funny, I've been doing a lot of podcasts lately and it's interesting in the comments 'cause I would think that people would be real righteous and they'd be like, man, it's terrible that you're having people take pills and dah, dah, dah.

The number one comment on the shows that I've done, I've done some of the biggest ones out there, is this guy's full of shit and he's lying. He's making this up. Well documented. This was pre-internet. I was on the news and the clips are online.

You can see it. It was published. Okay, so I can remember back in, like, I was in the rave days back in, call it 90, call it 93. You know, we would go to the Edge in Orlando and, you know, all night raves there, whatever, but I remember

I remember the, Oh, it's a smart drug, bro. It's a smart drug, this market. And you would take like a pill and it'd be like niacin and turn you like beet red in two seconds. You're like, well, this is super fun. I don't know that I ever experienced what you were making and selling. Um,

but it was definitely, I mean, I remember the time when this shit was everywhere. I remember this. So, you know, I have no reason not to doubt that you were doing that. But I mean, so at some point though, I mean, like, look, you generate that kind of revenue with something that people are ingesting. You piss somebody off at some point. Who'd you piss off? We pissed off every three letter agency. No, man.

Yeah. Yeah. The whole three letter community came after us, mainly FDA, FTC, all the different agencies. The fact was they couldn't get us. I was a teenage kid. I had created a billion dollars in revenue and they really wanted to go after us. In fact, the president at the time appointed a head of the FDA, new head of the FDA with part directive to take me down. And he went on national TV.

back to back with me and Sam Donaldson. I was on the show. He was there telling America, you know, look, the horse is out of the cart. Nothing we can do about this now. And it was amazing because they were trying to make it illegal at that time, but it was legal. Nobody had precedence for what we were doing and we were making money

You know day after day the economics of it were ridiculous. It was like printing money Yeah, a pill would cost me 25 cents to produce in bulk. I have multiple manufacturers making it We were selling it for 20 to 25 dollars cash every single day

So back up. I have a question about that. So you're 15 years old. You had to have gotten a partner or some partners of some sort of age that were helping you source manufacturing, figure this out. You're not a 15 year old kid walk, going to China and go into a manufacturing plant and getting those done. Oh, this was back when things were made here in the U S in the nineties, if you remember, and supplements are made here in the U S stuff here.

When did that happen? Yes, sir. We did. We did make stuff here and it's coming back. I'm pretty excited about seeing that. But yeah, things that are equipment intensive, not labor intensive can still be made in this country better and cheaper than China, I would argue. So the answer to your question is no. That's what employees are for. Was it a nutraceutical place? Was it a...

No, but who was making this? I mean, was it a nutraceutical place? Was it a supplement manufacturer? Supplement manufacturers. Yeah. Supplement manufacturers. I had the formula. I figured out the formula. We'd order the, they would order the ingredients. I would tell them what's in it and they would put it in pills and the pills were beautiful. There were little blue pills that a butterfly and an E on the back. We had a blister pack. They went in these beautiful little pyramids and they would be sold all over the world.

It was probably one of the biggest supplements of the time and one of the most profitable, I think, of all time. The precursor to the truck stop stamina pill. Yeah. For some reason in my memory, I think those always existed. I think those always existed. Yeah. Who knows? Who knows? But did you find a partner that was helping with this? No. No.

No partners. I just had employees, man. What's that? How'd you find it? Well, look, I started grassroots, but remember the economics of this, John. I was making this for 25 cents. I was selling it for $25 cash. If I sold a thousand units, that's $25,000 with what? Maybe $1,000 in expenses. It's extremely profitable, like printing money.

All cash business. It was spectacular. I didn't need any investment. So how old were you when that fell apart? It fell apart very gradually, right? It depends what you mean by fell apart. I mean, it went on through most of the 90s.

Uh, the fact was that, you know, eventually I sold the assets of it and kind of walked out just cause it was getting too much for me. Different agencies were after me. We had a couple people from the Japanese mob try to, you know, get their hands on the company cause we're big in Japan. And eventually I was just like, dude, you know what? I'm going on to the next thing. And I got rid of the assets and then moved back.

to what I was really good at, which was developing products and getting them out there. Yeah. Obviously with that experience, I mean, you know, when you see it, you see that you've done that and then you see the rise of Amazon. So you obviously saw an opportunity there to kind of make a pivot in a way that made sense, I guess is a good way to put it.

Yeah. I went from Herbal Ecstasy, which created over a billion dollars in revenue, to creating all the technology for digital vaporization. All the vapes that you see now derived from technology that I built and patented. That company went public, was one of the first vape companies to ever go public before Juul, before any of that other stuff.

And I exited that company around 2006. Which company was that? What's that? Which company was that? Because I thought the – I watched a Netflix deal on the Jewel guys. I saw that too. Yes.

Dude, they totally ripped off my whole thing. It was amazing. I was watching that going, oh shit, that's my pitch. I was like, oh my God, that's all shit that I built. So, and I patented it and the company went public. It was in 2006, 2007. It went public. The company was called Vapier. What company was that?

VAPIR. Yeah, we made the best frickin vaporizers on earth. The first one was like size of a ketchup bottle and then it came to the size of a cigar. Then we got down to like, here's the deal.

Just if you're listening, I keep getting, I'm going to get the, because some of the stuff is wild, man. I'm getting the name. So if you don't believe it, I can Google it. That's all I'm going to say is if you don't believe what's coming out this, I know it's a lot and it sounds like a lot. It was a lot on paper. And I was like, man, everything he says, I'm going to make sure it's Googleable. So look, we have, we have a high level of integrity here at the old escaping the drift podcast.

And yeah, so it's Google it. Google it if you don't believe it. Keep going. I'm sorry. Keep going. Yeah, no. So I wrote a book on vaporization, built that technology for digital vaporization. And then from there, I moved on to doing Amazon. And I was watching this little guy who had his office on some cinder blocks and a wood desk from Home Depot, this guy, Jeff Bezos. And I thought to myself, man, something to this.

And then I looked at it and I was like, man, this guy is not a nerd. This guy is one of the smartest guys in the room. And he's using Wall Street money, big Wall Street money to do something that's never been done before to remove all the friction points for both buyers and sellers. What he did was he went out and basically grabbed Walmart's head of, uh, uh,

logistics and fulfillment and said, here's a blank check. Build me the best fulfillment logistics company in the world. And that guy did it. Amazon's not an e-commerce site. It's a logistics company. Amazon's a lot of things. Yeah. So once they built that, all of us sellers, I was early on eBay as well.

So all of us sellers, the big bottleneck was I mean, dude, I had to have big, big warehouses and offices and people to pack and ship and insurance and, you know, warehouse management, safety program, like all that stuff. Once they did that, all you had to do is order the product from China, you ship it to Amazon.

And the world is yours, man. They'll pick pack and ship it. They'll advertise it. They'll drop traffic to you. And I was like, holy smokes, there's really something to this. So I started doing Amazon very early in the game, learning how to do it. People started coming to me asking me to teach them how to do it. So I launched my Amazon course. What year was that?

I launched my Amazon course, I think it must have been 2010. And we started our Amazon agency where we do this for brands, we get them to number one, get them selling on Amazon. And I think I started the agency in 2010 2011. Yeah. And then we had a bunch of Amazon brands and Amazon companies that we've sold over the years, very successfully. Because, you know, Amazon really has

The other thing that they did was, you know, look, if you go, John, you want to go out there and start a business. Okay, cool. What do you want to do, buddy? You want an ugly business? You want a coin laundry? You want a freaking restaurant? What do you need? You need 100 grand, 200 grand, 500 grand? How long will it take you to become a millionaire from a UPS store, from a freaking pizza restaurant?

It's going to be very difficult. More likely, you'll make a good mid-level pay from it. It might be a good investment, but you'll need 10 or 100 of them to really reach the level of success that you want. Yeah, the end scale.

The amazing thing about Amazon is that anybody can open up an Amazon store for very little money, 10 grand. You can create your own private label product. And mind you, what I talk about is private label, not arbitrage, not buying somebody else's product and selling it. Yeah. And what's the limit on how much that can do?

What's the limit on where you can go? Well, I'm really glad you just said that you teach white label. And the reason that I say that is if there was like a scam awards, like the welcome to the international scam awards for 2023. Yeah. The nominations for this year's online are...

Amazon dropship stores for $30,000 a pop, right? I mean, that was scam of the year. And no, probably 2022, I guess, is what it was. And a lot of dudes got smoked for that. And they should have. Yeah. Don't get me started on that, right? Look, I think it's all part of the kind of like Andrew Tate philosophy of going to younger guys that are...

aspirational entrepreneurs, and going to them and being like, dude, look at that jacuzzi filled with chicks in the back of my Lambo. You can have that all you got to do is drop ship these five products. It's bullshit, right? Because Yeah, okay, somebody could make money doing that. But

But eventually, everybody's going to be doing that. So then you're going to have to shift and then it's going to be race to bottom and you're going to lose the way to make money on platforms like Amazon is by bringing value and telling a better story. So we build out.

entire lines of product. I built out the first guy to sell matcha on Amazon, the matcha tea category, which blew up. I don't know if you ever go to coffee shops. Now you always see matcha in there. That didn't that didn't exist. Now they're making more profit from matcha than they are from coffee. And most of it is matcha that I brought into the country and branded and put out there.

We do so many different products, but what we focus on is value. How do you bring value and then tell a better story? Because that lives forever. And when you own the brand, you're fucking Louis Vuitton, right? Like we went to, I took my wife out for dinner and my kid was with me and we walk into one of these stores, right? And my kid's walking around and he picks up this little wallet. He wants to buy it for mommy. He's like, how much is that?

And the guy goes, oh, you know, that one's like 20 bucks. And then he looks behind the glass and it's a very similar one. Right. And he goes, oh, how much is that one?

and the guy goes oh well sir that one's you know 1789 and your mommy has to ask you know for you to see it what's the difference and the guy's thinking long and hard and he goes well you know the name they're both leather wallets and he goes well dad i got it he's thinking the whole way the whole way he goes dad i got it and i said what he's like we just need to have the name

And I was like, it was so simplistic from the mind of a ten year old. Right. But really, he nailed it. That's all it is. You have to bring value and you build value and trust through that name. Those guys aren't the wealthiest guys in the world for no reason. Yeah. So much for the same reason I try to leave parties first because I believe scarcity builds brand value.

What are some ways that you think builds brand value in a brand like that? How do you create a valuable brand? How do you create the perception that this brand is valuable? Yeah. So I believe in pull marketing as Seth Godin has taught in a lot of his books. I'm a big fan of Seth. He talks about that in a few of his books. And I believe that you shouldn't have to go out there and push stuff down people's throats. That if you build a product,

and are able to tell a better story and can do it in the right way, people will come to you. And all my life, it's been like that. That's been my path around the rainbow is being able to craft a story that's authentic, that's true,

around something that brings value thinking distribution first which is another mistake that people make people always go man I'm gonna build a better mousetrap and the world's gonna come this happens in my current world right now over my current company podcast Cola people are like bro

I'm just like Joe Rogan. Me and my buddies, we get on, we have a cigar, we'll drink some thing, and we'll talk about aliens. So I'm going to do a podcast. And they go out, they build out a big fat studio. And they get all their buddies sitting around. And then they make the podcast. It's fucking Tumbleweed City.

nobody's there right and then they reach out to me and they go hey nobody listen to this this is gold how's it happen it's gold how's it not happening and and i have to explain to them how it works i say you know joe rogan who has the number one podcast on the planet who basically single-handedly saved and rose podcasting you know how he did it oh well yeah you know he got around with his buddies and he's like one of us i'm like no not at all he didn't sleep

What he did was he did his own show. He built it up when nobody was listening to it, but he also went on other people's shows, borrowed their audience, went on network TV, borrowed their audience and brought it over to him. And that's what we do now over at Podcast Cola, which is our podcast booking agencies. We get people booked on shows like this.

And what we do is we help them borrow those audiences to whatever high ticket product or service that they're selling. So the key is you got to become a good storyteller, but more importantly, you got to be able to borrow other people's audience. Otherwise, it's a long road pushing unless you got a lot of money. If you got millions...

You can, you can do it. People look at this guy, Alex Hormozy, you know, Alex Hormozy, another Persian. Yeah. I love Alex is great. Yeah. Another Persian guy who hustled a lot. I love Alex. I love his content and people look at him and they see his rise because it was very fast. Alex, the Vegas guy. He's here. Yeah. He was very fast. Yeah. But.

But what they don't realize is they think, hey man, this guy just went on and he said, hey, I got nothing to sell you. Look, I'm so jacked. You know, whatever people watched him, the nose thing, you know, the wife beater shirts. He's great. Yeah, that's how he did it. No bullshit. Do you know how many hundreds of thousands, how many millions of dollars this man has spent

on getting his message out on getting that marketing out. And if you look at Alex Hormozy, and I'll tell you this from somebody who's an expert in the field of podcasting, as we've been doing it for a lot of years and now have the largest podcast booking agency in the country.

is that Alex does other people's shows and borrows their audience. That's his whole MO right now. If you look at his podcast called The Gamer, whatever it's called, I'm not sure he's doing very many episodes himself right now. Almost every single episode is him doing somebody else's show, and that's aggregated on his own feed. So that's the key. And the key, I think,

Today is getting on podcasts and being able to tell your story because you know, this is why you're doing it. This is why I'm doing it. Traditional media is dead.

Nobody wants the shove it down your throat interruption economy where they're interrupting your Super Bowl with a commercial of like, hey, John, you want beer? You want beer now? How about now? You want beer now? I think when it comes to podcasting, right? Like I just randomly the other day I was on the treadmill and I was like flipping through all my episodes. I was like, fuck, let's episode two. Back when this was called the power move and I did it with a couple of my buddies and it was literally we started doing this just because

We were at a bar one night shooting the shit and the waitress thought we were funny and said, man, you guys should have a show. All right, let's do a show. I don't care. Let's do it. And that's how it started. And I listened back to that and oh my God, it was terrible. I mean, it was just, we're talking over each other the whole time. Just, you know, there's just, it's a mess. And I'm like, I put this out. And in over the two and a half, three years now I've been doing this, it's a lot of work. I mean, we were doing this for eight,

eight people for a long time. You know what I mean? And it takes a long time to build that audience. And I completely agree with you on using, leveraging other people's audiences to grow yours. I mean, when we look for guests here, you know, some people monetize their shows and they monetize appearances. I don't do that. I know it says so on my website that we charge to be on here. And I do that just really just to filter people out, but just to try to keep the request down. But yeah,

For me, like if I like, like just for those of you listening here right now, shine did not pay to be on my show today. I, I genuinely thought he was interesting enough to somebody that I would want to have a conversation with the meat. Cause I just, I did one pod paid podcast once where dude came on and it was trying to like sell water softeners or some shit in Florida or some technology developed. And it was the most boring thing. I had zero interest at the end of it. We cut it up and I watched it back and I just, I,

I have a lot of ability in a lot of things, but feigning interest, not one of them. Like if I'm bored with you, you it's, I just, I can't fake it. I'm like, dude, I'm bored. Right. And you could just see me just like melting it behind the microphone. This guy was talking. I'm like, Oh my God. And when it was done, like I sent the guy's money back and then we, we sent him all the footage and I said, dude, I'm not going to post this. Like we're not putting it up. I just, I didn't feel good about it. But yeah,

I do it for several reasons. Number one, because it's great exposure for us. Number two, it's good exposure for the guests. Number three, I can grow my network like you just said. If somebody wants to come on, very rarely will I have somebody... Like when I look at you and I look at somebody who's come on, I look at all their social media handles and...

you know, it's, it's easy to see the ones that are bullshit. Like, Oh, I have 500,000 followers. And then you look at their videos and all of like, this content makes me happy. Oh, great content. Good video. It's like, dude, this is all bullshit. Right? Like I can see that. So I'm looking for people that have a genuine following because I look, I made the mistake years ago of,

buying an audience because that's what somebody told me I needed to do. And, you know, I fought that battle for years trying to sift those people out. And I think we finally done that. So now I'm, I'm down to a very, a real audience, which is nice. But for me, like,

I've kind of laid this plan out. Maybe you tell me if it's right or wrong. I think it's right. I think what I'm doing is right because I've got a book that is now with the beta readers, with the publisher. So 20 people are now reading my book as we sit here. Hopefully they're liking it or at least telling us what needs to be fixed before it comes back. But it's with a focus group right now through my publisher. And when it's done, so my thing is like when that book gets ready to roll, I will be going on like,

hell-bent like full-on six podcasts a day every day but i've been saying no to everything for like the last year and a half i haven't done i've not been on stage stage speaking in probably a year and a half i've not been on another podcast i just i just say no to literally everything um yeah just because i'm like

I don't want to do that. Shoot your trajectory and then you're gone. And then I don't have it, you know, because obviously when you do this stuff, you really should have something to sell. You should have an angle to it. There should be an objective to everything you do. So is that right of me to hold that back? Is that right of me to be saying no?

I think it depends. So I tell people all the time, the way that we work, a good friend of mine, Wayne came up with a framework for strategy, we always talk about this. So objectives, strategy, tactics, we work top down. So objectives, what are you trying to achieve? So you're very right in that your consideration is, hey, man, I've got no objective. So I don't need a strategy or tactics to implement. But however, let's say if your strategy was to

build content, gain authority, and to become an expert in whatever niches that you want to be in. Well, if that was the case, then we would build a strategy around that. So I would look at, hey, why do you not want to do these shows? Is it a time thing, right? Is your time more valuable spent somewhere else? Or is it just because you want to hold back because you feel there won't be shows if you do them all the time?

for that reason for you in particular i would think and this is just my gut is that relevancy is more important and you are doing something that you want to promote which is your show so i i would recommend doing it i would recommend building that content now you do so many shows

That you are getting content out there already that's unique, that's produced well, that's your own. So you probably are different from the majority of people out there who are producing nothing. Most people put nothing out into the world as far as content goes. You're producing great content. You have interesting people on your shows, killing it on Apple and Spotify. You've got tons of downloads, you know, so you're doing very well.

To your point about monetization, there's other ways to monetize around brands that you believe in. But I agree with you. And in the industry that we're in podcast booking, people come to us, we get them booked on shows. Yeah.

I tell 100% of my clients, it is against my religion to pay to be on a show. There's agencies that do that. If you want to do it, you got a specific show and you want to do that as my client. I discourage you from doing that because it sets a bad precedence. Exactly like you said, like with the water softener guy, you know, the guy's not going to be interested in what you sell in, what you're doing. He just wants your whatever it is, five grand, 10 grand. It no longer becomes an organic conversation.

and it stops being that. And like one of the reasons I do that, I don't have anybody on here that I wouldn't want to have a beer with, right? That's my, you know, my Steve Sims-ism. My Steve Sims-ism is when I see everybody in my circle, if I was to be walking down the street and they were across the street and I saw them, would I walk across the street and say, let's grab a beer? Or would I put my head down and go the other way? And if I put my head down and go the other way, I don't need to be around that person at all.

And I love that. That's his little ethos. And it's kind of the same way when we hear, right? Because dude, you spend an hour talking about somebody's favorite subject, which is them. They're going to have some sort of affinity towards you at the end of it because it's hard not to. I'm really not this likable. It's just, we're talking about you. That's why it's, it's, it's, it's like a master trick we do here on the old podcast, right?

It has nothing to do with anything else, but that's all it is. You're pretty likable, buddy. I do. You know what? It's all a lie. It's a facade. I'm not that likable. I'm just kidding. It's a facade. But no, but I like that philosophy of not paying for stuff. So how does someone become podcastable? That's a word. Yeah. Look, I tell people this. And I'm going to say, I will say this. All right. I'm going to give you, I'm going to give you a stroke real quick as you answer this question. Your, your,

Your package is better than anything anybody has ever seen me send me.

this all, all of this whatnot that I got your tear sheets and your one pagers. This is, yeah, yeah. This is better than anything I've ever, than I've ever gotten. And normally when I get something even remotely this thorough, we go to immediately start Googling it to see if it's bullshit. And if it wasn't, um, which is nice. So I was confident telling people earlier to Google the shit out of you. Cause it's fine. Um, sure. Yeah. But, but this was really well done. So how do you, what are your, what are your advice for how do you become podcastable? Um,

all right let me give you the first piece of advice right so i know you're in real estate as well you ever go to like a really affluent area there's a bunch of houses for sale markets hot every day right and there's some dude on the corner you see this sign that says for sale by owner and the house isn't selling and that dude thinks he's got the most golden best house in the world why does he need a professional he could sell it himself

but he's not getting any action. And while all the houses around him are selling, while everybody's climbing the real estate ladder, he's still sitting there with that sign, getting musty in his hands, let's say for sale by owner.

The fact is there's a reason for professionals and people who know, people who you and I both know who are multimillionaires, maybe billionaires in the real estate business never represent themselves. They hired the best professionals because they know a good professional will bring the value. My friend always says a professional is expensive, but an amateur costs a fortune. Fortune, yeah. Same in podcasting.

The biggest mistake that I made when I started was representing myself. By now, I've done hundreds of podcasts. I've been on massive shows like Adam Carolla, which is the top downloaded podcast in the country. Crazy fact. He's actually over Rogan. He's got more downloads than Rogan.

But I've done all the big shows. I continue to do podcasts all the time. But when I started, I started representing myself, going out to people saying, hey, dude, will you have me on your show? I like your style. And some people would say yes. But a few of them came to me and they said, dude, your story's fucking awesome. Why are you representing yourself? So I hired a publicist. And the publicist did okay. But...

She wasn't doing what I needed to do because she was all over the place. Didn't really understand how podcasts work. They didn't understand podcast community. So I started my own company and that's podcast Cola. We started podcast Cola as a way that everyday people and celebrities and people that are authors, speakers, people that sell high ticket products and services,

could get featured on these shows. And what we do is we structure an entire podcasting strategy. It's cheaper than you would think. We're a rounding error for most of our clients for the value that we provide. And we get people booked on unlimited podcasts. So you can keep every day busy doing shows if that's what you want to do. And never one time will you ever have to pay for being on any of the shows that we book you on. Mm hmm.

I'm going to use that. Well, how much do you charge? Dude, I'm a rounding error for you. What are you talking about? Oh, that's good. But yeah,

Are you telling me that everybody has something that is it, is it just a matter of packaging from your end or do you, or, or is there something that in particular you would want to do? No, some people are fucking boring and we don't take them as clients. However, however, yeah. And we turn people laugh at me. My wife laughs at me. She's my partner in, in this company. She's, she's a big time real world publicist used to work for Kofi and non United nations. She's done mega, mega things. Um,

And she laughs at me because I oftentimes tell people, dude, I don't think we're going to be a fit. And the reason for that is I really believe that if you want to serve people, you got to take people who you know that you can under promise over deliver for. And you got to come to everything you do with excellence. And that's how we approach every business that we do. So if I don't think I can serve you, I won't. But the fact is with podcasts, people are interested in interesting stories.

People don't give a shit about your water softener business. And I get company, the ones that we turned down oftentimes are like, hey, this is XYZ Corporation. Can we get our senior VP and then maybe our publicist and then the third person? I'm like, no, nobody cares about your company. What they care about is the CEO. That dude's got an interesting story. He built this thing from nothing. That's what we want. We want that story. Because at the end of every deal, and you know this too from the businesses that you're in,

there's a human at the end of every sale there's a human at the end of every action at the end of every everything that we do person to person there's a person and people care about other people and interesting stories that move them so if you have an interesting story we can sell it we can get you on podcast to

Put your message out. Now, what you do with that is up to you. I find, you know what I find, man? I find that everybody has some interesting story. And I feel like sometimes you just got to extrapolate it at them. I feel like some people have a not interesting story that they think is the greatest thing ever. And you've got to sit through it ad nauseum. But I think if you really think about it, man, if you're of a certain age, everybody's had something happen. Like you've had something interesting that you can talk about.

Yeah, I'll put it to you this way. Let me rephrase that for you a little bit. A mentor of mine, one of my greatest teachers, told me something. And I sat down with him because he had really a quality where we would go somewhere. We would go to a bar. We would go to somewhere to hang out. And 100% of the time, he would start talking to somebody next to him and it would turn into a lesson. And he told me, everybody you meet will have something to teach you.

And I really like that. And I think from, from your words, that's what I'm capturing. Yeah. Well, I was at, there's a quote somewhere. I don't know what it is. Like everybody's a teacher. Everybody, everybody you meet is a teacher. There's actually a famous, I don't know what it is. There's a famous quote. I don't know what it is.

Well, we'll go from there. So let's shift gears a little bit, dude, because I want to ask you this, because as the father of two kids and much like you said, my kids do not want for a lot. We try to create as much manufactured adversity as we can into them. Yeah. You know, as manufactured adversity, it's always my biggest fear to raise worthless kids. That is always my biggest fear. You just mentioned you have a kid. Obviously, you're not hurting for much. So what?

What are you doing to not make your kid, you know, Veruca salt in the, in the fricking Willie? You know, what are you doing?

very common conversation. And I have this all the time. And I love your concept of manufactured adversity. So I think those are the things that we have to do, right? Because now we're rich people. And, you know, coming up, I wasn't rich. So my kid is going to be a rich kid, he will have access to money, he will have access to wealth. And that's good. He can use that to his advantage to propel himself in the world. How does he not become an asshole?

He becomes not an asshole by doing difficult things, things that challenge him, things that push him. So we're big on martial arts. One of our deals are

When I was a kid, I was a big fan of Bruce Lee, right? And I got Dao Ji Kundo, which was Bruce Lee's book. And I decided that I was going to become just like Bruce Lee, a martial artist, because I watched his movies and I was like, man, he got beat up just the same way I did at school. He was discriminated against and he really made it up despite all the facts. There was never an Asian star that made it into the mainstream until Bruce Lee did. Bruce Lee was the one who broke the mold.

And so I went out and I sought out Bruce Lee's partner and teacher, this guy, Dan Inosanto at a studio here next to me. And my kid still trains there. So my kid trains Brazilian jujitsu. My kid trains mixed martial arts. And our deal is he can do whatever he wants, but every week we go to that class. If he's feeling crappy, if he's feeling good, we go because it's difficult and it's what he does. And so, yeah,

These are the types of things. The second part of that is we travel.

So we take a few months off every summer. We go to Europe and we sail the Greek Isles. We go to Italy, we go to France and we work from wherever we're at, but he gets to travel and he gets to see other cultures. He gets to see how life is in other places and nothing can replace travel for children. One of my favorite quotes from one of my good friends, Chris Connell, it was used to be a host on this show when it was the power move.

He said one day, and here he goes, I've never met a well-traveled racist. I thought that was such a- A well-traveled racist? I've never met a well-traveled racist. When you see how the other parts of the world live, and I totally agree. Our kids were going to Europe for

for two weeks and a couple of weeks. We'll be, we traveled JJ Todd, who was also a friend of the show had travel hacked me some unbelievable seats on Emirates for like very low miles. So yeah, super happy. Thank you, JJ, for your listeners again. But yeah, I, I agree with that. And for me, you know, right now I told my literally, cause you know, my daughter, it's, it's so funny cause you think nature versus nurture, right?

And you think two exact kids coming up in the same exact scenario, but couldn't be more polar opposite, right? My son is very affable, very laid back. My daughter is like the most tenacious person you'll ever meet. Like she just decides, like I'm going to accomplish this and then just does just tunnel vision. Bam, just runs to it, which creates when she doesn't get there, it creates a hard fall for her, which is probably good for her anyway. But my son, um,

you know, has fallen into the, the, the I'm gonna, it's like, there's easy and there's hard. Right. Yeah. And this is true all through life. There's easy and there's hard. If you do the hard first, then, then life is easy.

Or you can do the easy first or you can go easy. And then the hard is way harder than it would have been if you just did the hard upfront. Right. And so I told him the other day, like, we're not doing 90 hard. We're not Andy for selling it, but we're doing the summer of hard. And we're going to this instead, we ain't sleep until noon this summer. I said, like, look, you're 16. I got to tell you 18 to like really man you up and get you ready for the world. So we're going to do the hard first. And

every day. You're going to get up and get in the gym every day and do the hard first. We're going to every day. It's like, well, he's like, well, I want to go do this. Okay, cool. What are you going to do to earn that? Everything is hard.

And it's been kind of eye opening for him, but it's so funny. You can see even in the smallest things, man, when you do it that way, I can see the self-esteem just growing in him daily. Yesterday, dumbest thing in the world, right? Okay. Today, because I got, I was furious with him on Monday because we were going to a dinner to celebrate his sister's graduation from middle school. Yeah. It's a thing, I guess, when I was a kid, but now it's a thing.

And we're getting ready to walk out the door to a nice dinner. He goes, I don't have anything to wear. What do you mean? Nothing fits me anymore. This is not when you tell me that. You should have already known this, right? So the hard yesterday was, and you're talking about he hasn't done this in years, clean out all of your drawers, all of your closet, get rid of all of it, and then be part of the solution, not the problem, and make a list of what you need to buy.

I want how many pairs of pants you need. I'm a bridge jeans. You need shorts. I want a list that we can just check off the list. Cause that's how adults work, right? Kids go, I don't have any clothes. Well, you can buy me some clothes. We're not doing that anymore. You're picking this shit up and it's stupid. But like when I got home yesterday, he was like, dad, come look at my closet. Come look at my closet.

And you're like, yes, because you're just doing something that's inconvenient and hard first. So I'm going to flip that mentality. I have two years left with him. I'm going to flip that thing as hard as I can. But it takes every day, dude. It takes every day. It's true. Do the hard first, man. Do the hard first.

Oh man. Well, Shane, if they want to find more of you, man, if they want to connect with you, how are they find you? How do they, how do they locate you? Yeah. So people think I'm crazy. I'm going to give you my email. People can reach out to me by email. My email is dark zest at gmail.com D A R K Z E S S at gmail.com. I personally respond to every single email. It might take me a minute, but I do do it. I pride myself on that.

If you're interested in being featured on great podcasts like this one, check out podcast Cola. That's podcast Cola calm just the way it sounds. If you're interested in my Amazon mastery learning how to create value in your own products. I'm just gonna give that to everybody who listens to your show for free. It's a one hour course teaches you everything from A to Z just mentioned

the drift in the subject heading, email me at D A R K Z E S [email protected] mentioned the drift in the subject heading and that you want the one hour Amazon course. I'll give that to you. And you guys can check me out on social. We've got a show called business story of the week.

And you can Google me, Shaheen Chan, if you don't believe my crazy story. Google it! Oh, my book. I forgot my book. There's a film that's going to be made on my book called Billion, How I Became King of the Thrill Pill Cult. The book's on Amazon. You can get the audio book on Audible. That tells the whole crazy story of this. But there will be a film made in the next couple of years, major studio. And we're very excited about that.

Love that. Love that. Well, dude, thanks for stopping by. It was awesome to spend an hour with you here on the show and come back anytime you want. All right. Likewise, man. We'll have to do it in person. For sure. Okay, guys. And remember, man, if you're drifting along with the currents of life, man, you're either somebody that's happening to life or life is happening to you. So you might as well start drifting along and stand up and start walking. See you next time.

What's up, everybody? Thanks for joining us for another episode of Escaping the Drift. Hope you got a bunch out of it, or at least as much as I did out of it. Anyway, if you want to learn more about the show, you can always go over to escapingthedrift.com. You can join our mailing list. But do me a favor, if you wouldn't mind, throw up that five-star review, give us a share, do something, man. We're here for you. Hopefully, you'll be here for us. But anyway, in the meantime, we will see you at the next episode.