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cover of episode No Small Boy Stuff, Investing Wisdom from Nassim Taleb, plus ChatGPT Prompts We're Using

No Small Boy Stuff, Investing Wisdom from Nassim Taleb, plus ChatGPT Prompts We're Using

2025/1/3
logo of podcast My First Million

My First Million

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Sam Parr
以《My First Million》播客主持人和企业家身份而闻名,专注于发现和分享高利润商业模式。
Topics
Sam Parr:"No Small Boy Stuff"这个短语深刻影响了他的生活轨迹,帮助他避免幼稚的反应,并对他的生活和决策产生了积极的影响。他分享了Amjad的故事,强调了坚持不懈的重要性,即使在没有认可和资金的情况下也持续努力。 Sam Parr还详细阐述了Nassim Taleb的观点以及相关的实验结果,指出即使提前知道未来的新闻,投资者也很难在交易中获利,甚至可能亏损。这主要是因为人们难以区分信息中的信号和噪音,并且难以正确评估风险。他用一个真实的案例说明了即使拥有内幕信息,也可能因为错误的决策而导致失败。 Sam Parr深入探讨了他如何利用ChatGPT作为思考伙伴、助手和治疗师,用于个人理财、商业问题、情绪疏导和任务规划等方面。他分享了具体的应用案例,例如利用ChatGPT分析投资组合、制定公司策略、安排日程和回复邮件等。他还展望了未来AI技术的发展趋势,认为AI将成为人们生活中不可或缺的一部分。 Shaan Puri:Shaan Puri主要从技术角度解释了大型语言模型(LLM)的工作原理,并分享了他对AI技术未来发展趋势的看法。他认为,AI技术将深刻改变人们的生活和工作方式,并对教育和就业市场产生深远的影响。 Shaan Puri:他解释了大型语言模型(LLM)的工作原理,并分享了他对AI技术未来发展趋势的看法。他认为,AI技术将深刻改变人们的生活和工作方式,并对教育和就业市场产生深远的影响。他与Sam Parr一起讨论了ChatGPT的应用,并分享了他对AI技术未来发展趋势的看法,以及他对AI技术可能带来的挑战和机遇的思考。

Deep Dive

Key Insights

What does the expression 'No Small Boy Stuff' mean in the context of the podcast?

The expression 'No Small Boy Stuff' is used to emphasize serious, grown-up business and investment discussions, as opposed to trivial or immature topics.

What experiment did Nassim Taleb reference regarding investors and future news?

The experiment involved giving 118 adults trained in finance the front page of the Wall Street Journal from 15 random days in the past, and asking them to place trades one day before the news. Half of the participants lost money, and one in six lost everything due to over-leveraging.

Why did most investors perform poorly in the crystal ball test?

Most investors performed poorly because they bet the wrong direction and sized their bets improperly. They were only able to predict the direction correctly 51% of the time, similar to random guessing, and often bet too much or too little based on their conviction.

How did professional traders perform better in the crystal ball test?

Professional traders performed better by being more selective in their trades, avoiding over-trading, and using proper bet sizing. They were only right 57% of the time but achieved an average gain of 130% because they managed their risks better.

What is the main takeaway from Nassim Taleb's conjecture about having future news?

The main takeaway is that having future news does not necessarily lead to better investment decisions and can even be harmful if investors overestimate their ability to interpret the news and manage risks.

How is Sam using ChatGPT in his daily life?

Sam uses ChatGPT for a variety of tasks including personal finance advice, business strategy, acting as a therapist, and even helping with his children’s trivia and identifying objects in photos. He also uses it to generate grocery lists and match clothing.

What are the key principles behind large language models (LLMs) like ChatGPT?

Large language models like ChatGPT work by training on vast amounts of text data to predict the next word in a sequence. They use deep learning techniques to refine their predictions and generate responses based on context and prior information.

How can ChatGPT be used as a life coach?

ChatGPT can be used as a life coach by uploading personal information and asking it to generate questions and suggestions. It can help with goal setting, decision-making, and even provide feedback on your life's trajectory without judgment.

What is Fertilo and why is it significant?

Fertilo is a company that achieved the world's first live birth using an egg matured outside the body. This breakthrough could make IVF procedures less invasive, cheaper, and faster, potentially revolutionizing fertility treatments.

What are the key factors that can make a company a billion-dollar business?

Key factors include building something with network effects, ensuring durability and defensibility, and winning in a category where there is limited competition. It also often involves significant marketing efforts to acquire a large customer base.

What is the 'dogs not barking' question and how can it be applied in business?

The 'dogs not barking' question asks what problems or issues are not being heard or addressed, which can help identify silent failures or hidden opportunities in a business. For example, if no one is complaining about a service, it might not be as essential as thought.

What is the Hampton Wealth Report and how can it be accessed?

The Hampton Wealth Report is an annual survey of over 1,000 entrepreneurs, providing insights into their personal finances, investments, and financial habits. It can be accessed at joinhampton.com by clicking the menu and then the report button.

What is the strategic approach to staying relevant in the age of AI according to the podcast hosts?

The hosts suggest that by intentionally dumbing down their content and focusing on imperfect, half-baked ideas, they might carve out a niche where AI cannot fully replace human interaction, particularly in the podcasting space.

What is the '13 Questions That Will Change Your Life' and how can it be used?

The '13 Questions That Will Change Your Life' is a list of thought-provoking questions designed to help individuals gain clarity and direction in their lives. It can be used by uploading the questions to ChatGPT and having it ask them regularly.

Chapters
This chapter explores Nassim Taleb's contrarian investing philosophy, focusing on the Crystal Ball experiment. The experiment reveals that even with future news, most investors fail due to poor bet sizing and an overestimation of their ability to interpret information.
  • Nassim Taleb's contrarian view on investing.
  • The Crystal Ball experiment's methodology and results.
  • Most investors fail even with future news.
  • Importance of proper bet sizing in investing.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
中文

What's up, Sam? Hey. You like the fit? Where did you get that? Our boys at Jamby sent it over. The No Small Boys stuff. Christmas edition. You know, it's pretty funny. I actually use the phrase No Small Boys stuff like kind of a lot. Yeah, I remember the guy who tweeted it. I think his name was

Bengali87. And this was back in 2022. He said, best business slash entrepreneurship podcast out there. Big money that is. No small boy stuff. I love that. And that's basically the phrase that we use for this podcast a lot. No small boy stuff. But frankly, I kind of use it a lot in my life. Like, I don't know, man, that's small boy kind of stuff. Like it's sort of like in succession where they say, you're not a very serious person. It's kind of like that. Yeah.

I also use the phrase, but I'd never say it because saying it to me feels so cringe. But I think it like a thousand times for every one time that I say it. And every one time I say it, it feels so awkward to me. It's like saying, it's like saying, just do it in the Nike slogan way or something. You don't really want to say that. Hey guys. Yeah. In the fourth quarter, we just...

Nike, baby, just do it. And then they'll be like, what? Why are you saying slogans at us? But I do think it a lot. It's actually like- I think it a lot. Meaningfully affected the trajectory of my life is to use this phrase. And because there's so many situations where there's like a little small boy response. Ooh, I'll behave like a little small boy in this situation. Or- Yeah, that phrase and what Amjad said recently about what will make the better story, that has had a fairly meaningful change. Just in, you know, it's only been a few weeks, but like I think about that actually a lot.

He also said something else where he was talking about, he was basically so comfortable with this like 10 year plus odyssey that he's been on building this. And we're like, wow, you've been doing this for so long. And wow, you did this for years before you had really any recognition or any funding. And he just kept going. And he was just like, yeah, I persist.

And he was just like, yeah, he's like, I think that's what I do. He's like, I didn't really think about it that consciously, but like, I'm pretty comfortable pushing the boulder for a long time up the mountain. And I realized, like, I guess that's my like competitive advantage. Like, I'm in it for the long haul and I'll just persist. It's like, oh, and we were both like small, like a quick intake of breath. What do you want to start with today?

All right, I got a good story for you. So there's this great Nassim Taleb quote or tweet where Taleb who wrote Black Swan and Anti-Fragile is kind of this like contrarian thinker. Was he like a successful hedge fund investor, but he was successful because he had an interesting life philosophy and then he became like a thinker? Is that his story? I believe so. I believe so. I believe he's like a successful trader and part of his success, unless I'm mixing him up with somebody else, part of his success was that

He noticed that humans are, we would rather win frequently in small amounts and then lose a bunch when we're wrong. It's like gambling. It's like playing craps, right? You know, one roll of the dice, you made a little money, two rolls of dice, you win a little money, but eventually you roll a seven and it wipes out the entire board. All of the chips go away. But he's like, humans are more comfortable with that versus he was willing to bleed a little every day and look stupid every day for years.

But then when his big, you know, sort of like the big short, when his big bet pays off and his contrarian bet pays off, he makes back all the money in one day. Got it. And I think that's his story. If it's not his story, his book is talking about the guy who does that. So I can't recall if it's him or if he's the author or he's the author and the hero of the story.

Okay, so Taleb tweeted this thing. He goes, I conjecture that if you gave an investor the next day's news 24 hours in advance, he would go bust in less than a year. And this is basically the back to the future premise, right? So I don't remember the movie Back to the Future, but...

What's his name? Biff or whatever. He finds like the sports betting book that tells all the winners for the next decade. Exactly. He goes back in time and then he's just becomes a gazillionaire because he knows the scores. Okay. So like, let's take, yes, if you knew the exact score, you'd have to be pretty dumb to not win. What these guys did and what Nassim Taleb was saying is I could give you the news. So not the price change, but I could give you the news and I bet you would trade incorrectly. Yeah.

Dude, I think about this all the time, by the way. All the time. I think if I know what I know today, but I was 10 or 50 years ago, how would I capitalize on that? I think about that all the time. Right. And, you know, usually the easy answers for that are, oh, I just buy Bitcoin. I just buy Google, right? Like, yeah, it actually wouldn't be that hard if you could convince yourself, hey, do this one thing and just shut up and trust me. Like, don't touch it for 15 years. Now, what these guys did was a little bit of a different experiment.

So what they did was they took 118, as they call them, adults trained in finance, and they did the crystal ball test. And the crystal ball test was as follows. They said, we're going to give you money. So they gave them $50 each. So they said, you have 50 bucks and you get to place trades and you're going to trade. But we're going to, before you make a trade, we're going to show you the front page of the wall street journal, the actual front page of the wall street journal from 15 random days

In the last, like, I think 20 years or something like that. Okay. So 15 random days, we're going to show you the front page of the wall street journal, and that's a Wednesday edition. And you're going to place the trade that would execute on the Tuesday. So the day before that news. So you had the news at 24 hours in advance, they blacked out the stock prices. So they wouldn't just show you, Oh, Johnson Johnson's up 20%. Right. But they would say, Oh,

Like there would be the headline about Johnson and Johnson. They would just redact the actual stock price. Johnson and Johnson beats earnings, beats earnings. Exactly. Record job, record unemployment, record jobs, posting fed indicates, blah, blah, blah, right? Things like that. And by the way, anybody can go play this game online. There's like a link to it. We'll put it in the show notes, but you can go actually do it yourself. I did it too. There's a couple other caveats to this when you go do it, which is

it's not just a buy and hold. Cause what I was going to do, I went and did the thing. I was like, Oh, cool. This is news from 15 years ago. I'll just put all my money in by, and I won't trade. Uh, I won't do anything else for the next 15 years. I know there was a bull market, so I don't need to be smart. But the way that this test was designed was the trade executes and you either go up or down that day. So it's kind of like the trade closes that day. You know what I mean? You get one day gain based on the one day news. Okay. So they do it. And, uh,

The results are not good, as you might expect. Otherwise, I wouldn't really talk about this. So the results are not good. Half the players lost money, even having been given the news.

One out of every six players lost everything. And the way they lost everything was they let you trade on leverage. So you can trade up to like 20x leverage if you want to in this thing, like an options trader could. Or you could just trade. Or you could skip. You don't even have to trade any given day. You could just say pass. I don't feel confident. An example headline would be, like an example trade would be, they would see something that says like Fed has got a cut rate today.

I guess you would assume that the index is going to go up like a couple percent. So you would bet on the index or bet on what? It's basically the S&P 500 or it's the 30-year treasury. So you can bet on one of those two things. You buy the S&P index for that day or you could... Short a bond?

You go long or short, or you can go long or short the bond. Let me just show you an example. This is the Wall Street Journal, the article that they show you. It's Obama does something.

And then you see this business and finance section and talks about Rupert Murdoch. Chesapeake Energy says that their CEO is going to step down. Auto sales are up. Homeland Security says blah, blah, blah. Right? So there's all this news. And so you then go here and you place a trade. So you say, all right, I'm going to go in this little game here. You can see my screen where it gave me a million dollars. So I'm going to trade. And it says today's movement, I bet a million dollars. So I use my full stack here.

with no leverage and the day was up 0.62%. So I got an extra $6,200, right? Then he gives me the next one and it says, oh, there's a deadly plane crash. Iran is doing some shit. Okay, cool. Craft doesn't talk to acquire this Brazilian company.

And they're just blacking out any of the stock price news, right? So you read this and you can decide what you want to do. And you do that over and over and over again. So 15 days in history. And they tried to do it as 15. Like they did a third of the days were like Fed quarterly meeting days. A third was jobs reports. And a third was complete randomness. And they didn't, they're like, we're not trying to trick you. There's no, we're not like cherry picking, like misleading days. These are just actually like random front pages, okay? This is an awesome experiment.

And so, okay, so back to the results now. So like I said, half the people lose the money. One out of six lose everything because they got over leveraged. The average person was only able to gain 3.2%. So even being given the news. During that era, the market was up on average, I think 15% a year over the last 15 years. I don't know when this was done. Correct, correct. But again, these are like one day trades, right? So you're not just like buying and holding. Oh, it was for 15 days. The experiment was a 15 day experiment. Exactly. Exactly.

Got it, okay. And so, okay, now why, right? There's two ways you could lose in investing. One is you bet wrong, meaning you pick the wrong direction. You think it's going up, it actually goes down. So basically, even given the news, they were basically only able to bet the direction correctly 51% of the time. So it's the same as if, you know, you just flipped a coin, you would have been right the same amount of times as you were being given the actual front page of the Wall Street Journal, okay? So information doesn't lead to actual insight.

especially news. The second thing is that why did they do poorly? They bet sized very poorly. So when you had an event, even when you were correct, people didn't size up their bets enough. And when they're incorrect, they sized up their bets too much for the level of conviction that they had. And, you know, this doesn't go in line with what people think. So they surveyed people separately and basically 70% of people thought that

Even if they got the news, you know, sort of like, like basically they thought that even four week old stale news would be predictive.

And, you know, 70% of people thought that, but in this case, it just showed that even, you know, one day fresh news doesn't even really help you. Okay, so then they went and they did an extra experiment. They go, okay, maybe those 118, you know, financial trained adults, maybe they're just not the best of the best. So they went and tried to find the best of the best. The best of the best actually did better. So they went and found five people that were, you know, hedge fund guy, business,

the head of trading at a top five bank, seasoned macro traders. So they're used to trading on this type of news. They're considered the best in the world at this. And they actually did better. So what they did was all of them finished with gains. So all five finished with gains. On average, they were up 130%. And they also didn't bet on one out of every three

news things. One of the big ways that they were better was they just didn't bet all the time, whereas the casual was too active. Okay, what else did the pro do differently? They were only right 6%

So, you know, if the I think if the the the the the test group was right, 51 percent of the time, if it's going up or down, these guys were only right. Fifty seven percent of the time. It wasn't like they correctly interpreted it. But when they were right, they bet size properly and they never risk too much of their bankroll to where they couldn't recover. And so isn't that amazing that, you know, only being, you know, six to 10 percent better at your predicament?

predictive ability, but would yield a much bigger result, right? 3% average gain for the test group, 130% average gain for the pros.

So it's these small edges that can make a huge difference when you apply leverage properly, which was the bet sizing. And what's the takeaway that Nassim said, which is what? Well, he was saying it in a polarizing way. He goes, I conjecture if he gave an investor the next day's news, he would go bust in less than a year. And this basically showed that one out of six would go bust because they would get overzealous around this perceived edge that doesn't exist.

And on the whole, most people would just do worse than if they didn't have the news. It's no better than random, right? And that's actually one of his books, Fooled by Randomness. And at the end, they use this quote by Ray Dalio in there. This is a great quote. It goes, he who lives by the crystal ball will die eating shattered glass.

That's insane. So good. It's weird that multiple smart people come to that conclusion that I never would have come to. I guess everyone would have thought that. If you know the future, you know the news, you absolutely are going to outperform. Exactly. Exactly. The counterintuitive wise conclusion. Let me tell you one other related one. So there was one other story here that was kind of interesting.

There was a real world version of this where a hacking group got access. They hacked the press release system. So they had access to the next day's press releases that companies put out when they have like major announcements, earnings, results, et cetera. They got access to all of the press releases that were coming out the next day and they were using it as like their own form of like

home-brewed insider information. They were able to get insider information, and so they could place a bet in the market overnight or the next morning instantaneously. That's like a 12-hour leading indicator, maybe, because if you're going to fire your CEO, you submit the press release maybe at 5 or 6 p.m. on a Thursday, and then 9 a.m. on Friday, you announce it, or the wire goes live. Yeah.

Something I don't know the exact timing. I would imagine that it's a tighter window than that because there's too much leakage, but...

even a 12 second advantage would be a huge advantage. If you knew 12 seconds ahead of time what the news is about to be, you could just push the button, right? That's all you got to do. That's like an interesting, like HubSpot, for example, whenever they have a, that I'm a shareholder of, whenever they have like an earnings, I like, I know when it's going to go live that day. So someone is like writing that and they've submitted it to, I forget what the PR, what the thing's called. It's the popular- Yeah, PR Newswire or whatever. Yeah, like whatever the popular thing is,

That is kind of an – I never even realized that, actually. Well, that's why there's rules, right? When I was at Amazon, you couldn't trade the stock in a – there's a window. There's like a frozen window. So X days before the announcement, you can't make any trades. Oh, I know that, but I'm saying the employees of the PR – Oh, right, right, right. I think they probably have the same, right? Yeah, I didn't even think about that as a leakage. I tell you, when I accidentally did that trade and then I had to go to the – What were they like, you're an idiot? Yeah.

So I'm like, I've learned about this afterwards, right? I'm a startup kid. I don't know anything about this. We get acquired. I make a trade. And then I'm like, oh, shit. What was the trade? So we're at a subsidiary of Amazon, right? Like you bought Amazon before you sold to Amazon? I bought Amazon stock. I bought more Amazon stock or something. Or I sold to Amazon. I don't remember what it was. And I...

I was like, oh shit, did I just insider trade? Did I just get my hands dirty with a little big boy business? And so I'm like, oh shit, what do I do? They're like, you need to go speak to the general counsel. And I was like, what? So I get a meeting with the general counsel, urgent, urgent.

possible, possible big money move made. And I send the email, they get me a meeting stat. I go in and he's like, so what, what happened? And I was like, I went and made a trade, you know, I'm in the window and you know, I'm an executive. So,

Take me away, boys. Yeah, wake me up. I'm a bad boy. I'm a bad boy. Take me away. And he's like, so how much did you trade? Yeah, I'm a bad boy. And I was like, yeah, it was like 150 grand. And he's like, it's okay. You just, my lunch is outside. Can you bring it in before you leave? Oh,

He was like, this is for actual execs at the actual company who make actual trades. I was like, okay, gotcha, gotcha, gotcha. Let me go sit down. That's actually hilarious. He just like totally dismissed you.

But what about let me finish the story about the hackers. So let's put you and let's let's test your criminal mastermind, which I love. I love doing this, by the way. How would I how would I cheat if I was going to? By the way, you know that it's always the women always think to themselves, how would I get away from this bad person trying to hurt me? And the men always think in this in the they align with the criminal. I'd be the bad person. Yeah. Like, how would I get away with this crime? That's like I realized that after watching a lot of true crime. And so go ahead. I like this experiment.

So you're the hackers, you get this, but here's the problem. You they're like, Sam, we got it. We hacked them.

Dave over here in the corner did it. He got into this. He got root access. And they print out all of the press releases coming out, but they put it on your desk. They're like, hey, we got like an hour. We got to make a trade. And now there's 60,000 press releases on your desk. What do you do? I guess pick like a random five and act on those as soon as... Yeah, I mean, that's a very challenging situation. I guess... It's a challenging situation. Just like pick the first five. And if it's good news, buy the stock. If it's bad news...

somehow short, but I don't even know how to do that. So I guess I would only find like the five good news ones. You're like, I think I would still just end up holding the index fund, Vanguard. I think I'd just stay doing exactly what I always do. 80-20 stocks and bonds, baby. So what they ended up doing was they were like, all right, you sort of need to do a search function to figure out what news affects the price the most in a positive or negative direction. And I think what they figured out was that

It was merger announcements that would be the highest kind of like volatility for the company that was getting acquired because it almost always gets acquired at like a 50% premium to the where the stock was trading. And so I think what they realized was we need to be able to quickly discard 98% of the news and information because it's noise, right? Which goes back to the same experiment, right? Most of the news information is noise. The secret is figuring out what is actually signal.

And most of us can't do that. And we overestimate our ability to figure out signal versus noise. And so they figured out the signal. It was these merger things. And even they were only right in their predictive ability about 70-something percent of the time. It was enough to make hundreds of millions of dollars very quickly before they got caught for doing this, and then they all went to jail. But...

Isn't that cool also? I think that's the ending. When we sold to HubSpot, I think the share price, I think it was $350. And then like the week they announced it, it went to like $460 or something like this. Anyone can go back and look at it. It was February of 21. Damn, Sam, the needle mover over here. Well, so that stock price went up like, I guess it's a market cap of like $1 or $2 billion. And I remember going to Kip, the CMO, I go, huh.

You're welcome. He's like, oh, yeah. It was this acquisition that got mentioned one time in our earnings call. It just barely... It wasn't the fact that we had just announced that we grew by 45% and have been compounding growth of this, this, this. And I was like...

Yeah, causation is difficult to prove. I agree. I'm like, you don't understand, man. To each his own. Can I tell you? All right. So two or three years ago, we talked about AI girlfriends. I sort of understood it because I have actually developed pretty good friendships, mostly via text messages. I think a lot of people who have group messages here feel the same way.

I didn't entirely understand it. But in the last two or three months, I've been using ChatGPT in a way that now I'm like, yeah, if this would go away, I would be very upset. And I understand why people were very upset when their AI girlfriends... Replica got... When they did a software update. Yeah. And so basically, I've been using ChatGPT as my thought partner slash assistant slash...

And you actually said something recently that made it a lot better. So I sat down and I'll explain how I've used it. But I sat down and I said, Hey, can you ask me all the questions that a therapist or life coach or an executive coach would ask? And we could spend a few hours discussing.

But just me downloading, giving you a download of my life. And I did that. And since then, it's been magical. And I've been using it for all types of purposes. I use it all day. And I want to maybe explain to you how I'm using it. Maybe you could explain to me if you are doing the same, which I think you are and how you're using it. By the way, I'll just give you a quick one. My prompt that I used yesterday for this, I said, I was explaining the situation. I go, ask me a few questions, one at a time. Then when you feel you have enough info, then try to give me a suggestion.

Because otherwise it just tries to like, you know, man, you know, like mansplaining or what is it called when like guys hear like your girlfriend is explaining something to you and you're trying to fix the problem right away. She's like, no, I'm not trying to get the fix right now. I just want you to hear me and understand me. And you're like, what? I thought you just want the answer as fast as possible shoved into your throat. And like, that's what chat GPT does by default.

It's, yeah. And there's a bunch of other downsides that I want to explain to all of this and how I'm working around it. But first, I'm using it for a variety of things. So I'm using it for personal finance stuff. And I'll give an example for each in a second. I'm using it for business questions. I'm using it as like a sparring thought partner of like, I'm thinking about doing this.

What's your opinion? I'm using it as a therapist of like, you know, I'm struggling with this person at work or my personal life. How should I handle this? Or what should my life goals be? And I'm also using it for helping me decide which tasks. So I'll give an example. So for net worth, I use Kubera. Kubera is like a net worth tracker. You just log in with your bank accounts and all your accounts in it.

Tells you your net worth, whatever. Well, they actually have a feature where you can download the information specifically for ChatGPT. And you upload it. And it doesn't have any identifying information. It's not like it has passwords. It just has a bunch of numbers. And so you can... I will upload this to ChatGPT. And I'll say things like, I like to be conservative. What would you rate this portfolio out of 10 of risk? Or...

you know, like what's your opinion on it? Like what would Warren Buffett say? You can ask it all types of questions like that. Or you can also say like, you know, how much should I spend on a house?

Or what will my net worth be in 20 years? Things like that. And it's been actually really amazing. Another thing that I did was I took the main KPIs from my company, and I uploaded it to it. And I'll be like, what are the needle moving things that I can do for this company? And you could do your KPIs, which is typically like an Excel spreadsheet, like your company's churn, new users, things like that. You can also do your company financials.

And then another thing that I've been doing is I will actually take screenshots of my calendar and I'll upload it and be like, what task should I be doing for the next week, the next month, the next quarter to get to the goals that I've told you about, my life goals, which by the way, you helped me create. You helped me create quarterly and annual goals. How should I be spending my time today, tomorrow, next week, and next week? And it gives me an agenda that I literally print out

And I work according to that. It's like pretty wild. And that's how I've been using it. And then all day, I'll be like, how should I reply to this email? What's your opinion? It's kind of crazy. So that's how I've been using it. It's like you have Neuralink. They just never did the surgery. You're basically putting AI as the operator in your brain in many ways. But you're just like...

You know, we just haven't reached that tech point where the chip is already implanted. Well, the next step of that is here's what's going to happen. There's going to be software. It probably exists. I'm tinkering with a few of them that records your computer screen, your phone screen, the words that you say out loud, the things you type. And it's going to give you feedback on how you spent your day. It's going to give you feedback on what to do, things like that. So it's going to like, you know how there's a book called

I forget what the book is, but the premise is Google knows more than you because you are more honest in your Google searches than you are when you talk to your spouse or your friends or whatever. The same thing happens where it's like, yeah, you know, I spend this much time working on this, this, and this. And we'll just be like, no, you did not spend that much time doing it. And also, you told me that you're trying to be nicer. You wrote like eight really mean emails. Do you know what I mean? Like, that's how it's going to be in the next six months, I think. There's going to be products that are actually nailing that. Yeah, I think the CEO of Microsoft,

I don't know if you heard this story, but I guess when Balmer stepped down and they needed a new CEO. And at the time, Microsoft was kind of in a downward, downward to flat. It was an uninspired stock and company at the time. So they needed something. And I don't know if you heard the story. So the guy who became the CEO, Satya Nadella, actually wrote a memo, like I wrote a kind of like a manifesto, an internal manifesto about like what Microsoft needs to do.

And he ends up getting the job. And at the time it was like, he's like, I didn't, he's like, I never thought I'd be the CEO of Microsoft. Like, you know, you joined Bill Gates as a CEO or whatever, and then Palmer. And you just assume they're always going to bring in somebody, but they actually promoted him from within. And, um,

He wrote this thing, and one of the key principles that he wrote in this, this was a while back. You know what year? Like 05 or 10 or something? This was in 2014. So he wrote, he bet on two things. I don't remember the second one, but I remember the first one he called ambient intelligence. And ambient intelligence is kind of what you're describing, which is basically like, how do you have,

you know, computer intelligence, artificial intelligence, but just like kind of on and be like kind of in your, in your environment so that it can be helpful to you. So it just knows what you need without you having to go fetch it without you having to go ask specifically. It can either anticipate it. It can be aware of all of your context so that you don't have to like for

First explain the whole situation and then be able to just ask your question. It already knows your situation, so you could just ask the question, that sort of thing. And so isn't that cool that he, you know, like so long before, and you know, OpenAI wasn't even incorporated at that point or something like that. This is a very long time ago. So to bet on that as like one of the two ways

like ways that the tech puck is going pretty baller, which is shockingly hard, by the way, it's hard to make these predictions and remove like the limiter part of your brain and just imagine like, yeah, but what would be, what would be amazing? You know, like what would be cool if that's actually, that sounds easy. It's, it's really hard because you constantly think like, well, I can't do that, you know, like, because that's impossible or that would cost too much money. Like there's all these limiters, but the way that I've been using this, like if like,

It doesn't work perfect yet, though, by the way. There's a few issues with this. And I'm super not technical. The first thing is context windows. The more you talk to it, it doesn't always learn more. It runs out of memory in a weird way. And so I've been testing a variety of different platforms, Gemini versus ChatGPT. But I want to use ChatGPT because I think it's going to be around the longest and they're going to innovate the fastest.

But it's not perfect at all. But it's shocking how useful this is. I finally, for a long time, I'm like, yeah, AI is great. I can just Google a stat and it's going to tell me. But now it's more like...

this is my life like i am using this more than anything and so like they had their new 200 a month thing come out and i don't even think i need the features but i'm like whatever i'll take it and so i've like contemplated contemplating like should i like invest a little bit of money into like building up these systems just for my personal operating system and like making my life great and keep in mind i don't know anything about any of this shit i just know that it's it's just effective like it just literally is helping me get my day done better and it's like a great bit of advice i'll

Like here's a really another like practical way. I mean, I'll upload my measurements for my body and I'll be like, find me clothes that fit or like does this fit? Does this pair of pants fit? And you just like post a link like I just I've been using it constantly.

How are you, if you are using it to be like this, like sparring thought partner? Yeah, yeah. Well, I think this is the key. So what we're saying is basically the way that I think by default people will use this is you ask a question, it gives an answer. And actually a equally, if not more powerful way is to do the exact opposite. You basically say, I have a, I'm trying to think about this. Ask me questions.

And then you, and you get it to ask you the questions. And then in that way, it's your sparring partner. It is your thought partner in like kind of fleshing out or getting your own clarity around a situation.

And it's available 24-7. It doesn't judge. It's super, super intelligent, but also has empathy. You can go back and forth instantly. It's always available. And there's no lag time, right? It's better than a friend, right? You know you have a friend who you bitch to, and you're like, I just need a vent. And just give me, what should I do here? But you kind of feel guilty laying everything on them or making it all about you. And they don't quite understand exactly what you're talking about. Of course, yeah. This is just that person, but better. Yeah.

It's one of the main reasons why coaches and therapists are great because you're like, cool, we're going to have a completely one-way conversation here. Yeah. Like, I don't got to give you nothing. I can come here and be a taker. And that's the arrangement. And like, you know, I gave you the money. That's what that was for. And now from there on out, I don't need to consider your feelings in this interaction. That sounds like ruthless, but it's true. It's why it's different than just talking to a friend. Whereas a friend, you got to be like, sorry, am I taking up too much of your time? I don't mean to put all this on you. But, you know, you're like,

You're always trying to like kind of half apologize and then reciprocate. And one of the cool things about a therapist or a coach is like, that's not the social contract. That's not what's expected in that situation. AI is even better. It's like, Hey, sorry to bug you at 1am. I just, I'd like to talk right now. And I'd like instant responses with complete intelligence and

And I'll just keep saying, no, tell me, you know, no try again until I get something that's satisfactory to me. It's like, you couldn't even treat a human like that, right? So it's pretty great to be able to do that. It's become strange. I call it dude sometimes. I'm like, dude, what's your problem? That's wrong. Stop getting these, like, it's strange. Because if you think about it,

But when you're texting your friends, because it's in the same window or next to the same window on your computer, you kind of forget that this is a machine. And you can train it how to talk. It's very strange, but it's actually quite effective. Do you know how an LLM works? No. Do you know what deep learning is? No. I went and watched some videos the other day just to get like... I was like, how is this magic, magicking? What is going on here? There's one by this guy...

I think it's called like three brown, one blue is like his, his username or something like that. It's got millions of views and he explains, you know, a machine, like what is deep learning, which is like the technique that worked with AI. And the second thing was, you know, how large language models work. What does it even mean? What is large? What is the language model? What does that, what does that even do? But check this out. So, okay. Like here's the example that, that, that it gave. Okay. So this is me not even trying to explain to you what it is. Cause my explanation is going to be pretty bad. This is me just saying, okay,

I can't believe that this is what actually is happening. I cannot fathom that this is the actual scenario. Okay, so let's take this example. I wrote this, I put this on a card because like, I can't forget this. I'll never forget what I learned. All right, so imagine this number seven, right? So let's say you're trying to train AI to be able to see that this is seven. How do you do that?

You can hard code it, but well, every time you see the number seven, it's like a capture, right? It's like written a little bit differently. So it's like, you can't just say this is exactly a seven because you write your seven slightly different than me. Maybe you put the little line through it. Maybe you have a little angle to it, whatever. Right. So you just want it to be able to recognize anybody's handwriting and figure out seven or not seven. Right. What number is it? So how does it work? So imagine basically, um,

a classroom. Okay. So here's a row of kids. So there's 10 kids standing there and each of the 10 kids is like holding one of these cards with a different number on it. Right. But actually it doesn't have the whole number. So, or actually they have the whole number, but for at first it just says, all right,

There's a whole index card. We got to figure out. We don't even know if this is a seven or a dog or a car. It could be anything, right? So it just zooms in and it says, let's look at this little section right here. Like these 20 pixels. Okay. These 20 pixels, you know, on this area, it's white. So if you got color there, sit down, kids. Anybody who's got color over here, sit down because this picture is white over here. Can't be, can't be you. You're eliminated.

And then over here, it's like, hey, there's some blue ink. Something is here. So if you've got blue ink in this little section, stay standing. If you don't, sit down. Right? So that like eliminates a bunch of, you know, like kind of thought processes. So then it passes it to the next layer, the next layer of 10 kids. And it says, all right.

who here has got this flat line? Okay. So the seven stay standing, the five stay standing, you know, the threes are kind of like, Hey, we got some stuff up here up top, the eights, but you know, the four, the number four doesn't have a little roof on top. So it's like, I'm out, I'm out. And you're like, okay, go sit down. It's like paintball, right? You're out, go, go to sit on the side. And then, so now you're left with like, you know, some of the numbers.

And then it says, all right, we got a little stick over here. Who's got a stick over there? And it's like the three is like, oh, I'm out now. That's not me. But the sevens and the fives are like, hey, we're still in. It might be us, right? Bingo. And so you just keep passing it from layer to layer, showing it like kind of more pixels on the screen. And it's trying to get with some level of confidence at the end, right? It's going to be seven and maybe five at the end. And the seven is like, yo, I'm 90% sure it's me. And the five is like, yeah, it's maybe 10% that it's me. It's just an ugly five.

And then that's how the AI knows that this is a seven because it passes it from layer to layer to layer to layer, looking at the pixels on the screen and basically trying to figure out, trying to guess what's

Is it, is it one of you? I think with some probability it's this. Okay. So that's just recognizing a number. Okay. Now imagine what you're doing. You're giving it KPIs of your company. It has to understand what a KPI is, what a company is that you were looking for strategy, what strategy sounds like. It's got to say something that you as a successful business person who sold your companies for tens of millions of dollars that you will respect the output of this.

Like, isn't that mind blowing that that's even a thing? And so that now you take, how does that work? So now you take, instead of the seven, take an example where it's like the dog blanked, right? So it's like, what's going to come after it? You know, it basically sees a sentence, the dog or the dog. It's like, what's a dog and what do they commonly do? It doesn't even know that it has no idea what a dog is. There's no meaning. It just has, it read the whole internet.

So what they did was they were like, hey, go read the whole internet, which like if you or I, we were like, yo, Sam, I got to like, let's do this, man. We could do this. We're going to take so much AdRoll. We'll stay up all night and we're going to read 24 seven all the text on the internet. It would be like thousands of years before we could ever ingest what, you know, what they gave it in one training run. Right. So they said, go read all the internet. Cool. Done. All right.

Now, user puts in a sentence, the dog blank. Guess what? Guess what the next token is? Guess what the next little word is that comes after the dog? The dog. It's like the dog barked. The dog jumped. The dog, you know, is hungry, right? Whatever. It could be like one of many things. So then it takes the next word, which might be like the dog barked. And then it passes that phrase back through. It's like now you've got the phrase the dog barked.

What comes after that? And it just loops that over and over again to generate the next word. So that's when you see ChatGPT writing. It's literally taking like the next token it thinks it should say, then it feeds it back through and then says, okay, well, if I said the dog barked, then I got to say it loudly, right? Okay, loudly, period.

If I said the dog bark loudly, what would I say next? And then it would keep and it keeps recursively doing that. And that's what's actually that's how it generates a training thing. Right. And that's like, you know, there's only part of it half explained correctly. But let's assume for a second that I'm not like completely misinterpreting this. Let's assume for a second that this is only, you know, a percentage of what what is actually going on. Right. There's still parameters and weights and all this other stuff that I haven't even talked about yet.

This is like God, right? This is like... How is this even a thing? It's so mind-blowing to me. It's mind-blowing. It's absolutely mind-blowing. And I think that... I think young... I don't hang around 18-year-olds. I think they're using it for school. So I think they get it. I think I know...

a little bit about it because I hang out with smart people and I'm on the outskirts of what these guys are doing. So I kind of see it online and I play with it. For the average Joe, for my mom and dad, for a 35-year-old who isn't tech savvy, who just works as a mechanic, I don't think that they're using it this way. I don't think they're using it at all. And

It's going to change everything. It's just so crazy when the average Joe starts getting into this. I think young people, like a 21-year-old or something, I think it's changing schools, by the way. The grading system is totally effed up. When I think about this, I'm like, there is no homework. You can't do homework anymore. You know what I mean? Someone DMed me yesterday. It's not just homework. Someone DMed me last night. They were showing me...

This guy, Oliver, Oliver Hahn, he texted me this thing or DM me this thing. He said, coding interviews. Like, so, okay, school. Yeah. Kids in school are using chat. You write essays and the teachers are like, fuck, how do we, how are we going to, it's a cat and mouse game to try to be like, Hey, how do I stop you from using AI to just like do your assignments?

Well, the same thing is true for coding interviews. So coding interviews, which are used to hire programmers, there's a website, leetcodewizard.io. And basically, it just helps you cheat on your coding interview. It's like, oh, you got a coding test to get a job? Just use this. Watch, it'll, it's the same thing as a student. It'll write the essay for you, basically. And it's like, you know, doing 15 grand a month in recurring revenue. I'm just helping people cheat on coding interviews. This is insane. It's so difficult, right? But it's kind of amazing. How are you using this every day?

Like, let me just go to chat GPT and just tell you like my last. Is chat GPT your tool of choice or do you like any of the other ones? Yeah, it is my like default. And then, you know, I play with everything else. So usually if I'm like, how factually correct does this need to be? I'll perplexity. So I go to perplexity. If it's analysis, I'll use chat GPT. Like if you use like the 01 stuff, like the deeper thinking stuff. Only for 24 or 48 hours. Yeah, it's brand new. But yeah, it's wild. It takes a long time, but it's wild. Well,

Well, yeah, that's the point of it. It's basically if you told the computer, hey, you don't have to just quickly, like, again, shove an answer down my throat instantaneously where you're just predicting the next token and good enough to go, right? The 70% chance it's this word. Let's just put it in. They found they could get you could do more interesting tasks if you just said, hey, take your time before you answer. Just give it more time to think and then it'll come up with a better answer. It's temperamental. Which is amazing. So I use that.

But like, check this out. So there was this press release recently for, we were talking about IVF, remember? Well, it's kind of this amazing thing. I don't know if you saw it. It's called Fertilo. Did you see what happened with this thing called Fertilo? So basically it was like the first live birth using eggs that matured outside the body. So like if you've done IVF, it's like a pretty expensive and pretty like harsh thing on the body. Like the woman has to get like injections, which are hormone injections to try to get your, they're trying to get your eggs to essentially, um,

mature, be produced and mature inside your body. And so what Fertillo did was they were like, cool, instead of doing that like long, expensive sort of hard on your body process, we can take an immature egg, take it out of the body and let's do the hormones, hormone stuff out of the body and get it to mature. And then we'll put it back in the body. And so it just like removes the pain from, from the process.

And the first like actual live birth happened of a baby that was born using that procedure. It's kind of amazing. If true, it's going to make, you know, it's going to change IVF. You know, it's going to make it where,

I don't know if it'll just be called a new procedure or what, but basically for a fraction of the cost, a fraction of the time, and a fraction of the pain, we can do the thing that we've been doing with IVF. Okay, so... Dude, it makes me realize that I think that Sahil, I forget his last name, from Gumroad tweeted this thing out where everyone made fun of him, where he talked about how he's like, giving birth is not going to happen in the future. You're just going to be in this sack, and that's how you're going to grow. This is... I'm like...

Oh, shit. You're right. You know what I mean? Dude, I remember we were at a dinner and Jess Ma just said it casually in passing. She was like, yeah, like, you know, I'm really excited for and fascinated by basically like artificial wombs and basically, you know, pregnant, you know, you won't give women won't give birth at a certain point. Right. It'll be like riding horses for transport.

It's like, you could do it if you want to go have a unique experience. It won't be necessary. And she's like, pass the mashed potatoes. And you're like, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. Yeah. So no, like literally that's exactly what happened. And I was like,

And at the table, I looked around and be like, was anybody else mind blown by that? What's going on? Don't we all want more information about that? But I was at this far diagonal seven people away, but I heard her say it. And I'm stuck over here talking about Facebook ads with some dork. And I'm like, I just want to get out of this side of the table, get to that side of the table. So after the dinner... You're like, Jess, what did you say about wombs? Literally, I flagged her down. I was like, oh, you're getting an Uber? Hey, cancel that real quick. And she canceled it. And I was like...

what was that thing you were talking about? And then she explained and she explained the companies that she's tracking and like where we are in the scientific life cycle of like, how real is that possibility and how, what are the laws of physics? Is that inevitable or is it impossible? Right. Cause basically if something is not impossible, it's inevitable, which in itself is kind of a dope idea. Right. Like that already kind of blows my mind. And so she was explaining it. So, you know, I've sort of been paying attention to,

Any signs of movement in that area, because I think that's really cool. The world's going to change pretty dramatically when that happens. But what I did back to the AI thing, I just threw the press release into ChatGPT and I said, explain this article to me. Tell me what they're saying. Tell me what this means in simple terms. It's a press release. And so it might be misleading or overstating the success of this. So tell me about that, too.

And then it just goes, here's what it means in simpler terms. This company has achieved what they call the world's first healthy baby born with a woman's egg that was matured outside her body. Normally, in IVF, the doctors are doing ABC. In this scenario, what they're doing is ABC. And then it explains it. And he goes, in simpler terms, the conventional path is X. The new approach is Y. Y, it matters. If this is true, blah, blah, blah, blah. And then it says, here's why it might be misleading.

It's a press release, so it's definitely spin. Number two, one success doesn't prove a trend. It talks about the world's first, but it doesn't mention how many others they've tried that have failed and the hit rate of this procedure. It's not peer reviewed. It might be exaggerating the future impact. We would need to know clinical trials, blah, blah, blah. And then I asked it more. I was like, cool, what does the scientific literature say about this? So all of a sudden, I'm getting like a quick biology lesson.

Uh, another one brainstorming name ideas for a project. I'm like, Hey, here's the project. It's great for that. Ask me questions about the project and then come up with names. Then it comes up with dorky names. I'm like, no, make the names not dorky and long and don't make it feel like it's written by chat GPT. Make it feel like it's written by David Ogilvie. And then it comes up with different answers. A lot of financial analysis. So analyzing stocks or just like, yo, I see Kathy wood on my screen a lot. Like, is she actually like great at investing? Yeah.

And then AI's like, nah, she's horrible. Dude, you talk like a monkey. I see Cathie Wood on my screen. Is she just hot or good at trading, right? It's like, you know, they're asking these questions and again, no judgment. She gives me the answers, which was, spoiler, no. She underperforms the indexes and has over like a 15-year period and makes $100 million a year to underperform the index. It's like, wow. Good on you, Cathie Wood, you know, for doing that. Let's see.

This is other ones. Hey, I'm trying to do this in Excel, but I don't know how to do it. Can you just tell me the function I need to write in? Because like, you know, if you go Google this stuff, you get like YouTube videos you have to watch. Yeah. So now I'm like, all right, forget the YouTube video. Just give me the like the exact type thing I need to go type in or I'll screenshot the Excel window and I'll just say I'm trying to figure out in column C what are the ones blah, blah, blah, blah. And it gives me this like complicated, you know, whatever count ifs formula that's multiple like selectors or whatever.

So I'm obsessed with being transparent about money, particularly with ultra high net worth people. The reason being is that there's not a lot of information on this demographic. And so because I own Hampton, which is a community for founders, I have access to thousands of young and incredibly high net worth people. We have people worth hundreds of millions and sometimes billions of dollars inside of Hampton.

And so every year, we do this thing called the Hampton Wealth Report, where we survey over 1,000 entrepreneurs, and we ask them all types of information about their personal finances. We ask them about how they're investing their money, what their portfolio looks like. We ask them about their monthly spend habits. We ask them how they've set up their estate, how much money they're going to leave to charity, how much money they keep in cash.

How much money they're paying themselves from their businesses. Basically, every question that you want to ask a rich person, we went and we do it for you. And we do it with hundreds and hundreds of people. So if you want to check out the report, it's called the Hampton Wealth Report. Just go to joinhampton.com, click our menu, and you're going to see a section called reports. And you're going to see it all right there. It's very easy. So again, it's called the Hampton Wealth Report. Go to joinhampton.com, click the menu, and then click the report button. And let me know what you think. Thank you.

Oh, I play games with my kids. So we take pictures of like, my son got all these sharks. And so we just took a picture because he's asked me questions, right? Like, data, what is this shark? And I'm like, dude, shit, if I know, right? Like, you know, it's kind of like something I always dreaded as a parent. It's like, oh, cool. My kid's going to ask me questions that I, you know, where does rain come from? And I'm like, it's in the clouds. It's like, well, how did it get in the clouds? I'm like, I think it was in the ocean. And then it just like...

zipped up there because it was hot or something. And I'm like, oh my God, this is going to be terrible. I'm going to expose myself. And so I just do chat GPT voice mode and I'll be like, I'll send it a picture and I'll go voice mode. I'll be like, hey, tell me what these sharks are from left to right. And it reads it out to my kids. And then my kid can ask a question. He'll be like, which one is the strongest shark? And it'll be like,

actually, the great white shark is the strongest shark with the most powerful bite. And he'll be like, no, but what if it was with a cheetah? And he'll be like, well, a cheetah wouldn't be in the ocean, but if it was in the ocean, and it'll interact with my kids and we have a fun time, they'll tell me all the time, can we play with AI? Dude, that's so good. I've got a bunch of friends whose children are like three, four, five talking age, and they are doing the exact same thing. We'll do trivia, another hack for parents. You can go...

Hey, I'm sitting here with my two kids. Their names are, you know, whatever, Timmy and Tommy. And we're going to, we want to do Paw Patrol trivia. Ask us easy questions. And when we're right, say ding, ding, ding. And when we're wrong, say, that's not right. Try again. And keep track of the scores. All right, go. Literally, you could just say that to it in voice mode. And it'd be like, all right, first question. Marshall is a pup known for what?

what? And you're like, fire. And it's like, ding, ding, ding, correct. One point for you. Kids are going to fall in love with her. It's pretty crazy how, like imagine being

you know raised with this this is insane the i'll give it let me give three practical ways i'm using it so they have this new thing called i think it's new ish called projects and so i have three folders right now and the way it works is you have like a folder as a project and then you can upload files to the project and then you can have multiple conversations within the project and it refers back to the files or whatever information give me the example let me give an example in there

I have a health folder. And so you know how everyone has their own health guru, and it's usually based off of one book they read. Well, I go and download the book. Yeah, you're mine. Yeah. Well, I go and I download the book that I ascribe to, and I will upload. And if it's a book that's EPUB, which is how I buy it on Kindle, I convert it to .txt file because that's easier to read. And I upload the .txt file to the... Even though it's huge because it's a book that works?

I give it a full book, the full book. I download it and I convert it. And then like, so for example, we were going to the grocery store today. And I just said like, you know, there's like this interesting book I just read and I upload the, I've uploaded the book. And I would just say, make the grocery list for me. And then I'll tell me actually, and I'll say, which grocery store should I go to?

in my area and it knows where I live and it says yeah like these three grocery stores will have exactly what you need I think they will have what you need because like you know I'm on this like clean meat kick or whatever and he was like yeah the author says like to buy this cut of meat and you should ask the butcher this this and this and like here's three butchers that appear to have what you need

And it's all based off of the files that I've uploaded for health. But then within health, I can ask it... I'll like, hey, this quarter, I want to run a 5K at this particular time. Give me a good app to use that can help track my running and also tell me what my goals should

So that's a couple health versions. The second one is I've got a clothing one where I literally took a photo of myself and I used a tape measure to measure various parts of my body. And I upload it to it. And I was like, all right, make a chart with all my measurements. Thank you. Remember that always. Here's some clothing that I want to buy. Here's the links. Can you go and figure out what size it is? And let me know, will it fit? And they're like, well, this pants...

It says that the same width is your thigh, but you actually want like two inches, usually extra width that they'll probably feel more comfortable. Or what I'll do is I'll upload like a blog that I like, Dye Workwear blog. And I'll say, hey, here's a picture. I'll literally lay a tie next to a jacket and I'll take a picture of it and I'll upload it. And I'll be like, does this tie match this jacket? And I'll be like, no, but that other tie that you showed me a picture of a while ago, that actually would look great here.

It's like, that's how I use it. And then the final way that I use it, and this is my life coach folder, which is partially like, I'll complain to it. And I'll be like, I noticed you've been complaining about this a lot. Or I'll upload business financials to it. And that's more of my sparring partner throughout the day. And so I have three folders right now, health, clothing, and a life coach. And so those are the practical ways. And I'm using projects. That's

That's the term on chat GPT. And that's how I'm using it as of now. People are just going to replace their co-founder with this, right? Like, you're going to see a lot more solo founders because you could just have an AI co-founder. You're going to say, well, you know, you'll reduce churn if you use this messaging when you email your users. And then you're just going to say,

Yeah. Well, you have my login to MailChimp or Shopify. I've got it. Yeah. Get it done. Or you'll be like, my Shopify store is like a 2.1 conversion rate. And it's like, hey, we ran this A-B test. It increased your conversion rate to 3%. And you're like...

Get after it. Go do it. And that's what's going to happen. And so anyway, we've had these intelligent people, Dharmesh, whatever, explain to us all these things. But it wasn't until the last two months. And in fact, recently, actually, since you told me to ask him to ask Chet to do that question, that I'm like, oh my god, this is my life now. And in fact, you actually sent out a wonderful email the other day where you said, here's how to ask powerful questions.

I uploaded that email to ChatGPT and I'm like, remember these questions and like ask me them often or ask yourself these questions often. Yeah, I mean, it's just so, it's incredible and it's also so obvious that I think that ChatGPT is, I mean, it is the Google of our generation. And I guess the only question is like, why am I not

Why am I not a shareholder of OpenAI? Like, how do I go to sleep at night? Well, I mean, Dharmesh had to buy a $10 million domain and then convince them to buy it in order to become a shareholder. So, like, it's like asking... There's always a way, though.

There is always a way. Why haven't I tried everything? But that's like saying, why am I not a billionaire? It's like, well, you could be, but here are some of the barriers to entry that you've got to overcome. So there's certainly... You should ask ChatGPT that, by the way. It's a good question, by the way, why am I not a billionaire? It is a great question, but... Have you ever asked yourself that question? I asked a friend that question. And they weren't even really that close of a friend, so it was kind of a... It was a blunt question to ask at a dinner. I was like...

why are you not already a billionaire? Um, and he gave a great answer and he goes, uh, or actually what he was saying was, you know, I want to start a billion dollar company, something, something, something. And I was like, why have you not already done that? And he goes, I think when I was starting these other companies that I started, he goes, I didn't actually understand what a billion dollar company looked like. And if I had known that I would have built a different company. Um,

And he was correct. And, you know, as we dug in, it's like, what makes a company a billion-dollar company? Like, you know, there's really only a couple of paths to that. And, you know, one of them, for example, is like building something that has network effects. So he had been building companies that could do, like, great revenues, that could even be profitable, that could grow fast. Like, you know, those are some of the things you need.

But there was no network effect. It was no durability. There was no defensibility. There was no like win the category. It was like just go to a category where you can win inside that category, but there'll be other winners and you all compete. Like just as an example, that was like a gaming company. It's like there's a lot of mobile gaming companies. And at the time, like to build a billion dollar gaming company required, like you really had to be like one of the like, you know,

three that were going to get built in a five-year window, right? Like you had to build, you know, Clash of Clans or you had to build Candy Crush or you had to build like one of those. And even in one of those, it was like, oh, actually, you know, I'm sitting here tinkering on cool game designs. And actually the thing I need to do is build a enormous paid marketing team that is like point the top, the top paid marketers in the world to acquire hundreds of millions of customers is what I need to do.

And like the cool artsy game design that's going to win me awards is not going to, that's not what a billion dollar gaming company looks like. So he just didn't understand the shape of something. And I find that to be true about most of the goals. So instead of how can I do this goal? Another way of saying it is why have I not already done this goal? Why is it not already true for me?

And then it points out some like, you know, either knowledge gaps or execution gaps that are today that...

that are like more close to your timeline versus when you set like an ambitious goal that's like far in the future and you sort of bake in that it's going to take a long time, you sort of avoid the, maybe the harsh realities that might be actually existing today in your world about those. Yeah, you had a great email with a bunch of those questions. It was, here's a bunch of decision-making questions, which is, I'm not sure, I'm not sure, what should I do? Instead, you should say, what would I do if I weren't afraid?

One bad question is, how can I make this succeed? The better question is, what would make this certainly fail? A final example is, I can't decide which path is the right to pick. A better question or a better version of that is, what path makes for the best story? This is actually a pretty good email. I think I replied. I said this was a 10. But you had a list of better questions. And I used those questions in ChatGPT. Because what I'm learning with ChatGPT is...

you have to get it to ask you better questions in order to... Its input is important for its output. And so, yeah, I pretty much stole that email. Yeah, I think the...

The realization was Tim Ferriss had said something way back. I think I put it in the email, but he used this phrase. He goes, he was talking about it in the podcasting realm, but first he had this quote. Yeah, you can read it out. He goes, if you want confusion and heartache, ask vague questions. If you want uncommon clarity and results, ask uncommonly clear questions. Often, all that stands between you and what you want is a better set of questions.

Exactly. He said this about his podcast. He goes, I view questions as like a pickaxe for the brain, like a pickaxe when you're summiting a mountain and you use it to sort of like pierce the side of the mountain and use it to pull yourself up.

And so in many ways, you are excavating the brain with this pickaxe and your pickaxes questions. Another phrase I use all the time in businesses is ask a better question, get a better answer. So often if somebody asks a bad question, and I'll call a bad question either a vague question, open-ended question, or a question in the wrong direction, I think the rookie move is just to answer a question at face value. Like you should not answer 100% of the questions asked.

Like a lot of the questions need to bounce back to sender. Oh, this has the wrong address on it. You got to write a better address on that. This won't get delivered. The way you've written this address is not going to get delivered. And so you bounce back some questions and say, maybe the better question to ask is blank. For example, like, you know, instead of how could we succeed, which is like a million paths all unknown, it's,

What would make this certainly a failure? That's much more knowable. And we can, we can establish a few ground rules from that question and get some momentum towards this. And you could see this with your brain, just like if you ask, you know, they call it prompt engineering when it comes for AI, right? Being able to ask the AI in a certain way, that's going to get you a better result. Absolutely. The same thing is true for yourself and for people around you to ask better questions, right? Um,

I do, I ask annoyingly stupid questions to my team all the time. Like it'll be one question I love to ask is what are we stupid for not doing right now? And it's just that question, it comes loaded with a presumption that there's something stupid we're doing. Of course there is. We're always doing stupid things. And specifically, what are we stupid for not doing right now? Meaning what is an obvious low hanging fruit that's in our face

And we're out here searching for the complex when the simple, stupidly obvious thing is here. And, you know, I would say more than 50% of the time, there's a useful answer to that question. But if you didn't ask that question, it would just go unspoken in your company, right? So like, how many are those? Another one that I learned from Amazon is Amazon asked this thing in the

If you're an exec that leads a team, you have to write this document at the end of the year called the OP1. I think it's the Operating Plan 1. And you do two a year, right? The Operating Plan 1, and then you have the Operating Plan 2 halfway through the year. Was that effective? Yeah, it's great. I'm a fan of the Amazon writing culture. It's easy to make fun of also and easy to do wrong, but when done right, it's super effective. So one of the common questions that they ask in that is, what are the dogs not barking?

And it's back to that Sherlock Holmes story where he solves the case because he's like, and they're like, how did you know Sherlock? And he's like, because there's like a house break in. They're trying to figure out who did it. And he's like, well, it was the dog, of course. But the dog, the dog didn't do anything. He goes, exactly. The dog didn't bark, which means he must have recognized the person that broke in, which means it must have been, you know, the housekeeper or whatever. Right. And so in your business, there's what are the dogs not barking is a good way of asking questions.

what are the things that is really like I interpret in two ways one is what are the things we should be hearing that we're not so for example one week I didn't send out my Friday email and I just sat there and I was like like you want people to complain about emails being like hey where's the Friday thing man I love that I didn't get that okay dog not barking right and then I had changed how I did the Friday emails because of that it's like well why'd you make that pivot it's like

Because I did Jenga, dude. I took a block out and the tower was fine. Nothing fell down. I'm trying to only have like, I'm trying to be an email in your inbox that if I remove that email, your life got worse, you know? And you want to speak to the manager, where's my goddamn email, right? Like if DoorDash doesn't deliver your food, you're knocking on the door. I want to be at least more powerful than the DoorDash delivery, right? Like that's what I'm striving for. And so that's one way of interpreting it. The other way is,

what are the problems that you don't hear about yet, but are certainly there. That's another way to think about the dogs not barking is like,

you know anticipate a problem around the corner because we know it's going to be there um but we just haven't heard it yet but you know we can anticipate it and maybe get ahead of it dude i'm telling you there's gonna be a world probably in three years where you're gonna like so the issue that a lot of smart people like you and me and people listening is like you're like well i'm really smart and i feel like i'm wise and i feel like i know what to do but like it's a lot of work and then like

the idea guys are going to thrive in five years or the wise people because there's going to be AI agents doing all of this for you. You know what I mean? Like, you're not going to have to actually do that work. You're just, your opinions or your taste will matter. Yeah, but it is dangerous, right? Because then who's, why can't the AI do the idea part too, right? That's going to happen too. It's not. You're not. I don't think you are. So then what, right? And then that's when the brain breaks and you're like, I guess it's over then. And,

And I'm not sure. Wait, so are you actually afraid? Yeah, kind of. Like, I don't want to say afraid because I'm not like, you know, quivering in my boots about it. But I guess like, I don't have a satisfying answer.

And for most things in my life, I got a pretty satisfying answer. Sometimes the answer is just, I'll deal with it when it happens, right? I'll just adjust, right? And I could feel safe. I could feel comfortable with that. That's usually my fail safe. With this one, it's kind of like, so when the AI can do everything, right? Which is like, it seems like it's a matter of when, not if at this point. Okay. And it's like, seems like it's in my lifetime, probably in the next 10 years, right?

it could do the work, but it can also figure out what the work to be done is. All right. Well, I guess like, I'm less afraid of the, like, oh, and then it's going to crush humans and try to, you know, that'll go rogue and it'll, it'll attack us. Like, I'm not as afraid of that as I am just like the, what's the point of all this? What's the point of doing any of this stuff? If that's going to be true. And that's kind of just like a, a weird place to land. So you want to end there? What the fuck? Right. Yeah.

Podcasts are all that safe, dude. No, they're not. No, they're not. Perplexity has a daily podcast that's really good. They just take the news that is great. And then they have, or no, it's not Perplexity. It's a, what's the thing? 11 Labs. 11 Labs has, they use like a Stephen Fry voice and they read the news. I listen to it. It's awesome. It's not safe. We're not safe. No one's safe.

Maybe like a plumber. A plumber is safe. Well, I actually think our strategy is pretty genius because we are getting stupider. All right? Just like we dumb ourselves down and AI is trying to get smarter. And so there's actually a white space in the market for some just imperfect knowledge, some half-baked ideas, and some incorrectness.

I think we've really, I think we've stumbled onto something. I think we might be the last one standing in this whole podcast game. It's us and Theo Vaughn. It's just like the dumbest conversations on earth. There's going to be all that's left because the AI is going to do all the smart ones.

Maybe. I mean, I don't know. Maybe. Marc Andreessen should be scared right now. Not us. Yeah, the smart guys are fucked. Like, the smart guys built... The smart guys are digging their own graves. They're like... Their shovels are clanking together on accident as they're, like, digging the same grave. They're like, oh, sorry. My bad. It's like they don't realize that you guys are going into this grave in about a year. Is that my name on the tombstone? Yeah. That's weird. That must be a problem. Is there another Marc here? Two Marc Andreessens? Yeah.

Like, they think that they're like, we're putting the blue-collar guy in this grave and we're going to out-tour this fucking job. They're like...

I've never... Mr. Adresin, are you here? Like, you know what I mean? Dude, I found my new sick burn in the TikTok comments. You know, there's all these TikTok clips of podcasts. Like, we should probably be doing this, but we don't really do it very much. But like, people just clip, you know, podcast snippets. And that's like a lot of TikToks. And the...

And the more viral, the more, basically the more outrageous the comment in the podcast, the more viral the TikTok clip, because you're going to get a bunch of comments being like, no, that's wrong. That's stupid. That's whatever. And I saw the best one. It was just the top liked comment on a podcast clip, which is, it just said,

Podcasting equipment is way too readily available. This is like, damn, anybody can just get a microphone now? That's how I feel when I see a lot of these clips. I'm like, wow, this shit is... These microphones are way too easy to access. Have you heard that song, Another White Boy with a Podcast?

It's a song. Yes, it's a song called Another White Boy with a Podcast. Goddamn, how did I not think of that? It's sort of like that, like, Finance 6-4 Blue Eyes. It just says, like, Joe Rogan. Like, it just says, like, a bunch of, like, random phrases, but it's called Another White Boy with a Podcast. Maybe we should just play that song on the way out of this. That'll be our outro. All right, cue the music. Ooh, another white boy with a podcast. Crypto Chimborazo.

Ooh, another white boy with a podcast.

Hey, Sean here. A quick break to tell you an Ev Williams story. He started Twitter and before that he sold a company to Google for $100 million. And somebody asked him, they said, Ev, what's the secret, man? How do you create these huge businesses, billion dollar businesses? And he says, well, I think the answer is that you take a human desire, preferably one that's been around for thousands of years, and then you just use modern technology to take out steps. Just remove the friction that exists between people getting what they want and

And that is what my partner Mercury does. They took one of the most basic needs any entrepreneur has, managing your money and being able to do your finance or operations. And they've removed all the friction that has existed for decades. No more clunky interfaces, no more 10 tabs to get something done, no more having to drive to a bank, get out of your car just to send a wire transfer. They made it fast. They made it easy. You can actually just get back to running your business. You don't have to worry about the rest of it.

I use it for not one, not two, but six of my companies right now. And it's used by also 200,000 other ambitious founders. So if you want to be like me, head to mercury.com, open an account in minutes. And remember, Mercury is a financial technology company, not a bank. Banking services provided by Choice Financial Group and Evolve Bank and Trust members, FDIC. All right, back to the episode.