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Daniel Priestley: AI Will Make Plumbers Earn More Than Lawyers! (2029 PREDICTION)

By The Diary Of A CEO

Summary

Topics Covered

  • Jevons Paradox Creates Millions of Businesses
  • AI Data Centers Risk 2029 Crash
  • Entrepreneurs Master Six-Step Loop
  • Relatable Stories Beat AI Slop

Full Transcript

I was looking at the top 10 jobs that are most likely to be disrupted by AI and I really do worry about this.

>> So the nature of the economy is changing for a long time. Blue collar work like plumbers, electricians, brick layers has been devalued. But it could be in the

been devalued. But it could be in the next couple of years. These are the roles that are elevated the most and that plumbers regularly earn more than lawyers. And for the last 25 years, I've

lawyers. And for the last 25 years, I've been building companies from scratch and I've been through the global financial crisis and co but I have never experienced what we're experiencing

right now. I've never seen more fear for

right now. I've never seen more fear for the disruption that is coming. And my

real bare case for AI is that every time you go on AI, your request is going off to a big computer in a Walmartized building somewhere. And those big

building somewhere. And those big ginormous computers, they last 3 to 4 years before they need to be replaced.

And this year ahead, we're going to spend 650 billion and that could cause a massive financial collapse. That's the

thing that I'm worried most about.

However, I've never seen more excitement for the opportunities that are in front of us. So let's talk about in a world of

of us. So let's talk about in a world of AI what are the skills that survive.

>> So I really believe that everyone should build a little bit of a personal brand not like to become an influencer but position yourself with a group of people who know who you are and know what you do and could enroll you in their

opportunity. Second one if there's one

opportunity. Second one if there's one skill set that everyone should be learning at the moment it's how do entrepreneurs think? How do

entrepreneurs think? How do entrepreneurs behave? What are the

entrepreneurs behave? What are the skills that make an entrepreneur successful? And entrepreneurs just

successful? And entrepreneurs just simply follow six steps and we do it over and over and over again. and we'll

go through the six steps.

>> So, are there any particular opportunities that you think that anybody listening right now could pursue to make money?

>> So, I think one of the best opportunities is >> that is such good advice that we don't hear enough.

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Daniel, I think we're living in the most interesting opportunistic terrifying time to be an entrepreneur, a professional, to really be anybody

because this is a moment of such fundamental change. And I really wanted

fundamental change. And I really wanted to have this conversation with you today because I want to understand how you're thinking about AI from an opportunity standpoint as an entrepreneur, but also just for everybody that's working in a normal job and who is at risk of having

their their career, their livelihood, their identity, their qualifications made redundant because there is now an alien amongst us that can do so much. So

this conversation really is about giving people answers. It's about being honest

people answers. It's about being honest with them about what's coming. And it's

about preparing them, setting them up so that they have an advantage in the face of the future we face. So

give me the 30,000 ft view.

>> Well, my background for the last 25 years has been building companies from scratch. And I've been through the com

scratch. And I've been through the com and I've been through global financial crisis and I've been through uh Brexit and co. I have never experienced what

and co. I have never experienced what we're experiencing right now. I've never

seen more excitement for the opportunities that are in front of us and I've never seen more fear for the disruption that is coming. We are living through transformational times that is

very similar to 250 years ago where the end of the agricultural age ended and the beginning of the industrial age began.

>> I would argue that it's more significant because there's two forces that kind of keep me up at night. The first force is AI, which is you can think of it as just the replacement of the human brain from

a sort of productivity standpoint. And

then the other is robotics. And the

problem is they're coming in at the same time. And I was watching I don't know if

time. And I was watching I don't know if you saw this the other day.

>> So I'll put this on the screen for anyone that's watching the video right now, but this is a demonstration that took place in China of how advanced their robots are. And I had to check

multiple times to make sure that this wasn't fake. They are doing back flips

wasn't fake. They are doing back flips and landing perfectly on their feet. And

so when you combine intelligence with the disruption of our physical form, our muscles, our body, our ability to pick things up and move them through through time and space, it begs the question like where do we

>> where do we fit in to all of that?

Strangely, there's something called the Jevans paradox. And the Jevans paradox

Jevans paradox. And the Jevans paradox is a paradox where when we think something is going to completely disrupt the way that we uh live and work. It

often has the opposite effect. We

thought that YouTube was going to completely wipe out television. And it's

true that Hollywood lost tens of thousands of jobs, but YouTubing created 500 to 600,000 jobs at the same time.

And it used to take 150 people to make a a TV show or a movie. And now it's 5 to 10 people making YouTube videos as a little team. and they can have a wildly

little team. and they can have a wildly successful YouTube channel. With the

Jebans paradox, if we currently said that in order to have a successful software company right now today or in the last few years, you needed to have 10,000 customers and you needed to have a team of 50 people and you needed to

raise$1 to5 million to get a software company off the off the ground. If all

of a sudden the cost and the commitment drops dramatically to have a software company and you only need 500 customers to work it to make it work and you only need two people on a team to make it work and you only need a tiny bit of

funding to make it work. What happens is like YouTube channels you can end up with literally millions of tiny little software businesses that are super successful for 5 to 10 people and they do something niche and they do something

special. They don't look like

special. They don't look like traditional software companies either.

So a traditional software company would just do the software whereas these little software companies might do software plus they might do dinner parties where the clients get together.

They might have an annual ski retreat.

They might have a podcast and a YouTube channel that goes with it. And all of that could be done by 5 to 10 people using AI tools. So the Jevans paradox would basically say that there is

millions of unmet needs and that those unmet needs are not explored because the cost to explore them is too high. But

because the cost to explore those has come down, then now we can actually have millions of businesses that never existed that we didn't even know we needed to exist.

>> I was sat here the other day with Dra who is the CEO of Uber. He turned around Expedia, made it super profitable, turned around Uber that was losing 2 billion, made it generate about 9 billion in revenue, 10 billion in revenue. And uh he sat there and said to

revenue. And uh he sat there and said to me that their 9,000 couriers and drivers won't have jobs in the future. And and I so I sit and go, okay, so what what are they going to do? Are they all going to start businesses somewhere? Do they? And

also I think one of the interesting things about AI is the speed of transition. With the industrial

transition. With the industrial revolution, there's a little bit of a delay because infrastructure took time to build.

>> Takes a long time to build.

>> But this is the first innovation that I've lived through that is built on >> it's instantaneous.

>> The internet.

>> The minute an AI learns how to be a lawyer in one place, it can be a lawyer in every place. The minute it learns how to diagnose a disease in in one location, in one hospital, it can diagnose a disease in every hospital in

the world. So, it's this instantaneous

the world. So, it's this instantaneous roll out uh because it sits on top of a network that already exists.

>> This is what actually Boston Dynamics said to me. I was watching a video of their new robot that's working in factories. It's a humanoid robot that

factories. It's a humanoid robot that can work in factories, pick things up, move things around. They said, "The great thing about robotics is if one of our robots on a shop floor in Boston learn something, all of our robots learn it.

>> It's it's wild."

>> Like, hell. So yesterday Tesla built and they took this wonderful photo because they built the world's first Tesla Cyber Cab. Now if anyone doesn't know what a

Cab. Now if anyone doesn't know what a Tesla Cyber Cab is, it's the first ever fully autonomous car that doesn't have a steering wheel and it doesn't have pedals.

>> Yeah. You just hop in and there's there's no steering wheel, no pedals.

You can't take control even if you wanted to.

>> The Cyber Cab is the company's answer to vehicles like the Whimo. The two-seater

coupe unveiled in 2024 comes without a steering wheel or pedals. It's guided by AI and they're

pedals. It's guided by AI and they're now making them. The first one was made yesterday. Again, 100 over a 100 million

yesterday. Again, 100 over a 100 million people's job is to drive and you can get one of these now for Elon saying $30,000. Um, you can rent them, lease

$30,000. Um, you can rent them, lease them. You can buy a bunch of investment

them. You can buy a bunch of investment assets and set them out, >> set up your own fleet and connect them to different networks like Uber and all of those sorts of things. And the cost to move around is going to go through

the floor because you know my Uber to come here today was probably $50 uh and that will probably be $6 or $7 uh once that is rolled out. So the thing that with the Jevans paradox is it doesn't

mean that everyone gets the same job and that they get like uh there's just more of exactly the same jobs. It means that the transformation creates exponential growth as a result of the transformation in an unexpected way. Mhm.

>> So growing up, my mom worked in newspapers and there was probably half a million people working in newspapers as journalists and all of those sorts of things and that has dropped by 80% in the last 25 years. But at the same time,

the number of people who are bloggers, the number of people who have substacks, the number of people uh who are doing the kind of work of journalists and actually making money as a result of

content creation has gone 100 100x. So,

uh, I think it's something like three to four times more people now make their money in a way that kind of looks like a journalist than there ever were journalists prior to the technology that

disrupt journalists. So, it's not that

disrupt journalists. So, it's not that it's not that those exact same jobs uh are are replicated. It's that something similar emerges as a result.

>> I understand this and I when I read about the Jews paradox, I like ran it through my head multiple times to to understand like how it fits in different industries. But there is a part of me

industries. But there is a part of me that still thinks this is slightly different because in the example you gave where there was a a content creation industry that was then disrupted by a content creation

industry. I go yeah this this the skill

industry. I go yeah this this the skill of intelligence was still of human intelligence was still

rare and scarce and only humans had it.

M >> so the disruption of the content creation industry to a different content creation industry was still owned by humans. That transition was still a

humans. That transition was still a human one. But in such a world where AI

human one. But in such a world where AI agents can make, if you go on a lot of social media platforms, I shame which ones, it's just pure AI slop now. Yes,

it's just people's agents churning out content that they haven't touched or done anything about. And then I was I I started saying to you before we started recording that what we're going to experience and what I think a lot of people don't fully embrace about this

idea of becoming a content creator for a living or building a personal brand is when you look at some of the graphs and I'll throw the graphs from the Financial Times article on the screen. There's now

a plateau of people spending time online for the first time in history. Well, in

the first time in internet history, >> Gen Z especially were the first generation to plateau. Yeah.

>> In their time spent. But the amount of content, the amount of AI agents, the amount of people that are now choosing to make to do content as a living is exploding. Yes.

exploding. Yes.

>> So you have a supply and demand issue where there's a set amount really like a set amount of hours consu sort of consumption hours and then you have this

huge exponential explosion in available content because a kid in Mumbai >> Yeah. attention is a limited resource

>> Yeah. attention is a limited resource but content is >> and content is unlimited now.

>> Yeah. and and more so so AI slop is just rolling in and also AI slop doesn't do it justice. Some of my favorite things

it justice. Some of my favorite things to watch is AI generated. I'm enjoying

AI. So think about it a little when it comes to personal brand. Think about it a little bit like an airport that the airport has got this fog that is rolling in. If your airplane is already above

in. If your airplane is already above the fog, >> then you're you can continue to fly. But

if your airplane is not taking off already, then the fog is going to keep you on the ground. So like for example, you've invested so much into your personal brand and people will come

along to see you live and they would love to go to dinner party series that you know involves you and there's a whole community around DOAC, right? So

all of those things means that your airplane's already up in the air, you can continue to fly. But if you were starting 2 years from now or a year from now or maybe even 6 months from now and you weren't smart about it, there's just

too much AI generated content. You won't

get traction. you won't get you won't get that liftoff moment. Uh the same way that opportunity is coming to an end because of that AI generated content >> what I'm seeing in the algorithm. So we

do some data analysis every year on the variance of performance of pieces of content we produce on different channels. Now I've been making social

channels. Now I've been making social media content for 15 years. So I have a bit of a sort of a mental history of like every year us doing this this particular data analysis to see the variance between the worst thing we post

and the best thing we post. And this

year we did the same we ran the same analysis with my data science team led by Austin and my team to see if the variance between the worst thing we post and and the best thing we post is getting bigger because what that kind of

is a proxy of is is the algorithm caring less and less and less about how many followers I have and is it caring more and more and more about whoever posts the most interesting thing today which is if I was building a social media

company and my primary objective was to retain people. I wouldn't care if you

retain people. I wouldn't care if you have two followers and Stephen has 500 followers. I would just care about who

followers. I would just care about who post the best thing.

>> So we did that analysis and it's it's an almost perfect graph that looks like this.

>> And this is the variance increasing.

>> Y >> which actually means that okay Steven's taken off from the sky but every day I wake up increasingly it doesn't matter what I did yesterday.

>> What we've seen is the end of social media and the birth of algorithmic media >> interest algorithms we call them.

>> Yeah. So, social media was all about connecting with your friends and finding out what your friends are doing. Um, and

algorithmic media is just finding out what the algorithm thinks that you should be watching today. But with that said, there's this multi-dimension to it, which is you've got books, you've got live events, you've got the podcast,

and it's the multi-dimensional angle that actually really sets you apart. The

creators that just simply want to put a piece of content on YouTube and get paid through AdSense revenue and that really simple that one-dimensional model, that's coming to an end. But the

creators that have a community and they meet up in the real world all of that is is part of an overall ecosystem that is very defensible because one you know people want all of that packaged up together.

>> Why is it fundamentally defensible from if we think about first principles or human masloavian needs. Let me give you a big answer to that which is if we go back in time to the agricultural age,

farmers had to know when was a good time to plant the crops and then they had to go out and toil the soil and put the seed in the soil and the soil did most of the value creation in the economy. At

the end of that process, the farmer had to know this is the day to harvest and then we need to harvest that and we need to turn it into something and take it to market. And AI is very similar, which is

market. And AI is very similar, which is that it's very good at doing the middle to the middle. It's not good at knowing what to do in the very first instance or knowing when to stop and how to take it

to market. So the the entrepreneurs job

to market. So the the entrepreneurs job is to do step one and two, let AI do steps three to eight, and then do steps 9 and 10 and to basically have a

coherent cohesive view as to what you're trying to get the AI to create.

>> Theoretically though, I could I could ask an AI agent to think about the goal that will benefit me the most and make as many AI agents as it needs to to fulfill that goal. And then it would make start one business and that would start another business. lots of

different businesses, >> start another business, build another website, contact a supplier.

>> I think what you're into here is two or three steps ahead of yourself where, you know, all of this is theoretically possible, but we haven't seen those kind of examples happening yet, right? We

haven't seen whether that will ultimately unfold. I'm not saying it

ultimately unfold. I'm not saying it won't. I think we are moving into a

won't. I think we are moving into a completely new economy. Like like when you lived in the agricultural age, it was completely like unbelievable to you what the industrial age would have

looked like. like it's beyond all

looked like. like it's beyond all comprehension if you had an agricultural age mindset to imagine factory production or coal production >> and the thing the principle there that allows you to see what the future might

look like when it's exponential and not linear is imagining any rate of improvement and so this is how I think always in my business is when I'm thinking about which bet to make I

imagine if there's just 5% rate of improvement per quarter eventually this happens >> and so with some things we've done on this show we started two years ago and

for the first 18 months it didn't work and then 6 months ago it exploded because eventually the rate of improvement got to the point where it was viable and now it's the single most important disruptive thing we've ever done >> and I think about what I the example I

just gave there of agents I'm like if you just imagine any rate of improvement just imagine 1% a year >> and obviously it's way more than that but imagine 1% a month eventually we get to a point where a team of agents >> if nothing if nothing disrupts it one

thing that is very likely to happen in the next three years is the whole thing comes crashing It doesn't financially make any sense to build the data centers that we're building.

>> But you're not saying that AI is going to disappear.

>> The technology itself is remarkable, but the financial model just makes no sense whatsoever at the moment.

>> At the moment, which is kind of typical of bubbles, right?

>> So over the last 180 years, there have been infrastructure buildouts that have bankrupted the economy consistently again and again and again. In fact,

there's a pattern. Whenever we spend more than 3% of the overall GDP of the economy on an infrastructure buildout, it bankrupts the economy briefly for 10

years. Right? So this happened when we

years. Right? So this happened when we did railway tracks. In fact, it happened twice in the UK and twice in um the USA.

Then we bankrupt ourselves putting the electrification grid in place. We

bankrupted ourselves putting uh highways in place. Now there's something that

in place. Now there's something that makes this worse than ever before and that is that when we built train tracks they lasted for 100 years. When we built

roads they lasted 50 plus years. The

telecommunications g uh fiber optics 30 years. All of these investments were

years. All of these investments were multi-deade investments that we could get benefit from and and and leverage for decades. Data centers last 3 to four

for decades. Data centers last 3 to four years before they need to be replaced.

So we are building something that has a 3 to four year life cycle that costs hundreds of billions and it has to be replaced every few years and there is no financial model attached to this that

justifies it at all. So one thing that I'm predicting is that in 2029 100 years after the great depression we will see a massive financial meltdown based off the

back of these data centers that have been um developed at the moment. And for

someone that doesn't know what a data center is, >> so it's like a big Walmart or an airport filled with computers and those computers are running AI, right? So

every time you go on AI, you're actually, you know, your request is going off to a big computer in a Walmartized building somewhere. But

those GPUs, those uh computer stacks, those big ginormous computers, they are like iPhones. They last about 3 years

like iPhones. They last about 3 years before they get superseded. This year

ahead, we're going to spend 650 billion.

650 billion sounds like so abstract.

It's the equivalent of giving every single person in America an iPhone Pro with AirPods. But here's the crazy

with AirPods. But here's the crazy thing. 95% of people who have been given

thing. 95% of people who have been given the the free uh iPhone are not willing to pay for it. And the tiny number of people who are willing to pay for it,

they're only willing to pay $20 a month, most of them. So this $20 a month, everyone's getting a free iPhone effectively and then a small 5% of people are willing to pay $20 a month.

The numbers are just astronomically out of balance.

>> The numbers are astronomically out of balance. So what happens next? You're

balance. So what happens next? You're

predicting in 2029 there's a financial crash.

>> There's not a 0% chance that the financial model around what what we've launched with AI is catastrophic. It's a

huge financial problem that very few people are talking about.

>> So let's talk about in a world of AI.

What are the skills that survive? And

like what what are the professions that you believe survive? You've got

children, Daniel. When when they come to you and they say, "Dad, um I'm hearing about all this AI stuff and I've seen these robots in China doing back flips.

What should I be learning now to make sure that the next 20, 30, 40 years of my career is prosperous?"

>> It's the entrepreneurial skill set that is the most important skill set. It is

essentially the skills of identifying an opportunity prototyping fast and cheap experiments to see if you've got something that people want, taking it to market, making your initial sales,

scaling up to your addressable market, and then exiting and then coming up with a new idea. Because even if you're in a big corporate, they're going to want to prototype things. They're going to want

prototype things. They're going to want to spin out new products. They're going

to want to come up with new initiatives.

And we need to step through that process of is this a good idea or not? Can we

validate it? Can we scale it? Right? And

you want to go through that process as fast and as cheap as possible the way an entrepreneur would.

>> And on that first point of identifying a good idea.

Now is there any way to know if the idea that I have is a good idea or a bad idea?

>> Yeah, this is a step that entrepreneurs call validation. And the rookie

call validation. And the rookie entrepreneurs that fail, they don't do this step very well, right? So they

don't do market validation. They don't

do product validation. They simply get excited about an idea and then they go all in on the idea. And what really experienced entrepreneurs do is that we come up with ways to do fast cheap

experiments. So for example, last year I

experiments. So for example, last year I had two ideas and I I actually kind of liked one a lot and I liked one a little bit. And what I did is I set up a

bit. And what I did is I set up a waiting list campaign and I basically invited people to join the waiting list for idea number one and about 750 people joined that waiting list and they filled

in a set set of questions so that I knew that 750 people were interested in this idea. This was my favorite idea. And

idea. This was my favorite idea. And

then the second idea I invited people to join that waiting list and 4 and a half thousand people joined that waiting list. So even though this wasn't my

list. So even though this wasn't my favorite idea, it was way more exciting for people and way it was sitting on top of a much bigger need. So off the back of collecting 4 and a half thousand people on the waiting list and

collecting all the data and the information, we went to some angel investors about a week later after doing that and we raised quarter of a million pounds. So about300 or $400,000

pounds. So about300 or $400,000 and all of that took about a week or two. With that example, how do you know

two. With that example, how do you know that the business itself and the delivery of that idea actually meets their expectation? Because I can think

their expectation? Because I can think of multiple examples where someone clicked on an idea that I had, but actually the delivery of that idea fell short of expectation because sometimes

things can sound good when you you see the flyer or the poster or the advert, but the reality of the experience is actually not that great.

>> So, let me walk you through the six steps quickly. Step one is called

steps quickly. Step one is called founder opportunity fit and founder opportunity fit is finding something that you want to do. Step two is validation. Right? So this is where we

validation. Right? So this is where we actually try and see is there a market could we could we build something? Could

we sell something? Right? So that's two validation. Can we build it? Can we sell

validation. Can we build it? Can we sell it? Step three is called product market

it? Step three is called product market fit. And this is the next step where

fit. And this is the next step where you're actually trying to figure out can we actually make this live up to people's expectations so that they really like it. Is there a group of people who buy this and they're happy with the purchase? And we want to do

that carefully and cheaply. And then

finally once people say well or the next step once people say yes we can do that we go to market and go to market is making sales. And then after going to

making sales. And then after going to market we scale up right step five. And

then the final step is we exit. So we go through those six steps and we call that a value creation loop. And that value creation loop goes through those six steps and each step has its own little

job. And what we're trying to do is just

job. And what we're trying to do is just validate, go to the next step, achieve the milestones, go to the next step. And

and that's how we do it as entrepreneurs.

>> So in a world of AI, are there any particular opportunities that you think are um new and exciting that anybody listening right now could pursue to make money, whether it's passive income on the side or to leave their current role

and pursue entrepreneurship for?

>> Well, the starting point is that everything is an opportunity because what do entrepreneurs do? we find things that could be done better, faster, cheaper or with more emotional benefits.

>> But has AI created any particular interesting opportunities in your view that you think that's a a huge arbitrage opportunity?

>> I think one of the best opportunities is a small SAS company. So software as a service was an elite level business opportunity that very very few people could enter. That was something that

could enter. That was something that only maybe tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands of founders at most globally could have a software company.

So it was very very elite. And the

reason it was elite is because it was very very hard to mobilize the talent required to build a software company.

You probably needed, you know, maybe 10, 20 or 30 uh developers to build a software product that would actually be a good software product. You needed to raise millions of dollars to get through the costs of developing software uh

companies. And you probably needed

companies. And you probably needed 10,000 customers to have a break even software company. Now, because of AI,

software company. Now, because of AI, all of those costs have massively come down. And there are software companies

down. And there are software companies that are wildly profitable that have 500 customers or a thousand customers. They

service a tiny little niche. Uh they

attach a community and some media and some training to those little software niches. So one of the most exciting

niches. So one of the most exciting things is that if you essentially said that I would like to take what I know, turn it into a playbook, take that playbook, ask AI to advise me on what

software we could create, and then use AI tools to build out that software.

you're able to get very deep into that journey for almost no money.

>> I was thinking about this the other day because in my company, we're rebuilding our entire ATS ourselves.

>> So, an ATS is basically the system you use when you recruit people. Everyone's

name goes into the ATS. It's kind of like a like a search engine. Yeah, like

a database of where candidates who have applied for your company currently are.

>> And over the last couple of years, I've paid tens of thousands of dollars every year for an ATS for my companies. And

this year I thought, you know what, actually I reckon we could build an ATS in a couple of weeks ourselves and it could be bespoke to us. So we started that project. I saw the the first

that project. I saw the the first version of it yesterday. We started a week ago >> and the first version the the version of it I saw I was like, "Oh, this is significantly better than what we were using before because it's bespoke."

>> Yeah. And this made me think about the the opportunity of creating software generally, which is that in a world where it becomes, as you say, like cheaper, easier, faster, we're all going

to be using more software, but we're probably not going to be paying other people for their software, especially when it's these kind of tools, productivity tools and systems.

>> It's purely a tool, it's very easy to replicate. But if it's a tool that comes

replicate. But if it's a tool that comes with a community, if it comes with education and training, if it comes with agents that >> education and training.

>> Yeah. So like for example, if you were to do an ATS, right, an applicant tracking system, a a hiring tool, and you had the DOAC uh system and method that I can go and attend the training as

to how you on board people, how you create culture, how you do things at DOAC, I'm now interested in the software because it comes with that exciting training. if there was also a boot camp

training. if there was also a boot camp that I could go to that was attached to that product. If there was also an

that product. If there was also an annual retreat or a dinner series, if there was also uh some funding opportunities that came with that. So

once upon a time you were just simply going to focus on creating a software tool because that was so labor intensive and also it had a natural moat or protection around it that you didn't

have to get creative. But now we live in a world where the AI lets you to build the product pretty quickly. It helps you to do all these other things that we talked about and suddenly it's actually

quite a a fun product that you that you can spin up. What you've already created would have probably cost 500,000 in 6 months.

>> Oh my god. 6 months. I wish.

>> Not that long ago.

>> Yeah. It would probably cost It would have probably taken about 18 months total end to end.

>> And you've done it in a week.

>> Yeah. And so everyone else can do it in a week. And in fact, if anyone if that's

a week. And in fact, if anyone if that's anyone's business right now, there's going to be a thousand new ATS systems a day. One's going to trend on Twitter.

day. One's going to trend on Twitter.

You know, people are going to download that one and then they're going to jump ship because a new one emerges and it's better, it's more agentic, whatever. And

so, again, I think are we seeing software generally become a commodity?

>> What we're going to see is we're going to see all business opportunities be like YouTube content. I mean, if I went back 25, 30 years ago and said there's going to be 10 person unfunded little TV

studios that produce content every single week for almost no money.

You you would think that's crazy. I

mean, Seinfeld used to cost 5 million an episode. Um, The Simpsons and Friends,

episode. Um, The Simpsons and Friends, these were all multi-million dollars per episode. And we've now replicated that

episode. And we've now replicated that that can be done like by a tiny little team for free every week. It's

interesting because the minute we say that the answer is to do these things that are now easy and free and cheap to do, it's almost like we we then don't acknowledge the fact that if everyone's doing it, it's no longer a valuable thing to do.

>> It's less valuable.

>> Yeah. As it becomes easier, the other access is the decline in the value. So,

we're saying we're saying to people go be a content creator. But the very fact that they can without needing a CNN size skyscraper or production equipment also means everybody can which means that

that that actually is losing value at the same rate that it's becoming easy theoretically and and so what I continually think about from first principles is what is it that I can bet

on that is irreplaceably human which only I can do and a kid in Mumbai cannot do. And so when we say software I go kid

do. And so when we say software I go kid in Mumbai and then we say content I go kid in Mumbai. Well, uh, physical experiences in the world, real world, I agree with you. So, standing on a stage

and telling your story is something I mean, you already see that thousands of people show up to see this and to be part of to be in a room with other people who are sharing an experience.

See, the thing that the AI version of you can't do is turn up to an event.

>> I agree. So, I I say what I say because I genuinely want to be challenged here.

I I'm I sit here with these AI experts and CEOs because I genuinely I hope that they say something that >> tilts the current belief that I have and like makes me go, "Oh, actually, you

know, that's a good point. I'm in search of good points on the subject matter."

So, when I said what I just said about content software becoming increasingly commoditized and because it's becoming commoditized, we're like tempting people to go do more of it without acknowledging the fact that the very fact that people are doing more of it

means it's less valuable and it's more of a commodity. And what I'm saying though is that these things have to go together. So simply like anyone who's

together. So simply like anyone who's doing real world experiences, I think what's going to happen is you'll go to a conference and that conference will come with custom software that lasts 2 or 3

weeks that is really really interesting and it relates to that conference and that software was created as a SAS product for the attendees of that conference and it kind of pops into

existence very briefly. These things

used to be separate and now they all cluster together, right? So, it's a buffet of things that you all put together. If we take most successful

together. If we take most successful businesses now, they do social media.

That used to be a standalone business.

It was crazy to think that a hair salon could also be a media business. I've met

with tens of thousands of entrepreneurs and the number of people who want to go big is tiny. It's a fraction of the entrepreneurial community. What most

entrepreneurial community. What most people want is a business that provides an amazing lifestyle. They want to live and work from anywhere. They want to be able to travel. They want to do three or four days a week. They want to drop

their kids off at school. They want to uh do non-monotonous, interesting work that is a little chaotic, a little creative, a little bit fun, a little bit challenging. They want to work with a

challenging. They want to work with a small group of people that they get to know and enjoy and travel through life together. And those are the types of

together. And those are the types of things that the majority of people actually want. Very few people actually

actually want. Very few people actually want big. So, one thing that I'm

want big. So, one thing that I'm noticing is that it's probably harder than ever to build a big business, but it's easier than ever to build a small successful business. So, if we were to

successful business. So, if we were to say that a business that does 1 to 5 million of revenue with a team of 10 people, that is like totally

like super uh possible. But once you go beyond that, it's becoming harder and harder because you get disrupted more frequently. So you have to be an elite

frequently. So you have to be an elite athlete of entrepreneurs to withstand the constant disruption and and um the the constant change that's coming. So

because your natural mindset is to think really really big, you're probably missing that for many people who are working in a annoying corporate

environment and their job is monotonous and they feel tethered to a desk or they feel tethered to a team that doesn't really care about them. you know, a lot of those people are going to actually end up in small dynamic little

businesses that will never be big, but they'll be great. They'll be fun, you know, and people will, you know, have flexibility and they'll have uh, you know, great, you know, great opportunities as a result.

>> I think you're right. I do have a bias towards trying to find, you know, big opportunities. But actually, I think the

opportunities. But actually, I think the big blue ocean opportunity, which is, for anyone that doesn't know, I think of red oceans from the the book called Blue Ocean Strategy as very competitive,

>> hyper competitive horrible markets where it's like a race to the bottom. You're

all doing the same thing. Like you're

all saying the same thing, doing the same thing, and you all think that your unique positioning is is unique, but it's actually not. The market doesn't value it any differently. Like a wine company saying that their wine is a year older or that using a fancier word on

the label. It's a red ocean, a blood

the label. It's a red ocean, a blood bath. A blue ocean is an uncont

bath. A blue ocean is an uncont uncontested waters where you have room to grow much less competition and there is actually something fundamental to your proposition your business idea the thing the value you're giving to the

world that is unique >> I'm looking for blue oceans >> and yes I will try and build a big boat in the blue ocean >> because that's my nature but also life is easier when you sail in blue oceans

for everybody even if you want a lifestyle business I think one of the great examples at the moment is if you started a marketing agency when I started In 2014, especially a social media agency, you were in the blue ocean.

>> You were briefly >> briefly. And they say, you know, blue

>> briefly. And they say, you know, blue oceans often last for 10 years. In 2024,

my best friends, I'd say 70% of them run marketing or brand agencies.

>> Yeah.

>> I'm having the same same therapy session with them once a month at the moment.

And if you look at the big five, big four, big five agencies in the world, the WPPs and Martin Surl's business, >> they're all >> they're all competed to way their margins. They're struggling. Yeah.

margins. They're struggling. Yeah.

>> They're losing their profit. they're

losing their market share.

>> And AI and digital technology means that this disruption cycle happens in months, not years anymore. So you said a blue ocean can last for years or decades. Not

in the world of AI. In the world of AI, as soon as we've identified that you've got a blue ocean, we can replicate that real fast and we can come and fly out to your blue ocean with with an with lots of competition. Here's something that's

of competition. Here's something that's interesting. Throughout all of history,

interesting. Throughout all of history, whenever you find societies that have low social mobility and hyper competition, there's lots and lots of festivals. So you go into medieval

festivals. So you go into medieval times, they've got a festival for every season. They've got a festival for every

season. They've got a festival for every life event. There's just constant

life event. There's just constant festivals. You go into rural Africa,

festivals. You go into rural Africa, rural India, and it's festivals, festivals, festivals, right? Weddings,

funerals, seasonal festivals. It's a

huge part of human culture that we have lost in big cities. like we don't do a lot of festival or rare it's rare that we do a lot of festivals these real world experiences but I don't necessarily think it's a blue ocean

because uh as soon as people realize how much people want to do festivals and want to do real world experiences a lot of companies can also add this to the

mix I think what is defensible is community experience and embracing the constant chaotic change and coming up with new stuff all the time >> one of the bets I'm making and it goes

back to what like again reasoning up from those principles. If the question is what can I do that an AI agent or AI could not do and especially in the context of what humans will continue to need.

>> Mhm.

>> When you were born Dan, you're born with a bunch of needs and those needs like fundamentally haven't changed. One of

them is like connection.

>> I think you'll always be able to discern what is real human connection from artificial connection. I remember being

artificial connection. I remember being 16 years old and in my psychology class at the back when they told me about the recess monkeys experiment where they got a recess monkey, this little small little monkey. They pretended that its

little monkey. They pretended that its mother was a wire mesh. So they made a wire mesh mother. The recess monkey grows up to be a psychopath because it's it fundamental human need of connection

is not met. They then did it with a cloth and the recess monkey grew up to be a bit more stable. And then obviously they showed the examples where the recess monkey actually had a physical

flesh mother and it was it was fine. So

I say this to illuminate the fact that we have fundamental needs that if not met there will be consequences. One of

ours is connection. So, as a content creator, I can sit here and I can tell you what happened today, right? I can

say at 6:00 this guy broke into this bank and then he left. I think that's a commodity. Now,

commodity. Now, >> I think the thing that I can do as a podcaster, as a behind-the-scenes content creator, as a streamer, >> this is why I'm so bullish on streamers >> is they're making irreplaceably human

content. There's no AI that can an AI

content. There's no AI that can an AI can tell you what menop what happens in menopause. An AI can't tell you its

menopause. An AI can't tell you its experience of menopause. Yes, we need to find something that only we can say as humans. And every single person has this

humans. And every single person has this by the way, but a lot of us overlook what we can say as a human. I recently

came across a financial planner and his name is Matt Pitcher and he gave a TED talk and the TED talk is about what it was like for him to meet 100 people who

had won the lottery. So, he had a partnership as a financial planner with the uh British lottery. And every week someone wins the lottery and then he goes in and meets them a week later after they've discovered they've won the lottery.

>> Wow.

>> But what he did did is he looked back at his history and he had lots of different things that he was doing, but he looked back at his history and he connected some dots and he said, "Hey, wait a second. There's something that only I

second. There's something that only I can talk about. There's something that is that is my thing that I've experienced that I live through that I've sat in those living rooms. I've sat eye to eye with those people and only I can talk about that." And because of

that TED talk, he's he's had half a million views in the first few weeks and you know, his business is obviously going to explode and all of those kind of things because he found something that only he could say. I believe that

every person has something that's human that only they can say that's highly relatable. You shared with me an

relatable. You shared with me an interesting philosophy. Uh when we first

interesting philosophy. Uh when we first met, I did my first episode on Diary of a CEO and it got millions of views. And

I said to you, why is it that my episode got millions of views, but a few weeks ago there was a billionaire CEO who only got a few hundred thousand views. And a

few weeks before that, there was a billionaire CEO who only got a few hundred thousand views. And you said, Daniel, relatable beats impressive.

>> Yeah.

>> And a lot of people think that they have to cure cancer or launch a rocket to Mars or that they have to win a Nobel Peace Prize or float a company on the NASDAQ. And actually each individual

NASDAQ. And actually each individual person, we have to discover what I would call your personal intellectual property or your personal intellectual capital and your personal story, your personal

playbooks, you know, your your triumphs and your disasters, the things that you've done that are interesting to a certain group of people that you can quantify, that you can describe, that you can give me what it was like. Those

are your personal playbooks. Now once

you have personal playbooks, you have the ability to turn that into all sorts of products and services through AI. But

you but it starts with having personal playbooks.

>> I think this is the key mistake that a lot of content creators are um making, which is because it's easy to make stuff now, it's tempting just to churn stuff out.

>> Yeah.

>> Whereas I'm making less content now in a world of AI. If you look at my LinkedIn, I used to post, if you go back like three or four years, I was just churning stuff out my quote picture, anything fluffy, like just fluff

>> data.

>> Yeah. Now I go, well, if everyone can do it, the reason why my LinkedIn, you'll see almost every post I post now is a human story about something I've gone through, you'll see photos of me, you'll see photos of my family.

>> You're saying stuff that only you can say.

>> Yeah. So, we all have to find what is the thing that only you can say. And no

robot, no AI could ever say that because it hasn't lived that experience.

>> Yeah, it's got all the data. It's got

all the knowledge, but it's got no lived experience. And also from a business

experience. And also from a business perspective, an AI can never stand on a stage. An AI can never host a dinner

stage. An AI can never host a dinner party. Uh an AI can never meet someone

party. Uh an AI can never meet someone face to face and put their hand on their shoulder and say, "Hey, I've been through what you've been through and you're going to be okay." Right? So all

of those things AI can't do. So once you discover something that only you can say it it becomes a superpower.

>> I think my best performing post this year was actually me proposing to my fiance a prime prime example of something that is irreplaceably human which is getting down on one knee and telling another human being that you

love them. There's no AI that has ever I

love them. There's no AI that has ever I mean listen >> it's never experienced it.

>> Yeah. Exactly. So and there's something so human about that.

>> It's relatable. It's not impressive.

It's relatable. Um from first principles I ask myself which type of content am I making is creating the the strongest parasocial relationship >> with the person on the other end. If I

post on my LinkedIn everything happens for a reason. Am I how much have I moved the needle on our our relationship my relationship with you? Probably zero. If

I talk about something more human, some struggles that I'm having uh from a human perspective, if I'm more honest, authentic, and open or vulnerable about the experience I'm going through, like

streamers who sit there for seven I think did I say this last time that I I asked a streamer a couple of questions.

>> And I asked the streamers like, "What do you do?" And he was like, "Oh, nothing.

you do?" And he was like, "Oh, nothing.

I just sit there and >> sit for seven hours and watch Judge Judy with the audience and we chat." I say, and this is a prime example of Parasocial.

>> They actually talk to you. They go chat.

Let me know if you think X Y or Z chat.

Drop W's in the chat. That's a friend.

>> That's the closest thing to a friend.

It's the strongest parasocial relationship.

>> Well, you said about the football game where the loudest cheers in the audience came for those streamers who were just connecting with people.

>> They've built friendships basically with their audience. So, of all, I think in a

their audience. So, of all, I think in a world of AI where justformational content, which is this thing happened or this is what the gut microbiome is, is going to become commoditized. The thing

that isn't commoditized is content that creates relationships with audiences and then as you say then converts that relationship into stronger experiences like IRL events and so on and so forth.

I've got a couple more ideas that I I haven't fully shared with the world yet but I'm just I'll wait for the right time about all of this stuff.

>> See it's not one piece that is adding the value. It's the ecosystem of pieces.

the value. It's the ecosystem of pieces.

So it's having something to say that only you can say. Let's call that your personal playbooks. Let's call that your

personal playbooks. Let's call that your personal intellectual property. It's

having the people or your community that you're going through life with, right?

That's called that your ideal customers, your ideal personas if you want to make it a clinical definition of in marketing speak that that gives rise to a personal brand. When those two things touch, you

brand. When those two things touch, you then end up with a personal brand, right? As if by magic, you end up with a

right? As if by magic, you end up with a personal brand because you've got intellectual property and you've got an ideal customer who connects with that and then you you are the person who embodies it. So you you give rise to

embodies it. So you you give rise to that. And then the question is, well,

that. And then the question is, well, how do you make money from that? Well,

you productize it. You create products and services. And it's the product and

and services. And it's the product and service ecosystem that makes money. It's

not one product or service. It used to be that you could just have a a product or service that you offer. And now it's the product and service ecosystem. The

people that I see making the most money at the moment, they don't do one thing.

You don't do one thing. Right? So, if I look at uh your personal P&L, you've probably got 27 different ways that money came and hit your bank account last month. There's speaking, there's

last month. There's speaking, there's podcasting, there's AdSense revenue, there's sponsors, there's shareholdings in different companies that you've got.

Um, there might be some one-to-one coaching that you might have done. There

might be an appearance fee. There might

be some book royalties. There's multiple

books. Uh, there might be some software that you've launched. So there's all this stuff that sounds crazy and chaotic in a pre-AII world, but in a postAI world, it's not that hard to create all these different products and services

and to be launching different things and to be going on a journey with people and having a product and service ecosystem.

I'm the same, by the way. I've probably

got 20 different things that, you know, that I'm involved in at any given time.

>> I was reading yesterday that the for the first time, I mean, I was reading a few things. One of the interesting things I

things. One of the interesting things I read is that Spotify said their best developers haven't written a line of code since December thanks to AI, which again is a whole another conversation.

Maybe we should touch on that. What are

the occupations that you genuinely believe won't exist 5 years from now as we know them?

>> People say lawyers are going to be disrupted.

>> Well, I recently had a law legal case that I had to resolve and it was going to cost us £50,000. So, $60,000

uh as a start the process with a law firm. We took matters into our own hands

firm. We took matters into our own hands and we used Claude and we actually fixed the process and resolve the process by spending 20 a month, $20 a month. And

Claude gave us a coaching session on how to handle it. Gave us multiple decision tree pathways. Gave us the documents

tree pathways. Gave us the documents that we would need. Gave us an Excel spreadsheet of do say this, don't say this in the negotiation. And it made me realize, my goodness, what a lawyer's

going to do. Uh because if all they do is charge for time for money to regurgitate contracts, I don't need that anymore. Right?

anymore. Right?

>> Multiple reports say legacy legal tech and data firms have lost roughly 20% of their value so far in 2026.

>> 280 billion was wiped off the value of publicly traded companies like that in the last week. Like it's wild. Um

because we're not going to need that. I

don't believe we're going to need these business models as they currently stand.

I think they're going to have to change and adapt. I think a lawyer needs to

and adapt. I think a lawyer needs to take a completely different shape. Part

business coach, part lawyer, part prompt engineer. They're going to be the key

engineer. They're going to be the key person of AI in the room who the lawyer's job will be to work with you on your AI prompting and help you get the resolution. You're probably going to

resolution. You're probably going to need a lot less of a lawyer's time. Blue

collar work has been devalued. And we've

seen people who work with their hands and people who uh turn up to your house and fix your house in a devalued role.

And it could be in the next, you know, uh, couple of years. These are the roles that are elevated the most and that plumbers regularly earn more than lawyers simply because the nature of the economy has changed. One thing I've

learned over the last 25 years is the pendulum swings. Things that very few

pendulum swings. Things that very few things stay the same. There is always this swinging pendulum. And the swinging pendulum is like, oh yeah, white collar work behind a screen is the high value thing. Oh, no, it's actually blue collar

thing. Oh, no, it's actually blue collar work with your hands. You talked about supply and demand. We dis the government disrupted the natural way children go out and find opportunities in the world

by making university loans come along.

And they said, "Oh, everyone can just take out a university loan and go to university. In fact, you must and you

university. In fact, you must and you should go go to university. Get yourself

in debt or else you'll never get a job anywhere if you don't do a university degree." And lots of young people who

degree." And lots of young people who should have been plumbers, electricians, and concreers and brick layers went off and became a m got a master's degree in the mating habits of butterflies and you

know some random degree that doesn't have a job attached and they ended up in 60 70 $80,000 worth of debt to get this degree that no one was asking for. That

market distortion means that we now don't have many plumbers and electricians and the blue ocean is now being a trades person.

There's a phase a lot of companies hit where they're no longer doing the most important thing, which is selling. And

they get really bogged down with admin.

And it's often something that creeps up slowly and you don't really notice until it's happened. Slowly momentum starts to

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>> Steve, what are you doing?

>> Uh, just making myself a delicious coffee >> from the freezer.

>> From the freezer. Have you not heard about Contier?

>> No.

>> Oh my gosh. This is going to change your life. A couple of months ago, the

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what they do is they flash freeze it at the optimal moment when it's most tasty and they send you in the post the coffee in these little frozen ice cubes. Now,

Matt sent a big shipment to my office. I

moved it to the kitchen. I said to the team, "Knock yourselves out." And then I saw so many messages in our Slack channel of people going, "Oh my god, what the hell is that? It's so

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Try it and please Instagram DM me, LinkedIn me and let me know if you love it as much as I do. I was looking at the um top 10 jobs according to AI that are most likely to be disrupted and it said

things like drivers with Mackenzie estimating 30% of them will be automated by 2030 customer service representative and call center reps which I used to be.

>> Mhm. Same

>> 50% headcount reductions after AI roll out according to some estimates some go up to about 80%. I actually saw a tool on my timeline yesterday that is real human voice indistinguishable from humans that's just launched and is

causing a huge stir. So that they're thinking that will replace even more of the customer service roles. I I did speak to the CEO of Cler TLDDR as he said we currently have 7,000 employees.

We're going to be able to get down to 3,000. He said after summer because of

3,000. He said after summer because of um AI and we'll be using our existing team members that are in customer service roles to do more sort of bespoke white glove VIP

>> VIP stuff will go up. In fact, Jean's paradox would suggest that a lot of the dehumanizing repetitive work will go away. But actually, if there are AI bots

away. But actually, if there are AI bots that are really good at setting appointments for a VIP human person to have a conversation, then that work will go through the roof. Because one of the

reasons that people, like right now, most companies wish they could have more VIP conversations, but the appointment setting, they don't have a lot of the low-level appointment setting stuff happening. And if the appointment

happening. And if the appointment setting stuff, if the cost of that goes to zero, then the the the affordability of the VIP level treatment um becomes

you know becomes uh much more feasible.

>> Retail cashes, admin assistants, bookkeepers and payroll clerk, sales development reps, warehouse workers with um Amazon and others reporting that robots now assist or replace labor in a roughly 40% of fulfillment tasks. And

that Boston Dynamics video, which I'll put up on the screen, shows a humanoid robot working in a factory. What's nice

about some of this is that many of the jobs here are jobs that a lot of people don't actually like doing. They are

repetitive and dehumanizing. They're

late night. They're early mornings. So

potentially, provided there is a Jeins paradox that something happens that's more fun, more humanizing, more interesting, more VIP, more chaotic, and you know, all of that sort of stuff. It could be a very

positive thing.

>> Fast food workers. Um, or

>> I used to be a fast food worker.

>> So did I in McDonald's? I think it was two days. I did two years at McDonald's.

two days. I did two years at McDonald's.

>> Oh, really? Because this disruption is happening at record speeds. Where do all these people go? Because, you know, even in examples, oh, they could do AI labeling. They need to be upskilled and

labeling. They need to be upskilled and trained. And I worry that the rate of

trained. And I worry that the rate of disruption isn't going to meet the rate of creation of new opportunities.

>> And I really do worry about this. Like I

think people wonder why I have these conversations on this podcast over and over again. My philosophy to talking

over again. My philosophy to talking having conversations on this podcast is basically I'll say to my team I'll say Steve you want to have a conversation about >> you know this particular subject the gut microbiome and I'll say >> we've covered it

>> which basically means I'm no longer curious y >> I have the answers I know about the trillions of gut micro and I know how the gut brain access let's move on >> I keep having these conversations about AI because I feel like I'm getting no

good answers >> okay so here's what's interesting there is something which you have which is this elite mindset which is how do I

organize society so that everyone gets a job and everyone does stuff right and this is this is the trap that many people have fallen into and it's actually at the root cause of

socialism so the root of socialism is that I know better than everybody else and I will come up with a way of running society so everyone gets looked after

that's the top down mindset the crazy mindset that actually works is if If we give people education and training and we make opportunity transparent and we

actually let people know what's actually happening in the market and we give them price signal data, they will selforganize and reorganize and they will have a bottom-up revolution and they will find amazing interesting

things to do. The money is in the economy right?

>> You think that's true?

>> That's called capitalism.

>> I know, but >> capitalism works >> in the UK. Let's take the UK as an example, cuz we're all just screaming at each other about brown people. We're not

talking about the the real alien, which is like the fundamental economic disruption of AI. Yeah. There's a report that came out yesterday showing that unemployment in the UK has hit >> it's 25% up and youth unemployment has

grown by more than 25%.

>> It's like 16.1% of people that are between 16 and 24 unemployed now.

>> Yeah.

>> And we're still not talking about the economy. We're talking about brown

economy. We're talking about brown people.

>> When people feel that they can't get ahead, they look for somebody to blame.

And this is historically consistent.

What is really happening is that the government has become so big in the economy. The the UK government is now 45

economy. The the UK government is now 45 to 50% of all spending in the UK economy. That's essentially a socialist

economy. That's essentially a socialist or it's getting socialist. Every amount

of government spend is a market distortion regardless of what it's for.

And I'm saying there plenty of things governments should be spending money on, but all government spending is a market distortion. It's not market driven. And

distortion. It's not market driven. And

there is a monopoly on spend. So

therefore, it is a market distortion.

The more government spending you have, the more market distortions you have.

>> What do you mean by market distortions?

>> So a market distortion is where the markets are not really able to function because there is some big organization like the government spending money and taking away price signals and taking

away the realities of the market. So a a great example is what happened with student loans. So rather what in a

student loans. So rather what in a capitalist society what would have happened is that young people would have heard oh my goodness there's a shortage of brick layers. Have you heard that

brick layers are making £300 a day? Wow,

I would love to make £300 a day. I'm

going to go be a brick layer. Guess

what? It's a brick layers apprentice.

I'm going to go and be an apprentice.

I'm going to get paid to learn this trade. And there would be a market

trade. And there would be a market driven pull towards being a brick layer.

A young person would get a job at a bank and the bank would say, "Hey, can we please pay for you to do a finance degree because we need more people who've got a finance degree and we will actually pay for you to go through

that." So that's a functioning market.

that." So that's a functioning market.

It's basically based on uh needs and wants and things that are needed within the economy. What the government did is

the economy. What the government did is they created a what's called a market distortion. They said to all young

distortion. They said to all young people, we are going to give you as much uh lending as you like to go out and take whatever university courses you want. Um there's no price data, there's

want. Um there's no price data, there's no signaling data. It's just you if you want to borrow £50,000, you can go to any course. If you're really interested

any course. If you're really interested in the breeding habits of butterflies, go and do a master's degree in that. and

um you know, happy days, right? You you

could it doesn't matter whether there are jobs associated with it, you must go and get a a university degree. So, they

set up an entire system that pushed young people to go get £50,000 worth of debt and do a degree that no one was asking for. That's a market distortion.

asking for. That's a market distortion.

We now have a bubble of over 280 billion pounds worth of uh debt that will probably never be repaid. Uh we have a entire generation of young people who

are saddled with this debt that takes away all motivation. There's no point in working because they pay such high taxes every single time they make a payment to

pay off their student loan. They they

pay 600 but the debt goes up by 650.

Right? It's it's absolutely insane. And

that's a classic example of governments meddling with the markets creating a market distortion. And now we have

market distortion. And now we have hundreds of billions of dollars worth of people who are very angry, very upset uh because they are trapped in a student debt that will not go away for decades.

>> Rashi Sunnak, the former prime minister of the UK wrote an article last week which you might have seen where he said that if the UK fails to fix its productivity problems and seize the AI

opportunity, the country risks becoming a tourist theme park.

>> Yeah. Not even a good tourist theme park. you know, there's there's, you

park. you know, there's there's, you know, there's not a lot, you know, at least a lot of other countries have beaches and mountain ranges and ski resorts and, you know, the UK doesn't have a lot of that. We have to let

markets function. The issue that we

markets function. The issue that we have, and this is this is actually a trap that you're falling into is trying to figure out top down, how do we organize society, which is socialism, right? The top down approach of trying

right? The top down approach of trying to fix this problem for everybody is the socialist mindset. And it does it it

socialist mindset. And it does it it doesn't work. If you were the prime

doesn't work. If you were the prime minister >> Yeah.

>> and you you can see the future that's coming.

>> Yeah.

>> What would you do?

>> So the number one thing the UK needs to do is reduce government involvement where we need to get the government spending down less than 35%.

>> Where'd you cut?

>> Right. So the key thing that you need is that you need well there's loads of places to cut, right? Like getting

involved in trying to do wind farms and solar farms and all of this 40 billion and all this sort of stuff. Preventing

companies from accessing natural gas that is just sitting under our feet is a crazy thing to do. Spending 20 billion trying to give away one of our islands to someone is a crazy thing to do.

There's all sorts of crazy things that the government is spending money on.

Bureaucracy is a crazy spend. Do you

know that the um Birmingham City Council, they wanted to migrate from SAP to Oracle >> and from a CRM system with SAP to a CRM system with Oracle, a software system,

right? So they wanted to migrate from

right? So they wanted to migrate from one software system to another software system. They thought that it would cost

system. They thought that it would cost £19 million which in itself is a very high amount to migrate from one software to another software. It cost £220 million.

>> So are you saying that you think the government should just do less stuff?

>> They should be involved in less stuff because what's happening right now is that there is so much government spending that the benefits for succeeding are being eroded

by taxation and people are just leaving.

See, here's the thing. There's with

capitalism, the only benefit of capitalism is the creative entrepreneurial process, right? That

creative entrepreneurial process that produces amazing companies and amazing innovations and it creates stuff that is better, faster, and cheaper for everybody's lives. That comes from

everybody's lives. That comes from capitalism. But if you take away the

capitalism. But if you take away the incentives for doing that, you essentially don't have that happen within your country. And then as soon as you don't have that, you don't have any economic growth. And then as soon as you

economic growth. And then as soon as you don't have any economic growth, all you're left with is the debt. And the

debt erodess your economy and kills your economy and you don't have any growth to counterbalance the debt. So you enter a downward spiral. And that is basically

downward spiral. And that is basically the same socialist scam that happens over and over again everywhere that it's tried. You're essentially trying to get

tried. You're essentially trying to get rid of the worst elements of an economy, which is cronyism and extraction. But

that happens under socialism. you just

simply lose the one thing that doesn't happen under socialism which is the creative process, the entrepreneurial process, the innovative process that creates new value in the economy. So

what we've currently done in the UK, we've taken away all incentives for people to be in the UK and to succeed.

I'm sure you know people personally who are no longer in the UK as tax residents, who should be in the UK as tax residents. They like the UK, they

tax residents. They like the UK, they enjoyed living in the UK, but what happened? they left. You and I had a

happened? they left. You and I had a debate with a guy a year ago and he said, "Oh no, people are not going to leave the UK. We can tax them as high as we possibly can. We can ramp up the taxes."

taxes." >> Gary Stevenson.

>> Yeah, Gary Stevenson. And Gary's

prediction was that rich people are not going to leave. And he also predicted that the house prices are going to explode and that we're going to have these horrible house prices. What's

happened? Housing market has gone flat because people are leaving. the

economically active produ producers, providers, they have left in their droves and the economy is now in real trouble. If you ask anyone who has left,

trouble. If you ask anyone who has left, what do they tell you is the reason that they left the UK?

>> Well, it's one of two things. It's

generally, I think they feel a sense of pessimism about building their future in a place that that feels like it's unmanaged decline to some people.

>> And then the other cohort will say tax reasons, >> high taxes and and it just feels like you can't get ahead. And also the third I'd say is they they think that talent is elsewhere. So they think they have a

is elsewhere. So they think they have a better chance of getting capital and talent employees if they move to America or Dubai or wherever else.

>> Yep. And if you go to Dubai low taxes and if you go to America lower taxes um more opportunities. So we are living in

more opportunities. So we are living in a time where you know a lot of countries are exploring this socialism thing and unfortunately it's a scam. But even

what's interesting is even your mindset is we need to fix this top down as opposed to fix it bottom up. With AI, we need to give people price data, price signals.

>> What does that mean?

>> It means that they need to be able to see what's happening in in the economy.

A young person needs to know that someone's making a lot of profit. They

need to be able to see there is opportunities to do this, there's opportunities to do that. They need to also see, oh, this is no longer an opportunity. So, this was great. This

opportunity. So, this was great. This

was a great opportunity 5 years ago, but it's not such a great opportunity now. A

lot of young people are going to discover, oh, wait a second. I could get into house renovations because a lot of houses need renovating. And they go, "Oh, cool. I've heard about someone

"Oh, cool. I've heard about someone who's making money doing that. I'm going

to go do that." So, that's just having access to price data.

>> When I look back over the last couple of years, data from Henley and Partners in 2023, it says 3,200 millionaires net

left the UK. In 2024, 9,500 millionaires net left the UK. In 2025, projected 16,500 millionaires are expected to leave the

UK, which is a record outflow. And

predictions that have not yet been published warn that the trend is likely to continue into 2026. When you think about this, like I guess there's two questions, which is why does this matter?

>> Mhm.

>> And then the next question is what should I do about it on an individual level?

>> So why does it matter is because 1% of people pay for 30% of the bills and uh 10% of people pay 60% of the bills. So

if those people leave then those bills get passed on to everybody. We've seen

this here in New York. So we're at the moment we're in New York and this socialist mayor Mandani has basically just come out today and said we need to put everybody's taxes up because we need

to spread the bills of the city across all the residents um because people are leaving. Right. So he wants to propose a

leaving. Right. So he wants to propose a 9.5% tax rise on all people uh who who own homes regardless of the value of those homes. So essentially when rich

those homes. So essentially when rich people leave they leave behind a lot of bills that everybody else has to pay that they were previously paying.

>> In his February 2026 preliminary budget, New York Mayor Zorhan Mandani proposed a 9.5% property tax increase to address a projected 5.4 billion budget shortfall.

This proposal acts as a last resort alternative to his preferred plan which was increasing taxes on top earners and corporations to fill the revenue gap. H

>> he promised free stuff and he promised that everything was going to be paid for for free. Nothing is free. Someone has

for free. Nothing is free. Someone has

to pay for everything. If the rich people leave, there is not people who can pay for all the free stuff. And

that's what New York is suddenly discovering. So why does it matter?

discovering. So why does it matter?

Because rich people essentially create the growth. They are the high taxpayers.

the growth. They are the high taxpayers.

whichever way you want to say it or discover or discuss it. It is a small group of people who pay a lot of the uh taxes, you don't want those people to leave the economy. What do you do about it? The number one thing to do about it

it? The number one thing to do about it is you need to identify the opportunity that's right for you. That's called

founder opportunity fit. What you're

looking for is an opportunity where you can earn money no matter where you are in the world. If you're somewhere that you don't perhaps like being for any reason, you can pick up and move. Um, so

the best kind of businesses and the best kind of opportunities at the moment are the ones that are not geographically limited to a particular city.

>> It says that in New York, personal tax income remains pretty strong, but business tax collections have started to soften. Recent reports show they are

soften. Recent reports show they are roughly 378 million lower than initially projected as business formation slows down in New York.

>> Yeah, it's the same story. We've seen

this over and over again. Um, socialism

is like a hot stove that every generation has to touch for themselves.

that essentially every generation of young people, they think they've discovered something new. They think,

"Oh my goodness, what if we just go to the rich people and take it off them and give it to everybody else and we'll redistribute the wealth." And even though it's been tried for 180 years

since KL Marx came along, uh it just doesn't work. It it is a disaster and it

doesn't work. It it is a disaster and it ruins economies over and over and over again. And trying to offer lots and lots

again. And trying to offer lots and lots of free incentives without any productivity gains is a downward spiral.

What's your bare case for the future of AI?

>> Well, the bare case is that we have something called the angles pause. The

angles pause is what happened in the industrial age where for 50 years all the wealth went to the top uh because of the new technology of the industrialization. When we went from

industrialization. When we went from agriculture to industrial age, that new technology displaced so many people that there were revolutions off the back of it.

>> I mean, this is going to be even faster and more disruptive.

>> Yeah, it's very disruptive. Yeah. I said

this once before in a conversation I had about AI, but I went to my friend's accelerator in San Francisco, which used to be a software accelerator. And when I walked in there and went around, he has, you know, so hundreds of entrepreneurs

in there building stuff. I was like, why is everyone building robots? And he was like, oh, because and he showed me this, I said this in a couple of episodes ago, showed me this frying pan which had an arm, a robotic arm attached to it. And

he was like, cook your dinner for you.

>> Yeah.

>> And and he was like, so 10 years ago, the expensive thing wasn't actually the robotic arm. He's like, "All these

robotic arm. He's like, "All these pieces, all these, they've been around for for decades." He goes, "The expensive thing was the intelligence."

>> He goes, "Now it costs sense. Back then

it would have cost me tens of thousands to to buy the intell intelligence that would know how to make your omelette for you." So he goes, "What you're seeing

you." So he goes, "What you're seeing now is we're actually in the the Renaissance age of robotics." And I looked around everywhere. I was like, "Oh, there's what's that machine over there?" He goes, "That makes your

there?" He goes, "That makes your perfume for you in the morning." Yeah.

>> You tell it how you want to smell today.

It makes it has all the sense loaded in and it'll make you and you can see the making >> anything that is currently got a Bluetooth in it will have intelligence in it. So your toothbrush will tell you

in it. So your toothbrush will tell you whether you've brushed your teeth well enough and book it'll probably be the thing that books an appointment for your dentist uh and all that sort of stuff.

>> I'll go even further. I'd say even things that don't like my bed sheet my bed sheets my pillows my mattresses >> and they they will all have access to agents and all that sort of stuff. My

bare case for AI is not about the intelligence side of things. I generally

believe that more intelligence means a better society. Um, there's never been a

better society. Um, there's never been a situation where lots of intelligence was a bad thing. Um, so I think intelligence has a pretty strong bullcase to it, but financial bubbles are a real thing and

I've lived through a couple of them. And

what I've discovered is that they have widespread massive impacts on all sorts of areas of society that you wouldn't even expect. And my real bare case for

even expect. And my real bare case for AI is that we overinvest in these data centers. We cause a massive financial

centers. We cause a massive financial collapse. uh and that we wipe out

collapse. uh and that we wipe out pension funds. I don't know if you know

pension funds. I don't know if you know this, but they're packaging up the debt for these financial uh assets and they're selling that to um pension funds as private credit. So all of these huge

data centers, what they're doing is paying 6% above inflation as a packaged up debt. They send it over. Now when

up debt. They send it over. Now when

they go to the pension funds, they say, "Oh, this is backed by Google and backed by Microsoft and backed by uh Amazon."

and then they say, "Oh, you know, it's a 6% um financial instrument backed by these huge companies." But

unfortunately, the mathematics of spending 600 billion a year on something that only has a three or four year lifespan, every single time in the last 180 years that we've spent more than 3%

of our economy on an infrastructure buildout, we've ended up with either a massive recession or a depression.

>> Did you hear the Anthropic CEO? For

anyone that doesn't know, Anthropic is one of the large AI companies. Yeah,

they're they're the maker of Claude. Did

you hear what he was saying the other day in the article he wrote about his concerns?

>> Yeah. Yeah. I I saw at Davos.

>> Yeah. He wrote it just after he left Davos. Um Daria Amed.

Davos. Um Daria Amed.

>> Yeah.

>> He said, "Humanity is about to be handed almost unimaginable power, and it is deeply unclear whether our social, political, and technological systems possess the maturity to wield it. I

believe we are entering a right of passage, both turbulent and inevitable, which will test who we are as a species.

We are considerably closer to real danger in 2026 than we were in 2023.

If the exponential continues, which is not certain, but now has a decade long track record supporting it, then it cannot possibly be more than a few years before AI is better than humans at essentially

>> everything.

>> Everything. The same AI enabled tools that are necessary to fight autocracies can be turned inward to create tyranny in our own countries. There is an

alarming possibility of global totalitarian dictatorship. AI is so

totalitarian dictatorship. AI is so powerful, such a glittering prize that it is very difficult for human civilization to impose any restraints on

it at all. And he said this remarkable thing about um in that essay about imagining if there was an island with 50,000 >> geniuses on it

>> a billion a billion geniuses on it.

>> Yeah.

>> What would happen to society? And I

think there's I don't know like do you know what I hope I'm really wrong about this but when I think about this idea that there's 50 million geniuses on this brand new island >> and I ask myself >> I'm willing to work for free.

>> Willing to work for free. when one

learns something, they all learn something.

>> You just take that as a first principle.

You go, hm, society is going to be very, very, very, very different. And maybe

all of the advice we've been giving for the last 5, 10 years about how to be successful, how to be an entrepreneur, how to succeed in business, maybe >> it's for an economy that no longer exists. Yeah, we're going for we're

exists. Yeah, we're going for we're going from a fundamental industrial age economy to a AI age economy, right? That

is that is different. We will have different economic models. We also have a problem of aging. For all of human history, we've had a small number of old people at the top and a lot of young people at the bottom. And we now have

65% of all wealth in the economy is held by people over 65. And then you've got the financialized economy and the government economy which is inflationary and that they pump money in as stimulus.

So while the entrepreneurs are making everything cheaper, even free, the governments are actually inflating the economy and the financial systems inflating the economy slightly faster

than productivity gains. Right? So

what's happening is the entrepreneurs bring down the cost of everything and the governments and the financial system top it up with new stimulus. According

to the rules that the government runs by, as AI creates huge deflationary impacts, they can actually just inflate the economy like unbelievably. they can

pump huge amounts of stimulus into the economy. So this whole idea of um UBI,

economy. So this whole idea of um UBI, universal basic income, it actually stacks up from economic fundamentals basics uh principles uh where you can

actually provided you're getting the productivity gains where things are costing zero because of AI, you can actually just pump money into the economy and give give money away for a period of time while we're going through

that transition. Hopefully that prevents

that transition. Hopefully that prevents massive craziness from unfolding. And

hopefully as a result of having a huge amount of intelligence, we find really interesting fun ways to structure society and do things.

We're not necessarily leaving utopia. We

shouldn't necessarily be grieving the loss of shitty jobs and grieving the loss of dehumanizing low connectivity jobs. We have ruined

the way that we pair bond. We've ruined

the way that we do community. We've

ruined the way that families run. We've

got people working two jobs just to survive. Like that's not something to be

survive. Like that's not something to be grieving the loss of. We need a new system. Maybe AI is going to actually

system. Maybe AI is going to actually give us the breathing room that we need to actually create a system that gets us back to a little bit towards the way that humans have flourished.

>> Are we going to go to towards UBI?

>> It seems like in the short term that would have to be the case. So Sam

Alman's over here working to build open AI, working 24 hours a day. Let's just

say theoretically.

>> Um we're going to have to take some of his hard work away and give it to theoretically we're going to have to give it to someone who is maybe not working.

>> Yeah. And I mean Sam Alman, funny enough, he actually backed a study called Open Research in 2024 that looked at the impact of UBI. And it showed that

recipients who received UBI, which is money basically given to them, worked fewer hours and earned less money than the control group. Instead of using the freedom to find better jobs to improve their education, many participants

simply dropped off the workforce or reduced hours for leisure, resulting in a net decrease in household income despite cash payments.

>> Yeah, humans want stuff to do. We need a we need a meaningful struggle. We need

something that we um that we're up to in the world. And that is that is a very

the world. And that is that is a very difficult thing. The likely thing that I

difficult thing. The likely thing that I think will probably happen is that these data center investments will be so catastrophic financially that governments will have to bail them out.

And then the governments will have to own all the data and all the data centers and then the tech companies will have to essentially pay royalties back to the government over long periods of time to manage this kind of uh

infrastructure buildout. So you'll have

infrastructure buildout. So you'll have to have something where the government actually owns the primary asset and that is the thing that pays for the UBI. I

mean we're we're kind of theorizing and just kind of >> we're going to find out.

>> We are going to find out.

>> This is going to be on the internet someday.

>> The mathematics bend reality at age at about 2029 once you the financial engineering required to make this thing work. You need something like a 45 times

work. You need something like a 45 times growth in the number of people paying for subscriptions and the number of businesses. Like you take something that

businesses. Like you take something that is over the last uh 5 10 years there's been a product that has gone exponential

which is ampic and GLP1 weight loss drugs the amount of spend to build out and satisfy that demand is actually pretty minimal. Those companies spend

pretty minimal. Those companies spend about 20% of their revenues building new factories to produce new GLP drugs.

Right? So capex is about 20% of revenue.

We're seeing with the AI stuff, capex is hundreds of percent of revenue, right?

So, it is a financial feat that we've never attempted before.

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>> Let's bring this back to uh >> back to reality, >> the reality of the person listening and uh the pressing questions they have about all this stuff and what they should do. Is there anything else that

should do. Is there anything else that you would give people that are listening right now in terms of advice to be able to weather the incoming turbulence that the CEO of Anthropic describes there?

Yeah, look, the things that I know are good for people is I really believe that everyone should build a little bit of a personal brand. So, a personal brand

personal brand. So, a personal brand means that 2 to 20,000 people know who you are. They know what you do. They

you are. They know what you do. They

know you what your experiences are like.

They could approach you about an opportunity that would be a good opportunity. So, build a bit of a

opportunity. So, build a bit of a personal brand. Don't be invisible uh in

personal brand. Don't be invisible uh in this particular time because you know it is one of your assets which is to take some of your knowledge some of your playbooks and to let people know that

that exists. So I think build a bit of a

that exists. So I think build a bit of a personal brand. Second one is have a go

personal brand. Second one is have a go at entrepreneurship, right? Join an

entrepreneurial team, do an entrepreneurial side hustle, read some entrepreneurial books, watch some entrepreneurial um videos that are out there. start the process of thinking,

there. start the process of thinking, okay, the school system taught me to be a standardized uh employee, a standardized labor. Uh the school system

standardized labor. Uh the school system wanted me to fit in with an office or a factory, but actually there's this whole other way of creating value which is non-standardized called entrepreneurship. This is spotting

entrepreneurship. This is spotting opportunities and coming up with solutions to it. So, you know, play around with the game, even if it's a small game. Like you might notice that

small game. Like you might notice that there are dirty cars on the street and you might say, "You know what? I'm going

to go and knock on doors and wash the cars and see if I can make a couple hundred bucks in a day because I've seen an opportunity. I've seen something

an opportunity. I've seen something that's wrong and I I'm going to go and have a go at fixing it."

>> A lot of founders are telling me, Mark Cuban said the other day that one of the great opportunities now is catering for the gap between small business owners that don't know how to use AI and helping them learn how to use AI.

>> Yeah. Huge, right? Join a join a join a founder team and help them do that. Um

as I said as well 65% of all the businesses by valuation are people over 65 now. So there is a mathematical

65 now. So there is a mathematical certainty that 2/3 of the businesses that run the economy by valuation have to change hands in the next 10 15 20 years. So this is a massive business

years. So this is a massive business opportunity. Uh baby boomers want to get

opportunity. Uh baby boomers want to get rid of their businesses. They want to retire. Baby boomers are willing to fund

retire. Baby boomers are willing to fund you to buy their business if you present yourself well if you've got a little bit of a personal brand. So, that's a that's a huge opportunity. So, look into that.

Um, you know, Cody Sanchez, a mutual friend of ours, she talks to people all the time about how to buy a baby boomer business and and take it over and run it. So, um, you know, that's a that's a

it. So, um, you know, that's a that's a great opportunity. Play with these toys

great opportunity. Play with these toys called AI tools. Someone has given you a free iPhone which you can just use called AI tools um on the free account.

That is such good advice that we don't hear enough because I think people think there's where I am right now in my life and what I do and then there's like Sam

Alman and Elon Musk and I I either I'm one or the other but actually what I'm seeing as an employer who's employing we probably employ I'd say 20 people a month at current rate.

>> We're hiring 20 more people a month >> is increasingly on our culture test when we're screening who the right candidates are. We're looking for some kind of

are. We're looking for some kind of evidence that they're playing or messing around with AI.

>> Yeah.

>> And one of my team members >> is she was trying to figure out how to get a 100 different documents to synthesize and understand the data

within these documents. Now, there's two types of people I can hire to do that.

There's the old fashioned way of doing that where someone might sit there for four or five weeks and try to figure out how to get an Excel document to have the right formulas. And then there's her who

right formulas. And then there's her who we hired. Even though she doesn't have

we hired. Even though she doesn't have skills in that particular thing, she has no experience in it. But because of her mindset and her agency, she went, "Hm, maybe I could put this into Claude Co-work and ask set up an agent to run

this for me >> by the time dessert came." She pulled her laptop over to me and showed it to me. And she goes, "Stephen, I've ran all

me. And she goes, "Stephen, I've ran all those hundreds of documents um into this file and I can see the sentiment on every single post you've made on every single social platform, including every LinkedIn post you've made over the last couple of years. And we can see that

actually even though these point posts get more likes, these ones are actually the best posts you're doing."

>> She did that by dessert.

>> Yeah.

>> That and I thought there a isn't that interesting. How do you find people who

interesting. How do you find people who have that bias in the modern world where they lean into change? She's not

curiosity, isn't it?

>> Yeah. It's curiosity, but there's also something which is like and being fluid about your identity and what you know.

>> Yes.

>> Which is she has no experience in that.

>> But I can try.

>> I can try.

>> And the one thing for anyone watching or listening is that don't use AI as a search tool. Don't use it the way you

search tool. Don't use it the way you used it a year ago. Give AI your hardest problem and say, "Hey, help me to solve this problem." So, for example, you

this problem." So, for example, you might say, "I'm really struggling with these areas of my life. Here's all the data. Here's all the information. Here's

data. Here's all the information. Here's

the PDF documents. Here's the, you know, the the backstory. Help me solve this.

Help me write it. What kind of piece of software might I be able to use to to to build here?" I'll give you a real

build here?" I'll give you a real example. One of our team members used AI

example. One of our team members used AI to analyze all the sales calls for the last 3 months and discovered a huge opportunity. What they discovered is

opportunity. What they discovered is that 75% of all of our sales calls, the person who we were on the phone to mentioned that their spouse was a decision maker and that they needed to

talk to their spouse and that decision-m because it was a family business and that there was either a spouse or a family member. There was no point in our

family member. There was no point in our process where we invited collaboration with other family members. So none of our sales calls said, "Do you want to bring someone along to the sales call?

Like would you like to have someone do that?" The AI analyzed it, discovered

that?" The AI analyzed it, discovered that opportunity, wrote a script as to how to invite people onto the call so that that you get all decision makers on the call and now our sales conversions are going up dramatically.

>> I think this is the the real bification in terms of the employment market of what we're seeing is certain people have a a positive relationship to disruption in technology and change. They get

excited by it where others fall into cognitive dissonance where they they get so concerned that it's going to take out their business that they ostrich head in the sand. And then the these other

the sand. And then the these other people have this in inherent figure out ability. I could say to a certain team

ability. I could say to a certain team member of mine, here's a big problem and they would grab onto this big problem and even though they have no proficiency in data or technology or AI or CL, they

will just they'll plug away at it on a computer and they'll figure it out and they'll use all available tools, not their identity, what they learned in university or their experience as the only tool in the tool box. That's the

difference between employee mindset and entrepreneur mindset. Entrepreneurs see

entrepreneur mindset. Entrepreneurs see problems as opportunities. They get

excited by problems and they apply the entrepreneurial process. And employees

entrepreneurial process. And employees say, "Hey, wait a second. I was never trained for this. I was never told how to do this. I was not given the rulebook for this. So therefore, I'll just ignore

for this. So therefore, I'll just ignore it. I'll stay away from it because

it. I'll stay away from it because problems, it's not my problem." And this is the big fundamental shift. We need to say, "Hey, problems are great. We want

problems. And is this problem for me?

How would I test my assumptions? How

would I build something quickly and cheaply? How would I then test that? How

cheaply? How would I then test that? How

would they I then scale that? Right? And

it's just those kind of few steps that if you embrace those entrepreneurial steps, then life becomes great.

>> I have a contrarian take that I think writing is actually more important now than ever before because writing is a proxy of understanding. And in a world of AI, what I'm finding when I look at like my innovation teams or where

breakthroughs are coming from in my company, it's actually someone had a really good question.

>> Yes.

>> So they were like, could we theoretically analyze all of our sales calls using Claude to see if there's something interesting in there? Now that

starts with someone understanding sales calls, understanding the tools that allow you to analyze them. They have

lots of reference points. They

understand lots of um variant things.

And that means they ask a really great question. So for me, one of the ways

question. So for me, one of the ways that I've been um been able to understand more things is to to write more often about them.

>> Can I go one step further?

>> And that is a process called pause reflect document. And pause reflect

reflect document. And pause reflect document. If you do it correctly, you go

document. If you do it correctly, you go into nature away from noise and away from technology and you take a pen and a paper and you sit in nature on a bench

and you just pause and just let some boredom set in. You reflect on what's going on. You try and zoom out to the

going on. You try and zoom out to the bigger picture. You do some journaling

bigger picture. You do some journaling and you do some dot connecting where you say, "What are some of the dots that have happened in the last 5 years? What

are some of the bigger picture impacts that I've made? What are some of the problems that I've struggled with? What

if this was possible? What if that was possible?" We live in this incredible

possible?" We live in this incredible fast-paced world where the one thing that no one allows themselves to do is to pause, reflect, document with a pen

and paper. And those people who I know

and paper. And those people who I know who are doing incredibly well are doing more and more of this.

>> Yeah.

>> Yeah.

>> Same same. I mean, you're one of them.

You're a person who's I mean, look at this.

>> Yeah.

>> This is a lot of books.

>> That's my head.

>> But you tweet every day. You post every day. You're constantly experiencing

day. You're constantly experiencing something in the real world, writing it down to develop your thinking, which Richard Fryman talks about the process of understanding where you learn something, condense it, so an average person can understand it, then you share

it with the world to collect feedback on that thought. He said that's the like

that thought. He said that's the like the fastest best way to learn. Yeah.

Yeah, >> but actually in a world of AI where chat can do all of that for me, we're deferring our ability to sort of condense, compress, and understand to an AI because we think it's creating an

efficiency gain or a productivity gain in the near term. Like maybe today's email will will save you 30 seconds, but that the tax you're paying I think is an understanding.

>> And understanding is the is a proxy of therefore, you know, writing great questions.

>> I find myself writing more. I wrote a memo this I was up till 2 a.m. last

night writing a memo.

>> Yeah.

which means you were up late thinking.

>> You were thinking clearly and that was what you were really doing. A great

question I want people to reflect on. I

want them to think about the last 5 years and ask the question when did I do something special that impacted a certain type of person.

I can explain how I did it step by step and how it felt and it would be of interest to plenty of people. All right.

And that question contains what we talked about earlier which is lived experience feelings playbooks and connecting the dots looking backwards and actually coming up with some things

that only I can do things that only I can say. So that that particular prompt

can say. So that that particular prompt that particular question to sit in nature and think clearly and memo and and document and write a memo about it.

You know I I see so many people and you and I have done this over the last couple hours. We think so much about the

couple hours. We think so much about the future and the uncertainty of the future but a lot of value comes from just looking backwards and connecting the dots and then thinking what what is it that I now know that I want to take

forward and add value to others. sort of

adjacent to that but related is another thing I think a lot about which is um trying to get more information and experiences from a wide set of reference points because when I think about

innovation generally innovation is the connection of like two ideas or thoughts or principles that someone else hasn't put together so I think about the like non-stick frying pan it was a guy who

was fishing and was trying to make get a material so his tackle his fishing tackle didn't stick together and his wife walks past allegedly and says, "I'd love some of that stuff on our pans."

And that ends up selling tens and tens of millions of non-stick pans. And even

the even when you think about the iPhone, that was a combination of a of an internet device, >> a music device, >> and a telecommunications device >> put together, which you rarely found

those three things in one space. Three

different reference points. To achieve

that, someone would have had to understand music, the internet, and phones.

>> Yeah. Yeah. And even Steve Jobs himself, his skill stack contains typography and design which is why why he was able to disrupt Blackberry.

>> He stumbled into a calligraphy class at university and loved calligraphy and he was the first company to ever have fonts and those fonts became a huge differentiator on the first Mac and it

was only because he had like combined calligraphy with uh with with computers he created the font uh idea.

>> So maybe the future's owned by the wide not the narrow in this regard.

definitely become more of a generalist, become more curious and go out of your comfort zones, right? The the industrial age asked us to simply specialize and do one thing over and over. The grandfather

of capitalism is a guy called Adam Smith and he said ultimately efficiency is about doing one thing in the process over and over and over, but he said it's going to destroy the human spirit. He

actually wrote about the fact that that destroys the human spirit. having to

just twist this knob over and over that creates the most value in the economy, but it's horrible for you as a human.

And what and he recognized that problem from the very beginning. What we've been trained to do is just twist the knob, twist the knob, twist the knob, do the same thing over and over. What we need

to relearn how to do is allow us to become more human and say, "Actually, I'm going to explore nature. I'm going

to explore this weird passion that I have for um, you know, particular theater companies and how they run. I'm

going to go and explore this thing about like entrepreneur accelerators. Um, you

know, I'm going to combine things. It's

those rare combinations and you need to trust your instincts that you're actually pulling on a few threads and bringing them together. I do that while still focusing on a job, etc. Because I do this for a living.

>> So, I get to sit here, you know, someone walked in before you and they were talking to, you know, Alex Honold was talking to me in that chair before you.

That's why the little taipe statues behind us about, you know, then you've talked to me today about this, then the next person will talk to me about neuroscience and bringing a human brain.

And that's allowed me to kind of connect these interesting reference points. What

I'm saying here is you don't need to like >> quit your job and go and live in Peru to to to orchestrate your life in such a way. I think you just need to be really

way. I think you just need to be really intentional about resisting the urge to be a narrow person and to identify too much with one's identity. And so when I

left my former business, one of the chapters I wrote my book is how do I now resist all my labels? Because now I'm a social media CEO. And it's so tempting, >> yeah, >> to gather around social media people, go

to social media parties, put it in my bio, get social media opportunities, and just go further and further and further down that narrow line. So that's why I went and worked in psychedelics and biotech. I worked in cancer biotech. I

biotech. I worked in cancer biotech. I

started to DJ. I started a podcast called The Diary of a CEO. I tried to do as many things as I possibly could to remain wide. Yeah. And your superpowers

remain wide. Yeah. And your superpowers are extra superpowers when you take them somewhere new.

>> So if you've got social media superpowers within the social media bubble, everyone's got those superpowers. But if you go and take them

superpowers. But if you go and take them into a completely new place, you discover that actually what you what you learned over here becomes a massive differentiator over here.

>> Is there anything else the audience need to know about the big opportunities you see as we head into the future?

>> We all want the future to be bright. We

all want the future to be uh amazing and we love the idea of trying to improve the world. One of the best ways to

the world. One of the best ways to improve the world is to improve your own situation because the world is made up of people who have their own situation.

You know when we try and fix every problem on the planet it feels completely crushing and it feels so much weight on your shoulders. when you

actually say what's my opportunity like if I could if I improve the world by building myself a really great business that helps a few people that helps 500 clients do something and if I'm actually

out there adding value in my unique way and I'm finding a way through this AI weird adventure that we're going on that's actually helping the world right so you're bringing yourself forward

you're discovering something I really want people to resist the trap of trying to fix everyone and fix everything try and figure out what is your opportunity What is your way of adding value to others? What is your way of getting

others? What is your way of getting paid? What is your way of doing creative

paid? What is your way of doing creative entrepreneurship? Uh what's your

entrepreneurship? Uh what's your contribution to the world? And that is actually a contribution.

>> Is that difficult to do? Because I think it assumes certain level of self-awareness that is not always easy.

>> If you find it difficult to do, find someone who inspires you and see if you can join their team. So that's totally a valid move as well, right? just get onto a team where someone's figuring this

stuff out. Um, you know, follow your

stuff out. Um, you know, follow your inspiration and sometimes your inspiration is to start something.

Sometimes your in inspiration is to help propel something forward, being part of someone else's team who does inspire you. Self-awareness is is a skill that

you. Self-awareness is is a skill that we all have to learn. We're all on a crash course with reality. Every single

one of us is on a crash course with reality. There's a lot of narrative on

reality. There's a lot of narrative on on the internet that everybody can live their dream, you know, and I wonder whether every it's good I wonder

whether it's good advice to tell everybody to like quit their job and pursue their dream.

>> I believe that the new size of business that makes the most sense is small and dynamic and lean and is probably close to 10 to 50 people. Um, and that is the new size of company that is really

shaking things up and doing stuff. In

fact, it's probably 2 to 20 people. I

think that being part of a small, dynamic, vibrant, entrepreneurial team is a great place for people to go and have a look and explore. Does that mean that everyone's suitable to quit their

job and go start something from scratch with a blank piece of paper? Probably

not, right? That's that's a particular role called the founder. Not everyone's

ready to be a founder. In the same way, everyone could probably get a black belt if they if they joined a martial arts and stuck with it. But not everyone can start as a black belt. That's not where you start >> even in those numbers. So if we said

everyone's gonna have, you know, a team of 10 to 50, those numbers suggest that one in 50 or one in 10 people are going to be a founder.

>> Possibly a lot more people are going to be founders. I really believe a lot more

be founders. I really believe a lot more people are going to be founders. I also

don't think it's wildly unnatural to be a founder. If you go through all of

a founder. If you go through all of history, most people worked in little family businesses. That was actually the

family businesses. That was actually the vast majority of people. Mo, you know, most businesses never got past 30 people. That our natural way of being is

people. That our natural way of being is in family groups and tribal groups and little groups of less than 150 people.

We've built up this idea that to be a founder means Steve Jobs, Elon Musk or something massive like that and that you're trying to build something that changes the world. I've got so many

friends and clients who it's them, their assistant, and uh someone who's like head of customer development, and there's three or four of them, and they're having a great time, and they're doing 600, 700 grand worth of revenue,

and they got loads of flexibility.

Everyone takes their kids to school.

Everyone finishes up at 4 4 p.m. Um they

can travel, they can live and work anywhere. Um you know, that's really

anywhere. Um you know, that's really cool. This is your most recent book,

cool. This is your most recent book, Lifestyle Business Playbooks: How to Have Fun, Freedom, and Fulfillment with Your Own Business. You've written a lot of books. You could have written a book

of books. You could have written a book about anything. What's this book about

about anything. What's this book about and who is it for?

>> This book is about the times that we're living in, right? So, what I'm trying to do, I'm trying to give people some hope.

There's such a negative narrative that AI is going to wipe out everything and that technology is going to destroy everything and that, you know, all this negativity about the times that we're in. I'm trying to create a

in. I'm trying to create a counternarrative that actually more than any other time in history, you could live and work from anywhere. You could

have a group of 500 to a few thousand clients all over the world. You could

add value to people in a unique and interesting way. You could have a career

interesting way. You could have a career that's based on randomness and creativity and fun. And that there are some new rules to play by. and that if you learn the playbooks of entrepreneurship and if you learn the

trends that are unfolding that actually it could work out really really well for you.

>> A lot of people want to, you know, they want a side hustle, they want passive income. What's your general perspective

income. What's your general perspective on the reality of being able to generate passive income and a side hustle? I

think passive income reflects people's desire that they currently feel that they're working really hard and they hate work and they hate going to work and that earning money is a horrible

thing and therefore they just wish it would just kind of take care of itself.

The truth is that when you discover what I would call a lifestyle business where you work a reasonable amount of time and you have a lot of fun with great people, you don't necess the as if by magic the

desire for passive income just evaporates. you go, "This is this is

evaporates. you go, "This is this is better than passive income because I'm on a creative journey and I'm making great money and I'm having a lot of fun and I'm expressing myself." I think passive income ultimately comes from assets. It's not it's not passive

assets. It's not it's not passive income, it's asset income. Um, you're

either going to have to create an asset, which could be a business that is a digital asset. Um, or you make so much

digital asset. Um, or you make so much money in your lifestyle business that you own traditional assets like houses or stocks and shares and all that sort of stuff. Um, but I'm not really

of stuff. Um, but I'm not really focusing people on the idea of passive income. I'm focusing on the idea of

income. I'm focusing on the idea of having a lifestyle business that supports the way you want to live.

Anyway, >> a lot of people would would want that, but they're scared, right? They're

scared that they have to quit their job and I've got a mortgage to pay. I've got

kids. So, it's easier said than done, Daniel.

>> Yeah. So, that that's why in the playbooks, playbook one is called a side hustle or an apprenticeship. So, an

apprenticeship, let's say let's say you currently earn $100,000 a year for uh a really big corporate, but you know that's not your future. An

apprenticeship might be that you join four boards for 20 25,000 each and you actually work with some startups that are more entrepreneurial and you take a position where you have four companies

that are paying 25 grand. So you still earn 100 grand a year but now you've got four smaller startups that you're learning from and they're learning from you and you're learning from them. So

that's that's a version of an apprenticeship. Um, an apprenticeship

apprenticeship. Um, an apprenticeship could also be that you go from working for a big traditional company to getting a job that pays almost as much but with a smaller, more interesting business

that you can learn from a founder. A

side hustle is where you do stuff on the side and it's open and shut. You build

your entrepreneurial confidence. So

those are like starting points and then after that and the these are not designed to make a big leap financially.

After that we talk about a twoerson scout team scouting an opportunity. We

talk about a fourperson fire starting team getting something started. We talk

about an eightp person core team running a really cool little lifestyle business.

So it it it's not like people think that they have to go from zero to 100 in one jump. And it's like no, there are little

jump. And it's like no, there are little steps along the way that make this really easy.

>> I think uh it's really important with all of this advice to like know your nature and to know who you are and kind of honestly to like know what you want from life, >> which a lot of people don't and they're handed what they want from life from like scrolling on Instagram or LinkedIn.

and they cool >> I need to build a $5 billion AI company etc. I think I've I've noticed with myself that I started a business. I was

really I was ambitious about the goals for that business and then you know I ran that business for some time. I left

that business when I was what 20 maybe 20 years old. Went to work in Silicon Valley as basically a consultant.

>> Mhm.

>> And that was okay for a time being but then eventually I realized that >> the money really doesn't m it's really about like doing it with people you like and having a and having a challenge. So

that then led me back into the ambitious building businesses. Did that for six

building businesses. Did that for six years. But big big business around the

years. But big big business around the world >> and then left that and then I went through a period where >> I guess I was kind of a consultant freelancery type guy for a while again fundamentally unfulfilling for me.

>> Yep.

>> Because going on a mission with a group of people, an audacious mission really regardless of what it is that filled me up. It was never really about the money.

up. It was never really about the money.

>> A lot of people discover this. A lot of people discover that more is not better.

Uh, a lot of people discover that bigger is not more fun. Do

>> you know what else they discover? They

discover that their idea of independence and freedom is also not what they thought. And this is like a quite a

thought. And this is like a quite a contrarian take, but I have more responsibility now than I've ever had.

>> Yeah.

>> I could choose less responsibility, more freedom, and I would be less satisfied and less fulfilled in my life.

>> Totally. Look at rich kids. They've

they've got everything taken care of, and there's all this financial resource around them, and there's nothing for them to do. They live in a constant state of depression. We love

responsibility. We love creative tension. Uh we love being up to

tension. Uh we love being up to something in the world. There's nothing

greater than being up to something to being on a mission, especially with a great group of people that you're traveling through life with that you're on this rock with. Um and you find your group of people that you want to be up to something with and you natter and you

solve and you get curious and you run ideas past each other and you voice note at 2:00 in the morning. You know, that's that's where the juice is. That's where

the joy is. Um there's a chapter in there that says know when enough is enough. And it says that a huge part of

enough. And it says that a huge part of the times that we're in is you know we live in a time of endless scrolling.

There's no cue that says you've been scrolling long enough you know go to bed. And it's same with business that we

bed. And it's same with business that we think bigger would be better. Having a

bit bigger business another you know another product another thing another uh million would make you happier. And the

truth is it's it's not the it's normally not the case. Well, what is the case though is that we all need increasing levels of challenge. It seems to me, you know, this is why crosswords get more

difficult and video games get have levels because they realize through the studies that when something becomes incrementally more difficult, you drop into a flow state and motivation increases and if it doesn't, then you lose motivation. And so, I think this is

lose motivation. And so, I think this is why even in my life, like I'm striving to make things bigger and better because it's actually just a proxy of like I want to be challenged.

>> Well, there's a couple of things. You

can either go really big with one thing and just be really really focused or you can have challenge across a portfolio of interests. One thing that is happening

interests. One thing that is happening to your generation, if I can be so bold, cuz I'm just 15 years older or whatever, is that you've taken all the energy that

normally went into kids and you're putting it into business, right? And the

normal natural thing that is meant to happen around this age is that you're meant to struggle with a business or struggle with a way of providing and also struggle with raising kids and all

that sort of stuff. So there's this reservoir of creative energy that is meant to be divided amongst a few projects. And I'm seeing a lot of people

projects. And I'm seeing a lot of people that that misplaced maternalism or paternalism goes into just one thing and then we're expecting to get the joy and the fulfillment that would normally come

back from family >> and we wonder why that's missing. You

know, it's like, oh, I'm pouring myself into the creation of these companies and they're proxies for kids. And it's like, why don't I feel this warmth back? Cuz

your biology is not wired to receive warmth back from something other than a kid. So this is happening because we're

kid. So this is happening because we're not having we're not having kids. So one

of the things that uh well one of the things I encourage everyone to do is have kids because it's the best thing ever and to have a portfolio of interests that you don't have to struggle to get to a billion. You could

say, you know what, the business bucket's full at 3 million and I'm really really happy with a revenue of 3 million in a team of 10 and now I want to have a portfolio of interests that

includes health and fitness or travel or teaching at a local uh you know youth group, you know, or I want to play a bigger role in my church. Like there's

all these other things that you say, okay, these are the portfolio of interests that that are more human.

>> Lifestyle business playbook. going to

link this book below for anyone that wants to give it a read who is compelled by the lifestyle that Dan has described there where you can have fun, freedom and fulfillment with your own business.

As you know, Daniel, cuz this is, I think, is your seventh time being on this podcast. Record breaker. We have a

this podcast. Record breaker. We have a closing tradition. The question that has

closing tradition. The question that has been left for you is, what fear have you overcome to become who you are today?

You know, I grew up on the Sunshine Coast. Uh, I dropped out of school or I

Coast. Uh, I dropped out of school or I dropped out of university. I've got zero qualifications.

Um, I'm not particularly good at anything in particular. I've got no skills. Yeah,

particular. I've got no skills. Yeah,

there's me at 21. I tell you, this was a huge fear. Running my first ad in the

huge fear. Running my first ad in the newspaper. I put everything on a credit

newspaper. I put everything on a credit card just to run an ad in the newspaper for $8,000. and it had to work or else I

for $8,000. and it had to work or else I was in serious trouble.

>> I've had a weird 25 years. I've boom

busted over and over again. Um, so I had a massive boom in my early 20s, built a $10 million company rapidly and then lost it. And then I built another

lost it. And then I built another multi-million dollar business and then lost it. And then I got wiped out by a

lost it. And then I got wiped out by a co experience and had to reinvent the business. And then I had a negative

business. And then I had a negative experience with a co-founder and had to reinvent the team. So I've had these kind of like huge forif for for the first 15 years it was boom bust boom

bust boom bust and the fear was is that it would never feel a sense of fulfillment. I'd never get to a place

fulfillment. I'd never get to a place where I could actually say it was all worth it. Um and to just keep going and

worth it. Um and to just keep going and going and going when I felt exhausted uh was a massive thing. You know have a family.

>> Yeah. and the fear of will I be able to provide for the family and the fear of uh will my business ideas be valued by anyone else other than myself? Am I

doing something stupid? Am I doing something um that will fail again? So,

it's been a lot of fear. Um but you know what? It's been a wonderful journey that

what? It's been a wonderful journey that every time I've pushed through that fear, we get to the other side. And

actually, it's better on the other side.

It's even better. Had you known how hard it would be, do you think that 21-year-old Daniel would have done it?

>> I don't think I had any other choice.

>> But if I'd sat that Daniel down and I'd say, "Daniel, this is what's going to happen in the next 20 years. You're

going to go up and then you're going to lose it all. Then you go up, you lose it all. You're going to feel like this at

all. You're going to feel like this at this moment. It's going to be the worst

this moment. It's going to be the worst day. Then you're going to feel like this

day. Then you're going to feel like this and then this and then this and you're going to be working hard the whole time.

Then you're going to lose faith."

Would you have done it?

>> Secretly, yes. And the reason for that is I kind of I kind of like the roller coaster. Feel like I needed to go

coaster. Feel like I needed to go through boom bust boom bust boom bust because I I secretly didn't want a straight line. I think I think I

straight line. I think I think I actually want the the the I want the more interesting story. At 24, I was offered $14 million for my company. Uh

and I blew it. I I screwed up the negotiation and we ended up all walking away from the deal. I think it would have been the worst thing possible had I

had $14 million at uh at age 24.

>> So I've drawn a a little graph here on this iPad. One axis is your success and

this iPad. One axis is your success and the other axis is time. Could you draw for me what your career looks like in terms of success over time including the ups, the downs, etc., etc.

>> Well, if we just talk objectively what other people would have seen. Um I do this nightclub party and that's amazing.

And then I go and I get a job with a mentor and then we build this business that's like 6 million in its first year and I'm like right close to it and we go from zero to like 60 employees and then

I have a fight with my mentor and he tells me go start your own business. So,

I go right down to start from scratch again and I'm in I'm in a really negative place. And then we get started

negative place. And then we get started and suddenly I've got myself a multi-million dollar business. And then

the government changes the law and we have to reinvent that business. And then

we get a new amazing contract and now we do a million a month. And this, by the way, this is only like age 24. And then

we screw up the negotiation and it's right back to the start. And then I go to London and I start a new business.

And that goes really really well really quickly and like one year in we've got the palladium theater and we're doing hundreds of thousands a week worth of sales and then the global financial crisis resets the whole business and I

lose the major contracts that we have and and then I relaunch the business and then co comes along and we're by by this stage we're in uh 11 cities doing a

couple of million per city and then I relaunch the business as a digital business and it goes off the scale again right I'm running out of space here and Now we've figured out, okay, we own the assets, we own the brand, uh we've got a

great team, we've got multiple businesses, and at the moment, and this is around the time I have kids as well, and it and it starts to really uh become more stable and more fun and uh less up

and down. But that was my starting

and down. But that was my starting point. Up, down, up, down, up, down.

point. Up, down, up, down, up, down.

>> And this is over the period of how many years?

>> This was this was from 20 to 35. It was

just boom bust, boom bust, punch in the face, get back up, punch in the face, get back up. Uh, zero millions, zero millions, zero millions. I say all of

this because I think it's important to people for people to realize the reality of what it takes and how hard it is.

And, you know, oftent times if we want to get, you know, have a high performing podcast or write a great selling book, we kind of describe it as a linear journey. you're going to do this, then

journey. you're going to do this, then you do this, then this is going to happen, then you do this. Stick at it for long enough, and then and then why?

But actually, in my experience, the graph either looks like a boom and bust cycle, which is kind of what I'm seeing here in your graph, or it looks like nothing, nothing nothing, nothing nothing, something exponential.

>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.

>> I mean, even this podcast, if you look at the graph, it is nothing, nothing, nothing nothing nothing nothing nothing exponential.

>> 2 million, 4 million, 8 million, 16 million. Yeah. And so the question for

million. Yeah. And so the question for me always becomes like what would it take for you to survive either in your

story this boom and bust scenario >> or in many of the things I've done in my life this no man's land >> period of no it takes a certain something in someone

>> Yeah >> to be able to weather such a storm and well I guess what what is that you said a second ago I had no choice. Yeah, I

had no choice because I have no skills.

I'm not good at anything. You know, I've got friends who are good at coding or good at editing or they're good at designing. They've got accounting or

designing. They've got accounting or they've got dentistry or something like that to fall back on. I have no qualifications. I've got a driver's

qualifications. I've got a driver's license is my only qualification. Um,

and I'm all I'm good at is organizing teams and getting people in the room and getting them excited and essentially encouraging them to work with me and and build something together. So, I kind of

didn't have a choice but to keep playing the game, keep trying.

>> And by the way, I wouldn't change any of that. Like, there's there's no point

that. Like, there's there's no point there where I'd go back and say, "Actually, cuz where where I am now, every single one of those crushing drops is where I really learned something that

I leverage today." actually something I said to someone who works in my team as my business partner now, George Gibson, when she emailed me two years ago asking me to invest in a startup, a startup that I myself had failed at. I basically

was trying to say, "This is not going to work, but do it anyway because the actual thing of value here might not be the million-dollar exit. It's going to be the lessons you learn from the

failure are going to then be leveraged as I did at 20 years old when I went to Silicon Valley and started talking to people about this thing. I'd spent two years failing and was getting paid $70,000 a month to talk about this thing as a 20-year-old with no qualifications

because I was one of the very few people who had failed in social media and therefore had a deep understanding and a rare skill. You're no longer going on

rare skill. You're no longer going on BBC News night or in Forbes as the person who did this, but of all the things you've done in your life, this great failing is going to be the most valuable asset you have. And this is

what your story proves because every time it goes higher.

>> Yeah, it really does. Yeah, it was it was amazing. like the the like I can

was amazing. like the the like I can tell you what the moments feel like at the bottom and they're horrible and alcohol's involved and uh you know like wanting to just completely hide and you

know never be seen by anyone ever again and then suddenly you go okay I mean I've got this friend of mine who who's an entrepreneur who's failed several times and he says you feel like you're on a tight rope and then you fall off the tightroppe and you realize it was

only 6 in off the ground you know it's not as bad as you think and you can hop back on the tight rope and go and you can go again But every single time it's just gotten

better and better and better and bigger and bigger and more more stable and more like reliable.

>> There is another story which is one that doesn't have the survivorship bias because now Daniel, you've been wildly successful. Walk down the street, people

successful. Walk down the street, people know who you are. They, you know, you've got millions of people that tune in to watch you give advice. But there's also a version of reality where that wasn't the ending.

And I actually know someone who has fought for 15 years to build businesses all across the world >> and they they just don't have that self-awareness piece.

>> Mhm.

>> I don't know if I'm self-aware. Like

none of us can actually know cuz that requires self-awareness.

>> We've all got our blind spots.

>> They'll continue to start businesses and it's putting their family at risk now.

>> They go through the same boom and bust cycle, but it never goes higher.

>> Y >> and if you were to ask me objectively, do I think they'll ever have the moment you've had now? You have a survivorship bias that I have. We did something, it was hard, and then it paid off.

>> Here's the thing. There are no happy endings. Uh, life ends abruptly.

endings. Uh, life ends abruptly.

One thing that happens when you get a little older is you start discovering that actually when when you're under 40, you think everything ends well. And then

later on, you discover there are no happy endings. Everyone dies. You get a

happy endings. Everyone dies. You get a phone call one day and someone who is an amazing person has a stroke.

And that's them. That's them hit. That's

that's it. What you thought of that you thought they'd have 20 more years and they don't. You know, their entire life

they don't. You know, their entire life changes.

You you're left with the realization that it's just an adventure. Sometimes

sometimes the happy ending that other people would call as a happy ending or an objective happy ending is actually pretty miserable in the middle of it.

There are people who have everything.

you've met them and objectively they have the houses and the cars and the private jets and all that sort of stuff and they're not particularly happy.

They're miserable. And then there are some people who they lose all of that stuff, but then they reconnect with a group of friends and they're like happier than they've ever been.

>> Something's given you this insight.

>> Yeah. So, someone very close to me, very dear to me, recently had a stroke, you know and yeah, you realize that the happy ending is not guaranteed. In fact, the opposite

is guaranteed. you realize everyone

is guaranteed. you realize everyone everyone dies, everyone decays, everyone gets old. If you're lucky, you get old.

gets old. If you're lucky, you get old.

Uh and if you're unlucky, you don't get old. Um so you have to there comes a

old. Um so you have to there comes a point where you have to release the idea that you're going to have this happy ending. You're going to have moments of

ending. You're going to have moments of triumph and moments of disaster. You're

going to lose people. You're going to have everything taken from you. It's

guaranteed everything is taken from you.

>> How did that change your perspective?

this loved one going through this, >> you you realized that uh you real or I realized that the mental

timeline of endless decades spreading out ahead, endless amounts of health, endless amounts of relationships is not it's a it's a nice fantasy that

keeps us together, but it's not guaranteed. And then the impact for me

guaranteed. And then the impact for me is to treasure relationships.

Um there comes a moment where I don't know if this has ever happened to you yet, but you go, "Wow, I didn't know that was the last conversation."

conversation." Um, you don't realize this, but one of the legacies that you leave behind, not you because you've got this body of

work, but one of the legacies that people leave behind is little voice notes that they leave in your phone that they leave in your WhatsApp and you listen back to some of these voice

notes and you go, "Wow, I didn't know that was a treasure. Didn't know that was a special thing." Um, and this particular person who got impacted with the stroke, he was wonderful at voice

notes. He he had this thing that he

notes. He he had this thing that he would do called uh, it's not lost on me, voice notes. And I don't even think he

voice notes. And I don't even think he knew he was saying this, but it was his one of his favorite phrases, which was it's not lost lost on me. So he'd he'd leave a voice note and he'd say, "Stephen, it's not lost on me how much

you're dealing with at the moment and it's not lost on me that you are responsible for a lot of people's lives and all this and I just want to acknowledge you." So, so he would leave

acknowledge you." So, so he would leave these voice notes and um and he did this with everyone like it came out of the woodwork that everyone got these lovely

voice notes from this guy and um yeah, you you don't realize but like literally that is a huge part of people's legacies. You think you're

people's legacies. You think you're going to leave behind all this money.

You think you're going to leave behind all of this big stuff. You think you're going to leave behind some huge financial structure. And in the end, you

financial structure. And in the end, you leave behind some really touching voice notes as as one of the things that will be most treasured if you're lucky.

>> You've been listening to the voice notes?

>> Yeah, I have. Yeah. Yeah. Really, really

nice. Really, really nice.

>> What is that emotion in your face, Daniel? What's the range of emotions?

Daniel? What's the range of emotions?

Um, it's just the deeper awareness that the the the real, you know, we talk a lot about technology, we talk a lot about business,

but the whole game is relationships.

>> It's very easy to get that wrong, >> isn't it?

>> Very easy for you to get that wrong >> because um you're surrounded by such a whirlwind.

And people want so much from you. You know,

a lot of people want a lot from you. And

you think you have to lift people up around you and you have to do this heroic effort. Actually, little text

heroic effort. Actually, little text message, little voice note means a lot.

It's interesting. You for me, I figured out that we're that we're on a rock. We

get a few little laps around the sun.

That's it. We get this. We like

literally pop into existence like an electron spinning around a a neutron, whatever it is, and we we get we're we're on the rock. The most valuable thing is that we're on the rock

together. Like you zoom out enough,

together. Like you zoom out enough, we're all just little dots. We're all

just little dots trying to figure stuff out. Um and we're all trying to make

out. Um and we're all trying to make sense of our own lives and we're all trying to ignore how, you know, difficult things can be. And um but then you realize that it's just the fact that

we are moving through time together. But

yeah, you you as I said, you hit a point where you realize that uh there is no happy ending. Unfortunately, there's not

happy ending. Unfortunately, there's not uh you you you know the the ending is sad. When you hit a certain age, people

sad. When you hit a certain age, people that you really love get old get old and die or they get illnesses. They lose a big chunk of themselves in one fell

swoop. So, um, while those moments are

swoop. So, um, while those moments are happy, while you've got those happy moments, treasure those happy moments.

Really, really embrace them.

>> Do you have any regrets in this regard that might help me avoid having similar regrets?

>> I really don't. I'm really, really happy that things like I'm really the biggest relationships are with my kids and with my wife and family

formation.

I've I've had unbelievably high highs.

Like I've been on the big boats. I've

flown on the private jets. I've had

parties in my honor. I've had big paydays.

All of that cool stuff that people dream of. Family formation is where like the

of. Family formation is where like the core the core of it. Like that's the core of happiness for me, you know, the the the intergenerational passing of

life. Uh which is which is kind of like

life. Uh which is which is kind of like wow. like that that we I think we've

wow. like that that we I think we've forgotten how cool that is. I think

we've forgotten the idea that you're passing on consciousness and that this being has their own consciousness. They

do their own thing. They come up with their own ideas. They have their own challenges. Um yeah, it's wild.

challenges. Um yeah, it's wild.

>> Daniel, thank you. We're done.

>> That was great. YouTube have this new crazy algorithm where they know exactly what video you would like to watch next based on AI and all of your viewing behavior. And the algorithm says that

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