I think it is worth talking about the fact that there are ways to make a million bucks and then like ways to make a million bucks that could turn into a billion bucks, right? And I think we should talk about both. Ah, do we hit record already? Yeah. That's the intro. All right. I feel like I can rule the world. I know I could be what I want to. I put my law in it like a day zone. For the road, let's travel. So what do you mean by that? You're saying there's ways to make a million bucks and then there's ways to make a million bucks that could turn into a billion bucks. You have my interest. Let's go. Okay. Let's go. So I think maybe, and I don't mean this any dismissive way. I think venture capitalists are very often accused of dismissing something as like a cash flow lifestyle business or whatever, right? Which by the way, for anyone who is not in the VC world, you go to a VC, you say, I've got this great company. I think it can make five million in profit in year eight. And then after that, maybe we can grow this for another 50 years and one day it could be a thing and they say, that's a really nice lifestyle business. It's like them saying, that's cute.
Right. I remember. That's cute. Yeah. I remember my first time doing that. Of course, the thing is, is that anyone who actually is an entrepreneur, including anyone who's a VC, they know that you can oftentimes get richer and have a less stressful life if you have a quote lifestyle business. Yeah. So I'd say like there's many type of valid businesses, right? And then also a lot of things that are become very interesting start very small. So I want to recognize that. But I think a reasonable analogy is if you can figure out internet distribution and then get, you know, super powerful models getting increasingly powerful to just do something useful and in niche, those two things together, that's like the new drop shipping. You know how like for maybe seven or eight years, I'm like too old to know what the exact timeline was, but there was a period of time where people were like, oh, you know, I'm an internet kid. I'm going to figure out some drop shipping thing and like make my first hundred thousand dollars.
I think this is it. Yes. So basically for people who don't really know, you could go on Alibaba or all the express. That was like the open AI in this case, right? So it was like this thing exists that you didn't have to build, but it's magic. Watch this. You could push a button. You never had to make the product. You never had to warehouse the product. You never have to ship the product. It will just magically appear at your customer's door, you know, somewhere between one and three weeks later. All you have to do is the marketing bit. And kind of what you're saying is open AI and the other AI companies have built this magic that basically will take a piece of text and turn it into a video or a song or whatever. And if you just do the marketing bit, you can actually almost like drop ship a product or a service to the customer without having to make it yourself. Is that the idea? That is. Thanks for explaining it. And I think it's like easier with a few examples, right? Like copy editing is probably a prototypical one, right? You can do not amazing, but like reasonable copy generation with these models today. And so there are series of companies where you just have some templates that make it more obvious to somebody writing marketing copy, how to use these models. And then you have a website with Decine SEO. And then like you add some stripe integration and you're in business. What's an example? Well, I think like copy AI and Jasper, these companies started this way, right? And then I have several friends who have shipped like AI companionship apps. Just look at, you know, paid apps in the app store by charting. And you know, some of those people are generating a million dollars for cash flow for themselves. It's not because they're deep AI people.
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When you say companion, you mean like a digital girlfriend? Or boyfriend, right? I think people think that is skewed toward girlfriend in a way that's not necessarily true. And you can have your own ethical points of view about whether or not that's good for people, but it's a pretty basic human need. And guess what? People want all sorts of different things in terms of niche companionship and how you might distribute that. And aren't these quietly very huge? Can we do some ballpark, give people a sense of the size and scale that these have gotten to? So there's replica. I think that's probably the most well-known one, which is a digital boyfriend or girlfriend. They kind of try to say friend, but I think the use case is a little bit more in the relationship side of things. And I don't remember their exact numbers, but I don't think I would be crazy for saying they're doing like 50 million a year in revenue. And I believe she had bootstrapped it for a while, at least, or raised very little money to get there. Is that right? Tell me if I'm off base. I might be wrong on some of that. Yeah, Eugenius built a very cash efficient business. Okay. Is that like code for something? Are you an investor and graphic?
No, I'm not an investor. Dude, you just said everything without saying a thing. It was basically like, your friends are there, you know the number and they're killing it. Are they killing it from your perspective? I think they are making a lot more revenue than most startups. I don't think it's fair for me to give the number. It's not my number, right? Okay. What are the other ones that are interesting? So there's character AI that has like some absurd amount of traffic, but I've also heard some things about like, I don't know if this is all legit traffic or what, but there's character AI. What are the other ones that are interesting? Or what do you do? Who's your?
不,我不是投资者。兄弟,你虽然说了一大堆,但其实什么也没说。基本上就是,你的朋友在那里,你知道他们的业绩,他们做得很棒。从你的角度看,他们做得很好吗?我觉得他们的收入比大多数初创公司要多得多。具体数字我认为我不方便透露,因为这不是我的数据,对吧?好,还有哪些是有趣的?有个叫 Character AI 的项目,他们的流量惊人,但我也听到一些关于流量真实性的质疑,所以不确定这些流量是否都是真实的。除此之外,还有哪些项目是有趣的?你在做什么?你是谁?
I want to touch on character for a second because I think like, you know, when you look at consumer companies, one of the things that I learned was that the behavior patterns, like when something just really, really stands out from all other products in their category or previous categories, that's when you pay attention. It's like the, you know, dumbest metric, but it is really clear when something has special consumer behavior around. And the thing that is really interesting to me about character or the companion apps that work really well is like people spend hours with them, right? Like, you know, in terms of the number of products, how many products do you spend hours with every day? Not a lot. Like social media? Sean, that's like my product that I spent hours a day with. Yeah. You were at Great Luck.
I think when they invest in Discord, I think the timing is there. And Discord was one of those things that was probably overlooked because it was like, you know, mostly teenagers who play video games that were using this thing. And it kind of looked like a chat room, but you're like, well, how's it going to make money? It's not like Slack where you can charge the company. But the stat was people were spending like seven hours a day or something on Discord, something ridiculous like that. Just living in Discord. It was their social life. And so you're like, well, there's there's definitely something there. And they were able to make a ton of money just even selling emojis at that point. Because if you have that much engagement, you can't fake that.
Yes. By the way, I just went to character AI. And there's an option to chat with Elon Musk. And the preloaded question, why did you buy Twitter? So I click it. So it starts a chat with Elon Musk as a character. And then it first response literally goes, you're wasting my time. I literally ruled the world. Okay. So by the way, according to similar web, which is like you multiply it by two or three, and then you divide by two and three. And that's the huge range. But according to similar web, it says that character AI has 310 million monthly uniques. Are you kidding me? I mean, that's more than the Wall Street Journal. It's more than like a bunch of really fun things. Is this company really that big?
I think people want companions. This is what I'm saying that the like engagement characteristics around this stuff is real. And so for anybody like starting a new business, one person company shipping AI companion up to a niche, like generating a million dollars of cashflow for them. So do you know how these things grow? So I mean, 300 million monthly visits is no joke. What is what's the growth channel for something like this? Well, I think that's going to be like an advantage in the future.
I do think one of the weird things about these AI capabilities is they are so novel and unique that they do drive word of mouth. For example, with character, you can make new characters and people share them, right? So there's inbuilt virality there. But like maybe I'll give you like two other examples of just like when I say the capabilities are just really new and they're powerful and people want to talk about them. Like I don't think you can engineer that, but it's just characteristic of these companies.
Okay. So one example is I am an investor in a company called Hagen. You can make a video avatar of yourself. You cannot tell the difference. And reaching that bar of quality is new as of this past year. And like people create content that is unbelievable and they share it. And so like now Hagen is in tens of millions in revenue. Great. They've never spent a dollar on like paid marketing. Sam, have you seen this thing before, by the way, Hager? This is one of those products that I've seen all over the place.
But it felt like it was just like people younger than me talking about it. So I felt embarrassed. Well, this is not like like the character AI was like, you know, that's like teenagers kind of sharing stuff more like what pad or something. This is a corporate use case. So this is basically using like I make a digital AI of me or of a or just like a fake character altogether. And then it can be used in training videos. It can be used in intro, videos with customers, things like that.
So you could basically create a, you don't have to actually set up a camera, film a video, have it edited and then post it in order to send a video to a prospect or send a video internally to in a training system or educational product. And so that's what this is. And that's why they just as it says, the top raised 60 million funding. But I think the chart I saw was pretty absurd that you know, they basically raised 20 million in ARR very, very fast. Holy crap.
Some of the usage actually also it, yes, it's a business use case, but it's like all kinds of businesses like creators, SMBs, like high end enterprise advertisers. And so like for you guys would be like, okay, well, like actually, I bet there's a lot more demand for Sean and Sam talking than the amount I'm sure you hang out on the pot a lot. But like, then even each of you can contribute. And so if the marginal cost of more time of Sam talking is free, like you probably do more with it, right?
And I think that's just what people are discovering. Have you guys used this? Is it the landing page makes it look amazing? Like, I've used it. Is it amazing? Or is it still up and coming? No, it's like pretty good. This this crop, this one crosses the line, I would say of usable in real life versus cool demo, which is the hard thing with AI, you get a lot of cool demos, then you go in and you're trying to use it for your use case. And you're like, how come the tweet had such a good output of a mining is kind of whack every single time? Or like, well, this is good, but it won't let me change the text on it, which is what I would need to use it in my my real thing. I would say this one is is definitely production ready. They wouldn't have, you know, tens of millions in revenue if they weren't actually usable like customers. Well, they just did a like a public campaign with McDonald's, right? Like an advertising, but there's some good limits, right? Like you can't be like moving around. It's like a face on camera, or at least that's what it used to be when I tried it, like six months ago. Yeah, there's some new stuff you should try like, you know, you can be walking around now, right? Okay, I stay corrected. All right, never back. Can they just can we just upload our YouTube page or do we have to stand in front of it and film? You have to stand in front of your web or phone camera for two minutes and film. And it's more of a safety thing than anything else because they don't want people being able to take your YouTube and make you, if that makes sense, like they want they want you saying specific words about like, I, Sam Parr say it's okay to make this avatar.
And you said that you started the podcast by saying there's like a lot of you had a lot of the line you said was awesome, which is like there's a bunch of ways to make a million dollars that could eventually become a billion. Is this one of those companies where it started that way? I think, I mean, I think the market for this company is very deep because people, like they want a lot of video. And I think more like if you just think about the domain of making video, you guys know much more about this than me. But like people want a lot of control, right? They want quality, they want specific expression and brand and motions and they want like one person, two people, three people, like person walking around product, whatever it is. And so I think there's actually a lot like there's a lot we still cannot do with research and the company wants to continually pull like push the bounds of what you can do. And so I think this is a good example of like, I think there's a billion dollars of video generation revenue for them or for others. But like, you know, you actually have to invest in a product pretty deeply, but it doesn't mean that your wedge can't be really powerful across a single use case.
Sam, have you seen the ones that do this for DTC products, the AI for DTC product ads? So go to icon.me. If you scroll down, you could watch the video. So see the video of the Asian dude who's holding like a college and peptides thing. So that's an AI generated video. It's the product in his hand. That's not actually in his hand with a script that was written. He never recorded it. And now you have a UGC very authentic looking ad for an influencer. You go to the next one. Look, he's holding a different product. That's because he didn't reshoot it. They just put a different product in his hand and it looks super fucking real. Am I right? What? Isn't this wild? This is amazing. And so he's got another one with ramen.
萨姆,你看到过那些用于DTC(直接面向消费者)产品广告的AI吗?去icon.me这个网站看看。如果你往下滚动,就能看到视频。你看看那个亚裔小伙子,他手里拿着一种叫做college and peptides的东西。那个视频是AI生成的,手里的产品其实不是他真的在拿,剧本也是AI写的,他从未录制过这个视频。现在你就有了一个看起来很真实的用户生成内容(UGC)风格的广告。再看下一个视频,他又拿了不同的产品。但其实他并没有重新拍摄过,只是AI把不同的产品放到了他手里,而且看起来非常逼真。对吧?是不是很不可思议?这太棒了。他还有一个拿着拉面的广告。
And so what he's doing is interesting. What he's doing is he's letting actual and so these are not AI generate people. This is a real person. This is like an Instagram guy who's got like whatever hundreds of thousands of followers. So he's letting popular Instagram people say, Hmm, okay, I'll do it. I'll create my digital twin that will be able to do my brand like my branded content. So a brand can come in request from a listening Instagrammer with a million followers and say, I want you to sponsor this video. Here's the script. Here's my product. And if I click yes, then it will AI generate that video.
I never needed to like open up a package, grab a thing, you know, take take 20 minutes, set up my tripod, record an ad, send it to the brand, ask them if it's okay, then they say, yes. And then I get paid. Instead of this case, it's basically like, I just approve the brand. It uses my digital twin to make the ad. If I'm cool with the ad, I get paid. And that's it. And so that's what he's doing. Our ads is the same thing. If you go to our ads, it's like pretty fucking wild. And in their case, these are fake actors. So these women that you see on the thing that are like promoting stuff, these people do not exist. This is an AI generated woman who looks like a real person that is promoting some product. And you script it and you can get these made. These are the Or it might be like a real person, but they said like licensed to the company, you can do whatever you want with it. Yeah, exactly.
But I think in this case, they might have started with a couple of those like I think they found one of the girls from this like on five or something. But the idea would be I don't know too much about the under the hood stuff of these. I just started playing with them. But the idea would be that, you know, people are not going to know what the hell is real and what's not this these look like real people in their home giving a genuine endorsement of some product that they like. And it is very simple to create. I think Sarah, this is the type of idea you're talking about where two people can kind of take the existing models, you know, maybe customize them here. But then it's just in a wedge in this case, it's for e-commerce companies.
And they're going to try to build a business here that will do it'll be these both these businesses very quick to get to, you know, mid seven figures of revenue without, you know, much marketing spend or much of anything just because the product is such a wow product. And then, you know, from there, who knows if it can get, you know, really enormous or not. Yeah. And I think a piece of it is just like for me, like, okay, what's the difference between like the first million and the next 999 million? It is whether or not the capability exists in the company to make the product deeper and keep expanding scope for what you do for your customer, right? And but there's a ton of these wedges. So staying with visual content, you can use this category of models, their open source to be fine-tuned for different use cases that are super commercial, right? So it could be models or creator videos for e-comm, as you described, it could be renderings for like interior design or buildings.
I don't know if you guys have ever looked at a floor plan. Like maybe I just have terrible visual spatial reasoning, but I can't look at a floor plan with like a couple blocks and then like a fuzzy piece of fabric and be like, yes, I see it. Right. Are my life savings into this? And our friend Peter Lovels has a thing where you take a picture of your home and then it does interior design for you and shows you mock-ups, which is pretty cool. Yeah, but I'd say like those, you know, those renderings traditionally generated costs like thousands of dollars, right? And now if you can give it to people for very little incremental costs, like that's an interesting wedge. Like there's a handful of AI headshot companies making revenue.
Have you guys have ever gone like a professional headshot taken? Yeah, dude. So this actually, this is like a kind of actually interesting version of the drop shipping idea. So these are, this is, I bet you this would work. So there was an ad I saw on Facebook, I think there was a Facebook ad and it basically was a guy and he had a headshot. I think of somebody who I recognize, maybe as a VC in Silicon Valley, but basically like, if you're in San Francisco, I take awesome headshots for you. You should have a great shot for your website, for your LinkedIn, whatever. It's good for business, good for your career. And you click a site and it's a bunch of people in the tech industry and it was like $300 or $400.
And I went to some warehouse type of place in some little like photo shoot studio in San Francisco, stood there awkwardly, got like headshots made and paid this guy, you know, $350. And he was running Facebook ads profitably to do that. So he was able to put in and he was acquiring a customer for whatever, $70. He was generating $350 off them. And now you could run that same funnel, just without the San Francisco studio and without the guy taking the picture and without any of the cost, right? Like you just say, awesome, give me a couple of your photos and then boom, here you go. And I've seen a couple of these go viral of like viral headshot viral yearbook ideas.
But I haven't seen too many people just like running paid on them and making them work. But I'm pretty sure that you could create a paid funnel that would print cash for a period of time and maybe not forever, but an arbitrage period of time. Yeah. But what's what's it exactly? So I've seen the same ones where it's like, you look like a 80s glam shot model. Remember, like the professional one, people are willing to pay more, right? So if it's actually going to be for your example of one.
Yeah. Look at this, look at this company, Aragon.ai. Oh, dude, look at this landing page. This is genius. They just have a side scrolling carousel, and it's the before's. And then there's a line. And then they just that same photo becomes the after that is very well done. That's good. Sarah, how hard is something like this to make? So like there are a million of these wedges, right? And I think that means like it's an amazing time to, as you were saying, like be good at distribution, understand like how to make a funnel and how to market something and like to be an idea person, right? Fundamentally, like if you run into problems all the time and you like see the basic capabilities, you're like, oh, I can think like you guys are both like, oh, I can think of like five other use cases for this, right?
And by the way, you know, the distribution thing. So this is a good example. So I invested a little bit in Jasper. And Jasper was started by guys who were internet marketers first, not AI researchers, not AI, you know, engineers, not, not even frankly, very good engineers, probably. They were just like internet guys, internet, internet business guys. And they were, I think they were doing something before this that wasn't really working very well, but they had spent a lot of time building like internet marketing funnels. And so when they got access to probably chat GPT three or something like that, they were kind of back before, sorry, before chat GPT, just when it was GPT three, they got access to the API. And they built Jasper, which was a took that same capability, but now made it useful for marketers.
So if you're a marketer, you need a blog post written or an email or you needed, you know, copy written for an ad, whatever it was, they just made a standalone tool that would do that under the hood. It's, you know, the open AI model is doing 80 90% of the work, they may be customized the last last mile of it. But they were so good at internet marketing that they started running Facebook ads on this thing. And it's the fastest company I've ever seen get to 50 million in ARR. They get to 50 million ARR in one year, which is to go from zero to 50 million in revenue in one year is just absurd. And the way the reason they were able to do that is because their background as internet marketers as guys were like, as soon as I have anything that works, I will just plow the maximum amount of cash into Facebook as as I can. And I will just keep optimizing the ads until I get this thing, you know, a dollar in equals $1.50 out or dollar in equals $2 out. And that's why they were able to be so successful early on because they had a different skill set than most of the Silicon Valley people. Most of Silicon Valley don't ever run payed ads. That's just like a pretty crazy thing.
I think like if we just go to the difference then like a challenge for anyone in these companies that gets this wedge and like is rare to see zero to 50 in one year, that's pretty special. But even if you get like a product to hit in terms of initial adoption, then I think the like the next $999 million of revenue has to be like, I think more traditional moats. Because the problem is if it was, I'm not saying the distribution piece was easy, but let's say you were just first with an idea and like you hit it on Reddit because it's a novel capability. Like I think then you need to get to traditional like reasons companies get really big product velocity, depth of product ability to serve the customer or social engagement or something. So like if you think about companions, it could be like what are the arguments for like why somebody gets to dominate that business.
There's a version of a companion business or any business with paid spend and you know this really well that is like just a treadmill. I make money, but I have to keep putting money in. It's the opposite of compounding. And if I like stop working hard or other people compete with me, like the treadmill gets steeper or I fall off. And I think one simple answer is on companions, do you guys ever play the Sims growing up? Sure. Like it's very hard for me to not imagine the Sims better if the characters are like smarter and like richer in interaction and have like what looks like realistic video and voice. And so like technically instead of it just being like I'm talking to a person, it could be you know that person has some combination of memory of me, other interactions, goals, and like the media experience of them is richer. And we haven't gone there yet. But I think like there's a version of that company that's somewhere between like a companion and a game world that will be very big.
It's kind of an interesting exercise. Well, if I could just get to a million, then I've increased my likelihood. And then maybe I can get that to 10 and then 100 and then a billion. I actually firmly believe that if something can scale to 10 million, there it may take a while. But if it can get to 10, it can almost always get to 100. Like there's enough people in the world to make that work. But it's actually an interesting exercise to think of all the things that you need to do in order to make those jumps. Now getting it to a billion, I've actually that's been hard for me to figure out how to do that. But that's a fun exercise to think. Well, if I can just get to a million, I bet you I can get to 10. And if I get to 10, I know for a fact I can get to 100.
Yeah, by the way, the Sims lifetime sales $5 billion. So without AI, the Sims was able to get to $5 billion in sales. If you made it more engaging by AI powering all those characters, that's going to be even stickier. It's going to be a big business, right? Hey, Sarah, why dude, you're like pretty in the know, fuck this fun thing. Like why don't you just go do this? The size of the beyond these go make one. This sounds way more fun than investing in it. I get to I like really like doing the zero to one thing repeatedly, right? And so I think you just have to figure out what you're motivated by.
I am really motivated by working with people that are entrepreneurs that I like and respect and I think are super special. And I do not like working with people that that I don't have as much enthusiasm about. Right. That's like a very specific personality trait and like law of large numbers as soon as you manage very large teams, not everybody is going to be at the same level. And so like doing investing, like making being able to contribute to other people being successful that are really special. And then the competitive nature of be right with skin in the game and then know what is happening.
Like I like all of that, but I never say never. And we incubate companies where like it's essentially like, oh, I see it, I see it, I see it. And then there's frustration that like the right, you know, a set of people you're really excited to back just hasn't come together around a certain idea. Sean, you are more technical than me, but you're still not technical. I would say, but you're more than me. But a Sam Park classic compliment. Thank you very much. You're not a technical, you're more technical than me, but you're not technical. You're almost good looking. You're out of the me, but I'm a long year three. Did you, when you're, I know you've been like studying this stuff, when you like, this seems like a really fun weekend thing just to play with.
Are these actually, would it be really hard for me to learn how to do this? Would it be hard to build one of these? Just like a really simple project because I now, she's, Sarah's getting me all hyped on this show. I'm like, this looks really fun to mess around with. Yeah, I mean, I think it's like anything else. You got it. You'd have to have a partner to speed you up. Like you learning to code to be able to do these things. It would be the slow way of doing it versus the easy way is you find an engineer who's excited about this and doesn't have clarity of vision around it. Maybe doesn't have a, doesn't want to run the business side of things and you say, great, hey, let's build X together. I have a clear idea that X will work, and I'll handle the marketing side. You got to make this product do do this. And that's not so hard. That's pretty easy. This is exciting. You can see a lot of cool shit.
Let's do some of your specific kind of thesis. So you have this website, Conviction.com. Good website, by the way. How did you get that domain? I'm an internet person. Yeah. Okay. Did you see her website? She has a website for her. I think it's the incubator where you got to like code in order to get access it. You don't really code, but like the menu is set up like that. It's a little, yeah, it's a little CLI. What's that URL? I think it was called commit. It was like our program for like hackathons, college students, etc. Yeah. Commit.conviction.com, Sean. It's a pretty cool website, actually. Oh, you open up. It's a terminal. Yeah. Oh, God. Let me see. Let me try to do this. So run. No. Run. You just got to break it. Yeah. Job.html. You got to type in help. So if you type in help, it like gives you the menu anyway. It's like a folder. I don't know. I don't know how to do this.
All right. So you have a website with a bunch of basically like request for startups or things that you think are going to be built in AI. So let's run through some of these because that's actually why initially was like we got to have her on the pod to kind of talk some of these out. So let's do one that's you call your personal seller. Do you remember this? You might have wrote this a while back, but your personal seller. It might have been one like my partner, Pronov Redis or something, but we can certainly talk about it. Yeah. Okay. I'll give you the summary. So the summary is your personal seller. I think the idea here is that there's a bunch of places online to sell stuff at C and eBay and Amazon and a bunch of different places to sell things. But actually doing that is a bunch of work like creating the store listings, changing prices, writing the copy, all of that. And I think what you're saying is somebody should be able to just like have a product and then the AI should be able to like do the actual ecom management of the setting up the shop and running it. Is that what that means? Yeah. I think like it's probably it matches like a larger theme that I really think is exciting about AI, which is like because all of these skills and it could be run a basic like social marketing campaign, right? Or like send email to your customers that are likely to be repeat customers or improve your website for indexing. Like there are a bunch of things that are probably not related to let's say it's a let's say it's a Shopify drop shipping store for like a particular type of sock and you love socks as an entrepreneur, it's not like related to the merchandise decision or the design decision of like what is the sock I want to give the world. Right. And like that's kind of the essence of like why like sometimes people become entrepreneurs. And so can you can you take a bunch of these tasks that require skills and all these different domains and just automate them at least at a basic level? Like I think you can now, right? And I think like that there are the platforms Shopify and Square, etc. They're like, you know, they now have native assistant products that help you use the platforms better. But I think across the spectrum of how to be a good internet entrepreneur, like in the e-commerce sense, I think there's more opportunity there.
How do companies do that now? So let's just say you're a company with 10,000 SKUs. How do you get accurate descriptions for all of them? Well, usually if you have 10,000 SKUs, you have like, it's a they have like, you don't have 10,000 unique, totally variant. Yeah, but you get a size variance, things like that. So like I'll give you, I'll tell you in our case, right? So I have an e-com store and we have, we spend, let's see, probably like five or six grand a month on just Shopify per plus or whatever, like the enterprise Shopify thing. So that's just the Shopify cost. On top of that, I would say we probably have another three to five grand a month on Shopify apps. So you need an app for search. You need an app for bundles. You need an app for this, that, you know, there's like a ton of things that Shopify doesn't provide.
So my all in just software cost is at least 10 grand a month, probably a little bit more on top of the fees they take of every transaction. Then I have an e-commerce store manager. His job is just to like run the store, like we have new products coming up, make sure those launches go well, move things around. Oh, this is broken. There's a bug, whatever. We then have a merchandiser. The merchandiser goes every day, looks at the collections and says, this thing is sold out. It shouldn't be at the top anymore. We don't have sizes for this or we don't have colors for this. So let me move this other thing to the top or hey, the season just ended. These need to be rearranged. So there's a human being that does that.
There's also apps that do that, but you kind of need the app plus the software today because the app's not quite good enough to do it by itself. We then have VAs that go in and they do all the product pages, the descriptions, the templates, the tagging so that our inventory data is correct because we need to be able to analyze our inventory to do that. You need to tag every product accurately.
So there is like four or five people that are just making sure the store runs in addition to five apps that make the store run. That all today shouldn't be the elite, like future state of things. That's just the current state of things. And Sean, I think the future state is for entrepreneurs who cannot recruit, manage, pay the five people it takes to run your store. Like, what do they do, as Sam said? Like, I think it will be easier in the future. I think this is also kind of similar as an idea to all of the another area that we are, and I'm personally really interested in is the voice automation market.
I think a lot of your listeners will have seen the GPT-4O demo where it's a voice that may or may not sound like ScarJo talking in real time. Well, we played with 11 Labs. But that's dubbing. She's talking about just being able to like Alexa, you just talk to it, and it just talks back and it'll sound like Scarlett Johansson just like chat GPT, but you don't have to type. Yeah, but both of these things either like it could be in your voice or like some spokesperson for a brand or a company, but like the ability to give reasoned, you know, knowledge-based responses in a human voice, I think it's just really powerful, right? And I don't think people are thinking enough about the opportunities here where you mentioned 11.
There's like exactly one independent voice API business in tens of millions of revenue, and that's 11. They're great. That's amazing. I think there are other opportunities. So like, there's a company called Cartija that does like more real-time voice, for example. You think 11 is, by the way, 11 Labs, you think they're at tens of millions in revenue? They are definitely at, you know, a large number that is in the tens of millions of revenue. I'm not surprising a market with that. But, you know, a lot of developers who immediately gravitate toward API business, but that is not how the rest, like the world is full of niches and people running businesses that don't think about APIs and won't use them, right?
And so like, just to just like, you know, your personal seller, I think there are going to be a bunch of interesting voice services for everything from restaurants to HVAC companies to dental reception that are just like, answer the phone. I think that's one of the ideas we had. And it could be informational. Like, we are open from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. or a lead generation business where I'm like, well, like my plumbing broke and like, are you available tomorrow at 3 p.m.? I'm a huge believer in this. Huge. Like, I'm one, Sean. This simple idea. So, you know, like, when the internet came out, it was like, oh, it's going to be so crazy. But like, one of the obvious things was like, hey, every restaurant just kind of needs their menu online.
Like, you should put your, you should put your restaurant exists where it's located and then put your menu up there, even as a PDF that's still like value add for you. It's like, it became where every business needed a website. And now what I think it's going to have is that every business needs an agent. And so what's the agent for most small businesses? So like, I call pest control, because we always get a little bunch of like mice jumping in our pool for whatever reason. And try calling pest control. Nobody ever picks up the damn phone. And because there's usually, it's usually run by like, it's like Mike's pest control and Mike's out in the field doing things all day.
Controlling the patch. Actually doing work. And so he doesn't pick up the phone. And so then you leave a message and you're like, you, and then, but you call 10 of them because you're not sure if Mike's gonna get back to you. So then it becomes whoever gets back to you first. Mike loses his business because Mike doesn't pick up the phone. Mike also is not going to hire somebody to just sit there and wait for the three phone calls a day that he's going to get. It just wouldn't make sense.
控制这个区域。真正地做工作。所以他不接电话。于是你就留言,你说你,然后,但是你又打了10个电话,因为你不确定 Mike 会不会回你电话。所以谁先回你电话,谁就得到了生意。Mike 失去了生意,因为他不接电话。而且,Mike 也不会雇一个人只是为了每天接三通电话,那样做不划算。
But now you go and I built one of these in our like AI, like, weekly tutoring session that I have basically. I was like, I want to build one of these. So we have the same problem for our offshore recruiting business. So we own a off-shore recruiting business called Somewhere. It's like, you can fire tip. You can find amazing talent. They're just somewhere out in the world. You just have to find them. So what Somewhere does, they find you elite talent.
但现在你去做,我基本上在我们的 AI 每周辅导课上建了一个。我当时想,我要建一个这种东西。所以我们在海外招聘业务中也遇到了同样的问题。我们有一家叫做 "Somewhere" 的海外招聘公司。你可以找到优秀的人才,他们只是散布在世界的某个地方,你只需要找到他们。所以 Somewhere 会帮你找到顶尖人才。
Now the big problem, if you go to Somewhere dot com, it's like, you say, okay, I'm looking for a designer or I need somebody who could do, who get me leads for my marketing business or my real estate business, or I need somebody to do data entry, right? So you have all these jobs. Now the button on the site is basically like, you want to start hiring? Fill out this form. So you fill out the form and then it's like, awesome, we will get back to you soon. Or it's like schedule a call. Here's the call tomorrow or two days from now. And no matter how many sales agents we have, a call tomorrow is not as good as talk to me right now about what I need.
Because right now is when I'm interested, right now is when I'm on your website, right now is when I'm not thinking about other variations of how I might solve this problem. And you have an opportunity to sell me. And so Sam, I don't know if you've seen this, but like check out bland.ai. This is one I have built. If the answer is, have you seen this? Assume it's no. And my mind is being blown by all this stuff. But basically, it lets you build a phone agent for yourself.
So I went on here and I built a phone agent. So I built a guy who can answer the phone so that when somebody goes to somewhere and they want to, they want to hire somebody, it'll be like, awesome, what are you hiring for? Have you ever hired overseas? And you're like, yeah, I have. It's like, cool. Tell me what you're looking for in a couple, you know, a couple sentences. Oh, great. It sounds like what you're looking for is somebody who could be a developer for your Shopify store. Our normal budget for that is 2000 a month. Would that work for you? Or are you looking for something a little bit more a little bit less? And then an answer is, it basically does the intake, the initial sales call for you.
And it's like, no problem. We've hired this month for 85 other Shopify brands who are looking for Shopify developers. You're in good hands. We do this all the time. We will, I'm going to start looking for candidates. Now, I'm going to email you tomorrow with three candidates. How does that sound? And the person's like, great. I guess I can just like wait for that to happen or it'll pull from our existing database. I'd be like, here's an example resume. This is the type of person we'd be looking for with this person, fit your needs. Yes or no.
So then the human salesperson will come into work and see a ticket that's like the AI agent did the initial sales call and found the customer's requirements and kind of already warmed the sale up and told the customer what they needed to know, the things you repeat every time on the phone. And now you could follow up with the more bespoke answer for that person. That's the future that I see. I wasn't able to fully build that. I did like a prototype of it. But that's what I think websites, even like ours, which is an internet business should have, which means that every plumbing and pest control and restaurant, they're going to have their version of that.
This is 100% way better than having a call center or it might or it will be when it is long so long as it works as good. But this is absolutely the way to go. All right. Let's do some more. So you have another one on here that's, I think, an easy one. That's cool. Next gen auto complete. And I think the idea here is you do a Chrome extension or a browser extension that not just like auto complete helps you fill in the next word it thinks you're going to say or how to spell a word. But what you have here is that it starts to learn your voice. So it can write your, it can help you write your emails or your blog posts in your voice, which is kind of like the next level up from auto complete next level up from Grammarly. It doesn't just kind of correct or spell check your stuff, but it actually writes the way you write because it has watched the way you write. Is that the thesis here? Yeah, yeah, absolutely. And I think it can be, you know, lots of different types of business communication, but especially like email.
So I don't know if this is this is actually my friend Mike Vernal's idea. I think he suffers from the same thing I do that might be true for you, which is like I'm an incredibly picky writer. And so I will use the models today for generation of basic content or I'll ask my amazing EA to like draft emails for me. And then I will go rewrite the whole thing, because I don't like the tone, because it doesn't sound like me or because it's not tight enough, or because I want to use a certain phrase. And I think the next level of like value and impact is definitely going to be fine tuning to specific voice. And nobody wants to write like Chappie GBT, like nobody wants to be the generic AI either. So what everybody wants is the thing in between.
This shit's all wild to me. Is there anyone right now doing that that you like? Because I would like to use this today. I mean, superhuman has like really interesting AI features, but I think the unlock is going to be the personalization. And what's your overarching investment thesis? So you have this thing called software 3.0, which by the way, most VC thing to do to be like, oh, software 3.0, web 3.0. You've done it. You've gone full VC. What is software 3.0?
Yeah. Okay. So the seed for that phrase software 3.0, it comes from actually an essay that Andrei Carpathi wrote years ago about software 2.0. And the base premise here is that like you had to write a lot of software by hand in a prior generation before machine learning. And then software 2.0, Andrei worked at Tesla, was working on autopilot, was really about data set labeling, right? You are teaching a machine learning model by the data you choose to put into the pipeline, how to do new tasks.
好的。这句话里的 "software 3.0" 这个概念其实来源于 Andrei Carpathi 几年前关于 "software 2.0" 的一篇文章。基本的前提是,在机器学习出现之前,上一代的软件需要大量手工编写。而 "software 2.0" 是 Andrei 在特斯拉工作时提出的,他当时在开发自动驾驶系统,主要是关于数据集的标注。也就是说,通过选择放入模型的数据来教机器学习模型如何执行新的任务。
Software 3.0 is the idea that the next generation of software, a lot of it is about manipulating foundation models. And they're called foundation models because they have a lot of capability out of the box. You don't need to train them from scratch. You just need to give them like guidance, reinforcement, the information specific to your business. And so an example would be like Sean was talking about for his lead capture intake form voice spot. Like he doesn't need to go train a model. He doesn't need to go like collect data for that software application. Like the voice agent is a software application. He just needs to like make sure it's plugged into his scheduling system and his database of candidates and be able to retrieve the right information about the business and like, you know, respond consistently to customers in a certain tone, right? And so that's more about like manipulating a bunch of this base work that people like lads have already done for you. And the premise here is like that last mile of getting a foundation model to be like something that serves all these use cases in the real world that, you know, maybe the research labs think of as niches like the world is composed of very large niches. And so I think it's a thing is a really big opportunity for entrepreneurs and for us.
What are some of your like hot takes or maybe your contrarian takes anything that you think that might be counter to what the most people say most people do most people are betting on. Do you have anything that is against the grain? You know, I'm gonna get I'm gonna give a like a somewhat arrogant answer, which is I don't spend a lot of time trying to figure out what the entire market thinks. Okay. So I'm like, I don't know which of these things are contrarian. I can tell you where like my opinion has changed dramatically. Like let me give you one example for many years in including, you know, the tenure of my investing at Graylock. I was one of several people who were like, okay, we're gonna go understand healthcare and digital health. And I was like, Oh, healthcare sucks, right? It's a quarter of the economy. It's really important. How could you not want to work on this mission? But it is so slow and the incentives are so screwed up that like trying to enter that market with technology or the speed of entrepreneurship that you know, Silicon Valley entrepreneurs are seeking is like not a good idea. And we just did a healthcare administration automation company. So I'm like, oh, it's like change my mind real hypocrite here. And like one of the reasons being I'm like, well, if you think about the mind numbing work that happens in healthcare administration, like billing authorization, coding claims processing, like all like even not even mind numbing, but just like expensive and manual like patient support. It's actually really fertile for an AI company. And you know, we back something that's like growing really quickly in one of those domains. Right. And so I just say like, I guess I've changed my point of view on healthcare. I went to the pediatrician yesterday. My doctor is with my baby there and I'm sitting there and she's got her iPad on like a table. And there's a video like there. And I'm like, who the fuck is that guy? And they're like, Oh, that's just like my scribe. I he's just listening in and he's and he's taking notes. But she was like, I used to stay up until 3 a.m. taking notes on all of my patients. Oh, wow. They just do it for me. And obviously the wheels are turning my head. I'm like, yeah, that that job is going to be unnecessary in a few years. But it was amazing to have a medical scribe. I've never seen such a thing. And she's like, Oh, this has been around for a long time. I was like, I've never seen that.
Yeah, I do need one framework for like your listeners, like thinking about different ideas is like, what parts of work have been outsourced services already? Right? Because like it used to be the doctor taking the notes. And they're like, wow, we pay this person a lot. And like they should see more patients and think about their patients more like, let us outsource that to a cheaper tech in our office. Let us like outsource that tech to endear the Philippines. And now there are a number of scribe businesses in medicine that are growing really fast, like a bridge, nobla freed, like it is happening. And so I think that will happen in a bunch of different areas where like basically if you can create separation of that work already to outsource it, then maybe you can outsource it to a machine as well.
Yeah, Sam, moment had a good thing. He was like, everybody worries about AI taking your job. That's not the right way to think about it. It's AI will take your tasks. Like, you have to think about it not at a job level, but at a task level, there are certain tasks it can do really well. There's certain tasks that can't do really well. There's certain tasks today, it can't do that in the future it can do. And so eventually a job becomes a bundle of tasks. But for now, it's you can't think of the whole bundle because it can't replace the whole job, but it can replace specific tasks, which might be just the way it works in the long run is that there's a huge slew of tasks that can be done by AI. And then there's people that bundle those tasks together to make sure that they're getting done well or at the right time.
I think that's like approximately right. But to be intellectually honest, like that there was a scribe in that outsourced BPO that had that job. And so it's not taking the doctor's job, but it's taking the piece of the job that like the doctor's job that already got separated out the task that they didn't like. But that became a job of its own. Yeah, the job goes back to being a task basically in this case. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. It's a good framework. Sarah, are you are you investing exclusively in AI-related businesses? I am a technology investor. I'm not a machine learning researcher. I've been working on this stuff for a handful of years. And I really believe it. I think it was like the most important thing to happen in technology in a long time. But I'd say like I'm also here just, you know, investing great tech companies. And so you're also here to get paid. I am also here to work on things that will work that are important. Right. And so like if an entrepreneur that I think super highly of or like that I've worked with before or whatever comes to me and says like, I have a great idea, nothing to do with AI, I'm still definitely going to be really interested in that. If you ask me like, what are the ideas that we think about or are hunting, it is all in AI.
I do want to put one more thing out there, which is definitely not a idea that just anyone can go after. It's kind of the opposite of the like easy wedge idea in terms of how can I put distribution around like one functionality for a niche on a model like a AI headshot application or something. But I do really want to hear from anyone who has a point of view on what happens to the like Nvidia compute monopoly and overall what's changing in the data center. I don't know if this is a hot take to your former question, but like I think a lot of people intellect in technology really, the intellectual like are like, oh yes, of course, workloads are changing from not AI to AI, but they don't actually think about like what that means in terms of scale and market cap. Like that means like chips, memory bandwidth, networking, energy, storage, optimized system design. Like that was a lot of technology company market cap before.
And so like if that's true, there's going to be a bunch of different like new specialized solutions and it's trillions of dollars of value at stake. And it's not just like single direct attack on Nvidia that is like the opportunity. What else would be in that category? If it's not just like, hey, our chip is better than Nvidia's chip. What else is what is it? What's another shape of a company that could be in that that space? So I guess an example would be like, well, what are other bottlenecks like memory bandwidth? What like what if you design storage to be specific for AI data centers? What if you like you could do cooling systems? Like there are, if you just reimagine the entire data center around like big AI inference, I think you end up with like totally different needs.
The the New York Times had this article the other day. I don't remember the stat entirely, but it was something like the amount of AI capacity or in chips like currently created right now. We need to create like another like four trillion dollars in market cap in order to satisfy like the amount of capacity that we have. And they were sort of writing it in a way of like I don't know if we're going to be able to do that. But then when you think about it, the other way around where you think about, well, in 1998, if you said like, you know, how big is the internet going to be? I'm sure it went far beyond virtually 100% of the experts opinion as to how big it will get.
And I remember reading this article the other day, and I was like, that's just absolutely astounding that we're in one of these moments. Sequoia. Sequoia came out with a sort of blog post or I don't know, PDF or something like that about this, the thing they called it the $600 billion hole or something. It was basically saying, well, we've invested this much or we're investing this much in CapEx. So if you invest that much in CapEx, what do you need to get out to make that, you know, return? That's a VC saying that, which is which is not just like some journalist who doesn't get it, who doesn't get tech. Sarah, what was your reaction to that? What's your take on that?
I think it is a lot of CapEx. I think if you put it in context of like, how does it compare to other big CapEx spends in the past, let's say like the broadband build out, like, well, we wanted the internet, you know, like we spent about $2 trillion on broadband to date. Like, we're not there yet, right? That was worth it. And so what I would say is, yes, like, it's a totally valid question. We're spending a lot of money. What are we going to get out of it?
I think we're going to get a lot of value. We had Darmesh on the Darmesh founded HubSpot. Darmesh is amazing. Yeah, he's really wise. And he tends to be right more than he's wrong. And I think he said something great when I asked him, I'm like, man, I'm a little nervous about a lot of the stuff where the world is going to go. And he's like, well, I'm fairly educated. And I think that it's not going to be as good or bad as you think it's going to be. Do you agree with that sentiment?
No, I think it's actually pretty bimodal. I think it'd be like bad or and it's like, it could be much, much better. Great. It's the opposite. It's either going to be much worse or much better. It's got to take. What's the bad situation look like? Like, for example, I think the bad situation, and I'm fairly uneducated. So take it with the greatest salt. The very bad situation is that there's just going to be this massive gap between the halves and the halves. And like, if you have money now, that's going to grow and you're going to be awesome. Bad situation is AI kills us all, right? That's the doom situation.
That's a bad situation. But then in route to that, there is just this massive separation of the halves and halves not. You have not. You know what I'm saying? That kind of freaks me out. What's your where do you see the bad situation going going towards? So I think it is not necessarily that correlated that your resources or your capital today mean that you most take advantage of the of the AI revolution, right? I actually think people have a lot of agency in this. I think go start these businesses, make a million dollars. That's such a small group of people.
What does it have to be? Because of human nature, how many people know about this shit? Well, your parents are tech entrepreneurs, but go ask Sean's mom and dad. I go ask my parents, go ask my brother and sister, like, you know, I'm not entrepreneurial. Even if this widens the number of people who can be successfully entrepreneurial, it's not going to like, it's going to go from 0.1% or whatever, 1% of the population to, I don't know, not 50, right? And that is not going to go that far.
Yeah, I don't know if it has to express in pure entrepreneurialism versus like, you will get increased productivity for people in lots of different types of jobs. And it's not obvious to me that's like just the people who are already most highly paid today. You're somebody who thinks a lot about AI. You spend your time in the AI ecosystem. A lot of very smart people are actually worried about the doom scenario from Elon Musk to we had Emmett Sheer on the podcast and Emmett's a smart thoughtful guy. And he's like, you know, the P doom, the probability of actual doom here is it's pretty scary. It's not zero. And here's, you know, here's where I think it is. What do you think about that? What are the odds that AI truly is sort of like a critically dangerous thing?
You know, I don't actually spend a lot of time thinking about this problem because the because it is like conjecture in the future of both the objectives of these models and capabilities of these models that are kind of like hand wavy, right? Like, like, I think when you talk to experts about some of the suggested scenarios, like here are two classic ones. Oh, you know, people are going to use this to design a virus that kills us all, um, bio weapons or somebody is going to make the objective for a foundation model that is super powerful to be like, make the most money or generate the most paper clips. And it's going to take over all the resources in the world and kill us all. There's no linear path from here to there. And so when when people ask me about like the doom scenario, like I am much more concerned about abuses, we actually do understand. So for example, like, what if people don't understand what information is true or not, or like people are going to use this stuff for hacking and fraud and lots of like bad activities today.
And like we should go understand that and react as quickly as possible to that. And as a country, like probably want to stay ahead on these capabilities technically. Well, have you heard any what are some what what's a wild example of how people use this for hacking or for fraud? Oh, I mean, like for my company, we get emails from me. It's not really me. And sometimes it will have or like it'll have a link to something that sounds like it's in my voice. Yeah, I think that's the simplest example, which is, well, like what happens if you can create really authentic sounding media, like, you know, are your parents like, you know, going to not pick up the phone if it's a spoofed phone number and it sounds like you and you say you need something, like, that's a bad scenario. And so I think we need more tools to protect against that. And general education about it. So I worry more about that. And then I'd say, like, I think of the probability of a bad scenario. I said it was like, it is possible. I can't see exactly how we get there.
And if you ask me, like, what are the reasons in which broad use of cheap intelligence are going to be great, I can give you so many reasons, right? So Andrei Carpoffi just started a company around education. And like the the fields that have been super resistant to cost improvement, basically health care, the government and education, like, I think this will actually move the needle on some of the domains that matter a lot to all of us humans. And I think like when when people talk about like the doom scenario is really fun and scary to talk about the dystopian doom scenario. But I think the opportunity costs of not exploring the ways in which like, you know, you can have an economy of abundance. We need to talk about that. And that is really what I focus on.
Sam, do you know who Andrei Carpoffi is? No, but I love his name. It's a lovely name. Andrei is a is a amazingly well respected research scientist and educator who's trying to create like an experience that is AI powered in education where like the most amazing expert in a domain is like a personal tutor taking you through the material interactively. And he's one of like the five big thought leader type guy, he ran Tesla's AI program. In terms of self-driving cars, he was like one of the let's say five most known and respected guys about that. He then went to open AI. He then quit open AI. It says he's listed as a co-founder of open AI. So I guess he was a man.
He was like the early, early mind behind it. And Tesla, he was basically the guy leading their entire self-driving unit. I think he's I forgot what his title was, but he's like, you know, chief AI guy. When I lived in San Francisco, it was a fun period. I lived there from 2012 to basically 2020 or 2022. And back then it was like the Airbnb's of the world and Tesla or Uber and we had sidecar back then where it was like, holy crap, we're going to get into a stranger's car. And this is so exciting. This is so new. And you'd go to hackathons and people were working on like meal delivery services. And that was like really cool.
I went recently or this was about a year ago. And I was walking around the ferry building. And this kid recognized me. He's like, Oh, Sam, I, you know, I like the pod. I go, Hey, what's up, man? And he said, I'm doing a hackathon right now in the ferry building upstairs, doing your wife want to come up and like see what's going on. And I was like, hell yeah, let's do it. And so we go up there. And it was so invigorating. I was like, dude, we used to do these exact same thing, but it was around like the sharing economy and all this type of stuff. And they were, I was just talking to people what they were building. And I remember thinking like, this is like totally, I guess it happens in San Francisco a bunch. I was like, this is like the Renaissance. Like there's something really, really cool going on. And everyone was doing AI stuff. And I just thought it's magical.
Right when I moved there, it was like mobile was the thing. It was like, Oh, X for mobile. Everything we got to make we got to make it work on an iPhone and an Android. And then you would see like, you know, some like false flags like front back came out. It's like, Oh shit, this is the next thing. This is the next big social app. And then it would kind of die. But then, you know, Instagram snapchat, you know, they actually they stuck. And I remember early days of musically that now become TikTok. And so mobile was like the big thing at the time. Then it became crypto and it became the crypto hub. But it started to lose a little bit of the steam for crypto because crypto was a lot more international. But now it looks like for AI San Francisco, at least as back as the hub.
So are you in San Francisco? Yeah, we're in the mission in San Francisco. And like, I think we really believe in the sort of like community aspect of not in the like, maybe in the squishy sense, the word to, but like, if you're thinking about looking for ideas for companies and being inspired to like, be committed to the grind and have the right ideas, then the right thing to do is not do it like alone in your basement. What you have in San Francisco are people who are optimistic and then like work oriented, they believe lots of things are possible. They're learning about what's going on at the frontier. And we actually do this grant program in bed, embed.com to create that kind of community and a bunch of other stuff. But it is, it is around this idea that you people want to have the experience that you described, San, which is like, well, like, not all of this is going to work.
But what are smart people trying that is some version of the future in this area of AI? And like that will probably educate and inspire me. And some of it will be really big. Yeah, I think that like, if you're 22, and you're young and single, and you're into the shit, I would just say two words, I would say, go West, go West, young man. By the way, people always talk about San Francisco. It's dangerous. It's dirty. It's lawless. That's the appeal, baby. You can say you, you made it in the war torn city of San Francisco. You don't want to be a billionaire who was coddled. You want to be a billionaire who grew up on the mean streets of San Francisco. You can not that mean.
All right, I think we have to wrap up. Tara, thanks for coming on. We're sure people find you and where should they follow you? You can just Google Sarah Guea or conviction.com. And I'm on Twitter. I'm all right. That's it. That's the fun. Thanks guys. On a roll, let's travel never looking back.