Step By Step Guide To Make $10 Million And Then Totally Blow It
I sold that business for $10 million and then two years later I was dead broke because once again I forgot all about love. I squandered the love. I forgot my small successes and made them into a big failure.
$70 million was a lot of money for me at the time. And I couldn’t sleep at night until I gave back every dollar to the people who gave it to me.
I was running the sort of fund where people gave me money and then I invested it in other funds. The only problem was, I couldn’t figure out what funds were total scams and what funds were legit. In retrospect, I think about 9 or 10 of the 12 funds I was invested in were total scams.
For instance, and this is all in the SEC filings, one fund manager stole $10 million from his fund that I was invested in. He then paid a $50,000 fine when he was caught.
Now he’s nowhere. I mean, he’s somewhere but I can’t find him. We’re Facebook friends but the last update was him sitting on a beach and it was updated about five years ago.
My investors were furious. They had been making money every month with me. They didn’t want their money back.
When I told them I was going to give them their money back, with profits, they were so upset many of them didn’t want me to take a fee.
In every business I had ever started, even ones that had totally failed, I had kept good relations with the investors.
Except for this one. Not a single relationship survived even though I had made money for everyone.
When you can’t figure out how you are making money. It’s time to change.
In 1998 when kids in high school were learning how to make websites, I sold my website design business for $15 million.
Two years later almost all website design businesses were out of business.
And now in 2006, when no matter how hard I tried to figure it out it seemed like the world economy had gone crazy and I didn’t understand how these funds were making money.
I pulled out all the money.
But I needed something to do or I would quickly go broke. I don’t want to act here like I was totally altruistic. I was so miserable all the time.
I felt like I had failed and I was also having problems in my marriage.
The sort of problems where you’d get in an argument and get kicked out of a car in the middle of nowhere.
I decided to do the only thing I knew how to do and the only thing that has ever made me money ever.
I took one thing I loved and married it to another thing I loved. And, thus, created a new thing. I loved Internet businesses, having built and sold one. And I loved the financial business, despite the fact that it was almost all a scam.
– I shut down my fund.
Then, each step that follows was critical to success. If I missed one of these steps I would’ve failed. Each step was a small step. If you focus on big steps, you’ll slip on the small steps.
1) I spec-ed out a website I wanted to make: a financial site that had no news on it but was focused on building community by exchanging ideas. I wanted to give people a way to make good decisions on their own.
When I say “spec”, I wrote down what all the buttons on the front page would do and what other content would appear on the front page.
I completely defined the next five layers of the site and what buttons and actions and content would occur on each page.
2) Once I had the spec, I went to a firm in India and asked them to design five pages of the website. Just the design. No code. This cost me $500.
3) I showed a potential distribution partner (thestreet.com) those pages and worked out a deal where they would help me get traffic AND they would place ads in exchange for 50% ownership.
They had a billion pageviews a year so I said, “YES!!” (Actually, not quite true. I said, I was thinking 3% ownership for them and Tom said, “No, 50%” and then I said, “YES!!”)
4) I paid the Indian firm to finish the site. This cost $2000. Then I came up with more ideas for the site and more ideas and more ideas and although we did a soft launch at version 1.0, we did a hard launch at version 5.0 about five months later.
5) I got my friends to use the site. First I created over 700 fake users and manually entered in probably over 10,000 pieces of data onto the site just to make it useful right away.
Don’t be afraid to do things manually to get things going on your site. Even with user-generated content it’s ok if you are the first 1000 users if you expect a million users to benefit from it.
Every successful business, even Google, Facebook, Twitter, started with a combination of manual improvements and friends of the founders using the site.
– I got my friends to write reviews of the site on their popular blogs. I wrote articles that would link back to the useful content on the site. I guest blogged on many different websites. This is how you get users back to your site.
Everyone asks me, “how do I get users to my site”. The above is the answer. It’s the only answer.
Don’t forget: when you start a website, it’s not yet a trusted site. So you have to bring people from a trusted site to your site to build up the trust in your site.
This is true for any site: financial sites, bird-watching sites, weight loss sites, sports sites, whatever.
– I created three areas of community on the site: a way for people to message and have “friends.” A user-generated forum system, and a Q&A system. The Q&A system in particular generated 40% of the traffic the day after it launched.
– I had ads on every page at this point. A million users a month. And no employees. So we were profitable. We were making about $100,000 a month with zero employees in just four months.
Being too afraid to build this into a big business, I sold the site almost instantly.
I could’ve used other examples. I could’ve used the debit card business I started. The delivery service I started. The mental health hospital I was involved in.
The billion revenues business I’m on the board of directors of and the many other businesses I’ve advised and consulted with and invested in.
But the lessons are all the same.
Lessons Learned
Get down on your hands and knees and scrub:
Even when something is scalable, don’t be afraid to get down on your hands and knees and be the first part of that scaling.
Don’t expect anonymous users to do all your initial hard work. Don’t expect computers to do all your initial hard work.
YOU do all your initial hard work.
Free content on the front page:
I had so much free content available it obscured the design. Everyone cares too much about design. Value is 10x more important than design.
Outsource incremental stages:
First we designed pages, then after we knew we were going to get big distribution, we made the rest of the site.
Then, based on user feedback and more ideas, we designed four more versions before an official launch. The site changed drastically from version 1.0 to version 5.0.
Diversify your distribution:
Although there was one primary source of distribution (thestreet.com) where I was getting traffic from, I also worked out deals to get traffic from AOL. Yahoo, Forbes, Reuters, and basic advertising.
Here’s how to not worry about competition:
I had competition but they were doing the “build it and they will come” technique. 95% of businesses forget that it’s important to be the first heavy users of your product.
A restaurant is a great example of this. The initial success of a pizza restaurant doesn’t depend just on how good the pizza is, but how many of your friends and their friends come in the door to buy it. Don’t be afraid to call everyone in your rolodex to come on over and try the pizza.
Actually, this is not quite true either. When I first realized I had competition, I cried. I actually called the developers in India and told them it was all over. They had to cheer me up.
One thing I learned ultimately, was that the biggest asset the business had was the passion my partner and I had for it.
That passion was much higher than the passion of our competitors so we ended up creating and implementing the best ideas. End of competition.
I didn’t know anyone:
I cold-called Yahoo, AOL, and Forbes to get on their radar.
In fact, I had a “negative network”. The first guy I called at Yahoo said he knew me. “Oh yeah?” I said because I had no idea who he was.
He said, “yeah, I invested in your wireless Internet business and lost my investment.”
You would think that would have hurt my chances. Yahoo became one of my biggest sources of distribution after that call. That guy became my biggest advocate within Yahoo.
The key is to anticipate what they might want, show them how it will cost them nothing but they will get huge benefit from it, and then just simply do it.
Make it as easy as possible for the other side to say “yes” before you ask them.
If you want someone to say “yes”, show them exactly what “yes” looks like and show them that it is already made.
Combine interests:
I had been 20 years already in the technology business (since I was in college). And I had been in the financial industry for about seven years then.
So I combined interests and made the best financial website. Nobody else was as well-placed in this intersection as I was.
Make the business you would use:
I wanted a site with no news, but tons of interesting ideas, perspectives, ideas, and community.
Investing based on news is the fastest way to poverty but it is very common in the hedge fund business for professional investors to call each other and exchange ideas. Hedge fund managers are on the phone all day with each other.
I made it very simple for everyone, and not just hedge fund managers, to do that online.
ABD:
Always be dealmaking. Even though I had a 50% distribution partner right from the beginning I was constantly meeting with companies and people to see what extra deals I could make.
I would come up with ideas about the value I could deliver them and then I would offer up that value. Maybe they needed a white label version of my site.
Maybe they needed content from my site. Maybe they needed their blog to be distributed on my site, maybe they wanted their newsletter sold on my site.
I did any deal I could do. Until finally I sold the site. But that wasn’t even the final deal. I stuck with it and the site continued to grow.
Nothing is a straight line:
There were constant cases where the code was bad on the site and the site would crash if it had too many users at the same time. Every other week I thought I was going to have a heart attack because the site kept crashing.
And some companies were very slow to do deals with me. Some companies outright rejected me (Google). You can’t be bitter or burn bridges. There may come another day, another company, or all the people at Google might move to other places where you do business with.
The key here is to always stay in touch and provide monthly updates showing how you are improving things. Always be willing to help people no matter what.
How do you know when to give up?
Every step of the way I was willing to give up if I didn’t see some form of traction. Sometimes that meant more users.
Sometimes that meant more profits. Sometimes that meant more technology that I really liked and ideas implemented that people wrote great reviews about.
Build community by hand:
I traveled around the country holding meetups with the most active users so I could see with my own eyes how the site was helping people.
It was exciting to me. As long as I had that excitement, I knew something was working.
The people who showed up at those meetups became almost like ambassadors for the site. They were so active they used the site more than me. Nothing beats face to face meeting to build your ambassadors.
Why did I go myself to most of these meetups?
There’s a saying in Argentina, “When the CEO is looking, the cow grows fatter”. A business builds fastest when the CEO is looking at it.
There’s a thousand details that the CEO sees. There’s 100 details that the COO sees. There’s 10 details that the regular employee sees. And details slip through the cracks when there is nobody.
At the same time I had also started a dating site (or four) and none of them got traction even though the sites were beautiful and I had smoked my own crack and thought the businesses were great. But no users equals no traction.
Perseverance is like a fire that needs oxygen.
Love is the oxygen for perseverance. You can love it. Users can love it. Partners can love it. Investors can love it. There are a lot of sources of love. Businesses and humans need love to live.
Ultimately, you create value for people and that’s how you build the love.
Business is just the delivery mechanism of that love.
Then love + perseverance = abundance.
I sold that business for $10 million and then two years later I was dead broke because once again I forgot all about love. I squandered the love. I forgot my small successes and made them into a big failure.
So I had to start from scratch again. Which I did.