Modern WisdomThe Smartest Path to Financial Freedom - Scott Galloway
EVERY SPOKEN WORD
140 min read · 28,263 words- 0:00 – 4:32
Stop Following Your Passion
- CWChris Williamson
What is the problem with following your passion? Everyone's told that they should follow their passion. What's up with that?
- SGScott Galloway
Well, sure. But just keep in mind that the person telling you to follow your passion is already rich usually and they made their billions in iron ore smelting, and I think a lot of young people mistake their hobbies for passion. And my suggestion is that you try and find your talent, and that is something that you think you have some natural ability around and that with a requisite 10,000 hours of commitment, training, discipline, that you could become in the top 10% or even maybe the top 1%. And here's the key part. In an industry that has a 90+% employment rate, because the top 10% of tax lawyers fly private and have a broader selection set of mates than they deserve, the top 10% of basketball players, like me, get cut from JV basketball, like me, in the 10th grade. So you want to go where, um, uh, you know, um, a modest surfer can look amazing, where the waves are great and the waves are great in 98% of industries. 98% of industries have a 90+% employment rate right now. But if you want to be in modeling, sports, open a nightclub, open a restaurant, be in acting, be in the arts, I don't want to crush anyone's dream, but you better be getting pretty bright green lights from a very young age that you're in the top 1% because there are 180,000 actors in the SAG-AFTRA union. These are the most talented actors in the world and last year, 87% of them didn't qualify for health insurance 'cause they made less than $23,000. And what I have found as I've gotten older is that the, the ability to master something and become a ninja at it and then the accoutrements of that mastery, relevance, camaraderie, prestige, economic security, whatever provides you with those things makes you passionate about whatever it is. And the example I use is I'm renovating a house and this Iraqi immigrant is the soapstone guy. Everyone renovating houses in Marylebone knows the soapstone guy and he knows all the quarries, he's very passionate about the different marbling and the different colors and he talks to you and it's almost like poetry listening to him and he installs a soapstone counter for 18,000 pounds, right? And we all have to use him 'cause he's the soapstone guy and I talk to him very openly and I told him I wrote a book on financial literacy and I asked him about his, his business. He makes 1.2 million pounds a year and that type of... And he's just really passionate about soapstone and I have noticed... I'm sure he'd be interested in it, but I think this has given him such an extraordinary living that he's become really passionate about it and what I would argue is that as you get older, you become really passionate about taking care of your kids. You become really passionate about, um, doing wonderful things with your spouse, taking care of your parents and your priorities change and I, I feel like, okay, if I could change spots with Federer or Nadal, I would. I think they have a more interesting life than me but the number seven player on the men's tennis tour, I have a better life than him because I get to go to Wimbledon and buy my way in and I don't throw up before matches or have to put up with the insecurity of like, "Okay, if I don't make it to number one, does that haunt me the rest of my life? Am I gonna have enough money?" So guarantee that you might be the seventh or eighth best tennis player or football player in the world by developing mastery in a business where there's not an over-investment of human capital. And so, y- you know, your 20s is for workshopping. I thought I was gonna be an athlete. Got to UCLA and found out, no, these are real athletes, Scott. Being in the top 10% in high school is in the bottom 10% of every college D1 team in America and then I thought, well, I'll be a pediatrician and chemistry just abused me of that notion and then I thought I'll be an investment banker and I just wasn't very good at it and then I found something else. I found analytics and business intelligence. I didn't even know those things existed and I became great at it and now I'm passionate about it 'cause it's afforded me with an amazing life. And what I would just say is find... Use your 20s to try and lean into your talent and recognize that a lot of times these vanity industries just have an inverse correlation in terms of ROI. The sexier the industry, the lower the return on investment and if you can get good or great at anything and start making real money at it and be... j- just develop that pride of ninja mastery, trust me on this, you're gonna become passionate about it. So find your talent.
- 4:32 – 13:59
Do What You’re Great At
- SGScott Galloway
- CWChris Williamson
I like the idea of your passion coming out of competence. If you become good at something, on the other side of that, you're going to be passionate about it because anything that you get positive reward from, like you say, the soapstone guy. Like is it that glamorous? Like kind of, I guess, if you tell a cool story about it. Pretty fucking glamorous if you bottom line 1.2 million pounds a year though.
- SGScott Galloway
Well, and, and we're fascinated with this guy. We, we're... He, he turns our kitchen into a work of art or at least he's convinced us that this is now a work of art.
- CWChris Williamson
(laughs)
- SGScott Galloway
And he, he, he gets relevance, he gets credibility, he has a lot of people working for him that are grateful to him, um, I think he feels good about paying a lot of taxes, I think he feels really good about having influence and being able to send money home to his family in Iraq and I just... All of these things will make you passionate and as I've gotten older, yeah, I would love to play quarterback for the Jets right now, that'd be a lot of fun, but I'm, I'm not exaggerating. What's funner for me and even more rewarding is I get to take care of my dad and it doesn't... It's like no skin off my back. I can step in. My, you know, my dad's at that age, Chris, where he's just requiring a decent amount of not a lot, probably a lot less than most 94-year-olds, but he's 94 and my sister can step in 'cause she has more time than me and I can show up because I have money and it just feels really good. It just feels really good and you know, if you're... if you find someone who really inspires you or an issue that really inspires you-You can-- you know, it makes me feel strong like bull to be able to give money away. I, I don't do it because I'm philanthropic or a good person, I do it because it makes me feel strong and this is the power of mastery and kind of ninja skills in a capitalist economy and the thing about America and the UK is that, especially America, America becomes more like itself every day and that is, it's a loving, generous place for people with money and it's a rapacious, violent place for people who don't have money and I'm not... my book isn't about what should be, my book is about what is. And I think this is especially important for men and distinctive, distinct of what, you know, MSNBC or The Atlantic will tell you, I still advocate for men taking economic responsibility for their household and let me put, let me be clear, sometimes that means being more supportive of your partner who's better at the whole money thing than you. So if it ends up your wife, as are a lot of women now who are attending college in greater numbers, ends up she's better at that whole professional money thing than you, then your job as a man who took economic responsibility or at least wants to participate in it is to be supportive of her and get out of the way. My partner worked at Goldman Sachs when I started my company and I did my best to be there to get the kids up and be home for bath time because I knew like okay, she's a baller and I wanna be, I want our household to be economically robust but I think a good place to start for any man is to say I'm going to be the provider or I'm going to be take responsibility for the economics here. Um, I think that's, I, I think every man should start from that viewpoint and any, anyone that doesn't tell you or anyone that claims that your ability to attract a high character, um, uh, really good person who's really attractive as a mate, a woman, uh, and doesn't, and tells you that money isn't important is just full of shit. Uh, three quarters of women cite economic viability as a key criteria in a mate, only a quarter of men. You know, you, you've heard the stats. Men, you know, y- I think I've learned a lot of this shit from you-
- CWChris Williamson
(laughs)
- SGScott Galloway
... but let's just have an honest conversation that if you, uh, if you ask men what's important to you, "All right, I wanna have a family, I wanna be relevant, I want to attract an interesting mate, I wanna have camaraderie, I wanna, you know, be a good citizen," well boss, it all bubbles up to the same thing, you need to make a good living and so the question is well how do you reverse engineer from what is a good living and I'll never be a good skier, I'll never be a good surfer, but what I find when I'm in Hawaii, I'm actually a pretty good surfer 'cause the waves are perfect. Get to where the waves are perfect. Get to an industry where if being in the top 10% doesn't get you a SAG-AFTRA union card and basically turn you into an Uber driver but gets you, gets you the ability to have a really nice car and take wonderful vacations with your family. So I think economic, I, I think economic viability is just so incredibly important for everyone but quite frankly especially for men because men are disproportionately and sometimes unfairly evaluated on their economic vitality, women are disproportionately and unfairly evaluated on their aesthetics and we should... I'd like to see the world change, I don't see it changing. I see the, the bullshit wallpaper that oh, these things aren't as important and I find that they have not decreased one bit. As a matter of fact, I think it's actually increased in importance 'cause the reality is, you know, when I was a kid, my dad's boss had, had a slightly bigger house but he lived in the same neighborhood. You know, he had the, he had a Cadillac, we had a Thunderbird but it was still kind of the same car. Now if you have money in the US, different doctors, different schools, a set of vacations and hotels that are just totally out of reach for all but the top 1%. I'm working, you know, I, I can't get my passport for England and it ends up that I know the right senator. I mean, money just gets you in a capitalist society... I remember I did the pro- you know, the proverbial backpack trip when I was younger and we were going to Hungary and this will date me but I went into the American Express office and cashed in with my wallet belt some traveler's cheques and they gave me this stack of forints. I mean, just a huge stack. I felt like a drug dealer and I'm like oh finally I'm a baller and I'm gonna go to Hungary and I'm gonna have all this money and I went and there was nothing to buy. There was literally nothing to buy. You, you could get really good coffee and I thought okay, there's nothing to spend. We're the exact opposite of that. Every day the most talented people in the world are sending you messages that are AI tested and psychologically tested to convince you that you really should add that chocolate flow- flowers cake from Balthazar Boulangerie to your, you know, tuna cotto from Joe and the Juice that oh wait, for just $120 you can upgrade from economy to economy comfort and then for 280 why not business? It's, this is a fun weekend, this is your friends' wedding, you deserve it, this is an investment in yourself. So you are fighting an uphill battle trying to save money so that you can deploy an army of capital to fight for you and your family in your sleep. It takes real discipline because there's so much amazing shit to buy in the United States. Now the flip side of that is if you do have some discipline and you can aggregate capital and become an owner instead of an earner which should be everyone's goal, um, America just offers just an, an incredible quality of life. I just don't... I mean it just, it, it both amazes me and depresses me and the use- and the example I use is the following. I took me and my son and his six best friends... You know occasionally I just have to like show up and be dad, uh, my partner just carries so much more of the load on the, on the, on the responsibilities but occasionally I have to show up so, uh, you know, Disneyland seventh ring of w- hell, I'm gonna take, I'm gonna take our kids and their friends to Disneyland for the full day. Have you heard about this VIP tour you can get?
- CWChris Williamson
I've done it at Universal Studios but not at Disneyland.
- SGScott Galloway
Okay so you know what it is but basically it's about 800 bucks an hour so six, seven hours, it's six grand-... $6,000. But you do it, and granted I'm gonna raise like enormous assholes, right, who are incredibly privileged.
- CWChris Williamson
(laughs)
- SGScott Galloway
And you go to the Avatar ride. And you see a sign, and the sign says, "Three-hour wait from this point." So they could pass out an iPad with the movie Avatar, and you could watch it before you get to the front of the line, and you see these middle class families with three kids, with dad holding the four-year-old who's been asleep for two hours and they still got an hour to go. And then we, the really privileged and lucky ones, kind of just like lower our heads and walk by them, and then we're told when we get on the ride, "Here's the hand signal if you want to go a second time." I mean, i- i- the experience I have at Disney is just so dramatically different than the experience I used to have when I was a kid. And by the way, I'm not sure it's a good thing, but we're doing that to every part of our economy. Every part of our economy says, "If you have money, this is going to be a different experience, even though it's supposed to be the same experience." And there's some real externalities to that. But I- just the healthcare you can get if you have money. I'm- I'm struggling with my shoulders and, um, I've just- I'm- I'm just so glad I finally have some money to kind of just attack it with physical therapists and acupuncture and stuff. I'm like, "This stuff wouldn't be covered by insurance, or it just would have taken me so much time." But anyways, I- I'm- I'm- I'm both kind of... I'm discouraged when I see how important money has become in the US, the financialization of everything. But that's not what the book is about. The book is an acknowledgement that if you really want to enjoy your life and offer everything that America has, you need a concerted discipline plan for n- for financial security.
- 13:59 – 28:00
How to Achieve Financial Security
- SGScott Galloway
- CWChris Williamson
Well, you can't change the rules of the game, but you can learn how to actually play and win within them. So, how do you think about deconstructing what wealth looks like? What should people do in order to achieve financial security?
- SGScott Galloway
Well, the first off, define what wealth is. I- I- I define rich as the following, passive income that's greater than your burn. And I'll give you two examples. I have a close friend who runs the M&A group of a large bulge bracket investment bank, he makes three million in a bad year, 14 million in a great year. Because it's all current income, and he lives in Connecticut, he pays about 52% tax rate. Uh, but that's still a lot of money, but between his ex-wife, his alimony, his child support, his home in the Hamptons, his Master of the Universe lifestyle that he thinks he needs and wants to signal to his friends, I know firsthand he doesn't save a lot of money, and it is an enormous source of stress for him and on his marriage. And then, uh, he's what I call poor or the working poor. Despite how much money he's making, he's hugely stressed out. It's a hu- Money and the need for money is a huge source of stress for him. My father, between his Royal Navy pension and Social Security, and he owns about a dozen washing machines that he collects quarters from in trailer parks, he makes about $52,000 a year, without really working. He enjoys going and collecting quarters. My dad is Scottish, he's like tragically cheap. I'm pretty sure he goes home, lays the quarters out on his bed, and rolls around them- in them. I think that's probably fun for him. But his passive income, he- and he spends $48,000. He's rich. His passive income is greater than his burn. That's the definition of rich. And so, that's the point. You want to get to a point where you have enough investments that are spinning off, capital or growing such that your passive income is greater than your burn. And you can do the math, right? Well okay, if I'm gonna need $120,000 a year and I think I'll get 8% or 6% on that, I need to save two million. All right, this is how many years I have to work. I'll assume the market will go up 8% a year, you can kind of do the math around how much you should be saving and putting in to low cost index funds. So that's the goal. You want to be rich, you want an absence from anxiety, you want to be able to live well without having the obligation. If you decide to keep working, which I would suggest anyone does, it's a choice, and that r- that in itself is like a... When I sold my company in 2017 and I was finally kind of done, done, done, I felt like I exhaled relief for a good two years. It was just like, "Jesus Christ, now this is all, this is all things I wanted."
- CWChris Williamson
"I get to choose."
- SGScott Galloway
Uh-huh. I- just to digress, one of my role models, a guy named Barry Rosenstein who started Jana Partners said, "There's three buckets in life. There's things you have to do." Your biggest investors in town, you have to do it. You know, you- you get invited on Joe Rogan and this is the date, the window, you have to get there for that date, right? There's things you want to do. "Oh, I'm going to Cannes to the creativity festival," or your mates are meeting up for, you know, uh, in New York, all your friends from the UK, right? You want to do that shit. And then there's things you should do. "You know, my coworker's kid is having a wedding I really should go to." There's this, "It's South by Southwest, I got invited to a party with all these podcasters. I should go and network." I should, I should, I should. The great thing about having economic security, and Barry taught me, is he said, "You can totally delete the should bucket." I no longer do things I should, and it's actually a bit of a point of tension with my partner, but she'll often say, "Oh, we should do this. They're nice people," and I'm like, "I don't want to do this and I don't need to do this. I- I should do it, so I'm not doing it." And that is so liberating to just say, "Okay, there's just some things you have to do." The stuff you want to do, that's easy, but get rid of the should bucket. But the algorithm itself or the equation itself is the following. The first is focus, and it goes back to what we said earlier. Find something that you're naturally good at that you can become in the top 10 or to- top 1% in an industry that has a 90 plus per ten- percent employment rate and focus on it. I hate side hustles. Side hustle is fine for exploration if you're not happy with your main hustle and you can't give it up because you need the money, but it's exploratory, and if your side hustles are going on too long, it means you got to change your main hustle. Because I would bet, and I'm fairly confident that research shows this, that the incremental 10 or 20% effort reinvested into your main hustle will provide greater return than the distraction caused by an incremental side hustle.So find something you're good at that you could become great at through focus, and that's your job. Find that thing. That's not easy. The rest is, uh, uh, the product of the following, and this is probably the wrong word, but I like the word, I said stoicism. Recognize there's some things out of your control. My company went Chapter 11 in 2008 after Wells Fargo analysts pulled our credit line 'cause they did some equation showing that the market recently was going into a credit crisis. I can't control that. Um, I can't control that I got, in s- in some ways, a lot of my wealth since 2008 isn't my fault, i- isn't my fault. The market's ripped up. But I can control my spending. I can control... I can recognize that no one's thinking about my shit as much as I'm thinking about my shit, and I don't probably need a BMW at a young age. Like, uh, the first thing I did with my first bonus, uh, at Morgan Stanley, I got a $28,000 bonus, I went and bought a $35,000 BMW, and I hung swimming goggles from the rear view mirror, despite the fact I didn't swim, thinking that would, you know, impress women. And I thought about it. I thought, okay, of course, you're not smart if you do this, but if I had just bought a Hyundai for $12,000 and invested the other 20 in the markets, I think that money would be worth like 3.1 million now. So recognize there are some things within your control, uh, specifically how much you, you spend, how much you save, being thoughtful about trying to be disciplined about putting some money in low cost ETFs and index funds. So you do have some control. Focus on the things you can control. Uh, the next thing is time. One of our species' great flaws is that because for the majority of our time on this planet we haven't lived past 35, we just can't calibrate time. And strategy answers one question, what can I do that's really hard? That's basically leaning into your advantages. When you're young, you have one advantage, you have time. Most young people at 25 don't really recognize two things. One, they're probably gonna be here for another 80 years at this point if they're 25 right now. And, and this is the hard part, and you have to ignore your brain 'cause your brain isn't wired this way, it's gonna go a hell of a lot faster than you think. It's j- I look at you and I immediately think, "Oh, I'm his age," because-
- NANarrator
(laughs)
- SGScott Galloway
... I was 30 or whatever the fuck you are, you know, yesterday. It n- wow, life has gone so slow said no one ever. And if I could give you a magic box at 25 and said, "If you find 1,000 bucks to put in here, in an instant, and it will feel like an instant, in 30 years, you're gonna have 12, 16, 24,000, what kind of effort would you make to find that 1,000 bucks?" The power of compound interest is amazing. I'm, I've been doing... I'm kind of onto this idea of at some point we're gonna move back to the US, and in New York you signal with your clothes, your, your home, but you also signal with where you send your kids to school. And I'm a narcissist and, uh, big ego, and I thought, okay, I would want my kids to go to First Presbyterian or Grace Church or sort of these two tony schools downtown. Tuition is 62 grand. It's probably more than that. In the interview when we were here 10 years ago, they asked, they ask you how philanthropic you are, which is how much money are you gonna give us? But college is 62,000. You're the, you're the people who don't spend any money or give any money. Now, why do you do that? We s- uh, I bet for two thirds of the people that send their kids there, it's a sacrifice. Oh, probably a third don't care. It's like s- they're so rich in New York, they just don't care. But if you're talking about 62 grand, you're really talking about 100 grand at least pre-tax. I mean, that's real money. That's real money every year, and if you've got three kids, 300 grand. So for people, it's a financial strain, which you could argue puts strain on the whole household. Kids pick up on that strain. And why are you doing it? Well, I wanna give my kids everything. Well, what's everything? Well, I wanna give them the best chance to get in a great college. Okay, why? So they can have, you know, more options than I did growing up. What do you mean by that? What do they get? Well, a better job, more, more opportunity. Well, why do they need more opportunity and a better job? Well, so that at the end of the day they can do what they want and maybe get some economic security and afford a home and, and have a family and, and have economic security and have an absence from stress. I'm like, okay, got it. Instead of sending them to First Presbyterian and Grace, and I've heard you talk about this, there's a lot of research showing that the best school for kids is the one closest to their home, and then take, invet- reinvest that, commute time and studying, sleep, play. And try and be disciplined. Take that $62,000 a year from the age of four to 18 and invest it in low cost ETFs, on average they return 9% since 2008, 8%, now 11% since 2008, 8% since the beginning of the market. Assume it does 8%. Assume you are wrong. You sent that kid to public school and you screwed up. They didn't get into the best college, they ended up with a mediocre career, they have trouble buying their first home, they don't have... they can't live the life that you got to lead or that you'd really hope for them. Here's what's gonna ease your pain. If you were disciplined and reinvested that money you would've spent on Grace Church, by the time they are 35, you'll have $5.3 million to give to them. That will ease a lot of economic anxiety. So I would just love to have a banner that says, "Public school or 5.3 million?"
- NANarrator
(laughs)
- SGScott Galloway
You know, it's, it's... Or public school and fo- 5.3. Like, Grace Church or 5.3 million, 'cause people just don't realize how pow- how fast time goes, and how powerful compounding is. And then the last thing, and this is something, you know, do as I say, not as I do, it really killed me a couple times, took me from wealthy to not wealthy. I've been rich three times. This is the third time and I'm really hoping it sticks this time. But the first two it went away, and it's 'cause I didn't understand diversification. I always assumed that if I threw myself into anything, that I should go 110% in not only with my time but my capital, and that anything I devoted 110% of me to 'cause I was so awesome, that I could move mountains. And you need to recognize that market dynamics will trump individual performance all of the time. Most of my success and my failure is not my fault. And the way you protect against that is diversification. And now, so for example, I don't put more than 3% of my net worth in any one investment.And last week, if you'd asked me what is the best investment you had that has the most potential to be a 10Xer, I would have said it's this company I invested in, this healthcare company that does preventive mess- message, uh, excuse me, preventive medicine through text-based messaging selling into the enterprise. Baller CEO, tier 1 VC, huge, huge hitters, investors. Had to elbow my way in to get in. What a thrill I got to invest. Went out of business last week.
- CWChris Williamson
(laughs)
- SGScott Galloway
Zero. Zero, right? Uh, my investment goes to zero. And but here's the thing. It bummed me out for about an hour because diversification is your Kevlar. Okay, I lost 3% of my net worth. Doesn't mean anything. Whereas in 2008, when I was, um, running or one of my biggest investment was a public e-commerce company called Red Envelope, which was doing really well at the time, when I met with my investment bank, they s- you know, I think I owned 10 million in stock. And I said, "Well, how much can I borrow against it?" And they said, "You could probably borrow three million." And they, they said, "What are you gonna do with it? Buyout?" And I'm like, "No, I'm gonna buy more Red Envelope stock." And there, Steve Ballmer did the same thing with Microsoft and it worked out. You should assume you're not Steve Ballmer 'cause when my company went bankrupt, it meant that I owed $3 million. I went from being worth 10 million to owing 3 million. The tax on my emotional and mental wellbeing was enormous. And diversification is your Kevlar because you don't need to be a hero. You nee- don't need to find the needle in the haystack, you can buy the whole haystack and again, see above, time will go fast, you'll be financially secure. And Kahneman wrote about loss aversion theory, the joy you'll get from being smart enough to pick NVIDIA two years ago, which most of us were not, the joy you'll get of, like, a lack of diversification and the potential upside it offers is a fraction of the pain you will feel when NVIDIA gets cut by 90%. So for your own financial wellbeing, much less your own mental wellbeing, embrace diversification. Because now I just don't... I don't wanna say I don't think about my investments, I'm constantly looking for new opportunity, but because I never put more than 3% in any one thing, it's like, give me your best shot. I can take anything. It's a bullet to the chest when it goes to zero, but I got Kevlar. Yeah, it knocks me off my feet, and then I get up and I got a bruise and I'm like, "I'm fine." Nothing's ever critical, much less fatal. Whereas before when I got shot in the chest in 2000 with a dot bomb explosion, or implosion in the great financial re- recession in 2008, I almost never could get up again. I mean, I came very close to just never getting up again. So focus, find what you're good at, double down on it, um, uh, diversification, stoicism, save more than you or spend less than you make so you can save, and appreciate just how powerful time and compound interest is. And I think kind of the way I would wrap it up is, I know how to get you rich, that's the good news. The bad news is slowly. And then it's all wrapped in, and I didn't know how to put this into equation, but I call wealth a full person project. And that is, there's a myth that really wealthy people crawled over other people to get there, that they're billionaires lighting their cigars with $100 bills. That's bullshit. The majority of self-made people are actually good people. They're high character, and the reason why is if you want to be really wealthy, you need to collect allies along the way. People have to want to put you in a room of opportunities even when you're not physically in that room. They want to give you the benefit of the doubt. They want to go easy on you when you fuck up. They want to include you in deals. They want to come to work with you. They want to present opportunities to you. And the only way that's gonna happen is if you show generosity and character from, from an early age. Uh, so like I said, greatness, greatness and wealth is in the agency of others.
- CWChris Williamson
It's
- 28:00 – 37:06
Skills for Becoming Better at Networking
- CWChris Williamson
interesting to think about, um, the stuff that doesn't appear on a balance sheet, the difference between working hard and character, and just how much of a, a lever that is. You know, coming from running nightclubs for forever, all we had were our networks. That was it.
- SGScott Galloway
Mm-hmm.
- CWChris Williamson
That, that, that actually was the primary asset. It's the reason why events companies can't just pick up and move themselves somewhere else, because you don't own anything beyond your reputation in the local geographic net of that-
- SGScott Galloway
Mm-hmm.
- CWChris Williamson
... particular city. We go from Newcastle where we've got one of the biggest events companies in the north of the UK, and we go to Birmingham. Well, who the fuck's Voodoo Events? Who the fuck are you? You don't know us. There's a Voodoo Events that's been there for 15 years with some guy that's met and shook hands with a million people. I met a million people on the front door of nightclubs. That was all that we knew. And, uh, yeah, thinking about, I mean, that's a, that, that's a good point. How would you advise young guys and girls, how can they become, how can people become better networkers? What are the skills of being a good networker?
- SGScott Galloway
I bet you know more about this, this than me. I would say it's, uh, being friendly, being open, uh, being honest, transparent, um, and quite frankly, uh, I find the key to punching above your weight class is not, I mean, sure it's grit, uh, it's some talent, but more than anything, I think it's the willingness, and maybe this is grit, to endure rejection. If you're a club promoter, you've got to be comfortable going up to strange women and saying hi and introducing yourself and saying, "There's a great party here," or putting up with some douchebag asshole who's spending a lot of money and giving you a hard time and putting your own ego aside because he bought a bottle, he thinks he's, you know, fucking Prince Charles. Uh, y- y- you're just gonna have to be willing to get out a spoon and eat a lot of shit. And I've always said to the kids in my class, and I tell the story, I tell the following story. When I was, um, I had just moved to New York, on weekends I'd go down to South Beach in Miami and I got an apartment in the Continuum and I used to go out and I went to the Raleigh Hotel and I walked in and I saw a woman I was very attracted to. Or anyone would say I'm attracted to, she was very attractive. And I promised myself, "I am going to speak to that woman before I leave this hotel." And it was the middle of the day, they had a DJ, it was a pool party at the Raleigh Hotel.And I'm like, "Oh, fuck, she's talking to a... She's with a woman and a guy. I don't, I don't know how to, like, open." And I walked out, and I was at the valet, and I'm like, "Fuck, you promised yourself." So I went back and I just went up to him, right, right up to him and said, "Where are you guys from?" Anyways, long story short, 18 months later, you know, our son's middle name is Raleigh. And what I tell people is, unless you're willing to take uncomfortable risks, you're never gonna put yourself in a position of economic or professional or romantic success. Or, let me put it this way. You're never gonna punch above your weight class. And so your ability to endure rejection, your ability to put yourself in uncomfortable situations, is absolutely... You know, p- people have different words for it. Scrappy, right? But if you want, u- unless you have an unbelievable certification and you come out... Like, if you come out of MIT Business School and you're an AI prompt engineer, you don't need to have much grit. (laughs) I mean, maybe you got grit going there, but Microsoft's coming for you to offer you a world of opportunity. For the nother 99.9% rest of us, get used to emailing people who will not email you back, and then when they say they're not interested, assume that that means they want to hear from you a month later. Right? I, I don't, I... The amount... The secret to my success is rejection. I applied to nine schools, business schools. I got into two, really just one. One put me on the waiting list. I can't tell you how much rejection I've endured from women. (laughs) I mean, it's staggering. I, I ran for sophomore, junior, and senior class president. I lost all three times, and based on my track record, I decided to run for student body president where I went on to, wait for it, lose. And, uh, I've started nine businesses. Most of them have failed. One out of seven businesses succeed. So I started nine, and ou- two, and two won. And that's all you need. All you need is one good mentor, a, a few good friends, one wonderful mate, one business that works. But to get there means putting yourself in a position of rejection over and over and over. And here's the thing, it sounds easy. Most people will not do what you did in Newcastle, or, was it Newcastle? Is that what you said? They're not gonna go up to strangers and say, "Hey, there's a great party Friday night. You should come. Here's the thing on it." Texting back and forth. "Give me your credit card if you want a table." I mean, people just... The majority of people, 99% of people, will not do that. That's why in any company, the most overcompensated people relative to their IQ and their work ethic are the salespeople. And this is what they have in common. They either played with the wrong toys or the right toys, and they will get out that spoon and start calling people that don't want to hear from them and then following up, pretending to be their friend, being nice to them when they're not nice back. That is, that is the key, in my view, to success. If you're Kanye or Madeleine Albright or, you know, Stephen Hawking, you're gonna be fine. Assume you are not that person.
- CWChris Williamson
A much more reliable route to success is just resilience and an ability to eat shit.
- SGScott Galloway
100%.
- CWChris Williamson
I went back in... There's a, a way that you can view on your phone, you can see the number of messages that you've sent and received on WhatsApp. And I went in, uh, before I wiped it, when I, uh, exited the events company. I went in and I'd sent and received... I'd received six million and sent four million WhatsApp messages while I'd been on that last phone. Four million WhatsApp messages, and almost all of them had been sent, like, via fingertips. When I first launched this podcast, I went through... I think I might have about 1,000 people in my address book.
- SGScott Galloway
Mm-hmm.
- CWChris Williamson
And I went through every single one of them and sent them the same message which was, "Hey, I've just released this podcast. Would you mind subscribing on Apple Podcasts?" To 1,000 different contacts, most of whom I hadn't seen for- forever. But that was just, like, baked into the blood of what I'd kind of done. That was part of the... It was just par for the course. You, you message random people. That's how you get them to come to your, your nightclub. So, uh, yeah, basically, what we're saying is everybody should become a club promoter for a couple of years and then they can be-
- SGScott Galloway
I, I, I think there's... I would love my kids... I wanna do... I'm, uh, I'm really hoping that the election in America turns out one way and I'm thinking about taking my 16-year-old to do canvassing. Canvassing is knocking on doors and trying to get people to register to vote and then telling them, "Hi, I'm here with the Biden campaign." And a few times, there's a pit bull and there's someone who is not a Biden supporter. And it is really uncomfortable and really unpleasant. And you have to be polite, and they slam the door in your face, and then you have to go to the next house. I think that is really important for a young person to learn those skills, to recognize, "That was really uncomfortable." And in 10 minutes, they realize, "I'm fine." The first time it happens, you're traumatized. (laughs) The second time it happens, you're like, "Whatever." Third time it happens you're angry at the person. By the time the 20th time happens, you're like, "I don't care, I'm fine. I'm fine. I have-"
- CWChris Williamson
Oh, you can laugh about it.
- SGScott Galloway
Yeah. I would just, "I'm fine." That is an unbelievably, um, powerful skill. And what you did... I mean, I did something very... Every business I've ever started. Uh, I started a strategy firm when I was 26, trying to sell strategy engagements into, you know, Fortune 1000 companies. And I would write a letter. I would sit down and I would write a letter to William Snowman and say, uh, "The, the growth potential in this brand is William, is, is West Elm office. Uh, home office is gonna be huge. West Elm is perfectly positioned for it. Here are the SKUs. Here's your distribution strategy, your capital strategy, how you would signal." And I would basically do a strategy engagement, and then I would send it via FedEx. I'd... D- d- you know, this was word processing, you know, not a lot of email back then. Some email, but not a lot. This was 30 years ago when I was 26. And I'd send him a letter with this, like, strategy engagement and say, "This is free, and the next one, if you have other big, hairy questions you want answered, you know, call me." And most of the time you're working, you're putting in, you know, I don't know, four, eight hours to write these things up. I c- I can do this stuff pretty quickly, I have an aptitude for it. And most of the time you never hear back. You call them and the, the assistant will say, "Oh yeah, we found it. We don't know what it was. We threw it out. Please don't call us again." And occasionally, I would get a meeting with the CEO of Levi's. He'd bring me in and say, "We're trying to figure out the gray market problem. People are buying 501s in JFK and taking 'em to Germany and-"You know, consulting is, give me your hardest questions and I'm going to try and answer them thoughtfully. And I built a big consulting firm by cold calling CEOs. And I wouldn't just cold call them, I'd, I'd do a prospective engagement for them. And most of the time, it was kind of humiliating, like, let me get this, I spent all Sunday telling, you know, telling Dreyer's Ice Cream how they, you know, how they should discover new flavors and that they should be thinking about, uh, using Nestle for their distribution. You know, all this shit. And, and, but occasionally it would hit. If you're not willing to do that, never gonna punch above your weight class.
- 37:06 – 43:12
Link Between Fitness & Financial Health
- SGScott Galloway
- CWChris Williamson
How important is physical fitness to financial health?
- SGScott Galloway
Well, you know the studies here. The only... The, the thing that Americans have most in common, unfortunately, is obesity or overweight. The thing Fortune 500 CEOs have most in common is they work out every day. It's not Ivy League schools, it's not even gender, it's not race. Uh, ac- according to the F- 500... Fortune 500 CEOs, about 485 of them work out five times a week. They don't even work out every other day, they work out almost every day. So, I mean, you're, you're the prime example of this. You prioritize... I would imagine other than this podcast, you prioritize fitness probably over everything. And, um, I... Look, m- more... Less mental illness, more attractive potential mates, you signal... I mean, I don't... I, I even think, and I'm curious what you think here, but in terms of the mating market, I think aesthe of... Aesthe of... Aesthetically and instinctually, people are drawn to men who look stronger fast 'cause they're more likely... They're young and more likely to survive, uh, with someone strong guarding the cave or whatever. But in addition to that, even in modern day, women are still attracted to very strong men because what it says is, "I can commit to something. I have discipline. I show up. I, I k- I have the ability to get home at a reasonable hour without getting fucked up every night 'cause I'm gonna work out the next day. I really like myself, which means I mi- I'm capable of liking someone. If I really like myself and respect myself, I likely can like and respect someone else."
- CWChris Williamson
Yeah. I think, I think physical fitness and going to the gym is as much about the lifestyle and the kind of person that you are in order to be able to achieve that physique. The signal of that is it is the actual way that your body's going to feel when you've got your clothes off.
- SGScott Galloway
That's right.
- CWChris Williamson
You know, you can... You're reliable, you're dependable.
- SGScott Galloway
That's right.
- CWChris Williamson
You are able to use your own agency to do things. You're self-motivated. Uh, you have a routine. You are able to deal with discomfort and pain, which is kind of in itself sexy-
- SGScott Galloway
That's right.
- CWChris Williamson
... and reliable. All of these things.
- SGScott Galloway
Yeah. I, I just think it's, um... Um, and not only that, it's been my antidepressant. I ju-... Uh, I have sort of this... I don't know if you have this. I don't... You know, I struggle with anger and depression. And I've finally gotten better at managing it and I can recognize when I'm going into a dark place. I just start getting really... I start having really ugly thoughts. I'm pissed off at people all the time, really angry at myself, see everything just through really dark co-... And I'm like, "Oh, okay, I'm going dark." And right when I have that feeling I'm going dark, I know I have a method for how, how to deal with it, and I use an acronym. It's called SCAFFA. And the first thing is sweat. Like, sweat right away. If you're in that dark place, sweat right away. I find sweating is like restarting a computer. Like, "I don't know what the fuck's going on, turn it off and on." That's what I do. I reset my brain by sweating. Uh, C is clean. I try and eat really clean. I stop eating out. I find all the, the preservatives, the sugar, the shit, the salt, to basically have a food explosion in your mouth, for whatever reason, I think is not great for me mentally. Uh, A, abstinence. And what I mean by abstinence is abstinence from THC and alcohol. I love both of those things. I'm pretty good at them. Uh, but if I'm in a bad headspace, I just give my sensors a break from that stimuli. Um, uh, F for family. I find being around my boys is really healthy for me 'cause my boys and children generally are so awful and so demanding that it forces you to take yourself out of yourself. You don't have the luxury of focusing on how upset or pissed off you are because your kids demand your full attention. Less so as they get older, but specifically when they're younger. And then, uh, the A of... Last A of SCAFFA is affection. I will tell my boys, "I'm not feeling really well. And when I'm not feeling really well, I want you to be affectionate with me." What does that mean? When you sit down on the couch, I want you to throw your legs over mine. I want you to sit close to me on the couch. I wanna watch TV with you. Like, I... You know, I've told my kids, especially as they're a little bit older, like, "I get... Sometimes I get, you know, upset and down and it really helps me to be close to you guys." And they're great about it now. And not only that, even when I'm not, not upset, they're really... We've gotten kind of used... We've normalized affection in my household, which is like... Which really is my fav-
- CWChris Williamson
That's amazing.
- SGScott Galloway
Oh, it's wonderful. It, it really is. I didn't grow up in an affectionate household. My par- parents were British and Scottish and they just didn't... And I could tell my mom really wanted to hug me. I could just tell she just wanted to, but kind of... It was just hard for her 'cause she just hadn't been raised that way, and my dad used to... His way of affection was he'd scruff up my hair, but I could tell he also wanted to hug me. Um, but that, and then also, uh, affection with my dogs. I let... You know, when I'm down, I let my dogs on the couch and let them just kind of... You know, dogs just want to lie on you, basically. They'll just, like, wrap themselves around you. But I have... I have a means of getting me out of that dark place, of arresting that downward spiral. But this all comes back to the first thing, hands down, sweat. And when I'm traveling and I have jet lag, uh, the first thing I try and do, and it's really hard, sometimes I just... I mean, last 48 hours, I've been London, Las Vegas, then here in New York. Soon as I get somewhere, I try to do a little bit of exercise or resistance training, even if it's just doing 100 pushups, but it's such a gift because basically, the way I see it is you have this monitor in your brain saying, "Are you adding any value?" And the bad news is it's on 24 hours a day registering if you're adding any value. The good news is it can be easily fooled. And if you do a ton of pushups or start sweating, it's like, "Oh, he's hunting prey."
- CWChris Williamson
You did a thing.
- SGScott Galloway
Yeah. And he's use- he's hunting prey. He's, he's building housing. He's important to the community. Let's keep him emotionally stable, let's release a hormone that clears out the bad cholesterol. Oh, they're caregiving. They're being affectionate. We need those people around. Oh, mentally stimulated with a crossword puzzle or working really hard. This person's making key decisions. You wanna die? It's pretty easy. You don't need to shoot yourself. Just do a whole lot of fucking nothing alone. Just do nothing alone. Don't work out, don't move, don't talk to people. Just be alone doing nothing. And the security camera in your brain is gonna go, "You're adding no value. We'll take care of this."
- 43:12 – 52:32
Forgiving Yourself When You Fall Short
- SGScott Galloway
- CWChris Williamson
How have you learned to forgive yourself when you fall short? You've got high standards, you want to achieve lots of things. How do you not castigate yourself too hard when you fall short of those high standards?
- SGScott Galloway
You're positioning it in a generous way, where like I have high standards for myself. I think it comes from a worse place. I think it's just chemical. And, uh, as I think about depression, I listen to Sam Harris a lot. And, and I... Look, the past is the most immutable thing ever, right? There's literally nothing we can do about it. And I spend way too much time in the past. I'll think about the, what we did here, and I'll realize two, three, four things that could have been better, and I'll think about it way too much. I was on stage yesterday in Vegas in front of like, you know, 2,000 people. I used the word fuck too much. I was too profane. I was fine. I got... It went really well. But I'm like, "Do I really need to drop F-bombs five times?" Maybe once or twice to make a point, but why am I being so profane? There's probably 5% or 10% of the audience who's religious, who I just sort of really turn off. And I'm like, and I'm just like, on the whole flight home, I'm just like, okay. I mean, I'm not learning from it. I'm like beating myself up. And I'm constantly, constantly in the past. And, and then as someone who's successful, I'm constantly in the future. I, I know exactly what I have to do tomorrow for my newsletter. I'm already thinking about ways, turns of phrase. I'm, I'm... I know what I do when I get off this podcast. I'm gonna hit Google Doc. I've already had a couple new thoughts. And that's important. But the fear, right, is you get to the end... And as an atheist, I do think at some point I'll look into my kids' eyes and know our relationship's coming to an end. The fear is you're like, wow, I was so much in the past, so much in the future that I was never really there. It's like, did my life happen, right? And so what I've tried to do is I've tried to learn from my colleague Adam Alter at NYU who said, "The biggest regrets are the dying." I mean, these are people, he goes into palliative care and he talks to people who are days away from death. One, they wish they'd stayed in better touch with their friends. Two, they wish they'd le- led the life they wanted to lead, not the life that their parents wanted or society wanted. And then three, first and foremost, they wish they'd been less hard on themselves. They wish they'd been kinder. They wish they'd tat- taken stock of their blessings and allowed themselves to be happy. And that really haunted me when I heard that. I'm like, I'm just... I'm trying to refuse the failure of getting to the end and being stupid. And I'm reading Bill Maher's book. Bill Maher is sort of a role model/hero of mine. And it's so funny when I say that on Threads. Threads is so woke. People just come for me and call him a messia- I'm like, Jesus Christ, Bill Maher is not the problem. But in his book he has this great line and he says, "I can't imagine anything stupider than people focusing on what's wrong with their life." And on a scale of zero to 100, on a balanced scorecard, I'm running at about a 97 or a 98. I mean, people who I love immensely, who love me immensely. Economic security, I'm healthy, I live in New York. I, I just... I mean, where, where do I live? I live in London. Where am I?
- CWChris Williamson
Mm-hmm.
- SGScott Galloway
I- i- a- and I am so focused on the two or three points that aren't, aren't, aren't perfect. And that is just... You know what that is? That's stupid. And I'm trying to make sure that I don't really regret, like at that moment going, "Oh, I failed. I failed." So I'm... Bottom line is, I'm trying to forgive myself. And also what the stoics say, "No one's thinking about your failures as much as you." Something that really helps me is the saying, "Nothing's ever as good or as bad as it seems." And whenever I screw up... I said something really stupid and it bored me the other day. I was trying to be funny and it was just offensive. I'm like, "Oh fuck." And what I realize is like, okay, put yourself in the shoes of someone in that room. And generally what you find is when you do something stupid or say something stupid, people go, "Oh, that was stupid." And then about three seconds later they go back to thinking about themselves.
- CWChris Williamson
And the stupid thing that they did recently.
- SGScott Galloway
Yeah. They're just... And they're totally focused on themselves. And all you have to think about is when someone does something embarrassing, yeah, you go, "Oh, that was stupid." And then three seconds later, you're back to you. And just realize no one's thinking about... I mean, think about the people... Think about the most successful people in the world and how many just ridiculously fucking stupid or bad things have happened to them in terms of scandal or said things the wrong way or behaved inappropriately. I mean, shit that just would have brought most people down. And the reason they're successful is fairly, in fairly short order, they mourn it and move on. They're like, "Oh, I'm awesome again. I'm awesome. I'll run, I'll run for president again. I caused an insurrection. I... Okay, so what? I've been, I've been found guilty of rape. Ah, I'll run for president again." I mean, shamelessness, uh, you know, that... At that point it's no longer a superpower. You're a villain. But the willingness or the ability to forgive yourself, you're gonna really wish you'd embraced that much earlier at an older age.
- CWChris Williamson
Tactically, what does that look like to you when you're trying to do that? Because I, I, I don't disagree. I'm very harsh on myself. I have a hard time feeling proud about the things that I do. If there is something that goes well, I will find part of it that has gone wrong, gone badly. Uh, I always have this weird ambient sense that I'm in trouble, that I've done something wrong, that like the, the, the, that someone's mad-
- SGScott Galloway
It's anxiety.
- CWChris Williamson
... that someone's mad at me. I've got this sort of ambient sense that someone's mad at me. And yet I think all of the things that you've just explained there. Look, we only have the present moment. I don't need to be in... ruminating about the past. I don't need to be inferring the future. I have this life right now.E- everybody that's listening, these are the golden years. How do you bring yourself back to not ruminating about swearing too much on stage in Vegas, or saying a shit joke in a board meeting? What are the things, the practices, what's the skaffer equivalent that you do to try and enjoy your life more?
- SGScott Galloway
Well, I don't know if it's the right way, but it's my way, but I embraced atheism in kind of my 30s. I used to say I was a, an agnostic, which I think are just closeted atheists, and I thought, "Okay, I genuinely believe this is it. I don't think this is a dress rehearsal." And so, if you're the mite on a plum on an unremarkable planet circling a fairly mundane star that's one of 10 billion stars in one of 100 billion galaxies, and you're here not even in a blink, it's like why wouldn't you just squeeze all the juice of joy out of the lemon? Why wouldn't you, why wouldn't you just... You s- you are so trivial, and you're gonna be gone. I believe that. That's it. No one's ever gonna think about you again. You're never gonna get... take a run. You're never gonna be with friends. You're never gonna have sex with your wife again. You're never gonna feel accomplishment. You're never gonna be able to help anybody else. So, in a short amount of time, why wouldn't you just try and feel a sense of reward and joy, especially if you're born in America, which I was, or can live in America, especially if you're... you know, have people who love you? I mean, you're in the 99.99 percentile realistically. You're here in a blink. Why wouldn't you do everything you could to recognize, like, some joy from it? It would just be so selfish, stupid, wasteful not to enjoy it, recognizing you're gonna be gone, you're totally insignificant, so in this minute flash of significance or existence, why wouldn't you just, just like I said, just like squeeze the shit... I'm spending more money than I've ever spent. I'm like, "Well, okay. I'm either gonna spend it or give it away," and I'm absolutely loving it. And I know that sounds kinda crass, but I'm like, "Well, why wouldn't I?" Literally, why wouldn't I? There's so many amazing things you can do with money. I'm, I'm trying to be much more open and emotive with my emotions. I see somebody I don't even know that well and they do a great... I've, I've met a couple, not celebrities but fairly... yeah, celebrities, famous people, and they, I see them on Sunday morning on their program and they make a great point, and before I'd be like, "Oh, that guy's a baller. He doesn't ............................" Now I'm like, "You are fucking amazing." I'm like, "God, you're so good." Or I do now, I try and do more of that with the young people in my firm. I try to make memos of myself. Makes me feel wonderful, makes them feel great, especially young people who need a lot of watering, and I feel like I'm just racking up good feelings. And then the other thing I absolutely love is these, I forget what you call these, photo albums, these AI photo albums on Apple where they play with ch- schmaltzy music in the background pictures.
- CWChris Williamson
(laughs) Yeah, I, I know the ones you mean. Yeah, yeah, yeah.
- SGScott Galloway
I can't wait, and I can't wait... When I, when I'm at the end, I wanna make a lot of money so I basically, you know, die at home with people I love surrounding me and, uh, I'm gonna do a shit ton of heroin-
- CWChris Williamson
(laughs)
- SGScott Galloway
... and I'm just gonna play those Apple... I'm gonna live my life again and I love those things. And if I'm down, I just look at those things. It makes me feel majestic and nostalgic but I lean into the emotion. But just a recognition nothing's ever as good or as bad as it seems, and the recognition of a finite nature, the finite nature of life, of... and atheism is very emboldening. It's very... it really liberates me. It's like, "This is it, boss. This is it." Pr- what a failure if you don't enjoy it. What a failure if you don't forgive yourself. So, I would say more than anything my atheism has really kind of unlocked, um, unlocked joy, for lack of a better term.
- CWChris Williamson
Yeah, there's a seriousness if this is the only time you're gonna get to do it. You mentioned
- 52:32 – 59:28
What Is & Isn’t Worth Spending Money On
- CWChris Williamson
there about spending money. Given that you're someone who's been spending money for quite a while, what have you learned is and is not worth spending money on in life?
- SGScott Galloway
Oh, well, the research is there, and you know this research. People overestimate the happiness things will give them, and they underestimate the happiness experiences will give them. I don't own a car, not because I'm concerned with the environment or 'cause I'm trying to be less about shit. I just don't want another thing to manage. So, I'm all about... I'm generous with everything except my time, and a car takes my time. I'm spending a ridiculous amount of money on travel. I'm, I'm, e- e- and not only going to great places, but I'll call... My sister's turning 50. Called her, her husband, she has two kids, I'm like, "We're going t- we're going to Africa this Christmas. Just fucking figure it out." You know, their kid's got a car, they always have excuses, da, da, da. I'm like, "No, no, no, no, we're going to Africa. We're just gonna figure it out." It's gonna cost an insane amount of money, insane, and they do really well, not as well as me, so I'm paying for everything. It's gonna be just a crazy amount of money and I'm like, "Well, okay, why wouldn't I? I have the money." Um, so I... Experiences. I own a plane and if... I, I always tell my friends, "I'm a yes to everything with the right to back out." Oh, Formula 1 in Las Vegas? I'm in. I'm yes. I don't even check my bank account. I'm e- I'm yes. And, uh, you know, I didn't have any money growing up. I was on a plane five times, I think, before the age of 18. Uh, I vacationed two to three weeks a year up until the age of 45. I used to take, um, uh, July 4th weekend and go to Europe 'cause they didn't take... or Thanksgiving 'cause they didn't take that holiday and I'm like, "This is a chance to lap the competition by going to meet clients in London or Milan on Thanksgiving Thursday and Friday 'cause America isn't working but Europe still is." And now I'm catching up. So, w- y- you know, you know the lessons. Drive a Hyundai or don't drive a car and take your family to Africa. But... And also, I'm doing a lot of virtue circling right now. I'm giving a lot of money away, not because I'm a good person but because it makes me feel strong. I am... I'm... I don't do it anonymously. I want recognition. I want, you know, (laughs) I wanna go to the donor's party and have them call my name. I know that's... It just makes me feel-... makes me feel good, it makes me feel important. So experiences, giving money away. I hid my number. I'm trying, um, thinking about how to write something or do something. I think everyone should have a number and then commit to, like, giving the rest or spending the rest. I think spending money is actually quite powerful, 'cause it's not only fun but it puts money into the economy, you can spend it on your employees. It's a ton of fun and there's... I, I don't believe in hoarding wealth. I think once you get to a number, I don't... I, I... People should have the right to be billionaires, but I don't understand why. Daniel Kahneman, again, did this amazing research showing that above a certain level of wealth, it's diminishing returns. So I figured out what is enough money where I probably can do anything I want for the rest of my life, and have a little bit of money for my kids in case they need a house or if things keep getting worse for young people, which they, they, tr- steadily have happened over the last 40 years. Above that, I'm either spending it or giving it away. There's just no... I don't see any reason why anyone would get any utility from being a billionaire, other than hoarding resources from other people that need it more. And they'll make all these excuses that they're more productive and they invest and they do things. I just don't buy it. I just don't buy it. And I think you're gonna be happier. I don't think there's any... I don't... You know, there's some evidence that shows the kids of billionaires are a little bit fucked up. I, I don't know. So I'm, you know... I like the idea of getting to your number and then getting off the hedonic treadmill and saying, "Okay, from this point, I'm gonna do amazing things or I'm gonna give it away." But there's no real reason, there's no real reason to hoard wealth. We have, we have 20... You know, we have s- six people in America that are worth more than the bottom half. That doesn't make any sense. That just... Kahneman shows that the difference between 40,000 a year and 60,000 is enormous for someone's wellbeing and happiness. The difference between 10 million and 100 million a year, there is no difference. There isn't. You're no happier. Now, there is a difference between a million and five million. I mean, you can do more things, but once you get to a certain level... So I'm trying to understand that, 'cause what I found is I have been... I've had such an absence of money my whole life that when I finally got it, I had a difficult time not being focused on having more. 'Cause the terrible thing about numbers is they're really easy to get your num-... If you have X in wealth, you can easily imagine 2X. And also, you know someone that has 10X, and you read about someone that has 100X. And you think, "Okay, if-"
- CWChris Williamson
It's the best computer game in history.
- SGScott Galloway
And if the scale... If that number, as that number goes up, the more prestige, relevance, and random sexual encounters you have, you're like, "Well, okay, I'd like to 3X those good things." Uh-
- CWChris Williamson
You know, on average, when you ask people, "What do you think that you'll be satisfied with? Like, where do you want to bring your wealth into land? Like, what would you want to make every, y- annually?" Almost, uh, on average, pretty much everybody says, "About three times what I'm at now." Someone says about three times. It doesn't matter if it's 50 grand or 50 mil, it's about... You r- run about three times, and that's where, that's where I'd, that's where I'd come into line.
- SGScott Galloway
And it keeps growing, right? Once you get there, you go threefold.
- CWChris Williamson
Correct, yeah. It always keeps going up, that three times will... And then you get to three and it's like, "Ah, yeah, it wasn't 150, it was 450." Uh-
- SGScott Galloway
Yeah, right, right.
- CWChris Williamson
Taleb's got this phenomenal quote where he says, "The world is split into two groups: one who doesn't know how to start making money and one who doesn't know when to stop."
- SGScott Galloway
Oh, I love that. I... And in the w- words of the great philosopher Sheryl Crow, "It's not getting what you want, it's wanting what you got." And so what I, what I tried to do was say, "Okay..." I kept changing my number. If I'd had a million bu... When I was 22, I thought, "If I ever have a million bucks, I'm done. I'll keep working, but Jesus Christ, that would feel good to have a million bucks in the bank." And then I'm like, "Okay, to have kids in a house and to retire and make sure you have access to the beg- best doctors in case something goes wrong with one of your kids, or maybe a second home, whatever, you need a lot more than a million." And then you're like, "Yeah, but I'd really like... You know, I don't want a vacation home in the mountains, I want a vacation home in the a- in Aspen." I mean, your number just keeps growing and then you're like... And the r- and the real, like... The real budget busters are playing. But at some point... You know, and everyone gets to pick their own number. I don't believe we should Robin Hood it. I do believe though that... If you believe what Kahneman said, I do believe we should probably have a much more progressive tax structure. I don't... If you could, if you could tangibly change the life of people from 40 to 60,000, and someone's making 200 million a year, you know, what is that? That's 10,000 households that you can make much happier, and you're not getting, you're not getting any happiness from that incremental 200 million. I really don't understand why we don't have tax rates of at least 50, maybe even up to 80%.
- CWChris Williamson
I
- 59:28 – 1:06:23
A Different Way to View Taxes
- CWChris Williamson
think that for most of the people that are in that higher earning bracket, even anyone that's remotely smart, they have no idea where the fucking taxes go.
- SGScott Galloway
Yeah.
- CWChris Williamson
They have absolutely no idea. They don't think... I think if you were able to draw a line-
- SGScott Galloway
Enact it, yeah.
- CWChris Williamson
... between that person and this household in the, you know-
- SGScott Galloway
I like that, yeah.
- CWChris Williamson
... suburbs of Chicago or Atlanta or wherever it is that, that this, this person, this single mother... Uh, I, I think that that would give people an awful greater sense of, "Wow, look at what I'm contributing to." Yeah, it's taxes. What does taxes feel like? Taxes feels like it gets fritted away and some congressman is gonna be able to get an additional fruit fucking bowl to be able to put out at some wanky meeting that's unnecessary, it's gonna be wasted by this incompetent behemoth that is the, the government. You know, I mean, look at the UK. The flash (laughs) election that's just been called.
- SGScott Galloway
Yeah.
- CWChris Williamson
The flash election that's just been called. Uh, I... You know, no one thinks, especially in the UK... I know the people of America have a big problem with taxes, 'cause of the obsession with freedom, which I'm slowly becoming infected by too. But the UK... Let me tell you, if you are rich in America, you, you are so much better off even in California than you would be if you were in the UK, because the UK will eat you alive when it comes to taxes. And-
- SGScott Galloway
Yeah, I believe that.
- CWChris Williamson
Yeah. Uh, speaking of which, side point, I've invited... Do you know Dominic Cummings? Do you remember him?
- SGScott Galloway
Yeah.
- CWChris Williamson
I've invited Dominic Cummings on the show, I want to bring him on to have a conversation ahead of this flash election, 'cause he has got some real gossip and tea that will be-
- SGScott Galloway
You're such a Brit.
- CWChris Williamson
... fireza. I know.
- SGScott Galloway
You literally, nobody here, no one in America... Like, I, I, I barely know who that is. Um-
- CWChris Williamson
Mate, he's big time, he's fucking cool.
- SGScott Galloway
I'm gonna, I'm gonna steal your idea. I love the idea of someone who pays a lot of taxes and they say, "Okay..." I, I just think that's a genius idea, I'm, I'm actually going to steal it. And it says, "You are paying for all the pre-K programs for the next three years in Evanston, Illinois."
- CWChris Williamson
Yeah.
- SGScott Galloway
Here's the-
- CWChris Williamson
Well, it turns tax into charity, turns tax into philanthropy.
- SGScott Galloway
100%. Here are all the schools... Maybe even give them a choice. You're paying for the launch cable on the SS Ford carrier. And it comes with privileges. Do you want to go be the mystery reader at these pre-K schools? Or do you want to spend the weekend on the SS Ford? But I love the idea of connecting really big taxpayers to, to what they're actually doing, and maybe even giving them a bit of an option. It would be a bit of a shell game, because it's all going to the same place, but giving them... Would you rather pay... You know, some of us, some of us, you know, want to beat our chests, being like, "I want a Tomahawk missile that's going to be sent to this-"
- CWChris Williamson
(laughs)
- SGScott Galloway
"... kill these fuckers," right? Some of us are angry. Um, fine. You can... And you know what you get to do? You get to show up at an Air Force base and you get to sign your name on it.
- CWChris Williamson
Get a selfie with it, yeah, break out-
- SGScott Galloway
Right, that's right.
- CWChris Williamson
... a bottle of champagne over the nose of it and kill yourself.
- SGScott Galloway
And other people, like, want to save the dolphins or whatev- you know, whatever you want, we'll, we'll put your name on, or give you a sense for it and give you an opportunity-
- CWChris Williamson
So you could kind of stratify or have cohorts of where people's money goes. Well, I mean, you know, what was it that you were saying before? You like giving money away because it makes you feel good, makes you feel good to give your money away. Well, for the really rich people, that is what taxes are supposed to be, and what... You know, your framing around this is, this rich person could pay for this many people at the bottom end, or it could make life better for these people. But the, there's just no lineage, there's no sense at all.
- SGScott Galloway
No connection.
- 1:06:23 – 1:07:10
Where to Find Scott
- CWChris Williamson
Galloway, ladies and gentlemen. Scott, I appreciate the hell out of you. It's so good to see you everywhere at the moment. I do feel like you're kind of following me around the internet, which is nice and disconcerting.
- SGScott Galloway
To resi- it's futile, I'm like AOL in the '90s, stick your hand in a cereal box and I'm going to pop out.
- CWChris Williamson
(laughs) I appreciate you mate. New book out now, everyone should go and pick that up. Uh, where else, where else should they go to follow you on the internet?
- SGScott Galloway
Oh, like I said boss, I'm everywhere. Pro- Prop G Pod, Pivot with Kara Swisher, my newsletter No Mercy No Malice. But like I said, uh, I'll find you.
- CWChris Williamson
God damn it, what an apocalyptic end.
- SGScott Galloway
There you go.
- CWChris Williamson
But I appreciate you. Thank you.
- SGScott Galloway
All right brother, thanks Chris. Congratulations on all your success.
- CWChris Williamson
If you enjoyed that episode, you will love a selection of the best clips from the podcast over the last couple of months and it's available right here. Go on, give them a watch.
Episode duration: 1:07:10
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