AppSumo is about to do $100 million in revenue this year.
But the first 10 years:
• Rejected by Google (2x)
• Fired by FB after 9 months
• Built 20+ startups that didn’t work out
Here are 9 pieces of brutally honest BUSINESS advice (I wish I knew earlier):
1/ Spend more time picking your partners
In my previous business, Gambit - each partner thought we were most important and had our own idea of the best direction.
It didn’t work well.
A lot of entrepreneurs tell me they need a co-founder, and my response is always...
“Do you really need a co-founder?”
Because let me tell ya - who you partner with matters A LOT.
If you don’t find the right one, it’s a HUGE pain in the ass.
Now, I view partnerships like a “Business Marriage”.
If I can’t see myself working with someone for 10 years, I won’t work with them for 5 minutes.
2/ Learn personal finance
Learning about your money is a game-changer - and it doesn’t have to be anything fancy.
I’ve kept the same simple spreadsheet with my Assets, Liabilities, and Net Worth for the past decade.
Here’s my exact net worth from February 2018:
Finance is understanding how much money is coming into your business and how much is going out.
And trust me, nothing is more important than knowing where your money is.
If you don’t track your numbers, you have NO CLUE what the bottleneck is.
No numbers = randomness
Even to this day, we grow @AppSumo by focusing on budgets and financial models.
1- if you pay attention to money, you can grow it. 2- if you know how to track a budget, you can improve it. 3- if you aren't taking care of the basics of personal finance, DO it.
3/ Work-life balance is stupid early on
Early on in your career, being intense is a HUGE asset.
When I was building Gambit, I worked 16-hour days…
I remember being up at 3 am so I could do a pitch call with a company in Sweden… and at the moment I LOVED it.
We were making $150,000 a day in revenue and $15,000 a day in profit (!!) for 3 people.
If there are time-sensitive opportunities, go ALL in.
Intensity gets the ball rolling. Sustainability gets the ball winning.
4/ Let your hate, motivate
After I got fired by Facebook, I applied to Yahoo and they somehow gave me a $105,000 job offer. Pretty sizable money for a 26-year-old.
But something didn’t feel right. It felt like going backward and not the right chance to prove Facebook wrong.
I was so angry. Honestly - sometimes I’m still angry and insecure thinking back to those Facebook people.
Find someone to hate. And let your hate, motivate.
Over time, you can change from trying to prove others wrong to start proving yourself right.
But almost EVERY very successful entrepreneur had some deeper issue that they were trying to solve through starting a biz.
5/ Follow your curiosity, not the crowd
I tried Facebook games - I don’t play any games
I tried Affiliate blog websites - they're scammy-ish
I tried dropshipping bracelets - yea 🙈
None of these are “bad”, but when you chase your curiosity, you’ll stick with it much longer.
Instead of getting into AI or whatever else is hot right now, ask yourself:
• What are the things you’re using day-to-day?
• What problems are you excited to work on?
• What are you genuinely curious about?
Because the point isn’t to “win” business. It’s to STAY in business.
6/ Gifts for business marketing
Gifts are the cheapest way to build friendships.
I sent a pair of running shoes to Greg Tseng of Tagged, a potential customer. I ended up doing tens of thousands from that one customer.
You want it to be things they see and use regularly.
My favorite types of gifts:
• Ember Coffee Mugs for teammates at AppSumo
• Gave a camera to @AliAbdaal for his date night
• Got Air Jordans for @LewisHowes (I noticed his old ones were scuffed)
It doesn’t have to be expensive. People just want to feel acknowledged.
7/ Make your first $1
I remember the first AppSumo sale like it was yesterday.
Getting $1 from someone is one of the biggest confidence boosters in business
And the beauty of it is that you can do that today if you are just getting started.
To be a millionaire, you have to start with a dollar-aire.
Think NOW, not HOW.
What can you do TODAY to get that first $1 if you are just starting?
I promise you it will change everything.
8/ The best biz is the one that works
My conference biz (CommunityNext) was doing $200k a year and potentially more if I took it seriously.
But I didn't want to be known as a networker or event organizer… so I quit. Cold turkey.
A bud Charles Hudson started his own biz that modeled mine, and so did @thesamparr, and both went on to sell those businesses for multi-millions.
I wish I could tell my younger self to stop prematurely quitting things that are working.
It’s challenging to find a biz that people WANT, so once you find it, keep it going at all expenses.
You don't have to be the one to do it. Hire someone else if your biz is working.
Most people stick with losers too long and don’t stick with winners long enough.
9/ Take more swings
As you may be able to tell, when I was young, I tried a lot of businesses (almost too many).
Each swing taught me a valuable lesson.
When you’re young, you don’t need your business to be a success for it to be worth starting. The knowledge and skills you gain far outweigh any monetary outcome.
It’s not about WHAT you achieve, it’s about WHO you become.
Everything I tried (and failed) led me to where I am today.
So even if you can’t immediately see the fruits of your labor – just know that your swings DO COMPOUND.
9 images that will make you a better entrepreneur:
1. Think NOW, not HOW
Many struggle to make their first dollar because they focus too much on making their first million.
Sure, plan ahead.
But don’t get so caught up in the future that you forget to act in the present.
2. Test, then invest
Instead of spending a lot on something unknown, find out if it’s working quickly for a low cost:
• Hiring a new teammate? Start with 1 month paid trial.
• Buying new software? Start with 1 month, not a full year.
• New marketing idea? Start with a small group of customers.
Once you validate your idea on a small scale, then invest big time.
3. Persistence pays off
There’s no such thing as an overnight success.
Every “overnight success” story is actually a story of years of hard work and persistence.