Sinopsis
This podcast will inspire you to take risks to increase happiness. Bootstrapped is a podcast about entrepreneurs who started companies with their own money and the lessons they learned. These people are among the most successful in the world. Success on this show is defined as happiness. These people make deliberate choices to optimize for happiness. Many are millionaires but that was never the goal. Most are chasing autonomy and freedom of time. If youre an aspiring entrepreneur or someone who wants to take a risk and make a positive change in your life, listen to Bootstrapped. Go get it.
Episodios
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Ex-googler goes from cable guy to catching camera thieves - Trevor Sehrer, Lenstag
24/05/2017 Duración: 01h14minTrevor Sehrer founded Lenstag in 2013 to fight camera theft and he’s been recovering camera equipment ever since. His childhood was tough to put it lightly. He dropped out of high school and college and eventually ended up as a site reliability engineer at Google. He moved from his hometown Corvallis, Oregon to Silicon Valley. Trevor embodies the spirit of this show as he’s extremely humble, relentless and entrepreneurial. His ability to keep showing up despite adversity pushing back against him is why he’s successful. The takeaway from this episode is, keep showing up. Keep trying and you’ll get there. That’s the only thing that matters. Business Contact Info www.lenstag.com First recovery: https://petapixel.com/2014/03/31/exclusive-lenstag-recovers-first-item-stolen-lens-returned-happy-owner/
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Relationships, work & living in Mexico - Robert Graham, GrahamComm Speaker Training
08/05/2017 Duración: 01h39minUntil around the age of 30, Robert Graham was wandering around the world in search of answers to life’s two big questions, relationship and work. In this episode we go through Robert’s journey and his strategy for finding those answers. Robert Graham is the founder of GrahamComm, presentation, sales and communication skills training. He’s fully optimized his life to maximize his happiness. He lives with his wife and daughters six months of the year in Mexico and and the other six months in Oakland. The takeaway from this episode is that you should create a vision for what you want your life to look like AND a plan to get there Business Contact Info grahamcomm.net
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Sam Parr CEO of The Hustle. How to Whole Ass One Thing
24/04/2017 Duración: 01h05minSam Parr has started both bootstrapepd and venture backed businesses. Sam’s one of those people who’s a born entrepreneur and from an early age he was starting companies and selling things. Having two parents who were entrepreneurs he thought that’s just how people get jobs, you start a business. We go through his businesses, personal finance strategy that supports his entrepreneur lifestyle, mental health strategy and what led to putting Tim Ferriss in the four hour headlock: https://www.instagram.com/p/BQj-vGHhzhL/ The takeaway from this episode is that you should whole ass one thing instead of half assing many things. Quotes from the episode “Made money my entire life selling things” “I bet I just made more money than that teacher” “I don’t like being told what to do” “Every single thing that we touch has to be awesome” “We’re only going to do a couple things but we’re going to make them all really, really cool” Business Contact Info Sign up for The Hustle email: thehustle.co Sam’s Twitter: https://tw
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Take risks, they lead to to success. Failure isn't permanent - Gary Nealon, RTA Cabinet Store
16/04/2017 Duración: 01h21minGary Nealon went through bankruptcy at 30 years old after buying a business 1 year earlier. By many measures he’s your average guy who grew up in a lower-middle class family in America. By many other measures he’s quite far from average as he runs an 8 figure online cabinet sales business, a consulting business and more recently a social exploration and discovery wine app. I hope this episode gives you the confidence to take risks knowing that even if you hit rock bottom and file for bankruptcy at age 30, you can fight back and build a 10 million dollar plus business. The takeaway from this episode is that you should take risks because they often lead to success and failure isn’t permanent. Quotes from the episode “I was literally starting from scratch at the age of 30” - Gary Nealon “You gotta jump back on the horse and do something” - Gary Nealon “By the age of 30 I ended up filing bankruptcy on that and literally lost everything that I had.” - Gary Nealon “I assume and I hope that filing bankruptcy is th
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Nothing Values More Than Health - Bryce Huett, Distributor Wire & Cable
15/03/2017 Duración: 01h50minBryce Huett is an entrepreneur who describes his life as fantastic. He is one of the few people who loves his job. In this episode we cover Bryce getting laughed at when he registered his business without an idea, his love of customers, company culture strategy, the value of trusting people and much more. The takeaway from this episode is the value Bryce puts on health. He's been described by employees as the fittest person in his 50 person office. Even in the darkest days of his current business, which almost died several times, he worked out almost every day and always maintained a healthy diet. I guarantee three outcomes from listening to this episode: you will laugh, learn and leave inspired. I've been told the first 15 minutes are a bit slow and although I don't agree, I'd love your feedback. Quotes from the episode “Those are the moments where literally you have to bootstrap yourself to get off the ground and if you don’t then it can end bad. And by that sense, you could go and find a job that you tru
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Life shows up for you when you ask good questions - Kamaljit Bains, Impeccable Bookkeeping
15/03/2017 Duración: 01h43minKamaljit Bains has lived five different lives. In one of her lives she was considering attending her own funeral. In another she traveled the world for 9 months. She doesn’t see obstacles, she goes after what she wants. If the context of life isn’t making her happy, she changes it. People around Kamaljit are drawn to her infectious energy. She’s made piles of money in high paying corporate jobs but that didn’t satisfy her. Kamaljit has been on her own since the age of 16 which forced her to figure it out on her own. This is what made her who she is today. She currently owns her second bootstrapped business. The takeaway from this episode is that life shows up for you when you ask good questions. Throughout her life Kamaljit has asked tough questions and more importantly, she’s been honest about the answers. She always knows why she’s doing something and rarely, if ever is she doing something because it’s the norm. It’s gotta be her norm. She judges herself on her own standard, not someone else’s. Quotes fro
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There’s always a way - work ethic, persistence and optimism - Tonny Soesanto, Kikka Sushi
15/03/2017 Duración: 01h19minTonny Soesanto is the relentlessly optimistic President of Kikka Sushi. Tonny’s sushi empire started 30 years ago with just a few employees. The company is now 2,000 employees and supplies a significant amount of sushi to Whole Foods and other top grocery stores across the United States. Tonny is an extremely happy person. He was laughing and smiling throughout my visit to Kikka HQ in LA. This episode will teach you a lot about optimizing for happiness and how to run a business. The takeaway from this episode is that there’s always a way when you work hard with persistence and optimism. Every time Tonny encounters a problem or an opportunity, he finds a way to make it happen. His strategy is to say yes first and figure out execution second. This strategy led to Kikka Sushi becoming one of the first to-go sushi suppliers in grocery and to being one of the first to use brown rice in sushi. Kikka’s yes first approach is why they are still growing today. When competitors said no and died, Tonny said yes and thriv
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Everything in life is an experiment - Keith Wohlwend, BootCampSF
15/03/2017 Duración: 55minKeith started BootCampSF in 2000. He is constantly experimenting and seeking adventure. His experiments include starting his business and learning to roll a kayak once capsized in his neighbor’s pool (people actually do this). Keith is not concerned with the world’s judgement, his concern is his next adventure. He’s been one of the most encouraging and inspirational people I’ve come across. The takeaway from this episode is that everything in life is an experiment. There’s no failing, only finding things out. People often avoid taking the necessary risks to reach happiness due to fear of failure. Keith’s philosophy removes that barrier. If you ignore outside opinions and buy into believing that everything is an experiment then every experiment you run gets you closer to success regardless of outcome. Remember, on this show success is defined as happiness. Run experiments and be happy. Quotes from the episode “That first year, I wasn’t sure. It was kind of like an experiment and that’s kind of how I view eve