David Rosenthal and Ben Gilbert — of the Acquired podcast — invited me to San Francisco for a discussion on our mutual obsession: spending every waking hour studying the history of entrepreneurship and sharing those lessons on our podcasts.
Follow Acquired in your podcast player here or at Acquired.fm
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[3:00] David’s time with Charlie Munger
[5:30] Henry Flagler after Standard Oil
[8:30] What makes a great biography, and how to capture all sides of complex characters?
[11:00] Studying history is a form of leverage to achieve success
[13:00] How do we figure out what the true story is for an episode we're doing?
[20:30] Silicon Valley should focus more on durability than growth
[21:30] How David got into reading biographies and podcasting
[25:40] What were each of their influences before starting Acquired and Founders?
[35:30] How to suck less over time
[37:30] What motivates, Ben, David, and David to get better?
[45:00] Dead ends: business model changes, paid podcasts, changing the name to “Adapting”, and Senra's “Autotelic”
[51:30] “You’re not advertising to a standing army, you’re advertising to a moving parade”
[56:00] Comparison of podcasting business models
[1:00:10] Senra’s insane Readwise "healthy twitter" habit
[1:04:30] Is it possible for the ultra-wealthy not to mess up their kids?
[1:14:30] The fleeting moments you get to spend with your kids
[1:17:00] The value of building relationships with best-in-class peers
[1:19:30] How the book publishing industry works
[1:28:45] How to differentiate yourself as an investor in 2023?
[1:38:30] The greatest historical examples as content marketing
[2:02:00] The best businesses are cults (and Senra starts one on the episode)
[2:07:00] Senra gives feedback to Ben and David on Acquired episode format
[2:15:30] Steve Jobs’ 1997 product matrix
[2:17:00] The moral imperative to market products that help people
[2:23:00] Ray Kroc and Steve Jobs: deeply flawed founders
[2:23:30] The founders we idolize are world-builders
[2:28:00] When yachts and jets are underpriced assets
[2:32:00] How to compete when money is cheap vs. when there are real interest rates
[2:39:30] When Ben and David have fixed broken episodes in post-production
[2:44:30] Why masters of craft are so interesting to study
[2:45:30] Should you listen to advice?
[2:51:00] David’s first job detailing cars
[2:52:30] The Cuban experience immigrating to Miami
[3:01:00] College entrepreneurship programs
[3:04:00] Ben’s experience learning UNIX as a kid
[3:08:30] David remembers Tim Ferriss guest lecturing in college
If you have scrolled this far and still haven't followed Acquired in your podcast player please do so here!
#300 James Dyson (Against the Odds)
#299 Steve Jobs (Make Something Wonderful)
#298 I had lunch with Sam Zell
#297 Yvon Chouinard (Patagonia)
#296 Bernard Arnault (The Richest Man in the World)
#295 I had dinner with Charlie Munger
#294 Napoleon
#293: Ray Kroc (The Making of McDonald's)
#292 Daniel Ludwig (The Invisible Billionaire)
#291 David Packard (Founder of HP)
#290 Bill Gates
#289 Brunello Cucinelli
#288 Ralph Lauren
#287 The Founder of Rolls-Royce
#286 Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger
#285 Jay Gould (How Jay Gould Built Wall Street's Biggest Fortune)
#284 Andrew Carnegie and Henry Clay Frick
#283 Andrew Carnegie
#282 Jeff Bezos Shareholder Letters
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