The video titled "The High School Dropout Who Made Billions & Bought An NBA team" features a conversation between Shaan Puri and Ryan Smith, the founder of Qualtrics and owner of the Utah Jazz. The episode details Smith's journey from a struggling high school dropout to a billionaire entrepreneur. The discussion spans various topics, including his early life, the founding of Qualtrics, key business philosophies, and the experience of owning an NBA team.
"At some point you get offered $500 million to sell the company and you turned it down."
"When I kind of set my mind to something, I can do it."
"Don't take it and run... if you and Jared can get along and do this, it should be interesting."
Ryan Smith's story, as discussed in this video, is a powerful testament to the potential of perseverance, innovation, and strategic thinking. His journey from a high school dropout to a billionaire entrepreneur and NBA team owner serves as an inspiring narrative for anyone facing challenges in their own life. The insights shared throughout the conversation offer valuable lessons in entrepreneurship, personal growth, and the importance of family and community.
This is Ryan Smith, a guy who went from a 1.9 GPA high school dropout to a $2 billion net worth. But this isn't your normal dropout story. At some point, you have a conversation with yourself like, "Okay, I got to make this happen." >> Yeah, I got to find a gear that I've never used before. >> When he dropped out, he had no plan, no money, and nowhere to live. There's a great story about the early days of Qualrixs and Focus. >> We were religious about it, and it was actually an incredible forcing function for me. At some point you get offered $500 million to sell the company and you turned it down. >> Every other person I would talk to about this offer was like take it and run, >> right? You're building it from your family's basement all the way to the end zone. Basically sell for $8 billion. You end up going public. >> I didn't do anything else when I was doing Qualics. I didn't invest. I didn't sit on boards. >> No side hustles. >> No side hustles. Nothing except for hoops. >> What's it like to now own an NBA team? That's insane. >> My philosophy was don't bling. just go. I want to start with this like you know you've done what kids like me dream of. It's like I built a successful company with my family no less become this super successful guy, billionaire NBA team owner. You live this really interesting life. What's cool is that if we rewind the clock, you were a guy who dropped out of high school and had a 1.9 GPA in high school. So going from a 1.9 GPA to like, I don't know, a $2 billion net worth, that's a pretty big jump. We hear these stories where it's like Mark Zuckerberg, Bill Gates, they they were at Harvard and then they dropped out with this big grand idea and it came to fruition. That's not your story at all. So let's do the origin. Can you take us back? uh you know you're 14, 15, 16, 17 years old. What was going on in your life at that time? >> Yeah, I mean it's no secret like my parents split up when I was like 14 and the world was rocked and you know I was I was very much like okay screw everything. No one can tell me what to do and you know I think my parents were trying their hardest to keep us I mean we had five kids. They were keeping us all kind of afloat. And I think to be honest with you, you know, I never really developed the skills for for school and and I didn't think I was really good. I knew I was a good athlete. I knew I was good at golf and could play poker. And like I I knew there was something there, but I didn't work hard. I didn't finish anything. And it was really hard like this concept of finishing and it just never happened. And so I think the trajectory I was on at 14, 15, 16, 17 was not a very hopeful one. And there was no indication that there was a spark. There was no indication that there was good ideas in there. >> Right. So what what was your move? So you're not you're not loving school, not doing that well. No spark there. What was the decision to to quit, to drop out, to to leave? >> Yeah. I mean, it was just kind of forced. It was like, hey, school was like, this isn't working out for you. like you don't go to class, you don't it's not us, it's >> you don't study, >> you know, there's probably another path for you. And I had an uncle >> who reached out and said, "Hey, Ryan, you're 16. We're doing a tech company. It was called IMAL. You're not going to just screw off all day. You might as well come work. I'm running a sales team. Come work." And I worked in the mail room and I worked with three older gentlemen. I mean, one was in his 40s, one was there. and the founder had just gotten back or someone had just gotten back from Soul, Korea. And I would always say like, I'm going to go make money one day. I'm going to go work on the fishing boats in Alaska cuz they're paying 20 bucks an hour. I'm going to go do this. And my parents were like, go do whatever you want. Just graduate high school. Like, we don't care. The bar was really low. And like these guys were like, no, you should go to Korea. >> And I was like, that sounds good. And my dad was like, if you can pay for it and graduate high school, we'll do it. So, I graduated high school. I got a GED when I was 17. I went to like a university and just like cranked it out >> like a few months >> in like three months through like packets >> and like I was with like mothers and like everyone else who would not. And it was like I I was like, "Okay, I'm going to crank this thing out." And I did it. And it was a little bit of a moment like, "Whoa, all right." When I kind of set my mind to something, I can do it. And then I went out and that's that's when I went to soul. And so you go to S. You're what 17 years old at this time? Did you have a plan? >> The plan was I had communicate I never left Utah. I I had communicated with someone and like we were supposed to show up and like we had jobs. They had a house for us. They had all these things and you know we had talked to them. So I remember getting there and like we had limited cash but we were there. We were there to sign a contract and work for a school and move in. And we get there and we we go right to the hotel and we're waiting and we call where we're supposed to meet up and no answer, no answer, no answer, no answer. Next day, no answer, no answer, no answer. And we're like, what in the world? And then finally someone answers and it's a Korean woman who didn't speak any English. And it was like, okay, well, but this person, like I thought we were showing up and they were just going to I'll be there waiting. Hey, we're so excited to have you. And it was the exact opposite. And like basically after a week in this hotel, it was like you have no job, you have no house, you don't have enough money to be staying in this hotel. And so I remember sitting in a in a coffee shop and you know, we kind of all called our parents to come home. These guys, all the parents went to the airport, bought him a ticket, and they all jumped on the plane. But like I sat there, my dad's like, "You're not coming home." And I was like, "What in the world?" He's like, "I know what you're going to do here. Like, you got a chance to go do something." And I, as I look back as a parent now and I was like, "What in the world?" Like, I would never leave my kid over there. But he was like, "The upside is like way better." And so, what was your dad? Was that tough love or was he just sort of like, "Look, you just need to look at it this way. Hang in there." Like, what what what was he what was going through the mind, you think? >> I have no idea. I I like honestly I've thought about it so much. It's like and that's just my dad. Like he he's like fine with this kid's felling. >> Did you feel like rock bottom at that point? >> Oh my word. So homesick in a country, no Americans, >> no English, no money, and you just kind of had to go figure it out. >> All right. So you meet this guy, crash on his couch. At some point you have a conversation with yourself like, "Okay, I got to make this happen. Yeah, I got to find a gear that I've never used before. >> And so, what'd you do? >> Ended up running into someone who needed an English teacher. The school was a ways away. I didn't have a place to stay, so he said he'd pay me $10 an hour, which isn't a lot there. Um, so I teach the kids from, you know, 3 hours a day in the mornings. And I had found out about a place where Koreans go to study called A Goshiwan, which is like >> that locker room we just looked at. It's about that big, but a little bigger. No one ever sleeps there. >> And I'd convinced the guy that if I could teach him English 1 hour a day, he'd let me sleep there cuz they had a shower. I I found a little stove. I would cook ramen noodles on it because that's all I could afford. >> Obviously, it's tough. Obviously, you're sort of this like character building moment because you're on your own for so for such an extended period of time. Uh but was there like a part of you that was in sort of enjoying maggyvering it a little bit? >> Not at all. >> This was not >> no momentum. >> No. Like at the time there was no like there was no of like myself now looking back going, "Okay, I'm going to get crafty. This an experience. I'm backpacking through here." Didn't have that attitude then. >> This was not that. I mean, this was like, I got to get home, >> right? And so, you uh you're teaching one guy. Did you eventually get more students? And how'd you do that? >> In Korea, there was, you know, 20 big 15 to 20 story highrises where everyone lived. And I was like, okay, I'm teaching English. I've got 12 hours in the day. The better rather than teaching a school, it's way better to do these private lessons. And if I could get into one of the highrises and get like starting at four o'clock in the afternoon, teach every 55 minutes, >> right? Like it's going to be great. Well, how do you do that? And I got someone to write. I had a pager at the time. I got someone to write a message in Korean. And I made like 5,000 flyers. And I would go in and they'd have these huge mailbox rows, but there was a security guard there. So I would go in and talk to the security guard and I was like, "Hey man, like >> in English or broken Korean >> or whatever it it took." I would just try to be their friend, >> okay? >> And I was like, "Let me put these here. This it let me put these in all of these." And they're like, "Well," and I was like, "Come on." And I would normally be pretty successful at it, >> right? >> And then my beeper just started hammering and blowing up and I was like, "Whoa." Like this was the first time in my life I was like, >> "Actually, there's something in there." like you have a good idea and you can execute on it. And then I started getting a schedule. And like literally like a month later, I was making like $8,000 a month as a 17-year-old teaching English. And I was like, how in the world did I go from there to here? That's amazing. Let's talk about the startup Qualric. So, um, you build this company, you build it with Steuart, you build it with your brother, with your dad, and you're building it from your family's basement all the way, you know, to the, you know, to the end zone. Basically, sell for $8 billion. You end up going public. You have a pretty crazy story over like a 20some year period. Where, you know, what's the origin? Was it what was the idea? And, uh, you know, what were the early days like? >> Yeah. So I think I think that the origin and if you talk to all of us it's it's it's it's a little different like so it was really my dad and I who started I was doing an internship at Hila Packard in LA and I get a call that my father had cancer and it was terminal like or pretty close I mean it was like three years throat can or three years to live max and probably a couple months and he ended up going through and recovering you know and is alive today which is amazing story But I kind of had a moment where I just left California. I was working in LA and came back, deferred school, and said, "I'm spending this whole semester with my dad." My dad was always working on technology. He'd come up with this idea of like collecting research online and it seems normal now, but at the time it wasn't trusted, >> right? What were companies doing before Qualric? Yeah, they were they were either doing customer satisfaction paper pencil um or not doing it at all. >> Okay. >> Like the thought of asking your employees feedback or your your customer feedback. You that seems normal now. >> Table stakes today. >> They wouldn't do it. >> And so they'd have blind spots everywhere. And he would get paid a lot of money to go in there and help companies do this. And it was like a novel thing. We were going to go put the customer at the table. We were going to have them part of the decision-making process. And this is what we were going to come up with. And so he had this idea, but he was always messing around and he never really went commercial with anything. Well, I was in Hila Packard and I had gotten pretty I learned some tricks around how to like go to market over the phone with technology. And so I saw what he was working on and I was like actually I had just been doing that with like some software and supports stuff. what if we apply it here? And so he would come home from his like radiation and chemo and you're just kind of sitting there and I'd be like, "Let's do a business. Let's let me take this to the world." He's like, "Well, I don't have any money. I can't pay you." I said, "Well, let's just let's just go 50/50." And you know, by the time he recovered and he couldn't speak, we had 10 customers and like we we kept finding people that would believe in what we were doing. And it was a little Jerry Maguire moment where I had to find like one person, >> right, >> who was like then take it to the world and like that's kind of how the business started in the basement and >> so he couldn't talk at the time. So even he's what he's writing. writing on a board >> and you're the guy on the phone >> and I'm on the phone and these people are asking like about deep statistical stuff. I don't know. And I'm like going back and forth and you know it was a pretty gnarly time. I wish I had more pictures in that moment. But no one thought it was going to be anything, >> right? >> And everyone's like, "Oh, you started with your with your dad and it was this great." Like no one like my roommates didn't think it was going to be something. Like I didn't even think it was he didn't think it was going to be something. Hey, let's take a quick break for a message from our sponsor HubSpot who's making this episode possible. Listen, if you're trying to build something big, and I'm talking about hundred million dollar or billion dollar company, one of the most important things is to focus on the market. Where is the opportunity? You are like a surfer on a surfboard and you trying to find the biggest best wave possible for you to go on. Well, HubSpot has put together a cheat sheet that is studying and sort of reverse engineering what's working today. So, they're looking at the top performing industries that you could be looking at, the funding routes that work the best, and the growth strategies that the fastest growing companies are using. So, if you want a one-pager that is a cheat sheet on the uh the big company playbook, you can get it right now. Just either scan this QR code that you see on the screen or click the link in the description below. All right, back to the show. There's a great story about the early days of Qualrixs and Focus. And I love this when I was researching it. I guess it was you and your brother uh who were talking about like, well, we have this market. we can sell to these people, these people. And you guys at some point decided, no, no, no, we want to narrow down, sell only to universities. And the part I love because focus is a word anybody can throw around, right? But like if you take focus as an action word, what does it mean? It means saying no to a bunch of otherwise believable ideas. And the thing I read in the research was um your brother was basically like, you know, if you're talking to him about some other type of customer, he would, you know, he's hanging up the phone. He's like, unless you're talking about these 250 universities, I don't want to hear it. And so can you tell me about like how that went down and what that was like? >> This is probably 2006 2007 and we had found some traction in universities. We had found people like my dad. My first customer was Angela Lee at the Kellogg Business School. She made all of her students use Qualrix and then it just kind of went from there. And I can go through every professor and kind of how the whole thing worked. But my brother at the time was a Google. He was an early early Googler. And at this time like I didn't have very many people to call and you know I didn't know how good he was but I knew he was like running a big piece of the internet. >> Okay. >> Right. And and Google was kind of having a moment and he had been assigned to go run China for Google. So he was living in Beijing. He was working with Kyu Lee and like running Google China. >> Wow. So for me, I think when I would call him and ask for advice and we started developing this dialogue, he was four years older than me, so we were close but not that close. I think for him it was like, "Dude, you're all over the place. I don't have time for this. If you're going to call me, stay on script, stay focused, and like actually finish something." And it was a little bit more like get out of here, right? >> But he was religious about it. And it was actually an incredible forcing function for me and the team to be like, "Okay, we're going to go get the top 100 universities and nothing else matters, >> right?" These forcing functions are so powerful. You know, it's like uh if we play basketball, like if if there's a shot blocker, it's like you can't bring that weak stuff in here. You can't show up on the call and be scatterbrain because you know how the other person's going to respond. It forces >> I know what he's coming at me with. >> Even when they're not in the room, you start editing. >> Oh yeah. Yeah. What am I going to tell him? What's the story on our next call that we have? What progress am I going to show him? >> Am I Am I Am I actually telling him the same story I told him last week? >> So, what did we actually get done this week? >> I've got to actually come up with a new story. >> And, you know, ultimately I was able to recruit him out of Google to move back to Utah >> and that that happened in 2009. So, we were seven years in and and then when we got together um magic started happening. >> Why is that? Well, what what changed? Just cuz he's that good or what? What do you mean? >> Yeah, I mean, I didn't I knew he was good. I didn't know he was a top five or six whatever at the time product person in the world. And there was a dynamic between us. And I'll just be super honest. We were brothers. We had to love each other. And we were just able to push on each other harder than any executive or person I've ever I've ever met. >> Right? You know, with executives, I could probably go or team, I could probably go three or four rounds on something really hard before someone said, "Uncle." With my brother, I could go 15 because we had to wake up and there was no drama. There was no nothing. Like, we spoke each other's language, but we were so different. You know, he was full engineer, I was full like business, and we met on the product side, and we almost had to grow together. to like almost like a relationship like where like my weakness is he had to go fill in those gaps. My blind spot and me too. >> Yeah. I've read something where you were saying that that you know he came to you at some point and he's like hey here's my weaknesses. What are yours? And you're like >> yeah I had never really thought about it to that level of detail. I'm great. Right. >> No. He's like hey I suck at these five things. What do you suck at? I was like I don't suck at anything bro. And he was like suck. Oh boy. And I've heard him say this like my job is to develop my younger brother. Who does that? >> Yeah, that's great. >> And when we took money in 2011, Seoia, I remember was like, we're only doing this if there's a CEO. Which one of you is the CEO? >> So, it wasn't really even stated until it was he said clearly, we are co-founders. >> I'm not working for my little brother. >> Right. And like I remember sitting in the room, I'm looking across from Mike Moritz who gave Steve Jobs his first dollar and back Larry and Sergey and like they're like we need a CEO or we're not investing and like guys kicking each other under the table. >> Literally it was just crickets cuz I knew where this conversation was going and that I I still remember the silence because we're all just looking at each other and finally he just stands up and slaps the table and is like it's him. and he points at me and he goes, "I won't do media." And then sat down and like if you find a Jared interview, right, it's rare. >> If you find a Jared Smith interview, it is super rare. And you know, that was a moment where I was like, "All right, like we'll still operate two in the box. We'll divide the world." But like, it's a cool moment. And then it was like your first time CEO. They're giving you we're now in the big leagues. Like we've taken this money from Excel. This is the largest series A raised in 201 and and 12 since 2008 in all of tech. It's outside of the Bay Area which I mean Sequoia at the time wasn't even investing there. So we came out of nowhere. The Forbes article was like the biggest company no one's ever heard of, >> right? >> And you know, you look at that prior time, but now the pressure was on us. >> So wait, what year did you start the company? >> 2002. >> 2002. Now we're talking about 2012. 10 years. >> 10 years. You have a sign out there in your office that we walked by. It says, "Tune out the noise, play the long game." And there's a picture of a guy just sitt, you know, sitting there with his ears plugged. And I've had a lot of people on this podcast. I remember when we had uh Jimmy, Mr. Beast, he's now the biggest YouTuber in the world, but back then, and I played him a clip of him like, you know, 10 years prior, and he just said, matter of fact, he goes, "I started this when I was 12 years old. When I was 12, nobody watched. 13, nobody watched. 14 years old, nobody watched. 15, nobody watched. 16 is anybody ever going to watch? 17 nobody watched. He's like finally when I was 19 some people started to watch and even then it was nothing you know just relative to how it grew. And so he was talking about you know there's this cliche around the you know sort this 10 year overnight success but it's real different when you hear somebody just year after year of just obscurity. What was that like for you that period? but you against the world and and you know I I'll never forget once in I think it was like 2004 um we were in a basement and my father was operating he was in one room on his computer like deep into like stat stuff and I was out there and I was having these issues with our website. I was like super frustrated cuz our competition had just raised a bunch of money. The product was cheaper than ours. They raised $40 million and their product was better than ours. >> Better, cheaper, more resources, more funding. And I'm like, that's that's hard. Like, so I was I was frustrated. I was like pissed. And I was like, are we going to do this? What's going on? And like I was almost like argumentative with my father. My father's just sitting there. And finally, like it's the only time I ever saw him got get mad. And he like slams the table, turns around, and he's like, "Who's stopping you?" Like who's stopping you from going to do everything you want to go do. And like in that moment it was like a ton of bricks. Like if we're going to go do this, you're going to have to do it. Like you can't blame there's only two of you, >> right? >> Like you're actually going to have to go do it. There's not going to be a shortcut. There's not going to be an easy button. Like you're gonna have to go. And from that moment on I stopped asking him. And you know that was kind of that moment. Don't ask for permission. >> So I have this photo here. This is um describe the scene. >> Oh, wow. So, this is uh this is me and Stuart. Everything in this photo is bought at a salvage sale from campus. So, like the printers were $5 on the board. I'm making a list of customers and like setting goals like the 25K club. >> Yeah. >> And seeing how many we can put. >> How many sales calls do you think you did those first couple I was just dialing >> all day. >> All day. Like emailing, dialing, going. >> You still remember your uh your script? Ring ring. What happens? >> Oh, yeah. I mean, I would ask people what they're using. Have they ever heard of us or have they ever done anything like this? And telling them the top researchers in the world were using it. If I was calling into Dallas, I would say I was part of the Dallas American Marketing Association and we went to the conference. I would say, "Hey, can I just walk you through a demo?" And at the time there was no Zoom, >> right? >> So like I would actually get on the phone, send them a link, and then they would follow along with me, >> right? >> And I could do the demo. This is where I've always told our reps like, "Do you know your product?" I could do the demo on the phone in a car with a link walking them through, >> right, >> without me looking at the screen and explain to them every single thing that's going on. What does it take to be great at sales? You were great at sales. >> I mean, so so I think I think sales gets a really bad name um because people like use it as okay, the salesperson we don't want to deal with. But I remember a moment a lot of authors would use our software to write books. And I remember once Daniel Pink called me. He said, "I'm writing a book and I want your help." I said, 'Great.' And he's I was like, "What's the title of the book?" And he said, "To sell is human." And he basically um it's a great book about how every single person is a salesperson. They're actually trying to get a group of people to go in one direction or another at some point in the day, >> right? >> And I think that when it comes to like software, um the first of all is you got to believe in it. you've got to actually believe that your product has value and you know the person on the other end's life's going to be better if they use it. And so in our case, we wanted them to run their businesses from the outside in instead of from the inside out. We we believe that their employees or their were were their biggest assets and like getting a pulse on them more than once a year was probably a good idea. And then we said, "Hey, actually, if your business operated with the cadence >> of this data, you're going to win more." And so part of it was educating these people that there was a new way. And by the way, it was cheaper, faster, and better. And if you as a user would embrace this, your personal career inside your organization would skyrocket, >> right? because everyone else is guessing and you'll have this massive propensity of being correct all the time. >> Wouldn't it be great to know? >> Wouldn't it be great to know? You don't have to guess. And so that was the thought and I was like, "Oh my word." Like, "How do we get this to everyone?" >> Somebody had a great reframe. They were like, "Sales is the generous act of letting the right person know that you might have a solution to their problem." If you think about it that way, like it's an act of service and you can you can approach it maybe maybe differently. And so it it does start to work and you get it to work. You eventually hit a point where you do something pretty crazy. You start this business in your basement and you're dialing for dollars and at some point you get offered $500 million to sell the company. An absurd amount of money that sets up you, your team, everybody for life >> and you turned it down. What was that like? So, it was hard because no one had ever no one had ever offered to to buy our company. And it was it's it's always a reality check where it's like, okay, it's kind of a recommitting point. You know, the the gentleman who was doing it um ran a company, I'll just be honest, was called Survey Monkey at the time. Yeah. >> And you know, he was married to Cheryl Samberg and she was running Facebook and like they were the power couple and love Dave. Dave was awesome. And I was like, whoa, do I want to do we want to go? My brother had known him because he worked for Cheryl at Google. Like there was just this synergy coming together. And he's like, I'll take the business. Like, let's go. We can partner. You can leave and be done. Like it was like the cleanest moment of all time. And you I remember sitting around just like next door from here and one of our our mentors, Duff Thompson's office. And you know, this is someone who, you know, you talk about mentors who had who had been there at Word Perfect. And um, you know, every other person I would talk to about this offer was like, take it and run, right? And Duff's like like we sold Word Perfect too early. You know, we had the market, Microsoft was coming like we sold too early. And he was like, I he was the only person that said, "Don't take the money." He said, "In my mind, you guys are cash flow positive. You're cranking. You're growing at 100%. If you and Jared can get along and do this, it should be interesting." And Jared kind of turned to me and my dad turned to me and said, "Well, what do you want to do?" And I just said, "I I'll come back to And I I literally I remember getting in the car with my wife and I was like, "Hey, we got to leave. Like, we just got to drive south." And we get in the car, we're like 40 minutes in to a 3 and 1 half hour drive. She was from Vegas, so we were going down there. And she's like, like, if it's going good, just keep it rolling. And I was like, "You don't worry about like passing that up?" She's like, "No, like what are you going to do at home?" like I I don't need you around the house more and like this is the time like if we're going to go for it this is the time and it was like it was just one of those moments where we knew we were going to we were going to go for it. >> Had you pulled out a lot of cash already secondary were you like we basically already >> profit we were profitable so we were paying ourselves. >> Yeah. >> And that was a unique thing like profitability in tech as a young company. So we would distribute the money, but this was a whole new world, >> right? >> And so we came back and I remember sitting down, you know, it was funny, Dave, you know, rest in peace, like he he he was an amazing human and he's like, I just want to do what's best for you. But I remember he flew into town and I was like I knew that I think I was going to tell him that we were going to turn it down and I knew how crazy that was, but I also needed to hear him out a little. So we met at the office and I wanted to walk him through our culture and our company because I wanted him to see, you know, maybe things change, maybe comes back for more. I I don't know. >> Yeah. >> So I was like, "All right, we can't be recognized." I was like, "Put on that hat. Like, let's go in." And so, like, we did this whole tour. We come back, we go to a different office, we sit down. And I was like, I just I think we're going to go for it. And he's like, "Huh? What makes you think you can do it?" And like, I didn't know what to say. And I was like, "Well, I just got you to put on a Qualrix hat and walk through our building." like I I didn't know what else to say and it was like we're just going to do it and he really respected that and we'd have lunch every week I was out there and like you know we ultimately ended up talking about joining forces later on um actually the week before he passed away and then that was kind of it. It was cool like things happen for a reason and you know we went for it and then we decided like if we're going to turn that down that means we got to get serious. We can't be running this thing on our own personal credit cards and in the credit union bank and all this stuff like >> we've got to actually put all the money back into the business and then you know we decided to go raise money from Sequoia and Excel and at the time it was like taking money from the Red Sox and the Yankees. Excel just done Facebook, you know, obviously Sequoia had done um Google and you know, Apple and they were the forefront of everything. And the goal was, hey, you guys like watch our back in the tech industry. We're going to sit in Utah and we're going to make money and put our heads down and go, >> right? >> And like we got the world covered. That's what we need you for. It was it was a pretty cool partnership. >> I want to learn from you more on the business side, how you think, how you operate. One of the things I I liked is you talked about like working backwards. Says one way is just to work forwards. I don't know, we'll figure it out as we go. And of course, there's there's that. But a very useful exercise is to like, you know, start with the end in mind and then just reverse engineer. Well, if that's true, then what needs to be true underneath that? And you sort of go back. Can you explain maybe how you do that or an example? >> Yeah. I mean, I think it's different from where we are today to where we were then, but I I learned something by accident once. Um, you know, when we did announce the fundraising, I remember getting on the phone with a journalist from Business Insider, Julie Bour, and I'll never forget this. I had never really done an interview. I done one interview with Forbes, and she comes up, I mean, we're 10 years in, and no one even knows who we are, and she goes, "I heard you just turned down $500 million." I was just flustered. So, she writes this headline. kid who turned down $500 million with my picture is excited about it. And I'm like, "Oh my gosh." Because it looked like I went to the media with this, >> slam the story back >> into Dave's face, >> and I was so I was so embarrassed, >> but I knew at that moment that Dave wasn't coming back, >> right? >> It was a burn the boat moment. He burned the boat for us on a possible acquisition, the first one in 10 years, >> right? >> And I I was so mad and I never forgot about that. And so we operated for two more years and we went to raise money and everyone's like, "Well, when are you going to raise money again?" Because kind of when you start, you're on that path, right? >> And what's the dollar amount and everything? And you know, my entire thing was Well, we're going to raise it a billion dollars because that'll show that we've doubled. That's a new mark. We're giving away stock to employees. This is where it's going to be at. So, when we got down to it, Excel and Sequoia and we brought Insight in, they they agreed to that. And they said, "All right, we're going to how do you want to announce this?" I was like, "There's only one person I want to talk to." So, I called Julie Bort and I was like, "Hey, um, you might not remember me, but you wrote that article that said,"I turned down 50 $500 million. I was happy about it and raised 70 million, da da da, and just so you know, like we're raising at a billion. Do you want the story?" And she's like, "Yes." And so she basically took the exact same article, the exact same picture, and put the folks that turned down 500 million just raised at it a billion. >> New headline, >> new headline. >> You have they look the exact same. >> You have both of those framed. >> You have both of those framed. And then I remember sitting there one day after we had done that and there was a lot of our employees that were like, "Okay, wow. We're we made it. We're here." And I was like, "No, no, no, no. What's her next article? >> Work backwards. >> What's What's her next article? Like what is she putting up next? And two years later, it's like the group that turned down 500 million just raised at 2.5 billion. And you know, we knew that that wasn't the goal. We knew we had our own mission and the Qualric story and everything, but it was very clear from a directional standpoint. We raised it two and a half. What's the next article? a year later it says the group, you know, or two years later, it says the group that raised two and a half or turned down 500 just sold for and she she literally put four of those together with the same headline, the same page. So, I'm grateful for it because it fired us up to go and say, well, that next one isn't interesting. Like, we actually need to go bigger. We need to push harder. Like, we need to go more global. every decision came to like, okay, what's the story we're going to be able to tell when we're done with all this, >> right? >> And you know, it's kind of a weird thing because at the end, like if you meet sports stars at the end of the world, like where they're done playing, you know what they do? They sit around and tell stories. They tell stories about what the world was like. And you get them together and all they do is just sit and tell stories. And you hear Bird tell stories. You hear Ames tell stories. You hear Dwayne Wade tell stories. Like it's awesome. And it's kind of like all we have are going to be these stories that we're going to be able to tell. And when Qualric sold, it was probably one of the most underwhelming days of my life. >> So when the the money hits the bank, >> we were at a kind of a president's club type deal with about a hundred of our people and the deal had closed but hadn't funded. And I remember sitting there by the pool with like our whole company who had leadership who had like made President's Club and I could tell when the money I knew when the money was going to hit and it like lands and then just hits to everybody and I I could see over the next two hours like this reaction and I remember turning to my wife like handing my phone and she's like sitting there reading a book and you know there's a lot more zeros there and she's like h scary and I was like okay we've been grinding for 20 years and your respons you're responsible design in the movie >> scary like uh and then and then I started watching our people like it's like we just paid off our home we just did this like and then there was a little bit more joy But it became clear to me that it is about the journey because even after all that it wasn't a Eureka moment, >> right? >> And so knowing that I'm going to work till I'm 80. I'm never going to stop working. I already know that about myself. And every young person should ask themselves that question right now. I don't know that anyone knows exactly what they're going to do. No one has figured it out. Like I still don't know what I want to be when I grow up, right? But what I do know is I'm going to work till I'm 80 cuz I'm not going to check out. If I was going to do that, I would have done it already. >> So we play basketball this morning and it's clear you've been playing basketball since you're a kid. And so what's it like to now own an NBA team? That's insane. >> So it's weird when we on the road show to go public. Like you normally go like one day in San Francisco, two days in New York, one day in Boston, one day in Maryland, then back to New York. And I had organized our road show to go three days in New York, one and then to Boston. And like no one had really done that the way they were doing it. And they're like, "Why are you doing that?" I was like, "Cuz I'm going to the Celtics game. I'm go sit with Age." >> Yeah. >> And like I'll never forget like sitting in the locker room with A. Like it it's it's the only thing outside of Qu I didn't do anything else when I was doing Qualrix. I didn't invest. I didn't sit on boards. I didn't buy real estate. I was literally like Qualrix for 20 years heads down. When I when we say like intense focus, it was like everything else was >> no side hustles. >> No side hustles. >> No angel investing. >> No. Yeah. Nothing. >> And like it probably 22 years. >> Yeah. Like it was like nothing except for hoops. I would go down to summer league and sit there with A and he like he was cool enough to let me like I mean he's running the Celtics and it was like I could see. >> So you were plotting. You're thinking like I wanted to get into this. >> No, it just happened. I was like I am so intrigued by this. I love the NBA. I love hoops. Like I love the business side of it. And you know when we did sell like my brother was like what what are you going to do? And I was like I'm going to I'm going to go be part of the NBA. You know with SAP I I'd gotten to know Adam. I was working on a tech council for the NBA and through SAP and Bill Mcderman had connected us and you know he was like hey and I I let him know I was like I'm I'm going to be part of this one way or another >> like and he was like oh we'd love it like too bad Utah's not for sale d and >> you know he called me and was like hey you know and someone else like I hear Minnesota's for sale and so I went down that entire road and that story is pretty famous where Ash was like we're jazz fans. Well, do we have to give up our season tickets at the Jazz? I was like, yeah, that's probably part of it. And you know, it was like, no, we grew up Jazz fans. And I was like, oh, yeah. Like, >> and you just thought the Jazz would not come up for sale. The Miller family was like, >> "Yeah, they weren't." And like I had approached Yeah. I had approached uh Gail Miller who, you know, Larry and Gail had purchased it for years and they owned it for 30 35 years. It was in a legacy trust for the family that could never be sold. Oh, like it literally could never be solved. >> It was a pretty locked door. >> At least that's what we thought, right? And >> you got a jazz hat on. So something changed. What happened? >> Yeah, I think I think you know I had approached her and the answer was no. And then >> So you got a call back years later after the first >> No, about 6 months later saying, "Hey, after we turned down Minnesota saying, "Are you still interested?" I was like, "Are you serious?" >> Um, yes, we're in. >> Right. And >> how'd you negotiate the value or how'd you how'd you figure it out? >> It was literally a meeting where it was like, "Well, are you serious? Make us an offer." And we pulled up the Forbes valuation on the phone and I said, "Well, how's this?" Cuz I didn't know this team of scientists. >> This was before economist. >> This was like a year before all this madness. And I was like, "Does that work?" >> Like it seems fair, >> right? And and like to her credit like >> it wasn't a big auction or anything in that case. >> There was no one else. >> I think she had sat across the court from Ashley and I. She knew what we were about. She she cared about it being in Utah and that was important. They had had 35 years. I think they bought it for $22 million. >> Right. >> And would you buy for 1.6? >> Yeah. 1.6. And it was like, okay, I've got a this looks like about as clean as it could get, right? >> I mean, it's not all gold when you're running an auction. >> How does it work? You buy a franch you're not buying the whole thing. So that's the franchise value. You're buying a part like a majority stake. >> Yeah. >> You just got to send a wire one day. Like how does this actually go down? >> I mean, pretty much I mean, we did Yeah. Like Yeah, that's pretty much how it works. >> Let's double check the numbers like >> a car. >> You got you got to go figure it out because you can't put a lot of debt on these. And you know, my philosophy was don't bling these chants. There's 30 of these things in the world. Just go, >> right? >> And you know, Ash and I had a lot of conversation about like why life's pretty good at this point. Why are we literally going, hey, we're on this 20-year journey of sacrifice and travel and all of this and literally grinding at a level that most people could never comprehend. You interview founders all the time. like when I when we're all in, it's it's like a different level. And then and then going and signing up for a level where there's a lot of pressure, there's a lot of responsibility. Everything's public and you're taking the hopes and dreams of a whole nation here and putting them on your shoulders to go do something. And >> and you're also impacting the children like >> you know kids, our kids like Equalrix was relatively normal life, >> right? Even though it was worth on paper like a lot more than an NBA team. The NBA team is very different. >> Yes. >> Right. And so >> you didn't take it lightly. >> No. And you know there was a lot of personal discussions about what's this for? Is this for ego? Is this for us? Is this for helping Utah? And it really came down to like Utah. >> I want to finish with a couple of rapid fire almost like lifeisms. This idea of the nine most important minutes of the day. What are the nine most important minutes of the day? when your kids wake up, when they get home from school, and when they go to bed. >> 333 and you show up for those >> or you just try to hit one, >> right? I mean, a lot of times like you're planning a trip, you're doing this and like you have an option to like be at one of those, >> right? >> And so I think that as you schedule, as you plan, as you optimize, those are important moments. Not all three maybe, but like if I can schedule a call, I'm not doing it in one of those moments, >> right? >> Another one is, you know, if you don't know what to do, if you don't know what you want to do, go figure out what you don't want to do. Use use the inversion, use the contrast. Yeah. >> Uh what what's that? Unpack that a little bit. >> I just, you know, we teach a class at at BYU. We teach a business school class and, you know, it's every fall and it's it's around leadership and decision-making. and watching all these kids, it's like this is what I want to go do. I didn't know what I wanted to do. And I think that's why Qualrix worked because if I had a picture in my head of what it's supposed to look like, I don't think I would have done Qualrix. I would have been so focused on that the opportunity or Zuckerberg could have been sitting next to you starting a business and you're like, you didn't even see it and you're like kicking yourself, right? >> But what I did know is there was some attributes that I believed in. I knew I wanted to be able to have a job where the sky was a limit. My age wasn't going to limit me to what my potential could be. I didn't want to be like, well, when you're 22, you can make up to $80,000 a year. And you're 24, you get to 120. I didn't want to be capped. >> I want to be like, if I work harder than everyone else, I'm more creative, my ideas hit, like they can go somewhere, right? I knew I wanted to be like in leadership and I could lead, right? I knew I wanted to see a lot of businesses very quickly, a lot of industries. I wanted to know the world and know every industry, okay? I wanted something that was kind of not old school. And so, like when I started looking at opportunities, like I never thought enterprise software, but I was like, okay, I look at it and I kind of put the opportunity right here and I'm like, wait, sky's is the limit. I can be a founder. I can create. I'm not really capped. It's a new school. It's a new part of technology. It can go for a long time. Like I'm not going to get the legs pulled out from under me if I start doing well. And like I think those attributes is where I would advise kids and younger people or entrepreneurs to say, "Okay, don't be so caught up on what this looks like. See if it fits." And you'll be blown away that it's like, "Oh, the auto industry actually works really well for me." Right? never would have thought about that. And that's all that really matters. And so I think that's kind of how we look, you know, and now I've got a lot more roles and things that I care about, but it has to fit into that. You ask like what do we do? Does it fit? And you know, you kind of go through that rubric. >> It's great. Well, listen, man. Thank you for doing this. I appreciate you. >> Thanks for coming out to Utah. >> I mean, it's great out here. I love it out here. All right, man. Thank you so much.
*Get the guide to build your own unicorn billion dollar biz:* https://clickhubspot.com/wpd Get the behind-the-scenes on Shaan’s book project - https://onehourbooks.co Episode 761: Shaan Puri ( https://x.com/ShaanVP ) sits down with Ryan Smith ( https://x.com/ryanqualtrics ) – the high school dropout who built an $8B company and bought an NBA team. — Show Notes: (0:00) 1.9 GPA to $2B (9:47) Starting Qualtrics (14:02) Focus (24:00) How to be top 1% at sales (26:17) Turning down $500M (31:37) Working backwards (3814) Buying an NBA team (43:51) The 9 most important minutes of the day — Links: • Qualtrics - https://www.qualtrics.com/ • Utah Jazz - https://www.nba.com/jazz/ — Check Out Shaan's Stuff: • One Hour Books - https://www.onehourbooks.co/ • Shaan's weekly email - https://www.shaanpuri.com • Visit https://www.somewhere.com/mfm to hire worldwide talent like Shaan and get $500 off for being an MFM listener. Hire developers, assistants, marketing pros, sales teams and more for 80% less than US equivalents. • Mercury - Need a bank for your company? Go check out Mercury (mercury.com). Shaan uses it for all of his companies! Mercury is a financial technology company, not an FDIC-insured bank. Banking services provided by Choice Financial Group, Column, N.A., and Evolve Bank & Trust, Members FDIC — Check Out Sam's Stuff: • Hampton - https://www.joinhampton.com/ • Ideation Bootcamp - https://www.ideationbootcamp.co/ • Copy That - https://copythat.com • Hampton Wealth Survey - https://joinhampton.com/wealth • Sam’s List - http://samslist.co/ My First Million is a HubSpot Original Podcast // Brought to you by HubSpot Media // Production by Arie Desormeaux // Editing by Ezra Bakker Trupiano