Episodi

  • 3. How Tiny Improvements Create 372% Revenue Gains
    Jan 13 2026

    Summary:

    Would you take $3 million today—or a penny that doubles for 31 days? Most people grab the cash. By day 29, you'd only have $2.7 million. But by day 31? $10.7 million. That's the compound effect, and it's the invisible force behind every business that seems to grow "overnight."

    In this episode, I break down why our brains can't compute exponential growth (blame evolution), how the British cycling team went from 76 years of mediocrity to Olympic dominance using 1% improvements, and why Kodak invented the technology that killed them—then ignored it. You'll also get a practical framework for applying the compound effect to your business, whether you're running a Shopify store or a dentist's office.

    What You'll Learn:

    1. Why a penny beats $3 million (and what that means for your growth strategy)
    2. The "aggregation of marginal gains"—the philosophy behind British Cycling's 178 championship wins
    3. How Kodak's 70-80% profit margins blinded them to the future
    4. Three signals that predict exponential market growth before everyone else sees it
    5. The e-commerce math: how 1% weekly improvements across three metrics = 372% annual revenue growth
    6. How to build flywheel systems that compound automatically (with a real example from my wife's business)

    Timestamps:

    00:00 – The $3 million vs. penny thought experiment

    00:36 – How exponential growth actually works (nuclear physics edition)

    05:18 – Why our brains can't compute compound growth

    06:00 – British Cycling: from one gold medal in 76 years to Olympic domination

    09:48 – Kodak's fatal mistake (they literally invented what killed them)

    12:09 – The Innovator's Dilemma explained

    13:00 – The 1000x rule: why you've already missed it when it's obvious

    14:27 – Three signals that predict exponential growth

    16:39 – AI and the next wave of exponential curves

    18:55 – The e-commerce compound effect math (372% gains breakdown)

    21:10 – Building flywheel systems that compound automatically

    23:24 – Why knowledge compounds (Larry Ellison's "kernel group" philosophy)

    25:51 – Your dual challenge for this week

    Key Quotes:

    1. "What is so deceptive about exponential growth is that early on, it seems like nothing is happening. Scientists call this the valley of disappointment."
    2. "Consistency is more important than intensity. The compound effect rewards patience and persistence."
    3. "The compound effect works just as well in reverse. Small negative choices compound into major setbacks over time."

    Resources Mentioned:

    1. Atomic Habits by James Clear
    2. Clayton Christensen's "Innovator's Dilemma" concept
    3. Larry Ellison's book Softwar (kernel group philosophy)

    This Week's Challenge:

    1. Identify one potential exponential market opportunity in your...
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    27 min
  • 2. Focus Creates Fire: Why the Best Companies Do Less
    Jan 6 2026
    Focus Creates Fire: Why In-N-Out Crushes McDonald's With 10x Fewer Stores

    The Fundamental Edge | Episode 2

    Episode Summary

    What does a magnifying glass have in common with In-N-Out Burger? Turns out, everything.

    In this episode, I break down the physics principle of focus and how it connects to one of the most powerful business strategies out there—the Hedgehog Concept from Jim Collins' Good to Great. We'll dig into why more businesses die from indigestion than starvation, look at real examples of companies that nailed (or completely blew) their focus, and I'll give you a framework to find your own Hedgehog Concept.

    Fair warning: finding your focus isn't a weekend exercise. The companies Collins studied took an average of four years to figure this out. But once you get it right? It changes everything.

    What You'll Learn
    1. Why scattered light creates warmth, but focused light creates fire—and how this applies to your business
    2. The three circles of the Hedgehog Concept (and why you need all three)
    3. How In-N-Out Burger generates $4.5M per store vs. McDonald's $2.6M with a fraction of the locations
    4. Why Sears went from controlling 1% of the entire US economy to having just 11 stores left
    5. How AOL's "merger of the century" lost $200 billion in value within two years
    6. The story of Steve Jobs cutting 70% of Apple's products when they were 90 days from bankruptcy
    7. A five-step framework to find your own Hedgehog Concept

    Timestamps
    1. (00:00) The magnifying glass principle—how focus creates fire
    2. (02:50) Jim Collins' Hedgehog Concept explained
    3. (05:01) In-N-Out Burger: The power of doing one thing well
    4. (09:33) Why In-N-Out sued DoorDash (yes, really)
    5. (11:49) Sears: From American retail giant to 11 stores
    6. (18:48) The AOL-Time Warner disaster and the $200 billion lesson
    7. (25:49) Apple's comeback: 90 days from bankruptcy to $3 trillion
    8. (32:57) Steve Jobs on saying no to 100 good ideas
    9. (35:13) Five-step framework to find your Hedgehog Concept
    10. (42:18) Warren Buffett on why successful people say no to almost everything

    Key Takeaways

    The Hedgehog Concept has three circles:

    1. What are you deeply passionate about?
    2. What can you be the best in the world at?
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    44 min
  • 1. First Principles: Why Grandma Cut the Ham (And What It's Costing You)
    Dec 30 2025

    Three generations. One ham. Zero reason to keep cutting off the end—except "that's how we've always done it." Sound familiar? This is the trap most entrepreneurs fall into, and it's costing you more than you think.

    In this episode, we break down first principles thinking—the mental framework behind SpaceX's 90% cost reduction, NVIDIA's AI dominance, and Netflix's transformation from DVD mailers to streaming giant. You'll learn how to strip away inherited assumptions and rebuild your business from the ground up.

    What You'll Learn:

    1. Why Elon Musk got laughed out of the room (and proved everyone wrong)
    2. The 5-step framework for applying first principles to YOUR business
    3. How Netflix abandoned a billion-dollar business model at its peak—on purpose
    4. Jensen Huang's weekend pivot that saved NVIDIA from irrelevance

    Timestamps:

    1. 00:00 – The $175 million question
    2. 01:55 – Elon Musk's $65 million wake-up call
    3. 04:14 – The ham story (and why it matters)
    4. 06:38 – My first business failure (and what I'd do differently)
    5. 08:48 – SpaceX's near-bankruptcy and breakthrough
    6. 11:21 – NVIDIA: From gaming GPUs to AI backbone
    7. 15:42 – Netflix's first principles pivot
    8. 20:25 – The 5-step framework you can use today
    9. 27:26 – Your challenge: Pick one assumption to question

    Key Quotes:

    1. "Think of yourself to decide what you want, what is true, and what you should do to achieve the first in light of the second." – Ray Dalio
    2. "We implemented the graphics pipeline in a way nobody had done before and built something the world had never seen." – Jensen Huang

    Resources Mentioned:

    1. Liftoff by Eric Berger (SpaceX story)
    2. Principles by Ray Dalio

    Challenge: Pick ONE assumption in your industry that nobody questions. Break it down. Ask: Why is it done this way? What's the fundamental goal? How would I approach it from scratch?

    Subscribe & Connect: If this episode hit home, leave a review—it helps other entrepreneurs find the show. See you next episode where we uncover the invisible force killing more startups than running out of money.

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    28 min