Classic Economic Theory Doesn't Tell the Whole Story | Doug Howarth

1h 4m
Became a Master of the Close: https://masteroftheclose.comWhat if you could revolutionize your business strategy and optimize your pricing like never before? Join us as we unlock the groundbreaking world of "hypernomics" with Doug Howarth.Go deeper down the rabbit hole: https://linktr.ee/ryan_hanleyConnect with Doug HowarthHypernomics: https://hypernomics.com/Website: https://www.doughowarth.com/Doug Howarth is a seasoned executive who has redefined traditional economic models. With an illustrious career at NASA, United Technologies, Lockheed, and Raytheon, Doug shares how his innovative approach adds a third dimension to the classic supply and demand model, providing a fresh lens for understanding market dynamics and maximizing profit margins.Dive deep into the nuances of hypernomics as we contrast it with conventional economic theories. Discover how multi-dimensional models can offer a more comprehensive view of market behaviors, from choosing electric cars based on features like horsepower and range to identifying overpriced or underpriced products. Learn from real-world examples, such as technology's evolution and innovation's role in reducing costs over time. Doug's insights reveal the limitations of traditional models and the transformative potential of hypernomics in today's complex markets.Navigate the emotional landscape of stock market investments with Doug as he draws parallels between the current AI hype and the late 90s internet boom. Understand the importance of systematic frameworks and mental models to avoid common investment pitfalls. Explore the fascinating intersection between nature and economics, drawing lessons from the collective behaviors of ants and penguins. This episode challenges conventional economic theories and emphasizes the importance of integrating complex variables to better understand and optimize market behavior. Tune in for a mind-expanding conversation that will inspire you to rethink economics with Doug Howard's pioneering approach

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Runtime: 1h 4m

Transcript

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Speaker 5 Several economists review my work, and nobody has said I'm wrong. In fact, to date, nobody has challenged me in print because

Speaker 5 the math checks.

Speaker 3 Let's go.

Speaker 3 Yeah, make it look, make it look, make it look easy.

Speaker 6 The Ryan Hanley Show shares the original ideas, habits, and mindsets of world-class original thinkers you can use to produce extraordinary results in your life and business. This is the way.

Speaker 3 Hello, everyone, and welcome back to the show. Today, we have a tremendous episode for you, a conversation with Doug Howard.
Doug is a former NASA United Technologies Lockheed Raytheon executive.

Speaker 3 He has been all over the aerospace and aviation industries, and in that work, found patterns that didn't make sense to him.

Speaker 3 He saw problems consistently in understanding inventory pricing that didn't line up with the results that they expected to see in those businesses, in those industries.

Speaker 3 And out of that came Doug creating his own extension to classic economics that he calls hypernomics, and particularly the idea of a demand frontier and how we can apply this concept of a demand frontier to whatever business we're in, not just aerospace or aviation, to better price our products.

Speaker 3 How do we look into our industry?

Speaker 3 How do we look into the classic demand and supply curve and add, as he states, a third dimension onto the classic 2D model that allows us to price our products to move?

Speaker 3 This episode is packed with tactical insights, deep understanding of how do you develop a new branch of economics? Where do these ideas come from?

Speaker 3 And then ultimately, how do we apply hypernomics to our business in order to properly price our product against inventory to make sure that we maximize our profit margins.

Speaker 3 This is an incredible episode. You're absolutely going to love it.
And I highly recommend that you not only spend the entire time with us today, but also dig into Doug's work.

Speaker 3 With all that being said, as always, I love you for being on this show. I love you for listening to this show.
I love you for taking time out of your day to be part of this community, guys.

Speaker 3 We've officially cracked the top 150 of all of Apple podcasts. That is because of you and the fact that you do the one thing that makes the most impact on this show, which is spread the word.

Speaker 3 I appreciate the hell out of you for doing that. Let's get on to Doug Howarth.
So, Doug,

Speaker 3 as you called out before we went live, I was a math major in college. And as I

Speaker 3 described to you, I flunked my way into math because I couldn't make it through engineering school. So I'm going to try to keep up with you today.

Speaker 3 But I was so, I'm so intrigued by

Speaker 3 the way that you're looking at this particular topic because

Speaker 3 as you said before we went live as well, you've kind of developed a new coordinate system and I

Speaker 3 it just fascinates me individuals who are able to take something that

Speaker 3 we'll say kind of has an industry standard and is willing, not only able to, which is amazing,

Speaker 3 but also willing to step outside of that box and approach a topic. So maybe we could just dig into this idea of hypernomics versus economics.

Speaker 3 What are the distinctions so we can level set for the audience?

Speaker 5 Sure. Thanks.
Thanks again, Ryan, and thank you so much for having me on. I really love your show and you do a great job with it.
So it's my big privilege to be on this. So thanks.

Speaker 5 The primary difference between economics, as you've been taught, and hypernomics is that Economics likes to talk about two-dimensional systems where they have an equilibrium between what they call supply

Speaker 5 and demand. And they draw supply and demand as two solitary lines and they intersect.
And where they intersect,

Speaker 5 that's where the market is happy. And what hypernomics observes is that, no, that doesn't happen very frequently.
That happens in iron ore and oil.

Speaker 5 24 karat gold. It doesn't happen for things that iron goes into, for example, cars and planes and things like that.

Speaker 5 So as you're probably aware, when you buy a car, say an electric car, you pay more if you get more horsepower. And if you buy an electric car, you pay more if you get more range.
Well, what that is,

Speaker 5 more of the horsepower, more of the range, you're describing two features at the same time. And so that gives you what's known in math as a response surface.

Speaker 5 Specifically, it's a hyperplane. And that hyperplane, the plane that goes through the best of it, they're all the points that describe the range, the horsepower, and the price.

Speaker 5 That surface of best fit is a hyperplane

Speaker 5 from which you can figure out if products are overpriced, in which case maybe you want to drop the price, or underpriced, in which case you may want to raise the price.

Speaker 5 And then at the same time, so that's a 3D system there. So you've got, in cars then, again, you've got electric cars, you've got range, horsepower, and price.

Speaker 5 And then on the other side of this, you've got a certain price and a number of units sold.

Speaker 5 So there's a certain number of Tesla S's that are sold, and then there's more of the Tesla Ys, and then there's more of the X's, and

Speaker 5 they form this series of dots that you can find an outer boundary, which we call demand frontiers. And these demand frontiers turn out to be massively important in markets.

Speaker 5 And this is something that went undiscovered until we stumbled upon it. Well, I say stumbled, I basically was really grumpy.
I got my degree in economics

Speaker 5 and

Speaker 5 I never quite believed everything they were telling me.

Speaker 5 And I was suffering from a long-term

Speaker 5 condition, a kidney disease, that actually had taken my IQ down.

Speaker 5 I discovered after I got the thing fixed, took it down by several points over the course of three decades.

Speaker 5 And then when I got a kidney transplant from my best friend, all of a sudden my brain just cleared up. And I was able to see things in new ways.

Speaker 5 And so when my wife went off to buy a washing machine, when we went off to buy a washing machine, and she said that she liked the, she wanted more capacity, and I thought capacity versus price,

Speaker 5 that's a 2D problem. And then she said, we've only got one gentle cycle at home, I want more.
And I thought, capacity cycles in price. She's got a 3D problem.

Speaker 5 And then I saw a machine I liked, and it was just up one from what she liked. And I said, what about this one?

Speaker 5 she says it's too expensive and then I realized that when we were going to buy that one machine it was going to send the quantity for that unit out over the course of the year by one and we were adding to this demand frontier and so that was a the her problem was then capacity cycles price and quantity so she was working on a 4d problem in her head and it turns out very fascinatingly that the entire world works this way and they work out problems in a way in which the all the the answers self-aggregate you can actually describe mathematically using statistics so that turns out to be really important

Speaker 3 so

Speaker 3 diving into your washing machine example what would be the standard

Speaker 3 explanation for how you would figure out whether something was expensive or not using kind of the 2d model

Speaker 5 well in a 2d model they would say that there's a supply curve which they call upward sloping, which is to say when you look at quantity versus price, they would say as you add more units of that washing machine in the market, it becomes, they would say, harder for the supplier to make the washing machine.

Speaker 5 They will increase the price.

Speaker 5 And at the same time, on the demand side, they would say, well, many people can afford an expensive washing machine, then fewer and fewer people I should say more and more people can get a less expensive machine.

Speaker 5 And at a certain point, there there would be equilibrium for that machine. And that's how they would explain it.

Speaker 5 But there's a lot of problems associated with that, in that, first of all, there's more than one feature in that machine, A.

Speaker 5 And then B,

Speaker 5 it's not true that as people make more and more of something, they're going to try to charge more and more.

Speaker 5 So for example, you and I are looking at computers and you went to school 10, 20 years ago and you remember how expensive your laptop was then

Speaker 5 that only had a little bit of the capability that your does now and then the price keep the price per storage keeps falling the price per speed keeps falling and it's been falling for decades and so the prop what happens here there's something called learning that's completely ignored by economics textbooks and so what happens is is that learning can continue as long as the the cost

Speaker 5 stays below the price. And so for cell phones, for example, I think you're just barely young enough to remember or old enough to remember the the old brick phone that they might have had

Speaker 5 in Wall Street. And that phone lasted for 30 minutes.
You had to charge it all day.

Speaker 5 And it cost the equivalent of $2

Speaker 5 to get this big brick on your head.

Speaker 5 But then over time, as we kept improving these things and working out ways to work out the size differently, Well, the engineers and the people that are building this, they're learning the whole time.

Speaker 5 And as they learn, the prices start to fall. And that's one of the missing elements in modern economics is that as we start to build more and more of a product, the prices tend to fall.

Speaker 5 And that's one of the things that hypernomics covers that modern economics doesn't cover.

Speaker 3 Yeah, you know, it's funny. So I remember I paid

Speaker 3 $1,600 for my very first computer in 1996. And I was

Speaker 3 like overjoyed that I had found a computer with eight megabits of RAM, right?

Speaker 3 Right now, like the baseline Mac, I think, is like 500 megabits or 512, whatever it is, right?

Speaker 3 And you think about that, and I paid $1,600 for, I have two Macs, one I take on the road and one I keep set up, but the Air was, I think, $1,600 for $512.

Speaker 3 And

Speaker 3 that's a tough, you know, tough idea to wrap your head around. So if I'm a consumer,

Speaker 3 so I want to get into how we use this to build wealth and I want to talk a little bit about it.

Speaker 3 Also, I want to frame it also from someone who's trying to price their products, but just keeping our framework on a consumer right now,

Speaker 3 how do I use this to my advantage when I'm going out into the market and looking for a product

Speaker 3 like a computer?

Speaker 3 How do I frame my buying process so that I make sure I'm maximizing my dollars spent understanding

Speaker 3 how hypernomics can play a role in that?

Speaker 5 Well, you kind of do this probably already. Like when you went out and bought that computer, you were very satisfied that you got the eight megabytes.

Speaker 5 And so what you're doing is you're comparing it to other computers that might have had four, roughly the same price, and maybe one that had 12 or 16 that was two and three times as expensive.

Speaker 5 And then you had the, you know, the processor speed. And you bought a certain processor speed.
There was probably some that were better.

Speaker 5 Because there's always something better than a $160 computer. But there are also some that were slower.
And so what you did,

Speaker 5 you were working out along with everybody else how you felt the value of that computer was.

Speaker 5 And so when you actually made the purchase, you added a quantity of one to that and you actually validated that guy's price that he had for it.

Speaker 5 Now, in your estimation, since you got a good deal, it might have been below this surface that existed for the speed and the memory that this computer had.

Speaker 5 We actually use the same process in buying stocks. So we've had a

Speaker 5 a self-funded fund. I have to tell everybody you can't get into this fund.
I don't want to get in trouble with the SEC, but

Speaker 5 we're buying stocks out of the SP 500 using this algorithm that we've built.

Speaker 5 And as of last week, only buying SP 500 stocks and only going long,

Speaker 5 we're doing 1.6 times as well as the SP 500. And so what we're doing is we're finding the stocks that are below this surface that works out from all the inputs that we put in.
There's

Speaker 5 a surface that exists that explains all the stocks, and the ones that we find are relatively undervalued to that.

Speaker 3 Gotcha. So

Speaker 3 what, like, when you're approaching it from

Speaker 3 now we're talking wealth building and you're thinking about how to invest in different things,

Speaker 3 maybe

Speaker 3 so, you know, the everyday non math major like myself or economics major like yourself, so they can, so they can kind of start to think through, because, because, you know,

Speaker 3 the stock market is interesting. You really find two people.
You find two types of people. The people who understand what the words mean, they understand how they relate,

Speaker 3 or maybe three. And then you find the people who have no idea and they just throw their money in a fund and that's great.

Speaker 3 And then you got the people who know what all the words mean and actually know how to apply them, right?

Speaker 5 Sure.

Speaker 3 So let's take the example of the person who knows what the words mean.

Speaker 3 They know the various indicators

Speaker 3 and statistics that come in associated with what they're going to see in a particular stock if they're looking on Ameritrade or whatever. Right.

Speaker 3 What should they be looking for? And again, not investment advice, just what are some of the indicators that start to show them: hey, the standard model that people usually value a stock buy,

Speaker 3 they're not looking at this metric or they're not reading that metric properly.

Speaker 5 Sure. Well,

Speaker 5 your listeners will know some of these things intuitively, but what's happened, I think we've seen lately in the market, people have been getting wrapped up in AI.

Speaker 5 AI is to today as

Speaker 5 companies were back in the late 2000s. Anybody that had a web page, oh, you got a web page, we're going to invest in you.
And that was a big deal, having a web page in the 90s.

Speaker 5 Well, right now, if you've got AI in any shape or form, and a lot of these companies are doing great things with the AI, but there is...

Speaker 5 It seems to us to be a little bit too much hype to the AI companies.

Speaker 5 So they have in stocks, if people know some of the lingo, there's a certain price that you're paying for the stock, and there's a certain amount of earnings that exists for the stock.

Speaker 5 And that ratio of the price to the earnings is called,

Speaker 5 interestingly enough, the PE ratio. And when that ratio starts to get pretty high,

Speaker 5 like NVIDIA before they split was something in the order of 700, then they split 10 for one

Speaker 5 and it went down to 70, but it's starting to, you know, started to creep back up. Well, if other stocks have a PE ratio that's down below 10,

Speaker 5 you might say to yourself, it sounds to me like this stock below 10 might be undervalued. And those tend to be the stocks that we look at.
Now,

Speaker 5 having said all that, what we won't do without fund, the way the algorithm is set up right now, and that's not to say we couldn't come up with a new algorithm, is we probably would never buy a NVIDIA.

Speaker 5 We wouldn't find a NVIDIA, we wouldn't find an Amazon, we wouldn't find a Facebook as they're starting out.

Speaker 5 Because what we're doing is we're taking all the financials that a company has, and we're kind of amalgamating them into this model that we have.

Speaker 5 And then we pick and choose and then we say, well, who looks the best?

Speaker 5 And what often happens happens here is you pick a company that's been neglected by the SP, maybe because it's been in the market for over 100 years.

Speaker 5 A lot of the companies that are 100, 150 years old, well, people think, well, they're not doing any innovation. They're not worthwhile.
And so people kind of dismiss a whole bunch of those companies.

Speaker 5 But

Speaker 5 for us, if those companies have really good financials, and this would be for your listeners too,

Speaker 5 if they have good financials and it makes sense to you and they seem undervalued, if it seems to you that they're undervalued, again, because everybody's voting the same way, if it seems to you that they're undervalued, there's a good chance that they are undervalued, in which case you want to go out and buy that stock.

Speaker 5 as opposed to one that you think is overvalued. Now, having said all that,

Speaker 5 back in the,

Speaker 5 before you were born, back in the 60s, you know, everybody said you can't go wrong investing in IBM. Of course, IBM made a lot of mistakes and then they fell off the platform.

Speaker 5 Before that, people would have said in the 40s and 50s, you can't go wrong with GM.

Speaker 5 And of course, they fell off the wagon and they made

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Speaker 5 You're gonna bounce back now. And even before that, U.S.
Steel.

Speaker 5 Well, now the new things in which to invest is Walmart.

Speaker 5 You couldn't fault anybody for investing in Walmart or Amazon or any of the other companies that have really got this massive base.

Speaker 5 And why do people invest in Amazon? Because people invest in Amazon. So there's enough people that are going to keep the price up because they believe in what Amazon's doing.

Speaker 5 So, you know, Amazon's still a good bet for the average person, and so would, you know, places like Facebook. But it seems to us that NVIDIA

Speaker 5 could be one of those things like Facebook or Walmart, but we don't know enough yet, and we think the PE ratio is too high. So we wouldn't go in for that right now.

Speaker 3 Yeah, the two, and I don't profess to be a stock picker by any stretch of the means, but the two biggest mistakes that I see when I'm talking to friends or colleagues about their own investments often is they think

Speaker 3 they look at the stock's price what you have to pay for it the value you know say it's a hundred bucks and they like make they like do an equation in their mind if a hundred bucks feels expensive or not right like I had um I was talking to a buddy um about Tesla and I'm I'm intrigued with the company and I have a number in my head that every time it dips below you know my own equations that I do and that right and that every time it dips below that number I buy more and he's like oh you know and and that number

Speaker 3 let's say it's in the the high

Speaker 3 you know, between $150 and $200 a share.

Speaker 5 Sure, right.

Speaker 3 And

Speaker 3 he's like, oh,

Speaker 3 $170, whatever.

Speaker 3 That's expensive. And I go, expensive compared to what?

Speaker 5 Like, what do you mean?

Speaker 3 When you say expensive, do you mean, are you saying the price to earnings, the PE ratio is too high? Are you saying that they have too much debt to equity? Like, what are you saying?

Speaker 3 Why is it too high? Is it just the number? Like, the number, essentially,

Speaker 3 the number that it costs, the amount of money that it costs to purchase one share is almost meaningless, really. I mean, it has meaning, but not in the context that most people frame it.

Speaker 3 They just look at

Speaker 3 would I pay a hundred and something dollars for a stock, yes or no? Okay, that's the first one. The second mistake that I see people make is,

Speaker 3 and this is why I love talking to individuals like yourself who have like true systems that, and I'm all about frameworks and mindsets and mental models because,

Speaker 3 as I've shared on the show in the past, I have severe ADHD, which

Speaker 3 is like actually diagnosed. It's not just like made up or self-diagnosed, and it's caused me different issues.

Speaker 3 One of those issues is I have the propensity to shoot from the hip, I have the potential to, you know, I'm one of those people who can be super emotional into something, so I've had to use frameworks and systems to put guardrails up for myself.

Speaker 3 And so many investors, and particularly retail small investors, don't realize how emotion-driven stocks are.

Speaker 3 We look at the S ⁇ P today and S ⁇ P is up and to the right and everyone's like, you know, the economy can't be bad. Look at the SP.

Speaker 3 Well, if you take the top seven stocks out, the Magnificent Seven, Nvidia, Facebook, Google, et cetera, if you take those top seven stocks out, I think the stock market is barely up now.

Speaker 3 It was actually down, I think, a few months ago. It's now barely up, which means you're essentially flat.

Speaker 3 And so so when you're when you're looking at if you just buy the S P 500 right now, that's great.

Speaker 3 And maybe just buying that an ETF or whatever is a good investment for you, especially if you're risk averse.

Speaker 3 But if you're actually trying to get gains beyond what the market can provide, it's models like what you're describing with hypernomics that allow you to do this because otherwise we're just emotion driven into a number or an idea.

Speaker 3 And as you said, right now, the reason those seven stocks are so high, and push back on me on any of these these points if you disagree, but the reason those seven stocks are so high is exactly what you described.

Speaker 3 It's the AI craze. Those are the seven

Speaker 3 seven stocks that have integrated and deployed AI capabilities the fastest and the most obvious to the market, which is why all this money is getting pumped in.

Speaker 3 Just like every other new transformational technology, that is going to become normalized.

Speaker 3 And now all of a sudden, a company, you know, a boring company like Waste Management, who we would never, they're going to start using AI, which is gonna create efficiencies and drive that stock up, but it's gonna be lagging behind.

Speaker 3 And if we don't have a system to

Speaker 3 actually dissect these things,

Speaker 3 we're gonna miss them because we're just gonna be focused on where all the attention is. And those are often the companies that get hit first.
And like you said, you buy into NVIDIA

Speaker 3 at

Speaker 3 some price and then AI starts to equalize. And now the price per earnings ratio comes down.
and you're going, oh, I'm still doing okay. Well,

Speaker 3 not compared to what you're actually paying, to what they're actually making.

Speaker 3 So I guess

Speaker 3 when you're describing this to someone, so you're standing on stage, you're doing a keynote, and you get the line of people that come up after, which is amazing when it happens, and I'm always feel very blessed when it does.

Speaker 3 And you start getting peppered with questions.

Speaker 3 What are the aspects of your model that people tend to miss the most? Like, what's the part where they're like, you know,

Speaker 3 I feel like I got it, but I don't all the way. Like,

Speaker 3 what are the pieces that people tend to have a hard time grabbing on to?

Speaker 5 Well, there's this concept that we've discovered, which we call demand frontiers, and it works out that in

Speaker 5 mature markets. So, for example, the market for business aviation.
is mature. It's been around for decades.
And it forms these barriers that we call frontiers. So there's this upper level.

Speaker 5 So if you draw the dots, you draw the, you've got the quantity sold for, say, 10 years on the horizontal axis, and you've got the price on the vertical axis.

Speaker 5 So there are, Boeing has got 787s, or very large jet, and so 12 of those might have sold over a decade. And then there's some smaller 737s, the BBJs.

Speaker 5 And then you go down the list and you get into the Gulf Streams.

Speaker 5 If you take all those points together and you run a curve through them, you get a statistically significant upper demand frontier.

Speaker 5 And then if you

Speaker 5 see where they break, there's actually a point where they actually,

Speaker 5 the curve shifts and it becomes steeper. And then there's a Pilates PC-12, a propeller-driven plane, and the Gulf Streams in here, and they form this outer barrier.

Speaker 5 So this upper barrier is price-limited.

Speaker 5 The outer barrier is saturation-limited. There's just not enough money.

Speaker 5 People have already had all the planes they're going to have. They're not going to buy anymore.

Speaker 5 And then on the bottom of this pile of dots, again, every one of these dots is a price-quantity combination, there's this lower limit that's set.

Speaker 5 And the lower limit basically says nobody in that group, because business aircraft have to go through a whole bunch of studies and they have to be certified by the FAA to a certain level.

Speaker 5 Nobody below a certain price can build anything because there's not enough margin left. So that forms a lower limit to the market.
And then the market's got an inner barrier.

Speaker 5 And the inner barrier is basically describing how many you have to build

Speaker 5 to stay profitable. Because people have, in business, in aircraft building, there's something called learning.

Speaker 5 And if somebody only gets to build one plane a year, they're not going to learn, they're going to forget what they did earlier.

Speaker 5 So they have to have a certain number of planes per year that they're building. It's usually a few dozen planes.

Speaker 5 would be the optimal per year and this forms this inner barrier. And so one of the things that we pointed out to

Speaker 5 in my last presentation, which was that this company up in Reno, Nevada,

Speaker 5 had this really nice plane. It was called the Ariane AS-2.
It was going to be a supersonic business jet.

Speaker 5 And they came up with a price. We did some analysis.
And they were going to charge $120 million. And by some metrics, it was worth even more than that.

Speaker 5 And then they said, well, we're going to spend...

Speaker 5 four and then eventually five billion to develop it. And that that's actually got the right number of digits.
So they had the cost right, and they had the price, which we call value.

Speaker 5 They had that right. But then they said,

Speaker 5 we're going to sell 300 of these,

Speaker 5 300 in 10 years. Now, you recall I just said that there was this curve that forms this upper demand frontier, and there were 12 787s, and there was more 737s.

Speaker 5 And then there's eventually a few hundred Gulf streams at about $60, $70 million.

Speaker 5 This plane, this AS2, was beyond this frontier. And if you did the math and you do a little bit of statistics on it, you'd find out that they had a chance of selling 300, but that chance was about 2%

Speaker 5 in 10 years.

Speaker 5 So in December 2020, I wrote a little LinkedIn piece that said, worth every penny, not enough pennies.

Speaker 5 And I got a really angry response from a guy I knew who used to work back at Lockheed where I worked. who was then a VP at this place.
He says, ah, we just got a big order in. You're all wet.

Speaker 5 We're going to make it. And I go, good for you.

Speaker 5 Your order won't even take you to this.

Speaker 5 They started out with 20 units.

Speaker 5 They launched with 20 units. And remember, they wanted 300.
And five years later, they still had just the 20 units.

Speaker 5 And they want to get to 300 because they have to have so many to be able to make a profit. So I called them out and said, no, you're not going to make it.

Speaker 5 And then six months later, they went bankrupt. And they stopped writing me.

Speaker 5 So

Speaker 5 this has some real-world implications for people. And then this minimum level that I was telling you about.

Speaker 5 So, another,

Speaker 5 this guy up in Nevada was a billionaire. Another company,

Speaker 5 Eclipse Aviation, that was also funded by a billionaire. This guy was out of Microsoft.
And he had built a bunch of computers.

Speaker 5 And he said, well, you know, I'm going to build business planes, or I'm going to build personal jets, he called them. I'm going to stamp them out like personal computers.

Speaker 5 And so he started to make this business jet, the Eclipse 500.

Speaker 5 And his price originally was, I think, $750,000, then it eventually rose to

Speaker 5 $875,000.

Speaker 5 But our analysis said it was worth $2.1 million back in the early 2000s. And so he's selling this thing for a fraction of what it could fetch.
And so he gets 2,600 orders in,

Speaker 5 which is way beyond what he could satisfy.

Speaker 5 And he eventually found that he couldn't make it for that price. His costs were too high, and his price was too low.
And then that company went bankrupt. And so

Speaker 5 these limits, and then the response for what the thing was worth,

Speaker 5 they have real meaning. The meaning is gathered by all the money that's being poured into the market.

Speaker 5 So when the money's flushing into this market, and people are basically voting out, they're saying, well, it comes to play is I want to go so fast, I want to have so much room,

Speaker 5 you know, I want this number of seats.

Speaker 5 That information can all be reduced to a series of equations that describe how the market's going to react to something. And that's kind of what you want to do.

Speaker 5 You want to know that information going in before you just try to make something that won't fly, literally. So

Speaker 5 you may have heard in Russia, Russia is building hypersonic weapons. That basically means something that's going many times the speed of sound.

Speaker 5 China's got them. We want to have them too.

Speaker 5 And it'd be a great thing if you made the hypersonic weapon the right size.

Speaker 5 So my old alma mater, mater, Lockheed Martin, decides they're going to build a hypersonic weapon.

Speaker 5 Now, they're building another one that's the right size, but the first one they came out with cost 42 million bucks for the first one. That's the price of a Gulfstream, brand new Gulfstream jet.

Speaker 5 And the Congressional Budget Office said, Yeah, we love this thing. We're going to buy 100.
And they said, We're going to buy 100 at $14 million.

Speaker 5 Well, if you do 20 years worth of analysis on the air-to-surface missiles, which this thing was, it's going to launch from a plane, land on the ground on a target.

Speaker 5 If you do the analysis, it turns out that

Speaker 5 the limit for this market was really tightly drawn, correlated as they say in math, is really

Speaker 5 tightly drawn. And they were,

Speaker 5 again, in mathematics terms, there were 108 standard deviations, meaning

Speaker 5 they had less than one chance in one quadrillion, quadrillion, quadrillion.

Speaker 5 to make that figure. And so

Speaker 5 I told them that they had, you know, no chance, no Snowbell's chance in heck doing that. They didn't write me back.
And

Speaker 5 now Lockett, a different unit locking is doing something that's quite a bit smarter. They're making something that's quite a bit smaller and they have a chance to sell that.

Speaker 5 So it's got some real meaning in the market. What often happens, and you went to engineering school, my dad was an engineer, he wanted me to be an engineer.

Speaker 5 And engineers like to make bright, shiny objects, and they think if we build it, you know, back to, you also played baseball, well, they do the Field of Dreams thing. If we build it, they will come.

Speaker 5 Well,

Speaker 5 some people might come,

Speaker 5 but will enough people come to actually make it a profit.

Speaker 5 And that's what you need to be able to know before you go off and shove all your dough, you know, all your stack into this thing and try to make it work.

Speaker 5 You need to know this information in advance so that you can make the best decisions.

Speaker 3 Yeah, no, I love this. And I think

Speaker 3 I'm going to put an example out there and then you poke holes in it.

Speaker 3 There's a lot of startup founders, a lot of entrepreneurs that listen to the show. A lot of them create SaaS products,

Speaker 3 younger guys and gals.

Speaker 3 And

Speaker 3 you see how many, particularly today, SaaS products come into the market. We think it's a good idea.

Speaker 3 And then a year, two, three, maybe a seed round later,

Speaker 3 the product doesn't exist or it's got to get scooped up at a discount because maybe there was some good tech, but there's no market. And

Speaker 3 in a very kind of

Speaker 3 banal

Speaker 3 kind of thought process, it so often comes down to the fact that they completely misrepresent what

Speaker 3 this demand frontier that you're describing. I mean, as you're describing this, I'm going, this is the part that so many startup founders miss is they come in and I literally just had a call with

Speaker 3 a founder in the insurance industry a couple days ago where

Speaker 3 you know he's laying out his pitch and what do you think and

Speaker 3 you know he uses this example for market penetration and market size that just from having been in the industry for 20 years I was like that's wrong like you know someone who's not in the industry may look at that number and be like oh that sounds great but I'm telling you having sold into this market for as long as I have you know you're

Speaker 3 what you want to charge for the value that you're delivering there is not one the market is smaller than you think and two the uptick in actual users is going to be so much longer than what you're you're expecting

Speaker 3 you're going to miss here.

Speaker 3 And, you know, he had just done a perplexity search for how many independent insurance agents were there, you know, et cetera, and then said, well, we can sell X amount in this amount of time. And

Speaker 3 that part is, is, this is such a vital part, especially in the early stages or when you're ideating on how to actually deliver your product to the market. And we just like skip that step.

Speaker 3 We're just like, fancy product, let's throw a price on it. Here we go.

Speaker 3 And then we wonder why we run into all these. that does that make sense what I'm saying does that align with what you're talking about sure absolutely Ryan it's

Speaker 5 it's part and parcel what everybody else does I mean so one of the reasons I picked aircraft is that it's possible to find all the prices for the aircraft and it's possible to find how many units have been sold it's possible to find all the specifications for them

Speaker 5 but when it comes down to software as a service SAS

Speaker 5 I mean we're we're kind of running into the same thing too is that we've got software that helps you pick through all that stuff,

Speaker 5 but people really don't know just yet because we're brand new. I mean, my book came out in January, and people are just starting to hear of hypernomics.

Speaker 5 People don't know that they need to know this stuff. And so, when you get back to your friend trying to say he wants to put this new insurance product out there, or the software for insurance,

Speaker 5 it's hard for you to know in a market that doesn't have discrete functions like insurance or,

Speaker 5 in our case, software,

Speaker 5 how many you're going to be able to sell of a given product.

Speaker 5 It's very hard to know. We'd like to think that we're going to be an adjunct to Excel.

Speaker 5 And interestingly, I remember reading a story about there was a predecessor to Excel called Lotus 123.

Speaker 5 You're probably not.

Speaker 3 I actually, the very first company I ever worked for used Lotus. So I am vaguely familiar from a very past life.
Yeah. I'm older than I look.

Speaker 3 Okay.

Speaker 5 Well, for those of you who are quite a bit younger than us, Lotus 123 was one of the first widely distributed spreadsheet programs that you could buy. And Lotus...

Speaker 5 They went down the other side. They said, well, you know, we don't know how they're going to sell this thing.

Speaker 5 I think they anticipated selling, I'm going to give you rough numbers here, like 10,000 units. And at the end of the year, they sold something closer to 3 million units.

Speaker 5 And the thing was that back then,

Speaker 5 nobody knew how many people really wanted to

Speaker 5 use a spreadsheet. I remember reading some historical stuff about computers, when computers took up the size of a room.

Speaker 5 And some very well-respected scientists said, well, I think the world might have a need for as many as 10 computers.

Speaker 5 Now you've got households that have,

Speaker 5 we've got a household here that's got 10 computers in it. So, you know, it's

Speaker 5 hard to predict things that are

Speaker 5 insightful and new.

Speaker 5 You know, when you were talking about the stock, I just wanted to get back to that thing about things being overpriced. You know, we're doing,

Speaker 5 we've been running neck and neck with this company, maybe some of your listeners have heard of, called Berkshire Hathaway.

Speaker 5 And we had been for the four and a half years up until last week doing a little bit better than they are. Now

Speaker 5 they topped us last week. We're doing 98% of what they're doing over the course of the same period.

Speaker 5 But their stock price for the stock A is $660,000 a share.

Speaker 5 And they get people say, oh, it's

Speaker 5 worth that. Well, actually, it's exactly worth that.
It's doing better than the SP 500. It's doing better than us.
It's worth every nickel you could put into it.

Speaker 5 And

Speaker 5 figuring out what something's worth is

Speaker 5 fraught with a whole bunch of

Speaker 5 things that are hard to define and things that are easier to define. So what we've kind of done is gone to the things that are easier to define,

Speaker 5 hoping that we can find a market going off in that direction. So we've worked with some pretty large aerospace companies because aerospace is uniquely quantifiable.

Speaker 5 Automobiles would be another thing that we could do.

Speaker 5 But when you talk to insurance products, what you're not going to see, I don't think, maybe there's a central marketplace for that, but you're not going to see a list of all the insurance companies with all their life insurance products listed.

Speaker 5 All the features of the products, the prices of the products, and the quantities sold. Am I wrong in that? Does somebody have that data?

Speaker 3 You can derive a general sense of the pricing through their state filings, but there's no single repository of what a like kind and product would cost across the marketplace.

Speaker 5 Yeah, so that becomes, you know,

Speaker 5 as your person that you interviewed discovers, it becomes much harder to quantify. So

Speaker 5 in areas in which it's easy to quantify,

Speaker 5 it's pretty nice to be able to go after something. For example,

Speaker 5 one thing that hypernomics can do, it can quantify COVID. Now, how does it do that? Well, COVID, when COVID first started out,

Speaker 5 COVID was doing very well in densely populated areas. And so you might have guessed that.

Speaker 5 So what you can do is you can find out the infection rate per country, and then you can find the population per country.

Speaker 5 And it turns out that if you were more densely populated, well, by golly, you'd have more COVID cases.

Speaker 5 Now one thing that wasn't anticipated was that at the beginning, again, in the early 2020,

Speaker 5 that you might have thought that this had gone to some, you know, been evenly distributed distributed among countries. It turned out

Speaker 5 that wealthy, temperate, northern,

Speaker 5 northern,

Speaker 5 you know, people north of the equator, countries north of the equator, were getting infected far more frequently than people in the equatorial bands

Speaker 5 and

Speaker 5 in the southern climes.

Speaker 5 And what they what we figured out was, well, it was because a lot of people in the temperate zone had more money than they did in the equatorial zone, so they were more easily able to travel, and it was the travel

Speaker 5 that was spreading the germ around.

Speaker 5 And so,

Speaker 5 what you discover with this is that

Speaker 5 you have to go out and try to figure out the things that are actually driving

Speaker 5 a product, or in this case, COVID. And you've got to be open to the fact that it may not be

Speaker 5 what you think as you enter an arena. So, back to your thing about what's how, you know, who's done the best over the last

Speaker 5 four and a half years between the NASDAQ the Dow the S ⁇ P 500 the Wilshire 5000 us and Berkshire Hathaway well we're number two Berkshire Hathaway has done the best out of all that and they are they're you know two-thirds of a million dollars to to buy one share

Speaker 5 so it it it it just turns out that A lot of the thinking that

Speaker 5 modern economics would have you believe is trying to rely on your intuition and what we're telling you is that your intuition may be slightly off.

Speaker 5 Now having said that, I have a little story that you may think is an aside,

Speaker 5 but I want to show you that it isn't. So after I wrote my book,

Speaker 5 I went out for a run. This is about several months ago.
And I got done with the run, I get off this dirt trail and I'm standing on my on an asphalt parking lot near my car.

Speaker 5 I see a little reddish black ant, which I discovered later was a rock ant. So I see this little reddish-black ant.
And I thought to myself, Dr. Richard Feynman used to study ants, just for giggles.

Speaker 5 He's the Nobel Prize-winning physicist. He was part of the Manhattan Project, and he eventually won the Nobel Prize for his work on,

Speaker 5 oh, what was it? It was on.

Speaker 5 It'll come to me. Anyway, but this little reddish black ant was...

Speaker 3 Was he string theory? Was Feynman string theory?

Speaker 5 No, he was quantum mechanics. That's it.
Quantum mechanics.

Speaker 3 That's right.

Speaker 3 I always get confused which one he was. Yeah.

Speaker 5 Yeah, quantum mechanics. So, anyway, I saw this little Reddish Black Ant, single ant.
And I said, yeah, I'm going to study this guy for a second.

Speaker 5 And so I see this little Reddish Black Ant, and he starts to go in a counterclockwise fashion. He's a little fits and starts.

Speaker 5 He goes around, and he goes around, and he eventually traces 360 degrees, but it's not a circle. Because he goes out a little bit further in his circuit, you know, this trip.

Speaker 5 And then he does it again. And again, as he stopped, he's doing it, fits, and starts, and he comes around another 360 degrees, and he's out further still.

Speaker 5 And then I get down and look at him, and I notice that when he's stopping,

Speaker 5 he's on this asphalt.

Speaker 5 Asphalt, as you notice, made a bunch of little rocks, put it into, you know,

Speaker 5 a mixture. He's standing on top of the tallest rocks in this asphalt and looking around.
And I realized in that instant that this ant was doing reconnaissance.

Speaker 5 So I raced home and I typed in ant reconnaissance and hid it into a search bar and sure enough this species of ant which has been around for at least 140 million years

Speaker 3 does recon

Speaker 5 and what he's doing this little guy was looking for new places for the colony to live.

Speaker 5 Now how do ants go about looking for real estate? Well they do it much like you and I do. In this case they want to have a place that's clean.
That's very big to them. They want it to be clean.

Speaker 5 They want to have the right amount of headroom, so they don't want it to be really open because that thing can spread a lot of wind in. They don't want it to be too closed, and they can't get in.

Speaker 5 And they want to have the certain amount of room.

Speaker 5 And just like you and me, so that's that want floor area. And they also want to have

Speaker 5 the ant equivalent to acreage. They want to be away from the neighbors.

Speaker 5 Now, this ant colony has been around, this ant has been around for 140 million years at least.

Speaker 5 And I submit, since this, put on,

Speaker 5 this guy was doing what we would call hypernomic analysis.

Speaker 5 And since this ant has been doing it for 140 million years, I submit that people have been doing that since there's been people.

Speaker 5 And that's what's really cool about this is that this is not an artificial

Speaker 5 construct. This is something that nature has done.

Speaker 5 As nature evolved, they figured out, well, we have to go to other places to be safe. And

Speaker 5 the same kind of thing happened, you know, that's a metaphor for trying to find the safer places in the market. What do we have to do to create our space in the world? And these ants are doing it.

Speaker 5 And you and I, as people, we're trying to do the same thing. But the ants have just a very straightforward way of going about this.

Speaker 5 And so it was funny, too, these researchers started to play with the ants just like Feynman would do.

Speaker 5 And they'd set up places like, hey, if I got them really good here, would they go to someplace that is better?

Speaker 5 And, you you know they started to figure out that these guys knew more and what do they have eight or twenty four neurons they have hardly have anything at all but collectively

Speaker 5 collectively they know what they're doing and that's the important point there's this collective

Speaker 5 spirit that's going on with the ants the same thing happened well a different version of this collective happens with penguins

Speaker 5 In the South Pole, when it gets cold, the penguins in a colony will start to tighten up and form this big huddle.

Speaker 5 And interesting, the shape of this huddle starts to minimize what you see in the stock market.

Speaker 5 If you were to plot the stocks, all the stocks in the SP 500, the quantity here and the price here, and you put it into log-log space because it's going to be all condensed in the lower corner unless you do, you'd find basically there's a ball of stocks in the middle.

Speaker 5 It kind of looks like a huddle. Well, penguins form these huddles.

Speaker 5 At the south pole when it starts to get cold. And what they do is the penguins on the outside are taking all the cold air for all the guys on the inside.

Speaker 5 And then after a while after the penguins have to be, you know, are on the outside, they get cold. They start to wander into the middle where they heat up.

Speaker 5 And so the penguins all take turns doing this and collectively work out the way to live in this really

Speaker 5 hostile environment by doing this symbiotic thing through the crowd here.

Speaker 5 And so it turns out that there's a lot of

Speaker 5 forces that haven't been properly characterized in economics that are much like what we see in what we might characterize as lower creatures in nature that turn out to be very important for us to get into to be able to pull out these ideas so that we can use them for ourselves.

Speaker 5 So that's kind of what we're trying to do.

Speaker 3 Have you seen any like establishment economists push back on your ideas? And if so, what are they?

Speaker 5 Well, I went to,

Speaker 5 for your listeners should know, I'm here in Southern California, just north of Los Angeles. So we have a few pretty well-known universities here.

Speaker 5 And one of the local universities, the Extension University, offered me a speaking gig just before COVID, but then COVID hit and things fell apart.

Speaker 5 But I was allowed to get an introduction or two to the graduate school business.

Speaker 5 And I tried to show, I actually got into one guy's office. And he didn't tell me I was wrong, but he refused to read my book.
I think he was afraid of what it was going to tell him.

Speaker 5 And then I talked to another guy on the phone, and he basically tossed me out. People don't want to read it.
They don't want to be told.

Speaker 5 They don't want to know

Speaker 5 that there's a chance that they've been wrong about what it is that they've been teaching people.

Speaker 3 What would be the, like, I guess, what would be the core piece that they would, because that surprises me.

Speaker 3 You would think that if there's, you know, it's not like you're saying take all of classic economics, throw it on the floor and stomp on it.

Speaker 3 You know, what I hear you saying is we're just building upon and adding additional layers to what we've always been taught.

Speaker 3 And correct me if I'm wrong there, but it surprises me that if there's a new,

Speaker 3 I'll use this term very broadly, algorithm for finding insights that we couldn't see before, that they wouldn't be interested in learning about that.

Speaker 5 Well, surprisingly to date, no.

Speaker 5 I've presented this. I mean, I just got a Best Paper Award for a conference I gave in May, and that's what allowed me to become a keynote speaker for my first time.

Speaker 5 So I'm going to join that little keynote speaker club that you have there. But very interestingly, I've had several economists review my work, and nobody has said I'm wrong.
In fact,

Speaker 5 To date, nobody has challenged me in print. Well, I take it back.

Speaker 5 I got one or two people that have challenged me in print, but they're going after some of the minutiae about what it is that I'm talking.

Speaker 5 They haven't assailed the crucial points, which is this multi-dimensional aspect of things.

Speaker 5 Some people are trying to hold out, trying to show that there's some element of socialism or Marxism that my stuff doesn't consider.

Speaker 5 I'm just going after them. I said, hey,

Speaker 5 ants can't afford to be socialists.

Speaker 5 There's nobody that's putting up a chunk of the ants and saying, hey, you guys stay over here while we do the rest of the work.

Speaker 5 Ants can't afford to do that. Neither can the penguins.

Speaker 5 Now, that's not to say if somebody's hurt, they won't take care of them, but they wait till somebody gets to the point where they are disabled before they overtake them.

Speaker 5 So, yeah, I haven't had anybody push back on this yet. And that's been an interesting point about this, that there's no pushback.
Because

Speaker 5 the math checks.

Speaker 3 Yeah. Math is right.

Speaker 5 I mean, we're getting correlations here.

Speaker 5 For those of you who don't study correlations, basically you're looking at

Speaker 5 the prediction and being able to be as close to 100% or 1

Speaker 5 as possible.

Speaker 5 Usually correlations are, they hit a certain, what they call p-factor, p-value, the chance that the

Speaker 5 equation came about just due to pure chance.

Speaker 5 If that chance is less than 5%, which is the general threshold, you can basically exclude what they say, exclude the null hypothesis, which is a long-winded way of saying, I can reject the fact that your stuff doesn't work, which is a long way of saying they have to accept the fact

Speaker 5 that I can't reject it using some of the math that you've just proven here. Yeah.

Speaker 5 And so the math just checks out these correlations are running, when it comes to aircraft and you start to add features in,

Speaker 5 you're getting correlations that are up to 98%.

Speaker 5 You've explained 98% of the variation of the results using the math. And that's pretty powerful stuff.

Speaker 3 Yeah. And if you guys still don't understand correlation, just think redheads are crazy, right? Redhead are crazy.
Right? There's a good correlation, right?

Speaker 3 I can say that because I have red hair in my family and in my beard when I grow it a little longer. But so maybe that explains a lot.
But

Speaker 3 so that's really interesting.

Speaker 3 I just want to poke in as much as you're willing to go on this

Speaker 3 idea around

Speaker 3 their pushback. Are they saying that

Speaker 3 hypernomics is not taking into account the fact that socialism exists or that there are

Speaker 3 socialist

Speaker 3 trends in a marketplace that

Speaker 3 must be considered that you're not considering?

Speaker 5 It's kind of the latter. They want to say that there are trends that I'm not considering here.

Speaker 5 To which I reply, well, you can glue your stuff in. If you want to put some stuff in that proves that there is a socialist component, well, sure.

Speaker 5 I mean, in the United States, we have Social Security. That's partially socialism.

Speaker 5 We have the Affordable Care Act. That's another form of that.
I mean, no country

Speaker 5 is pure capitalist. And even the socialist comp I mean

Speaker 5 you know

Speaker 5 nominally Chinese are communists, but you won't find people that have more business sense and do things in a capitalistic way than the Chinese. So, you know, the countries have a mix of this stuff.

Speaker 5 What I'm trying to prove is that the mix that you're looking at in traditional economics has got more factors going into it than you might imagine. And so the standard arrangement is a 4D model.

Speaker 5 And then

Speaker 5 Again, this presentation that I just gave, I actually built a 7D model that you could actually assemble by piece by piece where it would show when I was talking about that Boeing business jet, the Boeing business jet was against its demand frontier.

Speaker 5 And one of the engines that went into it was also against its demand frontier.

Speaker 5 So if the engine manufacturer and the airframer, so Boeing and in this case GE, wanted to both make more money with this plane, the only option is if their price was still higher than they cost, they could both drop their prices and make more money.

Speaker 5 And how do you know that unless you glue together a system that shows the two interconnected markets working at the same time? And that's what this did.

Speaker 3 That to me is an incredibly important point here, guys.

Speaker 3 Just to grab onto that for a second.

Speaker 3 What Doug is saying is essentially when we're priced at a space, if we're not considering, and again, I'm reiterating this for myself as well as I'm learning here because I love this, is that

Speaker 3 if we're not considering the demand frontier and we're at X price, and as you said, we need for whatever reason to create more revenue out of this business unit.

Speaker 3 If we're not considering the demand frontier, then the thought process may be increase price or increase unit production.

Speaker 3 But what you just said is we have to take in the reality of our situation, which is where the demand frontier comes in and say, in truth, based on where you're actually set from a feature and price and supply perspective, the only way in which, you know, in this particular example, to create more top-line revenue, not necessarily profit, but top-line revenue, would be to drop the price because then that increases based on the demand frontier, the potential to sell more units because you're actually up against what you can sell into the market at this current price, features set, et cetera.

Speaker 3 Guys, that idea, I know it's heady and I know it's deep, but think about the products that you are selling. Think about your own businesses and really dive into that.

Speaker 3 If, and again, we're not specifically in this example talking about profitability. That's another piece to the curve that we may have to discuss.

Speaker 3 But if we're just talking top line revenue growth, there is a point at which your current feature set and price hit this demand frontier, and there just aren't more units to be sold in the market.

Speaker 3 Or certainly not maybe scaled units. You may be able to get one here or there potentially, but you're not going to be able to grow at pace.

Speaker 3 And that we have to take in the reality of this situation and not just, you know,

Speaker 3 I love the fuzzy math that happens inside Excel sheets, especially like in the early days of startups when they're like, well, you know, if that revenue is not enough, I can just change this number here in the spreadsheet.

Speaker 3 Look, everything works.

Speaker 3 That's not reality, though. That's a spreadsheet.

Speaker 5 Right.

Speaker 3 Yeah, that's really good stuff.

Speaker 3 I want to just pivot really briefly on something that you said earlier as we close out our conversation and talk about,

Speaker 3 you know, you said that, so you had this kidney disease and blessed to have a friend give you a kidney transplant, which is absolutely amazing. You said at that moment, your brain started to clear up.

Speaker 3 The fog started to remove. I would love, just maybe break down how you felt and that transition to kind of coming back into yourself.
What was that like? What was that moment like?

Speaker 5 Well, the odd thing about having a chronic disease and this thing, I discovered when I was 17

Speaker 5 that my kidneys weren't working right. And so this disease started to go downhill.
So,

Speaker 5 what happens when your kidneys don't work right is two things happen: you're putting poison into your urine, and you're not pulling poison into your blood, so the blood poison starts to fill up.

Speaker 5 And so, I discovered this in 1972.

Speaker 5 In 1993, I went on dialysis, and then in

Speaker 5 2002,

Speaker 5 my friend Tim had given me this kidney. Now, so what happens is you're coming downhill

Speaker 5 for decades.

Speaker 5 And

Speaker 5 as you age, you're coming downhill. But imagine if you're, you know, I'm 69 years old.
Imagine if you're 69 years old and you wake up one morning and you're 39.

Speaker 5 Well, that's kind of what happened when I got my friend Tim's kidney is that the brain had been going downhill,

Speaker 5 it was filled full of poison. And then all of a sudden,

Speaker 5 I wake up and the thing they tell you is when you're on the operating table, I mean, you're out, of course, but when you're on the operating table, and as soon as they connect the kidney,

Speaker 5 I mean, your skin turns ashen gray when

Speaker 5 your kidneys have failed. And

Speaker 5 as soon as they hook the kidney up, your skin, as they say in the trade, your skin pinks up.

Speaker 5 You start to become pink. And

Speaker 5 I started to pour out urine that was

Speaker 5 dark brown

Speaker 5 by the gallon. I put out four or five gallons, maybe six gallons of

Speaker 5 really dark urine because that's poisoned in my body. And

Speaker 5 I wake up with a different guy.

Speaker 5 I was just so happy.

Speaker 3 Yeah.

Speaker 5 And

Speaker 5 I realized at that moment that the brain was working differently and I wanted to do something with it.

Speaker 5 And so then, you know, a couple of few years passed and I worked out this way of doing things. And I said, you know, I'm just going to quit my job.

Speaker 5 I don't have a full idea of what I'm doing here yet, but I'm going to just quit my job and pursue this for myself, the family, and

Speaker 5 all mankind will be better

Speaker 5 when hypernomics is more ubiquitous. People are going to make fewer mistakes.

Speaker 5 There will be fewer run-ups in the stock market. There will be fewer collapses.

Speaker 3 There will be,

Speaker 5 you know, the current problem. No, there's no stopping a 9-11, but you could have stopped the 2008 housing crisis.
That was manufactured because data wasn't good enough.

Speaker 5 And this COVID problem that we had here, the United States had this inflation problem. Maybe we whipped it because the inflation is down now, but

Speaker 5 the Federal Reserve by itself, after growing the money supply by

Speaker 5 less than 2%,

Speaker 5 less than 5%

Speaker 5 for

Speaker 5 decades, jumped it up 400% in two quarters. Well, I didn't tell them to do that, and maybe if they had hypernomics in their bag, they wouldn't have done that.

Speaker 5 We wouldn't have had all the problems we had over the last half decade.

Speaker 5 That's something you need to be able to understand going forward, and we hope that hypernomics will let people do that. I love it.

Speaker 5 You know, it all goes back to, you know, when my friend gave me this kidney, it just opened up the

Speaker 5 ability for this little head to figure out a bunch of stuff that people hadn't gotten into. And

Speaker 5 I'm trying to get people as excited about it as I am because

Speaker 5 you end up becoming a

Speaker 5 digital explorer,

Speaker 5 a

Speaker 5 marco polo. You're figuring out things that...

Speaker 5 Nobody had seen before simply because you got this new tool sitting in your bag and you pull the tool out and you play with it and all of a sudden you can see these maps form

Speaker 5 that let you do things that you weren't able to do before. And people are going to find this very powerful going forward.

Speaker 3 Well, for my part and the part of this audience and all the people listening, I think this has

Speaker 3 core, foundational application to the startup community, to the pricing of products, especially in those early days.

Speaker 3 I mean, I'm thinking to myself of the number of companies that I've either been an advisor for, sat on the board on my own company, that if I had some of these thought processes and some of these frameworks that you're describing in hypernomics in my head at those times, how many pricing conversations, how many

Speaker 3 unit creation conversations

Speaker 3 could we have either skipped altogether or had just clear answers for right off the rip and been able to get to work if we had had these things in our head? So,

Speaker 3 guys,

Speaker 3 I can't highlight enough how core these ideas are to taking a broader look at the market. I'm so excited that you shared them with the audience.
Where do people get more?

Speaker 3 We'll obviously have links to the book and everything in the show notes description. Whether you're listening or watching, guys, just scroll down.
You'll be able to find links to the book.

Speaker 3 But where else can they learn more about you and connect with you?

Speaker 5 Yeah, they can go to my personal website, DougHowarth.com, or they can go to the company website.

Speaker 5 We've built a company around this called Hypernomics, and it's hypernomics.com, H-Y-P-E-R-N-O-M-I-C-S.com. And you'll find there a whole bunch of, and I'm also on LinkedIn, and

Speaker 5 what I do with LinkedIn, and I pull the stuff in on the company website, my website, is I have a bunch of vignettes that describe how we've used hypernomics and everything from analyzing what happens if you're a football player and want to get faster, what does that do for you, to

Speaker 5 what's the value of a spaceship, to how do I rearrange the seating down the street for this restaurant that we like to to go to so that they can make more money.

Speaker 5 So there's a whole bunch of topics that it addresses, and

Speaker 5 some of those are bound to rig true with some of your audience there.

Speaker 5 They're going to bound to find something that they like because we've tried to make a smorgasbord of things that this tech can do for people.

Speaker 3 Well, I feel honored to have caught you towards the beginning of your world tour, and I can't wait to see what comes out. And I'll be like, I knew Doug Wen.
You know,

Speaker 3 I love it. I appreciate you so much.

Speaker 5 I appreciate your time, and i wish you nothing but the best thanks ryan it's been i've really had a blast on your show your your show is great and i was really lucky to be part of it so thank you

Speaker 3 let's go yeah make it look make it look make it look easy

Speaker 6 thank you for listening to the ryan hanley show

Speaker 6 be sure to subscribe and leave us a comment or review wherever you listen to podcasts

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