
Ecom Podcast
5 AI Tools I’d Use to Make $1M (w/o employees, capital, or time)
Summary
"Boost your productivity and profits with five underrated AI tools that can help you reach $1M without employees or capital, while staying mindful of deepfake risks and opportunities for use in marketing and customer engagement."
Full Content
5 AI Tools I’d Use to Make $1M (w/o employees, capital, or time)
Speaker 1:
This podcast is called My First Million. So if someone is trying to get from zero to a million dollars, these are the tools that I'm using to make a million bucks.
So today what I want to talk about is I want to show five or six different apps that I'm using Sam that I think you should be using and We can we can just go through it that are underrated hidden gems that you probably never heard of that will make you more productive and make you more money and the reason why this is fun is because a lot of people in the audience are like me which is they're like.
Speaker 2:
I'm a really good Googler. That's the extent of how good I am on computers. I'm pretty good at ChatGPT, but you are like three steps above me in terms of being technical. I mean, there's like people that are like 10 steps above that.
But you're kind of a good balance of someone who's like on the outer edge being an early adopter, but also you can relate this to kind of like a Neanderthal like me.
Speaker 1:
I appreciate that. Yeah, I'm just going to try to clearly explain as much as possible. And I tried to pick examples of apps that literally anyone could use that is going to make a big difference in their lives.
By the way, I know people are going to listen to this. Some people are going to be like, because there's a lot of AI haters out there, Sam.
Speaker 2:
Why?
Speaker 1:
Why? Because they see stuff like this, which I will show you, you know, an AI-generated Taylor Swift, and they're like, you are ruining the world.
Unknown Speaker:
Okay.
Speaker 1:
But, you know, this is where technology is going. And this episode is for people who want to use it to their advantage. And so that's what we're here for.
Speaker 2:
All right, Greg, fire me up. What do we got? How am I going to look like T-Swift?
Speaker 1:
All right, you want to start with that?
Unknown Speaker:
Friends, listen, what you're seeing right now is crazy. We are crossing a line in human history where the boundary between reality and fiction is vanishing. This is not a Hollywood billion dollar high production studio. This is open source.
This is from your computer. A click of a button and most people will not be able to even tell the difference now. So be safe out there. Question what you see. Verify what you believe. And follow what you see.
Speaker 1:
Sounds just like Taylor and it looks pretty much just like Taylor and I think the coolest thing about it is look at her mouth movement. Looks exactly like this guy on the top, my friend Cereo. And you can do this not with just Taylor Swift.
You can do this with like Mark Zuckerberg. You can do this with Jensen Wang, like anyone you want. You can kind of like deep fake.
Speaker 2:
Dude, this looks like she looks... Taylor Swift I think is a pretty woman. This is a very... She's got a stronger jawline than normal in this one. So it doesn't look exactly like her. You know what's interesting?
So I think that you should do like a use case for each of these. Do you want to hear a crazy use case I learned for one of these?
I had someone I knew who They're a wealthy person and someone discovered that they were out of town and a person used one of these deepfakes to call the building to say that a handyman will be coming.
Please let them up into their apartment. And it was a criminal and they like robbed their apartment. And so these deepfakes are very nerve wracking for these reasons.
Speaker 1:
Yeah, and that's there is a dark side to it for sure. And bad stuff is going to happen. And we need to be aware of it. I'm especially concerned about like, yeah, like grandmas and parents getting like scammed.
Speaker 2:
Dude, I've almost been scammed. I get almost scammed weekly. So it's not just grandmas. What's the service, what's the app that makes these videos?
Speaker 1:
So this is using an open source model called WAN 2.2. It's by the Alibaba people. So it is a Chinese app. So beware. For a lot of people, using open source technology is kind of difficult.
So there are apps like Enhancer.ai that allows you just to use their SaaS platform. So you can just pick it and you don't need to Look at a GitHub or there's another one called free pick which does the same thing. So You know,
I think it's worth people playing around with one 2.2. This is the anime So basically you record a video of yourself talking and you can basically pick a character that you know Yeah, you're right. It doesn't look like Taylor Swift.
Exactly. It's more like a Tyler Swift. Yeah, you know, so if you wanted Tyler Swift a Swift or you know I'm Matt Zuckerberg. It's fun to play around with it and use it as content for your brand or just having fun, your personal brand as well.
Speaker 2:
That's cool. When do you think this is going to be good enough for me to use in ads or things like that?
Speaker 1:
I mean, it's 100% good enough to use in ads. Now, I wouldn't use, you know, Tyler Swift in an ad because you might not get approved by Meta. But, you know, people are using JFK and Play-Doh and, you know,
Things that are in the public domain that you could create ads for and it's working.
Speaker 2:
So I can go to enhancer.ai, which I'm here, and I can film like a funny script of what I think JFK would say to promote MFM or something like that. And I can actually use that in an ad because JFK is considered public domain.
Speaker 1:
Exactly. I mean, I'm not a lawyer, but from my understanding, yes. There's this guy by the name of PJ Ace. I just had him on my podcast. He's amazing. He's like the number one AI video ad guy.
And he's literally getting hundreds of millions of views on his AI videos. And he's I've seen him like he'll work with like You know, the largest companies on the planet. And so he's using, look at this, like he's using Sam Altman here.
Speaker 2:
So, wow, is there a way that, what would be the best way, this, like I'm looking at this PJA's guy and I'm like, this sounds awesome. I wanna use this immediately. What would be the best way for me to do that?
Speaker 1:
So, first you need to write a script. And if I were to, you know, what I would do is I would, I use ChatGPT, use Claude to come up with a script idea.
And we won't have time to go through a tutorial today, but then I would create reference frames. So I would use one of the image models. I like Enhancer or like Freepik, which maybe we can go into later,
to create images of what the storyboard of the 22nd or 32nd ad might look like. And then I would animate those frames to create a cohesive story. That's basically the process. You use ChatGPT, Claude. You use Enhancer and Freepik.
And then you use If you're pro, you might want to use a Final Cut Pro or something like that.
Speaker 2:
Okay, this is awesome. What's the next one?
Speaker 1:
Have you played with Perplexity browser at all?
Speaker 2:
No,
I actually used Perplexity the other day because I watched one of your videos on how to use Sora and I saw that you say that Perplexity is good for researching and I forget what you exactly what you said in the video but I use it to research I think how to make a viral video or something like that and then I like put that into Claude and then I got the script from Claude and then I put it in Sora.
Is that right?
Speaker 1:
Yeah, so It's a hassle to move browsers. Everyone has everything set up on their current browser. Maybe they're using Google Chrome. But having an AI-first browser is an absolute game-changer.
There's Perplexity Comet, there's Dia, there's Opera, there's a few others. But for today's example, we're going to use Comet because that's which one I think is the best. And I just want to go through a few workflows.
So by the end of this demo, I think that everyone is going to be like, yeah, I need an AI browser.
Speaker 2:
So do you use, let me clarify, do you use Perplexity Comet instead of Chrome?
Speaker 1:
Yes.
Speaker 2:
Okay. So this is not a cool thing. This is ROI, this works.
Speaker 1:
Oh, and I can't go back. Going back would, my eyes would bleed. It is too slow to go back. Once you get used to an AI browser, you will not go back. Just like now you use ChatGPT over Google probably 95% of the time.
Speaker 2:
Yeah.
Speaker 1:
So I saw this ad for this company called OneBone. Which is a clothing brand for big and tall people. I'm actually not big. I'm pretty tall. I'm like six foot three. So I'm 165 pounds. I'm actually not that big, but I clicked on it anyways.
I thought that it looked pretty cool. And so, you know, let's just say I'm, okay, I'm six foot three. I'm gonna add this to cart. I always get to this, I don't know if this is just me, Sam,
but I always get to this point where it's the discount code and I'm like, okay, there must be a discount code I could use here. And you know that there was a scam, it was like a scam basically with Honey,
right, where it was, Someone did like a CoffeeZilla type video where they said, honey is like getting a referral affiliate fee on your data and on your products, right?
Speaker 2:
Yeah. Yeah. I saw that. That was about six months ago.
Speaker 1:
Yeah, exactly. It went viral. So here's an example of how I would use Comet. So I would say, I want to use a discount code.
Speaker 2:
Oh my gosh.
Speaker 1:
know any. Can you find one and only find one that works? Comment is it sees what's on your screen and you can see on the right hand side It's it's looking and it's searching through,
you know in this case ten different sources And it'll hopefully work And if it doesn't you can keep just prompting it to get it to work, right? So look thrift ten one save $66 on my two jackets and.
Speaker 2:
Have you ever heard of GirlMath? Is that what it's called, Ari? Have you heard of GirlMath? I think this is an example of GirlMath. You've just made $60 shopping.
Speaker 1:
It's basically free. You just got paid $66. I bought a jacket for 350-pound men and I'm 165 pounds, but it's free.
Speaker 2:
That's awesome. This is GirlMath. I love this. That's cool. Hey, everyone, really quick. I can already tell that this is an episode that you guys are going to be taking a lot of notes on.
And that's kind of a pain in the butt to do while you're either watching or listening to this. And so we actually made it really easy. We made the entire episode into a downloadable PDF.
And this way, you could just sit back and enjoy the podcast right now and get the notes later. So the link is in the description below. Click it if you want those notes. Now back to the episode.
Speaker 1:
So the next thing that I've been using Comet for has been finding exact moments in YouTube videos. So I'll say something like, so open up Assistant on the right hand side,
find and play the exact moment Steve Jobs talks about Apple's intersection of liberal arts and technology. And then Comet's agents go and figure out where that is. And I can, yeah, it basically downloads the transcript and it searches it.
And look how fast it is.
Speaker 2:
Dude, because I use, I do that all the time. Like if I'm doing copywriting, I'm like, oh, I remembered a good hook. I once watched this video of Steve Jobs and he made this like kind of small offhanded comment,
but I don't remember, like it was at a graduation talk, but I don't remember which one. And this would save so much time by being able to like just ask it to find it.
Speaker 1:
It saves a lot of time and also you're in flow state. So if you wanted to do this on Chrome or another browser, you'd have to open up another tab, you'd have to Google it, you'd have to find it, you'd have to watch.
It pulls you out of your zone. How am I able to run five companies that are successful is because I have a lot of tricks like this that help me save time. So it says here, the quote begins at the seven second mark.
You can actually tell it to, I think it'll, if I say play this video, it should actually play the video. Yeah, see it opened up a new tab. You can't hear this, but it's literally playing it.
Speaker 2:
It's crazy.
Speaker 1:
And then you can go back to Assistant and you can say, this is a cool talk. I'm a founder. What are the most interesting takeaways for me? Write it in an essay.
And I find that YouTube is just such a wealth of information, like literally everything. There's so much there. All of our world leaders are on it, the biggest founders on the planet, podcasts.
Learning from YouTube is so amazing and I just find myself just going to videos like this and seeing, like, look how amazing this is.
Speaker 2:
Man, I should have, I wish I would have known about this.
I actually just installed the Chrome plugin that gets the transcript from YouTube and it does it a little bit better than the normal YouTube transcript button and I did it so I could copy and paste it just to put it into ChatGPT to ask it these questions.
Speaker 1:
Yeah, this is going to make your life a lot easier. You're going to be way smarter from this. Not that you need to be smarter. You're a smart guy, Sam, but you know, we'll take any edge we can get.
Speaker 2:
I'm a few brain cells away from just being a talking monkey, my friend. I could use anything I can get. Okay, so perplexity comment. That's awesome. I like that.
Speaker 1:
I'll do one last one with perplexity comment and then we can move on. So you can ask it, you know, one of the hardest things I have to do as a founder is trying to hire good talent, right?
So you can say, find and go to the LinkedIn profile of someone who worked on Apple AI and now at Meta. So it'll actually go and do that.
Speaker 2:
Is this free?
Speaker 1:
It's free. It just came out like a few days ago for free for everyone. And I have no relationship to perplexity, by the way. I'm just like, I'm happy, you know, it makes my life better, right? So I'm happy to talk about it.
Speaker 2:
I pay, I think, $200 a month for LinkedIn Recruiter.
Speaker 1:
Oh, yeah.
Speaker 2:
And this just kind of, like, LinkedIn Recruiter has value, but this just would have helped As well, and maybe in lieu of and for free.
Speaker 1:
Well, watch this. So we got this answer. The LinkedIn profile of Mark Lee matches your criteria. He worked on Apple AI as a research engineer and is now an AI research scientist at Meta.
So let's say, Sam, that you wanted to hire him for Hampton.
Speaker 2:
It would only cost $100 million.
Speaker 1:
It would only cost between $100 million and $500 million. But what you can do is say, Can you craft an email?
Speaker 2:
Oh my gosh.
Speaker 1:
That is going to get this guy to work for me. I'm the CEO of Hampton. What's the URL?
Speaker 2:
Joinhampton.com.
Speaker 1:
joinhampton.com yeah it's just gonna say like good luck buddy get in line pal i hope this message finds you well my name is you know your name i'm the ceo of joinhampton uh we're assembling an elite you know and this is it's not bad and you can you can kind of like craft it to make it your own right but what's really cool about this is okay cool This looks great My name is Sam Parr Can you send this email for me on my gmail?
Oh my gosh So what it'll do is It'll basically create an agent that will send this email for you so you can actually connect your gmail Wow Yeah,
I'm not gonna do it right now cuz you know I'm not Sam Parr and I'm not trying to spend a hundred million dollars hiring this guy and But you can actually connect your Gmail and start sending emails.
Speaker 2:
Man, this is just so nutty. And this is a lot of people watching this will will mock me here and make fun of me. But for the real nerds, like I use Whisper. Is it called WhisperFlow?
Speaker 1:
Yes, WhisperFlow.
Speaker 2:
So I'm actually just I actually talk to my computer a lot and I have it set up to where like the little glow button on the bottom left hand of my screen,
I just hold that button and I have a conversation with it and it types it for me because I hate typing. Like literally my fingers hurt sometimes.
And so I just have conversations with my computer and if I could do that now in Perplexity's comment, that would make life way better.
Speaker 1:
Yeah, so speaking to computers, like how you're doing with WhisperFlow, which is another underrated AI tool, Once you do it, you can't go back. Here you can see a keyboard, you can only get to 45 words per minute.
Flow, you get to 220 words per minute. It's too slow to go back to a keyboard after.
Speaker 2:
So for those listening, you have to check out Whisper Flow. I think it's called Whisper. It's actually shockingly hard to find if you Google it because they spell Whisper in a startup-y way. I think it's like W-I-S-P-E-R.
And so the way it works is I have it set up, I have a hotkey where I just click this one button, I talk to it, but sometimes I'll make a mistake and I'll say, oh, whoops, I mean this. So can you pick me up a burger?
I mean, I actually want a taco. Like if I'm texting my wife, like it will not say that first thing and instead will say the second thing or I'll say, so my opinion on that is broken down into three points.
Point one is this, point two is this, point three is this. It formats it where it says my opinion is this, colon, number one, this. Paragraph number two, this.
Speaker 1:
100%. Also, I think that people could use WhisperFlow for teams. I think that's an underrated kind of hack. I'm using the snippet library that they have. You can create these snippets like here, calendar, hours, support, intro, FAQ,
so that you can just say calendar or say hours and it'll just throw it in there. I love WhisperFlow. To me, it's the same level up in productivity that you're going to see if you're moving from What are you more interested in talking about,
AI Excel or content automation on TikTok, getting followers on TikTok?
Speaker 2:
I don't like TikTok, but I do want to know how to get followers. But I want to know more so the Excel thing because I've been trying to find a replacement for Like I wanted to talk to Google Sheets. I actually use Google Sheets.
I don't use Excel. But I think I saw that one company got funded like 12 months ago. But I went and demoed it and it was only fine. And so I haven't found a good solution for this.
Speaker 1:
So yeah, if you're anything like me, you hate Excel. I don't even know what a macro is, honestly.
Speaker 2:
Yeah, I don't know what that word means, but I hear people say it all the time.
Speaker 1:
To me, an Excel sheet is almost like terminal. When I'm in the terminal, I'm overwhelmed. So I try to avoid going in Excel as much as possible. But there's this thing called tryshortcut.ai. It's from this research lab of ballers.
Some of the best researchers on the planet created it. And their first product is to create an AI-first version of Excel. And it's similar to actually Comet in the sense that, you know, on the left,
it sees your screen, which is like a cloud version of Excel. And on the right-hand side, you have prompts. And you can just use natural language to tell it what to do. And it works.
For example, Literally one minute before this call, I actually used Comet to find, I was like, hey, find me a sheet of financial data that I can upload to Try Shortcut. I uploaded it to Try Shortcut.
As you can see, it's this list of company, how much market cap they have, how much revenue they have, how much gross profit they had. I said, analyze my data for key insights. It gives me all the key insights.
Now, if I wanted to say, hey, build me a DCF analysis or build me an income statement or explain me this or explain me that, you can do it. And it works.
Speaker 2:
Can you ask it a question right now? Ask it which stock would Warren Buffett pick based off of this data? The reason I'm asking is I actually bought a book called Warren Buffett on Accounting or something like that,
or Warren Buffett on Balance Sheets when I was trying to learn accounting, because I was trying to figure out what does he see? What sticks out to him? And the book was really hard to read. These are complicated concepts.
This might just do it for me.
Speaker 1:
Yeah, yeah, and it has all it has this data that is on screen, but it's also looking, you know, it's sending agents all across the Internet to figure out what is what is happening.
And so the beauty of this context, plus that context, You end up getting really good outcomes. And then you can also say, so Warren Buffett's pick is Apple. So we're getting some data here. But you can also, now that it's giving this data,
you can actually say like create a new document based on this that shows like the operating cash flow.
Speaker 2:
Yeah. Wow.
Speaker 1:
This is a big deal. I just saw that they have this now, which is an Excel plugin. So even if you don't want to use their cloud-based solution, you can just basically... Look, it only has 36 ratings. This is how early you are to this.
Speaker 2:
I want to be number 37. That's great.
Speaker 3:
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Speaker 2:
Usually what I've done is I have uploaded my financials, like either my P&L, my business' P&L, or sometimes even like my personal income statement or my personal net worth, and I will ask ChatGPT questions based off that data.
Would you feel comfortable doing that here on Comet? Not comfortable because it's not any revealing information. It's just numbers. It's not like a social security number or anything like that,
but would you feel like it would give you good advice?
Speaker 1:
Yeah, I mean, I would feel comfortable. I think I would feel more comfortable, though, just doing it locally on on Excel. So you're not uploading your data to the cloud because who knows what could happen.
If it's really sensitive data, I do recommend just using Excel. Why not? You don't need to have it on the cloud, right? Most people use Excel. But look what you can do here. It's not even just querying.
Because on ChatGPT, you can query the data and be like, what would you do here? What would you do there? But you can't say, If you know, build LBO models or TCF analysis or perform a statement like this, this is stuff.
This is basically a financial analyst and a box that you can that you can use. And it's pretty.
Speaker 2:
Wow. This is magical. And this is free.
Speaker 1:
You get like a certain amount of credits for free. It's not that many credits. I think it's like four. Man, this is great. Yeah.
Speaker 2:
That's cool. That might be number two and comment might be number one, but it'd be close so far.
Speaker 1:
Yeah. I knew you'd like that one. You're probably going to hate this one, but I'm telling it to you anyway.
Speaker 2:
Okay.
Speaker 1:
And the reason I'm telling it to you is just because there's an arbitrage moment where I'm sure you've probably seen these slideshows on TikTok where...
Speaker 2:
No, I actually don't use TikTok, but maybe you can convince me, but I think that like this AI content is just garbage. You know, like I'm a purist. I want like Mr. Beast.
Speaker 1:
I bet you people, I bet you have like favorited, shared, liked AI content, but you just haven't realized it.
Speaker 2:
Dude, I did the other day. There was one where a guy made a fake potato launcher and he shot it at a grandma. And it was the funniest thing I've ever seen.
Speaker 1:
Yeah. Or like, did you see like Stephen Hawking?
Speaker 2:
Yeah. Yeah, it's great. So yeah, I guess I'm kind of being convinced in real time here. I think you guys like this podcast for two reasons. One is if you are building a business, it's lonely and listening to Shaan and I,
we're sort of like your friends. And the second reason is, you know, that we are builders. We love building companies. It's kind of our life's vocation. So if you have a business that does at least three million dollars in revenue,
I think I know exactly what you're experiencing. You've built a great business. It's working and you finally have a second to look up. You're young. You probably run an internet company. In your town, there's potential that you're a freak,
that you have no one else to talk to about growing your company. In fact, when you even go out in public, you probably don't even like telling people what you do for a living because you don't feel like explaining it.
If you fall in this category, that means you're making the biggest decisions of your life, 10, $20 million decisions all by yourself alone. And without that push, in my opinion, the risk is not blowing up.
It's drifting into good enough territory, into becoming mediocre. And the worst thing that can happen to you is 10 years from now, you look back and you realize, I missed this amazing opportunity. I didn't grow.
I plateaued in life and in business. My company Hampton, we changed that. If you're running a company that does at least three million in revenue, you can apply at joinhampton.com.
We vet you, we curate you, and we give you eight hand-picked founders who have similar businesses, similar sizes as you, who will challenge you, who will hold you accountable,
and who will give you perspectives that you cannot get anywhere else. And this all happens in real life. So check it out, joinhampton.com slash network.
Speaker 1:
Yeah, and I think a lot of these types, what I'm showing here, these TikToks are like six mistakes we made during pool planning and how to avoid them. You would never think that that's actually AI that created it.
Speaker 2:
No, that looks real.
Speaker 1:
That looks real.
Speaker 2:
OK, so how do I how do I fake the world?
Speaker 1:
Here's what I'll say. I'll say that, you know, a lot of people are vibe coding software right now. But the hardest problem is how do you get customers to that software?
Well, one way is to own a bunch of accounts, like on TikTok, that you can send traffic to. So I believe that there's an arbitrage right now to use AI to create these accounts, basically like meme accounts.
And then, you know, sell your software through them. So there's a there's a piece of software called Realfarm. This thing must do like 10K a month MRR or less. It's like not many people know about it,
but it's a way to automate TikToks to drive traffic to your website.
Speaker 2:
Just TikTok, not Instagram?
Speaker 1:
Just TikTok. I mean, you probably could, you know, upload it to Instagram. But from what I've seen, it does TikTok the best. How it works is you can source images from, let's say, Pinterest. So Pinterest has tons of images.
Let's say you want to do, you know, a slideshow that says top eight protein sources ranked by bioavailability and cost. So you add a prompt and generate a slideshow. You can see the slideshow over here.
Speaker 2:
That's crazy.
Speaker 1:
These images. And it's super clean. And the cool thing is that TikTok is promoting slideshows right now. And then you can just schedule and publish it.
So within like 30 seconds, you have a piece of content in your niche that you can just schedule.
Speaker 2:
Wow. Man, I have a friend that created an app. He's a man that helps men do Kegel exercises, which basically makes it so you don't premature ejaculate during sex. And I was like, man, this is neat and all, but this is real hard to promote.
Like, I don't, you know, I wouldn't want to brag. I don't feel comfortable bragging about using this app. And when you go to Realfarm, I see Realfarm. What is their URL? Realfarm. Like, I see the companies who use it and I'm like,
I see A16Z and I see Substack and I'm like, Really? You? You guys use this?
Speaker 1:
Yeah, I don't know. I don't know if they use it. But I do know that if you want to fight for customers right now and you want audiences, slideshows and TikTok slideshows is a great way to do it.
And then, you know, why pay an agency thousands of dollars a month when you can just use a product like this?
Speaker 2:
You want to know something funny? Do you know who Steven Bartlett is?
Speaker 1:
I do.
Speaker 2:
Stephen used to work for Shaan. He was like Shaan's intern or something like that. And then he left to start his first business. And apparently Shaan tells a story, but it's public,
which is like he had a whole bunch of like Twitter or Instagram handles. It was like things teens say about Georgia or art history, where they just like told stories about art history and he would get all of them popular.
And then you would spend money with him. You would buy an ad and he would have his meme accounts.
Tweet out or Instagram out your product and then like within 10 minutes it would go viral or something or it would be highly ranked in the app store.
This is kind of like in the same vein and you know I'm teasing and making fun of it but I'm on real.farm. Some of the like he's got this one where he's like old art to make like these slideshows. I am such a like I watch those all the time.
Like, if it's something like, you know, the top ten, like, strangest, disappearing, like, missing person cases, like, I watch all of them.
Speaker 1:
Totally. So that's what I'm saying. We've watched this. There's some way to do AI slop that just is cringe and looks bad. But some of these slideshows and he also has a UGC ad avatar feature on Realfarm that I think is pretty interesting.
Speaker 2:
What's that called? The same website?
Speaker 1:
It's the same website, but they basically have a way that you select a template. Let's say of this person, this sleepy looking guy over here in the hoodie. And you're like, okay, I want to create an ad. And then you come up with the hook.
You know, you can use like ChatGPT or Claude to come up with the hook or you can, you know, actually be creative yourself. And you can say like my top three matcha brands. You choose the background music and then it creates using AI.
That looks real.
Speaker 2:
That looks real.
Speaker 1:
That looks real. This looks real.
Speaker 2:
So this guy is fake?
Speaker 1:
He's a fake guy. You create the product video. You can use AI to create the product video, or if you want, you can create it yourself with an iPhone.
Speaker 2:
It does look like green paint, not matcha. I guess because I'm staring at it.
Speaker 1:
Sherwin-Williams' new matcha brand.
Speaker 2:
That's what it looks like.
Speaker 1:
It's not perfect, but I also think that we're looking at it surgically, but the average person just swiping in their brain-rotted frame of mind is probably not like it looks like paint.
Speaker 2:
Yeah, they're just a fat pig in a cage just saying, I want to buy stuff.
Speaker 1:
I want to buy stuff. What's an account like this worth if you're just reviewing matcha brands and you have thousands of followers? That's probably worth a lot of money.
Speaker 2:
Dude, this stuff, whenever I see it, so the capitalistic side is like, this is awesome. And then I find myself slowly like becoming a socialist and I'm thinking, oh my god,
we're just a bunch of palantiers in our house just watching us and we're just buying dumb stuff from AI ads. Okay, that's interesting though. Regardless, if I make fun of it, I think it's kind of cool. What's another cool one?
Speaker 1:
Okay, this one, you're gonna hate this, I think, also, but.
Speaker 2:
Sign me up.
Speaker 1:
This is not just for you. It's for people looking for jobs. So, there's this thing called AI Apply. And if you go to the website, you could, let's say you're looking for a job,
you can literally apply to thousands of jobs automatically via AI.
Speaker 2:
That's crazy, man. This is absolutely crazy.
Speaker 1:
It also has this cool thing. There's like an interview buddy. So it helps you like get real time interview help and answer interview questions. It helps you build in resume. It helps you build a cover letter.
And obviously, the core feature is the auto apply thing. Now, why I like this is it's I get my feel in our little tech bubble that like the economy is good and everything like that.
People are suffering right now and it's really hard to find a job. Any way that you can find an unfair advantage to get in the room, I support.
It does suck for the HR managers and the people at the companies getting all these AI applications. I will say that, though.
Speaker 2:
That is insane, man. I hate this, but I get the need. It says that it's loved by one million users. So a million people use this?
Speaker 1:
A million people have used this. I actually tweeted, like, what are some underrated apps? And the CMO replied with this. And some guy was like, Yeah, but if you're, you know, the company getting these, this sucks.
And he responded saying, like, the next version of the product is helping companies filter out AI applications.
Speaker 2:
This is like if Nestle, like, owned the hospital. Do you know what I mean? Yeah, exactly. Like, we're going to fatten you up and then give you a bunch of medicine to make you skinny. And then we're going to fatten you up again.
Speaker 1:
Yeah, it's amazing. And it's probably going to be a great business. But I think that like there's an again and I'm always looking for like the arbitrage opportunity.
Speaker 2:
Has seeing. Yeah. And I get the money making perspective. And I think that if you haven't made your first dollar and you're looking to do something, then this is the future. And I.
You know, like my business that made me money was a newsletter that had advertising in it. So I am no one to talk about any of this, but sometimes I see this stuff.
I do get pretty bummed out where I think, and I think this will always happen. I think the people who are older will always look at the younger people and being like, back in my day, like we cared about our jobs or we were more craftsmen.
So I'm going to preface all of that with that. But does any of this make you feel bad?
Speaker 1:
Yeah. Well, this podcast is called My First Million. So if someone is trying to get from zero to a million dollars, these are the tools that anyone could use.
And there's no capital restrictions and you don't need to be in Silicon Valley to win. So I think that if I'm trying to make a million bucks, these are the tools that I'm using to make a million bucks.
I grew up with no connections and, you know, not a ton of money and stuff like that. So, like, I have a soft spot for people who are starting out going zero to one. And, you know, so that's who I'm focusing on, man.
Like, I'm focusing, like, that's what I've, like, dedicated my career to doing, really, is helping people, you know, being in the light bulb business and helping people have light bulbs so they can actually,
like, change the trajectory of a life. Now, I say that with, like, I don't want to go on X and Instagram and see AI slop all day long. You know what I mean? Like, I love X and I love Instagram. And we have kids now, right?
We don't want our families to be addicted to these products. So I do feel that. I do feel a sense of responsibility as well.
Speaker 2:
But I do think it's interesting. I think that the generation before the internet came around, they probably said the exact same thing.
Speaker 1:
They said the same thing.
Speaker 2:
I think that the generation before the industrial revolution, they would say the exact same thing. So things tend to work themselves out. And it's just, this is the first time in my life that I'm old enough where I'm potentially Like,
okay, are you getting on or are you getting off? Whereas if you're a young person, you're just born on. So there was no, are you getting on or getting off for the internet? I was born into the internet. That's just how I grew up.
Whereas now I'm old enough to where it's not, I'm not default into it and I have to like learn about it. And this is, this is the first time I've experienced that.
Speaker 1:
Yeah, I mean, we are getting older, you know, so and we've seen some of these shifts, but I agree. Like, what's the difference between brain rotting on TikTok and like watching TV for eight hours a day?
Speaker 2:
These tools are really cool. How many hours a week are you just nerding out and finding all these interesting things?
Speaker 1:
I mean, that's one of the reasons why I love the design agency is like the design agency is working with all the top AI apps to build up this stuff.
So sometimes I just sit in meetings and I'm like, You know, teach me everything about, you know, character AI. Teach me everything about Jasper AI. Teach me everything about these tools.
Speaker 2:
How many of them are you proficient in?
Speaker 1:
I spend probably 10 hours a week playing with new tools every single week. And I would say I'm proficient in I'm proficient, like I'm native in 10 tools, I'd say.
Speaker 2:
Man, well, thank you for filling me in. I do feel it's funny. For years, I was like the young guy. I was like the guy who my parents would ask, how do they turn their internet on or plug their TV in?
Because I think that I'm like a computer geek. But I was never actually that. And now I feel I'm even further away from the AI epicenter,
but I'm so happy that I have friends like you who can pull me towards it a little bit and show me what's cool and not make me feel stupid by not knowing what it is.
That's the value that you provided to our audience this episode, so I appreciate you doing that.
Speaker 1:
It's literally my pleasure. It's an honor to do so. Like I said, I'm in the light bulb business. If you had one or two or three light bulbs, even if some of the stuff you saw today was like, that's a little bit cringe, I wouldn't do that.
There might be a way that you can do or use some of these tools in a way that works for you. I think that's the important part. That's the important takeaway. Sam, thanks for having me on and letting me share my nerdy stuff.
And I'll see you next time.
Speaker 2:
All right, that's it. That's the part.
Unknown Speaker:
I feel like I can rule the world. I know I could be what I want to. I put my all in it like no days off on the road. Let's travel never looking back.
Speaker 3:
This episode is brought to you by Hubspot Media. They have a cool new podcast that's for AI called The Next Wave. It's by Matt Wolf and Nathan Lanz.
And they're basically talking about all the new tools that are coming out, how the landscape is changing, what's going on with AI tech. So if you want to be up to date on AI tech, it's a cool podcast you could check out.
Listen to The Next Wave wherever you get your podcasts.
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