#828: David Senra — How Extreme Winners Think and Win: Lessons from 400+ of History’s Greatest Founders and Investors (Including Buffett, Munger, Rockefeller, Jobs, Ovitz, Zell, and Names You Don’t Know But Should)

#828:大卫·塞纳拉——《如何成为极端赢家:从400多位历史上最伟大的创始人及投资者身上学到的经验》(包括巴菲特、芒格、洛克菲勒、乔布斯、奥维茨、泽尔等,以及你不知道但应该了解的名字)

The Tim Ferriss Show

2025-09-25

2 小时 55 分钟
PDF

单集简介 ...

David Senra is the host of the Founders podcast. For the past nine years, David has intensely studied the life and work of hundreds of history’s greatest entrepreneurs. His new podcast, David Senra, showcases conversations with the best-of-the-best living founders and extreme winners. This episode is brought to you by: Cresset family office services for CEOs, founders, and entrepreneurs Our Place’s Titanium Always Pan® Pro using nonstick technology that’s coating-free and made without PFAS, otherwise known as “Forever Chemicals” AG1 all-in-one nutritional supplement Timestamps: [00:00:00] Who is David Senra? [00:01:11] Brad Jacobs: Roll-up king and positive-driven billionaire founder. [00:02:26] Rare positive archetypes: Ed Thorp, Sol Price, Brunello Cucinelli. [00:06:04] Michael Dell as another exception; fear of failure and motivation. [00:06:47] Negative self-talk, excellence, and its ripple effects. [00:08:26] Jensen Huang story: “Why do you suck so much?” [00:08:54] Inspiration from Dan Carlin’s Hardcore History. [00:10:00] Derek Sivers: unconventional, philosophical entrepreneur. [00:11:04] Learning equals behavior change, not memorization. [00:11:48] Jeremy Giffon insight: biographies as substitute mentors. [00:12:37] Reading biographies as one-sided conversations. [00:13:16] The chain of influence. [00:14:09] Podcasting as “relationships at scale.” [00:14:28] Coping with trauma and breaking cycles. [00:20:18] Note-taking process: books, Post-its, ruler, Readwise. [00:29:27] OCD tendencies and love of doing things the hard way. [00:31:04] Comparing our reading/re-reading workflows. [00:35:04] A family falling out and the randomness of student housing. [00:38:58] David’s introduction to my work during his MySpace-era college years. [00:40:07] Podcasting influences: Jocko Willink, Kevin Rose’s Elon Musk interview. [00:44:14] Five-and-a-half years of obscurity before breakthrough. [00:46:50] Graphtreon and experiments with subscription models. [00:49:25] Patrick O’Shaughnessy’s endorsement sparks growth. [00:51:23] Sam Hinkie and Patrick connections fuel momentum. [00:52:19] Transition to ads and joining Patrick’s network. [00:55:17] Edwin Land: patron saint of founders and Steve Jobs’ influence. [00:57:02] Lessons from Sam Zell, Jay Pritzker, and William Zeckendorf. [00:58:48] Need a generous, well-connected person? You can’t go wrong with Rick Gerson. [01:03:04] Edwin Land’s philosophies: Differentiation and doing to excess. [01:04:30] Entrepreneurial archetypes and conflicting advice. [01:06:00] Daniel Ek as an alternative founder archetype and mentor. [01:10:59] Further founder archetypes and contrasts. [01:13:41] What is an anti-business billionaire? [01:19:55] Advice from “shark” Michael Ovitz about the value of truth in one’s inner circle. [01:22:30] The hands-on approach of practical founders who live for the love of their business. [01:23:28] Doing one thing relentlessly. [01:23:51] “This can’t be my life” as a powerful motivator. [01:26:57] Low introspection as a common trait among founders — and its implications about human nature. [01:30:15] Robert Caro: The only writer David believes should be allowed to write thousand-page biographies. [01:32:40] James Dyson’s persistence vs. the risk of blind stubbornness. [01:34:22] Todd Graves (Raising Cane’s) as an example of relentless focus on one idea. [01:35:41] Separating fact from fiction in biographies/histories. [01:41:55] Considering trainable vs. non-trainable attributes in potential role models. [01:46:11] Perusing Charlie Munger’s library. [01:49:35] Dealmaking lessons on Eddie Lampert’s superyacht. [01:55:34] The smartest person David knows. [01:56:55] David’s obsessive craftsman approach to podcast creation. [01:58:51] Why David decided to begin a second podcast. [02:01:21] The economics of trust. [02:03:40] The benefits of cultivating a purposeful aloofness about current events. [02:07:11] Using the pulpit of publicity for good, not evil. [02:09:57] New show frequency/dynamic and how David plans to balance the burden of running two shows. [02:13:30] Teamwork with essence of turtle. [02:15:40] Adapting the Rockefeller “secret allies” strategy to podcasting. [02:17:56] Chris Hutchins: The mad scientist of podcasting? [02:18:30] Working with Rob Mohr and Andrew Huberman of SciComm. [02:20:54] Why David focuses on 24-hour cycles over long-term planning. [02:24:54] Does David worry the extra workload will disrupt his lifestyle? [02:30:18] What makes one potential guest more interesting to David than another? [02:34:34] Making an impact vs. happiness. [02:36:32] Playing the status game when your heart’s not in it is for suckers. [02:44:23] Travel observations and the rarity of truly unique experiences. [02:46:26] Books as philosophical operating systems. [02:48:39] Parting thoughts. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
更多

单集文稿 ...

  • Hello, boys and girls, ladies and germs.

  • Welcome to another episode of The Tim Ferriss Show.

  • My guest today is David Senra.

  • David is the host of the Founders podcast, a cult favorite.

  • at this point, which explores the life and work of hundreds of history's greatest entrepreneurs.

  • For each episode, he does something that most people will not do.

  • He reads one or more biographies about a single founder and then shares the key lessons.

  • It has become incredibly popular.

  • His new podcast, David Centra, is brought to you by the Huberman Lab team.

  • It showcases conversations with the best of the best living founders and extreme winners.

  • You can visit davidcentra.com.

  • That's S-E-N-R-A, davidcentra.com for all things David and to check out the new show.

  • And now, without further ado, please enjoy this very wide-ranging conversation with David Senra.

  • Who is Brad Jacobs?

  • So Brad Jacobs is I think the only person in history to start eight separate billion dollar companies So a lot of people like on the the west coast you know in the taxi and they don't really know who he is

  • because he's just been an east coast guy his whole life But he started his first company when he was like 23.

  • He's 68 years old He is by far the most energetic person I have ever been around and he wrote this book called how to make a few billion dollars What are some of his companies?

  • He's like the roll-up king So like he'd roll up like logistics companies and trucking companies and now he's got a massive one.

  • Uh, they, he just took public that's doing like building supplies.

  • And so like early in your career,