
You can have a great product, a smart strategy, and still get buried if your team and culture can’t keep up. That’s the part a lot of business owners miss. If you’ve ever felt like growth is getting harder, decisions are getting messier, or your company is starting to feel heavy instead of sharp, this episode is going to hit a nerve.
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No child deserves to go hungry, especially at school. But right now, some politicians are cutting funding to programs that help kids access free meals at school while handing out tax breaks to billionaires. Hungry kids can't focus and learn. The National Education association is made up of 3 million educators and allies across the country dedicated to making sure every child has the support they need to thrive in the classroom. Help the NEA keep hungry kids fed at school. Learn more@nea.org Nutrition for Small Business A high speed fiber connection is only one piece of the puzzle. You need the total solutions advantage from Comcast Business. It's a first ever combination of the largest, fastest fiber powered network gig speeds with equipment and security included plus a 5 year price lock. Learn more get started for $60 a month for 12 months when you add an advanced solution to a qualifying Internet package, Limited time offer restrictions apply. New customers only. Requires 300 Mbps Internet security edge and additional qualifying service 1 year agreement paperless billing and autopay with bank account required taxes and fees extra. How did Netflix go from being laughed out of a boardroom to becoming a beast worth $366 billion? Well, let me tell you a story. In the year 2000, Reed Hastings, the founder of Netflix, walked into a conference room on the 27th floor in Dallas, Texas. A across the table sat John Antioko. John is the CEO of Blockbuster. At the time, Blockbuster had 9,000 stores, 60 million customers, $6 billion in annual revenue. Netflix had 300,000 subscribers and they were losing money. So Hasting made a pitch to him. He said, buy us for $50 million and we're going to run your online business. Antiocho laughed them out of the boardroom. Ten years later, Blockbuster filed for bankruptcy. Today, Netflix is worth $366 billion. That meeting is one of the most instructive moments in business history. Not because Blockbuster was stupid and dropped the bag, but because Netflix had something Blockbuster just didn't. It had nothing to do with technology. It had nothing to do with their business knowledge. It had everything to do with their team and their culture. Reed Hastings wrote a book called no Rules Rules and it's about the specific principles that built Netflix into what it is today. And today I'm gonna give you the five most critical lessons from their playbook and exactly how to apply those lessons in your business right now. In fact, when I read this book, I implemented some of the things I learned immediately and saw immediate results. Some of the things I'm gonna share with you today are gonna make some of the biggest impact impacts in your business that you've ever seen. And that's no exaggeration because I've witnessed it in my own business. So let's get started. The Doom. Welcome Back to the $100 MBA Show. I'm your host Omar Zenholm where I deliver practical business lessons three times a week, Monday, Wednesday and Friday to help you start, grow and scale your business. I got a quick favor to ask if this show has helped you in any way. Leave me a quick review you could do. So wherever you listen to podcasts, this helps me and my team reach even more people who need the same no fluff practical business advice that you're getting from the show. It only takes a few seconds, but it makes a huge difference. Thanks for being a part of our journey to help others on their journey. Lesson 1 Talent Density Changes everything. And this is the foundational idea behind everything that Netflix does. They believe that a small team of exceptional people outperforms a large team of average ones every single time. And Hastings calls this the talent density. How dense your talent pool is in your business, even if that's just you and a co founder or you and your executive assistant. Here's specifically what Netflix means by this one. Exceptional engineer not just does the work of two average engineers, they do the work of 10. I've witnessed this myself building a software business for over 10 years. I had an engineer on my team that was outputting 10, sometimes 20 times work than the average engineer on the team. Okay, so we had many engineers. There was one that was just so, so much better. And guess what? He was the most expensive one. This teaches you that exceptional people do not just work faster than they make better decisions. They solve harder problems. They raise the standard for everyone around them. And here's the flip side. One mediocre performer on a team of high performers doesn't just underperform. They drag the entire team down. They slow decisions. They lower the standard. They make the exceptional people around them work harder when they don't have to. Some of you know I play basketball and I'm competing in the World Master Games in Greece very, very soon. And when I practice with my team, and this is a team of very high performing players, many of them, if not most of them, have played professionally around the world. And when I play because the standard's so high, I play my best basketball. But sometimes I play some pickup basketball with my friends. They're okay, but they're not at the same level. And when I play with them, my performance just not as good. It's because I become worse of a player. I become less, you know, fast, less smarter. My passes are not as sharp because I don't have to play as good. So this is a good example of the environment really shapes how well people perform and how they show up at work. Netflix has this concept called the Keeper test. Every manager at Netflix regularly asks themselves a simple question. If this person told me they were leaving tomorrow, if they got another job offer somewhere else, would I fight to keep them? Or would I kind of secretly been like, well, that's okay, I can find somebody else? If the answer is anything less than an emphatic yes, that person should probably be somewhere else. You probably shouldn't hire them in the first place. And Netflix fully understands this. Now, there's another exercise that I recommend that you do that I teach inside the $100 a program. And it's a thought experiment. The idea is that if you had to, you were forced to fire everybody on your team and have to start from zero, who would you rehire? Okay, so this concept kind of gets you thinking, well, I don't have the burden of having to fire them or go through that painful. I have to do it. So they're all fired, they're gone. Now I got to choose who I can rehire. That is a different idea of, like, who would I actually value and need? And they're actually adding a lot of value to the company. So this is a really, really good way to find out if your team has good talent density. Are most of the people you would rehire? Are most of the people the people that you would fight for so you can keep, or are some of them, or most of them just not worth rehiring? Now, I want to pause for a second because you might be hearing this and saying, this is sounds very cutthroat. This sounds like, oh, my gosh, like, firing people is not a fun thing, and that's really not a nice thing to do people. And I understand that. But you have to understand when you signed up to become an entrepreneur, when you signed up to start a business, you have a loyalty, you have an allegiance. You have a duty and responsibility to your customers to give them your best. And if you're shortchanging them because you are not choosing the right talent or keeping talent that are not the best people for the job, then that is something that you're going to have to live with. The fact that you're just not delivering the. The best quality, the best product or service that you possibly can do. And guess what? Your competition, they're going to do that. They're going to make sure that they have the best people. And especially as you start growing in your business, start competing with bigger companies, you're going to start realizing that, hey, it's all about talent. It's all about who can I recruit on my team so we can win. Netflix totally gets this. And they don't wait, by the way, for annual performance reviews. They apply this test constantly and they act as a result. And they're very honest about this. They're very honest about a lot of things, which I'll mention. But this is a lesson I had to learn the hard way. When I was building my software company, Weapon or Ninja, I had a software engineer that was genuinely good as a person, but not really adding a lot of value to the company. In fact, a lot of the other engineers were doing his job for him because he wasn't doing it good enough. But I didn't know it was happening. They were kind of hiding it so that they can cover for him. And this is a likable guy, but you gotta hit the standard, otherwise it's not fair for your customers, it's not fair for the rest of the team, and it's not fair for you who's making sure that you're trying to keep a high standard in your company. So I encourage you to do the keeper's test. Who would you fight for if you had to fire everybody and had to rehire them again? Who would rehire? This is something that you can implement right now and start asking yourself some real questions. Why wouldn't you rehire them? Can you train them? Can you help them out? Can you give them the support they need? Or you just need to get better talent? If you're honest about this, the answer is going to tell you a lot of things about the talent density in your team. Now, before I move on, I want to talk about something that a lot of entrepreneurs fall into. Okay. It's a myth. They believe. They believe they can find the diamond in the rough. They feel like they can find the best value. I'm going to find the person that no one knows about. That's pretty cheap from some country, blah, blah, blah. You get what you pay for. You get what you pay for. At the end of the day, don't try to find the diamond in the rough. I use a lot of sports analogies because I do believe that a business team is very much like a sports team. And Netflix believes this as well. I'll share that in a minute. But the New York Yankees, how many championships have they won? How many World Series have they won? Too many to count. Okay. They also have the biggest payroll, okay? And there's a reason why. Because they go after the best talent and the best talent they deserve and demand a lot of money. So in my opinion, it's best for you to have one person that's expensive, that's then five that are mediocre and maybe, you know, less expensive and allows you to feel like, oh wow, I got a team of five people instead of one and kind of strokes your ego. No, you get what you pay for. Go with the top talent and you're going to get a lot more than what you bargained for. Investing with Schwab is like spending a Saturday at a great farmer's market. You can fill your reusable tote with a bit of everything. Maybe you go for some free range self directed investing or perhaps you pick up a few farm fresh trades while you peruse. You can even get help from a dedicated advisor. That's full service wealth management. Mix, match and change your mind whenever you want. Because at Schwab, you can invest your way. No matter your goals or appetite for investing, Schwab has everything you need all in one place. Visit schwab.com to learn more. Running a business means you're always reachable. Until you're not. And the moment you miss that call, that text, that follow up, a competitor is the one that picks it up. That's why today's episode is brought to you by Quo, spelled Q U O. The business phone system built so you never miss an opportunity. With Quo, all your calls, texts and voicemails live in one place. So anyone on your team can pick up a conversation, see the full history and respond fast. Set up in minutes on any device, keep your existing number and add teammates as you grow. No it, no hassle. And Quo's built in AI agent handles after hours calls, answers questions and even books appointments. So you never miss a lead. Even when your team is offline. Money is on the line. Always say hello with Quo. Try Quo for free. Plus get 20% off your first six months when you go to Quo.commba that's Quo.commba lesson number two. Radical candor is the competitive advantage of Netflix. I'm going to tell you right now that this chapter is probably the most controversial chapter of the whole book. Most organizations, they have a feedback problem. Not because people don't have opinions. It's because they don't say them out loud. They don't actually give feedback respectfully and honestly. You know what I'm talking about. They smile on a meeting and they complain in the car, in the parking lot. Right? You need to encourage your entire team to be as honest and respectful as possible at all times so that we're constantly giving each other feedback. You know, just five seconds ago, you didn't see it off camera. Josh corrected me. I made a mistake. I read the word on my script incorrectly. But that feedback I needed so that we can all win and that we can have a great episode and I don't look like a fool on camera. In most businesses, they write performance reviews in the most diplomatic language possible not to hurt anybody's feelings. Right? Makes sense. But often in that process, honesty gets missed. They tell their colleagues what they think, but they never really tell the person that they're supposed to hear it, like the person that needs the feedback. Netflix decided that this is not acceptable. They built a culture they call radical candor. Right? And I love this idea because. And they really underline the understanding of that. We're going to be honest, we're going to be candid, but we're going to be respectful. Right? We're going to give honest feedback to encourage each other to do better. Again, sports analogy. All the time when you're on the basketball court, you're telling your teammates that they missed a shot. Don't worry about it. Next shot, you know, keep going after it, giving them people feedback constantly, just so that people know that, hey, we're on the same team. But you need to hear, you know, find another way to influence the game. You don't have to always keep shooting. So the point here is that you want to give honest feedback to your team at all times and understand, and they all understand, we have, like, a culture that, hey, we're doing this so that we all get better, Right? Because if you win, I win, we all win. By the way, this only works if it's at every level. And one of the rules they have at Netflix that I absolutely love is don't try to please your boss. It's a great, great rule which lets people know that, hey, you're not going to win any Browning points by trying to please, you know, the CEO or the manager or whoever it might be. What you want to do is give honest feedback regardless of who you're speaking to, okay? Because we all need to hear all the ideas in the room. So the person that's making the decision or the team that's making the decision got all the information so they'd be able to make the best sound decision possible. So in Netflix, a junior employee, an intern, can give feedback to a senior employee. Even the CEO himself, Reed Hastings, really encourages people not to try to, like, pander to him and, you know, give him lip service. He says, please destroy my ideas if you think you have a better one. But the best part of this is that Netflix encourages feedback in real time. Not once a year, not once a quarter in the moment. And there's nothing wrong with that. There's nothing wrong with taking that moment and say, hey, I'm going to make this a teaching moment to give feedback. But also remember that you need to be open to get feedback. You got to be open to say, if someone gives you feedback, be like, hey, I'm going to consider that. I'm going to try that next time. Because they're not going to listen to you if you are not listening to them. And that's the whole point. And I think Netflix really nailed it with this framework. Now I want to break down this framework so that you can apply it in your own business. And it's called the 4A framework, and it's 4A's. The first A is aim to assist. Give feedback with the intention of helping and not criticizing. This is very important because if you don't have the right intention, it's going to come off as you just being a little bit petty. So that's the first aim to assist. Number two, actionable focus on what the person can actually do differently. This is so important. So many people just say, well, I don't like what you just did. Well, that's not feedback. That's helpful. You want to tell them what they should do instead, right? Not what you didn't like. A number three, appreciate when you receive feedback, resist the instinct to defend yourself. A lot of us, we were just like, no, you don't understand. This is why I did this. No, don't do that. Just say thank you. Just take it as a data point and say, I appreciate you giving me feedback. And then you can figure out what you want to do with it later. And the fourth A is accept or discard. You are not obligated to act on every piece of feedback, but you must genuinely consider it. And this is really good advice. Even as the leader of your business, as an entrepreneur, anytime you hear anything, and we're going to talk about this in a future episode, but anytime you hear anything, like advice from a podcaster or, or some guru on YouTube or something you read in a book, Just see it as a data point. See it as something that you can add to your arsenal to help you make better decisions. It's up to you what you do with that information. So what does this actually do for you? What does radical candor do for your business? Well, it eliminates the gap between what people think and what gets said. You know, a lot of people, they think something, but they don't actually say it, right. They keep it to themselves. And that gap is where bad decisions live. That's where problems really fester, and you don't want to do that. By the way, this is applicable to even just personal relationships where the thing everyone knows is wrong never gets fixed because no one wants to say it out loud. It's very hard for you to address something that you don't recognize. Here at the $100 MBA, we've built a culture where we have learned through repetition how to give feedback the right way when something's not working. What we like to do is we like to be very direct and honest, but there's no reason to be mean about it, right? There's no reason to be, like, you know, spiteful about it. You can just be respectful and even you can have a little fun with it and just be nice about it. So we like to have a direct conversation. We don't have, like a strongly worded email or anything like that. It's just easier to talk to somebody face to face or even on a zoom call and just have a chat. And more times than not, we're actually on the same page. We just decided to implement whatever we decided to do in different ways. So we have to Save yourself from those bad decisions that can be created by miscommunication, by the fact that you just never told that person the way you wanted it or the way you envisioned the project to go. So always communicate. We have a rule that you can never over communicate because over communication really doesn't exist. You know, it's good to reiterate things, remind people, and also give feedback when it's needed. But also encouragement. Feedback is also encouragement. Just say like, hey, I really liked what you did. That was fantastic. And that just tells them, hey, keep doing that. That's the direction you should move in. The point of this takeaway is you want to build a culture where honesty is safe. It's not just tolerated, it's rewarded, it's respected, and it's celebrated. Lesson number three. Now, some of you are going to really need to learn this lesson. And some of you, this is going to Come naturally. And what's lesson number three? Treat people like adults. Netflix has a very generous vacation policy. In fact, they have a no vacation policy, which means there is no policy, okay? They just allow people to understand that these are your responsibilities. This is what you got to get done. As long as you get them done, that's fine. They're just result oriented. And, you know, I know that a lot of countries have different laws and, you know, you have to kind of follow these laws, but if the spirit of your holiday policy is, you figure it out, you're going to be fine. If you need to take a few weeks off, no problem, as long as you get your job done. That is really what you should embody from this lesson, is that it's not just about the vacation policy, but you have to treat people like they are autonomous, like they're responsible, like they're adults. Netflix doesn't have a lot of policies, whether it comes to expenses or holiday or sick leave or whatever it might be. But they do have one rule, and this rule is very simple. Act in the company's best interest. So they don't have any forms to fill, no approval chains, not even receipts to submit to a committee. They can just submit it straight to accounting. But they have a rule that says, hey, whatever you do, we're expecting you to act in the company's best interest interest. And that kind of covers all the bases. Now, most people, when they hear this, they hear that, oh, my God, people are going to abuse this. If I just give them unlimited holiday, they're just going to be gone for six months. If I have no expense policy, they'll just, you know, run up a huge bill and, you know, drive me out of business. And here's what actually happens in Netflix, okay? Employees take roughly the same amount of time off as if they, if they had a traditional policy. The funny thing is that people will just act responsible if you just allow them to be adults. Remember, you're hiring top talent people that care about their job, that want to keep their job. They want to keep on doing what they're doing for a living. And yes, I understand that things can get expensive travel costs and all that kind of stuff, but you have to understand that what's the cost of making your employees feel like you don't trust them. And in Hastings Book, literally and figuratively, he really believes that that's a small price to pay. It's a small price to pay to have no policy and maybe to have a little bit of overspending here and there. To make sure that the team understands that I trust you, I appreciate you, and I also believe that you are going to act responsibly. But that's not the best benefit of having as little rules as possible or as little number of policies possible. The number one benefit of this is speed. When people do not have to approve to make any kind of decision, things get faster, things get done quickly because they don't need a committee, they do need approvals. They're not waiting months to get something done. For example, when they don't need to submit an expense request, they just buy what the business needs and move on and they get the job done. When they are trusted to manage their own time and their own holiday, they take ownership of their output rather than their hours. They make sure that the team is not burdened by the leave. They take care of things so that they can take the leave responsibly, but also comfortably. Their entire model is built on one belief. Most people are adults that want to do good work and treating them like children who cannot be trusted and are gonna run amok if I don't, you know, stop them from doing so. That's the kind of culture and behavior that a lot of people don't wanna be around. People don't wanna be a part of a company that makes them feel restricted, makes them feel that they can't be creative and they can't make decisions and can't be autonomous. The flip side of trusting somebody is that they understand that they're responsible, right? And they respect your trust. Control, on the other hand, produces really just compliance. And you don't want that. You want innovators, you want people that are going to go after it and do better work than you could ever do. Hey, if you're loving this episode, do me a favor. Smash that subscribe button. Whatever app you're using, subscribe. Because we have an upcoming episode I don't want you to miss. And as soon as it goes out, you'll see it in your feedback. And this episode's all about how to create a vision for your business without feeling cliche or corny. I'm going to give you a step by step plan of how we come up with our vision, how we communicate our vision to our team. And it's not a once and done thing. It's something that we try to do over and over and make it a part of what we do every day. And this is actually quite simple. It's not some big corporate concept and framework that is hard to follow. It's simple. It's step by step. And I'm going to share it with you. So hit subscribe so you don't miss that episode.
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So you can nail your vision, not only what it is, but how to communicate it. Lesson number four is something that I kind of talked about and hinted on throughout today's episode, and that's, we are a team, not a family. Now, this might rub you the wrong way, okay? But you have to understand that in business, you have competition, just like in sports, just like a professional sports team. And the goal of a professional sports team is to win a championship. And they want to assemble the best team possible to be the best. You know, the best team wins in sports. Now, most companies describe their culture as a family. We're a family here. We take care of each other. We're loyal to each other. And no matter what, we got each other's backs. That sounds warm. It sounds human. It sounds kind of nice, but it's not reality. That's not the truth. You're actually lying to people because that is not what actually happens in business. Why? Because family doesn't cut you out when your performance drops. They don't have any obligations to do anything other than love you, okay? That's what makes families so special. It's unconditional. I'm going to, you know, support my sisters, my mom, my parents, no matter what. But that's not the reality of business. If somebody just shows up to work and does nothing all day, are you going to continue to pay them? Of course not. Because you have an agreement. You have an exchange. This person is supposed to deliver a certain level of value to the company, and in exchange, they get compensated. So this is not reality. Let's just stop calling it a family, because family is a whole different thing. And love your family, you know, your family keeps you in the family because you belong your blood. You're a part of the family. Not because of how you're performing, has nothing to do with the way you're performing, okay? But a business that operates like a family ends up keeping people out of loyalty rather than results, which means high performers carry the people who are not performing, which means the standard drops, which means your high performers are going to feel resentful and they're going to look elsewhere to work. They're going to go somewhere where everybody's an A player and you're just not going to compete. I'm just giving you the truth here. Because if you want to operate your business like a family, Then in a lot of ways, you're not a real business. You're a not for profit, right? You're just kind of operating in a way that makes you feel good rather than what actually gets you results. So like I said, at Netflix, they compare themselves to a professional sports team. Think about a professional sports team and what they do at the start of the season. They try to have the best roster possible so that they can win the championship. Every player on that roster has a role. They're there because they are the best available person at that position right now, okay? And as long as they are the best option, they will remain on the team. But if there's an opportunity to have somebody that is in that position that you know, with their skillset and what they provide to the team that is better than them at whatever they do, then it's the obligation of the team and management to go after that person because it's going to make them more competitive. Now, within the team, the coach has a deep loyalty for the players or to the players. The players have a deep loyalty to each other. But if a player's performance drops and someone better comes along, you know the team management is going to sign that player. Trades happen in sports all the time. And it's not because the player is a bad person. It's because the goal of the team is to win. And that's just the bottom line. And this is how Netflix thinks about every role in their organization. The manager that genuinely cares about people on their team, they invest in their team because you can develop the players on your team and make them better and make them the best in the industry, and you could invest in your team and your training of your team and the ability for them to take on more responsibility, that's going to make them a better player. So all these things are with the mindset of, hey, how can I level up all my players so that we as a group are the best of the best. But what if somebody no longer is the best person for the role anymore? You have to have a conversation. And Netflix really believes in having, again, an honest, clear conversation. And they make sure that they take care of them and they give them a good reference. And the funny thing is that when people leave and in the book they've interviewed people that left Netflix, whether they didn't make the cut and they had to be cut from the team or they resigned, they say the same thing. They feel honored that they were even chosen in the first place to be part of this elite team. So it's not seen as a bad thing. They're seen like, hey, you made the team. We were able to use your talents and your abilities for a period of time, but now you're going to move on. And you got to remember, Netflix is at the top of the media game. So anywhere go, you know, people would love to have them. So in a lot of ways, it's something that is understood in the company, and they understand that, hey, we respect what you've given us, but we got to keep on growing. And now we're going to move in a different direction and get somebody else to do this role. Because, by the way, this is one of the worst things a lot of people do. They keep somebody in a role that they're not succeeding in, and they are not feeling fulfilled. They're not feeling like they're doing their best work. So it's actually better for them to move on to somewhere where they can be more useful and get more fulfillment in another company. And by the way, through my 20 years of experience in business, anytime I had a conversation with somebody who's not performing, they know it. They already know it before you have the conversation. And they actually feel relieved we're having the conversation and that there is a path forward, whether it's them getting trained up or them moving on to another company. And they actually feel a sense of burden that, hey, I'm not pulling my socks up. I'm not the person that's actually helping out the rest of the team. They're helping me out, and I'm kind of burdening them with my responsibilities. So they're actually relieved when they have this conversation. I say nine times out of 10, so don't be afraid to approach them and say, hey, we gotta do something about this, because they can feel it and they want to improve or they want to change. I talked about this in a previous episode where I waited too long to make a fire that I needed to do back in the day with Webinar Ninja, my software company. And when I had that conversation, it was a clear and quick conversation because we've already had a few other conversations beforehand, and they saw the writing on the wall. They kind of understood that this is where it's going. But I actually dragged it on for too long. This person was with us for about two years. I should have known this within the first few months, and I kind of knew it, but I was hoping that things would just get better. And I didn't really apply any kind of strategy or tactics to make it better. I didn't have a plan for them to get better or even putting them in a different position. I just hoped that I was wrong, and that's not a good way to look at it. You got to face those challenges head on. So, one, you're not wasting their time. You're not wasting your company's time and making sure that you have the best person for that job. Lesson number five, reinvent before you have to. Let's go back to that Blockbuster story that we shared at the top. Because the lesson of that story is not that Blockbuster was arrogant. It was that Blockbuster was trapped. They were trapped by their own success. This is often called the innovator's dilemma. They were really good at movie rentals, but they never innovated into streaming. And that's where the movies were going. That's where any kind of media was going to. I mean, think about it. You're a business that has 9,000 stores, 6 million customers, $6 billion in revenue. It looks like success by any metric, right? Everything about that business was optimized for the model that it was at the time. But they didn't see the fact that they were going to become obsolete within a decade. And people that were running this business could not see it because they were so obsessed with what was working rather than what will work in the future. That's a principle that Netflix continues to embody. In the beginning, they were just DVD by mail. You know, they were sending DVDs in the mail. You could return it. And then they moved to streaming. When Internet speeds got better, they moved to streaming. Then after that, they were streaming movies and TV shows that were produced by other production houses. But then they were like, hey, maybe we should produce our own movies and shows. And the first show they produced was House of Cards, by the way. Remember when I just did Dum Dummy? That is actually the sound of Frank Underwood, the character, the main character of that show, pounding on the desk with his ring. And that's where the Netflix sound bit came from, where he's going, bum, bum on the desk. But I thought that was really cool. But the point of this is that they keep reinventing themselves. Now they're producing their own shows, they produce their own movies. When they produced Roma, which won a ton of awards, it kind of put Netflix on the map as, like, a real production house. They didn't stop there. They kept on changing. Now they do live events, whether it's sports, whether it's comedy. I just saw Kevin Hart had some comedy roasting special that was live. So they're constantly reinventing themselves. They're constantly trying to make sure that they're on the next thing and not just settling with what works. They're constantly trying to figure out what will continue to work, not just today, but tomorrow and the future. Why? Because technology changes, customer expectations change, and the business is still optimized for what's working right now. So you gotta work on your business, but also work on the business you're gonna become. You have to, like, work on two businesses at once. We had to do this at Webinar NJR Software company, where we were serving the needs of the customers and what they wanted, what they're asking for today. But we knew in the future they're gonna need other things that they're not voicing today because they don't know they need it yet. And that's a tough compromise because you gotta spend, split your effort and your time and your money and your capital and all that kind of stuff on what's working and making you money, but also on a few bets that you hope will work so that you are ahead of the game before it actually happens. One of those things we had was automated webinars. We realized that people didn't want to always do live webinars. We were one of the first people that did automated webinars so that you can run webinars 24 7. So when we launched that, people were like, wow, yeah, that's something that I want to do. That's something that I actually need. They didn't know they needed it, but we kind of knew it because they expressed some of the problems they had, and we knew that this would be a good solution. So you're constantly looking to do what's next and not just work on what's working. So you want to be a company that always is asking, what does the future look like? What does the next version of my business look like? And then build it before you have to. All right, to wrap up, here are the five takeaways, the five insights that I absolutely loved from this book. No Rules Rules by Reed Hastings. The founder of Netflix CEO wrote it himself. Talent density, number one. Very important to make sure that you have as much talent possible on your team, even if you have a smaller team. Number two, radical candor. Build a culture where honest feedback is the standard. It's safe, it's expected, and it's respectful. Number three, freedom and responsibility. Treat people like adults because they are adults, and you shouldn't have to have to manage them and micromanage them constantly. Hey, That's a lot of work and a lot of headache. Relieve yourself of that and treat them like adults. Number four, build a great team, not a family. Right. Make sure you build this culture so that you can compete at the highest level. And number five, reinvent yourself before you have to build the business you are going to become while you're running the business you have right now. One of the best things about business is building what Derek Sivers calls building your own utopia, creating your own perfect world that you create yourself. That's the joy of entrepreneurship, is that you get to create the culture that and the vibe of what your business is like. So you get to choose what it feels like to work there. You get to choose the spirit, the talent, the type of feedback you give, and the respect you show each other. In my opinion, it's one of the hidden benefits of starting a business is that you get to create a world of your own. I highly recommend you check out no Rules Rules by Reed Hastings. It's also co written by Aaron Meyer, who is actually outside the company. She's somebody that interviewed Netflix employees to get an honest understanding of what it's like to work there. So she's just not interviewing Reid where he has got biased opinions as the leader. Okay. But it's a fantastic read. I highly recommend it. If this episode made you want to think deeper about the business you're creating, the team you're creating, then subscribe. That's your way of saying thank you. You're always showing love and allowing other people to find this episode just like you found it. I also want you to subscribe because we have great lessons that are coming up that I don't want you to miss. We recently published an episode that I think you're going to really love if you liked today's episode. It's called the Right Way to Fire Good People who Are Bad Employees. Okay. Sometimes the best, nicest people are just not good at their job and you have to have a plan on how to approach the situation because again, you want to have a high talent density in your business. So check out that episode if you want to continue learning. Thanks so much for making to the end of the episode. If you found today's episode helpful and you want more practical business lessons to help you start, grow and scale your business, the best thing you could do is subscribe to this podcast, hit subscribe or follow on your favorite podcast app, the one that you're using right now. Whether it's Apple or Spotify or ever you listen to podcasts by hitting subscribe, you get our next episode automatically, and it's the best way to support the show. It's absolutely free and it's a way for you to commit to growing your business. And now that you've subscribed, I'll check you in the next episode.
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This year's Girls trip to Telluride was the best. We one upped ourselves with my Sapphire Preferred card. And with five times points on Chase Travel, plus three times points on vacation homes with top brands, we got this incredible cabin.
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It was a mansion.
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And with three times the points on dining, we ordered a wagyu steak dinner.
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And that pistachio gelato was too good.
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So where should we go next year?
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I've got ideas.
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Chase Sapphire Preferred the card that's preferred for a reason. Cards issued by JPMorgan Chase bank and a member FDIC subject to credit approval terms apply.
Podcast Summary: The $100 MBA Show
Episode Title: How Netflix Grew To A $366 Billion Beast. Sharing Their CEO's Secrets
Host: Omar Zenhom
Date: July 3, 2026
In this episode, Omar Zenhom breaks down how Netflix ascended from a scrappy startup mocked by Blockbuster to a $366 billion industry leader. Drawing on Reed Hastings’ book No Rules Rules, Omar shares five critical lessons from Netflix’s unique approach to culture and leadership. Each lesson is presented with actionable advice so listeners can implement them in their own businesses, regardless of size or stage.
This episode is rich with clear, actionable business lessons inspired by the Netflix growth playbook. Omar’s energetic, no-nonsense tone highlights the importance of people, trust, and relentless innovation in building a world-class business. Perfect for entrepreneurs at any stage striving to create a high-performing, forward-thinking company.