Dan Fleyshman
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
I wasn't prepared for that because I didn't get paid for the first order.
You see the problem?
And now extrapolate that to Ralph's, Vaughn's, Albertson's, 7-Eleven, Whole Foods.
You're in a bunch of other chain stores.
So it sounds great on paper that you're getting all these orders.
You've got to have capital to manufacture.
And so you need to be properly what's called bankrolled for these situations, whether you have a snack company, a beverage company, selling chess boards, anything that you're selling.
If you need a lot of product inventory, you need a lot of capital to manufacture that.
On the charity side, why do you think it's important for, let's call it a celebrity, an athlete, an influencer, why should they have some type of charity component to their life, whether they're supporting a charity, donating to charity, or just spending their time and energy and effort with charity?
You know the feeling when you do charity or you help someone and you feel good about it, right?
Oftentimes, we don't give that privilege to other people.
And they're like, oh, we don't want to ask them to donate their money or time or energy.
I'm like, well, you're holding back from them.
They could have that good feeling too and help someone that needs it, a homeless person, a children's hospital, senior citizen, a cancer situation, et cetera.
Everyone wins in the scenario.
You feel good, okay, hey, zillionaire or whoever, will you donate to this thing?
They feel good because they got to donate.
The person receiving it is ecstatic.
They don't care how they got it because they needed the capital for their situation.
Everyone wins in the scenario.