His 250M+ App Download Blueprint (Full Strategy)
Résumé
TLDRIn this episode, Hunter Isacson, a successful app developer with over 300 million downloads, shares his strategies for building consumer apps that generate significant revenue. He emphasizes the importance of creating a simple user experience, establishing a strong brand identity, and focusing on a core action that users can easily complete. Hunter discusses the role of social media in app growth, particularly through collaborations with creators and influencers. He also highlights emerging trends in technology, such as consumer AI and crypto, encouraging young entrepreneurs to innovate in these areas. The episode serves as a valuable resource for anyone looking to enter the consumer app market and achieve success.
A retenir
- 🚀 Hunter Isacson has achieved over 300 million downloads with his apps.
- 📱 Focus on creating a simple user experience for your app.
- 💡 Establish a strong brand identity that resonates with users.
- 📈 Use social media and influencers to seed your app's growth.
- 🎯 Identify a clear north star metric to guide your app's development.
- 🌟 Young entrepreneurs should take risks in the consumer app space.
- 🤝 Collaborate with creators to enhance app visibility.
- 🔍 Explore emerging trends in consumer AI and crypto.
- 📊 Effective onboarding is crucial for user retention.
- 💬 Build a community around your app for sustained engagement.
Chronologie
- 00:00:00 - 00:05:00
In this episode, Hunter Isacson shares his insights on how to achieve $1 million monthly revenue in consumer apps, drawing from his experience with successful apps like NGL, which has over 250 million downloads. He emphasizes the potential for startups in the consumer mobile app space, especially with the rise of consumer AI, and encourages listeners to explore this opportunity.
- 00:05:00 - 00:10:00
Hunter Isacson discusses the importance of creating a simple onboarding experience for apps, using examples like Cal AAI, which successfully combined classic tools with AI. He highlights the significance of packaging and presenting apps in a way that enhances perceived value, making it easier for users to engage and share.
- 00:10:00 - 00:15:00
The conversation shifts to lesser-known apps like Hallow, which focuses on Christian prayers. Hunter notes the need for mobile apps in various religious contexts, suggesting that there is a significant opportunity to create spiritual apps that appeal to younger audiences, emphasizing the importance of daily engagement and community features.
- 00:15:00 - 00:20:00
Hunter and the host discuss the potential for spiritual apps to incorporate single-player experiences with daily use cases, followed by multiplayer elements. They agree that a strong single-player experience is crucial before adding social features, which can enhance user engagement and retention.
- 00:20:00 - 00:25:00
The discussion continues with the idea of creating AI-driven spiritual apps, exploring how AI could enhance user experiences by generating personalized content. Hunter suggests that there is room for innovation in this space, particularly with the integration of AI technologies.
- 00:25:00 - 00:30:00
The conversation then turns to Locket, an app that utilizes iPhone widget functionality for social interaction. Hunter explains how Locket capitalized on this feature to create a unique social experience, and they discuss the potential for future innovations in the app ecosystem as new technologies emerge.
- 00:30:00 - 00:35:00
Hunter shares his approach to app growth, emphasizing the importance of leveraging creators and social media platforms like TikTok for organic growth. He explains how he successfully seeded his apps with minimal marketing spend, focusing on creating viral content that encourages user sharing and engagement.
- 00:35:00 - 00:43:22
Finally, Hunter outlines his playbook for building a successful app business, which includes creating a simple user experience, identifying a core action for users, and continuously iterating based on user feedback. He stresses the importance of authenticity in branding and communication, encouraging aspiring app developers to take risks and explore consumer-focused opportunities.
Carte mentale
Vidéo Q&R
Who is Hunter Isacson?
Hunter Isacson is a successful entrepreneur known for creating consumer apps with over 300 million downloads, including NGL.
What is the main focus of this episode?
The episode focuses on how to build a successful consumer app and the strategies for achieving significant downloads and revenue.
What is a key takeaway from Hunter's playbook?
A key takeaway is to build a simple user experience and focus on a core action that users can easily complete.
How important is branding in app development?
Branding is crucial; a strong brand helps users resonate with the app and enhances user retention.
What trends in technology should new entrepreneurs focus on?
New entrepreneurs should focus on consumer mobile apps, especially in social and crypto spaces.
What is a north star metric?
A north star metric is a key performance indicator that guides the development and success of an app.
How can social media be leveraged for app growth?
Social media can be used to seed the app by collaborating with creators and influencers to reach a wider audience.
What is the significance of user onboarding?
Effective onboarding helps users understand the app quickly, increasing the likelihood of them completing core actions.
What advice does Hunter give to young entrepreneurs?
Hunter advises young entrepreneurs to take risks and build consumer apps, as they can reach a global audience.
What are some examples of successful apps mentioned?
Examples include NGL, Hallow, and Pangu, which have successfully leveraged unique concepts and branding.
Voir plus de résumés vidéo
- 00:00:00In this episode, Hunter Isacson, the guy
- 00:00:03who's gotten 300 million plus downloads
- 00:00:08to his consumer apps, shares his
- 00:00:10playbook for how to go 0 to $1 million
- 00:00:14MR in a consumer app. How do you create
- 00:00:17mobile apps? Like him, he's created an
- 00:00:19app called NGL, which got $250 million
- 00:00:22downloads. He created other apps that
- 00:00:24got 60 million downloads, a dating app,
- 00:00:26crypto app. So, he just breaks it down.
- 00:00:29It's really, really simple. How he
- 00:00:30breaks it down. Obviously, creating a
- 00:00:33business isn't simple and I'll never
- 00:00:35ever tell you that it isn't simple. I
- 00:00:37learned a little bit from it and I think
- 00:00:39you will too. I do believe that right
- 00:00:41now there's a window with consumer AI
- 00:00:44and consumer mobile apps that you can
- 00:00:46actually go and build a startup and
- 00:00:48start generating real revenue without
- 00:00:51raising venture capital. So, I'm
- 00:00:52particularly interested right now in the
- 00:00:54consumer mobile app space. Hunter
- 00:00:56Isacson is a great guy to learn from.
- 00:00:59Enjoy this episode and let me know what
- 00:01:01you think in the comments.
- 00:01:11We got Hunter Isacson on the pod. You
- 00:01:14might not recognize him, but I I'm
- 00:01:16pretty sure you recognize some of his
- 00:01:18apps. This is the goat who's
- 00:01:21gotten
- 00:01:23250 million downloads for NGL. Is that
- 00:01:26right? That's right. Yes. And then
- 00:01:29another 70 million downloads for the new
- 00:01:32app you're working on. Uh previous apps
- 00:01:35I built. Previous apps you've built.
- 00:01:39And so this guy's got the sauce. And we
- 00:01:42have a thing on on the Strup Ideas
- 00:01:43podcast which is when when when someone
- 00:01:47has a sauce, you have to you have to
- 00:01:48deal the
- 00:01:50sauce. So, what I'm hoping for is uh I'm
- 00:01:54going to share my screen real quick. I
- 00:01:56saw this tweet where it's a bunch of
- 00:01:58these apps, mobile apps, 100K MR, 300K
- 00:02:03MR, Cali Million AR, RZ 200 MR, Couple
- 00:02:07Joy 300K MR. basically a bunch of apps
- 00:02:09that are doing anywhere between 100,000
- 00:02:12MR or actually 90,000 MR and and a
- 00:02:15million MR and how they've been able to
- 00:02:18grow organically through productled
- 00:02:20growth and stuff like that. My goal
- 00:02:21today, Hunter, if you oblige to deal
- 00:02:25some sauce, is to help us understand how
- 00:02:28people are doing this in consumer social
- 00:02:30and crypto and AI and h, you know, by
- 00:02:34the end of this episode, I want people
- 00:02:36to basically have ideas for how they can
- 00:02:38go and do this themselves. Do you think
- 00:02:40we can do this? I think we can
- 00:02:42definitely do this. Absolutely, brother.
- 00:02:44We can.
- 00:02:47Okay. Well, where do you want to start?
- 00:02:50I mean, we can kind of start with just
- 00:02:52the obvious picks on that list. Um, you
- 00:02:55know, I Cal AAI is a great example of
- 00:02:58how to use, you know, classic tools and
- 00:03:01AI and that are publicly available to
- 00:03:03everybody. But then if you package it
- 00:03:05nicely, if you create a good onboarding
- 00:03:08experience, you create like a user
- 00:03:10investment in that onboarding
- 00:03:11experience, um, if you kind of package
- 00:03:14these simple tools the way that they
- 00:03:17did, that's why they've seen the success
- 00:03:18that they've had, right? You know, the
- 00:03:20reality is anyone can go and make a
- 00:03:22calorie tracking app, but they built an
- 00:03:25amazing funnel, right? So, I think like
- 00:03:26the key lesson in a Calai is they
- 00:03:30packaged it really really nicely and
- 00:03:32made it seem even more valuable than it
- 00:03:35is, which I think is, you know, part of
- 00:03:37the genius of of an app that simple.
- 00:03:40So, so what you're saying is basically
- 00:03:43uh it it's really simple. Like it's it's
- 00:03:47I mean it's it's stupid simple. That's
- 00:03:48how good That's how good it is. Yeah.
- 00:03:51And they just figured out basically how
- 00:03:54to how to onboard, you know, I think
- 00:03:56it's been largely known creators onto,
- 00:03:58you know, to to take con, you know, to
- 00:04:02to create content around it and then you
- 00:04:04marry creators with a stupid simple app
- 00:04:07mixed with AI and good things happen.
- 00:04:10Absolutely. Cool. Let's move on. Like
- 00:04:14what about do you know anything about
- 00:04:15some of these lesserk known apps like
- 00:04:17Bible chat? Like I don't even heard of
- 00:04:20that. So I've seen I've seen Hallow. I
- 00:04:24know Coco Note. I don't I don't think
- 00:04:26I've seen Bible chat. Um
- 00:04:29obviously I know Pangu, you know, Couple
- 00:04:31Joy, Riz Locket, obviously all those
- 00:04:34guys. Let's look at Hallow for a second
- 00:04:37because I didn't realize it, but it's
- 00:04:40the number one app for Christian and
- 00:04:42Catholic
- 00:04:43prayers. Um, what do you know about this
- 00:04:47app? I know that it has some pretty big
- 00:04:49backers. I know it's very built out. Um,
- 00:04:52I mean, it's definitely super popular. I
- 00:04:55think that um as young people kind of
- 00:04:58grow up and you know venture into
- 00:05:01religion, there needs to be there need
- 00:05:02to be mobile apps you know for religion
- 00:05:04and for you know seeing these stories
- 00:05:06and kind of experiencing them in a
- 00:05:08different way. So, I think that they
- 00:05:10took just like Yeah. They they took the
- 00:05:12Bible, they made it mobile, they made it
- 00:05:14digital, they made it more colorful,
- 00:05:16adding push notifications, just kind of
- 00:05:18like making it young uh and and making
- 00:05:20it appeal to not just, you know, older
- 00:05:23audiences, but also skewing towards, you
- 00:05:25know, millennials, Gen Z.
- 00:05:30And they charge $69.99 for a yearly
- 00:05:33plan. They charge
- 00:05:35$120 for a friends and family plan which
- 00:05:38includes up to six members. That's
- 00:05:40actually kind of cool. That is
- 00:05:43Yeah. Yeah. I feel like that's a when it
- 00:05:46comes to like health, spirituality,
- 00:05:48stuff like that, including a friends and
- 00:05:50family plan makes sense. 100%. Yeah, I
- 00:05:53fully agree with that.
- 00:05:56Um do you think that there's
- 00:05:59opportunities, you
- 00:06:01know, in the like Okay. Hallow's
- 00:06:04crushing it. I think pray.com is also
- 00:06:06crushing it. There's a you know is there
- 00:06:08is there more opportunity to create
- 00:06:10spiritual apps for for example
- 00:06:13Christians?
- 00:06:15I think there's I mean across all
- 00:06:17religions. Yeah. There's a huge opening
- 00:06:19for this. You know I I mean I you know I
- 00:06:21was raised Jewish. Um I'm not very um I
- 00:06:25don't go to synagogue as often as I used
- 00:06:27to. Um there's other religions that I've
- 00:06:29been interested in, you know, different,
- 00:06:31you know, more spiritual, you know, or
- 00:06:33Buddha, you know, you know, Buddhism,
- 00:06:35things of that nature. I don't see apps
- 00:06:37for those types of religions, right? So,
- 00:06:39I think there is an opportunity here to
- 00:06:40kind of look at what are the
- 00:06:42denominations and faith that people have
- 00:06:44around the world and like how many of
- 00:06:46those have been turned into an app and
- 00:06:49are you passionate enough about the
- 00:06:50subject matter to go and build build the
- 00:06:52app for those people, right? I feel like
- 00:06:54that's the that's the question on the
- 00:06:55builder side. I'm laughing because it's
- 00:06:58two Jews talking about if there's an
- 00:07:00opportunity to build something for
- 00:07:01Christians. It is kind of funny.
- 00:07:04We're going to get so roasted in the
- 00:07:06comment section. It's going to be
- 00:07:07insane.
- 00:07:09At least we can recognize it though.
- 00:07:11We're calling ourselves.
- 00:07:13Totally. Um, dude,
- 00:07:164.9 on
- 00:07:18284,000 ratings. That's wild. Seeing
- 00:07:21this.
- 00:07:23Yeah.
- 00:07:25Um, I'll I'll I I'll just say one thing
- 00:07:27on this before we move on from spiritual
- 00:07:30apps
- 00:07:31is I think what they did really well
- 00:07:34here is it looks like they have a really
- 00:07:36good
- 00:07:38um like daily use case. So like daily
- 00:07:41prayers are in there. Um and it's just
- 00:07:44like a really good single player
- 00:07:45experience meaning like you could
- 00:07:47there's it just seems like there's a ton
- 00:07:49of content. like they got a bunch of
- 00:07:50content and they structured it in a way
- 00:07:53that you're going to open this up daily.
- 00:07:55Um, which is which is kind of like what
- 00:07:57you want, right? Because they have the
- 00:07:58daily prayers, they have sleep
- 00:08:00meditations, they've got minute
- 00:08:03meditations. Um, and then they've got
- 00:08:05like kind of a multiplayer experience
- 00:08:07around community challenges. So, I think
- 00:08:09that if you're creating a spiritual app,
- 00:08:11think about it as like single player
- 00:08:13first. How do I create the best daily
- 00:08:15driver single player and then how do I
- 00:08:17add multiplayer?
- 00:08:19How how would you think about it? I
- 00:08:21mean, I think that in an app like this,
- 00:08:23like this is very much single player
- 00:08:24first. I think you look at the
- 00:08:26multiplayer side as like a way to
- 00:08:27leverage like a different growth lever,
- 00:08:29right? So, if you have, you know, you
- 00:08:31have a really good single player app,
- 00:08:32it's easy to then add like some kind of
- 00:08:34multiplayer experience or some kind of
- 00:08:36social experience where you're porting
- 00:08:38in contacts or you're connecting socials
- 00:08:40or they're sharing something to socials.
- 00:08:42I feel like all that is like great
- 00:08:44growth levers. Uh once you have a
- 00:08:46amazing single player experience once
- 00:08:49you have some kind of habit that you've
- 00:08:50formed then you know you can add a
- 00:08:52little gate right you can you know you
- 00:08:54can gate monetization with some kind of
- 00:08:56share mechanism. You can you know
- 00:08:57encourage them to invite their friends
- 00:08:58and family for a discount. A lot of
- 00:09:01things that you can do in that realm but
- 00:09:03you do need to crush that core
- 00:09:05experience before you can do this. Okay
- 00:09:08I have a question for you. So we talked
- 00:09:10about Calai in the beginning. They took
- 00:09:12something that pretty much existed
- 00:09:14before calorie tracking and then they
- 00:09:16made it AI first. Is
- 00:09:19there is there like an AI first version
- 00:09:22of Hallow that could be created?
- 00:09:26I mean, yeah, there totally could be. Um
- 00:09:29I I think that I think that you know
- 00:09:31more with GPT vision I think will be
- 00:09:34interesting, right? being able to to
- 00:09:36look at things to take pictures of, you
- 00:09:38know, beautiful scenery and then it
- 00:09:40overlays and creates some kind of
- 00:09:41beautiful, you know, religious or
- 00:09:43spiritual video maybe with some kind of
- 00:09:45Bible quote, you know, things of that
- 00:09:46nature, right? Content creation here
- 00:09:48could be interesting for AI. Um, you
- 00:09:51know, generating
- 00:09:53uh, you know, answers to, you know,
- 00:09:55complex questions using, you know,
- 00:09:57different religious texts. I feel like
- 00:09:58there's a lot that you could do here. It
- 00:10:00just we're still pretty early.
- 00:10:03Yeah. Cool. So, someone could be
- 00:10:05experimenting. Um, okay. Moving on
- 00:10:08from two Jews in a Christian app. Um,
- 00:10:14okay. Locket. Let's talk about locket.
- 00:10:17So, okay. Well, I've used Locket
- 00:10:20actually with my wife. Yeah. Like as a
- 00:10:22consumer. Um, tell people what it is,
- 00:10:25why it's interesting, and and how
- 00:10:27they've been able to grow. Well, I mean,
- 00:10:29I've been using Locket for a long time.
- 00:10:30the founder is a very very smart guy and
- 00:10:33um the the general premise is they were
- 00:10:35the first ones to really take the widget
- 00:10:37functionality on the iPhone and make it
- 00:10:40social um by just taking a picture and
- 00:10:43it goes to your other goes to your
- 00:10:44friend's uh home screen. Um, it's a very
- 00:10:47simple concept and I feel like it really
- 00:10:49popped off with, you know, kind of like
- 00:10:52people on Tik Tok who are in
- 00:10:53relationships like the relationship talk
- 00:10:55side of Tik Tok or the, you know, best
- 00:10:57friend side of Tik Tok. This, you know,
- 00:10:59skewing super young, right? Like kind of
- 00:11:01how do you build a social app that's,
- 00:11:03you know, Snapchatesque, but it lives in
- 00:11:06a different place. I feel like Lockit
- 00:11:08was like amazing at figuring out how to
- 00:11:10do that. Um, I mean, I I've used the
- 00:11:13app. Uh, it's a great app. Absolutely.
- 00:11:16Um, so it it does feel like uh it's one
- 00:11:20of those apps that saw that like widgets
- 00:11:24started to become more like was a thing,
- 00:11:27right? They saw an o an opportunity to
- 00:11:29me. was like the first widget that I was
- 00:11:31using as a as a daily basis like um
- 00:11:36is okay we're sitting now in 2025 like
- 00:11:39what is the equivalent of I think this
- 00:11:41you know they built this I probably in
- 00:11:432022
- 00:11:46um somewhere around there around there
- 00:11:48what is the equivalent of okay the
- 00:11:52widget store just opened in 2025 like
- 00:11:55you know from an Apple
- 00:11:57perspective you know does this exist
- 00:11:59like where where where is the wild west
- 00:12:01in terms of uh you know new
- 00:12:04opportunities within the app Apple
- 00:12:06ecosystem
- 00:12:07you know I think that like yeah I mean
- 00:12:09every year we have a new version of iOS
- 00:12:10and there's sometimes they give us
- 00:12:12something new uh like new real estate to
- 00:12:13play with I really think live activities
- 00:12:15is a cool thing that very few people are
- 00:12:17playing with compared to what they
- 00:12:19should be which is when like on your
- 00:12:21lock screen it like shows some kind of
- 00:12:23cool graphic like your Uber is on the
- 00:12:25way right and it's like it shows you
- 00:12:27know the distance things of that nature
- 00:12:29I feel like live activities is like
- 00:12:31that's a super interesting piece that no
- 00:12:33one has really like really dominated
- 00:12:35like way locket dominated the widget
- 00:12:38functionality. Um I also think like lock
- 00:12:40screen widgets have not been fully
- 00:12:44played out like you know I use them a
- 00:12:46lot um you know to kind of customize my
- 00:12:48lock screen. I wish there were more. I'm
- 00:12:50sure there's like some social
- 00:12:52experiences that we could you know use
- 00:12:53there but um yeah I mean every year
- 00:12:56there's something new that Apple gives
- 00:12:57us. Yeah, exactly. things like this.
- 00:13:00Yeah, it's true.
- 00:13:01Like the lock screen widget you stare at
- 00:13:05it every day, you know, and all the
- 00:13:08time. Yeah. Yeah.
- 00:13:11Um, so the thing with with the thing
- 00:13:15with this sort of stuff when when Apple
- 00:13:17opens up something new
- 00:13:20is like
- 00:13:22locket looks obvious now, but
- 00:13:26realistically like they were one of the
- 00:13:27first, if not the first mainstream use
- 00:13:30cases of a widget. Yeah. Um, so I I I
- 00:13:35can, you know, my prediction over the
- 00:13:37next six to 12 months, live activities
- 00:13:39and iPhone lock screen widgets, like
- 00:13:41we're going to see one or two really big
- 00:13:44uh bangers basically. Yeah, I could see
- 00:13:47it happening for sure.
- 00:13:50By the way, you know, you've grown
- 00:13:53you've grown your um your apps to
- 00:13:56millions of users.
- 00:13:58Guom, this guy on X who who who who's
- 00:14:00who's who's really good at sort of
- 00:14:01sharing a lot of these
- 00:14:03examples, he he's like exclusively talks
- 00:14:06about like creators um driving the
- 00:14:10growth of them, the organic content.
- 00:14:12Like is this something that everyone
- 00:14:15needs to pay attention to? How have you
- 00:14:17grown your apps? Um can you talk more
- 00:14:19about that? Yeah, for sure. I mean, the
- 00:14:21way that I've really grown my apps is
- 00:14:24using creators and using Tik Tok and
- 00:14:26that kind of content just to seed the
- 00:14:28app. Um, to get enough people to
- 00:14:30download it within a tight amount of
- 00:14:32time in order for them to then kind of
- 00:14:34activate a growth loop where everybody
- 00:14:36shares something. Um, this is what I did
- 00:14:38on MGL. You know, we we spent less than
- 00:14:41$10,000 marketing the entire product um
- 00:14:44to get the quarter of a billion
- 00:14:45downloads that we got. Um, and really
- 00:14:48the purpose of the marketing was just to
- 00:14:51seed it, right? Just to get enough
- 00:14:53people to download it quickly. Um,
- 00:14:55because it's one of those apps that just
- 00:14:57once enough people do it, it just goes
- 00:15:00giga viral, which is what happened for
- 00:15:02us. It just just took some time to seed
- 00:15:04it properly. Uh, and we use Tik Tok and
- 00:15:07Instagram to do it. And what do you say
- 00:15:09to people who say, "I've seen this app
- 00:15:12before. This isn't a new idea."
- 00:15:15Yeah, it's I mean it's not a new idea,
- 00:15:17right? You know, um anonymous messaging
- 00:15:19apps have been on the internet for a
- 00:15:20long time. You know, there was Ask FM,
- 00:15:22there was um Yikyak, there was bunch of
- 00:15:25different ones, you know, in between. Um
- 00:15:27really what made NGL special for us is
- 00:15:29we launched it right when Instagram, you
- 00:15:32know, unveiled the link feature for
- 00:15:34everybody. Used to have to have 10,000
- 00:15:36followers to post links. In October of
- 00:15:392021, they just randomly switched it.
- 00:15:41Within a few days, me and some friends
- 00:15:43were already building NGL. We shipped it
- 00:15:45in a few weeks and then it took about
- 00:15:48six months after that point for people
- 00:15:50to start using it just because it took
- 00:15:52time to seed it. So for for like people
- 00:15:55listening, you don't really need to
- 00:15:57reinvent the wheel. Sounds like. No,
- 00:16:00it's a new channel, right? You know,
- 00:16:01it's like anonymous messaging has worked
- 00:16:03on the internet, it's worked on apps,
- 00:16:05it's worked on different platforms, why
- 00:16:07wouldn't it work with Instagram as the
- 00:16:09growth lever? So that was kind of our
- 00:16:12thought process behind building the app.
- 00:16:14Um and also because like nobody had ever
- 00:16:16posted, you know, links on Instagram.
- 00:16:19The average person had never done it. So
- 00:16:20we really had to train, you know, a
- 00:16:22couple hundred million people on how to,
- 00:16:24you know, tap the link sticker, paste
- 00:16:26the link, position the link. Sounds
- 00:16:28really easy, but it's super super hard
- 00:16:30at scale to getting everybody to fully
- 00:16:32comprehend like a new feature that they
- 00:16:34hadn't used prior.
- 00:16:37Totally. Yeah. I think uh it just gets
- 00:16:39you it gets you thinking that you can
- 00:16:41kind of like go back to old ideas that
- 00:16:44have gotten popular in the past, but now
- 00:16:47with like the new economics of like it's
- 00:16:49cheaper than ever to build distribution.
- 00:16:52You can build stuff on social, you can
- 00:16:53work with creators, there's new channels
- 00:16:56like something that might have worked
- 00:16:57for mobile might also work in a in a
- 00:17:00widget form. Widget first. Totally.
- 00:17:03Absolutely. Yeah. Looking for like you
- 00:17:04know existing ideas that could work in a
- 00:17:06new channel. I feel like that's a great
- 00:17:08way to just find good ideas because you
- 00:17:11don't have to come up with fully
- 00:17:12original, fully fleshed out thoughts.
- 00:17:14It's more of just like finding a little
- 00:17:16opportunity of, hey, something's not
- 00:17:18optimized on this platform. It's not
- 00:17:20built for this channel. Let me just go
- 00:17:22and do that. And worked. It worked for
- 00:17:24us very well.
- 00:17:26So, I I got to ask you, you
- 00:17:30know, if you're trying to
- 00:17:34uh, you know, create an app, let's say I
- 00:17:37What's Hunter? Basically, what's
- 00:17:39Hunter's
- 00:17:41playbook to build a $1
- 00:17:46million a month
- 00:17:49uh app business?
- 00:17:53you know, h how do you think about that?
- 00:17:55I just want to like brainstorm with you
- 00:17:57live. Yeah. Around like thinking about
- 00:18:01what makes cuz you know, you you could
- 00:18:03be working on a million different ideas,
- 00:18:05right? How do you think about um what to
- 00:18:08work on and then how to structure your
- 00:18:11apps so that you know that it's going to
- 00:18:14do at least a million dollars a month? I
- 00:18:16mean, the main thing that I focus on is
- 00:18:18building like a really simple
- 00:18:19experience. So, you know, I start with
- 00:18:21like figuring out what the features are
- 00:18:23going to be for like a V1. Like what's
- 00:18:25like my bare bones MVP version of this
- 00:18:30concept that is is good enough to solve
- 00:18:34the problem I'm trying to solve, but
- 00:18:36it's probably not optimized. It's
- 00:18:38probably rough on the edges, but it's
- 00:18:40enough to kind of solve that issue. Um,
- 00:18:43I then like to get users on pretty
- 00:18:45quickly, right? So just it could be a
- 00:18:49couple hundred could be a couple
- 00:18:50thousand. So, you know, once you have
- 00:18:52kind of built this core concept and you
- 00:18:54have like some kind of MVP for it, um
- 00:18:56just testing content, right? You know,
- 00:18:59and and this could be even when the app
- 00:19:00is in pre-order stage, right? It doesn't
- 00:19:02even have to be live for you to do this.
- 00:19:04Um you can test content on Tik Tok or on
- 00:19:06Instagram reels and, you know, see are
- 00:19:09people responding to these formats that
- 00:19:10you know, your app is, you know, kind of
- 00:19:12the the premise of the app is around
- 00:19:14these formats or the formats working or
- 00:19:16not. Um, once you drop some people into
- 00:19:18the app, then really what you're looking
- 00:19:20for is you need to get a high percentage
- 00:19:22of people to complete a core action. So,
- 00:19:24you select a core action and then you
- 00:19:27kind of orient your decisions around a
- 00:19:30core action or like a northstar metric.
- 00:19:32This is like something that I'm really
- 00:19:34bullish on like always having that one
- 00:19:37metric that matters more than the other
- 00:19:39ones. It makes it really easy when
- 00:19:41you're doing like conversations of
- 00:19:42tradeoffs, right? because it's like do
- 00:19:44we sacrifice this, we sacrifice that. If
- 00:19:46you have a northstar metric, it's kind
- 00:19:48of obvious what the decision would be.
- 00:19:50Um because you want to just increase
- 00:19:52that. For example, um yeah, I I give you
- 00:19:55a couple examples. So for for Wink,
- 00:19:56which was an app that I built was a one
- 00:19:58of the largest make new friends apps in
- 00:20:00the world. You know, Northstar metric we
- 00:20:01had was like um what percentage of users
- 00:20:04get a match in their first day, right?
- 00:20:06How how do we make sure that you know it
- 00:20:08was a it was a swiping make new
- 00:20:09friendsdating app. How do we make sure
- 00:20:11that everybody gets a match? you know,
- 00:20:13what does that mean? How do we use the
- 00:20:14out matching algorithm in order to sort
- 00:20:16people who swipe a lot, you know, to the
- 00:20:19right with new users, for example,
- 00:20:21right? How do we just maximize um that
- 00:20:23percentage with NGL? Um, our Northstar
- 00:20:27metric was the percentage of users that
- 00:20:29are sharing the link and sharing a few
- 00:20:31replies. We figured that, you know,
- 00:20:33sharing the link was already pretty hard
- 00:20:35because it was a four-step process. You
- 00:20:37had to, you know, go through a tutorial.
- 00:20:39If we could get as many users as
- 00:20:41possible to share the link and then
- 00:20:43share a couple replies that then made it
- 00:20:45where people became more comfortable to
- 00:20:48actually um to actually like send
- 00:20:50messages, right? Because you see your
- 00:20:51friend posted a link, then you see that
- 00:20:53your friend got replies. So now you as
- 00:20:56the viewer are more willing to send a
- 00:20:58message because you know that it's cool.
- 00:20:59So we kind of figured that this was like
- 00:21:01the core metric. Um, and then with with
- 00:21:03bags, right, with my with my latest app,
- 00:21:05the core metric is how many people are
- 00:21:07coming in that are funding their
- 00:21:09accounts and making one trade uh in the
- 00:21:12first day, right? How do we maximize
- 00:21:14that number? And so, if anything that
- 00:21:16you're doing is going against the
- 00:21:18northstar metric, then it's just not the
- 00:21:20right decision. I feel like it's super
- 00:21:22important that you have to pick one of
- 00:21:23those and kind of like go all in on, you
- 00:21:26know, orienting the business around it.
- 00:21:28I think you're missing one key piece of
- 00:21:31this framework that I've noticed you do,
- 00:21:33which is um you call it build a simple
- 00:21:35experience, but it's build a brand
- 00:21:38people love. So, I've noticed that all
- 00:21:40the apps that you create, Wink, NGL,
- 00:21:45Bags, they all have like pretty simple
- 00:21:49uh names with brands that people can
- 00:21:51resonate with. Um bags is it's bags.fm,
- 00:21:55right? Um,
- 00:21:57so like when I just look at bags, like
- 00:22:00first of all, surprisingly, no one had
- 00:22:03built a crypto app called bags.
- 00:22:06Shocking, right? Shocking. Yeah. Like
- 00:22:10couldn't be more shocking, right? And
- 00:22:12and it's it's so smart to take the
- 00:22:17um like the slang of a community and
- 00:22:21make it and basically coin it as the
- 00:22:23name of your app. Yeah, 100%. That that
- 00:22:26that was the thought process behind it.
- 00:22:28And uh we did something similar with
- 00:22:30NGL. You know, NGL is not going to lie.
- 00:22:32So, it was like really easy for young
- 00:22:34people to understand like what the NGL
- 00:22:36link is, you know, and then being, oh,
- 00:22:37it's an anonymous app, you know, makes a
- 00:22:39lot of sense. But that's actually a good
- 00:22:40idea like yeah, build a brand people
- 00:22:42resonate with. And I think a brand that
- 00:22:44people understand like people are able
- 00:22:46to look at your app and have like some
- 00:22:48idea of like what it is or kind of get
- 00:22:51some get something from it, right? And I
- 00:22:54think with with my apps, I try to be
- 00:22:55pretty like on the nose with like what
- 00:22:58it is. Just be very obvious with it. Um,
- 00:23:01and that's something I just learned over
- 00:23:02time. Just I've done it so many times.
- 00:23:04I've seen good names and bad names. I've
- 00:23:07seen if I go too complicated, people get
- 00:23:09confused. So now I stick to short names.
- 00:23:12Is that something that is just intuition
- 00:23:15or like how do people how do people
- 00:23:19actually come up with a brand that
- 00:23:20people can understand and resonate with?
- 00:23:22Is it as simple as keep it short, find a
- 00:23:25slang term?
- 00:23:27Um, keep it short and finding a slang
- 00:23:29term, I think, are two great ways to do
- 00:23:31it. I don't know if there's like a like
- 00:23:32a, you know, a full a fully fleshed out
- 00:23:35framework. A lot of it is like how you
- 00:23:38feel the vibes of the brand are. And I
- 00:23:40think that I think the by using slang,
- 00:23:43by using like, you know, words from a
- 00:23:44specific community, it can kind of set
- 00:23:47the vibe and the tone to be more like
- 00:23:49young and like comfortable and like
- 00:23:51colloquial and like we're just friends
- 00:23:53talking and hanging. And that's why the
- 00:23:55app is called what it is. And sometimes
- 00:23:57I, you know, I in the past I would like
- 00:23:59move some of that that language into the
- 00:24:01app like into like, you know, different
- 00:24:03popups and different, you know, into the
- 00:24:05copy to kind of also skew young, stay
- 00:24:08relevant, make them feel comfortable,
- 00:24:10right? Like make them feel like they're
- 00:24:12almost, you know, it's like the app is
- 00:24:13like uh that understands them because it
- 00:24:15understands their language.
- 00:24:18Yeah. We have um we have a sta a saying
- 00:24:20for uh we actually made it our slogan
- 00:24:24for our design agency stay a while. Um
- 00:24:27it's like how do you how do you
- 00:24:30uh how do you make people feel like when
- 00:24:33they're in an app experience that they
- 00:24:35want to stay a while like they don't
- 00:24:36want to leave. That's yeah that's
- 00:24:38actually very true. We we you definitely
- 00:24:40want them to stay a while. So making
- 00:24:42them feel comfortable is a big part of
- 00:24:44that. And then from a design
- 00:24:46perspective, so you know, do you hire
- 00:24:49like one designer? Like how how do you
- 00:24:51do you you know, how do how do you do
- 00:24:53deal with that? So I I I design
- 00:24:57everything um for all my apps. I've like
- 00:24:59I I've solo designed every single app
- 00:25:02I've built. So like a dozen apps at this
- 00:25:04point, including the branding, including
- 00:25:07everything.
- 00:25:09And what do you use? Like Figma or?
- 00:25:11Yeah, I use Figma. Cool. I started out
- 00:25:14my first app. I my first app I was
- 00:25:16designing it on PowerPoint and then I
- 00:25:18learned Photoshop and then I learned uh
- 00:25:21Sketch and then Figma. So I've kind of
- 00:25:24used a lot of different tools. Awesome.
- 00:25:27Okay. So build a step one build a brand.
- 00:25:29Step two build simple experience. What
- 00:25:31does this look like bare bones? Step
- 00:25:32three get users on at least 100. So
- 00:25:35testing the content figuring out what
- 00:25:37the format is. Picking a platform. You
- 00:25:40select the core action as number four.
- 00:25:42high percentage of people doing it. You
- 00:25:44know, I'm guessing this Matt, you know,
- 00:25:47this this is different depending on what
- 00:25:50your core action is, but can you give a
- 00:25:52range of what a high
- 00:25:55percentage is?
- 00:25:58Um, yeah. So, when I say like a high
- 00:26:00percentage of people sharing the link
- 00:26:02and multiple replies, I mean over 90%.
- 00:26:05Oh, wow. Yeah, that's majority. You need
- 00:26:07to aim where everyone's doing the same
- 00:26:10thing. Um and then also it's like you
- 00:26:14want to have one flow right because if
- 00:26:16you have branching user journeys then it
- 00:26:18gets also complicated right you want
- 00:26:20like everyone to go through the exact
- 00:26:22same flow and then you can see you know
- 00:26:25it was I successful in getting them to
- 00:26:27do this or was I not because it's very
- 00:26:30apparent because everyone has to do the
- 00:26:32same thing.
- 00:26:34So once you've done that, say you've got
- 00:26:36close to 90% or 90% or more, what do you
- 00:26:40what what's next?
- 00:26:42Um at that point, then you want to
- 00:26:44continue seating it, right? Because now
- 00:26:45you've you've um you've proven that you
- 00:26:47can get enough people to complete the
- 00:26:49action in the app. So now you need to
- 00:26:52seed it with like a really like you got
- 00:26:53to you kind of did the test content, you
- 00:26:55got users on, you iterated. Now you need
- 00:26:58to kind of take all those learnings and
- 00:26:59then apply more pressure and then just
- 00:27:01start trying to seed it in different
- 00:27:03audiences, different niches, um you know
- 00:27:05work with creators in different
- 00:27:07countries, um in different time zones
- 00:27:09that have different kinds of audiences
- 00:27:12um you know just really like push like
- 00:27:14once you know that you can get people to
- 00:27:17do the core action, your job is now just
- 00:27:19to get more people onto the app. Uh, and
- 00:27:22what I like to do is like part of the
- 00:27:23core action, I do like to have some some
- 00:27:25kind of sharing or inviting in that in
- 00:27:28that core action, right? You know, um,
- 00:27:30you know, we've seen apps like, you
- 00:27:31know, uh, that have hard invite gates.
- 00:27:34We saw that with, uh, with laps, for
- 00:27:35example, very viral photo app. You would
- 00:27:38invite, I think, three to five friends
- 00:27:39to get in the app. Um, so a lot of
- 00:27:42people would, you know, hit that wall
- 00:27:43and maybe not go over, but if you got
- 00:27:46over the wall, you were an extremely
- 00:27:47valuable user because you brought in all
- 00:27:49these people with you. So, it's like if
- 00:27:51you have some kind of loop in the app or
- 00:27:54some kind of way of inviting people,
- 00:27:55whatever it is, I would put that in the
- 00:27:57core experience because then if you just
- 00:28:00drop in a thousand people and 50% of
- 00:28:03them share, that's 500 people that have
- 00:28:06now shared your app or they've invited
- 00:28:08their friend. So, it's like your K
- 00:28:10factor is going to increase um because
- 00:28:12you have that in there and you're not
- 00:28:14fully rellyant on the Tik Tok or the
- 00:28:17Instagram reel or the ad that they came
- 00:28:19from because you kind of have this extra
- 00:28:21little growth lever that um some people
- 00:28:24or most people are going through. In the
- 00:28:27case of NGL, it was almost everybody.
- 00:28:30Yeah. So, I've noticed you've done that
- 00:28:32with pretty much all of your apps. So,
- 00:28:34with NGL, it was you were posting the
- 00:28:37link, the NGL link on your Snap or
- 00:28:40Instagram. Um, with
- 00:28:43bags, I first learned about bags. I
- 00:28:45didn't even know it was you, to be
- 00:28:46honest. I first learned about bags
- 00:28:48because I saw people sharing their their
- 00:28:50bags link on Twitter. Can you talk about
- 00:28:53the the social aspect of of uh of the of
- 00:28:57bags? Yeah. So, you know, when we
- 00:28:59started bags, we didn't really know what
- 00:29:01it was going to be. We kind of had this
- 00:29:03idea for like what we wanted to build.
- 00:29:05We knew that we wanted to build like a
- 00:29:06really good consumer crypto app that
- 00:29:08could get anybody into crypto but also
- 00:29:10have them understand what's going on and
- 00:29:12at the same time still have people who
- 00:29:14are crypto natives be able to enjoy the
- 00:29:16app, right? So, it's a pretty hard
- 00:29:18problem. So, we started with just like
- 00:29:19how do we create like a really cool
- 00:29:21brand? How do we create like a great
- 00:29:22community of people? Um, we had the idea
- 00:29:25to kind of start building growth loops.
- 00:29:27This was really early days of the
- 00:29:28company. We didn't have any followers on
- 00:29:30social media. and we hadn't made any
- 00:29:32money. We hadn't really built, you know,
- 00:29:34anything substantial at the time. So, we
- 00:29:36started with just a couple of loops. Um,
- 00:29:37one of the loops we had was, you know,
- 00:29:39you would log in with Twitter, you'd
- 00:29:40claim your bags link, and then you share
- 00:29:42it. And then if people join from your
- 00:29:44link, we would mark those people as like
- 00:29:46one of your invites, and then we had
- 00:29:48like a leaderboard of all the people
- 00:29:50that were inviting. And we had like lots
- 00:29:52of the top people on Salana, you know,
- 00:29:53like, you know, Raj and Tuli from Salana
- 00:29:56were on there. Um, a lot of other people
- 00:29:58that are big in crypto were on there.
- 00:30:00Um, and then we basically just kind of
- 00:30:02kept building growth loops. Um, and that
- 00:30:05kept growing the followers and it kept
- 00:30:07just growing the hype and the buzz about
- 00:30:08the app and it allowed us to kind of get
- 00:30:10to that, you know, that 100,000 follower
- 00:30:12mark on Twitter. And um, and then we
- 00:30:14really just focused all the efforts on
- 00:30:16backing that up, backing that growth
- 00:30:18loop up and and that hype up with
- 00:30:20building a really good product.
- 00:30:23And when you're talking, okay, once
- 00:30:25you've got a thing that's working and
- 00:30:27you're continually seating it, are you
- 00:30:30paying to seed it? Like where you know,
- 00:30:34is this organic or is this paid?
- 00:30:36Basically, some sometimes it's organic,
- 00:30:38sometimes it's paid. I think that um you
- 00:30:40know, in the case of NGL, we were
- 00:30:42paying, you know, $50, $100 here or
- 00:30:45there to influencers to just post the
- 00:30:47link on their story. Um, you know, in
- 00:30:50the case of an app like a different kind
- 00:30:51of app, right? Like with Wink, a lot of
- 00:30:53we were doing, um, we were paying Tik
- 00:30:56Tockers, we were paying people to make
- 00:30:58videos. Um, but like I think that you
- 00:31:01don't want to you don't want to pay a
- 00:31:03lot, right? Like you want to you kind of
- 00:31:04want to just test and build things that
- 00:31:07can scale that like work on a small
- 00:31:09scale and that way all you really need
- 00:31:11is like that one viral video to kind of
- 00:31:13get the get the traction going. Um, but
- 00:31:16it it can be paid, it can be free. It
- 00:31:18just depends on honestly your
- 00:31:19relationship with an influencer, your
- 00:31:21relationship with creative agency,
- 00:31:23whatever it may be. Um, there's not
- 00:31:25really like a a go-to uh answer there.
- 00:31:29And what else are we missing from this
- 00:31:30list if anything?
- 00:31:34Um I mean just not I wouldn't call like
- 00:31:38additional pointers more of just like
- 00:31:39general like you know good practices uh
- 00:31:41is like authenticity in the way that you
- 00:31:44present the app like just present it how
- 00:31:46it is right and like be very real with
- 00:31:48how you you know communicate publicly
- 00:31:51like with in the case of NGL and Bags
- 00:31:53like you know NGL has 2 million
- 00:31:55followers on Instagram you know bags has
- 00:31:57over 100,000 on Twitter um you know very
- 00:32:00active posting on the bags account every
- 00:32:02day, you know, we have an intern that's
- 00:32:04constantly, you know, making sure that
- 00:32:06people are, you know, seeing bags,
- 00:32:08having seeing hearing an authentic
- 00:32:09voice, you know, being memeable, being
- 00:32:11funny, being relatable, you know, not
- 00:32:13being just like a brand that just kind
- 00:32:15of like sits there. Uh, in the case of
- 00:32:17NGL, you know, we don't push it as much
- 00:32:19now on Instagram as we used to, but um,
- 00:32:21you know, the Instagram has like meme
- 00:32:23formats and like, you know, the
- 00:32:24funniest, you know, messages from people
- 00:32:27and like, you know, just a bunch of
- 00:32:29like, you know, fun young skewing things
- 00:32:31that make it feel more comfortable to
- 00:32:33young people. So, like an authentic
- 00:32:35voice, an authentic stance. It's
- 00:32:37probably part of the brand um, aspect,
- 00:32:39but I feel like that's really critical.
- 00:32:42Yeah, I I agree. Um, I mean it just it
- 00:32:46makes it makes everything work better.
- 00:32:49Like it it makes people love the product
- 00:32:50more. It makes them want to share it
- 00:32:51more. It makes them
- 00:32:54uh just increases affinity and trust
- 00:32:57with the brand. So I I agree. And it's
- 00:33:00an unfair advantage um for people. Yeah,
- 00:33:04definitely agree. Anything else?
- 00:33:08I mean that's pretty much the core of
- 00:33:10it, I'd say. Um Cool. Yeah.
- 00:33:14Um, and just curious like are there one,
- 00:33:18two, three apps that you can think of
- 00:33:21that you look up to that you're like
- 00:33:24they've done these things that people
- 00:33:27should look at as like a uh inspiration
- 00:33:31for for for for you know mobile app
- 00:33:34ideas.
- 00:33:36Um, I think that, you know, if you want
- 00:33:37to look for consumer social inspo, I'd
- 00:33:40hope that people look to to some of my
- 00:33:41ads, uh, specifically NGL. I think on
- 00:33:44the AI side, I do think that Zach uh,
- 00:33:46and Blake and the guys at Cali crushed
- 00:33:49that. Really did an amazing job on the
- 00:33:51AI app side. Um, and then I'd say like
- 00:33:55um, I mean there's lots of apps that I
- 00:33:57respect. You brought up Lockit. That's a
- 00:33:59great example of an app that crushed on
- 00:34:01social. Um, and uh, we didn't talk about
- 00:34:03that, but also Pangu. Um, I I I know
- 00:34:07those guys well, and I think that what
- 00:34:09they're doing with, you know, character
- 00:34:11animation and AI and kind of creating
- 00:34:13this more this like human experience
- 00:34:15between an AI is very interesting. Uh,
- 00:34:18and like definitely worth exploring. I
- 00:34:20feel like we're going to see a lot more
- 00:34:21of those things for different like
- 00:34:23contextualbased use cases. Um, you know,
- 00:34:26not just like an AI friend, but like
- 00:34:28different, you know, kind of
- 00:34:29personalities to help you on the way.
- 00:34:31So, Panganger is a great one to look at.
- 00:34:33Um, yeah, I mean, those are the ones
- 00:34:34that like just jump out to me just from
- 00:34:36my pure uh memory, but uh very very
- 00:34:40impressive apps. So, Pangu for for
- 00:34:44people who don't know, it's it's
- 00:34:47essentially like a virtual pet, right?
- 00:34:51Yeah.
- 00:34:52So, this is a great example of
- 00:34:57um it's not like they invented virtual
- 00:35:01pets, you know, when I was a kid. I
- 00:35:03remember getting a a Tamagotchi like OG
- 00:35:07from the '9s, you know, and even then
- 00:35:10that was like that was a new form factor
- 00:35:12of the time. It was like the first time
- 00:35:14you'd be able to have like essentially a
- 00:35:16portable computer and and then, you
- 00:35:18know, a lot of kids had them now.
- 00:35:21This is virtual pets on mobile has has
- 00:35:25existed for a while but they haven't
- 00:35:26existed with the degree of AI that's
- 00:35:29been injected into them right. Yeah.
- 00:35:32Yeah. Exactly. So one way to think about
- 00:35:36startup ideas for in general like you
- 00:35:39know I love your your playbook but I
- 00:35:41think also thinking about it like NGL
- 00:35:43for X, Cali for X, Lockit for X, Pangu
- 00:35:47for X. thinking about what you know what
- 00:35:50other niches like how can you take that
- 00:35:53format and just apply it to other
- 00:35:54niches. Totally. Yeah. I mean I think
- 00:35:58that like you know Pangu is a great
- 00:36:00example of that for sure. I mean, we
- 00:36:01talked earlier about like Hallow, right?
- 00:36:03And like, you know, you know, these like
- 00:36:05um spirituality apps, you know, it could
- 00:36:07be interesting like a hybrid of a Pangu
- 00:36:09type app with a spirituality type app,
- 00:36:11right? Like that's a that's an
- 00:36:12interesting niche that I don't think
- 00:36:14people have explored fully or you know,
- 00:36:16rather than you know, a calorie tracking
- 00:36:18app using you know, you know, GPT vision
- 00:36:20for something else that that that maybe
- 00:36:22is a novel experience, right? I do think
- 00:36:24that like it's more about looking for
- 00:36:26frameworks than it is for looking for
- 00:36:28like ideas. Uh the framework I feel like
- 00:36:30is more important because now it's
- 00:36:33really easy to just like framework X you
- 00:36:35know with you know audience Y
- 00:36:39you
- 00:36:40mentioned uh GBT
- 00:36:44vision we talked about widgets what what
- 00:36:48technology are you interested in right
- 00:36:51now
- 00:36:53um well I'm very interested in crypto
- 00:36:55and crypto going mainstream and getting
- 00:36:58real regulation being accepted now by
- 00:37:01the government. Um, that's really
- 00:37:03exciting. Um, and a lot of people now
- 00:37:05kind of building consumer apps in
- 00:37:08crypto. I feel like that's like very
- 00:37:10exciting for me. As far as like future
- 00:37:12tech like this or on the horizon, I'm
- 00:37:15really excited for augmented reality
- 00:37:16glasses whenever those happen. I think
- 00:37:19that's going to be a pretty incredible
- 00:37:21experience when we can prompt an app
- 00:37:23using our own, you know, Jarvis AI type
- 00:37:26and uh and we can create a fully
- 00:37:29immersive experience that anyone can
- 00:37:30look through and see. And I think that's
- 00:37:33really going to be um the the next step
- 00:37:36of how we kind of take AI off of just
- 00:37:38the phone and really becomes more
- 00:37:40immersive and it becomes more sharable.
- 00:37:43And I think it'll kind of mirror the the
- 00:37:45trend of, you know, where everything's
- 00:37:47going with AI coding tools like cursor
- 00:37:50um and AI video tools. I think it's all
- 00:37:52going to kind of like have this
- 00:37:54interesting singularity where we're
- 00:37:57going to be able to just create anything
- 00:37:58and anyone can see it in full immersive
- 00:38:01detail and then we can share it. And I
- 00:38:03feel like that's going to require the
- 00:38:06next step in hardware. Um so I'm bullish
- 00:38:09on that. I don't know when Apple's going
- 00:38:11to finally unveil what they have there,
- 00:38:13but I'm sure it's sitting somewhere in
- 00:38:16the basement. Um, and they have the
- 00:38:18glasses ready to go, but uh, I can't
- 00:38:20wait for that. That's what I'm super
- 00:38:21excited for, like, you know, the next
- 00:38:23hardware platform. I feel like we're
- 00:38:25we're not quite there yet, but we'll
- 00:38:27start to see it soon, I think. What
- 00:38:29about local running local models on on
- 00:38:33phones? Do you think that phone, you
- 00:38:35know, AI models will be run in the cloud
- 00:38:38like they are today? You know, you use
- 00:38:41chat GPT and it's all hosted by them or
- 00:38:43do you think people are going to have it
- 00:38:45local on their phones and and and on the
- 00:38:48web on desktop? Um, I think that the
- 00:38:51phones eventually, yes, absolutely. I
- 00:38:54think that I do think that like the
- 00:38:55phone will be the driving compute for
- 00:38:57whatever the glasses are. I don't think
- 00:38:59that the compute's going to be happening
- 00:39:00on the glasses. So, I think that in the
- 00:39:02way that we're using the cloud to do all
- 00:39:04the AI um training and generation, I
- 00:39:07think it'll be like the phones will have
- 00:39:08to get more advanced. They'll have to be
- 00:39:10able to handle more of these, you know,
- 00:39:12LLMs. Um I could see it happening for
- 00:39:15sure. I could definitely see it
- 00:39:16happening. Um but I also we don't know,
- 00:39:19you know, maybe it requires even more
- 00:39:21compute to do the even crazier things.
- 00:39:23So, it might stay in the cloud, but I
- 00:39:25could totally see a future where like
- 00:39:27all the compute and all the LLM stuff is
- 00:39:29happening on the phone and then you have
- 00:39:30like super lightweight glasses that are
- 00:39:32just connected over Bluetooth and the
- 00:39:34processing is being sent to the
- 00:39:37iPhone. If you're um so these are three
- 00:39:40trends that trends in tech that you know
- 00:39:42you you think are interested in that
- 00:39:44you're interested in. If you're just
- 00:39:47starting out, you know, you want to make
- 00:39:49your first million dollars, $10
- 00:39:51million, maybe even more, um, and you're
- 00:39:54trying to create a startup to go and do
- 00:39:56that. Um, what sort of trends in tech
- 00:40:00should people be
- 00:40:03um, you know, focused on? I guess
- 00:40:07I I do think that for young people who I
- 00:40:10can talk to more specifically about
- 00:40:11this, like people that are in their
- 00:40:13teenage years, 20s, you know, in college
- 00:40:15or post college, I do think that um you
- 00:40:19know, when you're young, you you want to
- 00:40:20take a lot of swings and a lot of risks
- 00:40:22and a lot of like you want to have a lot
- 00:40:24of at bats, a lot of tries. So, I do
- 00:40:26think that building consumer mobile apps
- 00:40:28is like the best thing to be doing if
- 00:40:30you're a young person. Obviously, I'm
- 00:40:32biased. That's like all I've ever done
- 00:40:34my whole life. But I do think that like
- 00:40:36when it comes to understanding human
- 00:40:38psychology, figuring out how to build a
- 00:40:40product that people love, um figuring
- 00:40:43out how to go viral and kind of create
- 00:40:44these, you know, global experiences,
- 00:40:46like you can really like touch the whole
- 00:40:48world using, you know, consumer social
- 00:40:50and consumer um consumer just consumer
- 00:40:53apps in general, right? It's like the
- 00:40:55way that people and the way that humans
- 00:40:57interact with the world is through apps
- 00:40:59and through our phones. So, I feel like
- 00:41:01if you're a young person and you're
- 00:41:02looking at tech and like where do I go?
- 00:41:04I would really go on the consumer side
- 00:41:07um versus going on like the B2B side,
- 00:41:09the SAS side just because I feel like um
- 00:41:12you know those things aren't as call it
- 00:41:14traditionally fun than compared to a
- 00:41:18consumer app, right? Consumer app is a
- 00:41:19little more fun. You know, you're you're
- 00:41:21dealing with building things for lots of
- 00:41:22people. You're not dealing so much of
- 00:41:24like, you know, the B2B world of dealing
- 00:41:26with businesses and contracts. It's more
- 00:41:28of like build a great product, figure
- 00:41:29out how to market it, build something
- 00:41:31people love. Um, so I would say like
- 00:41:33yeah, young people, just anyone that's
- 00:41:35looking to get into tech, I I would just
- 00:41:37get into the consumer side also because
- 00:41:39the tools are getting much better. So
- 00:41:41within a a short amount of time here,
- 00:41:43you will not need any technical person
- 00:41:46with you. I think still we need we need
- 00:41:48someone. We're not fully there yet, but
- 00:41:50um I do think yeah, consumer is the way
- 00:41:52to go for sure. Cool. I love it. Hunter
- 00:41:56Isacson giving away playbooks, giving
- 00:41:58away sauce. I knew I knew you'd bring
- 00:42:00it. Uh, we did zero preparation for this
- 00:42:03podcast.
- 00:42:05And I said I said to him right before
- 00:42:07this, I said, "This is what I would ask
- 00:42:10you in person, like if we were just
- 00:42:11catching up for coffee." So, I wanted
- 00:42:13that to be this experience. And uh, so I
- 00:42:17appreciate you, man. And um, Hunter, if
- 00:42:19people want to get to know you better,
- 00:42:22how can they how can they do it?
- 00:42:24Follow me on uh on X and Instagram,
- 00:42:27Hunter J. Isacson. And yeah, I post
- 00:42:30there regularly. I uh I give insights. I
- 00:42:33help young people in the industry and
- 00:42:35mentorship and I'm always, you know, a
- 00:42:38resource for people that are getting
- 00:42:39into consumer social. So yeah, follow
- 00:42:42me, hit me up, send me your app. I'd
- 00:42:44love to see it. I'll include those links
- 00:42:46in the show notes to make it easy on
- 00:42:48people. Um, and then like always, I read
- 00:42:53every single every single darn YouTube
- 00:42:56comment. So, please say hello, say
- 00:42:59what's up. Let us know if you enjoyed
- 00:43:01this episode and what we should be
- 00:43:03covering next. Startup ideas podcast,
- 00:43:06Hunter Isacson. It's been real. I'll see
- 00:43:08you around Miami, my friend. Yes. And,
- 00:43:11uh, hopefully people enjoy this episode
- 00:43:13so you can come back. I would love that.
- 00:43:16And yes, I'll see you in Miami soon,
- 00:43:17brother. All right, I'll catch you
- 00:43:19later. All right, man.
- Hunter Isacson
- consumer apps
- mobile apps
- branding
- user experience
- social media
- growth strategies
- north star metric
- entrepreneurship
- technology trends