for estimating cash flow growth, it’s helpful to not guess but just use historical data. so, you find the derivative of the growth rate to see how much the growth rate itself is growing every year, apply that amount to last year’s growth rate to get the growth rate for the current year, then apply that growth rate to last year’s cash flows to get a cash flow estimate. Once you get a new year’s cash flows, you immediately use that data to update the historical growth rate and growth rate of the growth rate. lol
Thanks for this video. Now I don't need to go to a business school just to learn how to build company and compete with Apple and Google. Watch out Apple! I'm coming!
Excellent recap of MBA 101. But none of this is why people go to Stanford. They go to Stanford for the network(ing) effect of being able to raise capital from alumni and get exclusive opportunities from high end peers. Period, point blank. 😅
Management is the lubrication in all of this technical theory of business talk (the mechanics of a business). In my current company, I have heard stories of poor management, experienced it firsthand as well. We've had multiple decent guys quit because of one or two bad apples. The manager we all like isn't perfect, but he actually works alongside us when he can and makes us feel like he cares. It's incredible the amount of contrast in people skills there is between different managers. If you're a founder/CEO and you've hired poor middle management, your company might be doomed because that guy is going to hire/appoint lower-level managers.
Thanks for the information! Totally decentralizing knowledge that is taught in classrooms and that is accessible only to a few. Also, don't be shy, do tell us where you got that green shirt coz it looks fire.
If this guy can explain everything he learned in two years in a 29-minute-long video, and with so many people sharing their experiences and knowledge online, coupled with the advancements in AI, why would anyone pay a lot of money to get an education that's already available online for almost free and waste two to four years of their life? The traditional approach to learning is no longer valid, especially now that information can be accessed so easily in a short amount of time
Thank you so much for these lessons, you’re a life saver!!! I’ll apply this to my cafe, if ever you’re in the Philippines hit me up and I’ll treat you. 😁
I don't have a business background in anything and I don't think I can ever afford to get back in school for a MBA, so this is an amazing value proposition in one single video, FOR FREE! I run my own social brand as an entertainer and although I don't have any physical products(yet) to offer, and only a subscription-based model based on regularly-timed live content, I think the concepts explained in your video are mighty helpful for me.
Hey Jay, could you please take a time and list 1-3 books per covered topic you found to be most educational during your time in Stanford? And maybe a bonus book that you found to have the biggest added value for you. Much apreciated.🍻
At 16:30 the video put a human employee under "cost of goods sold", and said "what was the cost of… the person making that coffee?" I know it's a semantic accident, and we aren't buying and selling humans, hopefully. But the video also speaks admiringly of the corporations referenced in this video, which have been treating and paying their common employees worse, excepting top executives. I personally don't admire these corporations. Just wanted to share my take, no trolling or judgement meant by it, thanks for sharing this video!
Good content and summarized like an essay. They've taught us the same thing in other schools just framed differently. For example, analayzing competition through SWAT analysis. STRENGTH, WEAKNESS, A… AND T… of a company. I forget the last two acronyms. Thanks for the reminder
Appreciate the insight into Stanford! What's surprising is that I did a Bachelor of Commerce at a non-ivy league school + non-grad school and everything you covered was taught there as well
I hate to say this but I was an outlier. I went to Pitt and had a UPENN grad and professor/worker for RAND want to mentor me and also get me into Oxford University in the UK because he believed I would become a bonafide polymath.
Unfortunately many things in Pittsburgh ruined that for me deeply and all at once.
47 comments
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ACTUALLY ACTUALLY ACTUALLY ACTUALLY
This is very useful for people trying to write business majors tyvm.
This sums up my entire accounting and finance career in half an hour and now I finally understand it as a whole. Thank you so much
Wow, that’s crazy. Big thank from Russia dude. You care so much about people, definitely you are a good manager)
4:50
love the way this dumbass assumes we all use apple daily.
Your hand movements don’t look too natural, almost looks like a tweaker talking a made up story
for estimating cash flow growth, it’s helpful to not guess but just use historical data. so, you find the derivative of the growth rate to see how much the growth rate itself is growing every year, apply that amount to last year’s growth rate to get the growth rate for the current year, then apply that growth rate to last year’s cash flows to get a cash flow estimate. Once you get a new year’s cash flows, you immediately use that data to update the historical growth rate and growth rate of the growth rate. lol
thank you for the very useful infos
Thanks for this video. Now I don't need to go to a business school just to learn how to build company and compete with Apple and Google. Watch out Apple! I'm coming!
Thank you very much! ❤🎉
One of the greatest videos imparting knowlege I have seen on youtube with a great breakdown. Thankyou for sharing the pointers.
Bro, this is the most helpful video I have ever watched. Hats off to you, Thanks a lot
I'm not seeing the next video he was going to work on for network connections. Am I just missing it or did he just never make it?
Thank you so much I have used the information form this video and done further research. It has helped me greatly thank you
wonderful job producing this video!
Incredible video, so much value
Cool video
Жалко, что нет озвучки на русском языке. 🥲
Excellent recap of MBA 101. But none of this is why people go to Stanford. They go to Stanford for the network(ing) effect of being able to raise capital from alumni and get exclusive opportunities from high end peers. Period, point blank. 😅
Management is the lubrication in all of this technical theory of business talk (the mechanics of a business). In my current company, I have heard stories of poor management, experienced it firsthand as well. We've had multiple decent guys quit because of one or two bad apples. The manager we all like isn't perfect, but he actually works alongside us when he can and makes us feel like he cares. It's incredible the amount of contrast in people skills there is between different managers. If you're a founder/CEO and you've hired poor middle management, your company might be doomed because that guy is going to hire/appoint lower-level managers.
Find your Insane Clown Posse? Check. Got my network of worldbeating Juggalos. We gonna dominate the market with our Faygo.
I have a Bachelor’s degree in International Business and an MBA. This guy literally explained everything I learned in 5.5 years. Great video!
Thanks for the information! Totally decentralizing knowledge that is taught in classrooms and that is accessible only to a few. Also, don't be shy, do tell us where you got that green shirt coz it looks fire.
I like how our capstone class started us with Porters five forces and I guess you go in depth in grad school.
Extremely worthless video
If this guy can explain everything he learned in two years in a 29-minute-long video,
and with so many people sharing their experiences and knowledge online, coupled with the advancements in AI, why would anyone pay a lot of money to get an education that's already available online for almost free and waste two to four years of their life? The traditional approach to learning is no longer valid, especially now that information can be accessed so easily in a short amount of time
ty for saving me $250k!! damn i thought tthere was more secret sauce, but this is pretty basic! learned this in econ at ucsd
Bro you literally look like Shang Tsung from mortal Kombat…!!!
Thank you so much for these lessons, you’re a life saver!!! I’ll apply this to my cafe, if ever you’re in the Philippines hit me up and I’ll treat you. 😁
Thanks for the crash course man!
I don't have a business background in anything and I don't think I can ever afford to get back in school for a MBA, so this is an amazing value proposition in one single video, FOR FREE! I run my own social brand as an entertainer and although I don't have any physical products(yet) to offer, and only a subscription-based model based on regularly-timed live content, I think the concepts explained in your video are mighty helpful for me.
Hey Jay, could you please take a time and list 1-3 books per covered topic you found to be most educational during your time in Stanford? And maybe a bonus book that you found to have the biggest added value for you. Much apreciated.🍻
At 16:30 the video put a human employee under "cost of goods sold", and said "what was the cost of… the person making that coffee?" I know it's a semantic accident, and we aren't buying and selling humans, hopefully. But the video also speaks admiringly of the corporations referenced in this video, which have been treating and paying their common employees worse, excepting top executives. I personally don't admire these corporations. Just wanted to share my take, no trolling or judgement meant by it, thanks for sharing this video!
Awesome bideo glorb
This is awesome, just subbed
Good content and summarized like an essay. They've taught us the same thing in other schools just framed differently. For example, analayzing competition through SWAT analysis. STRENGTH, WEAKNESS, A… AND T… of a company. I forget the last two acronyms. Thanks for the reminder
finally a video worth watching thank you .. !!
You’re so cool!
Can I hire you as an advisor for my startup? 😂
Appreciate the insight into Stanford! What's surprising is that I did a Bachelor of Commerce at a non-ivy league school + non-grad school and everything you covered was taught there as well
This is really good
If Heath Ledger and the girl from 10 things I hate about you had a kid, he would look like this.
I hate to say this but I was an outlier. I went to Pitt and had a UPENN grad and professor/worker for RAND want to mentor me and also get me into Oxford University in the UK because he believed I would become a bonafide polymath.
Unfortunately many things in Pittsburgh ruined that for me deeply and all at once.
Se la vi
Last minute is probably the most important lesson
Masterpiece