Make Money by Hustling Like Gary Vee episode artwork

EPISODE · Jan 7, 2026 · 19 MIN

Make Money by Hustling Like Gary Vee

from Travis Makes Money · host Travis Chappell

In this episode, host Travis Chappell and his producer Eric unpack what big brands like Starbucks and Target are getting wrong about culture, customer experience, and “forced friendliness.” Using Eric’s local Starbucks and Target’s “10–4 policy” as jumping-off points, they dig into how authenticity, sleep, and sustainable effort matter far more than corporate scripts or nonstop grind. Along the way, they break down Gary Vee’s “new” stance on sleep and hustle, plus how high performers actually use rest as a competitive advantage.​ On this episode we talk about: Why Eric’s favorite Starbucks went from feeling like “Cheers” to feeling scripted once corporate required baristas to write something on every cup.​ How genuine, voluntary gestures from employees turn into hollow “corporate bullshit” once they’re turned into a rule.​ Target’s 10–4 policy (smile within 10 feet, warm interaction within 4 feet) and why forcing friendliness can feel awkward for both customers and staff.​ The difference between real culture (people who like working there) and forced culture (mandated smiles, scripted greetings, required cup messages).​ Gary Vee’s clip about sleeping 7–10 hours, not going hard 24/7, and why that sounds like a reversal of his early “hustle” content.​ How high performers reconcile hustle with rest: being insanely productive when awake while protecting sleep so they can sustain output for decades.​ Insights from Travis’s interview with The Sleep Doctor, including Steve Aoki’s custom sleep schedule built around a 1 a.m. start time.​ Why even entertainers and entrepreneurs with “wild” schedules need intentional sleep architecture to keep going into their late 40s and beyond.​ The weirdness of people falling asleep to business podcasts, and what it says about how hard it is for entrepreneurs to mentally clock out.​ Top 3 Takeaways Authentic culture can’t be scripted. If you take something organic—like baristas writing personal notes—and turn it into a corporate mandate, you strip away the sincerity that made it powerful in the first place.​ Forced friendliness doesn’t fix deeper problems. Policies like Target’s 10–4 may create momentary eye contact, but they can’t compensate for broken systems, low morale, or a bad customer experience.​ Sustainable success requires real rest. Hustle still matters, but the people who win long term (including Gary Vee and Steve Aoki) are the ones who treat sleep as a performance tool, not a luxury.​ Notable Quotes “There’s a difference between culture and forced culture—once you make it a rule, you kill the very thing that made it special.”​ “Don’t put ‘going hard’ on a pedestal; it’s not about never sleeping, it’s about being productive when you’re awake and listening to your body.”​ “You can’t perform at a high level for 15–20 years on no sleep—hustle without rest just means you hit the wall sooner.”​ ✖️✖️✖️✖️ 🚀 Travis Makes Money is made possible by High Level – the All-In-One Sales & Marketing Platform built for agencies, by an agency. 🚀 Capture leads, nurture them, and close more deals—all from one powerful platform. 🎁 Get an extended free trial at gohighlevel.com/travis Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

In this episode, host Travis Chappell and his producer Eric unpack what big brands like Starbucks and Target are getting wrong about culture, customer experience, and “forced friendliness.” Using Eric’s local Starbucks and Target’s “10–4 policy” as jumping-off points, they dig into how authenticity, sleep, and sustainable effort matter far more than corporate scripts or nonstop grind. Along the way, they break down Gary Vee’s “new” stance on sleep and hustle, plus how high performers actually use rest as a competitive advantage.​ On this episode we talk about: Why Eric’s favorite Starbucks went from feeling like “Cheers” to feeling scripted once corporate required baristas to write something on every cup.​ How genuine, voluntary gestures from employees turn into hollow “corporate bullshit” once they’re turned into a rule.​ Target’s 10–4 policy (smile within 10 feet, warm interaction within 4 feet) and why forcing friendliness can feel awkward for both customers and staff.​ The difference between real culture (people who like working there) and forced culture (mandated smiles, scripted greetings, required cup messages).​ Gary Vee’s clip about sleeping 7–10 hours, not going hard 24/7, and why that sounds like a reversal of his early “hustle” content.​ How high performers reconcile hustle with rest: being insanely productive when awake while protecting sleep so they can sustain output for decades.​ Insights from Travis’s interview with The Sleep Doctor, including Steve Aoki’s custom sleep schedule built around a 1 a.m. start time.​ Why even entertainers and entrepreneurs with “wild” schedules need intentional sleep architecture to keep going into their late 40s and beyond.​ The weirdness of people falling asleep to business podcasts, and what it says about how hard it is for entrepreneurs to mentally clock out.​ Top 3 Takeaways Authentic culture can’t be scripted. If you take something organic—like baristas writing personal notes—and turn it into a corporate mandate, you strip away the sincerity that made it powerful in the first place.​ Forced friendliness doesn’t fix deeper problems. Policies like Target’s 10–4 may create momentary eye contact, but they can’t compensate for broken systems, low morale, or a bad customer experience.​ Sustainable success requires real rest. Hustle still matters, but the people who win long term (including Gary Vee and Steve Aoki) are the ones who treat sleep as a performance tool, not a luxury.​ Notable Quotes “There’s a difference between culture and forced culture—once you make it a rule, you kill the very thing that made it special.”​ “Don’t put ‘going hard’ on a pedestal; it’s not about never sleeping, it’s about being productive when you’re awake and listening to your body.”​ “You can’t perform at a high level for 15–20 years on no sleep—hustle without rest just means you hit the wall sooner.”​ ✖️✖️✖️✖️ 🚀 Travis Makes Money is made possible by High Level – the All-In-One Sales & Marketing Platform built for agencies, by an agency. 🚀 Capture leads, nurture them, and close more deals—all from one powerful platform. 🎁 Get an extended free trial at gohighlevel.com/travis Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Make Money by Hustling Like Gary Vee

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How long is this episode of Travis Makes Money?

This episode is 19 minutes long.

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This episode was published on January 7, 2026.

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In this episode, host Travis Chappell and his producer Eric unpack what big brands like Starbucks and Target are getting wrong about culture, customer experience, and “forced friendliness.” Using Eric’s local Starbucks and Target’s “10–4 policy” as...

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