The Acquired podcast adopted Warren Buffett's "too hard pile" concept to maintain focus. Opportunities like Hollywood deals are deliberately shelved, recognizing that their highest-leverage activity is always creating the next episode, thus protecting their core compounding asset.
Don't chase every deal. Like a spearfisherman, anchor in a strategic area and wait patiently for the 'big fish'—a once-in-a-decade opportunity—then act decisively. This requires years of preparation and the discipline to let smaller opportunities pass by, focusing only on transformative deals.
The true cost of becoming great at one thing isn't the work, but the discipline to ignore all other 'shiny objects.' Success comes from the paths untaken. The fear of missing out (FOMO) is the price of focus.
Jacobs's team uses the acronym WOTWOM—Waste Of Time, Waste Of Money—as a rapid check on new ideas. Any suggestion can be challenged with this label if it doesn't clearly contribute to organic revenue growth or margin expansion. This simple tool creates a culture focused on high-leverage activities.
At scale, the biggest threat isn't a lack of opportunity but mental overload. The key is to treat your focus as a finite resource and actively protect it. This means becoming comfortable saying "I'm done for today" and disappointing people, realizing that protecting your mind is more strategic than satisfying every request.
Club Penguin's founders lived by a simple rule: 'If it doesn't matter to an eight-year-old, it doesn't matter.' This filter forced them to reject prestigious but irrelevant opportunities like speaking at certain conferences, keeping them focused on their true customers: kids and their parents.
By releasing only 8-12 episodes a year, the podcast "Acquired" mimics the NFL's event-driven model. This scarcity elevates each release, turning it into a highly anticipated event rather than routine content, driving listener engagement and perceived value.
'Strict productivity' for a founder is work centered on the startup's single biggest bottleneck, approached with a direct strategy, and executed with intense focus ('goblin mode'). Any other activity, from pitch competitions to unfocused work on non-bottlenecks, should be considered 'performative' and a distraction from making real progress.
The founders of Acquired consciously choose not to build a large media company, a decision reinforced by an investor who warned that many founders become trapped in "prisons of their own making." By prioritizing founder control and lifestyle, they avoid the obligations that come with scaling an enterprise.