Ryan went to college for business at Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo
- College is not where he claims his “business prowess”
The ‘Real Education’: 4 Years at US Bank
- Located in Boulder, Colorado on the corner of 28th and Canyon.
- He got to see the bank accounts of 10% of Boulder’s population.
- That taught him about
- “money”
- gave him “self-confidence”
- learned how to use his hearing loss as an advantage; understanding human movements and ways of talking about money
- That taught him about
Got to talk to:
- “Rothschild’s”
- “famous people”
- “non-famous people”
- “average rich people”
- “husbands and wives”
- “40 hrs per week jobs”
- “entrepreneurs: poor ones and successful ones”
- Side-note:
- hiding money in the dirt can yield “moldy money”.
- Side-note:
As a result of US Bank gig:
-
- he managed to learn “lots of ways to manage money”.
- And he started to understand that ‘rich people’ make deals with other humans in a matter of minutes; one thing is said to “another man/woman” that has a skill set, a promise is made and “both parties win”. Ryan, after seeing an average of 300 transactions on busy days, learned how to “take care of business really fast“.
- The blog here, details the “timing philosophy” of Standard Bike Repair. We designed this business to make the “best use of people’s time”: Watch/Help/Learn.
- Ryan believes that he used his understanding of mechanics, social media, time, money, and business as a combined set of resources to create the perfect system for a business.
Watch/Help/Learn
- Way 1: Watch/Help/Learn saves time: the customer’s and the business.
- Reason 2: Using the customer as a “cog in the machine” is a human way to exist as a business owner. The process of interacting with a human to fix a bike, where one of them is a professional, is an inspiring and satisfying human experience. It allows Ryan to get up each day and know that the joy of the world is there to co-create Standard Bike Repair.
If he had to do it “all over again”, he would have started as a mechanical engineer and got a subscription to Lynda.com.
Even a small bike shop needs “effective branding”.