MY FIRST MILLION · EXTRACTED

This Guy Copy-Pasted Warren Buffett's Strategy

8 lessons from Mohnish Pabrai — the man who turned $1M into $13M in 5 years by doing exactly what Buffett did.

3.2M views on YouTube
"I am a shameless cloner. I find the very best investors in the world and I copy them exactly. And it works."

Mohnish Pabrai runs Pabrai Investment Funds, which has compounded at roughly 26% annually since 1999. He paid $650,000 to have lunch with Warren Buffett. He modeled his fund structure on Buffett's 1950s partnerships almost line by line. Before any of that, he built a tech consulting company from scratch at 24 with maxed-out credit cards, sold it for $20M, then turned $1M of that into $13M in five years through pure value investing. Shaan sits down with him for one of the most practical conversations about wealth the show has ever done.

TACTIC 01

Clone the Best. Stop Trying to Be Original.

Mohnish's whole philosophy comes down to one thing: the best playbook already exists and most people are too proud to use it. He studied Buffett's early partnership letters, his investment criteria, his fee structure, his communication style. Then he copied all of it. The fund fees, the investor letters, the checklist process — all taken directly from Buffett. He didn't spend a single hour trying to invent something new. He spent that time executing something proven. 'I didn't need to invent a new system. The best one was sitting in the public record.'

THE PLAY

Find the person who has already built what you want to build. Go through everything public about how they did it. Their pricing, their processes, their communication, their sequencing. Copy the model. Spend your energy on execution, not reinvention. The goal is outcomes, not originality.

TACTIC 02

Operators Make Better Investors

Running a real business gives you something most analysts never develop: you know how companies actually work from the inside. You know what customer churn feels like. You know what a real moat looks like versus a made-up one. You know the difference between a business that looks good on a spreadsheet and one that actually runs. Mohnish can spot a bad business in ten minutes because he's lived inside one. 'I know where the bodies are buried. An MBA who's never run anything doesn't.'

THE PLAY

If you run or have run a business, use that lens when evaluating investments. Don't defer to analysts who've only ever seen a company from the outside. Ask yourself: would I want to own and operate this? Do the unit economics make sense to someone who's had to make payroll? That instinct is a genuine edge. Use it.

TACTIC 03

The 168-Hour Framework

Mohnish built his first business while holding down a full-time job. His math was simple: everyone has 168 hours a week. If you're working 50 and sleeping 56, there are 62 left. Most people spend those 62 hours on TV, social media, and nothing in particular. He spent his on building a consulting company. He kept his salary to live on and used his evenings and weekends to build equity. He never had to make a bet-the-farm move. 'I used the time other people wasted. That's it.'

THE PLAY

Write down your 168 hours. Subtract sleep, work, and the things that aren't negotiable. Whatever's left is your building window. Even 10 hours a week is enough to start. Keep your employed income running while you build. The second engine doesn't need to be big. It just needs to start.

TACTIC 04

Real Entrepreneurs Avoid Risk — They Don't Chase It

One of Mohnish's most counterintuitive lines: real entrepreneurs don't take risks. They identify risks and eliminate them one by one. Buffett never bets on turnarounds. He never buys what he doesn't understand. He only acts when the downside is limited and the upside is real. Mohnish took this principle and applied it to everything. 'Every investment I make, I first ask: how do I lose money here? If I can't construct a realistic path to losing, I get interested.'

THE PLAY

Before any major decision, write a pre-mortem. Assume it failed. How? What were the three most likely reasons? If you can't identify realistic failure paths, you're not thinking clearly. Risk management isn't about being afraid. It's about being precise. Define the floor before you think about the ceiling.

TACTIC 05

The Low-Cost Producer Wins Almost Every Market

Mohnish spent years studying a specific phenomenon: immigrants from one region of Gujarat, India, own roughly 40% of all motels in America. Not because they built a better product. Because they run family operations with near-zero labor costs and share supplier relationships across a tight network. The margins are untouchable. Competitors can't get there. 'If you can be the low-cost producer in your niche, you can survive almost anything. Price wars, recessions, new entrants. You outlast everyone.'

THE PLAY

Ask yourself what the structural cost advantage looks like in your industry. It could be geography, technology, vertical integration, or a community network. The business that can survive a price war wins the whole market eventually. Build toward a cost structure your competitors can't replicate, not just a product they can't copy.

TACTIC 06

"Heads I Win, Tails I Don't Lose Much"

This is Mohnish's core filter for every deal he takes. Before he acts on anything, he maps the floor and the ceiling. Best case, what does he gain? Worst case, what does he lose? He will only move when the floor is survivable and the upside is meaningful. He's passed on dozens of opportunities that looked great on paper because the downside wasn't clearly defined. 'I'm not trying to maximize upside. I'm trying to make sure the worst case doesn't kill me. The upside takes care of itself after that.'

THE PLAY

Before any major decision, write out both scenarios explicitly. Best case: what do you gain? Worst case: what do you lose? Only act when losing is survivable and winning is meaningful. Most bad decisions look fine until you've actually defined the floor. The floor is where the analysis starts.

TACTIC 07

The $650,000 Lunch That Paid For Itself

Mohnish and Guy Spier paid $650,000 each to have lunch with Warren Buffett through the annual charity auction. He says it was the best investment he ever made. Not because Buffett gave him any stock tips. But because three hours with someone operating at that level recalibrated his entire internal model of what was possible. You absorb things in those conversations that you can't get from books. 'You leave thinking differently. That shift is worth more than any specific piece of advice.'

THE PLAY

Find the most expensive room you can afford to be in. Masterminds, paid dinners with operators, mentorship fees — don't optimize for cheap. The return on proximity to excellence is non-linear. One conversation with someone a decade ahead of you can compress your learning curve by years. Pay for access. It compounds.

TACTIC 08

The Rarest Edge: Being Comfortable Doing Nothing

Shaan asks Mohnish what single trait separates great investors from everyone else. The answer: the ability to say 'I don't know' without flinching and do nothing for months without forcing a decision. Most smart people feel compelled to have a view on everything. Great investors don't. They sit in uncertainty. They wait. Buffett doesn't swing at every pitch. He waits for the fat one. 'The investor who can hold cash for 18 months without acting is rare. That patience is worth more than any analytical model.'

THE PLAY

Build a 'too hard' pile. Decisions and investments you won't touch because the outcome isn't knowable. Your real returns come from a small number of situations where you have genuine conviction. Forcing a view on everything guarantees you'll be wrong a lot. Practice doing nothing until you have a clear edge.

YOUR ACTION PLAN

All the plays, back to back. Use this as your checklist.

  1. 01

    Clone the Best. Stop Trying to Be Original.

    Pick one person who has built what you want. Read everything public about how they did it. Copy the model exactly before you try to improve it.

  2. 02

    Operators Make Better Investors

    Before any investment, ask: would I want to run this business? If you've operated before, trust that gut over any analyst's model.

  3. 03

    The 168-Hour Framework

    Map your actual week. Subtract sleep (56h) and work (50h). Use what's left to build — even 10 hours a week compounds fast over a year.

  4. 04

    Real Entrepreneurs Avoid Risk — They Don't Chase It

    Write a pre-mortem before any big decision. Assume it failed — what were the top 3 reasons? If you can't answer that, you're not ready to act.

  5. 05

    The Low-Cost Producer Wins Almost Every Market

    Map the cost structure of your industry. Find one structural advantage your competitors can't easily copy — geography, community, technology — and build toward it.

  6. 06

    "Heads I Win, Tails I Don't Lose Much"

    For every deal: write out best case and worst case. Only move if the worst case is survivable. Don't act until you've clearly defined the floor.

  7. 07

    The $650,000 Lunch That Paid For Itself

    Find the most expensive room you can afford to get into this year. Pay for it. One conversation with the right person is worth more than months of self-study.

  8. 08

    The Rarest Edge: Being Comfortable Doing Nothing

    Start a 'too hard' pile — a list of decisions you won't touch until you have real conviction. Practice saying 'I don't know' and doing nothing until the right pitch arrives.

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MY FIRST MILLION · EXTRACTED BY PODEX