U know how u stupid u are? It’s a joke, but then u said fun fact making it misleading then actually a joke. When did facts become lie and a joke at the same time.
@@JohnDoe-sk6wy True, but it isn’t a one-time thing. He frequently says something like “wait wait wait”, gives one reason and then says “and for those reasons, I’m out”
@@JohnDoe-sk6wy the pitches usually last around one hour and are cut down to about eight minutes. Do you really wanna hear all the boring financial details? Because that's all you're really missing.
@@violintegral As a viewer who is watching Shark Tank strictly for entertainment purposes, it makes sense to only focus on the most entertaining parts of the pitch. But for someone who is truly looking to learn from it, having the full pitch is more beneficial. There might have been a lot of boring (but significant) things that were said which led to Mark saying he’s out. But we will never really know what those were. For someone like me who is interested in the details, the 1 hour pitch would be better but for someone else who doesn’t care about that, 8 minutes are fine. But you can’t judge Mark’s decision with only 8 minutes of a clip when there could have been other boring (yet important) things that were said that you’re not aware of.
@@arjundhar5983 Because he may have listed other reasons or someone else may have chimed in. They do cuts almost right on top of the scenes they want because its still supposed to flow somewhat smooth. Like each pitch and meeting takes around 2+ hours.
No, a royalty is literally the "I want free equity and my money back" option. He doesn't take any risk when you have to pay him out of sales before it goes back to the business. Equity alone mean they don't get anything until the business is stable, making a profit, and has enough money to support itself without them doing anything. A royalty is always a no risk scumbag move to get their money back first before anything else.
@@sws212 Of course there is a risk. Many of these businesses are in such an early stage, there is a high probability they never make enough sales to even his investment. He also has less potential reward, because he usually asks for less equity than the other sharks.
Kevin: I'll give you a loan for 150K at 20% over 1 year, 10 cents per can for 2.5 years, 5.3% stake in the company, and your wife for a day. Mark: Great deal guys, congratulations.
Why is 5 cents a bottle such a big deal? Honest question. Trying to understand the royalty concept a little more here, especially since margins are high.
Can someone explain to me how % ownings in company work? So you basically own for example 20% of sales by company, if you have 20% cut in a company? Sorry, I'm dumb.
You have 20% ownership, which you then aim to sell at a higher price (either only your percentage, or the whole company, and you get 20% of cash then). Also, when the board wants to take out X money from the company (They say: "Hey, 10K of this month’s earning is going to us, not back into the company!"), then you get 20% of this money. That’s called dividends.
All the sharks except for Cuban all act like they are the king or queen in their chosen industry. But relatively speaking they are super investors. This show needs more sharks that are on Cuban's level. People like Steve Wynn and Tilman Fertitta. And not just once in a while, but every episode.
Those dudes won't invest in shit. Hell Cuban barely invests as is. You need a shark who actually sees 100k as a meaningful sum of money. Even the most successful products on the show are drops in the profit bucket for a Uber wealthy like Cuban.
Well it has to through his legal team and his financial team, signed agreements can take weeks before they finalize the deal. This is just pure entertainment. People like David don't make the final decision until his own people have accessed and have seen that everything is inorder.
Is it 60Hz, or the way the guy in a blue shirt looks right in the camera, but it feels like a rehearsed and scripted infomercial, not like a reality show