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Why Giving Your Secret Sauce Away Is the Secret Sauce

Why Giving Your Secret Sauce Away Is the Secret Sauce

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In 1980, a Vietnamese refugee selling homemade hot sauce out of baby food jars made a decision that lawyers called catastrophic: he refused to trademark the word "sriracha" and let the entire world copy his recipe. Today he's a billionaire who's never spent a single dollar on marketing. That same counterintuitive move—giving away your most valuable thing—saved over a million lives when a Swedish car company did it, and turned a band with exactly one Top 40 hit into the highest-grossing American touring act of the 1990s, out-earning Madonna, Springsteen, and Michael Jackson.

This episode explores why the instinct to hoard and protect your best work might actually be fear disguised as strategy—and what happens when you do the opposite. You'll hear about peacock tails, a form of generosity so threatening to European colonizers that governments literally made it illegal, and a daily ritual involving Google searches that might be the weirdest business practice you've ever heard of.

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Dumbify celebrates ideas so weird, wrong, or wildly impractical… they just might be brilliant. Hosted by David Carson, a serial entrepreneur behind multiple hundred-million-dollar companies and the go-to secret weapon for companies looking to unlock new markets through unconventional thinking. Dumbify dives into the messy, counter-intuitive side of creativity — the “dumb” ideas that built empires, broke rules, and ended up changing everything.

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