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Time Stamps:(1:13) - Introduction to Yasir and Top DRWR(6:35) - Working at Campless and analyzing Sneaker data & trends(11:53) - Looking at different factors in the growth of the sneaker market(16:51) - Working at StockX on different categories like sneakers, trading cards, and memorabilia(22:04) - The inception of Top DRWR, French Montana and talent memorabilia(26:52) - The opportunity for talent to sell their memorabilia and dormant inventory(30:55) - What kind of talent is a good fit for Top DRWR - fashion & collecting(35:59) - Creating a new market for talent-related product and addressing sustainability(37:50) - Their first drop with Jimmy Butler and the future roadmap for Top DRWR(42:25) - The evolution of marketplaces and auction houses (46:46) - Closing thoughts from Yasir and where to find Top DRWR Find Yasir and Top DRWR:On their website = https://topdrwr.io/On Instagram = https://www.instagram.com/topdrwr/On TikTok = https://www.tiktok.com/@topdrwr Find Neustreet:On our website = https://neustreet.com/On Twitter = https://twitter.com/realneustreetOn Instagram = https://www.instagram.com/realneustreetOn TikTok = https://www.tiktok.com/@neustreet
Time Stamps:(1:04) - Introduction to Josh - starting with Campless(9:01) - Meeting Dan Gilbert and the founding of StockX(17:07) - Meeting Michael Rubin and the creation of Fanatics Trading Cards(24:52) - How Josh started collecting sneakers as a kid and how he collects sneakers today(32:30) - How Josh started collecting cards and how he collects sports cards and non-sports cards today(39:45) - Josh's Whitepaper 'Trading Cards Are Cool Again' and how influencers shape the industry(47:04) - Exploring the similarities and differences between cards and sneakers as collectibles and investments(50:31) - How people are investing in alternative assets like NFTs, sneakers, and trading cards(53:42) - Closing thoughts on supply and demand and where to find JoshFind Josh:On Instagram = https://www.instagram.com/joshluber/On Twitter = https://twitter.com/joshluberFind Neustreet:On our website = https://neustreet.com/On Twitter = https://twitter.com/realneustreetOn Instagram = https://www.instagram.com/realneustreetOn TikTok = https://www.tiktok.com/@neustreet
【主要话题】[02:04] 上周足坛新闻和各大联赛回顾感想[31:36] 本周最新发售的卡盒系列展望[01:02:40] 经典卡盒系列 - Select 16 - 17【主播】若淅,尤文图斯铁粉, goldenlimit开箱UP主[goldenlimit]https://space.bilibili.com/388670971/【嘉宾】孜彦,BGC球星卡UP主[BGC球星卡] https://space.bilibili.com/16149568阿鲁斯,阿森纳套装搜集达人https://www.instagram.com/Arsenal_card_collector/【延伸阅读】UEFA Champions League Gold 2021Topps ‘Gold' returns with the new UEFA Champions League collection designed by trading card artist, Tyson Beck. Look out for the stars of the 21/22 competition, with special ‘Elite' and ‘Gold' cards, plus ‘Future stars' on all-new 3D print tech.Configuration:150 total cards in the set.80 cards per box (8 packets of 10 cards).1 Numbered parallel card per box.1 Autograph card per box. Checklist 官方名单: https://uk.topps.com/amfile/file/download/file/607/product/326722/Joshua Eliot "Josh" Luber (born February 18, 1978) is an American entrepreneur and sneaker collector who co-founded StockX, the stock market for things.[2][3] Luber worked for IBM when he founded Campless, a "sneakerhead data" company that tracked the secondary market for sneaker sales.[video 1] Campless then morphed into StockX, which is an online marketplace for high-end product resale.[4][5]Luber is an expert on the sneaker resale market, and has applied that knowledge to the broader secondary market for luxury goods, a $6 billion global industry.[6] Originally from Philadelphia, Luber is a graduate of Emory University, from which he holds a Bachelors, and MBA, and a law degree.[2][7]关于他的TRADING CARDS ARE COOL AGAIN 白皮书论文https://www.tradingcardsarecoolagain.com/【Staff】后期:若淅监制:若淅封面设计:韩智澄【音乐BGM】Doja Cat, The Weeknd - You Right"β" 1 - Masashi Hamauzu, Hikaru Shirosu【关于我们】网站:https://podcard.buzzsprout.com/邮件:goldenlimit@gmail.comSupport the show (https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/podcard)
Josh Luber is an entrepreneur, long-time trading card collector, and co-founder of StockX, the on-line sneaker and collectibles marketplace he co-founded with Cleveland Cavaliers owner, Dan Gilbert. Luber talks to Rich and Gianni about his early entrepreneurial leanings, alternating between corporate jobs and startups after getting his MBA/JD from Emory University, creating Campless, a sneaker data company, while working at IBM, and his life-changing meeting with Dan Gilbert where they decided to create a “stock market for sneakers.” Luber also dives into why he thinks it’s a golden age for trading cards, and how that’s led him to the creation of his new venture, Six Forks Kids Club, an alternative asset management company focused on trading cards. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Welcome to another episode of Action & Ambition with your host, Andrew Medal. Today’s guest is Josh Luber. Josh Luber is the co-founder and CEO of the disruptive stock market-modeled online sneaker marketplace, StockX. Within a short timespan, Josh has transformed sneaker resale and turned StockX into a $1 Billion business. Luber founded many online companies before StockX, including Servinity, that went bankrupt due to the financial crash in 2008. Luber worked a consulting job after that, and in 2012, he used sneaker sales data to launch Campless, the precursor to StockX. He is also the founder and CEO of Stealth Trading Card companies and is moving on to his 5th and 6th startups. You’re going to love this episode. Let’s get to it! What was the process like for Josh while starting his businesses? (3:32) Looking back, Josh says he had some kind of corporate job between each of his startups. His life also changed exponentially between each of his startups as he started a family. Starting a business is always a risk for everyone involved, and anything that happens during a startup can change how it goes drastically. Josh’s last startup had to shut down before exiting because of the crash in 2008-2009. Josh was in Atlanta during that time, and it had a terrible job market; he eventually took a job in IBM, which had him move to New York. As a strategy consultant in NYW, the city was a jumping-off point for capitalists, which ended up becoming StockX. As a startup guy working in IBM, it’s a good company because it’s the definition of big corporations and bureaucracy. If you find yourself in that position, you have to start working and looking for stuff to do on the inside. Josh believes that if he never went to work at IBM, StockX would’ve never happened because it allowed him to accumulate enough taste and skill level with data to ask the right questions. So even though his experience at a Law firm and IBM might look like anomalies on Josh’s resumé, they were both massively helpful in all of his endeavors. What was the data that Josh saw that made him start StockX? (10:12) Josh says that it is extraordinary that what is happening in terms of data in the trading cards right now is almost identical to what was happening in the sneakers in 2012. It’s the big reason Josh has decided to leave StockX to go after trading card companies was because of the similarities for sneakers at that time. In 2012 there was no price guide, there was no Beckett for sneakers, no Kelly Blue Book, and as sneakers became more mainstream, that became more and more of a problem. Sitting in IBM, deep in the data space and having collected sneakers his whole life, and always following the sneaker market, Josh was also just searching for side projects. He thought about trying to get his hands on some sneaker data and seeing what he could do with it, and eventually, he figured out how to collect eBay data. It became clear very quickly that no one was doing real analytics around the resale market at that time. People were still using eBay sold auctions to understand the price of a pair of sneakers, the value of them. It was a very insular, fragmented market at the time. Using the data Josh collected, he looked at what he could build around it, and no one else was doing that. What is the impact that Josh wants to have? (39:47) Josh was happy about this question because most people usually ask him what’s the most expensive shoe he owns, and he’s gotten tired of answering those questions. For Josh, it’s about the process, and all the success he has had with StockX is impressive, and he’s excited that that success allows him to do it again. With the age his kids are now, Josh is excited because growing up, the word entrepreneur did not exist. Going after your dream and making a business, a career from something you love to do was rare. Josh was lucky that what he loved as a kid has grown into the two biggest things in culture and commerce. But it was the actual process of starting up the business and building it that he enjoyed the most. He hopes that his passion for that will reflect in his kids and show them how to create value—hiring people, creating jobs, and helping the world. StockX StockX is a Detroit-based online marketplace and reseller of sneakers, streetwear, handbags, and collectibles. Acting as a live bid/ask marketplace for the most hotly anticipated drops. Resources Connect with Josh: LinkedIn StockX: Website Connect with Andrew: Linkedin
“Ideas are worthless. Execution is the only thing that matters.” After three attempted startups and a lack of enthusiasm for corporate jobs, Josh Luber decided to try a new avenue: one that combined his passion for shoes with his entrepreneurial ability. Three years later and with the help of billionaire Dan Gilbert and experienced businessman Greg Schwartz, the three transformed Josh’s startup into StockX: the world’s first stock market for “things.” Recently valued at over $1 billion, StockX acts as a virtual marketplace for consumers to buy and sell highly coveted products including sneakers, streetwear, collectibles, handbags, and watches. As the former CEO who now serves on the executive leadership team and board of directors, Josh takes us through his entrepreneurial journey from selling blow pops in sixth grade to pioneering the resell market with StockX. Instagram: @BaimBrothersWebsite: baimbrothers.com
Josh Luber is the founder of StockX, the world's first online consumer “Stock Market of Things” for high-demand, limited-edition products featuring a live marketplace where participants anonymously buy and sell limited-edition consumer products such as sneakers, watches, clothing, handbags, and trading cards.In this episode, we talk about everything from Josh’s formative years and how going to law school helped him become a better problem solver, the various business ventures he’s had throughout his life, how the industry for sneakers and trading cards has evolved over the last 30 years, the insane story of how he met Dan Gilbert (owner of the Cleveland Cavaliers and founder of Quicken Loans) who he ultimately co-founded StockX with out of pure serendipity, why building a stock market model makes so much sense for the business, why certain sneakers and trading cards resell for thousands or millions of dollars, building a $1 billion company in just 3 years, why he stepped down as CEO in 2019, and what he envisions the future of the company as well as e-commerce and new product launches, in general, to look like.SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER & STAY UPDATED > http://bit.ly/tfh-newsletterFOLLOW TFH ON INSTAGRAM > http://www.instagram.com/thefounderhourFOLLOW TFH ON TWITTER > http://www.twitter.com/thefounderhourINTERESTED IN BECOMING A SPONSOR? EMAIL US > partnerships@thefounderhour.com
Getting his start at then entry-level startup Campless, which then became StockX, Matt Luber quickly became the go-to guy for everything marketing - despite his very specific job role. In such a small environment, it's bound to happen. But it was exactly the training Matt needed to become the well-rounded marketer he is today. Tune into this episode of Out of the Box with our host Dan Feldstein, Director of US Marketing and ironSource, and guest Matt Luber, brand builder and former marketing executive at StockX, an online marketplace and clothing reseller, primarily of sneakers. Listen to the podcast or read the transcript: https://outofthebox.ironsrc.com/podcasts/matt-luber/
This week Rob and Jeremiah barely outrun a walking Michael Myers and find out how Elijah Wood, Flea, and Back to the Future connect to Jeff Bridges! Intro/Outro music constructed from Creative Commons sounds by the following freesound.org users: -“Proyector16mm-2” by espectral -“Goofy Music” by FlatHill -“Cinemato” by jlozano -“3er Ding 01” by Raggaman --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/realonreels/support
The secondary sneaker market has gone from an underground aficionado scene to a billion dollar industry. Lifelong sneakerhead and CEO of StockX Josh Luber saw an opportunity and created Campless, the Kelley Blue Book for sneakers, using data to determine the true market price of sneakers. StockX is a revolutionary live marketplace for buying and selling sneakers, streetwear, watches, and handbags. So if you’re curious whether reselling sneakers is more The Wire or Wolf of Wall Street, listen to our newest episode. Listen on iTunes: https://apple.co/2MRXMPK on Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2I66lpa direct via RSS: https://bit.ly/2xvZnGe
Dubbed the "Stock Market of Things," StockX is one of, if not the fastest growing startup in Detroit, and CEO Josh Luber is at the forefront of all that growth. Beginning as a passion project outside his time at IBM, Luber started StockX (then known as Campless) off of his passion for sneakers. As a dedicated sneakerhead, he often found himself buying and reselling sneakers, and he found there was no price guidebook to reference. Think Kelley Blue Book for comparing car prices. That's when he got started with Campless, and although they're relatively a huge company now, they grew slowly. It wasn't until Luber was approached by billionaire Dan Gilbert (Chairman, Quicken Loans; Owner, Cleveland Cavs) to buy out Campless and pursue a joint venture that growth started to kick in. Now, StockX is processing over $2M in sales... DAILY. We had the chance to interview Josh and chat about the growth of StockX and how it's creating Impact for Detroit, and more broadly, Michigan.
Internets! This week on The Premium Pete Show, Pete sits down with Josh Luber, CEO/Co-Founder of StockX.com. Josh explains the function of StockX and its rise in popularity among sneaker and streetwear consumers around the world. His early Entrepreneurship days of selling gum in school to creating multiple startups over the years including the worlds only sneaker data site called Campless that grabbed the attention of a Billionaire. When almost ready to give up on all his projects Josh details receiving an email to meet with Cleveland Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert and the negotiations that led to Luber and Gilbert becoming business partners and creating StockX, that today does over 5,000 orders daily. Premium Pete and Josh also discuss attending high school down the block from Kobe Bryant's High School, meeting LeBron James and receiving a 2016 NBA championship ring, & much much more. Be sure to rate, comment, & subscribe! Check In! @PremiumPete @PremiumPeteShow
Today’s guest is Josh Luber, founder of StockX: the stock market of things. At last count, StockX had over 19,000 pairs of pre-owned sneakers for sale. Josh also founded Campless, an online pricing guide for resale sneakers. We found him through his TED Talk where he persuaded a roomful of creatives and techies to think about how Air Jordan could be relevant to their businesses. In short, Josh is a data guy with a passion for sneakers. A few years back, he left his corporate gig at IBM to build a business that blends those two qualities. And it’s paid of big time. He was able to sell Campless and score a partner with big money and clout. In our interview, we explore some of the ins and outs of sneaker culture. If you’re into sneakers, you’ll dig some of the history we get into. There’s one man responsible for the popularity of sneakers more than anyone else. Do you know who that is? If you’re not familiar with sneaker heads, sneaker culture, sneaker collecting, we got your introduction right here. By the end, you’ll know the difference between Ones, Js, Clydes, Yeezeys. You’ll probably have to look up Winos though. We also learn how Josh built his business so quickly, how he was able to connect with a community of rabid fans, how he crowdsources information and ideas. We discuss how he protects customers from buying fakes. (Did you know counterfeit sneakers were even a thing? Josh explains why NDAs are stupid, why the best businesses combine human intelligence with data and algorithms, and how to keep pushing through when you’re working day and night. That’s a lot of knowledge for one hour!
How many pairs of sneakers do you own? Josh Luber of Campless and StockX talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the world of sneakerheads--people passionate for collecting and trading sneakers. Each week people line up to buy classic sneaker models Nike re-releases. Luber has collected millions of transactions from Ebay on these sneakers and others and has analyzed the return to investing in various sneaker models. The conversation includes a discussion of how Nike has helped to create this market and Luber's work creating a stock market for sneakers and other goods.
Josh Luber is a "sneakerhead," a collector of rare or limited sneakers. With their insatiable appetite for exclusive sneakers, these tastemakers drive marketing and create hype for the brands they love, specifically Nike, which absolutely dominates the multi-billion dollar secondary market for sneakers. Luber's company, Campless, collects data about this market and analyzes it for collectors and investors. In this talk, he takes us on a journey into this complicated, unregulated market and imagines how it could be a model for a stock market for commerce.
Josh Luber es un "sneakerhead", un coleccionista de zapatillas raras o limitadas. Con su apetito insaciable de zapatillas exclusivas, estos catadores organizados dirigen el marketing y crean publicidad para las marcas que aman, específicamente Nike, que domina absolutamente el mercado secundario de la multimillonaria venta de zapatillas de deporte. Campless, empresa de Luber, recoge datos de este mercado y los analiza para coleccionistas e inversores. En esta charla, nos lleva en un viaje en este complicado mercado no regulado y se imagina cómo podría ser un modelo de bolsa de valores para este comercio.
Josh Luber é um "sneakerhead," ou seja, um colecionador de tênis raros ou de edição limitada. Com um apetite insaciável por tênis exclusivos, esses formadores de opinião movimentam o mercado e dão publicidade às marcas que adoram, especialmente a Nike, que, sem dúvida, domina o bilionário mercado secundário de tênis. A empresa de Luber, Campless, coleta dados sobre esse mercado e os analisa para colecionadores e investidores. Nesta palestra, ele nos conduz a uma jornada para dentro desse mercado complicado, não regulamentado, e imagina como ele poderia ser um modelo para um mercado de ações para o comércio.
Джош Лубер — сникерхед, коллекционер редких кроссовок или кроссовок ограниченного выпуска. С ненасытным аппетитом к эксклюзивным кроссовкам эти создатели тренда раскручивают и рекламируют любимые бренды, особенно Nike, который абсолютно доминирует на мультимиллиардном вторичном рынке кроссовок. Компания Лубера Campless собирает данные по этому рынку и анализирует их для коллекционеров и инвесторов. В этом выступлении он знакомит нас с этим сложным, нерегулируемом рынком и представляет, как это могло бы послужить моделью биржи продаж.
جوش لوبر، مدمن الأحذية الرياضية، هاوٍ لجمع أندر الأحذية الرياضية، بشهيةٍ لا تشبع للأحذية الرياضية النادرة، يقوم صانعو النكهة بقيادة التسويق و يخلقون ضجةً للعلامات التجارية التي يحبونها، خصوصًا Nike، التي تسيطر بشكلٍ مطلق على السوق الثانوي لعدة بلايين من الدولارات من الأحذية الرياضية، تجمع شركة لوبر المسماة Campless، البيانات و تحللها لمستثمري مجموعات الأحذية الرياضية، في هذا الحديث، يأخذنا لوبر في رحلة إلى هذا السوق المعقد، و الغير منظم، متخيلًا كيف يمكن ان يصبح نموذجًا لسوق الأسهم التجارية.
Josh Luber est un amateurs de baskets, un collectionneur d'éditions rares ou limitées. Avec leur appétit insatiable pour les baskets exclusives, ces adeptes dirigent le marketing et sont à l'origine de battages médiatiques pour les marques qu'ils aiment, en particulier Nike, qui domine largement le marché secondaire des baskets qui représente plusieurs milliards de dollars. L'entreprise de Luber, Campless, collecte des données relatives à ce marché et les analyse pour les collectionneurs et investisseurs. Dans cette conférence, il nous emmène en voyage dans ce marché compliqué et non règlementé et il imagine comment cela pourrait servir de modèle pour une bourse de commerce.