How '4-Hour Workweek' author Tim Ferriss went from a struggling entrepreneur to a bestselling author and podcast host with millions of fans

Tim Ferriss

  • Tim Ferriss struggled with an online business after college and was unsure of what to do with his life.
  • His 2007 book, "The 4-Hour Workweek," was based on his business and travels and became a surprise bestseller.
  • Over the past 10 years, Ferriss has built a brand that has attracted millions of fans from around the world.

 



Just over 10 years ago, Tim Ferriss felt overworked, restless, and unsure of what he wanted to do with his life. Then he took what he learned from his experiences as an entrepreneur and traveler and wrote "The 4-Hour Workweek," a book whose massive success surprised himself most of all.

Ferriss took the momentum of that book and created a brand around being a "human guinea pig," seeking out experts in their fields to learn some of their techniques and incorporate them into his own life before passing them on to his audience. He's now had several bestsellers, including his new book "Tribe of Mentors," and a podcast that's surpassed 200 million downloads.

We recently spoke with Ferriss for Business Insider's podcast, "Success! How I Did It," and he took us through his unlikely journey.

SEE ALSO: The 4-Hour Workweek' author Tim Ferriss reveals what he's learned after a difficult year of introspection, and how he built a passionate fanbase of millions

Ferriss was born in 1977 on Long Island. He said that although his parents didn't have much money, they would always buy books for him, and it's how he developed a love for learning.

Ferriss was small for his age as a child, and he said kids would pick on him because of his size. When he was around eight years old, his mom signed him up for wrestling classes, a sport that laid the foundation for his love of experimenting with workouts and diets that he would develop as a teenager.



As a high school sophomore, Ferriss transferred to the elite New Hampshire boarding school, St. Paul's School, with help from his grandparents and academic scholarships. At age 15, he spent a year as an exchange student in Japan.

Ferriss' trip to Japan was his first time traveling abroad, and he said it was "a huge formative experience in my life."

He considers this part of his life to be an awakening to the realization that there was a huge world beyond where he grew up, and it fostered his passion for exploring other cultures.



St. Paul's led Ferriss to Princeton, where he majored in East Asian studies.



See the rest of the story at Business Insider

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