He Sold For $8M and Regrets It, And The Reason Why Is Shocking.
Moneywise
Hampton
4.7 β’ 701 Ratings
ποΈ 2 June 2026
β±οΈ 57 minutes
ποΈ Recording | iTunes | RSS
π§ΎοΈ Download transcript
Summary
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EPISODE DETAILS:
Thibault β known online as Tibo β is a French indie hacker who spent six years failing at startups before building Tweet Hunter during Covid lockdown and selling it for $10 million. Except the real number was more complicated than that: $2 million up front, $8 million in earn-out, and 18 months of some of the most stressful building of his life to get there. He walked away with just under $3 million post taxes β and says he regrets the sale entirely.
Today, Tibo is doing over $1 million a month in revenue across a portfolio of five software products he's built since that exit. His personal spend is negligible. He has no financial advisor, keeps roughly 50% of his net worth in cash, and puts almost everything investable into index funds.
This episode gets into the full deal structure, the psychological cost of the earn-out period, what he calls the "frozen state" that hits founders after a big exit, and why he says he will never sell a company again.
Timestamps:
- 02:12 β Full guest intro: who Thibault is, the Tweet Hunter story, deal structure breakdown, and episode roadmap
- 08:08 β The $10M deal unpacked: earn-out structure, revenue milestones, and what he actually collected
- 10:17 β The co-founder split, the 25% influencer equity deal, and whether he'd do it again
- 14:09 β How the influencer partnership worked and why they replicated it on Tapio
- 26:17 β "Getting a ton of money up front feels unhealthy" β Thibault on why lump-sum exits are psychologically dangerous
- 28:14 β The "frozen state": why founders can't ship after a big exit
- 30:42 β The earn-out burnout period: stress, loss aversion, and the 18 hardest months of his life
- 34:37 β "It was a bad decision financially" β Thibault's verdict on the sale
- 38:15 β Nomadic life, the Vietnam hacker residency, and how wealth changes how he travels
- 42:42 β No financial advisor, no trust in wealth managers β why everything goes into S&P 500
- 45:29 β Personal spend breakdown: ~$8K/month β rent, food, tech gadgets, and that's basically it
- 48:27 β What happens to the ~$90K/month delta: cash, S&P 500, and acquiring more products
- 49:45 β The portfolio strategy: five products, two unannounced, and the 2026 scaling challenge
- 51:12 β Building a distribution bridge between all his products with an AI agent
- 53:06 β Raising kids with money: unconditional safety as the foundation for risk-taking
Transcript
Click on a timestamp to play from that location
| 0:00.0 | We would go from 1.5 million per year to 8 million in just 18 months, but it happened. |
| 0:05.7 | Cibo spent six years failing at startups. |
| 0:08.8 | Then during COVID lockdown, he started building software products by himself. |
| 0:12.8 | One of them was Tweet Hunter. It took off fast, and within a year and a half he and his co-founder |
| 0:17.5 | had scaled it. They eventually sold it to a company called Lemlist for a |
| 0:21.1 | headline price of $10 million. |
| 0:23.4 | It was a addition to financially because we ended up getting $8 million for an $8 million |
| 0:29.3 | annual revenue products. |
| 0:30.6 | Tebow's story is one of the more unusual ones we've had on the show because the exit didn't |
| 0:35.2 | really end the story. It just complicated it. It puts you in this |
| 0:39.4 | mindset where if you do not work enough, if you do not achieve your goals, you're going to lose |
| 0:45.2 | something and you're going to be like a loser. Now he's building a product portfolio that's |
| 0:49.8 | generating more revenue than the exit itself. Yeah, I basically do not want to fall into a frozen state where I would be afraid about |
| 0:59.3 | shipping anything new. |
| 1:01.2 | We get into exactly what that looks like, what he does day to day, how he's spending his |
| 1:06.1 | money, how he thinks about deploying the money he's generating, personal spending habits, |
| 1:11.4 | a lot more liquid, in fact, than what a lot of people would think is worth doing. |
| 1:15.1 | My MoneyWise guest today is Tebow. |
| 1:17.5 | He's a French indie hacker and software entrepreneur, and he's one of the more unique |
| 1:21.0 | financial stories we've had on MoneyWise. |
| 1:23.4 | Tebow spent six years failing at startups. |
| 1:26.5 | Then, during COVID lockdown, he started building software products by himself. |
... |
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