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The James Altucher Show

Michael Dell vs. Wall Street: Dorm Room to Billion-Dollar Battles

The James Altucher Show

James Altucher

Society & Culture, Talk Radio, Writer, Philosophy, Comedy, Chess, How To, Entrepreneurship, Jay, James, The James Altucher Show, Altucher, Author, Jay Yow, Education, Jay The Engineer, Business, James Altucher

4.6 • 2.7K Ratings

🗓️ 12 June 2025

⏱️ 55 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

A Note from James:

Michael Dell. Founder of Dell. I remember in college, hearing about this kid who was building computers in his dorm and making millions. I thought it was a myth. It wasn’t. He’s the real thing—and he just kept going.

I wanted to understand what drove him, what it felt like to deal with Carl Icahn trying to wrestle his company from him, and what success feels like after decades of being in the game. Also: I had to ask why Dell didn’t invent Google. That, plus how he’s now thinking about AI, cancer, and what “focus” really means.


Episode Description:

James Altucher sits down with Michael Dell, founder and CEO of Dell Technologies, to trace the entire arc of Dell's career—from building computers in a college dorm room to defending his company against Carl Icahn and taking it private. In this candid conversation, Dell shares how early obsession with tech and business turned into a multibillion-dollar global enterprise, the lessons he’s learned about leadership, and how he’s positioning for the future with AI, cybersecurity, and gene tech on the horizon.

This is more than a business story. It’s about risk, conviction, reinvention—and knowing when to walk away from Steve Jobs.


What You’ll Learn:

  • How Dell’s dorm-room business scaled to $80,000/month before he even left college
  • What Michael Dell really thought during his showdown with Carl Icahn
  • Why most big companies fail to innovate—and how to keep a startup mindset
  • How Dell Technologies is preparing for the explosion in AI and edge computing
  • What makes a good leader at the head of a $100 billion company


Timestamped Chapters:

  • [00:00] James introduces Michael Dell and the origin story of Dell Computers
  • [01:00] The economics of building PCs in the early 1980s
  • [03:00] Winning state bids with a bike and a dorm room
  • [05:00] Pressure to become a doctor—and the 10-day “intervention”
  • [10:00] Meeting Steve Jobs and licensing DOS from Bill Gates
  • [13:00] Dell’s early B2B focus and international expansion
  • [15:00] Going public and the Icahn showdown
  • [18:00] How activist investors play poker with billion-dollar stakes
  • [21:00] What focus really means in business
  • [24:00] Defining leadership at global scale
  • [26:00] Encouraging innovation inside massive companies
  • [28:00] The failed Mac OS licensing deal
  • [30:00] Philanthropy, education, and urban poverty
  • [33:00] COVID lockdowns and a $100M response
  • [35:00] The future of work and city migration
  • [39:00] AI, edge computing, and exponential data
  • [42:00] Gene editing, mRNA vaccines, and solving cancer
  • [45:00] Blockchain in enterprise (no bitcoin on Dell’s balance sheet—yet)
  • [47:00] Why cybersecurity is an arms race\


Additional Resources:


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Transcript

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0:00.0

This isn't your average business podcast, and he's not your average host.

0:06.7

This is the James Altager Show.

0:12.4

Today on the James Altager show.

0:15.7

You're literally the college student entrepreneurs dream come true. Build shit in your dorm room and make a billion

0:24.7

dollars doing it. I've been doing that since I was a little kid. You can't understand things unless

0:29.6

you take them apart. Giving up the opportunity for a high quality education was like the most

0:37.0

disastrous decision any person could make.

0:39.3

That I decided that, you know, this wasn't just a fun little thing I was doing on the side to earn a couple of extra bucks.

0:47.7

It was actually pulling me in in a much bigger way.

0:51.6

It was what I was passionate about, what I was excited about.

0:54.5

I saw this great opportunity.

0:56.1

We got a glimpse of the future,

0:58.6

and we're not going to go back to the way it was.

1:01.9

Everything in the physical world is becoming intelligent. Michael Dell, author of Play Nice But Win, a CEO's journey from founder to leader.

1:21.7

And also you may have heard of a small little company he named after himself because he's got a huge ego.

1:27.2

It's called Dell Computer.

1:28.8

Michael, how are you doing? I'm doing great, James. Great to be with you. Michael, this book is like not only

1:35.0

a book about entrepreneurship, but I feel like it's a how-to on deal-making. You went through so much

1:40.0

with all sorts of hedge fund, activist battles with Dell through the years. But I really want to start with the beginning and then go to the end also because I'm curious

1:49.4

about some things.

1:50.4

I'm always fascinated by your iconic story of how you started.

1:54.0

You're literally the college student entrepreneurs dream come true.

...

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