GoManDo Everyday Moments Podcast
Welcome to episode one of GoManDo, where Mike and Nelson sit down for exactly the kind of loose, roll-with-it conversation the show is built on. Mike kicks things off already flustered, wrong hat, wrong shirt, and a morning ATM run that went sideways when the machine flashed "out of service." No cash for Nelson, who cuts hair as his nine to five and does the podcast on the side, so Mike raids his mom's drawer for a hundred bucks with a promise to pay it back later. From there the guys get into the business side of the show: Facebook boosts that no longer let you set your own budget or timeline, a lingering Google ad running for a project Mike already walked away from, and a plan to loop in the folks who host and edit the podcast to figure out how to actually grow.The heart of the episode is a slow-burn scam story from Mike's day job at a pallet plant in Indiana. A supposed Wisconsin food company wanted 5,000 reconditioned pallets, then morphed into a $90,000 purchase order shipping not to Wisconsin but to an address in the Bronx, the exact same address Josh's cousin down in Kentucky got hit with too. Add in a co-conspirator whose emails read like pure ChatGPT, and Mike's spidey sense was tingling from the jump. The takeaway both guys land on: AI-powered scams aren't coming, they're already here.The back half loosens into everyday life. Mike weighs selling his canceled Sirius XM boom box and receiver on Facebook Marketplace, reviews the book "Wave Walker" and the ninth Nick Petrie novel (with a plea for authors to keep their plots local), and orders a lightweight Drive wheelchair for his 94-year-old mom, only to spot "Made in China" on the box after assembly. Then it's gardens: Nelson's cucumber tendrils finding a buddy, and Mike's dill plants getting devoured down to nothing by fat green-and-black caterpillars that turn into butterflies. Plus fresh grass seed, busted 1960s water valves, and the ongoing headache of syncing his mom's CVS prescriptions.Key Takeaways● AI-driven scams are already mainstream, and a "too formal," ChatGPT-sounding email is a red flag worth trusting.● A suspicious purchase order that suddenly changes the ship-to address (here, to the Bronx) is a classic tell, especially when the same address hits multiple businesses.● Facebook's boost tool now runs indefinitely until you manually stop it, so watch your ad spend closely.● For reselling gear, check eBay for real market prices and keep Marketplace deals local to dodge shipping scams.● Finding American-made products is genuinely hard, even a Drive-brand wheelchair can turn out to be made in China.● Sometimes a smaller, more local story (in books and in life) is more satisfying than one sprawling all over the map.Timestamps00:00 - Wrong hat, a dead ATM, and paying Nelson in cash01:56 - Plant tour, stray ads, and the podcast growth plan04:02 - Facebook boosts that never turn off and looping in the team05:25 - Canceled Sirius XM: should Mike sell the boom box?06:54 - The $90,000 pallet scam and the Bronx address10:31 - "Wave Walker," Nick Petrie, and keeping plots local14:47 - A wheelchair for mom and the "Made in China" surprise17:56 - Gardens, cucumber tendrils, and the caterpillar massacre20:32 - Grass seed, old water valves, and CVS refill headachesConnect● Website: https://www.gomando.com● Hosts: Mike and Nelson#GoManDo #PodcastLife #TravelPrep #LifeUpdates #EntrepreneurLife #AIScams #SmallBusiness #GardenLife #Books #EverydayLife
41 episoder
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