The Collective Genius Podcast
Dr. Tyson Cobb is a former orthopedic surgeon who left his practice group in 2019, moved into triple net commercial real estate, and became one of the most respected capital raisers in the Legacy Family Mastermind, now part of the Collective Genius commercial room. Before medical school he rode bulls professionally in Texas, and as a resident he published more papers than anyone who ever came through the Mayo Clinic program. Recorded live at the CG Q2 event in Oceanside, Tyson walks through the exact moment his career pivoted from acquisitions to capital raising, why decades of academic publishing and teaching turned out to be the real superpower, and the terms of a deal he tracked for eight months that converts old hospitals into inpatient facilities for foster children rescued from trafficking. If you are trying to raise capital and wondering where your first investors actually come from, start here. Timeline Summary [0:22] – Leon Barnes opens from the CG Q2 event in Oceanside and introduces the new CG Legacy commercial room [1:31] – Dr. Tyson Cobb on leaving his orthopedic surgery group in 2019 and moving into commercial real estate [2:16] – Why triple net was the easy on ramp and how tax mitigation pulled him toward real estate in the first place [2:44] – The CPA who told him not to complain about writing big checks, and why he eventually fired the guy [3:08] – Life as a frustrated entrepreneur under the glass ceiling of surgery, where the day has a hard ceiling on it [4:30] – What he needed most walking into the mastermind, and why he no longer has to solve every problem himself [5:46] – The professional bull riding career that came before medical school and why big deals scratch the same itch [7:22] – How a 118 unit building a mile from his house led to the question that changed his career [8:52] – Gabe asks if he can raise capital, so he calls his closest friends, all orthopedic surgeons, and it is done in a week [9:29] – The line from a mastermind stage that made him push all his acquisitions work off the desk [10:28] – Why publishing at Mayo, holding patents, and teaching surgeons for decades built the capital raising superpower [11:13] – Knowing people matters less than people knowing you, and why raising from surgeons was never a hard sell [13:07] – The deal he followed for eight months, converting old hospitals and schools into inpatient care for foster kids [14:00] – The terms, 18% paid like debt, backed by real estate they already own, liquid after a six month lockup [15:12] – The Steve Nash KPI and why intentional connection is the metric CG actually tracks [16:26] – The one connection Tyson needs before he leaves the event, capital that is ready to deploy 5 Key Takeaways 1. You Only Have to Be Good at One Thing — Tyson was grinding out acquisition offers into a market where nothing would pencil. A speaker told him that multifamily has a hundred moving parts but you only need to be excellent at one of them, and he went home, cleared the acquisitions work off his desk, and went all in on the capital raise. 2. Your First Investors Already Know You — When asked whether he could raise capital, Tyson had never considered it. He called his closest friends, who happened to be orthopedic surgeons with money looking for a home, and the round was closed by the end of the week. 3. Reputation Compounds Before You Need It — Decades of publishing, patents, teaching surgical procedures around the country, and leading an international organization kept Tyson in front of the same people year after year. None of it was built for real estate, and all of it became the foundation of his raise. 4. You Do Not Need the Answer, You Need the Number — The value of the room is not that Tyson can solve every problem himself. It is that for any problem he hits, he knows exactly who to call, and if that person does not know, they know who does. 5. Track Intentional Connections Like a KPI — Steve Nash reportedly tracked how often he encouraged his teammates because he wanted to lead the league in it. Leon applies the same idea to the mastermind, scanning the room and physically walking people to the person who can help them, and it is why the culture works. Links & Resources • Collective Genius — https://explorecg.com [https://explorecg.com] Enjoyed This Episode? If you have been sitting on a capital raise and telling yourself you do not have a list, listen to Tyson again at the nine minute mark. His list was a handful of friends from his old profession, and he closed it in a week. Send this one to the operator you know who is stuck on acquisitions and does not realize where their real superpower is, then follow the Collective Genius Podcast, leave a rating and review, and hit the bell so you catch the next one.
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