Most people become customers first and investors second. NBA Hall of Famer Shaquille O'Neal just does it faster than everyone else.
Shaq owns several homes in Atlanta, and when a security company quoted him $80,000 for a new system, he did what any sensible person would do. He said no. Even multimillionaires have limits, apparently. Instead of writing a check, he drove to Best Buy, picked up a Ring camera, and installed it himself. "The crazy thing about it is I hooked it up myself," he told the "Earn Your Leisure" podcast in 2021.
The Lightbulb Moment in China
Shortly after, Shaq was in China when he realized he could use the Ring app to talk to someone standing at his front door back in Atlanta. That's when it clicked. "I was like, damn, my people don't know about this," he recalled.
He tracked down the Ring booth at a tech conference and made his pitch: "I said, 'Hey, my name is Shaquille O'Neal. I want to invest in your company, and you're going to pay me to do commercials, and then whatever happens happens.'"
The CEO agreed. A few years later, Jeff Bezos and Amazon bought Ring for $1 billion. Shaq didn't disclose his exact return, but he confirmed he got in early enough to make it count.
Investing in Things People Actually Use
For Shaq, the Ring investment wasn't purely about chasing returns. It aligned with his broader philosophy of backing products that serve everyday people. "It's affordable security that really works," he said on the podcast, emphasizing that he likes to invest in things regular folks can actually afford.
This wasn't his first home run. Back in 1999, his agent connected him with legendary venture capitalist Ron Conway. Over lunch at the Four Seasons, Conway pitched Shaq on a little search engine called Google. "We had a meeting with them and it looked good, and I put some money in and forgot about it," Shaq said. That $250,000 bet turned into a massive payday.
Shaq's early investment portfolio reads like a who's who of consumer tech winners. He backed Lyft (LYFT) just a year after the rideshare company was founded. When it went public in 2019, Lyft carried a $22 billion valuation. He also invested in Vitaminwater before Coca-Cola acquired it.
The pattern is pretty clear. Shaq finds a product he uses, decides other people will probably want it too, and writes a check before everyone else figures it out. It's not complicated, but it works.