
BIO: David Siegel is a Silicon Valley entrepreneur who has founded more than a dozen companies. He has written five books on technology and business, was once a candidate for the dean of Stanford Business School, and is now an AI thought leader leading an AI startup he hopes will pave the way for the agentic economy.
STORY: David invested heavily in launching a longevity coaching business, believing people would pay to extend their lives through lifestyle change. Despite strong science, personal results, and significant marketing spend, demand proved nearly nonexistent.
LEARNING: A great idea without real demand is still a bad investment.
“There will be many new problems, and whenever there are new problems, there’s a new economic opportunity for many people.”David Siegel
Guest profile
David Siegel is a Silicon Valley entrepreneur who has founded more than a dozen companies. He has written five books on technology and business, was once a candidate for the dean of Stanford Business School, and is now an AI thought leader leading an AI startup he hopes will pave the way for the agentic economy.
Worst investment ever
After years of building companies and studying major technological shifts, David found himself pulled deeply into the longevity movement. This wasn’t casual curiosity. He read more than 20 books, radically transformed his lifestyle, and developed a deep understanding of insulin resistance, nutrition, exercise, and long-term health.
The results were personal and visible. David was fit, disciplined, and energized. The idea that science could help people live 10 to 15 years longer, with a higher quality of life, felt not only possible but urgent. Helping others do the same seemed like a natural next chapter.
Turning passion into a business
Confident in both the science and his own experience, David decided to turn longevity coaching into a scalable business. His target audience was people in their 50s and 60s, individuals who were pre-diabetic or heading toward serious health issues and stood to benefit the most from early intervention.
He approached the venture like a seasoned entrepreneur. He built funnels, ran Facebook ads, spoke at retirement communities, and spent months on discovery calls explaining how lifestyle changes could dramatically reduce the risk of cancer, Alzheimer’s, and diabetes.
This wasn’t guesswork; it was disciplined execution.
The painful reality check
Then reality set in.
Despite spending over $100,000 on advertising and investing countless hours in conversations, demand was almost nonexistent. People listened. They nodded. They agreed the logic made sense. Then they walked away.
Many believed the healthcare system would save them. Others hoped for a pill instead of discipline. Even those clearly facing insulin resistance weren’t willing to make sustained lifestyle changes.
The most sobering realization wasn’t about marketing or pricing. It was this: most people don’t actually want to live longer if it requires consistent effort.
Accepting the loss
In the end, only about one percent of the people David spoke to were already doing the work and didn’t need coaching. Everyone else opted out, fully aware of the consequences.
The investment failed not because the science was wrong, but because the market wasn’t there. David ultimately gave the information away for free and walked away from the business, having learned an expensive but clarifying lesson about belief versus demand.
Lessons learned
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