Canvas & Ratio
Choose your destination platform format
Layout Template
Choose a content structure for your slides
Preset Themes
Typography & Sizing
Brand Kit Customization
AGENCYConfigure brand assets for headers & footers
Outro Slide CTA
Customize your closing call-to-action slide
Background Pattern
Build Your Carousel
Drag and drop any post card below onto a slide, or use the quick buttons to insert content/images instantly!

Look at this guy. Age 22. $15K in debt. Depressed. Now, he makes $8.7M a year while traveling the world and living his “dream life”. Here’s exactly how he did it (my story):


Picture this: I'm 18, kicked out of my house, and sharing a shitty apartment with a suicidal friend. To top it off, I had $0 to my name and $15K in debt. Safe to say that my life was a spiraling mess of debt and hopelessness.


I remember coming home from a long day, and our vacuum cleaner exploded. Dust everywhere. That’s when my friend and I both snapped. I stormed out. He thought about killing himself (and quite frankly, so did I). That was my rock bottom.

By some miracle, I managed to get into Ivey Business School in Canada. I dreamed of going there. To learn business. To be an entrepreneur. And I got in. But it wasn’t what I expected…


Business school was the opposite of entrepreneurship. It was a factory churning out corporate clones, not the entrepreneurial land of opportunity I dreamed of. The result? I ended up at Kraft Foods. A textbook definition of a “'shitty job.” Great.

Before I gave in to the 9-5 grind, I asked for a 4-month delay to go traveling. I took a $30,000 line of credit. Booked a ticket to Asia. And off I went. F*ck it, you only live once.

That experience gave me a taste of freedom. I could finally do what I wanted, when I wanted, with who I wanted. Not long after, I was back in Toronto working a dreary job. It hit me hard. But I had tasted the freedom. And luckily, after 2 weeks of Kraft Foods, I had a plan.


I quickly realized that no one knew what I was doing. So I cut my work hours from 40 hours per week to just 2 hours on a Tuesday. And I spent every extra minute learning to code. I listened to Tony Robbins and brainstormed biz ideas. I couldn't let the Matrix control me.

Then came Bitmaker: an idea my friends and I came up with in my Toronto apartment. We were going to build a coding school to get people jobs at big tech companies. But we had nothing. No curriculum. No teacher. No clue what the f*ck we were doing.


A few people we talked to were interested in it. And that was all the proof I needed to take massive action. I stayed up for 2 nights straight, emailing people to join the program and companies to be our hiring partners. We hustled hard and sold 30 spots at $5K each.

Bitmaker didn't just succeed. It exploded. We hit $200K a month in revenue, placing 90% of our students in top tech firms. Business was booming… Until the government raided us 7 months after we started the business.

Bitmaker faced a crisis. Government agents stormed in after reading a positive article about me online. They accused us of running an unregistered private career college. And they threatened us with jail time and a colossal $1M fine.


I was desperate. I stayed up all night and emailed over 3,000 people for help. Chamath. Paul Graham. And other influential people who could amplify our story.

The media picked it up and the story went viral. Within 1 week, the government backed down and Bitmaker was granted an exemption. Phew.

Fast forward two years, Bitmaker was unstoppable. We trained over 2,000 software engineers. And then, the big moment: General Assembly acquired us for 8-figures. Life-changing money, but not life-changing happiness.

Post-acquisition, I was lost in a sea of wealth but drowning in depression and burnout. I was breaking inside. The final year at Bitmaker was by far my toughest.

I needed a new mission. Something to reignite my passion. So I emailed over 5,000 people searching for leads, advice, and opportunities. I focused on action and creating momentum. I was certain that one email or one meeting could change everything. I spoke to 240 people…


And that’s when I met Tucker Max. I reached out with a genuine, personal message. He saw my potential and asked, "What excites you?" I was honest: I wanted to build, to grow, to innovate. This led me to the Stoners Cookbook.
