Why we built Vetta Camp
Most twenty somethings building something today have a phone full of mentors and zero compass.
They've watched every Hormozi video. They've read every Brunson book. They've taken three courses, started a Shopify store, dabbled in crypto, and still don't know what to actually do on Monday morning. The noise is winning. Their motivation is leaking. Their twenties are running out.
We've seen it up close because we lived it.
Dr. B spent 30 years building. He survived a four day paralysis on a football field at the start of his life as a man. He survived a $30 million real estate development lawsuit at the peak of his career. He survived a health collapse that nearly took him out of the game. Two high seven figure exits later, what he knows is not what's on most consultants' resumes. It's what nobody talks about because nobody else lived it.
Braxton grew up watching it all. He went on to ring the Wall Street bell at 23, run one of the largest Facebook ad accounts in history, and train under the biggest names in the game since he was 14. He also went through his own recovery and rebuilt his life from the inside out.
Two climbs. Same mountain. Same lessons learned the hard way.
Vetta Camp exists because nobody told either of us the things we wish someone had. We're saying them now, to the next generation, before they spend their twenties learning the slow and expensive way.
You don't need more tactics. You need to find your signal. Then you start the climb.
