Entrepreneurship

Mark Cuban Took a Trip to Celebrate Selling His Company for $5.7 Billion – and Ended Up in Coach in a Middle Seat 

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Selling a company for billions of dollars didn't immediately upgrade Mark Cuban's life. In fact, the longtime entrepreneur, investor and "Shark Tank" star found himself in the middle seat of an airplane while going to Las Vegas to celebrate his windfall.

"When I sold my company for billions of dollars, to go and celebrate, I was on a Southwest flight," Cuban told ABC News earlier this year. "I was in the center seat facing the wrong way on the plane thinking, 'This is just perfect.'"

In 1999, Cuban and his Broadcast.com co-founders sold their company to Yahoo for $5.7 billion in stock. Instead of letting it go to his head, Cuban said, a simple concept kept him grounded.

"The wisest advice I ever got was 'live like a student,'" Cuban said. "That served me a long, long time."

That meant continuing to live a low-key lifestyle, which "took away a lot" of risk and uncertainty in his financial life. In an email to CNBC Make It, Cuban confirmed that he "didn't change much after selling my first company" — keeping the same car, house and even furniture.

But Cuban did splurge on one luxury item, which meant his days of sitting in the middle seat didn't last long: In 1999, he famously went online to buy a private jet for $40 million. His purchase of a Gulfstream V business jet still holds the title for the largest-ever single e-commerce transaction in the Guinness Book of World Records.

Buying a private jet "was my all-time goal," Cuban told Money in 2017. "Because the asset I value the most is time, and that bought me time."

Notably, Cuban has also celebrated his financial milestones in ways that didn't always require large amounts of spending. According to comments he made at OZY Fest in New York City in 2017, he celebrated first becoming a billionaire — in 1998, when Broadcast.com went public — by dancing in the nude.

At the time, he was sitting at a computer, repeatedly refreshing a webpage to check Broadcast.com's stock price. "Obviously I knew exactly what the number was to become a billionaire," he said. ″[The price] gets up there, and then I did my little naked billionaire dance."

Today, Cuban is the world's 247th-richest person with a net worth of $4.5 billion, according to Forbes.

Disclosure: CNBC owns the exclusive off-network cable rights to "Shark Tank."

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