

This article is an excerpt from the Shortform book guide to "Way of the Wolf" by Jordan Belfort. Shortform has the world's best summaries and analyses of books you should be reading.
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Have you watched Martin Scorsese’s film and wondered, “who was the Wolf of Wall Street in real life?” How was Di Caprio’s portrayal in The Wolf of Wall Street different from the Wolf of Wall Street in real life?
The Wolf of Wall Street, in real life, was the inventor of the Straight Line System, Jordan Belfort. Belfort claimed that he could turn anyone into a world-class salesperson very quickly.
Read more to learn about The Wolf of Wall Street in real life.
The Wolf of Wall Street in Real Life
Jordan Belfort is famous mostly for his copious drug use and philandering, as depicted by Leonardo Di Caprio in Martin Scorsese’s The Wolf of Wall Street. But who was the “Wolf of Wall Street” in real life?
Even though selling comes innately to him, Belfort believes, based on his experience, that he can turn anyone, even those not gifted with his talents, into a world-class salesperson very quickly. He created the Straight Line System after Black Monday in the Spring of 1988 and started teaching mostly working-class young men and women to be exceptional closers. He was able to create wealth at such a fast clip that the brokers at the firm didn’t learn any sort of respect or restraint, and at that point, excess in all forms reigned.
Belfort and Stratton Oakmont
Belfort hit on the Straight Line strategy at Stratton Oakmont. After selling penny stocks to the middle class, he realized that he could make a lot of money selling five-dollar stocks to rich people. Belfort entirely changed the strategy of his firm (which at that point had only 12 employees) to focus on selling to the rich.
The first commission that Belfort’s team got from selling these stocks to the rich was by Danny Porush, played by Jonah Hill in The Wolf of Wall Street. In real life, Porush made $72,000 off of it—this was over 100 times more than average for a penny stock trade. This made Belfort sure that they needed to sell only to rich people. But after four weeks the Stratton Oakmont team hadn’t closed a single other trade—they weren’t equipped to sell to rich investors.

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Here's what you'll find in our full Way of the Wolf summary :
- How to sell like Jordan Belfort, the Wolf of Wall Street
- The 4 steps of the Straight Line selling method
- The 3 types of certainty you have to create to make a successful sale