GUY·NEEDS·GIFT

Best Gifts for Entrepreneur Brothers

Updated July 8, 202612 picks7 min read

You know the brother. The laptop's open at breakfast and still open at midnight. He's got a spreadsheet for his morning routine and at least three ventures at various stages of "about to take off." Shopping for him is tricky because he already bought himself the obvious stuff — and returned half of it after reading the reviews.

The trick isn't finding productivity gear; it's finding the pieces he wouldn't justify buying for himself. The desk upgrade that's a little too nice. The mic that turns "I should start a podcast" into a Saturday project. The kettle that makes his coffee ritual measurably better and marginally more insufferable. Gifts that back the hustle without being another growth-hack gimmick he'll abandon by February.

Below, a spread across price points and the corners of his operation: the desk he runs everything from, the gear that protects his focus, the tools behind the side hustles themselves, and the books he'll finally finish because they're audio. Buy for the guy, not the LinkedIn post.

The Desk He Runs Everything From

The command center where the ten-hour days happen — worth upgrading.

Top pick

E7 Electric Standing Desk

He treats his desk like a cockpit and spends ten-plus hours there — give him one that moves.

The morning routine he keeps pitching you probably ends at a desk he's outgrown. A FlexiSpot electric sit-stand desk lets him switch between sitting for calls and standing for the 3 p.m. slump without breaking his flow, and the memory presets mean he sets his heights once and never fiddles again. Get the bamboo top if you want it to look less like an office-supply catalog and more like something he chose. Skip this if he's on a tiny apartment desk with no floor space — measure before you commit, because these are genuinely large.

$250–$600

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ScreenBar Monitor Light

The laptop's always open past midnight; his eyes are the thing giving out, not his ambition.

A BenQ ScreenBar clamps to the top of his monitor and lights the desk without throwing glare onto the screen — no lamp real estate, no shadows across the keyboard. It auto-dims to match the room, which matters for someone still answering Slack at 1 a.m. The kind of upgrade he'd never buy himself but notices every single night.

$70–$110

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mStand Laptop Stand

His neck pays for the always-open laptop; raise the screen to eye level.

A single block of aluminum that lifts his laptop to monitor height and kills the permanent downward hunch. It matches the MacBook he probably runs everything on, and the gap underneath swallows a keyboard when he's docked. Small gift, daily payoff.

$40–$50

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Focus Is the Whole Game

Gear that protects deep work and feeds the ritual-optimizing side of him.

Top pick

WH-1000XM5 Noise Cancelling Headphones

He context-switches between calls, podcasts, and deep work all day — noise cancelling is his off switch.

The XM5s make a loud café or a thin-walled apartment disappear. He'll wear them for a focus block, flip to transparency mode for a coffee order without taking them off, then take a call an hour later. The noise cancelling is genuinely class-leading and the multipoint pairing handles his laptop-and-phone juggling. Skip this if he's rough on his gear — the earcups are matte plastic and less tank-like than the older Bose.

$330–$400

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Core Reusable Smart Notebook

He fills notebooks with launch ideas, then loses the notebook — this one syncs and wipes.

He scribbles the side-hustle idea on whatever's nearest and never sees it again. The Rocketbook Core lets him write by hand, snap the page straight to Google Drive or Notion, then wipe it clean with a damp cloth and start over. It scratches the analog-thinking itch without generating a drawer of half-used notebooks.

$25–$40

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Stagg EKG Electric Gooseneck Kettle

The morning routine he'll pitch you has a coffee step; this is the gear-nerd version of it.

A variable-temperature electric kettle with a gooseneck spout, built for someone who takes his pour-over seriously enough to care about water at 205°F. It holds temperature, looks sharp enough to live on the counter, and hands him one more optimizable ritual to obsess over. Purely a want, not a need — which is exactly what makes it a good gift.

$150–$170

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The Side-Hustle Toolkit

Hardware for the ventures themselves, not just the vibe of them.

Top pick

MV7 USB/XLR Podcast Microphone

One of those three side hustles is definitely a podcast; give it a voice that sounds intentional.

The MV7 is the mic you've heard on more podcasts than you realize. It runs over USB for the starter setup and XLR when he graduates to an interface, so it grows with the hustle instead of getting replaced. The close-mic design forgives an untreated spare-bedroom studio. If he's ever muttered about "starting the pod," this removes his last excuse.

$230–$280

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Stream Deck MK.2

He runs six apps and a content workflow; give him physical buttons for the repetitive parts.

Fifteen programmable LCD keys that trigger scenes, mute mics, fire off canned replies, or launch his whole work setup with one press. It started as a streaming tool and quietly became a power-user's macro pad — catnip for a guy who optimizes his morning routine. Skip this if he's not the tinkering type; it rewards setup effort and punishes the impatient.

$130–$150

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737 Power Bank (PowerCore 24K)

He works from cafés, coworking spaces, and the passenger seat — dead batteries are the enemy.

A 24,000mAh brick that pushes 140W, enough to fast-charge the laptop itself, not just the phone. The little display showing exact wattage and remaining charge is the kind of readout a metrics guy appreciates. It's heavy — a "day of meetings" bank, not an everyday carry — but it means he's never tethered to an outlet when the good idea hits.

$110–$150

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Books He'll Actually Finish

Because the ones that get finished are the ones he can listen to.

Top pick

Audible Gift Membership

He 'reads' at 1.5x on the commute and the treadmill — audio is how books actually get finished.

The books-he'll-actually-finish problem solves itself when the book is audio. A gift membership drops credits in his account for the business and biography titles he keeps adding to a list and never opening. It fits the gym, the drive, and the dog walk — all the slots where he's already only half-present. Get the multi-month gift; a single credit feels like a stocking stuffer.

$30–$60

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The Almanack of Naval Ravikant

It's the wealth-and-happiness book every founder quotes; he'll want the copy he can annotate.

A compact, endlessly quotable collection of Naval's thinking on building wealth and keeping your head straight while you do it. It's short and squarely in his wheelhouse without being another 300-page airport paperback. The hardcover is the dog-ear-and-annotate kind.

$15–$20

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$100M Offers

He's obsessed with the mechanics of actually selling the thing — this is the tactical bible for it.

Hormozi's playbook on building offers people feel stupid saying no to: pricing, guarantees, bonuses, the unglamorous machinery of a business that makes money. It's blunt and practical, aimed at the operator rather than the dreamer. If his side hustles are long on ideas and short on revenue, this is the useful gift.

$15–$25

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Heads up: we may earn a commission if you buy through our links — it never changes what we recommend or what you pay.

KEEP BROWSING

More for this guy: all The Hustler Brother guides →