BigDeal - #57 This Is Why You’re Still Broke (And How to Fix It) | Dave Ramsey
Episode Date: April 2, 2025🚀 Main Street Over Wall Street is where the real deals get done. Join top investors, founders, and operators for three days of powerful connection, sharp strategy, and big opportunities — live in... Austin, Nov 2–4. https://contrarianthinking.biz/msows-bigdeal In this episode, Codie has the one and only Dave Ramsey. Dave shares his personal journey from financial success to bankruptcy, emphasizing the emotional toll and the lessons learned from his struggle.He discusses the nature of money as a tool rather than a moral compass, addressing misconceptions about wealth and its relationship to evil. Codie and Dave dive into the importance of leadership in organizational growth, innovative methods for screening candidates, and the significance of fostering a positive company culture. Want help scaling your business to $1M in monthly revenue? Click here to connect with my consulting team. Chapters 00:00- From Success to Bankruptcy: A Personal Journey 02:58- The Emotional Toll of Financial Struggles 05:47- Lessons Learned: The Value of Experience 09:08- Money: A Tool, Not a Moral Compass 12:01- The Misconception of Wealth and Evil 15:02- Leadership and Organizational Growth 18:04- Building a Team vs. Hiring Employees 21:03- The Importance of Company Culture 23:53- Gossip and Its Impact on Workplace Dynamics 26:58- Hiring Practices: Trusting Your Instincts 32:52- Innovative Hiring Practices 35:44- The Importance of Integrity in Leadership 39:15- Understanding Entrepreneurial Stages 50:01- The Challenge of Succession Planning 53:00- The Heart of Entrepreneurship: Serving Others 58:15- Navigating the Pain Cave of Business MORE FROM BIGDEAL: 🎥 YouTube 📸 Instagram 📽️ TikTok MORE FROM CODIE SANCHEZ: 🎥 YouTube 📸 Instagram 📽️ TikTok OTHER THINGS WE DO: 🫂 Our community 📰 Free newsletter 🏦 Biz buying course 🏠 Resibrands 💰 CT Capital 🏙️ Main St Hold Co Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
One year I made $250,000, the next year I made $6,000.
We got sued 78 times.
Going way back when you were $26, making a couple hundred thousand dollars a year,
flashed for a year bankrupt.
I got my degree in real estate, and I sold my first house three weeks after I turn 18 years old.
But I was good at it.
I hustled.
Started from nothing.
We ended up with about a little over a million dollar net worth making a couple hundred a year.
But I'd borrow too much money, and I had a lot of short-term notes.
The bank got sold to another bank, and a guy in another city looked down, so there's a kid,
24 years old owes us a million dollars this is crazy and they said let's limit this relationship
which is banker talk for ruin his life and that started a snowball that took two and a half
years to unfold and we were bankrupt at the end of it with a brand new baby a toddler and marriage
hanging on by a thread hello i'm cody sancho's welcome back to the big deal podcast today you are in for a
treat if you are sitting alone in your business right now wondering how do i take it to the next step if you're
financially or unsure how to break through the level that you're currently at. There is literally
one guy who for more than 30 years is helping people change their complete financial future.
He's arguably the best in the world to out it. And he does it in a way where he's going to slap you
in the face a little bit and then also make you feel better about it. Maybe even give you a little
Nashville cookie in the end. I think you guys know who I'm talking about. I'm talking to the legend
Dave Ramsey today. And we've broken down stuff that I've actually never heard him talk
about before, like how to grow a business in a way that is repeatable every single time,
and like what to do if you are sitting in the dark, head in the hands, unsure of what to do next.
So without further ado, let's get to the man himself, Dave Ramsey.
Okay, first of all, the book's amazing.
Thank you for writing it.
Well, thank you.
And I have all these notes, and I started writing notes for the podcast, and then what
quickly happened is it became notes for my employees and myself about all the things I need
to do in my business, which was kind of funny.
Wow, that's good.
That means it worked.
It did work.
It worked too well.
So now I have homework in tandem with this podcast.
But what I really liked about it is I don't think a lot of people realize how big your business is.
I mean, we're sitting on your campus, which is, I believe, $400 million and you didn't use debt to buy it.
Is that right?
Right.
We built it.
Yeah.
It was the first, yeah, it's probably worth about $600 million right now.
But somewhere in that range.
But yeah, we built it all.
And we bought the first 42 acres of dirt.
And then we added 22 more acres to that.
It's been fun.
It's incredible.
And I think the part that's the most interesting to me is, you know, going way back to your original story when you were what, you know, 26, had a couple million dollars in real estate net worth, you know, making a couple hundred thousand dollars a year to flash forward a year, bankrupt financial struggle to $600 million office. I know you've mentioned this before, obviously, but I think there's a lot of people that are more like the former you than the current you. What was that like back then? And what happened?
Well, we were, I got my degree in real estate, and I sold my first house three weeks after I turned 18 years old.
So I've been in real estate my whole life.
Mom and Dad ran the business.
And so when I got out of college, I bounced through a couple jobs pretty quick, and then started buying and selling houses.
And I was doing flip this house before there was cable TV or Chip and Joanna were born, you know.
And so it was a long time ago.
This was in 1984, right?
So, but I was good at it.
I was good at making a deal, and math is easy for me and that kind of stuff.
I would, and I've hustled.
And so I bought, started from nothing.
We ended up with about $4 million worth, a little over a million dollar net worth,
and I'm making a couple hundred a year at 24 years old in 1984.
But I'd borrowed too much money, and I had a lot of short-term notes.
The bank got sold to another bank and a guy in another city looked down and said there's a kid,
24 years old, owes us a million dollars.
This is crazy.
And he said, let's limit this relationship, which is banker talk for ruin his life.
They called them.
And that started a snowball, a bad snowball.
That took two and a half years to unfold, and we were bankrupt at the end of it with a brand new baby, a toddler, and a marriage hanging on by a thread.
So it's like my old pastor used to say, a man with an experience is not at the mercy of a man with an opinion.
I've been there, done that, and I don't care what TikTok says.
I've done it.
Well, it always makes me chuckle.
I remember showing a video to one of my execs, and it was a man on a yacht, talking about personal finance,
comments were like, how could this guy, this is a scam, whatever, and it's Ray Dalio. And I was
remember sitting there thinking, if they think that he's not the real deal, then who cares
what they say about the rest of us on the internet? Because you've been there. It's a fascinating
story because I was looking at the numbers of those that go into bankruptcy, those that ever
become a millionaire, the number that I saw was less than 10%. It's like once you hit bankruptcy,
you have an incredibly low likelihood of ever hitting seven figures and net worth again.
And so I think so much of what you talk about here is really cool because you're like, I've been there.
But for somebody who's in that position right now today and is struggling, you talk a lot about how it's not necessarily just tactics, although you give a lot of them and I want to talk about it.
But is being broke largely emotional, too?
It is.
And in our case, it was because I ran out of gas.
One year I made $250,000.
The next year I made $6,000 because I spent the whole year trying to see.
sell everything and do the right thing, in air quotes, and pay the banks what they were owed.
And the weird thing that we don't talk about a lot was we took the debt from $3 million down to
$328,000 in two and a half years.
We almost made it.
But I ran out, I was 28 years old.
I had, you know, again, little babies and a wife is scared of death.
She thought she married Sir Galaad.
Turns out it was Goober.
And, you know, I just ran out of emotional gas fighting.
And we got sued 78 times.
And all of them were right because I owed them money and I didn't pay them.
And, you know, so we're fighting the lawsuits, the interrogatories, the, you know, they're capturing any asset they can capture.
Rightfully so because we owed them money and didn't pay them.
But there weren't any assets left.
We'd sold everything.
And, but they were coming to take the furniture out of our house.
And I was out of gas.
I didn't know how to fight it anymore.
And I just, but I almost made it.
You know, the bankers we talked to later, I went back and paid them all back.
It took 10 years.
But the bankers that we talked to later, I said, we thought you'd file, you know, a year and a half for you did, two years before you did.
Most people would have.
Most people do.
But, you know, it was the worst thing that ever happened to me and the best thing that ever happened to me because it's not how I want anyone else to have to learn something, but the lesson is thorough.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. Do you think that other people can learn through that experience?
Sure.
Or do some people just have to go through it?
Yeah, you don't have to go through drug addiction to know it's bad.
You don't have to go through, say, you know, cocaine kills people.
I know that, and I've never done cocaine, so I don't have to go there.
But, and you don't have to go deeply in debt and lose everything to figure out that debt will choke you to death.
You know, basic common sense observation ought to help most folks get there, but it doesn't.
but we did a full CSI on it because we were not only broke, we were broken.
So any illusions I had to my academic prowess or intelligence or whatever I thought I was,
obviously I wasn't.
And so I got the opportunity to start from emotional and spiritual ground zero as well as financial.
And when you look at that, you go, okay, what really happened here?
Who's really at fault?
And you can choose victimhood.
You can go, oh, you know, I just spilled hot coffee on myself.
Turns out McDonald's serves hot coffee.
I think I'll sue them.
You know, or you can say, I'm a klutz, and I just spilled some hot coffee.
And I should have expected it to be hot since I just bought coffee.
And so in my case, I signed up for this debt, and it was short-term notes.
Well, and then they chose to call them in a short-term.
Who's the idiot?
The one that signed it's the idiot.
idiot. So you got to learn from that and go, okay, what the Bible says the borrower is slave to the
lender is real. And I got to experience the shackles. Yeah. You know, you talk a lot about
the Bible and money. Is money biblical? Is your application of how you think about money biblical?
Well, it is for me. I was a baby Christian. I just met God when all this stuff happened.
and so I had to make a conscious choice of, okay, the information I'm reading in Scripture,
which is all, it's not spiritual necessarily in nature in the sense that it has to do with getting into heaven
or it has to do with your relationship with God or something, but it's more instructional.
Like Proverbs is known, for instance, as the Book of Wisdom.
And whether your personal faith or not, you could get something from Proverbs,
just like you could get something from any ancient piece.
You could read Socrates or Aristotle.
and you can get something from that even if we're not Greek.
You know, and so most of the biblical stuff is kind of,
if you sat on your grandpa's knee in another generation,
they would be, we would call it common sense.
And it's borrowers, slave to the lender,
or don't build a tower without first counting the cost
unless you get halfway up and you're unable to finish it
and all who see you begin to mock you.
In other words, have a plan, a budget.
I mean, we run a $300 million company.
Guess what?
every department, every profit center has a budget. We have a plan. We didn't build this building
without first having a blueprint. And so that's kind of common sense. It's not really
mystical at all. It's not really some kind of spiritual voodoo stuff. But it's just God's love
letter to me going, hey, son, here's some wisdom. And if you live this way, you'll have a better
life. Yeah. Common sense, not common practice. Definitely. Amen. Common sense is rare. Yeah.
Nothing's more uncommon, Ben Franklin said.
Yeah, it's true, but it's interesting.
I always wondered, you know how, like, you go and you speak to a group of people?
And if you say, like, blank is the root of all evil.
Everybody will fill in money.
But you've mentioned in this book and others that it's actually, in the Bible, they say,
depending on the way you translate it, that love or desire for money is the root of all evil.
So do you think that it is bad or evil to be rich?
No, absolutely not.
No, and I did an entire book on it for the Christian community.
As a matter of fact, I'm positive.
It's not bad or able to be rich.
But it's also not good or positive.
You're not better either.
Money is amoral.
It doesn't have morals.
It reflects the morals of those it touches.
And so if someone is greedy and they get money, then the rich are greedy.
If someone is generous and they get money, we call them a philanthropist.
And they change an entire community and feed hungry kids.
No one talks about them when they're mad and being envious or jealous.
But the vast majority, and I've studied the wealthy for and been among the wealthy, just about my whole life.
And the vast majority of wealthy people are unbelievably other-centered and generous human beings.
There are some jerks.
I've met the jerks too.
But among poor people, there are jerks.
And so it turns out it's not really the money.
The money just reveals the character qualities or lack thereof of the person it touches.
And so now money, wealth is.
not evil in and of itself. The pursuit of it to the degree it negatively affects everything
else, sure. That'd be idol worship if you were a Christian or if you aren't, it would just be dumb,
you know, and so, you know, you'd give up your family in order to, you know, have an IPO. Well,
that's, that's short-sighted and not fulfilling. No one's 78 years old on their deathbed,
88 years old on their deathbed and says, gosh, I wish I'd have done another IPO.
And where's my grandbabies?
Yeah.
So why do you think we are programmed to think that money is bad?
So many of us, I think, are programmed that way.
Where do that come from?
It's come from some toxic teaching in the spiritual world.
Sometimes some churches have twisted some of these scriptures.
And usually they do it in a demographic area where they're ministering to poor people.
So they run that rich down.
I was having dinner with some folks in Australia a couple years ago, Australians, and we were talking about this, and they said, the Australians have quoted Aristotle.
They call it tall poppy syndrome.
As soon as someone's, as soon as one poppy sticks its head up above the others, it must be cut.
And so we want to tear down those that are ahead of us.
That's just jealousy and envy, which the Catholics would call that one of the seven deadly sins.
And so, you know, it comes from, you know, negative human nature.
and that we just we don't want other people to win but again oddly enough those are usually poor people
in not in spirit uh not not necessarily poor in wallet but they're usually people who have not
attained something most successful people they want to help others yeah they reach out and you know you're
you know you're just starting in a business that i'm already in i'll show you how or uh i'll spend time
with you and you can't mentor everybody that has to be mentored i don't mean that but i have to you know say
young man, I can't run the business here. I can't do that full time. But I'll help anybody
I can across the podcast world or the publishing world, the speaking world. I have talk radio back
in the day. All those guys are old guys are friends of mine. And so we've been friendly competitors.
But again, most successful people do lift people up. It's usually people that aren't successful
that want to pull people down. Do you think it's too crazy to think that part of the reason why
we think money is evil because when you don't have money, you're actually a lot easier to control.
Like my belief is also if we keep having like centralization of power throughout all societies, right,
until eventually it reverts to the mean.
But then if you have a populace that has a bunch of money, which is really just optionality, freedom, pushback, then they're harder to control.
And so it seems like over time they kind of want the few to have it because then you can control the few easier because they have a lot to lose.
but the many, they don't want them to have the pushback.
Does that seem to a conspiracy theorist?
Yeah, no, that's good.
I mean, there's an influence in some of the anarchist movements of the communist manifesto.
And that's really what that comes down to is this, if you read and understand and grasp marks,
that's really, you just described it.
It's, which is odd because the, you know, the very propaganda piece of communism
is there for the working man, which is absolute hogwash.
Yeah, it doesn't work out.
You know, and just all you got to do is visit operating communist countries today, and I have, and you have two probably.
And it's, you know, it's not working out.
It's not working.
And the weird thing, you know, in America today, we're the opposite of that.
We're very hard to control because of ease of access into almost any industry.
And, you know, we're talking about business and starting a business, running a business.
It's the easiest it's ever been in America right now to start and run something because you could instantaneously
turn on these things and be anywhere, anytime, accessible on video, on audio.
You can set your product, you can set up a digital store in 20 minutes now.
And all of a sudden you're in business.
And in the old days, you used to have to, you know, haul stuff in in a covered wagon,
put some boards up and, you know, build a country store.
And it was a lot of process and a lot of risk.
And we can launch stuff and iterate it so fast right now.
those of us that are already here and those that want to be here, meaning in business,
it's a wonderful time for the little man can't get ahead.
Oh, more than at any time in history right now, the little man can get ahead.
I agree.
And also, you know, one of the reasons I really like the book is there are a couple things in there that I think are true overall,
which is you had a line that was organizations are never limited by their opportunity.
They're limited by their leader, which I have found to be incredibly true in any business that I've ever run.
What do you mean by that and how does making yourself better make you more money in business?
Well, John Maxwell, my friend, has written a bazillion books on leadership,
and he and I speak often together.
And he says in this bestselling book, The 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership,
the third law of leadership is the law of the lid, meaning I'm the lid on my organization.
When I started this, I was 30 years old, two and a half years out of bankruptcy.
healing
psychological
I had PTSD
I didn't even know what it was
healing spiritually
healing in my marriage
and my relationships
healing in my finances
from that tsunami
that took me out in my late 20s
that's the guy that started
this place he could not have
run this place today
he didn't have the skills
he was he was
you know just a beat up
wounded
you know
a passionate dude
that wouldn't be denied.
And that's all, that's the only thing I had was I just wouldn't quit.
But over the years I've read and learned and grew and healed and all those things.
And, you know, I'm a much better husband than I was when Sharon married me 43 years ago.
Just ask her.
I'm a much better dad today.
My kids see me with my grandkids.
And they're like, who are you?
You know, and it's like, you know, it's, you know, we get better.
And if you don't get better, don't,
expect your organization to grow because you're the problem with your organization. I'm the
problem with my organization. That's the bad news. The good news is I'm the solution. And so I can read a
book, listen to a podcast, go to an event, put some more inputs in, remove some of the lies that I
believed about life and about business, put in the real stuff from the people that have really done it,
not just ones who have a theory. And then I'm a better, all of a sudden I'm a better leader. And now
my organization can grow a little more.
And so, you know, I dropped in the other day.
I've got, you know, we've got 450-some-odd folks just on our digital team.
And, you know, software engineers, platform engineers.
And, you know, we're building, constantly iterating, writing, and launching, you know,
every dollar app and all the other things we do around here that are digital,
which is almost everything in the building.
And I'm not a digital generation.
I'm a boomer.
So I drop in with all these brilliant kids that work for.
for me and I'm sitting in a room and I'm they might as well have been speaking German.
I have no idea what they're saying.
And I had to raise my hand after a minute.
I went, hey, guys, I can't add value to this room right now because I don't even know
what you guys are saying.
Would y'all tell me what you just talked about for the last 10 minutes in English so I
can understand without dropping all the acronyms?
And once they explained to me, I understood the concepts, but they were just using a completely
different vernacular.
And unless I get better, and I'm not the only bottleneck in the place, but unless the leadership
team here does that and understands the business that we're in is working with and for people
that have grown up with a magic wand in their hand, which I didn't. I had a rotary dial phone
on the wall when I was a kid, so I'm old, but I got to be relevant or I can't run the business.
Yeah, it's so true. Well, and one of the other things I loved that you talk about is that
speaking of your employees, that you never want an employee again, that you've had a
before, you never want an employee again, but you have 1,100 team members here. What's the difference
between the two? And how do you decide if somebody's an employee or a team member? Well, I think
we've all had, if you've ever hired someone, or if you've ever worked anywhere, for that matter,
you've observed people that were what I call employees. They come late, leave early steel while
they're there and check Facebook all day. And so not much work, right? And so no productivity,
don't care. They're there for what they can take rather than what they can add. And so around
our organization, we're a team. We add value. Everybody here adds value. And we're,
and if you don't add value, what are you doing here? I'm not paying you. I need to get an ROI on this.
And it's not because I'm a jerk. It's just because if I don't get an ROI on you, I can't pay the other guy.
So we want to make enough revenue. We can't pay payroll. Hello. So, you know, we want team members.
We want people who treat the place like they own it. And when we have an argument, and we have a lot of
arguments around here every day, they're wonderful arguments. We have an argument of,
about which call to play, which play to call to win the Super Bowl,
which play to call to get the ball in the end zone.
We're not arguing about, you know, some irrelevant thing
or some political internal thing.
Like, hey, trying to, you know, we're not sitting around talking about somebody.
You know, we're not, we're just getting stuff done.
It's very utilitarian.
And so if you don't want to get stuff done, you don't fit in at Ramsey.
I mean, we get stuff done.
And you're working with people that are smart,
the smartest people you've ever worked with in your life.
but they care deeply.
That's the difference.
You can hire smart people that don't give a crap, and they're useless.
They're there, again, for who they can impress with their brilliance rather than,
let's get something done.
Because the people outside these walls is why this place exists, not for the people inside
these walls.
We've got to love our customer by serving them and bringing them something that helps them
change their life.
And if you're not doing that here, you're really not a part of this team.
And so we don't need employees.
If somebody's mailing it in, you know, wants a J-O-B and, you know,
I've got these many degrees.
I had one guy more degrees than a thermometer.
He's like, tell me how he was worth.
I said, dude, you know, here, this is a small business.
Your raise is effective when you are.
It's not when you get another degree.
I couldn't care less about your certification except it gives you the ability to get something done.
And that's all it's good for.
And so I don't care about your experience.
I don't care what happened to the other place used to work,
except to the extent it helps you get something done here for the good of our customers.
And that's who we serve.
And if you can't get on board of that, get your butt out of here.
Don't let the door hit you in the butt.
Yeah, I loved when you said that profit is the reward for serving the customers that you have.
Yeah.
And, man, it's so true.
So many people, I think, don't charge their worth, don't get comfortable with profits,
don't want to talk about how much revenue they make.
But it's so true.
If you're not making any money, it's because you're not really helping anybody.
Bigger problems you solve, more money you make.
Exactly.
And the more scale you do it.
So, I mean, if I print one little book for $2.50 and I sell it for $10, I help one person.
And nobody's mad about that.
But if I sell, you know, 10 or 15 million of those and I get, you know, $10 or $15 million of that profit, then somebody gets upset.
But I help 10 or 15 million people.
So, I mean, that's how this works.
And my friend Rabbi Lapin says that if you help people, they will give you certificates of appreciation with president's faces on them.
such a good line.
Yeah, it is a great line.
I wish it was mine, but it's a good line.
You got so many.
You need to give a few others out.
Like, you're the one-liners from here.
I went through your ex or Twitter or whatever they call it today, and I was like,
there's so many.
I want to just quote him this whole time.
One thing that I do want to double tap on for you is you have some really specific ways
you figure out if somebody is going to be a culture fit or not for you guys.
And I think we've all been in a job or a career where we hang out with that person
who's gossiping all the time.
And it's kind of fun in the moment.
It's like a little adrenaline hit.
And then afterwards you feel worse about yourself.
Yeah, it's like exactly.
Gossip is like junk food.
So you don't let gossip happen here.
How do you, one, stop that in your company?
And two, for somebody who doesn't run the company but is in a company,
what's the right way to kind of say, I don't want to engage in this behavior?
I think people are scared of doing that.
Yeah.
In this place, you're one of the owners, and it's one of the things you value.
You're not technically an owner, but you're an emotional owner.
It's one of the things you value working here.
And so just like you wouldn't allow something more horrible like sexual harassment to occur, you're not going to look the other way.
You're going to say, we don't do that here.
And, you know, gossip is much less horrendous than that.
But we don't do that here.
And we, and if you want to be a we, we're French, we, we, if you want to be a we, you want to be we, you can't do that here because that's not who we are.
And the team will protect the place because it's one of the things that they value when we survey them.
Because they've never really worked in a place that doesn't do gossip.
And it's not like we have to fire a bunch of people.
We don't.
Occasionally we do because sometimes people just won't get it.
But that's okay.
That means they need to be somewhere where they allow that.
That's, you know, it's just one of the things we don't do here.
How do you start that, though?
Hand your negatives up and your positives down.
And you're going to have negatives.
There's 1100 opportunities in this building to be pissed off at somebody.
So, you know, when something happens, not if something happens, when you're frustrated with so-and-so,
when you're frustrated with a situation, your project is not getting attention.
You can't get the bandwidth on social media on this thing you're trying to get launched.
Whatever it is in Ramsey that's frustrating you.
And it's like all day long, something frustrating you because we're trying to get stuff done and there's friction.
And so just count on it.
Not if you have something that frustrates you, when you have one place to air that.
And it's not at the water cooler.
it's in your leader's office or his leader's or her leader's office or another leader somewhere
anywhere that's up is okay you can go talk to somebody in a whole different area and go look
I just need a place to vent tell me about this and and then they can help you they can help you move
through the issue one way or the other but when you're talking to people that can't do something
about the issue that by definition here is gossip and usually it's talking about somebody is the
problem. And so, and we all know, and yet even at 64 years old, I have trouble remembering
that if that person is sitting there gossiping in front of me, then the next time when I'm not
there, they're talking about me. We all know that, but we act like we're the exception. Like,
well, they would never do that. Yeah, so yes, they do. A hundred percent they do. And organizations
move at the speed of trust. And when you have a building full of that toxic garbage, you cannot move.
It grinds the smartest people to a halt because now they spend all their time covering their butts,
sending out C-Y-A emails instead of productive questions.
And so we'll sit down with you and go, look, you had a negative.
You talked about it here.
Two or three people talked to us, told us what was happening.
And they brought it to leadership that you were doing this.
And you can't do that here.
And if you do it again, then, you know, we're going to help you find another place to work.
Because we love you and we love this place.
and we don't do that here.
And just like if they were doing some other behavior that you don't want,
we're just not going.
If you tolerate it, you get what you tolerate.
And so in the early days, I had to really, you know, we had to kind of,
but once it became like a thing internally, one of our core values,
now it's self-police is like 99%.
I bet once a year, twice a year out of 11 hundred people,
leadership actually has to have a discussion with someone goes,
you can't do that.
And maybe we fire one person a year.
You know, you would think out of a thousand freaking people.
But no, they, number one, we tell people that coming in, then they get here.
And after 90 days, we review with them in their first 90 days.
And they go, I couldn't believe the audio actually matched the video.
You really don't do this.
And we really don't do this.
And we really don't borrow money.
And we really live on a budget.
And we really live on less we make.
We really don't have credit cards.
We really do the stuff we teach.
We're not freaking hypocrites.
And if you want to be a we, this is what we.
this is what we do. And so, you know, it's an interesting thing culturally to observe that when people
actually believe it's going to happen, they believe there's consequences and accountability,
they will self-enforce. Yeah, so good. Can you tell the story about the first time that you had to
fire somebody sort of for this in the company? And it's such a good story. And the salesperson.
Yeah, man, one of my top salespeople. She was incredible. She was selling so many. And we were tiny.
There was only just a handful of us, maybe less than 50 of us.
But there was a cloud.
You ever walk into a place and you just in your spirit, you sense or something wrong?
It's almost like something runs down your shoulder.
It was just like this cloud.
We were doing good.
The numbers were good.
The show was growing.
The book sales were, everything seemed to be moving, but it was just like this.
And I couldn't figure it out.
So we had a little staff meeting.
We have a staff meeting every Monday morning still.
and, you know, I guess they're probably 30 people or something like that.
And I had an appointment right after, and I ran out to my car.
And when I got out of the car and forgot my stupid keys, I came back in to get my car keys.
And when I walked back in, this person was having the second meeting.
And we've all experienced the second meeting where someone stands up and says what everybody thought,
what they thought everybody was thinking when the leader was saying otherwise.
So anyway, she was just trashing me, how dumb I was.
And it's one of the companies stayed open under my leadership.
and da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da-da.
And her back was to me, and she didn't hear me come in through the door
because there was one of those silent, closed-door things.
And the other people are looking at me, and they're like, you know,
and I just stood there and listened to her for about a minute and a half, two minutes,
which is an eternity to hear somebody trash you in person that you're paying.
You know, it's just like, yeah.
And so finally, I guess something happened,
and the hair stood up on the back of her next.
She turned around and looked at me.
She goes, oh, blank, right?
And I'm like, yeah, that's probably accurate.
And so she goes, well, well, well, and she starts trying to,
and I'm like, hey, listen, both of us are not dumb.
You're dumb if you stay here and work for a guy as bad as the guy you just described.
And I'd be dumb if I kept somebody and paid the money that feels that way about me.
That'd be dumb, too.
So we're pretty much done.
Come on in here, and I'll sit down with you.
I'll cancel my other appointment.
and we'll figure out your exit paperwork.
And she's like, no, no, no, no.
The worst part was when I got home, and I told Sharon,
she's like, I told you not to hire her.
I get that so.
They're always right, too, aren't they?
I know, it's 100%.
So we actually now, that's one of the reason we also do spousal interviews.
God, I wanted to talk about that.
Yeah, that's another thing.
And it's just the spouses go on the final interview,
both the person being hired and the leader leading them,
hiring them because the spouses can smell a route a mile away.
And I've had people being interviewed and the spouse looks at him or her and goes,
you don't want to work there, right in front of us.
I'm like, good.
That's the time to figure it out.
Before we go through all the onboarding, before we go through all this,
we got the expense of recruiting in at that point, but I don't have all the other stuff.
That's time to figure it out.
And then we've had people go, we go home, the wife, my wife would say something like,
I don't know, it just something feels bad.
And that's pretty vague.
but if my wife says that, we don't hire them.
And she's probably said it three times in 30 years.
She doesn't play that card.
She's scared of that power.
She doesn't want to.
But if she has that feeling, I want her to say it.
I want her to say.
Because every time she has that feeling,
if somebody's doing cocaine or somebody's doing something,
you know, something's going on.
And I'm just like a Labrador retriever.
I just think everybody's great.
And I'll just hire everybody.
And she's like, I smell evil there.
There's something happening.
Okay.
Let's avoid that one.
And then we always find out later that that person that we avoided, you know, God protected us.
Yeah.
You know, my husband always says it's either an F yes or it's a no with hiring.
Yeah, that's exactly right.
And every time I go against that, I regret it later.
Exactly.
Every time.
But I've never thought about it.
You're trying to get the work done.
I'm trying to get the thing filled.
And so I tend to just claw, I kind of had that.
Now I push that to the back.
I know better.
Yeah, but the resume is good.
Yeah.
But I know, but the way he treated his wife at dinner,
Nobody would hire that guy.
But yeah, but I'm going to.
And I'll make it wrong.
Okay.
It's like missionary dating.
It's like dating somebody and you're going to change them.
Oh, God.
Oh, crud.
No, just date somebody of quality.
Hello.
Yeah, it's true.
I've done it.
Oh, I've done it wrong so much.
Yeah.
But you do have really good ways to go about it.
I thought the spousal interview was the most.
I've never heard of that before.
I thought it was really smart.
And also, I think if somebody else can put up with them for a long period of time,
It's also a great sign.
I'm like, this other person who seems reasonable thinks you're good enough to stay with for a decade plus?
Okay, I like that.
Some of our best team members, when we sit down at the final interview with the four of us who go out the dinner,
you're more impressed with their spouse than you are them.
And you go, well, if you can pull that off, then you're probably going to make her name.
If you can attract her.
You can attract him.
You know, yeah, that's good.
And keep them.
I really liked that.
I also liked how you think about a screening process that is.
sort of the same every single time. What else do you think makes it possible to hire A
players every time or all the time or often? How do you screen people to find the best people?
We just remember the pain of when we didn't. Every time I let crazy in the door,
because crazy will screw up the building, man. Oh, my God. They just, there's not enough drugs
on the planet to handle some of these people, man. So it's just like, so true.
And every business owner feels that way, you don't think?
But every time I find the door they used, we put a lock on that door.
So all I, and all I got to do is go, the last time I ignored this, it just about kill me.
The last time I put loyalty ahead of integrity, it just about kill me.
The last time I thought, well, I knew this guy back, you know, 20 years ago, yeah.
Every time I ignore these things that are tickling at the back of my spirit in my, you know, in my brain, then it kills me.
So, yeah, we.
And so we try to say, okay, we're going to do different.
things, checks and balances to do that, and we're going to measure them, and we want more
than one person to look at them, and we're going to take time. And every time we say,
oh, this is, we just got to get them in here. And we shortcut, oh, every time it screws it up,
take your time and do it right. Or you get to do it over. Yeah. It's the old mom thing. It's like,
you know, anything worth doing is worth doing right the first time. You know, well, or you get to do
it over. It's true. And then, not only then, but you've got all the lost productivity of all the
humans that have to deal with that person that came in that shouldn't have been here.
And it's just, and the good news is these days there's hardly any of them.
They're very, very, they know what they're getting when they come in here.
And if they want to sign up for this and pull off our interview process, they're freaking
pathological if they got through it, if they're nuts.
Because we're going to spend enough time with them, different settings, calm, discussing, asking
questions, lots of questions, let them.
them ask anything they want to ask.
We don't need them.
We just need them.
Yeah.
You know, and it's okay.
We don't emotionally need you to be here, but we'd love to have your help.
You know what's interesting.
I'm curious.
Have you ever fired somebody that you regretted firing?
Or do you usually wait too long to fire?
I have, I promised myself when we opened that because I, in my early, in my
20s, I struggled with a temper with anger and it's been part of my spiritual walk to no longer
struggle with that. And I don't struggle with it today. But I promised myself I would never fire
someone while I was angry and I haven't. I've managed to pull that off. I did wait two days
to calm down before I fired a person that had a major thing they had done. And I was definitely
angry. But I just said, I'm not even going to look at them. I'm not going to deal
with it. I'm not going to be the same room with them until I get my head straight.
Then I walk in and then I go, then I can be kind, but also, you know, do what's necessary
because this person cannot be a part of our organization and do those kinds of things.
It's not optional. And so, but yeah, I mean, you get that. But, you know, again, with the four
or five times you could, I could say that has happened. Then I can look back and go, every one of
those are because I kept them too long.
Because I ignored the signs and I'm all again, my loyalty to the person.
Well, they've been here 10 years.
I owe them.
They poured their life out for this place.
I'm going to, so I'm going to give them one.
And you end up becoming an enabler if you're not really careful as a leader.
And I struggle with that.
But it's never gone on so long that it destroyed the company or something like that.
But, man, that's the pain point for me.
You can feel it just me talking about it.
Yeah.
Well, it's interesting because I found every owner I've ever talked to has the same thing, which is we usually wait too long, even when we know it's not right.
And I ask the question all the time because I need to remind myself, I always keep people too long too.
And I think it's a little bit of like a God complex, too.
I'm like, no, I could fix them.
I could help them.
I don't want to be mean.
And I have to remind myself that it's actually doing them a huge disservice because they could be amazing somewhere else.
It's just not a good fit for me.
Exactly.
And so you've been at this longer.
So it's nice to hear you say the same.
Exactly the same thing. You're exactly on it. And it is a bit of a God complex, but it's also just a kindness thing. And, you know, I'm a Southern guy. And so, like, we're specialists at passive aggressive. So, you know, we're like, bless your heart. Bless your heart. And that can mean slit your throat or it could mean bless your heart. And so, you know, it's, but we were taught that, you know, it's not nice to have conflict. Yeah. And the truth is what I, the thing I picked up about 20 years ago, and I say it all the time,
and our leadership is indoctrinated with this is to be unclear is to be unkind.
And so when I sit with you three times and tell you that you're not cutting it at this,
this is this work is not, how can we help you to get you there?
Because this is not, we're not going to continue like that.
When I tell you that three times, there's probably not going to be a fourth.
And we're going to talk about that the second time is there's not going to be a fourth.
We're going to have a discussion here because I'm not going to sanction incompetence.
It's not an option.
as much as I love you and as much as I love hanging out with you and doing stuff,
that doesn't matter.
You still can't be here because we got to get our work done.
Guess what?
If I suck on this microphone, people don't listen.
Hell out.
I get fired.
So that's how it works.
Yeah.
You know, I want to actually talk a little bit about entrepreneurs.
I think it's a super lonely journey.
This book is for builders in particular and owners.
And one of my favorite parts is your categorization of where somebody is at in business.
Because I think all of us have felt in business numerous times, hey, my business is struggling.
I'm not making any money.
Hey, we're making a ton of money, but it's moving so fast.
I don't know what to do next.
And you kind of categorize entrepreneurs into a few different types, five levels.
Treadmill operator, pathfinder, trailblazer, peak performer, legacy builder.
The five stages.
What are these and why do they matter as an entrepreneur?
Well, most of us that are entrepreneurs,
oddly enough,
if you have dyslexia,
you are more likely to be an entrepreneur than anything else.
If you have ADHD or ADD,
confirmed or unconfirmed,
Dave talks too much, he's hyper,
was on my report card every single year.
Unconfirmed, but probably, you know, and so medically unconfirmed.
But, you know, so you're probably in those categories.
Because what happens to those of us that have those different things is we live our life doing workarounds.
And that is the ultimate definition of an entrepreneur.
You're finding a problem in solving it.
You're doing a workaround for somebody that doesn't even think that way.
It doesn't even know they have a problem and you're going to solving it for them.
And that turns into a product, a service that becomes very profitable and very much of a blessing.
to the customer, as we talked about earlier.
So we find a high degree of those folks, and we start as a treadmill operator.
We start with, I'm going to go get this thing done.
And you get up on treadmill and you start running and running and running and running,
and you get home at night and you're exhausted, and you go, what did you do today, honey?
I have no idea.
But I work my butt off.
But some stuff moved around.
I know that.
And it's very chaotic and it's very dependent on you.
And that's the problem.
It's not sustainable.
You don't yet own a business at the treadmill stage.
you own a, you own your job.
Because if you don't show up, you don't make any money.
You don't show up the customer doesn't get anything because nothing's produced,
because you're the producer,
and you're the producer of revenue and the producer of the goods and services.
And so that's how it started here.
It's where it starts with most people.
And then you begin to go, okay, this isn't going to work.
I'm going to die of burnout.
I may die happy because I don't work for somebody else,
but I'm going to die of burnout.
I've got to get some other people helping me,
and that's called delegation.
And you begin this dreaded hiring.
process we were just talking about and you learn, oh, this is hard.
Hiring and firing is hard, but it's harder.
It's not as hard as working by myself and trying to do everything myself.
So, you know, we start adding folks and doing time management and working on the right things,
working smart, not hard, get a little bit of work-life balance all of a sudden you can
actually be home before 10 at night.
You can actually not have to panic about payroll every Friday because you actually get some
cash reserves. We start putting some things like that. Now we're starting to run a business,
and that moves us into that pathfinder stage. And from there, you start doing some planning,
and you actually think past Friday. And, you know, that's the stage. I learned the phrase
strategic thought. I was very, I'm totally tactical. I mean, get it done, get done right now,
and we'll deal with it later. But no, and so I was just constantly running through the Lambrent
trying to figure out where the end of the bushes were, and some guy standing up above goes,
if you turn left, you get out of there.
You know, and so that's strategic thought.
You've got to get above the problem and look, give it the 30,000 foot view.
And so I always laugh and say, I got to the point I finally started hiring people that MBAs.
I don't have an MBA.
And but I've got great admiration for that level of business education.
And 100% of the MBAs I've ever hired.
I guess it's indoctrinated in every program are wonderful strategic thinkers.
They are taught to get above the problem.
And I always laugh and go, okay, the MBAs taught me how to get above the problem.
them out of work. Because when in doubt, I worked my butt off, you know. So, you know, that's the
trailblazer stage. And then that stuff starts to work and you start to do something you mentioned
earlier and you go, I'm going to put some systems and processes in place so humans don't have to do
everything by paper. We don't have to kill so many trees. And this thing is analog as it can be.
This thing, this P&L ought to automatically spit out. It shouldn't be like sharpen a pencil.
We ought to start putting these systems. And when you do that,
added with a strategic thought, and you get the second layer of leadership.
Your first layer of leadership is just you've got other people leading.
Now you're leading people that lead people that lead people.
Now you're moving into Pathfinder.
Pathfinder is a sweet spot.
Money is coming and you're bailing it.
You're bailing money.
You're making money.
You're good at what you do.
It's a well-oiled machine, we always say around here.
And that's a fun time.
It seems like Midas touch.
Everything you touch turns to gold.
The danger is you start to believe your own press clippings
and you don't iterate fast enough.
You don't kill it before it needs to die.
And so we break stuff before it needs broken around here
so we don't get stuck there.
Because you can try to, you know,
you can be Kodak and say,
I don't, you know, film is the way it's always going to be.
Digital cameras are never going to happen.
And then all of a sudden you're gone.
You're a memory.
You can be blockbuster and be a memory.
If you stay in the Pathfinder stage
and don't constantly iterate and break it before it's broken
and new products and learn skills you didn't have
and bring in leadership that's smarter than you constantly
and figuring things out, blowing your mind with how smart they are.
And that keeps Pathfinder vibrant.
And then you've got to realize that you're immortal
and you're not going to outlive this thing called life.
And I did that at 48, 16 years ago,
we hit the legacy builder stage.
And we started working on succession plan then.
How is this brand survive?
How does this leadership team survive?
I don't work my whole life and build something and then it just evaporate because I do.
That's kind of dumb.
And especially for a guy that teaches financial responsibility.
And so, you know, we started working on at that point.
The Ramsey personalities were born, the early iterations of them.
The leadership team has always been good and strong.
So that was fairly easy handoff at my death or retirement.
The ownership, you know, the next generation has got to be able to carry the, have the wisdom and the character to carry the things.
thing.
The Ramsey kids, as we call them, were younger at that point.
They're old people now.
They're all in their 30s and 40s.
But, and they're very capable.
So we've got ownership dialed in.
We've got leadership dialed in.
We've got a brand transfer lined up where you don't have to have me on the microphone to survive.
You don't have to have me doing a book to survive.
And so today, our survivability index, which is our accounting metric, says that 96% of the revenue will survive me if I doubt a day.
the next year 96% would survive me.
How do you measure that?
Do you have like a little, do you have an algorithm?
Yeah, we run through all the P&Ls.
We ask all the leaders to look at their product lines and give us a case study as to why they believe what they believe.
And then, you know, what would happen.
For instance, we've got one that's probably 99%.
Our high school curriculum is a, you know, 10, it's a $25 million of your business.
and people buying higher high school curriculum to teach it in high schools.
It's almost zero dependent on me.
I'm not even in it.
And so it's got my, it's got Ramsey on the outside, but Daniel Ramsey's my son.
So it survives because they don't care if I mean.
When the thing was 100% me on talk radio and the revenue from talk radio that year was 35 million and I die, that'll be a Rush Limbaugh event.
It'll evaporate.
That revenue will evaporate that affiliate.
it network will evaporate, which is what's happened with that one, largely, not completely,
but largely, because there was no succession planning. And so, and Rush was a friend of mine.
It's just sad because he was Elvis of Talk Radio. But that network is not, I mean, it's probably
a little more than 10% of what it was before he died. So it's, you know, the actual show
itself, I'm saying. But the, not the company. I mean, the company's eye heart. So they're
fine. But the, anyway, it's not to run them down. It's just that that's what happens if you don't
have a brand transfer in our world, the podcast world. Well, what's interesting is that every
business should have this ability for the owner to, quote unquote, die in some way, shape,
or form, move on, get a new project, do a new revenue line, and it should still survive theoretically.
But a lot of businesses obviously don't have that. And I think this type of business, which
as you described as like a content or media business has typically the lowest survivability because
it's a personality.
So it's actually a really interesting way to learn from the business that would typically
have the lowest survivability in order for any business to increase its survivability.
Because at the end of the day, Apple, like, of course, it misses Steve Jobs and his brilliance,
but not really important at all to the survivability.
If we just look at it mathematically based on its revenue, I'd never thought about that before.
Because most media companies, one, are bad business models, right?
They have lots of volatility, third-party ad sponsors, no proprietary products, and huge keyman risk.
And so you basically diversified all of that away, which is interesting.
And, you know, when you're diversifying, it has to be quality.
So when the Ramsey personalities are sitting doing the Ramsey show, which was originally the Dave Ramsey show.
Now it's called The Ramsey Show.
And when they're sitting and doing it, you know, I have.
took several weeks off and Sharon and I were out of the country.
And when I came back, the ratings were up.
Distressing!
Makes me mad.
I don't feel as important.
Well, it's, you know, it's interesting too because I think that's probably a reason
why egoically a lot of us don't put these things in place.
Oh, it hurts.
It kind of feels good.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
And even with a small business that, you know, I talked to a guy the other day, one of our
people were coaching in Ontario leadership.
He's at one of our events.
He owns a heat and air company.
And he's like, he's the only one that can do it.
And I'm like, you're not Jesus.
That job's taken.
The Messiah is gone.
You're not him.
You're the only guy can run a heating air company.
You've got to be kidding me.
What kind of self-importance is this?
I can tell you this.
The biggest, when we watch these succession plans,
Gen 1 to Gen 2, the founder, turning it over,
is the hardest succession plan,
emotionally because the founder is always a hard head. We're always stubborn. We're always self-important.
We're always have that Messiah complex. We always have that. And it can be in any business.
Media is particularly bad because we dare to step on a stage or in front of a microphone, which requires
another level of ego. But yeah, you really got to fight against that and start to realize,
okay, it's the message that's important. It's the method that's important. And someone else can do it.
And if you don't believe me, watch when someone else does.
Yeah.
You know, it's a great point.
Like one of our portfolio company CEOs, he's an incredible operator.
He's run this business really well for a long time.
But to get to the next level, you can't do the same thing to get to nine figures as you did to get to low level eight.
It's just not going to do it.
And so what's fascinating is he surround himself kind of with this like band of Mary Fools.
And they were okay for the level he was at before, but they are actually detrimental for the next level.
And so I actually gave him this book because my point was, like, you have felt good and benefited from the fact that you were the head of the table and everybody listened to you.
And in your next venture, if you are the person everybody's listening to and they aren't smarter than you, you're never going to make it.
You know, I walk into that room of youngsters and not know what they're saying.
Right.
If you're not that guy, then you're going to die.
You're going to get taken out.
The marketplace will shear your head from your shoulders.
It's bad.
It's brutal out there.
Yeah.
You really got to get over your own BS, which is hard.
And again, but it takes a level of that to start something.
The people that don't have that oomph, that it factor, that I'm going to throw my shoulders back and show the world.
You know, if you're just a timid little mouse, you're not going to start anything.
So you've got to go bust into it.
You've got to knock stuff down.
You got to create friction and piss some people off.
I mean, you've got to go do that.
But once you get to doing that, you got to realize, okay, the best way to keep doing this is have people
smarter and even better at and more energetic than me around me.
Yeah, and kind of get excited by that.
Like, look who I attracted.
You know, we just hired a new president for my company and he's going to, he's going to
chuckle that I'm talking to him about this, but he came from this other company, Mr.
Beast, right?
And so big huge YouTube company.
And so I'm like, you know, Mark, we got to do a press release to show that you came
on board.
He's like, I don't need that.
I'm like, no, that's for me.
I'm like, I'm really excited that I attracted you to the business.
Because this means that, you know, you're a signal.
So the marketplace so that we hire great people, people that are better and smarter than me.
Well, and that we're coming.
Yeah.
Look out.
We're coming.
Here we come.
Yeah, that's right.
And notify the competitors.
Exactly.
I shouldn't do that.
But yes, you're right.
Yes, you're right.
What would you say to a young builder, that crazy type of human that wants to do the
psychopathic work of building a company?
What would you tell them to do?
Where should a young builder start today?
Well, I mean, the first thing that, and I,
I just talked to our team about it this morning and staff meeting,
reminding them yet again one of our core values here is,
if you help enough people, you don't have to worry about money.
So too many times when we start something,
we are enamored with our own idea, our own ability,
and the idea is the thing rather than the customer.
And what I want to do is I want the person that is not inside the building
to be blessed, to be changed, to be served,
to have their mind blown.
The people inside the building all get their mind blown.
Um, eh, not so much. Not so much. You know, that doesn't do anything. What happens is when all those
people out there, all over the world, I get the opportunity to help one on them with their budget.
I get the opportunity to help one on them with their marriage. I get to help one on with their
spiritual walk. I get to help one on their small business. When they, you know, and so we don't
build anything for us. We build everything for them. And when you first start, that's not natural.
That's, uh, that's paradoxical. Because you're, you're, you're kind of into what you're doing.
and you're like, oh, I'm kind of good at this, and this is kind of cool.
And it was for me anyway.
And so, I mean, I did the first cassette tapes or VHS tapes, you know, I was like, wow, look at that guy.
He's funny and he's good.
And it kind of started coming to me, no one cares except your mama and your wife.
And they also don't.
And they don't care that much.
So, you know, it's like, but I think that's a thing, serve, serve, serve.
And if you can find a way to make other people's life better and let them be the hero in the story, as my friend Donald Miller says, don't you have to be the hero, you can be the guide.
And, you know, that kind of stuff, it just makes you have a good quality life and you've got a good philosophical, spiritual underpinning to your business then that you can, okay, we're about service.
We're about service.
And when you interact with an organization of business that is about themselves, you feel the take.
rather than the give.
And when you interact with a company
that is all about service,
you come away with your mind blown
because they're fairly rare.
That's such a good point.
Yeah,
I wasn't at Don Miller
that talked about the fact
that you think that you're Skywalker
as the business owner,
but you're actually Yoda.
I need to remember that often.
And I love that visual.
I love the visual
because one, you're like,
you know, you're not the sexy,
young hero of the story.
You're like the wrinkly green,
old, you know, kind of in the background.
And then also that,
everybody thinks they're the hero in the story.
So since they think they're the hero, if you put yourself in the hero seat, they don't
want to talk to you.
Yeah, it's true.
But if you're, if you'll show them how to live their life and be the hero in their life,
then that's, that's the story brand is the book that Donald did and the talk.
He's a wonderful communicator.
And, but they, that idea of a story arc as a marketing plan and the idea that, okay, I'm going
to position myself.
And we did that.
He mentions it in the book.
We do that with the debt-free scream.
Yeah.
And the people get to be the hero.
And they scream, I'm dead free on that stage right out there.
And that's not like, I love Dave.
It's like, I'm dead free.
I'm the hero.
Thank you, Dave and Ramsey, for showing me how to be the hero to change my life.
And so anytime our team is instructed, anytime someone comes up and says, you changed my life, they always say, oh, no, no, no, we showed you how.
Yeah, it's so incredible.
You know, and you can notice it kind of everywhere in the headquarters.
It's one of my favorite things whenever I get to come to a company's headquarters.
Because I feel like you can almost immediately tell what the soul of a company is by the place that they choose to build.
It's your physical manifestation of who you are and who you think your company is.
And so, you know, when I came, there's only one other company that I've seen that's as intentional as yours,
which is my friend Andy Fricle, is at first form.
Different brand.
But, you know, the truck you have with the books that you use to sell out of the back of it,
then the cookies that you give people to sit in front and how you built a studio,
thinking that they might watch it for free.
You know, then the fact that you have a wall with everywhere somebody signed if they've
become debt-free and also somewhere they can take a picture.
It's like the headquarter is for the company, but it's also for the individual and the person.
And I think those little reminders, it goes back to your point of like, well, once you set it
and you enforce it a few times, it becomes self-enforcing.
And it's even in the way that you design everything here.
So I didn't realize that when I was a first time founder.
and I'm learning it more and more, the more businesses we build.
Well, this is the fourth building, so I didn't realize it early either.
Makes me feel better.
We've gotten better.
Yeah.
But how cool that, you know, as a builder, you can do that same thing.
So I think it's really interesting.
I just have a few questions I want to struggle or I want to summarize with.
My dad has this line that I always go back to about being a builder, which is like you're not in the game unless you sat in the dark, head in the hands, completely unsure of what.
what to do next. And if you have, then you're in the game, then you've played. What would you tell
somebody that is in their business right now and they are struggling? They're in the pain cave and
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The only thing we've done is nothing, I tell entrepreneurs this all the time because I deal with them like you do that are there.
They're in that.
Anytime I'm talking to an audience of a thousand people, a certain number of them are in a pain cave, right?
First do a gut check and say, why am I in this business?
am I in it just to make money?
You may be done
because the pain cave may be telling you time to quit
because you suck and, you know,
it's not going to make you money.
Your goal was to make money.
Your only goal was to make money.
I'm not against making money.
Don't misunderstand it.
But that's your only thing.
Money's great.
Get you some, but if you eat enough lobster,
it tastes like soap.
So there's only so much you can do with money.
But if you're not in it just for,
money. You're the second category. And you want to make some money. You want to bless your family.
You want to do those things. But the reason you're in the business is because something's burning
inside of you. You can't not do it. You have to do this. If that's you and you're in there
with your face in your hands, welcome to the club. You're in the game. Take the next step.
Take the next step. Don't sit. If you're in the pain cave, it's time to stand up. And step
out and step out. Take another step. Take another step.
And pretty soon you'll see light and you can work your way out of the cave.
There'll be a little light up there. It'll pin light and then it'll get bigger and then it'll get bigger.
But you and I guess the third piece or other than take the next right step and keep taking the next right step.
The second piece of advice would be on that is when you do get into the light, you're going to laugh when you look back about.
what you thought was going to kill you, how small it is.
You're going to laugh at what a drama queen you really are.
And I look back at some of the stuff that I thought, oh, God, this is the end.
And I look back and I'm going, that, that was the end?
You were a complete wuss.
You know, it was like, no way.
But you know, but you don't get that perspective until you get out into the light.
When you're in it, it feels like the world is coming to an end, that the, that's the end.
that's, you know, the last thing.
Well, there's one more.
And if you walk your way out and you look back, it's, when I look back of stuff 25 or 30 years
ago, and I think that, that almost took it, I thought that was going to take us out,
I thought we weren't going to make it.
It's humorous to me how stupid I was that I thought, you know, it's that big now.
But time gives you that perspective.
I thought it was the end of the, I thought it was a 10-story building.
It's so true.
I keep this meme on my phone that's like a picture of a just, just, it's like a drawing.
but of a man that just looks like he's going through it.
And he's staring up at God.
And he's like, you know, why have you presented me the most horrible challenge yet?
And you see Jesus look down at him.
And he goes, man, just go take a walk outside and get some vitamin D and get off your phone.
And I giggle every time I look at it.
Because the solution is, like you said, it's just one step in front of the other.
And also realizing that entropy is physics, which just means problems get worse and worse and worse,
but we become more capable of fixing them.
Yeah.
So it's a great, it's a great reminder.
And also, man, thank God there's problems.
Otherwise, we'd make no money because that's the only way we get paid, right?
Yeah.
Yeah, I think you're right.
So this next book will be one of now the next series of 30 million books you'll have sold.
Oh, your lips to God's ears.
Exactly.
When you put this in the next Jen's hands, what's like the one thing?
If they could take one thing out of this book, as you can tell, I have a ridiculous amount of notes in this thing.
But if you had to pick one, what would you hope somebody takes out of this?
We have learned around here, and it's true of this book and this material, that there is great hope in a clear path.
That if I can see that this is where it's going, then I can keep my energy level up.
When you can't see where it's going, we experience burnout.
And you can see where it's going.
It's only fatigue.
And so I can see where it's going.
I can move from treadmill to Pathfinder.
I can use these six drivers in business that we talk about in the book.
And these are systems and paths that help me make the next thing.
And it's by a guide, a Yoda that's trustworthy, because not only have I been there done that,
but we've also been there, done that with 10,000 businesses.
So this is not think tank theory.
This is not academia.
This is actually people freaking running businesses.
And it probably won't work if you're running a, you know, a $700 billion business or something.
It wouldn't work for Apple.
It's not what it's written for.
It's written for the veterinarian, for the heating and air guy, for the young podcaster, for the whatever, somebody that's starting and or is in the early stages.
Or they've been running it for 10 years.
They just feel stuck.
And they don't know.
Well, you're supposed to be there now.
And somebody needs to tell you that and show you why and then show you what the next things are to level up.
And so the clear path gives hope.
I love that.
Well, I think one of my richest friends told me that if you can do one thing in life, it's if you can buy somebody else's 10,000 hours, you should.
And so this is a pretty cheap price tag.
Thank you for sharing it with us.
Oh, thank you.
It's honor to be with you.
Great job.
Same.
By the way, you guys, a little sneak peek.
We are sitting in Ramsey Solutions headquarters in Nashville, Tennessee.
This place is wild.
It's somewhere between $400 and $600 million, multiple buildings, this huge campus, that they built with $0 in debt.
And now, if you've ever built a business or a building, you know how ridiculous that is.
What's super interesting about this headquarters, too, is that it's one of the most intentional headquarters I've ever seen.
You know, all around me are these little notes, these little messages to all of you, to the people out in the audience who are actually making change in their lives by becoming financially free.
And so I'm going to give you a little sneak peek of this.
Go to Instagram.
You can check out the stories of the headquarters.
I think you'll see what I see too, which is don't despise humble beginnings.
Because, man, if you can start out where he did and get to where he is today, I think we'd all be pretty happy with that.
