Digital Social Hour - The Secrets to Becoming a Top Performer in Business I Shawn Meaike Part 2 DSH #564
Episode Date: August 5, 2024Unlock the secrets to becoming a top performer in business with Sean Kelly on the Digital Social Hour Podcast! 🚀 In this episode, Sean sits down with Shawn Meaike for the second time to dive deep i...nto the mindset and strategies that set elite performers apart. From the power of respect in interviews to the unexpected lessons from the world of sports and personal growth, this conversation is packed with valuable insights you won't want to miss! 🧠💡 Discover how to navigate the competitive landscape, break cycles, and turn vulnerabilities into strengths. Whether you're an aspiring entrepreneur or a seasoned business leader, this episode offers practical advice and thought-provoking perspectives to elevate your game. 🎯 💬 Join the conversation and share your thoughts in the comments below. Don't miss out—watch now and subscribe for more insider secrets. 📺 Hit that subscribe button and stay tuned for more eye-opening stories on the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly! 🚀 Tune in now and transform your approach to business. Watch now and be prepared to conquer your goals! 💪✨ #AchieveGoals #BusinessPodcast #ProfessionalTips #SuccessInBusiness #ProductivityBoost CHAPTERS: 00:00 - Intro 00:40 - Shawn Meaike talk Super Bowl 02:23 - What Shawn Meaike learned from Shannon Sharpe 04:59 - Babbel 06:10 - Skip Bayless and Shannon Sharpe 10:04 - What gets to you 10:53 - Drama, gossip, and bull 13:16 - Emotion is the biggest thing a client will use against you 15:32 - How did you control your emotions 19:00 - Do you have all your employees take personality tests 20:57 - How important is IQ 23:01 - How to Run Effective Meetings 25:00 - Why You Hate Seniority 28:28 - Big Business, Big Ego 29:46 - The Importance of Fairness 34:57 - Why You’re So Passionate About Coaching 37:28 - What does your profitability look like 37:46 - How much do you focus on competition 41:08 - Where can people find you 41:28 - Final thoughts APPLY TO BE ON THE PODCAST: https://www.digitalsocialhour.com/application BUSINESS INQUIRIES/SPONSORS: Jenna@DigitalSocialHour.com GUEST: Shawn Meaike https://www.instagram.com/shawnmeaike/?hl=en SPONSORS: Deposyt Payment Processing: https://www.deposyt.com/seankelly LISTEN ON: Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/digital-social-hour/id1676846015 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5Jn7LXarRlI8Hc0GtTn759 Sean Kelly Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/seanmikekelly/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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now big o tires the team you trust say you said something like you want to you want to watch a
dateline or something else go watch that i i'm not here to get you i'm here to i've earned the
respect of people and then they get to come on and say what's on their mind my job's not to debate
the facts they give their information out y'all take and digest it and figure it out, which is genius.
I love that.
Every host needs to listen to that advice, man,
because there's some hosts that really talk over their guests,
and it's like, why are you even interviewing them?
Correct.
That was great.
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and here's the episode.
All right. Sean Mike, part two.
Welcome back, man. Thanks for having me, dude.
Absolutely. You were just at the game, right?
I was just at the Super Bowl, yes, sir.
Was it one of the better ones you've seen?
I've been to a lot of them.
It's funny, not being a Chiefs fan.
First of all, I'm not a fan.
That's what I've learned in life, too.
Like, I like watching sporting events,
but watching people get that excited about a team
and the way they go about it is very interesting to me.
The psychology behind it is interesting to me.
But I bet a lot in the Chiefs, like probably way too much,
but it was okay.
They covered.
And actually, Sam Fran was giving me a point and a half.
So it was a great game.
Great.
It was very competitive. I like defense, too, the first half when people are freaking out. I'm like, dude, that and a half. So it was a great game. Great. It was very competitive.
I like defense, too, the first half when people are freaking out.
I'm like, dude, that was a good game.
That was a good half.
So it was good football, but I ain't betting against Mahomes or Andy Reid
and I guess Travis Kelsey.
Interesting.
So you look at sports objectively.
You don't got a team or a player?
You know, to be honest with you, I think that's really uncomfortable to me.
Like I played baseball and football and basketball growing up.
Went to college, played baseball.
And I just think I've never been that excited about something I'm not involved in.
You know what I mean?
And I think that, like I said to my son,
you can't wear another man's name in the back of your jersey
once you become over about age 18.
Doesn't mean you still won't or not or whatever, but
cheer for you and cheer for yourself.
I love the game, but no, I'm not.
But football's amazing, dude, because you realize that
people, I was talking to a guy the other day
and he's like, dude, people love a team over
the players. And he's in the NFL. And I was like,
for real? He's like, yeah, dude, they're just so rabid about the
individual teams. So yeah, man, I can
take and relieve. I follow the Broncos. I grew up watching
John Elway. He's a good player. I like individual players and things they can do.
But the team itself, I'd gamble on two hermit crabs racing. I'm a gambling freak, so I like
gambling. You can learn a lot from athletes, man. I saw you just had Shannon Sharp on your show.
What were some things you took away from that interview?
Man, a lot. First of all, he's super sharp, which I love, and he's got a huge personality.
Probably one of the bigger things, he actually said it before we got on,
and he was talking about perspective.
He was talking about growing up.
He was talking about being in – I think he just got drafted,
and they had a tragedy in their family.
And his grandma was like, don't tell him until after practice.
And just how hardcore he was about his mission.
If you learn, like, he played Division II football.
And if you, like, football is not like baseball, even basketball.
I mean, a lot of those, you play Division I football,
but I don't know the stats on it.
I go through the NFL, there's probably not a lot of guys, you know.
But I'm like, when did you know you'd be in the NFL?
The entire time.
I was just laser focused.
I didn't know that they called him Pee Wee when he was young,
which is amazing to think he was ever small.
And I think also just that he's taken that mindset,
that championship mindset that he has, and he has no fear.
Yeah.
And he's approached his post-football career like he did that.
I mean, he's got the number one show in the world right now,
and that was all in the matter of a year, under a year.
And I asked him, I said, how did you get like, like why you?
Like why did Cat Williams pick you?
Because that was interesting to me.
And why did he come on and tell you all that?
And he said, well, for a safe space.
You know, I get on and tend not to talk over people.
I roll, and then people might come at me. What do you say? He said something like you like you won't watch a dateline or something else go watch that I I'm not here to get you I'm here
to I've earned the respect of people and then they get to come on and say what's
on their mind my job is not to debate the facts they give their information
out you all take and digest it and figure it out which is genius I love
that every host needs to listen to that advice man because there's some hosts
that really talk over their guests,
and it's like, why are you even interviewing them?
Correct.
It was great.
I learned a lot, man.
It was a good time to be around him.
Yeah.
I think when he left Skip, that was such a pivotal moment,
and you see the trajectory of, because Skip's going downhill,
he's going uphill, and you're like, wow, he was really running that show.
Yeah, and dude, I mean, when you look at,
because that's what I asked about Stephen A.,
and he's like, dude, he wants me to get big.
Like he wants a big personality.
He wants somebody to be next to him, and he doesn't want to try to control them.
And, you know, because I asked him that about former athletes.
That was always weird to me.
Like how do former athletes listen to people that never played?
Because I don't understand that.
But I'm also like I'm not on these big shows and I'm playing the NFL.
But if you if you like did
you play sports growing up yeah basketball basketball well that would make sense right
play baseball no okay so if you were giving somebody advice on baseball i'd be like i'm
just like bro slow your roll you don't know what you're doing but and i'm okay with that like let's
be honest like i was asking before the thing do i look better with this he's like no put a sweatshirt
on you look better like dude i ain't got like it is what it is right um but he said when steven
a's talking he talks to a different lens than me.
He's like, I'm looking at the X's and O's.
He gives you a bunch of coverages and all kinds of stuff.
And he's like, but he's not looking at it from that perspective.
And he said, plus, Stephen, he wants me to grow.
He wants me to scale.
Now, he didn't say nothing bad about Skip, but it's also like, you've heard Skip rant and yell.
And it's like, dude, like, who are you, bro?
Like, really? I just, but, you know. And it's like, dude, like, who are you, bro? Like, really?
I just, but, you know, so it's been great for him.
Yeah, I mean, what he's doing, what he's continuing to do is just massive.
I just saw him the other day.
And he's just a good guy.
He's a good dude to be around.
I agree, man.
It's a respect thing, right?
Because Skip didn't play professional sports at a high level, right?
But Shannon did.
So people will gravitate towards that.
Yeah, dude.
And, I mean, listen, I don't put on those shows,
but Skip's annoying.
You know what I mean?
And then, like, you do need that guy to, like,
I just think how smart it was for Shannon to pick Ocho
to do what they're doing.
Nightcap, like, that was brilliant.
Like, he's got a great personality.
You never know what he's going to say.
He had his success, but kind of what he was saying,
doesn't, like, take himself that unbelievably seriously.
It just works out really well.
So I think he's on to big things, and, dude, he's razor sharp,
and he's focused on it just like he was at the NFL.
So everything he does will continue to expand.
I won't be shocked at whatever numbers you all pull up.
I'll be like, that doesn't surprise me at all.
Yeah, he's killing it.
But, yeah, and they're doing a great job in first take, too.
And he's actually made me like Stephen A.
Yeah?
Weirdly enough.
I don't dislike him.
I don't get that excited about it,
but when he said that about the lens,
I was like, dude, that makes sense.
You know what I mean?
I don't tend to get that upset when people are talking.
This guy announces I don't like when he does this,
and some people are like Tony Romo.
He was doing the game last night.
I'm like, dude, I like Tony Romo.
I kind of like the way he talks.
I like the way he analyzes the game.
He's smart.
I like his inflections and his voice, all that.
But yeah, I think it definitely big, big deal for him,
and I don't think he knew that Stephen A thing was happening,
and he went from there to, I guess it's one of those opportunities.
You never know what's around the corner.
I've actually grown to like Stephen A, too.
I think mainly because his own show.
I think when you're on your own show, you're really yourself.
Like you see with Tucker, he's amazing now.
I feel like Fox News was holding him back.
Dude, he's a monster.
I mean, he just did Putin.
Dude, he's a monster.
Yeah, did you see that one yeah I watched it it
was nuts he and he almost like dude of me like you're thinking about this the
entire time he's came out and like who else can do that who else is doing that
in the world right now no one no one who has the courage to do it has the ability
to make those connections and actually can stand there and when he was talking
to me like dude he's such a strong, intelligent, tactful person.
You just watch Putin, you're like, you can just see the mutual respect for.
This isn't going to be a game today.
So, yeah, no, I agree with you, dude.
It's been awesome.
Times are changing because you rarely see the opponent's point of view.
And now we're getting that perspective with podcasting, with new media.
It's really interesting, actually.
That's what it's supposed to be.
Yeah.
But that's also like, how old are you?
26.
I'm 51.
I was raised that way.
It was okay to have an opinion.
They didn't vilify us for having an opinion.
We had debate classes.
We were encouraged to talk about those things in class.
Really?
Absolutely.
It was like, what party are you?
And you were usually what your mom or dad were. I'm this. What about you? Y'all debated out. Really? Absolutely. It was like, what party are you? And you were usually what your mom or dad were.
I'm this.
What about you?
Y'all debated out.
Really?
Absolutely.
Next week you come back.
Political science classes, civics classes, and high school, let alone college.
We did that, but we didn't hate each other.
You had an opinion.
I had an opinion.
It was totally fine to not agree.
I had to listen to you.
You had to listen to me.
You had to say things that might really piss me off.
We also had really thick skin, and we were taught not to have a panic attack and scream and yell when you don't like what
somebody's saying but where does that get us so i mean for me i always say it with people i was on a
pod not too long ago and he's in his mid-20s too and i'm like but you know i was talking about
sports he's like i didn't know that i'm like yeah that was that's how we were raised so it is really
cool to see yeah so having thick skin like that,
is there anything someone could say that will get to you?
Really?
There's things they could do,
but not say.
There's nothing you can say about me.
Cause I don't give a what anybody says about me.
Really?
No.
Even if it's someone you respect,
they don't respect me if they're talking about me.
So why should I respect them?
So I respect you.
Let's say I respect you.
I do respect you.
We don't know each other that well. I respect you. You turn around and start popping off in the mouth and being like, okay, well, why am I respect them? So I respect you. Let's say I respect you. I do respect you. We don't always have that.
Well, I respect you.
You turn around and start popping off in the mouth and being a s***.
I'm like, okay, well, why am I worried?
He doesn't respect me.
What am I worried about?
And then why would I let you get me?
And people, and every time you get successful, people run their mouths about everything.
Right.
I mean, literally everything.
So for me, it's kind of like there isn't anything you could say.
And if you're going to do something, it has to be something pretty significant.
You know what I mean? Yeah, running my mouth. That was one of my worst habits. And you you're going to do something, it has to be something pretty, pretty significant. You know what I mean?
Yeah. Running my mouth.
That was one of my worst habits.
And you learn it in public education,
right?
How to gossip and talk about people.
And it took me,
it took me a while to get out of it,
but it's such a,
such a bad habit.
Honestly,
there aren't a lot of companies.
And one of the things I used to ask when they came in and
applied,
and I'd say on a scale of one to 10,
and don't lie to me because time will end up telling how much much do you like drama, gossip, and bulls**t?
Seriously.
But don't lie.
You can't say a 1 because everybody's going to say a 1.
If I had people, I'd be like, no, I participate in it because I don't tolerate it.
And it just eats you alive.
And it's Lord of the Flies.
Remember that book?
Yeah.
They made us read that in school.
They made me read it too.
I mean, that's the thing about how long that's been a thing, right?
And I was with a group yesterday.
I'm like, dude, read The Lord of the Flies.
It's a quick read.
And they hit me back, and I'm like, this is what y'all are doing.
You're Piggy, you're Jack, you're Ralph.
Like, knock it off.
Like, this is what we do to each other, though.
Because we start working together as a team.
It's like, in this business, you'll work with people, and eventually you're like, dude, what is his problem?
You know, you could use Skip and Shannon.
Like, why don't you want Shannon to be great?
What are you worried about? Like, what's the concern for you but it's that ego yeah and again if you
gotta feed your ego and i always tell people you know if you're gonna say it come and say it to my
face you're direct heads on okay i'd rather just fight you in the parking lot i don't get me because
i'm just i'm trying to be funny or be a tough guy i'd be weird but but, like, dude, like, that's the other thing. I remember I was probably 14, and my father drank a lot.
He's sober now.
So I drove him a lot.
Okay.
And back then, you drive at 14, cop pulls you over.
They didn't, like, it wasn't, it was just a different time.
And I remember I'm driving.
I remember this exit 28 asking on Route 395 in Connecticut, and I go around a corner,
and this guy is coming on the highway.
And, like, it's debatable who cuts whom off.
So I get in.
I pass him, and I start flipping him off.
And my father said, pull over.
And I was like, okay.
He's like, no, pull the car.
And the guy's, I mean, he's beeping.
He's flipping me off.
And he's got a beer between his legs, cooler in the car.
He said, now get out, and you man out to flip him off.
And I'm, you know, 81 pounds, 14 years old, growing up, 225-pound man, got out.
And I got out.
I'm not going to tell you I was excited to fight the guy.
You know what I mean?
And I think he just realized, my father just sat there.
But it was lessons like that in life.
And there I went through a lot of shit.
Don't get me wrong.
But it was like, dude, every single thing you say, you're accountable for.
But then I'm also accountable for, do I have to react to everything you say.
And I don't have to react to it.
It took me some while.
And I'm also 51 years old.
It took some time.
At your age, I wanted to fight everybody the entire time.
Plus, I was still drinking and getting high and everything else at your age.
So, you know, I'm sober.
You learn.
People bait you into saying shit.
Yeah.
You know, and I've really respected myself.
You talk about games. Like like i'll go to games
and you watch i was at a niners um chargers game last year and this fight breaks out between like
10 dudes they couldn't hurt each other if they were fighting for an hour it was hard to watch
but i'm like as long as they don't bump into me and my buddies are what are you gonna do i'm like
i ain't gonna do nothing unless they bump into us and they bump into us i don't want anybody else
to get hurt i'm also not gonna beat them up then they're drunk they can barely walk i'm sober they're 160 pounds like what you know and i think there's a
lot of i had took me a long time to learn there is a lot of pride and respect in in value and
being able to go like i don't care right just turn the other cheek call what you want smile
keep it moving a lot of energy to take people on then they know they have you yeah so i teach
people in sales running running a business.
Emotion is the biggest thing
a client will use against you.
But if I don't have any emotion,
I don't get freaked out
about what you ask me
or what you say
or what you're pushing on,
then you trust me more
because I control my emotions,
I make my money,
do better for my family,
so I learn how to just relax.
Interesting, yeah,
because in your 20s
you would have joined that fight, right?
100%.
Anybody said a damn word about me.
But also, there weren't people saying a lot about me because I wasn't doing a lot.
That's the other thing I realized.
Like, dude, people are saying stuff about you no matter what you're doing.
Run a business, successful team, because you're doing something.
And I think as I started coaching, too, I was coaching baseball, basketball, football, you know, travel teams, travel all over New England, all over the country.
And I was like, I'm giving these kids advice that I ain't taking.
Like, okay, we're in the basketball court.
There's thousands of people hanging off the rafters.
We're good.
There's really good teams.
That dude's going to North Carolina, Kentucky.
Boom.
We're a lot of baseball players who are trying to stay in shape, but we're good.
And I'm like, I'm telling them not to react.
And then what I started doing was becoming more of an a**hole because I don't want everybody to be mad at me.
You were the Draymond Green of the team.
Yeah, dude. Absolutely. I would lose.
It was obnoxious. If they were yelling at my kids
and I just find somebody or the other coach,
I'd be like, half the game, what we should do is you and I should fight
in the parking lot. Whoever wins,
you're like, no more talking a**hole in here.
We'll just go in the parking lot. You and I will fight it out.
The good news
about most people is they're all this anyway. Yeah, especially basketball. Yeah, it is. So it's just um, but I learned to take my own advice
I was good at giving advice. I wasn't taking Wow
So what age were you when you were finally able to control those emotions you sir? I got sober at um
28 I had no control and when I was drinking I think it's hard to control your emotions, your anger, whatever issues you have that are exacerbated with those things.
Like if you're pretty chill and you've got a pretty good personality and you're pretty even keeled and you get high.
But, like, dude, I like smoking weed.
I smoke weed a lot.
But I like **** more.
I like smoking crack more than I like –
Damn.
Oh, yeah, I love smoking crack.
God bless America.
But, I mean, it was best 15, 20 minutes of your life
followed by the worst 30.
I smoked it by accident to start.
Okay.
Yeah, a buddy of mine was like,
you want to get high?
I was late.
We were at the gas station.
We worked at, went in the back,
we used to take these cans,
dent them in the middle,
put a little carburetor in them,
smoke out of that,
like your own little makeshift bowl.
And that's what I thought I was hitting.
And I was like, dude, what is that taste?
And he's like, oh, you'll love it. And I'm like, dude, what kind of bud is that taste and he's like oh you'll love it I'm like dude what kind of bud is that and he's like it's not it's crack and I
was like I'm already in so I did and then do it every day and I was like god I know why people
start feeding for the stuff and get addicted wow yeah yeah mushroom always the eyes I love the
party but I've been sober now so I think once I got that I got through the sobriety thing and
then also realize that as a man like I don't know it i was raised that that's everything's
about you know physical and you know who you are and it's how you were how you were uh valued as a
man and you realize like that's actually kind of bull like anybody can fight anybody at any given
time i've met a lot of people i don't think are great but they're good at fighting right you know
so it took me a while though dude and then when i had kids once once then then every decision i made was different because now it's not about my
consequence it's about my biggest consequences i can be away from them whether i get arrested
go to jail or do something bad enough where i just can't be around them right and now it's like
and now the decisions may are they're all very different when you start factoring that in and
you could be it could be a business for people that
are younger. It could be anything that they
value in life. It could be taken from you real fast.
Because common sense, it's funny, people are always
so common sense. You can drive through the state of New York
and you can have a gun and you can live
in Connecticut and forget you have
it. The gun laws are pretty mother
freaking severe. And they can send you to jail
for a long time. Just for having a gun?
I mean, for literally having a gun.
And I got arrested at the airport in Connecticut.
I had a gun in a bag
just like that one I carried in here with me today.
And I wasn't trying to sneak it on a plane.
I put it through the x-ray machine.
And in some states, they give you,
hey, go put it in the car. And in some states,
they're like, you're under arrest.
In Connecticut, it's one of those states where you're under arrest.
But I was like, I don't agree. Like agree like dude i wouldn't try to do nothing i
would think i could i have a permit yeah legally you know the guy's like is it loaded on my course
is loaded who carries unloaded gun you know i mean of course the thing's loaded so i i think for me
it really got me to to start to understand that you never know like people do small things that
we think common sense and make no sense and it's's like, he's in jail. Yeah. So I guess I just,
you know,
laws are laws and people end up in jail for a little.
That's why I always respect people and don't think that there's a,
you know,
I love when somebody's judges somebody else and it's like,
dude,
you did three nights ago could end you.
It just didn't.
Yeah.
And you should respect that.
There's something on everyone,
right?
We all have done stuff.
Dude,
I don't care who you are.
You know, I always tell people, be careful. The people that if they tell you they're sociopathic people, think they've done nothing wrong and they live this life.
Dude, all of us got ****.
Yeah.
We're all ****ed up.
Absolutely.
Do you have all your employees take personality tests?
Yeah, man.
I have a lot.
It's funny you ask that because we've done all kinds of assessments before they start.
Just kind of figure out who they are.
I do it with my sales team too.
And they're not employees.
They're independent contractors.
But I want them to know.
Like you need to know these things about you.
And we do a lot of assessments.
We do disc assessments, who matches up with whom.
Because a lot of times you get people that are like, okay, these two won't do well together.
But he'll do really well in general.
We just can't put this one in charge of this one. And here's why, you know, he's a high, he's a high D he's
high C all that kind of stuff. So I'm a big believer in all that. Cause for me, it taught
me a lot about myself. You start looking at these like, that's true. That's true. I had a group one
time they were arguing about how they think they want me to change all stuff as a company early on
in infancy, which we've gone on to, $800 million we did last year, and our top 15
people, and they had everything figured out.
I'm like, I'm going to give you a personality test, an IQ
test. So I bought
15 of them. I was like, okay, does anybody want to guess who's
the dumbest? And I took a two.
I'm like, I took a two. And they're looking around like,
seriously, I'm like, dude, I have all the results right here.
We're going to share them all with each
other. Absolutely. And they were just looking
around like, and it was funny because the funny thing about
the ones that scored the lowest, one of them was like, and this is how he was, he was dumb
and unaccountable.
And he was like, well, it was the test.
And it was like, no, it's God didn't, it's kind of like, how tall are you?
Six, five.
Six, five.
And I'm six foot on a good day.
That'd be like me going, I'm taller than you.
You're like, no, no, no, you're not.
God made me, I'm six, five.
Like whatever you believe in science, God, you're not god made me i'm six five like whatever you believe in science god you're six five and i'm six foot yeah and then the
other guy who did much better was like yeah dude i don't like tests i don't give like but he did
really well and i was like you see how he does well and you don't and you have the exact same
iq actually but like how unaccountable you are and how keys and people like him because you don't
have to be the smartest guy if people don't want to work with you.
And then I found someone that was like, who's the smartest?
I'm like, nope.
And they're like, this guy actually is.
I'm like, oh, we didn't know that.
I'm like, he's not near as smart.
And we went through all – we just went through all.
Not to belittle anybody.
To be honest.
Like let's know what we're all dealing with.
Because if we don't know our own inadequacies, how do we get ahead?
That is so cool.
But how much importance do you actually place on the IQ?
I place importance on your understanding your IQ.
I don't care if you have the highest IQ
because there are people that do this.
I don't think that I'm going to walk in a room
and have the highest IQ.
I'm not dumb, and I don't apologize for being smart.
I just don't.
There's a lot of things I suck at, a lot,
and I know those things.
And there's things I find every day.
I'm like, oh, I suck at that too.
I didn't even realize.
And then being transparent and vulnerable.
What I place priority on or importance on is vulnerability and transparency.
Don't try to be something you're not because people know it anyway.
Some of the highest income performers I know and some of the people who have the highest net worth are not the smartest people I know.
They know who they are.
They're great at delegating.
I was on a plane the other day.
I'm a pilot, right?
And I've always said said who needs science and math
And I'm like dude why can't we land
And he's like wind shear
And he starts showing me this formula
And a piece like there's scratch on a piece of paper
And I'm like what happens if it goes here instead of here
And he's like plane crash
And I'm like god when they say you don't need math and science
Some people just laugh
Like I don't need math and science
Because I have people around me that know math and science
I don't love it.
I love math more than I love science, but I'm not going to engage in it.
I'm not going to spend a lot of time talking about science.
But I think that – but also like some of the pilots I know have terrible social skills, and they don't know it.
And it's like, dude, stop talking that way.
You look dumb.
Like you're super smart, but then just be who you are over here.
So I place it on – I like people that have the ability to communicate.
I like communicating to people. I like people that are humble. I like people that are good to be around.
That's probably my biggest thing. Do I like these people? Do I want to be around them?
We're all going to have strengths and weaknesses. And also I'm in charge of most of the stuff I do,
but I have no problem deferring to other people. Hey, do you think this makes sense? Hey,
should we do it this way? Should we do it like, what do you think? Do you think we should do it
this way? I don't know. And that screws people up when you go, hey, what do you think? That messes people up,
especially somebody who's only been there for a period and they don't know yet. And you're like,
I see something in them like, hey, what do you think? Because they're scared. Yeah. And I'm
like, don't worry about these people. They're smart. What do you think? Yeah. I didn't ask you
how long you've been here. I run the company. I know how long you've been here. What do you think
about what we're talking about? Right. Teaches this group a lesson, him or her a lesson, involves more
people. It's life changing.
I like that. Did you see how Bezos runs his meetings?
No, I have not. So it goes, say they're at
a round table, it'll go from the lowest tier employee
starts first and then works his way all the way up
to Jeff. You know what's funny is
life insurance company I run,
about the first year and a half, I'm like,
God, these meetings are so unproductive.
And I was talking to a buddy of mine and he said, how valued do you think that they feel in those staff meetings?
Like, what do you think?
And I knew I was in trouble when I said I didn't know.
And he said, go into the next meeting.
He said, ask everybody to write on a piece of paper the three things they like the most about the way you run the meetings.
And the three things they like the most about the way you run the meetings and the three things they like the least and be like be open like they need to be able to share and they
don't put their name on it i was saying then what i do with it he goes then don't do it in front of
them but take in every one of them for the things they like the least about him was how much i spoke
and how uninvolved they were. Wow.
Yeah.
So I transitioned, and we were doing, at the time, $25 million a year,
and we just did $800 million this past year.
Damn.
And I went from like, okay, and I just transitioned.
You can't stop overnight.
You can't be like, hey, you run it.
But six months later, I would come in the meeting once a month to listen.
I went in there.
Dude, they know what I know already.
I came in monthly to get an update from them and give them anything quick they didn't know because I got it from somebody.
And they just grew like this.
I just hold them down.
I come in and talk at them for an hour.
Wow.
And then that's how we kind of learn.
Because when you start launching a company, you don't know what you don't know.
Like I was a CEO, CFO, CTO, COO.
And you're like, you don't have the money early on.
You really don't know where to invest or what to do.
Do you partner?
Do you get acquired?
Do you take on money?
How do you do this?
How do you build the infrastructure?
So I learned the art of delegation, man.
But I love that.
Basically, I had not heard that.
Super cool.
A lot of meetings, man, are useless.
So what's your advice to those looking to run successful, effective meetings? I mean, getting good people around you. And also,
I'm always nervous when people won't provide their input too. It's either I didn't, now early on,
I didn't provide a good environment. They were nervous too. I used to say this, how idiotic I
was. I used to say the new idea department is closed. No new ideas. Well,
if you're running for your life and like the boat sinking and you're the only one on the side to fix
it, then that's probably not bad advice. Like we can't, we don't have time, but in the day-to-day
life, dude, I know that my successful meetings are led by other people. Doesn't mean I'm not
leading them as well, but it's successful meetings are where everybody's everybody's inputs value but also in a place where if you are not productive your input's not held equally so like you know
the problem a lot of companies is this guy's inputs held is it but but he ain't doing that
he's down here so i'm always like hey i'm okay with your input sean but tom and mike's and chris's
we like your input and we we're open, dude.
What I'd love for you to do is have their productivity so we can – actually, I think you have really good ideas.
Except you're half as productive as them.
So it might mean you work 75% less than them because you seem to have better ideas than they do.
But why aren't you as productive as they are?
So let's let your voice be equal to your productivity.
And I love meetings like that.
I want it to be fair.
It doesn't matter how long you've been with the company.
I hate seniority.
Really?
I hate it.
How come?
Hate it.
The companies I've worked, first of all, I hated it when I worked at United Parcel Service when I was 19 years old.
Because I was like, why can't I have that route?
I deliver more packages per hour than anybody, according to you, my boss.
Like, you guys run the numbers.
If the analytics say that, why can't I get a better route?
I'm more productive.
Seniority.
That's okay.
So I learned as an early age.
I'm like, I don't like this.
It doesn't make any sense.
I took state jobs.
Why can't I be promoted?
Seniority.
So I hated it then.
In business, what makes me nervous about this, like in my industry, and a lot of them, I've built a waste management company, exited that, real estate company, life insurance company.
And one of the reasons we've scaled so fast is a lot of the companies I watched got suffocated
at the top, right?
Because you had X amount of people been there so long.
They believe they were entitled to everything under the sun.
Their opinions, their own was matter.
And they didn't grow with the times.
They never changed.
You know, you got to be innovative if you're, if you're like, if you're going to sit in
a constant state of mediocrity or you're just going to refuse to grow,
for me, I really, really, as I'm looking at how we scale it and I'm looking at seniority,
dude, I got some really good new people.
That's some really good ideas.
And I need them to know if you do as much as him, he's been here 10 years. I do love him. If you do as much as he does your first year, in my mind, you're equal as far as your contribution to the company.
Wow. So all the previous years don't matter for you.
I love you and I'm here for you. We're trying to scale a company. I'm not going to hurt you.
People ask me how long you've been here. It's 10 years. I appreciate you being here early on when
it sucked. Totally get all that. But a lot of times the new guy is not accepted and not pushed because a lot of the meetings
I went to, they bring the same 12 people up.
It's like, dude, they've been here 25 years.
Of course they have bigger businesses.
They've been here 25 years.
But you have people over here and what happens to these people?
They quit.
They're like, I can never make it into the good old boys club.
I can't get myself in there.
I want to feel good.
And also what we should have been teaching those 25 people that have been here forever is you can't get myself in there. I want to feel good. And also, what we should have
been teaching those 25 people that have been here forever is you can't have a big business and a big
ego. So when like, dude, we're going to have other people that need attention. That's why when you
see companies, they kind of blow up. They go to award ceremony, three new people get awards. You
look at these three, you're like, dude, what happened? It's like, bro, you've been getting
the credit for nine years, bro. Grow up. Go home. Get a friend. Get a dog. Tell your wife to love you.
Tell your husband you love him.
Why do I got to be your validation for everything in life?
And a lot of people, their company recognition award system is all the validation they got.
And that's scary.
And that's where a lot of companies just, they starve because they run out of, you know,
I had a guy tell me a long time ago, I said, what happened to this company?
This company was life insurance space imploded three decades ago.
He said, we ran out of credit. So what do you mean? I said,
money? He goes, no, credit. All
the guys that were at the top wanted the credit for
everything. There was no credit to give out.
So the first person that has to take no credit is you
when you run it. So I tell people all the time, we're
great because y'all are great. I want no credit.
Do I think I'm good at my job? Yes, I do.
I don't take any credit. You're like, you guys
are awesome. We did 100 million. Look at him.
Did you know him?
Hey, he's been here six months.
She's been here a year.
They're awesome.
I have great freaking people.
Now I have 100% of the credit still to give away.
I'm going to try to teach people in seniority that.
And by the way, you've already been winning for eight, nine, 10 years with the company.
Let's just be happy and let these guys win.
And by the way, if they win and we light more of a fire, you'll win even more.
Why do we have to continue to bring you in and hang banners up and tell everybody how
great you are?
Yep.
You know?
And I think that's a struggle with a lot of these independent sales organizations, whether
it's solar, pest control, they're everywhere.
Insurance, real estate is, you can't crack your way in.
Can you imagine how debilitating it'd be if I said, hey, join my company, and there was
a level system, but no matter how long you worked, you can never do better than that
guy.
He's here 10 years before you.
So his hierarchy is always bigger than yours no matter what.
Well, you're competitive.
Competitive people want to be number one.
Yep.
But you can never be number one, Sean, because Tom started 10 years before you.
Guess what you're going to do?
You're going to go start your own company or work in another company where you can be
number one or number two or number three.
You want a shot.
Yeah.
So I like fair.
I like unbiased.
I didn't like the state. They didbiased. I didn't like the state
that did the same s***. I didn't like it at all, man.
I like that because some people get
comfortable, right? They have a few years of success
and then they're not as motivated.
Let's take coach basketball, right? I coached
basketball for years. If you're a freshman
and you're equal or even
a little bit less talented than my senior, you're
going to play. He's going to sit.
But he played for three years.
I'm like, I got you for four more years, and you're of the same ability pretty much as him four years in.
I do let me go, well, he's going to have a better idea.
It's basketball in high school, dude.
We ain't playing in front of 100,000 people.
Like what, he's got better experience?
Hell, look at the upside I got with you.
And I want the kids to
know that hey guess what maybe if he worked harder he'd been that much better than you
then he would have played that's actually why i quit basketball i was better than kids older than
me but they had family connections there's politics involved there you go and how many
times does that happen probably a lot honestly way too much i never did i always tell people
when i coached i was like let me be clear my kid well and my kid was good but i'm like i'll sit his
i don't give a wow and i told him if you're a problem every year i learned as my son was
probably seven he played football for this guy and i loved he brought everybody together and
he was like here's the deal i played in college here mother coach over here mother coach we don't
think we're the greatest coach in the history of the world,
but we know this game.
If any of you would like to volunteer to coach, I'll talk to you afterwards.
If you played past high school and you have some experience with kids,
we'll talk, but you speak now if I ever hold your peace.
Once we're done with that, you ain't never going to talk about what I'm doing ever again.
And if you do in the stands
Cause a problem for this team becoming cancer you and your son are not welcome anymore Wow And he made him sign something he's like here sign this if you don't sign you can't play I was like dude
I like that so every year I do that baseball basketball every single year and
Then what happens is people are like how like you like the gossip. They're like tonight
I ain't gonna gossip I was coach basketball coaching basketball one time, went to stands,
because I could just hear the guy, and I was like,
we taught three years ago, right?
This is during a game.
Like, we got time out.
We taught three years ago, right?
Yeah.
Are you good or not?
Are you going to shut the **** up or not?
This was a parent of the player on your team?
Yeah.
Are you going to shut the **** up or not?
Because you're screaming about what they should be doing.
You don't even know what you're talking about, dude.
Look at you.
You couldn't run up and down the court twice without having a heart attack.
So why are you
screaming at the kids?
And then all of a sudden
the other parents are like,
yeah, yeah, go,
hey, wait a minute,
don't do that.
You didn't say that
when he was saying it.
So everybody's going to grow up.
I'm going to coach.
Y'all want to coach next year,
you can coach next year.
Go for it.
But right now,
we're all going to enjoy the game.
We're going to have fun.
I smile.
I say these mean things. We're going to have fun. I smile. I say these mean things.
We're going to have fun.
They're all friends.
You're friends.
And next time he's being,
tell him he's being peer pressure is a very powerful pressure.
And that was it.
I don't do it very often.
And it wasn't,
you know,
but I didn't do that when I was a parent either watching my kids play.
It's people always go like,
you know,
I think the coach should do this.
I'm like,
it's easy sitting here.
Why are you so passionate about coaching?
Cause you did 800 million last year. You know know you value your time a lot and you spend
a lot of it coaching you know i um because growing up that's what allowed me to get better you know
i was i'm blessed enough to be good and i had a lot of coaches that were very financially successful
and i i used them like they used me and. And I learned that at a very young age
in life. Maybe that's nice or not. It's very manipulative. I was like, okay, you're very
successful in real estate. I never had a house. You all have a couple of cars. Your wife doesn't
work. You all have nice. I want to know what you know. So I'd befriend him. And I'm like,
I want to know what your dad knows. And I didn't pretend, but I was like, he's like, why? My dad's
an idiot. I'm like, no, he's not.
Your dad, first of all, you got a dad at home, and he's making a lot of money.
But those guys did a lot for me.
We weren't best friends afterwards.
They bought me cleats and bags and paid for my trip, and I was cool with all that.
And I knew it would come to an end.
I wasn't like, oh, my God, he's my best friend.
He's been meant to me forever.
So if I hadn't had athletics growing up, and then in business I had good coaches too.
Now I got myself around them, and I think it's my job to pay it forward. When I see people, when I saw what you were doing and the time you put into it
and how bold you are and you're smart, I was like, and then you're appreciative.
I like appreciative people.
The first thing you said to me, thanks for getting on before.
I've gotten a lot better.
Me too.
I like that, dude.
Those are people I want to be around, real people.
They're just transparent, vulnerable, honest,
and they're trying to do something different than everybody else.
So coaching is a massive passion of mine.
Yeah, the energy is contagious, right?
I love it, dude.
Yeah, that's super cool, man.
So 800 last year.
Are you going for the B this year?
Yeah, we're going to do a billion.
Easy.
Actually, when we launched the company 10 years ago, I said we'd do a billion within 10. So we failed and didn't. But it's funny when we said we'd do
a billion. Nobody does 200 million. How are y'all going to do a billion? I had all these reasons
why. But I believed it, man. Now we missed it, but it's not bad to shoot for a billion your first
10 and hit 800 million. But it's the lives that it changes for everybody else too. Because every
time a client gets a policy, their life changes. Every time an agent sells a policy, their life
changes. Every time a policy is sold in that agency, the manager's life changes.
Yeah. It's like a spider web.
It's cool, dude.
You've probably helped hundreds of thousands of people at this point.
Oh, with millions of policyholders.
Wow.
Millions.
That's incredible.
Middle American people who didn't have any or didn't have enough life insurance. And I've been through so much and seen so many claims and so many
going on in the business, but it's been life-changing. But definitely a billion. I
wanted to do that. That was a goal. Not a lot of people can say they run a company that does a
billion dollars in sales annually. Right. Especially in the insurance space. How many
companies ever hit that point? Not many, dude. Did Patrick Bet-David hit it?
Not that I'm aware of. You have to ask him, but I do not so i know he sold his but it was for what 400 million he sold it for a lot yeah
nice and i saw you uh postman next are you partnered with that now yeah that's been great
dude he um that's another person he knows a lot you know about that space and uh and i was telling
andrew my buddy when it works for me i was like we gotta go down there because i want to see what
i can do to help him. I understand that's
also how business works, too. Everybody wants
everything. It's like, well, what do you provide?
Okay, will you jump on and support my app, Manect?
Yes, absolutely. Will you talk
about some of the stuff that you're doing that's allowed
you to build this audience, that's allowed
to do what you're doing on YouTube? Will you spend an hour with
me talking about that, and I'll join the app?
There's nothing wrong with that.
Bartering. Yes, but everybody wants this, like, how do I get it?
I don't know.
What are you giving up?
What do you got?
Bring me something, dude.
I'm in.
What do you bring to the table, and I'll talk to you.
So I'm part of it.
It's been great.
I was just on the way over here today.
A guy asked me about launching an insurance business.
He's like, I'm thinking about doing it.
Here's four different ways I would do it.
I'm like, I wouldn't do this, I wouldn't do this, but I would do it this way.
So it's been cool to connect with people that have questions and want to do a video call or do
an in-person meeting and i do a lot of that coach individually i started doing a lot of that and
down at my place and at the house i'm like do this i'm into the house and coach them up for a day and
teach them how to actually speak right how to deliver their message not in two hours tell me
who you are and what you do in 90 seconds.
And then why should I work with you in 90 seconds?
So we're walking through that.
Profitability business, building it.
What does EBITDA look like?
What's your net?
I've done it a bunch.
I've done it in three different sectors.
Built them, exited them.
Some have been much better than others, and they've been in excess of hundreds of millions of dollars.
So it's been a great run.
But, yeah, my neck's been good.
You can find me on there, and I answer questions from people in all kinds of industries. So it's been been a great run but um yeah my neck's been good you find me on there
and i answer questions for people in all kinds of industries so it's been nice we'll link that
below he talks about you know choosing enemies wisely that was his last book yeah you got
thousands of competitors how much focus are you putting on competition you know it's funny he and
our competitors yeah you know absolutely and i always my buddy's like you think you're in that
book and i was gonna read it you know we were just laughing um we can we competed for years man
um and and but competition isn't personal to me like i like that um i focus on what my competitors
are doing good and then i try to replicate that and then i focus probably more managing what they
do poorly and ensure we never do it so probably my best business lessons honestly in life have
been people i worked with that did a lot of things wrong.
And I'm like, dude, I'm just never going to do that.
That's the thing about parenting or the way you grew up.
I think if you grew up in a – like for me, we grew up in a – we didn't have any money, right?
But I watched a lot of good and bad.
And I really focused on like, okay, that guy does that as a parent.
I would never do that.
You're like, that's how you break these abuse cycles, right?
You're like, because people have learned behavior.
I'm like, so you tell me when you get your ass kicked like a lot of us did that you want to kick a kid's ass.
You didn't like it when it happened to you.
Or if you watch your mom go through, you're telling me you really go like, because when I was a social worker for 14 years,
when I worked in abuse with other children, they'd be like, what's my dad did?
I'm like, dude, that's the dumbest statement I've ever heard in my life.
You watch your dad kick your mom's ass, and you love your mom?
Yeah.
Okay, so you love your mom.
I can see you being mad at yourself because I went through that as a kid.
I wanted to defend my mom when I was three or four or five, and I couldn't.
Yeah, that's young.
Yeah, I wanted to, but I couldn't.
You want to so bad, and you start to feel bad about yourself.
There's things you want to do to stand up for her.
I'm like, but you went and took.
Like, a woman can stab me, shoot me, beat me over the head.
I ain't hitting her.
I'll run.
I ain't afraid.
I'm running.
So if they hit you first, you won't hit back?
Hell no.
Never.
I'm a grown man.
I could harm somebody.
Absolutely not.
You hit me as many times as you want.
I ain't going to stand there until you keep hitting me.
I'll cover up and get the hell out of there.
I may never come. But I am not hitting you back. I ain't going to stand there until you keep hitting me. I'll cover up and get the hell out of there. I may never come,
but I am not hitting you back.
Uh-uh.
Well, she hit him first.
She.
The operative term is she.
The pronoun is she.
But if a guy, it's different.
Hell yeah.
I'll punch him in the fucking mouth.
Absolutely.
That'd be a good day.
That'd be a good Monday, bro.
Yeah, there's some trauma, man.
My dad got physically abused his whole life, man. He never
laid a hand on me. But he broke the cycle. He broke it. That's the thing, dude. There's a lot
of power in breaking the cycle. Because somebody in your family, whether it's financial, abusive,
because I think that's the deal, man. When you see people, it's like, dude, what were you feeling?
What are you doing? And why would you replicate that? So a lot of the stuff I learned that's good,
I want to replicate it. And the stuff that learned that's good, I want to replicate it.
And the stuff that hurt, I don't ever want to do that.
That's why I got sober.
I'm like, I know what it was like to be a kid raised by people that were f***ed up.
Drugs and alcohol.
Why would I want to do that?
Yeah, there's a bunch of people like, well, remember you did this?
Dude, I was doing stupid s*** when I was 13 when I started getting high.
I've been arrested, I can, eight times for drinking and beating the s*** out of guys.
Like, I get it. Dude, I didn't decide. I got sober because I didn't want my kids to go through what I've been arrested like eight times for drinking and beating the shit out of guys. Like, I get it.
Dude, I didn't decide,
I got sober
because I didn't want
my kids to go through
what I went through.
That's all.
Powerful.
Yeah, I don't want
them to go through it.
Why would I want to?
That's what kept me
when you can't sleep
at night or you want
to smoke some rock.
It was a better,
thank God,
that excitement
of being a parent
was better than that
draw of smoking crack.
Don't smoke crack, guys.
Don't smoke crack.
Be the best 25 minutes of your life followed by the worst 30, 35 minutes of your life.
Don't do it.
Sean, it's been a pleasure, man.
Where can people find you and find out what you're up to?
Like I said, MinAct.
You'll put that link below my Instagram.
I got my own podcast, Closing Conquer, which I need to get you on if you would indulge me.
Yeah, let's do it.
One day it'd be great.
But everything through Instagram.
Hit me up there.
I'll find you. I've got a lot of coaching down in Florida. If you like Southern Florida, come on down'd be great. And, you know, but everything through Instagram, hit me up there. I'll find you.
We have a lot of coaching down in Florida.
If you like Southern Florida, come on down.
I'm in Boca Raton.
And I appreciate you letting me get on, man.
I mean it.
You're going to do some amazing things, dude.
Thanks, man.
I need to lock in from you.
I mean it.
You really are.
You got a really good presence, and I like being around you.
You're super sharp, and I love what you're doing here.
And I love how vulnerable and transparent you are, dude.
Absolutely.
Thanks so much, man.
Appreciate you, brother.
Thank you.
Thanks for watching, guys, as always.
See you tomorrow.
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