In Search Of Excellence - Andy Elliott: The No-BS Blueprint to Winning in Life and Business | E153
Episode Date: March 4, 2025Andy Elliott is a powerhouse in the world of sales training, leadership, and personal transformation. From a tough childhood filled with hardship and rejection, Andy turned his struggles into the fuel... that made him one of the most successful sales coaches in history. As the founder of The Elliott Group, he has trained over 600,000 people and helped more than 13,000 companies scale their businesses through his cutting-edge sales techniques and mindset strategies. With a no-nonsense approach to personal growth, business success, and extreme resilience, Andy has built a career on breaking the mold and pushing people beyond their limits. In this episode, he shares his journey from being the least likely to succeed to becoming a self-made leader in sales and motivation, offering powerful lessons in overcoming adversity, mastering confidence, and taking complete ownership of your success.Timestamps00:00 – Introduction12:15 – Andy's Childhood33:40 – Andy's Transition to Sales53:17 – Andy's Start in Sales, Mindset, and Self-Development1:22:20 – The Strategy Behind Andy’s Business Growth1:55:09 – Dealing with Haters2:08:27 – Cold Calling and Persuasion2:14:08 – Fill in the Blank to ExcellenceResourcesAndy's InstagramThe Elliott GroupWant to Connect? Reach out to us online!Instagram | 1-on-1 Coaching | YouTube | TikTok | LinkedIn
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The whole side of my foot is cut.
Like the whole side.
And it's me, it's my foot, it's my body.
She ran me over.
Long story short, blood is everywhere.
Everybody's screaming, my dad runs over,
pulls me out, my shoe's halfway ripped off.
Blood is everywhere.
I mean, it looked like a thriller, psycho, freaking movie.
And my dad takes his shirt off, wraps up my foot,
puts me in the car, and we race like 100 miles an hour
to a hospital that's probably an hour and a half away.
People who molest children, what was the number one thing that you looked at before you decided
to take a target out on a child?
My manager pages me to the tower and he goes, Andy, do you know how much money you just
made?
You just made $1,700.
Let me tell you something, payroll's tomorrow morning,
so you're gonna get the $1,700 check tomorrow morning.
Plus, you won high gross of the month, Andy.
He's like, you hit the biggest gross of all month
in our dealership, your very first car deal.
And that's gonna give you 500 cash in the morning.
["The Daily Show"]
Welcome to In Search of Excellence,
where I get to meet some of the most talented, successful
people in the world.
My guest today is Andy Elliott, who went from the least likely to succeed as a kid to becoming
one of the most successful coaches and best coaches in history.
He's coached over 600,000 people and over 13,000 companies.
Well, Andy, thanks for being here.
Welcome to In Search of Excellence.
Your story is amazing,
and I always start my show with our parents.
I wanna go back to the seventh grade
when you were living with your dad.
You grew up broke, broken household,
and you and your dad had this fight.
And tell us about the fight,
and then this fishing trip that never really happened.
Yeah, so well, so my mom left when I was two years old, right?
Which it's not a victim story, but like, so she leaves.
And by the way, my mom and my dad get a divorce
when I'm two years old.
She leaves, so my dad divorces her, she bells.
She gets custody of my two sisters, you know what I'm saying?
Right?
And my dad takes me, and we get separated
for about two years.
And then one day, my
mom, she calls my dad and I guess I'm about four at this time. And she's like, come get
them. I'm sick of them. And so that's my mom, just so you're aware. Like she's an alcoholic.
She was always putting her head through the wall, guys coming in the house. It was a bad
place for my sisters. But so my dad, we drive down there, pick up my sisters, bring them back. So I really didn't know my mom, but I knew that every couple
years I'd get a phone call, right? And it would be like, hey, if you ever want to come to Ohio,
like the Great Lakes are here, we go fishing, like it's so cool. And so like she would be like
once every couple of year call, right? And it would be like the cell of like hope, like she's
a cool mom,
whenever maybe she wasn't drinking or whatever.
And then so seventh grade, testosterone's flowing, right?
I'm hitting puberty, I'm in seventh grade,
I'm chasing girls, and my dad's like,
"'No, you're not going out."
And I'm like, no.
And I get into this big fight with my dad,
and it's just part of like dad's son growing up.
And I was like, that was after I'd gotten
one of those phone calls from my mom about three weeks earlier
And she was like come down here go fishing. You know, I'm your mom. I miss you, you know, it'd be so cool
I've never seen her. It's like a theory in my head. You know I'm saying
I mean last time I saw her man, maybe was a kid one time and so I threw it in my dad's face
And I'm like, hey man, I'm like do listen. I'm just gonna go live with my mom
You know cuz that's what you say cuz you want to hurt somebody right? I'm just thinking I can attack my dad's face and I'm like, hey man, I'm like, do listen, I'm just going to go live on my mom. You know, cause that's what you say because you want to hurt somebody. Right? I'm just
thinking I can attack my dad here. And, uh, you know, and we were all a broken home. I
mean, there was always a different step mom in the house. I mean, there were step kids
in the house. I mean, wasn't he married seven times? A lot of times Jerry Springer show
for sure. Right? Like it was full Jerry Springer. But the biggest thing is, is that my dad,
he goes, and he, and sometimes it's good when your kids test you,
like, OK, call him out.
Cool, let's go see how that works.
And so my dad did that for me.
And it was really good because it
set the tone for a lot of things.
And it showed me that my dad, even
though we had a Jerry Springer family,
my dad was still there with us.
He never left us.
He was always there with us.
As crazy as it was, as broke as we were, all the wild stories, he never left. He was always there with us. As crazy as it was, as broke as you were, all the wild stories,
he never left. He was always there with us.
And anyways, he's like, okay, cool. We'll fly out to see your mom. If that's what you want, that's fine.
And I remember I was like, dude, this is going to be awesome. So I remember just one call my mom, she's like,
hey, you're going to fly out here. I'm going to pick you up from the airport. We're going to take you.
Where do you want to go? I was like, I want to go fishing. She's like, cool, we're going to take you to Lake Erie.
We're going to go fishing. We're going to catch walleye. You're not going to take you. Where do you want to go? I was like, I want to go fishing. And she's like, cool. We're going to take you to Lake Erie. We're going to go fishing. We're going to catch walleye.
You're not going to believe this.
The most beautiful stuff.
We're going to have the greatest time you've ever.
I'm like, dude, this is awesome.
My mom is the best.
And so we catch a flight to Ohio.
I've never been on a plane.
As soon as I land, my mom picks me up.
Remember, she starts bawling.
She's like, oh my gosh, my son.
We get in her car.
We drive to the gas station.
And she's like, hey, I think we bought her car, we drive to the gas station,
and she's like, hey, I think we bought some worms
or something, and she's like, get you a drink.
I'm gonna go to the bathroom.
We'll go fishing.
And so anyways, I bought me a drink,
and I was probably 12 or 13,
and I remember I was sitting in the car,
and I probably sat in the car for 45 minutes or an hour,
and she never came out.
And so you're in another state, right?
You're a kid.
I mean, this is in the 80s.
I mean, you remember, right?
Everybody was smoking everywhere.
I mean, it was just like back in the old days.
Kids used to ride their bikes, never come home for days.
I mean, that was our life anyways.
It was just crazy.
And I remember sitting there and I was like,
hey, can you go check on my mom in the bathroom? And I remember this lady walked in there and I was like, hey, can you go check on my mom in the bathroom?
And I remember this lady walked in there and she's like,
yeah, there's a lady passed out on the floor.
And I remember I walked in and there's
two bottles of vodka laying on the floor, and she's passed out.
And that was the trip.
And so social service picks me up and takes me back
to the airport, flies me back home to my dad.
And I was like, man, okay.
So my mom's a loser.
Listen, even if she's watching this, she's a loser.
She's someone who doesn't want help.
And she's just such a bad perspective.
We've tried to help her her whole life.
And every time we do, it's always ended up being our fault.
And anyways, everybody has that person in their life.
So growing up with a single dad for most of your life,
I want to talk about, you mentioned-
Well, he was always in a relationship, yeah.
But like the stepmoms were crazy.
Talk about the smoking, my mom smoked too.
And back in the day, smoke in the car and, you know,
cough it out, like you said before,
and it just, I'd get these migraine headaches.
And sometimes it takes an epiphany
for something in our family for one of our parents to change.
So tell us about when your sister ran you over with a-
Did you hear that story?
With a mower.
Hey, I knew that.
You felt like you were sitting in the car with me
when I was telling that story, right?
I did, and to this day, the smell of cigarette smoke,
I'm allergic to it.
And people, I mean, my wife is over there, will say,
if someone's smoking in a restaurant,
or we're downstream, and Europe is the worst place to go, right, because people are smoking, I wife is over there will say, if someone's smoking in a restaurant or we're downstream
and Europe is the worst place to go, right?
Because people are smoking, I can't sit there.
And for someone else, they don't like it.
For me, it does something to my brain
where it makes me physically sick.
Yes, me too.
It gives me a migraine.
I don't get migraine headaches only with that smell.
And it takes me back to the car.
And so we-
It's like PTSD.
That's exactly what it is.
Yeah, it's like PTSD of war. But I remember my dad, so the
cars we drove, they were no air conditioner. You're 100 degrees in Oklahoma. It's just
hot. It's humid and there's chain smoking one after another. I remember my dad, he's
chain smoking one after another. And I remember dad, he's chain smoking one after another.
And I remember I was like,
dad, can we please crack the window?
My head is killing me.
I hate the smell of smoke.
I feel like I'm sick.
And back then, no one cared.
Remember that?
Like, were the parents shut up?
A different generation.
Were the adults?
Yeah.
Like now, I told somebody,
now if I was to spank my son in public, I would go to jail.
Right.
You used to get the hell beat out of you in public, I would go to jail. Right.
You used to get the hell beat out of you in public.
And they were like, beat that kid.
You know, it was a whole different thing now.
But I just remember though, that I asked my dad so many times, can we please crack the
window?
And dude, I wasn't asking him to stop smoking.
I said, can you crack the window?
And he was like, I'm the kid, or I'm the dad.
No.
And long story short, he said, don't wait for something bad to happen before you change.
Most people, they do wait for something bad to happen.
They're in a good relationship with somebody, something's amazing, they're doing something
stupid, they don't think that there's an effect to it, and boom, something happens.
They're like, oh my God, I should have straightened up.
I can just think about this so many times in my life, but this time, we were on our
way out to this land.
My dad had this dream of putting this trailer out on this piece of property.
My sister was 10 years old and her job that day was to mow this big field with a riding
lawn mower.
You know what riding lawn mowers are, right?
She sits on it.
They mow the whole field down.
I'm four years old.
She's six years older than me, my older one.
I'm chasing behind her. She's mowing a path through this field
And I'm just like following her and she comes up on this stump
And then she decides to put it in reverse and back up because there's a log that she hit
And when she did I was behind her and so she backs up over me and you hear this
And it's me. It's my body she ran me over
and she didn't mean to is this an accident long story short blood is everywhere and by the way
the lawnmower is on me and so uh everybody's screaming my dad runs over pulls me out my shoes
halfway ripped off blood is everywhere and i And I mean, I'm talking like, I remember yesterday, everybody was covered in blood.
I mean, it looked like a thriller, psycho, freaking movie.
And my dad takes his shirt off, wraps up my foot,
puts me in the car, and we race like 100 miles an hour
to a hospital that's probably an hour and a half away.
Now, because it was so far away,
and the whole side of my foot is cut,
like the whole side, like it's, like it cut my toe off, but the whole side of my foot is cut, like the whole side,
like it's like it cut my toe off, but the whole side of my foot is cut wide open.
It's like a razor blade.
If you cut yourself, you know how bad you bleed.
But it's also gravity going down.
Dude, I'm bleeding out.
And so I remember when I got to the hospital, the doctor had grabbed me and I was like,
yellow.
And my dad goes, or the doctor said to my dad, he said, hey, there's a good chance your
son's going to die today because he's just bled out.
Like we're going to pump him full of blood.
We're going to sew him up.
But like, dude, your son has bled out.
There was blood everywhere.
And I remember hearing that, but I remember my dad falling to his knees.
My dad starts crying.
Obviously, any parent to hear that your son could die, you're going to start bawling.
This is the thing.
We wait for something bad to happen.
I remember I go into surgery.
I come out six hours later and my dad is there waiting when I come out and he said, hey,
I'm never going to smoke again.
He never did.
That day he quit. So, you know, so I was telling people, I'm like, man, like,
you know, like, you know, like,
like that's usually how life goes, you know?
Someone's gotta lose someone before they straighten up.
Yeah, it took my grandmother, who was my hero,
who died two years ago, died at 104 years old,
for her to have breast cancer, for my mom to quit smoking.
I mean, it's very hard to quit, right?
I've never smoked, I would never smoke. It's disgusting to me as it is to you but
like you said it takes it takes a major near catastrophe or catastrophe to make a change.
Everyone has vices right? I mean honestly like and I'm not gonna go up to now but
like one of my vices that I found out about five or six years ago, being successful
meant so much to me.
Just doing well, proving everyone wrong, whoever doubted me in my whole life, that I almost
destroyed my whole family working too hard.
Again, you smoke, and I think that I have to work, I have to win.
That's the only way I feel that I, there's never, I have to work. I have to win. That's the only way I fill that deal.
And, you know, I changed that, but like, you know,
I didn't, I was too one-dimensional back then,
but my point is.
Well, we'll go back to the smoking
and growing up without money.
You stole, speaking of smoking, a Marlboro raft
and you slept on the Marlboro raft as a kid.
So tell us about that experience and why you did it.
And do you ever think back today,
now that you're super successful
Think back like holy fuck. I slept on this raft. Yeah, dude. I mean no one was around there was no parent supervision
I say this all the time. We were kids raised by kids
Like I don't ever remember anyone being home. I don't know like I mean just kids were always there. We were always there
Our house my dad so my dad bought a new home, right,
which was unreal.
And we got, but there was no air conditioner in it.
And so because there's no air conditioner,
it's 120 degrees, it's in Oklahoma.
It's like, it ended up becoming like an oven.
You know what I'm saying?
Right?
Like a home with no air.
You can only imagine after time, like it becomes, you know,
and then there was only guys.
There was no, my dad had stepmoms coming in and out, you know, it becomes, and then there was only guys.
My dad had stepmoms coming in and out here and there, but it was always dirty. It was
just like, there was no manners. There was no, I was raised, it's just like, almost like
in a twilight zone. If I look back at it now, so me and my brothers look around and there's
fiddlebacks all in our house. And obviously in Oklahoma, brown recluse,
black widows, fiddlebacks, they're very, very poisonous.
What's a fiddleback by the way?
A fiddleback has a back that looks like a fiddle.
It's called a brown lacruse, I think is what it is.
We show a picture of it.
And if they bite you, good chance most people die.
We had them everywhere in our house.
I would be sleeping
and I'd be like, and I'm like, oh, spider. And I just remember one night, like I kept
killing spiders on me and do the whole house. I mean, what are you gonna do? Say, dad, we
need to spray the house. I mean, I don't even understand what that looks like. You know
what I'm saying? But me and my brother were like,
we're going to go sleep in the pool. And so there was this, this is hilarious. There was, and by the way, we had this little tiny raft, but we remembered down the road at the 7-Eleven,
the Circle K, whatever, they had this huge marble raft, right? And we literally stole it and ran out
of the store with it, just so we could sleep on it. And so we did.
I mean, I was probably in fifth grade, something like that, sixth grade.
And so he was probably in third grade.
And so we grabbed it, ran home about a mile, and then we put it in.
We had this lagoon looking green nasty algae pool, which we slam in every day because we
didn't know.
You know what I mean?
Like, dude, this is like swimming in a pond.
In Oklahoma, you just swim in ponds Like dude, it's just like swimming in a pond, you know?
In Oklahoma, you just swim in ponds.
It's a pond in our backyard.
And we literally put the raft in the middle of that thing
and we slept on it every night.
Just every night slept under the stars.
Just, and it was-
It's like a water bed almost.
Yeah, it's like a water bed.
And we woke up sweating, but it was cool, man.
All summer long, we slept on that raft.
Didn't even think twice about it.
During our childhood, we all have a crush on people
throughout our lives, and they have big impacts on our life.
I remember there was a girl named Jill Blade in kindergarten.
I had the biggest crush on her.
And I don't even remember what I did.
But in the sixth grade, you were not
in the best shape of your life.
At some point, you had what I think you said,
chunky boobs, chest cellulite.
I had cellulite all over my stomach.
So my family, I'm really big into fitness now.
And my family is like 300 to 400 pounds.
Some of them are all big, all stomach surgeries,
all very big people.
And so I know what happens if I don't take care of myself.
And as a kid, I was a very, very chunky, chunky kid.
And I didn't really know,
because everyone else is, like when you were brought up,
no one was in fitness and all that stuff in my family.
And so-
And there's a girl that comes in the equation
in a talent show. We started to like girls, yeah. You start to like girls. And in sixth grade,'s a girl that comes in the equation and a talent show.
You start to like girls.
Yeah, you start to like girls.
And in sixth grade, I liked this girl.
Her name was Jennifer.
And I remember she did this talent show deal and I swear she looked like she was a senior
in high school.
I mean, I couldn't believe it.
I was like, oh my gosh, I'm in sixth grade.
This girl's amazing.
And that was my first like, I like girls, but that was like my first like, oh my God,
I love her.
Like I need her.
I have to have that girl.
And I walked up and I was like, hey,
will you go out with me?
And she's like, yes.
Do the little paper deal, the note pass, whatever.
And anyways, for a week she was my girlfriend.
And I remember, dude, I never felt so special in my life.
She was definitely the hottest girl in the school by far.
I wasn't popular.
I was always poor.
I was wearing the same two pair of clothes every day. I knew that she was way above me, right? But I had the courage to ask. I got it.
And then one day she just walks up and she says, hey, I'm going to break up with you and I'm going
to go out with this guy. What's funny is this guy today is very fat. He's out of shape and he's an
alcoholic. It's so crazy how underdogs come up and things switch.
Ugly girls become hot when they get older.
You know, hot girls get ugly when they're old.
It's so weird how things can switch and change through life.
But just a story told at that time, I was a big chunky kid.
I was very insecure.
But I asked a question.
It was a very good question.
I said, why are you breaking up with me?
And she said, because he has a six pack.
And you know, you've seen all my six pack, you're fired, and the things
that I've gotten triggered by in my life.
And I asked her, I said, what is that?
And she showed me.
And this kid had abs, and he's in sixth grade.
And I'm like, well, I want abs.
And I was a long ways away from getting abs.
And I went psycho, brother.
That was my first sign of recreation.
Total recreation, being reborn, reinventing yourself.
You've done it as a man many times through your life.
Women do it.
Men do it.
Anybody does it before they're going to get a breakthrough.
I recreated.
I ran around my neighborhood every day for about four months.
I ran every day.
I ran, I ran, I ran.
I did sit-ups all day long.
I did push-ups. I didn't see my body changing, I ran, I ran. I did sit-ups all day long. I did push-ups.
And I didn't see my body changing.
I couldn't see it.
But I had so much pain from the rejection feeling
that I felt from that girl that I looked up,
and after four months, dude, I was shredded.
I mean, I'll give you a picture when we put it up here.
I had an eight pack.
I was shredded.
I was lean, going mean, I'll give you a picture when we put it up here, but I had an eight pack, I was shredded. I was lean going into the seventh grade
and I was after revenge, dude.
I wanted to burn her eyes out.
Seventh grade, I'd come home crying every day,
stuttered like you.
I wanna talk about that. Big time stutter.
I mean, I went through speech therapy
and we'll talk about this in a few minutes,
but I used to come home crying every day from school.
You know, I felt like a loser,
people making fun of me, it was brutal.
And my mom would say back then as well, you know,
the cool kids today are not gonna be the cool kids tomorrow,
you're gonna be a successful, and you look back one day
and you look at all these other kids
and it's gonna be a little bit flipped.
And of course-
It's hard to believe that back then.
Yeah, it is impossible.
I mean, you can't see it even till the next day.
But tell us about stuttering for you
and how you got through it.
And at what point did it start?
And at what point did it end?
I stuttered my whole life.
I mean, I remember just trying to say, what?
I would be like, what, what, what, what, what?
And I remember they used to make me try to have to give
like your class essay or whatever.
And I just hated that man.
My face got so red, I couldn't talk because obviously I stuttered.
So I was like super insecure, right?
It was very embarrassing, you know, but you had to do it.
And I just hated it, man.
I hated it.
I hated it.
I hated the way I thought about myself.
Getting in shape, honestly, was the first time in my life
I ever felt confident.
Like at that time, I was like, dude, I can do this.
I believed in me.
And no one else had to believe in me.
Matter of fact, I don't believe that anyone even
believed in me.
But me getting in shape, I remember
I started getting in better shape than everybody else,
and I didn't even play a sport.
I became addicted to this running and sports and all
this stuff, and you say, what does that do to stuttering? At that time, I wanted to start liking girls, but I couldn't even play sport. I became addicted to this running and sports and all this stuff, and he said, what does that do to stuttering?
At that time, I wanted to start liking girls,
but I couldn't beat that stutter.
And I-
What age are we talking here?
Seventh, eighth grade.
You know, I didn't beat it until I got into sales at 18.
I didn't beat stuttering altogether.
And how I beat it was actually pretty neat,
and anybody can beat it like this.
I started learning and developing word tracks.
So someone would say, like, I need to think about it.
And I would be like, I don't know what to say.
And then my manager would say, well,
this is what you say when someone says that.
And I would learn it verbatim exactly
how he told me to say it.
And I would have to write it down like 20 times
on a piece of paper.
And then I would say it like 100 times.
And then I would say it with the tonality that he used.
And I just like said it.
And I think that learning those word tracks
allowed me to think about what I was going to say
before I even said it.
And then I was like, dude, my brain started to jump ahead
even faster than my words and started to correct myself.
And then if I started to feel like I was going to stutter,
I could actually pause like with like tonality
and no one would even know that I was about to stutter.
And I could trick everyone.
And I started to learn me.
I think the hardest thing in this world is to learn yourself.
That's the hardest thing.
And no one ever does this.
People go through it their whole life,
and they never go down the journey of learning themself.
I learned myself when I got a six pack in seventh grade.
I learned myself at 18 when I got into cells.
And then I learned myself at 39 years old when my wife said
she learned to live without me. Three major recreations that I can fully
remember, probably many versions at many different times, but for sure three
times that I can completely remember transforming and changing everything.
I mean you mentioned your face getting all red. I have nightmares but now they're
good mirrors because I help motivate you who you are. But I remember my English teacher, Gus
Seeger, pulling me aside, this was in ninth or tenth grade, and he said,
you don't have to give the speech if you don't want to. Because everyone's gonna
laugh. I mean, it's awkward laughter, you're bullied anyway. I wasn't a cool
kid. I just remember the pain and suffering from all that. And I had to
learn a new way to speak.
I practiced a new way of speaking one hour every night.
And I remember I'm riding in the car with my speech therapist to McDonald's, pulling up to the window and
being able to order a hamburger for the first time, it's like, fuck yeah.
And then, you know, you build on it and, you know, that pain motivates you to do better
and to work harder.
And, you know, here I am today.
And I made that look back at all the kids
who made fun of me and now we're living different lives.
So crazy, man.
So crazy to even remember that.
I mean, you don't ever forget it,
but it's like going back to that.
Yeah.
Like it's almost like another human.
Yeah.
And you know what? I gave that speech and I Like it's almost like another human. Yeah, and you know what?
I gave that speech.
And I did it, and everyone made fun of me,
and I knew it was coming, and I took it.
It helped me make me who I am today.
That's so crazy, man.
I feel sorry for anybody that doesn't have to go
through this kind of pain.
I always say what people don't have as a kid,
they crave as an adult.
Yeah.
Right?
And I always wanted to be able to talk to people,
communicate, inspire, you know,
that stuff wasn't even in the cards, right?
But it shows how resilient that humans are
and how much people can change.
Yeah, I remember going to group therapy.
Eventually my speech was getting better and my speech therapist would have this group on Thursday nights and
we'd sit around for two hours and my speech was getting a lot better and a
lot, I think six of eight people just couldn't even speak. I mean they couldn't
get past the rrrr and you can see their face face. And you're in a group of people like that,
and no one's flinching, no one's laughing.
And it just makes you feel like you're part of the tribe,
for lack of a better word, part of the group.
And I think that group being around similar situated people
and made everybody better.
Dude, I got a guy that works for me in my media department,
and he stutters.
What do you tell him? Well, every time, if you're like, I'm a guy that works for me in my media department, and he stutters, right? What do you tell him?
Well, every time, if you're like, I'm like, stop.
Say what?
And he'll say, I'm going to say, say what?
We're not going to go until we do this.
Me and him, we go all, and he says, what?
And I say, all right, say it again.
What?
Say it again.
What?
Say it again.
What?
All right, now go. All right, what should we do? There you go. What? All right, now go.
All right, what should we do?
There you go.
That's it, that's it.
And is it working for him?
Yeah.
Is it going to speech therapy outside?
No.
Just every day I talk to him, I just stop him.
And I'm like, bro, we're not in a hurry.
I got you.
We're going to roll through this.
And I promised him.
I said, dude, you're not going to stutter anymore
when you're done. We'll beat to roll through this. I promised him. I said, dude, you're not going to stutter anymore when you're done.
We'll beat it together, 100% sure.
There's extreme cases of stuttering and there's certain words.
The W was a big one for me.
Even to today, I get up, I can speak super fast.
So fast people can't even understand me.
I can just, and I won't stutter at all. But I know even three sentences before I'm about to stutter,
I can smell it coming.
I got it.
Do you know what I mean?
I got it.
Like you can feel like it's-
The vowels for me are the A's.
But you know when it's coming,
it's like almost knowing that like if you had Tourette's,
that you were gonna like Tourette,
it's like I can see it and I'll change the patterns
and the thoughts in my head and I'll go a different way.
I mean, when I landed the show,
like fuck, I got Andy Elliot.
How am I gonna get the A down there?
I was really worried about it the whole time.
I didn't even tell my wife.
I was sitting there on the plane like Andy Elliot.
I gotta think I'm gonna get the name on Andy Elliot
and not stutter on that word.
But hey, just like that.
And by the way, I'm nervous.
I've tried to add you on my show now.
I'm so excited.
Thanks for being here.
Yeah, you bet.
It's like a year.
And am I going to start out stuttering
and I can't say his name?
No, I got it.
Listen, that's why I told you.
I will literally be talking and speaking.
And I'm on stage or or anywhere and I can smell I know I
know me so good I've the art of learning yourself no one does it no one does it
they learn their businesses they learn things but they don't learn themself and
when you go down the journey of learning yourself you become very very dangerous
you can fix anyone if you can fix yourself you become one of the most
unbelievable transformational people in the anyone if you can fix yourself. You become one of the most unbelievable
transformational people in the world
because you can just change anyone.
Inside what's going on in your head,
you're under, in the mechanics of fixing your business.
How you scaled and growed businesses bigger
than most people could ever even imagine or fathom.
Why?
Because you can see, it's a super power
to be able to see around corners in business.
Just be around, see around corners. See the unseen. You can see it's a super power to be able to see around corners in business. Just be around and see around corners. See the unseen. You can see it. And I can see where I'm
going to make a mistake. Even in cells, I could see where I was going to get trapped here, and I
would pivot around there. And you know, it was just, I just, I knew myself so well, I could even
smell other people when they were going to box me or trap me.
And it's just crazy.
It's always going on in my head.
It's just like, I got ADD, ADHD, blah, blah, blah, whatever.
It's like having 50 computer screens open in my head
at one time.
I just see all of them.
I see all these conversations.
But I can smell when I'm getting tied to a word.
And everybody struggles with something,
but this is our thing.
And it makes you not value yourself very well.
Well when you're young, you don't even know how to handle it, right?
Oh yeah.
Back then, kids are different than today.
You get suspended or kicked out of school if you're bullying somebody, right?
Back then, I was like, all right, man, don't do that.
And I'll stop.
And then they do it anyway.
No one got in trouble for it.
Yeah, you got punched in the face.
Who cares?
Now you get punched in the face. Who cares? Now you get punched in the face.
It's like, I told my kid, my son's 14.
And I was explaining to him when we grew up that they paddled the hell out of you.
And my son's like, what?
And I said, listen, let me explain this to you.
Your teacher calls me, right?
Back when I went to school, we didn't get a phone call.
The teacher called the principal, the principal wore you out with a paddle with holes in it.
And your parents signed a permission slip saying, if my kid steps out of line, swat
him.
Like, I'm like, bro, do you know how easy you have it?
You guys think you can get it hard?
Are you kidding me?
I mean, we had it crazy.
You know, I remember I got beat every day.
So let's go back to high school.
You never went to class.
You cheated.
You got Ds.
And then tell us about the F5 tornado that blew everything out and let you graduate.
Yeah.
So, well, not having a leader, right?
And back then I would say not having a parent home or we could say even no one even wanting
to invest.
Usually, listen, my wife is such a good mom.
If we had a kid that didn't have a good mom or a good dad,
my mom, or my wife, I call her my mom,
because she's like my mom, but she'll step in
and take care of that kid.
And you see like good, like strong women, like good men.
If a kid's lost, if they want to be a good kid, you'll see parents step in to help kids, right?
Dude, no one ever stepped in for me.
So like not going to school, like who cares? Making bad grades, who cares? Report cards, who cares?
No one even reviewed them. I signed my dad's name on everything, who cares? There was no good, there was no bad,
there was no reinforcement for good or bad, so it's just like whatever, right? I didn't have a curfew since second grade.
I never even went home.
No one asked.
It's just like, I said it, when I say Jerry Springer, I mean, I'm like laughing.
Because like when I watched Jerry Springer, people are like, I can't believe that.
I'm like, that was my life every day.
Like it was always something crazy.
And so again, I was talking about tornadoes always happening in Oklahoma, more Oklahoma,
which is where we lived. May 5th,
May 3rd tornado, 1999, biggest tornado in the history of the world. It's May 3rd, 1999.
The movie The Twister was made around this movie. That movie, by the way, gave me nightmares and
I'm afraid of sharks and tornadoes. Yeah, but I was in that video though. That video, I chased that video in my truck with my dad,
my $400 truck.
Me and my dad chased it.
We were sitting on top of our roof, right?
And the tornado is coming in.
It's five, six miles wide.
And it's like, OK, everything is going out.
So me and my dad, and they were like,
and the guy's yelling at the time, the news guy,
he's like, get underground or you're dead. And you can tell, the guy's like flipping out. So me and my dad, and they were like, and the guy's yelling at the time, the news guy, he's like, get underground or you're dead.
And you can tell the guy's like flipping out and we've seen like people flip out
like, by the way, we're so dumb. My daddy had a damn storm shelter.
So what do we do? We get in the truck and my dad's like,
we'll just drive around the back street. We're good. We'll go around it.
I have no idea, but we made it around it and we came in right behind it.
And sure enough, our house was flattened.
I mean, when I say flattened, I mean, everything was flattened.
Completely flattened, gone all the way through our high school.
So if you had passing grades during this tornado,
because it's like an act of God, war,
whatever they call that area, if you were in it when it happened,
you just got to graduate.
Because it was May 3, and that was graduation time.
So you didn't have to take your semester test or whatever.
I had like 60s on everything.
So I'm not Fs, I'm 60s.
And you can roll right across that stage with Ds.
So I graduated.
I have no idea I didn't have Fs, but I had Ds.
So I graduated.
I didn't even remember ever even walking. I think they mailed it to me because I didn't have Fs, but I had Ds. So I graduated. I didn't even, I don't remember ever even walking.
I think they mailed it to me because I didn't show up.
But the main deal is I graduated.
Now I had to get a job.
And I remember I worked construction.
Since the whole town was just destroyed,
I got into construction for 30 days.
And I mean, I work seven days a week,
15 hours a day, and I was like, dude, this sucks.
What's with people who chase tornadoes,
especially an F5 tornado that killed hundreds of people?
It's sort of like, isn't that the same thing
as jumping into the ocean where there's a school
of great white sharks there?
Leaderless.
Do you have a death wish to go do that?
Well, you know what's crazy is I didn't even think
that people would die. Like, I'm like unaware. You're like one of the most, you know, they say,
like, it was super loud. It was like a train. It was like a train running through everything.
But you don't like ignorance, right? Like you got to remember, man, if no one ever said what's good,
what's bad, dude, my dad never, we never went to church. We never, I mean, there's no like
community we plugged into. It was, it was whoever was on the streets was in the streets
I mean I would go from getting jumped into a gang one week to the next week trying to figure out how to
I mean dude
I was like I was like that stray kid running around and that's why I said I told my wife
I said I'm surprised no one ever took me in
Right like like so at some point there was a lot of kids, one of those mothers,
man, mothers are normally the ones that are like, that kid, come here, you're going to be a good kid, come with me.
No one ever took me in. And so that's why, and my wife, I was like, oh yeah, like she's the only person that took care of me.
You did construction for a month, you were cleaning up the tournament, 200 bucks a day.
Yeah, 200 bucks a week.
200 bucks a week, I mean, so 200 bucks a week.
Tell us about the day you were at your best friend's house
and you meet his older brother,
and then tell us about a lay down and what that is
and what happened from that point on.
Yeah, so sales changed my whole life.
It's crazy, no one ever knows
what they're gonna end up doing in the end, right?
I always tell people, they're like, oh, I would never do that.
I'm like, dude, you have no idea what your future is like, how it's going to play out.
I did the construction deal, and obviously I just wanted to make money, which is what
people did when they graduated.
My older brother, or my best friend's older brother said something that was very intriguing
to me.
I never heard anyone talk like this in my life.
I've never held more than $5 in my hand.
Not at one point in my life.
Um, so we were sitting there and he said, man, dude, he goes, Andy,
you ought to come sell for me.
And I'm like, what do you mean?
He's like, you gotta come sell cars.
He's like, dude, if you can get good, you can make $5,000 a month.
As I'm hearing him say these words, $5,000 a month,
I'm like, guy's a liar.
That doesn't even exist.
I'm like, so if I would have seen $1,000,
my dad bought a truck when I was 16 years old with $400 cash.
And I remember asking my dad for months,
where'd you get that much money?
I don't understand the concept of cash, of money.
It's just that we didn't have any, and I knew that for sure.
And when he said $5,000 a month, I was like, dude,
are you kidding me?
I was like, I would do anything for an opportunity
to do anything.
And by the way, I hated construction,
but I would have kept doing it because there
was zero choice for me. Okay?
And so sales was my way out.
My first job, my first day on the job, I remember walking into the dealership.
By the way, so his dad was a general manager of a Mercedes-Benz store.
His father had passed away with cancer.
He was a very good man in the business.
And his son was 23 years old and was the used car manager of a Nissan store.
He was way smaller than me. I was a little bit bigger of a kid. His dad was bigger than
him, so he said I could wear his dad's clothes. I remember putting his dad's clothes on, and
they didn't fit me either. I showed up in high waters to here, but not in a cool way.
It's like I don't belong.
You can clearly tell I'm a kid trying to show up for work first day, look stupid, bleach
blonde hair, earring.
He was like, hey, take your earring out.
I remember I did that.
He said, hey, I'm going to have a sales meeting.
Go sit out on the porch, which is the front of the dealership.
He said, if somebody pulls up,
just tell them we're in a meeting.
Somebody will be out with them in a minute.
And I remember, that was my instructions.
I go outside.
Remember, I stutter at this point still.
This is how cool sales is.
This is why I tell everyone, I'm like, dude,
sales is like the free enterprise system.
Like everybody, it's your way out.
Automotive, whatever, any industry, I don't even care.
You learn to sell, you're going to get rich,
if you get good at it.
And everyone can become great at it.
But I go outside, there was this old man that pulled up.
And I remember that he said, hey, it was just like this.
He said, hey, I want to look at that truck.
And I was like, OK.
And I walked over there, and I just, I didn't know what I was
doing, and he pointed at the window. He's like, go get this number right here.
Clearly the guy's bought a lot of cars in his life.
I told him my first, I have no idea what I'm doing.
They're in a meeting.
He's like, just go get this key.
And so like he like told me what to do.
I go inside and I say, Hey, I need this key.
I go back.
The guy, one of the kids gives it to me out of the key machine.
I go back out, guy gets in the car, he says, jump in, let's go drive it.
And I remember I talked to this guy for about 20 minutes.
He drove with this guy.
Uh-huh.
And I didn't really know what we were doing,
but I just went on a ride, but he was cool, man.
This is like a real, and I remember he was like my grandpa.
My grandpa was really cool.
And my grandpa was a great man.
He told me, he said, I remember I told him,
I said, hey, you remind me of my grandpa, my pop-pop.
He's a great man.
You remind me of him.
And he was like, that's awesome.
Me and him kind of bonded in that car drive.
And I guess I was building rapport at that point.
I really understand what's going on.
I pull up.
As soon as I pull up in front of the dealership where he pulls up, he gets out.
A salesman walks out and goes, hey, why don't you know it's Andy's first day, so I'm going
to help him out from here.
And the guy cuts him off and goes, hey, why don't you know it's Andy's first day, so I'm going to help him out from here. The guy cuts him off and goes, hey, I like him, so I'm going to let him sell me the truck.
I don't need you.
I'm good.
I've bought a lot of cars before, so I'm going to stick with him.
We're good.
I'm like, damn, I'm going to get fired on my first day.
I don't really understand what's going on, but they're trying to get me a veteran sales
guy. day, right? Because I don't really understand what's going on, but they're trying to get me a veteran sales guy, right? And so I go inside and I tell my best friend's older brother that this guy out here,
you know, like he likes this truck and he wants to buy it, but he wouldn't want to talk to this guy.
And he said, just sit him down on a piece of paper, have him fill out this credit app,
have him fill out this thing. Let's see if he can buy some or not. And so that's what I did. I sat
down and guy filled it out. I remember I go back to my manager. My manager goes, this guy's gold.
And so that's what I did. I sat down, guy filled it out.
I remember I go back to my manager.
My manager goes, this guy's gold.
And I'm like, oh, well, gold's gotta be good, right?
And he's like, I want you to go fill this out,
ask him how he wants his car titled,
and then we'll go from there.
As I go and he's filling it out,
this other salesman comes back in and goes,
hey sir, I'll kind of help you out at this point.
The guy goes, if I have to say this again,
I'm gonna get up and leave.
And I'm like, man, dude, like,
like me and this guy are cool, but like, we weren't that cool. But like, I had built rapport with him. And I think the, man, dude, like, like me and this guy are cool, but like we weren't that cool.
But like I had built rapport with them. And I think the guy liked me. And I think because he knew it was my first day,
he was like being like he was protecting me. Right? Like maybe he was like, you know, you know, like you show someone love.
Like God brought this guy to show me some love, man, because it was my first sale.
But I called a lay down because the guy didn't really give me a hard time. He was nice to me He was kind to me. He didn't beat me up and I really didn't act like I knew at all either
I was I didn't know anything. I was just trying to serve him or help him or whatever it is. I was even doing
Anyways, I take that piece of paper. I filled out my manager goes alright
Andy go ask him if he wants to do option a or option B
A is this B is this and he basically put some terms that the truck would be.
I have no idea what he even wrote down
in this piece of paper.
But I go inside, and I'm like, option A, option B.
My manager said, just sign next to it, which one you want.
And so let's act out you're my customer.
And he goes, and he looked at me with this look.
He goes, what's the interest rate?
And I was like, the interstate?
He's like, the interstate? He's like, the interest rate.
And I'm like, the interstate?
And he's like, I mean, I had no idea
what he was talking about.
How would I know what an interest rate was?
I don't know money, I don't know nothing.
I know nothing, I just remember that weird silence.
And then he goes, I'll do B. It's fine, man.
And I just got up and I walked back to my manager and I go, he'll do option B. I don't
understand any of this.
I thought about it later and I'm just a dumb kid.
And the guy was being nice to me.
And long story short, my manager goes, no ways.
And I'm like, yeah, he said it'll do B. He's like,
get this truck back to the detail department now.
And dude, everybody starts moving real quick.
And I'm like, what the hell happened?
And so anyways, I rush this guy back to finance.
He goes back there, signs his paper.
The place in the back, washed the car.
I pulled it around.
He comes out, gets the keys, drives off.
My manager pages me to the tower and he goes,
Andy, do you know how much money you just made? And this is 1999. He goes, you just made $1,700. And I remember I was
like, dude, because he asked me and I said, no, I was like, if I just made enough money
to go eat a Subway sandwich, like I'm starving. I've eaten all day long. It's about 7pm at
night. And he's like, you just made $1,700. He goes, let me tell you something. Payrolls
tomorrow morning. So you're going to get $1,700 check tomorrow morning.
That's cool.
Plus, you won high gross of the month, Andy.
You hit the highest gross of the whole month.
I'm like, what does that mean, high gross of the month?
He's like, you hit the biggest gross of all month in our dealership, your very first car
deal, and that's going to give you $500 cash in the morning.
The next morning, they hit me $1,700, $500 cash in my hand.
And I was like, dude, I'm going to become the most deadliest salesperson they've ever
seen.
All these people, I'm going to crush all of them.
And that was my way out.
That day, I knew that sales was my way out.
Now I could have ended up in any industry, but the fact that I ended up in the automotive
industry, I stayed from 18 years old all the way till I was 39.
And then, I mean, I was in the industry my whole life.
And then that's when I quit
and I started my coaching company afterwards.
The manager, when you started,
gave you two pieces of great advice.
What were they?
My manager?
Yeah, when you first started.
Oh, when I first started, the first one is,
well, number one, he made me practice
shaking his hand every day, every day. And this is funny because everybody laughed at me for this.
Everyone laughed at me. I was the only one that made it through this. There was 10 of us.
And he goes, everybody look to the left, look to the right. Nine of you won't be here in six months. One of you will.
And he goes, every day we practice shaking hands. Every day. Look at me in the eye. Andy, shake my hand. How you doing?
Andy, shake my hand. How you doing? Andy, shake my hand, how you doing?
Andy, hold your hand sideways like this,
not like that, like this.
Come in, shake my hand, I want you to head,
how you doing?
Nice to meet you.
Pull me in a little bit, do that again.
Ready?
Do it again, do it again, do it again, do it again,
do it again.
And do people like, dude, I'm sick of this.
I'm not gonna sit here and shake hands.
He would take me to the mall
and literally make me walk around
and shake 100 people's hands.
He's like, dude, I don't need anything from you.
I just want to say hi.
How you doing?
How's your day going?
He made me beat my stutter by saying it over and over again, but also he made me look at
people in the eye, shake hands and talk to somebody, which I didn't know until later
in life how invaluable that this would be.
And then the second thing is, is that he said every time someone says no, right, like there's
an objection or whatever, he's like, you need to learn most people are professional wingers.
They're amateurs.
They don't know what to say.
And so if somebody came up and they punched you, right, if they came up again, what would
you do?
You would duck.
You would start to understand what's happening and that's a cycle, right?
That's a pattern.
And salespeople are dumb because what they do is they have a cycle and a pattern of an objection
that keeps going on.
Instead of figuring out how to overcome it,
they just keep getting hit with it.
And he goes, I want you to learn how anytime,
any place, anywhere on the phone or in person,
if somebody says no,
I want you to figure out how to turn them around
and get them to say yes.
Not just by being great at objections,
but also by pulling their shoulders down
and getting them to relax.
And he told me, he said, no matter what happens,
no matter how somebody gets heated or mad
or whatever, always stay calm.
No matter what, you can bring anyone down.
And so those are two pieces of great advice with the objection handling deal and controlling
my state and making sure I knew what to say and then also shaking hands and look at people
in the eyes.
At some point as well at the beginning of your career, you got the advice, be nice to
people and be on time.
You'll be 99% of the other people.
How on earth can it be that simple to be 99% of the people by just being nice to people
and showing up on time?
Aaron Ross Powell 06.15 Dude, I showed up every morning at 7 a.m.
He would pick me up.
I would open the gates, and then I would ride home at 11 o'clock at night with him because
I didn't have a car.
And I had a lawn chair.
I don't know if you ever heard my lawn chair story,
but I used to have a lawn chair, right?
Remember the plastic lawn chairs when we grew up?
They had the bars and they had the plastic.
They had the plastic, they had the yellow.
They had the plaid, whatever they are.
Yes, yes, they had the yellow, the white, the whatever.
Yeah, they were like rubber bands almost.
And they would click when you would open them, right?
So I had a bunch of those in my garage,
and I thought, dude, there's only
one way into this dealership, there's one way out. And so I put a lawn chair in the
middle of the drive and I would sit there in the drive like this. Dude, all the guys
are standing there and I'm sitting here like this. And then anytime somebody would pull
in, I would literally, hey, how you doing? My name's Andy Elliott. Are you here for sales?
Right? Are you here for service? For service, how you doing? My name's Andy Elliott. Are you here for sales? Are you here for service?
For service, how you doing?
Hey, my name's Andy.
Here's my card.
When you're going to go over here, parts are expensive.
Sometimes labor is expensive.
If for some reason it's an expensive bill
and you just want to trade it in,
there's a lot of times we can give you more money
than what it's worth.
I'd love to help you with that.
Shoot me a text.
Call me.
I'll walk right over here.
I'll meet you.
Let me walk you over and introduce you to Lisa.
She's in the service advisor.
Or I'd walk up here and I would have to hand walk.
I would put my hand on the car and I would hand walk backwards as I'm talking to them
to the parking space because they hated me so bad at the store.
I went to sell in 70 to 80 cars a month.
Average salesman sells six, eight cars a month.
I was in total annihilation.
I am an extremist like you.
When you did business and you went crazy,
people were like, when's enough enough? I was so obsessed. I wanted to be the best in
the world. Not the best in my store, not the best in the state, but the best in the world.
I love that everybody was doubting me. That was the only thing that kept me going. The
only times I want to believe in me is when my wife showed up at 26. I'm telling you,
that was my secret superpower. I used a lawn chair in the gate.
And every time I would walk a car in,
they'd grab my lawn chair and throw it in the creek.
And I would just bring another one,
because broke people have hundreds of lawn chairs.
At some point, no one teaches you what you're doing, right?
You're going and you look at something,
you wanna be the best that you can be.
We watch other people do and how they become successful.
You look at their eye contact,
you mentioned how they shake hands.
Most people don't know there's 14 different kinds
of handshakes.
Yes.
You know, there's the-
I don't even know that, but I believe it.
There's the sweaty, I mean, there's so many crazy ways
to shake your hand.
You got the bone crusher handshake and you got the wet fish
and there's nothing worse than the sweaty palm handshake.
If you know you got sweaty palms, go dry them off,
go do something, but because it's the most disgusting thing
in the world when someone is shaking your hands, but you're watching how people speak,
their mannerisms or eye contact, their postures.
You studied and you read, how important was that watching other people to the amazing
success you've had today?
It's everything.
I love studying.
I'm a people watcher.
I love watching people.
They teach me who I want to be, and they teach me who I don't want to be.
I think God made losers. People are not going to understand this, but he made losers so I can understand if I don't get my crap together what my life's going to look like.
I can see what my life will look like if I don't straighten up or if I don't get better, if I don't practice.
And then he makes winners and he makes comeback kids. People that winners. And he makes comeback kids, people that come back.
We're comeback kids, people that come back.
And that's why I love the comeback kids stories.
But I love watching people.
If I'm sitting there, I love my wife to death.
I'm psycho-obsessed with my wife.
She's everything.
She is my rock.
She's my battle mate.
She's the one I go to war with every day.
I love her to death.
If I watch a man, and he's being affectionate with his wife, I will
immediately emulate anything that I can see that I feel like is better than what
I'm doing. I don't compare. I'm just like, thank you, I owe you. And I'm like, boom.
If I see a guy and he's walking with his son and you know like he's got his son
on his shoulders and he's getting like a piggyback ride and I'm just holding my
son's hand, I'm like, no ways. I'm gonna get my kid a piggyback ride too.
Boom, I want to level up.
So anything that I see that can take me to another level,
I just emulate.
Modeling proven practices.
And the fact that me and you grew up reading books,
listening to cassette tapes,
or whatever that we were doing, DVDs,
and all that stuff at that time,
dude, the fact that we can train and learn
the way we can train and learn now,
like, I used to just only be able to watch the people
that were in my city, you know, or my store.
The world now, you can see.
You have this amazing epiphany, right?
You made $1,700, $500 on your first day of work.
You're killing it.
You made $150,000 that year.
And you came home one day and you said,
Dad, I need help with my taxes.
And tell us about what happened next
and what's your advice to people who are young and make money
and what they should be doing with their money?
Maybe you can go through your story on that.
Well, number one, money is an all in a.
Money is all an identity thing. Who you think you are is
what you'll earn. You can't earn an amount of money that you don't think that you're worth,
right? And I know that you know this, like you'll never out-earn your own self-worth. You never will.
And I learned that how much someone can make is just a label in your head. And once you label it,
you've silling out your head. Like the choke label it, you're sealing out your head.
The chokehold of every income is the individual.
It's not the company, it's not anything.
It's always the individual.
Now there could be things that play into that,
but it's always here, right?
And so at 18 years old, I made 125 grand my first year.
I had a PESTA or a whatever.
W-2.
W-2, right?
And I go home and I show it to my dad.
My dad, who was a chemist or worked for Kermagee or did
something, and he had worked there for like 30 or 40 years.
And he made $60,000 a year towards the end
of his retirement.
And I remember he looked at me and he was like, dude,
I can't believe you're making that much money.
And I'm like, well, number one, he was like,
you owe me rent, right?
And then I was like, okay, I'm moving out.
Because I was ready to get the hell out of there anyways.
I just, I needed a reason to get the hell out of there.
I was at work all the time anyways.
You're 18 years old at this point.
Yeah, I was 18 to 19.
That first year from 18 to 19, made 100 and a quarter.
I will tell you, the reason why I made $100.25
is because my manager told me that the most anyone could make
in our industry was $125,000.
And so my first year, anyone could make was $125,000.
And by the way, he was my manager.
Social media didn't exist.
I mean, so everything my manager told me
was everything that was possible, right?
You remember when you were younger.
I mean, what you learned from your circle
was what you learned.
There was a new manager that came in, and I remember he was from Georgia.
He said, and remember with the glove boxes, we used to put stuff in our glove boxes back
in the day?
He said, man, Andy, you can make 250 grand or whatever, 220 grand selling cars.
I was like, impossible.
I'm like, nope.
You know that wolf on Wall Street, show me your pay stub I'll quit my job right now I can work for you
and he shows him his pay stub and the guy quits. He said come with me in my car pulls
out his pay stub out of his glove box and shows me a pay stub like $220,000 and
I remember going well number one I've been lied to you know because that year
to date just showed me what I needed to see. Something kicked in immediately in me that made me push.
And from 19 to 20, I would hit $220,000.
I would make another $100,000, break
all the records in my store, do this thing.
And I realized, man, it's always been this way in my life,
no matter what situation, money, marriage, being a father, being in shape.
Whatever I think can happen, happens.
I know that everybody hears that, and it really sounds overrated, but it is really the truth.
It is the truth, it's the secrets, the law of attraction.
Every successful person ends up sharing this at the end of their life that until I took
ownership that this could happen, it never happened for me.
The sooner that I think that anybody watching this that younger, there's no bars, no limits.
Your mind isn't your friend.
It's not your friend.
You know, you've been programmed since you were born, the things you see, the relationships
you went through, the pain you went through, to believe that you're only worth X or you
can only do X or you're only as cool as or no one believes in you and you have guilt,
you have shame, you have embarrassment, you have all these things.
And that only comes from the devil who's the father of lies and he's really good at telling
us we can't do stuff, right? And long story short, I would tell myself these stories, what's possible. And at that point, this is where I broke into like, what's possible. I made 500 grand that next year selling cars. And I just became obsessed at that point with being a renegade. Now, I'm in the automotive industry,
and that was a lot of money for selling cars.
I think I ended up making, like most I ever made selling cars
was like 716 grand.
And then I moved up into management,
which was a deep motion.
So tell us about the self-development
you did in terms of how you got to where you got
to be the best salesperson, maybe in the state
in your dealership.
What kind of self-development did you do and what's your advice to everyone out there today
who's listening to this and say, gosh, I'm a salesperson for Oracle or some software
company or selling furniture who says, all right, this is the most I think I'm going
to make.
This is what I hear.
How can I improve myself?
What can I do to do it the Andy Elliott way?
Well, number one, I wanna tell everybody something
real quick, so when I was in the automotive space,
I mean, number one, the transportation space is huge.
So I'm gonna talk about any industry here.
But the transportation space is big.
For some reason, when people said I'm a car salesman,
they were really embarrassed by it.
I don't know why, but I was never embarrassed.
Like, I don't understand.
Like, people-
The reason is, by the way,
is because most people think they're sleazy.
And they've had bad experiences buying cars.
Well, the truth is, is that they have,
but for me, I saw that as an upside.
Because if I could be the best and be really good
in an industry where everybody else is poor,
then I'm gonna capitalize. Like then I'm going to capitalize.
Like, I'm going to crush it.
Remember, it's all perspective, right?
So if I could tell anybody anything,
it's like you can walk into work,
and you could say, oh my god, I see everything that's wrong.
Or you can walk into work and be like,
I can't believe I have this opportunity.
You can walk into your home right now and be like, oh my god,
I can't believe I get to get married.
I'm married to my wife.
Like, oh my god.
Like, I'm the luckiest man ever.
You can walk in and be like, dude, she's a nag. I mean, whatever you think is what you see. Okay.
And so my deal is, is that I remember I was in an event with Zig Ziglar and when
he was alive, it was back in like, like maybe 2002, 2003, maybe even Grant Cardone
was there. This is a long, long time ago. And I remember they asked them, they said They said hey who in here wants to make a lot of money and everybody there's like 500 people in this like seminar right and
And oh funny thing is is funny so super important when I invested I spent money on myself
You know my manager said he goes you're an idiot dude
I spent two thousand dollars to go to a seminar back in like 2002
And I just remember he goes dude. I could have taught you what they're gonna teach you. I could have taught you, just pay me, dude.
But I was like, dude, I've been working for this guy
for a couple of years, and he taught me nothing.
You know what I mean?
But I wanna learn from these guys.
And I was listening to their cassette tapes, right?
And so they were coming in town,
so I wanted to listen to them.
But I remember they said, who wants to make more money?
500 people all raised up and was like,
hell yeah, I wanna make more money.
And then they asked another question.
They said, because we were all automotive salespeople.
It was for the car business.
And by the way, now I train all industries,
but back then that was my niche.
Guess what?
He said, who in here is proud to be a car salesman?
I remember standing up.
I was like, yeah, that's me.
And no one else said it.
I remember my buddies that sold cars with me.
They would go to a party, and one of them
was a chiropractor, one of them was a doctor.
And then the ones that were car salesmen were embarrassed. They wouldn't tell anybody. And them was like a chiropractor one of them was a doctor and then the ones that
Were car salesmen were embarrassed they wouldn't tell anybody and I was like do this is stupid
The reason why I thrived in the car business was because I loved it. I mean look I didn't have good leadership
Honestly, I did a lot of stupid stuff. I made a lot of wrong mistakes. I almost went to jail at certain times
I ran around the wrong people but the automotive industry the places that I worked
There's a lot of good car dealerships, but the places that I worked were the wrong people, but the automotive industry, the places that I worked, there's a lot of good car dealerships.
But the places that I worked were the worst places.
Worst leaders, worst owners, crap.
And if you're around crap, you're gonna become crap.
And so, you know, being in Oklahoma,
I never had been out of Oklahoma ever my whole life
until my wife moved me here when I was 40 years old.
So let's talk about the controversy
and some of the bad decisions you made.
You were a general manager, there were two car dealerships
and then people were coming in without down payments
and basically the dealership which you were a part of
was committing fraud, essentially.
Tell us about King Cash and the whole experience
and you've called it, why is it that some
of the dumbest things we do
lead to the best experiences in our entire lives?
Well, so I'm 45 years old.
I was raised by motivation from fear.
Okay, not from love.
Okay, we live in a generation now
where everybody needs to be loved on.
Back then it was sell cars or you're fired. I mean, do you understand?
This is simple, bro. It's Randy. Sell cars or you're fired. How many cars do we
sell? How many cars do we sell? How much money are we making?
What kind of gross per copy are we running? How many customers are we closed
today? That was it. I mean, compliance, getting in trouble, black and white,
gray. I mean, we weren't in trouble, black and white, gray.
I mean, we weren't harming people,
but there's loopholes in business
that companies should train and teach people on.
And so when I walked into this company,
all these things were already going on.
I didn't magically create this.
I went into a company that already had
a lot of bad practices.
Now, it was a bad credit company,
which means they advertise for bad credit.
Like if you have bad credit, if you have a bankruptcy, if you don't have any money down,
like you're approved.
Does that make sense?
Okay.
When you are a roofer, if I was to go to your house and a storm blew your roof off and I
said, Hey, Randy, you know, obviously your house qualifies for a new roof.
You've had insurance for 20 years now.
I'm going to go and process your claim.
Make sure they put a five starstar roof on your house, okay?
Randy, it shows right here there's a $2,000 deductible
that you have to pay to get your roof.
I need that two grand so I can process your claim.
Now, the insurance company's gonna pay
what they're gonna pay.
And the deductible comes to the roofing company.
Does that make sense?
No.
Randy says, I don't have $2,000 for a deductible.
Oh.
OK, so what do we do, Randy?
Do we walk away from your house and not put a roof on it
because you don't have a deductible?
Or do we fudge some of the paperwork somewhere
and show that Randy put a deductible somewhere
and then go to $150,000 roof from the insurance company.
What do you think is happening in the world right now with all the roofing companies around
the whole world?
There's probably 90% of the people in the world that aren't putting their deductible
down on these homes for these roofs, but they're still getting roofs.
Every business has a gray area, a loophole,
an issue. Ours was, and I'm not justifying it, I'm explaining it so you can see. People
came in, they had jobs, they had pay stubs, they had utility bills, they were good people,
they rode the bus in, some of them had $100 beat up cars. They had a job, they could qualify
for a car. Problem is they didn't have any damn money down.
And so what happened is there was this thing in the company
that already preexisted before I started there,
and it was called King Cash.
And if somebody didn't have the down payment on a car,
well, you would just coach them.
Hey, if the bank calls you, you say you put 1,000 down.
And even though you didn't, you just say you put 1,000 down,
they're going to give you the loan.
You get a car today.
And as a 30-year-old kid who's been in the car business my whole life, I worked for a good
credit store for 10 years of my life.
I don't really understand.
I didn't even work payments out a lot.
Most of the time, they went to the finance office.
This was all new to me, but I was indoctrinated into this culture.
I'm not saying that I didn't think that we weren't cutting corners or something to do loans, but I didn't
think you could get in big trouble for stuff like this.
I'd never been in trouble.
When the owner, who is a bad person, by the way, that's what happened.
He's a bad guy.
There was probably a lot of companies doing it, but there's a lot of roofing companies
probably doing things like that. There's probably some that say, you know what, if you don't put the deductible down, we'll
walk away and we just won't put a roof on your house.
But then the next roofer coming behind you is going to take that deal.
He's going to figure out how to handle that deductible.
That was kind of like what happened every day.
Nobody had any doubt.
Dude, we were doing hundreds of them a month.
I mean it was just like, it was just a normal process procedure, a part
of business.
And then, you know, when they came in, it was like at one point they got in trouble
for it.
And then there was like a pawn shop deal kind of where we said they pawned something.
It was like there was a bad credit store.
But you know, my wife, the biggest problem with all this is that my wife said this guy
was a bad guy and I shouldn't work for him.
This is where, this is where I made the biggest mistake.
Every man should know this.
Women have such an incredible intuition.
My wife, when she married me, she said she'd always protect me.
She said, you're a project.
You believe in everybody.
You think everybody is out to help you and you always try to fix everyone and you're
an idiot.
One day it's going to get you.
And I believe that this guy, I'd worked with him earlier in life, I believe that this guy
had changed, he'd been a good guy.
He offered me a lot of money to really come run this store for him, and I thought he was
a good guy, I thought he had changed, I thought, you know, I just thought some stuff.
And then basically all this happened, and you know, he said if I didn't lie, he was threatening to kill me.
My wife said, I told you that guy.
Funny thing is my wife warned me of this man for a long time and said, don't work with
that guy.
Because my wife, we started to have kids and she's the mom now, now I got to be the one
that's the winner. I end up not listening to her and honestly her warning me
I was like you're nagging me because like I didn't want her to tell me I thought I knew the way
Well, it sounds like I didn't know the way and you know, I almost went to jail. I told the truth
The truth will set you free. This is biblical. I wasn't very close to God at this time
I was a Christian, but I wasn't like God wasn't like number one. I just you know believed in them and
You know, my wife said it's very simple. Any the truth will set you free. I support you
I will back you but under any circumstance we not lie
That's it. Like I'll be with you. I don't care what happens if you go to jail and you're jail for five years
I'll be there but you're not gonna lie.
And I need you to promise me.
That was a very hard time in our life,
but I learned that you have to go
through these very hard lessons, these nasty lessons.
Before greatness, there's always some nasty storm.
And I weathered it and I didn't lie.
And because I didn't lie, I didn't get in trouble.
I ended up walking away.
I would say like, God gives people second chances.
He gave me 10,000.
And so, you know, that's part of my testimony
of like, of what can happen when you do the right thing.
Were you scared shitless when the FBI showed up at your door
started asking questions?
Absolutely, yeah.
Are you kidding me?
Thinking about going to prison is a terrible thing?
Every person will never understand, right,
what that will feel like until it happens.
I always say there's two things
that'll change a man's life for sure.
One, you get terminally ill if you found out
you were going to die today with cancer.
Your mom changed when your grandma got breast cancer.
But if somebody got terminally ill,
they're going to change immediately.
Oh my god, I'm going to stop.
Or if you go to lose your freedom, you start thinking,
like, like, was this worth it? Like, is this? And by the way, I was like, is this real?
Like, I thought for a year, I was like, is this real? Like, is this really happening to me? Like,
I've never I've never heard anybody. I was never a bad person. I've never had a bad heart.
I just worked for the wrong company, man. Look, stuff like this happens all the time, man. And so that's the power of being around the right people is you don't
have to worry about this stuff. And I never want to go to sleep again ever, like worrying
about any of this. And so I had to go through it, man. I wouldn't be who I am today. I wouldn't
be able to help anybody had I not gone through that hell.
We all have pivotal conversations with our wives that influence our future.
At some point, you're killing it at work,
you've got three kids, you've got a multimillion dollar house,
and your wife says to you, I can live without you,
and she squeezes your love handle.
So tell us what happened after that.
Well, so we go through this like FBI deal, right?
It's like happening.
By the way, were you, was it one phone call? Or they're calling you into the office. We go through this like FBI deal, right? It's like happening. And-
By the way, were you, was it one phone call
or they're calling you into the office?
Yeah, there's just a lot of stuff going on.
It's going on for a couple of years.
You know what I'm saying?
Years.
Yeah, it's years.
I mean, these things don't, they don't just like solve up.
Like it happens in March and it's over by October.
They're squeezing you, right?
They want you to turn, you got immunity
at the end of the day.
Every single person day every single person every single person
That worked in that company
All lied
Every one of them lied I was told if I didn't lie just just look if you don't lie, I'm gonna kill you I
Mean I was called and said hey, there's death threats on you right now
I third like someone'm going to kill you. I mean, I was called and said, hey, there's death threats on here right now.
Someone's trying to kill you.
I want you to understand this.
When you go to do the right thing, the devil hates it, bro.
Like when you go to turn and you go from being a piece of crap
to a good person, when you go from being a liar
to a good person, like, dude, no one likes it.
But all those people that lied all went to prison.
All of them.
And in the end, I don't know if you ever watched a movie, But all those people that lied all went to prison. All of them.
And in the end, I don't know if you ever watched a movie, right?
And you kind of see how something plays out at the end.
They all plotted against me the whole time.
And then down to the last week, the sentencing was coming.
They all turned on each other.
They all started tearing each other to pieces.
No, he really did this.
He really did this.
They lied about everything.
I didn't get involved in any of that.
I told the freaking truth.
You tell the truth, truth will set you free.
That's why I don't have a felony.
I'm not in trouble.
That's why I don't have a problem with anything.
That's why I live my truth now. You know what I'm saying?
But it was hell.
But going on the backside of that,
me and my wife now, there's a lot of resentment
that my wife has towards me.
And then I feel, obviously, like I'm lost.
The thing about lost people is lost people
don't know they're lost.
And so money buries problems.
And so, you know, I'm making like 2 million a year.
I'm making good money.
My wife's got a purse full of cash.
We got a paid off house.
I'm doing better than everybody thought we would do.
In Oklahoma, which is a shit ton of money.
Yeah, yeah.
And we have a million.
Just everything, everything is just like, there's a lot of unresolved issues.
And from the outside
We are way better than most I don't cheat on my wife. I'm a good man I don't play golf on Sundays with you know like everyone else did like I'm home with my kids the problem is I wasn't present
See so I have this thing where like my wife says like love eyes like she's like I can tell when you're with me and
When you're not with me. She's like I can tell when you see me and you don't see me
and you see through me.
And she goes like, I support you as being a bad ass man
and making money and winning and killing it and crushing it.
But when you come home, like we need you home.
You can work even at home in the afternoon,
but we want you to be present when you're home.
And you're never present.
You're in the pictures, but you don't even remember that.
You missed everything.
You don't even understand what the kids are interested in.
You think you know about them, you don't know about them.
You don't even know what they like.
And so as you're sitting here, you're kind of like in
delusion when you're being called up.
She wouldn't call me out, she's calling me up.
She's giving me an opportunity to be a better man,
is what she was.
But I remember, I was always in shape. When I met her when I was 26 and she was 24, I was in good shape.
This time I was not in good shape. I had big fat love handles. I was out of shape. I was
chunky. I was losing my edge. I was stressed out going through all this crap that I just
went through the last couple of years. I was just a pile of trash.
Now you can imagine I'm giving her nothing but absolute leftovers.
I'm not present when I'm home.
And then my wife one day, she has this hard conversation.
I was like, I'm on my way.
And she like heated the food up or she had the food ready.
And I was like, I'm on my way.
And I didn't show up.
And then an hour later, she's like, are you coming?
Because like, you know, I'm like, yeah, yeah, I'm on my way.
And she's like, okay.
So she reheats the food.
And then an hour later, she's like, are you on your way? And I'm like, yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm on my way. And she's like, OK. So she reheats the food. And then an hour later, she's like, are you on your way?
And I'm like, yeah, yeah.
And she's like, I'm sick of it, man.
And those are the hard lines a guy like me needs,
because I'm always bumping the edges.
I'm always trying to find, like, I have this itch, right?
And the itch now is in such a good place. But the itch then is I didn't know what to do itch, right? And the itch now is in such a good place.
But the itch then is I didn't know what to do with it, right?
And so I thought I needed to work harder
because I could get lost in my work.
I can go get lost in it and I'm good.
And so I can bury all the pain.
She's got kids.
I know how much she loves my kids.
I know how much she loves her kids.
So like, she's like getting to be a mom and the kids love
her. They need her. She knows they need her. So it's like, it's like, and by the way, we're doing
better than anyone ever said we would. Aren't we winning? And really we're just burying problems.
So one night she just real direct, she's like, Hey, I'm going to be completely clear. And you're
not going to want to hear this. And she's like, and I don't want to hurt you, but you know, me
and the kids have learned to live without you. Like, like, like, like you're not here.
So like, we don't even operate like you're here.
Just so you're aware for years, we've been operating, like you haven't even been here
and you haven't even noticed you haven't even picked up a hint that we run without you.
And then she's like, also, it was like a double deal and people like ask, like, what,
so what did the second part have to do?
So my wife triggered me in an area that was always really insecure for me
Which is goes back to sixth grade being a good shape having the six back being fit
I always did good when I was in shape
When I always got out of shape everything always like went average, you know I'm saying look. Greatness is found in the extreme. I'm either winning or I'm losing. Right?
So like I average doesn't work for me. So she reaches over,
she grabs my love handle. I don't think he's ever grabbed your love handle,
but maybe we'll do it after the show.
I'll grab it and I'll just kind of pull on it for a minute.
It's like spiders crawling up your back. And I was like, dude,
how disrespectful is this woman? Now,
she wanted to attack my ego. Everything you want in life is on the other side of your
ego. And you know that. There's books on it. It's all the truth. I was a loser with an
ego that was hurt. So like in total delusion. But this solved very quick. I go in the garage, I work out for four hours, like I was going to walk in the house, like
all ripped up and shredded, and she's going to be like, oh my God, I can't believe how
jacked you are.
But that didn't happen.
So I shaved my head, right?
Which I honestly had like, I was losing my hair anyways.
So it was like even way better for me.
And I just went and owned my shit.
I just said, dude, I don't like me.
I think the awareness stage of owning,
anytime you coach somebody, you're like, hey,
you got to be aware of what's happening, right?
Self-assessment, right?
I didn't assess myself for probably 10 years.
I stayed numb.
Numb people are dangerous.
I was very numb. And I call that the scarcity mindset. I wasn numb. Numb people are dangerous. I was very numb.
And so I call that the scarcity mindset.
I wasn't living in abundance.
Scarcity, poverty, garbage, hurt.
And by the way, she didn't deserve any of it,
because she's an amazing woman.
And she would have been amazing.
She would have married some badass guy.
She would have had a good life.
She found me.
But let me tell you, there's always a really cool ending.
I decided that I was going to chase human excellence, and I wanted to be better.
This is so crazy.
If you want me to tell this real quick, I go to the computer, I type in motivation on
YouTube.
I'd never been on YouTube before.
I'd never been on social media.
We get 100 million views every 30 days on social media right now.
2019, I'd never been on, I'd never
been on the internet. Okay. I go to YouTube and I type in motivation. Tony Robbins pulls
up. I remember after watching 20 minutes and I'd never sat through any of this, right?
Like an internet was like internet leads. There was no like internet, like I'm watching
social media. I missed Instagram, Facebook, MySpace, whatever.
I never was a part of any of that.
So I didn't understand any of this
except for the search bar I typed into motivation
because that's what we people go for in the beginning.
They need that spiritual motivation to feel alive.
And dude, Tony Robbins, within 20 minutes,
dude, I changed my state.
I altered the way that I was thinking.
I wanted to win. Like dude, I saw a different that I was thinking. I wanted to win.
Like dude, I saw a different me within 20 minutes.
And then the craziest thing is,
is I always tell people like, I almost didn't do it.
Like somebody is always like this close
from like being in these shoes
and this close from being in those shoes, right?
And so you gotta understand like,
when you can get in those shoes,
you always go for it, no matter what.
But I didn't understand this at this point, but I'm glad that I did.
I live by this now.
Anytime I can cut the check for speed or pay somebody to mentor me or teach me or do anything,
I want to know everything that everybody knows because that's the shortcut in life is model
and proven practices.
People have been somewhere.
I want to figure out how they got there.
I want them to teach me.
I want to be their best student.
That's the game.
So I saw this training at the end that he said,
hey, if you want to change your life,
if you felt different, if you can see differently,
if you're in a different state now,
you know Tony's doing this thing, right?
He's like, I got this course.
It's called the KBB Broker Blueprint Training Course,
which will literally show you that how your specialized skill
can be monetized.
And I'm thinking, I don't have a specialized skill.
I'm a car salesman, right?
Well, my head is in the garbage.
And he's like, I know you probably are good at something,
right?
And I thought, oh, I'm good at selling
because I was good at selling.
And he's like, did you know there's people out there
that would love to learn how to sell
instead of waiting 20 years, right?
To be great at it.
They'd love to learn from me right now
and they'll cut you a check for it.
And I thought, this is crap.
People don't do this.
I don't even understand the world.
I've been in a car dealership for 22 years.
My wife's like, dinner's ready. As I go to turn around, something in my body was just like,
like heavy on my chest. Like, you know, like people always say like, like they feel a voice, right? I
think like, like God, like sometimes you feel that voice from like the devil being like, like don't do
it. And he like, you need to do it. And he's like devil being like, like, don't do it. And he like, you need to do it.
And he's like, don't do it, don't do it.
Because you're actually about to take a risk.
And he's like, don't do it.
That's the devil.
This one was like, do it, do it, do it.
And I was like, but I'm not, nobody knows me.
Like I, this is stupid.
I need to go back to work tomorrow morning.
Like, it's like, and then click.
I just bought it.
I spent three grand.
I remember going back to the dinner, I said,
babe, I just spent three grand on a training course.
She didn't get mad.
I couldn't believe it.
I swear she was gonna get mad.
And she goes, as long as you'll do the training,
that's all I care about.
So I made that commitment.
That was my first commitment.
For the next 30 days, watch how weak I was.
For the next 30 days, I did this training. Now there was first commitment. For the next 30 days, watch how weak I was.
For the next 30 days, I did this training.
Now, there was a money back guarantee that in 30 days, if you didn't get your money
worth, you can get your money back.
I studied this course like hell.
Russell Brunson, Tony Robbins, Dean Gracios, he studied the hell out of all of them, dude.
I totally was on fire, bro.
I saw a new me, my wife, so I said, dude, Andy, your eyes have changed color. Like, you're like, you're on a different deal here.
Long story short, quit my job.
I'm done.
She's like, whoa, like you're moving.
And I went to her and this is the last scarcity
that I've had.
I said, hey, I wanna get my money back.
Babe, there's a 30 day money back guarantee.
Can you help me get my money back? That way, you know, like it was like
free. And she's like, Okay, this is a chance for you to
understand how this whole thing works, which she was like my
mom. She's like, Okay, you're gonna leave, you're gonna go
teach people how to do this thing, because they just taught
it to you. And now you know the skill that they taught you. Did
you get your money's worth? Yes or no? Yes, I did. Okay. And so
when you go and train people and you coach them after they pay you and you give the value, do you want
them to ask for a refund? And I was like, no. And she's like, but you're going to do it.
Do you understand what Carmen is? And we're going to go build a business. You just quit your job
and you want your money back? And I was like, I'm such an idiot. And at that
point I was like, I have got to change this. Like my head was such a piece of crap. So
I worked on my mind every day, the greatest gift you'll ever give yourself is spending
time working on yourself. I spent every day, all day studying, training. I cut the check,
we sold our house, we did everything,
and we went to zero and we rebuilt.
Huge change in your life.
You're starting a new company, lots of new businesses,
most new businesses need capital,
and you got a total reset.
So you did sell your house, you sold your furniture,
you didn't have mattresses, you rented a house.
Put yourself back in that mindset right now
and think about the first day you're in this rental house,
you got nothing there, but can you put yourself in that mindset right now and think about the first day you're in this rental house, you got nothing there, but can you put yourself in that mind right now?
It was amazing. Yeah, listen, we, so look, I'm gonna tell you this, when a man
really decides to change, his wife goes all in on him, but not until she sees he
really made a change. And most people are like, oh, I'm gonna change. I've never
told my wife I was gonna change like this. When I made are like, oh, I'm going to change. I've never told my wife I was going to change like this.
When I made this change, it wasn't my idea
to sell the house.
Dude, this is crazy.
My wife raised our kids in this house.
This was her home.
She said, in order for us to make it,
it's going to take everything we have.
We're going to sell the house.
We're going to sell the furniture.
We're going to explain to the kids
that we're recreating our lives.
You're going to reinvent yourself. I'm going to reinvent myself. We're going to get in shape. We're going to the house. We're gonna sell the furniture. We're gonna explain to the kids that we're recreating our lives You're gonna reinvent yourself. I'm gonna reinvent myself. We're gonna get in shape
We're gonna get closer than ever dad's gonna be a good dad. You're gonna be a good daddy now
You're also right going to be here with us and our whole family is going to do this together
You're taking your family with us and I will support you. I will back you but I don't want to be your queen
I want to be your battle mate.
From now on, me and you, we go to battle together."
And I was like, I'm in.
Remember, I almost went to jail.
I almost did all this.
I see this guy now, he's changing my state.
I see differently.
Dude, we went to this little rent house.
There was mattresses on the floor.
My wife said, I'm not furnishing it.
There will be no furniture in this house.
There'll be mattresses on the floor.
We're gonna stay like this until we move out of here
and build our dream house. We're going to build our business."
It was like an FBI lab, two plastic tables. Me and her took phone calls all day long.
All I did was shot content on the internet, which I was an absolute weirdest thing ever
because I'd never spoken to a phone before or a camera. It felt really weird. But we
learned. We learned it all. We learned everything. I was so hungry and passionate. I had so much
pain and I knew everybody was betting against us.
Everyone was like, are you guys okay? What's going on? What happened to your house?
We didn't answer no one. We cut our whole family off. We cut everyone off.
No one knew what was happening. And then when I started posting all the stories,
you think people are on social media? You think people be like, oh my god, I'm so
proud of you. You're starting your business. No, dude. They were like, who are
you? This isn't who you are.
We know who you are.
You know what I'm saying?
Why are you trying to pretend like this?
And that's what happens when you try to change.
People can't change in front of their peers.
And so literally, me and Jackie upped,
we moved to Arizona, which is here.
We left everything we knew.
Everyone, everything, all of it.
And dude, I'm telling you,
we rebuilt our whole freaking life
and the rest is history, dude.
Everyone can do it.
But she backed me.
She backed me because I kept my word that time.
When we reinvent ourselves,
we have to tell ourselves the truth.
And why is it so hard for us to look in the mirror
and be honest with ourselves?
Because we feel unworthy.
I mean, honestly, I mean, really anybody that's been through a hell life or through some stuff,
I mean, you know, you're thinking about all the people that said you weren't going to
make it.
You're dude, honestly, you're thinking about how bad you've been to yourself.
I was really bad to me for a long time.
Dude, when I was going through the FBI stuff, there was a lot of times I was like, dude,
I'm going to kill me.
Like if I would just like, like if I would would just kill me, everybody's going to be better.
Dude, the devil's so good about making people think they're not
going to make it through a situation.
And so the good thing is that, again, I just, lessons, man.
They're just lessons.
They're nasty lessons.
And I don't wish anybody to have to go through any
of these nasty lessons. But I've learned the bigger to have to go through any of these nasty lessons, but I've learned
the bigger the mess, usually the bigger the message, man.
The more wounds you have, the more weaponized you are.
Saul and the Bible turned to Paul.
I mean, dude, he was a Christian killer and took the Bible the furthest.
I mean, it's like, dude, I think God likes a good example.
I think he likes good examples, you know?
So that other people can be like,
hell dude, if he did that, I can do it.
So you started this new business, coaching business,
Elliott Group is the name of the business,
and you started putting out videos online.
You actually put them for sale
before the class was even finished.
So tell us, most people have a plan,
they just don't create these videos online you just
Kind of child by area started posting all these free content
Give us the strategy between free content and paid content
And how does that whole conversion process work people are saying?
Why should I want to pay Andy Elliot this all this money when I can get it for free?
Well number one you get better every day. That's the trick
And so I learned this right out the gate, which I had
a lot of people tell me like, don't give away everything you
got because then nobody can pay you for anything. Again, that's
not the abundance mindset. That's a scarcity mindset. And
I'm thank God I didn't listen to those people. Because like
value first like value added content was what we did. So
basically, what I did is that I crushed the game. If you if you
really want to know this in 30 seconds, I went to Google, I typed in car sales training, because that's what I did is that I crushed the game. If you really want to know this in 30 seconds, I went to Google.
I typed in car sales training because that's what I was good at at first, right, before
we'd niche out to all industries.
I went into Google and I typed in car sales training.
Car sales training in Google said people also searched.
All of those titles that it gave me that people also searched, I made YouTube videos on every
one of those titles. I clicked on those titles that said people also searched, and I knew that Google had
crawled that blog or that video, and that copy was very enticing because it served it
before anything else.
Out of like 20 million searches, it served that one, so I'd copy and paste and move it
over here.
So literally, it would crawl mine, and I'd use the same title, and then I made videos
showing how to overcome that.
I made 500 to 1,000 videos within one year.
Just kicking them out every day.
Every day, I'd do three to five a day.
Long form YouTube videos.
And then guess what happened?
I didn't ask for a dollar.
I went broke for a year.
All I did, watch, smartest thing thing I did and it was stupid but smart
So Gary V had this text community and it said text me. I didn't understand it was a text community
Like what does that mean? Because I don't not smart technology. I thought he gave his cell phone number out
I was like did this school guy gives his cell phone number?
So I gave my cell phone number out
to everyone. And so every day it'd be like a dick pic, like a naked picture, somebody saying something
bad and then 10 people telling me they love my training.
It's like every day.
It was like that was the world.
And I wouldn't ask anybody to buy anything.
I would just respond and say, hey man, I believe in you.
I appreciate you.
If you need something, let me know.
If you have an objection, I'll help you cover it.
If you want to be a good leader, this is this.
And I was doing this and I was posting content online about my life-changing transformation and getting in shape, talking
about my wife, loving my kids, and I'm doing all these things.
The biggest, craziest thing is that I built up a following and an audience.
I really understand what I was doing.
This guy told me, he goes, in 2020, he goes, did you need to build a course?
I built a zero to 100K course.
It's how to go from zero to $100,000 to sales guy.
I posted it. It wasn't even finished. The course wasn't even made yet. I just kind of started
making it. But he was like, yeah, you ought to pre-release it. Tell people it's a thousand,
but they can buy it for like $299 if they get it tonight. And I was like, oh, great idea. I didn't
really know what I was doing. So I go make this YouTube deal, and I go live on YouTube to the
people that had been watching me give away free content for the last year.
I said, hey, if you've been watching my content and it's helped change your life or make you
more money in any way, I've actually created a structured course.
You don't have to dig all over YouTube for it.
21 modules that will teach you how to go from zero to 100,000 fast and get there again and
again and again and sells.
I made it this.
You guys have been asking for it.
So I made it.
I go to bed
I woke up the next morning. There's 150 grand in my stripe account and then I started to understand
I'm gonna I'm gonna make this a business and I just became obsessed and I still to this day
Give away massive amounts of free content and training everywhere
I think honestly a lot of people are always like if you buy this thing, I'll show you how good I am
I get better every day dude. I take the old lot of people are always like, if you buy this thing, I'll show you how good I am. I get better every day, dude.
I take the old me to the back of the building. I shoot him in the head every day.
So if you knew me yesterday, like if we meet today, tomorrow, you're not gonna know me,
because I'm gonna be a different guy.
So if you bought my training yesterday, today, like you're gonna have to buy it again today,
because I just keep growing, man.
Like I understand the art and the game of change, and I become obsessed with it.
I'm a super freak with it.
Like I'm obsessed, like a crack head with it like I'm obsessed like a crackhead
Trying to chase his next hit a crack
For an edge for a self development for social media. Do you understand the algorithms like no one I understand everything
I understand how to transform change anybody's life when somebody's talking to me. I can feel their pain. I can change them
I know I can change them. I can teach people to sell I never turn it off
I don't have an off switch.
I was dead for 39 years. So now I'm going to be like this until I die. And anyways, that's how I
built my business. Yeah, three years, nine figure business. And one of the things you've done, I've
been walking around here now for two days. Brandon's been amazing. Shout out to Brandon for showing me around. He's
incredible, absolutely incredible. Andrew Loranger, we got to give a shout out to
him because without him introducing to Brandon that I wouldn't be here. So
Andrew, appreciate you so much. Appreciate you, brother. The culture on here is
absolutely insane. You can feel the energy when you walk in the building.
Culture is such an important part of how we build successful companies.
You have put out there that I will pay you
$10 million in cash if you can recruit somebody
for my company.
Is that insanity or is that reality?
So I lived by that for a while,
but then I realized that honestly,
that could never exist or play out.
It did, for the first couple
years of my life I lived by that. To be honest with me, I mean to you like, like I
thought when you change someone's life, when you would, when you took someone who
was broken and didn't, didn't under, had a lost marriage, wasn't a good father,
wasn't a good mother, didn't make any money, had no one believe in them. I thought if you took someone like that and you would
Totally change everything in their life and give them everything and show them a life that they never could ever have I
Just thought like people like that would stay with you forever
like it doesn't like it doesn't make sense, right and
and so
That's the way I lived for the first couple of years.
Like if you can recruit one of my guys,
like I'd give you 10 million cash, like you can't do it.
It's impossible, my team would never leave me.
But then I had a guy quit and it totally blew me away.
And then when he left, I sat back and I realized
that I had saved this guy every month for
four years.
I had talked this guy down from burning his life to the ground every month.
I was never going to stop this guy from burning his life to the ground.
And honestly, I love the guy.
I wish him the best, but I could not.
I couldn't have done anything.
I always ask myself, when somebody leaves
or at any point in time, like, could I have done,
like what could I have done differently?
I did nothing.
I mean, I physically could have done nothing.
And so I realized that honestly,
like I've built such an incredible culture.
I've built such an incredible life.
I give everything to everyone around here.
I would die for them, truly.
I take care of their kids.
They take care of my kids.
Our families are here.
We have 87 people on payroll right now currently.
We would do anything.
They said, don't get close to your people.
We do life with our people.
We do anything.
But you understand this.
You're around here.
You see how close everybody is, the fire, the culture.
That's why we scale so fast.
They're not salespeople.
They're all coaches.
They're all me, and they're all younger, and they're on fire, dude.
They're fire.
We're obsessed with this development.
But I can't keep everybody forever.
And it's good to be delusional, right?
And does it hurt when somebody leaves?
Yeah, it hurts.
But at the end of the day, honestly,
I think 95% of my team will be with me forever.
I think that having the right people around you
is a very important part of life.
And you know, I let them operate this business like it's theirs.
I let them build their own brands and everything in it.
And that's why we call Elliot Army.
People come here because you can change lives.
How can a company be a sniper?
Well, number one, when you when you change someone's life, 99.9% of people will be indebted to you for life.
That's what I do.
I find people in my coaching program that I changed their life.
I have their back now until death.
I'm with them.
It's just crazy.
It's not a career. It's not a career.
It's not a job.
This is our life.
What else would we do?
To be real, I know you've sold businesses, right?
But I don't ever want to sell this.
I love this.
This is what makes me healthy.
This is what makes me tick.
This isn't a business.
This is what made me a good man.
This is my ministry.
This is all our ministries.
We all wanted to be good people.
And the crazy thing is, I always say, God opens doors
humans can't close.
I try to open these doors for so long,
and humans can close them.
And things always happen.
But the Elliott Group, it's our ministry.
You can't close the doors.
We're doing God's work.
We're not calling it a church, but we're doing God's work, for sure.
You have amazing people around here.
I know I've met some of them along the way and I've done a lot of research and done research
on you.
And one of the things you're known for, and I was my cousin, my nephew texted me, Andy
Elliott, and then he started talking about the six pack.
And you made this comment once, you're at this conference, you're speaking on stage,
there's a bunch of obese people there on their phones,
and you said, we don't hire people
if you don't have a six pack,
so we'll fire you if you don't have a six pack.
True, not really true, metaphor, reality?
Number one, I wanted to trigger the hell out of everybody.
Which you did.
Right, and it's always good to get a good piece
of viral social media content. I mean, there's nothing better, right? People still know it's always good to get a good piece of viral social media content
I mean, there's nothing better right people still it was a great viral deal. I gotta think of something like that by the way
You gotta give me a little heads up on how I can do that for our business
But do you know what is genius and this is crazy?
is a well well when people aren't paying attention, okay, like I
Don't like it. Like I like it.
Like if you say you want something,
then like I believe that you want it.
And then when I see you're distracted,
like I'm really, I'm kind of confused, right?
Like are we rude?
It's rude by the way.
Yeah, yeah.
So like, so most people don't say nothing.
They put up with it, but like as a leader,
like you get what you tolerate.
So like, I'm not gonna tolerate it.
Like you can, with all these other speakers,
you can get on their phones.
Like you can mess around, like you can,
but I'm not, I'm not gonna tolerate it.
Like you came here to grow. you came here to learn, right?
So there's like 45 minutes, I'm gonna recreate your life,
so you're gonna pay attention.
And so the people that don't, I just thought, you know,
like I looked over and there was this person
and they weren't obese, but they were just out of shape.
They were lazy, they looked lethargic.
Like in a sense, like they didn't care.
And so I was like, okay, I was like, come here, man. Come here.
I'm like, come here.
And I'm like, OK, so you kiss your kids, your wife goodbye.
You come to this event.
You pay this money.
You travel here, right?
Is that what happened?
Yeah, you got two kids at home?
OK, cool.
How old are your kids?
Eight, six.
Is this the example you want to be for your kids?
I'm just asking.
Like, take a look at yourself, right?
Not paying attention.
You left your family to sit here and be jacking around on your phone
while you're at an event that you told your family you were going to come to,
to spend time away from them to get better.
Is this your best self?
Is this your kid's hero right now?
If I call your son up here right now and I ask him,
I say, who's your hero?
Is he going to say my dad?
I don't think so.
And I was like, take your shirt off. And by the way, I love doing this. Is he going to say, my dad? I don't think so.
And I was like, take your shirt off.
And by the way, I love doing this because I trigger the hell out of people.
And what I say is that go look in the mirror, right?
Because at the end of the day, you have to live with you.
I don't go home with you, bro.
You go home with you.
You look in the mirror, man.
And if you're not really wanting to look in there, it's because you're dodging that guy.
That guy is a solution to every damn problem in your life.
That guy.
Nobody wants to face that guy.
The devil does not want you to look in that mirror and own your shit and get your stuff
together.
He don't want you to.
He don't want you to buy the training program.
He don't want you to go to the gym.
He wants you to be lazy.
He wants you to live in scarcity.
He wants you to be a piece of crap.
Over his dead body does he want you to be an example to your children.
It is child neglect if you're not an example to your children
Who else should be should it be some other man be to motivate my wife and kids should that be should that be the neighbor?
Or is it you because most men it's not them
And so I speak to these men and I might do listen if you think your wife's proud of you. You're an absolute idiot
She doesn't chase you around the house, bro. She doesn't chase you around the house no more
You know I'm saying she doesn't feel like around the house, bro. She doesn't chase you around the house no more. You know what I'm saying?
She doesn't feel like she's seen by you.
I'm telling you.
And it doesn't bother you, you're a loser.
I just get really pissed about this stuff
because there used to be a time I thought
which men were like the example in a home.
And they're just not.
They call it this masculinity phase.
It's called being a man.
Okay? It's called being a man. And being a very loving man. Like Christians are love. Like without love you're bankrupt.
They're very loving men who are savages, who protect their home.
I freaking hate this. I said this on stage to a guy one time. I said, you know, they interviewed all these child molesters.
People who molest children and they asked them, what was the number one thing that you looked at
before you decided to take a target out on a child, to molest a child? And they said,
we looked for weak fathers. Look at yourself. Look at yourself. Would someone think twice
about messing with your children because you look like a threat?
I guarantee, man, if somebody messes with my kids, you look at me, you're going to think I'm messing with that guy's kids.
And hey, and I ain't a bully. I'm a loving guy. But it's my job to protect my family. What the hell happened to that?
And so I went on this like era of like really like trying to really beat and and just so you're
aware I wanted to piss people off I wanted to trigger people we built an
audience of people that go dude I hate that guy but I watch him for
entertainment and then people go on dude I love this guy man I'm gonna become a
better man because of this dude I gotta stay plugged in and so now we are 2025
the six pack of your fire was like a 2022 thing.
I walk into any airport, I mean, 500 people, 600 people, any mall, everybody runs up and
they always come up and they say, hey, dude, I lost 80 pounds, bro.
I'm like, I'm not a fitness coach.
I mean, I'm a business coach.
I'm not even a fitness coach.
And they walk up and they do, I lost 80 pounds.
Wives come up to me and they're like, dude, you have no idea what you did for my husband. He's on fire
That era where I went psycho
Could have been the greatest thing that I ever did now
As I got a coach right because I've always had coaches Dean
Is one of my coaches and Dean's like hey, man, you know
You got to kind of wear your heart right like out here where people can see it
Like we know you have a heart cuz how wear your heart, right? Like out here where people can see it. Like we know you have a heart, because we
can tell how passionate you are, right?
But he's like, people got to know that you love them, man.
You know, you're just a little hard.
And so if you see a lot of my content now, right?
Like I'm trying to show people that I love them,
and I make sure that they know that I love them.
Like I'm not a bad person.
Like I'm not scary.
I'm not yelling at you.
Look, I get excited, OK?. Like, I'm not scary. I'm not yelling at you. Look, I get excited, OK?
I mean, winning should be exciting.
OK, changing your life should be exciting.
People are like, why is this guy yelling?
It's like, well, dude, that's called having a good life,
like getting excited.
There's a lot of ways to motivate people
in terms of how to sell.
We'll talk about a few of them.
But how is asking somebody to imagine someone kidnapping their family
and telling them with a gun to their head,
if you don't improve productivity in three months,
I'm gonna kill your family?
I think it's brilliant.
Yeah, I mean, it's so-
So do I, by the way.
When I heard you say that, I'm like,
damn, that's good.
Well, because people are just so blocked, right,
on what can happen, that I mean,
I used it as an automotive example, but I would say, like, if you can happen. I mean, I used it as an automotive example,
but I would say, like, if you're a solar salesman,
I'm like, how many deals do you sell a month?
And they're like, three.
And I'm like, OK, cool.
You got three kids.
You got a wife.
Let me ask you a question.
If I told you I was going to kidnap your kids
and I was going to kill them, if you didn't sell 10 solar
deals a month, would you sell 10?
They're like, hell yeah, I'd sell 10.
And I'm like, OK, well, why do I have to kidnap your family and threaten to kill them for you to sell 10?" They're like, hell yeah, I'd sell 10. And I'm like, okay, well,
why do I have to kidnap your family
and threaten to kill them for you to sell 10?
Couldn't you have a good, healthy family and go sell 10?
Well, yeah, but okay, cool, then why don't you?
Dude, it's just the point that people
just don't push the limit anymore.
They don't, they don't, they just,
dude, listen, the whole world is full of mediocrity, brother. And. And so I just I don't know it just pisses me off, dude
I like to like to trigger people. I like to get them to think differently
Flaw like philosophy. I just think differently see it from a different perspective
You're one of the best salespeople in the world one of the best coaches in the world
What are the three most important elements of our success?
What are the three most important elements of our success? Man, there's so many things.
You mean like...
What makes us successful?
Like you're asking, I come to Andy and say,
Hey Andy, I'm new.
I need some advice for you.
Just give me three things.
In sales?
Well, in success, let's take it two ways.
What are the three most important, successful in sales?
And are they any different if you're not in sales?
Yeah, I mean I think no salesperson is ever gonna be successful without confidence
Just just can't happen. You're you're dead in the water without confidence
Without belief you're dead in the water. And then also I think a lot of people don't give themselves permission to have a big life
I know that sounds weird
I train a lot of women They're very good in sales don't give them self permission to have a big life. I know that sounds weird.
I train a lot of women.
They're very good in sales.
Very good.
I mean, deadly.
But most of them never become really successful
and make a lot of money until they give them self permission
to start making money.
Men are pretty stupid, right?
We're like, oh, we can make a lot of money, pretty stupid, right? We're like,
we're like, oh, we make a lot of money, let's go. And they're like, we just jump
in. But like women have to like reason, like with, with like, like, can I do this?
Am I good at this? And they overthink it. If they're just giving self-permission,
they'll kick every guy's ass. They're just dangerous. So I think, I think
confidence, I think belief, you belief, delusionally, right?
Everybody can buy, came to buy, will buy.
As long as they do my job, do your job,
they're going to say yes.
Don't think about anything else.
I promise you, it'll always play yes out in your favor.
Give yourself permission to win.
I think if you want to be successful,
there will be people that would definitely disagree with this.
But I would say, number one, you're never
going to win long range in success
without a good family life life without a good home life
You can't if you don't take care of your home. It's going to
Implode at some point and you will start over and so however far you think you're getting ahead short term
You're going to lose it all
We I watch every man ruin his family
I I watch him and they don't mean to but no one ever teaches us how to have it all.
That's the missing piece,
that they don't teach us how to have it all.
So we are one dimensional.
We only think we can have this, but we can't.
It's like, that was my biggest struggle.
My wife's like, you're so stupid.
So I would say number one,
if you want to really be a dangerous competitor,
if you're being you with the same in skill, the same in skill,
but I had a bad ass home life and you didn't,
I would smoke you.
Because in two years, you're going to get tired.
And my wife's going to keep building me up,
telling me I'm a bad ass.
I'm going to love who I am.
I'm going to be fired up, get a good night's sleep.
I'm going to be on fire.
I'm going to be magnetic, infectious.
I'm going to be rocking it.
Dude, I'm going to show my team what having a great family
looks like. My team's going to work harder for me than your team will work for you.
Dude, my team don't need to look up to anybody else.
They can look right here.
I'm going to show them how to have it all.
That home life piece is a very important piece to the puzzle
that is not talked about enough.
Okay?
And by the way, I'm not telling you not to make money.
I'm telling you to be the best in the damn world.
You think your wife wants you to be a loser?
She wants her husband to be the best,
but they also, your family wants to go with you. And telling you to be the best in the damn world. You think your wife wants you to be a loser? She wants her husband to be the best.
But they also, your family wants to go with you.
And so just be present, be where your feet are.
Wherever you are, be there.
If you're at the gym, don't be thinking about being at home.
If you're at home, don't be thinking about being at work.
Just be where your feet are, right?
And if you treat something like it's the beginning,
there'll never be an end.
So I think that that's a big deal.
I still look at my wife like it was the first day.
Like, damn, I want that.
And I still do that.
And I still keep dating with her. I still keep flirting with her. And people will tell you this crap and they don't do it. The one thing I love about my wife like it was the first day. Like, damn, I want that. And I still do that. And I still keep dating with her.
I still keep flirting with her.
And people will tell you this crap and they don't do it.
The one thing I love about my wife,
and no man I think would be able to make it with my wife,
honestly, the reason why is because like,
if me and her aren't getting along,
if I'm not on fire with her, right?
Like, she holds me to such a high standard.
And most people are like, I wouldn't put up with that.
I know you wouldn't.
I know you wouldn't. That's the reason why we're growing so fast
Is because I have the best damn accountability partner in the world and by the way
I think a lot of people underestimate the superpower of the person they're with
Everything that you want is sitting right next to you, but you're an idiot. You don't motivate her
You don't fire up. You don't invest in her my wife one day. She said something
I remember two things she said and I'll go back to what you asked me
But I was doing a sales meeting.
I was firing this team up.
And when I was done, I was like, my wife's
going to be so proud of me, dude.
That was the best sales meeting I ever did in my life.
My wife walked over and she goes,
I wish I could get some of that.
I'm like, she's right.
I'm on fire when I take those sales calls.
I'm on fire when they call me about business growing.
But when's the last time I went home and told my wife I'm ready to grow our marriage like
crazy?
I do that now.
That was kind of a big deal that woke me up.
My wife, you can tell clearly, she's that accountability partner.
I was talking to a guy one night, we're on the phone, and he was having a marriage problem.
I was like, hey brother, listen man. I'm like, you got to go and you got to see her,
brother. She knows you're looking through her. You got to make sure that she feels seen.
And I look over at my wife. We're arguing. And she's like, no ways. And I'm like,
I got to call you back. I'm like, babe, listen, I'm like, that's,
that's my job. She goes, I'm not going to marry a fraud. I'm not going to date a fraud.
Okay. What advice did you give him? And I was like, well, you know, she's like, are
you looking, are you looking at me right now? Like you love me? Is that how you're looking
at me? And I'm like, she's like, you're not looking at me like that, but you're going to give me advice.
Do you feel good about that? And I'm like, why did I have to marry the most dangerous woman on
planet earth that whole and most men are like, I wouldn't put up with that. I know you wouldn't.
I know you wouldn't. That's why your life sucks. That's why your life will never be what it should
be because your ego. And she's's just she's just such a good
By the way, a lot of people don't think that their coach should be their wife
It should be like Tony Robbins because that's cool. Everybody would love if I said Tony Robbins my is my coach
No, she's my coach dude. She's a savage. She knows me more than anybody. She knows when I'm slipping
She knows she know your wife knows everything about you. She knows it.
The question is, have you given her permission to be direct with you? Can she tell you? Do you have ego? Do you fight her for it?
And so that was something I learned.
So I think another deal is I think if you're going to be in a relationship at some point in your life,
grow and take your family with you in all of the self-development you do. Make sure she's theirs also.
So yes, you can grow together and you can independently be a savage.
She can inability to be a savage and then you can independently be a savage she can inability patch savage
And then you guys will be a power couple together dangerous great home life
Obviously the relationship to me is like ultra important and then I would say
Become a map just some skill like every one piece of advice
Whatever you're gonna do master it
Most people are a master of none
They've never mastered anything and that's
the reason why they won't be remembered. And I believe in changing people's lives and stuff
and so my mastery is the art of communication. I'm a sniper. If I can get my hands on you,
I'm going to change your life. I'm going to do it. And so that's my cell. I'm just
delusional in that.
One of the things that's made me successful is something I call extreme preparation. I
prepare more than anybody for any meeting, any podcast, anything. How important is preparation?
How important is preparation? One to a hundred, how important is preparation?
101. Success favors the prepared. And it's the cool quote, but it's just the truth. If you
didn't succeed, you probably didn't prepare enough. Then if you did fail, you probably
need to prepare harder next time. Like that 10X Greg Cardone book, he said most people
underestimate the amount of effort it takes to be great at anything. And so you over-prepare.
Guess what?
When is the last time as over-preparing screwed you?
Never.
Never.
Yeah, never.
Are good-looking people more successful at sales than non-good-looking people?
Yeah.
But people will look at this, hey Andy, man, like what if I'm not good-looking?
What if I'm not a model or I'm not thin or I'm not-
We don't have to be a model because I'm a pretty ugly guy But I am in very good shape
So it increases my odd of being more attractive because I am in better shape, right?
And so like again, you know, it's like I'm not Brad Pitt
But I can work out get in really good shape that increases my odds and by the way increases my influence
Okay, like believe it or not dude if I was a fat person right now, 350 pounds,
would you be having a podcast with me?
Well, it depends.
I mean.
Ah, see here's at the end of the day.
I wouldn't.
If Jelly Roll were sitting in here,
I'd be like, hey Jelly Man, let's get down with this show.
No, I just wanted you to know,
I was kidding when I said that,
but I was saying like,
I know.
I wouldn't be where I am.
I wouldn't be where I am honestly,
because it looked like I don't make good decisions.
You know, I mean, if you look like you made bad decisions, you probably do.
Okay.
But I do want to say something.
If someone was to knock on your door right now, if they were to, you know, pitch you
anything, if they're more attractive, would you probably give them 30 seconds more time
than if they were ugly?
That's why we see good looking female sales reps visiting all the doctors' offices.
We have a friend, a family friend,
who sells pharmaceutical.
She's good looking and got boobs, big boobs,
because men like looking at big boobs.
And she loves it.
She knows it.
She's a top salesperson.
So she got it.
And you don't have to be fortacious.
Look, this is crazy.
But my wife, she's never been hit on.
And you may say, Andy, your wife's lying to you. No, she doesn't get hit on. And you basically, like, Andy, your wife's lying to you.
No, she doesn't get hit on.
My wife's a good looking girl.
She's awesome.
She doesn't get hit on.
She doesn't have a personality.
My wife is a very direct business person,
like awesome communicator, loving person,
who is non-flirtatious.
And so you can be attractive as a female,
and you don't have to be flirty.
And people are like, oh, I get it.
So you're like a slut slut or you're flirty.
No, dude, no, you're attractive.
Like I think everybody should understand
that like you chase or you attract.
Yeah.
And you know, and so take care of yourself, right?
Yeah, and I think physical attraction.
I think physical attraction is so important
in a relationship where you need to be attracted
to your mate.
And then you see people, okay, you're once in good shape,
now one person is very obese,
and you look at these couples sometimes,
and I think, how is that going to work out?
So tell us-
Well, I think it ain't working out,
and it ain't screwing, for sure.
Right, right.
Then, so tell us about the divorced diet, right?
I mean, it's what happens when you get divorced,
and someone is not in shape, and you're thinking about,
all right, the next time I'm getting naked with someone, I better have that six-pack divorced and someone is not in shape and you're thinking about,
all right, the next time I'm getting naked with someone,
I better have that six packer,
I better not be as fat as I used to be.
Yeah, I mean, we see it all.
Not the right motivation.
Well, no, but you see it all the time.
And dude, I honestly believe that being in great shape
is one of the best feelings in the world.
It really is.
It's just one of the best feelings in the world. And I'll just, I think anything that makes you feel good, I think you should
do a lot of. And I think it makes you feel amazing when you take good care of yourself
and you look good.
The most enjoyable thing in the world is having sex.
Yeah. If you do it right, I guess, for sure.
Well, you said if you're not having sex with your spouse every day, then you hate yourself.
Is that really true?
Well, I mean, at the end of the day, dude, I mean, your wife,
I mean, again, I'll go back to this.
But your wife said, I'm not going
to have sex with any other man for the rest of my life.
I give myself to you, and she's not having sex with you?
I mean, the deal is that you didn't keep your word, man.
You promised her the right of a lifetime.
It was cool when you guys got together.
Again, probably other things are more important than her.
She knows about it.
You guys aren't having sex.
You're becoming roommates.
End of story.
Your kids are gonna have a marriage just like you guys do.
Good job.
My rabbi told me something once a long time ago.
He said, if you're not having sex with your wife,
you're having sex with somebody else.
And same thing for her.
Well, somebody, listen, the devil,
I'm gonna tell you this for sure.
Me and my wife have sex every night.
And a lot of people are like, man, that's extreme.
Oh yeah, yeah, we're pretty extreme.
I've been in this. I read that and I'm thinking is there a night where you just want a
night off you got to replenish you gotta you gotta just read just I mean it's
just hard I mean physically it's hard I mean not not that. Do you want me to tell you
what's hard? Me and my wife no matter what's going on if if we have sex no
matter what's going on no matter what have sex, no matter what's going on,
no matter what problems we have in our life, they all disappear and we sleep great together.
And so I'm never going to let the devil come into my home and come into my bed.
And even if, like, we're not like, I mean, I don't know, like, I want to have sex with
my wife.
Like, I don't understand. I don't need, I mean, I guess everybody's built differently.
Does that make sense?
Yeah.
And like, I just, I hunt my wife.
I just do to listen, something happened
when she stood by my side, when the FBI came in
and I got in big trouble.
And then when she stood by my side through all that hell,
I understood that I'd been pleasing the wrong people our entire life. I have been kissing
everyone else's ass my whole life and she is the one that's gonna be by my side
when I freaking die. I am an absolute piece of shit. I owe her my life and guess
what? Like just like somebody would save your life in a war,
my wife saved my life.
And so like, I know like most guys don't get it,
but like, that's how I view her.
Like, she's my best friend and I'm obsessed with her.
I love having sex with her.
I love her being a great mother.
She's my best friend.
She's my counselor.
She's the CEO of our company.
If you were to talk to her right now,
you see she's a savage bro. Like she's an animal, but she's, she's the
heart of our whole company.
You ever heard of the urban dictionary?
Never heard of the urban dictionary. All right. I'm going to shout out to my buddy, Robin
McGee on this one. I'm going to read you something for the urban dictionary. You ever heard of
the word nip ons? All right. A nip ons are the state of obvious protuberance of the nipples or when one's nipples are visibly
hard due to cold weather, friction, or possibly physical arousal.
Talk to us about your wife pregnant and pinching your nipples.
Well, so I love this actually funny story.
And she was pregnant with her son, Ian, first time she's pregnant, right? I love this actually funny story.
She was pregnant with her son, Ian, first time she's pregnant, right?
I'm at work and I come home and she's just like in this like miserable state.
By the way, not being negative, she's just like very uncomfortable.
She's like, you caused this, right?
I'm having your son. She's like, I'm this, right? And I'm having your son.
And she's like, I'm going to pinch your nipples.
She's like, that would make me feel better.
And it was funny, because we cracked up, right?
And I'm like, all right, baby, whatever make you feel better.
Whatever it is.
And dude, she pinched my nipples so hard, dude.
I remember it was just me and her.
We lived out at Lake Texoma, which
is in between Oklahoma and Texas, this small lake.
No one's around.
There's no social media.
It's 2009.
There's nothing.
We had no friends.
It's just me and her cracking up.
We're best friends.
Right.
And, uh, at that point, the rest of our life to this day, anytime she's going
through something, she's like, it'll make me feel better if I pinch her nipples.
And so she'll just grab and pinch my nipples.
And she does it just as like a joke when something's going wrong.
She's like, come here.
No, no, no.
You didn't look, you're like a puppy.
There's the puppy pad and you piss next to the puppy pad.
There's the hamper and you threw your clothes on the ground right next to it.
And I gotta go pick it up.
So come here, I'm gonna pinch your nipples.
And people will laugh, dude.
And people don't like seeing people have fun.
They don't like it.
But people comment on, I mean,
I ask the question, it's a question because
I think it's important to have playfulness with your wife.
Yeah.
And not only be so serious,
but people make fun of your hard nipples all the time online.
I love it, bro.
Everyone's talking about Andy's nipples.
Bro, they make fun of my short shorts.
Dude, they make fun of everything.
Listen, at the end of the day, what happens is that when people hate themselves, right?
And by the way, hey listen, my nipples are always hard, right?
But when people hate themselves, honestly, like a lot of times, like I make people question themselves.
And they don't like that, right?
Like I'm talking about my wife and some guys,
if his wife was watching this podcast,
he'd be like, babe, don't watch that crap.
That guy's a loser.
I get it, dude.
I get it, man.
Don't you love the haters?
Oh, yeah, no, I wouldn't be this far without them.
I understand what Grant Cardone said when I read it and he no. I wouldn't be this far without them. I understand what Grant Cardone said when I read it.
And he says, I wouldn't be this far without you.
Can't thank you enough.
Well, the fact that we're in this state of social media,
which is a big part of the world now,
because everybody's on their phone all the time,
if you want to really have influence
and you want to build your brand,
you're going to have to understand
how to hack the algorithm, which we do.
And it gets around 100 million views every 30 days
The haters helped me get my content to travel to my followers my believers
And so thank you like honestly like I'm grateful the more they say negative stuff the more engagement I get the more
comments I get
The more that the algorithm is like oh man something's going on here, let's show more people.
And so I'm super grateful for it.
Honestly, like, I mean, listen,
I've been made fun of my whole life,
so like, I have a pretty good life.
One of the things that's hard for us to see too
is when we live in a toxic world, what we have to do,
and sometimes you don't even realize that you're in it.
So what's your advice when there's someone gnawing at you
or criticizing you behind your back
and you just have to deal with these people.
You really don't have to deal with them, do you?
Yeah, like honestly, like I know this sounds crazy,
but like I've never, never,
I've never had somebody walk up to me
and say anything to my face.
They don't have the courage.
I don't know.
Well, I mean, you look like a bad-ass.
I know, but I've been out in public everywhere.
By the way, I want to say something.
I'm not like a fighter or something, right?
I work out.
I'm in the gym.
I take care of myself.
I mean, I wouldn't be afraid to defend my family
or something like that.
But people don't like to see people come up.
You know, people don't like to see people change.
You know, like, because I made all these mistakes and I was like an underdog and stuff, like,
like, like I love seeing people correct their life.
Like that's what a good leader is, is like, man, you know, you can change.
But the problem is, is that when people make those changes, like people don't like it.
It's because people put boundaries on themselves, right?
Or maybe I put boundaries on you, on what I thought you were possible, like what you
could do.
And then when you go outside those boundaries, I'm like, screw you, dude.
But at the end of the day, I've never had any issues, man.
I'm out in public every day.
I don't have a bodyguard.
I mean, we're all strapped and have guns, but like I've always carried guns.
Everyone here has a gun.
We got hundreds of guns around here.
If you walk into the LA group, there are machine guns and whatever you can call them everywhere.
There are semi-automatics.
There are weapons in every corner of this place.
And we love it.
We live in the beautiful state of Arizona.
We love weapons.
What's wrong with the human condition that so many people are unhappy for others
who become successful, or especially massively successful?
Well, again, I just think that people,
if I see you win, then I'm just like, screw that guy.
Right?
I mean, that's pretty easy for me to say,
dude, I don't like you, dude.
Who do you think you are?
You think you're cool?
Coming in here with you and your girl, you think you're cool? Like, they just hate me, bro. They don't like you, dude. Who do you think you are? You think you're cool? Coming in here with you and your girl,
you think you're cool?
Like, they just hate me, bro.
They don't hate you.
You just, you make them question themselves.
And so that's why they hate you.
That's why, and they don't really hate you.
Matter of fact, I'm gonna give you this real quick
because I know that you'll get this.
And because being successful in business,
as you're going to build your social media now,
you're gonna get things like like it looks like this it goes I hate you I wish you were
dead I hate watching your stuff I hope you drowned like this is my social media like
my DMs I get people to tell me I change your life every day but then you get these hateful
ones.
We never respond we never I don't ever reply to anybody.
You don't engage with people.
I don't engage with anybody, bro. No. And then, um, I mean,
I might've said thank you before to somebody like over something,
but I don't engage with anybody. Never comment to your haters. Never, never come down.
You're here, bro. You don't go there, but they're in the comment section and, uh,
you know, everybody's different, but that's my deal. And but then one day it's like marketing the right message to the
right person at the right time. They say, hey bro I hope you'll accept my apology.
I want to tell you that I've been really hateful for a long time. I've been mean.
My wife had just threatened me that she's gonna walk out on me. My kids don't
like me.
I've been in a really toxic relationship with myself.
Your videos really inspire me to be a better man.
It's just that I was living in darkness.
I'm finally making a decision today to change my life.
I gave my life to God.
And I want to tell you that I want to be inspirational like you one day.
I want to help people.
And please forgive me.
I know you probably will never see this, but forgive me.
And I just say, hey man, we love you.
We believe in you.
Whatever you need, we got you.
It's cool.
Dude, I don't hold nothing.
I was a piece of crap for a long time.
One of the really cool things about my show
is I get to meet amazing people, people that I admire,
people like you that motivate and inspire me.
And what I learned shockingly along the way
is all these immensely successful people,
including you, have a coach.
You coach, I mean, you're gonna come up
on a million people at some point pretty soon.
And yet, and you're one of the best coaches ever.
And you've got a coach.
And as I'm thinking, I've been coaching people for 25 years
and I want to get into a formalized training program.
We're going to have classes, I hope to do
some of what you guys are doing.
And I've said to myself, I had the most successful,
one of the successful money managers on my show,
Graham Weaver runs an $18 billion private equity firm.
He's been getting coaches his whole life.
He goes to Tony Robbins seminars
and I interviewed Tony as you know a couple weeks ago and I'm
saying to myself like I should get a coach. Shouldn't everybody get a coach?
And what do you say to people who are making a hundred thousand dollars a year
and say I can't really afford a coach? Well you can't afford not to have a
coach. At the end of the day everybody I say there's two things that'll ruin a
man's life and by the way and this could work for women too, but I mean
because my audience is about 80% male. Okay, number one, having the wrong woman.
Just, and you say what does that do with having a coach? Well, if you have the
wrong woman, you're not gonna make it. If you have the right woman, you're gonna
kill it. Okay, number two, not having a brotherhood.
Men have to have a good man in their life.
If right now you and your wife are fighting, and you called me,
and I'm going to say, dude, your wife's incredible, bro.
You know how lucky you are.
Look, your perspective on this situation,
I promise you, is skewed in some way, shape, or form.
And I'm going to tell you this, don't let this trigger.
You don't like this bother you.
Never get emotional
Okay, like if somebody was to hurt her you would kill him
like
Don't hurt her like that's not who you are go back home
Even if it wasn't your fault tell her you're sorry you love her
You're the protector of your home. You're the man. Go take care of this, okay? You know this already though.
But now I told you, okay?
Go take care of it bro, we love you.
Have a good day.
You're gonna go home and you're gonna make your life right.
And that's it, and this is done.
If you call the wrong guy, he says, you know what dude, I'm gonna be honest with you, I've
never told you this, but I don't really like her anyways, bro
She I think she's been using you the whole freaking time
I'm being for real man. You deserve way better than her. You shouldn't have to put up with that crap, bro
Listen come come meet me down here at this bar. Let's talk about it
Brotherhood Okay, so a coach to me is like having a brother or
Whoever it's having somebody it could be a male even teaching a woman or a woman teaching a man
It doesn't have to be I call the brotherhood is like that person that you can call that's like dude
Like talking life into you and then by the way like helping you troubleshoot issues
You know because I always say you're one step away from being in the wrong say you're one step away from being in the wrong shoes.
You're one step away from being in the right shoes.
And getting you to the next level in life,
the people that you currently have in your life,
if you look to your left and your right,
you probably don't have somebody
that's trying to pull that next level out of you.
That's what a coach does, dude.
Basically, like, I'm just giving an example.
Like if you paid me,
you would pay me to give you an edge
and figure out how to get you to the next level.
And you know what?
A lot of the times a coach ends up helping you
in areas that you didn't think
that that coach was gonna help you in.
So it may be like, because you've made a lot of money,
I may be like, oh, this is gonna help me make more money.
But in the end, you actually helped me
have a better marriage.
You helped me be a better father.
You helped me like myself more.
You helped me process information.
I got to hijack the way that you think.
And I'm like, oh my God, what's that worth?
I mean, holy cow, dude, now you wanna talk
about making money?
That's stupid.
Now we're doing everything at a really high level.
And so great, great people don't want coaching.
They demand it.
Why is one of the most important jobs
of a coach to piss people off?
Because sometimes, you know, people need to get, they need to get, I always say this,
my wife knows how to trigger me, right? Like she knows how to trigger me. And so a coach's
job to me is to trigger you to grow. Kobe Bryant and Michael Jordan had Tim Grover.
Tim Grover would know how to poke Kobe to get him to play better.
Look, nobody's going to get better by kissing your butt.
Doesn't help anybody. The job's to help you get better, which is why you're paying them.
You're paying them for growth.
Let's talk about what it takes to work for you.
And it's really not for you.
It's with you.
I hated in my career where someone said, Oh, Randy works for me.
It made me feel like shit.
They're putting you down.
You got a team.
Your team is incredible.
What does it take to work here?
Values.
Number one, standards, values, and you
have to have a good heart, period.
All the rest can be taught.
Most of my salespeople here that work here,
they were not coaches.
They were not in the high ticket coaching space.
They weren't in nothing.
None of these people here have in the high ticket coaching space. They weren't in nothing.
None of these people here have ever worked
for a coaching company.
They were people that were inside of my coaching company,
that were the greatest students,
that had the biggest transformations
that I fell in love with.
And then I was like, oh, I'm like a collector of people.
I'm like, oh, these are my people.
These are my family. This
is, you know, this is my, this is my chosen family, basically. And so like we
all have the same values. Here's what I'll tell you, is you and your wife get along
really well because you guys have alignment. I have the best wife in the world, by the way.
Yeah, but you have alignment though. Like you guys both align with the same stuff.
Even when you don't see eye to eye, you still align. And so me and my team, any
time that we don't see eye to eye, we grow align. And so me and my team, anytime that we don't see eye to eye,
we grow through suffering, but we're always in alignment.
And so I think that was the key, is that we hire from alignment
and we hire from a good heart.
You can't give someone a good heart.
As part of the interview process here,
you asked someone to share three things with you
that they've never shared with somebody before.
I'd like to ask you to share three things with me that you've never shared with somebody before. I'd like to ask you to share three things with me that you've never shared with anybody
before. Man, I'm pretty open book. It's probably got to be out there somewhere.
Man, I don't know. I think I've shared everything, bro. One of my
wife, one of the things my wife always says is that like I just share
everything.
And the reason why is because I'm just not afraid
of anything coming into the light.
Once I decided to become an influence for people,
I knew the enemy was gonna attack me.
So what I did is that I emptied all the bullets
out of the enemy's gun as fast as I could.
Does that make sense?
Just told everything.
And I said, I didn't, you still like me either,
but like come meet me now and tell me you don't like me.
Like I was, that guy, I wouldn't have liked him either.
I didn't like him either, but come meet me now.
So I emptied all the bullets out of the enemy's gun
and I told everything when I decided to start my coaching
program to everyone.
There is nothing that anyone knows about me
that I haven't told.
And people say, we don't like a private life.
I don't have a private life.
I've decided to be an example for people.
It's working.
Yeah.
You're killing it.
Yeah, but I wanted to share with you, I almost wish that I could have something, but my wife
would be like, oh, good luck with that one.
He tells everybody everything.
And so I wish I could make up something, but I've shared it all.
For me, one of the most important skills that anybody could have is the ability to knock
on someone's door, go up to someone, shake somebody's hand, and cold calling. How critical is cold calling to our success?
Super important. The ability to master a stranger is probably the number one
skill a human can have. Master a stranger, walk up to someone you don't know and
start a conversation, be kind, be polite. It's the most valuable skill on
planet Earth. If you can learn that, you can write your own check.
And what's the advice to somebody who says,
yeah, we have a summer intern program.
We have 32 kids, Andy, every summer.
It's a teaching internship, eight to six.
And they work on my beaches company.
I have a company called Sandy, S-A-N-D-E-E.
It's a Yelp for beaches, essentially.
We've cataloged over 120 categories of data
for more than 140,000 beaches in 212 countries.
So they all work on our company.
And I tell people, one of the assignments in the summer
is you have to go out to strangers on the beach,
and you have to do what's known as a Sandy Dance.
Well, what's a Sandy Dance?
A Sandy Dance is for you to go and demonstrate
to some stranger some crazy ass dance
that people laugh at
and think it's funny, that you think would go viral
in a TikTok video and get them to do it.
And everyone looks at me like, oh my God,
like I cannot do that, I'm gonna quit, this is terrible.
I could never do that.
And I say, you know, you're gonna go do it.
It's not an ask, it's a requirement.
You're gonna go do it.
And we have this rehearsal in the parking lot of the building and everyone's very stiff.
And I said, man, that's not funny at all.
And everyone's giggling and everyone's laughing.
And they all go out.
And I said, you got to create 10 videos.
Everyone come back with 10 videos.
You are required to come back.
I don't care if it's two weekends, three weekends, you come back with 10 funny videos.
We're going to go through those videos.
And everyone says it's life-changing for them.
To be able to go up to someone on the beach,
to someone who's enjoying the sun,
don't wanna talk to you,
and then for you to go do something absolutely crazy
and get someone else to do it,
if you can get someone else to do that,
that's an incredible skill.
Facts, it's amazing.
Life-changing, life-changing.
Yeah, they're just breakthroughs.
Huge breakthroughs.
At the end of their life, they'll look back and they'll say, I changed my life on that
beach.
We're at the end of the show right now.
Now is the end of the show with a game I call fill in the blank to excellence.
Are you ready to play?
Sure.
My number one professional goal is...
My number one professional goal is...
Man, anytime I say number one, I'm fighting like nine million answers in my head.
My professional goal is to probably be a great example of human excellence for the rest of my life.
My number one personal goal is...
Probably be the greatest daddy and husband
that's ever lived until I die.
The biggest lesson I've learned in my life is?
Listen to your wife, she's always right.
The one thing somebody should say to themselves
when they wake up in the morning is?
I believe in myself.
The one thing that they should say to themselves
when they go to sleep at night is?
Bet against me, I dare you.
My biggest regret in life is?
Not listening to my wife sooner.
I probably wouldn't be in trouble.
My biggest fear in life is?
Probably letting myself down.
When you were younger?
Probably now.
Like I just, I'm finding new levels every day.
And like, I don't ever want to get comfortable.
Do you ever get down?
No.
Never have a down day?
I just don't want to lose my edge.
It's impossible.
I've got my, I'm so good at developing.
I've developed this edge that I, it can't be beat.
I have every area in my life dialed.
The most prideful moment of my life is?
It's prideful.
Is that a good pride or bad pride?
I never thought about it that way.
Good and bad.
Yeah, because then like some pride's bad,
but then like some pride.
So prideful would be probably when my kids are born.
Like that was a really special gift.
Craziest thing that's happened in my life is?
I would say probably getting another chance at life.
That was pretty crazy.
You know, I thought I was gonna be in the car business
till I die. If you'd have told me, I mean, I thought I was going to be in the car business till I die.
If you'd have told me, I mean, I 50X my income in three years.
I mean, you know people that do that.
But it's like getting struck by lightning.
The funniest thing that's happened to me in my life is?
Probably looking at pictures of me
whenever I was fat with hair, which we should see that.
The best advice I've ever received is?
The greatest gift you could ever give yourself in life is spending time working on yourself. The worst advice I've ever received is. The greatest gift you could ever give yourself in life
is spending time working on yourself.
The worst advice I've ever been given is.
People like you don't make it.
The most I've ever bench pressed is.
I could have hurt shoulders,
so I didn't think probably 225 pounds
is all I've ever lifted.
10 years from now I'm going to be.
Ripped.
20 years from now I'm going to be.
Jacked.
If you could pick one trait
that leads to somebody's success, it would be?
One trait?
One trait.
Communication.
The art of communication.
The most important trait that's contributed to my success is?
Persuasion.
Influence.
The one thing I've dreamt about doing for a long time but haven't is?
I'd probably give my wife a little bit more sleep.
Like I just don't ever get to sleep.
My wife says success to her would be to sleep in.
My amazing wife is sitting right there.
I'm gonna be, Anna, I'm gonna be hearing this.
She's like, are we ever gonna sleep in?
Oh my God, I'm gonna be hearing this for the rest of my life.
But my wife says that's what the definition of success
is to her, is to sleep in.
And I'm like, she's like, and we're still not successful.
If I had to coach one person in the world, it would be?
It would be my son.
You have an opportunity to coach your son.
But that's who it would be though, is my son.
Like I'm coaching him, but like it's him.
Like he's my only son.
If you could go back and give your 21 year old self
one piece of advice, it would be?
Don't be around the wrong people.
If you're President Trump today sitting in the over office, the next thing that you would
do is?
Make it mandatory to make kids be able to start doing pushups and sit ups and the stuff
they used to do in class when we were young.
I did, you had to, you used to be able to, you guys, everybody had to do seven pull-ups,
50 crunches, and we had to be able to run a had to do seven pull-ups, 50 crunches,
and we had to be able to run a mile in under eight minutes.
Like that was mandatory for kids.
I don't remember what it was called,
but I would say that goes effective immediately.
The one question you wish I'd asked you but didn't is?
I don't know, man, you asked a lot of questions.
Do you have any questions you wanna ask me?
One regret you have in your life.
The one regret I have in my life is probably,
and I'm gonna answer this in an easy way,
but the most profound way, I don't have any regrets
because at the end of the day,
I wouldn't be the person who I am today
without living the life that I've left so far,
that I've lived so far.
But if you could change that?
If I could change the one thing, I think I would have learned at an earlier age to build healthy
relationships and learn lessons from my past to know that I have the ability to change at an
earlier age as opposed to as I get older and more mature and more into self-assessment and reflection
and learning and devoting to
improving myself to be the best person I could be.
I would have started a lot earlier.
That's a big one.
Anybody watching this, falling in love with learning yourself is a superpower.
There's a problem too, and I know I was very successful and made a lot, a lot of money
at a young age.
And people think, okay, that's so great,
and you have everything in the world.
And you really, most people would
want to be in that position, right?
99.9999% of the people in the world
would love to be in that position.
But it also doesn't allow you to develop as much emotionally
as you would if you were building a business
over a long period of time.
And also, as weird as it sounds, it also creates very significant problems in relationships
around you.
It creates familial issues, which people have all kinds of unrealist expectations, friend
issues, unrealist expectations, jealousy, envy, backstabbing.
And I think as I look back at it,
if I had been 56 today and not 32 years old or 33 years old
when I made a lot of money,
I would have handled situations very, very differently.
And I would have not given a shit
what people thought of me, which today I don't, then I did.
Yep.
And you know, back then, and I love that,
back then we didn't have the ability to watch a podcast
There were no podcasts didn't exist. So if you're I would say if you're lucky enough to watch it
You know, I'm just doing it changed my life. Yeah, I mean when I made it
I mean our company went public a year after we started the company our companies were
14.4 billion dollars the day that the stock traded went up to 35 billion dollars, I think
490 days after we started
the company.
And it was craziness.
And you look around and say, you know, this can't be happening to me.
And you really don't know who to talk to.
And there weren't a lot of people in similar situations who had been that, who were your
age, there were only a couple, and I'm not going to name who they were.
But I remember having these conversations sitting at this guy's $30 million house in
Malibu, a young guy, well-known guy.
And I said to him, hey, man, I said, we're talking about high-class problems that are
real-world problems.
And I said, it'd be weird for people to listen on a microphone on this conversation because
they're high-class problems.
But it comes, like I said, with all kinds of responsibilities and pressures that people
don't think about.
And everyone's looking at you on their microscope.
Everyone's waiting for you to act like an asshole.
Everyone's waiting for you to be arrogant.
Everyone's hating on your word.
Everyone's just waiting for you to make a mistake.
And everyone's talking about you.
Back then, there were no unicorns.
It was very rare.
And you're that guy, and you're walking in a restaurant,
and all your peers, highly educated, the lawyers,
the investment bankers, the whisperer.
And just being on that microscope
wasn't very comfortable.
And you just want to crawl into your shell.
And what I learned along the way, too,
is just you got to be yourself, be the same person,
and stay humble.
I think at the end of the day, I think all my friends,
you know, will say one thing.
And again, I made a lot of mistakes.
I'm sure I've pissed people off.
I know I've pissed people off.
Part of the learning curve.
And I'm sure I've acted,
I know I've acted very, very badly,
but the one thing that I've done is
I've stayed very grounded, stayed very humble.
And you know, you talk to all my boys back in the day,
friends from college, high school,
they'll say, you know,
I'm definitely the same exact person I was then.
That's good.
Love it, man.
Appreciate it.
You're amazing, Andy.
Appreciate you.
That's great.
This was awesome.