Mick Unplugged - David Shands | From Cheesecake Factory to Millions: Lessons in Success with David Shands
Episode Date: December 5, 2024Welcome to another electrifying episode of Mick Unplugged! Today, we sit down with a true visionary and entrepreneurial powerhouse, David Shands. Known as the mastermind behind the influential Social ...Proof podcast, David has turned his dreams into millions and inspired countless others to pursue their own entrepreneurial ventures. Join us as David candidly shares his journey from being a hardworking server at the Cheesecake Factory to becoming a multi-million dollar success. We'll dive deep into his philosophy on the attitude of gratitude, his motivation to inspire others and his insights on why everyone should have a podcast. Plus, David reveals his simple yet powerful advice for entrepreneurs gearing up for 2025. Buckle up for a dose of raw insights and game-changing wisdom with the incomparable David Shands!Takeaways: ·      Gratitude is essential for personal fulfillment and success. ·      Podcasting can open doors for communication and opportunities. ·      Everyone has a voice that deserves to be heard. ·      Entrepreneurs should focus on content, community, and cash flow. Sound Bites: ·      "You're the GOAT of podcasting." ·      "I just want to make more money." ·      "Stop stopping." ·      "Your because is your superpower."  Connect and Discover Instagram:    Instagram.com/sleepis4suckers Facebook:    facebook.com/DavidNeverSleeps Website:      davidneversleeps.com and Davidshands.com               myfirstmillionlive.com               themorningmeetup.com               podcastsummit.com Podcast:      Social Proof Tik Tok:      @DavidNeverSleeps Youtube:     @RealSocialProof X:           @Sleepis4suckers Books:       Dream are Built Overnight ( https://a.co/d/7IDWS4J)              Networking Know-No’s  (https://a.co/d/70qa4sf)    See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
David Shands, man, like, what was your because?
There's a lot.
Like, who am I?
Or it's not one thing.
Like, at what point did I say I wanted to be
the most amazing father in the world?
Or at what point did I say I wanted to affect the world
in terms of teaching entrepreneurship?
Or you talked about the attitude of gratitude.
Some people are waiting until they get a lot to be grateful,
but it doesn't really work like that.
I'd love for you to just take a moment
and talk about attitude of gratitude
and what it means and how that helps center your day.
Once you get more,
it doesn't make you grateful for that stuff.
It just makes you want more.
I was grateful for a good night of tips.
Just grateful.
I'm grateful that there are people around me that I love.
I was grateful for the church that I went to.
I was grateful for having family because I went to. I was grateful for having family
because I realized that other people didn't have family.
My job is to be grateful for it
because whatever I have, I didn't do anything to get it.
To multi, multi, multi, multi, multi,
I won't put all the millions on there, right?
But to this very successful person
that teaches other people the ingredients to success,
what inspired you to be that inspiration for others?
I wasn't trying to be an inspiration for others.
I was trying to make some money.
Ha ha ha ha ha.
Welcome to Mick Unplugged, where we ignite potential
and fuel purpose.
Get ready for raw insights, bold moves
and game-changing conversations.
Buckle up, here's Mick.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to another exciting episode
of Mick Unplugged, and today's guest
is nothing short of extraordinary.
He's a visionary entrepreneur, transformative speaker,
and the man I call the goat of podcasting.
As the mastermind behind the social-proof podcast
with over a million monthly downloads,
and a leading inspirational entrepreneur
that's turned dreams into millions.
Please join me in welcoming the one and only,
the GOAT, Mr. David Shands.
Mr. Shands, how are you doing today, brother?
I'm good, thanks for asking.
How are you?
I am great.
And I truly mean that when I say you are the goat, man.
Like I just started my podcast, God, back in March.
I'm now part of Urban One Podcast Network.
Yes.
But I'm gonna be honest.
When I started, there wasn't people
I could really look up to.
You were the one.
I dissected and listened to every podcast.
I was a huge podcast listener of yours before,
but when I decided to start, I was,
okay, let me hear how David's doing it.
And what I realized and what became my method
was make it all about the guest.
And that's what you truly are is you're a carer of people.
And so I wanted to just take a moment
before we even get into everything, man, and just
say from the bottom of my soul, thank you for being someone that a kid, I call a kid from Greenville,
South Carolina could look up to. So I appreciate it. Thank you. Man, I'm honored, brother. I'm
honored. In the intro, it was a million monthly downloads. And we did hit a million monthly
downloads, but it's not at a million monthly downloads right now.
I'm not a capper.
They did like some sort of, it was Apple did something with the podcast numbers where they
stopped counting a lot of the backlog or they stopped sending your backlog podcast downloads
for a while.
So it like, people lost like 40% in their views, but we still have millions and millions of views,
but I will always be upfront with what's going on in the world.
So, but yes, thank you, man. I appreciate you.
Yo, I appreciate you more.
And just what you mean to the world, man, like your journey,
your story, you know, on Mick Unplugged,
we go deeper than your why and really talk about that because
that thing that really fuels you, that gives you that purpose.
And so I love for the listeners and viewers,
David Shands, man, like what is or what was your because,
that moment, that thing that said,
this is my purpose and this is who I'm gonna be?
It's a somewhat loaded question because there's a lot.
Like, who am I?
Right, it's not one thing, just a lot. Like, at what point did Or it's not one thing, I'm just a lot.
Like, at what point did I say I wanted to be
the most amazing father in the world?
Or at what point did I say I wanted to affect the world
in terms of teaching entrepreneurship?
Or I feel a responsibility of letting people know
that their voice can be heard,
which is why they need to start a podcast.
But I do a lot of this stuff
because it's one, a profitable thing for me,
and I get to do what I love and
with extra time by doing things that I love with the happiness that I get from be able to make money to do the things that
I love and also with the extra resources
I can really really truly help people that when the cameras are not on
Is when I get the fulfillment. Or I can spend some time in like really pouring to someone
or give someone something that I wouldn't have been able
to give if this was 12 years ago working
at the Cheesecake Factory.
So I am just truly, truly blessed in every area of life
to be able to wake up and do what I love.
I love it, man.
And again, I love your authenticity.
You are always going to talk to people about things that matter.
And one of your recent episodes, and it's something that tells me about the core of
who you are, and I'm not going to lie, Dave, like it made me cry, man.
I'm a tough guy, but tough guys can cry sometimes too.
You talked about the attitude of gratitude.
And I felt like that message is so inspiring
and it's something that everyone needs to hear.
And I'd love for you to just take a moment
and talk about that, the attitude of gratitude
and what it means and how that helps center your day.
Because I watched it first thing in the morning
a couple of mornings ago and bro, it got me there.
And that was the message I needed literally that moment.
I am just super grateful for everything that I have,
the ups and the downs, but some people are waiting
until they get a lot to be grateful.
But it doesn't really work like that because if you're not
grateful with the little that you have, once you get more,
it doesn't make you grateful for that stuff.
It just makes you want more.
And then we've found ourselves on this hamster wheel
of going after more.
But when I was working at the Cheesecake Factory,
I was just grateful, man.
I was grateful for a good night of tips.
Just grateful.
I'm grateful that there are people around me that I love.
I was grateful for the church that I went to.
I was grateful for having family
because I realized that other people didn't have family.
I was actually grateful for this job as a server,
understanding that some people don't have a job
and they would love one.
I was grateful, bro.
So the alternative is not being grateful, right?
Yeah.
Where I believe I've been so unexplainably blessed, bro.
You know, like some of the things that in your life
that happen, you can't take credit for?
Yeah.
Like, how can you take credit for the right person
at the right time coming into your life?
You didn't do anything to do that.
They were sent that way.
Like the message that I gave whenever I gave it
and you heard it, but that was the thing that you needed
to help you do something that was gonna empower you. Now, if you didn't get that message, you have not been
empowered, but you can't take credit for that because it was sent. Right. So I'm
so grateful for everything I have knowing that I'm not that fancy. I'm not
that smart. I'm not that brilliant to have accumulated some of the things that
I have. There has been a grace on my life.
So whether it's a million downloads
or 200,000 downloads every month,
whether it's a million dollars or 30,000 a year,
my job is to be grateful for it
because whatever I have, I didn't do anything to get it.
Man, that is so awesome.
And you know, my mother is a minister
and I talk about my mother a lot on the podcast.
And I immediately called her and I said, Mom, you know what?
I know that you know I appreciate you and that I'm grateful for you.
But in this moment, something's just telling me, just so that you know I love you.
And my mom was like, what just happened?
And so I shared the YouTube video with my mom
and she called me back like 20 minutes later.
She was like, actually, that's the sermon
I'm preaching this weekend on just being grateful.
And that moment centered me, man.
Like grateful that I could put shoes on my feet, right?
Grateful that I could go make myself breakfast.
Like the little things that you just said we take for granted
that we just need to be grateful for.
And for me and the spirituality that I have,
it just reminded me that we're here for a purpose
and you gotta be thankful for, you said it eloquently,
the ups and the downs, the trials and the tribulations,
right, like you gotta be grateful for everything
because that continues to shape who we are.
So again, bro, just thank you for that message
because you have no idea how much I needed it
Monday morning.
My pleasure.
I'm honored, bro.
I'm honored.
Yes, sir.
So you hit on Cheesecake, man.
Let's get into it.
David Shantz, Cheesecake Server.
To multi, multi, multi, multi, multi.
I won't put all the millions on there, right?
But to this very successful person
that teaches other people the ingredients to success.
Like, how did that happen?
So you're at Cheesecake Factory.
Like, when did it click that I want to inspire others,
but even before that, there's something greater for me?
Because I think that's where it starts, right?
Yeah, I was always going after something.
I've never not been ambitious,
but, and I've tried a bunch of things.
It just so happened that this T-shirt brand that I wanted to build was a thing that worked.
I think it could have been anything at that time.
It could have been real estate or crypto or I don't know, telecommunications or I think
at that time it could have been anything because at this time I try and fail and try
something else doesn't really work out and I lose all my money and it just I've
been through the education process and at this time I'm listening to a lot of
Jim Rohn and Zig Ziglarz and Barry Thomas's and Enki Johnson's. I'm listening to
all these people I'm on this personal development path all of my failures and my clarity on who I am
and all this motivational stuff that's going on in my head
and the network of people that I met along the journey,
it all came together when I decided
to put this t-shirt brand together.
Yeah.
So it worked.
It wasn't one moment that,
or how did I come up with this genius idea?
It was the fact that all these things that I've went through,
ups, downs, networks, everything, books I decided to read.
Now I'm taking all that stuff and I'm putting it
in this t-shirt brand, it worked out, man.
It was the first thing that really worked
in terms of my entrepreneurial journey.
Yeah, and so now we've got the t-shirt brand
and you have some success.
What inspired you to be that inspiration for others?
I wasn't trying to be an inspiration for others. I was trying to make some money.
It wasn't like, you know, I just had this passion and motivation to help people.
No, I was trying to make some money like everything else I tried in my path.
I started this brand called Sleep is for Suckers geared towards entrepreneurship and people
that are willing to lose sleep to get what they want out of life because that was the
lifestyle that I was living and that's who I was.
I'm going after it.
So I'm willing to give up a little bit of sleep to make a little more money and that
worked.
So it didn't start out as I want to help the world.
I'm like, I'm going to sell some cool t-shirts and make some money because I can count.
If I'd sell 200 t-shirts a month at $20 a piece, I make $4,000 a month. Run it.
Simplicity, right?
Yeah, for sure. It wasn't super deep.
No, I love it. So started as a t-shirt brand, but then it became a movement, man.
And like it still is a movement today.
And again, very honored to say that I've been touched by that movement.
Like, when did you get the idea to scale it?
So so, yeah, you're making money, right?
You've got that part down.
And it's like, OK, because I feel like that's the ingredient
that most entrepreneurs miss.
It's like, OK, you get comfortable.
You've got the idea.
But I know, again, your mantra, sleep is you get comfortable. You got the idea, but I know again,
your mantra, sleep is for suckers,
you were not stopping there.
It was, oh, okay, I can scale this thing now.
I wasn't super familiar with the word scale at that time.
It was, I need to make more money
than I'm making right now.
Yeah.
It wasn't scale.
It was like, yo, if I made $2,000 last month,
can I do 2,300 this month?
So entrepreneurship on this level is more simplistic
than people wanna make it.
It's like, when did I decide to scale it?
I decided to make money when I started it.
If I'm making a certain amount of money,
I just decided to make more money.
I don't understand the scale concept.
It's like, how can I sell more t-shirts?
So I call one of my friends, he's wearing the shirts
and he, well, I'm talking to him one day.
He's like, man, you should send me some shirts
and I'll sell them.
I was like, where?
He's like, yeah, the message is dope.
I was like, all right.
So he takes the shirts and he starts selling them.
And then somebody else calls me like, yo,
you should give me some shirts and I'll sell them.
I said, where?
Let's go.
If you keep going, there'll be a natural progression.
If you're interested in that,
if you're interested in progressing,
there will be a natural progression at some point.
But again, it wasn't scale and how can I double,
I was like, yo, I just wanna make more.
And I think that's a blessing.
It was a blessing for me
because I've never been like that smart, but I knew how to make more. And I think that's a blessing. It was a blessing for me because I've never been like that smart,
but I knew how to work.
And I think if people weren't so smart
and they weren't trying to think of how to
mastermind everything and go out and get some money,
you'd be able to feed your family a little easier.
You'd make that extra money to be able to
take your family on a trip.
Go hustle.
I'm from the era where I had to actually
go to somebody and make a sale.
There wasn't no link in my bio create content.
It wasn't none of that.
Right.
I got to walk up to you and try to convince you to buy this t-shirt.
So I realized the more people I walk up to and convinced to buy a t-shirt, the more money
I'll make.
And then my first lesson wasn't scale.
My first lesson was how do I not spend all the money?
How do I keep the money?
Again, authentic, keeping things in the simplest form, the things I appreciate most about David
Shands. When I listen to David speak, he's going to give it to you raw. He's going to give it to
you simple with things that you can start doing. And you're exactly right for businesses. It's
about how can I do more? And then. It's about how can I do more?
And then the profitability side is how can I keep more?
So it's two folds.
It's how can I go get more and at the same time keep more?
And in the middle of all that, you got profit.
And to me, it's that simple.
It literally is that simple.
100%, 100%, you're right.
So the things that you do well you're the
master of I'll say that right like the things that you do well you're the
master of. When did podcasting become a thing for David Shands? What I didn't
know was a podcast necessarily but I've always been like I've always brought
people together so I'm doing this conference called Social Proof
Conference. So what I decided to do to promote it was typically
at a conference, you'll get a bunch of speakers
and they're going to speak on different topics.
So I said, wouldn't it be great if I just started sitting down
and interviewing the speakers?
Because if I interview this person,
someone might watch it and say to themselves,
I want to come meet that person that David interviewed.
So I was just trying to sell tickets.
If you look at them first episodes, you'll see at the end, for one, I didn't have a name for the podcast
in the first bunch of episodes. The second thing was at the end, you'd see me selling
tickets. Hey, make sure after this interview, y'all go get these tickets March 4th and
5th. It's going down in Atlanta. So I was just trying to sell tickets to an event. It
wasn't that I was trying to be a podcaster because I didn't know what it was. But I got
really, really good at the interview process
and I just, people said they liked it, so I kept going.
And this new buzzword podcast comes up
that I'm already doing
and I just started putting gas on it.
So-
That's why he's the OG.
He is the OG.
And you said earlier, everyone should have a podcast.
And I know three of my best friends are laughing at me right now because they were for two
years trying to convince me to have a podcast.
And my answer was, everybody shouldn't have a podcast.
I don't want to listen to everybody talk.
So I am convinced now that I do have one though, that podcast opens doors and I'm not even talking about
financially. Podcast opens doors for communications. Podcast opens doors for people that listen
to you to go through and get through something all the time. And so why does David Shands
feel everyone should have a podcast?
Because I believe everyone should have a voice and I believe we can
have something to say and put it out to the world and if nobody ever listens was
it a bad idea well no because maybe through this podcasting journey you start
to develop communication skills or maybe through these interviews you get more
comfortable asking questions and getting more information, maybe you get a sense of freedom from letting your
voice be heard. It's like, if we can have a voice, should we? If we can have a voice
in this world, should we? Is the question. Right. If we have something to say, the question
is, should we say it? And I believe the answer is yes. So everybody has their own reasons
for what they're doing. But it's like, okay, everybody knows how to read, right?
Yes, sir.
The question is, should we?
Yes.
Yeah, right?
I mean, everyone has something to say, should they say it?
I believe so.
I think everybody deserves to have their freedom of speech.
And once in the moment, when we start saying to people,
no, everybody doesn't need to have a podcast.
I wish some of these people don't have a podcast. It's like you want to
take somebody's voice from them when they have something to say. If you don't like it,
change the channel, but don't tell somebody they can't set up a microphone because their
opinion is different than yours because people are taking their opinions as facts and your
opinion is just an opinion. It's not a fact. This person saying whatever you're saying,
it's not right or wrong. it's their opinion, right?
Should a man open a door for a woman?
Yes.
Well, that's your opinion.
That's my opinion, but yes.
That's your opinion, because some people say,
well, I get my own door.
Why does a man open a door for a woman?
Why doesn't a woman open a door for a man?
We want equal rights.
Who's right?
It's all your opinion.
So I think everybody should get an opportunity
to have something to say, put it out into the world,
let the people hear it.
Listen, man, my dad, one of the most brilliant people
I've ever met in my life, smart.
I mean, the way he would say the things he said
and the little jokes that he would crack,
I mean, he was just a masterful communicator.
No one will ever, don't ever be able to hear it.
None of my followers will ever be able to hear
how witty my dad was.
Why?
Because he didn't record the stuff that he had to say.
How I loved my kids listening to my dad's wisdom.
Yeah.
So, myself-
I love it.
I love it.
I love the fact too, again, now that I have a podcast,
I get exactly what you're saying is the ability to express your thoughts in your own way.
Because you're right, people don't have to listen. Yeah. But sometimes that stuff is very therapeutic. To be able to have a conversation about whatever it is I want to talk about. And the beauty of it is it's your show, right? It is your show.
So I can bring on David Shands every day
if I could afford to bring them on every day.
But no, I can bring on who I want to.
I can host it wherever I want to.
I can go out publicly and just say, hey, let's record it.
Let's have a conversation.
I love the fact that podcasting has opened doors for me from a
relationship standpoint that I'm not going to say it would have never happened. It would
just been more challenging. Podcasting has done that. And so you're exactly right. And
so to Ryan and to Daniel and to Bradley, you all were right. Everyone should have a podcast
because everyone has a voice. So thank you, David
Shans for that piece. Yes, sir. So coming towards the end of 2024. And for entrepreneurs, I always
say every year becomes different, not necessarily challenging, but every year becomes different,
right? The world advances in technology. Now we have AI that literally changes every five minutes.
There's something new that you can do
and improve on or get better.
But I also think a lot of entrepreneurs stay in this warp
of trying to figure things out
and not always keeping the main thing, the main thing.
So for David Shands, man,
what's some advice that you have for entrepreneurs
as we get ready to start 2025?
There's three things you just gotta get right. And this is specifically for the timeframe
that we're in right now.
One is content, don't be afraid of it.
You gotta learn how to create this stuff.
Two is community.
You gotta build a community.
Now, that's more of a buzzword now,
but I've been doing meetups and all that kind of stuff
since 2011.
So I've always been in the community in terms of like getting a bunch of people around me, because that's of stuff since 2011. So I've always been in the community
in terms of like getting a bunch of people around me
because that's where I feel safe.
And cashflow, you have to build some cashflow.
You got to understand business and understand economics
and go make some money.
So those three things walking into 2025 will serve you well.
But whatever one of those three aren't,
you just don't have rights,
whichever one of those three are broken, fix it.
You got about 40 days or so left
up until the end of the year.
Don't walk into 2025 with those handicaps.
I told you he keeps things simple, ladies and gentlemen.
If you can't follow and input something
that David Shan says, it's a you problem.
I promise you.
He breaks things down to the simplest form like water.
So what do you have coming up?
What's exciting?
What new projects is David Shan's working on?
Podcast Summit will be late July, 2025.
It's a gathering of podcasters and content creators.
Just an incredible experience.
The best podcasting event in the world, hands down. And the morning meetup that's continuing to grow, just follow my journey.
I'm all about teaching entrepreneurship.
The end of this year, December 13th, Donnie Wiggins and I, my partner,
we're putting on your first million conference.
So we're doing all, we're going to be spending a whole day laying a foundation
for 2025 for you to have your first million dollar year
And we believe we're gonna have at least 50 testimonials coming out of that
Hmm, and I don't want you to give anything away. No tips. No tricks or anything
I want everybody to to register for that event. So how can we register? How can we?
Find and follow the things you have going on
Yeah, my first million live comm and if you're going on. Yeah, MyFirstMillionLive.com.
And if you're watching this after that,
then you know we got Podcast Summit coming up.
If you're watching any other time,
I have a Morning Meetup community.
I'm teaching entrepreneurship every single day,
Monday through Friday.
I'm literally on a call like this every single day.
And I have this community of people
that are looking to grow and they're all growing.
It's incredible.
So yeah, that's TheMorningMeetup.com, PodcastSummit.com, MyFirstMillionLive.com whenever you're listening to this.
Perfect. Where is the Summit 2025 going to be?
In Atlanta.
Yes, sir. It's an easy drive for me if I'm invited, David.
For love. Come on. Come on. Absolutely.
Absolutely. So I want to end with this because I
know you have a lot going on and you were gracious
with your time today, man.
For the listener or viewer right now that's like,
they need that something to keep going because you mentioned
keep going earlier and that's one of the pillars of my life
too.
What's two or three things that you want to tell or leave
with people that are watching and listening now?
Stop stopping. I mean, people spend 30, 40, 50 years, they're alive, starting and stopping
and starting and stopping and starting and stopping. Just stop stopping. There's so many
things. I think they could have gotten from this interview, but that's just the words I would leave
you with. Just stop stopping. There's too many people depending on you, but for some reason you keep stopping and we can't progress that way.
Can't get excited about something today and we're excited about something tomorrow. So the thing we were talking about today
we're not excited about and we stopped that. It's like laying a bunch of seeds and only watering the seeds you laid today.
And you forget about the rest.
Nothing's gonna grow like that.
So I believe if you keep going long enough,
eventually you figure this thing out
and you'll see something grow in your life.
Amazing, amazing.
David, brother, I appreciate you more than you know.
Thank you for being the man, the leader, the father,
the inspiration that you are, man.
From my soul again, thank you so much.
My pleasure, thank you for having me.
You got it. And for all the listeners and viewers,
remember your because is your superpower.
Go unleash it.
Thank you for tuning in to Make Unplugged.
Keep pushing your limits, embracing your purpose,
and chasing greatness.
Until next time, stay unstoppable.