Next Level Pros - #156: How I Built a 9-Figure Business by Outworking My Mind // Chris Lee // Next Level Pros Podcast
Episode Date: July 17, 2025Welcome to a New Episode of Next Level Pros! Today, Chris Lee shares his powerful origin story. From humble beginnings in a small town to early business ventures, overcoming personal challenges, and f...inding his true path in entrepreneurship. Originally recorded for his first podcast, “The Founder Podcast,” this replay dives deep into Chris’s childhood, his work ethic shaped by necessity, how he found confidence through Cutco sales, and the pivotal decision to walk away from medical school and build something on his own.Apply to be on the show:https://forms.gle/hwDijQPFyKCEtHNs8 Highlights:"Sales is the root of every successful business. Learn it or lose.""Diabetes didn’t define me. It disciplined me.""I was making $65,000 in three months while my dad worked all year for that.""You don’t need to be the quarterback to win the championship."Timestamps:00:00 – Why This Episode Matters00:38 – Meet Chris Lee: Early Retirement & Entrepreneurial Lessons02:00 – Growing Up in Connell, Washington05:10 – Childhood Jobs & Early Financial Discipline 08:10 – Discovering Sales Through Cutco at 1813:00 – Lessons from Sports & Being Benched18:00 – Diabetes Diagnosis & Life-Changing Identity Shift21:00 – Serving a Mission & Developing Deeper Resilience27:11 – Marriage, Fatherhood & That First $65K Summer31:30 – Pivoting from Medicine to EntrepreneurshipLooking to scale your business? Want to learn directly from the same team that helped me sell my last business for 9 figures? Click this link below to check out how you can work with us. https://nextlevelhomepros.com/grow-home-service-vsl Join my community - Founder Acceleration https://www.founderacceleration.com Apply for our next Mastermind: https://www.thefoundermastermind.com Golf with Chris: https://www.golfwithchris.com Watch my latest PodcastApple- Next Level Pros Podcast - Apple PodcastsSpotify- https://open.spotify.com/show/1e0cL2vI1JAtQrojSOA7D2 YouTube - @christhefounder
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Real quick, before we dive in, I want to give you some context on this episode.
This conversation was originally recorded back when I was running my first podcast,
the Founder Podcast.
It was before Next Level Pros even existed.
I sat down with some serious heavy hitters, entrepreneurs, operators, leaders, and we
unpacked real tactical stuff that still holds up today.
So instead of letting these episodes collect dust, we're bringing them back here on the
Next Level Pros channel.
You'll notice the branding is a little different, maybe the style too, but the lessons? Still
gold. Especially if you're in the trades or home service space and trying to build something
real. Let's get into it.
Today I'm going to be sharing my story. I am 39 years old and unofficially retired.
When I say unofficially,
it's because I'm still very active in investments,
in consulting in as a chairman of the board for my,
my business Solgen power. And so, um,
over the years I have been involved in founding many different businesses.
Now only two of them have had rapid wild success.
Outside of that, there was some moderate successes,
there were some failures, there was a variety of different things.
But before we get into the business talk,
I want you to know a little bit about me and who I am.
What made me who I am today?
Why in the world do I have a
paddleboard back here? Check it out. Take a look at that thing though. Man, that thing
is beautiful. So if you guys are listening to this, go ahead and look on
YouTube. You're gonna be able to see this really cool paddleboard. This was
actually made for me, handmade by a wood shop, a high school wood shop, pretty amazing. I'm also an avid collector of shoes,
of sports apparel. You can see up here I'm a big gun guy, fairly conservative. I have some left
leaning opinions about certain things, social things, but for the most part, very, very
conservative and right-leaning. But don't let that scare you. I am open to all
kinds of ideas and so we're gonna be talking about all kinds of cool things
with so many different founders. But once again, what made Chris Lee the person I
am today? So I am a, I grew up in a household where my father was the only
one that worked. My mom was a stay-at- a household where my father was the only one that
worked. My mom was a stay at home mom. There were six kids. There was actually
seven kids, six siblings, and we also raised my cousin who's a year younger
than me. And so growing up in a small town of Connell Washington, it was the
perfect place for a kid to grow up. You know, summers were spent playing
backyard baseball. We were big sports people because my dad was a high school teacher, also a head football and wrestling coach. And so since we didn't have a lot of money, all of our time and effort went into things like sports that didn't cost a lot of money. And sports back then were completely different. You didn't have these club sports. We weren't paying all this money to travel. I mean, we were out hustling on the gridiron. We were playing on the sandlot,
like it was completely different day and age. This small town that I grew up in, 2,600 people.
And later the population doubled only because a prison was put into the town and they counted the
only because a prison was put into the town and they counted the prisoners as citizens of the town.
So anyways, that was a little bit about,
you know, life growing up for me.
It was very simple, very basic.
Many of you guys remember what the 80s and 90s were like.
Lots of nostalgia.
It's funny because there's a lot of things
actually coming back from the 90s right now as far as styles, which just makes it laughable altogether.
So, loved sports. I loved math actually. So, in second grade I was taken and
identified as someone that was pretty good at math and I was put on a math
team in second grade. And I think a lot of that had to do with the fact that I was held back.
I started school a year later than most. In fact,
when I graduated from high school, I was 19 years old. But it put me ahead.
If any of you guys have ever read the outliers,
you know,
it talks about the advantage of age and hockey and different things.
And I think there was definitely because I was advanced in math. And that's one thing that I've always loved is numbers.
And that's one thing that has appeal appealed to me about business is, you know,
just the language of numbers.
I just, I get nerdy when it comes to that.
In fact, one of the things I always like to tout because I was an athlete, it was,
it was strange, but I was, I competed in math.
Um, eighth grade, I was in the fourth grade.
I was in athlete, it was strange, but I competed in math. Eighth grade
math team state champions, me and three of my other peers who were the state champs.
But so growing up, it was a lot of fun. But because we didn't have a lot of
money, we were required to work at a very young age. In fact, I got my very first job when I was nine years old, delivering
papers every single day, 365 days a year, unless we left on a little family
vacation in which we got a sub.
And so that was me waking up between five and five 30 every single day from
age nine till 16. And then later at 16, I got what was called the route manager
job. And, uh, I was supposed to be able to get my driver's license, but I didn't have my Eagle Scout yet.
So my mom wasn't going to let me get my license, but later realized that I needed it for this job.
And so I got my driver's license. But me and my younger brother, Tony, we ended up running,
we were the paper route managers, and we would wake up at 430 every single day. And this set a foundation for the rest of my life of
be becoming an early riser, even though naturally, I am a night owl. And I love love those times. But so learned work
at a very young age. In fact, the rule in our house was that the age of 12, you had to provide for everything but
underwear and food on the table. So if you wanted food outside of the house, if you want to close shoes, you want to do any activities, guess what? That was coming
from your pocket. And so because of it, I learned the value of work early on. Now I only, I didn't
know how to work smart. It was literally just work hard. And I was picking up any side job that I
could. I was driving tractors during the summer, raking hay for local farmers.
I worked at an oil place, delivering oil only for, in fact, that was the only job that I was actually fired from because I was just unreliable.
I worked at a little restaurant called the pizza station, just anything, any odds and ends way to
make money, but it wasn't ever smart. My dad, he was a disciplined investor, which is interesting.
He only made about $65,000, $70,000 a year growing up, but over half of his paycheck went towards his
401k. Now, he wasn't really robust it. I wasn't super creative, but he was
disciplined. And so that's one thing that my parents taught me from a very young age was the value of
discipline, the value of work. And so early on, it was just me working discipline. It wasn't, it wasn't
anything that was super smart. And I first was introduced to working a little bit smart when I was
at the age of 18, I was between my junior year, my senior year in high school.
And I saw this little tab, little post. It was, uh,
I was at that moment attending what's called running start.
So I was attending college while in high school at a Columbia basin college,
a little, uh, local two year school, a little community college. And I saw this tab
posting that said, make a guaranteed $13 an hour. I couldn't believe it. I think minimum
wage at that point was like $6.50. I was like $13. That is twice what I can make it doing
anything else. And so I gave it a call and come to find out it was Cutco and selling knives.
And, you know, you got paid $13 for every presentation, whether you made a sale or not.
Now, this is where I realized I had a gift, a gift for connecting with people,
a gift for identifying needs and pain of people and being able to provide a solution with product.
And so this was the very first product that I actually got to sell and was paid for
the value that I created during an hour rather than just paid for an hour no
matter how much value I was creating. And so this is where like my mind went off.
Man, I can make sales. I can literally go into any old farm lady's house, the farm
wife's house, and walk out with a $1,200 to $1,500 check for a full set of knives.
And I fell in love with those knives too. You know, in fact,
today still have a big set of cutco.
One thing I've always preached is never sell a product that you do not absolutely
believe in and that you don't use. In fact,
every single product that I've ever ever sold in my life,
I have and I use. And so that's a big thing,
but that's where I was introduced to sales.
And I think sales for anyone that's listening to this, um,
is really the basis of any entrepreneurial journey.
If you want to have a successful business, I don't care who you are.
If you're a doctor, a lawyer, or anything, if you
want to run a successful business, you have to have a background in sales. You have to master
this craft. And it was while selling Cutco that I was introduced and began to fall in love with the
world of sales. Now, at this point in my life, I thought the only thing I wanted to be was a doctor.
And the reason I wanted to be a doctor is one, I wanted to help people.
I love the idea of helping.
But two, my grandpa, my mom's dad was a doctor and he was the only person in my life that had some level of wealth.
And I thought, well, and I always knew from the age of like five or six, I want to be rich.
I want to be wealthy. I want to be successful. I was driven.
I just have that deep personality for anybody that's ever taken the disc assessment
that is like extremely dedicated, driven, dominant. And so because of that, I was very
goal-centric as a young boy, knew I had goals. In fact, I wrote them. They were up on my wall. Uh, one was to be a state champ.
The other was to marry my sweetheart in, in, uh,
what we refer to as the, uh, an LDS temple in, in my religion.
And so, you know, all these things, uh, I was driven.
I knew I wanted to be rich and I thought the only way to be rich was to be a
doctor and helping people seem pretty cool
So literally my whole life was mapped out. There's the reason why I was going to college in high school was to all
become a doctor and so
So this was this is where I was at at the age of 18
Working in sales trying to save up for medical school realizing that after I graduate from high school
I was planning on going on a two year mission. And so, you know, during, let's, let's back up a little bit and tell you a little bit about how sports
shaped my life. Sports was so important to us. Like I said, it was, it was really all that we had. And it was our way
that we connected with our father. And my mom was funny. She didn't really like sports. She grew up in a household,
like I said, the doctor. And talk about Clash of Titans. So you got my mom, who's She didn't really like sports. She grew up in a household, like I said, the doctor and talk about clash of
titans. So you got my mom who was raised on the East coast in Washington, DC, super wealthy with my dad who was raised by a
ditch rider, which is like one of the poorest jobs that you could have. In fact, my grandpa, he, he was a wonderful man,
but you know, loved the bottle too much. My dad has early memories of driving him home from the bar at age 12.
So these completely different backgrounds, they come together.
You got my mom, the dreamer, my dad, the work, the workhorse.
And they came together to to formulate this this wonderful family.
And so this this is what these are the people that raised me.
And once again, going into sports,
sports was everything.
And I had a battle.
Like for me, I always wanted, like I said,
I had that leader characteristic.
I wanted to be the one recognized.
I wanted to be out there and doing amazing things.
Of course I wanted to be a quarterback in football.
In fact, but the one thing that didn't line up
is I wasn't super fast. But,
you know, worked hard and I had some heartbreaking moments where, you know, as a sophomore, I was a
backup quarterback through seven touchdowns on varsity. Had a pretty awesome sophomore year. As
a junior, I ended up getting beat out by the sophomore that was younger than me. And it was
heartbreaking. And one of the turning points in my life where like a dream I felt was just ripped from my
chest because I wanted to be a state champion. And like, and I thought that the way to be
a state champion was to be that leader, be that quarterback. And, uh, had a terrible
junior year. I was, I was injured more mentally than physically. And, uh, it was then I made
a decision that, Hey, look, sometimes you don't hit your goals,
the route that you think that you're going to go.
And sometimes it takes an alternative route to get to the same result.
And so after my junior year decided to pack on a bunch of weight,
hit the weight room, um, creatine, all the, all the good legal stuff, protein,
and, uh, ended up packing on a bunch of pounds. And I moved from
quarterback to the line my senior year. And I, and I started as the right guard. I was a good pulling
guard and then a middle linebacker. And eventually we ended up winning a state champion and the
championship. It was the very first state championship in our school history. But that
thing taught me a lesson that it doesn't matter what the path is. If you have a goal and you're not
willing to quit and you bounce back, even though others may dictate what the future is, this kid
that beat me out or the coaches or whatever the reason that I could have been just an excuse maker,
excuse maker, right? Like, like this is where I learned the lesson, the E plus R equals O. I love the book Above the Line by Urban Meyer on which he uses the equation, E plus R equals O, event plus response equals the outcome. Whatever the outcome
that we want, that ultimate goal, it doesn't matter what the event is, as long as we control the response and luckily I controlled the response as a junior in high school
And you know that taught me many lessons for the rest of my life and I drew on that experience for the rest of my life
During during high school. I started dating my high school sweetheart as a sophomore. She moved into
Our little town she had transferred so she didn't move, but she had transferred
in. And if anybody ever grew up in a small town, you realize not a lot of people move
in. And so when she showed up our sophomore year, it was like having fresh meat. Every
guy in the world wanted this woman. And man, I was smitten the very first time that I,
that I saw her and I begged her to be my boyfriend, my girlfriend.
And we started dating almost immediately after she had transferred in.
And that wasn't always, you know, growing up as a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints,
LDS or Mormon, you know, it wasn't always encouraged to have a steady girlfriend.
And so my mom was always like trying my childhood, not only the work, not only the sports and my relationship with my now wife, Andrea, um,
was diabetes.
So in fourth grade at the age of 10 years old,
I was in the middle of my first year of high school.
And I was in the middle of my second year of high school.
And I was in the middle of my third year of high school.
And I was in the middle of my now wife Andrea was diabetes.
So in fourth grade at the age of 10 years old, I began to lose
weight, I weighed about 80 pounds, and I dropped 10 pounds,
like literally 12 and a half percent of my body, body weight
gone. And I just became this skeleton and nobody knew exactly
why and I remember running on the playground and being out of breath and I go and drink a glass
of water and then have to pee five minutes later.
And like just had no idea what it was till one day my mom was talking to a good friend
of her who's a type one diabetic and she began sharing with her Susan.
My mom Carol was sharing with her friend uh, Susan, uh, my, my mom, Carol,
sharing with her friend, Susan, what was going on with me. And she's like,
Carol, I think, I think he has diabetes. Like you need to go get this checked.
So we go down to the local little doctoring, you know,
local community doctor's office.
They stabbed my finger and I'm just bleeding and it hurts so bad.
They didn't even have like one of those like nice, easy ones. He just literally pulls off this needle and just stabs my finger and
they've test my blood sugar and it's 350. Anybody that knows anything about blood sugar,
you're supposed to be between 80 and 120. 350 was extremely high.
So immediately they knew I had type 1 diabetes. And so they call up the hospital. They sent me to the hospital.
But in the meantime, I had been fasting for 24 hours and, and my parents are
like, Hey, can we go and get them something to eat? And they're like, Oh
yeah, feed him. So of course my parents don't know anything about health at
this point. We go to Burger King and I think I got like a whopper and fries
and just all this garbage fat and carbs. By the time that they admit me to the hospital, my blood sugar is 650 and 650 is like crazy. I mean,
you're, you're about a hundred, maybe 200 away from going into coma.
And so they immediately started pumping me full of insulin and everything.
But I spent the next week learning how to control and manage my diabetes.
And there was a pivotal moment
that forever changed my life. When I was at the hospital, and they played this, I don't know why I'm tearing up right now,
but because this meant this means so much to me. But there
was this pivotal moment in which they played this little cassette
movie. And there was a there was an NFL player. And he was talking about, he's like, guess what? I'm type one diabetic and type one diabetes doesn't have to
define your life.
No matter, no matter what you can go and accomplish whatever
your goals.
And like, this was such a message of hope for little 10 year old
boy that literally thought my life was over.
I didn't, I, I didn't know what to do. I didn't, I, I thought I'd never be able to eat sugar again. I thought I was going to die at a young age.
You know, I was being told that I was going to dictate how the rest of my life goes.
And I'm just going to be a victim, a victim of my circumstance.
And, uh, and as I'm watching this video, it, it brought me so much hope that, man,
I don't have to be a victim.
I can go and do anything I want.
I could be a professional football player if I wanted to be. And, uh,
it was then that I made the decision in my life that I was never going to
identify as a diabetic. I just had diabetes,
but I was not a diabetic. And I know that doesn't sound like a huge difference,
but for me it was, it was a big identity shift that
diabetes was not going to determine my success. And from that moment on, I made
a, I made a resolution that not a lot of people would know that I had diabetes.
You know, in fact, I would, I would hide it from most people because I didn't
want it to be my crutch. I didn't want to wear it on my sleeve. Like, Hey, guess
what? I'm diabetic. Take care of me. No, I wanted to be self reliant, self dependent.
Like I said, that video changed my life. And so from age 10 till eight till 19, when I ended up
leaving the house, I had nine years of discipline that I was able to be taught. And I've always looked at my diabetes as a blessing. It's something that
has taught me to
just be dedicated and disciplined and take care of my health and not be a victim.
So I spent the next nine years taking eight to ten shots a day,
testing my blood sugar on a regular basis, counting carbs. In fact, I'm a human
calculator when it comes to counting carbs. I can literally look at any food and tell you exactly
how many carbs, how much fat, how much insulin I need for it. It's kind of one of those just crazy
things that you develop. In fact, diabetes has just become a part of me. Like I said, I was
definitely afraid of needles forever and I found weird ways to get around that.
But yeah, it just was an amazing experience.
My junior year, I ended up getting put on a pump.
For those that are watching here on YouTube, this thing is attached to me in my stomach,
keep it in my pocket really.
Nobody knows what's going on.
And then on top of that, I have this really cool device that literally I just scan my,
I can scan my arm and it'll tell me exactly what my blood sugar is.
So I no longer have to, uh, no longer have to, uh,
stab my fingers, which is really cool. So diabetes is coming real, real long ways,
but for the rest of my life, like I said,
I've I've decided that diabetes would not be a crutch. And, uh, the interesting thing enough is two years ago, my then nine year old daughter, my now 11 year old daughter was diagnosed with type one diabetes.
I'm a father. I'm a father of five. And, uh, and so as, as a father, uh, uh, and a father of a
diabetic, you know, I got a teacher that valuable lesson. I said, Jocelyn,
we are not diabetics. We have diabetes, but we aren't diabetics. This is not,
we cannot let this determine who you are. And so I've, I tried to share that, that blessing and that lesson with her, but these are just a few of the things that just really shaped me as an adult, as a child to
later become an adult and have the different variety of successes that I've had.
So at the age of 19, I graduated high school.
Once again, I was held back.
I had finished two years in college.
I had this plan to go on, finish, and then go to medical school.
But after I served a mission. And for those that aren't familiar with missions, in the
LDS Church, in the Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-day Saints, we submit paperwork.
So you write a little background about you. You go and you get your health work done and
all these different things. And then you send it to what we call our profit. So we believe in a living profit, send in the paperwork.
And, uh, for any of you guys that know anyone that ever served a mission or
ever seen those guys walking around in white shirt and ties, like this is what
happens, they submit the paperwork and say, Hey, guess what?
For the next two years, I'm actually going to pay to be on a mission.
I'm not going to get paid.
I'm going to pay.
I'm going to sacrifice time when everybody else is going to college, doing all kinds of other stuff, but I'm going to pay to be on a mission. I'm not going to get paid. I'm going to pay. I'm going to sacrifice time when everybody else is
going to college, doing all kinds of other things with their life. I'm going to
give two years up to the Lord. And so you send in this paperwork. A few weeks
later, you receive this big white packet. Well, this is how they used to do it. Now
they text it to you and you have a little link that you go to. But you get
this white packet and you open it up.
And in that white packet tells you where you're going to be spending the next
two years of your life with perfect strangers that you have never met before
going and doing the Lord's work. And you could go to anywhere in the world.
In fact, my dad went to New York, my older brother,
Dave went to Chile and my younger brother Tony went to Honduras. I've
had many Fresno's that have been all over the world. So I opened up that paper and inside it says,
you're hereby called to serve in Oklahoma City. I was so excited. I knew I was probably going to end
up being in the United States since I had type 1 diabetes as they tend to not send diabetics outside of the U S. So I was excited, but more importantly, even cooler as I was called to serve
as a Spanish speaking missionary. And so you go to this place for nine, nine weeks. It's called the
MTC missionary training center. You learn a language. Well, at least you think you do. And
then you go out and you're required to serve in that language. And so over the next two years I spent sacrificing, knocking doors, selling the
gospel of Jesus Christ, following the spirit, being with companions and people that I had never met
before in my life, sacrificing, only calling home twice a year, writing weekly handwritten letters to both my wife and and
my now my now wife and my parents and
You know is there when I learned reliance on God I've learned reliance on myself
I learned how to develop greater sales skills greater spiritual like consciousness
Like where how things impact me? I took care of my health and all these
different things. And I also learned how to speak Spanish. And, and I also got to serve among a group
of people called Marshallese. They're from the Marshall Islands, Southwest Pacific. And I spoke
a little Marshallese. And so I learned so many incredible things and, and, uh, really learned how to be disciplined
at an even greater level, you know, and live away from home for the first time.
And so from age 19 till 21, that's where I spent my life.
Age 21, I returned home from my mission on July 4th, come home to the airport.
There's my, there's my bride to be, you know, We had broken up right before I left on my mission.
So I wasn't even sure if this was gonna work out.
And we wrote periodically my first year
and then every week after the second year of my mission.
And immediately I knew that that was the woman
I wanted to marry three weeks later.
We were engaged and two months after that. So two weeks,
two months and three weeks after my mission,
we were married on September 24th in 2005.
And so my wife has been beside me my whole career.
And the beauty is, is I didn't wait for success.
And I knew that I wanted to be a family man from a very young age, just because
my parents made it so appealing. Having a family, having kids, putting God first, putting family
first and everything else. And I knew that I wanted to establish a family. I wanted to have kids. And
I wanted to have that as my priority. And then anything I chose to do after that was it being the doctor or building
a business that that would come secondary to this, to this unit.
And so me and my wife got young, married young. I was 21.
She was just barely had turned 20. And, uh, you know,
the crazy thing is at a thousand dollars in my bank account,
a guy had given me a 1991 for Thunderbird and said, pay me $1,000 when you can.
So I was at a thousand dollar car with a thousand dollar in debt and literally
no real plan besides him.
I'm going to go to college and I'm going to become a doctor.
And, uh, so I didn't wait for success.
We just, we chose each other first.
And, uh, meanwhile, I've got married, didn't put up five kids.
Six months later, we were pregnant with my oldest, who's now 16.
And we have two beautiful daughters, Addison and Jocelyn and three amazing sons, Kaden, Dylan and Bruin.
They range from age 16 all the way down to Bruin.
He just turned five.
Uh, they're my pride and joy and really where I've been able to go and build.
to Brewing, he just turned five. They're my pride and joy and really where I've been able to go and build. So with the plan to become a doctor, I went to
Brigham Young University, a LDS college and planned on finishing my last two
years applying to medical school, just that whole thing. While there I wanted to
treat college like a job. I wanted to be there full time and I didn't want to have to work a job while
going to school. Now, obviously I was now a husband and a future father and I
had all these things I had to take care of.
So I got recruited into sales and not just any sales door to door sales,
knocking on doors.
And I was told these crazy stories that, Hey dude, you can go and make another So I got recruited into sales and not just any sales door to door sales,
knocking on doors. And I was told these crazy stories that, Hey dude,
you can go and make enough money to live on in just three and a half months.
And I thought, man, that sounds wild and amazing.
And I knew I had been pretty decent at sales from selling cutco before my
mission. Um, and then, and then also, uh,
selling the gospel on my mission. then also selling the gospel
on my mission.
And so I thought, heck, why not?
Let's do it.
And so originally I was recruited by my now business partner,
Darrell Kelly, to come work with him selling pest control.
And so if anybody ever heard like we go door to door,
we sell pest control contracts, year contracts,
we'll come out, we'll service, we'll spray around your house,
we'll do all this, that and the other. And I did it for work in pest control contracts, year contracts will come out. We'll service, we'll spray around your house. We'll do all this, that and the other.
I did for work and pest control. And the very first time that I ever did it, I went out and this was in summer of 2006. And I sold, I was the top guy in my office. I'd never done this before. I went out, worked hard, used my brain, used, used everything, worked hard, worked smart, did everything I possibly could.
And in a period of three months and one week, I need $65,000.
And for a 22 year old boy that had never made more than $12 an hour, this was life changing money.
In fact, I was making as much as my dad at the point. At that point, I was like, man,
this guy has worked his whole career, worked his whole butt off to be able to make $65,000 a year. I did it in three months and one week.
And like, dude, I thought it was a bazillionaire. Like this was crazy money. Like, you know, most
of my, my, uh, cohorts or, or, you know, people that I was going to school with or whatnot, they were making three to $6,000 in a summer. I made $65,000. And I really learned, man, I'm pretty dang good at this
wholesale thing. And so from that, I was able to not work as I went to school, went and got a 3.96
GPA at BYU, just with the intention to continue to go to medical school. So then I was into, I was into my senior year, no,
not quite in my senior year. And then the next summer I go out. So I finished my junior
year. Next summer I go out, I manage an office, and I make six figures. I make $105,000. What? How did this little farm town boy go from making 12 bucks an hour in two
years to be making $105,000 in three and a half months? It was mind boggling. My little
mind could not comprehend it. It was such an amazing experience in life changing that as
I started my senior year,
I was contemplating, okay, I'm going to take the MCAT.
I'm going to be going into medical school or whatnot.
And I started wondering, I'm like, man, you know, I want to be able to help people.
And I want to be able to make a lot of money.
Is it possible that I can make a lot of money doing something
else that being coming to doctor and help people in a way that isn't just in the medical
field? So this little idea started creeping in my mind. And then I started just getting
a little fearful around socialized medicine. I had a teacher that is like, Hey, look, you're
going to go and get all this debt. You might only make $80,000 a year under socialized
medicine regime. I'm like, Oh, you know, and me being raised a conservative, of course,
I got a little bit of fear around that. And so, you know, I got, I have, I have this,
this happening and starts creeping in my mind. And I'm like, Oh my goodness.
Do I want to spend the next 10 years of my life going to med school,
doing residencies, fellowships,
and all these stuff and not making money until into my mid thirties?
Or is there potentially another way during this time?
I had a professor that said, Chris,
it wasn't just to me, he was saying to the class,
but it felt like he was just saying it right to me. He said,
he said,
you can save more lives running a successful
business than any medical doctor could ever do.
And that right there, ladies and gentlemen, is where I began to like,
it really began to blossom in my mind that maybe the medical world isn't for me,
that if I have the ability to save lives, to change lives, to impact other lives outside of being a
medical professional, I was interested in that.
And so that's where it began to go. And I got, you know, through
middle of my, my senior year. And I said, man, I'm just not sure this is, this is what
I was meant to do. So what I ended up doing, I ended up dropping out of my, my science,
my, my, my science major, I went took all the prereqs, be able to get into what's called
the Marriott school, Marriott business school of management. There are B went took all the prereqs, be able to get into what's called the Marriott school, Marriott business school of management. Uh, there are BYU took all the prereqs tested.
You have to take a test. You have to submit. God accepted, ended up going into the Marriott
school of management and, uh, did a, did a one semester, felt like I learned everything I needed to know.
And I ended up dropping out to start my very first business.
This was at the age of 24 in the beautiful year of 2008.
Of course, everybody knows what, uh, 2008 has to, has to offer, but this is where I
took the entrepreneurial leap and no longer was I a boy pursuing my boyish dreams. And we are going to jump in those details and exactly what happened with my very first business
on the next episode. So I'm doing two episodes of my story. So this is episode number one.
Feel free to jump ahead and get started. And I'm going to be doing a lot of the
same things that I've been doing for the past year. So I'm going to be doing a lot of the
same things that I've been doing for the past year. So I'm going to be doing a lot of the
same things that I've been doing for the past year. So I'm doing two episodes of my story. So this is episode number one.
Feel free to jump ahead and get into some amazing stories of these other
founders. Hopefully I've been able to keep you engaged until this moment.
If you are liking what you're hearing, if you like the story, if you,
if you love this podcast, please leave a review.
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stories of others, engaging, sharing little bits and pieces and nuggets along the way.
So if you're liking what you're hearing, please leave me a review. I greatly appreciate it. I
read and respond to all these different reviews. Make Make sure you do it on Apple podcasts on YouTube all the all the good stuff. But anyways until next time