Next Level Pros - #157: My 9-Figure Blue Collar Journey Part 2 // Chris Lee // Next Level Pros Podcast
Episode Date: July 25, 2025Welcome to a new episode of Next Level Pros! In this episode, Chris shares the raw, unfiltered story of his first major business failure, the lessons learned from bankruptcy, and how he rebuilt his ca...reer and mindset. If you’re an entrepreneur, operator, or anyone in the trades or home service space looking for real, tactical advice and inspiration, this episode is for you.Highlights:“Take everything you believe are going to be your expenses and at least double it, sometimes triple it.”“There is almost always a way out… Go ask for help. Quit being prideful.”“Do what you’re physically able to do, not what you’re mentally able to do.”“The best flattery you could ever give me is something that I 100% know that I did, and it was amazing.”Timestamps:00:00 - Introduction02:34 - Challenges and Mistakes in Early Business 09:55 - Changing the Approach16:06 Handling “Dead Partners”19:36 - Impact of the 2008 Economic Crash 24:02 - Rebuilding and Learning from Failures 30:26 - Competing in the Sales Seminar 34:33 - Winning the Sales Competition 47:50 - Lessons Learned and Future Plans Want me to teach you how to grow your business? Text me! 509-374-7554Want access to more of my content? Click the link below for all of our latest updates and events!https://linktr.ee/nextlevelprosWant to be a guest on our show? Apply here!https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1YlkVBSluEKMTg4gehyUOHYvBratcxHV5rt3kiWTXNC4/viewform?edit_requested=trueWatch my latest PodcastApple - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/next-level-pros/id1687030281Spotify- https://open.spotify.com/show/1e0cL2vI1JAtQrojSOA7D2?si=95980cd4e55a437aYouTube- https://www.youtube.com/@NextLevelPros
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Discussion (0)
Real quick, before we dive in, I want to give you some context on this episode.
This conversation was originally quoted 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 Pro's channel.
You'll notice the branding's 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.
Part two of my story.
And so as you guys remember, so I kind of give you the background on the previous episode in which we talked about my upbringing and my schooling and just all the different things that ultimately led to me jumping full tilt into starting my first business.
so in 2008 great year to start a business might I add no I'm joking but I was caught with the
entrepreneur bug and I thought man you know I already know everything that I'm doing this is the
typical e myth right the entrepreneur myth that like I am a high functioning a technician
really good at sales I'm already doing everything that the owner is doing why don't I just go
and do this on my own. And so I was smitten, decided to drop out of school. I felt like I learned
everything that school had to teach me. I was 24 years old on a pike dream, just ready to go,
ready to go and build my first business. And so my first business was in the home security space
in automation in which we would recruit door-to-door sales teams. We'd establish offices with
different locations throughout the United States. We'd recruit technicians.
We have a back office.
We were located in Orem, Utah at that point.
At that point, I had moved my family.
Just so you know, throughout my career, I have moved my family because me and my wife have been married throughout my whole career.
14 different times.
14, we have moved from location to location.
Some of them within the same town, but 14 different times.
And so it's been a crazy wild ride in pursuing the success that I ultimately wanted to.
experience. So at this moment, we were living in Norm, Utah, I was attending BYU, decided to drop
out of school and start my first business. But before I decided to do that, I went and I said,
you know what, I want to go and compete with some of the big dogs, the guys that are doing it
bigger than me, the Vivants, the Pinnacles. At this point, it was Apex Alarm instead of Vivant.
And I was just going to go and compete. Everything was based on competition. And so in order to go
and compete with them. I need to be bigger, better, pay more, charge less, all the different things.
And so this is where I really made a bunch of mistakes. Well, one, I went and I took on two
partners that were working with me at then a company called Security One. We decided to up and leave
in the middle of the night. And we ended up not getting paid our backend checks for anybody
that doesn't know what a back end check in summer sales. You go. You make a sale. You get paid some
up front for the installs. As long as they retain for a certain amount of months, you get paid
full commission.
Ended up losing out on like $100,000, which was a lot of money to me back then.
And I mean, still is a lot of money now, but then it was significantly more than it is today.
And I didn't get paid that.
But like I said, I was just caught with this entrepreneur bug.
I went and I talked with my father-in-law, who I knew had some money.
And I ended up raising a million dollars from him.
And then I went to my dad, who was a school teacher, had saved his whole.
life and done all these different things to invest and never really taken much risk.
It'd always been 401k stock market, everything like that.
During the 2008 crash as the market tanked, he decided, man, I can't handle this anymore.
And he took out all of his money.
He had cut his, uh, it was about eight, nine hundred thousand dollars that he had in the stock
market down to like $400,000.
He decides to take it out of which he invests just over $200,000 into my business.
now some of you guys thinking that 200,000 great whatever to my dad this was a ton of money and and so he had put he was betting on me as the horse and I had two business partners that worked with me over at security one didn't bet them out too much just like hey we sold together we managed together let's go and build a business together and initially we were all in right we were going we were doing it but we took this $1.2 million and we just started just being stupid we built out this big nice office space
as our headquarters we were paying signing bonuses to sales teams for them to come and work with us
and man we recruited the doors off that thing i think we hired 150 to 200 sales reps so we thought
we were just going to you know sail off into uh you know retirement essentially you know we were
spreadsheet millionaires and i think this is a common mistake that a lot of entrepreneurs make right
they calculated everything they put it on a spreadsheet they're like you know uh this should cost this
I should get this much of revenue.
We should be able to easily sell this amount.
Let me just tell you one thing I've learned about spread,
becoming a spreadsheet millionaire.
Take everything that you believe are going to be your expenses and at least double it,
sometimes triple it,
and take every dollar amount of revenue that you think you're going to get
and usually cut that in half.
And you're going to end up being somewhere close.
And you've got to be able to operate from that kind of level.
I didn't know this at age 24.
I was young, dumb, thought I knew the world of sales.
I'd had a lot of success up until this point.
And so, you know, what could I lose?
You know, and so I'd go and I sell this big vision to my father and I'm, hey, put your
million bucks here.
You're going to have $10 million in the next three to four years, right?
And we gave him 20% of our business.
And then we gave a percentage to my father in exchange for $200,000.
And, you know, essentially we were operating, we were pitching that this thing was worth
five million bucks, right?
And I remember sitting down with a guy named Alex Dunn.
He didn't tell me exactly who he was.
He was currently, he was at that point working for Apex alarm as like their CFO.
But we were trying to pitch this idea to somebody else.
And he starts like picking it apart.
And I didn't know who this guy was.
And he's like, so you're telling me this thing is valued at $5 million.
And I'm like, yeah, of course it is.
He's like pre-launch.
You know, all you have is an idea.
And he's just started picking it apart.
And I just remember thinking, man, this guy's a jerk.
Like how who does he think he is, which is hilarious because I would probably be the exact same guy today in his seat, asking the same questions, pepper him with the same answers.
Needless to say, we didn't raise any money with that group.
So end up raising money from my father, my father-in-law.
Of course, I have the good credit.
My name is on everything.
The leases, everything like that.
Hey, guys, it's Chris.
Hey, a lot of you leave comments asking for help.
Do me a real quick favor.
shoot me a text at 509, 374-7554. That's 509, 374-7554. Shoot me a text. I'll answer and help you with whatever you need. Don't worry, I got you back. Let's go back to the show, baby. And then, as we know, we're in the middle of the hit, and we were just flying blinded. I refused to take a look at the macro environment. I was so focused on the micro, like I've been successful. I've done this, that, and the other. I can control my own destiny.
sales right like sales can be up and good or bad economy right like the typical uh mantra in
in the sales environment so you know i was just so totally self-deceived in the fact that i had
these blinders on and i refused to look at the macro environment that was just crashing around
me banks failing uh credit scores dropping you know just all the financing and everything was going
on so we go and we convince a company so the way it works in the home security business is
you go out and you sell a contract door to door.
We install the equipment and then you sell them on a three-year or a five-year monitoring.
So if you say, for example, three years times 40 bucks and a monitoring company would
actually pay you for the full contract, right?
So they pay you three years times $40 a month.
So you get like $12, $1,500 or whatever it was.
And so, and they are in turn are hoping that after that contract, customer stays on, they make
money, that's essentially how the business works. They're backed by financing and banks that
help float this upfront cost from us. We take that $1,300, we pay a commission to a sales rep,
we pay for the equipment, we pay for the install, and then we pay for all of our back office fix
costs. And so essentially hoping for like $2,300 to $300 at the end of the day. Obviously,
gross margin or bigger than that, but yeah, that's essentially what you're looking for in that business.
first summer goes and we go and we do the summer sales model we have six offices we're crushing it
well not really right like we're up against this macro environment that's that's crashing around us
we ended up operating essentially a break even through september but then we had back in checks
and different things like that we realized man we are in overhead we don't really understand a county
we don't really understand finance the only way like we saw what was in the bank account
what we had to be paying out and that we didn't have sales coming in after the end of the summer.
So immediately after our first summer of 2009, right, we launched this business, fall of 2008,
paid signing bonuses, all these things.
We go out 2009 in this depressed economy and we realized there's no way this thing is going to survive
if this continues to be our model.
So immediately after the summer of 2009, we're like, hey, we're now doing year-round sales,
year-round offices.
don't go to school, sell year-round, make this a lifestyle.
And so we went from six summer sales offices down to three-year-round locations.
And, man, we were just really trying to scrape by.
Then comes the bad hit, right?
Security one, our security networks who was buying our contracts at that time,
knocks on our doors and said, hey, your cancellation rate is a whole lot higher than what we expect.
A lot of this was driven by the economy.
And they said, and the bank.
links are seizing or like seizing up funds and not allowing us to to come. And I remember
talk with the CFO from the security networks and just thinking he was a jerk, right? You're seeing
the trend here. Right. Like I think CFOs are jerks, but they're just the ones telling the
reality and I'm just self-deceit. And so the CFO is just like, look, one, your cancellation
sucks to we can't afford to buy more than 100, 100 contracts a month from you.
The problem was, is we need 120 just to break even.
So I don't know if you understand that, but like, if you're limited in 100 and you need
120, that delta is negative money every single month.
I remember just panicking.
And then on top of that, security networks is like, oh, by the way, we have a UCC
one filing on your business and you can't sell these contracts and anybody else as long as
you're trying to do it in our regions and so we started searching the map security networks only
buys in certain territories and whatnot we're like holy crap the only way we survive is we have to go
open another market right because we are limited we cannot break even under the current circumstance
The only way that we can get this thing going is going elsewhere.
And, you know, the pact me and my two business partners always had was like,
hey, look, if crap hits the fan, we're going to be back on the doors, knocking doors,
and doing whatever it takes to make this happen.
We will move away, open up our own offices, make this happen.
We're no longer be operating from this like grandos headquarters, like, look at me.
I'm the CEO.
Look at this, that and the other, right?
that we're going to go out and get our hands dirty again.
When push came to shove, either of my business partners were willing to do that.
One stopped showing up to work.
The other one's like, hey, look, let me just run headquarters.
Me and my wife will take care of the books.
And so I was the only one willing to move.
And at this time, me and my previous pest control manager, Daryl Kelly, who's now my business partner,
we hadn't been talking for a while and and so and I apologize this there's a lot of details of
the story but like this is like the pinnacle of my career because of the way it collapsed
and so Darrell was going through a tough time he was like kind of translation trying to figure out
what he wanted to do so I go to Darry on like Darrell let's make up be friends again
we got over our first divorce we've always talked about how we've had two divorces over our
career. We decided to get through our first divorce and be back together. He's my work
wife. And so I convince him, I'm like, Darrell, hey, let's move from Utah. Let's relocate
back to home, Washington State, and let's open up this branch for my business. Kind of leaving out
that, dude, we're desperate. And the only way that this business is going to survive is if we
going, we make this happen in Washington State. So we pick up, we move our families to Washington State back
where we're from. And I move into my parents' house. They had now moved down to St. George. They
were renting this house. I convinced them to rent it to me. And me and Darrell, we start hitting the
doors. We start recruiting a small office. And we start selling these contracts to a different monitoring
station because it's outside of security networks territory. And we're selling these contracts.
and every single week, so we had to set up a different corporation.
So at this point, my company, my first name of my company was five diamond protection.
And this other branch of company, we called a five diamond home protection, right?
So it was a little bit different.
Different LLC, whatnot set up with monotronics.
So monotronics, we start crushing it.
And we're doing well.
We got, you know, this, there's a little bubble in Tri-Cities during the 2008 recession that just did not hit.
And so we start selling lights out.
We recruit a little team, start making money.
Monotronics is depositing money in our bank account every week.
And physically, I have to go the only way we couldn't afford the wires in different things like that.
And I can't remember why we weren't able to or maybe computers weren't up to the day where I could like send wires without going into the branch or whatever.
But I'm going and I'm getting physically 30,000.
in cash every single week out of this one bank account and depositing into my other bank
account to be able to keep things afloat down in Utah to pay the bills, pay the salaries
of my then dead partners, like literally partners not doing anything, and just pay those fixed
costs. So we end up doing this for like five months. And, you know, me and Daryl are living
off of nothing. Like we, this is literally, if we were running our own little business,
our own little offices, we would have made 30 to 40 grand a week.
Instead, it was going to float this other business.
And me and Darrell were only taking home $5,000 to $6,000 a month.
Like literally, I was making $60,000 on an annualized basis.
And we go and we do this for like five months straight.
And this is summer of 2010.
And Darrell becomes a prize to exactly what's going on.
He sees that we're floating in the other business.
He sees that, you know, we're just.
And then what it finally hit was we were, so my then partner who was running everything just
stopped running everything else. And the other three offices just completely crumbled. Right. And like,
it's like what? And you expect me to continue to pay your salary and everything like that. And one
day we're on the phone, myself and this business partner and Daryl's listening in or no,
Daryl was on the phone as well. And me and Daryl decided.
They're like, dude, we've got to cut these off.
Like, we've got to figure out, like, what the next step is.
And it can't be continued to float this business that's failing.
And so Daryl tells him, he's like, dude, we're not going to be paying your salary.
And all of a sudden, boom, he starts threatening legal.
Like, dude, I'm going to have my dad sue you.
He's a lawyer, this, that, and the other.
As soon as that happened, Darrell was like, whoa, I don't want to do with this anymore to do with this.
And so, you know, all of a sudden, man.
Man, I had a terrible choice to make.
My name was on the line for all this stuff.
On the office leases, the line of credit,
this, that, and the other with the inventory company.
Oh, come to find out, supposedly this inventory bill was getting paid.
And then one day we get a letter like, hey, you owe us $450,000.
Like, what?
$450,000.
What, this has been getting paid?
I go to my business department.
I'm like, dude, I thought your wife was cut.
She's running the book.
She was supposed to, oh, yeah, I'm not sure what happened there.
So I'm not sure if like embezzlement.
And frankly, I was in such a panic like at this point of my career and just misunderstood books and financials and stuff so much that like I don't even know how to like dive in and figure it out.
And so that hits.
We stopped paying the office lease and they're like, hey, we're hitting you for $600,000.
I'm like, dude, this is all coming down, crashing down around me.
And Amex stopped getting paid.
it was $130,000 and this, I mean, dude, it was, it all totaled up when it came to like,
oh, my father and my father and I was like $2.2 to $2.5 million somewhere in that range.
And it was just devastating.
And I was just like, dude, how am I going to survive?
How am I going to get through this?
There is no way like I can keep this company afloat.
And so at that point, like, I saw no light at the end of the tunnel.
The only decision that I saw at that point was like, I got to file bankruptcy.
Darrell was no longer going to be working with me.
My business partners stopped showing up work.
One's threatening lawsuits, everything like that.
And it's like my credit is attached to everything.
At this point, like I had never, ever missed a bill.
Ever.
My credit score was like $7.80.
I was like, my parents taught me like, you shake a hand.
You pay somebody.
You sign your name on the dot.
You pay somebody.
Man, but at this point, like, I was desperate.
But there was literally no way out.
And for anybody you guys that listening to this has ever been in this position,
like you know exactly what I'm feeling.
We were talking like pressure on the chest.
We're talking crying to sleep.
We're talking stress, anxiety, not wanting to show up to work,
just putting one foot in front of the other.
Blank stares at your spouse, blank stares at your kids,
blank stares at anybody that's trying to talk to you.
You're just like, oh my gosh.
What is happening?
Now, the sad part is, is at this point in my career, I figured out what worked, right?
What me and Daryl were doing was working, but we had no way out.
And I had a business partner in Daryl that was unwilling to help me get through this because he wasn't a part of it.
Like what motivation did he have not having the equity in the business or whatnot.
So that fall of summer or fall of 2010, I made the decision.
Man, I got to file chapter seven bankruptcy.
So I started the process, and immediately Daryl knew exactly what was going on, and we knew exactly what we needed to be successful.
Darrell opened up a home security business, K2K alarm, which he was going to make me a limited partner on, but during my bankruptcy, kind of kept me off the papers.
So the next three or four months was me filing in January 26, 2011, I completed my filing.
And, you know, when I had going to appear before the judge, which anybody that's ever gone through us, it's humiliating.
Like, it's the worst experience. And I would not recommend it to anybody. I think there is almost always a way out at the age of, what was I, 27 at that point, or almost 27. It was a month before my 27th birthday. I didn't see a way out. And I had no mentor. If I could talk to myself at that point.
right now. I would say, Chris, there's somebody else that's been through this. Go ask for help. Quit
being prideful. Quit trying to struggle on your own. There are so many people out there that are
willing to lift up that have gone through similar things that have solutions. But instead,
I just just held it in. And Daryl was the only person in the world that knew exactly what was
going on besides my wife. And I just dealt with the stress on my own. And, like,
Like I said, I wish I could go back and slap that kid and be like, Chris, there is a way out.
Please go find a mentor.
Go find somebody else that has been through this.
They will get you through it.
This is the same advice that I give to anybody that's going through a similar type of struggle right now.
Like somebody out there has experienced it and they can help.
Please talk.
Do not be self-deceived.
Do not be prideful to the point that you're unwilling to.
to share the struggle with somebody else.
We have all gone through struggles.
And there's a lot of great advice out there.
Please, oh, please, oh, please do not do what I do and just gave up.
So I gave up, filed bankruptcy, had less than $1,000 in my bank account,
car repoed out of my driveway, Mercedes-CLS 500.
I had all my assets stripped.
Everything at this point, I had been smart investor, all these things like that, gone.
And I forgot to mention that, like, in order to make the back end check the previous year, I had maxed out a personal credit card through a buddy who could process it.
He paid me back everything less fees just so that I can make payroll.
So for any of you that are just thinking out there, like Chris was a coward, Chris was not willing to work hard.
Chris was not willing to trade.
Like, I freaking did everything.
Everything I knew in that moment.
The only thing I didn't do, which I mean, it's.
of four is go and ask for help go and find somebody else that was that was going through it i just
chose to deal with it on my own between my wife god and darrell and uh and i regret it i regret it because
man frankly bankruptcy sticks with you for a long time literally it wasn't until like last year
that that sucker finally fell off my credit report and my credit like although i had recovered it
you know probably three or four years prior to that had fallen off my credit it like it
was forever there as a black mark and it's still a black mark today like every application that
I ever file that ever fill out with a bank or whatnot it's like have you ever filed bankruptcy
and I have to have yes and I have to give a one page explanation of what it was like it's been a
black eye for my whole career and I do not recommend it to anybody you know but it ended up being
a great thing in the moment right like give me a fresh restart there's a reason why you
United States government allows for it like it got the monkey off my back. I changed my phone number
from an 801 to a local 509 in the Tri-Cities and was able to finally start fresh with Darrell.
And me and Darrell, we went and we started building a business different, right? No longer
were we selling monitoring contracts to a monitoring company. We actually raised our own
little fund and started in-houseing things, which meant we paid a monitoring company a little bit
every single month, but we started creating this residual. And we started building that.
And, you know, it was a fun time in my life.
I was building a small local business, K2K alarm.
Me and Daryl, and like I have so many fond memories of this, like trudging through the snow, making sales, getting referrals, doing what I was meant to do, getting my hands dirty, being a salesperson, enjoying the people, selling a great product.
And over the next couple years, we built a, we built a nice business.
and we had an investor, you know, someone that was actually willing to trust me with their money at this point.
And, but then it got to a point, like, I didn't know, like, I wasn't passionate.
Like, we were building just, like, kind of good, steady business.
We weren't growing rapidly.
It was just kind of enough to pay the bills.
We built up a nice residual.
We were making $8,000 a month each residually, right?
No longer had to go to work, but any work that we did would add to that.
And Darrell decided.
to go back to college to get his MBA. He went for a half a quarter and then dropped out. But the
best thing that he took from that, he went to this night school, realized that like these people are
all here just to get degrees. There's nothing that I can learn from this. But there was one person
that brought up a book. It was called the four hour work week. And many of you guys have probably
read it, Tim Ferriss. So it was brought up in his class. And the teacher immediately was like,
No, that is stupid.
Nobody, you know, four-hour work week, impossible, da-da-da-da-da,
just totally dogged on it.
We set a light ball off and Daryl, and he's like, dude, we got to read this book.
So end of 2011, early 2012, we both read this book and we catch a bug.
It's like, dude, we got to stop knocking doors.
We got to stop building this little business.
We got to think different.
We got to think laptop lifestyle or start leveraging, looking to build.
to build a team, to leverage out, to hire foreign work and everything like that.
And so we started like kind of looking for our next path in life during which I launched
a SEO company search engine optimization.
This was in 2012, all the way, just having that business making residual, having a couple
employees that maintained those accounts and stuff.
And then Daryl decided to go completely revamp and he started bee farming with the with the hope and expectation that this guy was actually going to turn his bee farm over to him.
So, so I started an SEO company.
Meanwhile, we're making this residual and while I do it, I set it up.
And within three months, I have a $6,000 residual in which I,
am getting in which I am getting paid. Hey guys, it's Chris. If you're finding value in what you're
hearing, go ahead and like and subscribe. That way people just like you can find this content
for free here on YouTube. Now let's go back in the show. Um, every single month. And I'm sending
one email a month. I land these clients. I have these Filipinos and Indians, uh, doing literally
all the work. And I'm just collecting a paycheck. Then I got bored. I'm like, that was cool. And so
meanwhile, I've got two residual checks coming in, one for $8,000, one for $6,000.
I'm making about $14,000 a month, which at this point in my career is the most money I've
ever made because granted, when I ran my business, that was garbage, man.
I lost money.
And so this was, this was phenomenal.
And my brother approaches me, my younger brother, Tony, he's like, Tony, he's like,
Chris, dude, come hit the doors one more time.
Come give it a shot.
I'm just like, dude, no way.
And this is Chris's pride and ego speaking at the moment.
I'm just like, dude, I've already done that thing.
I've already, first of all, I own my own businesses.
I'm a CEO of a company of four or whatever.
You know, I'm already a big dog and I am way above going back and working for somebody else.
And like, this is all the things that were going through my mind.
It was initially telling him.
But then he kept at me, capestering, capestrian.
and ultimately got me in a vulnerable state where I was bored and really looking for something
else. And he's like, dude, just come to it. And ultimately, I decided to get back on the doors and do
summer sales for two different, two different reasons. One, I wanted to prove to myself that I could
compete, that I could compete with a big company. He was then working for a company called
Pinnacle Security, which was one of the large companies out of Utah. I wanted to be able to
going to prove to myself that I was a top performer in the industry and that I wasn't just
me, this guy doing like the solopreneurs, small side hustles, whatnot, but that I could
go and compete. The second thing was my brother at this point was, was struggling and just needed
a good moral person to be able to be with him. He had gone through a divorce and just just needed
me by his side. And we hadn't spent very much time together. And I thought this was a great
opportunity to be able to go and manage an office with him.
and spend a,
spend a summer.
So once again,
pack up everything
and move my family out
to Arkansas summer of 2012.
And just with like swallowing my pride,
thinking like, yeah,
whatever,
I,
I no longer work for myself.
But at the same time,
I had my bills paid
because I was making this residual.
We ended up selling off
that residual of home security accounts.
We sell it as a big package
for a multiple to,
to monetronics.
We pay,
offer investor, me and Darry each cash a little bit of money. But then I had my SEO company that
was paying my bills. And so I decided I'm going to go out and knock doors. And prior to knocking
doors that summer, I attended this sales seminar that changed my life in which it really started
to open up my mind of like what was possible from a personal level of production. There was a guy
that named Adam Webb. He had written this book called The Six Figure Summer. And at this point,
the only six figures I had made was in my second summer. I made $105,000. I thought that was great. But not only did I want to do that, I wanted to go make like $300,000. And he went through like this mentality shift of what knew. But more importantly, at that event, they had this range rover part there. And they're like, hey, this summer, we're going to be giving away a range rover. Now let's back up. Chris Lee, me and of myself, I am not a car guy. I grew up in a school teacher's home. We drove beaters.
We had geometros, you know, we had an old Toyota pickup, 15 passenger van.
They were all ghetto, you know, needed oil changes.
I mean, dude, garbage, right?
That's what we're used to.
And I was fine with that.
Always driving these type of just lower class vehicles.
The only time I changed from that is when I got my Mercedes and then ended up getting repo.
And I'm like, dude, I got to go back to myself.
But I see this rangerover.
And it wasn't the rangerover that appealed to me.
It was the fact that it was a prize.
is going to be given away for the winner.
And I freaking love to win.
But more importantly, I hate to lose.
It like every pain drives me way more than winning.
And I think most entrepreneurs are that way.
And once you find that out, you start setting up your life to create punishments for anything that.
And so I'll talk about this in later episodes.
But, but essentially, whenever I want to accomplish anything, I just set up levels of punishment, never levels of like,
Hey, if I do this, I get this.
It's if I don't do this, I have to pay this.
I have to do this type of thing.
And it really works for me.
But, man, I wanted to win and I really didn't want to lose.
And so saw this thing.
And I immediately, immediately wrote this letter to myself.
And basically, it was this letter that I knew that I was going to read to myself whenever I felt discouraged, whenever I was out knocking doors, doing sales.
Because anybody that's ever done door to door sales, it's the most disgusting.
discouraging, unmotivating thing in the world, right?
Like, just to get out of your car, you're like, your mind plays all these games and whatnot.
It's fun once you're out there and you make the sales, but just the motivation to get out
every single day, dude, it is a mind blast.
And for anybody that's young, that's looking at, like, building their career and doesn't
know what they want to do and how to get an entrepreneurship, go do door to door sales or go
do multi-level marketing.
Like, those two things will, like, thicken your skin.
skin and give you people skills and mental battles beyond anything else.
And so knowing that I was going to be going into this because I had done summer sales
before, I wrote this letter in my notes that they talked about like what I was going to
be able to go and accomplish.
And every time, and I referenced like, hey, winning the Range Rover, all these different
things to be able to motivate me to be able to motivate me for the rest, uh, the
rest of my life and you know um it i i'm looking up here on my phone to see if if the if i even have
it still here but you know there was i i know i have an attachment of it somewhere but um but anyways
like this is a letter that i that i wrote and so like whenever i felt discourage i pull it out
and it would talk about like being faithful to my family never doing anything to disappoint them like
what i was capable of it would just all these positive affirmations and it's
about winning this range over. So anyways, I go out that summer, Arkansas, and I work my butt off. And I started applying these principles of like mental fortitude and like like changing my level of satisfaction instead of being satisfied with one sale every day. It was shifting my satisfaction to three sales a day. You know, just like playing these little mental games. And August of that year comes around and I get into a bracket, 256 man bracket, top players, you're all seated.
And I think at this point, like, I'm doing pretty well.
Most sales I'd ever made in a day was eight, which is pretty awesome.
You know, you're making $600 a deal.
It's $4,800 in a day.
It's phenomenal.
And so, you know, this is where I'm going into.
And I'm, and I purposely screw up the seating a little bit to be seated a little bit lower
because the way I've always liked to compete, I like to smack somebody in the mouth
without them realizing it when it comes to when it comes to competition make them think that
I'm a little bit weaker or whatnot than I am and so the way that it was structured it was a three
and a half week competition every round was two to three days and so it goes 256 128 64 32
16 842 let's go and it was double elimination and so Ranger over on the line my
might I remind you?
And so it comes down to it.
I'm in the championship and I've won every round up until this point.
And, you know, I was referred to this point in my career, my life as the day when impossible became a reality.
And so I was competing against Adam Webb, the same guy that wrote that book that had motivated me that got me to the championship.
So we're competing.
He's come through the losers bracket.
We're up against each other.
And I think he had actually just beaten my brother like the round before, maybe the round
before that.
Like us, Lees were crazy competitive.
And so we get to the championship and I'm just like, I am going to just annihilate him.
I'm going to make it where it just is so uncomfortable.
Now, what they did is we had these.
dashboards on the computers where it would actually show where you're at for the day
what they decided for the championship was to black out the dashboard no access full blinders
you have no idea what your competitor and if anybody has ever seen facing the giants the little
clip where the guy gets blindfolded and he does a bear or like a bear crawl or crap you know it's a
bear crawl um he thinks he can go like 20 or 30 yards puts the blinders on and ends up going the
full 100 yards and it's just like a really motivating um part of the movie
And in fact, it was part of Adam Webb's presentation.
It's just like put on the blinders.
It's you versus you.
Because whenever we compete against somebody else, right, whether in business, in weight loss or whatnot, we're either going to be overly satisfied or like underly motivated.
And when it's us versus us, it's the only way that we can truly unlock what our potential is and when we throw on those blindfolds.
So that day I had the blindfolds on.
And I knew I was going to leave it all in the field.
I got my first deal.
So typical door-to-door sales would be you get out on the doors between 12 and 1 o'clock
and you work till 9 or 10 o'clock at night.
This day, I was like, I'm giving it a mile.
My first sale happened at 7.45 a.m.
And if you remember, Darrell at this point was farming bees.
And I called Darrell up that day.
I'm like, dude.
And I was back in Washington selling.
And I called Darrell and I said, dude, is there any way you can just.
accompany me for the day or at least a few hours my mind i'm just like racing it's just wild
it's going crazy i'm like can you just drive me around from uh you know door to door appointment
appointment i had set up a few appointments the previous day and i said can you just do that
just to help me get right so he helped me in these first few early morning appointments that i'd
set and uh first deal happens at 745 you know darrell ends up leaving me about 1 p m just like all right
dude, I'm good. I'm in the groove. I'm making sales. At 9 o'clock, I'd sent the company record.
It was like, or 8 o'clock. It was like 12 or 13 in a day. And I walk out at 9.30, I think,
with my 14th deal thinking, man, I did it. It's awesome. And I remembered, up until this point,
literally nobody had told me no all day. Like, I was just on this.
this extreme manifestation high that, like, I was hoping for it. I was manifesting it. And it was
happening, right? Like all the stars aligned. And the stars do align when you really do manifest
and when you really do believe. And so I go and I manifest this thing, right? 14 deals. And then
I remember there is one person that told me no. But he told me earlier in the day that
his church had some home security systems.
So actually there was two people that had told me no.
This guy had told me no, but he said his church had home security systems.
I said, isn't there any way you can make a decision today on those?
He's like, well, I need board approval.
I'm like, when does the board meet?
Well, we have a church meeting tonight.
Anyway, you can make that work.
He's like, come by at 945 or 10 o'clock.
So I roll in there just getting out of their church meeting.
I'm like, hey, can we have a board meeting?
He's like, well, we got three other four.
Yeah, let's do it.
I take them in, give them a presentation.
They have three security systems.
I take it over, reduce it down to two.
That's numbered deal, 15 and 16.
Meanwhile, I convinced one of the board members to get installed at their house.
That's deal number 17.
I walk out of this place.
It's 11 o'clock at night, 11, 11, 15.
I'm, I call my brother.
I call Tony, my younger brother, my older brother, Dave.
I'm in tears.
I'm like, dude, I did it.
17 deals in a day.
I'm going to win this range over it's a two-day competition mind you this is day number one like
dude there's just no way he's going to be able to get me while I'm on the phone with my brother so
I'm driving home it's about a 45 minute drive while I'm on the phone the one other person like I said
there was two people the other person that it told me no text me and says my husband just got home
from work I think we want to do it what are you kidding me this is like just wild
are you? And so I'm like, Dave, I got to call you back. So I call her up. I'm like, hey, can we get it done? Can we do the welcome call? I'll send over the digital paperwork. Let's get this done. 1145. She signs. We hang up. We do the welcome call. The technician shows up at midnight. We end up installing all these systems. And 18 in a day. And I'll tell you what, like the best.
The best thing that happened from this was the next day.
They opened up the dashboard just for about an hour,
and it showed Chris Lee 18, Adam Wed, seven.
Now granted, seven is phenomenal.
My best day ever until this point was eight, 18 to seven.
And the best thing that anybody could ever do in this moment was call me a liar.
and like man i had all these texts there's no way you must have cheated like the best flattery you
could ever give me is something that i a hundred and thousand percent know that i did and it was like
amazing and i accomplished it and you call me a liar i'm just like dude that's the biggest
form of flattery like that flatters me so much that you think what i did is so impossible
that I had to have cheated.
And I'll tell you, ladies and gentlemen,
when you achieve something like that in your life
that seems so impossible to you,
so impossible to others,
but you experienced it,
and you found that outer limit
of what you're capable of doing,
dude, there's nothing.
There's nothing better.
In that point of my life,
from August 2012 until today, when I'm recording this, the next 11 years,
next 11 years, I've been able to accomplish the impossible because I realized what I was
capable of doing if I just put on the blinders and it was me versus me and I got into my
outer limits. And I did everything that I was physically able to do and never be limited by my
mind. Ignore the excuses, ignore all the different thoughts that are going through your mind.
Because guess what? The one thing I've learned in my sales career is the better you get,
the better the excuses get. And there will always be an excuse. You've already done enough.
Nobody expects you to do anymore. Your wife's got a great meal on the table. You should be doing
X, you should be doing leadership, right? Sacrificing the grape for the good, right? You will always have
these excuses. When you realize that you are more capable physically than what you are mentally,
you will repeat this in your mind. This is what I always do. Do what you're physically able to do,
not what you're mentally able to do. You have to realize that the mind is literally a outside
abstraction that is trying to work on who you really are, which is your heart.
Your heart is who you really are.
And rarely do you get into the feelings of your heart.
It's only when you're feeling motivated.
It's only when you're, you've gone through like a goal planning session.
That is when you know your heart is speaking, it's feeling, it's thinking.
That is who you really are.
These little mind things that go through your mind, like it's the reason why like thoughts
you're like, where did that come from?
how in the world did that go through my mind about this woman or about this thing or about
what that is not me what is going through your mind is not you it's your heart it's only when
we start entertaining it entertaining it in our mind that it sinks down and starts to become
who we are which is our heart and so realizing that when you're in the moment of weakness and
you have these thoughts going through your mind that are tempting you to give up to do less
to not perform.
That is your mind thinking, not your heart.
And that's where you have to remind yourself,
do what you're physically able to do,
not what you're mentally able to do.
And if you master that one principle,
I promise you,
you will be able to do amazing things like selling 18 in a day
and doing such amazing things that people will doubt
that it's even possible.
They will think this is absolutely impossible.
which is the biggest form of flattery.
Let me tell you what.
To this day, I'm pretty sure Adam Webb thinks I cheated and everybody else.
The best part about it, okay, so let me finish up.
I'll wrap this story up and then we'll wrap this episode and we'll do one more of my story after this.
But at the end of this, so like I said, it was a two-day competition.
I sold 18.
He sold seven.
The biggest mic drive I did is I didn't go to work the next day.
High school football was starting.
and I was coaching high school football at the moment.
I really wanted to be there with the boys and I just wanted to be able to celebrate.
My regional manager monitored how many Adam had sold that day just to make sure it wasn't going to be close.
He was selling out in Washington, D.C.
I was selling in Washington, so I had a three-hour time difference to be able to see where he was going to end.
And so I think he ended up selling six that day.
So he got up to 13, which was phenomenal.
And, dude, I applaud you, Adam.
You're a freaking stud.
I do love Adam Webb.
And this, man, Adam, you changed my life.
You really did.
And so he goes and he sells 13, I sell zero, I end up winning 1813, win the Range Rover.
Man, that was a phenomenal.
Let me see if I can find a picture of the Ranger Rover in my photos.
Let's see here, Range Rover.
Oh, yeah.
This was it.
And this was back, let's see here.
This was back when this thing was brand new.
There wasn't a range like rover like this on the market in 2012.
And man, I freaking loved that thing.
Not because I loved cars, but because of what it represented.
Because it represented the possibility coming true.
And thank you, Adam.
Thank you for motivating me.
Thank you for changing my life.
You really, that part of my, it just changed the trajectory in my career.
And so I ended up selling the Ranger over two years.
years later and bought some real estate that I still own today. This still pays me residual.
So it's something that will continue to pay me, continue to roll up. But guys, thank you for
letting me share with you that business failure and me coming through my ego and being willing
to roll up my sleeves, get my hands dirty, get back in the grind. It was a life altering
experience. On the next episode, we're going to be talking about how not only did I go back
and work for Pinnacle, but I went and worked for two other.
companies strictly with the one reason to be educated, to learn everything I could, to get a paid
education over the next few years so that the next time I launched a full-fledged business,
I was ready to take this thing to the moon. And as you guys know, I've experienced some
pretty awesome exits. And so join me on episode number three, which is the last section,
the last chapter of my story. I appreciate you guys.
Until next time.
Let's go.