The Entrepreneur DNA - How Scaling with Tech Made Him Millions (60+ Companies Later) | Michael Byars | EP 67
Episode Date: April 14, 2025Michael Byars, known as the Acquisition CEO, shares his no-nonsense approach to scaling businesses by leveraging custom technology. With over 60 acquisitions under his belt, Michael explains how to el...iminate operational bloat, use tech to amplify productivity, and scale without hiring massive teams. From real estate to service-based businesses, he reveals the exact frameworks he uses to grow companies 2-4x in under 18 months—often with the same team. The episode is a masterclass in profitable scaling without the BS, ideal for entrepreneurs ready to take their business to the next level. -- About Michael Byars: Michael Byars is a serial entrepreneur, investor, and business growth strategist best known as the Acquisition CEO. With a track record of acquiring over 60 businesses and selling more than 20, Michael specializes in scaling service-based companies by implementing custom-built technology and operational systems. He owns a vast real estate portfolio, including 190+ single-family homes, commercial buildings, and multiple tech companies. Michael helps entrepreneurs scale quickly without bloated teams or overhead, turning low-tech businesses into high-profit machines. 🔗 Connect with Michael Byars Instagram: @acquisitionceo Facebook: Michael Byars Website: https://acquisitionceo.com Best contact method: DM on Facebook  -- Thank you to Mando for supporting today's podcast! Stay Fresh, Stay Confident with Mando! Tired of body odor? Mando Whole Body Deodorant keeps you fresh for up to 72 hours—pits, feet, and everywhere in between. Grab the Starter Pack and get $5 off (over 40% off!) with code [COLBY] at ShopMando.com. Smell fresher, stay drier, and boost your confidence. Get yours today! -- About Justin: After investing in real estate for over 17 years and almost 3000 deals done, Justin has created a business that generates 7 figures in active income through wholesaling and fix and flipping as well as accumulating millions of dollars of rental properties including 5 apartment buildings, 50+ single family homes, and 1 storage facility Justins longevity in real estate is due to his ability to look around the corners, adapt to changing markets, perfecting Raising private capital, and focusing on lead generation which allows him to not just wholesale and fix & flip, but also accumulate wealth through long term holds. His success in real estate led him to start The Entrepreneur DNA podcast and The Science Of Flipping podcast and education company, and REI LIVE where he’s actively doing deals with members. He has coached and mentored thousands of aspiring and active investors over the last decade. Connect with Justin: Instagram: @thejustincolby​ YouTube: Justin Colby​ TikTok: @justincolbytsof​ LinkedIn: Justin Colby Â
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I like boring profitable stuff that I know I can scale going into with tech.
In other words, I'm looking for the guys that's got, maybe they've got a 15 year old website.
Maybe they have no technology.
Maybe they're still running off a regular cash register that you buy at the Sam's Club, right?
I'm looking for stuff like that and trying to understand how I can scale it 2, 3, 4, exit in the first really 12 to 18 months.
Yeah.
What is up, entrepreneur family?
What is up?
I'm super excited about this guest because we are going to be talking all about how to
build, grow, and scale a business, how to acquire the right businesses, how to bring
in the right people.
My guest today has bought over 60 companies, has sold 20 of them and is great at growing and scaling.
Michael Byers is here. What is happening? Hey, thanks for having me on today Justin.
Yeah. Appreciate it. Yeah, excited. So what is some of the secret sauce about, you
know, you are kind of the expert at being able to scale businesses. I think people
have a hard time knowing even where to
start at scaling. What would be kind of the foundational rock that you would
talk to an entrepreneur looking to scale a business?
Yeah, so normally I'm just gonna start off trying to understand where they're at
and see what kind of technology we can bring in to be able to scale. You know,
you got to understand technology, it never lays out. Its grandma never dies three times. It doesn't show up late. It doesn't have to leave technology. It never lays out. It's grandma never dies three times.
It doesn't show up late.
It doesn't have to leave early.
It doesn't need the weekend off.
I'm, I'm looking for stuff like that.
You know, I started a tech company back when I was 19 and you know, I use it.
To scale all the businesses that I buy and all of the, you know, like the
consulting clients that I have, I use it to scale all their stuff with.
No kidding.
So this is something you started back in the day and you still use it today.
Yeah, yeah. I still have that company.
That's just, it'll never sell it as long as...
It's just a testimonial to the power of tech.
For sure.
I mean, so what's your thought since we're leaning into this, like out of the gate,
what are your thoughts about all the crazy, you know,
growth in the tech space and the AI this, I mean, you're way more advanced than I am,
but what are your thoughts on all this?
Like how fast is this going to move?
But it's moving super fast already, but you know, at the end of the day, people get worried
that, oh, tech's going to take my business.
Now tech's not going to take your business.
You got to think, technology can improve a lot of
things in our day-to-day life, right? But technology is never going to go change
out your air-conditioning unit if it quits. That's right. Technology is never
going to change your tire if you have a flat on the side of the road. So, you know,
technology is going to improve our everyday human experience, right? It's
going to help us do things faster, more efficient, streamline stuff,
but it's never going to replace good workers,
good employees, or good entrepreneurs, never, zero shot.
I just had this conversation with a friend of mine.
So in real estate, since real estate's kind of the vertical
I live in day to day, do you ever see tech being able
to do some of the people, like signing docs at Tidal, right?
Like we're getting it notarized.
There's just some things within real estate
I don't think it'll ever replicate
or be able to come in place of, do you?
No, I don't think so.
I'm pretty big in the real estate space as well.
I got about 190 single family homes,
commercial buildings, and you know,
but I don't think that it will ever replace
certain things you know it's never gonna go to closing for you it's never going
to sign for you it's never going to do your transfers for you that's right
right you know yeah and you can't walk like you're not gonna have an AI bot
walk the I mean I guess anything's possible but like to understand what
needs to be done to the property what TI's need to be done to your commercial building what kind of
repairs need to be done to the rental property zero shot that AI can ever do
that that's right because they don't understand you know so when you're
talking to your coaching clients and you really help entrepreneurs grow and
scale their businesses that is your expertise and so by the way make sure to
follow Michael acquisition CEO all over social authority on my social make sure
to follow him but your expertise with your clients is scaling the business
scaling the operation when it comes to that what type of verticals make sense
right now because because as I have a tech play myself in that tech plays
actually facilitating a large growth in the service space roof roofing, flooring, HVAC, etc.
Right.
Because they're such an archaic model still.
And I say that with a lot of love, they still do door knocking.
Door knocking just works.
So it just does.
But archaic, right?
Right.
And so taking data and taking, you know, data-driven operations and being
able to use that tech to go to the right door to knock, for example.
What companies do you think have a lot of scalability in them still today?
Most of your service-based companies are going to have that through tech because, you know, a lot of times the service-based industry,
they're really good at their trade,
but they're not really good at running a business or
implementing technology, any of that stuff. They're good at plumbing or they're good at heating and air, but yeah, that's what they're not really good at running a business or implementing technology any
of that stuff they're good at plumbing or they're good at heating and air but
yeah that's what they're good at that's right you know okay and buying certain
of these small business and the service-based stuff there's really a ton
of room for improvement and growth mm-hmm there by bringing in tech do you
just bring in tech and so when you, and I have a couple friends that also are in the space
of like merger and acquisitions,
is it always a seller finance, creative finance deal?
Do you come to the check sometimes?
Do you use tech as a way to,
talk to me about how you even go about that.
Do a lot of different stuff.
No, it's not always owner finance, creative finance.
Sometimes I'll write a check for it, you know,
sometime we'll work in, you know, creative stuff,
sometime we'll work in, you know,
getting a piece of equity for bringing in the tech
and scaling the company.
You know, there's just a ton of different options there,
you know, to make those plays and those deals.
But I mean, it's really a high as 57 model.
You know, there's 57 different varieties to do every deal.
That's right.
I love that.
I love that analogy.
And so, you know, one of the things,
what has the most growth that you're seeing right now?
I mean, is it just strictly the service space?
Is it tech plays that they don't know how to functionally do
what they're trying to do?
What are you seeing on your side?
So a lot of it is, I like boring,
profitable stuff that I know I can scale going into with tech.
In other words, I'm looking for the guys that's got,
maybe they've got a 15 year old website. Maybe they have no technology.
Maybe they're still running off a regular cash register that, you know,
you buy at the Sam's club Club right? Right. You know I'm looking for stuff like that
and trying to understand how I can scale it two, three, four exit in the first
really 12 to 18 months. Yeah. You know because coming in and doing that I might
buy it for three million bucks you know and it might be doing a million bucks a
year, buy it at a 3x multiple. I know if I can get that to doing four or five
million dollars a year EBITDA or net profit, you know, I might get a five or
six x multiple out of it. Plus I'm gonna make that a couple million bucks a year
for the next two or three years. So I mean it's, it's a really cool, you know,
cool thing that I've developed as
to how to grow and grow through that technology.
And it allows me to grow super fast.
Yeah.
You know, because tech's there or either if my development teams have to build it,
you know, normally we can build out a whole project in six months, eight months.
And then, you know, that tech, you build it once and it eats forever.
That's right.
Right.
You know, it, it doesn't take days off.
It doesn't get tired and want to go do something else.
With employees, you train them.
I've got a lot of great employees now,
but it's taken me years to build the team I've got.
So during that time, you're training these employees.
You're kind of getting them on the same page. You know, maybe they pass away, maybe they move,
maybe they have some sort of health scare or something like that.
They decide to go on and do something else.
I mean, you just lost all that training you just put into these people.
Oh, yeah. With tech, that's no longer the case.
So let's lean into this a little bit for the people that are scaling.
You've already said it, but I want us to dive deeper.
You're saying it's not about the people per se.
Growing with operational blow of 20 people being paid 60 grand a year is a crushing model.
You can replace a lot of that a lot of times with tech.
Let me explain to you my thought pattern on that.
Yeah.
So as I, when I buy a company
I'm not implementing tech to get rid of the people
I'm implementing tech to put those same people that have been there for years to doing revenue generating
Activities that are boring mundane stuff that I can replace with tech. That's right. Now we can grow
I mean, it's like, you know if I can replace some of their daily tasks with tech,
I just got a free two or three employees.
Because all the BS junk that they were just doing, now they can go do something
that makes, that generates revenue that makes money.
Right.
Where does tech usually fit into most of these companies?
Is it more on the marketing and sales side?
Is it operational?
Operational is where I'm seeing it most.
Yeah.
You know operational there is some marketing and sales you know most you
know most small businesses or especially service-based small businesses they
don't do any marketing they they run off word of mouth or you know Chuck in a
truck we know Chuck over here he's been doing our plumbing for 30 years right
but you know Chuck can't hand that down to anyone.
He can't sell it to anyone because it's him in a truck.
Right?
You know, and in order for him to scale, he's got to do things differently.
Not saying that these small businesses are bad.
I mean, they've been doing what they've been doing for 20 and 30 years, feeding
their families.
There's just, if you want to get bigger, there's, there's a way to do that.
That's right.
You know, should people be reaching out to you right now?
If they're like, Hey, I'm interested.
Are you looking at acquiring?
Are you looking at stuff like that?
Yeah.
I mean, if they're looking to sale or they're looking to scale, I'm always,
always looking, looking for new solid companies.
Yeah.
You know, for me, I'm buying cash flow.
Sure. Right. I don't buy anything that's losing money. I don't buy any turnarounds.
You know, it's got to be cash flowing and they've got to want to scale.
Yeah. In my world, especially in the kind of the real face specific space, scaling a lot of times,
I believe they do it wrong. They really try to create, you know, they get the nice A plus office,
they get the people and I say, yeah, but you're going to create operational blow.
And then if you have a rough week, month, maybe a couple months back to back, you're
in a bad spot.
That could be crushing. Talk to people about your philosophy about how to stay away from
that. Obviously tech plays a big part, but how do you implement some of the philosophies
that you want to, what are you looking for? How do you implement that?
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So it's good that you brought that up.
I'm taking in 2, 3, 4X these companies that I'm buying with the same amount of employees.
I don't have to go hire more employees.
I don't have to go get a better office.
I don't have to go hire more employees. I don't have to go get a better office. I don't have to go get a bigger space.
I'm doing three or four more times the revenue and within
turning the profit with the same amount of employees or less.
Yeah.
You know, I really believe it's, it's good to, you know, if you
want to have a nice office, that's cool for me.
I ran lean for years, man.
Probably 15 years.
It's better that way.
I believe right.
People want to have this, you know, we just had a, one of our mutual friends,
Dan's here and people think bigger and better just because they kind of see it.
Right.
It's not always the case.
That's not the case.
Usually a lot of times it's just a big PP measuring contest.
That's right.
You know, I, I've got to be better than my neighbor. Keeping up with the case usually. A lot of times it's just a big PP measuring contest. That's right.
You know, I've got to be better than my neighbor.
Keeping up with the Joneses.
You know, at the end of the day, the Joneses aren't going to pay your bills.
Right?
Ain't that the truth?
So.
Yeah.
And then when you start making money, and there is my broadband because we just heard
him talk about you don't go buy two or three of these, you buy one.
Right.
You start making money, you don't need to go outpace everything and get the A plus office space. You can stay in your C plus
B minus office space. You don't need to create more operational bloat for
yourself. Right. So lean into something if someone came into your world as a
client. What are the first couple things that you're gonna audit their business
on? Look at their numbers you, especially a lot of these small
businesses, maybe they don't turn in all the cash, right?
You know, it's that's work for them for the last 15 or 20 years.
But if they're going to sale, it's never going to work because you can't
pay for something you can't see.
That's right.
And I can't buy something that I can't understand and see.
Right.
Yeah.
You know, if they're not putting the money in, we got to, we got to
get them to put in the money and I, I? You know, if they're not putting the money in, we gotta get them to putting the money in.
I'm not gonna keep any cash out.
So I can't have them doing that as well, right?
We're gonna look at that,
we're gonna look at what their tech is.
Are you implementing technology?
Where can you implement more technology?
A new employee to do these tasks is going to cost you,
let's say at a thousand a week,
it's gonna cost you 4,000 a month, right?
Can you get techs for 300 a month to do the same task and it never lays out?
Same concept we've been talking about, you know, it never takes a break.
Yep.
You know, we're also going to look at, you know, what are their SOPs or
standard operating procedures?
If, you know, little Bobby that's running the place,
if he gets hit by a bus in the morning,
how are we going to replace him?
How are we gonna train somebody
to do his roles and responsibilities?
Because if you don't know that,
he is the company.
If we can't train someone to do his task
or to do it like him, man, you're in a bad spot.
You don't have...
Tricky.
It's not like you've got anything to sell or buy.
Yeah.
Right?
You know, because he is the company.
He's the business.
He's everything.
Right.
Except that is something that...
Go ahead.
I don't understand.
I mean, it kind of goes both ways.
I'm a firm believer to get to growth, you need to stay in doing the work.
Right?
Yep.
There's too many people, and I'm sure you see this all the time, right?
The owner fucking, they think they're in the owner's box
now, they think they're Jerry Jones and can sit back
and let the business just run, and then you go and look
at the P&L and be like, you're losing money.
That same person should be jumping back in the business
and actually making the business work.
It started with them, it needs to continue with them, right?
Because they knew what worked.
That's right.
Right, and apparently the culture has gotten away from what they were
doing to start with to make it work.
Yeah.
Yeah.
And so there's that part.
The scaling, the reason why I'm sensitive around scaling,
I think too many people hear you or they hear me and they think,
okay, if I can scale my business, I don't have to work so hard.
No, that's definitely not it.
That's right.
Talk about that.
I agree 100%.
That's definitely not it. You know,. Talk about that. I agree 100%.
That's definitely not it.
You know, it's all scaling and technology is going to allow you to do is to be able
to buy back some of your time, which is the goal, right?
You're doing what you're doing in the hours of the day that you're doing it in and you're
only getting X amount done.
What if you could double your hours that you had to focus and concentrate on that business?
How much more do you think you could grow with them?
Thank you, say that louder for people in the back.
I think, they think it's like time off.
Like, oh, I get to go sit on the beach.
I don't know, that's where you have more time
to go put it in, right?
That's the idea.
That's how you grow and scale by putting in the damn work.
That's it.
You know, and so I'm glad you're saying that, man,
because I see too many of these entrepreneurs,
whether it be in the real estate space,
maybe it's in the branding space,
because I'm more in the branding space now with the pot,
but they just think it's like this thing
that you don't have to invest your energy and time in.
You are the culture creator as the founder of this company.
Correct.
And if you remove yourself out of that culture, what's gonna happen?
It goes away.
That's right, right?
Yeah.
And so we need to lean on that ideology
to make sure people understand that scaling
isn't this idealistic, like,
I'm gonna go sit on the beach.
At some point when you're Elon Musk,
even him, by the way, is not a good example.
That guy works probably harder than all of us combined.
He now is in politics for guys.
Like, now it's not just business example. That guy works probably harder than all of us combined. He now is in politics for God. Like now it's not just business,
now he's a politician, right?
So I think people need to really understand that.
Give me kind of the second pillar.
Besides technology, what are you kind of
helping people re-engineer with this kind of thing, right?
Because like I said, I think that it's more dynamic
than just being able to say, hey,
put some technology in and boom, you're rich.
For sure, you know, it's the right people in the right spots.
You know, a lot of the consulting clients I have,
you know, they might have one person
that does something really well,
but they got them over here doing something else.
That's right.
And it's about getting the right people
in the right positions because you know,
I really encourage all of them to think about what would you do for free if you didn't get paid?
Now who do you have doing that task in the business? Put them over there, right? If you
have someone that enjoys that more than them, switch them up. Right? Because if you'll do it for free or you would do it on the weekends when you're
off work, you know, that's how I got involved in the tech company.
You know, I enjoyed it.
I would do it for, you know, I would do it for free.
I would do it on the weekends for nothing.
Yeah.
I got started by, you know, Hey, there's, I can actually make some money doing this.
Pretty cool.
And it just spiraled. Yeah. Yeah. So, started by, you know, hey, there's, I can actually make some money doing this. Pretty cool.
And it just spiraled.
Yeah. Yeah.
So, and that is the fun part is, is when you start to realize the things that you
enjoy doing and how easy it is for you to do those, you never work.
You never feel like you're working.
That work.
But again, that's where a lot of times the founders get caught because they
stay in their, their zone of genius, but then they're not gonna ever build a business right because then it's just
them they produce what they can produce they don't actually take the time to
build out everything else.
You know you got to hire people in those other fields that you either don't like
or you don't know as much about that are better at those tasks than you are.
Who's your ideal consulting client? Where would you go and what would you be looking for for your ideal consulting client?
I'm looking for small business owners who are looking to grow using technology or grow through acquisitions.
Normally they're doing $5 million a year or less, maybe $7 million a year or less.
Okay, and they want to grow?
And they want to grow.
And do they want to exit? Possibly yes some of them do. Yeah. You know some I want to
grow in order to be able to exit. Mm-hmm. To get their EBITDA up so they get a
higher multiple. 100%. So with that said, what are the downsides that you see
people that don't have you as a consultant, they're not with you and
they're trying their best to scale. What are you seeing them fail at? Where are
their potholes that they keep stepping in?
Man, I've seen a lot of them, you know, a lot of them that come to me looking for help,
they've tried to scale on their own and there's just not enough hours in the day.
They can't, them as an owner, they can't work on the business because they're working in the business.
They've got no way to do anything.
I mean, they're working 80 hours a week and you know yes they've grown but at the end of the day
they can't go any further because there's not any more hours in the day or
the week. That's right. They're still stuck in the business and they
don't know how to lever and this is where tech comes in right? Now
specifically if we're talking about your tech, is that something people can pay you to use
or is it only within your companies?
I just don't know if it's something that they can go find.
No, I mean, it's nothing that they can go find
because every business is going to need something different, right?
So we're putting together a lot of off-the-shelf stuff.
Yeah.
I've got four development teams across the world that, you know...
Handcrafted for the right business.
Correct. But I mean, it's got, you know, the average bill will cost
$250,000 to $750,000.
So it's not something where you're making $200,000 a year.
It's, you know, that won't work, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You got to concentrate on the stuff that's making, you know, netting a couple million bucks a year.
You can afford to spend that,
if it'll three or four X to you.
Of course. Right.
As long as you see the trajectory up.
Right.
And then some of the functionalities
that should be used in your opinion,
instead of hiring,
where should tech be looked at to take over?
Right, cause the old school way is people do it all.
Right, there's no, now tech has become very progressive. be looked at to take over, right? Because the old school way is people do it all, right?
There's no... now tech has become very progressive. We are way faster in a lot of places.
Where would you encourage some of your clients to really start to look at using tech in those areas than anything else?
I mean, we're using it in the starting of sales.
Okay.
You know, instead of... I mean, you're familiar with the sales process, you know, a lot of these high ticket companies, they're going to have an
appointment setter bring it in, then they're gonna have a closer to close the deal
out and sell to the customer. I can eliminate all the setter positions,
every one of them, and bring more qualified leads to the closer than the
humans can. I love that. It is insane, you know, what you can get the tech to do.
You know, any of the, like I've got a company
that builds a lot of chat bots for a lot of these companies
and it's just general question bots
that they put on their website.
Someone comes to the website, you know,
just think about your business.
If someone asks you a question and you can pick 100 people at random,
there's probably 20 questions that everybody asks.
If you can answer all of those and that person needs to go and is looking to buy your product,
if I can answer all of those at two o'clock in the morning while they're sitting on their couch,
you know. I hope they're sitting on their couch.
You know, I hope they're asleep, but sure.
Well, there's right.
Right.
Right.
Well, you know, but if I can answer all those questions at two o'clock in the morning, we
nobody's at the office to answer them in person.
No, and I can set an appointment with a salesperson or an estimator or maybe give them an estimate
at that time, right?
You know, if you're up in the middle of the night, you're looking for a product,
you're going to call to someone answers or you're going to dig until you find somebody or,
you know, you might take and make a list, right? Write down the top five people and you're going
to call them in the morning. Yep. If I can get you on my schedule at night while you're shopping, you're like, oh, I got this
call with Michael in the morning at eight o'clock. I can stop if I don't like him, then
I'll go to looking. I can stop that whole process. See what I'm saying? I can stop that
potential customer from searching. Now if my product doesn't fit, by all means, they
can go find something else. But man, it's been a real game changer
in some of the companies that I've implemented
the technology in.
Well, that's why I bring up what I was bringing up
about the service space, right?
I mean, there's still just, there's so much
archaic ways to go drive business for them
that this technology, I mean, if you're in any
service industry, I would tell you,
make sure you're following Michael,
acquisition CEO, right? That's all over Instagram and the website but make sure
you understand the tech that we're talking about because it is again if you
are going to scale one of the best ways to scale is not necessarily in growth
and revenue but profitability as well right if you can just convert more leads
you already have that's it you already have them you're just more profitable
and then someone like yourself would take a look at that P&L
and get pretty excited about it. Right. I mean for example I've got a coaching
client that I do some stuff for in the business growth sector. We built out one
of the bots for their company. Their appointment setters were sending about a third of the leads coming in to the actual
closers.
And the appointment setters, they had a few of them, they didn't like their job.
We implemented the technology, put a bot in there to ask all the questions, qualify the
lead.
The closer was having an hour, um, session to close the customer.
Now with the technology in place, the closer went down to a 10 minute segment,
10 minute time statement, because they're an order taker.
When that customer shows up, they know what the cost is.
They know what the term is.
They know everything because just like we just talked about, there's only 15 or 20
questions that the setter was getting asked.
That's right.
Setter would have a bad day.
They wouldn't, wouldn't get anything moved along.
The bot is moving over over 70% of the leads that come in now.
I mean, guys, this is crazy.
It's crazy, dude.
Crazy.
You know, I've been around a long time and you guys should really see the
list that his resume is really, I didn't even know how to do the intro right because your resume is so great and that's just kudos to you
But it's just funny that you and I have been around long enough to see like the trajectory of all this
I mean it just wasn't like this. No, I remember a dial-up AOL. Absolutely
I do a hundred percent on your computer. It's like it was this big
Oh so big and had to be so deep
because all the machines like you're like now laptops are this thin and can
run way faster but I think you know for me I think like I'm pretty passionate
about I don't necessarily take people to the scale side that you do I just want
people to build and grow because then I can hand them off to people like you say
Michael take care of John John's great he's been able to build it, but now we need some efficiencies.
I think scaling is a base.
To not overly simplify, I think scaling
is creating more efficiencies and removing the weight.
That's all it is.
You know, you're not getting rid of people or employees.
You're freeing the time up for the people or employees
to go do revenue
generating tasks.
That's right.
That's all it is.
That's all technology is good for.
You know, it's gracious.
So again, where do we want to have everyone go find you, get to know you?
Do you have any place you want to send them?
I've got Facebook under Michael Byers, B-Y-A-R-S for last name, and acquisitionceo.com.
Yeah.
So guys, this man is is I mean, like I
said, the resume is expansive. And I'm excited that he's been able to be on
here to help you guys grow and scale your business. Michael Byers acquisition
CEO on Instagram, make sure you follow and make sure you rewind this. What's the
best way they can just ask questions? Would it be over Instagram? What would be
the best thing for best things? Facebook? Facebook. Facebook yeah they'll shoot me a message
on Facebook yeah I'd be glad to answer anything they got. Love it well I
appreciate you being on. Thanks for the opportunity. Right on it. If this was
helpful if this had one or two things to help you grow in scale or know someone
looking to grow in scale make sure you share this episode at least to your
friends see you on the next episode. Thanks.