The Home Service Expert Podcast - Adopting Performance-Based Compensation to Scale Your Business Sustainably
Episode Date: December 31, 2021Danny Kerr is a Managing Partner at Breakthrough Academy. At 20 years old, Danny took a leadership position for a franchise company and grew sales by 300% in one year, and over the next six years was... managing over 150 staff in the organization. Today, Danny is helping external contracting entrepreneurs with Breakthrough Academy, which was rated Canada's 16th fastest startup by Maclean's Magazine. In this episode, we talked about performance-based pay, culture vs. paygrade, mindset, incentive-based program…
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if you're going to be paying people money to do things for you,
make sure that, especially if it's incentive-based,
it's inspiring them and not manipulating them.
Because if you're manipulating behavior,
it might short-term work,
but long-term usually blows up in your face.
If you're inspiring people to be better
and actually helping them find things inside of themselves
that they didn't even know was possible,
then it's going to the right place.
And I think money in general,
and especially the more you have it,
and Tommy, I'm sure you'd agree with this, money is a form of energy. It's a form of transaction
that it exemplifies what is already there. It brings out more of what already exists.
And if money is being used to manipulate people at a higher degree, then that's what you're going
to get in the end. But if it's being used to inspire people and drive people past what they
normally would do, then that's what you're going to get in the end. And just be very intentional
about what that money is actually used for
and your intentions behind it as well.
Welcome to the Home Service Expert,
where each week,
Tommy chats with world-class entrepreneurs
and experts in various fields,
like marketing, sales, hiring, and leadership,
to find out what's really behind their success in business.
Now, your host, the home service
millionaire, Tommy Mello. Welcome to the Home Service Expert. I'm Tommy. And today,
we're going to be talking a lot about hiring and operations because you guys know 1A player
equals 3B players and stacking the deck. I just got out the phone with a private equity company. And I said, I'm more interested in my internal customers and my external customers,
because that's where my family is. And these guys, they pay my bills. So Danny lives in the
most beautiful house I've ever seen, but the most amazing view I've ever seen. I haven't been there
personally. I'm jealous.
He's from Canada. He lives in Canada. He's the managing partner of Breakthrough Academy,
president of, well, he was a BEST, best mindset group, college pro HR manager at Western Canada.
He's been on the podcast a couple of times. At 20 years old, Danny took a leadership position for a franchise company and grew sales 300% in one year. And over the next six years was managing over 150 staff in the organization. Today, Danny has shifted his focus on helping
external contracting entrepreneurs with Breakthrough Academy. In just six years,
Breakthrough Academy grew from 370 active members with over a billion in revenue and 41% net profit increase per member in 2019.
It was also rated Canada's 16th fastest startup by Maclean's Magazine.
Danny, it's always a pleasure.
I think your podcasts are just brilliant, and a lot of people get a ton out of this stuff.
I'm excited to have you on today.
Hey, man.
Thanks for having me.
And just so everyone knows, that's not a billion dollars of our revenue.
That is a billion dollars of our members' revenue.
We are not there yet.
So it's been a hot minute since we spoke last.
We're in an economy now that getting the right people is becoming harder and harder.
I've got companies begging me to buy
them every day. They can't get parts. They can't get labor. They can't get into the job for three
weeks out. It's nothing new to hear that, but it keeps getting a little bit worse. Human capital
is an issue, but let's hear what's going on with you the last few months. We haven't spoken a whole
lot. I want to hear what's new in your life. the the flu and uh i don't even want to call it what it is but you did well it looks like you're back
at it i did fine for me anyways it was no issue so yeah that was good because you know if anything
i've got some antibodies now there's no wondering what this could be for me anyways for my body and
good just get back at it this is controversial topic, but I don't really care.
Did you get the vaccine?
No.
See, I've already had COVID and I got the antibody.
I got to get tested for the antibodies, but it's like, you know,
this isn't a politics show.
So we'll go into home service, but sure.
So tell me what, what breakthrough academy's been
up to what's the newest latest and greatest what's the big topics going on in your world and i'm
excited to get talking about this yeah we've been uh we're working on a lot i'm sure a lot of
companies through you know since this pandemic started have had time to really internally look
at hey how do we make improvements and what do we do we've done that with a lot of our members and
we've done that a lot ourselves and so so, you know, some of the big stuff
that's just launched is we just launched
something called our Contractor Quick Tools,
which is basically public domain,
like, you know, free access to courses
that we feel really would hit the nail on the head
for a lot of people.
And we design them specifically for the public.
So there's a walkthrough video,
instruction manuals with like step-by-step process
on how to build out parts of your company
and then example files and templates to use. So a couple of people on our team spent about six
months building it and it's something that we can offer to the public for free now, which is awesome.
So those are launched as of about a month and a half ago. And then in coinciding with that,
we built our own public facing brand called Contractor Evolution, which consists of a podcast,
blog articles,
our top tiered webinars. Like I said, there's free resources we're giving away. It's kind of
like a freemium version of Breakthrough Academy to get people kind of some value into the public
and let us have a voice so that we're not just talking to our members all day long, but we can
actually talk to the public and provide some good help. So that is what's been going on. And then,
yeah, I guess the last thing, it'll be announced next week to our members.
So they'll know more details on this.
So I won't say too much right now, but we are officially doing our Winter Summit, which for most doesn't mean a ton, but that's our annual get-together.
So we should have about 300 people there.
And it's all members that have been working with for years coming together for a good time.
So we've got a lot planned for that.
It's the first time we've done that since this pandemic kicked off.
So we're stoked because a big part of what we do is,
you know,
noogies and handshakes and hugs.
And I've been able to do that a lot lately.
So excited to get.
Not a lot of nowhere.
Is that waiting for next week?
Yeah.
It's all next week.
It's all,
it's all under wraps.
So all I can say is that we are doing it.
Do you have to say a is like,
ah, or do you say a
or i don't know if that makes sense what i can say about the event though tommy is you
may want to be there and it might be quite easy for you to be there so oh good okay so california
uh not quite okay i'm not giving you know it's not i won't say location but I'll just say that. It's in the States. Okay.
So, you know, let's dive into one of the things I get all the time with hiring is really, you know, I got a book right here on my desk.
It's called 1501 Ways to Reward Employees.
And most of them don't cost money.
But money is how we pay the bills. People say not everybody's after money, but I know a lot of people don't want to make minimum wage, even if you give them
all kinds of cool lunches and dinners. So let's talk real quick about performance-based pay.
And what are the big advantages and disadvantages of performance-based pay?
Yeah. I mean, it's interesting because we've definitely grown up in a society where we feel like the more you pay somebody, the better they'll do, right?
But that's not always true. And that does hit, I'd say, a bit of like a law of diminishing returns
over time, and especially if you don't organize it well. So for those who have put in performance-based
pay, some of those maybe not. I mean, the things I've established and seen is it does give direct
accountability. So you can say, hey, these are the things we're paying you for to specifically achieve. And you
can track that with them. And that becomes more meaningful, which is huge. I think for a lot of
business owners, especially as you're growing your business, it is nice to somehow have a bit more of
control over the costs. Things don't run away. If you have your production team that has no care in
the world how long it takes them to produce a job versus if they have some performance-based pay on
how long that takes and the quality of the job, they're tied to think a little bit more like
an owner, which is huge. And you have to do this right. But I find a lot of times owners are
feeling like the boss all the time, just having to bark orders to get things done.
And this can help align the company goals with those individuals' goals. So you don't have to
feel so much like a boss. But if you do this right, and we'll talk about this today, feel a bit more like a coach
that everyone's in it together and everyone scores together and everyone wins together,
which is huge. A word to the wise, buy yourself a whiteboard
and do not roll out performance pay until it's hard to take it back. Just like social security.
Once you give it, it's very very very
difficult lev has taught me make sure you run the numbers inside out because you will have hell to
pay if you play with people's money all the time so i love performance pay but i've screwed up
dozens of times on it and you know for example my managers last year were based on a pay
salesless materials so salesless materials went up right take the material cost out of the revenue
and the taxes out and that's the number well i didn't plan on 100 inflation on the cost which
inevitably caused our numbers to go up yeah because the dollar is worth a lot less than it used to be.
And so I didn't plan on rapid inflation, which was, I guess, we're up 120% of what we were at
the beginning of the year. So you know, price has been going up. So a big mistake. And here's where
actually statistics come in. You learn a lot about finance and statistics and standard deviations and
the mean and the median and how significant those numbers are and that's what i've learned to kind of base things off of is compared to the cohort that you
work with instead of basing things on an arbitrary number that you have no control over if prices go
up inflation happens i don't think we're going to hit any deflation because uh the plan of the
democrats is to release five trillion dollars into the economy. But anyways, so would you say incentives work on every type of task, like a CFO or a
linesman?
Or where are you going to draw the line there?
Yep.
So it's funny.
And so I've seen this for many, many years.
Going back to my days doing franchising, working with middle management, now working with Breakthrough
Academy, not only with our own team, but also within all the members we work with. There is this really interesting psychological
study that was done. I first saw it on TED Talks like 10 years ago, and I was like,
that is so true, and we do not reference it, I think, enough. And this is what it talks about.
It says, compensation and incentive-based pay works extremely well for basic tasks,
and it actually almost does the opposite for complex
tasks and what they did is a study on and i can't remember the exact tasks they had people do but
i'm just going to make these up and give you an example of this one was on let's call it ditch
digging and the other one was on like building a bridge out of popsicle sticks i think i can't
remember the exact ones but they basically had a control group and then they had an incentivized
group in each one of those tasks the ditch dig diggers, long and behold, when incentivized, dug that
ditch faster than anybody else that was not incentivized. Worked every time, data was very
well proven. The people that were incentivized versus the people that were not, the incentivized
people built bridges that broke quicker and were not as structurally sound.
And the conclusion that came out of it was that when you put incentive-based pay, especially when it's quite a bit of incentive-based pay versus their base, you blind people from the task at
hand and they start to just try and get to the result to get the money. And the problem-solving
gets diminished. Well, let me just ask you this. I believe in specialists. I don't believe you should have a CSR that's a dispatcher. I believe in a salesman versus a tech versus an installer. And if you could break apart the complexity of the role by getting a specialist, you see, when you have to build a popsicle bridge, there's someone that knows
integrity of the bridge. And what I would say is I think you'd want to limit it to a few KPIs.
If it goes out of that, if it says the bridge needs to do this, this, this, this, this, then
we're going to judge it by the design, this, this, this, this. I think that's when you go,
wow, this is tough. And you know, there's something else I want to talk about. And I think you hit the nail on the head there.
But we got to also discuss equity incentive programs,
rev share, and a couple other things when it comes to this stuff.
Because those complex tasks, if it's on everything overarching,
that's what profit share means.
And that's what an equity incentive program or what is it?
It's fake equity until it changes its hand. Are you talking about incentive program or what is it it's fake equity
until it changes his hand are you talking about profit sharing or what are you talking about
there's a profit incentive program equity incentive program and then phantom phantom equity so
they're the same thing so but i'm kind of getting off on a tangent here so where do we start out
then so typically you have three things ldb has always taught me the triangle is CSR, dispatcher, technician.
Do you believe all those roles can be put into a performance pay situation?
Yep.
And to varying degrees.
So everyone in our company has some level of a bonus structure.
Everybody.
So we do that for a couple of reasons.
One, I think intrinsically, I want our people to feel like they can get something for doing
more, for going above and beyond.
And I've always said that to my team.
And I think for a lot of the contractors we work with, I always try and help them see
it too.
It's like, look, if you're giving away money beyond a salary, it should be for going above
and beyond.
And that should be the perception of it.
Because if it's, hey, this is what I get paid to do my job, for the most part, unless we
get into strictly just people that are commission-based, doing your job, that's the hourly wage you're
getting or that's the salary that you're getting.
Going above and beyond is what the incentive is for.
And that also helps a lot with what you were just saying around people get entitled to
like, hey, this is how much I make.
Why are you taking this from me now?
It's, no, this is because you went above and beyond. And that's a really important thing
to distinguish. So yeah, whether it's our administrative staff, our sales staff,
production staff, everybody has something they're trying to work towards that they can still live
without it, right? Their needs are still met, but their wants aren't. And that's where these
incentive-based pays kind of kick off. I know that there's certain areas like commission-based roles, which we can talk about if you'd like to as well today, where it's a little bit different. But for the most part, when people are high in emotion, aka can't pay their bills this month because they didn't hit their targets, they're low in intelligence. And when you put your people into a constant state of high and low, unless it's a basic task, it can impede on their ability to be 100% them. And they start to lose themselves a bit as a result. That's really interesting. I do think that what I tell people
to do when they're thinking about an incentive program or a performance pay, the biggest mistakes
I see is a lot of the things they pick are out of their hands. they might say the csr i'm gonna give you money based on their job
description yeah and the problem is yes if they set the call for success but really that's really
difficult to pay the csr on the ticket total but yet people do that but here's what happens
some good things happen is they try to give the number one guy it sales all the jobs but then the
next csR goes,
well, why are they?
And then it turns into this internal conflict
and then it's like,
and it just doesn't make sense.
So a lot of times we pick the things
that are out of their control.
Right.
So how do you stop that?
Yeah, I mean, there's no way.
I wish in a podcast,
I could explain exactly how you stop it.
But the best thing I could say is,
first, you need job descriptions.
If you don't have job descriptions,
don't even think about incentive-based pay
because you're just going to create a misalignment
all day long,
especially for where you're heading
in the future of the company.
Once you have job descriptions
and people have very specific things
that they do and they don't do,
and there's a production line of passing the buck down
from lead all the way to invoice,
and they know what part they do,
now you can stare at that job description
and say, what are the things that this job description does every single day that would benefit the
company if they do it better or if they went above and beyond? That's the stuff that they
should be focused on. So every company that's going to be different. But if you haven't even
defined what people's jobs even actually are, and you're already putting in bonuses, you've
skipped a step and you're going to create animosity. You're going to create misalignment.
People are going to feel like, I couldn't hit my goal because I'm not even in
charge of it because you haven't structured it properly. You know, I got a scenario for you
that's actually happening right now at A1. We came out with this program called the Pinnacle Club
and it's for my technicians. And if they hit a certain customer satisfaction,
conversion rate and average sales material ticket,
they get to go.
Well,
three of my top guys came up to me and they're disqualified because they were
in a different role in the beginning of the year and they spread back to tech
and oh my God,
you don't want to off these guys because they're amazing guys and they're
great at what they do and you also don't
want to change the rules which the rules were never said that if you they still hit those marks
and it's like hmm it's interesting and it's these little things that you rock the boat it's almost
like when you have incentive pay it's great until someone feels like they were taken advantage of
and maybe they were part of the team and didn't get the credit. How do you deal with that? And I
love your answers, by the way. They're so well thought out and just very well-spoken.
Yeah. These are hard questions, Ben. Okay. A couple of things. One is what you dealt with,
I've dealt with too, right? So like you set up something, you think through it, you think you
thought of all the variables and you release, and it doesn't really work out.
One of the best things I've seen with our members even, because a lot of times they'll come in with us and they don't fully know their numbers.
They don't fully know what their year-end averages are and stuff like that.
They get excited about bonus programs because we told the guys we're going to start this management program, we're going to get them bonuses.
And I'm like, that actually might take you one to two years to roll it out.
And they're like, what are you talking about?
I'm like, you don't know fully all the ramifications that are going to go in place.
So why don't we, for a year to maybe even two years, track it, even have something small that people can get as a result of it, but make it less transactional, make it less about money, make it more about you and have a trip or a prize.
And let's see how things roll out.
Because after probably one to two years, you're going to get all the kinks ironed out.
And I've tried to, man.
I thought through our sales team bonus structure
and the next year I changed it.
And the next year I changed it again
because first it was an annual bonus.
That was too long.
Now we've gone to quarterly.
That works extremely well.
And then we've got certain on sales
and then on setups.
And I needed a couple of years
to kind of play with it, if that kind of makes sense. And I needed a couple of years to play with it,
if that makes sense. And I would just say to a lot of entrepreneurs, because a lot of us are
hyper, just go, go, go, make things happen tomorrow. Something like this, when you're
playing with people's livelihoods, take time, slow down to do it once well. Because it's like
you said, and you've experienced, I've experienced it too. It's hard to pull back once you started.
So I don't know if I have a fix for you for how to do it moving forward. Other than, again, what I've done
is just conflict resolution, right? Let's sit down with a guy, let's be human with them. Let's figure
out where my mistakes lied and where their expectations lied and find common ground. And
that's a one-on-one talk that has to come out of that. But to learn from that would be to, okay,
you know what? It's going to take us a year
maybe even two to get this right and let's not put too much weight on these incentives until we know
what we don't know right now you know at christmas we set up a really very sexy scorecard and
to my mistake i wanted to put driver score on there and the other
great amazing people around me said
driving is non-negotiable if they suck at driving they need to get fired you know and i said no
you're very right at that i agree with that so putting some things on like you need to be dressed
well or your truck needs to look okay and you need to keep it clean those should be non-negotiables
those should be your duty.
And I think a lot of times that I've made this mistake of putting things that you're just,
this is your job. You don't smoke in the van. I'm not going to reward you for not smoking,
not being on your cell phone.
I'll give you an example of this on a management level. Again, going back to your base pay is to do your job. Everything that's in your job description, that's why we're paying you $50,000, $60,000, $70,000, $80,000 a year.
It's a lot of money.
So hopefully you're doing the things that are written in there.
To go above and beyond is where I really want to incentivize behavior.
So to make you better than you currently are.
And so like a project manager, one of my best bonus structures I ever figured out was to help them have what we call the gross profit driver. So it wasn't a revenue driver and it wasn't a profit driver. It was a
gross profit driver. So the profit made after labor, subs and material. And what I would say
to them is this, you know, use hypothetical numbers. I want you to produce a million dollars
this year at a whatever, 40% gross profit margin. So essentially I'm saying to the person, I want
you to bring the company $400,000. And that's why I'm giving you this, it's called $70,000 salary to do that.
It's fair enough. I've got to pay for overhead. I've got to pay for all these other things. And
I want to make a profit. And part of that 400 grand is going to go straight towards your salary
anyway. Now you want to make more money. I want to make more money. To do this together, I want to give you 10% of all the gross profit made over 400 grand. So if you make $450,000
next year, I'm going to give you $5,000 bonus because it's 10% of what's over 400K.
And you can do that by producing more. You can do that by producing that million dollars more
profitably or the combination of the two. And that gives them a baseline where it's like, you still got to produce 400K this year.
Like that's your job.
But if you want to go above and beyond what I've budgeted, then you can make yourself
more money and me in turn as well.
And now we're in it together.
But again, we're going above and beyond.
I'll tell you, you guys listen to this.
This is true.
I've done programs like that.
The problem is, then then i say you know what
you're a better closer i'm going to get appointment centers for you then i say you know what you're
better at closing high ticket items so i want to make you i break up the divisions to create
specialists and then all of a sudden they're like well i have my numbers you know second quarter
and you're like and you know what so that's why i think you said you
got to take some time and that's as you develop a company because when you're young in a company
you know there's a lot of people listening that work for me or are going to listen to this so
gotta watch what i say but you know i always thought if we get a top producer just pay the
trainer good money then i realized well there needs to be more trainers.
Then we got to hire recruiters.
Then we have to have people train them 60 days into it.
So all these things that I thought, and then all of a sudden I was like, the trainer is
going to make like $10 million this year because all of a sudden we got recruiters and we got
a great station.
We brought on more trainers and we brought on more systems and we brought on more consultants
that we're training to like personality profiling.
And it's the cumulative of everything that makes it better.
So it's really, you do got to be very, very careful.
And you got to tell people, if I give you this, just realize that there could be changes
and I need you to sign something saying you understand that
your base pay is not going to change. You'll always get paid what we agreed upon. But if we
got to make this thing a little more robust to get you some other people involved, you realize
that this might not be the same. And it sucks when it happens because you see top producers that are
kicking butt, getting paid induction, their life becomes a little easier, but it's still aggravating
for them. What you're describing is a company that is growing quickly. So the rules of the game are
changing quickly. And that's true for a lot of us, right? So like the overhead changes,
the marketplace changes. And I think for a lot of us, especially now you're not in this position,
but I think a lot of people listening probably would be when you're a smaller company, it is
kind of like in the beginning, almost like, yeah yeah i could give them a percentage of this and then a percentage of this and then i'll have my percentage and then
it's safe it's good but they're not looking three years out or four years out and how that all
changes and i've realized too it's like it might might feel a little bit more like a high risk
thing in the beginning but to provide people with good stable salaries that they don't need the
bonuses they're just an added little piece of benefit.
And then as your company matures and you really start to lock in and know your net metrics and
know your actuals and know your overhead, now you can start to kind of expand out and provide
bigger incentives for people. But in the beginning, it's just like, let me take care of you.
Let me pay you what you're worth and let me go figure out what we actually have here.
Once I figure that out, let me come back and provide something that's a little bit more like
incentive-based pay.
But our company, I mean,
every single person we work with,
even on my sales team,
I would much rather pay you extremely well,
make sure you can live your life.
But if you want to have that extra nice house
or that extra nice car or whatever,
these are the things that we'll work towards
through incentive-based pay.
Other than that, your bills are always going to be paid
working for us.
I don't want you stressed out.
And like you just mentioned, the rules change every year. Things change. And I don't want to
get stuck in a weird spot where I got to pull back on something I promised.
Well, I'd rather work somewhere that I get paid a lot less, but I'm not a 1099 and I get insurance
and I get PTO and I get a 401k valued. And sometimes lunch is bought and somebody cares about my kids.
Somebody cares about my wife.
And those are the things.
And it's a family rather than a 1099 contract.
We get shit on all the time.
And I think those guys that come in here and say,
I make more as a 1099, blah, blah, blah, blah.
I go, go pay for your own gas, pay for your own truck,
pay for your truck insurance, go get an insurance plan,
pay for Aflac.
We cover Aflac, at least a portion of it. We pay for the Dave Ramsey program. You
add all these things up. You're making way more money as a W-2 for me. And you don't do your
taxes. So you think you're making a lot of money because you all Uncle Sam for the last 10 years,
because you never paid taxes. There's pros and cons to it. I see in the roofing industry,
it's very 1099 driven. And I also see that there's models that are pretty well proven now. People kind of know generally, when you're in Texas or when you're in Colorado, there's a certain amount that a decent sales guy can book in a year and a really good sales guy can book in a year. we go by and i think it's getting to be a little bit easier to understand how to pay a 1099 in that
realm but i would say it's 10 15 years of running 1099s not just for one company but for all these
companies combined i see them at conferences sharing what they're doing and it's starting
to come down to a bit more of a common denominator but yeah it takes time and nobody's going to be
able to like just year one of production be able to figure out what the best bonus package is going
to be because you have no idea so be careful not to go too far with it anyways we've talked a lot about that but well
you know here's the thing i just decided to buy grills barbecue grills for every single market
and one of my managers was like dude i got the grill we grill up every day the guys love it
we're attracting so many people because they're close to the distribution center sometimes they
even grill for other grocery companies and i'm like I love that because it means a lot to me to be able to have
lunch. And if you add it up, there's so many things you could be doing to create a better
culture. And I'm obsessed with culture these days. I mean, I think I told you this, Danny,
but I used to hate the word culture because I was putting out so many fires. I'm like,
what the hell is culture? Like, this is crap. But I realized I was the problem because I was a firefighter and it's
compassion. It's understanding. It's communication. How important is that versus their pay grade?
Again, going back to my background in franchising and just working with hundreds and hundreds of
people, I did notice that pay was the number one importance to people up until the point where they could pay for their
bills and save, say, 10% to 15%. After that, pay became quite a bit less important. And where I
saw a lot of my franchisees sticking around, our painters sticking around, was because what you
just talked about with culture, we had a performance culture. So we felt more like a high-level sports team than a painting company.
And we were all trying to track goals and see what we could hit and achieve and award people for that.
And it wasn't always money.
Sometimes it was just like, you literally get an award at the end of the year.
And it was like the sought-after thing to get.
And that gamification of our business really changed people's mentalities from being transactional with me.
You pay me this, I'll do this for you, to being a cohesive team, right? You think about the
sports teams you were a part of when you were a kid and think about how much you like sweat,
blood, tears, like put it all out there for what? So that you could win the championship.
What did you, did you get paid for that? Nope. But you cared about it a lot. And it's tapping
into that same primal nature within the
competitiveness. That's why I hire only competitive people because they like to win
and they've been in competition. I don't care if you played in the symphony, you understand what
it's like to practice. You understand what it's like to want to be better at something.
Totally. And you can have fun with it. And people from there can get a lot more value than just
money. Now, is money important?
Definitely.
And if you're trying to find ways to pay people less, you're already thinking the wrong way.
Right?
Like, I constantly, every year, I'm like, how can I make my people more money?
It's so fun for me to be able to have them make tons of money because in return, they bring that value right back to our organization.
And I tell my team that one thing they know in working with me is I'm not like, hey, like you missed your goals too bad. I'm like, no, you're about to miss your goals. I want to
make sure you hit year end or hit quarter end. I will figure out with you how to make sure this
happens. And it's my job as their coach versus their boss to get all my players to be like top
stats. Well, I had to go beyond that because for me, every once in a while, every quarter I go out
there and I go, who here is a Harley? Who here is a boat who here those are all and i hate to say this depreciating assets your
snowmobile your jet ski and i go through this and i say look if you can't save money at 40 000
you'll never be able to save money at 100 000 unless we work together because for some reason
like me and like a lot of people
think we're owed something we worked hard we should deserve it and we should go spend it
but the fact is that what if you invested in yourself and in your future and i think it takes
a lot it takes constant management it's like when i had my my weight loss i was such a horrible
leader when it came to this contest i spent spent five grand, 3,500, 1,500. We didn't get accountability partners. We never talked about short-term
success. We didn't celebrate the little wins, like not eating any fries for a week.
I could have done such a better job. And I think there's a lot of things that go into leadership
that's more than just the money. It's teaching people. We weren't taught in high school
how to not bounce checks or get an 800 credit score. No one teaches that. So I feel like it's
kind of our responsibility as business owners and half the business owners I know, they're in debt.
And so it's a tough thing to do, but when you can do that and you can change lives, it means a lot.
Yeah. We actually, our own company, we have a podcast coming up on just how to create
essentially just like company brand to your people.
Like how do you create a brand to the world
that your employees are drawn towards, right?
And a lot of it has to do with that.
I keep going back to this one way of thinking.
Am I every day reinstilling transactional relationships
with my people?
Or am I instilling more of like a unified team mentality? And the words that are coming out of my mouth, the words that are written down in
their job description, the meetings that we have, the way I support them, the way I spend my time,
what am I portraying in all of these areas? Am I portraying a transactional, I paid you,
so shut up and do your job? Or am I portraying a unified, we're in this together,
right? And there's subtle things, right? Like the simple use of the word employee versus team,
right? And if you're usually used to like, yeah, they're my employees. As soon as you say that in today's world, they feel less than you. But you're like, yeah, it's my team. They're like,
they feel on board with you. Hey, I hope you're enjoying this conversation. I just want to let you know that we have a special
offer from Breakthrough Academy for you today. So stick with us to the end and I'll reveal how
you can take advantage of it. But if you're in a rush, just go to btacademy.com forward slash
home service expert and check out our exclusive offer that we put together for our listeners
today. Okay. Now let's get back and continue our chat with Danny. You know, I tend to say my coworkers
and sometimes I catch myself saying,
you know, my employees and I'm like,
they pay my paycheck.
I would not get paid my paycheck
or when we have really good years, our profit.
And there've been a lot of good years.
So, you know, I really respect the fact fact no one knows what these CSRs do.
Without the CSRs, the calls don't get booked.
No one knows what the dispatchers do.
No one knows what the managers and the lead techs do.
No one knows what those techs are doing at 130 degrees in the garage.
And yet, I think what happens with me sometimes is out of sight, out of mind.
And I look at some people, and all I want to do is go dude especially out of state what do you do all day show me your calendar
because it seems like to me well here's the worst answer danny and i think everybody what
i've been here many times is i'm like and this is this is so funny because i always ask to see
their calendar.
What did you do today that you needed to get done that's going to help your life get easier towards a better system or hiring a better person to make your life easier?
Because to me, a lot of times I talk to my managers and they say, well, I had to fix
the dispatch board.
Well, I got an answer for that.
I'm just going to call a fake guy, Steven.
Steven, how about I fly you to Arizona to teach the dispatchers to focus on the dispatch board the way you want it?
And then they say, well, I had to fix a fire with the supply chain.
Well, why don't we go to our supply chain specialists that work here in the main hub and tell them how to handle that?
Because I need you doing a few things right.
You're either growing the market revenue, figuring out ways to make more profit, or you're working on getting a great team together.
Those are really the three main things.
You're growing the market and you're growing the people.
You're growing those relationships.
And I know I'm going off on a little tangent here.
I was starting to talk about how everything applies, but I think sometimes we take for granted what our guys do.
But it's our job not to let them firefight.
Because if you're a firefighter
they always follow the leader if my desk is messy every desk is messy in this place yeah and you're
also just talking about like what kind of mentality are you creating in people because what you're
describing is people going from like a i do my job task master mentality to like a problem solver
kind of more like independent thinker mentality. And you create your own reality around you
every single day, right?
I even think about with my team,
I'm like, I can say to them messages of,
you know, you're a part of this
and you couldn't exist without us.
Or I could send a message of you're incredible
and look what you're creating around you
and look at the opportunity that you're doing.
I didn't even think I could do it that well.
And just that simple like line of communication changes their mindset. I had one guy on my
sales team for years. He makes calls. That's what he does. He makes calls. He calls people,
50 to 100 people a day. And that was all he did for two years. And that was all he ever asked to
do. And he had an okay mindset around it. But there were times I could tell he just was losing
it because he was just burning out because he wouldn't after making that many phone calls
and i remember reaching into him one day and just being like bro like i know you're more capable
than this and i know you have so much more locked up inside of you and you're not using it and we
need to address that because it's you have a better potential to be a better person and i'm
not allowing it and you're not talking about it and we need to get level you up and the first thing I said to him is I trust you I trust you with some of the decisions that
I'm making right now and I'm going to give them to you and I want you to see how you do with them
I knew he was his capacity was there I knew his ability was there so that was step one for me
once I knew that like really laying into him I trust you a year later like everything changed
like he's now actually leading up our entire like follow-up
team and he's like reinventing our crm for us right now and he's doing all kinds of cool stuff
that's like optimizing our flow and then he came back to me he said i'm like like what's changed
he's like you told me that you trust me i never thought you trusted me just the way you were
acting prior i was like right he's like you're always tracking like how many calls i was making
every week and like wondering why some weeks were lower and some weeks were higher and then finally you just told me you
trusted me like right pretty profound that's a good story you know part of them is knowing that
you believe the other day i had a tech call me i was in florida this was a few weeks ago and he
said dude i feel so bad i'm letting you down i know when you were talking about conversion rate
everybody i get a million calls from
all my technicians after a meeting.
If I address something, they're like, dude, I know you were talking to me.
I was like, no, I wasn't.
I didn't.
They're like, he must be talking about.
Yeah.
And they call and he goes, dude, my conversion rate hasn't been my average tickets.
Not where it should be.
And I said, do me a favor.
Let's say this together.
I'm a winner.
Pull your shoulders back. put your head up, be a little louder and smile. And here's what I want
you to do. When you knock on that door and you offer a coffee before you get there, I want you
to play with the dog. I want you to say yes, sir, no, sir. And I want you to have fun. He called me
back. We called a couple of technicians in between that. And he goes, I had so much fun. I was
smiling the whole time. I just walked out with a $7,000 job. And we rejoiced. We were
excited. We clapped. We celebrated with him, but he needed to believe in himself as well.
And I think sometimes we don't know what's going on at home. And that's why one of the things I
try to do is go out with a significant other that they're part of the business too. And you got to
see how that relationship is because something could be happening at home or with
your kids or anything else and a lot of times you bring work home and a lot of times you bring home
to work so it was a profound having this talk with him and like you said believe in yourself
you are amazing and it's what's hard about interviewing people because i'm like dude i
need direct eye contact.
I need tonality.
I need to know that you believe in yourself
because I can't, I don't have the time
like Starbucks has to fix people
to make them believe in themselves.
Not with the way I'm trying to go.
I need somebody that can look me in the eye and say,
look, I'm a good person.
I love myself.
And sometimes I just got to remind them.
A really good environment for that.
What you're kind of describing
is just like you're coaching people. So you're coaching them more just on
their numbers and skill. You're actually coaching them on their mindset. So we, and I still do this
with my staff. We do this with all of our members. We institute something called GSNR. And I think
you might do something kind of like this goal setting and review. And it sounds very like we're
going to set goals. We're going to review them. We're going to look at numbers, but it's surprising
how many of those meetings turn into how's things going at home? How's your workload? Where are you at right
now? Always starting with that personal side. And being somebody who... I did GSNR since I was 18
years old at College Pro Painters and moved through the ranks of doing it for franchisees.
And now I do it for my staff. And now we teach all these members. I'd say 30% of those conversations
have nothing to do with numbers.
We actually don't talk about it for the week because it's not relevant because trying to
figure out how to get two more leads this week or get four more hours produced, or it's going to
ring on deaf ears because there's something else going on. And if you have that regular cadence of
meetings, like ours is every Monday, half an hour per report, right? So you might not do it with
your whole team, but you'll do it with your direct reports. Your direct reports will do it with their
direct reports and so on. It catches a lot of that
stuff early before it becomes systemic. I love that. And you know, we're hiring a dream manager
right now. And I want to know, Danny, your dreams, because your dream is not for me to become a
billionaire. I don't think maybe it might be, but I don't. so what are your dreams because if we can help you accomplish your dreams i just love the notion of becoming a person that's trying to help others accomplish
their dreams and you know i love the idea of just giving because for some reason when god's
been good and plentiful to us i I feel like we want to give it back.
And everybody that I've ever went to and visited their shop, they opened their doors to me and gave me everything.
And they've been very successful and they pay it forward.
And now I told my guys yesterday at our Thursday morning meeting, I said, guys, not to sound condescending or cocky, but God has been good as far as financially to me.
I don't need to work anymore. I don't need to work
anymore. I don't need to be here Monday through Friday. I'm coming in Saturday. I'll be here
Sunday. I don't have kids and I'm not married. So, but I want you guys to know that my goal
and my dream is for you guys to hit your dreams. And that means we're going to celebrate the
homeownership. We're going to do these fun things. We're going to make sure your life is set up and I'm not going to give you,
you know,
job versus a career.
I'm going to give you a better life.
You guys are going to run with me.
Come with me.
If you guys hate me,
then you can go work for a competitor,
but I promise you your life will change when you work here.
And that's,
it's exciting because I really,
really want that.
Yeah.
It's important for you to know too.
And to even express this to them, there's no such
thing as altruism.
There's no such thing as a selfless act.
And it's not just money that is always going to be the beneficial thing for you.
You're like, I actually personally get a lot out of seeing you guys succeed.
You're getting a lot from that.
Oh no.
Yeah.
We're selfish that we cry because I believe they're in heaven.
So you're right. I'm selfish that I want them to succeed because I could say I was involved
with it. You love it, man. You love seeing people grind and pound and make something out of
themselves and know that you had a little bit to do with that. Exactly. That's why you're doing
this podcast. That's why you do a lot of these things. And it's important just to realize that
for yourself and let other people know that too. And be like, look, I am greedy. I'm greedy because
I really like seeing what happens and know that I had a part look i am greedy i'm greedy because i really like
seeing what happens and know that i had a part of that but the best part is you're going to benefit
from that too i'll tell you what you know part of being an influencer is what started to happen
with the podcast is speaking on stage quite a bit is i realized this thing called affiliates. And what happens is I genuinely believe in somebody and they say,
let me pay you my marketing fee.
And then what I say is I'll take that money instead of having all these
sponsors on these podcasts and I'll promote the podcast to get more listeners
because it costs money to pay Facebook.
It costs money to pay Instagram.
And I'm not going to pay,
take money out of a one cause that's not fair to my employees. So somebody is willing to, if I love them and I cherish the company and
they say, hey, Tommy, what I'd like to do is throw you a few bucks because you've helped me succeed
and your outlet has, then what's so cool about it as an influencer is I can take that money
and get the message to more people. So all around it all becomes this equilibrium
that feeds the beast.
And I don't feel bad doing it.
And the people I work around don't feel bad doing it.
And I love it because it's genuinely things that I care about.
Take, for instance, for example, if I had a guy that was just amazing at Google or something,
what's so cool is I will never stand behind somebody.
And I know 100,000 people probably that got screwed over by a Google guy. So if I can promote it and say, this is a good
guy. And he's like, dude, you've changed my life because I do a good job. Look, this thing is,
is definitely changed. I owe everything to the podcast because Al Levy came on the podcast and
decided to go to lunch with me and teach me about manuals. Then I had Dan Antonelli
teach me about brand. Then I had Ken Gitteris come on and teach me about buying company.
And literally they wouldn't come on unless it was entertaining and we were helping people.
So people say, what's the catalyst in your business? And I'm like,
it was the podcast because people now want to talk to me. They don't want to talk to this
firefighter, Tommy Mello, before the podcast.
Here's an interesting concept. Actually, our event's coming up in January. One of the things I say at almost all of our events is I'm like, look, you guys are all here. You guys all have
needs and wants and business interests and hope for what you'll get from this seminar or the
thing we're doing. Approach it like this. Everywhere you go, figure out how can I help? How can I give? And if you all do that,
all 300 of you here this weekend, watch as 300 people do the exact same thing to you.
Now, instead of just one person trying to draw as much as they can and pull out and
whatever, get what they can get, everyone's focused on each other. And it's a very small
tweak to how the conversation goes with people. But I do feel, and I see it even in business right now, more and more business owners need
to understand that because we all know so much.
But we have to be willing to work together because as big as your businesses or my businesses
and other people's maybe, we're all still pretty small fish in a pretty massive pond.
There are organizations that are just eclipsing anything we could ever even dream of.
And if we're all going to work against each other and all that,
then we're never going to get anywhere.
But things like this podcast and these programs
and some of these guys you're working with,
we can work together and actually pool resources
and do something much greater than even just one individual company,
which is cool, which is exactly what you're experiencing.
I've seen it time and time again with our membership.
And we're getting out of the competition side of things,
but just the message I always say to entrepreneurs is
try to find ways to develop non-transactional relationships. And we're getting out of this, the competition center of things, but just the message I always say to entrepreneurs is like,
try to find ways to develop non-transactional relationships.
And you'll find way more comes out of that,
both with your employees,
your customers,
your competitors,
everything around you.
And that's,
if there's one thing that I've really focused on,
even building Breakthrough Academy is like,
I don't need to make this the most profitable thing on the world.
I don't need to be the guy who's like,
I've invented all this because the truth is I haven't, my team has. And it's like,
if I can just figure out how to bring people together and help people kind of almost like
hold the space for everything to kind of become more productive, then I've done my job.
It'll grow infinitely. It'll grow exponentially if you do that.
Yeah. And it's less effort, which is interesting,
right?
You don't have to pull the rock uphill all by yourself the whole way through.
Everyone will do their strengths and do their part.
It's true in your company.
It's true.
And you know,
your working relationships are true in your family.
You know,
just because look,
I'd rather have a podcast like this.
Yes.
I like to stay focused,
but if it goes somewhere,
this one is going everywhere and i
love it because you know for me i was on this podcast yesterday for this pest control company
cool dude and he shows me he sends out these letters to every single pest control company
in his markets to buy them and there's this amazing book right here by chet holmes called
the ultimate sales machine and then there was a student of this guy who wrote this book called There's this amazing book right here by Chet Holmes called The Ultimate Sales Machine.
And then there was a student of this guy who wrote this book called The Dream 100.
It's a $100 book.
And in the book, he says, learn how to identify your perfect hundred.
Me, I got clients that spend over a million dollars a year with me.
If I find a hundred of those, that's a hundred million dollars.
It's very easy. Now, what can
I do to get 100 people?
Well, all these gifts came.
There's these gifts, these cups.
I've got my name and Bree's
name written on them.
We just got those cups. We have our own brand on those.
Those are good cups.
Tommy, the Mellow family.
This is a company that sends these things out.
This is a shirtisserie, whatever they call it, board.
But yeah, I'm not good at that.
Recruitery.
Recruiter.
I'm not a cheese man.
But this company sends out gifts and they make itemized things.
And imagine if you found 100 companies you wanted to buy or partner with.
And you worked with a VA and you worked with them diligently and you went to buy or partner with and you worked with the va and you worked with them
diligently and you went to town and you find out their favorite metallic they love metallica so
you superimpose them in a picture and you get a fake signature and you tell them it's fake but
it's kind of cool and then you put we love that you're four and a half stars on yelp and you write
about how the company was founded and you sent a nice gift and a nice a truly nice gift that they're
interested in do you think they take your phone call and want to do business with you versus
this thing that comes to everybody that's generic and you know the generic ways works your guy made
200 calls a day and he you know he accidentally got lucky a lot but if you go with a purpose
and that's what i'm learning is i'm trying to identify my dream 100. But more
importantly, here's the next game. I'm identifying my next dream 100 employees. And then even on top
of that, dream 100 companies, dream 100 employees, and dream 100 customers, which are clients because
they spend a lot of money with us. So when you start thinking with purpose,
the world becomes a lot easier.
And you know, the world doesn't change,
your attitude changes.
And I gotta tell you, I hate the people that say this and now I'm saying it, I'm 38, I hate this.
But if I do then what I know now,
and I'm not even, I'm not old,
but damn, who would have thought 40 years old
is right around the corner.
But this is goal.
I think just
identifying 100 100 100 and working on what those people learn how to get them because i could send
a free book listen if i get somebody that spends a million dollars and i spend 10 in marketing
do you realize i could spend a hundred thousand dollars to acquire that customer
a hundred thousand dollars if i'm willing to spend ten percent i could buy them
tickets to hawaii for two weeks and still make a ton of money so the thing is is it just changes
your whole paradigm doesn't it one thing i've noticed is uh how we do like you're saying you're
38 how we reach different stages in our life so like when we're in our 20s we're in our like
warrior phase we got to conquer we got to achieve warrior phase. We got to conquer, we got to
achieve, we got to win, we got to own, we got to make money. And I'd say it's a pretty important
phase, right? A lot of people need to establish themselves on this planet and find out who they
are, right? In their 30s, you're kind of continuing that and you are now physically establishing
yourself. You're gaining that wealth, you're gaining that recognition. And then by the time
you hit your late 40s and 50s, you get to what you're talking about right now is where you do really
want us to give back and you feel that and you see that in older people right left right and
center not everybody but a lot of us yeah and it's pretty natural for the human experience i think for
people to go through that and i think it's important to recognize that like one thing i've
done in my life is i'm like hey like working hard and conquering and owning is important, but I can see that like, there's another phase here. It's not always going
to feel like that. And the reason I know that is Tommy, think about when you were in high school,
how much you cared about being cool or getting by or getting good grades, or think about how
much anxiety you had around, like somebody picking on you or the teacher gave you an F or whatever it
was and how much that didn't matter now in your life.
The same is true in this business thing we're doing right now. This whole thing of like,
I got to build a business and conquer and grow. And it's really important for now. But when we're
50, 60 years old, we're going to look back at it and be like, that was a cool game. It taught me
some cool stuff. But what I was so emotional about wasn't nearly as important as the relationships I
built along the way. Yeah. The deal is, is I know a lot of billionaires that want to kill themselves.
Right.
Look at my buddy.
He's a very brilliant guy.
He got paid a ton of money and he says,
Tommy,
do me a favor.
Don't ever sell.
He goes,
I lost my purpose.
He goes,
the money,
the couple hundred million dollars I got is great. And I'm like,
yeah, pretty nice house, kind of cool car. I like the boat. But at the same time,
there's not as much purpose waking up. And the reason I'm here is I got a bunch of phone calls
after a meeting yesterday and they said, dude, that was an amazing meeting and I was so excited. I was so
excited and energetic.
To not be in this role,
I've worked hard to be able
to give back to these guys and gals.
I'm not perfect. I'm far
from... Look, I'm a 6 out of 10 on a
good day. No, I'm actually
making 3 out of 5.
I know.
I know.
I'll tell you, I joined this club.
It's called a hundred million mastermind.
And these guys are going, I know rich people every day that commit suicide.
The money is a tool.
And when people understand, yeah, it's easy to say that when you have it.
But the deal is, is I guarantee you, if I went dead broke, I'd have the money back within two years because i know how to get it now it's so crazy you see these people
they live extra sometimes they go broke they lose all their money in real estate within three years
it's all back and it's actually the relationships the relationships i could get money back but the
relationships my integrity the fact when i shake your hand, I mean it.
There's so many rich people I know that they're scumbags and they're scummy
and I hate them.
And there's other guys that would give the shirt off their back
and the reason they drive a normal truck to work.
And I love those guys because there's so many flashy guys.
We used to call them $30,000 millionaires because they'd rent a Beamer.
They'd lease a Beamer and live at their mom's house, you know, Scottsdale.
But this is fun stuff, man.
I know you had something very important drill you wanted the audience to listen to.
And I don't want to take that away because I do think performance pay,
I'm bringing it back.
One of the best things about our company is top performers can make what i love the most
about performance pay is i got csrs making 26 28 bucks an hour and then i could advertise that and
three of them could come on and say yeah i make this consistently but they're a players they're
drivers so one of the things that my call center manager taught me angela she's brilliant she said don't
give an hourly rate plus bonus give an hourly rate or bonus so that way they're making minimum wage
or their bonus number because if you pay minimum wage plus a bonus, then you get C players that stay.
So we encourage people are like,
what's your turnover?
I'm like super high for the first 90 days,
but it's really,
really low after the first 90 days.
Yeah.
I would say net on everything we're talking about going into like both
topics.
If you're going to be paying people money to do things for you,
make sure that,
especially if it's incentive-based,
it's inspiring them and not manipulating them.
Because if you're manipulating behavior,
it might short-term work,
but long-term usually blows up in your face.
If you're inspiring people to be better
and actually helping them find things inside of themselves
that they didn't even know was possible,
then it's going to the right place.
And I think money in general,
and especially the more you have it,
and Tommy, I'm sure you'd agree with this, money is a form of energy. It's a form of transaction
that it exemplifies what is already there. It brings out more of what already exists.
And if money is being used to manipulate people at a higher degree, then that's what you're going
to get in the end. But if it's being used to inspire people and drive people past what they
normally would do, then that's what you're going to get in the end. And just be very intentional
about what that money is actually used for
and your intentions behind it as well.
You know what I love about talking to you
and other business owners is I've been an employee.
I've been a dishwasher.
I've been a busboy.
I've worked at a lot of jobs.
I worked at women's shoes.
Dillard's selling women's shoes.
That was a funny job.
But I liked it that I could
always look at how much I hated certain things like being on call. And so a guy came up to me
this week and said, I hate being on call if I get no action. So I said, that's not fair to you.
And I wouldn't want to work for somebody that had on call shifts that I stayed home all day,
stressed up waiting for a call. I couldn't live my life, even if it's only one day a month or one day every other week.
So I'm talking to my dispatch manager saying, listen, we can pull today, Friday, we can pull
from Saturday, Sunday, Monday, and work very hard to make sure this on-call at least gets one job.
And then if he gets another one, he's fine. So I love thinking as an employee,
but what I don't like, Danny,
is I don't like employees thinking that they know what it's like to be an owner
if they've never done it.
I appreciate employees that know
if you stole their own businesses
because they actually know what it's like.
You know what I mean?
Yep.
It's something I saw every single day.
So back in the day, I was a franchisee.
When I was 18 years old, I started my own business.
I remember thinking I knew what it was going to be like to start my own business. And it's just
like having a kid. You just cannot describe it. And it's 10 times crazier than you ever thought
it would be. Then I got into a position where I was hiring and training young franchisees.
There was 18, 19, 20-year-old kids to go start their own business for the first time. And I got
to experience that shift in their mindset going from like, I'm due this, aren't I?
I'm owed this.
I'm like, you're owed nothing.
This is your business.
Everything is on you.
And the 80-hour work weeks that you're going to go work,
no one's going to thank you for it or say anything.
You're just going to do it because it's the right thing to do.
And when you can learn that way of being,
it changes somebody internally for the rest of their life, I think.
And it gives them a level of freedom and a level of, I'd say, discipline that most people don't get to experience.
And until you've experienced being off on your own, you're right, Tommy, you can't know. You
can't read it in a book. You can't be told by a friend who's doing it. It's an experiential.
And yeah, I would agree with that in a big way. And I would say on top of that is you put sweat
equity into the business you did not have
a bunch of cash so all of a sudden for some reason our wife and i or your husband and you you say
we deserve this beautiful second home we deserve to put our kids through private education well
private education is one thing but we deserve all these things because we work so hard for the business. No, you don't. Put that money back into it and
receive 10 times the gifts. But it's called delayed gratification. I talk about it in
the Home Service Millionaire book, is people don't have enough delayed gratification. They want it
now. And Bill Gates said, quit thinking what you could do this year. Think about what you could do
in 10 years. It's a little bit of a longer game, but 10 years from now, you can do this year. Think about what you can do in 10 years.
It's a little bit of a longer game, but 10 years from now, you can get a lot done if you look at things in the long way, but we want to be overnight. The websites tell us we could be
this e-commerce site. We could be billionaires. No, dude, it's a pipe dream. Literally get your
shit together. Go to work. Don't put your money into real estate. Like I was a house slipper.
I was going to own a bar. I was going to do all these things out of the garage, your business.
And now I got rid of everything. I'm so focused now because I think that this business has given
me the gift that keeps giving him. Don't get me wrong. I've invested in a lot of real estate.
I buy the building next to mine, but we're using it, you know, and I believe in it. But what's
your perspective on that
because i think people want to take it out and splurge and you don't deserve it yet you got to
take your head outside of just north america right because there's a lot of parts of the world that
having more money is it doesn't take precedent over having a better family life or having better
kids or having more time like there are cultures and people on this planet that look at North America
and think we're psychotic and think that we are giving up what life is really
all about to make more money.
And they wouldn't be wrong.
And I'm not saying they're,
they're a hundred percent right.
But I'm saying what we have here in North America is just one perspective.
And we live on a giant Island separated by a massive ocean.
And we don't really get to see what the human experience is like in
many other areas because to be human and to live on this planet i'm a christian just like you know
probably some listeners and probably you too tell me it's not about just this life and there's more
to it than that and it's easier to say when you have the basics met for you i think the basics
would be you know eat sleep poop, sleep, poop, and breathe.
You can do those things. You're in good shape, right? If you don't have those things, yes,
I get it. That's the fight or flight response takes control. And you are unfortunately subject to that a little bit. But for a lot of us, if not most of us in North America, we've already gotten
those taken care of at birth. And now it's about inspiring to do something more. And money is just
one component. It's not the whole thing. That's well said. I was in Brazil and these kids are piled into this car
and they're all singing and they got their heads out the window and they're high-fiving and they're
loving their life. They're actually so at peace and harmony and family. And to have that happiness
and that you watch these people around the world that smile
yeah it's hard to do when you don't have clean water and i understand that something's changed
about you know i feel like my grandpa he's born in 1910 he worked in the coal mines in pennsylvania
scram pennsylvania and life was different then you know he had an outhouse think about the people
that like came on a ship, arrived in
the Americas, built a
log cabin before the winter hit,
survived that. Think about the people that came west
that went through the woods and just
trekked over here. And that was
only a couple hundred years ago.
150, 200 years ago.
Some of it, not even.
You know what I love the most about this podcast, too,
is usually I stay on topic and stick to the questions,
but I feel like this is a little more Joe Rogan-y.
And I feel like a lot of people say they're liking it
and it was profound.
I really enjoy just, because you're a deep guy
and we can have a deep conversation
and we both have done a lot in the home service industry.
So we can talk about these things
and you've got a different perspective on a lot of things.
And it's just fun to have a conversation.
And normally we don't get to do this kind of stuff.
I think we understand performance pays great.
What's your exercise?
Because we're really excited to give the exercise.
And I don't want to take that away from the audience.
Yeah, so we made a bunch of quick tools for everybody.
There's 10 of them.
One of them is on how to build incentives
and performance-based pay for your staff.
So we'll give that away to everybody.
And there's a little video that goes with it.
There's a step-by-step exercise to help you decide what types of incentive-based pay to
pay certain roles in your company.
And then there's a little thing for you to kind of build out for yourself so you can
build your own incentives.
So I'll put the link in here.
You guys probably will have it in the show notes, I imagine, for those who are listening.
Yeah, so if they go to the Home Service Expert to find this podcast, this will be in the
notes and you
get these free links this stuff i'll tell you is very powerful what you guys do there is
it's so hard for me to teach i've just i know when i have kids and i'm gonna have kids hopefully
i'm gonna be so patient and i'm gonna have so much understanding and what my daughter, my son's going to go, daddy, what's three plus three. And I'm going to go son or daughter, one, two, three,
four, five, six. And I want to be patient for one day. They're going to be smarter than me.
But for some reason, when I teach, I'm like, it's six and I don't have a lot of patience. And sometimes I forget where I've been
because it's so hard to remember. It's so hard to remember what I was because let me tell you,
you know, there was a time I was a four handicap in golf and I always wanted to go out with
somebody that was even. If I golf with somebody that was 10 under, I'd be like, dude, I can't
take a divot and get backspin on the ball.
It's just not where I'm at right now.
So right now I'm going and visiting two, $300 million companies.
But before I used to visit $6 million companies and $10 million companies, because I wanted
to be that.
And I'll tell you, I think part of my problem with teaching is I understand the formula,
but sometimes like you're just not ready for it.
And you've got to grow this way instead of like this. And I want to have everybody listen to the
podcast, skip the steps that I failed at. But sometimes my mom and dad told me this, son,
you're going to make your own mistakes. And I wish I could take the mistakes and tell you,
but you're going to make them. And I wish I could do this for you, but it'll make you stronger.
And I wish I could take all the business, but it'll make you stronger. And I wish I could
take all the business owners listening to this and say, listen, I want to give you the best life
and the best marriage and the best father, motherhood, whatever. I just certain people
are hearing this and it's the perfect podcast for them that they needed to hear today. Other people
might say the other one last week or two weeks from now, but it's very, very interesting.
And I'm hoping that they just
understand that I'm just getting started. A hundred million used to be a goal. Then it'll
be a billion. But the deal is, is that just means more lives I can help. So.
I would say this too, from getting to know you, like you're very good at inspiring people,
but you're not the gifted teacher and that's okay. I come from a family of teachers. So that's like,
kind of like was grained in my DNA.
I'm not as inspiring as you,
but I teach and that's what I'm good at.
And I've got some good thoughts,
but you have an ability to inspire beyond most people.
And teaching is something I think you have around you.
You have people that help do that.
So just do what you do best,
man.
You know,
I'm like this,
we went over that three weeks in a row.
It's so funny.
I tell my guys, they're like, I remember over that three weeks in a row. It's so funny I tell my guys they're like I remember adam my gm. He goes
Tommy you talk about the same shit every week you talk about conversion rate average ticket how to get eye contact and i'm like
When i'm talking to 200 guys, all I need to do is get through to one and every week
I promise you I get a phone call dude
And they're like i'm like what is there to talk about?
We have a mojo call every
single day except for saturday and sunday but what i like to do is hear somebody's success story
let's say oh my god it finally clicked when it clicks these guys start giggling
you were right and we go you know tell us about it we get excited about it and we got this new
fancy checklist that you got to take a picture of
every single part before and every single part after there's 60 pictures you have to take and
all my veterans were like dude you're crazy what's wrong with you and all these new guys are like oh
my god this is freaking awesome i could show the customer everything and now all my fires like the
one lady said we didn't replace her Springs.
It was broken.
So we have the before and afters.
Right.
And then when I go to this job in two years,
I could see exactly what the stuff looked like and know what I'm walking
into.
And so we turn it into a positive.
I love what I do,
man.
I got to tell you this,
I wouldn't want to change it for the world,
but there will be a day that I say my job here is done.
And you know,
I'm not Elonon musk or
richard branson but i'm obsessed with space and i think one day i might not be going to space i
don't i just i love nice size theory of relativity i love wormholes i love the cosmos and i think
there's going to be something else that comes up i don't know if i'm going to start another podcast
about it but i love home service too much but you, what do you think you're going to be doing?
You think this is your life?
I'm 30.
I'm 34.
I mean,
until I'm 40,
this is me.
This is me.
I'm here.
I'm in.
And I'm like fully like,
I've got some stuff to create here that I'm super stoked about.
I can feel it inside of me.
Like I need to build things.
Like I have to create something from nothing.
And it's so like,
even on my house that I just bought,
like I'm just constantly,
you know,
my creative juice are going into building an infrastructure that is stable
and is beautiful and is unique and is whatever comes out of this thing.
So it will probably be in building something.
And if BTA continues to,
you know,
provide that runway,
cool.
Like we're building some software right now.
We're putting about a million bucks into a custom application for our
members that will eventually become public.
And we'll, we'll see where that leads. Right. We're putting about a million bucks into a custom application for our members that will eventually become public.
And we'll see where that leads.
But one thing I've noticed my entire life is nothing has ever been planned out years in advance.
I started a random painting company when I was 18 because I was in university to be a police officer.
I flew helicopters for a little bit randomly.
Then I started doing management consulting.
Then I built this BTA thing. But if you asked me when I was 18, did you plan to do that?
I'd be like, dude, I was just building stuff. And I was passionate about it. And I built this BTA thing. But if you asked me when I was 18, did you plan to do that? I'd be like, dude, I was just building stuff and I was passionate about it and I was learning
and life will probably do that. So by the time I'm 40, we'll see. I'm open. I've got some ideas,
but I'm not too tied to anything. Well, Danny, you are one of the smartest guys I've ever spoken
with. I love what you're doing. I've told you before, I swear, I think Canadians have different
water or something. You guys are all smart and awesome and nice. I think you guys got a lot of values
too. It's not as populated. It's not sales signs everywhere you look. It's genuinely great people.
I always learn a lot from you and I really appreciate today. It meant a lot to me and
I had a blast. You too, buddy. Yeah, it's a good job. So hopefully everyone enjoyed it.
Well, there's three things that i always got to do that i
forgot about how do people reach out to you if they want to get involved with your teachings
uh breakthrough academy so btacademy.com b as in bravo t as in tango academy a c a d e m y.com
is our main website if you just want to check out our content brand that we just launched, it's contractorevolution.com.
You can check that out.
And then the second question is,
are there any books that you read recently
that are must-reads for the listeners
that you really enjoyed?
So yeah, you always ask me this.
So it's funny, and I think I told you this last time too,
I don't read books.
Yeah, that's right.
I don't know why.
I watch a lot of documentaries.
I have had an unhealthy, I'm sure a lot of. I have had an unhealthy,
I'm sure a lot of people listening have had an unhealthy obsession with what's
going on in the world right now.
So I spent a lot of time understanding the background of this,
the history,
the future.
Yeah,
whatever it is,
the history,
the future,
the science,
the hearsay,
the political side of it,
my faith side and the religious side of this,
and just trying to come to terms with where I stand on this and what to do about it for me and
my family and the most important thing i could say about all this is right now is do not let us be
divided i get that people are going to think differently and people are going to be emotional
about that for lots of very good reasons we cannot allow ourselves to become divided that is more
dangerous than anything.
So, well, I'll add two cents and I hope I don't lose any listeners because of this, but I just,
it's hard for me when my dad almost passed away from this. So I'm very sympathetic and I can tell
you this, he pulled through and I'm very lucky. This is not good, but I also know that the
mortality rate has not changed. And typically,
so there's healthy people that have passed. You know, I believe they're in a better spot
too. I do believe I am a Christian and I just don't believe in big government. I don't,
I don't believe in redistribution. I believe that I'm going to become the best, one of the biggest
philanthropists of all time. And I'm better than putting it through this system of diseased republicans democrats
whatever you are i just don't believe in big government i believe that the us people could
make a better choice in our own communities now that's i'm probably pissing a lot of people off
and i'm sorry and those are my own views and this is not a political show,
but sometimes I just got to throw it out there.
And this isn't the forum to do it either.
This is just me telling you as a friend and you've obviously probably studied
a lot more than I have. So.
I think a lot of us feel very similar about a lot of things and very different
about a few things. And if we can focus more on where we feel aligned,
I think that's what will keep us from being divided.
So I just got back from Florida and I was near the equator.
That's why I'm like purple right now. I apologize.
And this is the last question, Danny, and so much good information here.
Why don't you leave the audience with one last great thought,
one go-to one thing they could do right now to change their lives for the better,
whether that's business or personal? I don't know if I've said this on your show yet or not,
but one thing I've always lived by is just like, how can I? Right? So I think people go to
motivational seminars and they're always just like, you can, you can do it. If you say you
could do it, you can believe it. The words that come out of your mouth, create reality. And
there's a place for that. But I think a lot of people also bullshit themselves and then know they're saying
bullshit and then nothing happens out of it. On the opposite side, people are negative,
right? Like that can't be done. That's impossible. I've never done that before.
Won't work. Well, that doesn't cause any kind of action, right? It just causes you to sit in the
place you're at. So I've always just been like, well, how can I? Like if I had to, like, what
would I do? And how would I figure that out? And I don't claim to have the answer or know 100% what I'm doing is right or wrong, but
I'm willing to kind of go in that direction and see what happens.
And so from like just a pure way of just living my life, just be open and just like, how can
I should be the language you're always pursuing life with and be in the process of.
You don't have to have something done or figured out or complete.
No, I'm in the process of figuring out how I can do it and constantly be problem solving. And it's
weird what comes out of that two years later of an idea that could never have happened had you
not spent that year thinking through how can I versus I can, or I cannot. That's so good.
People say, how do you get to a billion? And I wrote a billion on the same whiteboard.
It's at a different shop before. And I said, I wrote a line, just a slant, slanted line.
And I put a billion at the top. And then I put there 500,000 protect 2000 technicians.
And then I wrote five lines for five years. And I said, what would need to happen at the bottom
here? I need recruiters.
I would need trainers that I broke down all these things that we need. I would need a huge training
center. I need to figure out how I'm going to get the trucks, how I'm going to get the trucks
outfitted, how to have the iPads monitor. And I wrote all these things. And I said,
this is the beginning. Then how do I scale up every year to do that? And all of a sudden
it was a map. And then everybody came in and looked at my map that
said it was impossible and said holy shit you're serious aren't you let's get to work
it's history from there but it's fun man and i love that piece of advice uh this has been a
really fun podcast for me brother and uh it's a friday i don't know do you drink beer i used to
i probably drink more just rum and cokes and whatever i don't know for Do you drink beer? I used to, I probably drink more just rum and Cokes and whatever. I don't drink a lot.
I'm not going to break out the beers.
I got another three hours here of meetings,
but appreciate you very much,
man.
I know you guys learned a lot about performance pay and maybe a little bit
more about a lot of other things.
And thanks for listening to everybody.
Awesome.
Thanks for having me.
Thank you.
Hey, I hope you enjoyed today's podcast with Danny Kerr.
A lot of people always ask me if I could coach them or provide them training to grow their business. The fact is you guys probably know this, but I'm really, really busy with A1 Garage
for Service, making it the biggest and largest home service company in the country. But I got
to tell you, when I discovered what Danny Kerr was doing with Breakthrough Academy, I realized that this would be a perfect program that I'm proud to vouch for.
What I truly love about their program is they combine the done-for-you systems with coaching
and accountability to make sure you make huge progress fast in your business.
So if you're making a million dollars or more and you want to build a solid structure for your
business to generate more profits and grow, check out the link btacademy.com forward slash
home service expert to learn more about the Breakthrough Academy out the link btacademy.com forward slash home service expert
to learn more about the Breakthrough Academy.
You're going to thank me for it.