The Home Service Expert Podcast - Unlocking Organizational Success Through Management with Brain Gottlieb
Episode Date: June 30, 2025In this conversation, Brian Gottlieb shares his insights on the importance of management in shaping organizational culture, the challenges and strategies in the home improvement industry, and the sign...ificance of leadership and decision-making in business success. He emphasizes the need for effective recruitment, innovative marketing strategies, and the five pillars of leadership that can drive a company towards growth and excellence. The discussion also touches on the importance of financial management and the role of culture in employee engagement and retention. Don’t forget to register for Tommy’s event, Freedom 2025! This is the event where Tommy’s billion-dollar network will break down exactly how to accelerate your business and dominate your market in 2025. For more details visit freedomevent.com 00:00 The Role of Management in Organizational Culture 04:16 Navigating the Home Improvement Industry 08:47 The Journey of Starting a Business 13:00 Sales Strategies and Customer Engagement 19:44 Building a Strong Company Culture 24:36 Leadership and Decision-Making 30:16 The Importance of Financial Management 35:27 Recruitment and Talent Acquisition 39:23 Innovative Marketing Strategies 46:27 The Five Pillars of Leadership 53:33 Closing Thoughts and Key Takeaways
Transcript
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The manager affects how people think.
The manager is the custodian of the company's culture.
If you want to really grow your business,
you have to work at the manager level
because that's what defines organizational performance.
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.
Before we get started, I wanted to share two important things with you.
First, I want you to implement what you learned today.
To do that, you'll have to take a lot of notes, but I also want you to fully concentrate on
the interview.
So I asked the team to take notes for you. Just text, notes, N-O-T-E-S to 888-526-1299.
That's 888-526-1299, and you'll receive a link
to download the notes from today's episode.
Also, if you haven't got your copy
of my newest book, Elevate, please go check it out.
I'll share with you how I attracted and developed a winning team that helped me build a $200
million company in 22 states.
Just go to elevateandwin.com forward slash podcast to get your copy.
Now let's go back into the interview.
All right, guys, this is going to be an awesome episode.
I got Brian Gottlieb here.
He is just a really good man.
And this is like a must listen to. He's an expert
in sales business. He spends half his time in Wisconsin, half here in Phoenix, founder
of Tundra Home Improvement and the author of Beyond the Hammer. Brian is an inspirational
business leader who founded a home service business in 2009 on plastic folding table
with $3,000.
When he sold the business 12 years later, the organization expanded across multiple
states and it's grown to be 600 employees, nearly a billion in lifetime sales.
Brian, I really appreciate you doing this today.
Yeah.
Hey, thanks for having me.
I appreciate it.
It's fun watching you.
We had dinner recently and I just, I love your stories. I love the book.
Let's just tell the audience a little bit about you and where you came from, where you're
at today, what you're enjoying in life.
Yeah, well, I came up in this industry like a lot of people, right? When I finally had
a business, it wasn't like I really planned to have a big business. You know, I worked
for somebody, I didn't like it. I started doing it on my own. And next thing you know,
I've got people, I've got a business. And of course, I don't know what I'm doing along
the way. So it's kind of interesting. But yeah, I grew up selling at the kitchen table.
So I love the idea of that I can go into somebody's home, people that don't know me and a couple
hours later walk out with a check in my hand. And that's pretty exciting. And you know,
I love also about the industry in general, that, and as you know very well,
it doesn't matter what kind of car people drive, it doesn't matter what kind of education
they had, it doesn't matter what type of house they live in, people can truly have the career
of their dreams if they show up right, if they have the right attitude and energy and
commitment and willingness to learn.
People can have an amazing career in this industry.
It's great.
Yeah, you know, to tell us a little bit,
because home improvement is so much different
than home service, is that home improvement,
you gotta kinda go get it.
And it's not like this, like my pipe just broke,
I need you here today.
You gotta be really good at sales, getting into the home.
You gotta tell a story.
There's just a lot to it. And I love home improvement
so much because everyone in there is a hunter and you got to go to home shows and have a
dialing system. I'm spoiled. Everything's inbound. They're like, I need you out today.
Yeah. Yeah. You got to make leads every single day. Every single day at the end of the day,
you're out of business and you got to start over the next day and you don't have these
repeat customers. I envy home service businesses that have some sort of a pipeline. But yeah,
look, and I think that the secret to in-home sales is if you think about it, there are really five
things that you sell every single day. It's why our company, why our product, why our installation
process, why our price and why right now. And you have to do all of those five things really, Why our company? Why our product? Why our installation process?
Why our price?
And why right now?
And you have to do all of those five things
really, really well if you wanna be successful.
So it's a great industry though.
It is fun and it's super scalable when you get it right.
You know, what do you think the future holds
for home improvement and home service with,
everybody asks me, the Google algorithms are changing now.
There's all this AI. There's just a lot of stuff happening. Where do you see the
future? Look, I think that what if you look for where is the dissatisfaction in
the current business today, I have to say that the home improvement industry
requires a 90 minute to a two hour presentation.
That's grueling.
That is grueling.
And if there's a way to shortcut that a little bit, you know, do I think that people can
buy a whole, spend $15,000 on a bathroom modeling project by buying something online?
I'm not so sure about that.
So I think there's some human, you know, effect to it that helps answer questions, overcome objections and close.
But look, I think more than anything else, I think marketing is gonna change, right?
Where leads come from. Yeah, is Google always gonna be the best search engine?
I don't know. It is today.
But you know, I know Reddit is a search engine for a lot of people and you know,
will chat GPT be the next search engine? Who knows? And you know, a lot of things and you know how will chat GPT be the next search engine who knows and you know a lot of things to think about there. So I want to go
back to 2009 here for a minute and you are you got three grand and and what's
going through your mind how did you come up with the concept what were some of
the growing pains? Yeah well let's just be clear that that three grand had to work because there wasn't
a whole lot of more $3,000 buckets behind it to make it work.
And, you know, before I started my business, I was a consultant in the industry after I
got done selling and leading a sales team.
And I got a chance to visit companies across the country.
And I saw so many companies, I kept a journal, and I kept two columns in my journal.
On one side is, if I ever open up a business, I'm definitely doing this. And the other side was,
if I ever open up a business, I'm never doing this. I got to see a lot of things that were broken.
And look, in the beginning, when you start a business, you know, it's all about execution.
It's, I got to go out and I got to make a lead. I got to close a lead. I got to install a lead
every single day. And that's fine when it's just me.
I think what gets really complicated
is when you start to build teams.
And now all of a sudden, the business's success
has little to do with how well I execute
and everything to do with how well the teams execute.
So look, in the early days, look, in the early days,
as the business gets more mature, you can take risk,
risk that doesn't put you out of business.
In the early days, it's a lot of risk.
You're moving your chips in a lot of times
on different ideas, and hopefully they work.
So that was, I mean, it was a fun ride, as I'm sure you know.
Yeah, it is.
I mean, there was, but how many times were you at like
ground zero, ready to go bankrupt,
or wondering if you're gonna hit payroll, that first employee the first five or when you had a switch from 1099 to W2s or
what was that like what were the initial stages because everybody asked me what was it like to be
a few million dollars and that was so long ago I said I'm like it's hard for me to think back then
yeah I remember sitting at a kitchen table for this person that they wanted a sunroom because we were
originally a sunroom company. That's what I opened with. And
I thought to myself, and he went into the other room to talk to
somebody for his wife. And I thought to myself, if this guy
buys a sunroom, I'm still in business and if he doesn't, I
probably have to close the doors. And it was kind of it was,
you know, was that critical is that critical. So of course,
I couldn't leave the house without a sale. Now, you know,
that those disciplines that we have, I think in the early days,
you know, how often do those things get lost? You know,
I remember, I remember when I first started my business,
one of the things I saw with other companies is they ran out of
marketing dollars. They didn't have money to, to, to generate leads.
And so in the early days, when I first started my business,
I set up a separate bank account and I took 7% of every single check I got. It doesn't matter if it was $100 or $1,000.
That went into a separate account. That was my marketing dollars. I wanted to make sure I always
had marketing money when I started my business. Those kinds of disciplines are really important
in business when you first start. Likewise, when you start bringing on those first hires,
in business when you first start. Likewise, when you start bringing on those first hires,
right, and when the business is small,
you know every single thing about the business.
You can make really great decisions.
You're not, most entrepreneurs are,
I mean, they're great decision makers.
As the business grows, and as you start having an org chart
and people and people and people,
we now as leaders start to get further and further away
from the customer, and actually might not even always be the best decision maker when it comes to certain problems. So I think one of the big
differences is we have to shift our mindset as we grow to always being the decision maker, to releasing
power and teaching other people how to truly make decisions in a business. And it's a mind shift.
Well, here's what I've learned. You know, Brian, I want to hear what your thoughts are on this.
Because before, I used to kind of reprimand people and say,
why didn't you call me?
I've already made that mistake.
Like, I've already, I know the answer.
I know how to treat that client.
And then I realized all my failure,
and I expect them not to fail once,
don't fail on a 10,000 or 100,000.
I've had people blow it more than that.
But once you start embracing failure and releasing, but
don't make the same mistake twice and make sure you got a
system to stop that again, everything changed for me
because at first when you're holding it all in, you're like
you idiot like dude, I got the answer and then you start
writing down manuals and SOPs and building processes. What
are your thoughts on that?
Yeah, well, a couple of things on that.
Yeah, first of all, we have to teach people
to make decisions.
We have to also teach them it's okay to be wrong,
just don't be wrong for long.
And get off of a bad idea.
If you make a bad decision, get off of it.
But I also know that, look, if we're installing a shower
in somebody's home and it's a $15,000 shower
and we mess something
up and let's say it's $500 to fix it. If somebody can't make a decision on fixing that $500 problem,
and it has to go all the way up to my desk, by the time it gets to my desk, they don't want $500.
They want a free house. So we have to teach people how to make decisions as close as possible to the
customer. I also think when you talk about like systems and processes, I think, look, a lot of companies
struggle.
We could probably travel the country together and ask companies, do you need to do a better
job documenting your processes?
And they'd also, oh yeah, absolutely we do.
But I think we're starting in the wrong place.
I think it's more important to say, what are our business disciplines?
What are the core disciplines of our business?
Like, I'll give you an example, Tommy.
One of our disciplines was the lead is sacred.
Okay, that's a discipline of the business.
Then we can ask ourselves, and we teach that discipline,
but then we can ask ourselves,
okay, how do we treat a sacred lead?
How does it need to be treated?
What kind of technology?
How quickly do we call it?
Then we can come up with what are the systems and processes need to be around it. kind of technology? How quickly do we call it? Then we can come up with what are the systems
and processes need to be around it.
So I think a business would do quite well
if they start thinking about what are the various
core disciplines inside of their organization.
It also, by the way, creates a stickier training.
When you're teaching people the process,
you can teach them the discipline first.
Ha, I love that.
I'm still in that.
And by the way, this podcast, I still have the stuff.
None of my stuff is my own.
I just take the good stuff and then dump the rest.
I recently had a gentleman out that I'm
trying to get to help me on a business venture that's
going to roll under A1.
And he's in home improvement.
And he's probably the number one guy on
the planet for water purification and he said you know Tommy I started an HVAC
company you want to know why? He goes because I had four HVAC companies come
out to my home for a repair installation I remember what it was none of them sat
down at my table looked me in the, and asked me for the business.
Nobody followed up.
Nobody explained why they're different.
Nobody told me a great story, why they work there.
But the biggest one, in my meeting today,
I had a few hundred people and I said,
are you sitting down at the kitchen table
playing with their dog saying, listen,
my goal is to make you happy.
I want to earn your business.
We're going to figure out a way to do this
because here's the deal. At the end of the day, Brian, my boss is going to fire me if
I don't own your business because I know I need to make you a happy client and you joke
around and you have fun, but not a lot of companies even do that. That's right. And
they don't give options. They don't do that and that tells you there's a great opportunity.
When we built our home out here in Arizona, I thought I'm going to start a landscaping
company and the name of the company is going to be, I'm going to answer our phone.
That's going to be the name of our company.
If I can just get somebody to answer their phone.
I mean, that alone was hard, no less coming to my home, telling me a great story and asking
for my business.
Look, you know, there's such an opportunity to build a business by just focusing on the
fundamentals of what should that customer journey be like? There's such an opportunity to build a business by just focusing on the fundamentals
of what should that customer journey be like?
What should that employee journey be like?
Like what does excellence look like?
And if you just execute on that,
you can have a heck of a business.
You know, here's, go ahead.
Oh, I would also share with you that the other thing
is when I think about scaling. Look it in the early days of my business we sold some beautiful projects i sold this one half a million dollar
pull enclosure for customer was beautiful i made no money on it make any money but it was beautiful so you know in the early days we were selling a lot of stuff we were we weren't making any money. And I learned that, that look, when you have a
chaotic business, right? Chaos can produce revenue, but it takes discipline to produce profits. And
that was a big learning experience for me. I love that. You know, I was always told 2017,
I learned revenues for vanity, profit is for sanity. I always say, my best friends now in
the trades, we don't talk about
revenue anymore. They call me up and they say, here is my profit this month. Here's
my EBITDA. We don't even know. Revenue is like you pump out your chest when you walk
in a room. It's like social media BS. I was bringing in $50 million, bringing like 6%
to the bottom line. I mean, when you really my biggest problem Brian early on was and this is still five years ago
I got a good CFO and then I got a great CFO. Yeah, and oh my gosh big I needed the report card
I needed to understand why why do we have 6% AR? We are a cash shot
We're collecting when we're there
Well, my installers weren't collecting.
6% of the numbers when I was at $120 million ended up being a lot of money.
And as you fixed that, the bottom line got better and better and better.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And you do.
A great CFO is a game changer in a business.
A totally different skill set than I have.
I'm the worst person to try to onboard a CFO because that's not my thing. But it's also important to give them
a really loud voice inside of the company. Because we had a
saying in my business, my CFO, we were the we were the yin yang
for each other, because they brought a totally different
perspective, but such an important one, too. So yeah,
really important.
You know, I think that I was obsessed with marketing and
driving leads. But here's what I missed, Brian,, I think that I was obsessed with marketing and driving leads. But here's
what I missed, Brian, and I think you'll appreciate this and I think you'll agree with it, is
I realized that marketing is also recruiting. Marketing is getting the right people to come
on the bus. And when I realized that 50% of my time went to recruiting talent. And I figured out an equity incentive program,
how to motivate people, pay for performance. Tenure is not a thing. It's really about meritocracy.
It's all about Jim Collins. I think it was good to great talks about getting the right people on
the bus and then figuring out where you're gonna go after that and that's
Not the way I did it man. I was the bus driver and I'm like get on and get off
I didn't really like that's that's what happened. I think most businesses
They're the smartest they're the smartest one in the room and it's almost scary to bring in somebody smart enough
That's all that I do
But you must have been a magnet for talent to get to the stuff you did. How did you well?
How do you look at that?
Yeah, well, the first thing is when it comes to,
you're right, recruitment is marketing like anything else.
And just as it's marketing from an overall concept
and it's also from a speed to lead thing,
if you think about somebody that's looking for a job,
somebody's looking for a home improvement project,
they might look at one or two websites, maybe three websites and give out, somebody's looking for a job, somebody's looking for a home improvement project, they might look at one or two websites, maybe three
websites and give out there. Somebody's looking for a job,
they're going they're going after job application, they're
scrolling down indeed, and they're just reading a whole
bunch of them. How do you stop their their shopping pattern?
How do you stop them and have them freeze on on your
application? And what I realized is that, you know, who are we
looking for? And where are they? How do we meet them where they are?
The person I'm not looking for.
I'm not looking for somebody that has this really fancy resume,
this whole polished up.
And boy, does it shine because they're probably I'm looking for the person
that, you know, is a great person.
They do great work, but they had a bad day at work.
They have some jerk for a manager.
Maybe they've had several bad days at work.
They're not appreciated.
And they're coming home
and they almost feel guilty looking to see
what other options are out there.
And I wanna meet them there and I wanna have hook ads
like not appreciated where you are today,
you do great work and nobody values you,
not being paid what you're worth.
I wanna create hook ads that speak directly to that person
and not create barriers for application
like I need a resume if you wanna to apply. It's a lead.
I want to get on the phone with them.
I want somebody on our team to get on the phone with them. Let's talk to them.
Let's understand them and let's get them in the house and interview them and
hire them if they're a good fit.
And then how important this is where I feel like it goes wrong.
Number one, days to hire. Cause there's always, some people are 30 days out,
15 days out, that's a good KPI.
And the other one is, you know,
I always say we celebrate when somebody leaves,
meaning that they retired, we're bringing them a cake,
we're having a party.
But we just say when they come in, we're like,
we appreciate you guys, here's your manual,
you're going to ride with this guy for a month or whatever.
What do you do during orientation to make,
like get their family involved,
get their buy? I think that first week is so they're going to decide if they're going to be a lifer
or not. It's crucial. Now in the early days I used to take people out to dinner. My wife and I, we
would take people out to dinner and try to explain to them why why is such a great career for them
and wanted their buy-in. But you know you in your book that when people leave you celebrate them. Why don't you celebrate them when they join your organization? I agree.
Day one is all about culture. Oh, by the way, it's tempting. The temptation is you need
somebody in the field. So you hire somebody and you put them in the field. And you miss
such a golden opportunity to weave them into the culture of your organization, to take
them around, have them meet up with everybody else, to introduce them, let them
feel the energy of your company.
But I also think you're right, that first, getting the family involved, that first week,
I really think is the first 90 days that are crucial.
How do we constantly have touched them and make sure that they're seen and they're appreciated
and valued? And also, if there's a coaching opportunity, that they're seen and they're appreciated and valued.
And also if there's a coaching opportunity
that they hear that too.
But look, I think all of that's important.
And you know, once people are all in,
they're really all in.
And that's the real opportunity
because you're gonna build a business by building people.
This business, the lid of our business,
they're directly connected to the lid of the team.
The business can't grow past the capabilities of the people.
So how do we constantly thinking about that and growing the capabilities of those on our team?
I agree. I got to tell you, I think about a lot of the people I know so busy recruiting,
yet the back door is open and they're letting the same amount of people
out the back that have been.
So sometimes it's the opposite where you're pouring into these people and saying this
guy is never going to leave.
And it's a hard balance when the business reaches a certain size because you only got
24 hours in a day.
And you're right, you got to build a systemic flow.
And everybody's begging now for leadership.
I see a lot of high level execs going,
that you're not hitting the finish line.
Perfection is the enemy of progress.
What do you do to get them the leadership skills?
Is there a program that you went through,
John Maxwell, or what, how do you teach leadership?
And it should come from the top down,
but also I think you need,
you need a lot of mentors as well.
Yeah. Well, you know, and as I write about in my book,
you know, it's interesting because I've made the mistake of,
and I'm sure we, I'm sure you have too, who hasn't,
putting somebody in a leadership role
that shouldn't be in that leadership role
and then having to try to unwind it later on. Look, I've put people in roles as a
manager because they had the most experience regardless of their passion
to develop other people, right? So we built our own leadership program,
our old management program, and it's the 10 practices of top performing managers
and it's a step-by-step guide. Look, we have a 10-step selling system.
We have a, there's a five-step system to setting a lead.
There's a seven-step installation process,
but we had nothing for our managers.
So they didn't even have, they didn't even know
what should a good manager do
because often they've never been in that role anyway.
So look, the manager is not only the custodian of the company's culture,
but what they really do is they drive performance by affecting how people
on their team think. Because how people think inside of the business affects how
they feel and how they act. All of those things determine whether they're going to
show up on time, whether their team is going to show up on time, whether they're
going to do good work, whether they're going to look for other jobs, whether they're gonna do good work, whether they're gonna look for other jobs,
whether they're gonna do quality work and be productive.
That's what defines organizational performance.
The manager affects how people think.
The manager is the custodian of the company's culture.
If we work, if you wanna really grow your business,
you have to work the manager level
because you can't be everywhere as a leader.
So important.
I think you gotta, I came up with,
I don't know if I made this up,
I'm sure someone else, I read it somewhere,
but you gotta delegate to elevate.
And you know, one of my,
we were with this guy, Cameron Herald,
and he said, you gotta stop skipping managers,
going two levels down and working with them.
You could ask as many questions as you want,
but you need to respect their leader
and their direct report. And I was sticking my nose and stuff. What are you doing?
Can you work on this? And then I was, that's Robin Peter to pay Paul and it was really
disrespectful. Yeah. Well, if we're putting somebody in that
role, we have to give them the freedom and the ability to pass or fail, right? We have
to support them so they don't fail, but we also have to, again,
if we want to encourage decision making,
we have to give them the ability
to make those tough decisions.
And it's hard because we're dealing with people, right?
And when you're dealing with people,
everything gets complicated because everybody's different.
You know, one of the things I learned
in leadership in general and in sales,
it's the same thing, is look,
when growing a business and when trying to grow people,
there's a massive
difference between being right and being influential. I could be right all day long. I could be right
about something we need to do. I could be right about somebody's behavior that needs to change.
I could be right when I go into somebody's home and their windows are falling out of their house
and they need new windows. By no means does it mean they're going to buy windows or by no means
does it mean that person is going to change behavior. I have to be influential. And again, we have
to teach our managers to be influential too. If I robbed them of that by doing it for them,
you know, it's that we're also then creating a situation where they're always going to
come to me and then I'll never get anything done.
Yeah, you know, here's the thing, like, you know what I look for in a leader and I think a leader is way different than a manager a leader
They speak of passion
They're willing to break glass. They're willing like a leader a
coach of a team a true leader their job is to win and I've met with a lot of the top coaches in the world and
Sometimes there's casualties along the way. And what do you
do when someone's super loyal to you, but they no longer fit? I mean, literally, you've
tried to develop them. They're great people. They didn't lie cheater still. But at the
role they're currently in and people don't like to get demoted. So how do you handle
that? And how do you believe, do you move on?
This is such a tough subject for a lot of people. Yeah, well, the culture of the business is shaped
by the lowest level of acceptable behavior, right?
That's what shapes the culture.
And if we tolerate underperformance
inside of our organization,
we're gonna attract more underperformance
because we're now setting the new standard, right?
What we tolerate, to attract more into performance because we're now setting the new standard, right? What we
tolerate, we attract more of. So we have to do something about
it, right? And I think there are really the two boxes that are
the toughest to coach are the high performer, low culture fit,
the person that can do anything, but boy, do they blow up your
meetings. And boy, you don't even want to talk to your
customer, or the high culture fit, low performer. You know,
you love these people, you absolutely love them. But if they're like in a sales role, they can't even want them talking to your customer, or the high culture fit, low performer. You love these people, you absolutely love them,
but if they're like in a sales role,
they can't even close a car door,
no less a home improvement project.
So, coaching those two boxes,
and the same is true for managers.
We simply can't tolerate it, and it's difficult.
These are difficult conversations to have,
but ultimately, the team deserves the best possible leaders inside of the
organization. And likewise, it's true throughout the entire organization that it's often easy to
just ignore problems in your business, but it's deadly to do so because it will destroy your company.
You know, I got a buddy of mine who built this little best practices amongst eight of his colleagues, and they'd top $100 million HVAC plumbing companies.
And they'd go to shop tours and they'd write down what they like. And it was a really the majority was not what you like, but it was all the problems they see, because sometimes when we're in this bubble, we can't see what's going on within our own business.
I've walked in businesses and they're like,
this is amazing, isn't it?
The windows haven't been cleaned, there's no lighting.
They don't even have a coffee machine
and they're spider webs and they think it's the Taj Mahal
because they were working out of their house before.
And it's crazy because I walk around here
and I'm like, I'm really proud of it.
I'm like, I'm ready to go to the next level.
I'm very proud of this building and what we've done. And I just want more. I think sometimes when you're in that bubble
and how did you, how were you able to read between the lines and see the things that
no one else would see? Because you were part, you were in it.
Yeah, you're right. Well, and it is true. It's very easy for entrepreneurs and business
leaders to get in a bubble. And we then the only decisions we make, we only have our frame of reference is very narrow.
Look, I remember a bunch of my friends and I, we had this group was called the Big 12.
We actually came and visited your facility many years ago.
It's so cool.
I loved it.
It was such a training organization, man.
It just was super exciting and so healthy.
But our Big 12, we would learn from each other.
We'd all visit each other's locations.
I think sharing masterminds with your peers
and going to conferences,
I know you guys put on a great conference.
These things are so important for people
to get out of their bubble and to see what's really possible.
Even by the way, I remember with our installation team
that we're asking our installers, these really, you know, tough blue collar people to provide this white
glove, you know, amazing experience for our customers.
But then we had to ask ourselves, do they know what that means?
Do they even know what that looks like?
Do people even know?
Do they know what fantastic service looks like?
Look, how many people have been to the Ritz Carlton with a with
a thin wine stem glasses and the beautiful tablecloths? If they
don't know what what fantastic service actually looks like? How
can we ask them to replicate it? And the same is true for a
business leader. If they don't know what's truly possible out
there. They don't have any they don't have any model to chase.
And that's why I think it's really important that we can't
take things for granted throughout the whole organization.
I'm you're scaring me I'm taking away too many notes, which means
this is an amazing podcast, which I knew it would be by the
way, you know, our buddy Sean McGraw introduced us, we knew
each other. But what was really cool, as he said, Tommy, I don't
really know of anybody who's been more of an influence
in home service. But if there was in home improvement by far, it's Brian Gottlieb. And
he's such a good mentor. He's always got an open policy where he'll always give advice
to anybody. And what you're telling me is so much more than tactical or systems.
It's and it starts with the people.
And that's what's so difficult is the people.
And you got such a good heart for your people.
And you want to see everybody win.
And I think a lot of times I've seen deals fall apart.
I've seen employees get a handshake deal.
And when the deal comes through, they're like, this is for me and my family.
I'm going to and it's it. I just don't understand why people they're so they like I took all
the chances. I took all the risk. I get everything. If they just understood if someone else had
a stake in the outcome, you'd scale so much faster. The families would be behind you that
you'd have other owners in the business. And some people just aren't fans of that. But every private equity company I know, every public traded company, stock options,
and profit units. But these smaller companies that we were never told,
why is it that people are so afraid to get it? And I know it's hard to take it away once you give it,
but if you structure it right, it's very simple. It's vested, it's not profit sharing.
once you give it, but if you structure it right, it's very simple. It's vested, it's not profiteering.
Yeah, and highly powerful. How do you create, you know, if we want, look, Tommy, if you were to ask me what is the single most important discipline in business, right, single most important discipline
above all, I believe it's the ability to hit, to not only forecast properly, but then hit those
forecasted targets with a high level of certainty. And the reason that's important is because it gives the business owner the ability to
invest in the business. I'm not going to invest in a business if I don't have a high level
of confidence in hitting targets. The only way I'm going to hit targets with consistency
is if the people in the business buy into them and they're part of it and they're treating
their own little business unit like its own business inside of the organization.
Profit sharing and equity opportunities for these individual business owners inside of your organization.
The better they can run their business, the better the whole business becomes.
And I think sometimes leaders have a limited mindset instead of a limitless mindset.
And I think that's a big difference because the better the team is,
the better the business becomes.
And look, you want people to treat the business like it's their own.
And there are some great ways to craft comp structures to deliver that too.
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That's freedom event dot com all
right back to the episode I want to dive into a subject that's been on everybody's
mind and that's private equity and you hear the horror stories and I I've been
a part of this now for a few years and I gotta say it's the best thing that ever
happened because I went out and I found great partners but I feel like certain
private equity companies
they try to squeeze a dime out of a dollar, you know what I mean?
And they like to cut things and they like to cut their way and it works for the short
six months or a year.
But what is your take on private equity?
What makes a good partner?
What makes a bad one?
Because everybody's like they hate them and they think they're out here to ruin investors
are going to come to anything that makes money.
I'm sorry.
Whether it's a hedge fund, an investor, or PE,
and everybody's like,
oh, why are they screwing up the industry?
And I'm like, there's millionaires being made every minute
because of private equity.
Yeah.
Well, yeah, so of the three businesses that I sold,
I sold two of them to two different private equity groups
and one to my executive leadership team.
And look, I think I got very fortunate
with aligning with the right private equity groups.
On the same hand, I think that private equity,
this is a very simple business, okay?
Home improvements is a very, very simple business.
And it's very easy to make a simple business complicated.
It's very hard to keep it simple. So it's very easy to
complicate a business. And I think when private equity jumps into it, they start overanalyzing.
They have a very short term mindset that if we're not hitting targets this month, we've
got to cut our marketing budget. We have to start laying people off. We have to make all
these changes. Or they have these org charts that are dotted lines and solid lines going all the way across the organization
Makes for a lot of complexity inside of the business. I also think that they they don't necessarily understand that ultimately
99.9 percent of all of your people Tommy and all of my people are
interacting with the customer in one fashion or another is It's either over the telephone or face to face. And because of that, culture matters. Mindset matters.
How people think matters. It's very different. It's not like manufacturing. So I think when
private equity understands that piece of it, that people matter, but also listening to
them, these, I've got a friend of mine that was part of a private equity group and really,
really brilliant business person and several friends of mine.
It's like his voice didn't even matter.
This guy has been through more storms in business than you could imagine and has managed to
get to the other side.
You would think he might have some pretty good ideas on how to fix things when they're
broken, but I think they turn a deaf ear to. And I think that's kind of a shame.
You know what I love that you said in the beginning of that is complexity. You start getting 160 pages of data, the org charts become more complicated, pick up the phone, book the call, earn the
business, get a good review and keep a raving fan. I mean, it keep your employees happy. Like,
the data starts to almost cripple the business and you got to uncomplicate
it. You know, when you grow, it's like, well, the numbers are telling us this, we can't
take a risk. Like I'm not a gut, I used to be more of a gut guy, but now I'm like, look,
the data is telling us this, we're going to go try it. And if it doesn't work, who cares?
If it works, we'll scale it. And I'm a risk taker. If private equity could do what we
do, they'd be out there doing it. I know how much they make. And I know
how much they travel. And they live on an airplane. And comparison is the chief thief
of all joy. So I'm glad they don't compare because I'm just a garage door guy. Done pretty
good. But I'm like, I just think about some of these private equity companies, they try
to bring in these Ivy Leaguers that
are super smart, but they don't have any emotional intelligence. They come in with their watches
and their loafers, and they try to have intelligent conversations and talk over people. And they
don't know what it's like in this industry. They might be greater hotels and conglomerating
things, but what are your thoughts on that? Yeah, I a million percent agree. I a million percent agree. I think
that, look, if I ran my business, I know if you ran your
business 30 days at a time, and you let the month performer, the
month PNL decide whether or not you have a good business, we'd
both be out of business by now, we would have fired everybody.
So you're gonna have tough times. And you got to just know
that it's part of business, and you got to get through it. And sometimes you're going to try stuff and
it's not going to work and that's okay. But I think part of trying stuff, if you never
try anything, what kind of business do you have? You're going to be disrupted very quickly.
So I think look, and if you haven't ever sat at a kitchen table and you haven't ever spoken
to Mr. and Mrs. Jones at their kitchen table and tried to sell them something, you know, you
probably or connect or been on a job site and seeing talking to the people that are
swinging a hammer when it's a hundred degrees outside and having a conversation with them,
unless if you're really connected to the culture.
Look, there's a saying that the shepherd should smell like the sheep, right?
The best shepherd will smell like the sheep, right? The best shepherd will smell like the sheep. And what happens with I think some private equity groups is the shepherd smells
nothing like the sheep. So they're trying to make decisions around an industry that
they truly don't understand. And I think that's where the problems really come from.
I like being super close, knowing that I was a technician. I've done the phones, I've done
the it's been a long time since I've done payroll or inventory. But I like being super close knowing that I was a technician. I've done the phones. I've done the
It's been a long time since I've done payroll or inventory
but I like that I understand a little bit about what it feels like and
It's hard to get it's hard to for me. I remember the phone ringing at the movie theater. I was bowling or on a date and
Because I was the guy that did the work I was like, I'm'm sorry, I gotta take you home, I gotta go run this call.
So I learned to create animosity towards the phone's ringing.
But I always did it, whether it was midnight,
I just hated it because, man, I'd hear that phone and I knew it was a job
and I'd pick it up and I'd go run it and I'd make money.
But at certain times, it literally took my freedom.
And so I just like that I know I've been in every position in this company and I try to tell some of our leadership
team, just remember what it's like to work in 140 degrees
or 20 below in Minnesota.
Because it's easy to make decisions behind a desk.
We get a little bit harder making decisions behind a desk,
not thinking where are they coming from?
Right, and look, how important is that for you,
not only just to build credibility with the entire
team as the leader of the organization, but even to just
to have that come across when you're recruiting people or, or
being grateful for others, because you know how hard they
work, or when they're struggling, or they have, you
know, problems at home, and they're trying to not bring it
to work. You know, we've all been there. And you know, how
much does that make you a, a credible leader for your team?
I mean, it's significant.
I love this podcast, man.
I absolutely, I just decided I'm gonna let,
I want a lot of my, a lot of people I know,
people in the company listen to this.
You know, everyone's talking about marketing.
I think if I had to give you one buzzword, it's marketing. And they're like, obviously, I always tell them it's not your marketing.
You're not doing the right sales.
Your conversion rate, your opportunity job average, you're not creating raving fans.
Your call center sucks.
But we do need leads.
So, you know, what's still working today?
If you had to give me your top three sources and maybe not the common stuff
like Google or email marketing. What are some, I know you had some pretty crazy
things you do with BR or PR with like wounded warrior type stuff, but what are some very
different things that you've seen work and exponentially propel the company on the lead
gen side?
Look, for me, for me, as long as I have a pair of knuckles, I can stay in business,
because I always knock a door, make a lead,
and stay in business.
So look, I'm a big fan of face-to-face marketing,
it's being timeless.
I want to set up, I want to have our people set up
wherever there are people.
One of the things we did, there was this music festival
that we would sponsor, and this was for our bath business.
It's like, why is there a bath company and a music festival?
So instead of in these bath displays,
instead of putting like shampoo and towels
in the bath displays,
we would fill them with microphones and speakers
and we would have people come on by and sing in our shower.
And once we got a certain amount of people singing
in our shower, we would send a kid to music school
for a year.
It was really cool.
So the whole community was involved in this singing
in the shower thing and the media would cover it. Look, I think you have to constantly figure out how can you connect with
the community that you're in and how can you come at them in a very unique way? And if possible,
how can you make them a co-producer in the success of your business? Because if you can do all those
sort of things, you're really going to win. But you know, from a classic marketing standpoint, marketing
sources, especially aggregators, they come and go like they like
the seasons, you know, they sometimes are hot, sometimes
they're not fundamentally, look, do I ever think? Do I ever think
that that tick tock will outperform Facebook? Probably
not, right? Facebook is a great lead generator, right? And so is long form television and two
minute spots and all that kind of stuff. If if bought, right,
I think a lot of the things, it's the fundamental stuff. And
what really is the challenge, I think for most companies, it's
the execution of it, you know, or it's being so scattered that
they're putting pennies in a variety of sources, instead of
saying,
I got to,
I got to really penetrate this source and go deep at it,
but make sure that I have the infrastructure that when I get a lead,
it's not sitting in my email box, not being called for two days.
So I think all of those things really matter when it comes to marketing,
but tell you a story.
Don't market like all your competitors where it's half off installation and buy
one, get one free and all that nonsense
Because you just start to sound like everybody else. I call it what you were talking about earlier
I call it spray and pray you're kind of shooting everything out and seeing that hopefully a call comes in and
You know can't good or it's Tommy. Don't be transactional in your marketing message
Tell stories have them learn who you guys are and and it just you know
He talks about his dog and one
of the and one of his radio as I just heard he's like Sadie his dog he goes you know Sadie is he
explains who he is the dog and he goes Sadie man when someone comes to that front door that
dog knows if they're good or bad he's like Sadie's gonna jump on you it's a some something hound
and he goes so I've learned very quickly that I got to bring Sadie on gonna jump on you, it's just something hound. And he goes, so I've learned very quickly
that I gotta bring Sadie on every interview
because if Sadie loves you,
you're gonna do great with my clients.
But it hits because we all have dogs,
a lot of people have dogs they love.
And they're like, our dogs is the same,
if my dog doesn't trust you, I don't trust you.
So those stories that just allow you to say,
you know, I kind
of like this guy. Like we feel the same way. This is right. These are my people. They buy
from people they like and trust. And it doesn't mean they're going to buy today. It means
your top of mind when they do need you.
Yeah, that's right. It's about making having conversations instead of just constantly trying
to pitch somebody. You used an interesting word that I want to kind of back up to here where you talk about transactional, right? So,
you know, tracks relational, right? We want relational people, right? Don't let your marketing
be transactional, but you can't let your organization be transactional either. And I think
that's a big blind spot for a lot of companies that, you know, we want to create relationships,
we're customer-centric, all these sorts of things,
but then you step into their meetings
and these company meetings and the conversations are around,
and rightfully so, I understand,
they're around like marketing costs, demo rate,
labor costs, material costs, all these transactional items.
But Tommy, when do we talk about the happy customer?
When does that person get talked about
inside of our business?
How often do the leaders bring the story today about the happy customer? When does that person get talked about inside of our business? How often do the leaders bring the story today
of the happy customer?
Because if we really are a customer-centric business,
we can't just talk about the percentages
and the upset customer.
We've got to talk about the great things we do
in our organization and the difference we make
in people's homes.
It's really important.
Yeah, it's so good.
You know, and as a business leader,
you tend to look at conversion rate
and wanna figure out how do I get higher conversion rate
and how do I do this, how do I do this?
And now that I only think in systems,
and you know, one thing I can't do though
is have somebody, I always say, listen,
the hardest part is getting me to help you love yourself.
Yeah, and to think you deserve more but I used to I used to
like to hire people good with their hands. Now I hire people
that are good with people they know how to smile and tell a
great story and make great eye contact when they shake your
hand. They mean it you can feel it and their energy and their
passion and their purpose and when that when
I realized that everything started and still starting to change because you know garage
doors are not super complicated they're dangerous and you don't want to try them on your own
but you give me a couple months with a person I could teach them the basics but you can't
you know how long it takes take somebody to teach them to be kind and say yes sir thank
you so much. I really
appreciate this opportunity. What's your dog's name? And let me care if I pet him. And like
these little things and offering coffee on the way and knowing what they do for a living,
knowing their kids names, understand like how often you use the door. And I know there's
certain people that say your job is not to do all that stuff, but what if you genuinely care?
I think the people you talked about the the most premium hotels in these different places
I think they hire people that say Brian, how's your day going? And you feel they're not saying hey Brian, how's your day?
They're like, you know, how how's your day and they genuinely care. They're not walking by and say hey, how are you?
It's the people that they bring. Right. With authenticity. And, you know, again,
what makes the greatest manager? What makes the greatest leader? What makes the greatest
salesperson? What makes the greatest technician? To me, it's about love. It's about love. It's about
love for developing others, love for people, love for the numbers of the business,
love for the process, love for the industry.
And if we look at athletes, show me one top performing athlete that doesn't love what
they do.
You won't find them.
They start with love.
They love the sport that they play in and that makes them top.
It gives them the fuel for everything else.
And I think the same is true with people. I think people have to love what they do.
If they don't love what they do, you know what? They're probably not going to do it
very long or not very well. So now as an owner of a business, as a leader of the business,
how do we get people to fall in love with the process, to fall in love with the business,
to fall in love with the customer and all
those sorts of things.
Or the mission and the vision of the business to truly love, to have true purpose for what
they do.
This is more than just a paycheck.
It's something that is meaningful to them and that thing that makes them realize that
we're not just a company to make a decent profit.
We make a decent profit decently.
And when you can fuel that and get a team of people around you that think like that,
you got a heck of a business and good luck competing with that type of company.
Let's do this real quick. So, you know, everybody always asks me when you're in an interview,
how do you know? And, you? And you could check their past jobs.
I'd like to ask this question.
Brian, when I call your last boss later today,
what's he or she?
I actually know where you work.
I got their contact.
What are they going to tell me?
Not that if I were to call, I say, and you got to do that.
You got to call.
Yeah.
Because then they're like, well, they'll got to do that. You got to call. Yeah.
Because then they're like, well, you know, they'll probably tell you that, you know,
then it comes out.
But what do you, you know, I always think happy birthday with the interviewers too.
So Brian fought with me, happy birthday to you.
And they're like, what are we doing?
And then they start laughing and they're like, or they're like, I ain't doing that.
And that's kind of just a litmus test.
But in an interview, and I'm not the best interviewer,
I'm just curious, what are some of the things
that you do differently to really tell?
And sometimes you could have them try out,
but I'm just curious, how do you know if it's the right fit?
Yeah, yeah, a couple of things.
We look at the idea of hiring to Ether, E-T-H-E-R, right?
And Ether stands for ethical, trainable, hungry,
energetic, and reliable.
Those are the five characteristics we want from people.
How do we test for trainable?
So our sales model is very scripted.
And if somebody is not willing to learn the script, they're probably not going to make
it in the sales world.
They're certainly not going to make it in our organization.
So instead of trying to find out two weeks from now
after training if they're memorizing a script,
what we would do is we would send them a two sentence
script before the interview that they had to come in
and they had to recite this two sentence script
on the interview.
Now, we didn't care if they messed it up,
we didn't look for perfection, but were they willing
to memorize a two sentence script?
Because if they weren't willing to memorize
a two sentence script, there's no way they're going to try to memorize the entire sales
model. So we just kind of demon look at them. The other thing we would we like to do is
I think it's important to try to give people the permission to show their true self. Okay,
to show their true self. And it's an interesting interview question by framing it this way. Well, you
know, Tommy, look, we've all had those crazy customers, you know, we've all had those really
insane customers that drove us crazy. You know, we got to give them people permission
to reveal who they truly are in the most challenging situations, because when we can do that, we
kind of know what we're looking at here.
Yeah, you know, another thing that Dave Ramsey does, and I love this stuff, I've eaten this
up, is Dave Ramsey says, listen, it's, and what you used to do with your wife is when
you take them out to dinner, he said, I like to see how they interact with the waiter.
So I'll have the waiter screw up their order.
But I also like to see how they treat their significant other.
Do they open the door?
Because if there's adversity at home, and you can just see it, the look on their order, but I also like to see how they treat their significant others. Do they open the door? Because if there's adversity at home and you can just see it, the look on their face,
the way they treat each other, if there's all this animosity at home, it's hard to just turn
a blind eye to that when you come into work. And so it's a great litmus test. And I don't think we,
sometimes I used to say, man man there was a while where if you
could fog a mirror you were hired because I needed people so bad and the
more time we take and we try we were not a company that trains yeah training is
the company and we don't stop it's not something we do it's something we are
yeah and it's forever it's forever going for it's forever I've got a friend of mine that what he does it's really it's really. It's forever going for it's forever. I've got a friend of mine
that what he does, it's really, it's really brilliant. I wish I could call it my own.
When he when he's doing an interview for somebody, he doesn't enter the interview room right
away. Like he comes in and sees how these people talk to the person that greets them.
And then they sit in this, this center area and they're waiting for their interview to
happen. And somebody comes into that room room sweeping the floor, sweeping the floor, cleaning up and they watch to see does
this person talk to that person? Do they say, hi, how you doing? What's your name? Blah,
blah, blah, blah. Just those general conversations. They treat that person as well as they would
anybody else or do they, or do they think less of them? And I think that's kind of cool
because right. How do people, what is their true authentic
self and how can you find that out quickly, right?
What do you think about appearances like, do you have your pants pulled up?
Do you, you know, simple little things, your hair is somewhat groomed.
I mean, if you have a beard, it's put together.
Yeah.
Yeah.
You know, is your shirt tucked in?
I mean, do you
that look and I've got guys that don't do that are completely amazing.
But but I think it's a harder thing to overcome if you're tatted up
from face down. But but, you know, I'm just curious your thought on
looking at somebody right and judging them a little bit. Is there certain characteristics you look for based on that?
I think it's it's I think it's role specific.
So if somebody is coming in to be a door knocker, and it tends to have a...
If you got a pulse, come on, you're hired, kind of.
But look, if somebody's coming in for a sales position, right, and they don't have a notepad
with them or something where they're asking questions and making notes, that's probably
not the salesperson we want to hire because if they're not, even if they're saying, boy,
this guy Brian is really a big jerk, I can't wait to get out of this, but I don't care
what they're writing down, but if they're not making some notes along the way, they're
probably not, that's a big strike against them because if we want them to listen and
ask questions, so I think those sort of things matter a lot, you know?
And how we show up in general does matter.
I mean, whether we like it or not, it matters.
I, you know, I tell people, I tell all my sales reps,
bring in a notebook and write things down.
I'm like, do you know how many people I've met
that are number one, my elders, number two became mentors?
And they're like, you're the only one that I've sat with in the last year that brought a notebook
and actually wrote stuff down. And they see me writing and they're like, what are you writing?
And I show them and they're like, wow. And I'm like, I'm not writing this. I'm actually getting
ready to implement it. And when I implement it, I'm going to call you and then I'd implement it.
And I give them all the credit. And whenever I'm on a stage or a podcast, I give them the credit.
And they go, I'm going to go ahead and put everything I got into you kid. And this is years and years.
So I think that's absolutely at the nail on the head. I want to go into the five pillars of
leadership because I think this is amazing. And when I go through these things, I mean,
I'm just so impressed by you. I mean, the more time I spend with you, the more I like love.
But let's just walk through the five communication and vision.
Or I'll let you go through them.
Yeah.
Well, the first pillar is the idea that belief is transferable.
And look, the book, the book is called Beyond the Hammer.
And I even just got a shirt on it.
I, you know how many podcasts I've done?
I'm like, why don't I have a frickin shirt that says Beyond the Hammer? I'm supposed to be a marketing guy. I don't know my own logo on my shirt. So I just got a shirt on it. I, you know how many podcasts I've done? I'm like, why don't I have a fricking shirt that says beyond the hammer?
I'm supposed to be a marketing guy.
I don't know my own logo on my shirt.
So I just got it.
You're the first one that I'm wearing it for.
So thank you.
Anyway, look, if you want to build a business, you have to grow people.
And, and if you want to grow people, you have to get people to
believe they can accomplish it.
And that's where the very first pillar of the book is the idea
that belief is transferable.
When you believe in somebody and you communicate that properly, they start to believe in themselves.
They're doing things they've never done before. We're all doing stuff we've never done before. So
that way, that's why that was the first pillar. It's a really crucial one to set the stage for
a limitless mindset so that people can truly grow. So, and it's really powerful when you practice it
and you tell people why you believe in them.
And there's all kinds of ways to practice it too.
When I go into a Subway sandwich place,
I can say, they make my sandwich,
and I can say thank you.
And it's like I never existed in their life
because everybody says that.
But if I stop just for a moment and I say oh my gosh thank you so much for
making my sandwich you are an absolute artist at what you do. I'm totally gonna
enjoy every bite of this thing. You are fantastic and they're like glowing
smiles oh my gosh thank you. You know adding substance to to why we
appreciate people or why we believe in them goes a really, really long way in life.
And it's powerful indeed.
So good.
And then alignment.
Yeah, so look, if we want an aligned team,
if you want your team to be aligned,
you say, what do you align them around?
And to me, the culture, the second pillar is the idea
that leadership culture through purpose and direction. Purpose and direction being what is your mission? Why
do you guys exist? What are you trying to be? What do you aspire to become three, four,
five years from now as an organization? And more importantly, what behaviors do you need
from the team in order to reach your aspirational goal? How do I want you to show up? How do
people have to behave around here? keeping a positive attitude,
having a learning mindset, you know, being great
communicators, all of these things are so important.
Because now when you're also having coaching sessions with
people, look, we can talk all day long about the numbers of
the business and the KPIs and the conversions. But how are
their individual behaviors aligning to the team vision
statement? Because that's what's going to
really, really accelerate growth. And then the Yeah, and
then the third pillar is what happens is, as our leadership
and circle of influence grows, so does our echo, and people
will determine what type of day they're going to have based on the type of day that the leader is having.
If the leader is stressed out, people are gonna be stressed out, I promise you. The whole team is gonna be stressed out. And so
pillar number three is the idea that leaders are aware of the echo of their voice. And I'm sorry, I understand that, you
know, it's all about, you know, being transparent and all that kind of stuff. Look, my belief as a leader,
you don't get to have a bad day. Leaders don't get to have bad days. Look, if you're having a bad
day, I mean, you can have a bad day, just don't dump on your team. Call me, call Tommy, dump on
us. You can dump on us all day long. But in front of your team, you don't get to have a bad day
because you're going to make everybody else have a bad day. And
is that really the type of culture, the type of day you want to have in your business,
the type of desired outcome? So that's the it's so good. Keep going. Sure. Pillar four
leaders as you know, model their business as a training organization. Tommy, as long
as I've been in this business has been a labor shortage. Guess what? Next year there's gonna be a labor shortage. Do you
want to be a victim of circumstance or do you want to be able to build people?
And if you want to be a training organization then what does it mean to do
that? And the fifth pillar, we were chatting about it just a moment ago
earlier, is that managers need a checklist. They need to understand what
it means to lead a team. What are the 10 practices of top performing managers and and how can they measure themselves to it?
So it's a great book by the way. I have to share a story with you real quickly about the book Beyond the Hammer
Yes, it's available on Amazon. The audiobook if you've never listened to it is
Crazy good. Okay, because what I did is the first half of the book as you know is a business parable, right?
And then the second half is about strategy.
I love James Patterson books
and all these really cool audio books.
And the most famous narrator of all time
is this guy named Eduardo Ballerini.
He used to be an actor on The Sopranos.
And he's really a cool narrator.
I had him read the parable section
and he just like killed it,
bringing all these characters to life.
So if you like a good audio book, I promise you it's a it's a it's a really fun listen.
Anyway. Oh, it's so good. I you know, we talked about a lot of stuff and I got to tell you,
yeah, I always say if I don't follow any of my notes, it was a good podcast and I've got
more notes on this. And I've got so many more questions. But there's probably a lot of things
I didn't ask you. So like if you were gonna do a keynote,
maybe there's some things you'd include
that I didn't ask you.
And we got enough time that if you wanna cover
a couple more subjects, but I wanna make sure
this is just so good and I'm sure people are dying
for more or so.
What's some other things that I should have asked?
Yeah, I mean, look, I think that,
look, building a business is a fantastic time.
It's a great ride, right?
And we have to understand that not just for ourselves,
but also for the people on our team,
you know, what we practice, we become excellent at, right?
I can't play golf to save my life
because I never practice it.
But if I practiced it all the time,
I'd probably be pretty good at it.
If we practice being negative,
we could find a way to be negative
in the most positive situations.
We probably know people like that,
people that are just addicted to negativity, right?
But on the same hand, if we practice being grateful,
if we practice gratitude and optimism,
we can be grateful and optimistic,
even in the most challenging situations,
because I promise that in our darkest moment,
there's still something to be grateful for.
And if we can focus on that and focused on the solution,
I think we're all better off because of it.
And I think the second thing is that,
when you go all in on developing people,
and I mean like all in on it,
and just really believe that people are limitless
and we have an opportunity to really change somebody's life,
I think you'll realize like I realized
that the two most important days of your life
are the day that you're born
and the day you finally figure out why.
I love that. Yeah. Yeah, it's so good. I want you to tell one more story real quick because
everybody's asking me, how do I green-filled? And I think you figured out some powerful ways
to go into a new market that no one's ever heard of you. And, you know, there's all kinds of stuff to do for direct response and deals and coupons.
But how do you make a splash in the community?
Yeah, yeah.
Well, okay.
So I've done it wrong and I've done it right, right?
The first place I opened up was a disaster, but I learned a lot from it.
And that was many, many, many years ago.
Look, I like when I first if I'm opening up a new market first of all is it the right market? Can I put up some
some can I put up some ads for for for talent before I even move into the
market to see who's applying? Can I get anybody decent even applying to the
business so that I know it's a new market? But once I go through all those
steps and deciding that is a market we want to open open up in the most
important thing to replicate I believe believe, is culture, right?
Because without the right culture,
they're not gonna follow the right systems and processes.
So now how do I get the community to know who we are?
I always believe that it's a good idea
to start with a press release.
You should always do a press release
when opening up a market that, hey, it's whatever,
Tungiland Home Improvements or a Jacuzzi Bathroom Model is moving to Arizona,
plans on adding 83 new jobs over the next 18 months.
So, and then it becomes talking about,
yeah, well, I believe Arizona is a great market
because we believe in the people there,
it's a great community.
And you tell your story in a press release
and the media, if it has to do with hiring,
adding people to your business, the media will cover that as a press release and the media, if it has to do with hiring, adding people to your business,
the media will cover that as a press release.
It also does some great things when it's on their site for back linking and such.
But then the next thing I like to do is I like to do a free project for somebody.
And look, I'm a big fan of doing free projects for veterans in communities, because it tells
the story of who we are as a company.
So if I decide to do a free project for somebody, once again, the media will come out, they'll cover it, they'll interview the person you're doing a project with, they'll interview you.
I've just gotten all this free press from the media, the trusted source of media,
and now recruitment, selling, all these things become a whole lot easier. I think
those are the two keys if you want to open up a new market. You can really make a splash
with a lot of free media too, so without a lot of money being spent.
All right, I got a few quick speed round questions to close us out. Number one,
we know the E-Myth and we know Napoleon Hill and Dale Carnegie.
We know the Bible's important. We've got a lot of great books, but what's a book that's out of the
ordinary that's really impacted you? How the mighty fall. So if you like good to great,
and you like built to last by Mr. Collins? How, oh Jim Collins, How the Mighty Fall is fantastic
because it tells you the five things
to watch out for in decline.
I think it's a great book.
You know, and one of them is about hubris
and that's always a problem.
I love that.
And if somebody wants to get ahold of you, Brian,
what's the best way to do so?
Yeah, my website, bryangotlieb.com, pop on by, say hi. You know, What's the best way to do so? Yeah, my website, briangotlieb.com, pop on by,
say hi, you know, that's a good way to do it.
I'm on Facebook too, you can catch me there too.
And usually catch me, I usually do a couple
of keynotes a month, so I'm all over the place.
Fantastic, and the last thing I ask is we talked
about a lot of things, I just, I'll give you
an opportunity to close us out.
And by the way, I can't thank you enough for taking the time. This is exceeded
my expectations, even though I know it was going to be great.
Yeah, I know, Tommy, first of all, I appreciate you. I appreciate you. I appreciate the you
are so plugged in to this industry in a massive way. And I know that you're that you come
from a good place
where you really wanna help these businesses survive,
you know, and thrive, more than survive, thrive.
And I love that, I love that.
And if I could be any part of that,
you know, this is why I'm happy to do it.
But look, I think ultimately that,
I'd leave everybody with the concept that,
you know, it's really easy for imposter syndrome
to beat us up in life, right? Like we don't know, we're doing things we've never done
before. When I ran a $30 million company, I never ran a $30 million company before,
you know, and the same thing when it was $150 million. I think the most important thing people
should do is keep watching podcasts like this, go to conferences, join mastermind groups. But
at the end of the day, learn and then execute. Go back and execute because that's ultimately
what's going to allow you to win. So, you know, I wish everybody always the best. It's
such a great industry. So I appreciate your time, my friend.
Thank you. I really appreciate it.
Hey there. Thanks for tuning into the podcast today. Before I let you go, I want to let
everybody know that Elevate is out and ready to buy.
I can share with you how I attracted a winning team
of over 700 employees in over 20 states.
The insights in this book are powerful
and can be applied to any business or organization.
It's a real game changer for anyone looking to build
and develop a high performing team
like over here at A1 Garage Door Service.
So if you wanna learn the secrets
that help me transfer my team from stealing
the toilet paper
to a group of 700 plus employees
rowing in the same direction,
head over to elevateandwin.com forward slash podcast
and grab a copy of the book.
Thanks again for listening
and we'll catch up with you next time on the podcast.