The Mindset Mentor - How to Build the Business of Your Dreams
Episode Date: April 1, 2021In this episode, I am interviewed by my friend Justin Donald on how I have built my business around the lifestyle that I have always wanted. If you are a business owner or want to start a business, th...is is an important episode for you! Get motivational texts from me here: https://my.community.com/robdial Want to learn more about Mindset Mentor+? For nearly nine years, the Mindset Mentor Podcast has guided you through life's ups and downs. Now, you can dive even deeper with Mindset Mentor Plus. Turn every podcast lesson into real-world results with detailed worksheets, journaling prompts, and a supportive community of like-minded people. Enjoy monthly live Q&A sessions with me, and all this for less than a dollar a day. If you’re committed to real, lasting change, this is for you.Join here 👉 www.mindsetmentor.com My first book that I’ve ever written is now available. It’s called LEVEL UP and It’s a step-by-step guide to go from where you are now, to where you want to be as fast as possible.📚If you want to order yours today, you can just head over to robdial.com/bookHere are some useful links for you… If you want access to a multitude of life advice, self development tips, and exclusive content daily that will help you improve your life, then you can follow me around the web at these links here:Instagram TikTokFacebookYoutube
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to today's episode of the Mindset Mentor podcast. I'm your host, Rob Dial. If you have not
yet done so, hit that subscribe button so that you never miss another podcast episode. And today
is Thursday, which means it is the business edition of the Mindset Mentor. And I have a
special, special thing for you today. I was actually
interviewed by my good friend, Justin Donald on his podcast called the Lifestyle Investor Podcast.
And he interviewed me about how I built my business around the lifestyle that I wanted.
And since this is a business edition, I figured this would be really good to share with you guys.
We talk about how I built my Amazon business originally, how I built my coaching business and
what we're currently doing right now, how I built my business so that I could travel,
and then also how to set up a business based on the knowledge that's already inside of your head.
We go really in-depth about lifestyle, about business, and about how to build the business
that you truly want to if that's something that you're interested in. So I think you're really
going to love this episode. And in this, I actually break down a little bit about how I teach coaches. And if you want to learn more
about that, you can email my business partner, Dean, who's normally on the Thursday episodes,
dean at robdial.com to see if we're right for you and if you're right for us. But without further
ado, let's dive into this episode. Let's jump in. So let's kind of take this back a ways. How did you get to, and if you
can share kind of what you're doing today so that my audience and my viewers can understand
your life. You have built an incredible life and I'm excited to learn more about it and
how you got there.
Yeah. So I originally met you or knew of you through Cutco. So I sold Cutco.
I started in 2016 when I was 19 years old.
I hired a mentor when I was 19.
And that was our mutual friend, Hal Elrod.
And I paid him 500 bucks a month to be my one-on-one coach.
And it was him and his best friend, John Berghoff.
So that was a pretty damn good deal knowing both of them now and even knowing them then.
And so I hired both of them to be my coach, life coach,
sales coach, all of that stuff. And I moved up through the ranks of Cutco. I was the pilot sales
manager there. So I ran the office in Tampa. After I ran the office in Tampa, I went and moved down
and we won two silver cups when I was there. So we were the number one office in the United States
there and then moved to Fort Lauderdale and opened my own office.
And I got kind of burnt out as a lot of people do. I was obsessed with being the best. And so once I hit number one in the region, I was like, okay, I feel like I've done what I want to do.
And I just ended up leaving. And so I left the company and I went into just normal traditional
sales, corporate sales. So I went from being my own boss, running my own office to then working
for someone else for five years. And I was like, this sucks. Like it literally, it's terrible to go from being your own boss to working for someone else because you just, for me, it was like, it was just soul sucking to do it. And so as I was working at these places here in Austin, I was, I was in Tampa for a little while. I quit that job after a year and a half. I went in backpack Europe for three months by myself and then immediately moved here and had
never been here, knew only one person here and moved here, fell in love with it. Uh, started
another, I was with another business, two other businesses when I was here and I was like, I can't
do this anymore. And so I started researching how to make money online and all these different ways.
And so first thing I did was start an Amazon business because I felt like that was a pretty
easy way to just start a business. And, um, and I was in Jason's deli with my girlfriend. And I still remember the moment
where I was like, I don't know if it was in my head where I was like, everybody seems miserable
here. Or if it was actually that way, we're just, there were people that were just screaming at
their kids and they were severely overweight and they looked depressed. And it was like this,
this moment when I turned to Lauren and I was like, I need, I'm going to start a podcast. And she's like, all right. Like
podcasts weren't a thing six years ago. Like they were not what they are now. Like now it's like,
everybody has a podcast, but then it was like, nobody really listened to podcasts like they did.
And I didn't even know how to listen to them. And so I was like, I'm gonna start a podcast.
And she's like, why? And I was like, well, I feel like, I feel like I have so much information that I can give people. Cause at that point I was still
in a personal moment, still reading, still growing, still going to conferences, still learning.
And I felt like I had knowledge that I was obligated to teach to other people
as far as like how I improved my life from where I came from. Um, and you know, backstory on me is,
you know, I had an alcoholic father who passed
away when I was 15 and had to deal with all of that and the stuff that comes with it.
So I felt like coming from where I came from, I was able to build a pretty good life at
that point and had a great mindset.
And I was like, I think I could teach this to people.
So, uh, I started it in August of 2015.
So it's been almost six years.
I've had the podcast now, um, 900 episodes.
I think we're about to eclipse 900 episodes.
So it's three times a week.
Actually, it's four times a week.
It's about to go to five times a week.
So literally constant creation is what I'm trying to do.
And yeah, and it's grown.
And then, you know, grew, started making videos on Facebook
because I wanted to get the message out there more.
Because when I first started podcasting, nobody knew what it was.
And so when I was like, people like, what do you do?
I was like, I run a coaching business and I run a podcast. It was like, what is a podcast and how do I listen to them? That was usually what
people said. I was like, I need to go where everybody is. And at that point in time,
everybody was on Facebook and Facebook kind of dwindled down. I think Instagram is more of the
big thing now. And so I was like, I need to figure out how to get basically a podcast and the
messages that I'm giving and how I can take that and put it into a video form and make that go viral.
So then I started making viral videos and got obsessed with it.
And I mean, we're probably at about like 1.5 billion views with a B, which is pretty cool on that.
And so from there, I was able to grow a following.
We have about 2.5 million people, 2.7 million people that follow me on Facebook. And then from there was able to start transferring people who followed me to find
out my podcasts exist. So I basically started the podcast, grew the following on Facebook and
Instagram, and then started bringing Facebook and Instagram people to my podcasts for my podcast to
grow. And so, um, so it was like, you know, we did a million downloads the first year,
which is, which is big. But, um, now at this point we're, we're this month, we're going to
pass 4 million for the first time downloads this month. So it was, it took four years to get to 50
million down five years to get to 50 million downloads. And within the next 12 months,
we should do another 50 million downloads. I'm thinking that's incredible. And it's fun
hearing the story because when you started making your
videos these viral videos I didn't even know you had a podcast then and that's
probably because podcasts weren't you know as big and people didn't listen to
them the same way that they did and access to the podcast you know there's a
little bit of a hurdle mm-hmm and so it's neat hearing the backstory of all
that you had going on behind the scenes,
but you built out another channel to create the following to actually pull people into your
podcast world. Yeah, a hundred percent. So I was like, at that point in time, I didn't want to
spend any money into it because I didn't know if it was going to work. So I was like, how can I get
people to come and listen? My podcast called the mindset mentor. How can I get people to listen to
the mindset mentor that don't know who it is in podcasting is not really easy to be found. Like it's, there's,
especially now there's 1.7 million down 1.7 million podcasts. If you go into iTunes and
try to search for it. And I was like, I don't know how people are going to find me. And I was
like, the only way to be found there's, I mean, there's, there's just so much value in having a
following, right? Whatever you want to do. So like I had the Amazon business and then, you know,
I was like, I'm not passionate about this. I want to do coaching. Um, and so I've
been doing coaching cause we did that all throughout Cutco. That's all we did was coach
people all day long. It was, that was our job. And so it was an easy transition for me. I was
like, Oh, I can definitely do this. And so started the coaching business. Um, and then every time
I've decided to do something different, a different course, um, we have a few different
courses that we have now. I could easily just promote it to my following and also to my podcast.
So all of everything I've built, the company I've built, everything, there's been no Facebook ads.
I never bought followers on Facebook or Instagram or any of that stuff. I was just able to figure
out with human psychology what people like and then be able to create content that they would
like. So therefore they want to follow me. And then when they follow me, it's about making them aware of,
you know, my podcast, they can start listening to it that way. Or if they want to be able to
buy one of my products down the road, they can buy my products down the road, because they've
been following me for a while. Very cool. Yeah. Now, tell me a little bit about the Amazon
business. So is this one that you just decided to close the doors on? Did you sell it? What did you
end up doing with that business?
And what was it?
So we were selling foam rollers and we were crushing it.
So we were literally, we sold on our first 30 days,
we sold a thousand foam rollers and we ran out like fast.
And I was like, oh my God, we got to get more from China.
So we got them all made.
We had them all.
I mean, these are like really,
like we went through tons and tons and tons of different ones
to find the one that was like the highest quality
because I didn't want to just have crappy products. So then we had
to have it shipped back over and so we were selling a lot. And then I realized that I was putting a
lot of time into my coaching business and I was putting a lot of time into my Amazon business.
And I was looking at both of them and I had this moment where I was literally sitting in Starbucks
and I was working on this stuff for Amazon and getting people to follow and learn about that
product. And I had this moment where I was like, okay, I don't think both of these are going to
win. You know, like they could both win depends on which one I want to go for, but they're not
going to, they're not going to win unless I put a hundred percent into one of them. Like I can't
put 50, 50, 70, 30, none of that stuff. And so I was like, if I fast forward 10 years from today,
and this is probably 2016, beginning of 2016. If I fast forward 10 years from today, and this is probably 2016, beginning of 2016. If I fast forward 10
years from today, do I want to be known as the Amazon guy or do I want to be known as the guy
who's helping people? And I was like, I just want to be known as the guy who's helping people.
And, um, it's, it's interesting because like, I never would have thought that the business would
be where it is now. Um, I had a feeling, but I thought it would have taken 10 years to get to the point that it is.
But the first year, the business, we did about $85,000. Then it grew to a hundred,
a couple hundred. And now we're on track to probably about 5 million this year.
But I don't think it ever would have gotten anywhere near that if I wouldn't have let go of Amazon business. So we literally just shut the doors down. We're like, when we, when we run out of this run of products, we're just going to be done with it. My business
partner, Dean, who is now my, and that product is now my business partner here. Um, and what I do
now, but at that point in time, he was like, yeah, I want to go into real estate. So he started
getting really hardcore into real estate and it was best for both of us to just let it go.
And yeah, it was it. We just let it go. Busy Buddha was the name of the company.
Wow. That's so cool. And it's neat to have a working business that you could keep doing it,
but it wasn't about the money. It was about something else. And I think that that in itself
is a cool story because I teach and coach people the same way on it not being about the money,
that once money is taken care of,
then you it's so easy to focus on what it is that either a you have gifts in or be that you're most
passionate about or see, likely both combined. Yeah. And so it's neat to see that you can make
that decision, even in the face of some income that you're just going to shut the doors and then
pursue what it was that you're best equipped to do and what you enjoy most.
Yeah. The thing that people don't realize whenever they tried to grow a business is
you can struggle your way to success. I've done it before. And I know a lot of people who have
done it. Like you can struggle your way to success and force yourself. Like when I had my Cutco
business, I did struggle. Like I was working 110 hours a week. I was putting everything I could
into it and I would be considered a success in that business, right?
But I started falling out of love
with all of the aspects of running the office
and doing the trainings and doing the interviews and stuff.
But when I left, the thing that stuck with me
was like, I love teaching people.
And I feel like, without tuning my own horn,
I feel like I'm really, really good at teaching people.
And what a lot of people- By the way, I can vouch for the fact that you're really good at teaching and coaching
people. So you don't have to worry about any tooting of a horn. You're good there.
Yeah. And what people tell me is like, I'm good at taking really complex things and making them
easy to understand. And I feel like I can do that too. And so for me, I was like, when I left and
I was in Jason's deli, I was like, I just miss teaching people. Like that was what it was for me is I just, I love getting on stage, all of that.
I love content creation. I love those things. So with me, you know, the, the way to become
successful is hard work. And you can either hate your, your life as you're doing it and push
yourself and push yourself. And you can make, there's people that do it all the time, make
millions and billions of dollars, but they hate what they do. They're not a fan of it, whatever it is, or you're going to, you can work really
hard by doing something that you love, but as cliches are cliches because they're true.
When you literally do something that you love, you don't feel like you're working, right? So they say
when you do something that you love, you'll never work another day in your life. Like when I say I
make three podcast episodes, actually now it's four and it's about to be five.
Like for me, it doesn't feel like work.
Like I love doing this.
I love setting up.
I love recording. I love getting everything together in the aspect of, you know, what the shots look like
and what the sound looks like and putting all of it together.
Like I love the aspect of just creating.
And I think that everybody has a creator inside of them in some sort of way, whether it's
through art, whether it's through, you know of way, whether it's through art, whether it's through music, whether it's through writing, whether it's
through... We're getting an interior designer that's doing this house. That's art. They have
a cool job. And so they love what they do, the interior designers of this house.
And I think that everybody should find something that they love to do because if you
do something that you love, it doesn't feel like you're working. It literally just feels feels like an extension of you, right? My, my real good friend was over here.
I was just telling you about it. He's here yesterday and he's obsessed with wine. He's
a level two sommelier. He's going to level three and he's going to go to level four
and he's obsessed with wine. And I was like, this should be your business. Like,
and the reason why is because he reads books about wine and he handed it to me one time and
he's like, look at what region this is from. And I was like, I don't actually care. Like this is, this doesn't interest me at
all, but it tastes really good. Right. That's the only thing that I really care about, but he is so
into it. I'm like, this is perfect because you're going to get really good at this. Your knowledge
is going to surpass 99.9% of people on the earth. And when you get to that, you become an authority
in that space and you will work really hard to build whatever business that you want to around that. And it won't feel
like work because you're doing something around wine, which is what he loves. Minus personal
development, human interaction. And I just love people and trying to figure them out.
And so for anyone that's out there, it's like, if you don't know what you... I always say this in
every single podcast where I talk about passion and purpose, a lot of people listening are like, I don't know what it is. That's my passion or my purpose
in life. Like that is a big issue with a lot of people. And I always say, it's completely cool
not to know what your purpose is, but it's not okay to not be in constant search for your purpose
every single day. So if someone's listening and they don't know their purpose, they don't know
what lights them up. Well, then their freaking job every day should be if they go to a nine to five, that can be your side gig. Your job should be, I need to find what
it is that I love to do in this world. Because if you decide to do that, you come alive. And then
somehow lots of people are like, you know what? I'm going to start a business on the side of this.
I'm going to start this little side business. I have friends that started a business around a game
and he happens to know a lot about marketing, growing followings and stuff, but
he started a business around this game called Warhammer 40,000. Have you ever heard of it?
No. Oh my God. It's the weird, it's, I don't want to say it's weird. Cause I don't want to
offend anybody, but it's the craziest thing. It's literally a board game. That's like
20 feet by 20 feet. It's huge. And the pieces are like, you know, massive, right? And they,
the games can last like two to four to six hours. And so he literally was like, you know, massive, right? And they, the games can last like two to four to
six hours. And so he literally was like, you know what, I'm going to build a following and I'm going
to build like, I want to my, I want to be like, he just loves games. And so he literally took
cameras and just started live streaming for hours on YouTube. And he didn't get this massive
following, but the people who are hardcore in it became hardcore fans of his. And then the first
year he did like $150,000. That's not like not a lot of money, you know, like that's, that's what three times more
than the average household in America makes on average. Right. So it's like people, but it's
only because he's passionate about it. He's going to do it anyways. I'm going to learn anyways about
personal development and you know, the human brain, all that stuff. My friend's going to learn
about wine anyways. You might as well take that knowledge, teach to people who are also interested in those things and start to build a
following. And if you build a following, eventually you can figure out how to make a business out of
it. Totally. And I couldn't agree with you more because I've done the same thing in the investment
world. And I would call what I do both lifestyle and investing, because to me, I think it's
important to figure out how you can stop being a slave to the money that you make and to the business that you have and to measuring the amount of income that you earn based
on the equation of time. And so to me, I think figuring out that mystery and that puzzle to
have assets that produce income so that you don't have to have your time produce income,
meaning you can have your time produce whatever you want, your passions that don't have to have your time produce income, meaning you can have your time produce whatever you want, your passions that don't have to make you money. They can make you money. But what's
the thing that you do all the time? Right. And that's what it was when I took a year off and my
family traveled the world and we just had the most fun. I found that the two things that I constantly
did is I looked at investment deals and I coached my friends to financial freedom. And so with that
same Cutco background, you know, I always have loved coaching people. And so what you're saying
is spot on. And that's how the whole lifestyle investor brand became what it is. It's because
this is what I was doing anyway. And my friends wanted to kind of jump on and see what we were
doing and see if they could join in on some of the deals. And so I love, there are a couple of things.
Number one, I love that you have moments in your life that trigger,
like you just remember I was in this Starbucks or I was in this, you know, Jason's Deli.
And it's, I mean, you have these defining moments that just are, you know, hard to forget.
And then you've been able to develop this business,
coach other people into developing their businesses, which is incredible. And you're
doing a lot of work all over the globe. This isn't just here in Austin, where we live. I mean,
you've got followers in virtually every country. I mean, you've got a very, you know, tons of people
here in the US, but very international, uh, following, which is cool.
And then, uh, you're, you're helping these individuals kind of do the thing that you're
already doing. Right. So I'm curious, big picture, what, what does this look like in five to 10
years or more? I actually am not attached to it anyway. That's the crazy thing about it. So
it's funny because I am like the goal person, right? I've always been really big on goals.
And so when I sit down with my goals, I'm like, my main goal is just how can I create better
content? Like, so my goal for this year is, is literally how can I just give more, whether that's
give more time, give more money, donate, create more content, whatever I can do to give more.
Cause the thing that I found is that the more that you give, the more that you get, I'm like,
I'm just, you get to a point where it's like, all of this is, I feel like life is just a game, right? And for some people,
they kind of suffer and struggle through it because they don't release themselves from the
game, I guess you could say, and see it as it is. And so for me, it's like, you know, I have things
that are happening at all times. So like, it's not like, I'm just like, oh, nothing's going on.
Like I'm in the middle of writing a book right now. We're in the middle of pitching it. Uh, we're supposed to be pitching it this week to go, um, to actual traditional
publishers. So writing a book right now, and then that's going to be coming out next year.
And, uh, then for us, it's like growing, growing our mastermind is another big goal.
But for me, it's like, I have this vision and I don't know why I
always have it, but it's been popping up for a while now. And I've been telling this to people
and it seems to be something that's kind of starting to come true is in 2026, I'll be on
stage with in front of 5,000 people. I don't know who's 5,000 people. They're going to be them. I
have the feeling that they're going to be mine. Um, but it's just not 2026 yet. Like I just have
to keep doing what I'm doing now. And it's eventually going to be that way. Right. Um, but it's just not 2026 yet. Like I just have to keep doing what I'm doing now. And it's
eventually going to be that way. Right. Um, people are always like, Oh, do you want to be as big as
Tony Robbins? I'm like, uh, I don't want to have to have security everywhere. I want to go. Like,
I don't, I don't want it to be that way, but I, I feel I have no need or ego want to get to that
level. Um, but I have the feeling it will probably get to that level, but I'm not doing it
out of a place of lack or no self-worth or any of those types of things. I'm just trying to provide
value as much as I can. You know, there's a lot of pain in the world that people have that they
go through. And pain is inevitable. Like you can't go through this world without getting some sort of
scars, but suffering is optional. And there's a lot of people that have gone through pain, traumas, things in their past, and they're still suffering from it instead of
figuring out how to become released from it and start to create the life that they want.
So for me, it's like, I feel like a lot of the people that I've taught, a lot of the things that
I've, you know, people that I've helped have relieved them from suffering. So I feel like
I've kind of got like, like a tool, right? And I'm like, this tool helps so many people. Why
would I not try to give this tool to as many people, you know? And for me, it's like, it's there, there
aren't any real goals, like of where I need to be. It's just, how can I continue to wake up and love
what I'm doing? And creating is what I love to do. Like I happen to be a creator that does all
of these things. Like, so, you know,
Chris will tell you, Chris is behind camera. Like there was a, I sent her videos and I'm like,
oh shit, do you see how this is shot? Like we should try this. This would be something cool
to do. Like I should have another idea for you, Chris. Then we have some more ideas. I have more
ideas of things I want to do. Like I want to create videos of just giving to people and just,
just not because I want people like, oh my God, look at this guy is giving and stuff like that. Because I want people to be like, you know what? I should buy the coffee behind me
for someone at Starbucks. And to have those types of videos go viral, we'll have people go, you know
what? Maybe I should do something nice for someone else. Maybe, maybe this worldview would be better.
Maybe people would feel less divided, um, the left or the right or color of their skin or gender of
all these things that we're, we're being divided in different ways. And just be like, Hey, I can just love everybody no matter what they believe in, no matter what their
opinion is, no matter what they look like, no matter what they, how they were raised, any of
that stuff. And so for me, it's like, I only see myself as a person that's create creates content
to help people remove them from suffering, but also to make them feel better about what is they're
doing and see if maybe they can help somebody else. Like the way I am to every single podcast,
900 of them is make it your mission, make somebody else's day better. That's else. Like the way I am to every single podcast, 900 of them
is make it your mission, make somebody else's day better. That's it. That's all I want to do.
And if I can keep preaching that to other people, I think the world will start to become a better
place where it's going to be in five years. I don't know, but it's gonna be pretty damn big.
That's all I know from, from where it was five years ago to where it is now. And if I keep,
just keep going on the trajectory that it is, um, I think there'll be a couple more books,
there'll be some big old conferences, be all that stuff.
Well, we're on the same page on that. And I love hearing you speak about that. And,
you know, how can we make the world a better place using our gifts? How can we make the world
a better place? Really kind of engaging with people from all walks of life. I think that
that's incredible. By the way, side note, I've got some great contacts for you in the book world. So book launch, editing team, you know, the whole nine yards.
Just I was so impressed with my team. And we've just had great success with the Lifestyle Investor
book, as you probably already know. So just let me know who you want. And I'm happy to connect you.
Yeah, you crushed it for having having, you know, not gone into this world and then go into
Wall Street Journal bestseller.
Like that's a pretty damn big deal.
It's kind of crazy because this is not my world, right?
Like I don't have this huge following like a lot of people that are on my podcast like
you.
And I, you know, have not spent a lot of time in this, you know,
influencer space. And so it was very rewarding to see how my network and community really showed up
to support the book and to support the message and just the good that has come from it from a
charitable standpoint. It's amazing. I love that. Well, thank you. I appreciate that. And obviously
you've been a lot of support in, you know, of, of that and my online, you know, presence. So thank you for
watching you take a year off because, you know, I was like, I just love Justin because literally
you're like, I'm just going to go learn this year. And you just went to every conference,
even if it made no sense because of the fact that you were just like, I want to learn and see if
maybe I can meet people or do things and come aware of like what you did in that year is the same thing. I think
everybody should do if they're in that situation where they don't know their passion. Right now,
obviously they might not be able to take a year off, but most conferences happen over the weekend.
Like if you work a job, you could take two weeks of PTO. Sure. Then you could travel somewhere or
you could be like, listen, I could use this year to completely free myself from the rat race.
Right. And do what you did, which is like, all right, you know, there's this conference is Friday, Saturday, Sunday. Like you went to, you know, traffic and conversions, which is like
a marketing one. You met people out there and it's like, you could have found something that
would have been like, oh my God, this is huge for me. If you didn't know what your passion was,
but the cool thing was eventually your passion popped up and you're like, oh, it is investing.
I am obsessed with investing. You know, the, the, the stuff that
you are reading and getting into was your passion. I wouldn't do it because I'm not passionate about
it. Like I need to figure out like I've got, it's a good thing. I have friends like you that can
then help me in this way. But then it's like, when you, you find out like, there's a thing that I
love to do. And if I was doing nothing else, like if money was no object,
or if I didn't have to do something, go into a job, what would we do with my time? And if for you,
I'm sure money feels like a game or it's like a fun game that you get to, you wake up and play a
game every single day in different ways that makes you feel good. And it's like, everybody's got
something that they love. And if somebody doesn't know what they love, I would love for everyone to
listen to your podcast and go, you know what? I do have 14 days of PTO this year, 20 days of PTO this year. I could go on a
vacation with my family for a week. And then that other week, you know what I could do? I could,
or two weeks, depending on how much time you have, I could go to this conference, this conference,
this conference, and then just see what comes up. Like the way that I learned to do what I do
and to get good was number one, going to all these conferences,
learning from all of these people and having my mind blown where I was like, people are doing,
making money doing that. Like I was just, I had my mind blown at so many different conferences.
And I was like, that's where I really was opened up to. There's literally a million ways to make
a million dollars. There's probably more. And you go to these conferences, you meet these people.
And then like a little bit of someone's talk goes, Oh my God, that connects to me. I could do that. And then you
meet somebody. And I met so many people, all these conferences, which is a huge benefit of it
that expanded my mindset. Like I know that if I had not gone to a funnel hacking live four years
ago and met a friend of mine named David, that I would not have my business be where it is now
because of the
fact that he had a business, the same business as me, very similar, but about three years ahead.
And so I was able to see what the next three years were looking like for me. And I was able
to look at a blueprint and ask him questions and go, Oh, I like what he does here. I would probably
do something different here. And I literally was able to see his business and mentally build mine
behind his. And then literally my business is where his
was three years ago. Like that's kind of the way that it works. And so it's cool to be in those
positions where you start to meet people and then they open your mindset, you know, and then I would
say last year, you know, I joined another mastermind I'm a part of. And, uh, there was a guy that I met
there was at that conference and he told me something he was doing, which was similar to mine.
And it opened up a new part of my business because I wasn't doing the same thing
he was. Like I took that little piece, like a puzzle piece, and I locked it in place. And I was
like, oh my God, my business probably got, you know, maybe doubled because of just knowing him.
But had I not put myself out there and gone to these different things, I don't think I'd be in
my business or anywhere near where it is. And I think it's the phrase like no man is an island. I would not have the business I wouldn't have the following I have
unless I connect with these people. And so I think that if people are out there and they don't know
what they want, you know, take the year like you took and then have a transition period. People
always like I can't quit my job right away. You don't have to quit your job right away. Like give
yourself if you don't love what you do, find out what it is and then give your go, okay, I'm gonna give myself a transition time, you know, two years by this date,
I'm going to be doing X, Y, Z, whatever that thing is. And so I think it's like, for me,
I teach coaches. And so a lot of the people that are coaches have never been coaches before ever.
And so, but they've, they're really passionate about something, right? They're passionate about
helping people in relationships. They're passionate about, you know, uh, personal development and
fitness and nutrition. And, uh, you know, we've got
everything, swimming, swim coaches, we've got divorce coaches, we've got death coaches for
grieving and going through those. And they're people who usually have a full-time job,
but they're super passionate about this one thing. And that's where they spend all of their time
doing when they're not at that job. And they're like, how can I make money helping people go
through these situations? Whether it's learning to swim, going through a divorce, getting the
relationship better, fitness, all of that. And if people can find that thing, that missing puzzle
piece and lock it in a place, and then just surround themselves, people who are in the similar
category, like life just gets way better. Totally. And the opportunities are endless.
These different businesses that people can come up with in the area that they're already good at or a new area that they just want to become good at.
It's truly endless.
And I just I love how you spoke about how anyone can do it, whether they have a job, they have their business, whatever situation they're in.
They can choose to go to conferences or to go to boot camps or go to whatever it is.
And I've gone to a ton, as I know you have. And I mean, that's the name of the game. And I joke with people all the time. When I
went to traffic and conversion summit the first time, I think there were 6,000 people there. And
I said, I'm probably 5,999 or 6,000 in like knowledge of online anything. I really felt like I was the most novice person in that room.
But there are two things you get.
You get the education from the people that are speaking
and you get the connections from the people you engage with.
And both are incredibly valuable.
And go figure, today I'm utilizing all these things that I learned about
when I didn't even have a business.
I didn't even think I was going to do what I'm doing today.
Yep.
It's fascinating.
So I just, I'm a huge believer in being a lifelong learner.
And to me, that's just always going to be a core principle of who I am and what my life's
going to be about.
And you said earlier that your goals have changed.
You used to be this goal setter and you'd want to accomplish these things.
You'd write them down. And I've been very disciplined about that in my life as well,
where every year I go through, uh, my, my wife and I do like our, our planning day. And we do
this with our daughter now as well, uh, on a separate day for her. And it was interesting
this year being one of the first years where I realized that I don't feel like I need to check
the boxes like I used to. But what I do feel like I need to do is become who it is that I want to be.
Like who do I, what virtues do I want to embody more? Where am I lacking? How can I surround
myself with people that have those? And how can I learn to be, you know, a more well-rounded person,
a more knowledgeable person. So that to me is very inspiring as well.
Hey, is there something that's interfering with your happiness or preventing you from
achieving your goals? Maybe it's anxiety or stress or worry or how much is going on in the world
right now? Well, BetterHelp will help you assess your needs and match you with your own licensed therapist.
And you can start communicating with them in under 48 hours.
It's not a crisis line.
It's not self-help.
It's professional counseling done securely online.
And there's a broad range of expertise available to you
depending on what you need.
And the service is available for clients worldwide.
You can log into your account anytime
and send messages to your counselor.
And BetterHelp is committed to facilitating great therapeutic matches so they make it free and easy to change counselors anytime if needed. It's more affordable than traditional
offline counseling and financial aid is available. BetterHelp wants to help you start living a
happier life today. So visit betterhelp.com slash dial. That's betterhelp.com slash dial to join over
1 million people who have taken charge of their mental health with help with an experienced
professional. And this is sponsored by BetterHelp. So the Mindset Mentor listeners get 10%
off their first month at betterhelp.com slash dial.
People always want to set goals around their business and around how much money,
but people rarely want to make characteristic goals of who they want to be as a character,
as a person. Right. And I always think it's really important to think, I think about death
all the time. And I think it's important to think about death. And the reason why is because the
more you think about it, the more you realize your time's going to end. But the reason why
it's important to think about as well, besides death, giving you the urgency to get things done
that you want to, and, you know, bring your potential to the world or just out to, out to your family, whatever it
is that you're going to be doing is what do you want people to say about you at your funeral?
Right? Like if you were to go, Oh, I don't know what people, I don't know what characters I want
to bring out of myself. And you're sitting there and you're like, who do I want to be? I want to
be nice. I want to be giving, but you're kind of like surface level with it. If you're sitting there and you're like, who do I want to be? I want to be nice. I want to be giving, but you're kind of like surface level with it. If you're sitting there in the crowd of
your eulogy, what do you want every single person to be saying about you? Right? And that is the
character traits that you should, you should try to work for and build into yourself. And you write
them down. And then the simplest thing to do is wake up every single morning in the same way that
you get in your car. Like we're in Austin, Texas right now. If we want to go to Houston, I don't
know how to get directly to Houston. I could probably figure it out. But if I want to get
there quicker, I just put it in my GPS. My phone will go, okay, Rob is here. He wants to go here.
And this is the direct way that we're going to go. Wake up every single morning and set your GPS for
who you want to be as a person. Okay. I want to be more kind. I want to be more loving. I want to
be more giving. And then you look back and you're like, I kind of messed that up last week. There
were certain parts where I didn't do as well. I didn't do as well as I could have yesterday. And you're not going to be
perfect, but you wake up every single day and you're basically setting your GPS for who you
want to be as a person. And eventually if you just do that every single day, your characteristics
will start to change. You'll start to make different decisions. If you decide to be more
loving, you're going to stop screaming at people on the road. You're going to, you know, be a little
bit nicer around the people who are, you know, taking a little bit extra longer at Starbucks, whatever it is.
And those characteristics and those character traits are going to be built into you
simply because you wake up every single morning and say, who do I want to be as a person?
That's awesome. I love that. That is just gold. Yeah. You know, I re it reminds me of a time that
we were hanging out at South by Southwest
and we just had some incredible conversations and I had so much fun. Uh, we were connecting,
we were going to, you know, some of the different sessions we kind of pulled out, went to, I think
we were, went to go grab some food or went on a walk. And, uh, it was neat because at that point
in time you were doing a lot of traveling and we haven't even gotten into this. We could do a whole
episode just on the places that you've traveled around the world,
because you're one of the most well-traveled people that I hang out with.
And I love travel, as you know.
And you have done just a masterful job with it.
And you've been able to take your business with you wherever you go.
It's interesting, though.
We haven't traveled as much this last year.
And I'm sure that you're excited to go somewhere.
I am.
You know, I just got back from Puerto Rico, which was really nice.
And I went to Vegas for March Madness.
So that was really cool.
So, you know, I've got some small ones.
But going overseas is a little more difficult right now.
I'm curious what you envision for travel and the impact that that can have personally, professionally?
I'm just kind of where you're at with it. I mean, I love traveling. Traveling is like,
the reason why I want to start an online business was so I could travel. That was it. When I went
and quit my job in 2012, the thing that actually opened me up to traveling though was Cutco. It's
because we used to get trips all the time, right? So we had trips so we could go on and, you know, we went to, you know, Mexico a few times, the Czech Republic.
And the first time I went overseas, like overseas was to Prague for that trip. And it was, you know,
2008, I thought it was something like that. And it opened me up and I was like, wow, this is
incredible to be able to go and see such a different culture, see so many different people
and the way that they act and the food and all of that. And so for me, when I quit my job in 2012 and backpack Europe for three months,
I was like, I love this. I love this. This, this lights me up inside. And I was like,
I want to be able to travel any way I can. And then I went back, moved to Austin, got a job and
realized, Oh, I only get, you know, 15 days of PTO. Like that's not going to be enough for me.
And so I was like, I need to figure it out. So then I've really just started researching all of the ways you can make money online. And so I saw these
ways and I saw this way and I saw this way. And then I started going to this, this thing in Austin
called internet marketing party, where it's just a bunch of people who are on the internet and they
just make money in different ways. And so I started going and talking to them and I was like,
oh, I can really make this a thing. And so as my business, as I left the business company I was with, and I started my own business, you know, started in 2015, but then in 2017, I had built it to be
unstable enough that we could leave. And so we left and we went to, uh, Europe, my girlfriend
and I, we left for, for six months. So we went, we stayed about three and a half months in Italy.
We were all over. Then we went to, um, where we go after that. We went to Amsterdam. We
went to Spain. We went to Croatia. We went to Thailand, to Bali, to Dubai. We were all these
different places, but I ran my business the entire time. And the cool thing about it is
when I was there in 2012, I was like, how can I make money and then quit and have enough and then
come back and get another job and then quit and then make enough to be able to keep saving. And I thought it was going to be like this,
make money, don't make money, make money, don't make money, make money, don't make money.
But what's cool about it is that I was able to set my entire life up with all of my coaching
calls to do them at night. And so literally what Lauren and I would do is we would go to a new
place. We would explore all day long. And then we would work from like literally 4 PM to 10 PM.
And we worked for six hours every single day. And I do all my coaching calls there. I would do my
videos. I'd plan. I still did videos. My first like mega viral video was our very first week in
Rome. And that video did 50 million views. And I was like, Oh, I can do all of this while I'm still
traveling. And so, um, in fact, there might even be more of a draw
while you're traveling because you're more open and you're more creative and like life just,
you know, you feel better. And when you feel better, you show up better. When you show up
better, you do better, make better business decisions. You, you know, make better content,
whatever it is that you're doing. And so for me, it's like, I think that for me, travel has made
me a better content creator. It's made me more empathetic to what's
going on in the world and other people that are around me. And so, uh, for people who don't have
a way to travel and it's something that's their passion, they should absolutely figure out a way,
whether it's their own business or getting more free time or working through zoom and being able
to do it. But, uh, we've been kind of hindered with the traveling this year. I haven't left the
country for the, this year, this past 12 months. Like that's crazy. That's not normal for me in any
sort of way. Um, but literally yesterday, one of our friends who lives in Rome was he's over in
Hawaii right now, spending time in Hawaii cause they're still on lockdown. And so literally he's
giving me like the week by week when Italy is supposed to be open. Right. And he's going to
go back mid May. And I was like, maybe I'll meet you in mid-May. We'll see if it'll work. And so for us, as soon as Italy
opens back up, like we're gone because Italy is the place that we always, we spent at least
except for last year, a month, every single year over in Italy. And I think to be able to,
to be able to leave and go somewhere different is something to look forward to. And it makes
you more creative when you're there, but when when you come back it also helps you appreciate where you live as well
certainly and i cannot wait for italy to open up it's one of my favorite places to go in fact one
of my favorite wine experiences i've ever had is out there yep at uh torciano tenuta torciano it's
just an unbelievable uh organization we've brought them in we've done we've had them host actually you
came over for uh no i was out of town that time and she did it oh you missed our wine event i
remember you telling me about it though come into town and just do this amazing wine tasting with
like 15 different bottles of wine yeah it's crazy and uh with truffle oil and peperoncini oil and
just it was unbelievable so i'm a huge fan of Italy
in our last trip when we went abroad we spent three weeks in Italy we actually
brought our babysitter out with us so that we could get time away and kind of
have date nights and stuff like that my wife and I so I just think that that's
so cool and like you I'm ready yeah So I feel like this is the longest stretch I've gone since I've been an adult that I have not left the country.
Now, being in Puerto Rico, it's U.S. territory.
So I'm out of the intercontinental USA.
But it's still part of the USA.
So, you know.
It counts but doesn't count, I guess we could try to say. That's right part of the USA. So, uh, you know, I'm, it counts, but doesn't count. I guess we
could, we could try to say that's right. That's right. I'm trying to help it make it count. So
that way I don't have to say I took a full year of not leaving the United States, but it's kind
of part of the United States. So, um, anyway, well, that is another benefit too. So one thing
I didn't say is even not having to leave the United States. So people who are like, I want
to still travel when COVID hit, we were in Sedona and we stayed in Sedona for four months, just so we didn't have
to come back to town and stay more away from people and all that. So it's like, people don't
have to leave the country if they don't want to, if they want to be close because, you know, maybe
one of their family members has a, something that's, that's, you know, that's, you know,
they're worried that something might happen and they don't want to leave the country because they
don't want to be 12, 13, 17 hours away. You know, the cool thing about having your
own business or setting up your lifestyle the way that you want to, like you're talking about
is you can literally go, you know what, I'm going to go and, you know, go to Sedona for a month.
I'm going to go to Colorado and, you know, ski for a month. You can do all this stuff or go for
a couple of weeks, um, when you decide to set your life up that way. But what it comes down to
more than anything else is what I would assume one of the biggest things of being a lifestyle investor is to actually
be intentional. Like what the hell do you want? First off, like most people don't know what they
want. Put it down on a piece of paper. Like what do you want your life to look like? There's no
reason why your life can't be that. The only thing that's restricting you from being there
is you thinking that you can't be there. That's the only thing.
So I think that, you know, it's about waking up and being intentional with a lot of the stuff that you do so that you can build a life that you want and be free from the rat race that so many people are stuck in, you know?
Totally.
And here's the thing.
People get really clear on what they don't want.
For sure.
They just don't get clear on what they do want.
Right.
And it's fascinating.
And then sometimes people say,
well, I'm gonna stop being an employee.
I need to be my own boss because I need freedom
and I need autonomy and I need agency in my life.
But then their business ends up owning them
and they work more hours and they're more consumed by it.
And for a while it's fun, it's a challenge,
but at a certain point that's not the
case and and you end up being in it just it's still a rat race it's a bigger nicer rat race
i joke with people like you you get off the the treadmill this this you know enslaved treadmill
of having a boss and having a job and then you just get on a really nicer one like a peloton
yeah treadmill you know
it goes a lot faster and it's a lot more stable and there's you know more competition in it and
there's just so many more ways to keep you hooked to it but it's still a treadmill that's hard to
get off yeah and and like you i mean i feel like there's so much perspective and just energy.
And there's just so much about traveling that makes me a better person, makes me a more
understanding and compassionate person, which I think is really important, especially in
a day like today and especially being married and having a daughter, having a young daughter.
But we really had the most fun this past summer. We
went to Colorado. We went to all the cool spaces in Colorado that generally people go in the winter
and we decided to do them in the summer. So we did Breckenridge and Vail. And we did, by the way,
we did like every major cool place in Colorado. We had home base out of Denver. We hit up, you know,
Boulder and Colorado Springs and Fort Collins.
I mean, we literally hit up every cool place all along the way.
Went to Steamboat and then did a road trip all over Texas and all over New Mexico.
And it was just a blast.
And so just because you can't leave the U.S. doesn't mean that you shouldn't take advantage of all the wonderful
sites and experiences the US has to offer or wherever your country is, wherever you're listening.
Yeah. And it's sad that people don't think that it's possible. And it's sad that people stay
locked into it. And what you said is a really big point where I always say most people want to leave their
job so they have freedom, but then they get so locked into their job, they want to leave
their business so they can have freedom.
So they leave a job because they want freedom.
They start a business, they get locked into it, and then they want freedom from that business
so they want to shut it down.
So a lot of people, what they also do as they start businesses is they don't tend to start
businesses a lot of times in something
that they truly love. Sometimes they go in it just to make money. And then they actually hate
that more than what they did before, because now they're locked into something,
working more hours sometimes doing something that they absolutely don't love. And so
it's about finding what you love doing that thing. But then realizing that the most important thing
for me, I think as somebody that, that wants to
grow their business is as money comes in, don't spend the money on yourself, spend it on getting
more people in. Cause when you start getting really good people in, that's when you're able
to get freedom. And believe me, like when I had my first business, I ran it into the ground because
I could not delegate. And most people who have businesses don't delegate, but the more, the more
money that comes in, the more you start spending it on more people and bringing in more people and bringing more people, the more freedom
that those people create for you. And we both have a lot of friends that have a lot of different
businesses. The ones that I've seen that love their lives the most and that usually are the
most successful are the ones that trust other people to run aspects of their business and they don't micromanage them every single day. And they just like, this person's really
good at what they do. Like when I bring someone on, I want them to see that my business and what
they do in it as their business under my business. Like I want them to, to literally see it as their
business because then they have full autonomy of what they're doing. They love it more, but also at the same time, it's like the average person will look at what somebody does. Let's say it's sales,
for instance. I'm good in sales. I could hire a salesperson. I could probably do the phone calls
better than them, right? But if I have four salespeople, I can't do as many phone calls as
them. So I have four salespeople on my team. So I might be better than all of them, at least maybe just a little bit. I could do all four of,
you know, that'd be what, 16 calls a day, 17, 20 calls a day. There's that, there's no way I could
do a time-wise. So my business has grown because I brought on the right people who see this as part
of their business, their own business inside of my business. But there's a part of me, the
micromanaging side that used to exist a long time ago. I'm like, they're going to do it. Like just trust them to do it. They're going to figure out,
they're going to get better. And what tends to happen is when you give somebody autonomy,
they end up loving their job a lot more. And one of the phrases that I've always heard that
sticks with me a lot is that people don't quit. People don't quit their job. They quit their
manager. And a lot of times that people quit their manager because of the fact that they're, they feel like they are constricted
and they can't do anything. It can't be themselves and they can't create in their,
in their role and their position. And when you do that, it does a couple of different things.
Number one, the best thing that it does is it frees up more time for you. And number two,
the people tend to show up more and that's what really matters.
Yeah, there's no doubt. And you know, something else
really important that you said, that I think is, I actually want to like draw some math to it,
because, you know, number one, you find people that want to go above and beyond the call of duty,
based on how you hire them, right? So you're finding people with certain personality traits with certain behavioral
traits. And you can find people that are going to thrive in the environment that you want.
But you made a really good point. And I used to do a lot of consulting and advising for companies
to help them scale. And this is it. It's what you just said that let's say that you can do something
better than someone else. Maybe they're only 80% as good as you.
And you could do it 90%, 100%, whatever it is.
Well, what happens when you really want to scale even outside of sales?
You gave an example of four salespeople.
Well, you're not going to be able to do what four salespeople do.
So they can do it worse than you.
And they can do it even considerably worse than you.
But four people are still going to produce a larger return, right?
For sure.
The sum is greater.
Well, what happens then when you get to, you know, operations, right?
You can do operations where you're kind of managing all aspects of the business.
But when you plug someone in there, maybe they do it 70% as well as you.
But when you plug someone in there, maybe they do it 70% as well as you.
But that gives you the freedom to be able to be on your business, not in your business,
not into the day-to-day, but thinking and strategizing.
And so it's so powerful.
Let's say you have five people that you bring in, and they all do 70% to 80% as well as you do in that role.
But you add that up, and there's no way you could ever do that.
No way.
There's not enough hours in the day. And what you do is in what, I don't remember who said
it to me one time, but we were talking about zones of genius. Like in someone's like, what are your
zones of genius? And I was like, I feel like I'm really good at creating content that people love.
I just feel like that's something that I understand. And the second thing is I'm really
good at coaching people. And it came, became very aware to me that in my business,
as it grows, the only two things that I should ever do
is coach people and create content.
That's it.
There is nothing else that I should be doing.
And the more that someone gets focused on that,
they realize when I stay in my zone of genius,
I can then hire people that stay in their zone of genius, right?
So like our stuff right now is being recorded through video,
through mic, through Mike,
all of this stuff. And my videographer, Chris is doing it. Chris is way better than this,
that I am like, she's better at it than I am. And being able to run a business where I focus
just on this and be able to bring her in her zone of genius is this. She's also obsessed with it.
Like literally Chris is obsessed with this, right? Colors and all of this stuff. And
like, that's her life. And that's the beautiful thing is that she loves doing this thing and
creating in my business, but also outside of my business and getting better and better and better.
And like we were talking about it, we were in the studio. I was like, she's really freaking good at
lighting. Right. And she's gotten better and better. And Chris will tell you, she's, she wasn't
that great at lighting when she first started, but she's, she's improved because she's gone.
I want to get better at this. I want to get better at
creating content, right? So now our lighting looks really damn good in all the videos. I can't set my
cameras up to look as good as they are because my zone of genius is creating content and coaching
people. Hers is video, you know, making stuff look good. So that's hers. Then I have, you know,
Dean, who's my director of sales, my best friend, He is obsessed with sales. I love sales. I'm not obsessed with it. Like I'm good at it,
but I get tired of it if I do it for too long. He's obsessed with it. I'll tell you this. When
he first came on, I was better than him at the position. He's way better than me. What's crazy
about it though, is he's so good at it. He's gotten ridiculously good and trained our other
three people that they are all probably,
if I would be honest with you, all four of them are probably better than me because they've been able to focus on those things.
And by me removing myself from the actual day-to-day of getting those things done, it's
allowed somebody else to go, okay, this is my zone of genius.
I'm going to focus on this.
Chris in video, Dean in sales, for my coaches. So I have
Lauren and Abby who coach people that come into my courses and everything that I do. They coach
them one-on-one and they help them that way. So then now they're going and getting like
heart math certifications and certified in like the way to listen to your intuition more and do
all of this stuff that makes them really good at what they do. Then in my marketing, I have Jeremy
and I outsource it to Jeremy because Jeremy is obsessed with marketing,
putting click funnels together, making active campaigns, talk to click funnels.
Nothing bores me more than trying to set up a page. But these people are all like masters of
what they do. And the more full autonomy that they have allows me to have more full autonomy
of what I do and not have to focus on those things. And the thing that I see most with
most people is that it is really hard to delegate. And most of the time, it's actually an ego issue
more than it's anything else. And it's, this is my baby. No one else can do it better than I can.
But if you're going to completely scale, like we have 12 people on a team, I can't do 12 people's
job, right? There's no way it's time-wise. It just does not work. But when I let them do it,
it'll freeze me up to live
my life and do the things that I want to do. And the more that I can do the things that I want to
do, like travel, for instance, the better my content is, the better I coach people, the better
ideas I come up with all of that stuff. And I'm able to stay in my zone of genius and allow them
to stay in theirs. And in turn, I feel like everyone's happier. You know, I feel like people
love what they do a lot more than when there's someone that's on their ass, checking their numbers every single day. Tell me about this,
tell me about this, tell me about this. This isn't good enough. This isn't good enough.
And, uh, in the business just seems more effortless that way, which was a beautiful
part about it as well. That's awesome. Well, it's cool hearing your evolution as a business owner
and not just a content creator, right? Because you've got both,
but I can see a lot of your passions in the content creation side. It's neat seeing all the
people that you have come into contact with that have helped you in this world. You mentioned
internet marketing party and David Gonzalez is a good friend of both of ours and what a great guy.
I just want to give him a shout out. For sure. And it's just so cool seeing the way that you have grown and
evolved and have just gone from you know one business to a completely different
business and the success that you've had through and through yet you are still
this amazing down-to-earth humble easy to hang out with wonderful guy that you
know I feel very privileged to call a friend. Thanks, man.
And so I'm just excited that we could share all this with the world and people could learn
more about you and all that you have going on.
For sure.
I'd love to know who are some of your greatest mentors or teachers?
This could be real life, this could be books that you've read. Who are they or what are
they? So my favorite book ever is Think and Grow Rich. That was the first book. If you want to hear
a funny story, let me tell you this. Let me rewind it. So Saturday we had a party. My birthday was
yesterday. So Saturday we had a party and I was sitting outside and I was like, all of my friends
were here. And I was like, man, it's crazy. Like, you know, I'm 35. And so I was like, okay, I'm literally as close to birth
as I am to 70 years old. And I started thinking that and I was like, man, it's crazy to think of
like what, what the life that I have created, right? Which life is something that we create.
It's not something that just happens to us. And I was like, it all started because I was reading a
book that John Berghoff told me to read. I didn't read. I never read. I didn't read in college. I didn't read in high school.
I dropped out of college high school. I did well, but it was just because I'm really good
at memorizing stuff. Like I'm just, I'm very good at memorizing, which is why like, I can tell you,
I was in Starbucks for this. I was in Jason's. I remember every, I remember almost every detail.
And, uh, that happens to be just a skillset. And he was like, you should start reading books. And
he, he told me to read the five major pieces of the life puzzle by Jim Rohn. So I went and got it when all my friends
were still here. And I went and got, and I literally like almost the whole book is highlighted
and underlined and stars and all this stuff. And I opened it up and I was like, let me just see,
like if the universe has a message for me, let me open it up. And I opened it up and it talked
about that. Literally there was a box, like this huge paragraph.
I literally took the entire box
and I put around it and put a star next to it
so I could see it.
And it said, basically what we're talking about
is like life is something that you create.
It's not something that just happens to you.
But if you don't pay attention,
it will just happen to you, right?
And so I was like, man, that's crazy to think about.
Like I remember reading this book.
Another part of me remembering where I was.
I remember being in my Nissan Sentra the first time I cracked that book open. First book that I had read
without ever being forced to read. And I remember I was in my Nissan Sentra outside of someone's car
waiting for her to, outside of someone's house waiting for them to show up for a demo. And I
started reading it and I was like, oh my gosh, this is, this is good. This is great. And so like
that was the very first, and Jim Rohn is Tony Robbins'
mentor. So that was the first book that I read that was like, opened me up to books. Then I was
told, oh, you should rethink and grow rich. So I rethink and grow rich. And that was the first book
that opened me up to success, whether it's financial success, whether it's relationships,
any aspect, being a great parent, all of them have steps to being quote unquote successful,
being a great parent, all of them have steps to being quote unquote successful, or what would just the success can basically just be good at it. Good at business, good at relationships. All
of them have steps to quote unquote success. And Think and Grow Rich made me realize I can do
anything that I want to do. I've just got to figure out these steps to success are.
Doesn't matter what it is. No matter what it is, I can figure out the steps to success because somebody else has been
successful in this thing before me. So if I can find out, you know, get their autobiography or if
I can get myself around them, you know, if they are still alive or if there's, it's possible for
me to learn about them. So for me, it was like, that was the very first book where I was like,
I can do whatever I want, which is not, was not really normal for me as a child because I didn't
come from a place where there were a lot of rich people around me or people that had money. So it
wasn't like I knew wealth in what that looks like, but I was like, oh, I can get into it. I just
wasn't surrounded by it at this point. So like for me, it was always really big. And then obviously
Tony Robbins helped. Um, but what's my biggest mentors for me now are actually really deep philosophers. So, um, I went on a
really long Alan Watts kick. I love Alan Watts. I love thinking really, really deep when,
when I can be quiet in like, you know, outside, it's just all nature. So I can sit outside and
I can sit and think deeply. My best ideas come from that. And the, that's what I really like.
deeply my best ideas come from that. And the, that's what I really like. I love the philosophical side of life. And so for me, it was like, I love Alan Watts. I I've been on this for a couple of
years, a Ram Dass kick. Like I love Ram Dass and just the, just, just spirituality in general.
I feel like the first 35 years of my life was very much like business and make money and do this.
And now it's like kind of the transition of, you know, if that was the first 35 years of my life was very much like business and make money and do this. And now it's like kind of the
transition of, you know, if that was the first 35 years of my life and I've got another, at least
another 35, hopefully, uh, what do I want those to be on? And it's like more of spiritual development
and character development of who I want to be. And so I would say like, as of, you know, and then
there's a lot of different mentors. I would say like Bob Marley opened me up to some different
stuff where he was speaking different and talking about money differently. And I think that he kind of
opened me up to different things. And, you know, there was also like music of music really opened
me up to, as I listened to my music from high school, go back and listen to it. I realized
that the music I listened to made me think differently. And the music that I listened to
was never like anarchist type music, but it was
always kind of like screw the system type music. Like Ben Harper would kind of talk like that.
Jack Johnson, where he talks about, you know, the, the, there was a song that talks about the,
it's called cookie jar, um, where he talks about the people on the news and, you know,
all of this stuff that's happening. And, you know, then there's like a John Mayer song where they
talk about, they, they feed you, you know, they give you the music, they give you the,
the news to make you think certain ways. And I'm starting to listen to this music
and go, oh my God, the music that I listened to in high school made me go, I'm not going to follow
the rules. Like that was the music kind of brainwashed me to go, I'm not going to follow
the rules because I'm not good at following rules. I'm not good at being told what to do.
I'm real good when I have my own thing. And I like, we've been talking about full autonomy of what I want to do. So I would
say like, there's so many mentors and songs that I've listened to and books that I've read and
people that I've talked to growing up along the way that have opened my eyes to the world. Doesn't
have to be the way that I think the world is. And I can create it to be whatever I want it to be.
And so I think that a lot of people don't
pay attention to the people they surround themselves with enough. I don't think they
pay attention to the music they listen to enough. Um, cause I really do believe in the fact that
the words that we use, especially in our own heads and out loud, uh, will change the way that we
think. And if I'm singing something out loud, that is a verbal incantation or affirmation.
And so I'm starting to change the music I listen to and go, oh yeah, you know, I do
like the beat of this, but I would never say that to a woman.
Like, you know what I mean?
Like there's a lot of music like that where I'm like, I actually don't believe what they're
saying.
Maybe I should start listening to music that I do believe.
And as I started doing that, I started going back to music I used to listen to.
I'm like, oh my God, I can see how these people were, you know, as my podcast is called the mindset mentors. These were kind of
mindset mentors for me in high school. And I had no clue where I was like, I'm not going to follow
the rules. I'm not going to care about this. I'm not going to care. I'm going to do my own thing.
And once I started listening to that music, I think I kind of clicked out of the rat race from
there on. And then when I went to college. I was like, I don't
like this at all. And then I found Cutco and I was like, whoa, I can do my own thing and make as much
money as I want. And I can be my own boss. I don't have to listen to anybody. This is amazing. Oh,
I can open my own office with them. And then I went back into the rat race and I was like, no,
this doesn't line up with who I am at all. And so I think that there's been so many different
mentors along the way. And Rob 10 years ago would have been like, yeah, I'm a
hundred. Nobody's helped me. I'm completely self-made. I'm a, you know, seven years ago,
it would have been like, I'm self-made. Like I've, I've made all my money on my own. I don't,
I don't understand what they mean when they say no man's an Island. But as I get older,
I realized every single person I've talked to every single thing that I've read, every single
thing that I've listened to the music have all changed me in some sort of way to become the
person that I am. And so I think mentors are literally all changed me in some sort of way to become the person that I am.
And so I think mentors are literally all around me in my entire life.
That's awesome. What a cool answer. And it's interesting to think about what music did you
listen to and what influence did it have? Because even when you don't realize that it did, it may
have, right? It's a subconscious thing and there are trends
and themes that you'll see show up later on in life. I think that's incredible. It's great
recognition. And I appreciate you pointing to that as an influence. And I've actually
never really considered the lyrics of the music that I listened to to be some of the influencers or major influencers of
my life. But I think that you are onto something. Wait till you start going back and listen to the
music when you were younger and you go, oh my God, like this has influenced me deeply. Why?
Because I was saying it out loud to myself hundreds, if not thousands of times, right?
Of all of these different, you know, like the stuff that I listened to is
just a little bit on the rebellious side, right. It was never like burn the system down, but it
was always like, you know, more of just a little bit like, Hey, we don't like the way that things
are going. We don't like this. And I'm like, I don't like the way things are going. That is true.
Like, I don't like the government and the way that it's set up and the way that they treat people
and all of these, you know, left or right. doesn't matter to me. Right. So it's like, I've come to realize that like every
one of those things I listened to literally made me who I am and meant. So literally mentors are
everywhere. And that's the beautiful thing about life. That is so cool. So if there was only one
other thing that you could share to kind of wrap up our session here today, what would it be?
The same way that I leave every single episode of mine, making sure mission makes someone else's
day better. If everyone listening did one thing positive for one other person today,
it would make you feel better. It would also make that person feel better. And there's a
good chance that that might turn into a chain where they help somebody else out because they
feel better. So the same way that a virus can spread, as we can see over the course of this
world, you know, and what's been happening the past year, same way that a virus can spread,
you know, from one person to another, you know, positivity can spread from one person to another.
Also negativity can spread from one person to another. So if everyone just goes, you know what,
I'm going to figure out a way to do one good deed for someone today. I guarantee your day is going to be a lot better just by doing that.
I like it.
Yeah.
And so motive matters.
And if you're doing something for what you're going to get out of it, there is, you know,
an aspect of that.
But at the same point in time, doing things because it's right or because you want to
make a difference, you want to make change in the world.
Like that is a great motive and you're going to feel good no matter what the motive is.
Like it just feels good to help people.
For sure.
And on that note, I'd love to wrap things up with what I always say to our audience here,
which is to take some form of action on what you learned today.
And that action should show up in a way that gets you closer to living a life with financial
freedom, a life that is by design, not by default, not by autopilot, but intentionality.
And that's by taking one step closer, just moving in some way, taking some form of action
towards a life of financial freedom.
So thanks so much for joining today.
Where can our listeners
find out more about you? Mindset Mentor is my podcast. And if you put my name anywhere on the
internet, Rob Dial, R-O-B-D-I-A-L, it's going to pop up. It's on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube.
All of my stuff is, I'm everywhere on the internet. Just put my name in, you'll see me.
And the podcast is usually where most people end up listening to me
on. I love it. Well, you've done such a good job that you can actually say that. Just throw it in.
It'll show up. That's me. I'm out there somewhere. So nice job. Well, thank you for your time today.
This has been a lot of fun. And I appreciate getting a chance to do it in your home studio.
You've got a gorgeous home and an awesome property. I've got a chance. I'm just checking
out the pool and the hot tub
right out behind you as we're communicating here. And what a fun environment to be able to
create content in. So thank you for welcoming me into your home so that we can do this.
Yeah, man. Thanks for coming by.
You're an inspiration, Rob.
Thanks, buddy. I appreciate it.
On holiday, there's nothing like doing nothing. As an Exped Expedia member you can save up to 30% when you
add a hotel to your flight so you can go out there with great ambition to do absolutely nothing for
less Expedia made to travel