The Money Mondays - $2M to $2B in 36 Months?! Here's How Brandon Dawson Did It 💸

Episode Date: May 12, 2025

Brandon Dawson scaled from $2M to $2B in just 36 months. In this episode, he breaks down the strategies, mindset, and lessons that made it possible—including a $100M mistake that changed everything......---Brandon Dawson is a serial entrepreneur, business strategist, and co-founder of Cardone Ventures. He scaled his first company, Audigy Group, to over $150 million in revenue before selling it for $151 million. Now, he helps business owners 10X their growth by mastering leadership, scalability, and mindset alongside Grant Cardone.---Like this episode? Watch more like it 👇Grant Cardone’s BEST Advice for First-Time Home Buyers: https://youtu.be/3ZuMj6GiIUYHow I Wiped Out $2M in Taxes with One Real Estate Move w/ Cody Sperber: https://youtu.be/ORNpiwS1jEgWhat Does It Take to Reach a Billion-Dollar Valuation? w/ Albert Preciado: https://youtu.be/rOFamvnu4qgWhy Your HOBBY Could Be the Secret to Making a Fortune w/ Josh Luber & Noah Neiman: https://youtu.be/WF2k8olReBUWatch ALL Full Episodes Here: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLs0D-M5aH-0IOUKtQPKts-VZfO55mfH6k---The Money Mondays is a business podcast here to teach you how to make money, invest money, and donate money by showcasing some of the world's most successful people and how they do the same. Hosted by serial entrepreneur Dan Fleyshman, the youngest founder of a publicly traded company in history, this money podcast gives you an exclusive behind the scenes look at how the wealthiest celebrities, entrepreneurs, athletes and influencers make, invest and donate money.If you want to learn more business and investing while you work to improve your financial life, you're in the right place! Subscribe: https://www.youtube.com/@themoneymondays?sub_confirmation=1Dan Fleyshman,The Money MondaysLearn more here: https://themoneymondays.comWatch all the podcast episodes: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLs0D-M5aH-0IOUKtQPKts-VZfO55mfH6kLet’s Connect...Website: https://themoneymondays.comPodcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-money-mondays/id1663564091Twitter: https://twitter.com/themoneymondaysLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-money-mondays/about/TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@themoneymondaysFB: https://www.facebook.com/The-Money-Mondays-110233585203220/

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Literally my opening presentation was, I am Brandon Dawson, I have a $35 million business, doing $2 million of EBITDA. If you acquired me and integrated me into your business, I would add $2 billion worth of value within 36 to 48 months and I want 10%. I want 10%. I want 10%.
Starting point is 00:00:16 I want 10%. I want 10%. I want 10%. I want 10%. I want 10%. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to a very special edition of The Money Mondays because as you know,
Starting point is 00:00:25 99% of the time I film these podcasts inside of an RV motor home traveling around the country. But I'm in Phoenix, Arizona, we got the Aspire Tour, and so I decided to come to the 10X Ventures office where Cardone Capital has their own podcast studio set up because the co-founder is here, Mr. Brandon Dawson. So, good to see ya. As you guys know, we cover three core topics.
Starting point is 00:00:45 How to make money, how to invest money, how to give away to charity. These podcasts range from about 34 to 42 minutes for your listening pleasure because the average workout is 45 minutes, the average commute to work is 45 minutes. So I want you guys to have 34 to 42 minutes to listen to this whole thing, because that's why we have a 93% listen through rate
Starting point is 00:01:02 because of you guys there at home, or in the gym, or in the office right this second. I'm gonna ask Brandon so many good questions because I've been following him for years I'm super excited because he's filled up stadiums, filled up events, raised billions of dollars as a health company and everything in between there's so many things to cover might have to do three or four episodes today. So Brandon if you can give us a quick two-minute bio so we can get straight to the money. Yeah Brandon Dawson a entrepreneur, business partner with the one and only 10X
Starting point is 00:01:28 himself, Grant Cardone, and we have multiple companies. He and I partnered with my wife Natalie Dawson about six years ago and in six years we built Cardone Ventures to a hundred and twenty million dollar company, 10X Health from a one million one point five million5 million business to $120 million company. And we have other multiple companies we're rolling out on our way to a billion. And loving every minute of being part of the 10X family under the Grant Cardone brand.
Starting point is 00:01:57 All right, so many questions. Let's go company by company. So I have to cover the make money side. Yeah. There was an existing business that you had with, you know, Gary Breck was doing one or $2 million, and then you scaled to over $100 million in the blink of an eye with your guys' power
Starting point is 00:02:11 to make him more famous, make the business more famous, more efficient. Talk us through how a company that's been around for years, you can all of a sudden scale so quickly. Well, Gary was a grant service provider, and I had a few of my own, one in Arizona and a guy in Fort Lauderdale and I was doing this human optimization thing in 2019 and 20. When COVID had I really leaned into it to keep me healthy. I was doing a lot of IVs, I was really getting into things like,
Starting point is 00:02:39 because I'm 56 at the time, I was 52, 51. I was getting into things like testosterone, getting my blood checked, doing the IVs, doing all the cool stuff. But I was not getting sick during COVID. I came out of healthcare, the business I sold was in healthcare. Part of that business was in allergy, so we had a whole allergy business.
Starting point is 00:02:59 I looked at people that were having allergy problems, and part of that crept over into longevity, being affected or impacted by things you eat, things you breathe, the environment you're in. And so in this longevity space, I was getting very curious and then became a chairman of a 275 location chiropractic regenerative medicine business. And so I started looking into,
Starting point is 00:03:22 a lot of them were doing IVs, they were doing stem cells, they were doing things of that nature. And I was like, I love this space, this whole space, and it was so mom-and-pop. So I met Gary through Grant, and I liked Gary. We got along great. And so I told Grant, look I'm just gonna, Gary's business had been doing what is actually his wife's business. Gary didn't own any of it but he was her partner and Gary was a great communicator sage ran all the back back in make sure the nurses show up do the things they're supposed to do and and
Starting point is 00:03:56 One of the things they noticed in that whole space with everybody I worked with they were all doctors and nurses none of them had a big personality Gary had a great personality very communicative, but he just had no audience, no stage. He was small and he and Grant actually tried to launch a 10x health product at GrowthCon, the first one I went to in 2019, and Gary wasn't able to fulfill any of the orders and so they killed it and it went away. Well cycle back 18 months later when I tell Grant I'm gonna do this he's like you should talk to Gary we were gonna do it with 10x Health and I'm like we might
Starting point is 00:04:33 as well do a 10x Health brand so I revived the whole thing I went back to Gary and said you want to try this again but I'm gonna you know I'll give you 10% of the new company we'll buy Sage's and give her 8% and then, but I'm the managing partner and I'm gonna do it my way. And we launched that business, we went from one eight to 25 million, 75 million, 120 million. And Gary went from nobody knowing who he was
Starting point is 00:04:59 anywhere in the world, by Grant putting them on our stages and by Grant introducing them to our community, and then a few of Gary's relationships getting on the bandwagon too. It led us to Dana and many other people, and blew the business up. And I'll be honest with you, it's beyond even my, that business is such a cottage business, that help,
Starting point is 00:05:21 that innovative health space. Cottage pharmacies, cottage service providers, no systems, no technologies, federal laws that are different than state laws, and every time you start to figure it out, because big pharma doesn't like that competition, they change it constantly. Right, right.
Starting point is 00:05:40 And it's just the complexity, but see, I came out of that space, so I already understood the complexity as much as it's a pain in the ass. I'm still willing to work around it. And we have now innovated, we're now in 46 countries. We launched in the UK, we're launching in the UAE. We've got multiple partnerships in multiple parts of the world that are happening. We are, I acquired another business in the UK that had spent 10 years on life sciences,
Starting point is 00:06:08 doing precision nutrition, IVs, precision supplementation. So I did a global deal with a manufacturer who's a leading state of the art manufacturer in Europe, and I acquired control through Bridge Financing of this UK company. I combined that IP for rest of the world, brought in the best of that IP in the United States and we are the only people in the world
Starting point is 00:06:34 and we're just rolling our app out where everything can be managed which we can get into. But I want to have a global healthcare company that's centered on longevity, health, wellness and human optimization that can touch 8 billion people. Because my partner said when we were postulating four years ago, we need a business that can touch 8 billion people.
Starting point is 00:06:55 And I went and thought the only way to do that is to be in healthcare, be on the front end and provide value to every human being on this planet. How can we do it? And that put us on this mission. Wow. So you mentioned something about exiting company in the space. Is this right? Was it 77 times EBITDA? 77 times EBITDA.
Starting point is 00:07:14 So most of the time people exit for two times EBITDA, six times EBITDA, or maybe in the tech space they'll get eight to 12x EBITDA, and some sometimes 14x. How the heck did you get 77 times even? Yeah, well so when I took my first company public when I was 29 and I was a consolidator, I bought about 136 businesses. Although it was a phenomenal experience and more than I ever thought I would do
Starting point is 00:07:39 from a little town in Corvallis, Oregon sitting on the tractor, barely getting out of high school. So I had, I mean it was a dream come true. I'll never regret it. But I did leave about $400 million off the table because I didn't know what I was doing. And when my private equity group sold the business, I decided I was going to learn to build a business
Starting point is 00:07:55 without using anybody else's money. And I understood consolidation. I understood platform companies because for seven years, I was traveling around with my private equity group, going to healthcare conferences, looking at what they invested in, meeting other CEOs and asking a lot of great questions.
Starting point is 00:08:12 So I decided I wanna innovate the small business space. It's a $16 trillion space today. And I knew that consolidation on a very fragmented basis, small businesses didn't work. Very, very rarely worked, which is why private equity needed a platform company. So I thought there's got to be a different way to build a platform company,
Starting point is 00:08:32 because billion dollar companies are worth a lot more than 5, 10, 15, 20, 50 million dollar, 100 million dollar companies. So how could I aggregate billion dollars of value bypassing Wall Street and Redistributing that money to back to the business owners who normally don't get it at that size and that became kind of my thesis and so I created my own business plan it was a democratized decentralized Collaboration model I called it back then and I had to go through the SEC eight times finally got it approved launched it in 2005 here in Scottsdale actually at the Phoenician and the idea was I would swap And I had to go through the SEC eight times, finally got it approved, launched it in 2005
Starting point is 00:09:05 here in Scottsdale actually at the Phoenician. And the idea was I would swap equity rights, I would give a fractional equity in the management company which would equitize up to 250 independent businesses in exchange for upside rights in their business and management fee. But I would build a centralized brand which got around franchise law because they were owners so they had the right to use it. management fee. But I would build a centralized brand, which got around franchise law because they were owners, so they had the right to use it. And then I would build what a platform company had,
Starting point is 00:09:28 systems, technology, leadership, people development, skill sets, R&D on how to scale in your micro market and your regional market. And I would build an acquisition company for these guys, and then they would pay the management fee, and then they would get the benefit in their marketplace and everyone said it wouldn't work. Fast forward, I had a thousand locations, 198 equity partners that owned 35% of my management company.
Starting point is 00:09:58 We were only doing 35 million in revenue, a couple million in EBITDA, but what I had built was an engine that if any strategic bought it, they could plug it into all the businesses around the world that they were operating and elevate them to the standard of our businesses, which were 3 1 half to 15 times larger than their peer groups in efficiency, effectiveness, and market share dominance. And so I took the same research that we did 9, 10, and 11, where we broke down 10,000 businesses
Starting point is 00:10:29 across hundreds of verticals for me to understand consolidation, disruption, all these different convergence of multiple businesses into others. And we studied the Best Buy, putting all the mom and pop video stores out of business by using a revenue share model versus a buy and rent model, and then Netflix and Redbox, putting the pressure on Blockbuster and Hollywood Video,
Starting point is 00:10:53 and then innovation of Wi-Fi and technology, and putting them all out of business, and all those things happened over a few years. But we did like 20 of those things to create a data set. Then we took all these little businesses and ran them through those data sets. I did that for three years, had a team of 16 very smart people from Harvard, from Stanford.
Starting point is 00:11:12 But I could buy them cheap because 2019, 2011, 2012, the world was in a meltdown. And I formulated this engine and I found something. What I found is that if you find the right strategic, they're going to buy you not on your revenue and not on your EBITDA, but on a synergized value. And if you could prove the synergy by them buying you and what they could do with their businesses with you.
Starting point is 00:11:39 So I did that and then I researched our industry and I found the eight natural most best buyers, all big companies. And I literally my opening presentation was, hi I'm Brandon Dawson I have a 35 million dollar business doing 2 million dollars of EBITDA. If you acquired me and integrated me into your business I would add 2 billion dollars worth of value within 36 to 48 months and I want 10%. And when I pitched the head of private banking and investor relations and healthcare banking for Piper Jeffries out of Minneapolis, he ran the whole thing, 10 billion dollar division.
Starting point is 00:12:15 He said, that's the dumbest pitch I've ever heard and it's not gonna work. I asked him, when's the last time you've ever been out of the office? He's like, what do you mean? I said, when's the last time you did a Ro show, Ro show and watched a pitch? He says, Oh, it's been years I run teams. I go you come with me. Eight strategic and these are like
Starting point is 00:12:31 Siemens Healthcare EQT 56 billion under management. All these big public companies, I pitched eight companies, I had eight bidders, we reported 151 when it was done, I got 189 million. eight bidders. We reported 151 when it was done I got 189 million. Oh my gosh. Okay let's talk about the 10x side of things. 10x GrowthCon started 10 years ago. So you mentioned around 2019, 2020. 2019 was the one I went to as a guest. So was that half a decade in? That's like number five or so? Yeah. So those are very very large format events They became the premier of all events in America
Starting point is 00:13:08 If not the world as far as like the the big bad conference one time having 30 or thousand people. I was going I went to Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah, 34,000. Yeah, I was there. It was a sight to see How like there's so many companies that have plenty of money, can book celebrities and talent too. But why do you think it was that 10X became the premier big name leader? Same reason I partnered with the man who had the thought, Mr. 10X himself, Grant Cardone. You know, if you would have met Grant and I in 2010, 11,
Starting point is 00:13:40 and 12, you would have said I was a successful entrepreneur. He was the guy making three million a year. I had 68 full-time marketing people on a team of a couple hundred running a thousand locations, and they were trying to get me to launch a YouTube channel, a Facebook podcast, all in 2009, 10, 11. They were way ahead of the curve. I ignored them and told them it was dumb that we just needed to focus on our business. And I was doing all this research.
Starting point is 00:14:03 I wasn't thinking. I was working with Michael Gerber. And then I got to know John Maxwell started building, helping him double his business and built a relationship with him, Sharon Lecter. And they're like, you have all these authors and Jim Collins at the time, you should be shooting these podcasts. So 2011, I'm like, guys, guys, guys, nobody cares. Nobody cares. Nobody cares. We could be spending a little bit of money and you get millions of people. I'm like, guys, guys, guys, stick to the hearing aid business.
Starting point is 00:14:27 Worry about our customers. But fast forward to 2015 and 2020, Grant and I took a completely different trajectory. He went from being a guy making three million a year being a billionaire. I went to a guy, yeah, I was successful. I sold my business and made 100 million bucks,. Okay but the divergence of resources we both had from 10 to 20 he Just had this vision and went for it and he did it and he did it because he believed it and he put
Starting point is 00:14:57 Everything into making it happen. I didn't see it I didn't believe it and I stuck to the thing that I was good at. So I had to really do an assessment because when I sold my business, I integrated into the billion dollar company. And in 36 months, we took them from one to four and a half billion. So I was done. They said thank you, other than raising them
Starting point is 00:15:16 400 billion dollars or 400 million dollars euros, they didn't really need me to run the business anymore. So we were looking at what we're gonna do next and I started looking at grant because my wife Natalie's like you got to Look at what this guy has done It was a little difficult for me my ego because I was a type-8 driver very successful had all this research Which I refreshed all that research in 16 17 and 18 to get it up to current times And I knew I was the only guy in the small business space that actually had 10 years of research,
Starting point is 00:15:47 force ranking all the different growth and value factors of all these micro businesses, trends, all this stuff. And so I knew I had something. I just didn't know how to bring it to market. So she put me on grant. We went to that 2019 conference, and I was like, what? This guy. 2019 conference and I was like, what this guy I had been running meetings since 2010 with 1200 people I knew how hard they were
Starting point is 00:16:11 put together I knew how much time energy and effort now expensive. I walked into that stadium and I was like anybody that could do this has to be able to do anything they want to do. And I want to be on that wagon. And so that was the moment half first day, first half of the day, I had five things I wanted to see. And if I checked those five boxes, I knew I was going to be Grant Cardone's partner, but he had never met me. So wow.
Starting point is 00:16:35 Why do you think it's important for someone listening to this podcast for themselves or their friends to attend a business conference or mastermind to learn in those environments? Well, I don't think it's important to them if they don't know what their three to five things are. I think to the level you have intentionality you know what you're looking for if you go to the right places you're gonna find that right data. If you just go because you just want to get something and hope it works it's never gonna work. So if you can say these are the things or the areas I'm
Starting point is 00:17:04 deficient these are the things holding me, and I want to go to a place where I can receive information that can bridge that for me. Find mentors, find information that will help me take a different action tomorrow than I've taken today that's different than what I did yesterday, so I can drive to a different result. Like if you're gonna go for that reason, I think it's critically important to go to the right places, listen to the right people and get the right information. Because you're not gonna get it where you're at and you're not gonna get it from the people you're talking to. If they knew how to do it,
Starting point is 00:17:35 you wouldn't be talking to them, they wouldn't be talking to you because they'd be doing it. So trying to do it the traditional way through polling, P-O-L-L-I-N-G, what do you think I had to do and what would you do and how would you do it to people have never done it? It's the wrong place to go pulling P U L L I N G go up and pull down from someone who's been there done that doing it And learn from them. It's the only way to do it. And that's why I would go to those conferences So you guys also host a lot of smaller workshops, high level ones, more expensive, more focused
Starting point is 00:18:06 and what about that? So the people that they know that they want to do it, they know the three to five things they need, they've got a business doing two million or five million, 20 million, 10 million, whatever and they just know they want to scale and learn from guys like you and Grant, what about for them? Well, so the people that we work with and the reason we've been so successful We've had almost nine billion in businesses come through our format six six six six years is because Grant has proven he is the world's greatest
Starting point is 00:18:41 marketer now let me tell you the five things that drove me to the growth conference to see if I wanted to partner with Grant and I can answer this from my perspective because everyone has a different perspective. But I was already hugely successful. I was already wealthy. And I had a plan. I just didn't know how to at scalability execute my plan. When I went to the Growth Conference, hey, I wanted to know what kind of person Grant was. So you really need to know when you go places if you're listening to people, what kind
Starting point is 00:19:01 of people are they? You need to figure that out for yourself. You can't watch YouTube. You can't listen to other people's perspectives. Self-education is the only way to do it. Secondly, I wanted to build with my wife. So is Grant and Elena really a team? Do they believe in that? Because I've worked with entrepreneurs that don't really believe in working with family or spouses. So I wanted to go check that out. Thirdly, the community that he draws in, that 10X community, does it fit the community that fits my research? Are they independent business owners in spaces that we've got all our research in and that
Starting point is 00:19:29 we know have the opportunity to do some wealth creation strategies? Fourth, can I actually get along with this guy? And do we complement him or conflict with him? Because I knew he did sales and marketing training And I knew I knew he was the global leader in using crowdfunding for multifamily real estate like I knew that And there was nobody that competes against him The things I'm an expert in and all the research and the execution and all the systems and technology I built will complement his belief system in how he teaches or will we have a problem?
Starting point is 00:20:06 And then the fifth thing was I had all my targets. Since I was a kid, I was told by one of my mentors at 26, Warren Buffett at 27 was worth a million, at 37, 10 million, at 47, 75 million, at 53 he was worth 350 million, and then obviously went on from there. Well at 27 I was worth 10 million. The problem was at 32, I was back down to only being worth 250. When I sold my business, the reason I picked that number
Starting point is 00:20:31 is because it got me 75 million net, and that was my target at 47. But I had a new problem. I had no idea how I could escalate my success at 51 to be worth 350 million. So could the things Grant does rub off on me enough and compliment my skill set and my research and my business to accelerate my growth.
Starting point is 00:20:51 So I was less fixated in starting another company and building it up and more how fast can I do it to hit that 350 number. So when I got a chance to meet Grant, I said these are the five things I need from you. Are you committed to those? And he said, absolutely. Here's the five things I need from you. Are you committed to those? And he said, absolutely.
Starting point is 00:21:05 Here's the five things I need from you. We're like, let's go. Okay. For me, being able to hit that next target was everything I was fixated on. And finding somebody who could help me do it. And there wasn't a lot of people out there that I thought I could do that with. So that's why I went there and that's why we started doing what we're doing. And I forgot the exact question you asked me
Starting point is 00:21:27 so Someone did it they went to the workshop They learned from you guys to spend a year or two three years and really dove in scaled their company from 8 million to 16 to 32 When should someone be considering to exit? How do they know is it is there an emotional thing a mental thing are things breaking or they can't hire a skill like Is there a thing that you would say to someone when they're considering selling? Most people sell when they're under pressure and it's not working anymore and they get a low value for their business Private equities like the big troller that's going through the water just waiting for somebody to go. I'm overwhelmed
Starting point is 00:21:58 I got all these high costs In fact what we identified within our research is there are seven breakpoints between the startup and 125 million and another four between 125 and a billion. And people tend to sell at the top end of any one of those breakpoints because it's the hardest thing to do is punch through them and they increase costs and then they get less return and they get worn out and then they sell. And if you're a 15 million or 25 million or 45 or 75, you're in that perfect sweet spot for being tucked into a platform company. And they can buy you cheap.
Starting point is 00:22:29 They offer you six or eight times EBITDA. A real buyer that's offering eight times EBITDA if it's a platform company, it's eight times your EBITDA, it's four times or three times theirs, and they know that when they buy you. So when should a seller sell? A seller should sell when they've predetermined a target, a net worth target, and they've built to that target, and that target will accommodate that
Starting point is 00:22:53 the passive income they'll generate after exit will accommodate the lifestyle they want. And this is the calculation none of them do. Most entrepreneurs build and build and build until they're worn out and then they sell, Or they just stay small and they take an income. If you said to me, my target is I want to be able to live on a million dollars of income a year and have a remarkable life, own two houses, and not have to do anything anymore, and I want a million dollars a year. Well you're going to need to sell your business for a net of somewhere between 18 and 25 million bucks. Now, if you want a three million dollar house in both locations, you're going to earn that money while you're building to your net work target, because you're only at five, six percent protected
Starting point is 00:23:38 on the income. A lot of people, though, will build their 20 million dollar business, and they'll live on four million a year, and then they sell, and then they're only making a million a year so they start spending the principal and then they find themselves they got to go back to work. So if you know what kind of lifestyle and you build it that lifestyle and you have those targets and I always tell people have a 10 year target but you can do it earlier but have a 10 year target and know what you want to do and when you hit those targets that's the time to sell. If you don't hit the target you got got to keep building. But what really happens
Starting point is 00:24:07 if somebody gets their lifestyle to that, and they get to the 20 or 25 million, they're like, I can go a little further. And it becomes less burdensome. Because if you have that backstop, you have that confidence that hey, I can quit anytime, I'm going to have a great life. And that's usually what happens when people takes their first money off the table table and they go back at it. They're like, I got a backstop. So then they get more aggressive and they actually do the things they could have done
Starting point is 00:24:29 before they sold. And so that's why you get serial entrepreneurs doing over and over and over. So somebody went to the workshops, they scaled their business and they had the exit. They listened to all your advice. They got 32 million dollar exit. They took home 10 million dollars for themselves with their partners, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Why real estate? Why are you guys so all in real estate?
Starting point is 00:24:48 Why have you raised billions of dollars for the real estate category? Yeah, so that's my partner. So my partner is an expert in real estate, multifamily assets that traditional people would never have access to. The big institutions buy them. I am the other side. So I'm launching Cardone Equity Group,
Starting point is 00:25:05 which is our private equity group for businesses, for investing in businesses. So I always say to people, you should have a diversified portfolio. And in full disclosure, outside of Grant, I'm the second largest investor in Cardone Capital. So again, I like to use myself as an example. I want to have a diversified portfolio.
Starting point is 00:25:23 I'm happy with 5% or 6% coming in on things I don't have to touch. They also to have a diversified portfolio. I'm happy with 5 or 6% coming in on things I don't have to touch. They also give me a tax shield. But for me, real estate's boring. I own a lot of it. I don't really love any of it unless I work in it. Like I own a big piece of this building with Grant through Cardone Capital, so I love being in here. It's my building too, right? But I love businesses. And I can move the dial on businesses. And I can move the dial on businesses. And I can move the dial on businesses. So I think a balanced approach. So when you take, for example, I do have a guy that was,
Starting point is 00:25:50 we grew him from going out of business, two million to eight million to 22 million and then a $35 million exit. Now he's got 10 million. I was just kidding about that. But there is a guy and he had a couple partners and they each took 10 million. They've retired and
Starting point is 00:26:05 they're living off 400 grand a year and they're happy. So real estate, they were able to put it in real estate and not do anything. That's the beauty of real estate. You don't have to do anything. I like active investments. So I like to take my cash and I like to have an eight to 20% return on my cash. Well, I have to be able to drive that. And so the example of the guy that had a couple partners and they took that money off the table, that was a three year cycle by the way, $2 million of revenue going broke to a $35 million exit in 36 months. The one that has 11 million that's working with me, he took his expertise because many business owners don't do a completed
Starting point is 00:26:41 cycle. They don't know how to do the exits and all that. They usually screw them up. He did it, and so now I have him working with other business owners, but he also is co-investing some of his money with us in those businesses, like a traditional private equity exit strategy. And he's then adding operational value, and we're launching a whole new business around his expertise.
Starting point is 00:27:00 That happens to be an automotive repair. So it depends on what you as a human want to do. But for me, I want to have a diversified portfolio. I want to have something that's going to pay me 5% or 6% for life, where I don't have to even think about it. I don't have to manage it. I don't have to take the phone calls. I don't have to change the toilets.
Starting point is 00:27:17 And that gives me my passive income. And for me, it's mostly Cardinal Capital, but I also own a partner in 700,000 square feet of storage units. I own warehouses in Texas, Midland, Texas for oil and gas. So I have a real estate portfolio that I want to have passive income that I don't have to do shit. Then I can go risk my personal active time making passive income in investments in business.
Starting point is 00:27:44 So if you, whatever you're good at is where you should spend your time and what you're not good at, you should trust somebody and give them their money and go generate money in what you're good at. So I do this speech called 40-40-20. 40% low risk, where I want to make between 5% and 8% for the year. 40% medium risk, I want to make 10% to 25% for the year.
Starting point is 00:28:04 And then 20% by shot at glory, private equity investments, angel investing, cryptocurrency, et cetera. What are your thoughts on that concept and do you have your own version of that for yourself? Yeah, so I agree with the 40, 40, 20. I just do it a little differently. 40% real estate, that's fine, great. Only with people I implicitly trust,
Starting point is 00:28:24 most of that because I've been doing that for 20 years, but two thirds of that is with Grant, that's fine, great. Only with people I implicitly trust, most of that, because I've been doing that for 20 years, but two thirds of that is with Grant, my business partner, because I implicitly trust him. And I would live in any asset he buys, right, or work in any office building we own. And because we're partners and we see these things together, I'm always like, wow, I'm always mind blown
Starting point is 00:28:42 at the stuff he gets and how he gets it. He's a genius at that. The other 60% of the 40-20, 40% of that is something I'm still actively involved in, but it's at critical mass. So my business model is bringing all these people through that I help grow their business and then in partnership with them acquiring businesses and aggregating them
Starting point is 00:29:05 into their business and then helping them go to the next level. And so it's a little less risky because of the engine I've created of Deal Flow and be able to buy things right and at low risk but with great operating partners. So that's why I wanted to protect that other 40%. The 20% is in with people I have relationships with like micronuclear investments, things that I generally or public company stuff that my friends are involved in that they're like, hey, this is a good target or that's a good target.
Starting point is 00:29:40 And so I do less of that 20% with few people, but when they're like you should look at this company I have very wealthy friends 30 40 50 billion dollar portfolio managers very successful and when I'm sitting around with them I'm like, what's the one thing you really love three to five years then they tell me and I'm like is it insider information? They're like no, it's just you know, you can go search it yourself. So then I go put my attention on it. I'm like, it's $2 a share. It's a rocket. It's $3. It's a rocket.
Starting point is 00:30:09 It's supposed to go to the moon. It's the only one that's done it. I bought $1 million of the stock, and I sold it for $4 million nine months later, because it landed on the moon, even though it fell over. So I look at stuff like that. And if I really fall in love with it, that's my risk 20%. But otherwise, I'm fairly disciplined in the 80%.
Starting point is 00:30:30 I don't like to lose money. And I only like to work with people I trust and invest alongside them. So I have this thing called the Elevator Syndicate. I have 960 investors. And the last three years, I raised $56 million for small rounds, $3 million to $6 million per deal 6 million per deal, companies doing 2 to 20 million in sales. And I like that bite size thing that I can help, right?
Starting point is 00:30:52 I can't raise the kind of capital you guys raise and I don't go invest in companies that are doing 600 million. I like 6 million and 12 million, 18 million, and then if it works out, we can have a big exit. What are your thoughts about doing a bunch of small bite size things things like I'm doing or is it better just go for it like Jaws and go for the big ones. Go raise $56 million for one deal instead. Yeah, here you said something though in that you said things I can help. I
Starting point is 00:31:18 Fundamentally believe that 20% risk is the big things you put money in because if I'm not involved I don't trust anybody. Honestly, no. I don't really want to give my money to private equity groups and trust them. I would rather put my money in my own private equity group and be able to leverage that with people that trust me and Grant and my wife, because they know we're great operators.
Starting point is 00:31:41 Think about 10X Health. I put a million dollars of cash in the Tenex Health by buying Sage's business. I paid for it over four years because they had a little business making 100 grand each year. I mean, they had no risk. Their last year working with us as partners,
Starting point is 00:31:57 they made over $11 million, personal income. Like, they made a lifetime of money. They made six times revenue in their last year working with us as partners. Now, we had a falling out. You know, I find that people fight when there's no money or too much money. And I also find that when you buy businesses that are owned by artists, because Gary is really an artist. Gary is your typical artist. He is so in love with the science of what he does, but a lot of those artists aren't really that good at business. And they have this feeling of how exactly the piece of art needs to work. And sometimes it's hard to please artists, and so you have a falling out. But we patched it all up and he's doing what he loves to do. We're doing what we love to do and where it fits, we're still working together, which is great.
Starting point is 00:32:50 But that was a million dollar investment and some equity. And turn it into whatever the business is gonna be worth in three to five years. It'll be, trust me when I tell you, it'll be astonishing. But see, I can affect that and have low risk. And so for me, putting my money in our private equity group that we launched, having our business owners,
Starting point is 00:33:12 a lot of our business owners have lined up to invest alongside of us because they love business. They want us to invest that money in businesses. They want us to co-invest with them buying. And we create our own ecosystem that'll be $10 billion to $100 billion. So I don't need any outside influence But if I didn't have that and I didn't know what to do
Starting point is 00:33:27 I would only invest with my money with people I implicitly trusted and what you're doing is you're making micro Investments with people that trust you to overlook those investments and you don't need to make a lot of them If a handful of work it's going to give all your money back So your downside protection is somewhat protected But if you weren't involved with that the people that trust you that give you money and work with you They wouldn't put money in that if some stranger came along sure it only works because you have the relationships and you know what you're doing So someone that's out there making money from their core job, they're making three four hundred grand a year five hundred grand a year They're starting to really grow as a family
Starting point is 00:34:02 How do they decide them there's real estate, stock market, cryptocurrency, private equity deals, their friends opening a bar restaurant, there's just so many options of what to invest into. How do people research or figure out what the heck they should be investing into? Yes, you mean a micro investment? Well, first of all, like, you got to look at the track record 96% 97% of all businesses under 100 million fail.
Starting point is 00:34:25 2 thirds fail in the first five years. 97% fail in the first 10. Now, the actual stat, 65, the pure stat is 65% fail. So everyone always asks me, why do you say 97%? Because out of 34 and 1 half million small to mid-sized businesses under $100 million in revenue, 26 million have a sole producer, sole provider, sole owner working on their living room making 72,000.
Starting point is 00:34:48 To me, that reeks like failure. So I count those in the failure rate. That's not a real business. So how do you know and what do you know to invest in? I would never invest in somebody's idea. It's guaranteed to fail. I would invest in an entrepreneur who's been able to complete a cycle, includes an exit who has a stellar track record
Starting point is 00:35:08 Knows what they're doing their authority. They are unauthority in whatever they're doing and And they have a legacy historical Capability to not only build but exit Because the number of ideas that never go anywhere, and the majority of them even if they do, they fail. Not because the opportunity is not good, but because building a business,
Starting point is 00:35:32 the first three million is what you do, the what you do has to work. It'll get flushed out in three million. But once it's three million, the what you do still has to be excellent. But it's who you do it with, how you do it. And most of these small business owners don't know how to find, attract, align, develop, and retain
Starting point is 00:35:45 great people. Most of them don't know how to promote properly. Most of them don't know how to scale financially. Most of them don't know how to train other human beings. So what happens is it just falls apart. And so you're never going to get your money out of it. And it's not liquid. There's no point in investing in something
Starting point is 00:36:02 that's going to be tiny. So the idea has to be huge. It has to be with someone who has a phenomenal track record and authority and has to be somebody Who's proven they understand the concepts of building and scaling a business if they can't fit all three of those buckets I wouldn't even entertain putting a dollar in there. Mm-hmm Yeah, part of my speech is zero to one million, super hard. Rarely ever happens. Very few people do it. Going from 7 million to 14 million, not that hard if you get systems and processes and people to help go from 7 million to 14 million.
Starting point is 00:36:32 So if your friend is opening their seventh salon, or their seventh gym, or their seventh restaurant, their failure rate's going to go down. But their first location, you're not even just gambling. You're almost no chance. Well, the rule of three, because we studied 10,000 businesses and what caused them to fail. And what allowed the others to succeed and we came I came up with this thing I call the rule
Starting point is 00:36:52 of three. It's crazy how the business concepts the number locations all these things became 3333. So I called the rule three. Even if you have seven locations, if two, so that's three times two is six. So if the seventh location's underperforming against the six, and they cannot get it to the standard of the best two or three, the business ultimately will fail.
Starting point is 00:37:22 It only takes two to take six down. Interesting. And so it isn't the seventh because they have six because normally what you see with someone that opens six is two are working really well, two are breaking even, two haven't got to break even yet. So what I would say if someone said, I'm opening a seventh, I'd say, great, show me the individual store P&Ls and they'd
Starting point is 00:37:46 say here they are and in aggregate I would look at the best three say they had six I would look at the best three what are the revenues how long have they been in business how much profit are they driving and how much cash are they actually collecting. I would take those three and average them and I'd say now compare that to the next three and if the next three were not on the exact trajectory as the first three I'd say you're crazy for opening the seventh because you're gonna go out of business. So the rule of three never lies it's true with people it's true with you could just take three three times three how should you scale business? One to three to nine to 27 to 54 to 81, that builds a $25 million business.
Starting point is 00:38:30 It only takes the total aggregate divided by three to show if it's going to succeed or not. Because we never saw any format that worked. And you see this a lot with franchises. People have one, two locations. They start selling franchises. Now there's 20, they can't support them, nobody knows what the hell's going on.
Starting point is 00:38:48 There's no statistical facts, everybody gets sued, things go away. All right, so we talked about making money side, we talked about investing money side, let's talk about giving away money. By the way, on the investment money side, my partner has been innovating this in crowdfunding. David Weald wrote the Jobs Act under Obama.
Starting point is 00:39:07 Grant was the first person to really stretch into it. I was using a different model I created that now because of the Jobs Act, my model's going to be a lot easier because it was the first democratized, decentralized model, equity model, but now you can do it digitally, which is phenomenal. But now Grant's raised 1.7 billion since 19. And now he's combining with the Bitcoin fund, this property we're doing, real estate and Bitcoin. And I had David Whale come out because I work with David.
Starting point is 00:39:37 And David is the most progressive thought on crowdfunding, on equitizing, on public company stuff. And he looked at it, he's like, man, this is gonna be the biggest thing that's hit real estate because now you get a hedge in traditional real estate. You can do it by location, you can do it by portfolio. So if you love Bitcoin, now, if I would never go out and just buy Bitcoin, because I have no control
Starting point is 00:40:00 over anything, but if I'm hedging it against something else that has value that protects me, now I'd be like, I'm going all in on it, right? So we like to innovate these spaces. And so when you talk about it, you can combine it. Bitcoin, real estate, you can actually now do both, which now I'm like, OK, I'm in. That's amazing.
Starting point is 00:40:17 We want to do the same thing with business, where you can do these hedges. And that's what I've been creating is pooled hedges, because if you're in the HVAC space, and you're working with us, and you're growing your business, and now you can be part of a pool of another 200 HVAC people hedging how well they're doing, sharing data, sharing information, sharing shared economies of scale, and purchasing of other assets that
Starting point is 00:40:42 then hedges everybody's business. So that's what I've been focused on for the last 20 years is creating hedge pools. And that's why I got 77 times even though, because when we sold the business, we didn't just sell the business, we sold something that allowed a bigger entity to hedge what they were doing against what we built. And so if you think of building businesses with hedges, that's why hedge funds become the most valuable because they got multiple ways they can protect themselves. Small business owner doesn't have that. Usually they're key man dependent, key producer dependent, and key economics dependent. So the giving away money side, you guys
Starting point is 00:41:16 have a pretty big charity component to the live events with 10x events and also I've seen the crews you guys were doing and things like that. Why do you think it's important for business owners or just people in their own family and household to have a charity component to their life? Yeah, it's a great question. We have the Grant Cardone Foundation for Kids. And that is an amazing entity that brings inner city kids
Starting point is 00:41:37 and kids without fathers into our ecosystem to give them a perspective, a hope, a vision for the future. And we collaborate with a lot of great organizations to do that. And that was Grant and Elena Cardone's vision. For me, 15 years ago I launched the Dawson Foundation and we've worked with halfway houses, family, local family, displaced family, abused and victims,
Starting point is 00:42:02 a lot of, and I've been on the, today I'm on the Scottsdale Foundation Police Board. In Vancouver, Washington, I was on the Vancouver Police Board. Nationally, I'm on the US Marshals Board for fallen officers. And we've given a lot of money to things like St. Jude's Hospitals for kids. Our whole team, we have CV Cares.
Starting point is 00:42:24 So we'll shut the whole company down and I did this up in Vancouver with Ottergy cares. We'll shut our whole company down and we'll go to the food banks and we'll prep food and we'll do this once a quarter. And we do these drives two years ago through a company I'm a chairman of, the American Academy of Hospitality Science which was five star, six star original certification with with Frank Sinatra and Joey Chincue 50 years now and Joey's 90 Frank's obviously dead. So I became chairman to help this. But millions of dollars a year of toys, toys for tots, we work
Starting point is 00:43:00 with these other you know, but I brought it into Arizona, we have 130,000 toys away to kids in in in in homes and displaced shelters so that they can enjoy the holidays as well. So we really believe in and I think where I align with Grant with the Grant Cardone Foundation, why I'm such a huge supporter of it, is because children, they deserve to have somebody that takes an active interest in them. And we're really committed to doing that. And if we can get kids to see something bigger,
Starting point is 00:43:31 something more hopeful, inspire them to be able to take care of the needs and necessities of today by helping the way we can. And me, I do it through law enforcement. Because a lot of these law enforcement, local law enforcement have programs, but they don't have the funding. So I like to combine what I'm doing through law enforcement, because a lot of these law enforcement, local law enforcements have programs, but they don't have the funding. So I like to combine what I'm doing with law enforcement
Starting point is 00:43:49 and drive it into the communities, so the right people get what they need to get. And we've been doing this now and supporting these, and I give millions of dollars away to charity a year, and a lot of it to Grant Cardone, and then Grant and Elena do so many amazing things through the Grant Cardone Foundation. The cruise was one of them where we get to activate business owners to come in and support that. To answer your question why should somebody do any of this, look there's no better
Starting point is 00:44:18 like the biggest joy I have is when a business owner's life transforms because we helped them. The biggest joy I have is one of my team members, their lives transformed because we help them. The next biggest joy is when the lives of the people that we work with, with people that work with them transform. Driving impact through human beings, and I've been very close, one of my closest dearest mentor and friend is john Maxwell, number one thought leader in the world. If you have the ability to create and you don't share it, then you'll lose the gift
Starting point is 00:44:56 of the ability to create. And when you lose the gift of the ability to create, you will lose your superpower. So to me, if you're thinking about yourself and always thinking about yourself, you'll eventually be a miserable person dying a miserable life. If you think about the people around you and how you can drive impact and how you can shape and support and invest in those people, and you're
Starting point is 00:45:23 able to do that and affect that then true leadership says you won't stop there you'll continue to perpetuate and perpetuate but a lot of people don't know how to do that so through our organizations we drive our teams to do it in the community so that they get the gift of giving and when you do that and they bring their kids along and stuff and we have kids days and things like that you perpetuate this idea that if you can you should and if you don't you won't well and so I'm a big believer of that you spend the way you buy and you buy the way you spend and if you're cheap and if you're inwardly focused you'll die cheap
Starting point is 00:46:01 and inwardly focused if you're not concerned about money and you're investing in others and teaching others to invest in others, you actually drive and perpetuate long-term impactful change. And if you're unwilling to do that in any ways at all, you'll never get it. Because John says, if you want a hand, you've got to give one first.
Starting point is 00:46:20 And if you want to be interesting, you first have to take an interest in other people so for me I just believe that exchange. It's called law of circulation and If that circulation isn't happening, and it stops it also stops and all the good shit that's happening to me So I built a ranch in Temecula, California And our mutual friend Michael Chandler comes there once a month and we do training called operation black site But I built these shoot houses, and I let the police, K9, SWAT, and Sheriff come there every single week for free for
Starting point is 00:46:49 the last half a decade. On the toy side, I didn't know you guys did it that big. That's my biggest passion. So we started 11 years ago the Train This Kids Foundation. There was eight of us on the floor wrapping toys. Three years ago, we filled up SoFi Stadium, broke the Guinness Book of World Records. Last year, we filled up the Miami Heat Arena and 11 other cities in 17 days, including here in Phoenix. And same concept, hundreds of thousands of toys and I fly around like a crazy
Starting point is 00:47:15 person to all 11 cities in that 17 day period. I'd love to. I mean it's my true passion. I self-fund the majority of it because it's just like I do the 100K one-on-one coaching, I make them wired to the charity. That's awesome. And so I raise two million a year for charity by doing 20 clients and then they wire to the charity. Or I give them three charity choices, but that's the main one.
Starting point is 00:47:34 That's great. That way I can help pay for it and whatever. Yeah, of course. Well, you are paying for it, because your time is funding these opportunities. And so my last question is the only one question I ask the same question on every single episode and I've never gotten the same answer
Starting point is 00:47:48 and I know I'm not getting the same answer today. It's about children. So Brandon Dawson goes off to become a multi, multi, multi billionaire. And unfortunately at some point time goes to next health. You last for a hundred more years but you still have to pass away at some point. What percentage of that net worth of those billions of dollars do you leave to
Starting point is 00:48:09 children? I think for every single person, the reason everyone has a different answer is because it's a unique. It's unique to the individual, right? I have three remarkable daughters, three great grandkids, I'm expecting to have more. I will leave enough that my kids will never have to worry about money if they maintain a reasonable lifestyle. The rest of it will go to things that will support the beliefs I have. And a big piece of it for me because my wife is half my age, so she's statistically going to significantly outlive
Starting point is 00:48:46 me. A big piece of that decision will be whatever decision my wife makes. And I believe in my wife, I support my wife, but she's helping me create the net worth. She's president of our all of our companies, she's actively involved in she has things that she loves supporting. And the thing she loves are women driven businesses, minority driven businesses owned by females. So I am 100% certain that wherever that money is allocated it will be used well. But if you think about even the most wealthiest people after a few lines of generations their wealth is
Starting point is 00:49:18 gone because it gets pissed away. So one thing I can assure you is nobody's gonna touch the money to spend the principal. They're only going to be able to spend what the principal generates. And that will determine what happens with the wealth. But I'm not leaving billions of dollars or hundreds of millions to each child. I'll leave enough income that money won't be an issue. I'll leave enough income that health care will never be an issue. If they want to live a moderate, great life, they'll be just fine. So will my grandkids and my grandkids after my grandkids
Starting point is 00:49:46 But if anybody wants to go and live the life I have they're gonna have to go earn it. I love it All right, guys. This is one of my favorite episodes of all time I'm gonna hopefully come back here to do it again because there's so many more questions that I have But what you need to do is have all your friends that are in the business world real estate world listen to this podcast Make sure to follow Brandon Dawson across social media. Check out the different companies, 10X Health, Cardone Ventures, and all the things in between that you heard in this episode. And as you guys know, the reason for this podcast is we grew up thinking it's rude to
Starting point is 00:50:14 talk about money. I think that's ridiculous. You have to have discussions about accounting, legal, taxes, situations, borrowing money, loans, debt, what happens if my friend borrows money, how do I get it back? We've got to be able to talk about money because it's part of our real life. So check out this podcast, share it with your friends, like, comment, debt, what happens if my friend borrows money, how do I get it back? We gotta be able to talk about money because it's part of our real life. So check out this podcast, share it with your friends, like, comment, subscribe, and we'll see you guys next Monday on themoneymondays.com.

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