The Money Mondays - Peter Voogd & Dan Zrihen: Sales Strategies That Made Them Millions 💵 E77
Episode Date: July 8, 2024Both of these men have two things in common: They started in the construction business and they made millions through their sales strategies. Watch till the end to hear their story and learn how they ...did it... Peter Voogd, a successful entrepreneur and bestselling author, shares practical advice on achieving financial success and personal growth. With a background in sales, leadership, and real estate investing, Peter's insights have empowered many to overcome challenges and reach their goals. --- Dan Zrihen, a seasoned door-to-door sales expert and business leader in the home improvement industry, discusses effective marketing strategies and the future of manual labor careers. With over a decade of experience, Dan shares valuable insights on navigating entrepreneurial challenges and achieving success in competitive markets. --- Like this episode? Watch more like it 👇 Travis Lubinsky & James Malinchak on Building PROFITABLE Brands: https://youtu.be/Q6x_VQPFBuo Christian DelGrosso & Marshall Sylver's Social Media SUCCESS & Building WEALTH: https://youtu.be/h6ToLKH7Y5Q Greg Kimble & Kevin Peake: Making Waves in Education and Healthcare: https://youtu.be/eTAtkEJ5nvI "The Biggest Risk Is Not Taking Any Risk" - BJ Baldwin & Vince Ricci: https://youtu.be/vzo3MBY8cTE Watch 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=1 Dan Fleyshman, The Money Mondays Learn more here: https://themoneymondays.com Watch all the podcast episodes: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLs0D-M5aH-0IOUKtQPKts-VZfO55mfH6k Let’s Connect... Website: https://themoneymondays.com Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-money-mondays/id1663564091 Twitter: https://twitter.com/themoneymondays LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/the-money-mondays/about/ TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@themoneymondays FB: https://www.facebook.com/The-Money-Mondays-110233585203220/
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I'm doing my eBay business and my friends work in construction with my dad and my friend
came in and he made 60 bucks working all day.
I had checked my eBay and I made 90 bucks that one, like that hour.
I was 15.
I'm super confused.
I'm like, how did I just make $91 on a computer?
When my friend just made 60, he worked all day shoveling sand and I'm like, I have to
pursue this.
So I went from broke to six figures within six months and that's when everything changed.
And I wrote a book six months of six figures
because I wanted to help people reach their first six figures
because I felt like I had a formula.
I've sold over 800,000 copies.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Money Mondays.
We are here at the ranch right this second.
And our guest is throwing an event 17 feet away from us inside of the are here at the ranch right this second and our guest is throwing an event
17 feet away from us inside of the barn here at the wild jungle. And since he's throwing an event
I thought maybe I can just drag him outside. I've been wanting to get a podcast with him for over a
year now and so the timing is perfect. He's got all his Mastermind members outside learning, teaching,
networking, etc. And so we're secretly in here during lunch. We can't be too loud. Otherwise
they might notice we're here. All right.
So this gentleman has built up a strong following
teaching people from mindset to business to investing
and everything in between,
because he's done it for himself.
Unlike most coaches that just kind of coach to be coaches
or their life coach that's 19 years old
and they've had to live life.
Peter has actually built up real businesses
and he's been doing these events for many years.
He's done great partnerships and JVs
and worked with household name celebrities,
Mike Tyson, everyone in between.
And so without further ado, wherever you are in the world,
give a warm round of applause to Mr. Peter Voog.
Thank you, man.
All right, as you guys know,
there's three core topics to talk about how to make money,
how to invest money, how to give it away to charity.
These podcasts are always under 40 minutes.
That's why we stayed number one for 66 weeks in a row
because of you guys.
We have a very high listen through rate
for you guys out there sharing, commenting, subscribing.
The reason that's under 40 minutes is
the average workout, 45 minutes.
The average commute to work is 45 minutes.
And so without further ado,
I'm gonna have Peter do a quick two minute bio
so we can get straight to the money.
Love it, man. Thank you.
I mean, I've listened to it for a while
and I love this podcast because it helps people,
it educates people about money, which you need to have
some freedom, type of choices.
I said earlier, I've never met someone
who doesn't like or respect money that has any.
So it's an important topic because people just
don't understand the power of having it and having freedom.
So I grew up in the Bay Area in Oakland,
moved to Oregon when I was younger.
I've always been against agreeing entrepreneur.
I started an eBay business when I was 15 in high school.
I built that up.
I had a drop shipping business
because I just didn't,
I never wanted to work for somebody else.
I wanted to make my own money.
I wanted to kind of have freedom.
So I'm in a small town, Dan.
I'm in Florence, Oregon on the coast of Oregon.
And I'm doing my eBay business, and my friends
work in construction with my dad.
My dad had a construction business, and we were working.
I worked with him for years, and I was paid $7 an hour.
And my friend came in, and he made $60 working all day.
I had checked my eBay, and I made $90 that one, that hour.
And I said, I was 15, I'm super confused.
I'm like, how did I just make $91 on a computer?
When my friend just made 60, he's sweating,
he's working his butt off, he's tired,
he worked all day shoveling sand.
And I'm like, I have to pursue this.
I didn't know what it was or why I liked it.
I had to pursue it.
I did it for two years.
Everybody around me, including my parents, friends,
I'm in a small town that's very conservative and very, it's just a lot of nine to five,
not really a lot of entrepreneurship.
And everyone says you have to get a normal job
when you graduate high school.
I said, I don't wanna do that.
It got beat out of me.
So finally I'm like, all right, I'll get a normal job.
I guess I can't do this,
because everybody in the world that I know and respect
is telling me not to do it.
So I gave that up, got a normal job,
valet in cars, hated it of course.
I remember adding up my paycheck and it's the same and no matter what I did, I made
the same money.
So it was frustrating.
So fast forward, I went to college at U of O, got into sales.
Finally, I saw that I could make money based off my effort.
So I actually, because I was so hungry to make money on my own terms to prove my family
wrong that I could actually be on my own, I broke that sales record.
I sold a couple, I sold $11,000 or $12,000 a product
in the first 10 days, broke the record, worked my way up,
became a manager in that company.
I ran my own business in Tacoma, Washington
for a couple years.
I was paying rent and I was hiring and training people.
And in that instance, I became obsessed with building a team
and leadership and helping people.
And I had helped a lot of people make their first six figures
after I did in sales.
And I broke almost every company record in that company.
I was so obsessed with growth
and with personal entrepreneurship
and with helping people that I just was obsessed
with studying and learning and growing.
So 23 years old, I'm broke at 22.
I'm stressed out, I'm frustrated.
I dropped out of business school because I'm not learning what I need to learn.
I'm at U of O business school.
I have a professor that's never ran a business.
So I'm like, I can't do this.
I have to drop out.
So I dropped out of school, started that business up in Tacoma, Washington area, built that
to a couple million, but I was only making $300,000, $400,000.
So I went from broke to six figures within six months, and
that's when everything changed.
I stayed with that company a couple years.
I stopped in 13, and I wrote a book six months to six figures because I wanted to
help people reach their first six figures, because I felt like I had a formula.
It blew up more than I ever thought it would.
It got to, I've sold over 800,000 copies.
And that's where my speaking career took off.
I was able to start what's called the Game Changers Academy and I learned very early
on to invest in real estate.
So all money I got Dan in 13, 14, 15, 16, I invested back in real estate.
So that portfolio, I think the original 900,000 I spent on real estate is probably seven or
eight million now just real estate.
And then there's been all kinds of things in between but now I have a wife two kids
I live on a farm in Idaho and
It's husband first dad first and everything else secondary. So I love life. I love business
I've got paid highly to speak but now I'm just I feel like I've built a life that I'm proud of and it's cool and
And it's because I knew how to make money work for me. So on the make money side of the podcast
What would you say say holds people back from
making more money instead of just being stuck working that nine to five jobs that they were
told they had to do?
I think they don't ever understand that you can develop money skills and study money.
They don't listen to stuff like this.
And because of their past, they've never reprogrammed their mind to understand that you can make
money work for you.
If you learn making money is a skill set.
How do you know if you have it or not?
You check your bank account.
If you don't have the money you want, you're not very good at making money.
It's a skill to be developed.
So I learned because I was around other people that had money and I asked them questions.
I was at a mastermind, a small one when I was struggling in Washington, and this successful
young guy came up, he was running a small mastermind.
There was only like 15 people there.
And he said something at the end, this was 08, 09, and he said,
when the economy is down, the money doesn't disappear.
It just transfers hands.
And that changed my life.
Because I thought from my small town, I was like,
when the economy is down, no one has money.
You got to be scared.
Save your money.
Don't invest it.
And that was my mentality.
But when I heard from him that you can actually make more money in a down economy than you can in a great one,
it changed my perspective.
And then I started studying money and realizing
I hated people telling me what to do.
Because of how I grew up, because of my childhood,
because of certain things that happened to me
that I won't share today, I have this against the grain
mentality that I want to do things on my terms.
You can't pay me a million dollars
to tell me what I have to do. So I knew in order to fulfill that, I had to do things on my terms. You can't pay me a million dollars to tell me what I have to do.
So I knew in order to fulfill that, I had to make money.
So studying it, understanding that you
have to think about this.
The government's printing trillions of dollars out of thin air.
And people are working so hard for their money,
it's almost like it feels unfair.
That's when I realized you've got to make the money work
for you.
So people just need to educate themselves.
Understand that they need to figure out what blockage
they've had from their childhood.
Schools don't teach it, so no one really
has the right mentality.
And they don't realize how many barriers they
have because of that.
Maybe their parents said, don't make money.
Rich people are greedy.
You don't need money.
And all these things play out in their head,
and it causes them to go broke.
How I became successful is going broke. I had no choices. I had no money. I was stressed
out. I just dropped out of college. I called my mom and I was like, I might have to move
back. She goes, no, you started this. Luckily she didn't help me. And she said, you have
to finish this. So I was like, I just buckled up and studied and realized the more you learn,
the more you earn. And I just became obsessed in a sense.
I think you've been obsessed.
I think obsession's a bad thing in society.
But for entrepreneurs like us, I was obsessed
with making it work, building a business.
So I could talk all day about how to make money
and how to attract money in your life.
But you have to respect and understand
money's not emotional.
It's not good or bad.
It's just money.
It's just a reflection of value.
And the more you have, the more choices you have.
So, so Peter mentioned something about making money in a downturn economy.
So I'm going to walk you through a real life example of how that happens.
So in 2018, I invested $500,000 into a company called Ever Bowl.
Ever Bowl is the Acai Bowl chain.
You guys have probably heard me talk about in different episodes.
2019, I raised $5 million for Ever Bowl to help them scale. They had around 17-18 locations, 19-20-21, and then, if you notice I said 2019,
March 2020 happens. Wah wah wah. The whole world shuts down, especially restaurants.
So at that time we had 27 locations shut down. Hundreds of employees we have to. We couldn't make money can't open the doors. Yeah, you have to furlough the employees don't know what to do
Jeff Fenster the founder
God bless him calls means like hey, I want to figure out how we can deliver frozen acai to people's houses
He's like I can make 90,000 bowls. I can hire a bunch of the employees to keep them working
We have money in the bank where we're okay He's like, I can make 90,000 bowls. I can hire a bunch of the employees to keep them working.
We have money in the bank.
We're okay, but like, we don't know how long until we reopen.
So we figured it out.
We called a guy named Todd Abrams who owns Icon Meals.
I had just invested 3 million into Icon Meals,
the healthy meal company.
And I called them because he does frozen meals.
IconMeals.com, they should be frozen meals.
Perfect.
They get on the phone, they become best friends. Not only does he help us figure out the shipping for ever bowl he also is like hey by the
way you should sell ever bowl on qvc you want to sell us frozen acai on qvc sure why not
every 11 minutes 150 000 in acai sales just from that connection. $7 million in sales on QVC alone
because of this random situation of the world shutting down.
But wait, there's more.
Also, while everyone else on the planet
is closing down their restaurants.
And scared and fearful.
For sure they're scared.
Canceling their leases, not calling tenants back,
not calling landlords back.
Everyone just doesn't know what to do
because it's two weeks till there's a cure.
Two weeks becomes months and months and months.
And so Jeff Fenster goes on the offensive.
He signs over 300 leases.
For new.
For new locations.
Because he's getting 50,000 to a hundred thousand dollars
in what's called TI, tenant improvements.
He's getting six months free, 12 months free.
And discounts, yep.
Wow.
Oh, you're four grand a month?
No, I'll give you 2,800.
So he's negotiating leases, getting free six, 12 months free. Oh, you're four grand a month? No, I'll give you 2,800. So he's negotiating leases,
getting free six to 12 months,
and getting 50 to $100,000 in tenant improvements
while everyone else is closing down.
You know why?
Because the landlords and the building owners,
what are they supposed to do?
No one else is calling them
to get a lease right now for a restaurant.
Who's crazy enough to do that?
Fast forward, we now have 96 locations open,
one new one every six days, raised 15 million more funding,
Drew Brees bought 160 locations,
we've sold 430 locations,
all stemming from the shutdown when everyone else was in fear.
And so what Peter mentioned was in a downturn,
when everyone else is in fear,
we ran forward towards the war and we ended up winning.
Because of networking as well,
which is you're one of the best in the world at.
People need to realize money is networking as well.
Because I think what's more valuable
is money in the bank is your network
and who answers your phone call.
You know what I mean?
If you can connect with anybody
and have access to capital and high level people,
and you have access to information,
access to opportunities, you call the shots in a sense.
That's huge.
So on the investing side of things,
you mentioned that you were deploying capital
into real estate.
I absolutely love that.
Walk us through how at a young age,
you're like, you know what?
I just made 50 grand.
I'm going to throw into real estate.
I just made 100 grand.
I'm going to throw most of it into real estate.
Walk us through that thought process.
Well, first, I remember hearing like, money loves speed.
And if your money's not working for you, it's wasted.
I just remember hearing that over and over again.
And I remember when the economy went down in 08,
I made my first six figures 09 in that down economy.
Everyone stressed out.
My small town was so, I guess they were very scarce
mentality focused.
And I made my first six figures.
Then the year after, I made even more.
And I remember getting a check for a week of sales.
We broke some type of record and my commission check was 70k.
So it was, I'm 23, 24, my family's not doing well, all my friends and their parents are
struggling and they can't pay the rent and I'm this kid that makes 70k.
I almost felt bad.
I'm like, what the hell is happening?
This is super weird.
I wasn't focused at all on money.
I was focused on a cause and a mission. I'm like, what the hell is happening? This is super weird. I wasn't focused at all on money.
I was focused on a cause and a mission.
I was focused on getting my team rallied to crush it,
and the money came.
So when I made that, I said, I got to make the money move.
I got to make the money move, because there's
this old adage, Dan, you got to save your way.
And really, with inflation and what's happening now
and government printing money, savings
not going to get you wealthy.
It's investing.
It's moving the money.
So I found a deal in Furcrest, Washington.
I found a deal, and I bought my first piece of property for 285.
Sold it for 385 10 months later.
Put that money into another property in Arizona.
Rented it out.
It was cash flowing.
And then from then, every time I made a good chunk of money,
I invested it back in real estate.
Now it's more Airbnbs and short-term rentals
and I've done apartment buildings and stuff like that.
But I learned because I was lucky
to have my mom and dad had some rentals.
And I saw the money they were making from it.
Every month they were collecting money from their tenants
and I was like, this is cool.
So I was lucky to have parents
that actually already invested.
That's where I got it from.
So I was, they kind of trained me, but I was the one making the money, putting it in.
And then I had to manage it and find the right property management companies.
And it's been, now we have so many rentals that there's issues all the time, but it comes
with the, comes with the game.
You know what I mean?
So, and I love it because the money, I don't have to work ever again.
The money works for me, but I love what I do, so I work all the time.
And you know that feeling.
So someone out there is listening.
They are making their money, right?
They started making $50,000, now $80,000, $100,000,
now $200,000.
They started saving up some money.
They've got $100,000 to deploy.
How they decide when there's real estate, the stock market,
cryptocurrency, there's just so many different things
to choose from.
How did you land on real estate
and why should people consider?
I've done many different investments.
I've done hard money loans.
I've done short-term, long-term Airbnb.
I've done land, I've done crypto, I've done a lot of them.
It really depends on your situation
and it depends on what you're looking for.
If you're looking for just out of sight, out of mind,
I don't wanna say easy money,
but the easiest money you can get in working for yourself
is the short, like long-term rental game
with the right property and the right location.
It depends on what your goals are.
If your goal is to make the money work quick,
like for right now, it's very important
to have a business that prints money.
Have a business based on your skills and strengths
that prints money, and you can invest that money
into specific crypto based on knowing the right people, knowing Prince money, you can invest that money into specific crypto
based on knowing the right people,
knowing the right project owners, not gambling.
A lot of people in crypto gamble and make no money.
If you don't gamble and you know the right people,
you're in the right circles,
you can make a lot of money with your money.
So what I've been doing is taking money from my business,
investing in crypto, making that work
and making a ton of money there, bringing it out,
putting it back into hard assets, land and real estate.
It depends on where you're at.
If you wanna make quicker money,
I don't think there's a lot more time in crypto to do that.
I think the time is shortening
because regulations are coming.
I think by next year, it's gonna be harder and harder
to make these type of gains.
Some of them, we could talk money,
some of the money I've made in the last couple months
in cryptos, more than I made in my Web2 business for like two years.
It's a weird world, man.
But I tell people, money is easy to make if you focus on it
and you become so valuable that it comes to you and you network.
Here's the formula that I've used to make money
and make it work for me that I haven't shared much,
but I'll share it.
And it works for everyone I've ever talked to.
I was just on Ryan Pineda's podcast.
He said, yes, he does it.
I'll see if you do it.
There's four things all millionaires invest in
that I've ever talked to and ever met.
I've interviewed a lot of people, David Goggins
and Mike Tyson and a lot of people that have been around
and are pretty well known.
The first thing almost everyone invests
in that makes money work for them is themselves.
Whether it's masterminds, whether it's their mentality,
whether it's books, audios, whether it's events,
they invest back in their mentality
to sharpen their intellect.
I don't know any successful person
that hasn't invested back into their mindset.
That's number one.
And this has to be this order.
Number two is back in their business.
So when you're building your business
and you're making money work for you,
you gotta invest that money back into the business,
into personnel, into marketing, into ads,
into employees, into whatever your business is relevant to,
invest in that business to make the business grow.
So when I make money, I invest it back in the business.
I'm sure you do the same thing.
Or you find the right people
and hire them to run the business.
Invest in yourself, invest back in your business.
Number three is investing in assets that work for you.
Real estate, sometimes art.
I know I was talking to Rob from Dope, who I believe you know.
He's telling me he's buying jerseys and cards.
He bought a Mickey Mantle card for $5 million, sold it for $7.
He bought a Michael Jordan jersey, the finals jersey.
That's made a couple million.
Cars, collector cars, watches, artwork, jerseys,
real estate, land.
Invest that money you're making from your company
into things that appreciate and make more money.
It could be wine.
And then number three, that's key,
is invest back in that assets.
And number four is memorable experiences
with people you care about.
Maximizing memorable experiences. If you use about, maximizing memorable experiences.
If you use this formula, not in out of order,
if you invest in yourself, you grow your intellect,
grow your network, then you invest in your business,
grow your business.
Invest that money in assets that make money work.
Eventually, you're never going to work again.
And then four is experiences.
Because when I go on experiences and I pay for everything,
I go with my family, I fly in first class,
and I'm excited about what we're doing,
whether we're going to the Keys.
I have an event in Miami, and we're going to Keys afterwards with my entire family, my brother my family. I fly in first class, and I'm excited about what we're doing, whether we're going to the Keys. I have an event in Miami, and we're
going to Keys afterwards with my entire family,
my brother's family.
Taking care of that is amazing.
And I don't know about you, but if you fly first class,
you go to Dubai, you go somewhere amazing.
Are you less motivated or more to make more money?
Way more.
So you spend 10 grand, 20 grand on a vacation,
or if you're a Fleischman, I don't know,
100 grand on a vacation because it's damn Fleischman,
or get everything paid for it
because you know so many people, whoever it is.
You're fired up to make more money when you get back.
And I see people skip that.
They don't invest in themselves,
but they invest in the business.
Their business goes under because your business
is a reflection of you as a leader.
Or they invest only in experiences
because they're like, YOLO, you only live once,
but they have no business.
So they're kind of escaping reality and it never works out.
So that's the formula that I've used.
And I'm curious if you've invested back in yourself, back in your business, back in assets,
and then back in, and your assets are mainly companies, right?
That's another one.
So that's the formula.
And I think if you think about society, sadly, they don't invest in any of those things.
None.
And I think they need to really start because as the economy gets a little more challenging
for the majority of people, when there's a lot of fear in the air, there's an election.
Inflation.
Inflation.
You've got to protect your bag in a sense.
You've got to protect your family and position yourself so nothing can be taken from you.
And that's what I've tried to do.
And now that I'm good, I was positioned well before COVID, and now I'm positioned in a
place where now my fulfillment comes from giving back, helping others. And now that I'm good, I was positioned well before COVID. And now I'm positioned in a place
where now my fulfillment comes from giving back,
helping others.
And that's where the real excitement is for me now.
Well, that leads into our third topic, charity.
So when I say how to make money, invest money,
and give it away, I don't mean give away everything,
maybe later on in life.
But walk us through why do you think
that it's important for people or their businesses
to be involved in charity? Well, I've heard if you don't think money is everything you haven't given enough away
I didn't fully invest and it's a different aspect of giving back
But my first taste of knowing that I wanted to actually help people was when I was in sales and I was field training
Some guy was ready to quit. He was ready to quit and he said can I go with you on your appointment?
You've been doing well make sure came with me. He watched me. He goes, oh, I didn't
know you did that. Wow. You taught me that's how you close the customer. Oh my gosh. I
can't believe you use this technique. Long story short, I have chills. He was going to
quit. His family was struggling. He was going to get evicted. He became one of the top reps
in the entire company. So, and I had this feeling as a young kid like, wow, I've made six figures, but I got
more enjoyment watching him do well.
I still get, it's still, it's still a, it's weird.
So I knew giving back was more important and I knew that was how, why I see so many wealthy
people give back and they get more joy doing that than making money themselves.
So I then fast forward and I've donated to, to a lot of children, kids foundations, St. Jude's and some other ones.
But I started an NFT project and we wanted to help cheetahs because cheetahs are one of the most extinct.
They're almost extinct. But by this rate, when we have kids and our kids grow up, there'll be no more cheetahs.
Myself and my wife love cheetahs. We started a whole project around it. We were able to donate over six figures to a certain fund. Tarzan helped us and we
still have him doing some stuff with a really cool organization. We can maybe post it below
in a different country with cheetahs, like literally rewilding cheetahs back into the
wild and I don't know what it's called. Something about me, like something with cheetahs, like
duplicating them and making more of them.
Tarzan knows the exact term.
And it was the most fulfilling thing.
We get letters from them.
We've donated to kids overseas and kids in less,
like in Honduras and we get letters from the kids now.
I don't know, it's just, it's selfishly fulfilling.
I don't know if selfish is the right word,
but I think there's nothing else greater
than donating, giving back.
Donating your time, your money, your effort to helping people who are less fortunate.
It's amazing man.
I'm still young, but I mean it's amazing to do that and I know you've done it and I know
a lot of my friends do it and I used to wonder why are you giving away your money?
But now I'm like I get it.
I'm obsessed with charity obviously.
We throw six charity events per year. The
world's largest toy drive being the main public one for kids. We do a
Thanksgiving food drive. We do a back-to-school day. We do a report card day. We
have 400 families come to Hubble Studio in downtown LA. I throw Steve Aoki's
charity event. We help him each year do a charity poker tournament.
Cake in the face. He always gets me. You make me so bad I need to step my charity game tournament. Cake in the face. He always gets me. Okay. You make me so bad
I haven't I need to I need to step my charity game up. It's not just about the money part it's
the energy part and more importantly if you inspire your mastermind members to do it that's
the butterfly effect. My whole point of charity is to show other people how to do charity. Great.
If I donate more because of you that helps and then I bring in my audience that helps it's a
flywheel. Exactly. Yeah exactly., I'm gonna ask you a question
that I've never had the same answer to.
Ooh.
Okay, and I try to ask it on almost every episode.
Never had the same answer.
Never once had the same answer,
and I'm not gonna get the same answer today.
Interesting.
You said your number one focus is your kids,
and obviously, and your wife.
100 years from now, 150 years from now,
with modern technology, when you pass away, because you're gonna have robot arms and. I and your wife. 100 years from now, 150 years from now, with modern technology, when you pass away,
because you're gonna have robot arms and.
I'll be 150. Yeah.
And you've got your nine million real estate
becomes 90 million or 900 million,
and maybe you become a billionaire, who knows?
Peter's been on a great trajectory.
You've got hundreds of millions of dollars one day.
How much on a percentage basis
are you gonna leave to those kids?
I think the amount is irrelevant because I'm training them to not even want it.
So whether it's a hundred million, a billion, five million, I think they won't want it because
they're going to be self-sufficient and realize it's not about money.
I will give them a certain percentage and I haven't thought about that. That's a great question.
Of course, you would ask a question like that. It makes me think.
It's already not the right answer. I want to say right.
Same answer.
The amounts are relevant because I want to raise my kids to understand that there's more than that.
When my mom wants to give me money, she's built quite a portfolio now,
and she wants to, I mean, obviously, we're gonna get it,
and I literally, like, spend it all.
I don't care.
I don't want it.
Spend it.
And I want my kids to be the same way.
So that I'm trying to raise them in a way
where they understand that it's worth more
when you earn it.
I wanna give it to them so they don't have to
go through certain struggles and pains
that I did based on my past,
but I don't want them to have it and be able to just have
access and be spoiled by it.
So I have to think of specific boundaries
and specific filter systems on how they'll get it.
But if I did my job as a parent, I would have them, my kids,
I have two now, we want another one, say, I don't want that.
Thank you, Dad.
I want it.
You've taught me so much that I'll do it myself, in a way.
So that's my answer.
I love it.
All right, guys, make sure to check out Peter Voog on social
media, especially on Instagram.
He does really great content.
You can hear him on his podcast.
You can go to his live events, go to his Mastermind, et cetera.
It's really important to have the discussion about money.
The whole time we all grew up thinking it's rude to talk
about money. But as you can see, the things that we're talking about are for real life stuff.
Travel, family, children, charity, and everything between, those are all very functional things in
your life and they are all very positive things. So when people try to make money seem rude or
evil, it's not rude or evil to pay for your kids travel or buy your parents first-class tickets
or go have experiences around the world or pay for houses, life, events, food,
beverage, insurance, medical,
everything between are all money related.
So let's remove the stigma from our minds,
have the discussion about money.
Check us out at the moneymondays.com.
Make sure to like, comment, subscribe,
check out Peter on social media,
and we will see you guys next Monday.
Appreciate you, brother.
["Money Mondays"]
I appreciate you brother. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the Money Mondays where we are going to talk about three
core topics.
How to make money, how to invest money, how to give it away to charity.
I want to appreciate you guys.
Thank you guys with gratitude because you've kept us number one on the charts for now 68
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So we can keep doing that.
Also check us out on the money mondays.com. Every Monday at four o'clock I go live and do a live zoom call and live Q and A
every 4pm PST at the money mondays.com. Okay.
We are going to get into it because it is hot.
It is the summertime and what happens in the summertime is you need air
conditioning, you need solar power, you need electricity,
you need to fix your roof.
And so our guest today helps with all those things because he owns multiple companies in that category and
He teaches other people how to build and scale those businesses that do HVAC,
roofing, solar, etc. So his name is very easy because it's also Dan.
I'm gonna have him dive into his bio. But first I want you guys to keep in mind
we keep these podcasts around 30 to 40 minutes because the average workout is 45 minutes,
the average commute to work is 45 minutes.
So this episode will be around 30 to 35 minutes today
because it's extra hot outside.
And we are inside an RV motor home here
at the wild jungle right now.
It is over a hundred degrees.
So we're gonna do around 30 to 35 minutes for you guys.
But without further ado, Dan,
if you can give a quick two minute bio
so we can get straight to the money.
Awesome, man.
Well, first I wanna say thank you, Dan, for you can give a quick two minute bio so we can get straight to the money. Awesome, man. Well, first I want to say thank you, Dan, for having me on
and very impressive wildlife facility that you have here.
Yeah, I've been in direct sales, building companies
for going on almost 15 years.
Everywhere from starting out in door to door
to learning how to build teams, manage teams, lead,
and then to building my own companies teams, lead, and then to, you know, building my own
companies and then acquisitions and mergers and all those kinds of things.
So in the door-to-door space and the solar roofing HVAC, a lot of times it gets overlooked as
not the normal entrepreneur career because it takes work.
Right.
People have to go door-to-door. They have to interact with humans. They got to go build things.
And there's not as much labor as there was in the past because a lot of people want to
become TikTokers and influencers and other things.
They don't necessarily want to be doing the roofing.
I think, actually I feel like I know, that that category is going to start to charge
more and more and more and more because there's going to be less and less available labor
out there.
Talk us through what your thoughts are on the future of manual labor in those categories.
So labor has always been a pretty hot topic
in the home services fields.
For that, one of those main reasons,
because a lot of the youth don't want
to go into those jobs, right?
Social media has created a stir in that everyone wants to be,
like you said, an influencer in that way.
And manual labor doesn't sound inviting.
People don't know how much money you can make.
75 bucks an hour sounds inviting though.
Right, and sometimes it's more.
So like my dad is a plumber by trade.
So I grew up in the trades and he could go out and make
four or $5,000 in a day.
No way.
Yeah, but the problem is that
nobody really understands that.
But here's the other side of that.
It's feast or famine.
So when he's getting jobs, there's money.
When he's not getting jobs, there's no money.
You're kind of on your own in that way.
If you go down the entrepreneurial side
of the home services industry. I grew up seeing that and it made me not want
to be a contractor because I saw, okay,
you can make some good money,
but then you could be completely broke.
Eat what you kill, yeah.
You know, and he wasn't the best business mind,
but he was a great craftsman with his hands.
Sure.
And, you know, I didn't learn the craftsman side.
I took on a sales job because I wanted to
learn how to influence people
and accomplish the career path a different route, right?
It happened to be in construction.
So when I was going door to door,
it was for a construction company.
And when I told my dad, I'm like,
dad, I'm going door to door for a construction company.
He said, that's crazy.
That doesn't even make sense. I'm like, well, I can see that they need it a construction company. He said, that's crazy. That doesn't even make sense.
I'm like, well, I can see that they need it.
Sure.
And so I knock on the door and I say, hey, you need to-
Yeah, your roof sucks.
Your roof sucks.
There's a rainstorm coming.
There was a tornado last week.
Your roof sucks.
So it made sense to me and I saw how scalable that was.
And that's how I got started
in the construction industry my way,
where he could get and
maybe do one job a week, two jobs a week at the most where I could get 10, 15, 20, 100,
just by knocking on doors. I just had to figure out how to manage and get those jobs done. So it's
the way to market that made all the difference for me to want to stay in the construction industry.
And once I learned the door to door side, everything else kind of became easier to understand.
All right, rapid fire question.
And you can just give a ballpark, don't have to be exact.
What does an average roofer make in a month?
Okay, so when you say average roofer,
the guy putting a roof on or the guy-
The guy working, not the owner.
So like a sales guy?
The guy that actually is doing the roof.
So they, I mean, depends on what market you're in.
Every market's different.
So I can-
Who's the ballpark?
It's like 25 bucks an hour.
So, you know, you're 25, 30 bucks an hour.
You know, so you're looking at, you know,
800,000, 1500 a week,
depending on your level of your expertise.
Solar.
Little bit more than that.
So you're commanding somewhere around 28 at the bottom up to you know
I've seen them at 40 50 bucks an hour
HVAC is more right HVAC is a little bit more because you have it's more technical
Yeah, right so you can charge a little bit more for that
But it's it's the same kind of idea and and here's what's crazy
I can spend an hour with you sell you a roof right and and now you have your I sell you a roof, right? And now you have, I sell you a roof.
I might make two, three, $4,000
for my hour long conversation.
Whoa.
But the guy that's gonna be standing on the roof
for the next week doing it,
he makes 1,000, 1,200 bucks a week.
Sure.
The disparity between sales and installation is massive.
So I know door to door,
I speak at so many door-to-door conferences.
SolarCon and RoofingCon, literally every single year for the last half a decade.
I've spoken at so many door-to-door conferences.
And I see these kids that are 21 years old, 24 years old, they're like,
yeah, I made 200,000 this summer. Oh, I made 80,000 this summer. I made 60,000.
I made half a million. I made 100,000.
They just casually talk about six figure amounts in a summer.
Have you ever done the actual door to door side,
like where you were out there like.
I did it for a decade.
Oh wow, okay, cool.
Yeah, yeah, so like.
Let's dive in.
Yeah, man, so like dude, I am a door to door guru.
I've been doing door to door for a long time.
That's how I started.
I built these, I built a reputation as being a top performer.
And from that, it started my leadership career
because people would come up.
I remember the first time someone came up to me and said,
Hey, Dan, do like, and I was 22 years old, right?
And I was just starting out in my door to door career.
And he came to me and he said, Dan,
like you're really good at this.
Can you show me how?
I'm like, of course.
Sure.
Like come on with me, right?
And I didn't realize, but that was the start of leadership.
And from there I became, you know,
I started at a pretty big company
in the home improvement space going door to door.
And I moved my way up from, you know,
team member to team leader to assistant manager,
manager, branch manager, district manager.
And so by 23, I was running half of this company's
door to door program.
Because I was good at, you know,
speaking and talking and motivating
and I love to help people.
I love to see people walk through the clouds of darkness
into the light and be like,
oh wow, I can actually change my life
if I go out here and I give it everything I have.
So yeah.
What's the biggest fear for someone to go,
Oh dude, I had a guy just the other day, he's new.
And he says, Dan, I just, I have such a anxiety,
even just going up and knocking on the door.
It's so scary.
I'm just, I'm passing up home after home after home.
I'm just so scared to even, like, I don't know what it is.
And it's either a fear of rejection, it's an anxiety of like,
you don't know what's outcome, you never know.
So there's a lot of fears there.
And also do you have the ability to even perform
and do the job?
Because in door to door, you eat what you kill, right?
And so there's a natural fear behind that industry
that is, it's unavoidable.
Even someone like me who's been doing it for so long.
Like I go out there every once in a while,
I like to be out there with the team and go hit some doors
and lead by example in that way.
And even for me, having done it,
building companies, doing all this stuff,
I go out there and those first couple of doors,
that first door is still like,
there's little butterflies are coming.
You know, and you just, it's unavoidable.
So if it happens to me,
it's happening at a much higher level,
especially when you're new.
So the best thing you can do is just hit that first door,
get it out of the way, right?
Who cares what happens?
And oftentimes what happens,
you sign up that first person,
it's a done deal.
The rest of the day is easy, it's cake.
Yeah.
I think it's interesting for almost any kid,
fresh out of high school to try it.
I think it should be-
I think it should be experienced.
It's almost should be mandatory, right?
Like either door to door or the military.
Like something's gotta give you some discipline.
And there's people that have gone down different roads.
Like you've gone down a very different road,
very successful in what you do in social media
and all the other avenues of investing.
And for a lot of these kids that don't have that,
that have no background in this stuff,
like where I come from, it's a pretty rough area.
So most people don't make it out of that type of environment.
They get stuck selling drugs or going to jail
or getting killed trying to do, you know,
and so like I grew up around that
and there wasn't really an escape path.
And I got lucky that I found door to door.
I fell into it.
And for me being a sports guy and being competitive,
it was easy for me to look at sales
like I look at a sports on a stat sheet.
Because at the end of the week,
everybody's name was on this list
and everybody's numbers was on it.
I'm like, well, if I'm gonna show up here,
I have to have my name at the top of the list.
Oh, for sure.
You know what I'm saying?
And so that's the competitive side
that a lot of these guys that are competitors naturally,
most men are naturally competitive,
they can find sales as an outlet
if you focus in on that
and you can create financial freedom,
which is really what everybody's looking for.
So I used to work at Qualcomm Stadium.
Peanut, it's Cracker Jacks here.
Cotton candy, ice cold lemonade,
and there was 120 to 180 reps.
You know, the guys wearing orange hats,
the bright neon orange hats.
Yeah, yeah.
If I wasn't number one,
I would go out and sell in the parking lot after the game.
Just to be number one.
I had to be number one.
No, like I'm actually tense talking about it. I had to be number one. I would go out and sell in the parking lot after the game just to be number one I had to be number one. They're like I'm actually tense talking about I had to be number one. I
Would not leave
Like anything to do it do that is that is the fundamental foundation of door-to-door
Like if you're not willing to give it all out there, you're not gonna be successful
It's one of those industries where you can't part-time it really some people try to
But like the summer programs
that you were talking about earlier, those are very unique.
So you have year-round canvassing
and you have summer programs.
Some are like the college students that come out.
Salt Lake City mostly,
and then they go off to different cities, yeah.
Right, and so what they do is they have
a very short amount of time to make a bunch of money.
So they'll work six days a week,
they're going morning to night, it's very intense.
We have a summer program that we recruit out of Utah
and other states and colleges and all that.
And then we have our year round programs
in our different markets.
And so it's a very different dynamic.
Like one, the year round type of program
requires a lot of heavy leadership
and drive and motivation on a consistent basis.
Cause you gotta get people like,
you're gonna go knock, it's 112 degrees.
Imagine it's this.
And then you're out there in Phoenix
and you're knocking all day long.
It's hard.
It's hard.
Right?
And you get your face with rejection after rejection
after rejection.
And that weighs on you, especially with the elements,
you know, putting more pressure on you.
So with those things, the different types of door to door
require different types of management styles and intensity levels.
So I was a year-round guy for so long, I learned how to every single day bring just a massive
amount of energy and passion to my team because that was what helped them get over those hurdles
of adversity so they can find that success.
All right, so we talked about the making money side.
Let's talk about the investing side. Okay. These kids are 21, 23, 27 years old making 100,000, 200,000, 300,000 a year.
And they're babies. 22 and a half years old. Right. Like walk us through, you were doing it,
right? You're making six figures a year in your early twenties. How did you not just like go buy
three cars, go buy four watches, go spend it go spend it all the nightclub bottle service like walk us
So well, I'll tell you well
I have I guess that's a deeper story that probably requires a little bit more time
But I can give you I'll try to shorten the version
I had a good friend of mine who I watched from a young age save
money when we he was started at 12 and started saving every dollar and
I and I kept calling him crazy.
Like, dude, what are you doing?
And he graduated middle school with 1500 bucks
because he saved his $5 of lunch money, right?
So he didn't eat lunch.
So instead of, while I was eating lunch,
he wasn't eating and just putting the $5 in a piggy bank,
1500 bucks by the time.
So by the time he was able to work at 14 and a half,
you can get your workers permit.
I think it was either 14 hour or 15, one of those.
He started working.
I said, dude, come play football with us.
Come do all these things.
He went to work, right?
So I watched him and I would talk shit
and he would be like, dude, and I told him,
I remember the day I told him, I said,
you have your whole life to work.
And he looked at me and said,
I'm not gonna work my whole life.
And this was, I was 15.
We were 15.
And by the time he graduated high school,
he had $75,000.
Wow.
And even then it didn't click.
Like I'm like, dude, this is,
and even then it didn't click.
And then finally, you know, that was like 2008.
Housing marketing.
So he went and bought a couple of properties.
And I'm like, okay, things are, things are starting to make sense now.
So I went deep dive, where I was not like that,
and I went deep dive into saving money.
So I made the decision,
I'm not spending it on anything anymore.
I told my girlfriend at the time, I said, guess what?
We're not doing anything, okay?
So then this is what the life was.
And that's what it took for me as I started making money
and taking it serious and I got in door to door that I wasn't going to spend any money. I wanted to create a foundation.
So that's really what it is. I was thinking farther ahead.
So what advice would you give to these kids that start making good money? 50 grand, 100
grand, 200 grand, 300 grand? Maybe they're not in door to door, but they're just starting
to make some money. And by the way, they could be 30, 40 years old as well. To avoid, and I'll have my answer as well,
going and buying the second car and the third watch and the fourth XYZ.
Well, I mean, I think it comes down to, you know, what do you want personally? I don't necessarily
think that buying a second car or third whatever is bad if you're, if you're wise at money management,
you know, like what, what the problem that kids get in is they make a bunch of money and then they, is bad if you're wise at money management.
You know, like what the problem that kids get in
is they make a bunch of money and then they blow it all
and they're broke.
Where you can take some money and if you invest it properly
or you put it in the right places,
you can buy the things that you wanna buy.
You may have to wait a little bit longer than you think,
which is okay, right?
Invest the time to create the capital
to have the things that you want.
But I'm not necessarily against buying stuff,
I'm just against poor money management.
So just to pivot off that for a second,
because we're toying with this idea right now
with our own team of how to take these kids, right?
And they start making money,
how to give them financial literacy.
It's one thing to say, hey, here's
a job that gives you an opportunity
to make 100 grand in three months in a summer.
That's great, but what are you going to do with that?
What knowledge are you going to have?
So we're toying with the idea of, like, what
if we create an investor pool where the kids can put money
into real estate purchases, right, that the company kind
of manages for them.
And so as long as they're with the company,
they have this thing and it stays with them forever.
And you know, if they want to get bought out,
they can get bought, like we'll work on the legal side of it,
but that way they have a chance to like take their money
instead of blowing it on the weekend on girls
and you know, big parties,
they can invest it and start building
kind of that future portfolio.
All right guys,
I'm gonna have a very blunt discussion with you guys.
When you buy your second car, you will feel nothing.
When you buy your third watch, you will feel nothing.
When you buy the three bedroom, the four bedroom,
the five bedroom, or you rent the three bedroom,
four bedroom, five bedroom,
you'll never go into the fourth bedroom, ever, at all.
Not once. You will never stay in the third or fourth bedroom ever because it's
You and your girlfriend or you and your wife or you and your husband or whatever the thing is and you're gonna stay in
The main two bedrooms the kitchen and the living room and that's it
You will never ever ever go to bedroom number four and five at all and it's really really really rare
That you have that many guests and you don't really want that many guests at your house
and I say that because we've all watched it and over the course of
time I've watched friends with tens of millions, hundreds of millions, etc. and
they are numb to those things. But I've also watched people make 100k, 200k, 300k
and that second car they're like oh yeah it's only another 1200 bucks a month. No
no no that's 14,400 a year on a five year lease.
That means you've got 70 or $80,000 going to that car.
What would happen if you put 70 or $80,000
into a real estate investment or into the stock market
and you make 10, 15% a year?
All of a sudden that 70, 80 grand becomes $150,000.
What happens with 150?
150 becomes 200K, 300K, 500K, a million.
But see, that's the financial literacy that's missing.
Yes.
And they don't teach you that in school,
which I think is-
That's what we're here for.
That's right, that's what we're here for, right?
And this is why these types of podcasts
and this type of environment is so important for the youth.
And really not just a youth, it's really anybody.
Like my parents don't have that kind of financial literacy.
They couldn't pass that down to me.
Everything that I've learned, I've had to learn on my own
and from guys like you that have created success
in different ways, right?
Like I might be good at building
these direct sales companies.
You're good at your types of investments,
but together we can learn so much more
and go so much faster because there's like, as soon as you say, you know everything or you
think that you know everything, you're, you're screwed.
Um, and involving markets.
And especially when you're young, where you think that you, you know, like you death never
comes.
Right.
And so that's, that's kind of like, so you're right on, like you can make a lot of money,
but it's, it's not about what you make.
It's about how you use it.
Yeah. If you start making money early and you start deploying investments, you can be
set up forever, ever, ever, just basic investments. But also, as you guys have heard me talk about
the 40, 40, 20 concept of 40% low risk, 40% medium risk, 20% high risk. If you're throwing
in 2K, 5K, 10K, 50K, 20K,
again, the number's adjustable to you and your life
and what's going on in your career.
But you started throwing those investments in
on a consistent basis, oh my God.
Especially if you're starting your 20s and 30s,
you can literally be set forever
if you just make basic investments, nothing fancy,
no startup, no like crazy, I invested in Uber.
No, you buy like 80K property and 80 became 110
and you're getting a thousand bucks a month.
You bought Google and Netflix and Facebook stock
and some Tesla stock and Amazon stock
and you just didn't sell it.
And then you bought some Apple stock
and then you add some more Apple stock
and you just didn't sell it.
And you threw in 10 grand, five grand, 20 grand
and now it's becomes 50K and 100K over the course of time.
Like you just do basic stuff.
You can sell yourself forever if you start making money.
All right, third and final topic, charity.
Why do you think it's important for people as individuals
to do some form of charity,
whether it's financial, emotional,
or they're just putting in their time and energy into it?
Well, I think charity is fundamental to a functioning society.
Like, if you have something that...
And you don't need to be wealthy or anything like that to give charity.
Correct.
Because charity can be monetary and charity can also be time.
And so I like to give charity because I believe that that is a way for me to give back to
The the world, you know, it's all about like I'm a big believer in energy
right like energy kind of moves things and and so if I if I take energy and I and I give it to others and I
provide them with
Whether it's donating to to some charity or it's volunteering time to help kids or
animals or whatever the case is, those things also come back.
And not that you have to do it for that reason, but I believe that the world is just this
energy cycle just revolving.
The more charity that you give, the more that comes back to you and you should want to give
back. It shouldn't be just about you
and what you can gain in this life.
That's kind of my opinion.
So I'm gonna ask you a question
that I've never gotten the same answer for.
I have a very strong feeling
I'm not gonna get the same answer right now.
Right over there inside of that barn are two small children.
100 years from now when it's time for you to go.
And let's see, you've got $100 million saved up at the time,
more or less, whatever, you get the concept.
What percentage of your fortune
do you leave to those two little kids?
Hmm.
I don't know if I can answer that today.
Already, not the same answer, see?
I, because I don't,
I'm a new father and I want to instill
in my children disciplines and, you know,
what finite resources mean and how to have,
how to be tenacious to creating success for your life.
I wanna give them those things,
but I also don't want them to struggle like I did.
So it's hard to answer that today
because there's so little,
and I probably need more time to just be around
more of the world to make what I believe
is gonna be the best decision for them.
I don't want to enable them in a way that hurts them,
but I also don't want them to struggle.
$100 million is very far from struggle, right?
And so there's probably somewhere in the middle there.
I just can't answer.
I want them to be set up though.
It's hard.
I'm torn on that.
It was part of my conversation with Wayne last night
was this, because I don't want
them to resent me because I don't leave them something.
But I also don't want to enable weakness in where they don't have the drive to become
their own success in their own ways.
So it's a really tough question to answer.
Talk to me like 30 years.
Got it.
I'll have you back on here then.
If you could give everyone your social media
or how can they go find you, follow you, check you out.
Yeah, dan.zrihen, Z-R-I-H-E-N on Instagram.
That's where I'm mostly.
I'm always open to have a conversation
and meet and talk and discuss business.
And I'm a very, very much do I believe in entrepreneurship
and the ability to really create whatever you want in life.
If you can surround yourself with the right people,
put yourself in the right environment
and just push forward and never give up.
Just always, always have what your goals are on the mind and focus on those things
and try to stay away from the bad side of life
that can easily drag you down.
And financial freedom and sitting in podcasts like this
in 110 degree trailers can be yours.
So it's really, it's up to everybody
and what they want to accomplish.
All right guys, check us out on on the moneymondays.com.
Make sure to have these discussions with your friends,
family, and followers about money.
We all grew up thinking it's rude to talk about money.
I think it's rude and ridiculous to not talk about it.
So make sure you have these conversations with people
about accounting, taxes, salaries, life,
everything in between.
Have these discussions.
It's important for financial literacy, for the people around you, for yourself, and the people that are gonna
be here long after you. We have to have this discussion about money so that they
can protect themselves and better their lives. So check us out at themoneymoneys.com
and we'll see you guys next Monday.