The Ryan Hanley Show - RHS 186 - James Webb on Relationships and Resilience
Episode Date: June 22, 2023Became a Master of the Close: https://masteroftheclose.comWhat does it take to rise from humble beginnings and achieve massive success in business while creating millionaires out of your key employees...? Join us as we sit down with James Webb, author of Redneck Resilience, and explore his incredible journey from a small town in Mississippi to becoming a successful entrepreneur owning one of the country's largest Orange Theory Fitness franchises.In this fascinating and inspiring conversation, we dive into James's entrepreneurial journey and the pivotal moments that shaped his life and career. We touch on his early experiences selling pot holders at church bazaars, becoming an x-ray tech, and how the internet changed his entire trajectory. Throughout our discussion, we also examine the importance of resilience, relationships, and generational thinking in overcoming challenges and fostering long-term success.Don't miss this engaging episode, as we also discuss the often-overlooked topic of compensating high-performing employees in industries like the independent insurance industry, where there is no consistent solution. James shares valuable insights from his own experience on creating an ownership structure that motivates and rewards employees, as well as the benefits of profit-sharing plans and equity-based incentives. Tune in to learn from James's incredible journey and unlock the secrets to resilience and success.Episode Highlights: James shares his entrepreneurial journey, including lessons learned from starting and selling companies. (9:13) James discusses his experience being fired from executive positions and how it led them to become an entrepreneur. (17:27) James believes that relationships define life, and mentors can guide individuals through difficult times. (23:06) James discusses the commission structures and bonus programs they implemented for their sales reps, which led to significant increases in earnings. (31:05) James mentions that equity is a motivating factor over profit sharing, as it provides ownership and rules. (38:11) James explains that resilience is finding another path after being knocked down, rather than just getting back up and doing the same thing. (42:41) Key Quotes: “Relationships will define your life. And for me, it was developing relationships during these hard times. Mentors, people that helped me see, helped me guide. One of the reasons I love being a mentor now. It's been a lot of time doing that, is helping people get out of that thing.” - James Webb “I use the term resilience. It's not just getting knocked down and getting back up. Why the hell do you want to get punched in the face again? It's getting knocked down, getting back up and finding another path. You know, I think that's one of the keys to resilience.” - James Webb “My parents were probably the biggest influence in my life in terms of driving me and teaching me and showing me.” - James Webb Resources Mentioned: James Webb LinkedIn Book: Redneck Resilience Website: James Harold Webb Reach out to Ryan Hanley Rogue Risk SIAA Finding Peak Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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In a crude laboratory in the basement of his home. Hello everyone and welcome back to the show.
Today we have a tremendous episode for you, a conversation with James Webb, the author of Redneck Resilience, a tremendous book. James has a storied career from being in the radiological industry to running
hospitals to owning one of the largest Orange Theory franchises in the entire country. And what
I loved about James's story is his resilience, is where he came from to where he got to,
and all the trials and tribulations in between that he explains to us. Because as we know,
working through this pain, experiencing this pain and being able
to not only push through it, to not give into it, but to thrive in moments that are challenging,
in moments that we don't see coming. It's a story that I feel like we all need to hear.
I was inspired by the story. It was tremendous to meet and talk to James and I think you're
absolutely going to love this episode.
Before we get there, I want to talk real quickly about Finding Peak.
Guys, more than 10,000 of you listen to this podcast every month, and we have just about 2,000 people subscribe to Finding Peak.
If you love this podcast, if this podcast is something that adds value to your life,
you are going to love the website, the blog, and there are a lot of changes coming. There are a lot of things happening. Subscribe to Finding Peak.
Go to F-I-N-D-I-N-G-P-E-A-K.com. 10x ideas for people who want to become more. That's the tagline.
You're going to love it. You're going to love what I'm doing there. And I hope that you'll join us.
So go over to Finding Peak. Subscribe today. And for all my insurance friends who listen to this podcast, which is most of you, but
more and more people are listening to this podcast who are not in the insurance industry,
so I feel like I need to say that.
If you are in the insurance industry and you want to maximize the income that you are getting
from your agency, check out SIA.
I know that to different people, networks, aggregators, however you classify an organization
like SIA may scare you,
or you may have a negative perception, or you may just not know what SIA is altogether.
But SIA is a tremendous organization. Matt Masiello and the entire team and what they're
doing is changing the game on what it means to be part of a network, the value you get from a
network. And it is a pleasure to be associated and to be part of the executive leadership team of that organization.
So I ask that you check them out only because I have such a positive experience.
Honestly, I don't care if you go to SIA or not.
It's an independent insurance industry, and the beauty of our industry is you get to choose your own adventure.
All I want to do is put in front of you the idea that I have had a tremendous experience, and you may too.
And so you know,
they do not pay me or even ask me to do this. And frankly, they have no way of making me say this.
I say this because I've had a positive experience. I enjoy being part of the organization. I enjoy
the benefits, the thoughts, the ideas that they're trying to put out, the resources, and ultimately
the carrier contracts that they're able to deliver to members. And if that's something you want, I encourage you to check it out.
So with that, guys, thank you for listening to this show as always.
I absolutely love you.
Let's get on to James Webb.
I'm going to shaboos! I was very intrigued when your team reached out because particularly about some of the ideas around, you we have anywhere between 10,000 and 15,000 people listen to the show.
And all throughout the independent channels.
You're thinking people in the carriers like Travelers, Hartford, Liberty, all those, all the way down to brand new single-person independent insurance agencies on the corner of everywhere America.
And a conversation that happens quite often and has been going on since I got in the industry
17 years ago has been compensating high performers. And I know that's not relegated
just to the independent insurance industry, but it is a major topic.
A lot of really difficult conversations because, you know, kind of there's an old school methodology.
Hey, you get a, you get a commission check from me.
That's, that's my, you know, that's, that's my value to you.
And that's what you get.
And you should be happy with that.
And you have renewal commissions and those are essentially, you know, that's essentially
equity and et cetera.
And there's, there's all these wild, but what what's happened recently. And, uh, and I want you to get
into your story and stuff. I'm just kind of prefacing, um, why, you know, everything,
why I was so excited about this and why I'm so interested is that they're just, there is not,
and there, if you were to do research, there's best practices, but I don't, I don't think that
those best practices are filed widespread.
I think there is really no good, consistent, agreed-upon solution in our industry for how to compensate, how to handle, how to give longevity and a sense of ownership, if not real ownership, to high performers who don't say have the same last name as the owner of the agency.
So that's why I was so excited.
But before we get there, let's get into your story, man.
I mean, I'm excited to chat with you and do all the things.
I'll share one fact with you about your previous comment.
That's one of the highlights and one of the things I'm most proud of is I had 14 key employees in my life work for me.
13 wrote it out to the end.
The one that didn't wrote it out, wrote it out long enough that she got her buyout, so I bought her out.
Of the 13, seven became millionaires, and four of those became multimillionaires and these are people that just
took a paycheck with me when they started when they were young most of them out of college
and uh stuck with me the longest close to 20 years yeah that's amazing it's a good little
strategy i have um yeah we can tell the james webb story it's kind of cute and kind of fun and kind of interesting yeah let's do it takes a few minutes so james webb country boy from south mississippi born to two
teenage parents uh they were 17 years old and got a little too friendly in the front seat of a ford
or as my 80 year old mother reminded me that the day it was the backseat which i thought was funny um grew up fairly poor ed was electrical apprentice straight
out of high school we lived in a little shack behind the electrical shop the owner let us rent
i recognized real early in life that if i wanted anything extra besides uh peanut butter and jelly
i had to do it myself so i started working at five and building potholders and selling them at the
local bazaar church bazaars that led to bicycles which led to paper routes which led to lawnmowers
and rakes and when I was 14 I bought my first car and yes in Mississippi you could pull that off
and not get in too much trouble and then I got involved in the printing industry
and worked full-time through high school. By the
time I was a senior, senior pressman for the company, I thought that might be what I would do
and then I enrolled in the local junior college on a music scholarship of all things because at
some point I could sing before other things corrupted my voice and walking through the school one day saw a sign that
said i want to be an x-ray tech call this number and i thought what that got become an x-ray tech
and so did a two-year slave labor program was an x-ray tag uh one of the local colleges gave
you credits for x-ray tech hours so i actually went back to college at night or in the daytime worked at night
and got my bachelor's degree and the day after I got my bachelor's degree they named me
president of the x-ray tech school I graduated from 18 months earlier so I'm 21 years old
got 15 students six are my age three I went to high school with. So quite a management learning lesson.
Did that for a few years, really enjoyed teaching, but wanted more.
So I flipped a coin, literally flipped a coin and said Dallas or Atlanta.
And as I say, packed up a pick-em-up truck and a bass boat and went to the Redbird Mall parking lot in Dallas, Texas.
Slept in the parking lot trying to figure out what the hell I'd just done. Got involved in the hospital up in Louisville, Texas. Three months after I was
there, they promoted me to director of radiology. So I was the youngest director of radiology in
the United States at 24 years of age. Had about 50 employees. Went to night school. This was way
before the internet. Got my master's degree. thought i was going to be a hospital administrator then this thing called mri came out and changed my life and i left the
clinical side of medicine and went into the mri business and was one of the first people in that
industry learned a very valuable lesson worked my butt off built the second largest mobile company
and sitting in my big office in dallas tex 30 years of age, 300 employees thinking I'm hot.
You know what? And the phone rings and they go, Mr. Webb, we just sold the company.
Therefore, since you have no equity, you are fired.
And I learned a really valuable lesson about being my own boss and sort of starting my entrepreneur journey.
And it took a little while to get there,
but eventually in 1995,
I started my first company internationally,
went to Trinidad and Tobago,
started and traveled all over Latin America
and the Caribbean.
Got crazy stories we can talk about
or not talk about.
Probably the only guy you know
that's been held at gunpoint by the Sandinistas.
Probably the only guy you know
that was kidnapped by the Guatemala Rebels
and released.
So just a lot of fun stories.
Sold that company in 2000.
I was living in Boca Raton, Florida.
Moved back to Dallas, Texas
to start another company
with some buddies of mine.
2003, I was dead broke.
Couldn't pay my house note.
Started all over and made a couple of business decisions people said wouldn't work.
And they did. And so the next month, there was $9,000 there to distribute to my partners. And
the next month, there was $10,000 to distribute to the partners. And as we kept growing, we got to a point around 2010 that if I wasn't personally pulling in $600,000 to $700,000 to $800,000 a month in distributions, I'd kind of want to know why.
And we branched out into other areas outside of radiology.
So we were building medical imaging centers then.
And we went into surgery centers.
And then we went into toxicology labs.
Exited the medical imaging company in 2017.
Public knowledge for right at $100 million, so a nice payday.
Exited all the surgery centers one at a time because we sold them to healthcare systems in the various markets.
Exited toxicology. About that time, got involved in Orange Theory Fitness,
which I had no idea what that was and just accidentally stumbled upon it in 2014.
And we ended up building 33 gyms across North Texas, became their largest franchisee.
And we sold that in December of 2019,
about two months before COVID hit for almost as much as imaging center
companies. So it was, it was a nice couple of paydays.
I still have four or five companies now I work with,
and it's a little different now.
You're not worried about whether Ryan punches a clock.
You're more worried about the bigger picture stuff.
So that's sort of my business story.
And I can't stop being an entrepreneur.
Really love it.
Really love involving my employees in the business.
And, you know, I have a crazier personal story, but that's a different conversation.
So I'm interested in the, so obviously when you were
a kid, you had a very entrepreneurial spirit. You described that all the different jobs you had and
you know, selling at the, I think you said the church bazaar. And then, you know, you go and
you become an x-ray tech, which is not an, I'm assuming, you know, not an entrepreneurial endeavor. And then, you know, you have this period
of time, sounds like close to a decade between, you know, when you become an x-ray tech to where
you're sitting at 30, company gets sold and you're fired. Talk to me a little bit about that time.
Were you constantly chomping at the bit? Were you trying to be an entrepreneur?
Were you finding other things that were entrepreneurial oriented outside of
your nine to five while you were kind of like in the punch the clock phase?
I hear that a lot from people who seemingly have entrepreneurial traits. They all seem to go through this, we'll call it bureaucratic winter, right?
Where there's a period of time in their lives where they aren't an entrepreneur.
And what you see is, I think the people who truly are entrepreneurs, they tend to, there's
cracks, right?
They find little ways of getting involved or they become big time entrepreneurs or whatever.
Were you finding that in your life? And were you kind of always aware of that underlying sense that you wanted to get back and do your own thing? Or were you content for that period of time while you were not an entrepreneur? didn't have that entrepreneurial thought process. I'm working eight to five, punching the clock. And again, this is pre-internet.
So I'm going to night school at North Texas
to get my master's degree
because I thought I was going to be a hospital administrator.
I was trying to go up the corporate chain.
Yeah.
And I thought I was going to be a hospital administrator.
And it wasn't until Barry O'Brien knocked on my door
and said, hey, we're starting this mobile MRI company.
You want to join us?
And I went, heck no, man,
I'm going to be a hospital administrator and make a hundred and fifty
thousand dollars a year.
And he convinced me in a funny little side story doing 130 miles an hour
and his Datsun 240 ZX in Connecticut that to leave the hospital space and,
you know, jump out here and work for him.
So you really got it tuned to the business side of it.
So I worked with hospitals and I worked, you know,
we were building mobile routes. So we get 20, you know,
10 hospitals together, run a mobile between them.
Got to learn a lot about the sales side and all that, but no,
I really didn't have that entrepreneurial spirit.
It was just climbing the corporate ladder.
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And then you get fired where you, was your next thought time to start my own
business? Did you go through a period where you were feeling down? You know, what, what did that
look like? You know, I, um, so I own my own or, uh, or I founded Rogue Risk, a national independent commercial insurance agency, which is I'm the CEO of today.
I founded it in March 9th of 2020.
So seven days before the zombie apocalypse at Upstate New York.
And in two years was able to build it to the point where I was acquired in full.
So I basically traded equity in my company
for equity in the parent company owned by a PE company and became an executive director in that
company as well. But to get to that point, that entrepreneurial point, I was fired from the
previous three executive positions that I had had. I was a CMO, a CMO, and then a CEO of three
consecutive companies and was fired from all three positions. And it was like, I kept, even though I
felt like something was wrong, and I guess this is where I'm trying to get to and just to get your
experience on it. I felt like something was wrong, but I kept going back to that corporate job. I
kept going, well, you know,
this is 200,000 and you know, this is $200,000 a year with a bonus. That's not bad. You don't
even let me try this again. And then I would just keep butting heads. And it wasn't until I went off
and became my own boss that I realized kind of, this is much more of who I am. So I'm interested
in how that worked for you. And you know, there were obviously dips, dips in between. Now, the third time I was fired, the dip wasn't exaggerated. The first time
it was like, oh my God, I'm a loser. You know, I'm never going to have another good job again.
I worked so hard to get, you know, and then I got another job and then I got fired from the next one.
You're like, oh, I'm sure I can find a job. And then the last time I was fired, I was like,
fuck it. I'm just going to, I'm just going to start my own company. Like I didn't even really phase me as much. It's
interesting how that works. Yeah. Yeah. Mine was a little bit different. Mine had a little personal
impact on it. I had a young daughter, uh, had been separated from my wife. We literally got
back together the day before I got fired. So it was, it was really hectic and I had bills to pay
and had to have a paycheck. And since I was a little bit known in the industry,
I was fired one day, had a job the next day, but in Atlanta.
So I had to move to Atlanta. Atlanta, the city is wonderful,
but the lifestyle I had there was not very good. So that, you know,
that's 1991, 92, I would call those are the tough years.
I literally got a chance to move to Florida
to take over this company
and
it's in my book I'll tell you but anyway
that's the only time I ever told a boss to F off
he tried
to keep me hired
because he said I'll fire your boss
if you'll stay
and I said no I'm going your boss if you'll stay.
And I said, no, I'm going to go down to Florida and fix this company.
And so I went through a divorce, had to worry about my daughter, had to have a job, had to have a paycheck,
move into Florida, sleeping in hotels, sleeping in rental places.
Finally got my first apartment about six months later. And so it was a very tumultuous time for me, but it was about a paycheck at that point. I really had to worry about the paycheck.
Do you think, and in fairness to my own story as well, very similar. I also had two, I had two
young boys at the time as I was bouncing through and felt like it wasn't, it wasn't until that
third time that I was fired. I just felt like I was fighting the universe. You know what I mean?
Like it wasn't even that I really wanted to all the pressure and to go back to zero. I just,
you know, I was also sick of it not working. Do you think, do you believe that
those hardships are necessary? Like those, those moments where you are are you're on a couch or you're in a
motel or you know I uh you know unfortunately was recently divorced from my wife I'm living in a
hotel for three months and you're miserable and you feel like you know I'm not being I mean you're
not a good father you know all these things you're having all these emotions do you feel like those
times are necessary to navigate to success in business? Or do you, you know,
because I think there's a lot of people in the insurance industry, a lot of individuals who I
know struggle with the fact that, especially second generation leaders, who were born into
families that had agencies that were successful, they lived with success, whether it was their
father, uncle, aunt, mother, whoever, they lived in success and were brought up in success and then went to college and walk out of college and walk right into a successful
business that is, you know, at least steady, if not growing. And, you know, and I think,
you know, a lot of these people come to me and, or I, or I, you know, they, they ask me questions
about different things and I can tell they never really got punched in the mouth before.
They never really had that moment
where they had to pick themselves up off the ground
and they're struggling with direction.
Do you think you have to feel that?
Like you almost need to have those types of experiences
or where do you fall on that?
Because the story is so similar.
You hear so many of these.
Everyone's is different, but the same. they had these moments that were just terrible,
you know, and they had no idea what they were, how to get through. And they did, you know,
do you think that's a mandatory part of kind of reaching elite, like the elite levels of success
that you that you have? I don't know if it's a mandatory part, but I will tell you this,
I look back on it, and I'm glad. I'm glad I had those lessons. I'm glad that I had
that chance. Yes, I would have loved to be more second and third generation wealth. That might
have been cool. I don't know what kind of person I would have turned out to be. I've met so many
nice people that are second, third generation wealth. And I've also met some real, you know,
peckerheads that are second, third generation wealth. What I have found is that most of the guys that go through what you and I went through
tend to be the nicer people on the planet, tend to give back more.
And that's a big thing for me is giving back more.
So did I like the hard lessons?
Heck no.
Am I kind of glad now that I'm 63 years old looking back on it, you know,
and I'm sitting in the couch in Rockwall, Georgia, crying on the couch because I'm 63 years old looking back on it you know when I'm sitting in the couch in Rockwall
Georgia crying on the couch because I'm getting a divorce and I worry about my daughter yeah I
think about that and it helped shape me and help me make me and I think more than anything
it gave me that resilience that determination to just drive forward harder. But yeah, I mean, it's a mixed answer, but I'm glad I had them.
Why do you think it is that some people have these moments, these hard moments, and
maybe not perfectly, certainly not perfectly, but they bear down, they push through them,
they get better, they continue to find their ambition, they continue to them, they get better. They continue to, to, to, to find their ambition.
They continue to find, I don't want to say motivation because we know that's bullshit,
right? They continue to, to, to maintain a discipline of some sort that keeps them moving
forward in a positive direction while others just wallow. They just, they kind of sit in it.
They never get out of it. It becomes quicksand to them. And then they wake up six months, a year, five years later and haven't taken a single step forward.
Is it family?
Is it built in?
Is it who you surround yourself with?
Why is it that some people push forward through dark times and others kind of sit in it?
So I'm a huge, huge, huge fan of relationships.
I think relationships will define your life. And for me, it was developing relationships during
these hard times. Mentors, people that help me see, help me guide. One of the reasons I love
being a mentor now, and spend a lot of time that. It's helping people get out of that thing. I also think there's part of it's just a personality nature. There's just some
people aren't meant to be an entrepreneur. That might sound terrible and I apologize if it does,
but there's just people out there that need a career. They need the nine to five job.
Nothing wrong with that. I'm happy for them. I'm happy they're making their $75,000 a year salary and paying for
their house note. But that was never for me. Mine was about, I'll tell you another quick side story.
It's Second Avenue Baptist Church. I'm 17 years old, graduating from high school.
And they go around the room. And if I hadn't personally heard this on a cassette recording,
I wouldn't believe it. But they come to me and they go, James, what are you going to do after high school? In a very tiny voice, I said, I'm going to change I wouldn't believe it. But yeah, that's amazing.
I think for me, it was always about.
I want more, not just for me, I want more for my children, for my family, for my aunts, for my uncles.
The amount of people I'm able to help now is crazy.
Yeah.
And the amount of family that we're able to help now is just something I always dreamed of.
So I am not going to be able to reference who the person is.
For some reason, I want to say it's Simon Sinek, but it doesn't matter because I have no idea, to be honest with you.
But I was listening to a podcast interview about successful individuals. This person was breaking down X number of successful individuals they had talked to or whatever. And one of the topics that they brought up
that I had never really considered before that I thought was incredibly insightful,
a defining characteristic or a through line characteristic of the individuals that this person had talked to
was this concept of thinking generationally. They think they're not building, no matter how
successful they are, no matter how much personal income they take in, their day-to-day thought is
not about their own success. It's about the success of their bloodline, their children,
their children's children, what you just said, changing the destiny of their bloodline, their children, their children's children,
their, you just said, changing the destiny of a family.
My father used to say to me all the time, once you have children, your only goal is
to make your kids better than you.
That's it.
So you get to be, you get to be as selfish as you want to be till the day you have kids.
And then you don't get to be selfish.
And everything from that point on is about making your kids a better version of you. And, you know, that kind of mentality, to me, that makes a lot of sense.
There's a lot of nonsense in success literature. But that idea of thinking generationally, one,
it gives you a longer timeline to it allow it forces you to prioritize activities and decisions
that have a greater impact than just the next, you know, couple
thousand bucks you're going to put in your pocket. And I think there's something to that. I mean,
obviously, you just said it. And I hadn't I hadn't had that thought until you just said it. And it
kind of triggered that. But, you know, does that make sense to you? Have you seen that in other
people that you surround yourself and the mentors you've had? Yeah, I mean, I think that is one of the most critical factors in my life and in the life of a lot of people I know. I use this
fun example. I have a friend who's successful, got a vasectomy at 18 because he never wanted
children. He's got 18 exotic cars in his driveway. He's got his plane in his hangar, and he might have enough money in the bank to pay his grocery bills.
So he has zero interest in worrying about all that.
And I am just the complete opposite of that.
I mean, I have a company out of Baltimore that I hire that does family governance.
I've spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on my estate, making sure that it's estate tax-free, making sure that my children are protected,
making sure my grandchildren are protected.
If I drew it out on a board, it would blow you away
just how many 678 trusts are involved
and all sorts of crazy stuff.
But it was always, always, always my single driving factor.
Did I want to drive a Lamborghini Urus someday?
Yes, I did.
Yeah. Did I want to live in Euro someday? Yes, I did. Yeah. Did I want to live
in Mexico someday? Yes, I did. But you know, my wealth manager now he knows that that I'll make
the money his job is to protect period into story. He protects it for my kids. I don't touch anything
out there and make my own money now for what I want to do what I want to buy where I
want to live and you know we're continuing to do projects we've got a couple more we got one
potential grand slam we'll see if it happens and then you then you sort of get to a stage in your
life also when you're 63 which is not that old but old enough and then you start beginning to
think a little bit more about yourself okay wait a minute i've got 15 years on this planet 20 years on this planet you know and you got to balance that with
the fact that i got a new granddaughter coming in three weeks i gotta be back in texas but i want to
do the round the world trip one day and you know so it's it it gets bounded but wealth allowed you
to do that and when you think about your family it allows you to do that. And when you think about your family, it allows you to do that. And so, yes, to answer your question, 100% believe that majority of successful people
think long-term, long-term. Yeah. What's up guys. Sorry to take you away from the episode,
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Peace. Let's get back to the episode. So pivoting to your book and some of the ideas and
particularly, I want to spend some time thinking about what I kind of prefaced our conversation on, which is one of the things that we as an industry, talking about insurance,
struggle with the most, which is cultivating our high performers, keeping them happy,
keeping them invested, keeping them growing.
I don't know how familiar you are with the property casualty insurance industry, but
there's a lot of
issues around employees will hit a number and then they'll just stop growing, right? Whatever
their number is, everyone's got a different number. It could be a hundred thousand. It could
be two. It could be five. It could be a million a year. They hit a number and they just stop.
And there's just no more growth. They just manage the book. And that's what you're going to get.
And not that having an employee who consistently brings in a million dollars is a bad thing.
That's not a bad thing, but you can't grow a business that way because they just sit
on it.
And so there's all these different compensation models, all these different philosophies.
And as I said, it's a mess.
You know what I mean?
There's not a tried and true methodology that has circulated our space that people kind
of sit back on and go, yeah, we take
care of our people by using the whatever system, you know what I mean? They just, there just doesn't
exist. So, and not that you have to speak to the insurance industry, if you're unfamiliar,
but just in general, would love to know because of the success that you've had,
how do you start to cultivate that? What is it, where does it begin? You know, does it begin at hiring?
Does it begin in culture building? You know, where does this begin? And then and how do you how do
you start to think about this when you're building a company? Yeah, so when we started Preferred
Imaging in 2000, we had three employees. And it was really, you know, starting from the bound up.
And initially, you focus on growth and culture. You know, we were, we were a little bit of a party company.
We had some fun,
probably did things you probably shouldn't do nowadays with the current
environment,
but we had a lot of fun and happy hours and played poker tournaments and,
you know, kept people busy and motivated that away. But as we got bigger,
you know, the financial situation becomes involved in it. Yeah.
We did the commission structures it yeah we did the commission
structures and we did the bonus programs in the case of my sales reps uh in one day i took them
from salary to commission only period yep and i said okay here's your base you get three months
live off of this base after that you go 23 a scan get as many as you can. And I saw guys go from $60,000 a year to six figures a year,
just working because it was commissioned only.
So I really liked that.
And I just reinitiated that into another company just literally the last few
weeks, bringing them back from salary commission to just commission only.
And you give them that little cushion of three months.
Here's your cushion.
And I sort of back into it.
You're doing 60,000, you're doing 500 scans,
you get $30 a scan, you make the same amount of money.
You do another scan, you make extra $30.
Another scan, you make an extra $30.
So that was that model.
But then I started looking at really
the bigger picture model.
And that's the one,
and I'll describe it through an LLC model. It can be done through an LP and it can be done
through an Inc. too. So what I did is I took my LLC and the beautiful thing about an LLC
is you can write anything you want in the operating agreement. I can tell you, you got
to wear a hat that says Como on it every day at work, or you don't even have a job. I can tell you, you got to wear a hat that says Como on it every day at work or you don't even have a job.
I can put that in a company agreement.
So I went to the company agreement and I went, OK, class A shareholders.
That's me. And again, class ABC doesn't mean that you can be class red, green, blue, whatever.
Class A is me. I have all the voting power.
No one else can vote but me. I control the company. I went to Ryan. I went,
Ryan, you're one of my key people. I'd like you to have 2% ownership in the company.
You will get profits and losses just like me. There'll be no difference, although you don't
need to do the vote. And two, there's a five-year vesting period. So stick around. And as we make money,
you'll make money. And at the end of that five-year period, you can come to me and you can
say you want to become a Class C shareholder, which gives you two more years of vesting.
But now you've got seven years, profits, losses. And then after that seventh year,
if you leave under good terms i have to buy you
out under agreed upon multiple and in my deal i put a three times x made it a 36 month payment
if i wanted to so i could just pay out distributions for 36 more months and and what was really amazing
about it was it got to such a good point with four or five of my employees that they only drew a $30,000 salary to cover their health insurance benefits the rest of it
I remember my president one of my companies made $700,000 a year in distributions
but she had a $30,000 salary and so she was highly motivated now if you think about this in a bigger sense,
it's really just a profit-sharing plan.
But they get to say they have equity.
So they get past that seventh year.
It's not really equity, but it really is, but it really isn't.
So I found for people to say I own part of this company was highly, highly motivating for them.
For me to control it,
for me to make sure everything happened
the way I wanted it to happen was important to me.
But when they hit that seven-year mark,
they owned it.
And as I mentioned,
14 were owners in the different companies.
13 wrote it out to the exits.
And the one that left, left under good terms,
I paid her a three multiple.
And I think I just wrote her a check because it wasn't a big one, and still friends with her today,
and so that was my model, was ABC shares, get to a certain point, you're vested,
there's things I might have done different, you know, if you want to be selfish,
I might have done different, I might have said, okay, if we exit, you only get a four multiple,
even if I exit at a seven.
But I chose not to do that.
I let them exit however I exited.
So there's different little things you can do inside the model.
Yeah.
But that was my model right there, and it was highly successful.
I'm about to do it again with an employee.
I'm in a new company in the pet pet industry i've gotten out of health care never want to go back into
health care um and so you know we're in the pet space we're in the female weight loss space
we're in a charter space and so i'm starting to bring those people in under the same model
and so i know for seven years they're gonna stick around because they want that exit
and they want those distributions and distributions are a hell of a lot more
than commissions let me tell you yeah yeah yeah i would agree with that. I know one of the things that when I founded my agency, I wrote down this term, no shot at equity or profit or really any kind of
ownership structure because my last name was different than the last name on the building.
And that to me, I'm 42 today. When I was in my 30s, those were unacceptable. I was too young
and too ambitious to accept the fact that there was never going to be anything more than where I was.
So I wrote down this idea, no ceiling insurance career. work their way through a set of escalating positions to the point where when they proven themselves, which will be around the five year mark, um, they, uh, they vest into a
profit sharing plan on their book of business and stuff like that.
So it's, um, it'd be interesting.
We're still young.
So we haven't seen all the, probably all the pitfalls that come with these different things
as, as we go. But I will say that, you know,
the producers that we get here, the salespeople that we get here, tend to come in and fire pretty
hard, because they see that, you know, that there's a future for them, you know, and some of
them don't have the ability, you know what I mean? We've had people come in, they don't have the ability or culturally they're not good fit. But the idea that I could come in, work my ass off, make money and ultimately have this future where I'm sharing in the upside of what I like your structure a lot. And you have me thinking, cause we don't, we aren't yet using different share types.
We're using more like phantom equity structure, but.
I'd like to term equity. I really,
really think that's a motivating factor over profit sharing. I just do.
Yeah.
And it's the same thing from a dollar perspective. Yeah.
But when I tell people they have ownership i hand them a stock certificate
you know they know all the rules they sign the operating agreement i mean it's a it's a little
ceremony almost yeah i mean a huge huge deal i agree with you for some reason profit sharing
doesn't feel real you're kind of like hey they're gonna hose me somehow you know what're going to, they're going to do so they'll spend a bunch of money before the
end of the year. You know what I mean? There's all these like negative thoughts start to creep
into your head, but just like you said, even though, even if it's distributed exactly the
same way, you know, feeling like, you know, having ownership in something, it's a sense of pride
and it feels very important. So what, you know, so, so know so so so redneck resilience what what made
you write this book what was the impetus of it what what like why why did you decide to write
this why did you of all the things that seemingly you still have an incredible amount going on
and didn't need to take on another project what what was the reason for putting it together
you know i'll backtrack a little bit and share a little bit of my personal story and didn't need to take on another project. What was the reason for putting it together?
You know, I'll backtrack a little bit and share a little bit of my personal story.
Because I've had a crazy, crazy life.
Again, I mentioned I'm the only guy you know that's probably been held at gunpoint.
Yeah. By the Sandinista soldiers.
When I was young, I bit off my tongue.
Fell off a swing set, bit my tongue completely off,
had to have it sewed back on three different times with no, no deadening medicine, no pain medicine.
I learned a lot about that. That led me to disregard blood on my pillow when I was 17,
only to find out I had some brain tumors. Oh, wow. Had to go get those out um you know lost lost my hearing this other year because of it
uh you know had a tough year in 1990 going through divorce and child and losing jobs and all those
sort of things um side story to the side story um country baptist southern boy marries big city jewish girl from chicago
marcia in 1993 or 1995 very supportive spouse another thing i talk to people a lot about is
having that support system around you that you need that dramatically that support and i had it
with her she knew i had to work 17 hours a day she knew that I had
to do things now we set up certain things we had date night we date night was religion we had dad
coach kids sports I coached 17 seasons of some kind of sports so I'd have that relationship with
my kids grew grew grew grew grew um the sad part of the story is and we were really doing well in life
making a lot of money uh building our big you know 12 000 foot dream home and marcia was
unexpectedly without any symptoms diagnosed with stage four pancreatic cancer
yeah caught us completely by surprise i took off from the company, took care of her. May 20th of 2012, the day she was dismissed from MD Anderson, I was diagnosed with stage three renal cancer and made a decision to forego radiation and chemo.
And I said, just cut me open, cut me, take the tumor, take the kidney, take the bowel. Walked out of the hospital 19 hours and she lasted six more days.
So I'm raising two little boys. And when I was ready to get back into the real world of dating,
I went on match.com and which was kind of fun. And I lied and said I was an x-ray tech,
which was cute. And, you know, sort of went that route and met Kathy she was my first first date in
20 years in the last first date for the rest of my life so we we got together we dated three years
she helped me raise my boys uh we got married now eight years ago and have this this wonderful
wonderful life we get to live and all that's really due to this resilience it's coming
back and getting knocked down and i use the term resilience it's not just getting knocked down and
getting back up why the hell do you want to get punched in the face again it's getting knocked
down getting back up and finding another path yeah you know i think that's one of the keys to
resilience i don't know if i answered your question but that was sort of a personal part of my story.
Yeah, no.
I mean, it makes a lot of sense.
And I think that there is an art to knowing when to keep doing the same thing and not getting results. I think some people, some people take a concept like resilience or
perseverance or dedication, and they just continue to get up and try to do the same thing and get the
same results and then wonder why they're not moving forward. And I think that the insight
that resilience isn't just getting back up, it's giving back up and having the self-awareness, the situational
awareness to be able to, to, to, to make a decision. If, if the reason you got now knocked
down, isn't because you're just not on the right path, maybe. And there's a lot to that. So do you,
what do you think, you know, obviously your, your, your personal life has played a major role in
your, in the success of your, of your professional life. What was it about being raised
or was there anything about being raised in the South,
being raised Southern Baptist?
Was there anything in your upbringing in particular
that you think helped you develop resilience
or was this an inequality in you
that you've cultivated over the years?
Yeah, I think when you watch two 17-year-old parents that have three children by the time
they're 24 and you watch them go through what they went through, I learned so much from my parents.
My mom went back to nursing school when I was in high school, became a nurse practitioner. We were
in college at the same time that's funny he would get up
every morning as a child and make biscuits and we lived near a farm so we lived off of milk
straight from the cow wasn't you know we lived off the eggs straight from the chicken
we lived off of squirrels and fish and things like that but my mom would get up every morning
at five o'clock and cook his breakfast for school and get my daddy ready to go to work
one of my biggest resilient lessons was my daddy ready to go to work.
One of my biggest resilient lessons was my dad decided to start his own company when I was in high school. And two things came out of that. One, I said, dad, I want to go to
work for you after high school. And he said, no, I want you to go to school so you don't have to
work for a living. And I didn't really know what that meant until about 2006 i was stuck in an ice storm and i
saw alignment on a power pole in the middle of the ice storm and i went that's what my daddy meant
get an education where you're not climbing the pole nothing's nothing wrong with climbing the pole
but he was telling me get this education the other thing that happened to him was
uh his accountant was stealing his money and the
IRS came in and shut him down. I was probably 17 and I watched my dad go back to work, pay back
every penny to the IRS, pay back every penny to every vendor he ever had money to and rebuild his
career in the sales side of the electrical world.
So a lot of resilience there from him and learning that from him that,
okay, he got his ass whipped, and he got back up, and he went back to work.
Same thing I did in Florida when I couldn't pay my house note.
I kissed my wife on the cheek and said,
I got to go back to work, I'll see you in four to five years,
and went back to work. And see you in four to five years and went back to work and so I think
that was really relevant Southern Baptist not so relevant I mean it was interesting we went to
church you know four or five days a week I'm a little burned out on the church thing right now
personally and then when you marry a Jewish girl you learn a lot about the Jewish faith so it's
kind of in the middle I did agree to raise my boys Jewish so Southern
Baptist kid from Mississippi raised two Jewish boys so so interesting learning experience Kathy
embraced it I'm extremely extremely close to Marsha's family still uh her dad is my best friend
so and then he calls Kathy his daughter-in-law. So we've got this really crazy blended family.
That's kind of cool with grandbabies popping up everywhere.
So my parents were probably the biggest influence in my life in terms of,
of driving me and teaching me and showing me.
Seems like despite all that hardship, you were able to keep, you know,
love to a certain extent in your
heart. I mean, it sounds like the relationships you've had, the depth, the depth that you've had
with your employees, particularly your key employees and the, um, throughout your companies
has been a, a big part of your success. Does that seem right? Yeah, I said it earlier and I'll say
it again. Relationships will define your life period in the store they will define your business
they will define the direction you go that will define your success and i always make a joke about
the fact i probably fired 498 people and 496 still send me christmas cards because i have a
relationship with them i set expectations they didn't meet them they either weren't the right
fit need to go somewhere else was compassionate in my terminations, too not so compassionate
the rest of them I was. And again, about relationships. I'm a big believer in that.
Yeah. I mean, at the end, you know, not to get too cliche, but, you know, I think this is something you definitely don't realize when you're young and it takes time.
And as your life gets more busy and you realize what real relationships are and you go through real hardships with people, you start to understand what don't want to make it trite, but any advice for people who maybe struggle
to, one of the things that I talk about with, with, so I, I normally on Fridays, we didn't,
it wasn't this week, every other Friday, I have this little man meeting that I go to,
it's a bunch of guys around my age, like thirties to mid forties. And we just sit and we have coffee
or eggs at the diner or whatever. And,
and chat. And, you know, one of the things that comes up every once in a while is just the,
the, the hecticness and urgency of 2023, you know, kind of modern society makes kind of
cultivating relationships difficult. And, you know, we always, is it, you know, we kind of come back to sometimes,
like, is it just, is it just a lack of prioritization? Is it that the world really
is incredibly busy right now? Is it that secularism has kind of taken over and we'd rather buy
something than spend time with people? Like, you know, do you have any advice, guidance for people
who maybe are sitting here going, geez, I, I, I believe James that, that a hundred percent, but man,
I struggle.
I struggle to maintain build or grow relationships with people.
Yeah. It gets harder and harder. The older you get,
it's really hard at 2023, 2022, and maybe harder in 2024.
I think one of the most positive things and negative things that came out of covid
is what you and i are doing right now zoom you know positively we can communicate negatively
we're not in the same room yep you know i'm not meeting you afterwards for a happy hour drink
i'm not going to lunch with you and and i miss that a lot yeah a lot and i think that that that's a huge component
and i wonder about the next generations how they'll overcome that how they'll develop these
relationships will always be on a computer yeah i don't know i like you already but you're on a
computer yeah it's you know um so one of the things um so we're big into baseball, my family. I played baseball in college.
I played baseball a little while after college.
I have two sons, nine and seven, and they both play baseball and travel baseball and, you know, just what we do.
And one of the things that I find very interesting, just watching young kids today, because I tend to enjoy kids.
I'm not one of those guys who finds them annoying.
They're funny and fun, and I enjoy them.
And I talk to my kids a lot about it.
I tell them all the time, this experience that you're having where you're struggling, you're winning, you're losing you're you're having personal successes personal failures team successes team failures you're
watching your your friends where you're you're you're bleeding and sweating and you know you're
having all this you know these experiences together and traveling together I was like you
you you don't know it today but you will look back on these times and and all these kids that sit at home and they play video games and they never
come out of their house and their parents have to watch every move they make.
And, and they're just,
you are going to be so far ahead of them in life because you've,
you're learning how to have friends and how to interact with kids.
And one of the kids is kind of a jerk and how do you,
how do you deal with them? And, you know what I mean?
All these kinds of things that just these interpersonal,
interrelational skills associated with a common goal, you know, winning baseball games.
It's just so valuable. And, and so many kids,
you can just tell they spend 90% of their day indoors in front of a computer, in front of a TV,
in front of video games, and they really struggle. They don't look at you in the eye. You talk to
them. They don't talk back. And I worry about, I worry for those kids. It's not really my concern
necessarily. They're not my children, but I do think there is going to be a major divide in our
society in these generations where you have the kids that were given experiences like what I hope I'm doing for my children.
And then you're going to have this other group that just absolutely does not know how to relate to each other outside of a text message or a video game chat screen or, you know, I don't even know what I'm talking about.
I don't play video games. So, you know, like, you know, so that that does.
I just see it as such a competitive advantage if you can put your kids in that space.
I don't know. I agree 100 percent with you on that one and really trying to focus my grandkids on sports a little bit.
They're not athletes, but, you know, they're participating. And, you know, my one grandson spends half the day on the computer doing a program he's learned how to programming at 11
years of age wow but he's also going to the basketball game that night practicing with his
friends and he's also going to the swimming thing and so we're trying to really push in that direction
yeah and then we have the other grandson who's pretty content to play a saxophone and do his
video games and never leave the house so we're really trying to get him more involved in friends yeah i have a buddy of mine this is he's known out there uh during covid
his son was stuck in the house for so long was playing video games and he broke his video
controller and he hung himself in his in his closet he was seven years old my god
it completely wrecked his family's life and uh they've
started non-profits now to kind of remind people that get them off the freaking video games get
them out there into the real world you know and it's i struggle with it with my own grandchildren
a lot yeah i i do too i mean there's part of me there's part of me, there's part of me, one, I completely understand that the hectic
nature of life and in small doses, these, this is how these kids relax to a certain extent, you know,
and, and how they, you know, whatever, but uncontrolled unfettered access to YouTube or to,
you know, to, to video games. Um, it's not healthy. It's just absolutely
positively not healthy. And it's a struggle. You know, I, I struggle with it a lot. Like
they, you know, you, you have that thing inside you as a parent where you want your kids to be
happy and it's something that makes them happy. But at the same time, you know, and I think my,
my ex-wife and I have done a good job at this is like, you get so much time and that's it. Then it's done. You know what I mean? It can't, you know,
this is, this is play. This is not real life. And I tell that to them all the time, guys,
this is not real life. Like being, being good at football on the video game is meaningless.
Now it's fun. If you know, it's cool. We all have hobbies, you know,
we all have things we like to do, but like, it's meaningless to your life. It's just a fun thing
that you do as an escape for a little while, which we all need to have those things. That's okay.
But like, it's not real. Like that is not really what's going on in YouTube stuff. I'm like,
you're watching something. That's a, that's a a fantasy that's like watching drag a dragon movie
like it doesn't exist like you're not watching real life and that is such a hard concept for
these young kids to wrap their head around they don't realize that they're watching something
that just it's completely make-believe they they they get lost and and maybe there's some real to
that and that's very scary it's it's very scary particularly with some of the things that are happening out there in the world. You know I remember back when I was a child and you know my parents said okay
you watch Popeye and Three Stooges for two hours after that get your butt out the yard. Yeah. And
then we literally had the Second Avenue Raiders our little club and we would meet and play baseball
and softball and run up and down the streets and skateboard and, you know, build our own little go-karts.
And we just don't do that now.
And I don't know how much of that falls on us as parents, how much of that falls on us as society, as the norm.
But I push my children to limit their kids' time on the devices.
You know, I completely agree with you you know i i talked
to my mom about this all the time because you know just try to compare my mom was young too
not not as young as yours but she was 20 when she had me and um and you know so we we talk a lot
and you know at eight years old she was handing me milk money and sending me out into town to go get milk and eggs or whatever we needed from the store.
And I'm crossing streets and walking through neighborhoods at eight.
And I'd come back with bags of groceries and she'd be making dinner and whatever.
Now, my older son is nine and we're at the batting cages the other day and I send him out to get more money.
I left my wallet
in the car and he's like, Hey dad, can I get a Gatorade or whatever? So I send him out to the
car to get my wallet. And like, I'm like having nervous energy, you know, that he's going to,
and I, I, I trust that he's smart. I trust that he's capable. I trust that he's very cognizant
of what's going on, but like, I'm having some anxiety. And I know that that same situation with my mom, you know, 30 years ago, she wouldn't
even thought twice.
She was just like, Hey, I need milk.
There's my milk getter.
Here's, you know, here's five, here's $3, go get us milk and eggs or whatever, you know?
And it's just, I don't know.
Is it, is it that we just know every bad thing that happens in the world every day through the news and media?
Is it that the world is actually more unsafe?
I don't know what it is exactly, but it's definitely there.
It is absolutely definitely there.
Yeah, I don't think there's any question that the world is more unsafe, period, end of story.
I think access to news and social media has enhanced that problem
further um you brought up you know get milk my parents had a horn yeah eight o'clock at night
they would toot the horn and we knew we had to come home but i might have been gone for 11 or 12
hours yeah yeah yeah so i it's a hard question answer. And it's even a harder question to solve.
Yeah. I agree with you. I'm not sure what to do. I'm doing the best I can with my kids.
I'm going to make sure they're protected. I'm going to make sure that they limit their time
on social media. But, you know, so far they're doing great. All my kids are doing great. I'm
very happy. I'm very proud of them. Yeah.
James, I want to be respectful of your time,
respectful of our audience's time.
It's been absolutely tremendous speaking with you.
The book is Redneck Resilience,
A Country Boy's Journey to Prosperity.
We'll have it all linked up in the show notes for everyone that's listening.
If anybody wants to connect with you in any way,
other than just, you know, coming to your website,
which I'll have linked up and everything, it's jamesheshareweb.com slash book if you want to go
to the book, but you'll see the links are on there and everything. Is there anywhere else
they can connect? Do you do anything in any other venue where they can follow along with
anything that you're doing? I don't really. I mean, Facebook is big. LinkedIn is probably my
biggest. Gotcha. We'll have all that just look at Google James
Herbway of LinkedIn we we try to post daily messages and we're trying to motivate people
and yeah awesome well it's tremendous I love your viewpoint I love your experience uh I completely
think the way that you've used the word resilience and the fact that you did use it makes so much
sense and in the way that I think a lot of people need today, because it does, you know, just, it does feel like people
are getting, and maybe this is the way the world has always been, but I know a lot of people right
now that feel like they're getting knocked down or getting held back or, or quite often, or more
often than they're used to, um, whether it's COVID or it's something else, the economy. And I think it's positive, reassuring messages that also come with a bit of a kick in the
butt are what people need.
And I appreciate you and I appreciate your time.
Thank you for your time, Ryan.
It's a pleasure, buddy.
Yeah.
Thank you.
Have a good one.
Thank you.
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