The School of Greatness - 902 Master the Art of Negotiating in Business and Life with Former FBI Agent Chris Voss

Episode Date: January 15, 2020

There's a way to always get what you want.And it doesn't mean you need to be a tyrant. The art of negotiating is what each of us can learn in order to consistently and confidently get people on our si...de. To learn this art, I brought back a super popular guest from a few years ago, former FBI negotiator Chris Voss. Since our first interview, he has only grown in popularity, and I knew he'd have new insights about how to use the art of negotiation in business and life.Chris is not just a teacher and an author.During Chris’s 24 year tenure in the FBI, he was trained in the art of negotiation by not only the FBI but Scotland Yard and Harvard Law School. He has used his many years of experience in international crisis and high-stakes negotiations to develop a unique program and team that applies these globally proven techniques to the business world. Now he runs a top consulting company and teaches negotiation to graduate students at universities like Harvard and Georgetown.In this conversation, we discussed several ways you can negotiate in your day to day life, including getting discounts on anything you buy, closing huge business deals, and walking away from deals and relationships that will never work out. I can't wait for you to hear what Chris has to teach in Episode 902.How can we navigate emotional issues without getting too emotional about it? (2:40)How often did you fall backwards as an FBI negotiator and get reactive? (8:06)What are the biggest findings you learned about negotiation since your book came out? (16:47)What are the most common negotiations that anyone goes through on a daily basis? (29:04)How can you not take criticism personally? (49:48)How important is intention before you begin a negotiation? (57:02)How do you handle a negotiation that has gone south so that you don’t burn a bridge? (1:03:04)What hostage negotiation tactics do you use on a daily basis? (1:06:30)What’s the best approach for someone who wants to buy something? (1:08:14)How you can learn to not get defensive when triggered (5:44)Tools to use when making a deal in business (13:02)Why asking “why” questions makes people defensive (21:40)Ways to negotiate client deals if you are just starting out in your career (27:25)The formula to get people to do things for you because they feel like it (31:48)How to be a great sounding board for someone to work through their feelings (40:35)A role-playing exercise you can do with a friend to practice negotiation (51:51)Plus much more...If you enjoyed this episode, check out the video, show notes and more at http://www.lewishowes.com/902 and follow at instagram.com/lewishowes

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Starting point is 00:00:00 This is episode number 902 with best-selling author and FBI negotiator, Chris Voss. Welcome to the School of Greatness. My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro-athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur, and each week we bring you an inspiring person or message to help you discover how to unlock your inner greatness. Thanks for spending some time with me today. Now let the class begin. Warren Buffett said, you can't make a good deal with a bad person.
Starting point is 00:00:40 And John F. Kennedy said, let us never negotiate out of fear, but let us never fear to negotiate. Negotiations are something we do every single day in almost every interaction we have with human beings. You might just not think it's a negotiation, but it is. When you go to the coffee shop and get your coffee, when you go to a hotel on an airplane, when you're in traffic, when you go to a hotel on an airplane, when you're in traffic, when you're in a relationship, if you're trying to get a job, if you're trying to get a raise,
Starting point is 00:01:11 there's so many different situations in life that are negotiations. Everything is a negotiation. And I am a huge, huge fan of Chris Voss. If you don't know who he is, he's the CEO and founder of the Black Swan Group and author of Never Split the Difference, Negotiating As If Your Life Depended On It. This book is incredible. If you don't have it yet, you got to make sure you get it. Chris was the lead international kidnapping negotiator for the FBI, as well as the FBI's hostage negotiation representative for the National Security Council's hostage working group. During Chris's 24-year tenure in the Bureau, he was trained in the art of negotiation by not only the FBI, but Scotland Yard and Harvard Law School. He's used
Starting point is 00:01:59 many years of experience in international crisis and high stakes negotiations to develop a unique program and team that applies these globally proven techniques to the business world. Chris has been teaching his techniques through workshops and his book, but now he has a class in the masterclass series as well that you can check out. In this episode, we talk about real life examples on how we are all negotiating every day, even when you're getting your coffee at Starbucks, how curiosity can help you take power in a negotiation instead of feeling backed into a corner. We talk about the difference between empathy and compassion and how that can help when you get criticism in your business and life. And we've defined emotional anchoring and how to use it
Starting point is 00:02:47 when a deal is not going the way you think it should. This is a powerful one. Make sure to share this with your friends, lewishouse.com slash 902 to spread the message and help other people in your life become better negotiators. And I'm so excited about this episode with the one and only Chris Voss. All right. Welcome back, everyone, to the School of Greenness podcast. We've got the iconic Chris Voss in the house. My man. Thanks for having me, guys.
Starting point is 00:03:16 Super glad you're here. You were on, I think it was about four years ago. Three years ago, four years ago. Blew my mind with the stuff you were talking about in your book, Never Split the Difference. The book has gone on to just take over. It seems like every year it gets bigger and reaches more people. And it's constantly in the top of the ranks. You've now got a master class, which is blowing up.
Starting point is 00:03:39 You've got workshops around the country, and I'm assuming soon to be around the world. workshops around the country and I'm assuming soon to be around the world yeah you've got people doing big deals in a and inspiring it or in a good clean way of integrity you're not trying to screw people over you really try to create the win-win experience for people making negotiations which I think is beautiful because there's a lot of people who have especially in LA who said they've been burned by business deals or negotiations. They thought they knew who the person was in a business deal, but then something went south.
Starting point is 00:04:13 They didn't have their contracts set up. They didn't have the true negotiation set up and they got screwed over. And so you're teaching people, whether it be in business, whether it be in a marriage, whether it be in just friendships, how to negotiate with integrity so that everyone wins. Is that right? Yeah, and the cool thing, subtle distinction. Weekly, it's what we hear and what we don't hear. On a weekly basis, if not daily, somebody says,
Starting point is 00:04:41 "'I cut a deal, it's going to change my life.'" Really? Now, what they also never say is they never brag about beating anybody. Nobody ever gets burned. One of the guys, the compensation deal he cut with his employer, he says, literally, this will change my life. It's also the best avenue for his employer to grow his company. So the company's going to get huge for giving this guy a great deal. Nobody ever burns anybody else in the deals that we coach. It's amazing. Which means they don't pick up enemies. They only pick up people that want to do business with them. There's a lot of people that burn bridges, it seems like, right?
Starting point is 00:05:20 Yeah. We don't like burning bridges. That's the hardest thing to do I think is to not burn a bridge especially when your emotions are involved right I feel like I've gotten screwed over by this person in this whatever deal we had and I'm gonna burn a bridge I've been there in the past so I'm guilty of this but I feel like people's emotions get so caught up in their deal making and their deal breaking yeah how do we navigate an emotional thing and make it less emotional, I guess, for deal making? Yeah. Well, there's a couple of different ways to do that.
Starting point is 00:05:53 I mean, the first one in a process to begin with, like if you can learn to be genuinely curious, like a genuinely curious state of mind, it's really close to the mindset of flow also, but it's highly positive. You're pulling a state of mind. It's really close to the mindset of flow also. But it's highly positive. You're pulling a lot of data. You'll never feel backed into a corner. You will never burn, blow up a bridge. If you're acting curious. If you're completely curious.
Starting point is 00:06:18 If you're calling me names or if you're threatening me. Yeah. There's a lot of threatening going on out there. Defensive threatening. You know, I might react. Like, one of the things that we found out, a couple things we found out about the book we didn't know beforehand.
Starting point is 00:06:34 The procurement negotiator. In business, the procurement negotiator is feared. People are scared of procurement. Procurement tend to be very threatening, very attacking, very, very, very pushy. Now the flip side is, unfortunately that's not fair because procurement's one of the toughest jobs out there. Like whoever thought the idea of having a procurement negotiator, it's a great theory
Starting point is 00:06:58 and practicality. They got one of the toughest jobs on the planet. So they're constantly being backed into a corner by their employer. They're backed into a corner. They're probably going to make threats. You're on the other side of that threat making. You're going to get bent out of shape. You're going to want to threaten back.
Starting point is 00:07:12 You're going to not want to deal with them. Right. That's fear-based stuff. Instead of going like, how dare you threaten me? Because a lot of procurement people make threats. You should go like, wow, what's behind a threat, man?
Starting point is 00:07:30 What kind of pressure are you under? Somebody makes threats against you in a negotiation, chances are they're not a jerk. Chances are they are under tremendous pressure. If you don't make this deal with us, our company's never going to deal with you again. You know, my instinctive reaction as a combative person is like, yeah, screw you.
Starting point is 00:07:51 I could live without you. You're an idiot. But instead, my best reaction is to say, sounds like you're under a lot of pressure. Because you're not going to make that threat unless you're feeling tremendous pressure. The original question, how do I not overreact? If I'm really curious about what in the world are you dealing with that's making you act like that,
Starting point is 00:08:15 then I won't overreact in the moment. What if it's something that you care about so much? It always is. Your baby, your business, your thing. That's hard so how do you go to a place as a defensive person by default to not be defensive when someone is making an emotional attack on you obviously it's not a life-threatening attack but it feels you know triggering yeah so how do you separate that emotional part in your brain or your heart and just say,
Starting point is 00:08:45 okay, I'm not going to go there. I'm just going to be more curious. Is it just a matter of practicing it over and over? Is it role playing? Is it? Yeah, it's any performance. It's a performance skill. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:08:57 You know, everybody we have in performance skills, which is almost all of them other than riding a bike, you've got three choices and only three for tomorrow. Stay even, be worse, get better. Two out of three of those choices require effort. Right. You've got to put some effort in just to stay even. Somebody did an analogy the other day, you know, positive frame of mind. It's like taking a shower.
Starting point is 00:09:25 Today you can't say, well, I don't got to take a shower today because I took one yesterday. I don't have to brush my teeth today. I brushed my teeth yesterday. You know, the repetitive behaviors to stay in a positive frame of mind are critical because we're naturally wired to be negative.
Starting point is 00:09:40 You know, this crazy old thing in the middle of our head called the amygdala. Neuroscience has shown us that 75% of the real estate in your amygdala is dedicated to negative thoughts. 75%. And that's not a psychology thing. It's mapping the brain with neuroscience imaging. We needed that negative attitude when we were running from sabre through tigers right on a jungle path to protect us yeah to live yeah we don't live in that world anymore so yeah you got
Starting point is 00:10:13 to constantly i mean we're in southern california it's a cliche you know i'm so grateful in point of fact gratitude is a great emotional hack You write down first thing in the morning, anywhere from one to three things you're grateful for. That's emotional, spiritual hygiene. You need it every day. And if you don't do it every day, you deteriorate. Yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 00:10:36 So as a FBI negotiator for 24 years, is that what it was? FBI agent for 24 years, hostage negotiator for the biggest portion. The biggest portion. Biggest portion. How often did you fall backwards and not do two of the three, but you did the negative part of it where you went backwards, where someone was really aggressive or attacking you or saying that one word or the trigger phrase that got you to react? How often did that happen as opposed to, man, what are you going through? As opposed to being that curious, loving negotiator, how often did you fall backwards opposed to man? What are you going through like as opposed to being that curious loving negotiator? How often loving us?
Starting point is 00:11:09 Give you a hug. Nice. There is how often did you? Fall back into a negative state. I would say, you know What it makes no sense and in dealing with the bad guys. I never fell back Really, I would get mad at my bosses. I'd yell at them. Why? My negotiation, you know, when I was a hostage negotiator, I was on a bit of a mission. I mean, you know, we were out there. People's lives were on the line.
Starting point is 00:11:36 And it's a frightening environment for everybody who's involved in the rescue, if you will. in the rescue, if you will. And so I was determined that we were going to stand up for the kidnap victims and their families no matter what kind of damage it caused internally. And I stepped on no shortage of toes
Starting point is 00:11:54 within the U.S. government and the FBI by being really insistent about what I thought was right. And I was probably harder on them than I should have been. I got the question a couple times, if you had your career to do over again, what would you do differently? And my answer has consistently been, I'd have been nicer.
Starting point is 00:12:12 To the people you worked with? To the people I worked with. And especially the people I worked for. Now, I wouldn't have backed off of anything, but I would have just been nicer about it. You wouldn't have burned bridges? I would have burned fewer bridges. Fewer bridges. Okay, did you burn a lot of bridges?
Starting point is 00:12:28 Yeah, I burned some, you know. I burned some, and some of them, if their heart was in the right place, they got over it. Yeah, yeah. And if it wasn't, I mean, I remember being on a secure video conference with a bunch of different elements
Starting point is 00:12:41 in National Security Council. I'm in FBI headquarters, guys from the White House in. And I got after them a little bit. I was harder, harsher, spoke harshly to them. Right. And I can remember after the fact, one of the two people on the other end of the line, Bill McRaven,
Starting point is 00:13:01 you know, the guy who wrote Make Your Bed and also Sea Stories. Really? He was on the other line? He was Captain McRaven, you know the guy who wrote Make Your Bed and also Sea Stories. Really? He was on the other line? He was Captain McRaven at the time. Wow, that's a great book, great speech. McRaven's a phenomenal guy. Yeah. Caught both Osama bin Laden and Saddam Hussein. It's not a bad resume. McRaven told me there was a NSC guy in the White House on the other side after I got done being kind of hard on these guys.
Starting point is 00:13:25 He said, you know, they said you made some good points. They didn't get off the phone and say, that guy was a jerk. He probably was thinking it. But they were willing to admit that I made some good points. Not everybody's like that. They get bent out of shape and they don't get over it. But these guys didn't. McCraven was a great guy to work for.
Starting point is 00:13:45 Wow. Work for, with, in any way, shape, or form. Cool dude. Wow. Great guy. That's cool. Let's do basic negotiation right here. When people are looking to make a deal,
Starting point is 00:13:55 whether it's in business, and it's mostly business negotiation is what I think a lot of people are diving into this, but they're doing it with relationships, with friendships family with kids everything are you in a negotiation when you order coffee at starbucks absolutely what makes it a negotiation because i usually like to make it a game to see what i can get what i can get for free i usually i like to i like to make see what i can get for a discount, what I can get for free.
Starting point is 00:14:28 And I also just try to make it a game of like, how can I change someone's day? So I'm always thinking of like, okay. To make it better, right? Yeah. Because the game is fun. This person is, I try to put myself in the person's shoes who's taking the order. Yeah. And the person who's making my drink.
Starting point is 00:14:42 So I think this is a lot of my, yeah. Because I want it to be. Too important. I want a great drink, you know, because I've got a lot of times where it's like it doesn't taste as good so I try to First off say something to the person making the drink because you're waiting in line usually and if you're at Starbucks They're you know running around backwards busy busy making sure I try to say their name really quickly because they usually have the name tag on It's done. All right. Yeah. Okay, so I'll just say you know, I'm Ella or have the name tag on at Starbucks. Oh, right. Yeah. Okay.
Starting point is 00:15:06 So I'll just say, hey, I'm Mella or hey, Chris, I hope you're doing amazing. Hope your day's going good. Just try to get a quick little moment of like, oh, they'll see me and they'll go back and they're doing their crazy stuff. Recognition of them as a person though. Huge. Being seen, I think, is something that I always wanted as a kid. Right.
Starting point is 00:15:21 And when I learned that that's the thing most of us want is to be acknowledged and seen that we're here, that we're alive it makes a huge difference like ability of just saying oh that's a nice gesture like thank you yeah whether I never see them again or not but it was like it's always something I think about so I'm always trying to communicate with the people around me and just say hello right and smile yeah and then I typically try to say something to the person before I even make my order to the person who's like taking my order and make them smile.
Starting point is 00:15:51 It's always a game. What do I need to say or do to give them a smile? Because I feel like if they smile, they're going to have a better moment. And hopefully that moment turns into better moments moving forward the rest of their day. So that's what I try to do. But... That works. It works. Now you want me to lay out for you why that works.
Starting point is 00:16:09 Sure, tell me. So, Sean Acker, TED Talk, the happiness advantage, Harvard psychologist. You're 31% smarter in a positive frame of mind. So you're both making people smarter in the moment, you're making them feel like they exist on a planet, and you were showing them recognition, which is really close to empathy.
Starting point is 00:16:31 And you're good with it going no farther than that. Now, ideally, you get it in return. Yeah. Because that's how you get a better drink. Yeah. So, first of all, I talked to a speaker one time. He wrote this website called Secrets. Tell me your secrets.
Starting point is 00:16:47 Anonymously, I'll share them with the world. Somebody's struggling with what you're struggling with. He's telling me we're at a conference. He says he gets a brand new, still in wrapper, coffee cup from Starbucks. And the note says, I give decaf to people who are mean to me. Wow. Interesting. Wow.
Starting point is 00:17:04 Interesting. And then, as I bring this up in different, like, certain waiters and waitresses in restaurants have told me that if they have a customer that's being a jerk, and they ask for decaf at the end of the night, they give them coffee with caffeine in it. Oh, my gosh. Because they know it's going to keep them up. So people make a pain in a little ways. But then the other thing that I like about it is because got my U2 shirt on
Starting point is 00:17:27 so I'm a big fan of Bono as a person in addition to a lyricist, a singer and a rock star the forgiveness of the African debt him and Bob Geldorf
Starting point is 00:17:40 have negotiated the forgiveness straight forgiveness of literally hundreds of millions of dollars of third world debt. And reading Bono's, one of you two's books, and he says, you know, I've taken a lot of heat because of pictures of me laughing with Vladimir Putin. How dare you laugh with the devil? That sort of thing. How dare you? But he said, I found out early on, because Russia's got third world debt. They need them to say, never mind. He said, I found out early on, no matter how despicable
Starting point is 00:18:10 the person was on the other side, if I could find a way to share a laugh with them early, the chances that we're going to make a deal are very high. So he's laughing with dictators and brutal heads of dictatorships, not because he's looking to have a good time for him, but because he knows how much good he's doing in the world by breaking the ice in that fashion. This is what you're doing in small ways. Small ways, yeah. It's funny because I remember having a similar interaction with people. I went on Ellen a few years ago, and then I went on Glenn Beck within the same 24 hours. And people were like, how could you go on someone like Glenn Beck after you go on Ellen, thinking that he's whatever, not as positive or compassionate as Ellen, right?
Starting point is 00:19:04 Right. And I said, to be honest, I'm happy to go on anyone's platform who's got an audience because why do I want to only talk to people who think and believe the same way I do or a similar way, right? I want to talk to people
Starting point is 00:19:15 who think in different beliefs and try to support them as well and add value to them as well. That's what empathy's about, right? Can't just preach the choir all day long. Yeah. Yeah, I mean, you know, for whatever reason in their head, That's what empathy is about, right? Right. Can't just preach to the choir all day long. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:28 I mean, for whatever reason in their head, they have a reason for what they're thinking. And if you hear them out without attacking them in return, they're shocked. And then their mind opens up a little bit. They're like, somebody doesn't believe what I believe I can have a conversation with. Yeah. It makes all the difference in the world. doesn't believe what I believe I can have a conversation with yeah it makes all the difference in the world now you hadn't your book came out a few years ago and you told me before we started this that you've learned so much since
Starting point is 00:19:51 the book what are the biggest findings since the book that you've learned about negotiation or making better deals yeah first of all that you know the entire system was first designed to be successful against the international kidnapper. And that profile is almost exactly the profile of the professional negotiator in business. Really? The contracts guy, the procurement guy, gal. Almost exactly the same animal. guy to procurement guy gal almost exactly the same animal so found that and so it's far more useful
Starting point is 00:20:36 to people the hard bargainer in business deals they're a minority they're probably about 25 of the people that are out but about 25 of the people that are out there are real sharks that are looking to cut your throat now you might need to make that deal. How to deal with them without burning a bridge successfully. Then having learned so much more about the procurement negotiator, I'm at a procurement negotiation conference probably six months ago. They got a horrible job. I mean, they're under tremendous pressure. Their job is 10 times more difficult than anybody realizes. And we'll do one of our training days this year. We usually had 50 people in a room, high performers, top performers. There would always be at least one procurement person in there,
Starting point is 00:21:16 and they were trying to remain anonymous because they knew how hated they are. Yeah. But while being hated, they're decent people who are under tremendous pressure trying to do an extremely difficult job. So being much more aware of them and then also the kind of pressure they're under. They're getting pounded internally from so many different directions. So that's been a big one. Then the other one is how many fake deals are out there?
Starting point is 00:21:49 You know, I was talking to you earlier about what happens if you could put Get 20. What if you get 20% of your time back? Mm-hmm. How much more could you get done? Right? What do you mean by fake deals people just trying to waste you never gonna get the deal and they're just going back and forth, back and forth for months. They need you as a competing bid. Oh, wow. They want free consulting from you. They want to learn. Tell us your secrets first. Tell us your secrets.
Starting point is 00:22:14 And they're never going to give it to you. Open up your books. Tell us how much you're making. Let us do our due diligence. Right. Interesting. Right. It's at least 20% of the opportunities.
Starting point is 00:22:23 That's messed up. Actually, we think the numbers are much higher. That's messed up, isn't it? Well, again, you can't blame the other side. There's a lot of human nature involved. I'm doing a lot of coaching in the real estate industry with a gentleman named Steve Shaw, performance coach, cool guy, played in the Super Bowl. One of the people that have completely adopted our
Starting point is 00:22:45 approach in real estate, and this is just human dynamics, so this is not limited to real estate. Since she changed her approach about 10 months ago, she's gone out on 80% fewer appointments. Real estate appointments. Yes. Gone out 80% less. Have cut the same number of the deals that she did the year before. 80% less work. Same number of deals. And her deals are much more profitable. Wow.
Starting point is 00:23:19 Is it the pre-questionnaire? Is it the initial phone call? There's a little bit of an elimination. How do you eliminate up front whether or not somebody is either accidentally on purpose, never going to do business with you, and not burn the bridge? How do you figure that out? The simplest way is if you were buying my service, if you were looking for negotiation training. Yeah. The first conversation I'd say, Louis, you know, Harvard's out there, Wharton is out there,
Starting point is 00:23:51 Karras is out there. I got a lot of great competitors. I mean, these people that are really good. Why me? Why would you ever, I was a hostage negotiator. Yeah. Why would you ever come to a hostage negotiator to learn how to negotiate?
Starting point is 00:24:06 You're gonna do one of two things. Because why triggers defensiveness in every human being on a planet? If I'd have said, Loose, why'd you wear those shoes? Right. Your first thought is like, what's wrong with my shoes? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:24:22 And you might say, because I like them because they're comfortable right it's defensive you know it's funny you say that because my mom i ask her why all the time and she's crazy she says to me she says to me six months ago i stopped answering why questions i go why why questions. I go, why? So, but it's interesting. So why, why is why? Globally, the word why always creates defensiveness on anybody we ask it. Now you may not always be accusing them when you use the word, but if I've done something wrong, you're going to say, why'd you do that? That's everybody's first response when they think somebody's something and so we hit
Starting point is 00:25:05 it enough we're always defensive so but if I say why would you do business with me if you're gonna do it you're gonna defend it you say well hostage to go should you know so you reversed psychology psychology Wow so either you're gonna give me the reasons right away because I've just hit an emotional button in you I've actually hit two. I've created defensiveness. And also, it gives you, you think I need to be corrected. And correction is an addiction. It might as well be one of the seven deadly sins.
Starting point is 00:25:35 I can trick you. I can get you to tell me so much more if you're correcting me. I get you to say things to me that you would never say to me otherwise. Interesting. I really like it. I don't think I've ever thought of this. So when someone's- That's why we do what we do. I think I actually started doing this unintentionally, but I didn't know, I wasn't saying why necessarily,
Starting point is 00:25:59 but I remember I was trying to, I had this high ticket mastermind called the Greatness Mastermind for the last three years. We actually just put it on pause for this year because I'm putting my effort and energy into other things. But I noticed the time it took from year one, I was doing all these phone calls to sell people to get into the mastermind. Right. And it was a $35,000 price point.
Starting point is 00:26:19 And it worked fine because people applied, they showed interest and it worked, year one. year one year two I remember I said I'm gonna do no phone calls I'm gonna save my time because I was spending an hour on the phone selling people but just making sure they're qualified but it's a lot of time yes year two I said I'm only doing emails and I'm gonna essentially get them to enroll themselves in it for me and I started asking certain questions I don't think I was saying why me when you can go to this mastermind and this coach and this i wasn't saying that but i was more asking them to enroll themselves in it for me say you know what's the purpose of you joining in the last year i did something similar it was just like i had someone else on the phone
Starting point is 00:27:00 say why do you want to be a part of this? With Lewis specifically. Not saying there's all these other options, but just going, why do you want to be a part of this? And then he would listen to them say why they wanted to be a part of it. But I don't think I have the perfect system the way you talk about it, but I think that's, and I never had to jump on a phone call, I never had to do an email, and people just enrolled in a higher price point every year Which was powerful. Yeah, I like this approach to saying, you know, there's all these other options out there Why do you want to get one me? I mean we never badmouth our competition, right?
Starting point is 00:27:34 Right. I say they're great. Why me now the other response is gonna be now Here's what you're really looking for. These are the people that you're not gonna do business with if somebody looks back you say well It's up to you. Yeah, I like that. Yeah. Yeah, you convinced me. No well and in a point of fact That's a defensive reaction on their port vision drive decision If they if you said somebody sits down with you and they don't have a vision of doing business with you in their head already You can't put it there. Mm-hmm. Really? You can't inception them. No. Well, no you can I need to diagnose whether or not there's anything in there You can't put it there. Really? You can't inception them? No. Well, no. I need to diagnose whether or not there's anything in there.
Starting point is 00:28:08 Yeah. Well, if it is, also, I mean, the return on my time. Like, I get people that want to do business with me right now. Yeah. Because your most valuable commodity is your time. You were just talking about time. What do you and I have? It's exactly what's our commodity that's equal to Warren Buffett's it can't get it back Warren Buffett's got 24 hours. We got 24 hours. You can't get it back
Starting point is 00:28:33 so I could chase a deal for a long time or I can take the deals to people that are ready to do business with me now And there are enough people ready to do business with me now. And there are enough people ready to do business with me now that the chase is probably a fool's errand. Right. Now, coming to that is really hard. Very few people can do it early in a business career because they're so desperate for opportunity
Starting point is 00:28:58 to think it makes no sense to not chase every opportunity. And everybody that we've taught this to who's been in business for any length of time, you can just see the light going on over their head. They're like, man, I've been hustling for years. Say yes to everything. I didn't need to hustle those people. Yeah, they said I didn't need to hustle those people.
Starting point is 00:29:20 I know, I know. Well, the only thing you needed is to develop a gut instinct for the people that aren't worth the hustle You know, I guarantee you anybody attends your mastermind no matter what you charge for it It's gonna be cheap money for them, right? But if my mindset isn't there To start with if I show up, I'm not gonna pay pay attention. My mind's going to be in other places. I'll be wasting my time. Right.
Starting point is 00:29:46 So you're going to sell those people anyways. You want to get the people that already have a vision of working with you, it sounds like. Right. Or a vision of working with you where they realize the visions align. Yeah. And now this is a great collaboration. Right. But if the visions or the values, if the core values don't align.
Starting point is 00:30:04 I mean, what if there's someone who's just starting out in a business, they maybe don't have the reputation, they don't have the credibility yet, they don't have the audience size, where people aren't coming to them, seeking them out yet, they're trying to make a name for himself. The new real estate agent who's never done a deal,
Starting point is 00:30:20 the new videographer who's trying to get their first client, like how do you get them to say, well, why do you wanna work with me if I've never had the experience? They're not going to be able to answer that question. Gotcha. But there's another way to do it. An attorney I hired recently on a very specific issue wrote a white paper on that topic and put it out there. So I already knew he knew what he was talking about.
Starting point is 00:30:43 He put that out. He demonstrated an expertise in the area. He took the time to do the research. He took the time to review the issues. He took the time to write this white paper and he put it out there. It was an issue that we were struggling with internally. I had an intern at the time. He says, hey, I found this attorney
Starting point is 00:31:05 who wrote this white paper. Like, perfect. Bang. We went in right away and I knew that he had it. So if you're just starting out, put an article on LinkedIn demonstrating what you know at that point in time. Credibility, yeah. People want to know if you understand. And so you can be brand new in an industry and develop an understanding of some aspect of that industry in short order. LinkedIn is one of those great, it's a marketing tool. It's a marketing platform. Put a piece out on LinkedIn. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:31:47 Pretty good chance it's going to create some more back and forth. There's going to be a bunch of people that are going to be critical of you. Nine out of 10 of them aren't going to know what they're talking about. But a couple of people who are on your side will add some comments that'll help refine what you know. And now you've just, you're bringing value to the table the minute you walk in a room. Right. What are the most common negotiations that everyone goes through on a daily basis? Well, anytime somebody has got the words,
Starting point is 00:32:16 I want or I need coming out of their mouth, you're in a negotiation. You're in a negotiation. Right. The commodity that's always at stake is time. Yeah. So, you know, I'm in a negotiation. Right. The commodity that's always at stake is time. So I'm in a negotiation when I check into a hotel because I want a free upgrade. Or typically I'm in a hotel early and a lot of hotels want to charge you early checking
Starting point is 00:32:38 fee. I don't want to pay that fee. Or a late checkout. Or a late checkout. They don't want to give late checkouts to anybody that's not one of their super executives. I'm always pushing for that 3, 4, 5 p.m. late checkout. Right, right. Yeah, so, I mean, they could do that for you.
Starting point is 00:32:53 Yeah. If they felt like it. You know, never be mean to somebody who could hurt you by doing nothing. Well, everybody you interact with could hurt you by doing nothing. Hmm. Well, everybody you interact with could hurt you by doing nothing, which if you take to the flip side of that coin is they could do something for you if they felt like it. Right. How do you make them feel like it?
Starting point is 00:33:12 Demonstration a little bit of understanding. Recognition of them as a human being. Let's go back to your Starbucks example. You're trying to show them that you're not treating them as a clerk behind the Starbucks counter, that they're actually a human being. You say their name. Hey, how you're not treating them as a clerk behind a Starbucks counter, that they're actually a human being. You say their name. Hey, how you doing today?
Starting point is 00:33:27 It's not that you're saying how you're doing, but I guarantee you that the way that you say that is you're saying it in a way where it's my intention that for the brief moment that you interact with me, at least your day will be better. And their gut instinct is going to pick that up. So the minute you're no longer demanding, now you're negotiating with a Lyft driver. Is he going to come out of the Lyft app and go into another app that is even faster? Is he going to drive the slow lane the whole time? Or is he going to try to get around in traffic to save you a few minutes? The Lyft driver, he or she,
Starting point is 00:34:03 are they going to make some extra effort for you? Yeah. You know, there's a million things everybody can do no matter how simple the job is. You talk to a woman that probably about three years ago, she said, you know, we buy music for movies
Starting point is 00:34:14 and the people on the other side are just order takers. It's not a negotiation. Yes, it is. Right. The way you interact with them on the phone, if they write down
Starting point is 00:34:24 which song you're after with Sony or whoever it is, The way you interact with them on the phone, if they write down which song you're after with Sony or whoever it is, do they take your order and they walk it down to the hall to the guy who executes? Or do they put them on a bottle of Pyle because they didn't like the way you spoke to them? There's a million and one things people could do for you if they just felt like it. So if on a regular basis you're trying to give somebody a nicer day, you're going to turn around and they will have done something for you for free and then stuff accumulates. What's the formula or process to get people to do things just because they feel like it?
Starting point is 00:34:58 Well you know it's really, it's going to sound stupid. Smiling. Being nice. Smiling. Neuroscience behind a smile. If you smile at somebody, you actually hit their mirror neurons. You start a smile in their brain. Wow.
Starting point is 00:35:18 Smile is an involuntary response. Mirror neurons. Mirror neurons in their brain. It's the same as if the doctor hits your knee with a little hammer and your leg kicks forward. You didn't choose to have your leg kick forward. It's an involuntary response. So if somebody sees you and you smile, you've instantly hit their mirror neurons.
Starting point is 00:35:35 You've started a chemical change. Now, they might fight it. And sometimes you get them three smiles. Right. But by a third smile, you get them smiling too. Yeah. So you've already started the processing. And then your inner voice betrays your outer voice.
Starting point is 00:35:51 When you say how are you to somebody at Starbucks, your inner voice is saying I'm trying to make your day better. I want you to be a happier person. They're going to feel it. If your inner voice is saying like, how are you today? I need my Starbucks coffee and I need to get out of here and I hate this line and I hate how long you guys. If that's in your voice, they're going to feel that. They're going to be pouring decaf in instead of the other kind.
Starting point is 00:36:18 Right. So your entire approach, the neuroscience shows us the person is picking it up and responding. And so your body language, your tone of voice, the greatest negotiators in the world really maximize that because it's an invisible skill. Yeah. But it's a skill you can teach, it sounds like. And learn.
Starting point is 00:36:40 And learn. You can teach it, you can learn it, you can practice it. All you got to do is you get your rep get your repetitions in um uh john foley's a blue angel pilot i heard him speak about four years ago he talked about how long does it take to build a habit how much training do you need he called it grooving uh uh putting a groove in your brain the blue angels you know they got to build their habits before they get up in the sky. Otherwise, the jets crash. I was in a Blue Angel two years ago. It was crazy, man.
Starting point is 00:37:09 That had to have been an adrenaline rush. I threw up twice in the plane. I was sick the whole time and sick for three days afterwards. I've got a weak stomach. But it was unbelievable at the same time. They needed to know what they were doing. Oh, for sure. They can't learn up there, right?
Starting point is 00:37:24 It's amazing to watch them so close, just like feet away from each other. At Mach 1 or however fast they're going? Four or five, whatever. Yeah, it's crazy. Yeah. All right, so Foley said, how do they get that good?
Starting point is 00:37:36 They practice, he said, 63 to 64 repetitions to put it in your brain. And another guy wrote the talent code Daniel Coyle yeah he talked about perfect practice yeah you could go excruciatingly slow as long as you do it right and the first time you try any skill you probably go slow you come to one of the training sessions that my company puts on. I'm going to say, say this word for word. Take your time.
Starting point is 00:38:11 And then react in the moment. We have one of the negotiation tools is what we call a label. When I say something to you, I want you to label it. I don't care if you have to stare at me for 10 minutes. Label it. Label it. It seems like, it sounds like, it looks like. A label is a verbal observation.
Starting point is 00:38:28 Okay. But I need you to use those exact words. And if I say, I love teaching negotiations. Now, label my emotion. Your emotion? The emotion that I displayed when I said, I love teaching negotiations. Label that.
Starting point is 00:38:44 What do you say, the three things? It seems like, it sounds like, I love teaching negotiations. Label that. What do you say? The three things? It seems like, it sounds like, or it looks like. Say all three of them? Pick one of those three. Say, all right, I'm going to say it again, and I want you to say word for word, it sounds like, and then fill in the blank. Okay. I love teaching negotiation. It sounds like you love teaching negotiation. Yeah sounds like you love teaching negotiation.
Starting point is 00:39:06 Yeah. Now, that's enough. Now, to start with, what just happened is you demonstrated it perfectly. Okay. Because the important part is you have to say the first three words. It sounds like. That actually fires the brain. And you did exactly what I thought you would do,
Starting point is 00:39:24 which is that it sounds like you fired the brain mmm and you did exactly what I thought you would do we said it sounds like you fired the brain and then you opened yourself up to whatever your brain put in that's why I wanted you to actually say the words the actual specific words because your brain will kick into gear and say something huh now your first label every time you fire the synapse, you get a little bit better. There's a substance called myelin. Your brain wraps a substance. It's an electrical synaptic connection in your brain. And anybody, if you know anything about electricity, every time you insulate it, it fires a little bit better. Fire it 63 to 64 times, according to the Blue Angel pilot,
Starting point is 00:40:07 and you get a nice circuit belt. And it'll fire quickly. And then you'll start to hear it. So we'll fire it again, and I want you to label it again. I love teaching negotiation. Sounds like you love teaching negotiation. All right, now dig a little bit deeper. Explain it more?
Starting point is 00:40:25 No, no, no. Another label, but use another adjective. It sounds like X. I love teaching negotiation. It sounds like you're passionate about teaching negotiation. There you go. See? Perfect.
Starting point is 00:40:37 Now you came up with another word. Now it stumped you for a second. Yeah. And you kicked in. You let that supercomputer come up with another word. You're like, yeah, I am passionate about it. Now, interestingly enough, this is a way in a business negotiation, because a great business deal is an alignment of core values. Just like a great personal relationship is an alignment of core values. I'm sitting on a plane flying in here this morning i found out more about the guy sitting on a plane next to me
Starting point is 00:41:12 than he's told anybody in 20 years with the same kind of an exercise what do you do for living what do you love about it and when he when he tells me i now know the guy sat next to on a plane when he tells me, I now know, the guy I sat next to on a plane, he's got an adopted daughter. She was adopted when she was six months old from China. His mother struggled with bipolar manic depressive. She committed suicide at age 17. He was raised by his grandparents.
Starting point is 00:41:40 His grandfather survived the depression. His grandfather at one point in time, going into the Depression, owned 11 banks that all went bankrupt. He had to start completely over again. His grandfather used to tell him, I lost 11 fortunes. His grandfather loved to live off the land. They loved to make things by hand. This guy's a very successful contractor here in Los Angeles.
Starting point is 00:42:02 And he's constantly, constantly, constantly working on improving himself. Married to his first wife. They're business partners. They work together. They work in different aspects of the business. I mean, I've lost track of the number of things I found out about this guy. I know about this guy from when he was three years old to now. Now, in the space of what sounded like a normal social conversation,
Starting point is 00:42:28 I know this guy's incredibly loyal. He's very practical. He's very hardworking. I just flew in from Vegas. He was in Vegas because he was in a competitive poker tournament. He likes reading people. He's a very hard worker. From what I know from this guy, from what this perceived social conversation, I know that we could do business together. And if we run into trouble, I have a pretty good idea of what to expect from him and how to deal with those problems if we run into trouble. Wow. With the very sort of thing that you and I did just now.
Starting point is 00:43:02 Wow. You know, you start teasing stuff out. So when you ask him a question and he says something, you would use one of those responses. It seems like, it sounds like, what was the third one? Yeah, or it feels like.
Starting point is 00:43:13 It feels like. It looks like, it could be looks like. Looks like. Because I might be reading your body language. It looks like. It's like you're not that interested into it. Even though you said you were, your body language tells me something different.
Starting point is 00:43:22 Exactly. Yeah. And then, see, if you see that in somebody's body language tells me something different exactly yeah and then and then see if you see that in somebody's body language your point before about starbucks about actually seeing a person that same thing is going on and they might not even know it you know every now and i get people go like yeah you know i've been struggling with this for one really really conflicted about it. And they find themselves opening up.
Starting point is 00:43:51 Because most of the time, if you see conflict in somebody, most people say, Ah, it'll be fine. Just keep working hard. It'll be fine. It's all part of the journey. Instead of actually being a great sounding board for somebody and helping them sound that out, consequently learning a lot about that person at the same time. It sounds like you're going through a lot right now. It sounds like you're having a hard time with this. It sounds like. Exactly.
Starting point is 00:44:12 It's exactly right. And you start to become a tremendous sounding board for people. So what happens to that person when you respond in one of those three or four ways, if it sounds like, feels like, looks like, what does that person feel on the other side when you're showing that type of compassion or empathy? They feel connected with.
Starting point is 00:44:32 They feel very connected with. They feel seen. You know, they feel like they're a person on the planet. They feel like suddenly they're not just another part of the thundering herd that nobody's paying attention to. They feel at least that. Last week we were doing a training with some pretty tough business people.
Starting point is 00:44:51 And one of the guys in this exercise is saying, like, I found myself talking about stuff that happened when I was seven years old. Wow. He said, I got to tell you something. I feel transformed right now. And so we stopped the group at that point of time and we said all right so now based on larry talking about that sort of a change what kind of a guy is he to deal with he's a pretty decent guy yeah you now have gotten a glimpse into him as more as a total human being, which means if he does something that you perceive to be a negative move,
Starting point is 00:45:30 he either did it accidentally or you misinterpreted it, which means it's okay to go back to him instead of letting the rage build up in you because you misinterpreted something or did it by accident. He's a decent guy. If he slighted you, he did it by accident. Right. You can go back to him and bring it up and say, hey, I got to tell you, I got a problem with this. He's probably going to open up
Starting point is 00:46:00 because just based on this real, this three-minute exercise, you find out about... He opened up then, so you'd probably yeah. He's a decent human being. Wow. And every human being is going to hurt you principally inadvertently
Starting point is 00:46:13 so you can go back to him and find out what's behind it and make him aware because they're going to want him now. Yeah. Every human being's going to hurt you? Everybody one way or another is going to do something accidentally or on purpose it's going to hurt your feeling we're gonna we're gonna interpret it as negative the vast majority of the time yeah when in fact it was probably a
Starting point is 00:46:36 complete accident there's a really good chance they got no idea they hurt your feelings right you need to know which one it was did they do it on purpose do they know they did it the numbers are that they did it by accident and other numbers are there's a really good chance they didn't know they did it right you know i went i went to uh you know a landmark forum a couple years ago yeah talking about making amends with people talking talking to people who have hurt you. And so one of the young ladies... Did you go through the whole program? Yeah. One of the young ladies in it was like,
Starting point is 00:47:09 when I was seven, a girl who was my cousin, they bullied me. They said something that hurt me. It's 30 years. I haven't let go of it. Wow. So we talked about it.
Starting point is 00:47:21 They talked about it. And she said she went. She decided to go to the person and just... because to forgive, to forgive is to let go. Not forgiving is like taking poison and hoping the other person dies, right? You've heard that. Yeah. So she goes to this girl and she says, I want you to know I forgot. The girl didn't even remember.
Starting point is 00:47:38 She got no memory. What? She was just being a stupid kid at the time. She had- We're all stupid at seven, right? Yeah. They're joking around and- Wow. She held onto it for stupid kid at the time. We're all stupid at seven, right? Yeah, they're joking around. Wow, she held on to it for that long. 30 years, the other person doesn't even know it.
Starting point is 00:47:51 So by nature, we're joking around with somebody, and we accidentally say something that wounded them. If they don't feel they can talk to us, they're going to carry it for 30 years. If I heard somebody, I want to know. Yeah. You know, because I'm going to be like, I'm an idiot. You know?
Starting point is 00:48:10 Yeah. I had no idea I did that to you. Yeah. I had no idea. Was there anything from the emotional intelligence training at Landmark that added to your curriculum of negotiations that you didn't already know or use before? Well, not... Because it's all interwoven.
Starting point is 00:48:27 The biggest thing that jumped out at me is it occurred to me that somebody hurt somebody else without even knowing they did it. Like in a master class thing, they did a great job. The master class people are phenomenal. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:48:41 So we're wandering to the very tail end of it. And they got me talking about this guy that bullied me when I was a kid. You you're talking about yeah yeah and and i hadn't i hadn't i had literally never told anybody about this wow so you know it's and it happened when i was a little kid yeah i literally had never told anybody about it not even through landmark or anything else wow and they get it out of me at MasterClass. They catch me off guard over it. And to this day, this is one of the reasons why I hate bullies.
Starting point is 00:49:13 I want to become an FBI agent because we want to go after the bad guys because the bad guys are bullies. And there's nothing I like better than getting a bully that's victimizing somebody else and i think it was instilled in me in what happened when i was when i was a kid but then i started comparing that to this this interaction i heard a landmark where somebody bullied somebody else they didn't even know they did it and then i began thinking about like how many people have i hurt that i didn't
Starting point is 00:49:42 even know right like they would come up to me today and said, you know, I've carried this for 40 years. And I have to have done that to somebody. Right. Have to have done that to somebody. I know I have. Yeah. Yeah. So it's, you know, this forgiveness thing is a two-way street and also being, you know, who do I need to go back to that I can think of?
Starting point is 00:50:03 And say, look, look like since i know that inadvertently i'm a jerk did i what did i do i'm sure i did something i had to have done something then it's an it's an interesting dilemma all sort of part of you know being a better person anyway which i know is what what you're dedicated It's almost, it seems like it's really hard, especially if you're a public figure that has an audience, that you're going to say something or do something that's going to offend or hurt someone. Right.
Starting point is 00:50:35 At all times. It's like you're always going to be offending someone if you have a voice. If you're sharing something, your point of view. Your point of view is going to reach a certain audience's point of view, but not the're sharing something, your point of view. Your point of view is going to reach a certain audience's point of view, but not the rest of the world's point of view. So it's like you're always hurting people, aren't you?
Starting point is 00:50:52 Yeah. At some level, you're like offending, hurting, or frustrating people. And their hurt's gonna be defensive in reaction. Yeah. Or they misinterpret, or you hit a button with them that you didn't even, maybe you didn't hit the button, but you came close to a button that's been hurt before.
Starting point is 00:51:09 And interestingly enough, we see this a lot with the procurement people that come to our training. I'm really careful to say, look, look, I know you guys fear procurement. And this is about dealing successfully with procurement. And we had one person in the training go, I work in procurement and you criticized, you said procurement people were bad. I said, as a matter of fact, that's not what I said,
Starting point is 00:51:37 but I came so close to your hot button that it hit it anyway. And I spent some time with this woman and she was afraid that that was what I meant. But didn't know how to approach me. Yeah. And when it came up subsequently, I said, no, as a matter of fact, procurement has one of the most difficult jobs on the planet.
Starting point is 00:51:59 You guys are both, you spend your days either herding cats or getting chased by villagers with pitchforks. Right. One or the other. Yeah. And she was like, yeah, yeah, it's really tough. I was just afraid that that's what you meant.
Starting point is 00:52:14 It was that amygdala that we were talking about before, the 75% negative. Yeah. We're all equipped with that. And when someone even comes close to a criticism, then we're afraid that that's what they mean and they're hurt how do you take criticism not well I've never really been good at it until I want to say I've mastered it I think
Starting point is 00:52:36 I've gotten better over the last six years I started to really like say okay let me not react to this criticism like they probably have some good intention they're trying to tell me and maybe there's some truth okay, let me not react to this criticism. Like they probably have some good intention. They're trying to tell me, and maybe there's some truth there. So let me start to listen to the feedback or the criticism and say, okay, how can I be better? Is there any truth in there that really resonates or are they coming from a place of anger of their own thing? Criticism is mostly fear driven.
Starting point is 00:53:01 By the person criticizing. Right. Yeah. And you criticize at an important fact. You've been hurt. You've been disappointed. You've been frustrated. You know, there's a lot of things that you know, never take advice from anybody you wouldn't share places with. Criticism is a form of advice, but you're afraid to tell people how to do stuff. So you just criticize what they do. Mm-hmm. Some people, and then they and then it becomes an addiction for some people.
Starting point is 00:53:29 Criticism is not a great behavior. I know you've heard the phrase, nobody's doing better than you will ever criticize you. They'll mentor you. So, first of all, how do I take criticism? I've got to take a step back and understand if somebody's coming at me with just a criticism, even if they ask permission to criticize,
Starting point is 00:53:52 they got struggles that are worse than mine. If they ask you to give you criticism? They are an open wound at that point in time. So I'm not gonna, I'm gonna say, yeah, sure, go ahead. Right. I'm going to, they've already told me they're probably coming from a difficult place. Gotcha, gotcha. So what I'm going to try to do is just kind of take it easy on them and understand where they're coming from.
Starting point is 00:54:21 A blog I'm a big fan of, Eric Barker writes this great blog, Barking Up the Wrong Tree. Yeah, it's great. Eric told me one time, for every, every hater, there's going to be 10 people that are on your side. So when a critic comes up to me,
Starting point is 00:54:35 I see that as, there are 10 people, you're indicating to me that I'm successful with nine other people, and I'm not going to get down on this person. Because it's very easy to get down on them because unfortunately they're coming from a
Starting point is 00:54:48 negative place yeah gotcha that's good to know what's a role-playing exercise that anyone can do with a friend that would make them a better negotiator try to get whoever you're talking to to say the magic two words that's right which means you got to summarize where they're coming from if you hmm in in any given interaction if you got a point you want to make yeah before you make it your trigger you're not allowed to make your point so give me an example and you want the other person you're not allowed to make your point. So give me an example. And you want the other person you're role-playing with to say, that's right.
Starting point is 00:55:33 Okay, so you were telling me about critics. Yeah. You're a high-profile guy. You're about helping other people, which means you get criticized a lot. That's right. And when you get criticized a lot. That's right. And when you get criticized, I mean, I wouldn't say you're empathic, oh you are. I would say you're probably more compassionate. Those are two different things.
Starting point is 00:55:56 Empathy is, you have to have empathy to be compassionate, but empathy is not compassion. Compassion is the next step. Empathy is a compassionate thing to do, genuinely understanding somebody. But there's a real fine line there that distinct things. And I think you have a tremendous amount of compassion for people. So you know that when someone criticizes you, they're attacking you. But you also know that they've been hurt and they're struggling.
Starting point is 00:56:33 So you want to know how to respond to them and have them better as a result of the interaction instead of coming back and making them feel worse worse and you struggle with that because you're under attack and you try not to try not to fire back at him right yeah that's right there you go so you want to have a conversation with someone if you could summarize their point
Starting point is 00:57:00 of view first summarize the other person's, when you summarize what the other person's struggling with. In any type of deal making. In any type of deal. A business deal, a relationship, buying coffee, upgrading,
Starting point is 00:57:13 whatever it is. Right. Gotcha. Yeah. Then after that, you can make your point. Make your point or make your proposal or.
Starting point is 00:57:22 Yeah, or whatever. So if you're trying to get an upgrade, if you're trying to get an upgrade on an airport uh you know on a plane or a hotel right or trying to get a super size made for free right you're trying to get some type of upgrade for free right would you do the same thing would you say i know you're going through it seems like it's been a long day for you well you can look at them until not it's going to be a long day. So right off the bat, you say, long day? Right.
Starting point is 00:57:49 And then as soon as you get ready to make your ask, what's their instinctive response, their knee-jerk reaction, what's that going to be? When I make an ask? Once you've made your ask, what's their, if somebody's trying to get something for free, what's their typical knee jerk reaction?
Starting point is 00:58:08 Oh, this person's just trying to get something for free from me? Right. Yeah. So. And everyone does this or everyone, there you go.
Starting point is 00:58:16 Everyone's doing this. Yeah, so you walk up and you go like, hey, look, man, I know I'm going to seem like just another jerk who's trying to get something for free.
Starting point is 00:58:23 Somebody who treats you like you were their servant. Oh, man. Somebody who doesn't care about you, could care less whether you live or die. They only care that you're alive long enough to make my coffee. Because that's what the other guy's thinking. How do you articulate what they're thinking, especially the negative stuff about you? When you say that, they're going to be like,
Starting point is 00:58:47 no, no, no, no, no, no. But what you did was you just woke them up. You snapped them out of the negative loop that's in their head because the last guy come in and said, yeah, I want to die, and I want it now. I hate waiting in line at Starbucks. Do you do this all the time, all day long? Are you constantly in the game
Starting point is 00:59:07 of negotiation with people? It's that, you know, that I brush my teeth today just because I brushed them yesterday. You know, I genuinely, I got to keep my skills up
Starting point is 00:59:18 because it's either stay even, decline, or get better. I want to keep my skills up. The mercenary in me does it because I got to keep my skills up. The mercenary in me does it because I got to keep my skills up. The missionary in me does it
Starting point is 00:59:27 because I actually care about people. I just assume that you had a good day. That my interaction with you didn't leave you worse. That my interaction with you left you better. Everybody we encounter should be left better
Starting point is 00:59:43 by the interaction. How important is the intention before you walk up to the coffee shop, before you go to the hotel, before you get on the phone with the other business owner to make a deal, before you have a conversation with your partner about where you're going to dinner? Do you set an intention first, like walking into the hotel, you're like, this is what I'm going to say. This is the result that I want to get out of this. This is the way I want to leave people feeling.
Starting point is 01:00:18 The intention is, you know, I want you to have fun with the interaction. The other person. Yeah. I want you to have fun. If I'm playful, if I'm intending for you to have fun, I'm in a department store. I'm joking around with the guy behind the counter. And I go, I go, tell you what. You know what?
Starting point is 01:00:31 How about if you give me the employee discount? Give me the employee discount. I'll say it like that. Give me the employee discount. And the guy in the store says, if I give you the employee discount, I'm going to have to pay for it myself. Really?
Starting point is 01:00:46 And I go, I'll pay you back. I said it just like that. He went and he started walking around asking people how he could key it in and give me the same discount without having to pay it himself. He walked around the store for 10 minutes. Really? And I saw him walk up to a manager. There's a manager shaking his head. He's going to someone else.
Starting point is 01:01:06 And on his way back, another employee walked up to him on the side, whispered in his ear, and he went, and he walked up, and I get 30% off. Wow. But you didn't pay him back.
Starting point is 01:01:16 It was just like a playful. I just, you know, yeah. I just was being playful about it, just being silly about it. And what's the best way to get an upgrade at a hotel for you? All right. So, slightly different take on the approach.
Starting point is 01:01:29 Yes. My son does this all the time. My son, Brandon, runs my business. He's our best negotiator. He prides himself when we all come into a hotel, he's got to be in a better room than me. And I'm the boss. That's hilarious. And as far as I'm concerned,
Starting point is 01:01:46 I'm paying the bills. Yeah, of course. He got an upgrade in a hotel one time that I couldn't even get on the floor. You need a special key? Yeah.
Starting point is 01:01:54 Key code, yeah. Me and the other guys were going, hey, we'll come up to your room. He goes, no, no, I got to come get you. I said, no,
Starting point is 01:02:00 we'll just come knock on your door. He goes, no, you can't even get on the floor I'm on. He paid less for his room than I paid for mine. Wow.
Starting point is 01:02:05 I'm the boss. Wow. But he'll walk up to somebody and say, I'm getting ready to make your day the most difficult day you ever worked here. And he says, because somebody works behind a counter at a hotel, I mean, God knows what they've
Starting point is 01:02:26 seen. Have you got a head in the bag? Do you want to, are you going to have ritual sacrifice in a room? What have you done? Because in a hotel, they've seen every kind of crazy thing you could imagine. And they just go, oh God, what is it? And he goes, I'm just going to be another self-centered person looking for a free upgrade. And they're like, oh, my God.
Starting point is 01:02:49 That's it? That's it? That's it? Oh, yeah. And they're immediately through the roof. And they start checking and this and this. Hey, you know what? Yeah, I tell you what.
Starting point is 01:02:57 Let me give you this room. It's on the exclusive floor. Presidential suite. President ain't coming. So I'm going to give you the president. Right, right, right. I know the president ain't coming tonight. We're holding a suite for him just in case. You can have it. He I'm going to give you the president. Right, right, right. I know the president ain't coming tonight. We're holding a suite for him just in case.
Starting point is 01:03:07 You can have it. He's not going to be here. Wow. I remember from our interview the last time, I think if my memory is right, you would say one of the strategies is leading with being challenging in a certain way or I'm going to be demanding a lot. Isn't that something that you taught? To a little bit, yeah. a certain way, or I'm gonna be like, I'm gonna be demanding a lot.
Starting point is 01:03:25 Isn't that something that you taught? Well, to a little bit, yeah. You know that way, right? I am gonna, if I know you're gonna react negatively to my ask, I will give you a preview that makes it worse, look worse than what it's gonna be. Yeah, so what do you call that, that framework? For lack of a better term, it's emotional anchoring.
Starting point is 01:03:44 Emotional anchoring. Emotional anchoring. Emotional anchoring. You know, we don't do price anchoring. Uh-huh. You know, but we'll do emotional anchoring. If you're not going to like
Starting point is 01:03:54 what I have to say, I'm going to say, look, you're not going to like this. Right. That's what it is. And then I'm going to shut up because your amygdala
Starting point is 01:04:01 is going to kick into gear and you're going to think that I'm going to insult you, your parentage, your family, your genealogy, your parents, everything. Because the amygdala is going to go into overdrive. Wow. So whatever I ask for after that is going to be relief. And I'm doing that also because I need to keep an eye on how you feel when we're done. because I need to keep an eye on how you feel when we're done.
Starting point is 01:04:26 Not as much how you feel at the start, but how you feel when we're done. So you want someone to be, it's okay if they start off in a lower energetic or negative attitude, as long as when you finish, they feel like, okay, it got better over time. Yeah, you feel good at the end. The last impression is a lasting impression.
Starting point is 01:04:46 Interesting. And that's unavoidable. Yeah. It's what we refer to as a law of gravity. Huh. It doesn't, you know, we have gravity. We can't explain why gravity works. But you're still not going to step off the balcony because gravity's there.
Starting point is 01:05:00 Right. The last impression is a lasting impression, no matter what. So I need to, more than anything else, make sure that the last impression is positive, or at least feels collaborative. Let's say you've been in a negotiation with someone, or you're a business partner with someone, or you've been in a long negotiation
Starting point is 01:05:23 for six months with someone, either one. You've've been a business partner working together for a year or two or you've been trying to find a deal with someone else for a year or two right and both options have taken too long that haven't you haven't beginning the results you want and you feel like you've been taken advantage of a little bit, let's just say that. How do you, and it's going, you started off good and it's going the opposite way. Right.
Starting point is 01:05:53 It's getting worse and worse. How do you finalize it so that it goes back to a high or a higher mark, leaving you feeling better and leaving the other person feeling better. Or you get out of it. Yeah, or you just get out of it but you just say okay I'm done bye I don't want to talk to you how do you not burn a bridge if you're in that situation I probably say some of the effective look you're not gonna like this hmm so you start with the emotional anchoring. Right. Interesting. This isn't working for me.
Starting point is 01:06:28 And I'm sorry, but I'm afraid I can't do it anymore. And my problem here has been that I like you. I've always liked you. And the stuff that we've done together successfully has been phenomenal. And I would like nothing better than at some point in time in the future
Starting point is 01:06:47 for us to be able to get back to that. But for right now, in order to preserve the memories of the positive things we've done, I'm going to be,
Starting point is 01:06:56 I'm out now. Wow. How do I remember that so every time I'm in a situation I can say that same thing? Well, it's a little bit of a sequence.
Starting point is 01:07:05 Yeah. And the sequence is we need to stop what we're doing right now. But if we're going to stop what we're doing right now, what everybody thinks of is where is this going in the future? So I got to create a point in time for the future that we're both happy with So there's still a bridge there, you know, there's still there's still an attentional the future. Yeah, maybe it's a year Maybe it's never gonna happen, but you keep it open. I'm open to it. I want I know I'm finishing positively, but I am finishing Yeah, because the last words that I the last two sentences Maybe even just the last sentence, are going
Starting point is 01:07:45 to ring in your ears over and over and over and over. Because that's what your brain is always going to go back to, the last impression. How did I make you feel at the end? I make you feel valued. And you're going to appreciate the fact that I walked away without calling you names. But I walked away. Right. It's hard to do.
Starting point is 01:08:04 Yeah. Well, it's hard to get your practice in. You've got to do practice, yeah. You know, you just, you work on it a few times. Most of the time, what people have at the end is, the battle for the last word
Starting point is 01:08:15 is when the last word is a cheap shot. Right. That's when people... Screw you too. Hang up, right? Right. And I'm going to call you back to say screw you right back,
Starting point is 01:08:22 and then I'm going to hang up. Yeah. You know, there's a battle of the last word's a problem and the last word's a cheap shot. But when the last word is a positive thing, it's not a problem. So always end with positive words. Right. Even if you feel taken advantage of, even if they hurt you, even if they screwed you over, whatever, you should always try to end in a positive way.
Starting point is 01:08:41 Yeah, without question. Because if you're talking to them, then your goal was to resolve things and to have a great relationship. Now you might say that at the very beginning of the interaction, but it's more important to say it at the end. You know, my goal was always to have a great relationship with you.
Starting point is 01:09:03 And if we can get out of this dynamic that would be my goal again but right now I'm out no but understand that at any point of time we can go back to working collaboratively I'd love to do it well that's good yeah so usually what it is is take take what you said at the beginning and at least say it again at the end mmm that's good. Yeah, I like that. What is something that you did as a hostage negotiator with terrorists around the world that you use today in just common interactions? Is there something that you did at the height of this intense conversation that you do on
Starting point is 01:09:42 a daily basis? Pretty much everything we've been talking about. I'm going to make a verbal observation on how they're processing things. It seems like it sounds like, it feels like, you'll say all those things. That's the bread and butter of great hostage negotiations.
Starting point is 01:09:58 Really? Yeah. It's having them be seen or heard feeling understood. People are taking actions to make a point. What happens if you could make the point without taking the action? They're taking actions to make a point. Right. And you're saying you don't need to take that action because I hear you.
Starting point is 01:10:18 Yeah. Let me see what happens if I can, if I can, if you, and it's makes no sense at all. But I'm going to take probably 90% of a terrorist's agenda away just by making them feel hurt. Making him or her feel hurt. Then I'll deal with whatever I have to afterwards. But let's say I could only take away 10% of their agenda by making them feel hurt. What if I could only take away 1% of their actions by making them feel hurt? That's worth the investment to me. Let me see what's left over after they feel hurt.
Starting point is 01:10:51 Less fingers they're cutting off, less people they're blowing up, whatever, right? Yeah, one way or another. Yeah. What is the best approach? Say I'm looking to buy a company, right? I'm looking to acquire something. I really like this
Starting point is 01:11:05 software this tool this agency i want to buy them what's the best approach without seemingly or thinking like oh if i come to them like i'm too needy i really want them then i'm giving them all the power right what's the best approach of someone that wants to buy something yeah um approach of someone that wants to buy something. Yeah, completely counterintuitive. What are all their arguments for making you pay the high price? State them first. Because what that actually does is it leaves them with nothing to say. So eight mile them.
Starting point is 01:11:39 Very nice. Correct. Exactly right. Eight mile them. Yeah, we used to use that clip from eight mile all the time. So good. Articulate everything they got to say. So for instance, if I'm an agency, you want to buy me, right?
Starting point is 01:11:54 My company. What would you say? If I'm like, my business is growing. We've got all this attention. We're helping clients with big results. We're growing as fast as possible and you're like wow this company is really growing we got to get them now before they're too big what would you you call me up on the phone do you write me an email do you meet hey i want to meet for coffee
Starting point is 01:12:15 what's the best approach uh in person email phone video confer. If you could have it any way. All right, I'd say, look, I'd probably say right off the bat, like I'm completely blown away with what you're doing. You guys are phenomenal. You're on the upswing. You guys are killing it. I'm going to seem like a cheapskate. I'm going to seem like I'm trying to get something for nothing. So emotional anchoring.
Starting point is 01:12:45 Yeah. Is it a ridiculous idea for us to talk about you selling me your company? Wow. Getting something for nothing? Is that what you said too? Yeah. Wow. Okay.
Starting point is 01:12:57 Because I've started off with appreciation. Yeah. I've lowered your expectations of me. And see, the last thing that I did also was I did what we refer to as a no oriented question. Instead of saying, would you like to buy? Would you like to talk to me about selling your company? I'd say, is it a ridiculous idea for us to talk about you selling me your company? And what if I say, yeah, it's kind of ridiculous.
Starting point is 01:13:23 We're done. I never had a shot to begin with. Oh. See, this is about keeping me out of deals that either I'm never going to make or I don't want to make. So it saved you six months of your life, potentially,
Starting point is 01:13:32 in a two-minute phone call. Right. But if they say, yeah, we're growing super fast, it'd be hard for me to really want to sell right now, but, you know, if you made me a great offer,
Starting point is 01:13:43 I'd be open. Then I'd say, sounds to me like there's just no way that I'm going to be able to ever make you happy. Oh. Because I need a great offer.
Starting point is 01:13:53 Yeah. If you say something like that to me, what you're actually doing is trying to get a really high bid out of me to soothe your ego. You want to go back to the employees and say you know what we're worth 150 million dollars and i turned it down because in five years we're
Starting point is 01:14:18 going to be worth 450 million dollars wow so that kind of that kind of a question is you want to bid for me to make you feel good. You're not seriously going to, by laying it out like that, you're not seriously going to entertain selling. What if you as a business owner were like, we really need
Starting point is 01:14:39 something like this. We need an agency like this to help us grow. What if you're in a position like, we got to find an agency like this if it's not this agency someone close to it in order to help us grow would you say okay let me go look at the other options internally to yourself or would you keep that one open so that you can potentially come back in six months if something happens or well then my the last thing I'm probably going to say is how do i help you grow faster than you've got the means to get there on your own you know my guess is based on your rate
Starting point is 01:15:12 of uh improvement what would you say is a high high multiple of how much you guys are going to grow how are you going to get there right we have to start talking about, because now, and this is a typical dilemma for a lot of companies that are buying other companies. Because the company wants to sell today, is more worried about today's price as opposed to the amount of money that they could be worth in the future. And they're leaving this future money on the table. Like let's say your company's worth $9 million, but you had a buddy sell his company for $12 million. So you're not taking less than $12 million for your company. Now, it's worth $9 million. I can only buy it for $8 million.
Starting point is 01:15:50 Yeah. But I can take you to $200 million in three years. So you've got to show them the future potential as opposed to... Now, the contrast, the fear of loss is our ultimate decision-making tool. People most of the time will sacrifice the future because of the present. But what you need to do is not sacrifice the future over the present. So I'll say to you, so $2 million today is worth more to you than $130 million in three years? Wow, that's good.
Starting point is 01:16:20 And then you go like, wait a minute, no, that doesn't make any sense. So you need to reframe it for people. Right. Interesting. Because people are almost always framed on the wrong thing. Yeah. Almost always framed on today
Starting point is 01:16:32 as opposed to where could we be tomorrow? Yeah. I love this stuff. I got to come to one of your workshops. It'd be a lot of fun to have you come in. I got to come.
Starting point is 01:16:39 It's a two-day workshop? Two-day. How can people sign up for those? Where can they go? All right. So go to the website, blackswanltd.com. Okay. And the hack to that is actually to sign up for the newsletter because we always put the announcements for that stuff in the newsletter.
Starting point is 01:16:57 Yeah, and you get the employee discounts in the newsletter too, right? You get the Chris discount. Right, exactly. You put those in there so every six months they get a little employee discount for people that sign up to the newsletter.
Starting point is 01:17:08 Yeah. That's great. But the newsletter has a text to sign up. Okay. Send text FBI empathy. All one word.
Starting point is 01:17:18 Lowercase. FBI empathy. Empathy. Don't let your spell check put a space between FBI and empathy. If you send that to the number 22828, 22828, FBI empathy, you'll get a response back to sign up for the newsletter.
Starting point is 01:17:36 Once a week, short, sweet article on how to get better as a negotiator right now. And then plus, it's a link to the website it's a link to everything i gotta get on the newsletter that's gonna be good it's good stuff newsletter workshops how often you're doing the workshops once a month once a month all around the country all across the country the book is available never split the difference amazing book buy it on amazon it's the best price and is there an audio version of you speaking it there Well, I didn't speak it. Someone else did. Professional. Professional. Did it. Well, I've got to get that too.
Starting point is 01:18:09 I've got to listen to that. For me, I feel like you can never get enough negotiation training. You can always, you know, it's like you said, you're staying the same, getting better or getting worse. Right. And if you're looking to grow in your life with
Starting point is 01:18:25 relationships with your career with business negotiation is going to be the key is mastering that so that both parties feel like they're getting a great deal right yeah that's the key so go get the book audiobook I'm one of the workshop I'm gonna go this year so if you have it in LA I'm coming to do them in LA we're gonna have one in LA okay I'm gonna come this year sometime. If you have it in LA, I'm coming. Do you do them in LA? We're gonna have one in LA. Okay, I'm gonna come. All right, yeah, absolutely. If I'm in town, I'm there.
Starting point is 01:18:48 Yeah. Sometime this year if you're doing one. And you also have a masterclass. Yeah, the masterclass is out there. It's out, and this talks, this breaks down a lot of workshopping. Which, by the way, is a sign of the apocalypse. If Martin Scorsese and I are on the same platform,
Starting point is 01:19:04 it's a sign the world is coming to an end. It's amazing. Well, it just shows you how needed this information is and how important this stuff is, the psychology behind negotiating. And then you go there and get that, and you break down a lot of role playing there and other exercises as well, right?
Starting point is 01:19:17 There's some good stuff in there, yeah. A number of exercises. We've got some exercises there that we don't have anywhere else at all. Wow, okay. And I see more on Instagram now. A little bit. I don't know if that's you or your son.
Starting point is 01:19:29 No, no. It's me putting that stuff out there. Instagram is a good platform. That's good. I like the stuff that's out there. That's good. I follow your stuff on Instagram. Nice.
Starting point is 01:19:38 And it's a great way to tap into some people that are putting out some short, sweet messages. Tap into some people that are putting out some short, sweet messages that, you know, what I like to tap into the people that are helping other people get better, which is what's on your platform, which is why I like to follow you. That's great, man. Well, I want to acknowledge you, Chris, for constantly transitioning from what you learned, saving the world, to actually helping everyday people save their world. Yeah. You know, transferring those skills and sharing them with us.
Starting point is 01:20:07 The thing I love about you is you dive deeper into the same thing and just try to spread it to more people. You're not trying to take on all these new things. You're just going into one thing that you're a master at. Yeah. And really going deep. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Helping a lot of people save money, make money, and really have just better relationships.
Starting point is 01:20:23 At the end of the day, it's relationship that you're teaching. You're teaching how to be better in relationships, how to build bridges as opposed to create walls between people. So it's a lot of walls every day that we create, whether it be the Starbucks, a hotel, a hostage. And so I acknowledge you for the consistent work you're doing.
Starting point is 01:20:44 I really value it, and I know a lot of people do as well. Thanks, man. I appreciate it. I don't know if I acknowledge you for the consistent work you're doing. I really value it and I know a lot of people do as well. Thanks, man. I appreciate it. I don't know if I asked you this question last time, so I'll ask you again and see if it changed. Imagine it's your last day on earth many years from now.
Starting point is 01:20:55 Wow. You're as old as you want to be, 100, 200, however old you can be. And eventually you got to turn the lights off and it's your last day. And you can pick the day. But for whatever reason, all the content you've created over the next years, you've got to
Starting point is 01:21:13 take that information with you. So no one has access to your books, your workshops, a masterclass. It's gone with you to the next place. But you get to leave behind a message to the world. The three things you know to be true a message to the world the three things you know to be true about everything that you've gone through yeah that you would share with the world three lessons what I like to call the three truths what would you say the three things you would share with us yeah be curious be
Starting point is 01:21:40 nicer be grateful simple Simple, powerful. Yeah, any one of those will put you in a mindset where you're gonna achieve a lot more than you would ever imagine. I mean, that'll put you on a path. If you're grateful, you recover. If you're nicer, you wound less. If you're curious, you wound less. If you're curious, you learn more.
Starting point is 01:22:08 So recover, learn, wound less. Wow. That'll take you a long way. That's great. And what's your definition of greatness? Oh, geez. Yeah, maybe having a sense of what you could be. You know, it really is, again, another cliche.
Starting point is 01:22:27 It's not about how you do it against other people. It's how did you, you know, what was that, what would happen if you met the person you could have been? You know, it's probably a spectacular person. Yeah. So, you know, everybody's capable of astonishing stuff. Astonishing stuff. And so, you know, just having a sense of going after it.
Starting point is 01:22:52 Yeah. That's great. Chris Voss, my man. Appreciate you, brother. Pleasure. Thank you for having me. Powerful stuff. My friend, I hope you feel like a more powerful negotiator.
Starting point is 01:23:05 That's what this is all about. Having a win-win experience in your life with the people you care about, the people you want to be in business with, the people you want to be in a relationship with, and the people you meet and interact with throughout your daily adventures in the world. Again, we are always negotiating. You want to make sure you don't break any bridges. You don't want to burn any bridges. You want to make sure you're optimizing every relationship to the best of your ability. And it's not always going to be perfect. You're not always going to get what you want.
Starting point is 01:23:33 But what I loved about Chris's information is you can save a lot of time, specifically in negotiations that are wasting your time. You can get your life back by unneeded energy on negotiations where you know it's not going to work out for either of you. So why keep pushing? If you enjoyed this, make sure to share with a friend. You can text a friend right now, lewishouse.com slash 902 and help them become better negotiators in business and life.
Starting point is 01:24:01 Post it on your Instagram story. Tag me over on Twitter, Facebook, at Lewis Howes. I'd love to see who's listening, where you're listening, and what you've got out of this. So lewishowes.com slash 902. Also, you can shoot me a text right now. I'm sending out weekly inspirational audio messages, quotes, information that I don't share online. And all you need to do is text me right now, 614-350-3960.
Starting point is 01:24:29 Just text the word podcast so I know you came from here, and I'll be sending you some inspirational audio messages, kind of like mini podcasts on the top of my mind, what I'm thinking, what I'm experiencing, what I'm going through. I want to connect with you over there. So I try to text as many people back as possible, but I want to connect with you. So text me 614-350-3960. And I love this quote by Warren Buffett.
Starting point is 01:24:53 You can't make a good deal with a bad person. So be aware of who you're making deals with and have that intuitive feeling inside when you're doing those deals by asking the right questions. And John F. Kennedy said, let us never negotiate out of fear, but let us never fear to negotiate. Every day we are in negotiations with other people and with yourself. You know, should I get up and work out? Should I eat this sugar? Should I go out late or should I go to bed and get rest before
Starting point is 01:25:25 a big presentation? We've got to learn to be able to negotiate with yourself as well in the best possible way. I am such a fan of you. I believe in you so very much. I love you. I appreciate you. If you haven't heard those words lately, I want to make sure that you hear them from me because I care deeply that you give me your time and your attention to listen to these tools and strategies to help you improve your life. And I want you to say them to yourself. I want you to be proud of yourself this year. I want you to continue to say what you're proud of about yourself because I think we seek the validation to be proud of by other people, but we so often never say that I'm proud to ourselves. I want you to know that I'm proud of you.
Starting point is 01:26:08 You're doing the work. You're stepping up every day. And even though you might not be perfect, don't worry. I'm not perfect. I make a lot of mistakes. I don't hold to everything I say I want to do and my goals. I mess up. It's okay.
Starting point is 01:26:21 It's how you learn from the experiences in our lives and continue to try to do as much good that you can for the people around you. That's what this is all about. I love you. I appreciate you. I'm proud of you. And you know what time it is. It's time to go out there and do something great. Thank you.

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