The School of Greatness - Dave Ramsey: How To Create Financial Freedom & Become Your Own Boss
Episode Date: April 14, 2025Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!In this powerful conversation, Dave Ramsey shares the emotional scars from his early business struggles that transformed into 35 years of succes...s. From the trenches of entrepreneurial battle, Dave reveals at Ramsey Solutions headquarters how the hardest work you'll ever do is during a business's earliest days, when you're doing everything yourself and feeling like you're on an endless treadmill. With refreshing vulnerability, he recounts how his wife's intuition has repeatedly saved him from disastrous business decisions, and explains why building a company culture where negativity isn't tolerated creates an environment that accomplishes the work of four times as many people. Whether you're launching your first business or aiming to leave a legacy, Dave's practical wisdom offers a roadmap for entrepreneurs who want to build something meaningful without sacrificing their soul in the process.Dave’s new book Build a Business You Love: Mastering the Five Stages of BusinessDave’s book Total Money MakeoverDave’s book Entreleadership: 20 Years of Practical Business Wisdom from the TrenchesThe Ramsey Show podcastIn this episode you will learn:Why the first stage of business feels like a treadmill and how to strategically move beyond itThe three rules of business that apply to everyone: it takes twice as long, costs twice as much, and you're not the exceptionHow to develop the emotional resilience needed to handle the inevitable setbacks of entrepreneurshipWhy your first business idea is probably "an ugly gargoyle" that needs significant refinementHow creating a culture of trust allows Ramsey's 1,100 employees to accomplish the work of 4,000 peopleThe critical importance of taking your time with hiring decisions and why emotional competence trumps raw talentHow Dave structures his succession plan to ensure Ramsey Solutions thrives beyond his leadershipWhy Dave considers stewardship—viewing the business as God's, not his own—the foundation of his successFor more information go to https://www.lewishowes.com/1758For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Anas Bukhash – greatness.lnk.to/1753SCAnthony O'Neal – greatness.lnk.to/1738SCAlex Hormozi – greatness.lnk.to/1723SC Get more from Lewis! Get my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!Get The Greatness Mindset audiobook on SpotifyText Lewis AIYouTubeInstagramWebsiteTiktokFacebookX
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It's a beautiful day and I'm so grateful that you're here right now.
Whatever you're going through in the world right now, I just want to acknowledge
you for showing up for you today, investing in you, learning, developing
yourself, motivating yourself, educating yourself and being a part of this
community at the School of Greatness. And did you know that your value appreciates
every time you use your skill set to help someone else. Talk about this in my new book.
That's a quote from my book, Make Money Easy.
Your value appreciates every time you use your skill set
to help someone else.
So if you feel stuck or trapped or stagnant in life,
think about how you can use something inside of you,
a resource, a hidden skill, a hidden talent,
a tangible skill that you
have and help someone today. When you do that you appreciate in value because
you're adding value and generosity to someone else. Again you've heard me say
this before gratitude and generosity are the gateway to abundance and your value
appreciates every time you use your skill set to help someone else. So if you feel stuck, stagnant, trapped, overwhelmed, burdened, you might need a break.
That's one thing.
You might need to rest and take like five to 10 minutes to just breathe and actually
not do anything.
But if you feel kind of like just like something's not breaking through in life, stop thinking
about me and start thinking about how can I add value with my skill set.
And I want you to do that to some person today in your life.
Reach out to someone, be a giver, be a resource, be generous with your time, your energy, your
talents and add value to someone today.
And someone who added value to me today was Dave Ramsey.
I had a chance to sit down with him and have him on my show.
I've been inspired by Dave
as a human being for many years and it's amazing to watch what he's built within his business.
1200 employees in Nashville, an amazing facility that I was at for the entire day doing some press
with my book launch but also interviewing Dave for the School of Greatness. And the man just has
a presence about him. He just has a character about him. I'm not saying he's some perfect human being,
but he has built something inspiring that has lasted
and will continue to last for many years to come.
And it's powerful to watch how he's built a business
based on values and character.
And it doesn't mean everyone likes it
and everyone agrees with it,
but he has built something based on his values.
And those values attract the right people and those people,
he invests in them and they appreciate in value. And if you're looking to build anything, if you're
looking to build a business, a side hustle, a side project, your art, your music and put it out into
the world, there are three rules of business that no entrepreneur is exempt from that Dave is going
to be talking about and sharing from this in this interview.
He also shares some tactical things to do with growing your business and setting up
the business, the processes, the people, the product, all these different things.
But there's one element of this interview that we kept coming back to and it's his
secret weapon, which is his wife.
And he talks about how his wife uses one skill
to make some of the biggest decisions in his business.
And it's something that she's developed over time
that is appreciated over time.
And he's tried to go against it
and just go with his own gut at times and it's burned him.
But every time he has to make a big decision,
he leans on his wife and a superpower that she has.
And it's the critical difference between the success
and really making things easier versus harder.
So I'm excited for you to dive into this today.
I hope you enjoy this episode
with the one and only Dave Ramsey.
Welcome back everyone.
I am excited to be here today.
I'm in Nashville at the Ramsey headquarters,
Dave Ramsey in the house.
So good to see you, sir.
You too, welcome back. Thank you, it's exciting. So good to see you, sir. You too, welcome back.
Thank you, it's exciting, man.
Like a regular around here, man.
It's exciting, man.
You look good in that seat right there.
I gotta come back more often.
Maybe you'll invite me back more often.
Every couple years I get back, it's nice.
And the reason I'm back is because you got a new book,
and I'm excited about this.
I was able to dive into this, build a business you love,
and I think a lot of people want to build a business
they love, but they stress about it. They have a lot of overwhelm, they have a lot of stress, they have a business you love. And I think a lot of people want to build a business they love, but they stress about it.
They have a lot of overwhelm, they have a lot of stress,
they have a lot of anxiety.
They go into it thinking, I have this big dream,
or I wanna serve people in a bigger way.
But then they try to do it all themselves
and it becomes this daunting thing that they,
it's a nightmare.
And I think small business owners have had a tough time
in the last few years, obviously with COVID,
inflation, political changes, just uncertainty,
egg prices, all these things are kind of all over the place.
And it's really hard for some of them to navigate
how to manage a team and also manage their mindset
while they're trying to build and launch a business.
And for those that are struggling, are scrambling,
are just trying to figure this out,
what should they be thinking?
Should they even be thinking that they can build
a business they love in this season of life?
Or what should they be thinking in the world right now
in small business?
You know, it's so funny, those of us that are entrepreneurial,
we're like, I want to work for myself.
And then you find out your boss is a jerk.
You find out he's a slave driver.
Yeah, yeah.
16-hour days and cracking the whip,
and you're exhausted, you don't even know what you're doing,
and you're scared, and you're lonely,
and you're stepping and fetching,
and you're leaving the cave trying to find something to kill
and drag back, and oh my gosh, it's hard.
It's really hard.
And then add a bunch of outside societal variables to it that are all yelling at you that you're
going to fail.
It gets scary.
It's hard.
And, um, and I've never met anyone that was the
exception of that.
The ones that think they're the exception of that
scare me because that means they're getting ready
to hit the wall because they're in pride and they don't have any idea.
If you're not a little scared, you're weird and you should be a little scared.
If you're not a little bit lonely and a little bit overworked and a little bit stressed,
welcome to self-employment.
Welcome to running a small business.
That's how it works.
That's the bad news.
The good news is that it can get better.
That I distinctly remember those days.
They're emotionally scarred into my brain from the old days, so to speak.
Been doing this 35 years, you know, this Ramsey thing, 35 years.
And so, but I remember those early days when you had to do everything yourself and I would
get home and I would lay down across the couch exhausted after 16 hour days and my wife would
say, what'd you do today?
I have no freaking idea, but I did a lot of it.
I remember that and that sense of feeling like you're on a treadmill, which is the first
stage of the five stages in business.
It's a natural place to be.
The good news is you don't have to stay there,
that you can move on up and you'll face different problems
as you go through the different stages,
but you'll also start to get some relief,
because I think the hardest year of our work
is when you first kick it off.
It's so hard, it's so hard.
And people, they get excited about it,
but then it's, you're not making money,
you got all these expenses,
you got customers who are upset with you
and you're not sleeping
and then your relationships are going to crap.
Oh yeah.
You're like, why am I doing this?
Your health is going to crap,
your relationships are going to crap
if you don't have boundaries for your life.
If you don't have any type of stability,
it can feel exhausting and overwhelming.
But the treadmill phase is the first phase.
Is that just kind of like everyone,
you're doing everything all at once?
Yeah, and you don't even really own a business,
you just own your job.
Right, and you're not getting paid well.
Because if you don't come to work,
the stuff doesn't get produced,
and the revenue doesn't get produced.
It's all the production of the good or service
that you're in and all of the, uh, and all the
revenue.
I mean, so if you get hurt or sick or take a
vacation week, you know, you just expect the
revenue go whip in the, uh, and there's no widgets
being made.
And so if you're a veterinarian and you're the
only person there, no dogs are getting help.
You know, if you're a dentist, you're the only person there, nobody's teeth getting
help, you know, and so on.
And it's just, it's all dependent on you.
And you know that and that's what you signed up for.
So it's okay, but you don't want to stay there because it feels like you're on a treadmill.
And so the way to level up out of that is to start to talk about, okay, how do we get
some team on board that can create some revenue
and that can make some of the widgets and can provide some of the services?
And I've got to learn to manage my freaking time.
Because you know, when you're in the treadmill stage, when I was in the treadmill stage,
you're running from crisis to crisis to crisis.
You just wear a fireman's hat all the time. And you're not doing any thought past the moment.
All you're doing is living in the moment.
And that just is chaos, chaos, chaos, chaos, chaos.
The customers feel it, your spouse feels it, you feel it.
And you don't feel like you're getting traction
cause you're not, you're on the treadmill.
And so you've got to start managing your time
and going, okay, I'm gonna set out blocks of time
to think about something other than the flavor of the moment, the crisis of the
moment.
And I'm going to start talking about how can I add team members, just a few key ones, just
to get this off of my shoulders.
They're tired.
Yeah.
And that sounds very obvious, very primitive, very simple, but that is exactly how you level up out of that
and move on.
Yeah, 35 years in doing this business.
If someone was asking you, Dave,
I'm excited to launch my own business.
I wanna do this thing.
I wanna try this out.
I've got an idea, I wanna launch it.
And you could give them three keys of really
what to look out for before launching it
to try to set them up for some type of success
and eliminate as much pain as possible,
although they're gonna have challenge and pain and stress.
But if you said if you could do these three things
when you launch your business
or right before you're launching
to make sure you do every day
or you set it up in the beginning,
what will support them
in getting to the best success possible?
Number one, know that the first thing that you try,
you think it is a beautiful baby,
and it is an ugly gargoyle.
It's not, that thing's not gonna survive.
Prototype is not gonna make it.
And I know you love it, and I know you think
it's your thing, and I know you think
it's your first child, it's not.
It's just a bad idea that hasn't told you yet.
And so it's just, every, nothing, no one launches,
gets their first idea, very few people does that ever
even get to market.
It never gets past test market or beta or whatever you want to call it.
Because your customers look at you and go, you're an idiot. This thing sucks.
And you go, okay, I got to change that because I still want to do this idea.
I still want this service to be provided. But the way I'm doing it, the model
or the shape of the widget is not right. And so just get your little feelings hurt,
go ahead and get ready,
because your little baby is ugly.
And so, you know, you just, it's hard, that's hard.
The second thing is for God's sakes, don't borrow money.
Of course, you knew Dave Ramsey is gonna say that.
But what happens is you're gonna make mistakes.
We just talked about that.
There's no one that's the exception of that.
And when you borrow money into your mistakes,
you magnify the size of them.
And so if you buy 42,000 of that widget
and go put it on a credit card,
and then you figure out they all have to go in the dumpster,
now you've got credit card debt.
And because, you know, but, you know, the optimist in us,
the abundance mentality in us says,
oh, it's going to work.
And it's not. It's going to work eventually, but it's going to be, it's pretty
cousin to the thing you thought was really pretty and it's not really pretty.
So don't borrow into it because you're really going to, you're going to hasten the end of
this endeavor.
It's going to come down on you.
And then the other thing I guess is the old three rules of business.
You know, it's going to take twice as long as you think it's going to cost twice as long as you think, and you're not the exception. It's gonna come down on you hard. And then the other thing I guess is the old three rules of business.
It's gonna take twice as long as you think,
it's gonna cost twice as long as you think,
and you're not the exception.
Those are the three rules of business.
And that's true here today inside of Ramsey.
We get ready to launch something,
we got this little thing.
We got, oh.
It's coming out in two months, yeah.
Yeah, coming, no.
And I sit down, I talk to the tech guys,
and I'm going, okay, we ought to be able to put this out
in about what, a week and a half?
And they're like, no, try six months. Oh my gosh. And I'm going, okay, we're gonna be able to put this out in about what a week and a half and they're like, no, try six months.
Oh my God.
And I'm going, no, I don't do, you know, I don't write code, but we're not waiting six
months.
Let's figure something out.
But they're going no chance your six day dream that you can just end that right now.
So we end up settling reality somewhere in between, but it costs twice as long or takes
twice as long cost twice as much.
Therefore, uh, even if you're building a digital product, because you got the man hours and the stinking thing,
and the team on it, and so, yeah,
those are the things that pop into my head first
when you ask that, but it's still a great adventure.
It is a great adventure, if you can manage it.
And speaking of managing it,
how did you learn to manage your mind or your emotions
during the first kind of three to five years
of launching the business?
When things changed so much,
when you made a lot more mistakes probably back then
than you do now, when people came and go,
when you had to learn about culture,
like how did you manage your emotions
and your mindset around all of the crazy adventures
of entrepreneurship?
The things I thought were gonna kill me didn't.
And so the little drama queen that lives inside my head
got smaller and smaller and quieter and quieter.
The first person that left Ramsey, that was on our team,
I was emotionally devastated.
Why would anyone wanna leave?
We're perfect.
It's me, why would they wanna leave?
And now, we've got 1100 people, people leave every week and I don't even know some of
them. It's not an issue. I mean, I'm not being, I don't flip and I don't want them to leave still,
but the thing I thought was going to kill me didn't kill me. And, you know the the death of the prototype and the rebirth of it as
a prettier version of it didn't kill me hurt my feelings though and now I expected more
I expect you know I'm probably about the only one here at Ramsey that's not going to leave
some day you know and I've so I kind of expected I hope nobody leaves today I hope nobody leaves 10 years from now hopefully stay with me until I'm gone but the reality
is that that's probably not so and so I've just got to go now and and we
survived that and we'll sad but we're sad yeah especially when somebody's key
and that we love deeply and we've been with for a lot of years but you're sad
and so but again that's just drama it's like because you're sad. And so, but again, that's just drama. It's like, cause you're like,
Oh, the whole thing's good. No, it's not. Yeah. No, it's not. And so the more I had things I
thought were going to kill me didn't, or that I thought were the end that weren't, then I went,
okay, the drama queen, it really has to shut up. And it's inside my head. Yeah. Really got to sit
down and take a back seat there. So I just practiced it.
And, um, and it's, you know, when I look back on
the things, you know, 10 years ago or 20 years
ago that we thought were the end, this is it.
You know, and this, I don't know if anybody
else has these thoughts, but that's the way it
rings in my brain, you know?
Sure.
And, and then I look back and it's like,
that's almost funny that I thought that
because that's so stinking small.
There's no chance that was taking us out.
We were so much bigger and stronger than that by then.
And it's like, nope, not gonna take us out.
But how do you, I mean, for me,
I struggled with this early on in the first,
probably five, seven years of the business,
because I was like, I'm investing in this person,
personally, financially, you know, emotionally, spiritually, I'm investing in this person, personally, financially, emotionally, spiritually,
I'm investing resources, time, energy,
and if they did something where they left,
I was devastated for a while.
And it felt like it would emotionally set me back.
I guess my feelings were hurt, or I was sad.
And you were just like, so how have you learned,
I guess, to be emotionally invested in people
and really lifting them up, but not emotionally devastated
when they leave for whatever reason?
Well, you know, there's two things that happen
when someone leaves, whether they leave on their own
or whether we ask them to leave.
Two things that happen.
One is they go on and have a much better life.
Mm-hmm. And two
is some of them don't, you know, but, um, uh, but you know, most of them go on and have
a better life. Yes. And here's the other thing, the slot that they leave open. 98% of the time God sends us an upgrade.
And so if they're going to leave and the stuff I've taught them is going to help them be
a better version of them and they're going to go out there and win somewhere else because
of that and that's most of the time the trick the case and I'm going to get an upgrade in
their slot.
There's really nothing to be sad about.
Other than just the personal loss of not being in fellowship with that person on a daily basis,
you know, that that relationship, that relationship, and that's real.
Yeah.
And that's sad. But, you know, if you thought that when you let someone go,
that their life was going to be destroyed because you let them go. You would be really sad.
But the reality is after doing it for 35 years,
most of them get an upgrade and most of the time
the slot they left, we get an upgrade because it
was done.
It was either wasn't a fit to start with or the
season was over and God says, okay, next for both
of you.
Yeah.
Everybody take a step up.
Yeah.
And I think that's, you that's something I've heard you
talk about and read in your books before
about really taking a long time to hire someone.
Loading, definitely.
I think it's like 13 or 15 interviews.
Used to be, we got down to seven
because it was out of control.
Too much, yeah.
Still harder to get on here than the FBI, yeah.
And just like, I don't know how long it usually takes,
a months long process for you to come.
And I think as an entrepreneur when you're starting
or when you have a smaller business,
you feel like you need to fill that position now
because you're running on the treadmill.
And until you find that person,
and so sometimes we as entrepreneurs might cut corners
or just say, oh, they seem like a great fit
after one interview in 30 minutes and no reference checks,
so let's put them into place.
And then it's six months a year
of trying to make something work that isn't in alignment.
And you get to do it over because you did it wrong.
Yeah.
And it's kind of akin to,
I've got a bunch of rental property
and I grew up in a real estate business
and so if you get desperate for a tenant,
you'll put a cocaine addict in, I mean, you know?
And then you'll go, oh God, they're changing the Harley oil in the living
room.
I mean, it's you know, and you're just go because I because I got because I got desperate.
I got stupid.
And when I get desperate on hires, I get stupid.
Slow your butt down.
Slow down.
Take your time because you are going to expend a lot of energy, a lot of calories, a lot of money to get this person in
and you're going to invest in them
and eventually someday they're going to move along probably
but we want to have gotten an ROI on them
and they wanna get an ROI on the process too
and really when you hire somebody
it's about six months before you make money on them.
Right, because you gotta onboard them
and train them and get them in the culture.
They don't even know where the bathroom is for two weeks.
And so it's much less be productive at their job.
And so it just takes a little while.
Some people were able to get into the seat
faster than others, but this idea that by Friday
I'm gonna be making money on this payroll,
no you're not, takes a minute.
Yeah, what would you say after 35 years in this business I'm gonna be making money on this payroll. No, you're not. Takes a minute. Yeah.
What would you say after 35 years in this business
is the biggest mistake you've made in the last few years?
And maybe it's, I know these principles,
I teach these principles,
but still sometimes I'm a knucklehead
or I just kind of rushed this thing and it,
what was I thinking?
I knew better.
Was there anything like that in the last few years?
There's always something.
I think the thing that aggravates me the most, and it's more of a we than it is a me around
here because we do so much with collaboration and the leadership team these days.
Dave is not the lone ranger doing hardly anything, nor are any of our other leaders.
They're not in silos.
We're very much in pockets of people and we all sit down
and go, what are we doing here?
And, but you know, I think we all, I think we have revisited
and reset some of the things we say
when we're hiring someone.
And because we were getting really high quality people in
that were excited to be here, but they were not, we had a drop off in Crusader
and our people need to be Crusaders for what we do.
What does that look like?
What does that mean, being a Crusader?
It means around here that you're a hypocrite
if you're working in this place
and making $150,000 a year and you go rent a car
or you go lease a car or go buy a car on payments.
So you really have to live the message.
We don't check your wallet,
but we don't come around and say,
have you got a credit card?
We don't do that, but we're not big brother.
But if you're here trying to get people to get out of debt
and do not borrow money on cars
and live debt free the way we teach
or be on a budget the way we teach
and you're working on the Every Dollar Team
and you're not doing a budget, hello.
I mean, that's just kinda, you know,
and it affects your work because now you're doing a J-O-B,
you're here to click to check and execute a task.
You don't fit in here.
You're not living the mission.
You know, we're missional, man.
We're just, we're charging the gates of hell
with a water pistol.
You know, you gotta load up the water, here we go.
That's what we're doing every day for 35 years.
And we let our foot off the gas
and started bringing in some high quality humans
that were nice people, they're good people, good values,
all those kinds of things,
but they weren't crusaders. Interesting. And they, you know, they didn't like if Dave interviewed
Trump or they didn't like if Dave said Jesus or something like that. And so that you probably
aren't gonna like it because I'm gonna do all that stuff, you know, and so and I'm not mad about it about it but you know what did you think you were signing up for but yeah we were we
did a bad job we let our guard down on that and so we changed some of our
discussion in the hiring process with the person to make sure that they know
this is what your that's what it's gonna be when you get here wow and then they
can self opt out in the interview process, which is much easier and less painful for them and us.
We're talking about your book today,
Build a Business You Love,
Mastering the Five Stages of Business.
One of the questions I have for you about around this topic
is I think it's really interesting because
when a lot of people see your content and think of you,
I think that they think you don't make any mistakes,
essentially, because of just how,
whatever Dave does, even if it's a mistake,
he just keeps getting bigger and more successful
and the business grows and more people come
and he can hire anyone.
So I appreciate you sharing,
like we dropped our guard a little bit.
We just hired great people, but not the great fit.
And maybe there were some challenges there
that you had to face.
Yeah, I mean, you look crazy in the building.
That's what happens.
I'm always fascinated by your spiritual practice
within yourself before you come into this place
every single day?
Because I know this is a part of your life in a big way,
and this is part of your values.
Is there something you think about within your spiritual practice of an attention
before you come here every day, before you do a show,
before you have a meeting, before anything
that really grounds you for what you're about to take on for the day?
I don't know that it is a,
like a little prayer list or something on my phone.
That's not what it is, but it's more,
when we went broke all those years ago
before we started this, I had met God on the way up.
I got to know him on the way down.
And not only did I go broke, I was broken.
I mean, I lost my confidence.
And I needed to be knocked down a notch.
Believe me, I was an arrogant little twerp.
And so, but I mean, I was not just humble,
I was humiliated.
And so, I'm laying flat on my back looking up
and going, okay, I am not NOT if we're gonna open a business
I'm not going to do everything by myself God. You're gonna have to show us what you want done
This is yours will manage it for you. This is yours will manage it for you
But this is yours will manage it for you, but you're gonna have to speak
You're gonna have to show you're gonna have to give us some answers to some of these equations through circumstance, through just a random scripture popping up and go,
oh, let's answer that or through whatever, through someone teaching us or whatever it is. I don't
care where it comes from, but we need to know what you, how you want your business run. And that was
at the foundational thing, that idea of stewardship that I'm not the owner I'm the manager
was foundational and so that is the undercurrent that runs through you know every morning I walk
my little dog this morning three miles we go around the golf course and teaching her you know do the
commands I'm working on all that and the undercurrent while I'm doing that and praying and I'm just
going okay what you want to do today God really and what is it you got and if I'm doing that and praying and I'm just going okay, what you wanna do today God? Really? And what is it you got? And if I'm gonna be in there with my friend Lewis
and what is it that that that he needs and how can we be helpful to him and
how can this book be helpful to people and what do you want to do God and
And then you know, I just come down here and it ends up working out
Okay, so but it's kind of an undercurrent and it's not a special like pump yourself up or something
because some days you come down and the day is a tragedy
and it sucks and you're like,
okay God, what are you doing?
What's the lesson?
It's not fun.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, I mean you get in the middle of some of this jeez
stuff we get into when we're running stuff.
All this stupid but stuff you deal with.
But yeah, but that's the under thing and you go, okay
And but that also even in a tragedy day in a day that makes you angry or your feelings are hurt or whatever and you're
Frustrated and you come home and you go
Well, if it's God's and we're running it for him
that's probably not the last day we're here probably will go back tomorrow and
the last day we're here, probably we'll go back tomorrow and rejoice in your tribulations
because tribulations produce perseverance.
And perseverance character and character hope.
And so it just, you know, this is called
the method of success.
People that are successful are perseverers.
They don't quit.
It just because there's problems.
And you gotta have a mindset to get above that
because it hurts.
And you question yourself and you question your own judgment.
And I don't do that as dramatically,
as we said earlier, as I used to,
but it's still, I don't have everything figured out.
I mean, okay, what are we gonna do
for the next 10 years around here?
Ooh, I mean, I don't think, I mean,
are we all gonna be a hologram?
I mean, what's coming next?
You know what I mean?
How are we gonna teach this stuff? What I mean, you we all gonna be a hologram? I mean, what's coming next? You know what I mean? How are we gonna teach this stuff?
What, I mean, you talk about perseverance,
and I think God, for me, I feel like God has, I guess,
tested me or put me in challenging situations
where I've had to have courage.
I've had to develop the courage to be able to persevere
so that I can take on more
and steward different challenges.
I mean, what is the thing you've had to persevere the most
in the last few years, either personally or professionally?
Really, really, really finally coming to grips
with the whole idea that I'm not necessary
for this place to win.
And that's succession handoff.
We started that 16 years ago.
We started working on succession and handoff and so forth.
And so I planned to be less important.
And dadgum, it didn't work.
It didn't work.
It did work.
It did work.
It did work.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And that's distressing.
Interesting.
So I mean, you know, the noble, the intellectual, the wisdom says that's a good thing, but the
little boy likes to be important.
Okay.
I like I'm like anybody else.
I want to be I want to be a big deal, you know, and so everybody does.
And I'm kidding a little bit, but not much.
As soon as some of those succession plans started working,
I looked up and emotionally the ground started moving around
under my feet, and so, you know, I took six weeks off
last year in a row for the first time in my life,
and we have the Ramsey personalities on the Ramsey Show.
And we've had the Ramsey personality on the Ramsey show. And we've had the Ramsey personalities
on the Ramsey show for four years,
and everything's fine, we know they can handle it.
We know that even if I'm not there,
we know they can handle it,
and we know the audience likes them,
and we've worked through all the little kinks and stuff
to get all that ready, and so I'm like,
okay, I can take off and they can just do the show.
And I did, and the ratings went up.
Come on, no way.
While I was gone. No way.
Really hurt my feelings.
You're like, we're making all this money,
but no one cares about me, right?
Yeah.
Wow.
You realize you're not the Messiah.
Wow. So this is-
Job's taken.
Six weeks, huh?
Yeah, I was gone, yeah.
What would it look like to take?
Three months off and have the personality. Do you think it would grow? Yeah, I think it will I think I think it's at that point now and that's what we've worked really really hard on for 15 freaking years, you know
And had a lot of false starts and a lot of problems, but we're we've kind of got that part of it working
We got the leadership team working and I'm the CEO, my son Daniel is the president.
We did that three years ago,
and he and I were carrying about 50, 50%
of the load of running the place.
And then we went to 60, 40, and we're at about 80, 20 now.
Wow.
And because, you know, the last thing you need
is the old man showing up and throwing grenades, you know.
The, what do they call it, the seagull management, you fly in and poop over everything.
You know?
So, you know.
You talk about it in the book that there's
six drivers of business.
You know, the personal one, which is kind of the first one,
which is you're both the problem and the solution.
And I'm hearing you say that in this part, you know,
by limiting your drivingness in the business down to 20%.
That's a solution for you, but it's also hurting you,
maybe that you're not as in control
as you once were with your baby.
Yeah, but the irony is that you kill things that you love
if you don't turn this loose.
Because we've coached 10,000 small businesses, we've coached the 85 year old dad with a 65
year old son who still isn't in charge.
He's been neutered.
I mean that's just ridiculous.
But the old man just won't let go because he's freaking control freak and the gen one
to gen two is a hard head. It's that's emotionally the hardest of the succession plans
because they have, they be out there with their hands
in the dirt, you know, which is true.
But this thing of prying their hands off of it is
it's just an emotional experience.
And that actually oddly enough is the last stage
of the five stages is the legacy stage
where you plan an exit of some kind,
succession is one version of that.
Obviously you could sell, you could sell to team members,
you could let family come in, which is our case.
Our family, the next generation of Ramses
will be running this 100% and we'll be the owners of it.
If I died today, my wife does not get Ramsey.
She doesn't. No, she doesn't
want it and she's not capable of doing it. And it's not, it would bring her pain and
everybody else involved. So no, I mean that, and that's been that way for a long time.
Believe me, she's okay. She'll get paid out. Yeah. So no, no, she didn't get paid out of
this. Really? No, she, but she, we've got enough wealth. She's going to be okay.
And she just is that makes her into the cheerleader for her children who will be our children,
but her adult children that will be the next generation of that.
And so we just had to work on that.
And you have to do it intentionally because too many people on that last stage of the five stages, you know, they grab their chest and as they're
falling back in the grave, they toss the keys out, you know, and the probability of that
working is almost zero.
Wow.
Because it's there's so much that's left unsaid, undone.
Nobody knows what's going on.
Everybody's surprised. And it's very, very difficult
to turn that in.
Processes aren't in place, or whatever it might be
for the transition.
Well, trust is not there in the next,
the person that catches the keys.
The customers don't know them and trust them,
the vendors don't know them and trust them,
the team doesn't know them and trust them.
They just happen to be standing there
because they were family, and the keys came out
of that grave
and they're like, oh no, and everybody else goes, oh no.
It's a problem.
So the more gradual the handoff,
the higher the probability of success.
I love that you always talk about your wife
and the kind of the journey and how she's been a cheerleader
and supported you throughout this
and probably giving you some tough love
at different times as well,
maybe when you made some mistakes.
Every day. Every day.
Every day.
I, you know, I'm wondering if you can share some wisdom
for me, I just got married,
and for those who are also business owners
or entrepreneurs who are in a marriage,
whether they've been married for a while
and they're launching into business,
or they've had a business
and they're launching into marriage,
what advice do you have for either me
or those in that situation on how to make sure
you can have a thriving marriage while handling a business?
Yeah.
Well, I mean, there's two possible scenarios.
One is the spouse works in the business
and two is they don't.
The second one is what we've done. Sharon
never one time has worked here. She never been apart. She never had a responsibility at Ramsey
from the time it was a card table in her living room all the way to where it is now.
But I did discover and you and I have talked about this before, I'm looking for principles of success, financial and otherwise in scripture because I'm flat
on my back and I'm like okay God you're going to run this and one of the things I found
was Proverbs 31 who can find a virtuous wife for her worth is far above rubies.
The heart of her husband safely trusts her which indicates that virtuous part.
She's trustworthy.
Yeah.
This is not a flake.
This is not a high maintenance princess.
This is a, this is a person that's solid.
He safely trusts her and he will have no lack of gain.
And so the way that what we translated tactically
out of that was that we don't make major decisions
anywhere in our life anymore.
And we did before I went broke.
I've owned real estate sharing even know where it is and didn't even know what happened.
And I not because I was hiding it from her.
She just didn't care and I didn't care to tell her.
And I was getting it getting it done.
That was my job.
Her job is take care of babies and we're just getting it done and dumb, really dumb.
So we don't make major decisions for 40 years
without both of us being in agreement.
That's for the business as well?
Everything, yeah. Wow.
But major is defined by ratios, right?
Yeah, what is a major?
In the early days, buying a $12,000 phone system
was a major decision.
Yeah.
There were 10 employees.
And so Sharon comes down and doesn't want to.
She's out running around buying groceries.
I'm like, come by here.
You gotta meet this phone guy.
You gotta look at this.
You gotta, she don't know nothing about phones.
I don't care.
I want you to look at this.
It's a $12,000 decision.
$12,000 is a lot of freaking money.
And yeah, it is.
Okay, well, help me just, I want you to just walk in the room and then I don't I learned
pretty quickly I mean she's got a degree in home act and she's a full-time mom
mm-hmm and she's so she's not a sophisticated business person but she
has powerful intuition and and what she always says she's real country frat she
says I got common sense yeah And she does have common sense.
And so I'll ask her when we're driving away
from having a meeting, I don't ask her what she thinks.
I ask her how she feels.
Oh my gosh.
And again, we always laugh
because it's a seven syllable word.
And she goes, oh, I got a really good feeling about him.
Okay, we're hiring that dude.
Wow. Or, nah, something wrong, it's a really good feeling about him. Okay, we're hiring that dude.
Wow.
Or, nah, something wrong.
It's a bad feeling.
And I don't even know what that is, but every time I go against it, it costs me 10 grand,
so I quit doing it.
I don't know what that means.
I don't know how God, the Holy Spirit is using that little hillbilly woman, but it worked out good.
I'm just saying.
So yeah, we don't do that.
Before we were given a big gift, in the old days, $500 was a big gift of generosity.
Now it's got more zeros on it. And so we say, okay. And my daughter runs our family foundation.
So often if there's a large gift involved, Sharon and my daughter will go visit the people
and walk around and feel the air and the organization. And then we can come back and Sharon can say, OK, I got a good feeling or I don't have a good feeling.
And my daughter has done all the due diligence and
looking into the operational part of it to see
if it's a good investment of God's money in this
ministry.
But all that stuff.
But, you know, same exact thing.
So, you know, copy your paper.
She's no longer involved in purchasing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
But and she has no idea what we spend on coffee
here, which would blow her mind., she's no longer involved in purchasing.
And she has no idea what we spent on coffee here,
which would blow her mind.
I would love 100 people, I mean,
can you imagine my coffee bill?
So that kind of stuff.
So it's like stuff like that.
But if we get ready to build one of these buildings.
Oh, she's checking it out, she's filling it out.
She sits in with the architect and with the builder
and then we pull the trigger and we go execute it.
But yeah, and she's like, I think that architect
will be fine, I like her, she's sweet.
She, and I think she's smart.
And we walk away and we're ready to go.
So yeah, that's huge, that's how it works.
So a lot of your business then, I'm hearing you say,
is based on a feeling of your wife.
The big single stuff.
So no, not a lot of it. That would be 2% of it.
Okay.
The big, the big single.
If something's big in the early days, it was a hire.
Right, right.
Hire is a big deal.
Yeah.
You know, when you hire your first 10 people,
everyone is a big freaking deal.
And so we would go to dinner with them and their
spouse before we would hire them and just and
tell and ask their spouse to pray about it.
And you know, is this guy, is this woman or this
man going to be that you
think they work with these people across the table
from you and you all talk about it because if you
all don't believe this is going to work and you're
just collecting a check it's not going to work and
we've done that from we still do spousal interviews
as the final interview but it's not me and Sharon
that's the leader and their spouse go with the
person we're hiring and their spouse and we're
pretty much already hired at that point
unless somebody really gets a red flag
and they shoot up a flare.
And occasionally a spouse on the hire
or a spouse of the leader will save us
from making a mistake.
I mean, at the end of the day,
what I'm hearing you say,
correct me if I'm wrong,
it sounds like if something feels off
in that final interview,
it doesn't matter how good they look on paper,
where they went to school,
where they worked before,
they're not coming here.
Nope.
So at the end of the day, it's a-
Because I've talked her into it a few times.
I'm like, you sure?
Because this one's really good.
Well, I'm not real sure, it's okay,
whatever y'all wanna do.
And I'm like, she'll back off, you know?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And then I got drama for the next six months
because I hired somebody I shouldn't have hired, you know? So I don't I don't go against it and sometimes I tell you one that really happened in the early days
We had a young guy. He was like a little model. He looked beautiful. He was a sharpest attack
It's like everything you'd want we go to dinner with him and his wife. It's like Ken and Barbie, you know, it's ridiculous and
Sharon the guys like everything you you know, and we come home and she goes, woke
up this morning, she goes, I really feel dumb saying this, but I've got a bad feeling about
this.
And she almost never plays this card, by the way, which is part of being virtuous.
I mean, 5% of the time.
She's not crying wolf every day.
95% of the time, because if she was playing the card all the time
That would be the you want to trust her be the definition of not virtuous, you know
I mean, we've done a lot of good work to get to this point. Uh-huh
We've already culled a bunch of bad flavors, you know, so yeah anyway, she she woke up and I call the guy and I go hey
We don't know what's happening, but I tell you what we're gonna do we're just gonna push pause
We may we're gonna revisit this in a couple of weeks.
I didn't just run him off because I couldn't.
I was super stupid.
Yeah.
And he called me back six days later and he goes, he was like in tears.
He's like, I, I'm never met any people like you people.
Y'all are weird.
And I went, yeah, that's true.
We are, I'm true. We are.
I'm sorry.
And he's like, no, I mean, I don't know how this happened, but I got a job offer this
morning for twice what you were offering me.
And I'm like, see, you weren't supposed to come.
Wow.
Go take that dude.
Yeah.
And he goes, yeah, but how did you?
I said, I didn't.
I didn't.
I called Sharon and she's like, told you.
But it wasn't that he was a bad guy.
It was God had something better for him than us.
And he told us to, you know, gave through her sense or her Holy Spirit, common sense
or whatever you want to call it this intuition, you know, and that's how that kind of stuff
has happened over 35 years enough that you go, Yeah, this is a good idea. Just trust it. Yeah, just trust it.
Yeah, it was good for him. It's so interesting that, you know, that energy
and that spirit is something that continues to guide you today like it
like it did in the early days as well and it helps build what you have right
now. Yeah, you change processes but you don't change principles. People that
never change principles or that never change processes and change all their principles
are called bureaucrats. That's what they do in the government. But entrepreneurs we
reiterate we change we make up a new thing every day. But you don't change the principles
that guide you. The values, the system, you know, the,
okay, I trust my wife, that's a principle.
You know, I don't borrow money, it's a principle.
And I don't change that, but you know,
when we started, there wasn't even an internet.
So obviously, you gotta change processes.
Uh-huh.
You talk about these six drivers in business in the book,
building a business you love.
We talked about personal, there's purpose,
people, plan, product, and profit,
which you say profit is making money with integrity.
Has there ever been a time where you were trying
to make easy money, that it wasn't integrity,
it wasn't making money with the value,
the principles that you have,
but you're like, oh, that's a quick thing
I could do right there, easy money,
as opposed to based on a-
Yeah, I make the mistake in the early days on radio
of taking some ad endorsements
that I wasn't proud of.
Interesting.
And every time I did the ad, I felt like a jerk.
And obviously they didn't work, hello.
And so they're not there anymore,
and they didn't last very long.
But I was trying to make an ad sale,
because I'm a salesman.
I'm trying to make a sale.
And so I made the sale, and I didn't sell myself.
I just sold them.
You didn't sell yourself in the product or the business.
Exactly, exactly.
And so in those days we came up with the metaphor
and we still talk to our sales team about it to this day
is if I wouldn't be really, really excited
to tell my best friend's mother to do this.
No, I'm not doing it.
I'm not doing it.
Because my best friend's mother,
I'm knocking a knot on your head.
You know what I'm saying? You know what I'm talking about? And you know what I'm not doing it. I'm not doing it. Yeah, because my best friend's mother. I'm not gonna not on your head You know what I'm saying? You know, I'm talking that kind of you know, I'm talking just put it in that rather than oh
Cuz you can justify your butt away and your integrity too if you're not careful and we didn't ever do anything like yeah
Perpendicular like we didn't sell credit cards or something like that, you know, but we but we did
You know, I did bring on products that are like, yeah, feels a little slimy, I'm not sure about that.
But the money's good, you know.
But now we don't put anything on,
even if it's not in our voice,
even if it's not in our personality's voice.
And we don't ask any of our personalities to say,
if you won't use this product,
then don't put your voice on it.
That's great that you guys do that
because I think a lot of companies would just say,
make as much money as you can,
take whatever you can get,
and at School of Greatness,
there's a lot of stuff that I won't do.
I've never been, not this is bad or wrong,
but it's just against what I do.
I've never been drunk or high,
so I don't do any type of drugs or pharmaceuticals
or things like that for me,
just because it's not what I believe in for me. I don't do gambling stuff, I don't do any type of drugs or pharmaceuticals or things like that for me, just because it's not what I believe in for me.
I don't do gambling stuff,
I don't do any of those type of ads.
We don't either, yeah.
And it's just, a lot of money there though.
Yeah, a lot of people throw in a lot of money.
I mean, you know, the freaking sports betting,
they were actually big chicks.
Big chicks.
For anything that's on the air.
They don't even care who you are.
They've got an unlimited budget, I think.
Yeah, we don't, I mean sports betting's a huge problem
with our audience.
That's why they go into debt.
Yeah, it's breaking up people like crazy.
It's a huge addictive issue.
And so now we're not gonna have
so-and-so sports betting either.
It was the same thing.
I mean, that's one we would not have had
in the old days either.
But this is more like, okay, you know,
this company, food's not really good at that restaurant,
but we're gonna send them over there anyway.
It's a restaurant, they got food, you know,
but yeah, you know, but no, we don't do that.
And that hasn't happened in 25 years.
But in the early days, I was trying to get some cash
in the place and pay payroll.
Of course, of course.
I think that's when you're most likely to cut a corner. Yeah, when you're trying to get some cash in the place and pay payroll. Of course, of course. You know, and it's, I think that's when you're most likely
to cut a corner.
Yeah, when you're trying to survive or just stay afloat.
How do you, I don't know, maybe this is a weird question
for you, but when you're making money with integrity,
which you talk about in the book,
and you say no to money, essentially,
like someone's trying to give you a sponsorship,
endorsement deal, whatever it might be, an advertisement,
and you're like, no, that just doesn't feel right.
How do you think about that spiritually for you
about how either God is gonna set you up
for something greater or you're not missing out
on the opportunity?
What is the spiritual mindset you have in that moment?
Yeah, usually those things have real good short term feeling and a horrible long term.
Yeah. We had a major retailer that everyone knows, talked to us about 15 years ago. They wanted to
take some of our, in those days, CDs and books and stuff and build a Ramsey package custom for them,
which was really exciting.
And the order was gonna be $10 million.
And it was really exciting.
There's good margin, not great margin in it,
but it was decent margin.
And the other thing was it was really good branding
because we're gonna be on major shelf position
all over America in this major retailer.
And people walk in and go, oh, look at that.
So and so says Ramsey, yeah, Ramsey says so and so.
Okay, yeah.
And so that had a, the shelf positioning had a value,
unquantifiable, but it had a value,
like buying a billboard, you know.
And so we're looking at that, looking at that,
and we get really excited about it.
We got way down into it,
got into the contract negotiations on the final thing,
and they said we were really excited about, we got way down into it, got into the contract negotiations on the final thing and they said we were printing packaging
and re-recording stuff that was only for them,
had their name on it.
So you're already doing that work.
I was, no, I was going to do that on this deal.
That was how the deal was set up.
And then they come in and go, okay, yeah,
and we have full returns.
And I'm like, you want me to put your name
on ten million dollars worth of crap and send it over there and you can send it all back
if your eight dollar an hour stock boy don't get it on the shelf and it doesn't sell.
Because what happens is I got ten million dollars worth of stuff in the dumpster and
I'm out of business and so we walked you know we talked about it. They said, well, that's our policy.
Everybody does that.
And I said, well, now you can't say that
because you found somebody that doesn't do it.
So, you know, if you want to take some of our existing stuff
that when we take it back, we can repurpose it.
We didn't print your freaking name on it.
Yeah, we'll do $10 million with that
with full returns all day long.
I can figure that part out.
I can absorb that blow, but throwing it all in the dumpster
because it's useless, because you got somebody's name on it
that didn't want it anymore.
We're out of business with $10 million.
So we had to walk.
And that kind of stuff falls right in that category.
That's the bucket for me is you gotta go,
ah, ah, ah.
You're like, ah.
Pull it back.
Ah, dead gun.
One of the drivers of business you talk about in the book
is people. And for whatever reason,
when I think about you and the Ramsey brand,
I think about culture.
That's just the thing that I hear a lot.
Every time I come here, I feel it.
I go on going back to feelings.
Walk in, you feel like you're home.
You've just got an energy here and a presence of the people.
I'm sure every now and then people are off or whatever,
but in general, the culture here is a beautiful feeling,
going back to your wife's word.
And you see it, just the inspiration,
the quotes, the scripture, the attitude,
the energy, the effort that people bring here.
People show up, they're on time,
they're organized and they're positive, right?
And it doesn't seem like people are overworked
or exhausted or just like, ah, you're here 12 hours a day.
They have structure and they have organization.
But you gotta be in every day and you gotta do your job
and you gotta give results and you gotta be a good person.
And I feel like that's where a lot of people struggle
is building the culture and the team.
What would you say is the main things
that have allowed you to continue to thrive culturally?
If someone is never gonna be able to come here,
what does this place have that most places don't have
that allow you guys to continue to thrive?
It's very weird, but it does come down to,
we don't tolerate, and I don't want that to sound like a bully, but we don't tolerate and I don't want that to sound
like a bully but we don't tolerate it to be otherwise mm-hmm and so if someone
does come in late we're gonna talk about it what's wrong if someone's negative
and grouchy to each other here or customer, what's wrong?
What's going on?
Because that's not, we don't do that.
And if you wanna be a we, we gotta fix this.
Otherwise you don't get to be a we.
And so, cause the people that work here, they're on it.
They're game on and they're on time and they're excited.
And sometimes they have bad days
or sometimes they go through personal stuff.
You know, their spouse has cancer,
they've got a sick kid, you get a pass, that's great.
But we're gonna ask you, what's your problem?
What, why, what's going on?
And why are you late?
And how well are the kids sick?
Okay, I'm sorry, what's wrong with the kid?
How can we help?
Okay, now we can, you know,
but that's a temporary and a fixable thing.
I chose not to come to work on time, Isn't, you know, you get about one of
those and really, you know, we're not mean about it, but it's like, come on man.
I mean, really act like you own the place.
You know, the people that work here care and you know, can't be a J O B.
You stand out like a sore thumb in this place.
It's like, if something's off, it stands out and someone that, you know, we had a guy guy a few weeks ago blew up and a few months ago rather blew up in a meeting and start cussing it
Really at two or three people in there and we're like, hey, I don't know where you think you are
But you're not in that place
Yeah, you know we sat down and he's like well,'ve just had it. You people don't know what you're doing
and they're leaders.
Yeah, I guess you have.
See you later.
Yeah.
Yeah, and sorry, man.
And, you know, he just, he didn't,
his spirit had left the building,
he forgot to take his body with it, you know?
And so, that's okay.
And you made sure his body left as well.
Yeah, and we helped him.
But yeah, we're not mean about it.
It's just like, come on, man.
I mean, this is, the people love working here
because we don't do that.
Yeah, yeah.
And we were not, we don't mind arguing with each other.
We argue all the time about which play to call
to win the Super Bowl, but not about you're calling me a jerk
or you started calling my mother names or something.
We're not doing that.
That's just nuts.
But that's normal in other places.
What about if someone's really talented
and they're actually driving the business growth,
but they got a nasty attitude,
because to undertone they kind of,
they got a, they're just frustrated,
they're kind of disgruntled, they're just.
We've got to fix it or they can't stay.
Really? Yeah.
So how important is attitude and energy?
It's more important than talent.
Really?
And over results.
Because what you're doing is you're shutting down
all the other talent.
You're shutting down everybody else.
Everybody else is like, I don't wanna,
I'll do anything to keep from being
in a squad with that guy.
Wow.
I don't wanna be with him.
He's just, he's really good at what he does,
but he's a complete flippin' twerp.
I just don't wanna deal with him.
And that stuff happens, you know,
that happens at Ramseysey and sometimes it happens because
Someone is just there again their spirit left and we joke about that
But they really their season is over and they didn't activate
They they became disillusioned for whatever reason and that can happen
does happen and
You know, they get tired of my personality or whatever.
I mean, that's okay.
I understand that.
I, um, I mean, don't be here then.
Yeah.
It's just, cause that kind of goes with the package, you know, it's like, so,
you know, it's just that, that, but people, what happens is you get what you tolerate
and, um, you know, and you get what you allow And Maxwell says, don't sanction incompetence
and behavior incompetence is just like being
incompetent at the actual task.
And so, and that can destroy culture.
And let me tell you, culture creates trust
and stuff moves at the speed of trust.
So this 1,100 people in Ramsey,
we get the work done of about 4,000 people
because the speed at which, because you don't have to look over your shoulder all the time because there's not a dagger So this 1100 people in Ramsey we get the work done of about 4000 people
Because the speed at which because you have to look over your shoulder all the time because there's not a dagger coming at your throat Mmm, you know and we we we bust it and it's like but it's like a team that's in a flow a team
That's in a zone where you know
The quarterback knows he's okay to throw the ball because he's not gonna get his knees taken out on the blind side
You know that guy that that left guards got him or that right guards got out depending on which way he's throwing right and so
He once he knows that it makes his efficiency go up and it gives the guard
That's making him be protecting him great pride and dignity
Because we say that guy's more important actually than the quarterback because without him there is no quarterback.
And you know, and we just, you know, the guy that ships books here, you know, when you
ship a book at Ramsey, you probably could, could have saved somebody's marriage.
You could have led somebody to God with that book.
You definitely could have gotten them out of debt.
They might be millionaires because you put that book in an envelope and shipped it out
of here today and you did it on time.
And the spirit on that envelope
was fun and smiling, not I hate my job
and I don't want to come to work today.
Wow.
That positive energy.
It's there, I mean that's God's spirit.
Final, I have one final question,
because I'm running out of time here.
Before I ask the question, I want people to get the book,
ramsaysolutions.com slash build. You can go there and check this out, or you get the book, ramseysolutions.com slash build.
You can go there and check this out,
or you can go to ramseysolutions.com.
You can see the book.
The book is called Build a Business You Love,
Mastering the Five Stages of Business.
And there are really kind of six drivers of business
that you talk about on how to master as well.
The six drivers push you through the five stages.
Yes.
And this becomes the baby steps for small business.
That's beautiful, that's beautiful.
Really inspiring, I love the golf stories
and the golf analogies in the beginning as well,
but if you guys are looking to launch a business,
you're in a business that's not getting to the next level,
make sure you pick up a few copies today
and support the man here, Dave Ramsey, with this book,
because it's really gonna help you.
This is the final question,
because I know we're hitting our time here.
If you could have,
we're talking about the emotional incompetence,
I think you said Maxwell was talking about.
Would you rather have someone,
I mean, this is a, you probably wouldn't want either,
but if you would, would you rather have someone
who's emotionally competent, but lower level talent,
versus someone who's the highest level talent
and just a little bit emotionally incompetent
or a little bit of a bad energy.
Well, like you said, the answer is obviously to get both.
Of course.
And to just solve for that in the interview
and the recruiting process.
But I'll choose the emotionally competent C plus player
because they'll get to A plus when they're running But I'll choose the emotionally competent C plus player
because they'll get to A plus when they're running with a bunch of other thoroughbreds.
You put them in the stable with a bunch of thoroughbreds
and they all like each other,
the other horses will get them up.
They'll get them moving.
But if you put a donkey in there,
them thoroughbreds don't like donkeys.
Is there anything else, is there any final words put a donkey in there, them thoroughbreds don't like donkeys.
Is there anything else, is there any final words you want to say Dave for this conversation?
I think that I am a huge small business guy.
54% of the gross domestic product in America today is created by companies that have 500
or fewer employees. Small business mathematically with arithmetic
is the backbone of the American economy.
The free enterprise system, the ability to get up,
leave the cave, kill something and drag it home
and believe you can do it.
The people that fight through the pain and the insecurity
and the ADD and the dyslexia and the stuff
that we all fight through to get to be who we is. Those are the heroes in the American economy. So anything we can do to help
those guys, that's what I want to do because I'm one of them. We appreciate
you Dave. Thanks for always coming on and sharing your wisdom and being so honest
and vulnerable. Appreciate it. Appreciate your friendship. Appreciate you. I have a
brand new book called Make Money Easy. And if you're looking to create more financial freedom in your life, you want abundance in
your life, and you want to stop making money hard in your life, but you want to make it
easier, you want to make it flow, you want to feel abundant, then make sure to go to
MakeMoneyEasyBook.com right now and get yourself a copy.
I really think this is going to help you transform your
relationship with money this moment moving forward. We have some big guests and
content coming up. Make sure you're following and stay tuned to the next episode on the School of
Greatness. I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness. I hope you enjoyed today's episode and it inspired you on your journey towards greatness. Make sure to check out the show notes in the
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