The Skinny Confidential Him & Her Podcast - Mauricio Umansky On Marriage, Reality Politics, How To Sell, How To Grow, & Self Awareness
Episode Date: November 16, 2023#627: Today, we're joined on the show by Mauricio Umansky. Mauricio is the founder and CEO of The Agency, representing some of the world’s top celebrities, developers, and resort brands. Along with ...his Netflix series 'Buying Beverly Hills,' he has appeared on over 12 seasons of 'The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills' with his wife of over twenty-six years, Kyle Richards. Mauricio sits down with us today to discuss all things real estate, how he started from the bottom and paved his way towards creating one of the largest real estate businesses on the globe, and he gives his best business advice for anybody who's starting out in their career. He also discusses what everyone wants to know, diving into the state of his marriage, how he copes with the media noise, and answers the questions of if he will be pulling back from the spotlight. He finally gets into his experience on 'Dancing With The Stars,' what it's taught him and more, and gives advice to both couples and parents on how to produce a strong family. To connect with Mauricio Umansky click HERE To connect with Lauryn Evarts Bosstick click HERE To connect with Michael Bosstick click HERE Read More on The Skinny Confidential HERE To subscribe to our YouTube Page click HERE For Detailed Show Notes visit TSCPODCAST.COM To Call the Him & Her Hotline call: 1-833-SKINNYS (754-6697) This episode is brought to you by The Skinny Confidential This episode is brought to you by Momentous Visit livemomentous.com/skinny and use code SKINNY at checkout for 15% off your first purchase. This episode is brought to you by JSHealth JSHealth Vitamins is a science-focused vitamin and wellness brand that provides targeted formulas to help you meet your personal health goals, created using the highest quality ingredients backed by research. Go to jshealthvitamins.com/skinny and use code SKINNY for 25% your order or first subscription until the end of 2023. This episode is brought to you by LMNT LMNT is a tasty electrolyte drink that has everything you need and nothing you don't. It contains a science-backed electrolyte ratio: 1000mg sodium, 200mg potassium, and 60mg magnesium. Get a free sample pack with any purchase at drinkLMNT.com/SKINNY This episode is brought to you by the Natural Diamonds Council From Canada to Africa to Australia, the natural diamond industry has transformed local communities from which the diamonds originate with healthcare, education, and infrastructure over the last two decades and is committed to continued progress. Discover so many more natural diamond truths at naturaldiamonds.com/thankyou This episode is brought to you by Beekeepers Naturals Beekeepers Naturals is female-founded and the products are clean and effective, third-party tested for all pesticides, and the brand is dedicated to sustainable beekeeping and helping save the bees. Get 30% off your first order before 11/30 at beekeepersnaturals.com and use code SKINNY at checkout. This episode is brought to you by AG1 If you want to take ownership of your health, it starts with AG1. Go to drinkAG1.com/SKINNY to get a free 1-year supply of Vitamin D3K2 AND 5 free AG1 Travel Packs with your first purchase. Produced by Dear Media
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The following podcast is a Dear Media production.
She's a lifestyle blogger extraordinaire.
Fantastic.
And he's a serial entrepreneur.
A very smart cookie.
And now Lauren Everts and Michael Bostic are bringing you along for the ride.
Get ready for some major realness.
Welcome to The Skinny Confidential, him and her.
You know, I didn't have XYZ either.
I mean, I remember when I started my business and I got into sales and instead of looking at an entire industry and how I'm going to change it and how I'm going to define it and redefine the entire industry,
I was looking at myself and how am I going to take advantage of just starting to make 100 grand, you know, 300 grand, you grand, whatever that looks like, right?
I came home one day after I was fired.
I walked into my home, two bedroom condo,
two kids, a third on the way.
You can get started from wherever you are in life.
Sales is a great path.
It's an amazing path for some
because it is the ability to make a large amount of money
through commissions. When you
can deliver revenue to a company, they will pay you handsomely for it. My point is that
delivering revenue is where you get paid more money. Things are spicy today on the Him and Her
Show. We have Mauricio Yamansky. You may have seen him on Buying Beverly Hills on Netflix,
or maybe you saw him on one of the 12
seasons of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills, or perhaps you know him as the founder and CEO
of the agency. He's doing it all. He also recently appeared on Dancing with the Stars,
and we get into all of it. All the juice, all the tips, all the applicable takeaways are in
this episode. We go all over the place,
okay? We talk about how to make it in real estate, the traits of a successful salesperson,
where charisma comes from, how to build it, self-awareness, couples, marriage, wife, kids.
I mean, we go there. I just think that he's an incredibly dynamic entrepreneur and he has a lot of things that I took notes on
in the show. On that note, Mauricio Yamansky, welcome to the Him and Her Show.
This is the Skinny Confidential Him and Her.
When was the first taste of success that you had? Like go back way, way back. When was the
first taste where you were like, oh my God, I want to take this and I want to gain momentum.
Oh, wow. You're really making me go deep into my past. But I think there's a couple of instances.
I'm going to, well, there's multiple different types of successes, right? There's the business
success where you all of a sudden you're successful in business and you do something and you're like,
you feel like you accomplished a mission. And I'm going to say that that was when I was working for my father selling textiles and he gave me the worst accounts
on that, that existed. And I became his number one salesperson, you know, within six months,
right. And sold, you know, and all the other salespeople were like, well, you got the best
accounts. And I was like, I got all the accounts. None of you guys wanted, like, that's not BS here.
Like I got the worst accounts. But I would say
even taking it back further, I would say that my first taste of success was actually when I wanted
to ski in the Olympics and I wanted to do winter skiing and I wanted to start that. I became a
skier. I really just went all for it. I mean, I went so much all for it that I never went to school,
which was not necessarily a good thing.
But I think that it was that moment where it was that type of commitment to everything.
I never made the Olympics, to be clear, but I wanted to make the Olympic ski team and then I didn't make it.
So then I ended up, you know, kind of starting the Mexican Olympic ski team.
That's a different story when I say kind of starting it.
And remember, there's no snow in Mexico.
So that's just... I was going to ask you to follow up, but okay, glad you clarified. Jama when I say kind of starting it. And remember, there's no snow in Mexico. So let's just make that clear. I was going to ask you, Paula, but okay, glad you
clarified. Jamaican bobsled team. Yeah. It was that commitment to exercise the body, the soul,
the mind that gave me that first taste of success. When was your first sort of epiphany with real
estate? When did you feel like you wanted to get into it? You're a
naturally charismatic person. I'm a big fan of the show. I watch the show and you have strength and
warmth. That would be a very important tool with real estate. Did you know that you always wanted
to be in it or did you fall into it? A little bit of both. My passion was always real estate.
It was design. It was architecture, but I also
knew that my best trait, as you just said, was the charisma that I have and the ability to read
a room. And when you can take both of those things, what you really do become is a great
salesperson. And I knew that my strength was sales. And so I just needed to be in sales. I started with my father selling
textiles. I got fired from a job. I was down and out. I was broke. And Kyle's brother-in-law,
Rick Hilton owned a real estate brokerage firm, Hilton and Highland. And Kyle's like, well,
now's your opportunity to get into real estate. And it was, so I kind of fell into it. It was
what I wanted to do, but I kind of fell into it and it was in sales. And it was what I kind of fell into it it was what I wanted to to do but I kind of fell into it and
it was in sales and it was what I and so I fell into it but I wanted to get into it from your
perspective as one of the most successful sellers of all time I would say and I will say on this
show that I think you know if you could figure out one trade in business and you're not really
sure what you want to do like if you if you have the ability to go into sales, I feel like you can always feed yourself,
right? Whether it's selling real estate or selling a product or whatever it may be.
From your perspective, what do you think makes an incredible seller?
That's a great question. What are the traits that make somebody amazing to sell? I think it's a
combination of a bunch of different things, right? Number one is you got to have the ability to read
the room. And what that means is understand what your people are doing, what they're talking about,
their clients, listening. The skill of listening is so underrated and everybody talks about it,
but nobody listens. It's very weird. It's like, yeah, let's listen. But as most people,
when they're being spoken to, you can see it. It's going in one ear.
It's coming out the other ear.
They're not processing, and they're just thinking about what they're going to say,
and then they spit out something that has nothing to do with understanding and reading
what the client's talking about.
That's number two.
Number three is you have to be the most knowledgeable person about your product that you're selling than
anybody else.
You cannot afford to not know whatever it is that you're selling inside and out, A to
Z.
In real estate, it's about knowing the contract, A to Z.
I used to be able to pretty much recite every single clause in the real estate contract
like that.
They've changed the contract. It's
been hard for me to keep up with that on all that stuff. But I used to recite, I'd be in a
negotiation, I'd be like, 17B3 states, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. And they're like,
where'd you get that from? And what do you think that does to the person on the other side?
Well, in a negotiation, it puts them in a level where they're like, oh, wait a minute,
this guy's way smarter than me. This guy knows way more than what I know. And that allows you to be a better negotiator.
The art of negotiation is not always about the art of winning. It's not about sometimes getting
the best price. It's about achieving success, which sometimes just means buying the property,
being the winner, making your client happy and making them feel like they won, making the other
side feel like they won, right?
Because sometimes it's about real estate agents or salespeople want to be so good and so successful
that all they care about is the art of winning and delivering the best price, but then they
end up not delivering happiness, which is in my case, delivering the sanctuary of a
place where a family wants to live.
And then you over, you, you overthink it. You, you want to be too much of a hero and you actually
end up delivering negativity and you don't deliver what the client wanted to receive.
When you look back as a little boy, where does your charisma come from? Because I'm a believer
that charisma, it is natural, but I also think that
if it is natural, it can be refined. Well, first of all, my mother, one of the great things she
did for me is give me tremendous confidence. She always just made me feel like I was the best
person on earth, that everything I did was right. And she just gave me overconfidence. She was a psychologist. She was going to school for psychology. So she also taught me the art of human behavior.
I kind of went to school with her. She started school when I was seven years old. So it's not
that she started school and was finished with it. She actually started college when I was seven
years old. She kind of went back to go to college. And so I watched that. And then she got three post-doctorates after her master's doctorate, post-doctorate, post-doctorate, post-doctorate.
She went to the school of my life. And I learned how to read a room from her. I learned psychology.
I learned how to read human behavior. And she gave me a ton of confidence. But that was also because
I was born with a terminal blood disease. And I was very lucky to have survived that.
Between surviving that and then pretty much spending the first seven years of my life
in a hospital and I forgot, I cannot recall anything of my past prior to my seven year
birthday.
Wow.
It just doesn't exist.
It's not in my brain.
It just blocks the trauma.
It's shut down.
It's shut down.
I know the stories, I see photos, I see all of that stuff. But my brain does not recall a time before that.
Sure, it's probably protecting you from a trauma.
A hundred percent.
You know, that carpe diem, you know, that like,
luckily, you know, I'm lucky to be alive thing.
I'm lucky to be here and I'm lucky to be healthy here.
I think has a lot to do.
The combination of that together with the combination
of the confidence and the fun and all of that stuff that I received, I think is a lot to do the combination of that together with the combination of the confidence
and the fun and all of that stuff that I received, I think is what has given me the ability to have
that charisma. Farrah always tells me that you're like one of the most positive people ever. Do you
think the positivity comes from the trauma that you experienced? It's like you just said,
like you're so lucky to be here. You just feel lucky
to be alive. I think there's no question that the positivity comes from that feeling and being
lucky to be alive. I think that's super important. I think that's a critical piece of my positivity,
but I also think it's also something that I've been learning recently, just to be quite honest
with you, is that there's also a negative part of being so positive.
Because what the positivity does is it sometimes shuts down and shuts out your ability to be
vulnerable and your ability to be connected to your own emotions. And so although you see
everything in an amazing light and an amazing positivity, it sometimes puts a wall to other
aspects of life that are important. And one of
the things that I've been working on most recently is not, I'm not trying to lose my positivity,
but I'm trying to stop the wall that that positivity creates and be a little bit more
open to what is it that I stand for? How is it that I feel something? What are those emotions?
What is that vulnerability? Understanding a little bit more of empathy, particularly at work and understanding what
that looks like.
So there's a lot of things about being positive and being optimistic that are amazing qualities,
but there are also some, you know, I'm learning that, you know, there are some walls that
take place because of that.
Most high performers we meet tend to lean towards positive.
You have to think
there's a bright future. And I think even for ourselves, in some ways, acknowledging maybe
discomforts or things that are not so well, you feel like it'll throw you off your game. So you
just get good at blocking that stuff out. I don't think it's something that's conscious. I think
it's subconscious. It is a subconscious thing. And I think that if you can find the right balance
between finding the good and the right
and the positive in anything and everything, but being able to be a little bit in touch
with emotions and to be able to decide what's good and what's bad for you, that could potentially
be like a really good combination.
So I've been on this big crusade on this show, and I'm very curious to ask your perspective
on this.
We have a lot of women
on the franchises that come on the show all the time. And I always say, they ask if we would ever
consider something like that. And I was like, listen, I don't know if this works out for the
men. Right. I feel like a lot of the women have a great time, but the men it's tough. And I feel
like, you know, this better than anyone being on these shows. I feel like-
14 seasons or 12?
Oof. I don't even know anymore. Could it be 13?
It might be 13. It might be 13. Could it be even know anymore. Could it be 13? It might be 13.
It might be 13. Could it be in the middle of those two? Yeah, it might be 13. But my point is,
is like, I feel like with the men, either you get involved in the issues that are going on with the women and then the audience eats you alive, or you stay out of it and you don't get involved
and then the audience eats you alive. And I feel like there's nothing you can do where
they don't just come for you. How do you deal with that? It is so hard. I mean, the way I've dealt with it
is that I've taken a decision
to just be in and out of the housewives, right?
Like I'm in, my wife's always right.
There's no question she's always right.
And then I get out as fast as possible.
So I go in just enough to be in a conversation,
to listen, to do all of that stuff.
But I am completely out of
all of the drama. The drama is all about the woman and I have no interest in that. So that's the way
I've done it. It's worked out for me for 13 seasons. I've gone 13 seasons unscathed and I
think it's been a good program for me. No, no. I, you know, you know, we have a personal relationship
with Farrah. Hi Farrah. And I always ask her these questions. Cause, cause again, this gets
brought up in our world and I'm like, well, I don't know how you can stay even if you stay out of it sometimes i watch the men
and you can tell you guys are like we don't want to deal with this shit but you're almost
forced to and then it's like one wife is fighting with another wife and then the husbands are like
like if you and i were on a show i'd be like hey we're probably like good you have to drink a
tequila have a good time but if our wives are fighting like what do we do it's really hard and
it's really awkward i am and you know it's like look we we do? It's really hard and it's really awkward. I, um, and you know, it's like, look, we, we do become really good friends with, with these people and with our, with our co-stars
and it's a, it's a reality television is really strange, right? Because particularly the house
wives, it's gossipy, it's toxic, you know, they're talking, they're fighting. It's a,
it's a lot of that. The men stay out of that. We've, or at least on the Beverly Hills franchise,
we've stayed completely out of that. But we've, and we
kind of have like this little thing where it's like,
listen, let the wives do whatever they need to do.
We know that tomorrow's going to change
because they're going to have to get back together.
Generally speaking, when you fight with somebody,
you don't see them the next day, or you
tell them to take a hike,
get off, right? And you just never see them
again. When you're on a reality
show, when you're on the Housewives, you have to get back the next day and talk about it.
And it's almost therapeutic.
So what I have seen is that I have seen Kyle get home and tell me how much she cannot stand The Housewife.
She will never talk to her again.
She will never be.
And then three episodes later or three weeks later or whatever you're saying, it's her best, best friend.
Right.
So I have very much decided to not be judgmental and just to allow the whole thing to happen.
I think that's smart.
You mentioned earlier reading the room.
If someone doesn't know how to do that, how do they have the self-awareness?
What are some tips to read a room?
Because I feel like self-awareness
is like the word we all need to have in 2024. Of the two words?
So true. Self-awareness is so important. It kind of says it right there, right? It's being aware
when you're inside a room, right? It's being aware, observing, looking at the room. I mean,
I could tell you that when I was young, my sister and I, we would be in the back of my parents' car
and I would always play a game with her and I'd be like, what'd you just see?
And she would be like, what are you talking about? Like, well, what did you just see?
Well, what are you talking about? I'm like, what colors, what license plate, what cars,
what trees, what birds, what this, et cetera, et cetera. And she would go bananas with me. And I'm
like, I would not let her like not see things. Right. And so for me, I was always just like,
if you look at me, I'm always observing, I'm observing everything. I'm like, I would not let her not see things, right? And so for me, I was always just like, if you look at me, I'm always observing.
I'm observing everything.
I'm observing what everybody's doing in a room, what they're smiling, what they're drinking,
what their facial expressions are, what they're wearing, et cetera, et cetera.
All of those things tell you something about what's going on.
So being aware, observing, being present, caring, and all of those things at the end
of the day come with what you just said,
which is self-awareness. And you can't do it without being self-aware.
No, I think we talk about this all the time. I feel like so many people get in trouble in life
and we have when you're un-self-aware, right? When it's almost like something's a shock to you when
it shouldn't be. Does that make sense? It's in relationships, in business, in your job, whatever.
Maybe it's all of a sudden you get blindsided by something. It's like, well, if you were paying attention a little bit,
being more self-aware, it wouldn't be as shocking.
If people were just a little bit more self-aware, things would not be as shocking.
You were talking earlier on the show about listening. And I think even when we were
talking about podcasting, I think sometimes the people that are new to this medium that
have struggled, they do the same thing where like, I have all these questions in front of me, but if you're talking to me and I'm listening to you and I'm waiting for you to stop talking so I could just ask the next question, then I'm not really doing my job on a mic, right?
I think something like this is good for reference points, but I actually have to pay attention to what you're saying to have a conversation riff. I think you're so right that so many people, they think they're listening, but it's just waiting to say
the next smart thing. Right. Well, but you guys are also, I mean, I've listened to your podcast
and you're so good at what you're doing. Yes, you have your questions there in front of you,
but I know you've already read them. I know you prepared them. I know that you've got them going
on. And if I'm not a good subject for you and I'm giving you a really bad podcast, then you got to go to your questions, right?
But if we're having a communication and we're talking and we're going through all of that,
then your questions are just going to come out naturally and you almost don't even have
to look at your paper anymore.
100%.
Yeah.
We always say the best ones are like when you barely look at this, right?
I look at it as almost like just reference points, but no, to your point, it should just
be a great conversation.
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You have nothing to lose. drinkelement.com slash skinny. When you look back on when you first started the agency,
did you set out to build this empire? You guys are opening in Austin. You have so many different
locations. When you look back on it, are you like, oh, I knew I was going to build
this massive brand or did you just sort of put one foot in front of the other? That is a great,
great, great question. I knew I was going to build this massive brand. There was no question about it.
It was part of the plan. You had the vision. I had the vision. There was no choice. It wasn't like,
oh, maybe I will, maybe I won't. I remember telling Billy, I'm like,
we're going to be global. We're going to be all over the world. We're going to be everywhere.
And he was like, and I remember him saying, I'm not 100% sure how we get there, but I believe in you. I know you're going to take us there and I am all in. So you just tell me what I need to do
and we'll do it. And I knew exactly the way we were going to do it. I knew how it was going to
happen. I can tell you that we created a five-year business plan with Performa's. We looked at it five years afterwards. I was probably off by
two or 3%. I mean, on, on every line item, on how many agents we would have, on how many offices we
would have on what the revenue would be like, not one line item was off by more than, you know,
a couple of percent ditch points. And that's stitch points. And that's a five-year
plan that you're building off of a business plan, right? So you never hit those data points, right?
No, but when you talk and when you say that, that doesn't surprise me because I feel like
if you built that plan out to that degree, you were probably able to make a lot of disciplined
decisions in the beginning to act like a business
that was already there. Does that make sense? I imagine you said no to a lot of stuff that
were maybe short-term good decisions, but long-term not great for your vision.
A lot of stuff. I mean, even the no asshole rule, right? Everybody knows our rule number one is no
assholes. We put it everywhere. We print it everywhere. Back in the day when we first
started, our independent contractor agreement, our ICA,
actually said no assholes in big capital letters. Nowadays, my HR people have told me I can't put
that on there anymore. I got to be a little bit smarter. But it actually just said no assholes
on the contract. But I remember back in the day, we had a real estate agent. We were just getting
started. Every penny was important. We had a real estate agent that was an asshole. This person was the number three agent in the company. Me first,
Billy second, this person third. So that person was performing.
Performing, crushing it, big numbers, but was an asshole, complete asshole. Billy and I looked at
each other and we're like, dude, we're either going to be real about our world or we're not like, what, who are we? What are we like? This is a moment where
we need to make that decision. And we really needed the production. Like, don't get me wrong.
And we let this person go. Kind of long story short, we let this person go. We were a little
bit stressed within a week, within 10 days of letting this person go the phone started to ring
we want to work for you we didn't want to work for you because you were you know you had this person
we didn't want to work for you because we had this person we hired something like 15 people and
replaced the person's production by like 5x okay by letting this one person go and being you know
real to yourself so when you've set up to do a business plan and you're doing that you gotta dare to be bad you can't be great at everything right if you're vanilla to everything
you're plain you're nothing if you dare to be bad you can be something right walmart dares to
deliver really shitty customer service but they deliver really great prices, right?
I think it's like for aspiring business owners out there,
this is so insightful
because I always say like if you fuck up your culture,
you're going to like all the other performance stuff
is going to be really challenging.
You have to have people that are excited to work
within the organization and happy to be there.
You'll get the best performance that way.
If not, to your point,
you get a bunch of people that either don't want to work with you,
don't want to stay with you. It's just a disaster. Where's the asshole now?
The asshole is still producing a lot and is in another company.
In his asshole ways. In his asshole ways.
What are some things that you did when you started your business that you think made a big difference looking back besides your no asshole policy? What are some things that you did when you started your business that you think made a big difference
looking back besides your no asshole policy? Like what are some things, if someone wants to,
they're looking at you, they see this huge empire, what are some little things that they can do to
get started? That is such a great question. I'm actually going through that right now. And I'm
thinking about that right now because the real estate business right now is going through a lot
of changes. Okay. Uh, we've all read them and if anybody's following it, it's going through a lot of changes, lawsuits with commissions, all this type of thing,
NAR issues. I'm not going to go into that because that's a two-hour podcast on its own,
but it's going through a lot of changes. So the big question starts becoming in any industry,
whether you're starting in it, whether you're redefining in it, but you always need to look
at the same thing, whether you're starting a business or you're in a business, is how do you take advantage of opportunities? There's a shift happening. When
a shift is happening, what do you do in order to take advantage of that shift? You have to go find
that shift. You almost have to have an out-of-body experience and go look down on it and say, how am
I going to do something different? In my case, when I started the agency, it was all about
redefining the way real estate agents just worked.
It was so easy.
It was like, it was just old.
It was archaic.
It was dinosauric.
Tech wasn't really in real estate.
We didn't have an MLS system in real estate.
We were still looking at books.
Well, I would say something,
probably the MLS system on computer
where we actually had everything
was probably like in the year 2000.
Okay.
Like way late, way late in the tech world.
Right.
We were looking at books like till the year 2000 plus or it might be 2002, by the way.
I guess I didn't realize that because in 2000, we were still in high school.
Well, there you go.
But to your point, I just figured that it was, that's crazy.
Speak for yourself.
I was in the womb.
Yeah. That's crazy to think that the tech had advanced that much and you guys were still
in books. That's wild.
Crazy, right? So we looked at it like we just wanted to redefine... There was an opportunity
for us to redefine the way people marketed, the way the technology works, the way that
we marketed properties. When we started selling the agency, we are the ones that started the event marketing.
It didn't exist before.
The great grand open house, the big party, the partnerships with Lamborghini and Ferrari
and Patek Philippe and Rolex, those type of things where you're gathering luxury goods
or whatever it is that you're gathering in order to create an event and that event marketing
and create an experience, that didn't exist.
So we were the first ones to start that. We were the first ones to start this idea of
video marketing and marketing and lifestyle versus rooms. Right. So before that it was,
what am I buying? I'm buying a three bed, two bath, granite countertops and GE appliances.
Okay. Like that's what the ad said. Like, if you look at any old ads,
like that's what it was today. What we say is like, you're buying a lifestyle, you know, your,
your favorite barista is down, is down the street. Your, your dog park is, you know, over here. Like
what is it that you're buying? Cause you're not buying three bedrooms. You're buying a lifestyle.
You're buying a sanctuary for your family for your house for a place for you
to live and grow create memories and so we just changed the way that the marketing was happening
so i guess the big the takeaway here is that if you're starting into a business whatever that
business is you need to look at analyze the industry and figure out how you can be different
how you can redefine,
how you can change, how can you improve? You improve a technology, improve efficiencies.
There's always something that can improve. And one of the greatest things that you don't have
to go invent an industry and you don't have to go invent something in order to make money.
You just have to find a way during a shift to take advantage of it. Like right now,
there is a shift happening in the
real estate industry. I don't know what's going to happen yet, but I can tell you that from my
perspective, I've already taken myself out of my body and I'm looking at this industry and I'm
trying to figure out what that shift is and how am I going to take advantage of that shift. But
that shift is happening. And the ones that see it are going
to survive and the ones that don't see it are going to fold. On that note, I think there's a
lot of people listening or watching that are familiar with you that see your lifestyle now.
And maybe, like I would say, people look at the end result and they don't see all of the hours
and all the stuff that went into it. But I know, again, because of your personal story, and I know
this wasn't always a life. You struggled for long time for, for somebody that's new to their
career and they're sitting there and they're looking at you like easy for you to say Mauricio,
but I don't have X, Y, Z. What would you tell those people? Yeah. You know, I didn't have X,
Y, Z either. I mean, I remember when I started my business and I got into sales and you know, I,
I was like trying to figure out, figure out, I was having the same conversations
I am having right now. It was just a little bit different instead of looking at an entire industry
and how I'm going to change it and how I'm going to define it and redefine the entire industry.
I was looking at myself and how am I going to take advantage of just starting to make 100 grand,
300 grand, whatever that looks like. I did that. I came home one day after I was fired. I walked
into my home, two bedroom condo, two kids, a third on the way. And I looked at Kyle and she was
clipping coupons and she was hiding that from me. And I had no idea she was clipping coupons and she
was clipping coupons in order to go to the supermarket so that she can save money. And she
hid that from me. I had no idea that's what she was doing. So you can get started from wherever you are in life.
Sales is a great path. It's an amazing path for some because it is the ability to make
a large amount of money through commissions. When you can deliver revenue to a company,
they will pay you handsomely for it. If you're delivering a service, depending on the service, it's generally not paid as much as
delivering revenue. If you're in the service industry, if you're delivering a service,
that is revenue. But my point is that delivering revenue is where you get paid more money.
In sales, you're taking all the risks, right? You're taking the risk on yourself. You're not
taking business risk. You're taking the risk on yourself. And so therefore, the return is higher and salespeople have an
ability to make a lot of money without having to make an investment, right? And so-
Or carry any inventory.
Or carrying inventory, right? Or a small investment, right? It's an investment in yourself.
Yeah, no, I think that's why I was saying earlier, if you can get into sales
and you want to fast track your life and also have some stability, no matter, because I
feel like I could take you right now, I could take everything away and put you on the street.
And because-
I'll sell something.
Exactly.
And that's what I'm saying.
100%.
You will be fine because of that ability.
100%.
You seem like you're a disruptor.
Like if I was to describe you, I mean, yes, you're an entrepreneur, but you're also a disruptor.
And you're also at the same time a visionary.
That was really interesting what you said about how you look at yourself sort of out of body.
It's almost like meditative a little bit.
Are there things that you do like meditating, wellness, habits, healthy things that you do on a daily basis that you could give our audience?
It is 100% meditative. There's no question about that. And yes, I have,
you know, pretty much a routine that's every, you know, pretty much every day. Obviously I,
like everybody wake up with a hangover every once in a while.
We don't know what you're talking about.
It's worth noting that the first time Marisa and I met was on a boat in the middle of the ocean at 3 a.m.
That's another podcast. That's another podcast for a different day.
But yes, I can attest you can drink tequila with the best of them.
Yes, we can.
But almost every day I wake up.
I'm an early riser.
I don't close my drapes.
I wake up with the sun.
I meditate almost every day.
I stretch almost every day.
I'm just going to say it's every day because it's rare when I don't.
I meditate.
I stretch.
I exercise.
So basically what I'm doing is I'm exercising the mind, body, and soul.
I eat well.
I try to keep myself in really good shape.
It's very important for me.
And that allows me to have energy, to have clarity.
The meditating in the morning is so important guys for for to have clarity in your
life because it does give you that opportunity to have that out-of-body experience and to look at
things differently it is the only moment that i have the ability to define what my day is going
to look like and make a choice of what my day is going to look like and then i start i go through
the day and then i deliver on what i chose that morning to make my day look like. I get thrown a lot of curve balls during the day.
Let's not, let's be real.
Like, it's not like, oh, I'm going to make my day be, you know, flowers and chocolates
and sweets.
Oh my, like, no, you're going to get, you know, when you're in the business, you're
going to get a curve ball every single minute, every single day.
But it's a question of how you deal with those things that allows you to
ultimately at the end of the day, you know, this, you know, be successful.
Michael, I'm trying to get him to meditate. And I told him, I said, meditating is not just
for spiritual reasons. It's exactly what you said. It's like a business strategy session with
yourself of how you want your day to go or your week or your month or your year or your five
year. It's actually a strategy session with yourself. Is there a meditation that you do
or you just sit in silence? And if so, how long? I need to know specific.
Yeah. So different things, different days, different situations. So if I'm next week,
I'm going to be delivering the forum. I've got 700 of my top real estate agents coming here to Austin, and I'm going to be
on stage delivering, motivating all of that stuff.
So I'm waking up that morning and I'm meditating and I'm really just meditating then to make
sure that I can deliver passion, motivation, messages, takeaways, deliver, you know, empathy
and reality, right?
So that's very specific to what I'm doing in that morning. When I'm meditating with non-specifics and I'm really just allowing myself to get more out of
body and trying to see things from a different perspective, it's more of a silent meditation.
Sometimes I'll put on like a sound bath or something like that that's just very
innocuous and just kind of doesn't really do anything. I don't like that. I started meditating
and this is important because a lot of the people listening probably have never meditated. I started
meditating through guided meditation. And that is a really great way to start. Once you get going and
once you're accustomed to it, you don't need the guided anymore and you can kind of allow it to
happen by itself. The other day I can tell you, I went into the gym. I woke up super early. My intention,
I was going to be doing Dancing with the Stars. I was in the competition day. I woke up super early
and I was going to be half naked on television. And so my intention that morning was just to go
in there, have a little 20-minute meditation, really get focused on my dance, and then work
out and get ripped so I can look good. I. I got into this meditation. I was silent about two hours later. I woke up out of the meditation.
I was late for the, to get to the, to the dance studio. Um, it's a live thing. I never worked
out. I never did anything, but the meditation got so intense that I didn't even realize that
two hours had passed. Um, That was the first time I had
had that experience. You can get that deep if you get into that situation.
Are you inspired?
No, I am. And it's one of those things where I've had so many people that are high performers
come on the show and tell me the benefits they've got from it. And it's like,
I've started with the guide and I think I got to find a better guide because sometimes I get thrown
off. I won't say anybody's name, but I just got to find that one and then stick with it because I
have the other stuff pretty well under control, right? I will do all the other stuff, the eating
well and the fitness, but this is something I need to do for sure. This morning when I was
meditating, I had my crystal eye mask on, my headphones on, my blanket, and he tries to pound
around to break me out of my meditation. And'm like it's not gonna work because that's
why i meditate so i have capacity to deal with outside i will say it's not gonna work you try
so hard it's a sneeze it's a throat clear i will say the dog did this i'm you're not gonna break
me out of it little couple syrup here i will say that we also have a three-year-old and a one and
a half i need to get my chi going.
While she's meditating,
I have both in my arms
I carried them for 10 months.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I carried them for 10 months each.
Let me meditate for 20 minutes.
You carried her for 10 months?
You had an extra month?
I'm adding an extra month.
I'm rounding out.
You'll find with her,
she always adds
a little bit of exaggeration.
Okay.
Call it 11.
I mean, that's impressive.
19 months, bitch.
Speaking to you now,
a lot is starting to line up
with the world that you're in.
And we were talking about this a little off air.
And again,
Lauren and I work in this environment
where we control it.
What we say today,
we produce it,
we own it.
I don't have to be edited.
It's my choice what we decide to put out. But in your world, I feel like you guys can't sneeze without the world commenting on it. And I wonder with everything that's going on on the show
and in your personal life right now, how you deal with that outside noise and still-
He meditates for two hours.
And still show up here and do a podcast and stay focused and still show up to your event and stay focused.
Because I think a lot of people would be going through
what you're going through right now and saying,
what the fuck do I do?
What my life looks like right now is insane.
It's out of control.
The amount of stories that are coming out on a daily basis
about everybody wants to know what's going on with my marriage.
I do too.
And we're normal people.
We're normal human beings we're
going through a struggle we're going through issues just like everybody else does there's
no playbook for how to deal with it like we're humans we're people and it doesn't change on a
daily basis like if we're separated that means we're giving each other time to allow things to
happen which means it can't change every single minute and every single day. And the tabloids
right now, they want to write a story about it every single day. And I get calls and I get stopped
and I get this. And I'm like, guys, it's just not happening that fast. When I know what I'm doing
with my marriage, I will let you guys all know. Until then, everybody can take a hike and fuck
off. Part of my language, right? But do you feel that that is fair to have to let the,
I mean, I guess it's not.
It's not about being fair, right?
It's about life.
I mean, it's just, you know, we're in the public eye.
We're, you know, on two television shows.
We've got The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.
We've got Buying Beverly Hills.
I'm on a primetime television show right now,
you know, on Dancing with the Stars,
a third show that we've added to our life.
My wife is, you know, in the middle of producing, you know, a documentary and she's in the middle of doing some, a bunch of other stuff. We're public figures and people want to know we
cannot control that. It is a bit of an annoying, the way I control it myself is I, I do not let
the noise get in. It's, it's hard. Sometimes, sometimes the noise gets in. Don't get me wrong.
When I say I don't allow it, like I don't allow it, but there are days where it gets
in.
It just pierces in there, right?
There are moments where that noise gets in.
I don't have a Google alert on myself.
I already know what happened to myself.
I wake up every morning.
I know where I am.
I know what I'm doing.
I know what happened yesterday.
I don't need to read about myself to know what happened yesterday, okay?
Or to read speculation about what's going to happen tomorrow. Like I don't need that either. So I don't need to read about myself to know what happened yesterday. Okay. Or to read speculation about what's going to happen tomorrow.
Like I don't need that either.
So I don't read that stuff.
I don't have a Google alert on myself, which is really, really important.
I don't have a Google alert on my wife.
Um, I've chosen this year to not watch the, uh, season of real housewives of Beverly Hills.
So I'm actually not watching it this, this season, because I also know that they're dramatizing
everything and there's a bunch of stuff and there's a bunch of stuff against, you know,
that, you know, that, that, that I don't even want to see just because it'll create more
noise with me and the more, you know, more opinions and the people that are, you know,
that, that watch that show are all opinionated and they just don't realize that, you know,
there are two humans on the other side of that, you know, opinion.
And that's really really difficult but the way i deal with it through meditation and i deal with it by not you know
just i just don't listen i i know i mean like i always tell my wife i'm like i know what happens
to us i'm the one that went to bed i'm the one that woke up i know every conversation i had
yesterday and i know every conversation i'm having right now. So I don't need to read the speculation and the BS that's out there about us that's speculative.
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have you guys ever thought about pulling away from the show given so at this point in your
life with all of the success you've had I always wonder too like why anymore because because your
life is open now to like you said all of these people that have an opinion constantly.
Yeah, it's a catch-22.
There is a lot of fun stuff to it.
For example, I'm on Buying Beverly Hills.
Buying Beverly Hills is not on Netflix.
It's not a toxic environment.
It's a business show.
It's about a business.
I love that show, too.
It's a great show.
Yeah, it's a good show.
Farrah's amazing in it. My kids are amazing.
I get to do it with
two of my girls.
And you'll have to tune in to see if there's a third one
coming on. I was just going to say,
now it's three, right?
And I love it. It's an amazing
thing. I get to work with them.
I get to have amazing experiences. The friendships
that we have
all developed, not only as a father-daughter
relationship, but also as a friendship relationship has grown incredible. It's amazing, the stuff that
we get to do together. And a lot of that has to do because we work together, because we film
together. And I wouldn't trade that for the world because that bond that I have with my daughters,
with Farrah, Alexia, Sophia, Portia, but primarily with Farrah,
Alexia, because of the show and all that stuff and that friendship that I get to have with them
as adults, I wouldn't get to do that if I wasn't doing that. So that's an amazing trade-off.
And obviously it's an incredible thing for marketing, for branding, for allowing us to
grow the brand and the brand recognition on a global basis. So all of those reasons are reasons to continue to do the show.
I think that it should also be said that 26 years of marriage
that you guys have had is incredible.
And four children.
And four children.
When you look at 26 years of marriage,
what are some things that you would give advice to a couple like Michael and I?
Michael and I will be married for seven years.
We've been dating our whole life for 21 years. Not collectively,
like sporadically. What are some good tips and takeaways? I love that. Well, 26 years is a success, right? And it might go longer. It might not go longer. I don't know at this moment,
but 26 years is definitely a success. And it actually been 27 years i always say 26 years because it was 26 great years and one
difficult year uh round up like me just say 30 30 it's 30 years look at the end of the day i think
couples have to respect each other respect each other's boundaries have fun with each other like
you cannot lose that fun you know know, it's like you get
into these moments. I see so many of my friends and couples and all of that stuff. And they get
into this thing of like repetitiveness. Everything's the same. Like I got to get home. I got to feed the
kid. I got to do this. I got to do that. Like, you know, I got to be home by six because other,
it's like, you cannot have everything so regimented. If you have everything so regimented,
eventually that starts getting old.
And when things start getting old, eventually it starts breaking up your relationship.
Being open, being willing to take some risks, willing to be outside of your comfort zone,
being creative.
Like as a couple, you still have to continue to go find things to do together and be creative
and do different things.
It's very, very important to do that.
Are you taking notes?
Having fun. I can feel her staring important to do that. Are you taking notes? Having fun.
I can feel her staring.
Yeah.
Laughing.
Laugh.
Laughing and having fun is like critical, right?
Like taking trips.
I mean, you guys, you know, I saw you guys, you're out there, you're out and they're like,
like do fun things with each other, right?
Of course.
No, I mean, I think what we always say for us is we start like we're best friends.
We do, you know, we want to do all of the things you mentioned, because if not, like what else?
What's the point, right? Like we're not just trying to play house together.
One thing that I really want to compliment you on and Kyle too, is that you guys have raised really amazing children.
Thank you.
And they're very, very well-rounded and they're smart and they're self-aware.
I just think Farrah's incredible.
I think she's just...
And I know your other daughters are the same way.
Farrah thinks the same about you, by the way.
I love her.
She loves you.
Farrah, come back on the show.
Farrah, we miss you.
Yeah, let's get you and Melissa on.
But I want to know how you guys have been able to do that in a city where that can be really difficult
because not everyone's I lived in LA for a little bit not everyone is like Farrah she's down to
earth at the end of the day you just got to be real I mean I can tell you that you know from I
can't talk you know Kyle's an amazing mother she loves her kids she's real she does all of those
things I cannot talk about Kyle in terms
of like forgetting, but like, for example, me, I forget I'm on television every, if I'm not talking
about it, um, I forget I'm on it. If I, somebody will scream at me on the street, I'm like Mauricio.
And I'm like, you know, like, how do you know me? Like, and so you, you, you just gotta be real.
And, and, and, and it's hard. It's easy to say, you know, life is so interesting because my opinion and my philosophy of life is just going to simple simplicity as much as possible. The simpler we make it, the more fun and the more complicated it can be. Going to simplicity and actually doing that is really, really hard, right? But at the end of the day, like, yeah, you could just, it's so easy to save.
You could just be real at home and be open and be vulnerable and be all those things.
Like you're going to raise real kids.
It goes back to reading the room.
If you're watching them, if you're observing them, if you're present, you're going to raise real kids, right?
Like you have a limited amount of time with your kids. That limited amount of time that you have with them on a daily basis,
if you are present, you can choose to be present.
You can choose to pay attention.
You can choose to show them love and you can choose to do all of those things.
Or you can be on your phone.
You can watch the game, the World Series, the Super Bowl, you know,
and be like, stop bothering me, stop bothering me.
There's choices in that.
Okay. Those three hours that you have with your kids, if you are present with them and giving them love will make a humongous difference. I think that's great advice.
Great advice. If you were to leave our audience with a success tip, you're around a lot of very
smart people. You yourself are very smart.
And not just in real estate. I mean, you're selling to some of the most successful people
in the world. And also we listened to you on Ed Milet's podcast. I know you're friends with him.
You're just surrounded, I feel like, by a lot of high performers. And what is the common
denominator that you would leave with our audience? That is a great question. I think
that the common denominator amongst high performers is that everybody, high performers seem to find a solution and seem to look at the world just in different
ways, right? Like there's no problem that can't be solved. There's no bad situation, right? Like
we just seem to look at the world from a much wider perspective. Don't look at negativity and
problems as a problem, but rather as a potential to solve a solution and create a solution.
People say at my company all the time, you can't deliver bad news to Mauricio.
It's not that you can't deliver bad news.
It's that bad news to me is strictly an equation of something that needs to be resolved to be turned into something.
And so I think that that's you know successful people they wake up early successful
people are are present a lot of them have the ability to have that what i'm calling that out
of body experience be able to look down on themselves and look down on their industry
and look down at their issues and start finding solutions and uh opportunities and everything and
we're constantly thinking about those things.
Before you go, what was the motivation?
I just have, this is just curious myself,
to go on Dancing with the Stars.
I feel like if I were to do something like that for myself,
that would be-
It's a lot of work.
Yeah, it's a lot of work.
No, Michael, I don't think you understand how much work it is.
Tell them how much work.
You're practicing like 16-hour days, right?
I'm a confident guy.
It's crazy.
I feel like I would be such a fish out of water.
But it's also such a good workout, huh?
So it's an incredible workout.
It was the most fun I've ever had in doing something that was just completely out of body.
It was incredible.
First of all, you rehearse four hours a day.
Wow.
Okay.
So you're literally dancing, working out four hours a day. Then I was spending at least another hour a day in the gym, stretching, still working out, lifting weights, all of that stuff. I obviously wasn't doing cardio. I was doing enough cardio with the dancing. Okay. But the motivation to do that, honestly, and I look at it two different ways. The motivation to do that for me, A, it came at a really good time in my life. So it gave me an opportunity to get distracted, to do something else. From a business perspective, the president
of my company, Rainey, had control of the company. I had the time and the ability in my time right
now to be able to just take that time off and dedicate myself to something completely different.
But two of the most important things that I got out of this thing, number one, all successful
people in every book
that you've ever read, everything that has to do with motivational always tells you that in order
to be great, you have to put yourself out of your comfort zone, put yourself in an uncomfortable
situation, right? I have not put myself in an uncomfortable or out of my comfort zone
in many, many years. Okay. I would say probably, I don't know, 12, 13, 14 years where I've literally have been doing something that's completely outside of my comfort zone. such a growth and such an amazing thing.
And it made me so much better that it made me realize how important it is to put yourself outside of that comfort zone.
And what I grew and what I learned was I learned empathy.
I learned, you know, I was in how to listen.
You know, I was now a student, not a teacher.
I went from being the CEO of, you know, 100 offices, 3,500 agents, you know, being a student, not a teacher. I went from being the CEO of, you know, a hundred offices, 3,500 agents, you know, being a teacher, being a preacher to being a student, to listening,
to having to learn something completely new. I learned how to tap into a part of my brain
that I've never tapped into, which is that artistic performer dance completely, you know,
left brain, right brain, all that kind of stuff. Like I tapped into a completely new part of that
brain that I had never tapped into. Okay. I learned that, you know, how many mistakes I would make on a daily basis.
I mean, on dance two, I think it was week two where I was dancing the salsa and I knew the
dance and I had a perfect, the cameras came on, the lights were off. I was in the middle. I did
my first third of my dance. It was pretty much broken into thirds. I did the
first third of my performance. Amazing. Second third, I came out of it and I completely blacked
out. Never blacked out in my life. I literally blacked out. I lost my vision for about two
seconds. I looked at Emma and I'm like, I have no idea where I am with the dance right now.
I just kind of kept on moving. I kept on dancing. I'm on live television. I missed a third of my dance.
Okay.
But I faked it.
The country didn't know I missed a third of my dance.
Okay.
The country thinks I missed five steps.
I missed a third of my dance.
I then got it back together and finished the last third
beautifully and amazing.
Right.
That, that lesson right there was, was, was, was an incredible lesson.
Like those moments where you're doing those things and you're making that kind of mistakes, it taught me empathy.
It taught me empathy for the people that work for me when they make mistakes.
There were so many great, valuable lessons that came out of putting myself out of my comfort zone.
I wouldn't trade it.
This is why I love doing this show so much because I think, again, people will look at you from the outside perspective without hearing
you speak about this.
And they will have their notions about why you chose something to do this.
And I think you just explained that so eloquently.
And it even got my wheels spinning.
Like you can apply that to so many areas of your life.
You can go into so many different areas to put yourself in a little bit of discomfort.
We just had a guy named Michael Easter on the show who wrote a book called The Comfort
Crisis.
And a lot of this is about taking yourself
out of your typical environment
and doing something that stretches your comfort zone
so that you can grow.
And speaking of distractions-
I want to read that book.
I just finished a book called The Courage to be Disliked,
which has a little bit of that concept too,
which is really good.
You'd like The Comfort Crisis.
He's, yeah, you'd like that.
It's a quick read and he's a cool guy.
Love that.
Mauricio, I could talk to you for hours.
You can come back on with Farrah.
We can talk more real estate.
Tell everyone where they can find you. Also, you have to let everyone know you guys are opening in Austin.
We're interviewing you at your agency forum next week.
I'm so excited.
I feel like this episode gave me tons of tools to interview you.
But where can everyone find you?
How can they support the Austin opening? I love that. Thank you so much. We are opening up
Austin this week. The grand opening is tomorrow. I'm so excited for the agency to be here and to
be in Austin. I love Austin. I've been coming here for years. I'm going to be driving the
Circuit of America tomorrow, which I'm very excited about. And you can find me on probably the best way is
find me on Instagram, M. Umansky18. Yes, the number 18, M. Umansky18 on Instagram. Feel free
to send me a DM and I do try to answer most of them. Thank you for coming on. Thank you, Marisa.
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