The Tim Ferriss Show - #401: Gary Keller — How to Focus on the One Important Thing
Episode Date: December 12, 2019Gary Keller — How to Focus on the One Important Thing | Brought to you by ShipStation and Ring."My life is better when I'm spontaneous after I've done my most important thing. Being spontan...eous before that, that's where it becomes a distraction and does me harm." — Gary KellerGary Keller (@garykeller) is the co-founder, chairman, and CEO of Keller Williams (KW), the world's largest real estate franchise by agent count. In 2019, KW, which also ranks number one in units and sales volume in the US, was named by Fast Company as the "most innovative company" in real estate.In 2015, Gary began driving KW's evolution into a technology company, now focused on building the real estate platform that agents, buyers, and sellers prefer. He is competing with multi-billion-dollar, venture-backed companies using his own money. Gary is the bestselling author of The ONE Thing: The Surprisingly Simple Truth Behind Extraordinary Results, The Millionaire Real Estate Agent, The Millionaire Real Estate Investor, and SHIFT: How Top Real Estate Agents Tackle Tough Times.You can find Gary's podcast, Think Like a CEO, on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you typically get your podcasts.Please enjoy!This episode is brought to you by ShipStation. Do you sell stuff online? Then you know what a pain the shipping process is. ShipStation was created to make your life easier — whether you’re selling on eBay, Amazon, Shopify, or over 100 other popular selling channels. ShipStation lets you access all of your orders from one simple dashboard, it works with all of the major shipping carriers, locally and globally, including FedEx, UPS, and USPS. Tim Ferriss Show listeners get to try ShipStation free for 60 days by using promo code TIM. There’s no risk and you can start your free trial without even entering your credit card info. Just visit ShipStation.com, click on the microphone at the top of the homepage, and type in TIM!This episode is also brought to you by Ring. You might already know about its smart video doorbells and cameras that protect millions of people everywhere. Ring helps you stay connected to your home from anywhere in the world. So if there’s a package delivery or a surprise visitor, you’ll get an alert and be able to see, hear, and speak to whoever is at your door—all from your phone. Ring’s core mission is to make neighborhoods safer.I’ve used Ring for years now. It catches and records all the regular stuff like deliveries and so on, but it’s also saved my ass a few times, catching weirdos and weird things. Ring is key to my peace of mind, and as a listener of The Tim Ferriss Show, you can get a special rate for your own Ring Welcome Kit — which includes a video doorbell and a Chime Pro — by going to Ring.com/Tim. (U.S. Only).***If you enjoy the podcast, would you please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really makes a difference in helping to convince hard-to-get guests.For show notes and past guests, please visit tim.blog/podcast.Sign up for Tim’s email newsletter (“5-Bullet Friday”) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Interested in sponsoring the podcast? Please fill out the form at tim.blog/sponsor.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss YouTube: youtube.com/timferrissPast guests on The Tim Ferriss Show include Jerry Seinfeld, Hugh Jackman, Dr. Jane Goodall, LeBron James, Kevin Hart, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Jamie Foxx, Matthew McConaughey, Esther Perel, Elizabeth Gilbert, Terry Crews, Sia, Yuval Noah Harari, Malcolm Gladwell, Madeleine Albright, Cheryl Strayed, Jim Collins, Mary Karr, Maria Popova, Sam Harris, Michael Phelps, Bob Iger, Edward Norton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Neil Strauss, Ken Burns, Maria Sharapova, Marc Andreessen, Neil Gaiman, Neil de Grasse Tyson, Jocko Willink, Daniel Ek, Kelly Slater, Dr. Peter Attia, Seth Godin, Howard Marks, Dr. Brené Brown, Eric Schmidt, Michael Lewis, Joe Gebbia, Michael Pollan, Dr. Jordan Peterson, Vince Vaughn, Brian Koppelman, Ramit Sethi, Dax Shepard, Tony Robbins, Jim Dethmer, Dan Harris, Ray Dalio, Naval Ravikant, Vitalik Buterin, Elizabeth Lesser, Amanda Palmer, Katie Haun, Sir Richard Branson, Chuck Palahniuk, Arianna Huffington, Reid Hoffman, Bill Burr, Whitney Cummings, Rick Rubin, Dr. Vivek Murthy, Darren Aronofsky, and many more. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Well, hello, boys and girls, ladies and germs, monks and monkfish. Welcome to another episode
of the Tim Ferriss Show. This is your host. I don't think I've ever said that before,
Tim Ferriss. And it is my job every episode to attempt, do my best to deconstruct world-class
performers from different fields of all different types, to find out what their routines are, what their self-talk is like, what types of tools they use,
and so on and so forth. My guest today is Gary Keller. This is a name that's come up a lot in
the last few years in my friend circles, and particularly since moving to Austin.
Gary is the co-founder, chairman, and CEO of Keller
Williams, also known as KW, the world's largest real estate franchise by agent count. In 2019,
KW, which also ranks number one in units and sales volume in the US, was named by Fast Company
the most innovative company in real estate. In 2015, Keller began driving KW's evolution into a technology company,
now focused on building the real estate platform that agents, buyers, and sellers prefer. He is
competing, you may note, head-to-head with multi-billion dollar venture-backed companies.
The difference among many, so I should say one of many differences, is that he's using his own money,
which I just love. Keller is also the bestselling author of
The One Thing, subtitled The Surprisingly Simple Truth Behind Extraordinary Results.
We talk about this quite a bit in our conversation. The Millionaire Real Estate Agent,
The Millionaire Real Estate Investor, and Shift. You can find him on Facebook,
at Gary Keller. And you can also find his new podcast, which is called Think Like a CEO
on all of your podcast platforms. Think Like a CEO, which he hosts with Jay Papazian,
is described thusly on Apple Podcasts. Think Like a CEO weaves a narrative of the business
and life lessons, including developing business strategies, hiring the right people,
developing a culture that truly puts people first. You can find it, as I mentioned,
on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you typically find your podcasts.
Now, without further ado, please enjoy my wide-ranging conversation with Gary Keller.
Gary, welcome to the show.
Thank you, Tim. Happy to be here. I have heard your name dozens, hundreds maybe of times since moving to Austin and certainly heard the name many times before that. And that relates to much of your work in the written word. And I think we'll get to that. But I wanted to start with something I
came across in doing research for this conversation. And feel free to fact check,
because you don't want to believe everything you read on the internet, of course. But
I want to talk about your childhood a little bit, and maybe your later childhood. So it seems like it was the summer before your junior year that your dad had you
shadow appointments with a banker, an attorney, and a realtor.
And a lawyer.
And a lawyer.
Yeah, a lawyer. No, you said it right. Accountant, and a lawyer, and a banker,
and a realtor. There were four of them.
And so I'd like to talk about that, if you took anything in particular away from that,
and also a quote from your dad, which was, or in effect, when he passed on to you,
he said that anyone he knew who had any money either made it in real estate or put it in real
estate. So could you talk about that period of time and what impact that had on you?
Yeah, you know, it's interesting.
I thought, actually in high school, I thought I was going to be a rock musician. And I gave no thought to college whatsoever. And the summer after I graduated from high school, I came home
one night after our band had performed, and my mother and dad, who were both educators, were
waiting up for me. A little spooky, right? I turned the lights on and they were my parents in the dark sitting there in the den. But I just plopped down on the
couch, Tim, and I said, you know, I don't think it's going to work out. I'm not that good and
I'm not motivated to practice enough to overcome that I'm not any good. And my parents just looked
at me. I think they knew that, by the way.
And both being educators, my dad said, well, we actually applied to a college and you were
accepted if you'd like to go. And I said, really, where? And they said, Baylor University. I went,
cool. I'd been there once because I had an older sister who had just started going there. And so that was kind of it. So that's how I got to college. And at the end of my sophomore year, beginning of my junior year,
that summer, my dad, he said, you probably should get a major. And I went, okay. I hadn't given
any thought. And I love to tell the story to the kids when I teach because I said, maybe you can relate to the fact that I was clueless about everything.
And so dad said, well, why don't I set you up to spend some time with some guys?
So it was an accountant, a banker, a lawyer, and a realtor.
And I liked the realtor, Tim.
And I liked it because it was entrepreneurial. It was very
people-oriented. He didn't have a tie-on. He wasn't in a stuffy, corporate-feeling environment,
right? All those sound reasons why you should choose a profession, right?
But anyway, that appealed to me. Got back to college thinking real estate, what that guy did
was something that was very appealing
to me. And Baylor University had just announced they were launching that semester of my junior
year, first semester, a real estate degree program. And it was in real estate and insurance.
So that's kind of, so I signed up and the rest is kind of history. So I got my degree
in real estate and came out,
interviewed a couple of places and landed in Austin.
Let's talk about, and this is maybe one of those places, New York life for a second,
because I would assume, and again, this is a dangerous business assuming things, but that you are spectacularly good at selling or at least
persuading, conveying ideas. And my understanding is that you're put through some type of assessment.
Yeah, what happened? Yeah, that was in college. And my senior year, my degree plan was in the marketing department, and it was real estate and insurance.
So the college, they don't teach you much of anything about leaving the college other than teaching you how to interview.
So one of the guys that came on campus was with New York Life.
And I didn't realize – I later discovered that that guy – I thought I was interviewing with New York Life. And I didn't realize, I later discovered that that guy,
I thought I was interviewing with New York Life, the corporation, but I actually was interviewing
with the top New York Life salesperson in the area. And so anyway, so I went to the interview
and they gave me a behavioral profile assessment. And I got what felt like a form letter a couple of weeks later
that said I didn't match the profile of their successful salespeople. And so I would not be
made an offer to join them. And the funny thing is I was so mad about that, that I chose real
estate. I was furious. I mean, you know, I have a degree, right? I have a degree in real estate insurance. I go to interview for my job and they tell me I'm not, I don't have the job match requirements.
It's almost like, right, you got a degree in law or whatever. And then when you got out,
the law firms all told you, you're really not a good match to be a lawyer. It was kind of a,
it was kind of a, you know, freaked me out a little bit, right? But I tended to respond pretty strong to that kind of stuff.
So I got really mad, and I just interviewed real estate companies.
And when did you strike out on your own?
How did that, how was that catalyzed?
Well, that was in 83.
So when I got out of college and interviewed,
I interviewed two firms. I chose the one in Austin, Texas, um, and had been here, I think
maybe once or twice before with my family. But I drove here and, uh, interviewed with the firm,
liked them, agreed to go to work there and, um, start literally, you know, launched, launched my career, if you will, through – I guess that would be after the end of the summer.
So I did that, and I sold six houses my first 30 days in a city that I'd only been in a couple of times before
because I kind of believe in business by the book a little bit. You know, one of the things, and I don't know where this came from, Tim, but
I had a professor make a profound statement once, and he said, Mr. Keller, he says,
people have lived before you. You might want to study what they know before you go out and start
doing your thing. And that makes a lot of sense to me, right? So I studied,
while I was still in college, I was reading the books and studying how to be a successful
realtor. So when I hit the ground in a city that I knew maybe two people in,
I just did everything by the book. Sold six houses, closed five of them, got my picture
in the paper. Woo-hoo! What do you mean by the book in that case? Well, meaning that I went to the books.
I went to the books of the best real estate trainers at that time.
I see.
By the book meaning following the playbook of the people at the time who were well-respected.
Exactly.
That's exactly what I did. So I outlined all of that, created a
plan for myself, and then just executed on the plan. And things went well. The funny thing is,
is at the end of my, I guess it was the end of the 11th month of my first full year, calendar year,
my manager came in and said, you're going to be the rookie of the
year. You're 22 years old. Yeah, I'm not 23. This is amazing. It's awesome. And I went, no,
I'm out of here. And she goes, what do you mean? And I'm saying, well, I hit all my goals. I made
the amount of money that I wanted to make, bought a condo, got a dog, got a new car, got some Cerro Winvega tower
speakers that were like four feet tall. And, you know, and so I'm done. I'm going to go take a
month off. So I left. Anyway, came back and I discovered that I was really kind of a closet
trainer, meaning that I was over there helping people. And I've been in the business a year,
year and a half. I'm helping people. And I think I just came by that naturally, Tim.
So long story short, I ended up applying for a management position in the largest firm in the city at the time.
And the owner said, I am not going to hire you.
Why not?
Well, once again, I'm getting rejected, right?
He said no one liked me.
And, you know, the truth is that's probably correct.
But here's what I said doing.
And I remember it as clear as day.
I said, I understand that.
But I come into the office, and the receptionist is doing her nails.
And I have clients coming in.
And silly me, I thought the environment was supposed to support my goals.
So I asked her to put it away and she gets mad at me. And then I go around the corner and their
agents and they've got all their smelly food out and it's a mess. And it's right by the reception
area. And I asked him to clean it up or put it away or something because silly me, I thought
the environment was supposed to support me. And they don't like me doing that. But I said, if you hire me, they'll like me and we'll all make more money. And he said,
I'm not hiring you. And I don't know where this came from, but somewhere deep inside,
that was offensive to me. And so I said, well, give me a test. If I pass it, you have to hire me.
And I don't think anyone ever talked to this multimillionaire
businessman. And so he actually got a sheet of paper out. He wrote down the things that I need
to accomplish, handed it to me and said, go do it. And I had no training in what he'd asked me to do.
And I had no support, right? I wasn't getting paid for it. I was just entrepreneurially
going to go out and achieve this list to get a job.
Well, I think he blew me off and forgot about it. I don't know.
What were some of the things on the list?
Well, it was things like go recruit people to the firm, right? But here I am a salesperson
with no training in that, right? And then the other one was teach and we'll see what your ratings will be like.
It was just a series of hurdles that I was told to go do. And I did. My first recruit was actually
out of a bookstore. I was in the Beat Alton bookstore and I saw a woman that was looking
at the real estate section and I went over and said, can I help you? And she goes, no.
And I was taken back, right? I said, I'm so sorry. And I
walked away. And a little while later, she came over to me and she said, hey, I want to apologize.
I thought you were trying to pick me up or something. And I said, well, because I'm a
smart aleck, Tim. I said, well, the thought crossed my mind. But I said, no. I said, I actually have
a degree in real estate. I sell real estate. And I love learning, and I've literally read or browsed almost every book on these shelves
regarding real estate, so I thought I could just help you, and she said, well, I'm thinking about
getting into real estate, and so that was one of the things on my list I had to go accomplish,
right? So, check that off the box. And it's really cool
when we later started our firm, she was one of the first 20 agents to come join us. But so that
was it. So that what essentially, I then did that for about a year and a half to two years. Well,
it was easily two years now I think about it. And the company did something
that I didn't like and I went in to resign because the owner had promised me when he hired me,
he sent me to the goat pastures outside of Austin. They call it Round Rock now, but it was goat
pasture. And he didn't give me where all the growth was going because he'd already hired a manager
for that, he said. Well, turns out that he hired three managers and none of them could ever launch that office.
And he just had to eat the lease for three years before he could get out of it.
Me, on the other hand, went up to Round Rock, Georgetown and built a business that's still
there today, hugely successful. But he then did something that created a problem in my office. So I went in one
morning at like 6.30 and said, I quit. I said, I'm going to go back. I'm going to build it back
after you tore it down, and then I'm out of here. Now the table's reversed, though, Tim, and this
owner says, well, what would it take to keep you? And I just thought that was, wow, full circle,
if you will, right? No one likes you, and I'm not hiring you to, what will it take to keep you? And I just thought that was, wow, full circle, if you will, right? No one likes
you and I'm not hiring you to what will it take to keep you? So I wrote a number on a sheet of
paper and it was the largest sum that he'd ever guaranteed anybody. And he agreed. He said, okay.
How did you come up with the number? Did you already have it in your mind before you walked
into the office?
No, I went to quit.
I'd gone in to quit.
I didn't know.
And this is all back to what was the starting of Keller Williams.
I had no plans, Tim.
I just, you know, I'm not going to be talked to that way.
I'm not going to be treated this way.
I'm not going to build something. And then you, because you're the boss, that you can just tear it down and do that.
And so I was leaving.
No, I just wrote a big six-figure number that I knew he wouldn't pay,
or I thought he wouldn't pay.
And then, of course, he paid, right?
So I went out and launched that business for him.
Can you say, and if you can't, I understand,
but can you say what he did that was so disruptive or damaging to your office?
Yeah, it's real simple.
And this is all leading up to your question of,
so how do we start Keller Williams?
Yeah, I'm in no rush.
Yeah, so what happened was he had a policy and guideline manual.
And the policy and guideline manual for all of his offices in three cities
had a clause in it that said that if the company changes a policy, you have 48 hours to give notice that you don't agree with the policy.
Otherwise, you're now under the policy.
And so on Christmas Eve, he went to all his offices and changed a policy about how people got paid.
Oh, that is a terrible, terrible move.
It was. It was. And in fact, the policy had to do with what happens when people leave,
which I thought was really interesting. Anyway, so I had built this highly successful business
with literally no new people. These were all really seasoned vets, great people, and they weren't going to take this.
So they left.
And literally it destroyed – what he did destroyed the office.
And so I went to him and said, okay, I quit.
I'll go back and put it back the way it was.
But when I get it there, I'm out of here.
And that's when he said, well, what will it take to keep you?
And I wrote a number down.
And he said, OK, I'm going to put you in charge of VP in charge of expanding the company.
And your first job is to go back and rebuild that business.
So I went back and rebuilt it.
And then I got sent to another location in Austin down south.
And about, I would say, maybe a month and a half into that, at most, he called
me up out of the blue and wanted to know what I'd done for him. Now, understand that my office
was in an office building in South Austin, and I was in the broom closet. And I know it was the
broom closet because there were brooms in it. And it did have a window, however, and they gave me a
folding table for my desk, a folding table as a credenza, if you will., and they gave me a folding table for my desk, a folding table for as a
credenza, if you will. And then they gave me two folding chairs and a flip chart and a phone
and said, go build another company. Well, I did. And had I stayed, this was in 1983, had I stayed,
he owed me a huge bonus, but it was never about the money in the end,
and so I just quit. I didn't know what I was going to do. That's the thing. I really didn't
know. I just knew that I wasn't going to work for someone who talked to people that way.
The other thing that was going on in his firm, there were men and women who had been with him a long, long time, and he had promised them compensation in the form of stock or profits interest.
And what was happening was now he was taking all that back.
He was undoing all of that and trying to pull everything back into himself.
And I saw the writing on the wall because I'm looking up going, well, what's my future with
a guy like that? And I, you know, in other words, I too could work for 20 years for a guy like that
and then having pulled the rug out and not have anything. That's the way I internalized that.
So I quit. And, um, my wife at the time I had, I had been married now for approximately a year and a half, and my wife became his assistant.
And she was already in the firm, and she actually had been an administrative assistant in the firm, and so he recruited her to come work directly for him.
So I – so I ended up – he called me and treated me that way.
I went in the next day and quit, and this time I didn't name a price.
I just said I'm done.
And I gave him all the names of all the people I had recruited and all the info I had on them, and it was, I think, approximately – it was 14 people.
And they were all terrific, terrific real estate agent prospects. And I just gave him the list.
If I had just stayed a little longer, he'd owed me a huge bonus check, but I didn't care about it.
And I walked out and there was a gentleman that was in the commercial area of that company called
Joe Williams. And I approached Joe and I said, why don't we form two companies? I'll form a
residential, you form commercial. We'll each own, you each own 50% of each and we'll go build this. And the
commercial company never took off, but the residential side took off immediately and
never lost money. We had borrowed $44,000 to launch the business. We paid that back in a little over a year.
And to this day, we have no operational debt on the company. I've never borrowed money and I've
never taken any outside money to build Keller Williams. We all did it by internal cash flow.
And is there, aside from having the cash flow to do that, since a lot of people in many industries will leverage and borrow, what were the main reasons, if there were others, aside from just having plentiful cash flow, for not taking on debt to try to grow faster?
Man, that's a wonderful question. I'll cheat and I'll give you a quote from Robert Kiyosaki,
which is, assets feed me, liabilities eat me. And that mantra kind of plays in my head a little bit,
that if you have to borrow money, it means you can't afford what you're fixing to buy.
Even though that's, by the way, that's not true, right? It's not true. I definitely have – I use debt to buy real estate when it makes sense. I use debt when it makes sense to buy a business.
So I'm not the no-debt guy, but I do come from a position of I want to be smart with money such that money doesn't leave me. And debt's a way to do that. So other than that,
the reality is that it didn't take a lot of money to build a real estate business because
real estate's one of the few careers where you can come in as a job and then as you generate
more income, you just get rid of, you start shedding the jobs and it naturally leads to a business with employed
people. I don't know if that makes sense, but you can literally leverage your way all the way from
being a salesperson to owning a business. I contrast that to like the people that do the
maintenance in this building. There's no natural path from being the maintenance crew on a building to owning the building.
It's not a natural path.
It doesn't lead to that.
But in real estate, it actually does.
You do all the jobs from day one, and as you lever up and bring in other people, you ultimately get rid of all the jobs.
So maybe that helps explain why I actually didn't need the capital.
I didn't need it because I was organically growing and generating more cash flow.
And my understanding is that, and you can correct me if I'm off on the timeline for this, but two or so years later, KW, right, Gatler Williams is the largest office in Austin.
Yep, that's right.
As you mentioned, you don't necessarily need a lot of cash to get started or to enter the game of real estate.
So it's a very competitive industry.
Yes, it is.
To what do you attribute your ability
to not only become the largest office, and
obviously that's expanded to nationwide and worldwide. But in that first two years, let's
just say, to what do you attribute your ability to stand out and grow so effectively? Well, I understood value. So what I understood was
is that the real estate agent has the relationship with the client and the real estate brokerage
company has a relationship with the agent. And I understood exactly what the value proposition
needed to be to attract and retain really terrific people. So I understood that. And the way I like
to say it is Keller Williams was my third business, if you think about it, because I'd already launched
two businesses for my former boss. So you'd been learning on someone else's dime, so to speak.
Yes, absolutely. Best way to learn, right? So I was intimate. I had intimate knowledge with
the financials and what it cost. And I I was intimate. I had intimate knowledge with the financials
and what it cost. And I understood how much revenue I had to generate in order to cross
the hurdle into positive cash flow. And so I just knew it. So I set the business up that way. I kind
of play a game that I call red light, green light. And meaning that if I'm doing well, then green light, keep
going that direction. If something happens, I don't keep hitting the green light, right? If
something happens that should cause me to pause in any way, particularly from a financial standpoint,
then I'm going to hit red light fast and I'm going to back up and ask the question,
what do I need to do? What did I do wrong? Whatever, what happened? So the building of
a real estate company, you can generate all the cash flow you need to do that.
Even in these times right now of, you know, I have competitors who have raised over a billion
dollars and are just spending the money like crazy
in the real estate space. But what I understand is it doesn't take all that money to do that.
It takes smart money more than it takes a lot of money.
Oh, for sure. I mean, there's certainly no lack of examples of companies that have
pissed away hundreds of millions of dollars or more.
I'd love to hear an example, if you could give one,
of a time when you saw the red light or hit the red light and then how you did a post-game analysis.
Well, probably the biggest red light that I had to hit early on
was the commercial side red light because it never made a profit.
And we would literally just take the money that I was earning from the company I started and hand it to the other company that was being run by my partner.
And he's a good guy.
He's a great guy, Joe Williams, just salt of the earth, just a wonderful human being. But it was losing money.
And I hit the red light immediately and said, I'm not going to give you any more money.
And his response was, well, how am I going to pay the bills? And my response was, exactly,
exactly. How are you going to pay your bills? And then he voluntarily shut the company down
within a few months. It happens all the time. Were there any particular things that you feel that you guys did right or that you did right in handling that?
Were there things that you would have done differently in retrospect?
Actually, between he and I, no.
It was a natural thing.
We didn't have an agreement that said that we had to take one pot of money and give it to the other pot.
And it was amicable.
I mean there was no – I would say that I don't think that Joe and I ever had a crossword.
I think that he's – it's a testimony to him.
He's just a stand-up guy.
But on the other hand, I'm not going to keep putting good money into a bad situation.
Right. But on the other hand, I'm not going to keep putting good money into a bad situation that you can see doesn't have a plan that it can execute successfully on.
So it was really that simple.
They were separate businesses, and I wasn't obligated to give the money, so I just stopped.
I hit the red light, and I just stopped. I would say if you want to ask the question of what have you learned over time, not what did you learn from that, was that your agreements between you and your partners, I call them disagreements.
Because the only time you're going to read it is when you disagree.
That's so true.
Yeah, right. And that really informs the way you look at a document when you call it a disagreement.
Because it should be there to deal with things when you disagree.
Otherwise, if you agree, you never read the document.
You never go back to it.
That's genius.
That's a great way to reframe it.
Well, and the biggest issue, I find the biggest issues are who has control? Who's
the decision maker? Can that decision maker be relieved from that if you have to? How are you
going to handle cash flow? If there's profit, are you going to distribute it monthly, quarterly,
annually, never? What are you going to do? And then the other one is the dissolution.
And that is what happens if this isn't working out and one of you needs And then the other one is the dissolution. And that is what happens if
this isn't working out and one of you needs to buy the other one out. One of the things that
happened to me was, so we ended up forming this firm and in February of 84, and I'd now been
married less than three years, the company was just a little over one year old. And my wife at that time said she didn't love me and she'd never loved me.
And we headed to divorce.
And they started out at a million-dollar valuation on a one-year-old company that if you took me out of it would be worthless.
And I ended up negotiating my divorce with my former boss.
So if you want to read between the lines and think about that, you're welcome to do so.
I turned to my attorney and said, why am I taking the deposition of that guy?
And my attorney just looked at me and says, well, time will reveal all.
And it did, by the way.
But the agreement to break up, right, if someone passes away or if someone wants to sell, to me, we get along, we're good friends or whatever. We're
going to found a company together. And they look up later and they realize that they don't have
a disagreement. They basically have an agreement. This is so important.
Yeah. Yeah. They don't have it. They have no means of reconciliation. They have no means of
parting without bankrupting the other business. So what happened to me was when I got to the divorce,
I had a buy-sell agreement, by the way. And it would have meant that I could have gone into my
bank account and written a check for what I owed under the buy-sell agreement.
Can you define for people who don't know what that means, a buy-sell agreement?
Sure. This simply means that if I'm one of the partners and
I want out, what happens, right? Does the document address that at all? Can I sell the stock to
anybody? Does the company have to buy it? If the company has to buy it or wants to buy it,
what are the terms of that? Or are there no terms and it's just strictly a cash deal? Does that make sense? Yeah. Okay. That's basically a buy-sell.
It's a prearranged way that things are going to go if you decide to part company for any reason
or you need to part company for any reason. Well, I had one, Tim, but the judge in the case says, well, okay, I see you have a buy-sell agreement.
Who represented you, Mr. Keller?
And I said, my attorney's standing here.
He said, who represented her?
And I said, my attorney's standing here.
And they threw it out.
Yeah.
Because we had used the same attorney.
Good attorney, and he hadn't cheated anybody.
It was a fair buy-sell agreement.
But they threw it out.
Yeah.
I want to underscore a couple of really, really important things that you're saying.
So number one is whether it's, I mean, particularly I would say in personal relationships like a marriage, how critical it is to have separate counsel, right, for a million and one reasons.
And then also, a pattern that's come up in a lot of these interviews,
which is from the outside looking in,
many interviewees who are viewed as risk takers are actually experts in capping the downside.
That's right.
And are very good at thinking through the worst case scenarios and setting plans, if then plans, for the divorce proceedings or the escape plan, so to speak.
That's right. If those worst case scenarios so to speak. That's right.
If those worst case scenarios come to pass.
That's exactly right.
The very first thing I look at in every contract that gets sent to me, especially if there's
some type of personal guarantee or I'm involved personally, is the termination clause.
Not because I want to weasel out of something, not because I want to plan for failure.
It's for all the reasons that you just mentioned.
If you don't have a plan for the disagreement, which it's such a smart reframe, you're dead in the water.
That's right.
When you're going to need that document is when you do not see eye to eye or have a problem.
So let me tell you a funny story, or I don't know how funny it is. But
so I, after that divorce, you know, I met the love of my life, Mary, and we've been married
for 32 years. And her father, when he was alive, her mother had passed away from cancer many, many years ago, and her father was now getting remarried.
And I now, having lived this, Tim, I turned to my father-in-law and said, I'm getting you a lawyer, and your fiancé needs to get a lawyer.
And they need to be separate, and there needs to be essentially a prenuptial contract, which is very closely related to the buy-sell.
Basically, it's a disillusionment agreement, right? So they did. They each got separate
attorneys, and they did this prenuptial. Well, fast forward to the last year of my father-in-law's life where he was beginning to get dementia.
And he then passes away. And within a few days after him passing away,
we get an envelope that in it is a handwritten, I give all my money to my wife, right? I give all of my liquid assets to my wife,
and it has his signature. Now, at the time, we didn't know that he actually had been diagnosed
with dementia. We were unaware of that. And he had actually said, just a month or so before he died,
he said, watch her, she's going to try to take everything. And it happened.
And the weird thing is that for that little sheet of paper, she took a gentleman who was suffering from dementia, and she took it to her lawyer, the same one that had drawn up her side of the prenuptial.
And, of course, we hired a good law firm, and that took about five minutes to – the law firm had to recuse themselves. And then to basically explain that we would drag this out forever because the man had dementia, and it was documented.
We went back and checked, and it was documented.
But the spouse had never told the kids any of that. So my little lesson turned around and paid huge dividends for my
father-in-law and his estate because they could not pierce it.
Yep, that's a great example. And it's really important. A very close friend of mine, And one of his uncles has dementia, very well documented.
And he's suing other members of the family.
And there are all sorts of headache and heartache, as you might imagine.
And it's very, it's really important for yourself.
And we're going to come back to your story in a second, but broadly speaking,
to determine who will make decisions, who can make decisions for someone else if they are
incapacitated or dead or diagnosed with something like dementia.
Yes.
And I recently helped a friend
who did not have any of this in place
to figure out a way
thankfully her parent
is lucid
does not have dementia
they just didn't have the cash
to set this up beforehand
but to talk about things like
power of attorney documents
when things are reasonably stable
so that people can make decisions
for someone else
when the time comes
and lawyers say,
or hospitals say,
show us the documents.
You want to have those beforehand.
So I'd like to come back to...
So one statement about that.
One of the lessons that I've learned, Tim, is that money won't change you, but it will reveal you.
And when people have an opportunity to have a financial windfall, their character is getting ready to be revealed.
Yes, completely consistent with my observations as well.
And having a document, whether it be helping loved ones protect themselves or in business,
it actually is really important. People have asked me over the years about Keller Williams
and what's important about it. And I always give the same
answer. And that is, our most important asset is our franchise document, which is a massive
disagreement. So let's actually, I'm going to veto my earlier pivot and talk about that for a
second, because I want to spend a good amount of time talking about focus because you are famous for your ability to focus. But before we get to that, you're talking
about this franchise document. And I know very little about real estate, but a friend of mine
when I was doing prep for this said that you redefined
franchising through regional ownerships.
And then he went on to say how the company's made more money year on year
since they started in 85.
I think at one point it was like 40% per year for a decade or something.
I mean,
really incredible growth,
but could you talk about,
so you have the franchise document.
You also innovated in terms of of model, as I understand it. What does redefined franchising
through regional ownerships mean? If that's accurate. Yeah.
Yeah. So you actually asked a couple of questions.
I did. It's my tendency.
No, no, no. I just wanted, so let's talk about that regional. So when we as a company were ready to go out of state, if you
will, we began to study how others had done it. And we discovered that in the real estate industry
and other industries as well, that at the time they did what's called master franchises.
So franchising, remember, is just another vehicle, financial vehicle, right?
If you don't have the money, franchise and ask other people to come in and front the cost that
it would have been had you employed them. So that's one of the ways you keep from having to
borrow money, understand, is you could use franchising and essentially use other people's money.
I had actually expanded into four cities and all of them did great as long as I showed up.
And then when I didn't show up, they all started failing. So I took a year off in 89.
And one of the things, and began to document the business. And because the, there's an incredible story about, uh,
the McDonald's brothers and, and behind the golden arches that really just changed my,
my world. And one of them was around franchising and the other one was about, uh, building a
successful model. And the franchising part was that we looked into it and we discovered that the way that
franchising had been done was flawed. And that was called the master franchise approach. So
Dairy Queen was a perfect example. So Dairy Queen at one time was like, you know, the kick butt
take name fast food place in America. And what they had done is they had sold the rights for the franchises,
what you would call the regional franchises, to then be the franchisor of the franchisees.
So the print company wasn't, all it was franchising was, you know, these regional
businesses to then go and they would sell franchises,
and they would support the franchises.
Okay, just to restate, so I understand. So you might have like arbitrarily, let's just say you
cut the country into four quadrants, you have four regional people, those are your only kind
of direct reports, who pay you and then they have a downline of sorts where they then go out,
but you're only interacting with those. You only have
agreements with those four regional, uh, franchisees who then become franchisors, meaning they're
granting these licenses to other people. That's right. And it's called sub franchising. And,
and I, so I, I read the dairy queen story because when McDonald's came out with their playground, that was actually an amazing value hack, right?
I mean they realized that if they could get the kids wanting to come to McDonald's, the parents would take them, right?
And there's a playground.
So there was a famous meeting where these master franchisors, if you will, the sub-franchisor, met. And I don't know
how many there were in it, but they met and they decided that they didn't want to do the playgrounds.
This is for Dairy Queen or for McDonald's?
For Dairy Queen.
So McDonald's was doing it and really making inroads fast.
And so Dairy Queen calls a meeting and says,
hey, our franchisees need to be putting in playgrounds.
And the sub-franchisors, the regional people, said, no, not going to do it.
And by the way, that was the beginning of Dairy Queen sliding into a much smaller company than they could have been.
And they never really recovered from that.
So I read that, and my plan then was I'm not going to repeat that.
So we did what's called a regional representative agreement.
So the financial opportunity is the same. So we have 31 regions in the u.s and canada and those are owned by
individuals and but they're not sub franchisors they are simply representatives so they have the
the same job description of a sub franchise they have the same financial opportunity of a sub
franchise they don't have the authority and I would imagine the franchise document that you have prevents the type of log
jam. If you were to say, we want to install playgrounds in your offices, metaphorically
speaking, in those 31, the home office has the ability to insist, let's say, on certain types of things so that they
wouldn't run into the same type of Dairy Queen problem. That's right. Without having to go into
the weeds on documents, you said that very well. The document lays out the rights of the franchisor.
And the reason is because if a right isn't acknowledged in that
document, the judge will automatically give it to the franchisee. If it's an unstated right,
then the courts will take it away. So, again—
If it's not explicitly assigned to you, KW, the franchisor, it will be in a vacuum of mention in the document automatically assigned to the franchisee.
Every time. Every time.
So when people read a franchise document, if they don't say, heck no, I'm not signing this, it's an intelligence test.
That should be your first reaction. What I explained to them is that
this is a disagreement and that the odds are pretty strong that anything we don't address here
as my rights become your rights by default. So this is going to read like the most one-sided
agreement you've ever seen. But I just want you to realize that anything that isn't covered in this document automatically goes to you, and you are the decider.
So that was the regional side of that story.
The other side of the McDonald's behind the Golden Arches that just really profoundly impacted me was the story of the
french fries do you know that story i don't know if i know the story i watched i watched the movie
with uh birdman i'm blanking on the uh on the actor's name beetlejuice somebody will uh michael
keaton but uh i i haven't i don't have any background beyond that. So this is a great story, and it hit me like a ton of bricks when I read it.
And I'm just going to paraphrase and tell it to you as if it's a bedtime story.
Please do.
Yeah, so this guy, Ray Kroc, this is Keller all the way, right? about these McDonald's brothers, and people line up around the block to get their food,
and he's a salesman, and so he wants to go down and meet with them and understand their secrets
so he can go back and take it to his customers so then they could order more Dixie Cups and
whatever he was selling them. He got down there and was enamored with them and asked, could he franchise?
And it was a tough negotiation. They ultimately allowed him. He goes back to Illinois. He builds
out the stuff that he needs to build out in order to be able to deliver stores that sell food
exactly like the McDonald's brothers. And the challenge was the French fries didn't taste right.
So he calls the McDonald's brothers and says, you know, tell me what we did wrong or whatever.
And nobody could figure it out.
So what McDonald's did, and I love this phrase, they suspended their need to understand.
And they went all the way back to where they bought the potato.
And they documented, they tracked and documented all the steps from the field to the table.
And they discovered, yeah, and they discovered one, they discovered something.
And that is the McDonald brothers had not invented a way to cook a french fry. They had stumbled on a way to cure a potato. What was happening, the step that the McDonald
brothers never told Ray Kroc was that when they got the potatoes, they put them in open-air burlap
sacks, and in the climate where the McDonalds operated, when you put potatoes in an open-air
burlap sack in that temperature, the potato cures. Amazing.
And then, oh, by the way, you can cook it any way you want, and it tastes great.
And so that, oh, by the way, so end of the story. So Ray Kroc went back to Illinois. He duplicated
the curing process, and the rest is history.
That's incredible.
So this then brings us back to the year off in 89.
I have a bunch of questions about that.
So 89, paint a picture for how the business is doing, because I'm sure a lot of people are thinking to themselves, man, I'd love to take a year off.
My business is hectic.
How in the hell did Gary take a year off in 89?
How did you decide to do that?
Was there a straw that broke the camel's back?
And then practically speaking, yeah, how to do it.
Okay, so let's keep me on track here.
But I want to go back and I want to build to the moment of 89 so you'll understand what happened.
So we launch in the last quarter of 83.
I end up in February of 84 going through a divorce, and now I am in debt because I didn't have the cash,
so I had to sign a note. And then I had to take an insurance policy in case I died,
my former spouse got paid. And then within a year, Joe Williams came in and said he has to sell his
shares in the residential company. We'd already shut the other one down, commercial down, but he
needed to sell his shares because he bought a lot of real estate. The markets,
this is now 87, right? This is 88. The markets are crashing and he doesn't want to go bankrupt.
And he didn't, to his credit, he did not. He's just a standup guy. But he came to me and said,
hey, I need to sell the shares. So all of a sudden, I didn't have the cash, so I had to sign a note to the banks, take out another insurance policy. So essentially, whether I live or die,
everyone's going to get their money. Does that make sense? It makes sense. Yeah. And the way I
kind of describe it, particularly when I'm talking to kids, is that it was like I'd been going through life hopping seven feet and fell in a 10-foot hole.
And that right there has become the central theme of my life since that happened. Because I'd been
going through life and competing as a business person in a sort of organic, progressive way.
In other words, it's the next thing I should
do. So I do there, I go there, but I wasn't on an exponential path. In other words, I wasn't
running my business out of a business plan that would deliver exponential growth. I was living
off of an organic plan. And I looked down and I realized, oh my gosh, it's going to take me
10 years under this current earnings path I'm on, maybe sooner, but not much before I'm debt-free.
And that depressed the heck out of me. And so I got really creative. Then one last thing happened.
Then one of my competitors with a REMAX office set up shop down the street, and they were a lot less expensive than what we did.
And I had five of my top ten producers leave the firm, and I had grown to over 70 associates.
The economy going down took me to 38 associates.
We were still profitable, nicely profitable.
And then I lost five of the top 10. And so now I'm at 33 associates. And then they came back and they got my bookkeeper,
my receptionist, and my relocation coordinator. Man, that sounds like a really hard 12 to 18
month period. Yeah, absolutely. So now I just want to set the stage for 89. So now what's happened is I'm in debt to my eyeballs plan that would actually help me hop higher.
And so I created that plan.
And one year later, we were the largest real estate company in Austin.
And the next year, we sold more real estate than anyone.
And the next year after that, I paid everybody off in cash.
And I was 31 years old.
I was towards the end of 31, by the way. I paid everyone off in cash. I was debt-free, and I was the number one real estate company in my city.
So that plan was the plan that you drafted during your year off. Is that right?
No.
No.
No, it's a separate issue.
Oh, it's a separate issue. Oh, it's a separate issue. It's a separate issue.
So the plan is what ultimately created a model that I could go teach other people, and I could franchise that model.
So then let's go to 87, 88.
So I go around the state of Texas, and I'm showing how I'm doing business. And people are buying, at that time,
license agreements, because I wasn't franchising at the time. So they bought license agreements,
and the agreement said, if I ever franchise, you have to become a franchisee or have the
right to buy your business. What is that? Could you clarify what the difference is?
Licensing, they're paying a percentage just to use your name?
Yep. And that's it?
And you're licensing to use your name and systems, but you don't really have any control or influence. I see. With the license versus franchising.
So I was using a simple license agreement. Well, I was literally traveling four days a week,
right? If it was Monday, I'm in San Antonio. If I'm in Houston, it's Tuesday. I mean,
I was living my life that way. And all the businesses that we launched were successful and profitable.
And me, I'm thinking I'm a genius, so I come home, and then they all fail.
And so what I did was I did two things.
Number one is I hired an individual, and that individual, this is now, now we're getting to 89. Okay. So I then,
I then take that year off. If you will, I'm not franchising, I'm not licensing, I'm not doing
anything. I've hired a manager to run my Austin operation. So I have the freedom and I hired a
gentleman and gave him a video recorder, a, an audio recorder, notebook and pen, and a camera.
And I said, I want you to follow me around, and I'm going to go launch another office,
and I want you to document every little thing that I do.
That is brilliant.
No, that's the French fry story.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, so I read the French fry story about that time.
And then I said, okay, so the number one thing I'm going to do is I'm going to go do that.
The second thing I'm going to do is – so I'm going to create an operating set of manuals that absolutely show how to launch it, how to run it.
And the second thing I did was I discovered a list of the top 10 franchise attorneys in the country, and I started interviewing.
And I ended up hiring this amazing individual out of Dallas, and she was the one – it was her who said, you do not want to master a franchise.
You want to use a regional representative approach. Now, just to clarify, at the time, were you
interviewing them to potentially be your attorney, or are you interviewing them and paying them for
their time as part of your research? I actually hired them to help me build a franchise document,
the lawyer. And then she came back and said, you don't want to do what the others do.
So the way we built our document was we went and got our hands on our competitors' documents, and we got our hands on McDonald's document.
And then we took them by sections.
So we created – I don't think – I think it was like 19 manuals.
And each manual had how each of these franchisors dealt with issue number one.
The next manual was how they dealt with issue number two. The third manual was how they all
dealt. So I now can pick up manual one and I can see how all these franchisors have dealt with that
issue in their document. And with Joyce's guidance, we went through and made decisions chapter by chapter,
if you will, on how we wanted to build our franchise, if that makes sense.
Yeah, this makes sense.
Yeah. So we came out. So by the way, so at the end of 89, by the way, I did spend all my money.
I just want to be clear that hiring that attorney said that she gave me a bid to build that document.
At $100,000, she quit billing me.
That's how expensive the document was.
It was a serious document.
And yeah, absolutely.
So then I take this document and I take that.
Pause for one second.
So you're saying $100,000.
How much money do you think that document has saved you, excluding the headache and heartache?
I will assure you it is the most valuable asset of the company. Hands down, it's the most valuable
asset. There's not even a close second. It is the key asset. So I went back. So now I take these manuals and I take the
franchise document, go back to Houston. I meet this lovely individual who sadly just passed away
last year, but this is 1989. And so I go back, sign her up. I give her a two-week training program, and then I leave. And I hold my breath
and go, come on, sevens, right? I mean, I'm holding my breath because I'm not coming back,
right? I can't scale this thing if I have to go do it. I can only scale it if others can follow
the model. And she did real well. And that is a hugely successful business today. In fact, it's funny
that she had told her son that I had basically saved her life. And when my son was real little,
Mary, my wife, and our son were in a grocery store here in Austin. And this franchisee happened to
be here visiting her sister. And they ran into her at a grocery store. And my wife tells me that
she got down on her knees to stare at my little boy and proceeded to tell him, though he couldn't
comprehend a word she was saying, how what I did had changed her life. So anyway, so that's the story of 89.
The story of 89 was I took a year off and I reinvented how I did business. And I basically
created the platform, if you want to call it that, for building a nationwide real estate franchise.
What a story.
Yeah.
Thank you for telling that.
I want to talk about the flip chart that you mentioned at the beginning of the conversation when you were in the broom closet.
So KW is very heavily investing in technology.
It's, in many respects, becoming a technology company.
Yet, my understanding is you still use a paper month-at-a-glance calendar and a pencil.
What is the story behind that?
You know, I believe that, and I didn't always believe this, right?
You learn as you go, and if you learn, you grow, right?
And I'm having trouble visualizing my life.
And I get this month at a glance.
And instantaneously, I can see where all my energy this month is going.
I can see how I'm investing my life.
And so I begin this practice back in my 20s of using this month at a glance, and I can see everything at one time, right? And I use an eraser because if you erase, you must replace.
So I go through the month, and I kind of mark what I think I should be doing on these days in order to hit my personal and professional and financial goals.
And I'm happy to erase if I need to, but by doing it this way, if it was important to do it, it can't disappear.
I have to move it someplace else in my calendar. So it's really a
simple idea that I really struggle with the idea of doing planning off of a technology-based
day timer for that reason only. I'll tell you a funny story. There's a guy by the name of Larry Bragg, and he was a lead singer for Tower Power.
And I didn't know him personally, but I was coming back from Vegas on a trip, and I'd gotten to the
Southwest Airlines gate early, and there was only one guy in front of me.
And I recognized him as the lead signaler of Tower Power.
And then I looked down, and he had a briefcase, and it had a tag that said Tower Power on it.
And I went, okay, I'm pretty sure this is Larry, right?
So I say, excuse me, and I just introduced myself.
And we had a great talk because I'd just seen them perform a year earlier in Austin.
And so we had a great conversation.
Somehow we turned to – Kenny Loggins was coming to Austin to a concert in a venue that we love and support.
And somehow it came out.
And Larry had sung with Kenny came out and, and, and Larry used to,
had sung with Kenny Loggins and loved him. And he said, man, I'd like to catch that show.
My family's still there. And I said, well, I can, I can, I can get you in. He said, well, what date is that? And I knew the date off the top of my head and I said it. And then he pulls
out his electronic calendar and starts going through it. And I went, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, hold it.
You've gone to the dark side? And he's laughing. He's going, what do you mean? I said,
okay, let's have a gunfight at the OK Corral. You put your phone back down and I'll lay my
calendar out here. And when I say go, and I'll go one, two, three, go.
When I say go, we both reach for our guns and see who's the first one who can shoot.
He just looked at me and I said, let's do it. Let's see what happens. So he says, okay. So I go
one, two, three, go. I just pick up my calendar, pull it open and go,
there it is. And he's still trying to get into his phone, right? And then I said, and oh, by the way,
I can tell you what I'm doing tomorrow at three o'clock. I can tell you what I'm doing two weeks
from now. I can tell you everything I did last week. And I'm just peppering him with my vision
for my life. And he's still fumbling, trying toumbling trying to get to see if he could even go to the concert, which he did, by the way.
And it was awesome.
And he and Kenny hung out afterwards.
Where does your month at a glance calendar live?
Is it something that's –
It's right in front of me.
Is it on your wall in your office?
Is it –
No, no.
I carry it with me.
You carry it with you.
I carry it with me at all times, everywhere. It never leaves my side, actually. It's in my backpack.
But I create a day, I created kind of a daily worksheet. So as the day is going on, I don't
actually need my calendar per se, right? Because I'm working off of that. But the second that I
need to do planning, I got to get back to a month. I have to see the month.
And I can flip easily and look at the other months, right?
And for me, when I'm planning out time off and vacations and other things, it really helps for me to see the spacing of my life, to see the things that I'm doing that give me energy, to see the things that take energy away from me so that I can always be fine-tuning
my life quickly at a glance. So anyway, it's a really good way to do it. It does fly in the face
of the way that other people look at time and using electronics or digital time management systems. But I just can't get rid of it because
it makes me so aware of my life. Yeah. I think that's really important to underscore, right?
It's not just about the efficiency and speed. It's about the awareness that it cultivates.
Well, it's actually all. The speed was just a funny joke that happened. But it really is more about my ability to see everything at a glance.
And it's easy for me then to see how many times in the last 30 days or looking forward to the
next 30 days I have planned back in the day to go to lunch with my son, right? I can actually see it.
I can add it up and show you quickly at a glance. I can say, well, we did that three times last
month. This month looks like we have it planned for five, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. So,
for me personally, it gives me great vision, if you will. And so, I can manage my energy,
and I can always make sure that I have enough time set
aside for the things that really matter. And I can see that better at a glance when I'm looking
at a bigger picture. And that's the only, that's the value. That's the only value.
Let's talk a little bit about spacing. Two things you mentioned, spacing and energy uh i don't know if you still think about uh treating your time
like going to the movies uh this is something i came across which i thought was
uh very helpful as a as a comparison could you could you speak to what you mean by that
oh well that one is about time blocking. So the, yeah, so the,
it, in the, I'll just speak for myself. The, the, it is very hard to have a perfect day every day.
And as, as the research will tell you that willpower is on will call, right? You don't have a steady stream of willpower.
When you wake up in the morning, and it doesn't matter what time, if you got up at six, if you
got up at noon, when you wake up, these are your power hours. And I used to tell people, look, the goal is to have a great day by noon.
In other words, get everything that matters that is important to you, get it done. Don't put it
off, get it done, and then let the events of the morning drive your afternoon. And so time blocking
is just this idea of you pre-planning your time.
Because if you needed to exercise, and that's what you want to do, you're going to have to find the time to do it, and then you're going to have to block that out.
The movie analogy was this idea that you don't really need to time block more than two or three hours a day around your core activity for your
business, whatever that is. You're not equally effective all day long. So what you want to do
is you want to make sure that the world doesn't infringe on the time that you know you need to
give for whatever it is, is the key that makes your professional life run.
And so I just time block. And I encourage it. Go ahead.
No, I was just going to say, and those two to three hours are like a film, right? I mean,
if that is, if you go to see a movie, you're there exclusively to see a movie. So you turn
off your cell phone, you get snacks in case you're hungry.
You might make a pit stop in the bathroom beforehand.
You do all of that so you can have an uninterrupted two to three hours.
That's it.
You said it perfectly.
That's exactly what it is.
And it's kind of wild to think how much, if I look back at periods when I've been able to time block that way successfully,
consistently, and by consistently, I mean even for two weeks, how much can get done if you set aside the equivalent of one movie to single task on one important thing? It's really remarkable. And I think that's perhaps a good segue to
the focusing question. And this is in your book, The One Thing, which has come up over and over
and over again with interviewees on this podcast, particularly those who are in the sort of growth phase
and citing it as extremely important in the first, it's always important, I mean, this question,
but the particularly important in the kind of make or break it years in the first handful of
years for entrepreneurs that I've interviewed on this podcast. Could you
tell us about the focusing question, but perhaps how you got to the focusing question?
You know, so if we just talk for a second about the focusing question, right,
which is what's the one thing I can do such that by doing it, everything else is either easier or
unnecessary. It's an
understanding that you can't do two important things at the same time. You could definitely
multitask, but the second that something really matters to you a lot, you don't multitask. You
hone in on that and you do that thing. So the idea of the focus in question is, are you present in the moment?
Now, you don't do this every day, minute by minute, where you say, well, what's the most
important thing I can do right now? What's the one thing I can do right now? What's the one thing I
can do right now? But it is kind of a way of life, meaning that if you make your moments matter, right, matter as in you're appropriate
in the right moment, everything falls into place for you. So the whole idea behind the focusing
question was to keep when it matters, when it's important to you, making sure that you're doing
the priority right now that will lever your life, grow your life, expand your life,
right? And it's the idea that if two people are standing in the same spot and one has a clear
focus and understands the thing they need to be doing right now in order to get where they want
to go, their next step is an appropriate step. For the individual who doesn't know what
they should do, they're most likely going to take the wrong step and then another wrong step and
another wrong step. And over time, they're worlds apart. So everything that we talk about from
calendars to setting goals to creating plans, all of that is so that you get one thing, and that is in the moment right now,
you're doing the thing that matters most, such that by doing it, what you're fixing to do next
will either be easier or could turn out to be unnecessary.
And so I want to comment on a few things here first is for people who are maybe uh
in the in portugal listening to this fixin to do something is getting ready to do it
and uh the uh the second is uh how powerful this question is and how important the phrasing is
uh what's the one thing I could do such that by
doing it, everything else would be easier or unnecessary? Because, and I'd love to just hear
you kind of riff on this, but a lot of people listening to this, and I'll plead guilty myself myself also very often end up with a to-do list which is this spontaneously generated
yep uh non-hierarchical yep brain splatter of tasks yep and uh you may then just proceed in
a given day if you don't give any thought to it, to start knocking those off in order top to
bottom, even though they're not ordered in terms of importance. And such that it makes everything
else easier or unnecessary is the key, right? Because you're finding that lead domino that
kind of knocks everything else over. And I'd love to hear
maybe some of the results or effects that you've seen in your life as a result of using this,
or for your company for that matter. How do you suggest people use this? Do they think about it
for the week and then set something to remind them on a daily basis? Do you do it the
night before and then write it down? What's the protocol for actually implementing this?
Well, remember, and we said it in the title of the book, and that is the surprisingly simple truth
behind extraordinary results. So this is, in my mind, the concept of the one thing is like adult Plato.
This is a nuclear idea.
It is an extraordinary idea in order to get extraordinary results.
If you're inappropriate in the moment, the next moment you have not set up to succeed.
So you're behind, right? And so we have to be
appropriate in our moments. So, and I think I understand, I've always understood that
naturally, to be honest. But I think at some point, and I couldn't pinpoint it,
I grabbed it as an idea and began to aim my life
around that. And so simple ways to think about it is, I come home, I pull in the garage, what's the
one thing I can do with my wife when I walk in the door such that by doing it, everything else for
the rest of the night will be easier or unnecessary? And the answer is, go find her and kiss her.
That's the answer.
And it's actually that simple.
On a weekend, what's the one thing I can do such that by doing it, everything else would be easier or unnecessary?
So the one thing is, is I wake up in the morning and make a quick list of things I need to do around the house.
And I do that because I know that my wife is going to make a list for me.
And so the one thing I can do such that by doing it, my weekend is better, is to make that list and go knock it out.
That's the right thing, right?
My dog, what's the one thing I can do with my dog in the morning such that by doing it, everything else is easier or unnecessary?
By the way, the answer with our dog, Millie, is always the same. Get on the floor and hug her,
right? That's what she wants. And as long as I do that, life is great. If I don't do that,
well, everything else is irrelevant to the dog. She just wants me to love her.
So I'm just giving you a variety of different ways, right?
What's the one thing I could do with my diet such that by doing it, everything else would be easier and necessary?
What's the one thing I could do that affects my cholesterol, affects my heart, affects everything about me, right?
And for me, the one thing is eat vegetarian.
So that becomes the one thing for me.
So I'm just giving you a variety of different ways of thinking about this. And just to comment on the last one too, as you eat vegetarian and
part of that, I would imagine is setting up your environments that you require less willpower,
right? So you just get rid of anything that is not compliant with that, that is in your house,
whether you decide on vegetarian or something else. That makes everything
else easier or unnecessary, like self-control in looking at a box of whatever it is you're
not supposed to eat that's staring you in the face when you open your refrigerator.
So in business, a good example of using this would be, in my business, who's the one person
I could hire? It says that by hiring them, hiring other people would be unnecessary or easier. How might you have answered that for yourself in the past?
Well, in 1994, I answered it by firing myself and hiring a CEO. Because I'm asking the question,
what's the one thing I could do right now? It such that by doing it, everything else will be easier or unnecessary in growing the company. And the answer was fire myself and hire somebody better suited
right now at that moment in history to do that. And then I asked the question, okay, so I understand
hiring now is my one thing. Then the question becomes, who's the one person I can hire? So
it's about hiring them. everything else becomes easier and necessary.
So then I go on a hunt for that person who, when I hire them, I believe they can fulfill what I just said.
It becomes the one hire, if that makes sense.
It does.
Yeah.
Go ahead.
Same with technology, right? In moving the organization from being a company that buys technology to a company that builds its technology, which is the distinction between being a tech company and not, right?
You can't be a – we're a tech company.
We buy all our tech.
You're not a tech company.
A tech company builds tech, right?
So then the question becomes what's the one tech product you can build so that's that by building it everything else is easier unnecessary and we play the game is uh so there's a there's a
line in the one thing that that i really like and i'd love to hear uh how you think about it or how
you suggest people how you could elaborate on it perhaps. A clear path to a lesser
goal is the problem, is one of the lines that I have jotted down here. And I mean, the way that I
sort of interpret that is, at least for myself personally, is that it's not the sort of terrible ideas. It's not the awful propositions and opportunities
that are the problem past a certain point.
And it comes pretty early for a lot of folks
and a lot of people listening.
It's these sort of kind of cool,
easy to commit to opportunities
that are actually more threats and temptations than
opportunities. They are the biggest threat to the one thing that you might decide if you ask that
question that we've been talking about. Is that the right way to think about a clear path to a
lesser goal being the problem? I think so. I think that one of the things that I – I think it surprises people when they find out that I'm not focused all day long.
That, in other words, my goal is to have a really great day by noon.
And then if I want to be distracted or can be distracted, that's fine.
It doesn't really matter.
I've already done thing that mattered the most, which is really that it's kind of the cousin of the 80-20 rule, right?
For sure.
So that's all it is.
And the way Jay and I described it in our book, we're just saying that the one thing is the 80-20 principle on steroids, right?
It's a nuclear way of looking at prioritizing and just distilling it in.
And the other side of that is that it all comes down to the fact that you have to live in the
moment. So the question is, are you living appropriately or not? And then the other issue
is, do you always have to do that that do you always have to fight off distraction
and my response to that is heck no what what you need to do is protect yourself so you know uh you
need i put forth this idea that the morning is the best time for you to deal with your energy
so i just recommend that people get up and have pretty much a set routine when they get up in the morning to ensure that they get the key things in their personal life nailed.
That you then go to work and you just do that work.
What is the thing that's most important today?
And do that.
And in the afternoon, if you still want to pursue lesser goals or other things, who cares?
It's not going to impact your success.
So you don't have to be this 100% always on focus.
Yeah, it's a huge relief and respect, right?
It's not like you have to maximize every minute of every day from Monday to Friday.
That'd be horrible, wouldn't it?
Yeah, it would be.
That would be horrible. I mean, I don't even know how anybody would do that it? Yeah, it would be. That would be horrible.
I mean, I don't even know how anybody would do that. I mean, it would be a horrible life.
So the point is that we don't want to be, this is just me talking for me, but my life is better
when I'm spontaneous after I've done my most important thing. That being spontaneous before that,
that's where it becomes a distraction and does me harm.
So I'm free to pursue all kind of trivial pursuits after I've done what matters most
because it just doesn't matter, right?
If you like it and you want to do it, do it.
It's not going to harm you
because tomorrow morning you're going to wake back up
and you're going to be focused again
from the time you get up until about noon or whatever it is, whatever
time you get up, that six hours, that five and a half hours, whatever that is. That's your power
time. That's where you take over the world. Be great for that length of time and you're good to go. One of the most popular highlights, this is from Goodreads,
from The One Thing is, quote, work is a rubber ball. If you drop it, it will bounce back. The
other four balls, family, health, friends, integrity, are made of glass. If you drop one
of these, it will be irrevocably scuffed, nicked, perhaps even shattered. And that alludes to the fact that there are
categories of activities or different, I wouldn't say silos because they certainly interact so much,
but areas in your life where you can ask the focusing question, how do you think about
ordering them if there is an order? That's a great question.
I kind of order it this way.
I lump in their spiritual, physical, right, mental.
I lump those into this category and my personal relationships.
And I lump all of that into one category. And my goal
in the morning is to make sure that that works. In other words, that I get those things done.
That's what matters most to me. Because if you don't take care of your health,
that's like a glass ball that shatters. It's hard to recover from that.
Ignore your family too long and you'll lose your family. So, right. And so I kind of see spiritual,
mental, physical, and key relationships as the most important things that matter to me in the morning. So that I, you know, I live by kind of a mantra
that says, I don't want to die of regret, right? I want to say on my deathbed, if I'm even coherent,
that I'm glad I did, not I wish I had. Right. Does that make sense? Makes perfect sense.
So by the way, I played that game with my mom. She was a pistol after dad died, and I kind of became the man in her life. And she was a pistol. She was difficult at times. Mom, if you're hearing this, you were difficult. But I loved her dearly. But she was difficult. And so I had to play the game. I had to say, what's the one thing I can do with my mom such that by doing it, everything else is unnecessary?
Because my mom would – I don't want to go into the details of all that, but she could go off on tangents and do things and say things that could be hurtful and harmful.
So I asked that question, and the one thing was play dominoes with my mother. So for the rest of her life,
with few exception, I would go to lunch or early dinner one day a week, and I would play dominoes
with my mom. And you'd be surprised because number one, she loved it. Number two, it kept
her preoccupied. She had to stay focused on trying to beat me instead of verbally beating me up, right?
Yeah.
And then after I did that, that went so well, I said, okay, now what's the one thing I could do, right?
What's the next domino?
And mother loved basketball. So I bought her the NBA channel every year and made sure that she had the printed,
laminated copy of the game schedule right there by her easy chair. And then we made basketball
the thing that we talked about. Because if we didn't talk about basketball, Tim, we were talking
about my sisters or my spouse, her sisters, in a negative, derogatory, gossipy way,
just very destructive. And I just kept away from that with mom because I just played the game.
What's the one thing I can do? What's the one activity? It's dominoes. What's the one thing
we could talk about? Basketball, right? And to me, that's just another way of thinking about the one thing.
I think that...
You know, I'm embarrassed to admit, it's so sensible, and I've never applied this question exactly as you're describing it to individual people.
It makes perfect sense, and relationships with those people, but I've never applied it.
I think that'll be really powerful for a lot of people listening. makes perfect sense and relationships with those people but i've never applied it that's uh i think
that's really that'll be really powerful for a lot of people listening certainly i'm gonna do it
probably today or tomorrow sit down with the journal yeah so the thing is like uh after i
exercise i ask the question what's the one thing i could eat or drink such that by doing it right
everything else is easier and necessary.
And I play that game.
When do you exercise?
What time of day?
How many times a week?
So I exercise five days a week.
I exercise in the morning.
So I get up, and by 6.30 at the latest, my goal is to be in the gym. And so I do my cardio, right, in my 20 to 30 minutes in my target heart rate zone.
But I do, you know, four minutes on and one you go at the same speed, you're going fast, then slow, fast and slow,
and your artery is contracting, expanding, contracting, expanding. So, when I get up,
I go right in there and I do my 20 to 30 minutes in my target heart rate zone,
and then I move to weights. And so, we have a very specific schedule.
Clarence Bass is kind of like my physical hero. Do you know Clarence?
I know Clarence, not personally, but only because I saw his black and white photographs in old
muscle and fitness magazines and so on. And I would always think to myself,
how on earth, because he had this shiny bald, bulbous head, kind of like I now have.
And I would think to myself, how on earth is that old guy so ripped? I mean, just incredibly
defined. So that's all I know of Clarence Bass. Well, that's his one thing, by the way.
He was a health and fitness, he still is health and fitness journalist, but he used his body as
proof that what he was writing and talking about actually worked. But I only use it as an example that
I believe that we have the opportunity in life to choose our profits. And most people-
Profits with a PH.
Yeah, yeah. And most people tend to think of that as religion only, but you could have a profit,
or you can call it a mentor or role model. I just call it a prophet, right? But you can have, you can, everyone should have the individual that is kind of their guru
for those things, right? Who's your health guru? Who do you listen to? Who's lived before you?
Right. And Jack LaLanne, just as an example, Jack LaLanne and Clarence Bass are two perfect
examples. Gentlemen that started
bodybuilding or just taking care of their body at a very young age when the thinking was one way.
And as the thinking has changed over time, both of those men changed the way they thought, right?
And Jack LaLanne was incredibly prescient. I mean, he was so ahead of the curve on many things that then became mainstream and scientifically supported. It's wild. Also quite a character, right? He would
wear that kind of crazy onesie jumpsuit and he would say, sure, you don't have to exercise,
but on the days you don't exercise, you're not allowed to eat. I mean, very uncompromising,
which I appreciate.
It was awesome. So then let's ask that question. So who's the one person that you could follow for your health,
such that by doing that, following anyone else would be easier or unnecessary?
Yeah. Yeah, that's great.
So if you don't ask the focusing question around the people in your life, you'll end up following
too many people. So again, how many profits do you need around health?
Right? If you just follow Jack LaLanne, right, whose goal was to live to 100, what a loser,
he died at 96, right? But Clarence Bass has the same goal. So if you wanted to live to 100,
let's just pick that as a target. I want live to at least 100 then what's the one thing
you could do that would make that easier or everything else easier or not necessary in my
mind it would be go follow go find the person that that exemplifies that better than anyone else
and make that one person your true north what's fun fun. You could then go dive into the Jack LaLanne approach
or the Clarence Bass approach or whoever is your prophet for health. And you could then distill
down what they do into one thing, believe it or not. And you could also, this is something that I
do in a few areas, just ask yourself, for instance, my friend Matt Mullenweg is one of
the calmest people under fire I've ever witnessed in any capacity of any age. He's a young guy, but
incredibly calm when making high stakes decisions or facing tough circumstances. And
I tend not to be that. I mean, I think I'm reasonably calm, but I also,
as my mom would say, patience has never been your strong suit. And so, I will ask when I feel
myself getting spun up sometimes, upset about something that I know in many cases is trivial,
I'll just ask myself, what would Matt do? What would Matt do? And you can do that for Jack LaLanne or whoever you choose. And if you have
seven people as your true north, you don't have a true north, right? It's scattered. And you really
need, at least I do, that specific person, that image. And guess what? If it doesn't cover 100%
of all decisions, who cares? As long as you have one who helps you to navigate
the majority of decisions, you're far better off. Yes, that's it. I couldn't have said it better.
That is exactly right. And people tend to not understand that that actually is life-affirming,
it's life-expanding. It's really, if you want to live the biggest life possible, then ask big questions of yourself, right?
And go find individuals who in fact have – they're doing that thing that matters to you.
Not that I know what Jack LaLanne's morals were or anything like that.
I don't need to know because I'm not saying he's my prophet in morals.
I'm simply saying he's my prophet in morals. I'm simply saying he's my prophet around health.
And we've been discussing up to this point primarily how to say yes to the right things.
And it's not necessarily a long list, but how to hone in and say yes to the right things.
Do you say no categorically to anything across the board? Are there any
decisions that you've made along the lines of, I'm not going to do X? And I'll give you a personal
example just because I find it incredible how stress-removing these things, these types of categorical decisions have been for me.
So I used to stress about, this is probably 2008, 2009 speaking engagements. I didn't particularly
enjoy speaking engagements generally. Sometimes I did. And I found myself traveling all over the
place. It was similar to your travel schedule, right? The four days a week, like one day in
Houston, one day in San Antonio, et cetera. And furthermore, because I didn't have any strict policies, because I never expected to
be invited to speak before the first book, I found myself and my assistants constantly negotiating
one-off deals. And then one of my friends said to me who is who does next to no public appearances he said yeah
i have a simple rule i either do do full retail i never negotiate they pay my list price or it's a
no-go or i do unpaid for groups and causes i care about he said i do nothing in between i never
negotiate and if and he said if someone pays me a absurdly high rate, that becomes my new high watermark, right? That becomes the new retail price. And I remember coming away from the call thinking, that is so simple and so profound. And I implemented that and it just removed this gigantic energy suck for me. And so I've started to make more rules like that, right?
And I'm curious if you have anything
you categorically just decline.
Pretty much everything.
No, I know it sounds a little weird to say that,
but if the people around me would probably confirm that.
Yeah.
That essentially anything that's a distraction or anything that interferes with what I deem is my path or my relationships or whatever, I just say no.
I mean, I literally, I am a definite no person, right?
Time is a big issue for me, and we have a limited amount of it. I literally am a definite no person, right?
Time is a big issue for me, and we have a limited amount of it.
And so saying no to talking to people is, right, I have this saying in my head that says that people that work with me are more important than people that don't.
And so the fact that you and I are talking right now, my team will tell you that you must really love Tim. Well, I appreciate you making the time. Because I would, I say no to
everyone. This is, this is the only one I've done. And I just say no to everybody, categorically no.
And the reason is because when I woke up this morning, talking to that individual was not on
my game plan. So at the end of the day, if talking to that individual was not on my game plan.
So at the end of the day, if talking to that person, if I have a spare moment and it's a
kindness I can do, love to do that, love to do that. But given my life and how big it is,
there aren't many of those moments. Because I look up and I go, hold on, I have a spare minute.
I need to go hug my wife again. I mean, that's the way I think about it. I need to go hang out with my dog more, right?
I need to go do whatever that is within my list
or at least within my focus categories
of the things that matter most to me.
So I'm very much a no man.
I just say it over and over and over and over and over again.
Do you have any preferred or default language that you like to use or that you tend to use?
How do you convey that to people?
And let's assume it's not Joe Blow from Muckety Muck Incorporated,
who is just a random inbound, because I'm imagining you have filters for that type of thing.
And even if you didn't, you would just ignore it.
But let's say an old friend you've kind of drifted away from
manages to somehow get a hold of you
and invites you to be on the such and such board of some type.
And you're like, ah, you know, and you listen to,
A, it's not on your list.
B, you don't really want to do it.
It doesn't feel good.
What do you say?
Well, I'm fairly direct about it, but I believe in the love, tough love sandwich approach, right?
So I say, hey, Tim, typically this is in a text or an email, right? Because I don't allow people
to talk to me, get to me via a phone or standing in front of me because that then becomes awkward.
And now I have to deal with it on their time schedule instead of mine, which throws my schedule off, throws my focus off.
So my standard line is, hey, Tim, this is me typing at something.
And it says, hey, Tim, I really appreciate you thinking about me.
To be honest with you, I really appreciate you thinking about me. To be honest
with you, I would love to say yes. But the problem is, and I have several scripts after this,
problem is if I say yes to you, I have to say yes to other people. And because I don't have time to
say yes to everybody, I have to say no to everybody. And I'm so sorry, but I just can't do this. Good luck. I mean, or here's so,
have you tried Tim Ferriss?
Right.
I'll definitely,
you know, if there's someone else,
but that's kind of a standard line for me.
My line is,
you were looking for a script
and the underlying script would be,
I can't say yes to everybody,
so I'm going to have to say no.
Yeah.
Yeah, because I get those requests. I get them every day. They just fly at me. Same with you. I mean,
we get it. Absolutely. I'm asking partially because I want to borrow.
Well, the other line that I give, and it's totally true, by the way, is, and that is,
I plan my time months, even years in advance. Now, understand I can
always erase. So, I'm not a rigid person at all about that. But one of my standard scripts is,
I'm so sorry, I can't do that. I plan my time, you know, years, a year in advance, years in advance.
And unfortunately, I'm booked then. Oh, yeah. Remember, I'm the guy that when they
recognized me as the second person ever recognized from my high school, I didn't go to the awards.
When I graduated from college, I just drove out of town. I didn't even go to the graduation
when they named me the most, what me the most influential person of the year
two years ago. I didn't go to the convention to get my award. When Austin recognized me as the
entrepreneur of the year, I didn't go to the ceremony. I have to pause. These are great. And is the line, I'm sorry, I planned years and months out in advance. Do you remember specifically what you conveyed to these folks or had your assistants convey?
On which one?
Any of them. That's the line. And it says, sorry, his schedule conflicts with your date, so he will not be able to attend.
Now, we then offer up somebody else if they want to go.
So for Entrepreneur of the Year, one of my partners went.
And it was so funny because I think that was the same year that John Mackey of Whole Foods was recognized.
He and I were co-recognized.
And after, so she got up and she spoke about me, right? It's really hard for, you know,
if you win an award to go in and say, I'm awesome, I'm great, I'm terrific, I'm all these things,
because that would look stupid, right? But if you sent a proxy, the proxy stands up and says, I want to tell you about my
dear friend, Gary Keller. He's the most amazing guy I've ever met. I want to tell you a story
that exemplifies just a wonderful guy he is, right? And apparently, yeah. So I've heard this
more than once where they'll come off the stage and the person, whoever they were with goes,
I'm going to get a proxy next time. That was awesome. That is one of the most genius workarounds I think I've heard in a very, very, very long time.
Just put that down as one of your time hacks, man.
I will.
That's how you do it.
Oh, my God.
It works really well, man.
That is genius.
So genius.
Well, I know we only have just a handful of minutes left, and then I want to let you get back to hugging your wife and wrestling with your dog and doing all the other things that you no doubt have to do today on a business level.
I'd like to ask a question that I ask pretty often, and that is the billboard question.
So if you could put a quote, a message, a question, anything on a billboard, metaphorically
speaking, to get a message of some type out to billions of people, let's say, something
non-commercial, what might you put on the billboard?
Think big, aim high.
Think big, aim high. Why is thinking big important to you? It's a theme that runs through
a lot of your writing. Warren Buffett said it really well when he said that
the habits of our life are like chains that are too loose to be noticed until they're too tight
to break. And when you think about our life being built upon habits,
you realize that most people accrue habits instead of form good ones. And so when you think,
when you think big and you aim high and you start running towards that, you have to develop big
habits, scalable habits in order to implement that plan. So if you didn't say think big and aim
high, what would you say? Think small? Would you think low? Would you say think average?
Well, if you didn't say think big, what are the other choices? And most people by default,
because they don't think big, they don't aim high. They end up developing very
average or below average habits. They end up developing, right? Your thinking leads to action.
Action over time becomes a habit. So if I'm thinking small, then I'm forming small habits.
And here's the problem, like Warren Buffett said. Now I'm a person of small habits. And all of a
sudden I look up and I go, wow, I really do want more out
of my life. And then you have to go break these habits. And that's really hard to do, whether
they're eating habits or exercising habits or you name it, work habits or relationship habits.
It doesn't really matter that at the end of the day, if you have a choice, think big.
If you have a choice, aim big. If you have a choice,
aim high and then ask yourself, what do I need to do to do that? And what are the habits or what's the one habit I need to develop such that by doing it, everything else is zero necessary and go get
that habit. But if you don't think big, what's your choice? Right? Yeah. I mean, it's kind of
like the joke I tell the kids. I say,
so think of it this way. So you fall in love with someone and you want to ask them to marry you.
And you go, will you marry me? I've dreamed of our life together and it's going to be average.
We're going to live an average life and live in an average home, drive an average car,
eat average food, take average vacations, read average books, go to average movies. We'll
have average friends. We'll have average parties. And if we have kids, we'll have average kids and
we'll teach them the virtues of being average. Let's get married. It's going to be awesome.
I don't think anybody does that, do they? Not purposely.
Not purposely. Not purposely. But what you and I both know
is that if you don't choose your life, if you don't choose the direction of your life,
you'll go in any direction. You'll end up in places that you didn't want to be at because
you didn't choose where you wanted to be. So think big, aim high. I'd put that on the billboard. And I want to also note that you made a very deliberate decision to look at and change your
habits long ago. When you noticed that you were on this linear incremental path that maybe was
in some ways just kind of reacting to whatever was in front of you or
whatever was expected to be the next step, you were able to redirect that crucial handful of
degrees that over the long term is not a few feet, it's not a hundred feet, it's thousands of miles
in terms of the difference between where you could have ended up and where you did end up.
So it's a very inspiring story.
One of the things that I ultimately developed was the habit of being able to develop a habit.
Because in the end, that singular skill becomes like your superpower.
The ability to, just call it the habit hack, if you will.
But it's the ability to form a habit. And it's hard. It's not easy. It's really hard. I'm 62
years old. It takes time to develop the ability to say, I want that. And I now see the singular
habit that will get me there. I'm now going to develop that habit.
Aside from deciding on the habit, as you just mentioned, have you found anything in particular
to help you to develop or stick with new habits? Other people. Your support system. It's the phrase
that I used earlier, and that is your environment has to support your goal.
So your environment has to support your habit, too.
So you literally, if you want to form a new habit, you're going to have to have your environment support that.
You're going to have to have the people around you cheering for you and supporting you to do that, right?
Mary had an aunt who passed away a few years ago. She's a wonderful, wonderful
woman. But she was the size
of, I don't know how to say it, she was massive.
She was massive. And her husband, by the way, was Jack Spratt.
And in getting to know that family,
what I came to understand was-
I don't know who that is. Who's that?
Oh, the skinny guy. So, Jack Spratt knew no fat, right? Yeah, this is a skinny, skinny, skinny,
skinny man. And his thing was, you know, dear, you can go pursue anything you want around health as long as the kids and I have three square meals and ready for us.
And they have to be different meals.
And again, she cooked for them.
And she couldn't help herself.
She had to taste it and then she had to eat it.
And given her body type and the way she was, for him it didn't affect him. For her, it completely blew her up. And once you realize that, you go, my gosh,
your environment has to support your goal. So to me, the habit hack is go find somebody or a group
of people that will support you and then build that support mechanism, right? Make sure that your spouse or
significant other or best friend or whoever, make sure that they're in alignment, right?
Tell them what your goal is. Don't hide it. I want to do this. I need your help. Give me
permission. I give you permission to help support me to do that. It's the secret, right?
Good advice.
Yeah.
It's so critical.
Yeah.
Don't rely on being the best captain in rough seas that you manufacture yourself.
That's exactly right.
Set your conditions.
I have just perhaps two or three questions left.
One I have to ask because I don't know the answer.
Why do this interview? I know you're a
busy guy and you just mentioned you do very little media. So why do the podcast?
You know, because I really like and respect you, to be honest with you, and you do a lot of good.
You know, when your first book came out, I'll be honest with you, I looked at the title and went,
that guy's full of it. Then I read the book and then went, oh my gosh, this is a significant book. This is not a
trivial book. He has a cool title, but to be honest with you, what you wrote, everyone should read.
And I firmly believe that. And so to be honest with you, I'm just here to honor you. It's an honor that you
would ask. It's an honor that you would ask me. But more importantly, just the ability for you
and I just to talk for a couple hours is a thrill for me. And I just want to be supportive.
Well, I really appreciate that. And I want to give you, I want to give us time for me to disappoint.
So hopefully we'll be able to grab a cup of coffee
or break some bread back in Austin.
And this has been really fun.
I really appreciate it.
And valuable.
I took tons of notes.
I have four pieces of paper in front of me
with notes scribbled all over them
that I'm going to clean up afterwards.
Good notes.
And is there
anything else you'd like to say or suggest, mention, websites, social, anything like that?
Of course, I'll link to all of that in the show notes. So people will have that
on the website and via email either way. But is there anything else you'd like to say before we
wrap up? You know, if you mentioned sending people to some places.
So I just started, Jay and I started our new podcast called Think Like a CEO.
And so, yeah, telling people to come and check us out and see if that's a cool place to go learn would be awesome.
Perfect.
We'll send some traffic.
So we will put think like a CEO
the link to the podcast
we will put links
to the books
and certainly
the company
and many other resources
in the show notes
everybody listening
those will be available
as always
at tim.blog
forward slash
podcast
and Gary
thank you so much
for taking the time you're welcome Tim it was a blast my friend thank you so much for taking the time.
You're welcome, Tim. It was a blast, my friend. Thank you.
And to everybody out there with earphones in or otherwise, thank you for listening.
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