Wake Up to Wealth - Strategic Approach to Real Estate Success with Jeff Smith
Episode Date: December 27, 2023In episode 9 of Wake Up to Wealth, Brandon Brittingham welcomes real estate investor and former Special Forces Army Ranger, Jeff Smith. He shares his background, including his experience in special op...erations in the military and his transition to the corporate world and later the fitness industry. Jeff also discusses his current ventures in real estate investing and business consulting. Tune in to gain insights into Jeff's military experiences and how he has applied those lessons to his business endeavors!Tune in, a must - listen!-Brandon BrittinghamInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/mailboxmoneyb/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/brandon.brittingham.1/Hire Brandon to speak: https://www.brandonsbrain.org/home-Jeff SmithInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/realjeffsmith/Jeff's FacebookÂ
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This is Wake Up To Wealth, a podcast dedicated to helping you change the way you think about
wealth.
And now, here's your host, Brandon Brittingham.
All right, what's up, everybody?
We are back with another episode of Wake Up To Wealth, and I've got one of my good friends,
awesome guy here with us, Jeff Smith,
real estate investor,
has done some things in the fitness industry,
was in the military,
done a lot of cool shit, man.
Appreciate having you today.
Absolutely, Brandon.
Thanks, man.
Thanks for having me.
Absolutely.
So I've had the pleasure of seeing you speak a few times.
And you spoke to my team before, which was super impactful.
You spoke at events with me before.
And you kind of broke down some things that you learned in the military that you've kind of translated into business.
And I'd like to unpack that, but kind of give us an idea of who you are
and what you do and give us a little bit of your background. Yeah. I don't want to do the whole
origin story thing, but I was in special operations in the military. Then I came out of there and went
into your typical fucking corporate cubicle, fortune 50 company where i worked for a handful of years and then
i opened a gym in houston texas um which i owned and ran for a decade 12 years and then now i do
real estate investing and business consulting and run a couple masterminds personally yep yeah and
i know you kind of glazed over it,
but you actually did some, you told, you at least told my team a story. You did something
pretty cool in the military. I'd like you to share that with me. Are you talking about the
capturing of chemical Ali? Yes. Yeah. That's, that's probably my number one claim to fame in special operations was,
if you remember the deck of cards when we invaded Iraq, it ages me. I think those came out in 2003.
The King of Spades was Chemical Ali, and I captured him in the streets of Baghdad.
So that would be my claim to fame.
But my wife heard that story very interestingly because she is an Arabic and Islamic translator, she was.
And not like a terp, but she's just a white girl from Kentucky.
But she specialized in religious justification for suicide bombing.
And she actually was studying in Morocco in 2006.
And we were dating at the time.
And she heard the story for the very first time over there because I had never told her about it and so she fucking called me and was like why the fuck am i hearing this story about chemical ali yeah from this ranger in morocco who's who's
telling me about my boyfriend and uh so that that brings it full circle but yeah that is my claim to
fame so you know not many people in this this world make it to special forces and then
make it to a mission that is as crazy as that. Like, what did you learn? First of all, take us
into the mindset of the person you have to be to get to that point. Right. And then what did you
learn that you've translated into being successful in business?
Well, I think the biggest thing was like I enlisted in the military right after 9-11.
That was the catalyst for me enlisting in the military. But I knew that we were going to go to combat.
And I had so my trajectory kind of was I had been looking at these special operations units in high school because I was like a bad kid, juvenile delinquent, grew up without a dad, whatever you want to call it. But like,
I didn't have a lot of direction. And so I was looking at different things, but I was really
good at football. And so my opportunities, I looked at the Navy SEALs. I was like, I don't
really like all that water shit. They get caught on boats all the time and have to go out with the Navy and do all that. And
I'm not really interested in that. So I ended up, I found Ranger Battalion and I was like,
that looks fucking cool. What do they have to do? Went through all their shit, learned about it.
And, uh, but when the time came and I was a senior in high school, it was choose football
or go cause I was offered, was offered to go play in college.
And so at the time I was 18 years old, I was like, well, I could go play football now and I could always go into the military.
And sure enough, that's what fucking happened.
I went into it.
I went and played college football for a few years and then 9-11 happened.
And before that time, I was already done with college and done with playing football.
And I was working.
And so when 9-11 happened, I was like, well, I'll just go in the military.
Like rekindle that dream, if you will.
But the reason I went into special operations and volunteered for it was because I wanted to run with the best people, essentially.
Because I thought we were going to combat.
I knew somebody was.
And if I had to get deployed, I wanted to be deployed with the best I could possibly be.
Right.
So like that was my mentality.
So when I went from day one, I didn't have a guaranteed contract or anything.
All I could get my recruiter to write me was a an infantry contract with a guarantee for an opportunity at airborne school.
And then they were like, well, you can volunteer to go to RASP or RIP, which is Ranger Indoctrination
Program, after that, because they select their candidates out of airborne school. So I went
ahead and went through all that shit. I went through basic training, advanced infantry training,
airborne school, did all our
jumps and shit. And sure enough, they came down and they were like, hey, who wants to volunteer
to go through RIP? And I was like, sure. I raised my hand. They fucking come smoke you and like you
go get held up in these barracks for a couple of weeks before you start. But they just start
physically destroying you at that point in time and you wait for your slot in class.
So when I started, that's a weird story because I went through twice because I went through the
very first class and we were supposed to graduate the following day and there was a mix up in
communication and I had no clean uniforms for some reason, me and two other guys.
And so they washed us out, but we were like the best in the cycle. And so for some reason they
pulled us in. Cause I was like devastated. I mean, this is like 2001, like there's barely cell phones
and shit. So my family was like driving down from Illinois for graduation and they're like,
you're done. And I'm like, Holy fuck, man. I'm like going to Korea. Right. Like my dream is dead.
And after some devastating news of that, right? Like I'm trying to deal with it. And then they
pull us in there and they're like, hey, we'll give you another chance. We never fucking do this. Like it's completely against our rules.
But if you'll recycle and start Monday in the next class, it will give you that opportunity.
But you've got to go through day one.
And we were both like, well, let's do it.
And so we started again.
I went through the whole entire fucking thing again.
And then 88 people started that class and we finished
with 11 and I ended up soldier of the cycle the second time, which usually sounds like a good
thing, but I think I had a fucking, I had an advantage cause I had already went through it
once. And so besides being broken physically, I was, I was ready for everything that they threw
at us the second time.
That said, I mean, that's really like been my mentality always.
Like I put myself around people.
I mean, that's why we know each other.
That's what I mean.
I put myself around the best.
I want to compress time.
I want to not make all the fucking mistakes.
That's just kind of been my mentality always.
And it was my mentality when we went into the military too because i mean the military is a mixed bag there's some fucking douchebag assholes
in there that are fucking lazy and fat and everything else right just it's just like society
but there's also like cutting edge fucking savages right and so i wanted to be with the
group of savages when it was time to
fucking go to war. And so, and I feel the same way about business. I think it's important to have,
be surrounded by the best of the best so that you can operate at the level that you want to
and get the results that you want to. I mean, it's a long answer to it.
No, I mean, that's's you unpacked a lot there.
A couple of things, if you wouldn't mind, just because I've heard it before and I think it's so impactful.
But you kind of broke down like two or three kind of tactical things for me before of like kind of how you learned how to run a team and work within a team that you learned in the military that you've translated in business.
You don't have to give us all, but, you know, kind of give us a couple because, you know,
there was a lot of shit that when you spoke to my team that I took and immediately implemented.
You know, I don't know that I ever told you this, but after the one time you talked, you know, we really doubled down kind of on our pod leadership of out of some of the
things that you talked about. I mean, fuck, you just saw two of my guys crush it today.
Yeah.
You know, because I was like, God damn, that makes the most sense in the world. The military,
special forces does it. Why wouldn't we do it?
Well, I think what I discussed with them, the biggest thing is like,
Jocko refers to it as decentralized command, right? Everybody has to understand the mission ultimately
that you're trying to drive towards. And each person up and down the chain should be able to
execute on that mission should no one else be able to finish it, right? And like, I think that's the
biggest thing that we lose track of as business owners is we don't communicate the overall mission
and so that your team never gets bought in at the lower levels
because they think they're just paper pushers or they think their role is insignificant.
But ultimately, if you can reframe that thought process to be like, hey, motherfucker,
if all of us are dead, could you still drive this company to a billion dollars without me here?
And if you can rewire their brains to think that way,
hey, you are a really valuable asset on this team. You need to know the roles of him, him,
and him down the line and be able to execute on their roles. You don't have to be as good as them
necessarily, but if we're going to this point, you have to be able to operate each and every position on the team to an extent.
Absolutely. Yeah. Which was so powerful.
I'm going to switch gears for a second because I think this is one of the reasons we're aligned to.
Besides all that you just said, you teach people about wealth, right?
And you teach people about how to get and generate wealth. And I think that's so powerful because I call this show Wake Up to Wealth because I believe that we've all been taught wrong about money and, you can get out of the matrix.
So, you know, that's how did you transition from special forces in the military to,
you know, I want to figure this wealth shit out because I mean, that's a that's a different transition. You don't you don't hear that a lot, right? Yeah. Well, my my parlay or foray
into the corporate world was with insurance and financial services.
And so like Series 6, Series 7 type shit.
And I grew up in a tiny Midwestern town.
My mom was a schoolteacher for 38 years.
I learned conventional methodology, right?
She has a master's degree. My goal was to go to college, get a degree, go work at a company for 40 fucking years,
just like everybody else, right?
Contribute to these qualified programs where they take your fucking money and you can't
control any of it at all.
And that never sat well with me.
So like I didn't follow the model.
I went through a little bit of college, never got a degree,
didn't finish, went into the military. Immediately when I went into the corporate world and they're
like, you need to invest, I've always been a great saver. I can accumulate and amass a bunch
of money. That has always been a thing of mine, but I never really liked the traditional
methods. And the qualified programs just never made sense to me because I
just grew up with like a distrust for authority. And so like giving someone my money for them to
invest for 45 years with the promise that they're going to give it back to me when I'm 65 just
didn't fucking compute to me. Right. So that said, I took my own money, didn't contribute to my 401k.
When I was 26 years old, I bought a seven unit apartment complex.
And that's where I kind of cut my teeth in real estate.
I hopped in there very early on and then I started buying stuff from that point on.
But I do teach people about wealth because the biggest thing that I unlocked that I didn't
unlock for another 10 years was overfunded whole life insurance. Like that's my like high early cash value life
insurance policies are really what I consider the 401k for entrepreneurs. And if we buried a
shitload of money in those from the time that we were 15 to 30, there would be no workforce.
That's why you don't learn about these things. And that's why
I feel like they don't teach certain things. Plus, there's a lot of scam artists out there,
and they rip people off, and they set up the policies incorrectly, so they get a bad rap.
And there's guys like Dave Ramsey shitting on them all the time. And if you find them
where they can be written through the right companies the right way, they're the most
powerful fucking tool for wealth building you can ever imagine. Essentially family banking.
Yes. Because it provides you with what Kent Clothier talks about all the time, which is
uninterrupted compound interest for fucking ever at 6.5%. And you can't beat it. And what they tell you is they blow a bunch of bullshit up your ass about 401ks returning 10%, 11%, whatever. But they don't tell you all the fees and the taxes
and everything associated with that. So at the end of the day, you don't touch your money for 45
years and you're getting about an aggregated rate of return of 6.5 half percent too. So like, if you just get in these
correct policies, first of all, you've got a death benefit set up for your family. You're
buying your net worth for your estate essentially. And then you also have access to the fucking cash
anytime you want. And so that allows you to accelerate the cyclical rate of money.
And so like, that's one of the biggest
concepts that I teach people because it's so basic. Anyone can do it. You don't need a ton
of money. You can get started with a thousand dollars. You don't need fucking six figures of
savings to get started. And like, that is the powerful tool that you can use to buy your freedom
over a few year period. Now, if real estate's your thing,
which it's ours, and that's the next asset that you're putting it into, great. You can cycle it
again into a different asset that will make more money. But if you're super conservative and your
risk tolerance is not there, you can just chug along at 6.5% and keep feeding it. So you really
have a lot of choices with it it and it can really change the trajectory
of a family.
And that's important to me.
I think you just explained it in the simplest way I've ever heard it explained.
Cause anytime everyone tries to explain it, it's like, what the fuck are you talking about?
Yeah.
Like, and anyone that sells it when they try to explain it, I'm like, what the fuck did you just say?
Yeah.
If you don't understand
what he just said,
go back and listen to it
because it is
one of the most powerful tools
you can have.
I have them set up for me.
The minute I learned about them
and I found someone
that I could trust to do it,
I've done it.
And I've literally used it
to buy,
I borrow money against it
it earns me interest i buy assets with it you know what i mean and i've got um an eight-figure death
benefit on it today yep do you know what i mean so it's it's an amazing amazing tool if you don't
know about it to his point there's a lot of scam artists that are out there so you got to be
careful but used correctly it is a powerful tool to build wealth.
No fucking question about it.
Yeah, because as long as you can delay the gratification, you can literally lend yourself money at 0% for your entire life for anything you want to buy.
And it's a pretty incredible tool.
So you impact a lot of stuff here,
which I'm very appreciative and grateful for.
So the one thing I always ask people is,
and everybody's version is different, right?
You believe in fitness like I do,
but what is waking up to wealth?
What does that mean to you?
And there's no wrong answer,
just what is your version of it?
Oh man. It's funny, the speakers today, because that resonated with me so deeply,
because I say you are the asset all the time. You are controlling yourself, controlling your mind,
controlling your vices. When you can take control of all of that stuff, everything else just becomes easy. So when you said the money part is easy, I say the exact
same thing all the time because it's getting control of your shit, which if you can control
between what's between your ears, then you can, if you can lead yourself well, you can lead your
household well, which allows you to lead your teams well, which allows you to impact your community well. And like, for me, wealth is just making a broader impact and improving
people's lives on a regular basis. And I think that if you go into Maslow's hierarchy of needs,
like we've got enough money to eat, we're pretty comfortable with that.
Dude, so where you're saying this, because yesterday,
then not to cut you off, but I have to say this. So yesterday I trained all of the Apex. By the
way, we're in the Apex building today. We just got out of event. I trained all of the Apex sales
team and all the phone sales team. And, you know, one of the things that I, you know, talked to the Apex sales team about
was I said, you know, the second thing in Maslow's hierarchy of needs is community, right? And you
guys are selling a fucking great community. And then I also transitioned it to, if you want to
lead people, you have to build community. Cause if you don't know about Maslow's hierarchy of
needs and your leadership, you need to learn about it because right underneath food and shelter is what? Community. Community. Yeah. That's why I built
my inner circle. That's why I teach men to be more powerful leaders within their families.
Like for me, being great husbands, great fathers and making a fuckload of money is like, that's my
mission. That's what I teach people to do. That's what I talk about. It's what I'm interested in. And that's
what waking up wealthy means to me. If I can change more families and impact more guys to
step up and lead their families well and be who their wives need them to be, who their families
need them to be and be the example for their children while making a lot of fucking money,
because I think you can just make a broader impact, the more money you have. And so like that, that's what
speaks to me. Awesome. Well, brother, I, I, this has been a long time coming and I am super thankful
and grateful that I got here with you today. And thank you for pouring into us. Thanks for having
me, man. Anytime, anytime, you know, I can help you any, any way I can let me know.
Thanks so much for tuning into this episode of wake up to wealth. We sure do appreciate it.
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