エピソード

  • Lisa Larter has a strategic marketing firm, providing consulting services around strategy and business advisement. Like many entrepreneurs, Lisa started off thinking she had to do everything herself. In this episode, she shares the wisdom she’s gained from using her growth mindset to gain continual business success.

    Here’s some of what you’ll learn in this episode:

    The role of an entrepreneur in their business.The way in which Lisa’s background in retail helped her with marketing.The importance for entrepreneurs of understanding cash flow.How to make sure you’re prepared to pay taxes.What let Lisa know that her business idea “had legs.”The wisdom Lisa would impart to her past self.The variety of benefits Lisa has gotten as a member of the Strategic Coach® entrepreneurial community.

    Show Notes:

    The entrepreneur’s main capability is vision.

    There are many talented people who don’t have a purpose or a vision for using their talents.

    A lot of people understand sales and profit, but they don't understand cash flow and the timing and movement of money.

    Meet as many of the right people as you can that you want to do business with.

    People should aim to have a baseline—a certain amount of cash they want to carry in their business—and do whatever they can to avoid going below that number.

    Entrepreneurs want freedom in their lives. And money buys you freedom.

    Every entrepreneur needs some type of mentor, coach, or advisor that they can talk to when they have difficult things going on.

    You will cap your potential if you don't learn how to lead and build a team.

    If you’re entrepreneurial and you have a dream, it doesn't matter what your background or education is.

    Resources:

    Who Not How

    Profit First: Transform Your Business from a Cash-Eating Monster to a Money-Making Machine by Mike Michalowicz

    The Self-Managing Company by Dan Sullivan

  • Judi Paré is a real estate developer dedicated to building affordable homes. When Judi began her entrepreneurial journey, she didn’t know what boundaries to set in order to maximize her productivity. In this episode, Judi shares some of the changes she’s made, and the business success and growth she’s achieved as a result.

    Here’s some of what you’ll learn in this episode:

    How Judi learned to separate the roles of employee and family member.How The Strategic Coach® Program helped Judi with restructuring and reordering her business.The importance of setting boundaries and sticking to them.How Judi responds to feeling overwhelmed.The many ways Judi has ensured her business can give back to the community—and why.Why Strategic Coach® works for entrepreneurs with continuous growth mindsets.

    Show Notes:

    There is massive a shortage of homes across Canada, especially affordable homes.

    Strategic Coach takes a resource called an entrepreneur from a lower level of productivity to a higher level of productivity.

    In order to grow the company, you have to free up the entrepreneur.

    In most cases, when an entrepreneur is stuck, they’re approaching their role as though they work for a corporation.

    It's important to step away from your business because when you come back, you're able to be so much more productive.

    The important ideas that come out of Strategic Coach workshops don’t necessarily all happen in the workshop room.

    You’re never too old to learn.

    Right now, in Hamilton alone, there are up to 8,000 people waiting for suitable housing.

    People want to live where they work and people want to buy homes where they work.

    Resources:

    Unique Ability®

    Book: Who Not How by Dan Sullivan and Dr. Benjamin Hardy

    Blog: What Free Days Are, And How To Know When You Need Them

    Blog: The 4 Freedoms That Motivate Successful Entrepreneurs

    Plentitude

  • エピソードを見逃しましたか?

    フィードを更新するにはここをクリックしてください。

  • Business coach Dan Sullivan and marketing and advertising geniuses Joe Polish, Dean Jackson, and Mark Young have all been friends and business colleagues for years. Now, they’re teaming up as the Super Partners for a very special podcast episode where they talk about what marketing really means and provide examples of elegant ideas that entrepreneurs can use to better engage their audiences.

    Here’s some of what you’ll learn in this episode:

    Solutions that mean no more cold calls or door-to-door sales.The purpose of advertising.How advertising can be used to help people.The difference between marketing and sales.Why selling has gotten a bad name.What’s changed since Dan founded The Strategic Coach® Program 35 years ago.Why direct mail is still the greatest form of marketing in the world.

    Show Notes:

    Everyone who has a business is going to have to do marketing and selling.

    One elegant idea is worth more than 1,000 semi-good ideas.

    Perfect has become the enemy of good.

    Anything you put in front of somebody is marketing.

    Only the hungriest fish snap at the crappiest bait.

    Once you figure out marketing, it's the ultimate leverage.

    Marketing is the aggregate of all the steps you take to go from somebody not knowing you all the way to them being engaged in a relationship with you.

    Once you figure out a marketing algorithm, it works again and again.

    You can create control in your future if you learn how to put a message out there that causes people to want to give you money.

    There are businesses that die of starvation, and there are businesses that die of indigestion.

    The average person receives between 5,000 and 24,000 advertising messages daily.

    Part of sales is just connecting with someone.

    People don't buy from you because they understand what you do. People buy from you because they feel understood.

    Dan’s definition of selling is getting someone intellectually engaged in a future result that's good for them and getting them to emotionally commit to take action to achieve that result.

    Resources:

    I Love Marketing podcast

    10xTalk podcast

    American Happiness podcast

    Cloudlandia podcast

    HYPNO-TI$ING by Mark Young

    Video: “Is Selling Evil?” by Joe Polish

    Who Not How by Dan Sullivan and Dr. Ben Hardy

    The Gap And The Gain by Dan Sullivan and Dr. Ben Hardy

    10x Is Easier Than 2x by Dan Sullivan and Dr. Ben Hardy

    Strategic Coach®

    Mark Young

    Jekyll + Hyde Labs

    Dean Jackson

    The 8 Profit Activators

    Joe Polish

    Genius Recovery

    What’s Your Cleator?

  • Up until six or seven years ago, Nikki Fraser’s career consisted of working in large banks. Now, she’s an entrepreneur. Nikki and her husband, Dan, run a company called NextKey Services that provides small and medium-sized businesses with all of their outsourced finance needs. In this episode, Nikki shares what’s allowed her to make the biggest impact she can as an entrepreneur while having the personal life she wants.

    Here’s some of what you’ll learn in this episode:

    What inspired Nikki’s decision to leave corporate America.How The Strategic Coach® Program has been fundamental in the growth of Nikki and Dan’s business.Some of the business lessons Nikki has learned on her journey.Why Nikki and Dan don’t take it for granted that they’re able to work together.How to end up in a place where you're really focused on what you do best.Why corporate America can never produce the best product or the best service.What it’s like attending Strategic Coach® workshops as a couple.

    Show Notes:

    If something is going to be successful, it requires total commitment.

    You have to be committed before you have the capability. And that requires courage.

    Corporate America, as most people experience it, is not for entrepreneurs.

    Entrepreneurism means that you're using your own Unique Ability® to create Unique Teamwork that produces really unusual value.

    It's important to be okay with not having all the answers.

    It’s okay if something you try out doesn’t work. Keep trying.

    Finance isn’t a compliance; it's something entrepreneurs or business owners can use as a strategic asset in their business to grow and transform.

    You can pass on wealth to your kids, but passing on the right mindset is more important because then they can retain the wealth or even build their own.

    It’s important to have time to turn off.

    Being in a safe space with supportive, encouraging, like-minded individuals really gives you more confidence.

    As you keep using a Strategic Coach thinking tool, it gets easier and easier.

    Resources:

    The 4 C’s Formula by Dan Sullivan

    Article: The 4 Freedoms That Motivate Successful Entrepreneurs

    Unique Ability

    Who Not How by Dan Sullivan and Dr. Benjamin Hardy

    The Gap And The Gain by Dan Sullivan and Dr. Benjamin Hardy

  • Ann and Sunny Sheu are not only life partners, they’re partners on their entrepreneurial journeys. With their business, Mpowered Families, they help high-achieving entrepreneurial couples to be as intentional about their family lives as they are about their business lives. In this episode, Ann and Sunny share what it’s like to be in business with the person you’re married to, how they apply business lessons to their personal lives, and the benefits they get from business coaches and fellow members in The Strategic Coach® Program.

    Here’s some of what you’ll learn in this episode:

    How Strategic Coach® workshops are like a clarity break for Ann and Sunny.Where Ann and Sunny’s work overlaps, and where it doesn’t.How Mpowered Families workshops have immediate impact on families.What led Sunny to stop being a slave to the business.How improving your personal life and improving your business life feed each other.The danger of trying to be what you think people expect.Why being a Strategic Coach member is really about the mindset shifts.

    Show Notes:

    If you want to change your behavior, you first have to change your mindset.

    Many entrepreneurs don’t create the time and space to do for their families what they do for their businesses.

    Your family is the most important team in your life.

    When your family life is strong, then you have the space to give your all to your business.

    To build a great family life, you have to first do the work on yourself.

    What often happens in families is that people bring a very diluted version of themselves to the table.

    If you can’t clearly articulate what you want out of life, you won’t know how to ask for what you want.

    Once you're clear about who you are individually, you and your partner can come together and create a shared vision.

    It’s not always easy for a couple to have an aligned vision for their family, but there are always commonalities.

    Very rarely do people think a decade ahead for their personal lives.

    Resources:

    Unique Ability®

    Article: “What Free Days Are And How To Know When You Need Them”

    Article: “The 4 Freedoms That Motivate Successful Entrepreneurs”

    Article: “The Importance Of Collaboration In Business: Leveraging Who Not How”

    mpoweredfamilies.com

    Ann Sheu on LinkedIn

    Sunny Sheu on LinkedIn

  • From the age of 12, Molly Thompson knew she was different. She looked at the world differently and thought about the world differently, too, and it caused no shortage of problems. Now, she is the CEO of Perrysburg Energy Solutions, a company providing organizations—and communities—with compelling, mission-driven energy solutions. In this episode, Molly shares how she learned to embrace her uniqueness, the driving force behind her business success, and how her current project became a massive community collaboration. She also reveals how, through Strategic CoachⓇ tools and community, she learned to trust her intuition, think 10x instead of being limited by self-doubt, and turn perceived obstacles into opportunities. Tune in to learn more about embracing individuality and staying true to your vision as an entrepreneur!

    Here’s some of what you’ll learn in this episode:

    How Molly recognized her entrepreneurial mindset from a young age of 12 and saw the world differently.Her early entrepreneurial ventures, like co-authoring a book and developing a TV show.How she overcame challenges as an entrepreneur who didn't fit traditional corporate molds.Her experience being diagnosed with ADHD and how she strategically leveraged it.How she used tools from Strategic Coach to understand her unique brain wiring and thought processes.What makes for a transformational experience for a customer.What happens when an entrepreneur gets bored.How Molly took her commercial lighting business to the next level with a visionary solar project.Her innovative approach to collaborating with multiple stakeholders across sectors.

    Show Notes:

    Molly knew from age 12 that she was an entrepreneur at heart, seeing the world differently than others.

    Successful entrepreneurs often have a sense of being different or not fitting into traditional molds from a young age.

    This early recognition of their distinctiveness can be a driving force behind their entrepreneurial endeavors.

    It also helps them develop unique capabilities very early in life— and often makes them unemployable as a result.

    Young people are often pressured to conform and be like everybody else, but successful entrepreneurs learn to tune out the noise.

    The biggest danger for an entrepreneur is boredom.

    An ideal is like the horizon: you can never reach it.

    It's a lot easier to ask for a million dollars than it is to ask for $200,000.

    There’s value in taking a step back and thinking about things.

    Obstacles are simply opportunities for growth and transformation.

    Resources:

    Book: I Am Diva!: Every Woman's Guide to Outrageous Living, by Molly Thompson, Elena Bates, Maureen O’Crean, and Carilyn Vaile

    Book: The Gap and the Gain, by Ben Hardy and Dan Sullivan

    Book: 10x Is Easier Than 2x, by Ben Hardy and Dan Sullivan

    The Strategic CoachⓇ Signature Program

    Glass City River Wall

  • Greg Griffith has been in risk management and risk control for 38 years. For the past 11 years, he’s been a member of The Strategic Coach® Program, an experience he’s found “life changing and game changing.” In this episode, Greg shares some of the invaluable wisdom he’s gained from Strategic Coach® and why his entrepreneurial life is easier now.

    Here’s some of what you’ll learn in this episode:

    The Strategic Coach thinking tool for getting instant focus on something that's important to you.How Greg figured out he could help people dealing with risk.The interview with business coach Dan Sullivan that led Greg to Strategic Coach.The importance of Strategic Coach clients’ life partners embracing Strategic Coach tools.

    Show Notes:

    Entrepreneurs need to have a life partner who gives them total support for what they’re doing in their entrepreneurial life.

    For some entrepreneurs, the easy part of their lives is the day at work, and the tough part is the night at home.

    An entrepreneur’s best relationship has to be the one that they have committed themselves to for an entire lifetime.

    Trying to go through Strategic Coach when the person you're in a relationship with isn't buying into the Program can be a struggle.

    The approach in Strategic Coach is that your entrepreneurial life is your entire life.

    Only about 5% of the working population ever has the commitment and courage to go out and face the marketplace straight on.

    If entrepreneurs don’t succeed, they don’t eat.

    Before seeking a partner, get your thinking straight on what makes someone a person you want to be in a relationship with.

    Resources:

    The Team+ Programs

    The Impact Filter™

    Article: “What Free Days Are And How To Know When You Need Them”

    Your Life As A Strategy Circle by Dan Sullivan

    Thinking About Your Thinking by Dan Sullivan

    The Unique EDGE® Program for 18- to 24-year olds

    Article: “The 4 Freedoms That Motivate Successful Entrepreneurs”

    Deep D.O.S. Innovation by Dan Sullivan

  • Ken Robinson had a certain idea about how to be a more valuable financial planner than most. And when he couldn’t find anyone to hire him to do it, he created his own opportunity. In this episode, Ken shares the business lessons and entrepreneur ideas that led him to his success in holistic financial planning, and what’s allowed him to bring the greatest value he can to the right type of clients.

    Here’s some of what you’ll learn in this episode:

    Why Ken decided he had to become an entrepreneur.Which Strategic Coach® thinking tool Ken has framed in his office.How Ken is transitioning to just focusing on what he loves doing.What holistic financial planning entails.How Ken’s path forward became crystal clear to him.Why Ken plans to keep going to Strategic Coach workshops as long as he can.

    Show Notes:

    The educational system was designed to make you well-rounded, which means you divide your efforts instead of focusing exclusively on what you like doing and what you’re great at.

    It’s possible to get somewhere even if you don’t know what the map looks like.

    Your next step requires you to do things you don't know how to do yet.

    There are always going to be ups and downs in the economy.

    When you get rid of the clients that are a bad fit, you have more energy for your other clients.

    An entrepreneur can outsource the assembly of their team.

    It’s okay for you to want to improve your experience as an entrepreneur.

    You don’t need an advanced degree to understand Strategic Coach thinking tools.

    It takes insight to say, “Let's not make this any more complicated than it needs to be.”

    Resources:

    Unique AbilityⓇ

    The Four C’s Formula by Dan Sullivan

    Article: The Four Freedoms That Motivate Successful Entrepreneurs

    The Gap and the Gain by Dan Sullivan and Ben Hardy

  • Almost 31 years ago, 18-year-old Max Emma immigrated with his family to the United States from the former Soviet Union. Now, Max is the CEO of BooXkeeping, a bookkeeping franchise organization operating in the U.S., with offices in Europe, and the Philippines, with plans for expansion into South America. In this episode of the Multiplier Mindset Podcast, in a story that stands testament to the power of entrepreneurial resilience and drive, Max shares how he went from bankruptcy to business triumph, and the many lessons and insights he learned along the way.

    Here's some of what you'll learn in this episode

    The ingenious way Max learned to speak English.How Max bounced back after bankruptcy.Why Max’s company eventually expanded beyond the United States.How Max wrote the initial business plan for his company on a napkin in just four hours.How his business grew after joining The Strategic CoachⓇ Program.Why Max’s unique area of focus has changed.The significance of journaling for entrepreneurs.

    Show Notes:

    The ties between North America and South America are going to be a growth opportunity as we go forward over the next 25 years.

    Speaking English is an important entrepreneurial skill in the United States.

    What seems like a failure might actually be the beginning of the next step.

    When you don’t grow, you die.

    Entrepreneurs need to give up doing what isn’t their job.

    It’s important to keep investing in coaching because you don’t know what you don’t know.

    If your team members are successful, you’re successful.

    When someone gives you a tool, consider it sooner than later.

    The sooner you join an organization like Strategic Coach®, the sooner you can become successful and take your company to the next level.

    Links:

    Unique Ability®

    Your Business Is a Theatre Production: Your Back Stage Shouldn't Show on the Front Stage

    The Gap and the Gain by Dan Sullivan and Dr.Benjamin Hardy

    Time Management Strategies for Entrepreneurs (Effective Strategies Only)

  • In one of our favorite episodes, entrepreneur Leslie Fall shares how a team member who helped get her to a certain level of success was no longer helping the company grow. Leslie explains how, by employing the concept of “multiplication by subtraction,” she overcame the problem to great benefit, plus other gains she’s made since taking advantage of business coaching through Strategic Coach.

    Here’s some of what you’ll learn in this episode:

    What Leslie gets out of being in a community of like-minded entrepreneurs.The changes a colleague has noticed in Leslie since she joined Strategic Coach.How Leslie introduces Strategic Coach thinking tools to her colleagues.How her team now gets four months’ worth of work done in under a week.

    Show Notes:

    Sometimes, you have to let go of what your job typically is in order to let team members grow.

    For reasons of fit or reasons of competence, a team member can hold you back.

    It can take a fresh perspective to notice inefficiencies in your process.

    It’s exciting to see where people will go once their time has been freed up.

    When people have the time and mental energy, they’ll be more alert, curious, responsive, and resourceful.

    Team members who are freed up have time to think about other opportunities for revenue.

    You're probably only relying on your team 50% of what you could be.

    The minute you think of a new idea, think about who can help you with it.

    Resources:

    Who Not How by Dan Sullivan and Dr. Benjamin Hardy

    Unique Ability®

    Multiplication By Subtraction by Shannon Waller

    Free Days™ – The Entrepreneur’s Guide To Time Management

  • A few years ago, Chase Dansie found himself limited by Lyme disease. Now, he’s grateful for the experience. In this episode, Chase talks about how Strategic Coach® helped him through a very hard time and how he’s using his orthodontist practice to improve people’s lives.

    Here's some of what you'll learn in this episode:

    What allowed Chase to finally join The Strategic Coach® Program.How Chase learned that you can take something horrible and turn it into something useful.The signs of Lyme disease and the importance of getting the right diagnosis and treatment.Some of the positive by-products that came out of Chase having Lyme disease.What gets Chase up and going in the morning.

    Show Notes:

    An entrepreneur going about things alone develops all sorts of bad habits.

    The biggest problem for entrepreneurs is being alone and having no one to talk to about both your challenges and your successes.

    None of us celebrate our progress enough.

    The Strategic Coach Program isn’t centred on the business. It’s focused on you as a person.

    When something comes up and you don’t know what to do, Strategic Coach has processes you can follow that will help you get solutions.

    You can interpret your past experiences however you want to.

    You feel more normal when you’re in a community of people with similar challenges and obstacles to yours.

    If you’re experiencing a health challenge, it’s comforting to know you’re not the only one.

    Strategic Coach clients have a kind of shared language.

    Surrounding yourself with people, and having connections with others, can help you pull through some very difficult times.

    When you’re aware of the challenges someone is having, it lets you have compassion for them like you never would have before.

    Resources:

    How To Measure Success In Business Effectively With A Proven System - The Gap And The Gain

    Wanting What You Want by Dan Sullivan

    Unique Ability

  • Peter Denbigh grew up in what he describes as “the middle of nowhere,” Virginia. He wanted more, and as soon as he was old enough, he used his entrepreneurial mindset to start earning money. In this episode, Peter shares the many business lessons he’s learned from growing his own companies.

    Here's some of what you'll learn in this episode:

    How Peter learned to think long term.The tech company he founded while he was a university student.How Peter recovered from a dark time in his career.How he created one of the best-selling games of 2016.What The Strategic Coach® Program has given him.

    Show Notes:

    The Strategic Coach Program was designed for entrepreneurs who are active and “all over the place.”

    It’s a tremendous strength to realize that being an entrepreneur is a life sentence.

    Luck is involved in entrepreneurial success, but the entrepreneur needs the capability of taking advantage of luck.

    The more value they provide, and the faster they can provide it, the more an entrepreneur gets paid for their time.

    When you’re a little bored and you have your eyes open, interesting opportunities come your way.

    Kickstarter lets you test a product and validate it, and if it works, you get money.

    An idea is worthless without persistent and productive execution.

    You don’t need permission to say, “This is how I’m going to be in the world.”

    The ride is what teaches you to hang on.

    Some people are born with the permission to be themselves, but a lot of people aren’t.

    If it doesn’t excite you, it isn’t worth doing.

    Resources:

    The Gap And The Gain by Dan Sullivan and Dr. Benjamin Hardy

    Who Not How by Dan Sullivan and Dr. Benjamin Hardy

    10x Is Easier Than 2x by Dan Sullivan and Dr. Benjamin Hardy

    How to Expand Your Team's Unique Ability®

    The Impact Filter™

    Kolbe

    CliftonStrengths®

  • Dan Sullivan and guest Darcy Luoma dive into an extraordinary and unbelievable journey of resilience, reinvention, and triumph in the face of an unprecedented personal challenge. Darcy’s unwavering spirit and strategic approach are a true inspiration for all entrepreneurs navigating their own obstacles.

    Here's some of what you'll learn in this episode:

    The initial obstacles Darcy faced when becoming an entrepreneur, and how she overcame them.The traumatic experience Darcy had to work through while figuring out how to continue to run her business.Why Darcy was in a position to test drive her own concepts in the most extreme way.How Darcy prepared for business success before launching her business.The big risk Darcy took at a critical time, and how it paid off.What Darcy gets out of Strategic Coach.

    Show Notes:

    Running for elected office is a purely entrepreneurial activity.

    We’re not in control of what happens in the world, but we’re in control of our responses to what happens.

    Entrepreneurs transform situations from huge negatives to breakthrough positives.

    Strategic Coach is a thinking tool culture.

    If you have an anchor client, then you don’t have to fear that you need to say yes to everything.

    The entire business of an entrepreneur can be based on the entrepreneur’s reputation.

    Good people do bad things, and it doesn’t mean they’re bad people.

    If you want to handle your challenges thoughtfully, and you want to have strong relationships, you need to train and practice to be thoughtfully fit.

    Having an entrepreneurial business means you get to test things.

    Resources:

    The Strategy Circle®

    The R-Factor Question®

    10x Is Easier Than 2x by Dan Sullivan and Dr. Benjamin Hardy

    The Impact Filter™

    Unique Ability®

  • Ben Laws is the CEO of multiple companies. What’s more, after eight years as a Strategic Coach® member, Ben has just become an associate coach and will lead his own workshop groups. In this episode, Ben shares key points from his entrepreneurial journey and the value of Strategic Coach thinking tools.

    Here's some of what you'll learn in this episode:

    How to increase your four entrepreneurial freedoms.What made Ben think at an early age that he didn’t belong in an employee role.How Ben realized he was destined to be in the entrepreneurial world.Why he almost got fired from his first job after college.What led Ben to Strategic Coach.

    Show Notes:

    The more thinking tools you learn, the more your freedoms multiply.

    Entrepreneurs see risk differently than non-entrepreneurs.

    You can develop a lack of fear through failing.

    Failures point out opportunities to hone your craft.

    Paying for coaching is an investment, not an expense.

    Show up every day looking for how you can be wildly helpful.

    It’s far more effective to pull people along than to push them along.

    Resources:

    Video: Why It’s Crucial For Entrepreneurs To Expand Their Four Freedoms

    The Strategic Coach Program

    Article: How To Foster A Longevity Mindset & Reap The Benefits

  • Years ago, Susan Latremoille thought to combine the benefits of working for a large organization with the freedom of doing her own thing. Now, she runs a wealth management advising company with her partner. In this episode, Susan shares how she became an entrepreneur, how she realized she was an entrepreneur, and what’s helped her find both business success and balance in her life.

    Here's some of what you'll learn in this episode:

    How Susan’s company is on the ground floor of a new industry, retirement lifestyle planning.What gave Susan her first insight into entrepreneurism.Why Susan likes to push people beyond their comfort level.How The Strategic Coach® Program has been fundamental to Susan’s success in business and life.How Next Chapter Lifestyle Advisors are helping financial advisors provide value to clients.Why hiring team members is an investment.

    Show Notes:

    Retirement works better if you have a plan.

    A lot of things that are happening in the world of technology are automating the role of a financial advisor.

    Being a financial advisor is extremely entrepreneurial because you don’t get handed clients.

    Very few clients want to know the ins and outs of how markets work.

    Instead of competing, you can turn your competitors into your clients.

    The role of a good financial advisor is to understand the clients’ needs and bring them information in a way that’s meaningful and helpful to them.

    Financial advisors aren’t typically trained in the softer, more human elements of their roles.

    You have to understand the life of the client before you can do a meaningful financial plan for them.

    Financial products more or less sell themselves because they are driven by the financial plan.

    Resources:

    The RichLife: Managing Wealth and Purpose by Susan Latremoille

    9 Steps to a RichLife Retirement by Susan Latremoille

    Deep D.O.S. Innovation by Dan Sullivan

    Unique Ability®

    Who Not How by Dan Sullivan and Dr. Benjamin Hardy

  • Real estate attorney Matt Goodwin was fired after working at a law firm for six months. Within three hours of getting fired, he decided to start his own law firm. Now he runs a business focused on real estate transactions throughout the state of Florida, with multiple locations in the state. In this episode, he shares how his mindset and his entrepreneur motivation has led him to business success.

    Here's some of what you'll learn in this episode:

    Why Matt had to seek out his own mentors.How Matt has gone 10x multiple times.Matt’s mentality of acting like he owned the place even when he was an employee.How Matt balances his work life and his family life.Why Matt wasn’t open to all business when he started out as an entrepreneur.

    Show Notes:

    There’s a certain amount you can learn by just reading, and cold calling people.

    If you don’t like to be told what to do or how to do it, don’t be an employee—you’ll probably get fired over and over again!

    When entrepreneurs start off, they need one client to give them the margin of time and cash flow they need to pay their bills.

    You can get more referrals by narrowing your focus.

    Hard times growing up can make a person who they are as an adult.

    Entrepreneurs often learn early that they don’t have an employee mindset.

    Successful entrepreneurs kill off all alternatives except doing what they have their mindset on.

    If you do everything yourself, you’ll learn a lot along the way.

    Success with even just one client can give you the confidence and experience you need to market yourself everywhere.

    Developing thick skin can help you have greater confidence.

  • Leaving El Salvador for the U.S. as a political refugee when he was three years old, José Barrios always felt like he was different from others. He didn’t realize for many years that this was because he’s an entrepreneur. Now, Jose owns a janitorial and maintenance company that operates in two states. In this episode, José tells all about his journey to business success.

    Here's some of what you'll learn in this episode:

    Why being an immigrant entrepreneur can be an advantage.How José discovered what he loves doing.How The Strategic Coach® Program is “the gift that keeps on giving.”How José finds value in people who are often overlooked.

    Show Notes:

    Being an entrepreneur is something you’re either born with or not.

    Entrepreneurs don’t fit in everywhere they go.

    It’s a double-edged sword having an entrepreneurial mindset without the tools and the framework for it.

    One thing all Strategic Coach thinking tools have in common is that you can start applying them immediately.

    Strategic Coach clients can always be collaborating with more and more people.

    When you feel like you belong, you have more purpose.

    People are attracted to individuals who have purpose and freedom.

    Resources:

    Leverage: Operational Efficiency Training & Consulting

    The Entrepreneur’s Guide To Time Management

    Shannon Waller’s Team Success Podcast

  • As a child, Stuart Green was obsessed with what went on under the water. The UK entrepreneur became educated in fisheries, including by immersing himself in various coastal communities. He came to realize that the whole system wasn’t working very well, so he’s spent the past 25 years seeking solutions to the problem. In this episode, Stuart explains the fishing problems the world has and the entrepreneur ideas and mindset he’s using to find solutions.

    Here's some of what you'll learn in this episode:

    The business complexities that Stuart’s company simplifies for clients.How the fishing business is about balancing social progress with economics.The importance of understanding what drives your audience and your stakeholders.How Stuart came to understand what the business is really about.

    Show Notes:

    Earth isn’t really a planet; it’s a planet ocean.

    Most people underestimate the GDP of the world’s oceans.

    The GDP of oceans is about $3.1 trillion per annum, which is about 3% of the world’s GDP.

    Almost half the people on the planet depend on the oceans for their livelihood.

    15% of global protein comes from fish.

    Humans need to be incentivized to stop taking the oceans for granted.

    Several types of small-scale fishers are always overlooked and rarely given voice.

    If you have a grand vision but no metrics, you won’t know where you’re going.

    Initiatives created without consulting the community won’t fit.

    The real art in a solution is making it appropriate to local needs.

    You can take problems and turn them into solutions.

    Resources:

    Your Life As A Strategy Circle by Dan Sullivan

    Deep D.O.S. Innovation by Dan Sullivan

  • Andreas Wilhelmsson started his first company when he was 17. As a young entrepreneur, he approached the largest supermarket chain in Sweden, where he lives, and asked what it would take to become their main supplier of produce. Now, at the age of 33, he grows healthy greens in a way that lets him provide sustainable food year-round. In this episode, Andreas shares what it’s taken to find his business success—including his growth mindset and his evolving entrepreneur motivation—and lessons he’s learned along the way.

    Here's some of what you'll learn in this episode:

    The two passions that led to Andreas’s current company.His advice for anyone looking to embark on an entrepreneurial career path.How a success streak can put an entrepreneur in danger.Why Andreas joined The Strategic Coach® Program.Why he’s taken himself out of the day-to-day management of his company.

    Show Notes:

    Teenagers can’t even imagine a 25-year goal, but they can still dare to dream big.

    Do something small every day that will get you closer to your big goal.

    Don’t start with marketing. Start by going out and selling to the customer.

    If you’re too stuck in your own mindset, you won’t dare to ask for help.

    If you can’t figure out a solution, ask someone who’s done it before, and do what they did.

    To fill challenging roles, you need to find people who enjoy those challenges.

    If you challenge people, that can provide inspiration and energy.

    Sharing your challenges is the way you grow.

    The more time you take completely off work, the more you’re rejuvenated.

    In general, people underestimate how much you get done when you’re doing the work you’re meant to do.

    Resources:

    The Self-Managing Company by Dan Sullivan

    Unique Ability®

    The Entrepreneur’s Guide To Time Management

    Thinking About Your Thinking by Dan Sullivan

  • Joe Stolte is an entrepreneur working at the crosshairs of marketing and artificial intelligence. His company, http://Daily.ai , uses machine learning to help thought leaders and small brands build AI-automated email newsletters. In this episode, he explains how his company supports clients in achieving business success and talks about the business lessons learned from his company’s early days.

    Here's some of what you'll learn in this episode:

    The entrepreneur ideas and entrepreneur motivation Joe showed at a very young age.How Joe’s company finds the best content in the world on any topic clients choose.What it means to have short-term pessimism and long-term optimism.How the AI becomes smarter, making the newsletters better.The change in mentality that’s given http://Daily.ai an edge.

    Show Notes:

    When it seems everything out there is negative, what grabs your attention is the stuff that’s positive.

    It’s a win-win to partner with people who already have a marketplace of your potential clients.

    An entrepreneur doesn’t have to be the one with the idea.

    If you focus only on customers that are a good fit for your company, they’ll refer you to other people.

    ChatGPT has given people a taste of the exponential power behind machine learning and AI.

    If you get your clients their desired outcomes, the outputs don’t really matter.

    During tough times, you have to manage your expectations.

    You know you always need to get better, even during good times.

    Ads almost always get less than 50% conversion.

    Anything in excess becomes its opposite.

    Resources:

    The Spark newsletter

    Who Not How by Dan Sullivan and Ben Hardy

    The Impact Filter™ tool