REAL AF with Andy Frisella
REAL AF with Andy Frisella

1033. Q&AF: Maintaining Momentum, Making Right Business Decisions & Developing Urgency

1h ago48:309,017 words
0:000:00

On today's episode, Andy answers your questions on how to keep your momentum going, how to trust yourself to make the right decisions in business, and how to build the skill of urgency instead of putt...

Transcript

EN

[Music]

What is up, guys? It's Andy Pricella. And this is the show for the realists, say goodbye to the lies, the fitness and delusions about our society, and welcome to another fucking reality guys today.

As always on Mondays, we have Q&AF.

That's where you submit the questions that we give you the answers.

If you want to submit some questions to be answered on the show, you could do so, DJ, I'll tell you how.

Guys, you can email your questions into Ask Andy at AndyFersella.com. You can also click the link in the description below and submit them. There, or just drop them in the comment section of the Q&AF videos on YouTube. Tomorrow, you're going to hear CTI that's crews, the internet. That's where we put topics of the day up on the screen.

We talk about what's going on. We speculate on what we think is actually going on. And then we talk about how we the people have to solve these problems going on in the world. Other times we'll have real talk. This is 5 to 20 minutes and we give you a little rant. And then we'll have 75 hard verses. 75 hard verses is where people who have completed the 75 hard program come on the show. They talk about how they were before, how they are now, and how they use

the 75 hard program to fix their shit. If you're unfamiliar with 75 hard is the initial phase of the live-hard program, which is the world's most famous mental transformation program in history, okay? You can get that entire program for free at episode 2-0-8 on the audio feed. Again, it's 2-0-8 on the audio feed. You can also go to AndyFersella.com and buy the book on mental toughness. The book on mental toughness has the entire live-hard program plus a whole bunch of other

content about mental toughness, how to cultivate it, why it's important, and how to use it to become the best version of yourself. All right? Now, one thing about this show, we are the biggest show in the world that doesn't run ads. Period. All right? The reason we don't run ads is because I'm not for sale. Everything I say is what I think. It is very authentic and I don't want anybody

saying this or that or thinking that I'm getting paid to not say or say anything. So basically,

I do whatever I want and I ask very simply that you help us grow the show if you like it. All right? So if it makes you think, if it makes you laugh, it gives you new perspective. If you learn some shit, which you absolutely will, especially on Q&AFs, do it's a favor and don't be a ho. Sure, this show. All right. What's up, man? What are those deals? Yes. Yep. I'm going to try to speak a different language every episode. Oh, yeah. Let's see how that goes.

You should start with English. All right. I think that this will be my last another. I know more.

All right. Stay on dog. How are you doing? You're all right? I'm good. So there's like a net one up there. This is desktop and over there. Come on, man. You shot me. You fucking served that up pretty easy. I mean, you know, you got it. You got to do it. I was defensive. I was type of certain notes. That's something up earlier. Mike looked at me. He's like, they're not going to think you wrote that. I'm like, why? He's like, because everything's spelled right. Yeah. You know, so listen, you know, I might be

still be a little sensitive on that subject. You know, but it's fine, man. Everything's good. It's a big week, man. Yeah. It's got a match week week. Dude. It's, uh, we're rolling. Yeah. That's going to be a good time. It's going to be a great time. Dude. Yes. It's so crazy to like, you know, people don't understand this, but like, if you want shit to be right and like fucking perfect, because you can't get their bro. Yeah. The amount of planning and prep the has to go into that. Like people think you can

like shit. Dude, we've just started planning this. We start planning next year, summer smash, the

week after summer smash. 100%. Yeah. The first thing we do is we sit down and we talk about, um,

debrief, everything that happened, how it went, what we liked, what we didn't like and how we're going to make it better next year. That way, the idea is are all fresh right away. So we started working on that immediately. Yeah. Like actively next week. On Monday, our Tuesday, we will sit down and we will debrief the entire thing and we'll make the plan for next year. Yeah. And we'll start working on it. And you got people out here thinking this should just happen. Yeah. Of course.

How's everything else? Yeah. And it's weird too, dude, because it's like a, there's like, it's keeping it in lucky man. I don't know. That's what it is. Yeah. That's what it is. It's lucky for

them near 30 fucking years. You know, that's what it is. Yeah. No, but you, you have to, you have those

people who think it needs requires no preparation. Yeah. Then you have the other group of people who feels like it's all preparation and no execution. Dude. Yeah. What the fuck is that about? Well, I think, you know, it's two different mindsets, right? The person who prepares and consumes and plans

Consumes some more, they're lacking courage.

requirement to succeed. You cannot win. You cannot build. You cannot create. You cannot become unless

you go. And so a lot of people will overplay and over prepare and tell themselves, well, I'm just making sure I got everything set up. You know, and I'm just making sure I know what I need to know. Most of what you know, you're going to learn doing it. This is no different than working at Burger King, bro. You can read the manual, but you're not going to know how to make a fucking water until you're making them. All right. That's the same with anything. You know, these guys go to flight school

to be fighter pilots. They read the manual. They don't learn shit until they're in the plane.

Right. Okay. Like, this is, this is how it works. Yeah. So you have to be willing to go. And so when

people over prepare, it's, it's to compensate for their lack of courage. And then when people don't prepare at all, that's an ego problem. Those people have some sort of belief that comes from somewhere, that they believe that they are better than everybody else by just existing. And that's an arrogance and an ego problem. And those people lose as well. And we see that a lot, especially after someone has had a few wins. Right. People get what I call the mightest touch. They believe

because they've had a few wins. And they've done a few things that everything they do. And and everything that they're going to do is going to win because of who they are now. And that's

just not reality. It's, it's arrogance. And that'll get you killed just as much as the guy who never

goes. So it's a problem on both ends. Yeah. It's so, it's so crazy. But yeah, dude, it's going to be a

great fucking week. I'm excited for it. Excited to see some of you guys there as well. Yeah, it's going

to be awesome. And hell, yeah, man. But yeah. So let's get this week kicked off with a bang. Let's do it with a shabang. Yeah. Yeah, man. Let's have, we got, we got a long week ahead of us. So let's make some people better today. Guys, Andy, I got three go at once for you. Question number one. Andy, recently, I have been struggling with transferring momentum from one day to another. I've heard you talk about how successful people will do anything to keep them momentum. And I'm wondering

how big of a problem this is if I can't keep it going, need some advice. You haven't built it yet. Moment of carries you. If you have a problem going from one day to the next day, I mean, you don't have momentum. That's the definition of fucking momentum. You've created energy that is pushing you and you catch it. And it makes things feel like they're effortless. Okay. Momentum is not something that you catch accidentally. It's not something that just happens.

Okay. If you look at every single time in your life where everything has become nearly effortless, where you're in the zone, you're locked in, you're kicking ass. Everything seems to be working. That is a result of you forcing the execution for so many days before that. All right. Usually for people, it's about 10 to 12 days of force before the momentum kicks in. And when I say 10 to 12 days of force, I mean, you're going to have to force it. Yeah. All right.

If you get to a point and you think like after two days, you're supposed to have this momentum, you haven't been doing it long enough. You don't have the momentum. So you got to build it in order to keep it. And the reason that you don't feel like that is because you haven't built it yet. It's not some magical force that shows up after two days, bro. Yeah. Here you go, Billy. Yeah. And by the way, the less discipline you are, the longer it takes to build. So in the beginning,

let's just say you're an undisciplined human and you're going to start to work out and train. That could take you 20, 30 some days to really get locked in. But if you're someone who has a high level of discipline that has been developed that just needs to be sharpened up because it's a perishable skill and we need to make sure that that could be three days. It could be four days. Like for me, it's about 10 days. Okay. But it used to be like 30, 40 days. All right. So I'm talking

about like 10 years ago. All right. So when you have that discipline muscle developed to a certain level and you know what it is and you know how to utilize it, you know how to leverage it. The amount of time it takes to create the locked in momentum that you're looking for is much shorter. Here's the reality dude. You don't have it. That's it. You don't have it. You got to do it longer than what you're doing it.

And those days where you're like, oh man, I don't feel like doing it. That's the important day.

That's the most important day. Okay. The most important day is the day that you don't feel like

doing it that you actually do it because that's where the growth comes from. That's where the extra

Discipline muscle comes from.

it's not going to be just easy when you have the momentum. You're still going to have to apply yourself.

It's not like I think the way the questions framed and maybe it's framed wrong. I don't know. But it sounds like this person thinks it's like magic. Like, oh man, I got trouble. No shit, man. Like, you don't think that I have trouble doing what the fuck I need to do 27 years into this game. There's days when there's days when I have, you know, a hundred days of wins in a row. And then a day shows up and I'm like, fuck, I don't want to do this, man. But then I think,

well, I got a hundred days in a row. And that adds extra pressure for me to force that through.

And that's what I'm talking about what people do when they've created that momentum because

dude, it only takes two or three days to get totally washed out of that. Yeah. So, um, and that's why in 75

hard, the rule, the rule is that if you fail, you start over the next day. All right. But a lot of people

seem to forget that because they say, oh, I'm going to start again after this or after that or after this, that's why you are where you are because you're telling yourself some bullshit. Okay, you're just ifying it. You're making a negotiation. You're trying to make it convenient. You're fucking fail. You pick up right after that. And there's a lesson in that. It's designed that way for a reason because if you are living your life and you have a hundred days in a row of kicking ass,

and you have one bad day, you don't want that one bad day to turn into seven. And then you be totally downhill from there. All right. So, you got to pick right back up. But, you know, a lot of people seem to ignore that. Yeah. I'm a very visual learner, right? If you think about it, just so we're clear. When you pick up that day, okay, let's say you're, let's say you're 300 pounds and you want to be 220. You want to be 250. Okay. You're probably not going to lose that much weight 75 days. I would

say the chances are you're not. Well, let's say you get to day 40 and then you have a bad day. And then you start right back over the next day. Now you've got another 75 days. And like real talk,

you can probably hit that goal if you do that. That's what it's teaching you. Okay. It's teaching you

that when you have one bad day, that's not an excuse to turn into two or three or four. And then lose control of your entire shit. And a lot of people fail to understand that there's a really strong lesson in starting right back over because dude, when you become aware of your own discipline and your own skill set of discipline and where it's at and where it stands and how sharp it is in the moment, you become aware of how easy it is to lose. And that's what part of

that reason is. So, you know, you're, dude, if you follow the program, the way that's designed, you really can't fuck it up. Like you can't fail. It's going to build you into a fucking weapon. Yeah. Dude, I'm a very visual learner, right? And so when you were explaining the momentum process, I started picturing like having to push a car, right? Cars is a neutral. It's just sitting there, right? You got to start pushing it. And then when you start pushing it, though, it starts

coasting a little bit. But if you stop pushing it, it stops again. It's a lot of effort to get it going. So it's a fair to say if you exit in motion, tense to stay in motion. It's right. It's physics. It's a law. Yeah. No, that was real, bro. And so I guess my point is like, you know, you would say it's true that your momentum is directly just tied to the constant inputs. Like it has to constantly be this. Yes. So why do people get so tied in with this momentum thing,

then? When do you mean? Because it's not, like, you're so, dude, first of all,

everybody has the wrong idea about it. Yeah. They think you're catching it. Yeah. Okay. But every time you've caught it in your life, if you went back and audited what you did the days before you caught that, you would see how you created it. Yeah. So it's not something that you catch. It's something you create. That's the point. Most people completely misunderstand it. Just like they misunderstand

discipline as being a trait that someone's born with. Instead of being a skill set that you have to

develop. Yeah. All right. So it's just a misunderstanding of what it is. Yeah. And, and, you know, they also think, too, it's just going to continue to carry them. Like, that's like, you know, I'm saying, I know it. You still have to do the work. It just makes the work a little bit easier. Yeah. But yeah, man, you have to keep pushing. And that's the reality. And, you know, what that translates into every area of your life. That's not just your fitness. It's literally a mentality. That's why

live heart is a mental-fucking program. It is not a weight loss program. It's not a fitness challenge. It is a mental development, mental toughness program. Because if you pay attention to what's happening, you become aware. And, like, we've been talking about a lot more lately, that awareness allows you to know where you are at any given time. I know when my disciplines get around it off. I know when I'm not sure. I can feel it. I may not be like fat anti-weight off the reservation,

Okay?

want to close the gap before it gets out of hand, right? So once you understand how all these things actually work versus what we're kind of led to believe how they work, how most people think they work. It becomes easier to understand why it's so important to, you know, on that fifth day, to push through that. Because you've already got four days going, dude. You know what I mean? 100% dude. 100%. Guys, Andy, question number two. Andy, I run a small business.

And one thing nobody prepared me for is how often you have to make decisions without knowing

if they're right. Higher person, fire the person, take the contract, expand, wait. I always assumed

successful people became confident because they had better answers. Now I'm wondering if they just became comfortable making decisions without that level of certainty. So how did you learn to trust yourself when there was no guarantee that you were making the right call? Oh, that's tough. No, it's not tough. There's just a lot to it. First of all, you have to understand. There's always going to be risk. That's the reality of the game of being an entrepreneur. There's

going to be risk. But the risk is on both sides. All right. There's a risk. What happens if I make this decision? And it doesn't work. What happens if I don't make this decision? It was the right one. All right. So you have to weigh both sides. Most people spend 10 times as much energy when the, if I make the wrong decision, what's going to happen. And the way you fix this is by

understanding that the only way to actually understand what the right decisions are is to make the wrong ones.

All right. So the wrong decisions that you make along the way are actually what adds to your understanding of what the right decisions are down the road. And when you're in the beginning, you want to make the wrong decisions because the repercussions while they may feel heavy, because you're just getting started, they're nothing compared to what you're going to be when you're

doing 10, 20, 30, 50, 100, a billion dollars in sales. Okay. So if I was making the same mistakes

that I made in, you know, the early days back in, you know, 1999 through 2005 or six, now we'd be out of business. And nobody saw those mistakes because I wasn't relevant. Okay. That's the other thing. You're not making the mistakes in front of the whole world because dude, nobody owes you your anyway. So you follow your face. Yeah, man. It's okay. That's part of the process. And if you just reframe how you look at what the outcome of the decision, it's really a

winning either way because I get it right. Or I learned quickly that it was the wrong decision.

I don't do that again. And like I talk about, there's really only two things that you need to

have to be successful, man. You got to be able to understand that when you make the wrong decision,

don't make it again. Okay. Certainly don't make it three times because you are going to make some twice. And then the other thing is you have to develop the grit and toughness to continue on when everybody else quits. And if you can do those two things, man, you're going to win. Yeah. You can't beat someone like that. Yeah. So the, uh, you know, when we really talk about like what were, you know, there's no certainty, man. Like even when you've made the mistake before

and then that same thing comes up again, you've just minimized the risk. It's still not a 100 percent. Yeah. Okay. So you have to be willing to understand that we're living with some risk. That's part of the game. And you have to learn how to evaluate it properly, which is what we're talking about right now. The other thing is that based on those decisions, you develop a better vision for the playing field. Okay. You kind of know that like just in baseball, right? Like you

know a guy who is a left hand a hitter who pulls 85% of the balls that he hits. You know that you could put a shift and run three infielders to the right side of the infield because you've seen it so many times. That's a calculated bet. Now he may fucking, uh, you know, he may go the opposite way and hit it right through the whole where the short stop is. My butt. He's only done that 15% of the time. So you kind of know. You see what I'm saying? Yeah. So it's, it's about allowing yourself

to learn the lessons that then develop the skill of being able to see down the field and understand what's about to happen. All right. The reason that my vision is so good and I can be two, three years ahead of everybody else and almost everything, including what we talk about in politics and all this shit is because I've been doing this for so long dude. It's not a gift. It's a skill that I've

Developed by looking ahead, right?

business where I've been, you know, fortunately, very successful, I always have to look ahead. That's

my job. Yeah. My job is to be at the top of the mass rolling, rolling a boat together, dude. And, you know, everybody's down there and they're fucking rolling. And my job is to stand at the top of the fucking lookout and be like, "All right, guys, we gotta go left right now or we're going to drift into this iceberg." Okay. And then we gotta make a sharp right and we gotta go over there. That's my job. Okay. So, and then when I'm not, when I, when there's open seas, I get down and

row the fucking boat. That's right. That's what a good leader does. All right. But the vision part of it

is in a quieter skill set that you just don't have yet. So it makes it real scary, dude. But the only way that you develop it is by having the courage to make the decision based upon the risk assessment that you can, that you can make at the time. And this is where like having and being surrounded by good mentors is super important. And when I say mentors, I don't necessarily mean go but pay someone. I mean like fine dudes that are older than you, fine ladies that are older

than you. They have been through this journey. You know, make friends with them, you know, pay attention to them. Like watch them. Like one of the things that I think I've done very well that has helped me is like I watch other entrepreneurs that are ahead of me and how they move and how they operate and how they think. And then when they make moves, I try to evaluate it like why did they do that or why did they think that I don't ever assume that these guys are stupid.

I always assume this person knows what they're doing. And even if I think it's stupid, there's a

reason for it. So what is that reason? Yeah. You see what I'm saying? 100%. So it's there's you have to

have humility about your own skill set. But dude, like when you're just getting started, man, it all seems like magic. If you can't see behind the curtain, you figure like it's all magic, but it's not, man, it just comes from having the courage to make a decision that you, if you can't make a decision that you don't know the outcome of, you can't be an entrepreneur, because it's literally that's the fucking game. Now, as you get more experience and as you make

warm mistakes and as you add to that skill set and understanding of the game that you're playing, it becomes easier to make the right decision with certainty, but they're still always risk. And you've got to be able to tolerate that. And you've got to have the courage to do that. And the thing is, you know, any entrepreneur, you show me an entrepreneur that says, this for sure is going to work every single time. I'm going to show you guys about the news.

Real talk. Is that real? Oh, yeah. Yeah. The game is always changing, dude. You got to understand.

You're, look, man, I like to use the analogy of being in a boat because it's very accurate because like, it's, it's one thing to row a boat when the lake smooth and the, and the water's glass and everything's easy. It's a completely other thing to row the boat when there's a fucking hurricane. That's right. Okay. It's a completely another thing to row the boat in the winter time, as it is a summertime. The, one of my point is, is that the environment is always changing.

It's always changing a business. There are fundamental rules that stay the same. But if you think that what you did three years ago or five years ago or last week is going to work the same two years from now, just because you won then, that's, that's not right. That's not, that's not going to work. That's no different than being in a football game and saying, oh, man, we did a, you know, we did a toss sweep to the left at the 20 yard line one time and it went 80 yards. So it's going to

work right now. Like, that's not how it works. You have to evaluate the, the environment. And by the way,

just so, you know, it's never smooth water and the sun is never shining and things are never perfect, which is also why the Live Hard Program and the 75 hard program is so important because it's not convenient. You have to learn to operate when things are not convenient, especially, because that's what other people quit, dude. Other people that are in their boat and they're, they're like, in the boat, see, you're all in a boat. You just don't fucking realize it. Okay.

They're, they're in their boat and they're like, man, I'm just going to wait to start rowing until the fucking weather's perfect, but the weather ain't ever perfect. So conditions are never perfect. And you have to be able to evaluate, this is why like old sea dog captains are so good because it's not because, you know, there's some genius, it's because they've been through all the shit, man, with all the fancy tools and equipment. Yeah, dude. And then if you're an entrepreneur, like myself,

who has been through and I've run successful companies before the internet. I've run them after the internet and before social media. I've run them after social media. Dude, I fucking know the game.

Okay.

adapt to the environment that's what's going to be conducive to you winning currently. Yeah. So like when people say, you know, like when guys get real confident because they want once or, you know, like, dude, there's, there's dudes, you know, like, oh, my fucking uncle worked at Target and I got my product all over the country. Bro, you don't know shit. You don't know anything. You hit a, you got

up to the first, you got up at batting practice and the first pitch you hit a home run, you think you're

fucking babe Ruth. That's right. Right. Like, there's people like that. The game is long, too. Yeah. And this is also why. This is also why. When guys get to be like my age and they've gone through all this shit, built all this shit, done all these things and then they get resources and they're able to maintain that hunger and that they built relationships and they've got some money and they've got broke. They become super fucking dangerous because dude, now they know like all this

shit and now they have resources behind it. Now, now you're dealing with a fucking problem. Yeah, it could go with some gas there now. I'm just saying, yeah, entrepreneurship is the only sport that you can play where the older guys are far more dangerous than the younger guys. Yeah,

they just are. Yeah. Yeah. I've also heard you talk to about, you know, just decision making and

business. It's like, you know, you, I can't remember which one you were talking about, but there was a

decision that you made and it wasn't that it was just, it wasn't that it was the wrong decision. It just wasn't the right time because like, now you implemented the years later. It was like, oh, it's fucking work. It wasn't ready. Yeah. I'm the environment, the more that's another thing. Yeah. You can get you, you vision can get so fucking sharp that like, dude, like, look how we handle CTI. Okay. Like, let's use that as an example. The shit that people are talking about today,

you could go back and I was talking about five years ago, 100%. Legitimately. 100%. Okay. And the shit I'm talking about today, nobody's going to be talking about for two or three years.

Like, it's just what it is, man. Yeah. And so like, I'm, I'm a head and it makes,

sometimes it makes you look like you're wrong, but you're not wrong. You're just way ahead. Yeah. And I don't know yet. That's all it is. Yeah, dude. And, you know, that's a whole not that opens a whole nother problem because in business that can become a problem too, right? Like, you can, you could kind of see what's forming and position yourself too quickly to where you actually go backwards before you go forwards. So there's a lot here, dude. So like when you said, you know,

it's a hard question, hard, but like we could talk about this one thing for literally like

two days, you know, like this is, this is, it's a fluid environment, man. And you have to be able to

recognize what's happening. You have to be able to recognize the changes that are happening in the environment. You have to be able to make decisions today that are going to put you in the spot when all those things converge to push you forward. I give you an example. Four years ago, five years ago, six years ago now, I was telling everybody, I said pro-America's coming back. People are going to be patriotic. People aren't people are going to get their

fuck you back. And they're going to want to support companies that didn't go with all this woke bullshit and look what's happened. Everybody at that time was like, Andy, but if I do that, they're going to fucking hate me. No, now everybody knows who the real people are and who the fucking fake people are. And that's a big problem with influencers. It's a big problem with companies right now. How do you unwoke your company? Yeah, that's hard. I mean, bro, look, Harley Davis is going

through right now. They're getting fucking destroyed because they didn't understand that they need it to be America's brand when it wasn't cool to be America's brand. Okay, and now they're paying the price for it because they're getting called out by everybody and you know who's benefiting Indian because in any it makes great shit. Okay, so now you got a competitor who would say faster off the wall. I mean, look, bro, now you got a competitor that you gave the fucking ground up to

because you didn't have the foresight or the balls to stand on who the fuck you are. All right, but I said that years ago and you know, a lot of you guys who were entrepreneurs, you know, you guys were hesitant to do that and now you have a problem. So, and this goes back to what we talked about with Ferrari. Okay, on the last show, you got to know what your core brand structure

is and you have to fucking stick to that framework. What? This is why core values and living by them

and standing by them, knowing who you are, are so much more important than trying to be the thing that is popular at the time. Yeah. Okay, and getting back to the point I was making, we were that way before all the woke shit. We were that way during all the woke shit. And now we're being rewarded for it. You see what I'm saying? Yeah. So there are brands exploding again. And the

Reason it is is because people know that we don't fucking bend the knee to th...

the fuck we say we are. We've always been that and that's what you're going to get and people

like that. So, you know, so like dude, when you, you know, there's an art to this. Okay, it's not a science. Science is for sure. Art is like an educated guess almost. Yeah. You know what I mean? In a different way. Yeah. Take some finesse. It does. That maybe is a better word than art. But it's more artistically creative than it is science, you know what I mean? Maybe it's like a hypothesis, right? But it's certainly not a definitive, for sure, proven thing. Yeah. And, you know, that's what makes

business fun. I think. No. I, that's what I enjoy about it most. There's nothing more rewarding to me

in business. Well, there's two things that I, I going back to what I said a minute ago about the

older guys. That only applies if they maintain their hunger. Okay. A lot of older guys get fucking lazy,

they get comfortable and they become easy to beat because of that. Mm-hmm. The younger guys eat them up. But that older guy who knows all his shit is able to maintain that drive by expanding the vision, that mother fucker's hard to beat. It's hard. Okay. You're going to have to hit some fucking unscheduled home runs. That's right. Okay. But over the long haul that guy, you can't really catch that guy because they've got the years on you and the experience and the environment.

And they've been through the bad weather and all these things. But the reason is a lot of these old guys, what they do is they get in their forties and shit, they sell their business and then they kind of lose the plug-in of them paying attention to the environment, they're not really. And then like, when you try to get back in, it's like learning a whole new language because like you, you forgot it. You know what I mean? Um, but there's two things that I really love

at this point in my life. And one is I love helping people change their lives, whether that be through, you know, the live hard program or whether that be losing weight or whether that be transforming their personal lives. And the other thing, and whether that be an employee here that we're trying to develop, I love that shit. And the other thing is I love, I love coming up with a concept, building it out, putting it out into the market and then seeing how right I was or

wrong I was and then learning that process. Like that whole thing, now when you're, when you're young and your asses on the fucking line literally every day, it's a scary thing. But that's also

like what becomes the, the most fun once you know some shit. No. You know what I'm saying?

Yeah. Could I actually want last piece on this just the, the entrepreneur owner, you know, making these decisions? What, what's the level of transparency do you recommend an entrepreneur who's leading the small team, whatever it is, in making these decisions? How transparent should you be during this process? In what regard? So there's a decision that has to be made that, you know, you feel like, I gotta go left or right, right? I can, you have people that, you know,

are answering to you or your answering to them, however you're looking at it, how transparent are you in the process about the decision you're making? How you made it, why you're making? Well, there's a lot to that. Yeah. Okay. Um, depends on the decision. I mean, you know, part of what you're asking is how to build a strong culture too. You just don't know that you're asking it. Okay. All right. Because like when you don't know, you don't fucking know. All right. And so

as a leader, you gotta know what the fuck you don't know, which means you gotta listen to the guys to get their input on the things that they may see differently. There's a big difference between a guy calling in, you know, air strikes in the fucking tent from the guys that are on the fucking ground. And if you can't listen to those guys and hear what they're saying and trust them, then it makes it impossible to make the right decision. Also, if you just make decisions autonomously

all the time, these people don't really feel like they're part of it. Okay. So if you want to build

a strong culture, you have to show the humility to take their input. Now, some people will take this to the extreme. And the extreme is they start making decisions by committee, which is how you end up with a piece of shit like Ferrari just Ferrari making a good. That's, that's not what we're talking about here. We're talking about hearing people out and then you, as the leader, taking responsibility for the decision that is right for the team and the outcome that we're after,

even if it's not your idea. Okay. Because you're not always going to have the best idea.

A lot of people that are shitty leaders feel like they have to make the call ...

because it discredits them if they do this when in reality, that's what bonds the team.

All right. So how transparent do you need to be? Is that all makes sense? Yeah,

100% because what happens here is you end up getting by in. All right. These guys on the ground, they understand that they can talk to you. They understand you're going to evaluate the information and they understand that you're going to make what you think is the best decision. Even if it's not your decision, like meaning your idea. That's a, that's a hard thing for leaders to do because they want to flex their authority. Flexing the authority, I don't know if you guys understand this,

but flexing the authority is not the outcome here. We're trying to win. That's what we're trying to do. You know what popped up is like football coaches. You know what I'm saying? It's like fucking five seconds on the clock and the coach is usually like the quarterback. What play do you want to run? And the coach will let's the fucking quarterback. Maybe, you know, maybe the quarterback, it depends on what you say it. You know, like there's other like there's, dude, this is where

the experience comes into play because sometimes you're going to end up hearing things from certain people that work with you that aren't actually the reality, but they are saying those things in

their best interest to make their job easier. So you have, as a leader, you have to be able to

evaluate why is this person saying this? Are they saying this because they're on the team? Or are they saying this because they want to work less? The way that you get them to make decisions about what's best for the outcome is by cultivating what I'm talking about here at this back and forth and then a decision making that you make. And then if it's wrong, you take responsibility. You don't say Steve is a one that came up with that idea. I just fucking thought it, you know,

yeah, it's your fucking thought. You made a fucking decision. It didn't work. Now we're going to do this. And there's no ego involved. All right. And when, when, when you think about like how to get people to not make those those decisions about making their job easier, it's by giving them buy into what the overall mission is. So this whole process helps eliminate a lot of that. You see what I'm saying? 100%. So, so then when we talk about how transparent you're going to be as your

operation gets bigger, right? You're, you're, you're not going to go to the entry-level dude. He's right. And say, look, you're going to keep your core circle that's tight. This is why they have boards of directors or you have executive teams. See, sweet. Yeah. Right. Yeah. These are people that you can trust. These are people whose outcome and their incentives are tied to the accomplishment of the mission. And you keep it tight there and you let them do the other part that we're

talking about. You have to coach them on how to do that. Yeah. Because dude, the work, like if we're

being real, the worst fucking leaders in the world or middle management leaders. Really. Fuck,

that is that. Because they think that that's some sort of fucking title. It's the first time

they've ever had leadership. They think it's about flexing on people and, you know, telling people what to do when in reality it's about developing people and accomplishing the mission. So, when you say how transparent should I be, it depends on where you are in the business journey, right? Like in the beginning and you've got fucking 10 people, you know, they're probably going to know most of the shit. When you have 1,000 people, they're not people. People aren't going to know. But

that's why you're going to have a meeting or say, this is the general direction what we're trying to do when you do this, you do this, you do this. The guys on the inside, those guys are going to know the exact details of why, what, how, what to keep up. The key moves are. And, and, you know,

those people are always going to want to be fucking mega transparent with those people. And, um,

you know, your job as the leader of a bigger organization is to paint the vision and get everybody organized to move down what the solution is and protect them from worrying about the other outcomes that are possibilities, right? Like, because those can be described, destruction, distraction, distraction, that's your job, your job as a leader is to put that shit on your back and that's the trade off. And, and fucking let them do their thing. No different than being at the head of your

household, okay? If you're a man and you go home and you unload all your shit into your family, you're being a fucking bitch, okay? And that's the truth. So you've got to learn that your part, your role on the team, whether being your family or whether being your business or whether being this is to protect the people who are doing the work from the stress of what could go wrong so that they can do their work in a well-focused manner, right? This is why being an entrepreneur

Leader is so tough to, I mean there's lots of things that make a tough, but y...

transparency is mega important dude because transparency creates trust, which creates buy-in,

which creates better work. So I love it. I love it man. Guys, Andy, third and final question.

Andy, question number three. Andy, I had a buddy pass away unexpectedly last year. Since then, I can't stop thinking about time. Not in a depressing way, but in a very real way, it made me realize how many things I've been putting off because I assume I'd get to them later. I'm 42 going through this now. Was there ever a moment in your life that made time feel real to you and how did it change how you operated afterwards? Oh yeah, when I got stabbed in the face,

almost fucking died. I realized that my life could have been over and it installed a whole new sense of urgency and I'm very fortunate that happened to me when it did. It happened to me when I was 23 years old, okay? I understood after I got over myself pity that Holy Shit, this could have been over, right? And then it happened again when I was in 2011-12 when I was missed diagnosed with a fucking brain tumor and ended up being a benign cyst that, you know,

was nothing. But you said you had like two weeks later? No, he said, you know, he said it was an operable though. But you know, the point is, yeah, I do, those things and like you're friend and, you know, these things happen and most people fail to see the other side of the gift of that happening, right? Like, you know, your life changes when your own mortality comes into question. You know, everybody lives as if they have forever to do everything they want and

you simply don't. And then you wake up one day and you're 50 years old and you're like, holy shit, I haven't been taking care of myself. I've not lived the life I want to live. I've not lived the life I want to live with the people. I want to live it. And now I'm like way behind and then they just give up because they're like, fuck, I can't do anything about it. So it was a total bullshit, by the way.

You can always do something about it. Even if you're 70, you can change things.

Um, but the younger you are when this question comes into play in this realization happens, the better for you. I was very fortunate for that to happen to me when I was 23. All right, because then I started moving. I started realizing, well, if I'm going to do this, I got to go now. And a lot of people don't have any of these moments come into their lives until they are so far down the pipe that they've wasted a lot of their life.

Or when these things do happen, they just refuse to look at the other side of the coin. Right? They will just say, man, this happened and it's horrible.

And they will never acknowledge the lesson to be learned out of that situation. Yeah.

And that's the important, that's the important point of perspective, okay? Depending on how you

look at things, most things, there's almost everything, there's a lesson in. And that lesson can apply to you. And if you refuse to acknowledge those lessons, you're going to have a hard life. If you're able to be truthful and honest and be a realist about it, hey, my friend Steve man, he's four years old and he's dead. And fuck dude, that could have been me. And I better get my shit together. That's a powerful thing. Yeah. But how many people actually get to that point instead

of just saying, oh, my friend Steve died, right? Like it's it's not it. And I think a lot of people don't look at those things because they're so comfortable in the situation that they're in that they don't want to do the work required to change it, right? They know they they could see it. They know it's there. They understand it. But then they act like they don't. So they can pretend to live in ignorance. But the truth of the matter is that once you see it, you can't unsee it. So if you've

had that realization and you're trying to bury it, you're going to be miserable your whole life because you're really knowing that you're actively wasting your own opportunities. So it's going through these things, you know, they're bad. But it's the bad things that allow you to realize that you have

opportunities that you should take advantage of while you're here, whether that be traveling,

whether that be, you know, building a business, whether that be whatever it is that you're into, man. You know, like, that's real shit. Is there a way, because you know, you mentioned like not everybody's

Going to have those type of moments or experiences that kind of wake that pus...

urgency, I guess is what it is. So is there a way that can always learn from other people?

I was about to say, I mean, how how do you do that? You know, I'm saying, like, how do you create

that sense of urgency then? I mean, you don't think anybody listening here knows someone that's died when they were 30 years old. Right. Freakishly, I know you do. I'd be, yeah, 100%. You know, you have a situation in your family where young man died at what, uh, 19 years old. Yeah. Okay. Did that change you? Absolutely. Yeah. Absolutely. Right. So these things, if we're

willing to acknowledge them, instead of being bad things, they become things that drive us. And

it depends on how you look at it, right? Like it would be very easy for me to this, it would would have been very easy for me when I got stabbed to just quit everything and like become this piece of shit and then hang on to that story in my whole life and really do nobody would have blamed me. No, I'm going to say, yeah, just a five. Yeah. So fucked up situation. Yeah. But I mean, bro, like, and there's people that had a way worse than me, like do people that have

lost their legs or whatever and they become champions at something new. You know, um, a guy that just passed away, Alex and Arty, he was a famous F1 driver. He got in a car wreck and he lost his legs.

And they said, oh, you're never going to, he became a wheelchair, uh, race champion. Then he got

back in a race car and he became a champion again. Like, you either allow these things to move you forward or you allow these things to breathe the reason, which is bullshit that you don't do anything. So are you going to be full of shit your whole life? Are you actually going to become what it

is you're supposed to become? And that's what it always comes down to, man. So at the end of the day

for you, the guy that wrote this, um, you know, I don't want to sit here and say it was a blessing that your friend died, but you should look for the blessing in that. And the blessing in that you've already identified, which is I've realized that I don't have all the time that I thought

I once had. And that is a blessing. That's not a curse. Some people never have that. So your job now

is to figure out what it is you want, figure it out who you want to become, what you want to create and go do those things before the same shit happens to you. That's fucking real, man. That's fucking real, man. Guys, Andy, that was three, bro. Yeah, that's three. All right, guys, let's get out there. Let's have a good week. Don't be a hug, shut the shut up.

Compare and Explore