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Empowering Women in Business with Maggie Ishak, Focal Point Coaching

January 8, 2025 by John Ray

Empowering Women in Business with Maggie Ishak, Focal Point Coaching, on North Fulton Business Radio with host John Ray
North Fulton Business Radio
Empowering Women in Business with Maggie Ishak, Focal Point Coaching
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Empowering Women in Business with Maggie Ishak, Focal Point Coaching, on North Fulton Business Radio with host John Ray

Empowering Women in Business with Maggie Ishak, Focal Point Coaching (North Fulton Business Radio, Episode 834)

In this episode of North Fulton Business Radio, hosted by John Ray, the featured guest is Maggie Ishak, Focal Point Business Coaching. Maggie shares her journey from a 28-year corporate career to becoming a business coach specializing in helping women business owners and leaders. She discusses the unique challenges women face in both corporate and entrepreneurial settings, emphasizing the importance of time management, delegation, and setting boundaries. Maggie also highlights the value of coaching in providing accountability and strategic direction. She shares success stories, explains the differences between coaching and consulting, and outlines her various offerings, including one-on-one and group coaching, as well as specialized assessments.

John Ray is the host of North Fulton Business Radio. The show is recorded and produced by the North Fulton affiliate of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

Maggie Ishak, Focal Point Coaching

Maggie Ishak is a Certified Focal Point Business and Executive Coach and a Certified Trust Edge Partner.

Maggie educates and empowers her clients to reach their professional and personal goals: to grow their businesses, to engage their teams, to manage their time, and to maintain a healthy work/life balance.

Before launching her business coaching practice, Maggie enjoyed a 28-year corporate career at Michelin North America, holding senior leadership roles including VP of Supply Chain, VP of Operations and Director of Customer Experience. Maggie left a lasting impact not only on the business results but also on the teams she coached and managed and the customers she served.

Maggie has a BS in Chemical Engineering from MIT and an MBA from Wake Forest University. Maggie lives in the Atlanta area with her husband and three teenage sons.

LinkedIn

Topics Discussed in this Episode

00:00 Introduction and Welcome to North Fulton Business Radio
00:30 Meet Maggie Ishak: Business Coach for Women
01:58 The Corporate Journey: From Engineer to Business Coach
03:23 Navigating Corporate Challenges as a Woman
10:08 Balancing Work and Family in Corporate Life
17:58 The Transition from Corporate to Entrepreneurship
20:04 The Three Eyes of the Business Owner
22:50 The Role of Coaching vs. Consulting
25:21 The Importance of Celebrating Wins
33:27 Success Stories and DISC Assessments
36:53 How to Connect with Maggie Ishak
38:20 Final Thoughts and Announcements

Renasant Bank supports North Fulton Business Radio

Renasant BankRenasant Bank has humble roots, starting in 1904 as a $100,000 bank in a Lee County, Mississippi, bakery. Since then, Renasant has become one of the Southeast’s strongest financial institutions, with over $17 billion in assets and more than 180 banking, lending, wealth management, and financial services offices throughout the region. All of Renasant’s success stems from each banker’s commitment to investing in their communities as a way to better understand the people they serve. At Renasant Bank, they understand you because they work and live alongside you every day.

Website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Instagram | X (Twitter) | YouTube

About North Fulton Business Radio and host John Ray

With over 800 shows and having featured over 1,200 guests, North Fulton Business Radio is the longest-running podcast in the North Fulton area, covering business in our community like no one else. We are the undisputed “Voice of Business” in North Fulton!

The show welcomes a wide variety of business, non-profit, and community leaders to get the word out about the important work they’re doing to serve their market, their community, and their profession. There’s no discrimination based on company size, and there’s never any “pay to play.” North Fulton Business Radio supports and celebrates business by sharing positive business stories that traditional media ignore. Some media leans left. Some media leans right. We lean business.

John Ray, Business RadioX - North Fulton, and Owner, Ray Business Advisors
John Ray, Business RadioX – North Fulton, and Owner, Ray Business Advisors

John Ray is the host of North Fulton Business Radio. The show is recorded and produced from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta. You can find the full archive of shows by following this link. The show is available on all the major podcast apps, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Amazon, iHeart Radio, and many others.

The studio address is 275 South Main Street, Alpharetta, GA 30009.

John Ray, The Generosity MindsetJohn Ray also operates his own business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneurs and small professional services firms on their value, their positioning and business development, and their pricing. His clients are professionals who are selling their expertise, such as consultants, coaches, attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

John is the national bestselling author of The Generosity Mindset: A Journey to Business Success by Raising Your Confidence, Value, and Prices.

Tagged With: business coach, Focal Point Coaching, John Ray, Maggie Ishak, North Fulton Business Radio, Women in Business, women leaders

The One Liquidity Rule Every Business Owner Should Follow, with Bill McDermott, Host of ProfitSense

July 25, 2023 by John Ray

liquidity
North Fulton Studio
The One Liquidity Rule Every Business Owner Should Follow, with Bill McDermott, Host of ProfitSense
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liquidity

The One Liquidity Rule Every Business Owner Should Follow, with Bill McDermott, Host of ProfitSense

In this commentary from a recent episode of ProfitSense, Bill McDermott lays out the one liquidity rule every business owner should follow.

Bill’s commentary was taken from this episode of ProfitSense.

ProfitSense with Bill McDermott is produced and broadcast by the North Fulton Studio of Business RadioX® in Alpharetta.

About ProfitSense and Your Host, Bill McDermott

Bill McDermott
Bill McDermott

ProfitSense with Bill McDermott dives into the stories behind some of Atlanta’s successful businesses and owners and the professionals that advise them. This show helps local business leaders get the word out about the important work they’re doing to serve their market, their community, and their profession. The show is presented by McDermott Financial Solutions. McDermott Financial helps business owners improve cash flow and profitability, find financing, break through barriers to expansion, and financially prepare to exit their business. The show archive can be found at profitsenseradio.com.

Bill McDermott is the Founder and CEO of McDermott Financial Solutions. When business owners want to increase their profitability, they don’t have the expertise to know where to start or what to do. Bill leverages his knowledge and relationships from 32 years as a banker to identify the hurdles getting in the way and create a plan to deliver profitability they never thought possible.

Bill currently serves as Treasurer for the Atlanta Executive Forum and has held previous positions as a board member for the Kennesaw State University Entrepreneurship Center and Gwinnett Habitat for Humanity and Treasurer for CEO NetWeavers. Bill is a graduate of Wake Forest University and he and his wife, Martha have called Atlanta home for over 40 years. Outside of work, Bill enjoys golf, traveling, and gardening.

Connect with Bill on LinkedIn and Twitter and follow McDermott Financial Solutions on LinkedIn.

Tagged With: accounts receivables, Bill McDermott, business coach, cash, Cash Flow, liquidity, ProfitSense, ProfitSense with Bill McDermott, The Profitability Coach

Mike Conner of Action COACH and Steve Loudermilk of Loudy Properties & Loudy Ventures LLC

July 10, 2023 by Amanda Pearch

Forsyth Business Radio
Forsyth Business Radio
Mike Conner of Action COACH and Steve Loudermilk of Loudy Properties & Loudy Ventures LLC
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Mike Conner of Action COACH & Steve Loudermilk of Loudy Properties & Loudy Ventures LLC

Action COACH Business Coaching

With years of successful experience that can provide valuable insight, your Action business Coach will help you develop long-term and short-term goals and strategies, as well as improve your business in areas that you might have overlooked. You may be able to survive in business without the help of a Coach, but it’s almost impossible to thrive.

Whether you are looking for ways to grow the profit in your company or methods to attract high performing team members – Mike and team can help!

 

Loudy Properties

Enabling residential buyers, sellers, and investors to turn their dreams into reality with leading expertise and knowledge of all their real estate market needs.

As President and CEO of the Loudy Properties Team, Steves mission is to serve clients with knowledge and expertise of real estate market conditions to help them buy or sell the house of their dreams.
Serving the North Atlanta area (Cumming, Dawsonville, Alpharetta, Canton, Milton, Roswell, Sandy Springs, Marietta, and other communities), his goal is to help serve clients by maximizing the marketing around their homes and helping buyers find the dream home of their choice.

Connect with us on Social Media @forsythbrx 

Listen to shows 24/7 on businessradiox.com/forsyth-studio and SUBSCRIBE wherever you get your #audio shows to “Forsyth Business Radio” to stay up to date with the latest episodes.

This episode is presented by our #CommunityPartners at:

SPECIAL THANKS to our #ForsythBRX Studio Print Partner:

Podcasts by Amanda Pearch

Tagged With: Action Coach, amanda pearch, Amanda Pearch Marmolejo, Brandywine Printing Inc, business coach, Coaching, Cumming-Forsyth County Chamber of Commerce, Family Promise, First Citizens Bank, Forsyth, Keller Williams, Loudy Properties Team, Mike Conner, real estate, realtor, Rotary, Steve Loudermilk, training

John Davis of ActionCOACH – Davis Business Coaching

June 8, 2023 by Tom Sheldon

Northeast Georgia Business Radio
Northeast Georgia Business Radio
John Davis of ActionCOACH - Davis Business Coaching
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John Davis

John Davis/ActionCOACH – Davis Business Coaching

ActionCOACH is a global company with independent business coaches and owners that work with businesses and individuals, from start-ups through to executives. Their coaching programs are designed to identify your challenges and to apply practical and results-driven solutions. Contact them today to discuss how they can take your business to successful new levels.

From 2021 to 2022 ActionCOACH clients have seen and average revenue increase of 46% and 61% more profits. Nearly $200,000 more profit per client. Of course each business size is different and their focus changes as well. Visit the website to schedule a quick 20 minute call with John to talk about your situation.

Tagged With: action coaching, business coach, John Davis, northeast georgia, tom sheldon

Ryan Kauth, Kauth & Associates, and Host of The Fractional Executive Podcast

May 2, 2023 by John Ray

Ryan Kauth
Business Leaders Radio
Ryan Kauth, Kauth & Associates, and Host of The Fractional Executive Podcast
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Ryan Kauth

Ryan Kauth, Kauth & Associates, and Host of The Fractional Executive Podcast

Ryan Kauth, founder of Kauth & Associates and host of The Fractional Executive Podcast, joined host John Ray on this edition of Business Leaders Radio to discuss his business coaching practice and his podcast. Ryan talked about what led to his founding the entrepreneurship program at the University of Wisconsin Green Bay, creating courses for entrepreneurship, the five areas he coaches his clients on, the value of coaching, his podcast, and more.

Business Leaders Radio is produced and broadcast by the North Fulton Studio of Business RadioX® in Atlanta.

The Fractional Executive Podcast

Growing a company beyond a certain point can be incredibly challenging, particularly for smaller businesses with limited resources. These executives find themselves facing a range of issues, from a lack of funding and resources to market saturation and increased competition.

Ryan’s guest experts share their insights and experiences on the most effective strategies for overcoming these challenges, including building a strong team, expanding into new markets, leveraging technology, discussing the importance of developing a clear vision and strategy, and how to effectively communicate this to stakeholders.

YouTube | Facebook

Ryan Kauth, Founder, Kauth & Associates and Host of The Fractional Executive Podcast

Ryan Kauth, Founder, Kauth & Associates and Host of The Fractional Executive Podcast

Ryan Kauth is a business coach and executive who founded the current entrepreneurship program at the University of Wisconsin Green Bay. Over the past 25 years, he has helped hundreds of founders and family business owners grow their businesses. Ryan holds several business degrees and certifications, and has taught undergraduate and graduate business students and entrepreneurs.

Website | LinkedIn

 

 

Questions and Topics in this Interview

  • Why does a founder or family business owner need a business coach?
  • How has your professional career path lead you to coaching founders and family business owners?
  • What are the five areas you work on with founders and family business owners?
  • Why have you hired business coaches for yourself throughout your career?

Business Leaders Radio is hosted by John Ray and produced virtually from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® in Alpharetta.  The show can be found on all the major podcast apps and a full archive can be found here.

Tagged With: business coach, Business Leaders Radio, business owner, CEO, executive coach, family business owner, John Ray, Kauth & Associates, Ryan Kauth, succession plan, The Fractional Executive Podcast

What’s Your Number? E141

February 9, 2023 by Karen

Whats-Your-Number-feature
Phoenix Business Radio
What's Your Number? E141
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Whats-Your-Number-E141

What’s Your Number? E141

Eric Crews joined Tycoons to talk about what is important about the journey of growing your business all the way to retirement. One of the biggest things he recommends is that you know your number. What number are you aiming for to grow your business and eventually retire?

Tune in to hear Eric talk about how his love of endurance sports has helped him in his business journey and his philosophies on what is most important when growing your business. Learn more about Eric at crewsandco.com or find him on LinkedIn.

Crews-and-co-logo

Crews & co. is a management consulting firm helping ready-to-scale, seven-figure businesses achieve their first $10M, $20M, or $50M year. Using the Growth Method, their proprietary business operating system, they help companies increase their revenue, profitability, and salable asset value.

Through in-house resources and a curated partner network, they also offer entrepreneurs everything they need to grow their business: finance services, recruiting, HR, marketing, wealth management, M&A, and more.

Eric-Crews-Tycoons-of-Small-BizAs Founder and CEO of Crews & co., Eric Crews is passionate about helping businesses grow. Eric has guided 100+ organizations to increased and sustainable profitability while simultaneously optimizing their operations and instituting elevated quality of life for their leadership teams.

Working in industries such as technology, finance, marketing, manufacturing, education, and construction, he has helped convert many unorganized, underperforming ventures into streamlined, revenue-generating enterprises.

Building on decades of successful entrepreneurship and eight years as a Certified EOS Implementer® with over 1000 session days, Eric led Crews & co.’s 2021 launch of the Growth Method℠, a proprietary business operating system designed to propel companies to increased revenue, profit, and salable value.

Eric is also the Co-Founder and CEO of CE Painting, one of the largest commercial painting businesses in New England. Both CE Painting and Crews & co. have been honorees on the Inc.com list of 5000 fastest-growing businesses.

About the Show

Tycoons of Small Biz spotlights the true backbone of the American economy, the true tycoons of business in America… the owners, founders and CEO’s of small businesses. Join hosts,  Austin L Peterson, Landon Mance and the featured tycoons LIVE every Tuesday at 1 pm, right here on Business RadioX and your favorite podcast platform.

About Your Hosts

Autsin-Peterson-on-Phoenix-Business-RadioX

Austin Peterson is a Comprehensive Financial Planner and co-founder of Backbone Planning Partners in Scottsdale, AZ. Austin is a registered rep and investment advisor representative with Lincoln Financial Advisors. Prior to joining Lincoln Financial Advisors, Austin worked in a variety of roles in the financial services industry.

He began his career in financial services in the year 2000 as a personal financial advisor with Independent Capital Management in Santa Ana, CA. Austin then joined Pacific Life Insurance Company as an internal wholesaler for their variable annuity and mutual fund products. After Pacific Life, Austin formed his own financial planning company in Southern California that he built and ran for 6 years and eventually sold when he moved his family to Salt Lake City to pursue his MBA.

After he completed his MBA, Austin joined Crump Life Insurance where he filled a couple of different sales roles and eventually a management role throughout the five years he was with Crump. Most recently before joining Lincoln Financial Advisors in February 2015, Austin spent 2 years as a life insurance field wholesaler with Symetra Life Insurance Company. Austin is a Certified Financial Planner Professional and Chartered Life Underwriter. In 2021, Austin became a Certified Business Exit Consultant® (CBEC®) to help entrepreneurs plan to exit their businesses.

Austin and his wife of 23 years, Robin, have two children, AJ (21) and Ella (18) and they reside in Gilbert, Arizona. He is a graduate of California State University, Fullerton with a Bachelor of Arts in French and of Brigham Young University’s Marriott School of Management with a Master of Business Administration with an emphasis in sales and entrepreneurship.backbone-New-Logo

Connect with Austin on LinkedIn, Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.

LandonHeadshot01

Landon Mance is a Financial Planner and co-founder of Backbone Planning Partners out of Las Vegas, Nevada. He rebranded his practice in 2020 to focus on serving small business owners after operating as Mance Wealth Management since 2015 when Landon broke off from a major bank and started his own “shop.”

Landon comes from a family of successful entrepreneurs and has a passion and excitement for serving the business community. This passion is what brought about the growth of Backbone Planning Partners to help business owners and their families. At Backbone Planning, we believe small business owners’ personal and business goals are intertwined, so we work with our clients to design a financial plan to support all aspects of their lives.

In 2019, Landon obtained the Certified Exit Planning Advisor (CEPA) designation through the Exit Planning Institute. With this certification, Backbone Planning Partners assists business owners through an ownership transition while focusing on a positive outcome for their employees and meeting the business owner’s goals. Landon is also a member of the Business Intelligence Institute (BII) which is a collaborative group that shares tools, resources and personnel, and offers advanced level training and technical support to specifically serve business owners. In 2021, Landon became a Certified Business Exit Consultant® (CBEC®) to help entrepreneurs plan to exit their businesses by counseling owners about exit options, estimating the value of the business, preparing the business for exit and tax considerations.

Landon enjoys spending time with his beautiful wife, stepson, and new baby twins. He grew up in sunny San Diego and loves visiting his family, playing a round of golf with friends, and many other outdoor activities. Landon tries to make a difference in the lives of children in Las Vegas as a part of the leadership team for a local non-profit. He regularly visits the children that we work with to remind himself of why it’s so important to, “be the change that you wish to see in the world.”

Landon received his B.S. from California State University Long Beach in business marketing and gets the rest of his education through the school of hard knocks via his business owner clients.

Connect with Landon on LinkedIn.

Tagged With: business coach, business growth, executive coaching, management consulting

Expert Business Advice from Trusted Advisors: Jonathan Goldhill, The Goldhill Group, John Ray, Ray Business Advisors and Business RadioX North Fulton, and Tim Fulton, Small Business Matters

October 21, 2022 by John Ray

The Goldhill Group
North Fulton Studio
Expert Business Advice from Trusted Advisors: Jonathan Goldhill, The Goldhill Group, John Ray, Ray Business Advisors and Business RadioX North Fulton, and Tim Fulton, Small Business Matters
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The Goldhill Group

Expert Business Advice from Trusted Advisors: Jonathan Goldhill, The Goldhill Group, John Ray, Ray Business Advisors and Business RadioX North Fulton, and Tim Fulton, Small Business Matters (Organization Conversation, Episode 45)

Host Richard Grove welcomed three seasoned business advisors, Jonathan Goldhill, John Ray, and Tim Fulton, to discuss issues small business owners face as they seek to thrive in today’s economy. They discussed the talent shortage and how to deal with it, how to manage inflationary pressures, pricing, organizing your business as if it were a much larger enterprise, preparing for an exit, and much more.

Organization Conversation is broadcast from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta.

The Goldhill Group

Business coaching, mentoring, and consulting to growing companies with 10 to 150 employees in family businesses, construction, and service-related businesses. We guide leaders and owners to grow their businesses and enjoy the journey more using proven processes, systems, and tools that both accelerate growth and guide people to more freedom and fulfillment.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

Jonathan Goldhill, President & Business Coach, The Goldhill Group

Jonathan Goldhill, Goldhill Group

Jonathan Goldhill is a masterful business coach and personal strategist specializing in guiding next-generation leaders of family businesses to scale up their business as they take control over the leadership and ownership of the family business.

Jonathan left New York for California at age 20 after his family’s large, privately-held men’s apparel manufacturing company—started by his great-grandfather—sold to a conglomerate in its third generation of family ownership.

Within ten years, Jonathan had established himself as the go-to expert for entrepreneurs looking to find their version of freedom.

Today, Jonathan brings thirty years of experience to his clients, advising, coaching, consulting, training, and guiding entrepreneurial and family businesses.

 LinkedIn

John Ray, Ray Business Advisors and Business RadioX North Fulton

John Ray, Studio Owner, Business RadioX North Fulton, and Owner, Ray Business Advisors

John is a Studio Owner, Producer, and Show Host with Business RadioX®, and works with business owners who want to do their own podcast. As a veteran B2B services provider, John enjoys coaching B2B professionals to use a podcast to build relationships in a non-salesy way which translates into revenue.

John is the host of North Fulton Business Radio, Minneapolis-St. Paul Business Radio, Alpharetta Tech Talk, and Business Leaders Radio. house shows that feature a wide range of business leaders and companies. John has hosted and/or produced over 1,500 podcast episodes.

John also owns Ray Business Advisors, a business advisory practice. John’s services include advising solopreneurs and small professional services firms on their pricing. John is passionate about the power of pricing for business owners, as changing pricing is the fastest way to change the profitability of a business. His clients are professionals who are selling their “grey matter,” such as attorneys, CPAs, accountants and bookkeepers, consultants, marketing professionals, and other professional services practitioners.

John Ray is the host of The Price and Value Journey, a podcast aimed at solo and small firm professional services providers. The show covers pricing, business development, and other key aspects of building a professional services practice, as well as interviews with industry leaders.

LinkedIn

Small Business Matters

With over 30 years of experience, Small Business Matters (SBM) brings a results-based approach to each and every client. Whether your business has been established for 50 years or 50 days, we are passionate about helping you achieve your goals and mission.

Small Business Matters was established in 1994 as an independent management consulting and training practice. The primary goal of SBM is to increase the effectiveness and enhance the lives of CEOs. Since its existence, Small Business Matters has worked with companies such as Lucent Technologies, Carlson Companies, CB Richard Ellis Real Estate Services, Inc. (formerly Insignia/ESG, Inc.), and Georgia Power.

Small Business Matters is owned and operated in Atlanta, Georgia by Tim Fulton. Tim is a nationally-recognized small business coach, consultant, and advocate. He has been involved in the field of entrepreneurship for over three decades as a successful business owner, small business counselor, and adjunct university professor.

Tim is currently a Vistage Emeritus in Atlanta. Vistage is an international membership organization for company CEOs and Presidents that provides a very unique growth experience for its members. In addition, Tim is a former facilitator for the University of Georgia SBDC’s GrowSmart training program, which is designed for growth-oriented small business owners, operators, and executives.

Tim has recently authored a new book, The Meeting, available on his website and where books are sold.

Tim is also the host of the podcast, Small Business Matters, available here and other major podcast platforms.

Company website | LinkedIn | Facebook | Twitter

Tim Fulton, Owner, Small Business Matters

Tim Fulton, Owner, Small Business Matters

Tim grew up in Miami Florida. He attended college in New Orleans at Tulane University where he earned an undergraduate degree in Economics and a 5 year MBA.

Tim owned and operated several small retail businesses in Miami. He also taught as an adjunct professor and served as the interim Director of the Family Business Institute at Florida International University. After moving to Atlanta, Tim was a co-founder of an internet software company that was an INC 500 company and then sold to a Fortune 1000 company.

In 1992, he started his own small business consulting firm Small Business Matters. Tim was a Vistage Chair for 16 years, retired from Vistage in December 2018, and currently enjoys Chair Emeritus status. In 2008, he developed the GrowSmart training program for the state of Georgia and has trained over 3000 small business owners in 15 different states.

Tim has an award-winning Small Business Matters newsletter, he has self-published three different books including most recently the book titled “The Meeting”, and co-hosts a popular podcast for small business leaders.

For six years, Tim has hosted one of the largest annual events in Atlanta for small business owners.

He has been married to his college sweetheart Remy for 40 years, has two grown sons, and is an avid tennis player. Tim has walked the entire 500-mile El Camino Santiago in Spain on two different occasions and just recently walked the 400-mile Camino Portuguese.

LinkedIn

About Organization Conversation

Organization Conversation is hosted by Richard Grove and broadcast and produced from the North Fulton studio of Business RadioX® inside Renasant Bank in Alpharetta. You can find the full archive of shows by following this link. The show is available on all the major podcast apps, including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google, Amazon, iHeart Radio, Stitcher, TuneIn, and others.

About Richard Grove

Richard Grove, Host, Organization Conversation

Richard Grove‘s background is in engineering but what he enjoys most is brand building through relationships and creative marketing. Richard began his career with the Department of Defense as an engineer on the C-5 Galaxy Engineering Team based out of Warner Robins. While Richard found this experience both rewarding and fulfilling, he always knew deep down that he wanted to return to the small family business that originally triggered his interest in engineering.

Richard came to work for the family business, Dekalb Tool & Die, in 2008 as a Mechanical Engineer. At the time Wall Control was little more than a small ‘side hustle’ for Dekalb Tool & Die to try to produce some incremental income. There were no “Wall Control” employees, just a small warehouse with a single tool and die maker that would double as an “order fulfillment associate” on the occasion that the original WallControl.com website, which Richard’s grandmother built, pulled in an order.

In 2008, it became apparent that for the family business to survive they were going to have to produce their own branded product at scale to ensure jobs remained in-house and for the business to continue to move forward. Richard then turned his attention from tool and die to Wall Control to attempt this necessary pivot and his story with Wall Control began. Since that time, Richard has led Wall Control to significant growth while navigating two recessions.

Outside of Richard’s work at Wall Control he enjoys helping other business owners, operators, and entrepreneurs along their own paths to success by offering personal business coaching and advising through his website ConsultantSmallBusiness.com. Richard has developed an expansive and unique skillset growing and scaling Wall Control through a multitude of challenges to the successful brand and company it is today. Richard is happy to share his knowledge and experience with others who are looking to do the same within their own businesses.

Connect with Richard:

Instagram | Twitter | LinkedIn | Richard’s Website

About Wall Control

The Wall Control story began in 1968 in a small tool & die shop just outside Atlanta, Georgia. The first of three generations began their work in building a family-based US manufacturer with little more than hard work and the American Dream.

Over the past 50+ years, this family business has continued to grow and expand from what was once a small tool & die shop into an award-winning US manufacturer of products ranging from automobile components to satellite panels and now, the best wall-mounted tool storage system available today, Wall Control.

The Wall Control brand launched in 2003 and is a family-owned and operated business that not only produces a high-quality American Made product but sees the entire design, production, and distribution process happen under their own roof in Tucker, Georgia. Under that same roof, three generations of American Manufacturing are still hard at work creating the best tool storage products available today.

Connect with Wall Control:

Company website | Facebook | Instagram

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:01] Live from the Business RadioX Studio in Atlanta, it’s time for Organization Conversation, brought to you by Wall Control Storage Systems. Wall Control gives you the storage and organization you crave. Now, here’s your host, Richard Grove.

Richard Grove: [00:00:22] Hey, everyone. Welcome back to Organization Conversation. I’m joined today by three great guests that I’m really looking forward to having a conversation with. If you’re a regular listener of the show, today is going to be a little bit different. We’re kind of going to shift gears a bit and turn the lens or camera around and not so much on the wall, looking at wall control storage, but talking about or having organization conversations about organizations and small businesses in general.

Richard Grove: [00:00:48] So, we have found over time that our listeners are entrepreneurs, small business owners, business operators, all themselves. So, we thought it would be a great value to them to have some experts on in that space and just kind of talk about what we’re seeing across business, across the marketplace, macro landscape, and just kind of dive into some topics that kind of everybody is curious about, what everybody else is doing.

Richard Grove: [00:01:12] So, all of our guests today, extremely knowledgeable and experienced business coaches, advisors, entrepreneurs themselves. So, rather than going through very long intros on all of them, I’m going to introduce them and kind of let them go into tell them about – tell – tell you guys about themselves and what they specialize in. So, without further ado, I’m joined by Tim Fulton of Small Business Matters, John Ray of Business RadioX, as well as Ray Business Advisors. A little side note, John also produces the Organization Conversation Radio Show. So, if you’ve ever seen pictures, he’s the guy behind the board, you know, making everything sound good. And Jonathan Goldhill so, and Jonathan’s with The Goldhill Group. And yeah, so I’m joined in studio with John and Tim, and Jonathan has commuted via Zoom from Southampton, New York. So, I’m going to kick it off with you, Jonathan, and let you tell our audience a little bit about yourself just because you had the furthest commute.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:02:10] Sure. Well, the commute was really easy, I have to say. The view here in Southampton is pretty nice. I’m normally based in the Los Angeles area. I’m a business coach and have been since 2004. I’ve been small business consulting since 1987. Actually, I got a degree in entrepreneurship, if you can believe it. Some people said like, why would you ever go to school to study entrepreneurship? But, you know, my family, my grandfather and his brother started a clothing business at the turn of last century, and it blew up to a very large company. They sold it 40 years ago.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:02:50] But I’ve always been interested in family businesses. There was a lot of success in my family’s business, and so I’ve been coaching for, gosh, since 2004, and I wrote a book on family businesses and how to scale them. And so, that’s the topic that’s really near and dear to my heart. And most of my clients are people that are in unsexy industries. They’re in construction, they’re in real estate, they’re in property management, they’re in service-based businesses and manufacturing companies. So, that’s pretty much the space that I play in these days. But I’ve worked in a lot of industries over many years, so that’s a bit about me.

Richard Grove: [00:03:30] Awesome. Thanks, Jonathan. John, we can just keep working down the line here.

John Ray: [00:03:33] Sure. And thanks for having me on. It’s – I appreciate the invite, Richard. So, I’ve got two businesses. I’ve got a business advisory practice where I do some outside CFO work, but it’s mostly focused around pricing consulting. And, because I’ve come to believe, and this was a problem once upon a time for me, so I came to believe this. And I see this in a lot of businesses that pricing is their biggest problem, particularly for businesses that sell what’s between their ears, basically professional services.

Richard Grove: [00:04:09] And even us, lately it’s been insane. So yeah –

John Ray: [00:04:11] Oh, sure.

Richard Grove: [00:04:12] I mean, it’s just – sure. Crazy time for pricing.

John Ray: [00:04:14] Absolutely. And, so I do a lot of consulting around pricing and how to price more effectively. And so, that’s that particular business. And then, as you said, I operate a studio, North Fulton Business RadioX, and we help businesses that want to do their own podcast and use a podcast to really move the needle in their business, revenue needle in their business.

Richard Grove: [00:04:42] For sure. And I’m going to jump in and say to everybody who’s here today has their own podcast. So before we sign off, you guys will have to tell our listeners where to find you and listen to each of you. So, yeah. So, Tim.

Tim Fulton: [00:04:54] Well, first, Richard, I’m envious of Jonathan. I didn’t know that reporting from the beach was an option.

Richard Grove: [00:04:59] You could have done that. You see I know where you live. So, I was like, you want to – I didn’t give you the options. Yeah.

Tim Fulton: [00:05:04] But I’m very, very envious. And like Jonathan, I grew up as an entrepreneur. I was one of those kids and, as a young kid, cut neighbor’s yards and deliver newspapers and sell bumper stickers at school, just always looking for different ways of making money as an entrepreneur or I was just always interested in that and went off to school and got a business degree and one of the few kids in my class that didn’t go to work in New York on Wall Street or go to work for an insurance company or a bank. I thought, why? Why would anyone want to work for someone else? Crazy idea.

Tim Fulton: [00:05:38] So, I was an entrepreneur. I had a number of small businesses that I started and grew and sold, and then I’d start over again and did that for a number of years and then found that as much as I enjoyed that, I enjoyed just as much working with entrepreneurs as a coach, as a mentor, as a trainer. And that’s where I spent a good part of the last 20, 25 years. I’ve got a consulting practice, as you mentioned. It’s called Small Business Matters. I’ve got a mastermind group that I chair and meet every week. I’ve got about a dozen business owners that I work with as a coach, as an executive coach. And then, I also have a training program that I do for small business owners. I got the best of all worlds.

Richard Grove: [00:06:22] Yeah. That’s awesome. I’ve enjoyed some of your seminars for sure. It’s been super valuable. So anybody listening, especially if you’re in the Atlanta area, it’s cool to be there in person, but I think you can be there virtually, too. Yeah.

Tim Fulton: [00:06:36] Yeah, sure.

Richard Grove: [00:06:37] Awesome. Yeah, because we have kind of people all over the place, which is nice. So, yeah. So, I think to get things started and we can kind of, and we’ll just keep it conversational wherever we want to go with it. I kind of like to start with what you guys are seeing as challenges kind of at a macro level in the spaces you’re in and kind of, I guess, speak to specifically if you have any – you know, John, you were mentioning pricing – any specific expertise that you offer your clients that might be a good opportunity there. And again, we’ll just go back, Jonathan, if you don’t mind, we can start with you, and then we’ll just – we’ll go down and just kind of everybody jump in. And I would like for all of us to kind of interview each other if we happen to have any questions on anything or want to dive deeper on something.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:07:20] Well, I think I’ll jump in and start with something that’s happening on the macro level. But it’s always been happening for a long time. And I think all of you guys, my panelists, will agree with me on this, which is that if you want to be a leader, if you want to be an entrepreneur, you need to be a learner. If you’re not learning, if you’re not participating in seminars and workshops, you’re not reading books, you’re not listening to podcast, you’re not sitting in CEO peer groups, or you know, if you’re not exposed to other entrepreneurs, then you’re in the dark.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:07:56] If you’re a small business person and you’re trying to figure things out by yourself, I don’t know what size your business is, but if you’re under a million and you’re trying to figure things out by yourself, like there’s a lot of people like us who have gone before you that you need to get in front of. If you’re running a $100 million company and you’re not out talking to other CEOs of larger companies and understanding the challenges that they’re working through in leading and managing people, you’re missing out on a huge opportunity.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:08:27] And so, you just want to set the stage with something that’s so basic. It’s not specific to inflation or pricing or labor shortages. It’s about learning. You will learn about all of those things if you’re in the company of peers and learning in – you’re in the right rooms learning.

Richard Grove: [00:08:45] Yeah. I totally agree. I mean, I can say firsthand, you know, it’s easy for me to just be a guy that’s stuck in a warehouse doing things the way I think they need to be done. And it can be paralyzing. And even if I’m doing the right thing, if I am not confident in that, I’m not moving as quickly as I could. Whereas if I had validation from a peer group of similar individuals, it would help me be a lot more effective and move a lot quicker. So that’s a really, really good point.

Tim Fulton: [00:09:11] And, I want to build on that because I think not only is there real importance in being a lifetime learner as a business owner, looking for opportunities to learn more and to read and attend workshops, it’s also very lonely as a small business owner. I know I felt that way. I didn’t always have someone I could talk to about not only my successes but a lot of failures. And I wish I had. I didn’t have a peer group other than family. And my family got tired very quickly of hearing about my business.

Tim Fulton: [00:09:43] And so, that’s why I’ve always felt the peer groups were really important, particularly for small business owners, for the opportunity to grow, to learn, additional layer of accountability for the business owner. So, I would encourage any of our listeners. If you’re not already involved in some type of peer group, a mastermind group, that would be a great piece of advice.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:10:07] And get a coach too, by the way, Tim, right? People should work. If you don’t have a coach, you’re not being coached, you don’t have a mentor. You know, you can have multiple mentors. You can have several coaches, you know. But definitely reach out, get some help. All right, John.

John Ray: [00:10:23] Yeah. Well, I love the theme here that you guys are on because – when we get around to pricing. I know everybody wants us to talk about pricing and inflation and all that kind of stuff, right? But, for me, pricing is a journey. In fact, the name of my podcast is Price Value Journey, The Price and Value Journey, and that’s name for a reason because you’re always trying to get to the right point. And I think it’s something elusive that you never feel like you quite get to.

Richard Grove: [00:10:55] Iterative over time and, yeah.

John Ray: [00:10:57] That’s right.

Richard Grove: [00:10:57] Micro adjustments, for sure.

John Ray: [00:10:58] Yeah. So, particularly in that part of the business, and I think it’s true in all areas of the business, is Jonathan and Tim have talked about. But in pricing, in particular, it’s true. There’s no like special recipe to get there. There’s a lot of science in it, behavioral science, but there’s an art to it as well. And you’re always tweaking, I think, your pricing and how to get to the right point.

Richard Grove: [00:11:27] Yeah. And I think I remember, Tim, your boot camp talking about just the impact of discounting and how like a 5% discount, like what that does to your margin total. And it sounds obvious when you say it, but I don’t think people think about it sometimes or they just – they go to price match their competitor, but they don’t think about what they’re actually taking off the table for themselves. Even, you know, maybe you convert at a little bit higher percentage, but you’re losing a whole lot more money. And I think it’s very comprehensive, like mental algorithm you have to have when you start looking at that.

Tim Fulton: [00:12:00] You know, John, I’d be curious to hear what you’re telling your clients now around price. I had an interesting conversation yesterday with a client. On one hand, he’s feeling a lot of inflationary pressure. His costs have gone up, his costs of labor have gone up, his cost of materials have gone up. He’s a manufacturer. And then, he said, “Tim, at the other hand, I’m not sure I can raise my prices because I feel like the economy is beginning to decelerate a little bit, starting to slow down a little bit. I’m not sure I can pass on these price increases.” What are you seeing and what are you telling your clients in that regard?

John Ray: [00:12:34] Well, what I tell people generally, and of course, it depends on what business you have. Right? Let’s put that caveat out there. But I think it’s the wrong message to talk about price, potential price increases as it relates to inflation. That’s the obvious way to go to say, “Hey, my costs have gone up and therefore I have to raise my price.” The problem with that is that your clients don’t care what your costs are. They could care less. What they care about is the value that your product or service offers them. They care about the benefits. So, you’ve got to couch your pricing relative to the value that the client receives.

John Ray: [00:13:23] Part of the problem that I’ve seen, Tim, and I’m interested in what you and Jonathan have to say about this, but what I’m seeing with a lot of clients is they haven’t tended to their pricing in years. Right? And so, this little bout of inflation or big bout of inflation, I guess, that we are experiencing right now has really hit them hard because they haven’t regularly tended to their pricing over time. And I think that’s a lesson is that you always have to be looking at that. And so, because they haven’t done that, they’re really caught flat-footed in a lot of ways, right?

John Ray: [00:14:03] But it’s really the customer is going to compare. And if you’ve got to give them the point of comparison and if you’re talking about your cost or you’re talking about the economy or some amorphous kind of concept as opposed to the value that you’re delivering to them, both tangible and intangible, that’s a mistake. And I think that’s where I’m trying to get the clients I work with is understanding what perceived customer value is and pricing relative to that.

Richard Grove: [00:14:34] Gotcha. One question I have for all three of you guys to just to help clarify for our audience. So, John, you were talking about your client mostly between the ears. So, probably consulting services, that sort of thing. Is that what your typical client, maybe not like a widget manufacturer like we would be, but somebody who’s doing something with kind of creating value out of thin air, so to speak, not making a thing?

John Ray: [00:14:58] Sure, sure. But, you know, and let’s talk specifically about makers, right, because the maker community is the listeners here. Right?

Richard Grove: [00:15:07] Yeah. Quite a few.

John Ray: [00:15:07] Yeah. So, a lot of makers have a mindset problem, I mean, and their problem is, is that they think who is going to pay that price. Right? That’s the mentality. And what they don’t realize is that pricing is something of a marketing signal. If your price is too low, your marketing signal is a signal of inferiority. You’re pricing higher, it’s a signal of quality. And I’d love to tell a story about that, if you don’t mind.

Richard Grove: [00:15:41] Go right ahead. Yeah.

John Ray: [00:15:43] So, real-life story. I’ve got a friend of mine, he is a craftsman. He’s retired now and he does wood crafts. He sells – one of his items that he sells are wooden-fret crosses. Well, if you’ve seen these things, they’re very intricate. They take hours to make. And he was out at a craft show and selling these crosses for $40. And he got to the end of the weekend, he hadn’t sold any. And so, he was – time was running out. He decided he was going to mark them down and get them out because if you don’t sell them, you have to take them home. Right?

John Ray: [00:16:23] So, he heard this voice in the booth next to him, “What are you doing?” And it was the lady that was running the booth next to him, and he said, “I’m going to mark these down so I can get rid of them.” And she said, “You’re out of your mind. Let me price them for you.” And he said, “Fine. What I’m doing is not working. So you go ahead.” She priced them at $125. And before he left that day in an hour, he sold three of them.

Richard Grove: [00:16:48] Wow.

John Ray: [00:16:49] He now prices these crosses at $200 plus. They’re probably still too low, but never bad.

Richard Grove: [00:16:56] Yeah.

John Ray: [00:16:57] And he routinely sells out every weekend. He takes these crosses out. So, that’s a real maker story right there. Right?

Richard Grove: [00:17:05] Yeah. I agree. I mean –

John Ray: [00:17:05] Yeah. And so, the problem is, is that when you’ve got a $40 wooden-fret cross that takes hours to make priced at $40, what signal are you sending? You’re sending a signal that this is made in some foreign country or something like that; this is not a handcrafted item by a real wood craftsman like it really is.

Richard Grove: [00:17:28] Exactly. Yeah. And, I mean, the other bit of that, too, is it’s much harder to raise your price than it is to lower your price once you’ve introduced it. You know, I see that with our own product and some smaller brands that I’ll help coach. There’s one, it’s called Wall Works. It’s like a plastic mason jar that goes into our system, works with any pegboard. And it’s like I’ve told him over and over, you can price this higher. Like, we have it priced twice what your retail is on our website and we’re selling a bunch of them. He’s talking talks with Walmart and Home Depot and that kind of thing. And I’m like, “You got to start high. You can always come back down.”

Richard Grove: [00:18:04] And the other thing I’ve learned is if you start low and you keep trying to go low, you’re basically, because of a competitor, you’re kind of commoditizing what you do and it’s going to just be a race to the bottom. Whereas if you hold and then you bring along the brand, the brand story kind of like what we try to do with our podcast and what we do with a lot of this is create the value there. Like, introduce your audience to yourself and introduce your audience to behind the scenes and that kind of thing. Then, you can then you’re not in this never-ending fistfight to the bottom. So, that’s kind of what we’ve learned. So, yeah. So, Jonathan, what’s your ideal client look like?

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:18:43] I mean, my experience is along the same lines, which is, I never have clients who are low-priced leaders because none of them are large enough to fight that battle down, down to the bottom. And I’m always dealing with clients who are selling on quality and selling on value. And so, let’s change the equation to identifying what is it that you do that’s different, that’s better, maybe that’s unique. You come up with what everyone classically calls a unique selling proposition or value proposition and sell the value and sell the service.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:19:20] I mean, for a lot of services, businesses, the only thing that customers know how to discriminate on is price. And so, you know, you have an HVAC repair person coming to your house and what one person is charging 89 for a service call, one’s charging 129. They don’t know the difference between the two. So, it’s incumbent upon the seller, the service company, to communicate that value and to sell that value. And I’m sure you guys all agree. I mean, probably most of us don’t work with companies that are low-price leaders and are trying to play that game. It’s just – you know, it’s too difficult.

John Ray: [00:20:01] Yeah. Can I – yeah, to underline your point, Jonathan, everybody thinks Walmart’s like the low-price leader and they’ve got the lowest – they can put everybody out of business. Right? If you look at Aldi, their cost structure is actually lower than Walmart’s. And so, what does that tell you? It underlines what you just said, Jonathan, that you cannot, as a small business, if Walmart can’t do it, then you cannot get your cost to a point where you can compete on lowest price. You’ll never be able to do that as a smaller business.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:20:39] Yeah. I mean, the data on Costco used to be that 85% or 75% of their profits came from their membership income because their margins are razor thin. So, you know, they’re selling an exclusive value-based service in the membership.

Richard Grove: [00:20:59] Yeah. What about you, Tim? What is your ideal client look like? And what kind of challenges are you seeing in the space?

Tim Fulton: [00:21:05] My clients, they’re all relatively small businesses, growth businesses, but they vary. I’ve got manufacturers. I’ve got resellers. I’ve got service businesses. What they share mostly is a desire, one for their company to grow and hand-in-hand to that is their own growth as well. But part of the biggest issue that I’m seeing now, and the pricing is not, because pricing is a big issue now, is around people, it’s around talent and it’s being able to secure talent. It’s being able to retain talent.

Tim Fulton: [00:21:38] It seems like every meeting I go into, it’s, you know, I’ve got a job opening. I can’t find anybody. I can’t keep anybody. You know, we’ve been through this great resignation where 40 million people left their jobs. And what’s interesting now is I find the labor market is beginning to open up just a little bit what I’m hearing. Some of those people that resigned are now saying, “Okay, maybe I should go back to work. I’ve run out of government money. I’ve run out of this. I’ve run out – now I’ve got to go back and make money.” So, it’s starting to reopen. But there’s still a lot of movement in the labor market. You know, I hear from clients that, you know, somebody was supposed to start on Monday and they didn’t show up, or they showed up and they left on Tuesday. It’s a crazy time.

Tim Fulton: [00:22:20] And then, we’ve got these decisions about businesses that went remote during COVID and now they’re thinking about bringing their employees back. And do we bring them all back? Do we do a hybrid approach? Do we – companies are now talking about four-day workweeks. That’s kind of the new thing that companies are talking about, should we go to a four-day workweek? So, it’s all these decisions around people that are kind of centered on, you know, how can we find the best people, how can we keep the best people. And if I had the answer to that, I’d be a wealthy man. But that’s what I’m hearing probably more often than anything with my clients.

Richard Grove: [00:22:55] Yeah. We’re seeing it firsthand. It’s just – and we’re in a strange sort of kind of holding pattern just to see, you know, kind of sitting in a defensive posture, kind of looking at what’s going to happen. I mean, Wayfair just laid off, I think, 5% of its workforce today or yesterday. And we track very closely with these, the Wayfair’s and Home Depot’s, because we’re selling hardware into that same space. So, yeah, just kind of waiting to see. I think we’re right-sized right now, but it’s like you want to – you know, you want to keep your good people. You don’t want to bring on extra people. I mean, it’s just such a hard – and it’s never been – in my 15 years doing this, it’s never been this difficult to try to predict, you know, what’s going to happen next, even what’s going to happen in the next quarter. You know, like it’s just crazy.

Richard Grove: [00:23:42] So, the volatility and how to read it and what to make of it is such a challenge. So, if you guys have any insight into that or want to chime in as to what you’re seeing or if you have any hunches, please be my guest,literally.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:23:58] So, look, I’m with Tim 100% labor shortages, those issues around hiring. Especially for growth companies, they’re always looking for people. And I think one of the secrets is to build a really great company on the inside. Because if you’re an attractive company, then employees who are looking at opportunities are going to choose yours over other companies, and you do that through culture and building initiatives internally through obviously you have to have a competitive and good compensation program and benefits as well.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:24:34] But, really, culture, challenges, learning opportunities, growth opportunities and you know, getting rid of the C players because they’re toxic to a work culture. So, that’s really, I think, so important. You know, growth sucks cash, I guess, is the kind of the phrase we use in my business. And it’s also challenging with people. So I don’t think there are any real secret answers out there. You know, we’re all, everyone’s struggling with the same dilemma.

Richard Grove: [00:25:12] Yeah.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:25:12] And it’s slowing things down somewhat in terms of delivery and supply chain.

John Ray: [00:25:17] Yeah. Well, maybe one tip, because I’m with Tim and Jonathan. I mean, there are no, like, magic answers here. But I was interviewing a senior executive at CareerBuilder the other day, and what she was saying was that one of the problems they see with employers is not – having qualifications that are too high. So, requiring a college degree when otherwise that potential candidate has all the qualifications necessary for that job. And I think employers need to relook at what they’re requiring for particular positions. Because if you’re looking for someone that’s customer-facing, for example, I mean, you’re looking for somebody that’s client-oriented, you’re looking for somebody that looks out for the business and there are other ways to measure that beyond a four-year college degree. Right? So that’s just one thing. She said that what she sees is that employers that are losing the talent race right now are inflexible when it comes to job requirements.

Richard Grove: [00:26:31] Yeah.

Tim Fulton: [00:26:32] And, John, to build on that, you know, as companies are looking for talent, I find too often they’re looking in the same places they’ve always looked. They’re fishing in the same pond that they’ve always put their pole and hook into. And the best example, I’ve got a client, and, Richard, you might have heard this story that he owns – he is a manufacturer here in Atlanta. His facility is down by Grant Park in Atlanta, been around for a long time, and he was sharing this story. He said, “Tim, I’ve got these three women who came to work for me recently and the best employees I’ve had in a long time.” I said, “Wow, that’s great.” He said, “It’s really interesting. They all live very close to each other. They get on the same bus every morning. They come to the facility. They work hard all day. They get they leave work. They get on the same bus. They go back to the same neighborhood.” I said, “Wow, that’s interesting.” He said, “Yeah, they’re in a federal penitentiary. They’re prisoners, but they’re on a work leave program and they get to get out five days a week to go work.” And he said, “I never would have thought of hiring, you know, federal prisoners to come work in my plant. But the market is such that I had to be willing to look at places I hadn’t looked before. And they’ve turned out to be my best employees.” So to me, that’s an example of we just, you know, John what is saying, we’ve got to be willing to question what we’ve done in the past and ask, is that going to work today or are we willing to change horses?

Richard Grove: [00:27:56] Yeah, exactly. Is it a workforce problem or is it my requirements problem, you know? And it’s easy to say I can’t find anybody. Well, what’s your algorithm for bringing them in? You know, let’s evaluate that for sure. Yeah.

Richard Grove: [00:28:08] So, kind of in an effort to bring value to any business owner listening or any business operator, I kind of want to go through – you know, I know as we’ve grown all control, we’ve gone through, quote, valleys of death where you hit these certain headwinds at certain revenue figures or employee counts. And I kind of want to start with what advice you guys would give to, say, a new entrepreneur just starting out, somebody who maybe they are seeing some headwinds at their own job and they’re looking to venture out? What are some things to keep in mind when you step into that space? How would you advise somebody? If anybody’s got any ideas.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:28:49] We might be a little bit too far away from that space of working with those, you know, 0 to 10 startup kind of situations.

Tim Fulton: [00:28:57] I’ll take a quick stab just thinking out loud. To somebody who’s relatively new starting their business is to organize your business as if you’re a much larger business. And that comes from Michael Gerber who wrote, you know, one of my favorite books, The E-Myth Revisited, and he recommends that, he says, too often, you know, we start off a business and we figure, okay, well, I’m just going to operate this business like I’m a start-up. You know, every day I’m a startup. Versus what he says, just imagine that you’re running $1,000,000, 5 million, $10 million company. Organize your business as if you were a much larger business. And then before you know it, you are a much larger business versus going into it with a mindset of, you know, I don’t have any money, I don’t have employees, I don’t even have customers. And, you know, so, I’m playing catch up from day one. So, that’d be my first piece of advice is just act and design your business as if you’re already a mature business from day one.

Richard Grove: [00:29:56] Yeah, and that goes to designing scalability into it for sure.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:30:00] Yeah, so, let’s talk about design scalability and to that concept, leveraging off of what Tim just said. So you build out an organization chart of what this company looks like at $1,000,000, or if you’re at a million out of $5 million. And you may be sitting in five different boxes on that organization chart, but circle the one that you routinely touch and that you’re willing to let go of next and make a plan in a month, in a quarter, in six months, whatever it is, to get out of that seat. Document in detail the responsibilities of the person who’s going to sit in that seat. Define and describe what are the attributes, the characteristics, the qualities, the technical skills that that person who’s going to sit in that seat needs to occupy, and start to envision, you know, hiring these people and start to think about what’s the next position after that. So, have sort of a picture of a one, maybe three-year plan of getting out of seats that you’re sitting in. And then, once you have other people sitting in those seats, have them do that same exercise.

Richard Grove: [00:31:16] Yeah, that’s really good actionable advice. That’s awesome.

John Ray: [00:31:20] Yeah. And most – talking about pricing, I mean, most entrepreneurs, when they start out, have a – sometimes it’s a fatal belief because it’s fatal to the business that if they keep a low price that will attract clients, that a low price does not attract clients. I mean, just like the example I gave earlier of my friend Hans with his wooden-fret crosses.

John Ray: [00:31:50] A price is a marketing signal and you’ve got to price relative to the value that clients perceive in your product or service. And you’ve got to have the courage to do that. And part of what gives you the courage to do that is to understand your customers. And it’s amazing to me how many people get in business and how little customer discovery they really do, right? I mean, how little interviewing of actual customers that they do. And so, I encourage people when they start out to spend as much time as they possibly can, actually talking to real-life customers, not trying to sell them anything, but trying to understand what their problems are.

Richard Grove: [00:32:32] Yeah, they move into it without any proof of concept. It’s an assumption that people will want this thing I’m offering, be it a service or a product.

John Ray: [00:32:39] Yeah. And, they spend so much time on product development without understanding what that customer really values and they go off on the wrong tangent, and then they inevitably mispriced their product or service.

Richard Grove: [00:32:57] Yeah.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:32:58] So, raising a higher price is the fastest way to increase your cash, in my opinion, in my experience. Running cash flow models of, let’s increase sales volume, let’s reduce gross margin, let’s do all these different things. The top line, the increase in price, a dollar and more, is probably going to have the biggest impact on most clients, in most companies on their cash.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:33:28] So, I think that next stage to get over that next valley of death, if I’m not sure, the listeners will understand what that concept means, but to get to that next plateau, so be it from the million to the 5, or from 5 to 10, or from one person to five people, from five people to ten people, is to accumulate cash. Accumulating cash and having that as a singular focus allows you to grow and do all these other things. People are focused on figuring out and fixing so many other problems in their business, but they don’t pay attention to the cash flow and they don’t understand even the profit and loss statement, the balance sheet and cash flow as a third financial factor. You need to become an expert and learn this stuff if you’re going to be an entrepreneur.

Richard Grove: [00:34:23] Absolutely. And yeah, Tim, I know you have a good insight on that. I mean, just the classes I’ve taken and the boot camps I’ve been in of yours. So yeah. What do you see at that same – and like you said, Jonathan, that’s good to put it. Maybe not valley of death, but a plateau, like you hit this kind of ceiling and you’re just – you’re spinning your wheels how do I get, you know, that 10 million, how do I get to 50? And what do you guys see? It sounds like cash is obviously a very big factor. But what can trigger that next kind of move up?

Richard Grove: [00:34:54] In some – most businesses, I know for us, as we’ve gone through, it’s like when we first started, it’s like, man, how are we going to do a quarter million dollars a year? How are we going to do a half-million dollars a year? How are we going to do it? And it’s like, but once you start breaking through stuff, you kind of sail to that next plateau and then you get there and it’s like, all right, what, what now, you know? So, if you have any insight into that is. Sure. Yeah.

Tim Fulton: [00:35:18] You know, there’s been a lot of research that’s been done on business growth and barriers to growth. And one thing that I’ve seen and seen and the science says this, so to speak, is that only about 4% of businesses ever get to $1,000,000 in revenue. And I remember when I first saw that, I thought, wow, I’m surprised by that. Only 4% of businesses ever get past $1,000,000 in annual revenue. And the biggest barrier to growth at that level, it’s a leadership issue and it’s the inability of the founder of the business to let go.

Tim Fulton: [00:35:52] Because, you know, when I start my own business, I’m doing everything, right? I’m wearing all the hats. I’m the CFO, the CMO, the COO. I’ve got all the C hats on. And I can do that for a while, you know, as a new business. But at some point, I’ve got to be willing to let go. I’ve got to be willing to delegate. And I find for many new business owners, that’s very hard because no one can ever do it as well as I can. You know, nobody can ever sell like I can sell. Nobody can ever do the books like I can do the books. And so, I’m reluctant to hire that first salesperson. I’m reluctant to hire my first accountant, bring in a COO to handle day-to-day operations of the business. So, it’s my unwillingness to let go to delegate. It gets in the way oftentimes of businesses being able to break that million-dollar barrier and then work towards even higher levels of revenue.

Richard Grove: [00:36:44] Yeah. And I mean, perfect for Organization Conversation. I mean, it can – a lot of things boil down to organization and the inability to do that and like you say, let go. And, Jonathan, that’s like to your point about literally drawing out the roles and picking what you’re touching the most or what you want to touch the most and what you’re willing to let go. That’s a great, great spot to start.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:37:04] And you need to get the right people on your team and in the right seats and doing the right things and getting them doing the right things right. I know that’s a mouthful. But it’s about teaching them, it’s about first getting the most effective people and then about teaching them to be efficient. And, you know, I think probably everyone would agree, that’s the ultimate competitive advantage, is having the right people. The right people.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:37:30] I mean, I remember going to business school, and this was many years ago, and they’d say the same thing over and over again that an A team with a C concept would outperform a C team with an A concept. And it was all about the people. So, it’s not about – it’s the right people will figure this all out, basically.

Richard Grove: [00:37:55] Yeah. All very good. Well, John?

John Ray: [00:37:58] Yeah. I was just going to add to what Tim said. You know, the other thing, when entrepreneurs start out, they get cheap about getting an accountant from the very beginning, getting a great attorney, business attorney from the very beginning. I mean, they go, you know, get legal agreements, you know, off the Internet. I mean, I have seen so many horror stories from that. And great, great advisors, great coaches, mentors, they’re worth their weight in gold. I mean, because if you get the right people that will help you get your business set up and then advise you along the way, you’ll avoid so many mistakes that otherwise you’re almost destined to make because you’ve tried to do it yourself and you think you can keep your way out of, you know, growing your business and it will come back to bite you.

Richard Grove: [00:38:58] Yeah. Well, that kind of is a good segue to I wanted to ask you guys about. You know, we’re a multigenerational family business. Jonathan, you come from a multigenerational family business. What do you guys see? Because I know firsthand that that presents different challenges than if you’re just a solo entrepreneur calling all your shots and doing whatever you want and, you know, 100% equity is yours. That’s a different path. What – I guess speaking to – and again, I feel like there’s a lot of successful private businesses become family businesses just by function of, “Hey, you know, cousin over here needs a job. Can you bring him on?” And you start to accumulate family on your team, which is great, but it does have inherited challenges. And what are your, guys, experience personally or with your clients when it comes to family business?

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:39:49] Well, I think you need to start setting up the organization so that the family has a meeting on a regular basis, especially when it’s multigenerational. I would recommend probably a quarterly or semi-annual meeting where you talk about principles and values and goals, where there’s an understanding of ownership. You also need to have separate from a leadership team meeting, an ownership team meeting, and those are probably the people that are actively involved in owning the business. They’re kind of probably like the board or the executive team.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:40:32] And then, if there are family debates or issues or squabbles, like those should be done in a different room. They should be done outside of the leadership team meetings, outside of the board meetings. They should be done in a separate situation and environment. It’s really important to kind of create that structure where the right conversations are happening in the right rooms because otherwise you can create a pretty toxic work culture and, you know, family and siblings can get – it can get ugly, you know. Otherwise, if it does get ugly, then you’ve got like the HBO’s TV show Succession happening and, you know, you want to avoid that.

Richard Grove: [00:41:17] Yeah, absolutely. I appreciate the insight for sure into, like, having the self-awareness both individually and as a business to wear the different hat. Like, I have my business hat on at this table with my family and then we can go fight about, you know, where we’re having, you know, grandmother’s birthday dinner outside. You know what I mean? Like, don’t bring this – pretend like you’re not family when you’re having the business conversation, you know.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:41:45] Call each other by first names actually. Don’t say mom and dad.

Richard Grove: [00:41:49] Yeah, exactly. Yeah.

John Ray: [00:41:51] Yeah. There you go. You know, I knew of a family who did a family calendar every year and so they had the best family pictures. And the slogan of the calendar every year was we put the fun in dysfunction. Well, the problem with that is, you know, every family has its dysfunction. Right? But you can’t bring dysfunction to the business, I mean, to your points, guys. You’ve got to create culture from the very beginning. I think, Jonathan, you said that earlier, but that’s got to be the foundation of what you build in a business like that.

Richard Grove: [00:42:30] Yeah.

Tim Fulton: [00:42:31] I wrote an article for my newsletter a couple of years ago, and the title of the article was, Is Your Company The Red Sox or The Sopranos? Because I find those are very different cultures, family culture and a team culture. And I think the decision a business owner has to make at some point is which one do I want? Do I want to have a family culture where we’re all doing different jobs, we’re all pitching in? There’s not a lot of accountability. Or do I want a team culture where there’s a high level of accountability and expectations around performance? I’ll have business owners sometimes when we talk about values and let’s say, well, one of our values is that we’re like family. And I think you never visited my family because that’s not the family culture that you want for your business.

Richard Grove: [00:43:22] Yeah.

Tim Fulton: [00:43:22] So, I think companies have to be – I find family businesses tend to be extremely resilient. So in difficult times, like, you know, maybe where we are now with a declining economy, you know, family businesses can be highly resilient because, you know, family members are going to go the extra mile for each other. They’re going to do what it takes to keep the business going. And yet, on the flip side, if I’m wanting to grow a really fast-growing company based on employee professional performance and getting the best people in the right positions, you know, family business may not be the right structure for that business. So, I think the business owner has to be very careful how, what type of culture they want for their business.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:44:01] And, Richard, I think to speak to I don’t know what the challenges are within your own family business, but I work with mostly rising gen, next-gen leaders. And so, they may not yet be owners in that business, but they have an emotional ownership. Right? And they may want to play more like the Red Sox and have a team-based culture. And the parent, typically it’s a father, but it might be a mother and father, they might be typically wanting more of a family-based kind of a culture. And so, there’s that transition that needs to be managed.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:44:38] I find that I play oftentimes in the middle between those two types of those transitions where we’re letting go at the older generation level to the younger generation and to the ways of doing things. And, you know, it takes time. Not everyone’s willing to let go or transfer equity as soon as maybe it could or should. Sometimes let go of people, too. It’s difficult. You know, it’s – you have – if your father hired someone who’s been working in the company for 40 years and you’ve now moved him into six different positions and it’s really not that good of a fit and now they’re not even really a good core value fit, I mean, it’s a difficult situation with that person. I’ve seen it too many times.

Richard Grove: [00:45:26] And you bring up a good point to just kind of getting everybody on the same page because everybody, you know, what do you want for the business? Well, we want it to be successful. We want it to be good. We want it to grow. Like, what does that mean? Like literally, what do those words mean to you? You know, like what – and I think defining that is so important. And we see that. What is – what does success look like to you? Does it look like the whole family working there or does it look like you’re two extra revenue over the course of a couple of years? You know, so, definitely getting that defined and getting everybody on the same page so that decisions can be made, hard decisions can be made to take those next steps, for sure.

Richard Grove: [00:46:04] So, you guys can, if you got any more to add to that, feel free to. But also would like to jump to what – if you have any advice, what would you say to, say, the business owner or the family that was looking to exit the business? What are things to keep in mind if you’re building – say you’re not building a multigenerational business, but you’re building something to sell? What would you say to somebody kind of going down that path if you’ve seen any? Because the hard part is kind of like you were saying, Tim, like you’ve got to do – a lot of stuff, a lot of stuff you, you just kind of groupthink into. And you are like, wait a minute, I don’t know if – I don’t know where the fork in the road was back there, but I don’t think I like the path I’m on. So, I guess before you get down a path too far, if you have any advice for that person.

Tim Fulton: [00:46:54] Yes. Three things come to mind for me, Richard, in that position. One is start early. Most experts will tell you that it takes 3 to 5 years to get your business ready for exit, whether it’s a sale or whatever the case might be. And too many times, someone decides they want to exit their business and they expect within six months to find a buyer and get at it, it just rarely happens that way. So, number one, start early.

Tim Fulton: [00:47:23] Number two, get good help. Get someone like Jonathan, who, if it’s a family business, who works with family businesses, because that’s a whole different animal when it comes to exiting the business and putting together a plan for that exit, for that transition. So, don’t be afraid to get help, to find good consultants.

Tim Fulton: [00:47:41] And I guess the other thing is about timing, and it’s very hard to time an exit in terms of the economy. The economy is up, the economy is going down, but at least be mindful that ideally, you want to exit your business when the economy is on an upswing versus a downswing, and knowing that the economy usually changes every three to five years. So, let’s be mindful of the macroeconomic factors that might impact a successful exit and try to try to plan accordingly.

Richard Grove: [00:48:07] Yeah, that’s really good advice. Like riding the wave, wait till the swell comes back kind of thing. Yeah.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:48:13] Also, be really clear about your intentions. I wrote a blog a few years back that I think was titled, and I get a lot of hits on it was, 75% of owners regret selling their business a year after they sell the business. So be really clear about like, what is your motivation? Are you being – are you burnt out and are you feeling like you’re being pushed out of this thing, you just got to get out of this thing, or are you being pulled to something else? You want to travel. You want to spend time with your spouse. You have another business you want to start. I mean, be really clear about what your motivations are here.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:48:50] And then ask yourself, you know, have I done everything I can to make this the most sellable business? Have I grown it to the size that makes it more saleable? We all know that larger businesses sell at larger multiples because that’s just the fact, you know. Have I built a business that’s got some kind of recurring revenue stream that makes it more valuable because there’s more trust in what someone’s buying, that it’s going to continue? Have I built a business that’s independent of any one vendor or any few vendors or any one customer or a few customers? I mean, so if there’s too much concentration or there’s too much risk there.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:49:35] So, you know, what have you done to really dress up your business and make it the most sellable? And do you have – like, do you have a good team that will run the business once you’ve left? You know, unless it’s at a size where a strategic buyer is just looking, you know, looking forward and doesn’t really care who the people are. But often as you need to think about, is there a second in command that can run this business for small companies? So, those are a few thoughts, things, they need to think about.

John Ray: [00:50:08] Yeah. Just adding to that, I think one particular thing that’s really important is, particularly as you get to a certain size, I mean most of the buyers that are certain size in terms of just numbers are going to be financial buyers. So, we’re talking about private equity funds, roll-ups, what have you. The first thing they’re going to ask for is financials. That’s the first thing they’re going to ask for. So, your financials need to be impeccable. They need to look fantastic.

John Ray: [00:50:43] If you can afford to get an audit, that’s probably a great idea to get an audit as soon as you can do that. And because when you put that on the table, these are all financial guys with sharp pencils. And what they’re going to do is they’re going to tear it apart and they’re going to look for ways to devalue your business based on the errors or what they see that’s not quite, doesn’t quite look right. And so, getting those financials right before you even enter the process is really, really important.

John Ray: [00:51:23] And the other thing I would say is, talking about what Tim said about timing, you’ve got to realize that somebody’s buying the business, they’re looking to grow the business and you’ve got to give them – you’ve got to leave something on the table for them. I mean, you cannot –

Richard Grove: [00:51:39] That’s a really a good point. Yeah.

John Ray: [00:51:41] You cannot maximize –

Richard Grove: [00:51:43] I’ve got it as good as it can be.

John Ray: [00:51:45] That’s right.

Richard Grove: [00:51:45] Here you go.

John Ray: [00:51:46] Yeah. Yeah, exactly. And expecting somebody to pay top dollar for a business like that is just, it’s ludicrous, right? So, you’ve got to have the business in place where it’s probably a little uncomfortable to sell because you think I’m leaving money on the table. But what you’re doing is you’re ensuring by positioning your business that way, that you’re selling at a better multiple.

Richard Grove: [00:52:12] Yeah. That’s a really good point. Leave – if there’s no carrot on a stick, you know, what are you doing? So, absolutely.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:52:19] Yeah. I want to say something about as I was thinking about the financial statements. It’s like, you know, reading a financial statement is like reading a good book. If the first line is, like, really captivating, it’ll get your attention. So, make sure you’re showing, like, a healthy amount of cash on that first line on that balance sheet, because then it’s more interesting to the reader to want to dig a little deeper, you know. So, I mean, there’s obviously a lot of things you could do to have healthy financial statements, but to have a paltry amount of money in your cash position, never a good idea. And your December 31st year-end statements with a healthy cash balance.

Richard Grove: [00:52:57] Gotcha. That’s yeah, very good advice. Oh, come on in.

Tim Fulton: [00:53:02] Just one more quick thing, Richard. Something that I suggest to my clients, if they’re thinking about wanting to exit, sell their business is I’d say, I’d tell them, take a month off, because that does two things. One, many of my clients, you know, serial entrepreneurs have never taken a week off, more or less a month. And so, it’s really hard for them to imagine, how could I take a month off? But when they do take a month off, they find one or two things. Either they enjoy that time off, they enjoy time with their wife and time with their family, timely time traveling, or they’re miserable. And this goes back to what Jonathan was saying that a lot of times people sell their business and they’re miserable afterwards because they don’t know what to do. They’ve not planned on the next step in their lives.

Tim Fulton: [00:53:43] So, for one, it’s a good experiment for the seller to take a month off and see what that’s like. On the flip side, I don’t think there’s anything healthier for a business than the business owner being gone for a month because for that to happen, the business now needs to work, has to work independently of that business owner, and many small businesses aren’t able to operate that way. And yet to a buyer, that’s one of the most important things that they’re looking at, is that if I’m buying John’s business, can this business run without John? And one test of that is to be able to say, you know what, I take a month off and the business ran beautifully. So, you know, take a month off. It’s a good, good test for the owner. It’s a good test of the business.

Richard Grove: [00:54:23] Awesome.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:54:24] You might discover that if you’re half retired, it’s not a bad business to own. It spits out a lot of cash. You can do a lot of traveling. You have a place to go to get away from your spouse because they don’t want to see you all the time because they’re not used to having you around the house anymore. So, it’s a good thing.

John Ray: [00:54:41] You might actually find that there are a few areas of the business that run better without you being around mucking it up. Right?

Richard Grove: [00:54:46] Exactly. Yeah. They’re like, “Thank God he left for a little bit. Now, we can fix all this.” So yeah, that’s a perfect segue way actually into kind of – you know, you guys, you’ve been in industry to the point where now you’re advisors and coaches yourself. What would you – the advice you’ve already given is fantastic. But what advice would you give that entrepreneur who just – it’s kind of like, you know, you’re a type A personality, you’re always getting after it, you’re always taking in business podcasts, you’re reading books, that kind of thing. How do you yourself kind of let go and how do you balance that professional side versus what your hobbies and interests are and how do you know when somebody you’re advising, maybe they’re burnout and they don’t even know it? Like, what are some signs and some remedies to that mind that just can’t stop? If anybody’s got any.

Richard Grove: [00:55:42] I know, I personally enjoy cycling and I know, and running, and I can tell if I look like on my Strava, which is like the app for tracking it, if I haven’t logged anything for a couple of weeks, like I’m mentally in a different place than I am before. And it’s like this kind of – that’s a reset for me where I say, okay, I need to take a step back and maybe shut this down for a little bit and get outside and do this other completely different thing with a completely different group of people that takes me away from it.

Jonathan Goldhill: [00:56:16] Well, Richard, I think my lifestyle and my website have always had lots of images of cyclists, hikers, surfers. So, I think I tend to attract people as clients who are seeing that life balance is really important. Because I’ve made a lifetime decision around that myself. I lost my father when I was two. He was 35. He had a second massive coronary. You know, he was already accomplished. He had a Yale Law degree, was in the family business. I never was going to die before I was 35. So, I have made a conscious effort of kind of leading that kind of a lifestyle. And so, I think I attract people who enjoy those type, that type of a lifestyle. I mean, you know, Tim might have a different experience and can speak more to the hard-driving entrepreneur, but, like, you got to take a break. Otherwise, you’re going to burn yourself out.

Richard Grove: [00:57:22] Absolutely.

Tim Fulton: [00:57:23] And to add to that, I think what many business owners forget or overlook is that they’re a role model for their employees. And so, if they’re working 100 hours a week and not putting time in the family, not enjoying life outside of business, it’s very likely that that becomes the organizational culture. And now, their employees are doing the same thing. And so, they’re not setting a good example. You know, they’re telling their employees, “Oh, you need to take some time off, take a vacation.” And if they’re not doing that, it’s unlikely that they’re – particularly their direct reports are going to do that as well. So, they’ve got to set a good example for other people. Even though they may not be comfortable wanting to take time off, at the very least, they need to set the example for their people.

Richard Grove: [00:58:08] Yeah. And you could speak to what you do with your time off. I know you’ve done some pretty cool walks.

Tim Fulton: [00:58:13] Yeah, I know. I’ve been very fortunate in taking the time off. I’ve walked the El Camino in Spain two different times. Both of those were one-month walks. And last year I went to Portugal and did something very similar and just found for me, it’s great to be able to get away, to disconnect, to think in a deeper way than I’m accustomed to when I’m working crazy hours here. And amazingly, my clients got along just fine when I was gone.

Richard Grove: [00:58:41] Yeah, you probably came back, I mean, better than when you left, for sure. I mean, I’ve read all kinds of stuff about, this is just on a tangent, but just how good walking is for humans. Just through millennia of walking, it’s just crazy. Like biologically, it’s good for business.

John Ray: [00:58:57] Well, I want to add something Tim said. He talked about deep thinking. See, I think folks that don’t do this, take that time off and get away and take a hiatus, a sabbatical, whatever you want to call it, don’t understand the value of that to the business because you come back from that with all sorts of refreshed spirit, lots of ideas, lots of different ways to look at the business that you would never have had if you just stayed at the desk, hunched over with your head down. And I think there’s just a tremendous value to the business.

John Ray: [00:59:41] So, if you really care about the business, you don’t stay in it 12 months, 365. You don’t. You get away, you create. And frankly, folks, the concept is as old as Sabbath. I mean, this is like a –

Richard Grove: [00:59:58] Yeah.

John Ray: [00:59:59] This is like thousand-year concepts, right, I mean, that you get away, you create space and you come back refreshed and better for it.

Richard Grove: [01:00:07] Absolutely. It’s good for the business to be away from the business. I mean, that’s – absolutely.

John Ray: [01:00:12] Yeah.

Richard Grove: [01:00:13] Well, cool guys, I don’t want to take up too much of your time. I want to be respectful of that. But I also don’t want to leave any stone uncovered that we haven’t talked about, you guys want to get to. Is there anything – we’re going to -when we sign off, we’re going to go through and how our audience can find you guys, but any topic or anything you guys want to throw out there that we haven’t touched on today?

Tim Fulton: [01:00:34] We’ve covered a lot of ground.

Richard Grove: [01:00:35] I think it’s good. I mean, I definitely you know, if I was listening, I think there’s a lot of – I’m going to – there’s stuff I’m going to take away from it for sure. And I’ve had conversations with you guys all before. So it’s like, you know, I’ve learned new things today myself. So, yeah, well, anything Jonathan you can think of on your end?

Jonathan Goldhill: [01:00:52] No, I’m needing to wrap up for a phone call that’s about to come in. But I would say that, you know, the importance of clarity breaks and taking those so important, you might find some clarity breaks from listening to podcasts like this. You get them from being in a peer group, from working with a coach, a mentor, from reading a book, from taking a walk, you know, taking a hike, clearing your brain out with, you know, a long bike ride or a swim. So, important to have that so you can come back with a different perspective.

Richard Grove: [01:01:25] Absolutely. Well, that – we’ll wrap it up on that, guys. We’ll go back down the line, Jonathan, one more time. If you want to tell our audience where they can find you, where they can get your books, where they can listen to your podcast, you got the floor.

Jonathan Goldhill: [01:01:38] Yeah, great. You can find me at thegoldhillgroup.com, pretty easy to spell. Goldhill Group. The, GoldHill Group. My book and podcast have the same title. It’s called Disruptive Successor. The book is A Guide to Driving Growth in Your Family Business. And the podcast is for next-generation leaders, folks like yourself, Richard, who are scaling the family business.

Richard Grove: [01:02:01] Awesome. Thank you. John?

John Ray: [01:02:03] So, my website is johnray.co. You can find me there and connect with me there. I do a lot of posting on pricing on LinkedIn. So, you can connect with me on LinkedIn, John Ray. That’s R-A-Y. John Ray. One is my handle on LinkedIn and my podcast is The Price and Value Journey and you can find that at pricevaluejourney.com or on your favorite app.

Richard Grove: [01:02:30] Awesome. And Tim.

Tim Fulton: [01:02:32] Richard, first I want to thank you for having us on today. This has been great. My website is smallbusinessmattersonline.com. I have a monthly newsletter. It’s free of charge and any of your listeners can subscribe to. I also have a podcast, Small Business Matters Podcast, and a couple of books on Amazon, so you can check those out as well.

Richard Grove: [01:02:53] Awesome. Well, thanks again, guys. I really enjoyed it. I’m sure our audience has as well. And yeah, look forward to chatting with all you guys again soon.

Jonathan Goldhill: [01:03:02] Thank you.

Outro: [01:03:03] Thank you for joining us. Organization Conversation is brought to you by Wall Control, a family-owned and operated producer of best in class wall-mounted organizers for your home or business, made right here in the U.S.A. To learn more, go to wallcontrol.com.

 

Tagged With: business advice, business coach, Business RadioX, entrepreneur, Goldhill Group, John Ray, Jonathan Goldhill, Organization Conversation, pricing, ray business advisors, revenue, Richard Grove, small business coach, Small Business Matters, The Goldhill Group, Tim Fulton, trusted advisors, Vistage, Wall Control

Your Relationship Surgeon Michelle S. Thomas

October 3, 2022 by angishields

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Cherokee Business Radio
Your Relationship Surgeon Michelle S. Thomas
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Sponsored by Business RadioX ® Main Street Warriors

Dr-Michelle-S-ThomasDr. Michelle S. Thomas, Your Relationship Surgeon, is an 8X Internationally Best-Selling Author, Certified Life/ Relationship/Business Coach, Motivational speaker, and Multiple business owner.

She serves individuals and businesses by precisely pinpointing what is “infecting” their ability to achieve PEACE, PROSPERITY and PROFITABILITY while placing them on a permanent path of success!

She has spent over 20 years studying, analyzing and healing relationships of all types and within all stages. The journey into truly understanding relationships was birth out of her own determination not allow her “let downs” to become her Legacy.

Connect with Dr. Thomas on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:07] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Woodstock, Georgia. Welcome to Women in Business, where we celebrate influential women making a difference in our community. Now, here’s your host.

Stone Payton: [00:00:30] Welcome to another exciting and informative edition of Women in Business Stone Payton here with you this afternoon, and today’s episode is brought to you in part by the Business RadioX Main Street Warriors program. For more information, go to Main Street Warriors dot org. You guys are in for such a great treat this afternoon. Please join me in welcoming to the broadcast. Author, Speaker, Life and Business Coach. Your relationship surgeon. Dr. Michelle S Thomas. How are you?

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:01:04] I am amazing. Thank you. Thank you for this opportunity. I’m always that person that especially when we can kind of talk to our ladies about stepping into their greatness. That’s just where my, my, my sweet spot is. So thank you for having me.

Stone Payton: [00:01:23] Well, it’s absolutely my pleasure. We’re delighted to have you on the show here in studio. You and I had a chance to have a conversation a few weeks ago before, and I could I could hear it in your voice. But now I see it in your eyes. The the passion, the exuberance. You really clearly enjoy the work. I got a thousand questions. We won’t get to them all. But you can go back sometime. Maybe a good place to start is if you could share with us kind of in general terms, mission purpose. What are you really out there trying to do for folks?

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:01:56] So my mission, my assignment, I call it my divinely appointed assignment is to help people in general, but women especially, to be able to reach their level, their decision of their greatness, not what society says, not what your family says, not what your bank account says, but what you know, your level of greatness is. And for us to build a new foundation for the next five generations to come, we got to change the narrative and the dynamics out here of thinking of just now, the here and now we are, whether we want to or not. We are the ancestors of the next four or five generations. And where we lay this foundation is where they’re going to follow. So we got to do what we got to do. And so my job is just kind of that connector, that information guide just to be able to help people to kind of better articulate and walk down their path of greatness.

Stone Payton: [00:03:00] So was there a catalytic moment that led you down the path of doing this work? What’s the back story? How in the world did you end up doing this?

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:03:11] So long story short, I since the age of three, I knew that I was supposed to help people. I knew that there was something that was in me that I was supposed to help, but I didn’t have a definition for it. I didn’t have a description for it. And so throughout my journey of life, there’s some pivot points that got me to understand where my place was. And most of those pivot points were negative pivot points to get me to clarify that the unicorn in me was necessary. And so my first pivot point was sixth grade. I, my English teacher, asked for us to write a paper about what we wanted to be when we grew up. And so I went home and I always knew that I wanted to help people, but I didn’t know what job description. And so I wrote and I threw away about 50 different versions when I finally landed on the proper job for me, the perfect job for me. And it’s the day that I’m supposed to go and deliver this speech. And I’m ready and I stand up and I say, Hi, my name is Michelle Spears, and I am going to be the president of United States. And my English teacher jumped up, grabbed my paper, took a red pen, and wrote a great big F across. It made me sit down and styling. I’m gonna tell you, I’m gonna sit back there. I’m and I’m trying not to cry. I’m embarrassed and I’m trying to figure out because what my parents will tell you, I’ve always been that y person is probably I stayed in a state of trouble most of the time.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:04:46] I didn’t stay in trouble because I did things wrong. I just needed you to explain. Before we go into this punishment, I need you to explain why we’re here. So. So I’m sitting back there, and the rest of the students, I don’t even know what they said. I don’t know what I was focused on. What did I do wrong? And at the end of the class, I went up and I asked her, I said, what did I do wrong? And she said, You didn’t take this assignment seriously. And I said, But I did. I can show you all the drafts that I did, but I did. And there were two criteria for this, this paper. It had to be a real job, and we had to explain how we were going to arrive there. And I had all of it mapped out. I said, But you didn’t give me a chance. And. Here was my first lesson of people. What I love and how we interpret help. This is my first lesson and I want everybody to listen clear because this was a black teacher who looked at me and said, Young lady, in my lifetime, in your lifetime, you will never see a black president. And in my lifetime and in your lifetime, in the next five lifetimes, you will never see a black woman president. And that was a pivot point for me, because she did mean it for harm in her own manner, in her own version of help.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:06:09] She was trying to make sure that I wasn’t set up for failure instead, because, again, I’m that unicorn. Y’all learn after you talk to me a few times. I’m a little a little special. But when I wasn’t getting, I got the lesson. But where I interpret or reinterpret her lesson was. I have to change the narrative. I have to expand people’s mind and thought process of what we cannot do. And end to end translate it into what we can achieve. And so during that time, from that moment on, I begin to just learn how to listen to people and the barriers. And a lot of times we think that the way that someone thinks and the way that someone processes is out of negative negativity, but it’s only out of what they know. They can only operate from the information that they know. And so that’s what she did for me. And throughout my journey, I can tell you so many stories of people that I met that intentionally or unintentionally, maybe what they were saying and what they were doing was meant for my harm. But because of how I was built and what my assignment was, I took that information and turned it into a teaching tool. And so it was it’s as I’m going through these, again, negative experiences where people would have given up and people would have stopped. I became a a scholar of people first before any education, before any businesses.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:07:55] I began to learn people. And so I take that. And when someone wants to sink into segments and and our own little microcosms of bigotry or discrimination or hold back, I seem to be that neutral person to be able to. Let’s talk about it. Let’s talk about it. And so that’s how we just kind of got into this space of and I’m going to tell you in the beginning, like this wasn’t popular. I just want to clear that for everybody. Don’t let me sit here and make you feel like that. This was a great journey. There were so many times that I looked in the mirror and was like, Now, Jesus, listen, I don’t even know what is happening here. And let me just try to just let me go in here and sit in this little cubicle and do my job, shut my mouth, because my life is tore up. How am I in here trying to speak positivity and somebody else’s world and my life is completely jacked up. What is wrong with me? So, you know, there was times I felt like that. What now is my business? I thought it was a curse. I thought it was something that was wrong with me. Why is it that I look like this and I think like this? But now I learn that a lot of those roadblocks that I went through was building my story. I can’t relate to what you’re going through if I haven’t been through something myself.

Stone Payton: [00:09:16] Yeah. So several domains to your scope of work. One, and maybe it’s really two is is this life and business? Business coaching. Describe that a little bit. What does that look like in the early stages, especially? But then how does that that process unfold?

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:09:34] So back to when I was at, I used to tell myself to go into that cubicle and do my job. I found myself always speaking life into someone. And so the life coach part of me was kind of a thing that I did without having a certification for it. So when it became popular to get these certifications and when I got my certification to become a life coach, but as I began that life coach, the title, your relationship surgeon was birth, because as I’m doing my life coaching, I’m a business woman. I am straight business. That is what I do and that’s what I love. I begin to recognize that they they were not separate from each other. In order for you to be very profitable and successful in your business, then you also have to have that level of love and success in your life. So your relationship surgeon became the person to let you understand that no longer. 400 years ago, maybe you had to have a separate life. But in this global world and this world of technology, what we have to understand is our business lifeblood functions off of the life of the people that are applicable to our business.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:10:55] And until we get that message, until we stop segregating people’s lifestyles, and as a woman, as a mother, as a wife, going through my business career in the beginning, my first management job was at the age of 19. So I’m. Wow, right? I’m the kid sitting at the table and everybody is like, okay, so this one we’re about to make cry. But I had to learn my business acumen. I had to know that when I came and sat down at that table, I needed to know not only equal to what the people at the table was, but I needed to know more and where they were going to be a part of that study in people. And so when I get when I started my life coaching, it organically developed into becoming a business coach because now I go into corporations and I go into businesses and I’m able to talk to them about the human capital that they need to be able to survive. And I have I’m a 25 year old. I’m 25 year old, Right.

Stone Payton: [00:11:57] What I am, she looks great, y’all. We’ll get some pictures posted.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:12:02] I am a 25 year vet, air vet. So I understand the legalities and understanding the functions of human capital. But I take my experience of life coaching and I bring it into that business aspect so that that CEO, that vice president, that director, when they’re making decisions, then it is a transparent decision across the board. We got to get rid of the levels. We have to get rid of the big eyes and the big and the little use and post-pandemic. It is really very important right now for businesses, whether you have operated the way that you’ve done for the past 50, 60, 70 years, now that you are post-COVID post-pandemic, there are going to be some shifts and some things that you’re going to have to implement into your business model in order for you to retain the the the qualified candidates that you are seeking. And one of that is you have to understand that they have a life. They have needs. They have emotions. They have. I did a research. I do a lot of research. And one of the market research that came out was during the pandemic. The biggest fear of a lot of workers going back to work was I lose myself again. I lose the ability to feel what I feel. If I need to do what I need to do with my kids, I lose that that capability. And we saw that with the great resigned resignation. We saw people that went back to work because of finances, but then they had to balance it with is it really worth it anymore? So as as corporations, we all have to understand that there’s a shift that we need to do.

Stone Payton: [00:13:56] It must be incredibly rewarding work. What are you enjoying the most? What are some of the things that you just like? Wow, I’m so glad I get to do this.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:14:06] People. I get to in my line of work from global speaking and being an author and being in my own businesses. I get a chance to meet people that never would have had the opportunity to meet different backgrounds, different nationalities, different experiences. And that’s what I enjoy. I love sitting in the space where I learn from someone else’s background.

Stone Payton: [00:14:38] Now, even with that level of diversity, do you see some common patterns emerge? And maybe you don’t articulate it out loud, but you say to yourself, Yep, I’ve seen this one before. Yes.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:14:50] People don’t recognize. And if you actually take time to think about it, life is a circle and there are trends and things that we do. Sometimes we think we reinvent the wheel. We didn’t. If you ask, you do research. My first lesson with this, my kids and I have seven kids. Wow. Yeah. At one point in time, my house was worse than The Partridge Family. We had seven kids, two dogs, a cat and a partridge in a pear tree. If you looked hard enough, there was a lot going on. But during that time, one of my lessons that I taught my my kids and six on my boys, and so I taught them about music. And so some of our life lessons came through music and I would play whatever was hot at that time, whatever they was over there. And they just, Oh, this the ladies Mom, you got to hear this latest drop. This is it. Okay, so I’m listening. And this is Kanye West. It’s Jay-Z or whatever. And so I remember Jay-Z’s song came out 99 problems. And what happened was I sat the kid, the boy’s on the couch, and I told him, I said, so let’s play nine, nine problems. And all day just over there. This is the latest that Jay-Z has reinvented the world. And then I play top. And they said, Who’s that? Those are the guys behind Jay-Z right now.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:16:06] That that that that guitar, that track that was played back in the eighties when they first came out. And they’re like, well, real. Yes, yes. Everything comes and it stems from something. So even in our business, our in our in our in our functions and our micro biases and people have to I’m kind of that that shock factor because I talk about things that most people like to shy away from, whether you want to admit it or not, we all have micro biases. The biases that we have may not be negative or detrimental to someone, but we all have our biases. And our biases stem from exposure where we grow up, what we learn, what we were exposed to creates our biases. And so tall people have this image of short people. Short people have this image of tall people, light people, dark people, people with hair, people with no hair, people with bright hair. All these things are just micro biases that we have. When you go into business is key for you to recognize your own micro bias. So it doesn’t take on the personality of your business. And so my job a lot of times with that coaching is to go and expose the underlying biases that they’re not even recognizing. That is ostracizing a group of people in their business.

Stone Payton: [00:17:41] And you don’t even realize it maybe without the the objective perspective of someone with your specialized knowledge and experience coming in.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:17:48] And it’s not and no one’s doing it for harm. But when you’re that interview person, when you’re not hiring manager, what you don’t realize unless you’re unless it’s brought to the forefront of your mindset, you may steer towards a certain client or a certain applicant because your own biases and it comes with gender, it comes with experience. So let me take you back and let’s think back to maybe early 2000s or whatever when it got to the point that even to be the fry cook at McDonald’s, you had to have a degree. Yeah, like everybody housekeeping, everything. There was no job out there. Like in the nineties, if you had a skill and the qualifications, you could get that job and you grew in that job and then all of a sudden we shifted into everyone had to have that degree. Well, what happened was a group of people who had a strong skillset and work ethic became ostracized because of a a piece of paper that became the bias. I don’t even want to hear from you. I don’t even want to know what you can do because you don’t have this piece of paper.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:19:01] Well, what happened throughout our life is we begin to learn towards the latter part of the first ten years that we lost a valuable workforce. Ageism, sexism. Those are things that that that when we think that we’re inventing something new. It’s just the circle of what we have experienced just on a different level. Now it’s technology. So if you don’t have that tech knowledge, if you don’t if you’re not savvy with that, when you go sit down to apply for a job that you know that you’re qualified for. When they start throwing out these net and all these dots and all these are the terms and you’re not they don’t even want to hear the rest of the skill set. So post-pandemic. What is forcing us to do is look at our workforce in a different manner. Now it’s about transitional skills. Now, as a company, you have an obligation that if you want to groom someone to become the perfect candidate, you have to have that training, that support to get them there.

Stone Payton: [00:20:12] So how do you get the work? How does the whole sales and marketing thing work for someone like you? It seems like it would be a very competitive field and maybe the people with whom you might have the most impact, the greatest lover might be hard to even get to, much less have a substantive conversation with, even start broaching these topics.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:20:33] Yeah. So that is an excellent question. And this is for my entrepreneurs out here. You have to know your strength. And so I positioned myself in places that I am open. The doors are open for me to even have this conversation, a one dimensional piece of paper or a email and listen for social media and that don’t send me no emails because I’m just going to be transparent a minute. Nobody call. Okay? But this is this is what we all have to understand about. Again, that circle of life and business. Social media is great, but it has a place to it. If you have not developed the skill set to be able to walk in someone’s door and have that elevator pitch and sell them on why you are the better candidate than the other Fortune 500 company that does the same things that you do. Then you have to go reskill. Because coaching and business coaching right now, if you go on LinkedIn, it’s about 8000 pages of coaches.

Stone Payton: [00:21:40] Yeah, right.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:21:41] And post pandemic, everybody became a coach because everybody sat in their living room or in their bathrooms or whenever, wherever they were, and everybody registered as a coach. But what’s going to happen with the fallout in the separation is the tools that you give. So I’m a great communicator, but I’m a better business person so I can bring you a package that shows you the results. I don’t just go in and talk, and a lot of us entrepreneurs missed that. We think that our skill set is being able to just sell ourselves verbally via social media, but there’s no substance behind that conversation. I coach people to do it the opposite way. Build your packages first. Build your foundation Business comes off of a foundation and fundamentals. I’m a I’m an old school realtor. And and so one of my my goals is to be a a custom home designer. But my father had two daughters. He wanted a son. So I was it I was close to. So while while my friends was at the mall, we was dropping electrical cord down from the the attic and rewiring the house and changing tires. And and yes, millennials back in the day, you had to change spark plugs and actual oils.

Stone Payton: [00:22:58] I remember.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:22:59] Those. Yeah. Yeah. You had to jack the car up and figure out what was happening with carburetors. We had real stuff that was on our cars. But what happened was I thought that that was going to be a hindrance because my friends were shopping or whatever that taught me about the work of the surface. The house is is beautiful, the car is beautiful, but it’s the work and the maintenance that you do with it that keeps it going. And so I took that into my business practice. And so when I go and I want to do something, I first always go back to that fundamental now back to that real estate analogy that I give. I tell people you can build a beautiful multimillion dollar home, but if the foundation is cracked, what’s going to happen to that house?

Stone Payton: [00:23:48] Yeah. So is that in a good book says something about that.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:23:52] So you’ve got to take that into your saying business practice. Yeah, you can do a social media page and you can do great logos and great business cards or whatever, But if you’re launching a business and you don’t have a strong foundation, then you’re going to that business is going to crumble. And when you and for all of my architects and all of my engineers, they will confirm what I’m saying. You have to have a plan of where you want that business to go, because when you go to build a building, the first thing that your architect is going to at you is how tall and how wide is that building going to be? Because that tells them how deep they have to dig the foundation. So you can’t have a surface level business and expect to scale it and expand upon it with a surface level foundation. Does that make.

Stone Payton: [00:24:47] Sense? It makes all the sense in the world. It certainly does. So let’s shift gears a minute and talk a little bit about the books, the writing. You’ve written several, I think. Tell us about the first one.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:24:59] So my first book was at all the titles that I had imagined for myself. Author was never one of them. And so I what happened? And I want everybody to be patient with this because at first you’re going to think this is a very sad story. It’s not a sad story. It is just the truth of my life. What happened out of those seven kids that we had? June 15, 2017, We lost our 19 year old son to a car accident. Mm hmm. And that hits you like a sledgehammer. Wow. That hits you to the point where you have to put sticky notes all over your house to say things like Remember to put shoes on. Remember to brush your teeth because your body and your mind is so in a deep hole you can’t function. And so what I did was I watched every dumb show that I could probably find. I could watch anything because I didn’t want to think. I didn’t want to deal with grief. I didn’t want to think, well, I ran out of series and shows to do. And so I took my laptop out and I started writing stories, little scenarios about my experience of blend in the family because we’re a blended family. And when we were blending the family, I never could find updated information to help me with the stressors that I was experiencing, blending the family. And so I wrote a book on blending. A family wasn’t going to put it out there, just going to be something as my own therapy, my own grief therapy was to write this book, and a friend of mine read it and said, Well, you need to publish it.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:26:32] So I’m thinking, okay, that’s fine. My family again, I have seven kids, so ten books I know going to be sold. So seven of my kids don’t buy them because they had no choice but seven of the kids. My husband has to buy them. So that’s number eight. And then my mom and dad are going to have to buy a copy. So that’s listen, that’s ten people. I got ten people locked down and I published this book. And before I knew it, it went international. Wow. I received emails and messages and mail from people that talked about how this book. I had one lady that I put on my website. She said, For 11 years I hated my ex-husband and I read your book. And she said, And I actually called him up and apologized because I finally understood from his perspective. So the book is written in scenarios called Unspoken Real Talk of Today’s Blended Family. And it’s still selling. But what it does is it takes the first story and I really sensationalize it. You guys, when I tell you I was so excited about writing this book, I got so absorbed that I drove my husband crazy because I would come to him and go, Let me tell you what she did. And he was like, Aren’t you the one writing the book? I know, but I’m just saying. So it kind of took on his own little personality.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:27:50] But I give you the first side of the of the story. And then in the middle of it, there’s an assignment where you memorialize, you capitalize what you’re feeling, all of that emotion that you’re feeling. I want you to write it down. And then on the other side of it, I give you the same scenario with what actually was happening. And it really trains your mind in relationships to not take the surface of what society tells you. That person is cheating. That person doesn’t like you, that person doesn’t love you. It really trains your brain to look at it from a different perspective. Back to what I was saying. I’ve always been that person to want people to understand how to look at things from a different way. And so and it’s not just about couples. There’s a story in there about a husband and wife that are two divorces that now become husband and wife. The next story is about a mother and a daughter and how that breakdown happens. And then we I talk about drugs and how drugs and alcohol affects the family. And then I finalize it with a story of a breakdown between a mother and a son. But all of it is unspoken. These are unspoken feelings, and I’m teaching you how to bring voice to it. So that was my first book. It was built out of tragedy. But my son that we lost his name was Bryant, and my obligation to him is to make sure that the world still knows and hears his voice.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:29:22] Bryant was an amazing kid, like we really had no title when we moved or when we get into a new neighborhood. We were just titled Bryant’s Family, so he must be Bryant’s mom. What it must be Bryant is that biggest personality ever. Never held a grudge. Never got upset with anyone. And during my trials and tribulations, I watched this kid never feel and experience and process things like I did. And so when we lost him, I said, my obligation now is while his mother was waiting to die and not live up to what her expectations was. I had a kid who’s no longer here, so I had to get up. I had a choice. I had to get up and get out of my own way and and decide even if it wasn’t for me, but to carry on that love, that passion, that drive that he had for making sure that other people, especially underserved people, were taken care of. And that forced me to show up in what I’m doing now. And so I, I use that that story. And sometimes what happens in our world, what we think is, is a great loss, sets us on the path of where we’re supposed to be. A never. There’s not a day that I don’t miss my baby. There’s never a day that I would not wish that he was still here. But while I’m still here, I have a job to do and I have to give him voice where he can’t have voice.

Stone Payton: [00:31:00] Wow, I’m so glad I asked. And then you’ve gone on to write several more. Some of them focused on the business clients that you’re trying trying to serve. Have you developed a a methodology, some discipline and rigor to everything from identifying it’s time to write a book, and here’s how we write a book in my shop as it started to become like that.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:31:24] Okay, so you can laugh because again, I’m that person. So I usually write three books at one time. Wow. I have them because I write according to where I am at that moment. And I think sometimes a lot of times people get like, I’ve never gotten writer’s block, and I think it’s because I don’t box myself into one section. And so I’ll always in my laptop, I’ll always have. A business book that I’m writing on, a manuscript that I’m writing on. I’ll always have a relationship manuscript that I’m writing on, and then I’ll always have a comedy mystery. I’m a thriller person, so I always got that over here on the side. So whatever mode and mood that I’m in that day, if I have done a training, I can go to that business book and I can add to that manuscript because that’s the mode I’m in. If I’ve done a coaching or done a group class with relationships and now can go to my manuscript and add to that, now if I’m just feeling funny, then that’s where I just go and put my feet up and put on some fuzzy socks and I write and that keeps me flowing. And then once I get to each book tells me when it is done, I don’t decide how many pages I’m going to have. I don’t decide how many chapters.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:32:50] My book tells me, okay, this is enough for this time because you have to. There’s a balance when you’re writing where you don’t want to overwhelm your audience with information because it begins to replace that short term memory. It begins to replace what the the point that you’re trying to make because you’ve over inundated them with a bunch of information. And so with that, when that book is done that I, I move it on to my editor and someone else to read it. And then we go back and then we put that book out there. And so I brought you two books. One of my projects that developed was this exceptional woman enterprise. And so within the exceptional woman enterprise, there was two parts to it. The first part that came with the exceptional woman to her back story, all of our kids at a certain amount of time, my my husband requires for them to read the Seven Habits book. And so it was time for the 17 year old in the 19 year old, reluctantly, anybody who got into it just, you know, So my husband put it on the kitchen counter and it stayed on the kitchen counter for about a week. And so they just kept walking past and acting like the book wasn’t there. But for some reason, I’ve seen this book for years because our kids have this huge age span, and so I’ve seen this book for years.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:34:11] But this time it, it, it it stopped me in my tracks. And so I kept hearing I got to write a book. And so I’m in again. I’m I’m the unpaid comedian. I was like, okay, now listen, Lord, I got three in the laptop. I’m trying to get them published. Just slow down, okay? And I just kept hearing I got to write a book. I got to write a book. And over about three weeks, I came up with this title of the eight qualities. Well, as I was speaking on stages and things that I needed to do, it dawned on me that I needed to speak to a group of women which were women of color. And so the first project of the exceptional woman was to put out the eight qualities of the exceptional black woman in business and entrepreneurship. Because facts tell us that women of color are the least lended. We don’t really pass the iris sniff test. You know what that is? The iris sniff test. The iris will let you claim everything plus your cat and dog for three years, and you can claim everything in it. But after three years, if you have not turned a profit, then they. They will actually transition your business into a hobby.

Stone Payton: [00:35:25] Hmm. I did not know that.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:35:26] So you’re not able you’re no longer able to claim these business claims because now you just consider playing. You’re just a hobby. And so what happens is a lot of times, women of color, we aren’t able to get past that threshold because of lack of funding, because lack of information, because lack of drive, not drive from us, but drive from the community and other businesses to support what we’re doing. And so this book is is is is written as a reference book so that every time that they need to understand some aspect of business, they can just go straight to that chapter. The goal for the book is to put this in colleges and universities and African American studies, even in high school, because it’s not a book about race. I made the title because I need you to be interested in it. I need that to catch your attention. But once you read the book, the first portion of each section gives you the business acumen that every business woman especially needs to know, no matter what your race or color is. And then after that, there are story after stories of women who related to that quality when they felt like they weren’t that quality. So you have a balance where you now have that business knowledge that you need, but then that’s that warm and fuzzies of knowing that what you’re feeling right now. There’s a woman out there that felt exactly what you felt, but this is the blueprint of how she overcame.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:37:05] And so that was the eight qualities. Now, what happened? And during this book, I thought I wasn’t gonna have enough information because everybody who did book collaborations always told me they was like, Oh, you’re not going to have to publish the book because, you know, you’re not authors aren’t going to turn the chapters in or whatever. That was not the experience that I had. I had so much information turned into me that I was able to create The Greatness Journal, The Guide to Greatness. And this journal has a space that you kind of record what you’re feeling, but above each section are quotes from these very authors to keep encouraging you on why you are an exceptional woman. And that just kind of came organically. So that’s that was the first step of the exceptional woman enterprise. And that function. The second step was, although I wrote a book that was targeted towards a group of women, women of color, I am a woman and I’m in business. I am here to talk to women across the globe. So that developed and birthed the Exceptional Woman tour. And the exceptional woman tour happens in two parts. Every March, which is Women’s History Month, we focus in on the inner woman and we have speakers and panelists and fireside chats and things that speak to what tends to hold us back as mothers, as wives, as women in general.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:38:31] Just those barriers that seem to hold us back internally. And then every August we speak to the external factors of the woman that’s that finances, that’s that professional career, that’s financial aid, that’s education, that’s partnerships. We give them all of the resources and tools, not for them to use six months from now, but when they walk out the door, these are actionable items that they can take to make a shift in their professional career. And then in between that, in between March. So March, we have the Inner Woman Summit, which is always virtual. Last March, we connected with 15 different countries, which I was so proud of. Yeah. And then I built a business platform that after the conference, April, May, June, July, they shift to this business platform that not is not just business, but is where they can connect with those very speakers and a very panelist that they resonated with and connect with their coaching program, be able to buy their products, be able to learn what’s next for that person that carries them to August. Then August, we launched a business conference and then once again, we shift them back to that platform. We’re September, October, November, December, January, February. Once again, we become that accountability partner so our audience doesn’t ever get to that space where they feel like they’re in this battle alone.

Stone Payton: [00:40:03] That is so in. It, isn’t it, to have that accountability partner.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:40:08] It’s a great without the judgment.

Stone Payton: [00:40:11] That’s how you are a good accountability partner.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:40:14] Accountability doesn’t mean that you beat somebody over the head. Accountability means that I am in the space waiting on you to call on me. And whenever you’re ready, I’m here to cheerlead you on. I’m here to encourage you. I’m here to get you the tools and resources that you need so that when. Because we all do it. Let me just give this is going to be my disclaimer that I’m going to give to everybody. We have a tendency that we look at people through our own lens and we think that what, the grass is greener type of theory. If I had more money, if I had a better, bigger business, if my if my clothes were different, if this was different, we’re always living in this world of if what we don’t realize is. That increase in that bank account, that increase in your responsibility, that increase. You still go back into the same emotional space if you’re not ready for it. If you’re not ready to have those millions of dollars, then you’re not going to be able to maintain those millions of dollars. So we got to get you ready for that. We got to get you ready and responsible and used to the tools and the resources that you need to maintain the 1000 there. Come on, somebody. Everybody’s 1000. Okay, before you become that millionaire, and then once you’re in that millionaire status, then we have a level to help you to get to that billionaire status. But we are here so that it is not a superficial launch.

Stone Payton: [00:41:50] I love it. And we won’t try to dive into all of the books. I don’t know. We’d have to just do a daily show. But you were so kind enough to to bring me this one as well. And it’s relatively new, isn’t it?

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:42:03] This is new. It hasn’t even come out yet. You are the first one to even see it.

Stone Payton: [00:42:07] Tell us about it, because I’ll be reading it this weekend. I am bigger than my resume.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:42:12] Absolutely. And it’s a very quick read. I did that on purpose because now most of my books, you can see, like the quality is most of my books are really thick. Even publishers like, do you know how many pages you have?

Stone Payton: [00:42:23] This one is like an airplane book I call airplane book.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:42:26] And the reason that I did it is because at this base, the purpose, the very purpose of I am bigger than my resume is to reach that person in the stages of doubt. And so sometimes you don’t need a bunch of information, you just need task. So at the end of each chapter, there are nine chapters. At the end of each chapter is a challenge, and that challenge helps you to kind of get out of your own way. But the purpose of I’m beginning my resume when I told you, you guys, my my past and all this stuff, there were times in there were portions in my life that other people made me feel like the unicorn that I thought I was, but they made it in a negative way where I didn’t belong. And so they would look at the resume. And again, first of all, I was a single mom. I had three kids, so I didn’t have really time for a career. I had to get jobs. There was the job we need to keep the lights on. So and so. When people looked at my resume, they would always say, Oh my God, you’ve had a lot of jobs. And there was a period there. Stone that I felt embarrassed about that I felt like I didn’t want to show people my resume. What I didn’t know was all of those different industries that I had a job was designed to build for the seven businesses that I run right now because it gave me a tool, a skill set. I’m not that person that only knows one area. It built a repertoire and an information palate that was different than most people. Because I can touch on several different industries from experience, not from reading, but from experience. And so when I got past that embarrassment about my resume, I began on my stages.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:44:12] I would have these conversations with people who had degrees, who didn’t have degrees, VP’s or whatever. What I found was the common denominator was no matter what’s that is that they were there was some aspect of people around them that felt like they had to be satisfied. So if you’re a VP, but you decide that you want to be an author, people around you would look and and you know what this sounds like. They always go, Well, why are you doing that? You got a good job. Oh, yeah. You know, you make a lot of money. Why are you over here trying to do all this over here? And it speaks to everyone. Everyone that there is something in you, whether it’s gardening on the side or whether you make the best biscuits out there. And you decided, I want to just sell these biscuits. But I am a CEO of a company. It gives you permission to understand that you can be bigger than that one dimensional piece of paper. You’re bigger than that resume, you’re bigger than your degree, you’re bigger than all of that. You are a person and this teaches you how to pool those beauty in those aspects. And to get past we talk about those micro biases. We talk about generational gaps. I talk about things that help you to find what that light is within you. Because we’ve got one thing that I learned from losing Bryant, and that’s the key that I’m gonna leave everyone with. We got one shot at this. There’s no do overs with life. So if you’re not going to live every day to the fullest, then what are we doing? I’m beginning my resume.

Stone Payton: [00:45:50] I love it. So being an entrepreneur at any level, whatever stage of maturity your business is in, even in being an incredibly successful entrepreneur and living into your purpose, it’s still not all, you know, butterflies and rainbows in. And I know, at least for me personally, you know, sometimes I run out of juice. I got to recharge the batteries. Where do you go? And I don’t necessarily mean a physical place to kind of recharge, get inspired. What? How do you recharge comedy? Yeah.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:46:25] Comedy. I, i, I take all of my hats off, and my husband and I will sit on the couch, and you would think if there were people that had cameras in our house, they probably would put us those little hug me vest on because I think something was wrong with us. But we we will sit on and it could be like a 30 minute little sitcom. But I remember there was one show and I can’t even remember the name of the show, but there was a there was a scenario that happened in the beginning of that show. And to my to this day, I can’t remember what it was. We replayed that one section of that show at least eight times, and each time we fell off the couch laughing like the cat was looking like, Do I need to call somebody a day? Okay. But because of all of the businesses and things that we do, that’s our release. Laughter. Even in your relationships, I tell couples all the time, How many times do you laugh together? Because during that time of raising our kids, listen, there was a point there that we all we alternated months of who was going to file for divorce because I can’t I don’t like you and you don’t like me. I can’t do this. We’re not going to make it. But 21 years later, we’re able to tell people that even during those rough times, even when our buckets both were empty and we didn’t want to deal with each other, we could find something that we didn’t have to talk about it. We just sat there and found something funny and we would laugh. So that’s my cure for everything because life is so heavy sometime that you just got to get a real laugh. And so that’s how I refilled my bucket. I and I did stand up. I did stand up. I did circuit. I did, I did.

Stone Payton: [00:48:05] Oh, my.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:48:05] Goodness, I did. But as a single mom, that was not paying any bills, y’all. Okay, so you can’t couch I heard Sherri Shepherd talk about when she was starting her her career as a comedian, how she couch surfed. Well, nobody’s going to let you come in with your three kids and your cat. I’m just gonna throw that out. There. Ain’t nobody don’t knock on people’s door and try to couch stuff so you can have your comedy career. But I did. I did my little comedy circuit. I did a stint in broadcasting that was just kind of my my escape of I have to have a job. But during that time of comedy, people would always ask me, Well, who’s your writer? Who? Where did you write this material? I promise you guys, I just told you what happened on Tuesday. That’s just what happens in my life. And I think that became my my defense, my repair for tragic things that happened in my life. I always had a way that I could even as deep as it is, I can have a way that we can have a conversation and laugh about it. So just as like I told you about loss of Brian, I can tell you all the funny stories about Brian. That’s my healing to be able to do that. So comedy is my escape. To be able to go and just let my hair down and just be special.

Stone Payton: [00:49:20] I got to ask you about the professional speaking. Yes. What is that like? I think there are a lot of folks a lot of our listeners are you know, they have jobs of a great deal of responsibility inside large organizations. Several of them are entrepreneurs. Some of them do aspire to speak. Maybe some of them are speakers and authors. What is that life like doing the professional speaking?

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:49:45] So when I first started speaking, I thought that it was just about the speaking I did. I actually had a coach that was like, What’s your signature speech? What’s your target audience? And this is like my first session. I didn’t have no answers for y’all. I didn’t even know what she was talking about, but I just kind of faked my way through it. And so what I had to learn was I had to learn what the the speaking world really meant. And so I begin to dissect. So if you want to step out into your speaking career, you first have to know what your strengths are. Because even though you want to be a speaker, not all stages and platforms were designed for you. And if you want to not discourage yourself, you have to make sure that you focus in on platforms and stages that fit what you know. I caution people in the speaking business, Please do not ever try to be the expert of all. Because there’s going to be someone in that audience that’s going to know the facts of what you’re talking about. And if you’re winging it, it’s going to damage your career. So stepping out there on that stage in the beginning was very stressful for me. I was almost like that. Like if Webster had a kid. The dictionary. I’m sorry, millennials, and.

Stone Payton: [00:51:04] I don’t even know what you’re talking about.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:51:06] So back in the day, we didn’t have the Internet. We had a book that was called Webster. It was written by this. Now they’ve merged and it’s a whole nother name. But anyway, it was the dictionary. And keep you all catch all up. Just catch all up. But anyway, so I thought I had to be that. Like, I almost thought I had know every word that was in the dictionary for me to be able to be successful at this. That wasn’t what my calling was. And so what I learned to do to make my business, my speaking business successful was I had to learn what they needed. The key to professional speaking is not what you need. It’s what your audience needs. So if you’re not if you if you get like and there are some times that I get invited to stages that I probably drive them crazy because my first thing before I step on your stage, I need to know who I’m speaking to. I need to know what our tone is. What is the theme of this event? And once I know that information, then I go back and I take what my knowledge is and what my what my intent, my end result, and I tailor it to fit that audience. And so even though I do comedy and I’m funny, there is some stages and there are some corporations that I step into, they just want the facts. And so I can transition into standing in front of you and giving you a training with just the facts. And I don’t feel like I’m being fake about it or whatever. I just know what my audience needs. And so you plan accordingly. And I watch so many speakers stand on stage that they want the audience to accept them for their personality. And so you get to Tony Robbins place. That’s just not going to happen. But what you do to grow your speaker, your speaking platform, is choose at least two very comfortable stages that you know you can deliver. What what is that audience need? And that’s where you build that muscle and then expand out.

Stone Payton: [00:53:03] Well, that is marvelous, Counsel. Once again, I’m so glad that I asked before we wrap, let’s see if we can leave our listeners with a few actionable kind of pro tips. Number one pro tip is reach out and talk to Dr. Michelle. That’s number one pro tip. But maybe some things they’ve heard the conversation. They’d like to implement a little something. You know what they should be reading and what they should be thinking, questions they should be asking. Just sleep with a couple of things to go ahead and begin acting on, if we could.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:53:34] So here’s the first. Deliverable that I want everyone to understand, despite what anyone else tells you, you know exactly what you can do. You are your first resource. If it doesn’t feel right, if it doesn’t fit what your long term plan is for yourself, begin to evaluate what you really want. Back in the day, we used to talk about the wants, the needs and the desires. So let’s dig into and get to know yourself first. A lot of times we want to save the world, but we don’t know who we are. So don’t be afraid to get to know yourself, but also understand that every day you are developing and growing. So whether you are a reader, whether you are an auditory learner, or whether you’re a be a student of encouraging the growth in your life, what does that look like? And second thing, not everybody is going to agree with you. Even the closest people to you, their spouses, their kids, there are people in your life that don’t mean any harm when they don’t buy your book or when they don’t attend your conference or when they don’t support you. It’s not that they don’t like you or they don’t care. They’re just not in that space yet. And so you’ve got to approach things. We’ve got to get back to being humans, humans, brain to humanity, back into everything that we do. If there’s a kid out there, if there’s a person out there that’s being mean, that’s being aggravated by where the pain came from before we judge them. Get back to being human.

Stone Payton: [00:55:19] All right. If someone would like to have a conversation with you or someone on your team, I want to make sure that they can get their hands on these books, connect to a website, whatever you think is appropriate. Linkedin, email. I just want to make sure that folks can connect with you. Absolutely. If they’d like to continue this conversation on their own. So let’s leave them with some coordinates.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:55:39] Absolutely. You can always go to my website at michelle. Am i s.H.I.E.L.D. S as in sam thomas t amazon.com. That’s michelle s thomas dot com. If you want to be a part of even learning the speakers, if you want to be a speaker, reach out on our website of exceptional woman tours dot com. Bring us your story. Let us know what you need as a woman from your business through your speaking platform. Let us know if you want to email me. You can always reach anyone on my team at info at Michelle s Thomas dot com and we’ll redirect you into any direction. And I’m always that person. I want everybody to know if you want to know, one characteristic that I have is I am that connector. If I can’t help you, I will find someone that can get you the help and the resource that you need.

Stone Payton: [00:56:37] Well, Dr. Michelle, it has been an absolute delight having you on the show. Thanks so much for coming in. Investing the time with to visit with us. You’re doing such important work and we so sincerely appreciate you.

Dr. Michelle S. Thomas: [00:56:52] Thank you so much. And thank you to your audience. I want to hear from every last person, woman, men, age. I don’t care what age, race, whatever. Let’s talk about it and let’s figure out how we’re all going to get to our greatness.

Stone Payton: [00:57:04] All right. Until next time, this is Stone Payton for our guest today, Dr. Michelle S Thomas and everyone here at the Business RadioX family saying we’ll see you next time on women in business.

 

Tagged With: business coach, Michelle S. Thomas, Your Relationship Surgeon

Finding the Right Team Members on Your Own Advisory Board, with Anthony Chen, Host of Family Business Radio

August 1, 2022 by John Ray

advisory board
Family Business Radio
Finding the Right Team Members on Your Own Advisory Board, with Anthony Chen, Host of Family Business Radio
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Finding the Right Team Members on Your Own Advisory Board, with Anthony Chen, Host of Family Business Radio

In a commentary from a recent Family Business Radio episode, host Anthony Chen notes that a business owner can’t be an expert in every aspect of their business, and he advocates for finding experienced professionals to add to one’s advisory board, whether for one’s personal finances or a family business.

Anthony’s commentary was taken from this episode of Family Business Radio. Family Business Radio is underwritten by Anthony Chen with Lighthouse Financial Network.

Anthony Chen, Host of Family Business Radio

family owned craft breweries
Anthony Chen

This show is sponsored and brought to you by Anthony Chen with Lighthouse Financial Network. Securities and advisory services offered through Royal Alliance Associates, Inc. (RAA), member FINRA/SIPC. RAA is separately owned and other entities and/or marketing names, products or services referenced here are independent of RAA. The main office address is 575 Broadhollow Rd. Melville, NY 11747. You can reach Anthony at 631-465-9090 ext. 5075 or by email at anthonychen@lfnllc.com.

Anthony Chen started his career in financial services with MetLife in Buffalo, NY in 2008. Born and raised in Elmhurst, Queens, he considers himself a full-blooded New Yorker while now enjoying his Atlanta, GA home. Specializing in family businesses and their owners, Anthony works to protect what is most important to them. From preserving to creating wealth, Anthony partners with CPAs and attorneys to help address all of the concerns and help clients achieve their goals. By using a combination of financial products ranging from life, disability, and long-term care insurance to many investment options through Royal Alliance. Anthony looks to be the eyes and ears for his client’s financial foundation. In his spare time, Anthony is an avid long-distance runner.

The complete show archive of Family Business Radio can be found at familybusinessradioshow.com.

Tagged With: Advisory Board, advisory team, Anthony Chen, Anthony's Take, business coach, Family Business Radio, financial advisor, legal team, Lighthouse Financial Network, specialists

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