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Brent Rittersdorf with High Caliber Realty

March 12, 2025 by angishields

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Cherokee Business Radio
Brent Rittersdorf with High Caliber Realty
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Brought to you by Diesel David and Main Street Warriors

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Brent-Rittersdorf-bwBrent Rittersdorf is and has been the Managing Broker of High Caliber Realty since 2015. His professional background in Real Estate and previously the hospitality industry by working in Corporate and Franchise Operations has been helping people and teams make wise decisions that produce favorable results for over 25 years.

While many people enjoy meeting people at a local Pub conversing over a beverage, Brent has always preferred meeting people by being the guy who pours you the beverage, hence his enjoyment of speaking, presenting, and MC Ing events in front of groups of people of all ages and size.

Brent has made countless presentations for many groups including Restaurant Operators, Franchisees, Entrepreneurs, Local City Parks and Rec, Business Associations, and even Officer Candidate School.

His message of Purpose and going 10 for 10 by illustrating a basketball story resonates with everyone, and whether the takeaway is learning about your purpose, having an aha moment on one of the 10 shots, or even buying a t-shirt, everyone walks away with something. 10-fo-10-logo

Brent has grown his business in Real Estate by being heavily involved in the community, leading and participating in the Business Associations particularly in Marietta and Kennesaw, which he resides in.

Brent’s purpose in Real Estate has always been to help you and your friends make wise decisions in Real Estate that produce favorable results, and now, he has expanded his purpose to simply help you make wise decisions that produce favorable results, by going- 10 for 10.

Connect with Brent on LinkedIn and Facebook.

Transcript-iconThis transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix.

 

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX studios in Woodstock, Georgia. It’s time for Cherokee Business Radio. Now, here’s your host.

Stone Payton: Welcome to another exciting and informative edition of Cherokee Business Radio. Stone Payton here with you this morning, and today’s episode is brought to you in part by our Community Partner program, the Business RadioX Main Street Warriors Defending Capitalism, promoting small business, and supporting our local community. For more information, go to Mainstreet warriors.org and a special note of thanks to our title sponsor for the Cherokee chapter of Main Street Warriors Diesel David, Inc. please go check them out at diesel. David.com. You guys are in for a real treat this morning. First up on Cherokee Business Radio, keynote speaker, group facilitator, realtor, Mr. Brent Rittersdorf. How are you?

Brent Rittersdorf: I’m doing great. Stone. Thanks for having me this morning. It’s a beautiful morning out and I’m really looking forward to being a part of the show today.

Stone Payton: Well, it’s a delight to have you in studio. I got a ton of questions, Brent. All right. We probably won’t get to them all, but maybe a good place to start would be if you could share with me and Joshua, who’s also in studio with us. We’ll meet with him in a little bit. And our listeners. Mission. Purpose. What are you really out there trying to do for folks, man?

Brent Rittersdorf: Well, I got this keynote. I started creating it a number of years ago, actually. It was the head of had the privilege of being the president of the Marriott of Business Association. And they always have a theme of the year. And I had this theme. It was called purpose. And I started thinking about how I’ve always enjoyed speaking in front of groups of people, and I started thinking about this whole purpose message, and I came up with a linked a story from when I was in high school, believe it or not, to create a keynote speech called ten for ten How the Foulland Can Change Your Life. And it’s all about purpose and all about achieving your greater purpose. But the the t up is purpose is kind of a awkward word if you if you think of it. Because if you were to go to we probably how many you’ve probably been to what a thousand keynote speeches in your life.

Stone Payton: Yeah probably.

Brent Rittersdorf: Probably right. And you, if you heard a thousand of them, 999 of them are going to slide the word purpose in there somewhere. You know, they got to check off the box. It’s going to be in a PowerPoint slide. And then, you know, it’s almost it’s almost kind of like a, you know, you know, tee up this Oprah moment. You got a purpose and you got a purpose and congratulations on your purpose. Everybody’s got a purpose. Right. But what does that mean. You know, and when you start thinking about it and you start asking, people just go up to somebody and ask them, say, hey, what is your purpose? I don’t think a lot of people really know how to answer it. And so the whole ten for ten thing kind of came out of this story from when I was in high school about your purpose is your life, but ten for ten is how you achieve it. And so we kind of have some fun with it. It’s all it’s about basketball. I bring a portable basketball goal to the keynote speech and we we emulate what ten for ten is. Um, let me tell you what that is. Yes, please. All right. Well, when I was in high school, uh, I got to play on the varsity basketball team, and, of course. But I grew up in Maine, so I don’t know if you’ve ever. Have you ever been to Maine before?

Stone Payton: I went to a fishing camp there one time and had a blast, but I did not play any basketball.

Brent Rittersdorf: Okay. Yeah, well, Maine’s a Maine’s, not Maine’s. You know, it’s way up there. It’s a different part of the country. A lot of people have never been. It’s only got about a million people in the entire state. And I grew up in a small town in Rockland, Maine. It was a fishing village at the time, only about 9000 people. Um, you know, cue up the movie Hoosiers, because it’s a small town and it’s all about small town sports. And I got a chance to play on the varsity basketball team, and I was. I was like, the 11th man. I was like, the 12th man on the team, you know? So I wasn’t a starter. You know, I wasn’t anything, anything spectacular. But I was able to get on the team and we had this drill that we’d have to do every night before we could go home from practice. And that was make ten free throws, but not ten free throws, ten free throws in a row.

Stone Payton: Oh, my.

Brent Rittersdorf: So like if you got to shot number Josh, if you got to shot number seven and you miss.

Joshua Kornitsky : You start over.

Brent Rittersdorf: You’re going back. Going back to one right?

Joshua Kornitsky : I’d be there all night. Yeah.

Brent Rittersdorf: Well and that’s kind of what we felt like because, you know, in high school, you know, it’s 9:00 at night. You’re the last people in the gym, you know, you got to go home. You’ve got, you got you still got homework to do, and you got all this stuff that you got to do. And so the pressure’s on to make these ten free throws?

Joshua Kornitsky : Sure.

Brent Rittersdorf: So as a result, though, we ended up becoming very good at our free throws. And you know, everybody’s got their 15 minutes of fame. And my senior year in high school, we went to the Eastern Maine State of Maine basketball tournament, got to the semifinals, went out to a big league team, came back. They they tried to they tried to beat us. We get done with the game I get done. And and the coach is like, hey Brent, you know what you just did? And I said, well, we won. We won the game coach. We’re going to the finals. He goes, no, they put you on the line ten times and you made all ten free throws. You went ten for ten.

Joshua Kornitsky : That’s awesome.

Brent Rittersdorf: Yeah. So it was one of those little small town, you know, stories that, you know, even today, if you’re in the right, you know, group of people, the people remember those sets of games because that’s what’s important. You know, in a small a small town, you know, high school sports. And it became a, you know, I kind of buried it because when you get out of high school, everybody’s telling you, like, you know, forget all about that.

Brent Rittersdorf: Yeah. Go, go work hard. Right. Go make money. Go be happy. Go live your life. And. And I realized that over time, you know, we all do this stuff we call work, you know? And we’re supposed to make a lot of money, and we’re supposed to be happy. But I don’t come back to that question is when you ask people what their purpose is, it doesn’t connect because in order to really think about what your purpose, you have to think about what is it you really love to do, and know that you’re going to work hard and then have faith that the money will come. So this whole ten for ten on purpose thing is sort of flipping the script of understanding what it’s all about. And so I resurrected ten for ten. I named all the shots. So every shot has its own name.

Stone Payton: Oh sweet.

Brent Rittersdorf: Right. And so and it’s all about, you know, these shots kind of mirror your life. And so when you’re thinking about your purpose and you’re thinking about how you’re going to achieve it, you know, this ten for ten journey, we are going through it all the time and it almost becomes its own little language, if you will, like, you know, hey, I’m on. You know, yesterday was a lousy day, and I’m on shot number three. You know what the hell shot, right? And so they’re all. So all these shots, one through ten, all have their names. Everything from shot one from hopes and dreams all the way up to shot ten, which is cash money. And when you think about your life and all the things that you’re trying to do in it, these ten for ten, you know, these are just experiences along the way and it’s easy to win, right? When you make when you make a basketball goal, it’s like, that’s awesome. And everybody loves to win, right? But when you miss and you got to start all over and what is a miss look like. You know, I mean I mean people lose their job. You know, someone gets divorced, you have a breakup, you lose a client. You know, I saw real estate. You know, maybe the house doesn’t sell as fast as you want it to sell, you know, and the sellers are antsy, you know, like, when is, you know. So these are all these little misses along the way. And this is what ten for ten can teach you is it teaches you how to win, of course, but it also teaches you how to handle the setback of the emotion.

Joshua Kornitsky : Wow.

Brent Rittersdorf: What it is, is. So that way when you’re experiencing it, you’re like, all right, this is where I’m at. I know what I need to do, and I’m going to I’m going to push back forward through it. And so and all the shots have lessons. There’s lessons of practice. There’s lessons of promise. There’s lessons of accomplishment. And it’s just been a ton of fun to be able to do. And I you know, I got actually got the ten for ten brand registered trademark last year.

Joshua Kornitsky : Wow.

Brent Rittersdorf: Um, I’ve got the keynote. You got some handouts in front of you. I’ve got some hats, I’ve done some shirts. I’ve, you know, spoken about it in local local groups and, you know, just waiting for that one company that says, man, I want this message of purpose for my entire company to go out and travel around and teach them about purpose, because everybody can learn something from this.

Stone Payton: So the initial mechanism then for introducing this is right now speaking and promotion, just kind of getting the word out there coming on premium radio shows. Yeah.

Brent Rittersdorf: Premium definitely. We got we’re on Business RadioX. Come on. What are you talking about?

Stone Payton: But. But the ideal, the to dive into the work that that you intend to do. You want to be in that corporate environment, helping large and small and medium sized enterprises leverage these ideas?

Brent Rittersdorf: Yeah I do. And, you know, my purpose is always my purpose is to help you make wise decisions. And so when I’m selling real estate, I want you to make wise decisions in real estate that produce favorable results. But this is what this has evolved to over the years is I really feel like that I can share and teach people how to think and how to grow their career. And, you know, and it doesn’t matter whether you’re in a corporate W-2 job and you’re trying to, you know, you’re emerging professional, or maybe you’re an entrepreneur and you’re trying to figure out how to grow your business, or you’re just trying to raise a family. I mean, there’s all kinds of these shots have can emulate where you’re at. I even spoke to a group of, um, OCS officer candidate School for for the Army. And, you know, these guys were a year through almost a year through their entire school and we focused on routine, which is shot number four for them so that they could balance their lives with their, you know, giving to their country and giving to their family and then also doing their jobs as well. So it’s anybody can learn from it. So it’s been it’s been a ton of fun and I enjoy speaking in front of people. Everybody has to have like an outlet of what they do. Some people like to play golf. I like to speak in front of people.

Stone Payton: So at this stage in the development of all of this, what’s the most rewarding for you? What’s the most fun about it these days?

Brent Rittersdorf: Yeah, the most fun about it is every time I get a chance, like last week, I got a chance to speak to the Paulden Chamber of Commerce. And every time you get, you get to speak in front of a group. You you get the opportunity to watch people in the room of how they’re doing. So they’re either they’re either on their phone, you know, looking you know, as we you know, you’ve been to a thousand keynotes or everybody’s on their phone or they’re listening to you and they’re watching what you’re doing. And that’s that is so rewarding when you’re able to get up in front of a group of people and you have 99% of the people in the room actually just watching you and not, you know, being distracted by something else for, you know, 20 minutes of their life.

Stone Payton: So let’s map out what an engagement like you’re describing with an organization might look like. So I can envision maybe they do bring you in to kind of stoke the fires in the beginning, but then you’re talking about doing some real workshop facilitation kind of work or walk us through that.

Brent Rittersdorf: Yeah, you could take this program. You could take ten for ten, and it could be a 30 minute keynote, light hearted keynote. And just to kind of get the message across, you could do it. You could take it and make it into an hour keynote where you brought somebody up from the group, and everybody got to take a shot that emulated one of the one out of ten shots and expanded into an hour, but then you could take it and turn it into a half day workshop, maybe even a longer full day workshop where you break down every one of these shots so, you know, hopes and dreams is shot number one. Right? And when you’re thinking about your purpose and how you’re, you know, and we can talk about that in a second as far as defining and identifying it because it’s there’s three elements to purpose. You have to be able to define your purpose. You have to be able to identify your purpose. And then you got to be able to achieve it. And I think that’s really the big disconnect when people start thinking about, well, what’s my purpose? They want to be simple about it. Right, right. So we could talk about it in a workshop of something as simple as, like, all right, we’ll set you up is, you know, the purpose of things are singular, right? We want to make things very easy in our life.

Brent Rittersdorf: So, like, the purpose of a microphone is so you can hear me, right? So because if I step over here and I talk, right, you’re not going to be able to hear me in front of the microphone, right? Right. You can do the arm thing. Bring me back right in front of the microphone. But when you start talking about a person and you say, what’s your purpose? It’s like, whoa, you know, I got all this, you know, I got to work. I got, yeah, I got spiritual, I got my, my, my family. And how do you make all that happen? And so you start thinking about how do you define it. And, you know, and we talk about that and we start talking about how to identify purpose. And I talk about that at length. And I actually use my my dog Bronson as a story. We can talk about that later if you want. But once you understand the mindset of it, you could take each one of these shots, start with hopes and dreams and break down. What? What is that shot really mean, and what does it mean to you? And then actually have time where people can say, all right, well, what is your hopes and dreams? You know what you know? What are your dreams and understanding and getting past the mindset of, well, most people never even get to live their dream.

Joshua Kornitsky : Yeah, sure.

Brent Rittersdorf: You know, and that’s that stinks. I mean, it’s like you should be. Everybody deserves to be able to have a dream. But then the hope part of it is, is if you never step up to the line and actually take that first shot, whose fault is it? The person that never gave you the chance, or the person that’s looking back at you in the mirror to go for it so you could spend all this time and every shot you could talk about that. You know, there’s you know, the shot number two is the good luck shot. So you know, again, that’s, you know, half the people in your world want you to succeed. Good luck. Half the people in your world want you to fail or assume that you will. Good luck. You know. And so you can talk. You can talk about all these shots and. Right. And they all have these different meanings. And so you could go into a workshop where you break it all down. And everybody, everybody’s been on one of these shots at one time or another. Chances are you might be, you know, you might say, well, this is there’s 2 or 3 on this board that resonate with me right now. And you know, man, if you’re like, if you’re a professional and you’re in middle level management and you want to get that promotion to VP or something, you know, what are you doing to work on your, your, your craft and your practice and your promises to yourself to make these things happen so that you can get promoted? Or are you going to just play the the role of the a victim. When a peer gets promoted and say, well, that’s, you know, that’s not my fault or my boss is a loser and you blame all these people around you versus looking at yourself and saying, what do I need to do different in order to take this as a true miss and go back to shot number one and go back and get and get to where I want to be.

Stone Payton: So when it comes to you landing this work, how are people? Are you envisioning how people are going to find you? How are you going to find them? Like, have you cracked the code on the whole sales and marketing?

Brent Rittersdorf: I’d say the code is the code is still spinning a little bit. I, I keep, you know, my, my definition of purpose is love what you do so much that others will want to participate. So I’m in that moment where I just love what I’m doing so much and just looking for the opportunities to speak in front of people, whether it’s, you know, in a room or on a podcast to talk about the word so that others will say, hey, I want to hear more. I do, I am in the process of writing the book.

Stone Payton: Oh my goodness, of course. Yeah, because you don’t have enough on your plate.

Brent Rittersdorf: Yet, right.

Stone Payton: So write a book.

Brent Rittersdorf: I know, so I’ve got the brand, the brand is built and the publishers even said he goes, most people write a book so they can create a brand to go out and speak. He goes, you’ve done it. You’re already speaking and created the brand. And now the book is sort of the final touch. And I’m I guess I’m in in the mindset of that. It becomes a tool to, to hand to somebody who’s a decision maker for a company to say, yeah, he’s a he’s a published author on this and must be an expert because he’s got a book. So I don’t know. But that’ll be a great accomplishment for me to get that. I’ve got the website, so you know that. And the website encompasses, you know, the speaking side of me, the networking event that I host, my real estate side so people can find me all in one spot and and then ultimately after that, it’s just, you know, probably working with the publishing company to, you know, create that marketing. So I’m out in front of those decision makers.

Stone Payton: I have to I have to think that getting that kind of work, that corporate work, whether it’s a speaking engagement or the facilitation workshop, I would think that you would have to endure a great deal of trust with those decision makers very early on. And I bet you’re already experiencing that. Can you speak to that a little bit?

Brent Rittersdorf: Well, the decision makers, it based on my experience, you know, they they’ve got a they’ve got a budget. They, they’ve you know, they’ve got the money to spend. They can they can put the program together. But they also want to make their boss look good, and they don’t want to look bad in front of their boss as well. Right. So they they are going to be very cautious as to who they’re going to put on that stage. So you’re right, that trust factor is going to be a part of it. Um, there’s going to be that credibility. They’re going to they’re going to they’re going to be looking for that instant credibility. So like, oh, you do have a book. Oh, you do have a brand. Oh, you do have merchandise. Oh you do. You have spoken in front of other groups and ultimately, you know, I guess you know, I’m on shot one hopes and dreams. I need that one person to give me a chance, you know, to put me in front. So then I can say, well, I have spoken in front of these groups and this company and this person, you know, up until now, I’ve just sort of joked and it’s fun to joke about it because I’ve never been on Fox, I’ve never been on CNN, I’ve never been on, you know, in a movie. I’ve never I’m not I’m just a regular guy.

Brent Rittersdorf: Not yet, not yet, not yet. But, you know, that’s the thing I love about this message is, is that chances are anybody that’s sitting in a corporate room or room of sports players or trying to go to college or kids or entrepreneurs, they’re just regular people, too, trying to make a living. And just so many people go through this experience of life and they don’t have a purpose and they’re not happy with where they’re going. And, you know, for me, if I can change some of that, that’s just awesome. That’s just awesome. So I’m cool with being the regular guy. I was the backup in high school, you know, on that basketball team. You know, if that’s where I’m supposed to be the backup, you know, and and help people realize that, then that’s fine too. You know, and it doesn’t matter how I get there. You know, it’s all good.

Stone Payton: Sure. So tell me a little bit about the speaker, author, community. Have you are you finding that you do, if you look for it and take advantage of it, have the benefit of one or more mentors cheerleaders to kind of help you navigate this terrain because some of them have done what it is you hope to achieve, right?

Brent Rittersdorf: Yeah, a lot of them have. I mean, there’s some out there, there’s people that have come up to me and said, oh, you can you can make do all this kind of money speaking in front of a group. And honestly, I’m, I, I can’t I have not envisioned that. I’ve not thought about that. I’ve just been focused on creating a killer keynote and a killer brand that hopefully the rest of it will come The the the publishing company that is working with me on the book, its Ripples Media. They’re out of Atlanta. They they have been great because I have met a few people that have just tried to take your money. Um, yeah. You know, and coaching and all this and it’s, you know, and it’s, you know, it’s it’s, you know, shot number eight, you know, uh, is key to kicking the ass. You know, you write a check for coaching, and they just take the money and walk away and you’re like, wow, I gotta start all over again here and sell another house so I can fund this thing, right? Uh, but, you know, talking to different people with this company, the Ripples Media company, they have been excellent because they’re like, we’re going to help you write this book.

Brent Rittersdorf: And our job is not to get the book written. It’s to sell the book. We’re not. We want to we want to sell the book. So we’re going to take the time and make sure it’s right. And then when the book is done, we’re going to help put you in front of different people so that you potentially could help give you opportunities as well. So I really feel good about that particular, I guess, partnership and collaboration. And I feel like there’s somebody that’s truly willing to help. Um, the some of these other organizations you go into and you really, truly do feel like it’s kind of a good luck moment. You’re not really sure who’s there to help you and who’s there to just assumes you’re not going to make it. So I’m taking it, maybe slowly at first to make sure that I get the right people, you know, in my court, so that once this stuff is all done and we start meeting other people, that we’ve got a product that stands on its own.

Stone Payton: Do you find that engaging in this work, trying to serve people in this way, is also helping you grow personally, and even making you a better managing broker in the realty world? You got to be gaining. You’re winning all the way along, aren’t you?

Brent Rittersdorf: Yeah, the. Absolutely. Because if you’re doing something that you truly love to do, right, Everybody else. People want to participate. So they so people who are clients who have helped them buy and sell homes and then they hear this message, they’re like, this is really cool. And they want to be a part of it, and they’re cheering for you and they want to make it make it better. And as it relates to the business side of the of the real estate thing, there’s a couple of things. One, you know, I need to have a budget to be able to do all this ten for ten until it becomes self-funding. Right. So the more the more successful I am in the real estate side, then there’s more budget to fund, you know, the ten for ten project. So that’s important. But the the real estate side of it as well is all these things as far as practicing and being staying on top of the education in your industry and on top of trends and what’s going on and helping a client, whether they’re looking to buy or sell or, you know, work on their investment portfolio or commercial lease, all those things are real important for me to, to to be able to dial in the details because the details are really what matter. Right. That’s shot for routine shot. The details matter if you’re not practicing your details and practicing, and you never want to practice on your clients, right? So you want to be practicing and learning the different all those different details along the way. So when when it counts, you know, you’re you’re landing the plane, if you will, and you’re getting the keys and cash day and your clients happy, you’re happy and you’re, you’re moving on to the next client and helping them.

Stone Payton: So passions, interests, hobbies, pursuits outside the scope of the realty or the speaking work, anything you nerd out about that’s not this kind of stuff.

Brent Rittersdorf: You know, I wouldn’t say I would say nerd, but no, I like mountain biking. That’s a ton of fun. That gives me the opportunity to get outside and just clear the head. Yeah, I wouldn’t say I’m not a pro or anything like that. I mean, most of the time both wheels are on the ground. Uh, occasionally I’ll get a little bit, uh, you know, aggressive and see what happens. But when you’re out on the trail, you’re taking your mind is clear. Your, your you’re enjoying what you’re looking at because you’re out in the woods or out in the field or on a on a trail. And you’ve got to keep your mind clear and open to enjoy it. But you also got to keep your mind on the fact that, okay, there’s trees, there’s rocks, there’s roots. And so if you’re not paying attention, you’re going to fall, you’re going to crash, right? So it really gives you an opportunity to just completely clear your mind and enjoy what’s going on outside. And so I enjoy that a lot. I do enjoy doing some traveling. And my parents, they live out in Phoenix, so I’ll go out and see them a few times a year. I got I got a couple of cousins that live down in uh, down in South Central America. So that’s fun. And, uh, yeah. So I try to take 2 or 3 trips a year and do that stuff as well.

Stone Payton: Oh, great. I’m glad I asked. Yeah, you can learn a ton about somebody when you ask about those.

Brent Rittersdorf: You ask about it. Yeah. Central America on the Pacific coast has the most incredible sunsets.

Stone Payton: Mhm.

Brent Rittersdorf: Beautiful. Oh yeah.

Stone Payton: Hey listen before we wrap, I would love to leave our listeners with a pro tip or two uh, around just you know like this whole ten for ten idea. And look, gang, the number one pro tip is reach out and have a conversation with Brent. Bring him in to visit with your group. But to keep them sated between now and in that conversation, let’s leave them with a little something to to chew on.

Brent Rittersdorf: Yeah, yeah, I would say a couple of things as it relates to one that relates to purpose, and then one that relates to this art of ten for ten, you know, take some time and think about the word purpose and what it means to you. And maybe at night, you know, when I when I get done at the end of every, every presentation, I always challenge the listeners to go home before they go to bed is to write down what they think their purpose is and, and just and spend a couple of moments in quiet, um, and look at that person looking back at you in the mirror and think about what your purpose is. And if you’re your purpose is centered around just working hard to make money, to be happy, and you’re struggling with answering the question. Think about it as are you doing what you love to do and the work will come as a result. That’s probably harder than you’ve ever worked before, and then you have faith that the money will come on the backside. And I think you’ll find that you’ll have a you’ll have a better understanding of how to answer that question. And then as you jump into the ten for ten on how to achieve it, start right there at hopes and dreams. And if you if you’ve got something that you’ve been wanting to try to do and you haven’t been doing it, is it because someone you just want someone to give you a chance? Or is it because you you’ve been afraid to just try? And if you think about those two things, that’ll get you really a long way onto achieving your purpose. And like I said, I could talk about it for hours.

Stone Payton: Yeah, I believe you. And I could listen to it for hours. And it sounds like marvelous counsel. All right. What’s the best way for our listeners to tap into your work? Stay connected. Let’s leave them with some coordinates.

Brent Rittersdorf: Yeah. If you my website be rittersdorf comm. Uh, you can go there. You can go. You can type on Instagram. There’s not a lot of us. There’s not a lot of there’s not a lot of those. Um, you can you like. So Instagram, Facebook I’m on there too as well. So I’m on the I’m on all the typical channels LinkedIn you can, you know, feel free to friend me. Um, you know, go on to go on to the Merit of Business website. You can look at, look for our weekly networking event and just come on down. We’d love to have you.

Stone Payton: Fantastic. Well thank you. That was an inspiring and invigorating conversation. Hey, how about hanging out with us while we visit with our next guest?

Brent Rittersdorf: Is that okay to do that? I’d love to do that. Absolutely outstanding. I’m here. I’m here for the long haul.

Stone Payton: All right. Next up on Cherokee Business Radio this morning, please join me in welcoming back to the Business RadioX microphone. Joshua Kornitsky. How are you, man?

Joshua Kornitsky : I’m doing great this morning. Stone, how are you?

Stone Payton: I’m doing well. Did you learn anything out of that last segment?

Joshua Kornitsky : Uh, more than anything, what I learned is having a difficult last name makes it hard for people to find you. But the the ten for ten really, really resonated with me. So I’m really excited to learn more about it and I can’t wait for the book to come out.

Brent Rittersdorf: Awesome. Thanks.

Stone Payton: And we all know this guy, this Pharrell Middleton guy that is like the mega connector of Cherokee and Cobb County and probably places well beyond. So I’m glad he got us all. Got us all together. Uh, remind us if you would. Joshua. Uh, what? I won’t ask, I won’t, I won’t put you on the hot seat. Say, what is your purpose? But I will say, what are you doing out there? Doing for folks, man?

Joshua Kornitsky : Well, I’m I’m truly fortunate because I’ve had enough time and and have learned what my purpose is. But I learned that through an enormous amount of spectacular failure. Um, it’s the only way we can learn. My father taught me that right out of the gate. Um, what I do to help the universe is I’m a professional implementer of a business operating system called EOS, the entrepreneurial operating system. And I spend my time working with entrepreneurial organizations, usually between 10 and 250 employees to help them really get everything they want out of their business.

Stone Payton: You know, I asked Brent the same question, but I’m going to ask you, what’s what’s the most rewarding about that work, man? What do you enjoy the most there?

Joshua Kornitsky : So there’s a moment in what we have as a is a very structured process. We take these leadership teams through. But there’s a moment when the light goes on and when that light goes on, when you see the people that you are working to help understand difficult concepts, get it? That’s the most rewarding thing I get. That’s better than than anything else I could imagine because it truly does change their lives.

Stone Payton: I bet it does. All right, can we let the cat out of the bag, please, and share the real reason we invited you to be in the studio?

Joshua Kornitsky : Well, I guess the easiest way to say this is Stone and I have known each other for a little, a little over two years now.

Stone Payton: And we’re not. We’re not dating and we’re not getting married.

Joshua Kornitsky : No, but.

Stone Payton: It’s still a good team. Well, we are kind of getting married a little bit.

Joshua Kornitsky : Well, it’s more than dating.

Stone Payton: All right.

Joshua Kornitsky : Just don’t tell my wife. But Stone and I have had the opportunity to get to know each other over time, really more personally than professionally. And what came as a result of that was a clear understanding that we are deeply aligned in the core values that we live our lives by. And because of that, I am thrilled to say that I will be partnering with, helping, working with Stone and the team here and moving into to take more of the load off of Stone, so he has more time to continue to go and grow his business.

Stone Payton: Oh man, we are so excited about this partnership. Yeah. So you’re going to see and hear a lot more from Joshua in the weeks and months to to come. But as we continue at the network level to expand the network and place studios and communities all over the country. Uh, it’s just this is just the perfect opportunity to to team up with Joshua. Have you come in? I know you’re going to, uh, you’ve got all kinds of great plans. You’ve already added so much to the to the local operation. But, uh, this is going to be a lot of fun. So you’re going to you’re going to see and hear Joshua, uh, hosting Cherokee Business Radio, working with our clients who have their shows. And, uh, this is this is going to be a blast. Uh, and we’re getting started like yesterday, right?

Joshua Kornitsky : Yeah. And I hope everybody likes my voice.

Stone Payton: You do have one of those voices. I gotta say. That’s, uh. It’s, uh, that’s not really the reason that we teamed up with you, but it’s an extra. It’s an extra benefit that’s going to be.

Joshua Kornitsky : As I told you, my mother always said I had a face for radio.

Stone Payton: Absolutely. So lots more to come from. From Joshua. Gentlemen, this has been a really fun way to invest a Tuesday morning. Thank you both for coming, Joshua. I’m just as excited as I can be, as is the whole business radio X team. And, uh, Brent, I am so excited for you. What a fun time for you.

Brent Rittersdorf: Yeah. No, it’s a great time. It’s it’s it’s fun to be able to participate in it. And it’s, it’s I’m on my own ten for ten journey on this. So it’s a lot of fun. And Joshua congrats to you. Thank you as well. Maybe I get a chance to to come on another time.

Joshua Kornitsky : I look forward to it. You got to bring a basketball.

Brent Rittersdorf: Alright, I’ll get a basketball I got one.

Stone Payton: Well he’s the man now I got, I got no pull here. I got no way. You want to get something done at the Cherokee Business Radio Studio? You got to talk to Josh.

Brent Rittersdorf: I can’t, I’m not going to get any love. I just call you director.

Stone Payton: I’m just going to tell you, I don’t know. You have to call the boss. See what he has to say. Oh. What fun. Alright, until next time. This is Stone Payton for our guest today, Brent Rittersdorf and Joshua Kornitsky and everyone here at the Business RadioX family saying, we’ll see you again on Cherokee Business Radio.

 

Tagged With: Brent Rittersdorf, High Caliber Realty

Kathy Lathem with Cobb Senior Services, Jeff Stone with Clearpoint and Associates and Dan Bruton with High Caliber Realty

April 3, 2023 by angishields

CharitableGA033123feature
Charitable Georgia
Kathy Lathem with Cobb Senior Services, Jeff Stone with Clearpoint and Associates and Dan Bruton with High Caliber Realty
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Kathy-Lathem-bwKathy Lathem has been with Cobb Senior Services as the Strategic Partnerships Manager since January 2005. Prior to this position, Kathy worked several years in the Christian radio industry as on-air talent, Promotions Director and Community Affairs Director in the Atlanta area.

Since joining CSS, Kathy has developed a strong appreciation for the many challenges facing older adults and their families. She is thankful to be involved with a large network of caring professionals who strive daily to meet those challenges head on & provide quality support, services and programs for seniors.

Kathy serves on the Board of Directors for the Cobb Collaborative; is an Ambassador for Acworth Business Association; holds the position of Director of Programs for West Cobb Business Association; and is the Co-chair for Cobb/Cherokee Services for the Elderly.

Kathy volunteers with the Children’s Ministry at Burnt Hickory Baptist Church and is a volunteer docent for the Marietta Christmas Home Pilgrimage. Of all titles, one of her most favorites is “Fun Aunt” to 25 nieces and nephews and 11 greats. Born & reared in Cincinnati, Ohio, Kathy moved to Georgia in 1985 and has been married to William since 1997. They reside in Paulding County.

Jeff-Stone-bwJeff Stone is a highly accomplished sales professional and mentor who has made a significant impact in the business world over the past 30 years. Throughout his career, he has worked with companies of all sizes, from small local retailers to large multinational corporations, helping them to achieve their sales and marketing goals.

Jeff’s professional background is diverse and includes experience in both print and digital marketing. For 20 years, he designed multi-million-dollar marketing campaigns that helped businesses to reach new audiences and increase their revenue.

In recent years, he has focused on managing global sales teams for highly complex software solutions in data eradication and virtualization technology. His expertise in these areas has helped many businesses to streamline their operations and safeguard their sensitive data.

In addition to his successful career, Jeffrey has also had a rich personal life. In his youth, he was an accomplished soccer player and traveled the world competing with some of the best players of the 1970s and 1980s. He has also raised a family and is known for his dedication to his loved ones.

Throughout his career, Jeffrey has been a top-performing salesperson and sales leader, and he has trained thousands of salespeople over the years. He is widely respected in the business community for his expertise, mentorship, and dedication to helping others achieve success.

Jeff has decided to pursue his lifelong dream of starting his own company, Clearpoint and Associates.

Clearpoint and Associates is a valuable resource for business owners looking to reduce expenses and build a strong business portfolio through business credit development. Jeffrey and his team’s commitment to performance-based consulting, where clients only pay fees if they receive value in the form of savings or funding, is a refreshing and trustworthy approach to business consulting.

It is evident that Jeffrey’s years of experience in sales, marketing, and managing global sales teams have prepared him well for this new venture. His expertise and dedication to helping businesses succeed are sure to make Clearpoint and Associates a successful and highly respected company in the industry.

Dan-Bruton-bwDan Bruton, with High Caliber Realty, was born in Fort Walton Beach, FL at Egland Air Force Base. Shortly after, he moved to Plantation Fl and spent his child hood playing baseball until moving to Gainesville, FL to pursue a BA in Business Management.

While going to school, his passion for food and people lead him to the restaurant industry where he worked his way through college and honed his skills in the industry.  Attention to detail, listening, focusing on quality, and service are all important skills required to be successful.

He moved to Smyrna GA in 2006 to continue his restaurant career with an upscale casual restaurant at Cumberland Mall. As the General Manager of 250 employees, he took the sales from 8M to 13 M. In 2014 he opened a large entertainment Facility in Midtown with over 450 employees and 25m in sales.

In 2015, he met the owner at a local restaurant opening in Emerson GA. Making the transition from corporate America to a smaller restaurant while still focusing on quality and service gave him the opportunity to spend more time with family.

During his entire restaurant career, he has been focused on service, quality, and people. These are qualities he cannot wait to bring into the world of real estate.

Dan has always been interested in Real Estate and has bought several houses. He is handy and likes to make a house a home. He is also interested in the investment opportunities Real Estate provides as well. Whatever you need, Dan is committed to finding you the right property for you.

Dan has been married to his wife, Judi, since 2008 and have 3 precious boys, Evan, Asher and Wyatt. They enjoy spending time together at the baseball fields, swimming, being outdoors, and traveling.

Dan is also on the Board for a nonprofit organization, Our Giving Garden. Our Giving Garden grows local produce and donates the produce grown to interrupt hunger in the community. The Garden has also acquired a house on the property to provide housing to those in need.

Since starting his Real Estate Journey, he has worked with many happy clients and continued his education to become a Real Estate Broker.

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:07] Broadcasting live from the Business RadioX Studios in Atlanta. It’s time for Charitable Georgia. Brought to you by B’s Charitable Pursuits and Resources. We put the fun in fund raising. For more information, go to B’s Charitable Pursuits. Dot com. That’s B’s Charitable Pursuits dot com. Now here’s your host, Brian Pruitt.

Brian Pruett: [00:00:45] Good, fabulous Friday morning. It’s another fabulous Friday with three more fabulous folks here in the studio. We’re going to start off this morning with Kathy Latham from Cobb Senior Services. So, Cathy, thanks for being here this morning.

Kathy Lathem: [00:00:56] My pleasure. Thanks for having me.

Brian Pruett: [00:00:58] So Cathy is no stranger to the microphone. Cathy has a background in radio. So you’re passionate about seniors. We’ll get to that in a second. But if you don’t mind, share your story and how you got to where you’re at.

Kathy Lathem: [00:01:08] Well, it’s probably pretty prophetic. When I was three, my next door neighbor had me by the hand at the back door and my mom was in the kitchen and he knocked on the door and he said, Marge, would you please keep Chatty Cathy in the house? She’s breaking my concentration. And he was an avid golfer. He insured himself with Lloyd’s of London and went to Scotland every year to golf. So he was very into golf, and I was breaking his concentration. And who knew that all those years later, he, I guess, made that prophecy over me, that I would go into radio. So it was kind of a natural thing for me, really. I did not know what I wanted to be when I grew up, honestly. And my parents kept saying, You’re going to college, you’re going to college. And I’m like, What’s the easiest thing that I can do? And I said, Oh, radio. I already know how to talk and you don’t really need a degree, but I’ll go. So I did. And within two weeks before I graduated, I landed my first radio job right here in the metro Atlanta area, and I was in Christian radio for about 15 years before I made the switch to government. And that’s another story.

Brian Pruett: [00:02:10] Which we’ll get to in a second. I think it’s kind of cool because you share something the other day that I didn’t realize, but you also your voice is, well, I guess it could be infamous depending on how you look it. But your voice is in the Cobb County jail, right?

Kathy Lathem: [00:02:22] Yes. Several years ago, communications asked me to come and record the the welcome orientation video for people who become guests of the Cobb County Jail system.

Brian Pruett: [00:02:33] So there you go. Stone If you’re ever there, you’ll get to hear. Cathy, welcome you well, right? Yeah.

Kathy Lathem: [00:02:39] It’ll be a warm welcome.

Brian Pruett: [00:02:41] Yes. So I do like the way you talk about it. You are from the government, but you say you’re here to help, so go ahead and share Cobb Senior Services. The purpose, what you do and why you’re passionate about it.

Kathy Lathem: [00:02:51] Absolutely. Appreciate that. So actually, in 1972, there was this organization that started in Marietta, known as the Marietta Services Board Community Services, and they just started out by delivering meals to homebound seniors. And then when Cobb County government formed several years ago, they absorbed that organization, creating the own their own department, actually, of Cobb County Senior Services. So we have been proudly serving Cobb County for 50 years with everything from Meals on Wheels to home delivered meals to now we have seven senior centers throughout Cobb County, and we serve the 55 plus population with everything from exercise classes to seminars to dances to parties just to if somebody wants to shoot pool all day, we have that opportunity for them as well. Table tennis, just ways for people to stay engaged and have socialization. And it’s very important now more than ever since we out of COVID, you know, the seniors were the first ones that the government said stay home, stay home, stay home, protect yourself. And so many of them did that. And we’re still trying to get many back because some of them are still afraid of being out and not realizing that the senior centers are probably one of the safest places they can go because we do thorough cleaning on a very regular basis. So it’s been great to see people coming back and being engaged and even new people. We are growing our attendance at all the senior centers.

Brian Pruett: [00:04:22] You said there’s seven, correct. Can you share what parts of Cobb County they’re in? Absolutely.

Kathy Lathem: [00:04:26] We have one in Acworth North Cobb Senior Center. Powder Springs is West Cobb. East Cobb is the Tim Lee Senior Center. Smyrna has Freeman Pool Senior Center, Austell, Marietta, and then actually North Cobb has two programs in one building. So seven, seven different opportunities for people. Oh, and the senior Wellness Center. I forgot about that one in Marietta.

Brian Pruett: [00:04:48] Awesome. So obviously if you’re a senior, there’s a lot to take part of, but business owners can help the senior services as well. They can come and do presentations and other things. Can you share how people can get involved?

Kathy Lathem: [00:04:59] Absolutely. We are always looking for the community to come alongside us by giving maybe an educational presentation. It could be something as simple as the spring is coming. How do I check my air conditioning? You know, what do I need to do to get my house ready for for spring and summer? Or as we head into winter, what do I need to do to winterize my vehicle? You know, just things that will help, really anybody, but especially the seniors who probably need more more information sooner rather than than you and I, because you and I are going to scroll through, you know, the websites and try and find information, you know, just just like there is WebMD, which is kind of dangerous. You know, I’m the type that goes and just finds car places, right? He tells me. And then I’m like, Wait, that doesn’t make sense because they’re saying something completely different. But when you hear about it in a safe location, like a senior center from a professional, then it makes sense. Another way that the businesses can get involved is to help sponsor events. So when we do do these anniversary parties and big events, we’re always looking for somebody who wants to contribute maybe door prizes or to contribute toward the entertainment or maybe provide the cakes or something like that. So there’s there’s big and small ways that the community can come alongside us, get involved, and we welcome it all.

Brian Pruett: [00:06:18] So you just talked about some events. You got a big one coming up. You want to share about it?

Kathy Lathem: [00:06:22] Absolutely. This is my focus up until May 17th, which is the date of the Senior Services Expo and Marketplace. Two years ago, we could not have it because of, you know, the pandemic. Last year we brought it back. We had 92 vendors show up and almost 500 people come out and attend it. So we’ve been hearing the chatter early on this year. I’m at 100 vendors now and people are already wondering who else is going to be there, what can I get? And we’re really excited because we’ve got vendors we’ve not had before. I just got contacted by a coffee company that wants to come and I have food vendors, I have hand sanitizers, I have skincare, there’s travel, there’s transportation. So we’re very excited about all the vendors that are going to come out for this. And it’s May 17th from ten until two at the Cobb County Civic Center. Absolutely free, free admission, free parking. There will be some vendors that will have some items for sale, but you don’t have to purchase anything if you don’t want to. There’s going to be a lot of great free information for people to take. Awesome.

Brian Pruett: [00:07:27] So one of the things I think is kind of cool is, you know, there’s a lot of at least when I was growing up and even now, I think with millennials, there’s a lot of, I guess, stigmas for seniors. I know my stepdaughter, who’s 22 and I’m 51, says you’re all you’re old, right? But how do the senior service because you just mentioned a lot of stuff playing pool, all kinds of stuff. How does that take the stigma away for for seniors and being not considered, you know, like rehab or nursing homes or.

Kathy Lathem: [00:07:53] Right. And for 18 years, I’ve been in this role and it’s been my my personal journey to help get rid of that stereotype. Yes, we will always have the seniors who have more needs than others, the seniors who are truly infirmed and need help getting around. But we also have the seniors. I am 58 years old. I am right smack in what we serve at senior services. I don’t feel like I fit the stereotype that comes to mind of a senior citizen. So we are here to help get rid of that stereotype. And by offering things like ping pong and billiards all day long, we have line dance, we have tai chi, we have day trips where we take them whitewater rafting. Okay, think about that whitewater rafting. So we don’t really restrict anybody by their age. They restrict themselves by their ability. We meet people at their level of independence, their level of ability, and we meet them there and we work with whatever they want to offer.

Brian Pruett: [00:08:53] I can’t wait to get that age. That sounds a lot.

Kathy Lathem: [00:08:55] A lot of fun, right?

Brian Pruett: [00:08:55] It is fun. Right? So obviously, other than what you shared, why are you so passionate about this and passionate about seniors?

Kathy Lathem: [00:09:02] Well, it’s interesting because my grandmother I was very close. I was very close with her. I’m actually named after both my grandmothers and nanny. And I just had a very special relationship. She moved down here for probably the last ten years of her life, and then she went back home to Chicago, had some mini strokes. So I went up and stayed with her for a couple of months. And of course, I was the designated driver to all the senior activities, right? So I got to go to the lunches and the dinners and, you know, all the senior get togethers. And I just fell in love with that group of people. And so it was kind of a natural progression. But I was still doing radio and I started getting public service announcements about Cobb Senior Services. And I thought, Well, who are they? So I brought them in for a show very much like this, and I was blown away by what was offered in Cobb County for the 55 plus population. And I made the comment, Well, you know, you’re having way more fun than I am. And the girl looked at me and she says, I’m not going to have this job forever. Well, we kept in touch for about three years, and I would come back and do remote broadcasts and bring them in for updates. And she called me one day and she said, Listen, I don’t know if you’re interested, but I’ve turned in my notice. So watch the website and apply for the job if you’re interested. Well, then her boss, who was the director who had also interviewed, called me about three hours later and said, Listen, I don’t know if you’re interested, but Gwen’s turned in her notice and I would love for you to to apply if you’re interested.

Kathy Lathem: [00:10:29] And I’d like to interview you. And so literally on a Friday in January, I walked away from radio. And that Monday I started with Cobb County Senior Services. And yes, I am from the government and I am here to help. I’m here to help. People realize what is available not only for the adult or the senior, but also for the adult children, because we’re the ones that are helping mom and dad navigate this whole aging thing. Right? It’s new to all of us and it’s new to mom and dad, but we have to go through it with them. So we line up people, experts especially like like Medicare. I do not begin to understand it. I will never understand Medicare. But we know people who who do understand that that’s their passion. And so for me, it’s just a natural passion to help connect people with the products, the services, the programs that they need. And I just love seniors because they’re real. You know, there’s no filter. They’re going to tell you what they think. They’re going to tell you what’s going on in their life. And you better have time to sit down and talk with them and listen when you say, hey, how are you doing? And I just I get a kick out of that. I love doing that. And it all stems, I think, from my upbringing and just hanging around.

Brian Pruett: [00:11:35] Nanny Well, you know, you also from your radio background, the natural Chatty Cathy is there she love it but you and I do a lot of networking together. That’s how we met. You do several different groups, not only in Cobb County, but outside of Cobb County as well. Can you share one story maybe that people because I always talk about the power of networking. What’s one story you can share about how positively networking has helped you?

Kathy Lathem: [00:11:59] Oh my goodness. There have been people that I’ve met, especially most recently, because I’m helping to destigmatize what a senior is, right? People think they’re all in senior living houses and in assisted living, but so many of them are independent. For example, my mother lives down the street. She’s 91, lives by herself. Does yard work? The other day she said, I know you don’t want me on the ladder, so will you do this? But she blows and goes. She drives, she does everything. So I am finding people that I network with want to reach people like my mother, people who live in their homes. There’s one couple that are in real estate and home inspections. They’ve already done several seminars at the senior centers. Now Maria will bring homemade ziti and so they will make it a lunch and learn and then David talks about the things you need to check out on your house and why periodically you need a home inspection. Even if you’re not going to sell. You need to find out what’s going on under the roof so that you can call in the people to make repairs. That has been very effective because they’ve hit almost all of the senior centers and the seniors have been very receptive of that and the staff as well.

Brian Pruett: [00:13:03] That’s awesome. The other thing I’d like to ask is why is it important for you to be involved in the community?

Kathy Lathem: [00:13:11] Oh, goodness. Without community, none of us could do anything right. And yes, my my my passion is seniors. But I do have another passion. I do love children. And one of my dearest friends works for Children’s Healthcare of Atlanta. And so I would volunteer for years. Every time she would have an event, I’m like, I’ll be there. I’ll be there. And so I got the nickname as the number one volunteer because Pam would just say, Would you? And I’m there. I’m there just because I love being out in the community. I love the mission of children’s health care. So actually, I am now on the Cobb Community Board, so I have a little bit more structure to to my days and what I do for them. But being in the community is so important because I can’t just keep asking for people to support me. It’s important for me to come along and support people like you to help these charitable, you know, to help people who need to find connections with maybe food pantries that don’t fit into our programs. Maybe they’re too young. It it just does not work when we just constantly ask and are not giving. And I made that comment recently to one of my coworkers. I said, We are so great at asking, Hey, will you support us? Will you come alongside? But we got to stop and think, how good are we at saying, What can I do for you? How can I come alongside you? So to me, it’s just very important to be involved in the community, whatever it is, from children to seniors to the ages in between, to, you know, to animals, whatever. Any way that somebody has something coming up, I’m I’m there. Yes, I am Chatty Cathy, but I’m a people person. And so I get my energy from being around others.

Brian Pruett: [00:14:54] That’s awesome. You know, I wish you could preach a seminar on the networking aspect of it that people because there’s a lot of people still thinking about It’s me, me, me, me, Right. If if somebody wants to get a hold of you about your services or if a business wants to get hold of you, how they can help, how can they do that?

Kathy Lathem: [00:15:07] Absolutely. So we are very easy to find on the web. It is Cobb seniors.org very simple Cobb seniors.org or you can reach me directly at (770) 528-5393.

Brian Pruett: [00:15:22] Awesome Cathy thank you for sharing your story. You mind sticking around here in these next two stories? Happy to. So this is your first time listening to Charitable Georgia. I didn’t mention this at the top, but this is all about positive things happening in the community. You just heard a story about Cathy and her passion for, well, seniors, children and everything in between. We’re going to move over now to Mister Jeff Stone from Clear Point Associates. So, Jeff, thanks for being here.

Jeff Stone: [00:15:45] Thanks for having me.

Brian Pruett: [00:15:46] Jeff is also got a big heart. He is, I know, worked is working currently with a big nonprofit. He’s supporting everything that I do monthly by just coming to the events. And he’s got a great testimony. So this this is a story about, I guess, just testimonies and stuff. But first, Jeff, you got a pretty cool background. You you shared you played professional soccer, you played rugby, you boxed a little bit. You worked for the LA Times, right? You know, in LA. So just give a little bit of background.

Jeff Stone: [00:16:14] Well, I was very small as a child. And I grew up all of a sudden out of nowhere. So in general, I grew up in Los Angeles. I grew up in Southern California. I was one of the first things I did was speaking of soccer as I just happened to be in a very ethnic group, an ethnic area where I grew up, a lot of Armenian folks, and they played soccer. Everyone else was picking. I picked up baseballs and footballs and things of that nature, but I played soccer and my mom just pushed that narrative and said, Go play. I was a little bit husky. She said, So go play soccer. So I played started playing when I’m six, and that just elevated me into different. Like everything in life, you find a path, you start doing things and one thing leads to another. And I tried out a couple of times for, for different like travel teams and I made those teams. And eventually as I got into my teens, I was asked to play on the US national team. So I made that and I traveled six different countries and played all over the world playing soccer. I played against Pele and a lot of different people when I was a teenager, you know, and eventually when I got to be 17, 18 years old, one of my one event happened. There was a couple events happened in that period of time.

Jeff Stone: [00:17:24] I was graduating high school. I was I was accepted as the as an alternate for the US Olympic team. In 1980, we were going to Russia and Jimmy Carter put an end to that, which is ironic that I live in Georgia, you know, So to honor him, I guess. And so we did that. My dad, my dad was owned a company called One Stop Posters, and he was in Chicago on a on a on a business trip. And you may remember the Farrah Fawcett poster. Oh, yeah. I had one that was my dad’s company. And he died in that airplane crash in Chicago and O’Hare O’Hare Airport. And so that was graduating high school. Olympics were stopped. You know, it was my turn to my path. I was going down and my dad passes away. And so that changed everything, essentially. And and so I had a contract with Pony. Pony Sports came to me and said, hey, do you would you be interested in us supporting you and representing you? And I said, Sure. So they said, and my mom had scholarships, but but everything was out of the out of California. And I felt really like I couldn’t leave my mom because she just lost my dad, you know, Then I move away. It would be really kind of unfair. And so I didn’t do that. So I signed a contract with the LA Aztecs in Los Angeles, a whopping $33,000 a year and a, you know, an a used car.

Jeff Stone: [00:18:43] That was my that was my bonus, you know, compared to athletes of today, you know, it wasn’t a lot of money, but I played for the joy of the sport and I played that for a few years. And then I ended up and I and I tore my knee out three months into it. I tore my knee out. And so I lost my also. That was that was the sort of the trifecta. I lost my soccer career. So once that happened, I was in my early 20 seconds. I took up I took up rugby because I was sort of angry. And that was a great place to kind of release all that energy and stress and, you know, break knows being broken, things like that. Tear up the other knee. Yeah. Tear of the other knee. Yeah. All kinds of crazy stuff. But so I did that. And as I did that, you know, I just got, you know, I was always I always liked to play sports and very competitive person. And I and I lived through my my 20 seconds kind of doing that, beating my body up. And I’m paying for that now in my in my 60s. But so that’s my sports side of my life. And I moved out to Atlanta in 1993.

Jeff Stone: [00:19:42] So I’ve been there for quite a while. And as I did that, as I came to Atlanta, I got married. Did all the things that I thought were going to work out for my life, and they just didn’t work out. But in that process, I had some reflection. If you want me to talk about my walk with Christ, yes, please. So I’ll start off by saying this is that I was raised in a Jewish household, so I became a messianic Jew. So but I didn’t it didn’t start off that way. Right. So I was I was always, you know, going through temple and synagogue and through my family. And that was a very and I always felt sort of hindered because I was asked about Christ. Jesus Christ was the king of the Jews. And they would always say to me, Well, that’s fine, but we don’t really believe in that. You know, he was a he was a rabbi. You know, that’s what I the story I always heard. So. So as I looked at my life, looked back like every every birthday, I looked back at my life. In the past ten years, I look back at my life several times and say, what’s really happening in my life? What’s really positive? And am I living in a in an environment that really nurtures and promotes a healthy lifestyle and a really healthy person, both spiritually, physically, financially, mentally, all those things, and bringing myself as a whole person.

Jeff Stone: [00:20:57] And I realized that living in a world we live in is very difficult to do that. And I said, Why is that? Well, there’s evil. In this world. And so that evil, I said, has to be a counterpart. And I said, There’s God over here. And then I went, okay, where does God sit in my life? And I said, He doesn’t not not in the right way. I was sort of passively with God. And then I started reading and I’m looking at the Bible and reading the Bible and had some friends influence me. And and I accepted Christ in my life, you know, about six, seven years ago. And since I’ve done that, I’ve gotten baptized. I’ve, I’ve been on a walk with Christ. And that has really changed my entire life. I mean, to the point where I did have a hiccup. I got divorced about a year ago. That was a difficult thing. But but having God and having Christ in your life, you know, I handle a lot of that off to him. And then I don’t have to spend a lot of time and worry or fear and that kind of thing. So that’s sort of that’s sort of the general nature of my path.

Brian Pruett: [00:21:54] So it’s also cool because you and I met just a few months ago and you’re you’re just very giving and supportive because, you know, monthly I do a trivia event rotating charities and we’ll talk to Dan who who’s part of that as well. But you’ve either come or supported that every month just by us just talking a few times. And I just think it’s awesome that you can get involved in the community and be supportive. So I’d like for you to share. First of all, you do a lot of networking now to. And so the Clear Point associates share a little bit about clear point what you do and how you help others with that.

Jeff Stone: [00:22:34] So Clear Point Associates was was really a business. I started because I couldn’t get a job. It was really I aged out of the age, out of the actual job market, you know. Oh, you’ve got a lot of great resume, Jeff. But and I went, you know, I figured out for eight months I couldn’t find a job. Nobody would hire me. So I said, This is God telling me I need to start my own business, you know? So I started my own business and I thought, what am I going to really do here? What am I going to really impact? And how do I do this? I just didn’t want to sell widgets or chotchkie’s. I want I want to really just do something that has some impact on on other people and helps people. So I did a lot of research. I found products that I really felt passionate about and those products that I think help people directly either. And I did that through either I decided health was a big thing because we fight health. I think, you know, when when you’re seniors and people, you guys get older, you know, more aches and pains and more things we deal with. So I thought health is one area and other areas I love. I came from a lending background, so I like to help people get money, but not money That puts them in a bad position that puts them in a good position. So I chose products and I basically brokered those products and go out and and consult with companies about how to really best facilitate their growth and and also reduce their overhead by driving costs down. And the health side of their business, especially small and medium sized businesses usually people my my sweet spot of who I deal with is are companies with 100 employees or less. And I try to help them look at what their overhead and costs are. And then, you know, see there’s there are alternatives to what they’re currently spending money on.

Brian Pruett: [00:24:12] Well, I know that you have a passion for profits because you’re currently working with one of the largest ones, Fellowship of Christian Athletes, You know, so that but you’ve only been networking that I know of just a few months, right? Yeah. So do you have a story already you can share from that time period of networking?

Jeff Stone: [00:24:30] Well, I mean, the one thing I will tell you, the biggest thing I’ve learned about networking is exactly what you said, which is not about I and me. I go in there really to learn about other people’s businesses. And I really have learned. I’ll give you an example, a really good example. Sarah Mccourtney, who does stem cell, they do stem cell product. I sat with her the other day and I said, I think we can work with, you know, because really healthcare is reactive. Something has to happen before you go to a hospital or a doctor. I mean, some people, some stuff is preventative, but most people deal with health care as a reactive component to their life. I broke my hand. I did something. I injured myself. I feel sick. I mean, then I go see somebody. So stem cell therapy, which has done a lot of research on, was really interesting to me because that’s a that’s a proactive look at how you keep you keep your body health, you keep your mind healthy. I’m actually wearing one of the patches right now on my neck, so and I feel better. I got to tell you, I feel better from wearing these. And what it does is systemically gives you it helps your body as you get older, reproduce stem cells so it it helps strengthen your immune system, your metabolism, all these things that are, you know, truly clearly going to give you better health as a human being.

Jeff Stone: [00:25:40] So when we do that, I’m working directly with her and I’m partnering with her because it didn’t start off this way. And I sat down with one of my contractors, one of my clients, and I said, What’s the biggest problem you have when it comes to employees that are calling in sick and doing these other things? Is that a problem for your business? She said, Yes, it is. It’s a huge problem because he has only ten employees. So one person leaving that day or two people leaving, especially strategic people that are in his back office or just people that are on the field that have that particular skill set that that he needs, that causes him it costs him money. I said, what if we can keep them healthy ahead of time and you can help contribute to their health? And then and we can offer we can lower the cost of your health, your health costs in two different ways one proactively and one reactively. So that’s we’re already going out to companies right now together, Sarah and I. And I’m bringing her in for a web, a small webinar for the employees.

Brian Pruett: [00:26:39] I think it’s pretty cool because it kind of reminds me of our friend Bob Brooks preaches all the time collaboration over competition, and that’s a great example of collaboration, even though there really was no competition. But it’s just it’s awesome to hear the collaboration. So you just shared a little bit of why you started your business, but you can answer both of these in probably the same thing. Why is it why are you passionate for what you’re doing and why is it important for you to be part of the community?

Jeff Stone: [00:27:01] Well, the passion for doing it is really a mission. I if we’ve all probably experienced some level of. That to be disenchanted with health insurance. Health insurance unto itself is really anti health insurance, really anti health, because everything they did, if you look at what they do, is you can’t have this procedure because the insurance company won’t pay for it, but you can’t have this pharmaceutical drug because we won’t cover that. And people need these things like some of these some of these pharmaceutical drugs and big pharma, $800 for a shot, you know, $500, $1,000 for some pill you got to take. And for a child or for for somebody. And it’s expensive for families. You know, one of the things we I found when I’m working with FCA Fellowship of Christian Athletes is, is I mean, they are dealing with they’re paying $12 Million a year to Blue Cross Blue Shield for 1900 employees, $12 Million a year every year from 2020 to 2023. They’ve got $1 million increase in their in their cost of insurance. Now that’s that’s that’s debilitating for them in some ways. But think about the average person that works for FCA makes $50,000 a year family of four a family of five family of an individual is over $1,000 for the premium and $3,000 for the deductible. A family’s $2,300 they charge, plus $6,000 for deductible. And so it’s it’s it’s it’s financially inconceivable for a person making $50,000 a year to support their family, put food on the table and pay the exorbitant costs of health insurance.

Jeff Stone: [00:28:39] And it gets worse and worse and worse all the way through Medicare. It’s it’s not only the fact that insurance is bad and not set up right for health. It’s also things like Medicare and Medicaid are difficult for people like seniors to get the right kind of care from the right kind of doctor. So I found a product. I found a program that we eliminate. We pull the insurance company out of the equation and we put together the patient and the doctor like it’s supposed to be. So the doctor actually speaks to the patient and doesn’t have to worry about CPT codes or other elements of an insurance company. But the patient and the doctor get the benefits of being a The doctor gets a benefit of being paid directly by us for the patient and we pay directly to them and we negotiate a cash amount for that for that service. And so they don’t want to wait 60, 90, 120, 180 days to get paid by Blue Cross Blue Shield. And they don’t have to always have so many people chasing down bills. So that’s one benefit. The other benefit is, is the the the insured person, we cover them up front for the cost of the services. So we pay it ahead of time. So all I got to do is go to the doctor and the procedures they want get done.

Jeff Stone: [00:29:48] So the doctor prescribed something that gets done. There’s no insurance company that sits between the patient and the doctor. So and then we have all kinds of same similar mirror of what an insurance company does, but we do it with a profit. And we every dollar goes into our fund. About only about $0.30 goes out for care claims per dollar, whereas the insurance company charges you the premium and then you don’t get services until you pay off the deductible. So you really don’t have insurance until you pay the deductible off, but you pay a very high premium to have that service. So my passion was, well, this is ridiculous, this is a ridiculous thing. And then just recently and really what sparked this whole thing, Brian, was and you may be aware, I may not be aware, but Blue Cross Blue Shield, Aetna, Cigna, United, Health Care, Humana, they have because of equity in our society, everything has to be equitable. They change the gender reassignment surgery from in all their literature, from an elective surgery to medically necessary. So now they can legally they can literally go in and take your daughter or son that’s ten, 12 years old heading into puberty. And and if you have any reason to think that and you send that, send your child in to see a therapist, It’s just a moneymaking proposition for the insurance companies.

Jeff Stone: [00:31:07] And they can give them hormone blockers and they can actually lead them right into the into surgery. Our US government right now, Joe Biden, is actually put a bill out. They have a bill right now sitting in Congress that would allow that is forcing Christian hospitals to perform gender reassignment surgery. So when you get to this place where the irony is, is that a woman who needs maybe breast augmentation, it would be it would be elective surgery for her. So she had to come out of pocket for all this money to try to do this. But I could say I relate as a woman and because of equity, I can get a breast implant. They’ll pay medically necessary. So this was for me, this was a driver. It became more than just going out and helping people save money. That’s a great bonus. But really, the big the big push for me is I don’t want to see my children or my children’s children or my friend’s children or any child that’s going through the difficulty of living maybe in a in a in a position where they feel different or something like that, and being forced into a system that they’ll never get out of and will ruin their lives and there’ll be somebody that’s lost in their life and life is too precious to be doing that. So those things are really drivers for me and that’s my passion to do what I do.

Brian Pruett: [00:32:27] How about being a part of the community wise? I mean, that’s a lot, but there’s got to be another reason to why you think it’s important to be a part of the community.

Jeff Stone: [00:32:34] Well, I mean, you can’t you can’t get things done without other people. It’s a village. So you’ve got you’ve got to you’ve got to bring people in. And and I think about giving more than you take. You always get more than you give. So I’m a big giver. I just think that giving, whether it’s my time, my energy, my money, you know, I believe in tithing. I believe in giving my church money. I believe in giving God praise. I believe in giving myself, too, out there. Because I think when you give you bring you build trust with the community you build. And I’m looking that’s what I look to do in the community, is to build trust among my peers and among people that I don’t even know. I bring people all the time when I talk to people and try to build a better to me. We build a better world one person at a time. I mean, it’s nice to be in front of a group or be in a platform like this, but to me, discipling and ministering to people is a one on one opportunity where God puts you in front of people that need help, that need a voice, that need somebody to pick them up. And so I believe the community is a big part of what I do. And I and I love people. I really do love people. I mean, I hate being alone. I don’t like the solitude thing I do. I’m a single and I saw him solid in solitude a lot. But I love being around people.

Brian Pruett: [00:33:49] Yeah, it’s it’s, you know, once in a while it’s okay to be in a room, but I get after you. Like you, I got to be around people all the time. So I wanted to ask the Clear Point Associates, do you talk about the, the medical piece and the insurance? Is that available to individuals as well? Yes.

Jeff Stone: [00:34:06] Okay. Individuals or businesses? I mean, I focus on businesses because I can touch more people that way. And I can really and that’s another part of it is that if I can save a business 60% as an example, the $12 million that FCA is looking at spending this year, we can we just propose to them to do it for 5.5 million. Wow. So we saved them $6 million. I mean, went to the CEO and said, hey, what would you do with $6 Million? Right now, we can do a lot in the charitable charitable space to $6 million. What would you do with $6 million? Brian Would pretty nice, right, to have for your charities. And so yeah, we’ve just saved we just put money, more money in these companies hands. And that to me strengthens our community and strengthens the financial stability of small businesses. And and I think all that comes together as a way to benefit people and benefit the benefit everybody in the society.

Brian Pruett: [00:35:01] All right. So if somebody is listening, whether it’s an individual or a business owner or somebody who’s in charge of those for the business, share how they can get a hold of you to talk about that.

Jeff Stone: [00:35:09] So you can reach me at I’m at a couple of places that you can go to the website, which is for the health care side of it. It’s called Mighty Well, Health dot com and that’s a website we have. I’ll tell you about the whole entire thing. It’s not like insurance. It’s fully transparent. You’ll see rates everything right on the website. So all that, that’s probably the best place to see this program. You can reach me via my email. Probably the best way to reach me is email and that’s Jeff at Clearpoint associates.com.

Brian Pruett: [00:35:37] Awesome. Jeff Well, thanks for coming, sharing your story and listening to this, this next story. No, it’s fine. So Dan Bruton, thanks for being here.

Dan Bruton: [00:35:45] Thanks for having me.

Brian Pruett: [00:35:46] So, so Jeff gave you a title earlier that I thought was pretty cool. What was that? Jeff Quadro.

Jeff Stone: [00:35:52] Quadro Preneur.

Brian Pruett: [00:35:53] Quadro Preneur. So because Dan does a lot. I mean, he’s a broker with High Caliber Realty. He runs Saint Angelo’s. He’s on a board for the gift, the giving Garden Giving Garden. You coach your son’s teams and your husband and you got to do all this other stuff. So there’s a lot going on. There is. So do you sleep at all?

Dan Bruton: [00:36:14] About 4 or 5 hours a night?

Brian Pruett: [00:36:16] Yeah, that’s about all. All right. So, well, I appreciate you being here. Thanks for coming. Share a little bit, first of all, about high caliber, high caliber.

Dan Bruton: [00:36:24] I’ve been with them for about four years, just recently became a broker with them. We’re a little boutique broker out of Kennesaw, Georgia, and we just sell real estate. We’re brokered in seven states all the way out to Alaska. Our broker actually ran the Iditarod in Alaska several years ago. So it’s kind of a cool story, the only one in Georgia to finish. So, yeah.

Brian Pruett: [00:36:42] If you listen to a couple of weeks ago, Bill was on here, so it was it’s awesome.

Dan Bruton: [00:36:46] Yeah, he did great out there and he still supports, supports the the program out there and goes out there for opening day races and stuff like that. And so we’re pretty, pretty active. Yeah, we’re not real flashy and you know, you don’t see our billboards everywhere, but we just focus on helping individuals and selling real estate. So do you.

Brian Pruett: [00:37:02] Do both commercial and individual?

Dan Bruton: [00:37:05] I do mostly residential. I do some small commercial and I have an investment. I’m an investor as well. I have an investment in a small commercial piece of property as well. So yeah, so a little bit of everything we do land as well, so well.

Brian Pruett: [00:37:18] So I think a lot of people, most people know you who do know the community aspect of it know you more. For Saint Angelo’s and Emerson at Lakepoint, share a little bit about Saint Angelo’s. First of all, how well you guys are The oldest bar in Emerson is the is the it’s a joke, but it’s a tagline. It’s real. But share about the story, if you can, about Saint Angelo’s. And then we’ll talk a little more about what you and I are doing.

Dan Bruton: [00:37:42] Okay. Well, I moved to Atlanta in oh six with a big corporate chain, and then I switched to another corporate chain about 8 or 9 years after that. And then I said, Well, you know what? I really want to get involved in small business. I love food. I love people. I’m like, got connected with this guy Sean. Sean owns Saint Angelo’s, and he says, Hey, I’m opening a spot in Emerson, Georgia. Would you like to run it? I said, okay, It sounds like a great plan. So I left my corporate job and midtown Atlanta and came up to Emerson, Georgia. I didn’t know anything about Emerson, Georgia, a town of about 1600 people. And. No. One from the big city of Atlanta to Emerson, Georgia. And I was like, okay, let’s make this happen. So we did. So we’ve been there since 2016, a little family owned restaurant. We do a lot in the community. We support a lot of local high schools, kids, athletes. We do trivia with you, Brian. You’ve been a great part of that. And it’s just, you know, we’re we’re homemade, homemade food. And when you talk about being in service and if you want to be in service, work in a restaurant for a little while and you’ll learn all about service. So I love serving people and I love I love food. Well, you’ve.

Brian Pruett: [00:38:52] Seen the Lake Point grow. I mean, since you’ve been there, they’ve added the bowling alley. There’s all kinds of stuff going on. But I do want to touch on what you guys do in the community with Saint Angela’s because like you said, you guys do a lot for the schools. So a few years ago, Stephen Norton and I had a magazine called Northwest Georgia Rising Stars, and we were going out introducing this to the schools of the idea of the concept of it. And Dan partnered with us and provided lunch for the coaches for all the high schools in Bartow County. And it’s just, you know, just to do that in itself is an amazing. But you I know you do stuff for the red Door food pantry. You do other things. You and I are partnering right now doing a monthly trivia show, rotating charities in Bartow County. So I appreciate you opening up to do that. And it’s been an amazing journey. I started the trivia there when I was working for team trivia and I was your host there for for many years. And kind of the idea of that together and merge the charity thing was a natural thing. But you also provide the lunches for the learning table for the Castle Business Club. We do there that once a month as well. So there’s a lot that you provide for the community. So share a little bit. First of all, what people can expect when they come to either a trivia night or the learning table, what can they expect from the food? Because first of all, and Jeff knows you’ve come if you walk away hungry, it is your fault, you know?

Jeff Stone: [00:40:10] Yeah, I would say that’s true.

Brian Pruett: [00:40:12] You’re also not only known as the oldest bar, but you have the best wings in Bartow County, but share what people can expect from there.

Dan Bruton: [00:40:18] So what you can expect is, you know, our is just homemade food. We have everything’s fresh. We make it on site. I think our freezer is about the size of your freezer at your house. We have like French fries and mozzarella sticks in it and that’s about it. Everything else we either make or we bring in fresh. And, you know, it’s just a little, little local mom and pop flair restaurant that we just focus on. Great food, great food quality, great service, the staff’s friendly, smiling. And in this market, it’s hard. It’s hard to find, you know, everybody’s struggling for staff. So we’ve been very fortunate to have a lot of long term staff and staff that just gets gets the message of, hey, we’re here to serve people. We provide great food and a great, great atmosphere. It’s a sports bar in Emerson, Italian sports bar, if you will. We’ve got plenty of TVs all the games on. It’s just great energy in the restaurant. It’s just a good feel there.

Brian Pruett: [00:41:11] You’ve had plenty of people from the sports world that are considered celebrities come in there, too. For my understanding, there’s been Shaquille O’Neal’s been in there, right?

Dan Bruton: [00:41:19] I believe so, yeah. I’ve also heard.

Brian Pruett: [00:41:20] Derek Jeter was in there at one time. He was, you know, so you’ve got some some big names. And one of the things Can you share I know one of the pieces that’s really popular is your cheeseburger pizza. But is that your most popular pizza?

Dan Bruton: [00:41:34] We sell more cheese pizza in pepperoni pizza. People like the Staples, you know, just cheese. But we do we support a lot of birthday parties and stuff. And for the kids and stuff, they just kind of go with that. But we have a pizza of the month every month that we special, we knock the price down quite a bit to kind of walk people through the menu on our pizzas. So every month we have a pizza of the month and that goes over really well. Of course you can create your own pizza. We have plenty of toppings. If you want to start with a cheese pizza and add just about anything that you want, we have it. We have a great gluten free pizza for people that are a little bit more health conscious or have the gluten intolerance. I have a couple people that just buy the crust and make it at home. So the product is very good. You know, when the gluten products first came out, they were a little bit a little bit heavy. But now over time, you know, technology and everything, they’ve really done a great job. And we landed on a great product that a lot of people love.

Brian Pruett: [00:42:24] And I will say for that, my mother is gluten intolerant. And so she that is her favorite place to go to gluten free pizza because that’s like you said, it’s fresh and all that. You also are very willing and working with folks, we have a couple of people that come that are severely allergic to gluten, to the events, and you allow them to get the gluten free as part of the the deal we’re doing. So I also have to give him a credit because he’s helping my sponsors for this event by letting us leave the banners and stuff up all year long, not just the night that we have the trivia. So they’re getting the advertising alongside. Thank you for that. So now let’s talk about the Giving Garden. Yes, you are on the board for that.

Dan Bruton: [00:43:02] I’m on the board. So in my passion for food and people, I was at this church down in Mableton and there was a property next to the church and we’re like, This would be a great spot for a garden. So Judy and Jake and I were like, Let’s start. Let’s start a garden. So we started the garden to start it in 2016 and we’re just turned into it’s an amazing thing. We actually purchased the property a few years back and we’re just a non profit community garden and, and and since then we’ve started some educational programs and camps and stuff to educate people about food. And then we have some farm animals there as well. So we do camps and talk about different animals, goats and donkeys and rabbits. We have about 35 chickens, so people can sign up for summer camps or programs and just come or just come out to the garden and hang out. It’s a great space, a green space just to come, you know, hang out, sit outside, read a book, whatever you want to do, get away from the craziness of life and just hang out. And we also once a quarter, we do different things. We just had an Easter egg hunt for each of the public. There’s things you can purchase there as well, and you can support the garden by doing stuff like that too. We we sell some of our plants. So if you’re looking to start your own garden at home, you can purchase plants from the garden and support the garden and then get your own garden at home. We’ll do a pumpkin patch, pumpkin patch in the fall where you can buy pumpkins for Halloween and stuff like that. And we’ll have a little trick or treat thing for the kids and stuff. So it’s a great program, green space and you know, it’s educational. And we have a fridge where we provide produce and stuff that people can get for free, 24 hour access and just like a garden fridge, pantry type thing that, you know, we just give back to the community.

Brian Pruett: [00:44:49] You said it’s in Mapleton, McKinney shareware in Mapleton.

Dan Bruton: [00:44:51] It’s at it’s on North Cooper Lake Road 75 North Cooper Lake Road down in Mapleton. Yeah.

Brian Pruett: [00:44:56] Oh, excuse me. Other than coming and purchasing, you know, the plants or pumpkins or things like that, how can other people help support the garden?

Dan Bruton: [00:45:04] Well, you know, we’re profit, which means we need a lot of hands make light work, right? So if you have an organization that’s looking to a community project, there’s some schools that have to do community projects. They partner with us. It’s a great opportunity to partner with the garden and do a community service day for your school or your business. If your business likes to get out in the community and do stuff, we certainly need hands for, for different things and we have different projects. Sometimes we’re building stuff, sometimes we’re moving stuff, sometimes we’re just weeding the garden or what have you. But there’s always something going on there. Of course, we’re nonprofits, so you know, donations would help too. So you can donate as little as $5 a month or or a lump sum or however that works for you. And sometimes we just need people to go pick up stuff, you know? Hey, we need chicken feed for the chickens. Is anybody available? And we just need a volunteer to go pick that up. So there’s many ways you can get involved in volunteer. And some of it’s just, you know, sweat equity, some of it’s time. And, you know, a little money wouldn’t hurt either.

Brian Pruett: [00:46:01] You like I said, you do a lot. So, Sherry, you said your passion is food and people. But why is that? Because everything we just talked about that you do, it’s an amazing thing. But why is that your passion?

Dan Bruton: [00:46:15] I think it stems from my grandma. My grandma is Italian. She’s from Naples, Italy. And she had this little kitchen. It’s about the size of probably most people’s bathrooms now. And she could cook for an army of people at that little kitchen. And it was like homemade, just, I mean, Italian, just meatballs, spaghetti, pasta, fish, whatever you wanted. She could whip out out of that kitchen. And I was amazed by it. So growing up with her, I ate a lot of pasta and a lot of food, and I just I just love food. So I love cooking at home. I love cooking. It’s just. Just something I like to do. So you can tell I.

Brian Pruett: [00:46:48] Love food, so it’s not a problem for me either. So you do a lot of networking as well. I mean, we’ve all are part of some of the same circles and stuff. Can you share a story that’s of networking that’s been positive for you?

Dan Bruton: [00:47:00] I think the most positive thing for me is just, you know, going into networking. I don’t go there necessarily for myself. I go there to see how I can help others. I think that’s the best story because it does take a village. A lot of people say, say it takes a village to raise your kids, but it takes a village to raise the village as well. So I go in with the mindset of, you know, I know what I’m doing and capable of doing. I’m seeing what I can use my talents and abilities or it’s space at the restaurant for whatever I can do to help somebody else out. So like Big Rich comedy, he’s, you know, he’s looking at book stuff. I said, Well, if you ever have a booking that you need a space for, reach out to me. I’ll see if I can just use my space if it’s available, you know, just stuff like that. Seeing how I can help other people in the community. And then from that, it’s just the collaboration with, you know, I talk to other agents and networking and we bounce ideas off of each other in different scenarios so you can learn as well and teach at the same time. So as I’m learning from another agent, I can teach them what I did in a similar situation or what have you. So and then the third part is just connecting people, right? If somebody is looking for something and I know somebody that kind of does that or knows somebody that knows somebody that does that. And Bryan, you’re really good at that. Just connecting people with people that can help them out. So. Whether I do it directly or just introduce them to somebody that can can get them where they need to go is a big one for me. On the networking side.

Brian Pruett: [00:48:26] Anything you can do different, you can share about why it’s important for being part of the community. I’m sorry, being part of the community other than what you’ve already shared. Yeah, I think.

Dan Bruton: [00:48:36] It’s just important to get out in the community and you know, and I have kids. I like to know what’s going on in the community. And the more I’m out in the community, the more I know, you know, what’s a good, positive, comfortable environment for my kids, my family. And sometimes, you know, there’s areas that maybe are not so positive. And with that, not necessarily that I need to stay away from it, but how can I impact that to make that more positive for that, that specific area of the community? So but I think it’s just important to be out there and involved. I coach my son’s baseball games. I’m very involved with Smyrna Little League on that aspect. I got three kids in three different leagues there. So we’re constantly at the baseball fields. We’re doing football on Friday nights. I’m helping coach that. So I got a lot going on. But it’s all good stuff, all positive stuff. It’s stuff I really enjoy. You know, when I wake up in the day, I’m saying it’s going to be a good day. I know it’s busy, but it’s good. It’s all good stuff.

Brian Pruett: [00:49:29] Know Well, I was going to ask, how do you how do you manage the all the work life with family time? Because there is a lot going on. So how do you how do you balance that?

Dan Bruton: [00:49:38] Well, I’m fortunate in the sense that I can write my schedule for for everything I do. So the real estate side, I can schedule things when I need to schedule them on the restaurant side, I schedule things. I mean, there’s times I need to be there, but for the most part I can write my schedule. If I need to work in the morning, I can work in the morning. If I need to work at night, I can work at night. So it’s challenging because there’s a lot of moving parts. But you know, fortunately I’m able to schedule for the most part according to what I need to do and get things done.

Brian Pruett: [00:50:07] How do people separate you? Because most people, especially up in the Bartow County area, don’t relate to the high caliber part. They they mostly of the Saint Angelo’s part. How can you separate those two moving forward with some folks?

Dan Bruton: [00:50:22] That’s a great question. I don’t know. I think I think I’m always going to kind of be tied to both, which is fine. You know, I think people know me as the restaurant guy and hopefully they’ll know me as a real estate guy as well. So yeah, but I think it’ll be twofold for a while. All right.

Brian Pruett: [00:50:35] Yeah. The other thing, we won’t hold this against you, but he’s a Florida Gator fan, so.

Dan Bruton: [00:50:40] I actually went to school there, so that makes a little sense. It’s not like some of these schools that have fans that people don’t go there, right? Yeah, right. Yeah.

Brian Pruett: [00:50:49] All right. So if somebody wants to get ahold of you, either for the real estate, for restaurant for because you guys do some catering as well, or birthday parties wanting to get involved with the Giving Garden. How can somebody get a hold of you for any of that?

Dan Bruton: [00:51:00] So for the for the restaurant, it’s Dan at Saint Angelo’s. It’s s t a n g e.com. Angelo’s is how it sounds phonetically. And then for real estate, it’s Dan at high caliber Realty.com for the Giving Garden. It’s our giving garden.org. It’s a nonprofit down in Mapleton. Beautiful websites got all the information on their camps, programs, pop ups, all that kind of stuff. Spot to donate, spot to volunteer as well. So that’s a great resource. And then if you just want to call me, my number is (770) 876-7243 Cell phone. Awesome.

Brian Pruett: [00:51:35] Dan, thanks for sharing your story. When we wrap this up, I always like to ask this question. Wrapping the show up, I’d like for each of you to share either a word or a quote or some nugget to live today and beyond with to leave somebody with some positivity. Kathy, I’ll start with you.

Kathy Lathem: [00:51:50] Oh, put me on the spot. Why don’t we pass it off to Jeff? I think about that one.

Brian Pruett: [00:51:55] How about you, Jeff?

Jeff Stone: [00:51:57] Well, I always, you know, I think of, you know, inspiring things. I like a lot of inspiring quotes, but the one that always sticks with me is only those who are willing to go too far. Never know how far one can go.

Brian Pruett: [00:52:11] That’s it Makes you think, too. That’s good. Yeah. Dan, what do you have? We’ll come back to Kathy.

Dan Bruton: [00:52:15] I heard one the other day, so I’m going to steal it from from this guy that we had in the networking group along the lines of inspiring. And I hope I don’t mess it up. But he said, I want to inspire. I inspire to inspire before I inspire. Wow. So he plans to inspire other people before he expires. So that’s good. I thought that was pretty pretty moving. Yes. New to the group and he just came out with that. So that’s pretty, pretty good. Pretty strong.

Jeff Stone: [00:52:45] Right there. Can I give Kathy one more second? Sure. Yes, sure. Go ahead. I would say for the idea that we’re all networking and stuff like that, one thing I really I tell my kids this and I and I, I think it’s important for networking is seek to be interested. Not interesting.

Dan Bruton: [00:53:03] Yes, that’s a good point.

Jeff Stone: [00:53:05] You know, and if you because I noticed a lot of people in networking are trying to be interesting. Oh, I do this and I do that and I’m this and that. Well, no. Be interested. Instead.

Brian Pruett: [00:53:15] I’ve I’ll touch on that because we had a young man start coming and he I was we would go around the room and people would thank you for, for introductions or referrals and stuff like that and and happened to be one day that I had given a lot of folks some some folks, you know, introductions or whatever. And I was getting thanked quite a bit. And this young man, he was new to networking emailed me like right after the meeting and said, Hey, you know, everybody else referrals, can you send me some? And my email back to him was you can take this however you will, but you need to come in and establish relationships and learn more about them before you start selling a thing. He’s never come back to a meeting since. Wow. So. All right, Kathy, what do you have? Well, we.

Kathy Lathem: [00:53:54] Do do business with people we know, like and trust, Right. And if you don’t spend time with someone, you don’t know them. You don’t learn to trust them. Right? Right. And you don’t find out what they do. So I think we’ve all touched on it the same. You have to inspire others. You have to be interested and you have to listen. Chatty Cathy You know, it’s easy for me to engage, but I have to stop and really listen to people, not just hear, but listen. So that’s very important, I think, for all of us to take on a daily basis. But then it goes back to Scripture for me, to whom much is given, much shall be required. There’s not one person in this room who has not been given much, and we are required to take what has been given to us, be good stewards of it, and not keep it in our hands. But to pass it along, whether it’s knowledge, whether it’s tangible goods, whether it’s finances, our time, whatever it is we have to be willing to give.

Brian Pruett: [00:54:52] Awesome. Yes. Well, again, Kathy, Jeff, Dan, thanks for coming. Everybody out there listening. Let’s remember, let’s be positive. Let’s be charitable.

 

Tagged With: Clearpoint and Associates, Cobb Senior Services, High Caliber Realty

John Cloonan with Audacity Marketing, Bill Borden with High Caliber Realty and Professional Rodeo Rider Tim Pharr

February 20, 2023 by angishields

Charitable Georgia
Charitable Georgia
John Cloonan with Audacity Marketing, Bill Borden with High Caliber Realty and Professional Rodeo Rider Tim Pharr
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John-Cloonan-bwJohn Cloonan is the founder of Audacity Marketing. John lives near Woodstock, Georgia with his partner Suzanne, his dog Seamus, and when she’s home from college, his daughter, Annie, who is currently riding a Ninja 500.

He’s been riding a motorcycle since the 1980s, and very quickly found that his preferences ran more to speed than anything else. He’s got decades of track days and racing under his belt, and recently some sport-touring.

After more than a decade off the racetrack, John realized something – he missed it something awful. So, for his 50th birthday, he decided his gift to himself was to go racing again. He bought a bike; he made a plan. COVID-19 delayed that plan. But the bike got built and a year of track days happened for practice, and 2022 was his first racing season… well, in a really long time.

On the business side, he holds an MBA in marketing, and has created growth strategies as a marketing executive and agency owner for everything from startups to multibillion dollar companies.

Connect with John on LinkedIn and Facebook. 

Bill-Borden-bwBill Borden, a Broker with High Caliber Realty, is uniquely suited and exceptionally trained to negotiate the current tides of today’s real estate and business transactions market. He has conducted the business of real estate within all of the components of the transaction and has obtained a unique and cumulative perspective from each.

During Bill’s years in the real estate arena, his expertise spans from the very start of the negotiations as a Buyer’s Representative, Seller’s Agent or Business Broker to the management of a successful law firm for closing of the transaction, and everything in between such as Appraiser, Title Underwriter, Mortgage Underwriter, Loan Officer and was the Real Estate Wizard of the Wall Street Business Network.

Bill’s undergrad degrees are in real estate and his Doctorate of Jurisprudence has an emphasis on real estate. He holds the highest designation a Real Estate Auctioneer can hold, the CAI, a three-year course of study at Indiana University.

Bill has been in the real estate profession all of his life with the origins of his company found in his family’s real estate company established in 1939. Bill, originally from Kentucky, was the youngest licensed Broker in the Commonwealth at 19 years of age. He has sold commercial and residential real estate for over 40 years. His real estate sales and consulting practice currently has offices in Georgia, Alaska, and North Carolina, however his work encompasses all 50 states.

In the 80’s, Bill achieved Life Membership in the Realtors’ Million Dollar Club by having sold over six million dollars’ worth of real estate per month for several consecutive months. He still sits on the National Realtors’ Auction Committee Leadership Panel and is a member of the Atlanta Board of Commercial Realtors.

In 1989, Bill sold his real estate appraisal company, which at the time was the largest in Georgia; however, he still holds a Certified General Real Estate Appraisal License, the highest level of license in the appraisal profession. Bill holds Broker, Appraisal and Auctioneer licenses in several states. He is one of the few qualified to sit as a Georgia Department of Revenue Hearing Officer that rules on property tax disputes over one million dollars for Boards of Equalization across the state.

Bill has been honored and recognized by the Cobb County Chamber of Commerce as 2009 “Kennesaw’s Citizen of the Year.” Kennesaw Business Association also honored Bill as “Kennesaw’s Citizen of the Year.” He’s been honored with the Cobb County Police Department’s Chief’s Award in 2016. Bill was the 2010 President of the Vinings Business Association, 2006 and 2007 President of the West Cobb Business Association, a Director, Vice President and past President of the Iditarod Official Finishers’ Club, a Cobb County Chamber of Commerce’s Leadership Cobb Silver Anniversary Alumni and serves on the Board of the Cobb Chamber as the Northwest Area Council Chairman. He’s a Trustee for the Southern Museum of Civil War and Locomotive History (a Smithsonian Affiliate in Kennesaw, GA) and for the North Metro Technical College/Chattahoochee Technical College foundations.

Bill has been commissioned into The Honorable Order of Kentucky Colonels for life, twice, by two sitting Governors of the Commonwealth; he has been honored as an Honorary Commissioner of Agriculture by two different Commissioners; he is a past member of the F & T committee for the Cobb County School Board to oversee the SPLOST programs as well as a member and former Secretary of the citizens oversight committee for the Cobb County Board of Commissioners SPLOST program and as served on the Kennesaw Development Authority.

Bill is an aircraft pilot with a high-performance rating, a Master Certified SSI SCUBA Diver, Boy Scout Leader, proficient in two disciplines of martial arts, an expert marksman and has been a MENSA member for over 40 years.

Bill is a Rotary Paul Harris Fellow, and was named “Rotarian of the Year”, past member of both the Rotary Club of North Cobb and the Rotary Club of Vining Cumberland and is currently an member of the Susitna Rotary Club. He’s also a founding member of the Kiwanis Club of Greater Kennesaw and a Director for Georgia Kiwanis Division 15.

Bill is a professional athlete and an avid winter outdoorsman. He’s one of only 780 people in the entire world to have successfully completed the 1,151-mile Iditarod Sled Dog Race from Anchorage to Nome, Alaska. He completed his first Iditarod in 2002. Also, in his racing profile are top 20 finishes in Klondike 300, the Knik 200 and the Denali 300 races.

Connect with Bill on LinkedIn and Facebook.

Tim-Pharr-bwTim Pharr was born in July of 78 in north Georgia. He lived in Chatsworth until his junior year of high school. His parents started rodeoing right after he was born. When Tim and his brother showed interest, his dad encouraged them to start training their own. Tim has ridden horses for the public since then.

Tim’s family soon outgrew their 12 acres and bought what’s now Lightning P Ranch. It was full of trees so they became loggers for a brief period. Tim left for college during some of the building stages.

Tim studied in Vernon, TX on a rodeo scholarship for two years and earned a two-year degree in farm & ranch management. At the conclusion of school, he and his brother began to rodeo professionally.

Tim has rodeoed in 40 different states and two Canadian provinces over the course of his 10 year experience. He met his current wife and they married in ‘07. Tim has retired from traveling and now works locally exclusively.

Connect with Tim on Facebook.

This transcript is machine transcribed by Sonix

TRANSCRIPT

Intro: [00:00:07] Broadcasting live from the business radio studios in Atlanta. It’s time for Charitable Georgia, brought to you by B’s Charitable Pursuits and Resources. We put the fun in fundraising. For more information, go to B’s Charitable Pursuits dot com. That’s B’s Charitable Pursuits dot com. Now here’s your host, Brian Prewitt.

Brian Pruett: [00:00:45] Good, fabulous. Friday morning. We’ve got three more fabulous folks in the studio today. And it’s too bad we weren’t on earlier because there were some wild stories going on and it’s too bad we don’t have like an eight hour show because some really cool stuff talked about. But as you know, this is Charitable Georgia. It’s positive. Things happen in the community. And I’ve got three, three guys here that’s going to share their stories on not only what they do in the community, but about chasing their dreams. And we’re going to start first off with John Cloonan from Audacity Marketing. So, John, thanks for being here this morning.

John Cloonan: [00:01:17] Thanks for having me. Brian.

Brian Pruett: [00:01:18] So you have you’ve shared before we started quite a bit of things you’ve done, but tell us a little bit about all the marketing and why you’re in the marketing world.

John Cloonan: [00:01:27] So I’m actually in the marketing world accidentally. I was hired in I was hired as a proposal writer back in like 1997, and I just continually grew into that role. And then through 25 years in corporate and a couple of agencies and then back in 2020, I decided that I was going to start another marketing agency. And this is kind of my last act, if you will. So.

Brian Pruett: [00:01:51] Well, you, you, you like helping others. So what does nasty marketing do? Can you share what you do?

John Cloonan: [00:01:57] I mean, at the at the core, we grow people’s businesses, we provide we’re a full service marketing agency providing both traditional and digital marketing across the spectrum to really all kinds of companies.

Brian Pruett: [00:02:10] Do you do like from social media as well as websites?

John Cloonan: [00:02:14] And we do social media, we do websites, we true traditional marketing. So like we’ll do direct mail, we’ll do EDM, we also do oh goodness, we’ll do social advertising, we’ll manage your social media. I mean, we truly are a full service agency. In fact, one product that we offer is is what I call a fractional marketing department, which means that your company, if you don’t have a marketing department, you just pay us a flat fee per month and we do your marketing.

Brian Pruett: [00:02:44] Awesome. So do you work with just people in Cherokee County or do you do all over metro Atlanta?

John Cloonan: [00:02:48] Oh no, we’re international. Actually. I have clients as we have clients in the UK, California, all over the country.

Brian Pruett: [00:02:55] So awesome. You said you got this accidentally. So share a little bit of your story, what you were doing before and we’ll get to why I asked you here anyway, because it’s all pretty cool. It leads up to what? What we’re talking about.

John Cloonan: [00:03:07] Oh, God. What was I doing before?

Brian Pruett: [00:03:10] What were you doing before? I guess that’s.

John Cloonan: [00:03:12] What I was going to say. You know, I think I said before, I have a resume that reads like the Tibetan Book of the Dead. Immediately before that job, I was actually doing hotel maintenance for a local Marriott for local Marriott. And but I have done you know, I’ve done theater, I’ve done automotive detailing, I’ve done inline skating. I mean, you name it, it’s probably on there. Like if I actually wrote out my resume, it’d probably be 25 pages long.

Brian Pruett: [00:03:39] Wow. So we’re talking about following your dreams. You are a professional motorcycle racer. You’ve you retired and then came back.

John Cloonan: [00:03:49] So I’m not a professional. Let’s I need to be 100% clear. This is an amateur sport at this level. I have done it at that higher level. But but now. But these days it’s club racing.

Brian Pruett: [00:04:00] So we’ll share share about share their story. Why did you decide you wanted to come back and do it? I mean, that’s obviously all three of these guys that I’m going to talk to. Stone have extreme sports, and if I did any of them, I either wind up in the hospital or dead. So just why have you decided? Especially because what you do on the motorcycles, you are the one that leans all the way down and feels like you’re about to slide out from underneath it.

John Cloonan: [00:04:20] So, yeah, well, if you’re not leaning on the bike, you’re not turning right. So I, I got into this back in the early nineties. I’ve always raced or ridden or done track days and I did it until I did it like I did it steadily through until about 2008. And then right around that time I had a really bad divorce, which left me kind of financially unable to do it because it’s not a cheap sport. And then right about the time I was recovered from that and was thinking that I was going to have the money to do that, I got cancer. So that kind of took me out for a little while. So flash forward to to 2020 and I had actually just started this company. I’m like, I want to go racing again. And it was I turned 50. And so this is like coming back to racing was my 50th birthday gift to myself.

Brian Pruett: [00:05:10] Wow, that’s cool. So you’re you’re also an overcomer, obviously, with the cancer as well and going through your personal stuff but. Take me through how you train, because there’s obviously you got to do some training and being able to handle that bike and especially on those terms, because literally when I watch those and I see how far down you are, it just feels like you’re on the ground.

John Cloonan: [00:05:29] Oh, yeah, you’re on the ground. I mean, you know, if you’re lean angles, it’s really funny because the way your balance works is you feel really weird until you hit 45 degrees. And then when you get below 45 degrees, you feel great. It’s a very, very strange sensation. But, you know, training is well, for the year prior to starting, I actually built a motorcycle and just spent a year just doing practice days, just doing what they call track days, just to get used to being back out there on the race track again. But I’m also in the gym four to 4 to 5 days a week. You know, I lift a lot. I mean, that’s almost out of habit as much as anything. I’m also trying to lose a few pounds because I’m racing a small bike, I’m racing a 300, and they say that £10 is one horsepower and I need every horsepower I can get.

Brian Pruett: [00:06:20] So share with somebody, obviously, again, you did this and even though it’s not pro, it’s the amateur. So you should try to come back and do it. And you’re still following your dreams. I saw something that says the old man following dreams.

John Cloonan: [00:06:33] Yeah. Yeah. Well, as you go on the I hope racing website, you’ll see an old man on a small bike following his dreams. And this is just. I can’t not do this anymore. It’s just one of those I the first race back. I came off the race track, we came across the finish line and I started giggling like a schoolgirl, and I couldn’t stop laughing all the way back to the paddock. I was just I hadn’t had that much fun. I didn’t remember how much fun it was, and I hadn’t had that much fun in years. And then I was just, you know, all of a sudden I’m hooked again, right? And so I wrote I raced a full season last year, had some good success. And here we are again.

Brian Pruett: [00:07:16] So what is a full season?

John Cloonan: [00:07:18] Full season is well, last year is February to November. We first race was the last weekend in February. Last race was the weekend before Thanksgiving. This year we end a little earlier. We end in October.

Brian Pruett: [00:07:29] But and as of just the.

John Cloonan: [00:07:30] Southeast, yeah I’m racing. I’m actually racing to regions, I’m racing Southeast region and then I’m actually racing this year. I’m going to actually try to win the Atlantic Coastal Championship as well, which is only one additional race.

Brian Pruett: [00:07:45] So are there opportunities for people who want to get involved? Look, there’s all kinds of levels of sports marketing, so I’m assuming people can help sponsor you and be a part of that.

John Cloonan: [00:07:53] Oh, absolutely. You know, we have you know, I’ve been soliciting sponsors. Well, I mean, I did last year. Cherokee Business Radio X is a sponsor. Thank you much very much down and you know and because of what I do for a living I offer a very different sponsorship experience. You get social media value. You get you get visibility. You know, so rather than just a sticker on the side of the motorcycle, you know, there’s social mentions, there’s t shirt ads, there’s all kinds of stuff. So it’s a different it’s a different experience and it’s not as expensive as people think.

Brian Pruett: [00:08:28] Yeah, that’s what I think. When people hear sports marketing, they’re like, Well, I can’t be on a NASCAR. I can’t afford to be on the Braves stadium. But there’s all kinds of levels that you can be a part of. We talked at you where you mentioned that you like helping people obviously with your marketing, but you you’re in the process of looking at starting a nonprofit as well. Can you share about that?

John Cloonan: [00:08:44] Yeah. So when I started Audacity, Audacity has a focus on being diverse, like our internally diverse. And then. When we as we started to have some success and the company grew, I realized that a lot. There are a lot of diversity owned businesses or people who are underserved typically who just don’t have the opportunity or the connections that I do. As an old white guy, basically. So we’re creating an incubator to serve the underserved. So ethnically diverse women, people who have been out of prison attics. And actually, if you think you are in an underserved population, we encourage you to apply because we just take it on a case by case basis.

Brian Pruett: [00:09:32] How can people find them on that and apply for that?

John Cloonan: [00:09:35] Well, as soon as it launches, because we are in the midst of finishing up the paperwork for the 501. C three and building the website, we’re anticipating like an end of year launch. But as soon as that you’ll just go to break out by audacity dot com and you will be there.

Brian Pruett: [00:09:51] All right. Well can you share a little bit of if somebody is listening to you and they’ll hear these other stories, but if somebody is listening to you and they feel like they want to pursue their dream because they either had the dream and stopped doing it, whatever, but just tell somebody or give somebody advice about it’s not obviously it’s never too late to pursue a dream, but just if they want to pursue a dream.

John Cloonan: [00:10:12] Oh, yeah. You know, I think the really and I hate to be obvious, but the short version is go do it. You know, figure out what it’s going to take to do it and go do it. And, you know, like for me, one of the big things was just this. This is not a cheap sport. You know, you have to have a motorcycle. And the motorcycle actually at some level is the cheap thing, you know, And but, you know, so I figured out, you know, I sat down, I made a plan. I’m like, okay, how can I finance this sponsorship? Great. So we built the sponsorship program. What what do I need to do to be ready so that I don’t harm myself? I need to practice. So I’m going to sign up for track days for a year to practice, and then I’m going to get back in the gym with a specific program around motorcycling. But the real thing is just figure out what you need to do to make the next step and make that step, you know, and it just take it one step at a time until you’re there, you know, and then the next thing you know, two years later, you know, I’m going after two regional championships.

Brian Pruett: [00:11:11] So if somebody wanted to come watch you races or somewhere in metro Atlanta, they can see you.

John Cloonan: [00:11:16] Yeah, sure. We’re racing it wrote Atlanta twice this year, once in June and I think once in August. If you go to we’re a dot com and look at the schedule it’ll show you all the places we race. Also, if you’re here on the west side of of the state, there’s a small track in Oxford, Alabama, Talladega which is a great place to go watch racing. It’s because you can pretty much see the whole track from the grandstands. But any place, like any anywhere on the zero schedule, because we race in Georgia three times while we race in Georgia at three two tracks at Roebling Road Raceway down near Savannah as well. But any of those places and watching. Racing as a spectator at the club level is way better than at the pro level because you have full access to the paddock, right? You walk in like if you see a racer come across the finish line, you want to know what they did, go talk to them. And almost all and all of us are pretty much like you walk into my paddock and go, Hey, that was cool. How did that happen? We’ll talk to you all day.

Brian Pruett: [00:12:16] So if somebody doesn’t know the difference and you just shared a little bit of the difference, but what’s the difference between professional and club money?

John Cloonan: [00:12:26] No, I mean, so professional racing in the United States is all sanctioned by Motoamerica. And those guys are paid athletes and they are paid to be there. They have different seasons. They have different you know, there’s not really a regional championship. They have a lot of different club racing is, you know, most of us are paying our own way. We’re not getting paid to do this. We’re doing it because we love it. And I kind of like it better from a spectator perspective. Just because you really do get that, you get to talk to the athletes you get to and there’s some really talented people there and there are some guys who race at the club level who do both right. You’ll you’ll find some of the like if you want to meet some of the pro racers come to a club race they’re there too so awesome.

Brian Pruett: [00:13:17] Well if somebody wants to get a hold of you to talk about sponsorship or if they want to talk to you about your services of audacity, what’s the best way to might get hold of you?

John Cloonan: [00:13:25] Sure. Easiest thing for sponsorship. Go to five op racing I hope. And no, I won’t tell you what it means. It’s not obscene. Just be aware of that. Go to five op racing and click Support the dream and you can and you can directly. You can either directly donate right there or you can just reach out to me through the contact form if you’re interested in marketing services. John at Audacity Dot Marketing.

Brian Pruett: [00:13:50] Awesome. Well, John, thanks for being here this morning again and sharing your story a little bit. And, and do you mind sticking around? Listen to these next two stories.

John Cloonan: [00:13:55] Oh, no, I won’t to this is going to be great.

Brian Pruett: [00:13:57] So we are moving over to Mr. Bill Borden. Bill is probably the non official governor for Georgia. Everybody knows Bill.

Bill Borden: [00:14:06] Great to be here. Thank you.

Brian Pruett: [00:14:09] So Bill owns High Caliber Realty and he’s like, John, done some things probably. Again, what has he done? But first of all, share about Hi Gabba Realty and then we’ll get into the other stuff.

Bill Borden: [00:14:21] Okay. Well, High Caliber Realty actually started in 1939, and in 1939 it was known as Bowling Green Realty Company up in Bowling Green, Kentucky. My mom purchased it in 1962, and then after my father passed away, I purchased it from her in 1980, after I was already living in Georgia and was working with Johnny Isaacson and Ed Nutting and North Side Commercial Division. And I was a young kid having a blast selling commercial real estate and joy in life. And over the years we’ve ended up getting the high caliber trademark in the brokerage industry for the entire nation. We have offices and work in seven states with the main two offices and one in Anchorage, Alaska, which will become evident why it’s there. And the other one, of course, in Atlanta, here in Kennesaw, Georgia. So we we have take a little bit different approach. It all stems from after my dad passed away and I was actually the youngest broker in the commonwealth in Kentucky. I walked back into the office and there was a bunch of old people in there for a couple of weeks after the funeral. And they they were probably a lot younger than I am right now. But they said, how do we keep it going? What do we need to do? And we started working as a team, as a as a family with the whole company. So the whole company’s watching out for all the clients. And that is developed into not just commercial, not just residential, but to actually take businesses and people and help them with their financial needs so that we’re working on portfolios of of real estate and working very closely with financial advisors and working on having portfolios performing somewhere between ten and 25% per year on for profits for their housing and commercial needs.

Brian Pruett: [00:16:19] Well, you just mentioned helping businesses as well. And I know you you have a passion for that as well, because I believe there’s 13 business associations in Cobb County. And at one point you probably in president of all of them.

Bill Borden: [00:16:29] A president or director of all of them. Yeah. As well as the Cobb Cobb Chamber. I was a regional chairman for for them for a year as well.

Brian Pruett: [00:16:37] So share a little bit about if people don’t know what a business association is or does can you share a little bit about those.

Bill Borden: [00:16:43] Sure. Business association is is a great tool for getting into the community and learning more about what other people do. I always refer to it. The old adage of net weaving, a chamber of commerce, large corporations, they’re promoting large geographical regions, Cobb County. They’re promoting large geographical regions for large companies, trying to get people to move in. And they have their place and they have their purpose. Cherokee Chamber, Cobb Chamber, Bartow Chamber. They have their purposes, but the smaller business associations are much better for medium, small to medium sized businesses that are actually looking for other businesses and and B to B and B to C consumers. What we do with those business associations, when you go to those, you shouldn’t be looking for business. When you walk into one of those business associations as a small business, you should be looking to hear what everybody else does. You need to be the go to person. You need to know, have in your pocket who the plumber is, who the electrician is, who the marketing agency is. You need to know who the who the radio show producers like Stone. You need to know who somebody calls and says, Bill, do you know of a? And over the years you’ll become the go to person. You’ll become the person that when somebody needs a criminal defense attorney or when somebody. No, you don’t need a criminal defense attorney. You need a divorce attorney. You know those type of things. And you will learn what all those other businesses do. And by in that return, you will get business because people will remember that in my case, I sell real estate.

Brian Pruett: [00:18:26] It’s also important to understand what you just talk about. You don’t going to want to sell anything off. I mean, it’s it’s the relationship building.

Bill Borden: [00:18:33] Exactly. Yeah. You know, I was at a business association last week and covering for one of our guys, and I was one of five real estate agents. I was the only broker in the room, and I watched every one of those people say, if you want to buy or sell a house. Well, the thing is, if a real estate agent buys or sells a house, they are unemployed right after that closing. In my case, we work with families time and time again. I’ve been doing it for four years. I’ve been doing it long enough now that I’m actually selling grandkids their houses, that I sold their grandparents houses for them. And you develop that relationship. You’re never unemployed. You enjoy what you’re doing. I’ve been trying to get out of the real estate business for 44 years. You know, it’s I was raised in it on a farm. You know, Mom had it. Dad. Dad was in it before he passed away. And I’ve been trying to get out of it. Of course, you know, I wake up on my 18th birthday and dad says, you’re going to get your real estate license on my 19th birthday after being out rather late the night before, he says, get up. You’re going to go take your brokers test. And, you know, hindsight, 2020, he made a very good choice. But, you know, I still maintain all my licensing. I’ve tried to get out of it. I moved over into appraisal. I’m still a certified general appraiser. I moved over into the mortgage company. We had the 20th largest mortgage company in the state back in 2003 for. It had the law office where we were doing the real estate closings, never know how know how to what the surveyors do, but never licensed for that. So basically, God, me trying to get out of it. God’s been showing me all the different aspects of it, so I know what’s going to go wrong before it goes wrong. And we can make our transactions very smooth in high caliber.

Brian Pruett: [00:20:20] So somebody might be listening and wondering what’s the difference between an appraiser and an inspector?

Bill Borden: [00:20:26] Well, an inspector is not actually licensed in the state of Georgia. They have a business license. They have liability insurance. But interestingly enough, an inspector in the state of Georgia that’s inspecting it, they are only liable for what they charged you if they miss something. So the house could fall down the next day and they could write you a check back for their three or $400. An appraiser, on the other hand, is somebody that is coming up with value. Three approaches to value income, Market and cost approach. And those appraisers are looking at the value, but they’re actually. Doing that for a bank or a mortgage company that is trying to come up with a value basically to second guess the buyer and the seller. And appraisers use. Historic data, meaning stuff that’s sold already. Historic meaning old. To extrapolate, I’m glasshouses here I’m throwing stones to extrapolate. If you look that up in Webster, it’s a scientific guess to form an opinion. And we know everybody’s got one of those just like so they form an opinion based on his old data with some wild guess and they tell the bank, Yeah, we think this is what it’s worth. While in fact the true definition of market values are ready, willing and able Seller was willing to take in already willing and able buyer is willing to buy without undue influence. To me, that’s the value. So if you’ve got a buyer or seller willing to do it, then it’s up to the appraiser to prove that value. Taking it one step further, I do a lot of charity auctions. I was an auctioneer, livestock auctioneer and real estate auctioneer for many years. Still maintain that licensing. And to me that’s the ultimate, you know, put a whole bunch of people in one room and let them bid. And that’s going to give your true market value. So that’s the difference between an appraiser and an inspector. Two different jobs, neither of which hold much water with me.

Brian Pruett: [00:22:28] Well, you beat me because I was going to bring up your auctioneer stuff, so thanks for talking about it already. You also have a story of following your dreams. Now, you’ve talked about before that you were also a motorcycle racer at one point.

Bill Borden: [00:22:40] I was.

Brian Pruett: [00:22:40] You’ve been in the rodeo business for a while, but then the the really cool thing that I found out about you and was when I was working for a little sports marketing company, that you not only raced but finished the Iditarod.

Bill Borden: [00:22:53] That is correct.

Brian Pruett: [00:22:53] So if somebody doesn’t know what that is, sure what that is.

Bill Borden: [00:22:58] Well, the Iditarod is actually based. If they’ve probably heard Balto, the dog, Balto and Balto, in statue in Central Park, the 1925 serum run to. To Nome, Alaska, to take care of all the kids. So it was all based in children at the time to take medicine to them. Back then, they used several relay dog teams. I believe it was 17 relay dog teams to run from Tanana to Nome because the ships couldn’t get to the port and the two airplanes they had in Alaska back in 1925 were not flying at that time. So back in 1968, the state of Alaska Seward’s Follies 100th anniversary, they decided that they would have a dog race to support it. It actually became what it is today in 1973. The ceremonial distance is 1000 miles. It runs from Anchorage to Nome. The since it’s over 1000 miles, they call it 1049. For the 49 state each year, the actual race distance changes a little, depending on how the rivers freeze and how the depth of the snow and stuff. The particular race I ran was 151 miles. One of the longer versions of it, there was one that was 161. Of course, back then they didn’t have jeeps and they didn’t know how long it was Back when I ran it. You weren’t allowed to use Jeeps. You weren’t allowed to use compasses. You started in Anchorage. You could use a compass. I take that back. But the compass really didn’t do any good.

Bill Borden: [00:24:33] Because when you start in Anchorage and you go to Nome, the pilots out there, you realize that the standard magnetic north deviation is 17% between Anchorage and Nome. So you really got to know where you’re at to be able to determine where you’re at on a compass. So it goes right back to it is the ultimate pit of man versus nature. And you’re using dog power, which is pound for pound, the strongest pulling animal on earth. Each dog’s capable of pulling 5 to £4500 apiece. They’re pushing that harness you hook in my day 16 to a steel cable tied to a £20 sled and you’re the brakes. Only a suggestion at that point when we when I actually ran it, it I became the 540th person in the world to finish it. There’s now about 820 of us. Of course, some of those have passed away in the course of the 30 plus, 40 plus years, 50 plus years. It’s done it. The the actual race itself to me is 90% mental. Interesting story. How I got into it was phenomenal in that it had to do with real estate. And my wife and I was traveling. My wife and I have been together over 30 years, married 30 years this year, and all these wild hares. She’s like, okay, honey. And she’s very, very supportive with it. So, you know, Brenda is my treasure there. But as far as when we were traveling, we were sitting in the law office many years ago, I think it was 97.

Bill Borden: [00:26:15] And she walked in and back then a radio show that Clark Howard had called Friday flier before Internet bookings. Hey, there’s a trip to Alaska for $197. I want to go. Sure. Let’s go. We’re driving down the road there on the city limits signs home of the Iditarod. I got to see one of these dogs. Got to see one. You know, to me, Wide world of sports and the Iditarod, that growing up watching these dogs, it was phenomenal. I went out to the headquarters. Wasn’t the dog to be found. Lady told us there’s other ladies doing a tour. So we’re doing a tour. And the lady had finished the Iditarod seven times. And lo and behold, she said, What are you doing, Atlanta? I said, Well, we’ve got a real estate sales company. We’ve got a mortgage company and several different things. Mortgage company. I’m a single entrepreneurial 38 year old female, and I’ve built this kennel on my credit cards. And none of these banks will give me a loan. Well, back then, it was easy to get her a loan. So I got her a loan again, unknowing that the seven banks in Alaska had complete control of it, and there were no mortgage lenders in Alaska at the time. So we ended up getting her a loan and making the front page of the paper and becoming the first mortgage lender to do a loan in Alaska. I went back for the next year’s race and.

Bill Borden: [00:27:36] Sit down next to these two old guys at the banquet. My wife says you need to meet these guys. So I go over and I meet them. I don’t know who they were. How are you doing? You know? He’s really neat race you guys have got here. I’d love to bring my Boy Scout troop up to see it. One of the old guys says, Well, why don’t you just run it? They can be your dog handlers. Well, I was 38 years old at the time. I had finished law school. You know, we had all the different practices, We had the appraisal, we had the real estate sales and the mortgages. And I’m like, no, I can’t do that. I don’t have time to do that. And one thing led to another, and they one of them said, Well, I finished it when I was 72, and the other one goes, Well, yeah, I ran it the last time when I was 62. I’m thinking, God, if these two old guys can do this, I can do it. So I started telling everybody I was going to do It was like God was saying, You need to go run this race. It has something to do with the kids. Go run the race. So I. Three years of my life, basically quit work, devoted everything I could do to running the race. Spending all my money and everything to get into this race.

Bill Borden: [00:28:48] Found out later during training that these two guys were actually one of them was Colonel Norman Vaughn, Admiral Byrd’s dog handler in the Antarctica expedition. Wow. And has a mountain named after him in Antarctica. So of course, he could run it when he was 72. And then the other one was Joe Redington, senior, the founder of the modern day Iditarod, who had taken a dog team to the top of Mount McKinley. Denali. I’m like, okay, so I’ve stuck my foot in it there. But the interesting thing was when I got to Nome after 14 days on the trail and finished the race. The mayor of Nome walked up to me and said, Congratulations, you’re the 540th person to finish. And I’m thinking, wait a minute. You know, I’ve been on the trail for two weeks and yeah, I’m sleep deprived. But there wasn’t that many people in the race. So what are you talking about? Leo Rasmussen was his name. He goes, You’re the 540th person ever to finish the race. Well, no wonder it was so hard. You know, I’m thinking, wow, Because during that time I had broke. I had crashed three sleds, cracked a kneecap, broke a rib, lost £38, messed up my back, both my elbows and my thumbs. But I finished it, you know, And a lot of times in marketing, in marketing, I think it takes that type of tenacity. And I have proven my tenacity to help somebody get through their real estate transactions, large real estate transactions to small real estate transactions, because you’re dealing with a lot of pitfalls and a lot of trees in the way which I hit.

Bill Borden: [00:30:26] So it’s you know, it’s it’s an interesting sport. Everybody thinks you’re riding the back of the sled. But no, you’re running up the hills, hanging on for dear life down the hills. And when you’re on the river, you’re actually pedaling or pushing or using ski poles to assist the dogs. And you’re running 12 out of 24 hours. And the other 12 hours, six and six that you’re taking off, you’re cooking, cleaning, booting and booting, taking care of your puppies. And you know, later on those puppies, they all retired with me, of course. Fisher King for those that haven’t don’t know, we were able to do a great project with the city of Kennesaw and the busiest city park in. Alaska, which or I’m sorry, in Georgia, which is Swift Central Park over in Kennesaw, there’s a mile and a half trail there named after Fisher King, my lead dog. And there are seven National Park Service style signs in there that are really character. Edwards But to me, they’re words like perseverance and character and guidance. Those are the things that middle schoolers, high schoolers really need to key on. You know, one of the signs talks about my dogs that are not purebred dogs. They’re Alaskan huskies, Brian. And these Alaskan huskies are nothing more than mixed breed mutts. We don’t care what they look like on the outside.

Bill Borden: [00:31:57] We care more about their heart and soul and how they care about their teammates and how they care about me and what they do. And to me, that’s a lot. The way kids in school should be picking their friends, not what they wear, but how they treat them and what they do. So that’s one of the things that that we bring forward. So if you haven’t had a chance, definitely go to Swift Central Park, walk the mile and a half trail, read the signs. It’s a it’s a great sign. A lot of the school teachers using for extra curricular make up work. A lot of the home schoolers are using it for lesson plans. I know you were going to ask me about the nonprofit, but I’m just going to jump into that. You know, Cool dreams are 500 1c3. We started that back in 2002, and now we’re probably close to a million school kids that we’ve talked to about all these schools. At one point in time, I think there’s I heard there were over 4000 schools nationwide using the teaching curriculum. Well, they use the teaching curriculum to teach math. Simple, whether it be elementary school, middle school, high school, how many booties that take the booty, a dog, how many booties? You take the booty. A dog with 16 dogs. How many booties does it take? The booty is 16 dog team for a 1000 mile race, changing booties ever 80 miles.

Tim Pharr: [00:33:13] Yeah.

Bill Borden: [00:33:14] Math equivalent, for instance. But then we would go in and talk to the children and talk to the schools about through proper planning, perseverance and faith in God’s anything, anything’s possible if you ever get a chance to come here. One of my hour long speeches, it’ll tell you how God played a huge, huge part in my run and my finishing. And that’s what we take to those children. And I have teachers come up all the time, say, I can’t talk about that in school. We’re so glad you did. I remember talking to a North Carolina school a few years ago, and it was it was an elementary and middle school campus. And a lot of times when I would go in and talk to the whole campus, we’d do one in the morning and one in the afternoon. Well, if we’re doing a morning class, we do orange juice and donuts with some of them just so they can ask questions, you know, the A students or whatever. And afternoon we do pizza and coke so they select group can ask questions. Well, the interesting thing in that one was they didn’t use grades to do it.

Bill Borden: [00:34:17] They actually had a drawing. And just for lack of whatever his name was, Little Johnny. Little Johnny was constantly in the principal’s office and had C’s and D’s and flunking and. The teacher and the principal told me, says ever since we drew his name, knowing he would lose the ability to sit down and have donuts and orange juice with you. He’s been on his best behavior. So I let him hold one of the dogs when we did give the speech and everything was going along great. A couple of years ago, I set down at the High Ozone Music Park, and right in front of me was that principal. She turned around and saw me and I knew I was doing something then because when she turned around and saw me, she said hi. And so pleasantries exchanged and she said, You remember that young man, Little Johnny? Yeah. He says, Well, he’s in high school now. He’s A and B student. We never had a bit more trouble out of him. You change that kid’s life. And to me, if I just did that, one person that made my day awesome.

Brian Pruett: [00:35:25] Well, you talked a lot there. Some of the questions I was going to ask, but I’m going to ask him anyway.

Bill Borden: [00:35:29] Okay. So you might get a different answer.

Brian Pruett: [00:35:32] Well, I hope so. I hope so. Take us a little bit through the training for the Iditarod.

Bill Borden: [00:35:37] Training for the Iditarod is is very interesting because you’re training the dogs. And in doing so, you’re also training yourself. You know, typical training year starts out of course, I trained for three years for it because I had to run qualifiers by the time I stepped my feet on the sled at the start of the Iditarod, I kept everything on a spreadsheet. So I knew which dog ran with who, how long they had run. But I had been on the back of a sled behind a dog team for over 10,000 miles, actually running dogs. And so you’ll start and it’s changed over the years. But typically back then, we would start in we give the dogs the summer off and now they send them to the glaciers to try to get some running in. But we would actually start in September with weight training. And you have to realize how strong these dogs are. You’d hook up 4 to 6 dogs and run starting out a mile or two apiece and working your way up to ten miles over the course of the next couple of months. Not on a sled, but actually tied to a harness to a four wheeler.

Bill Borden: [00:36:46] And a big four wheeler. And if when you got off that four wheeler, you had to not only set both the brakes, but you had to make sure the handlebar was actually tied in a straight position because they would drag it if they didn’t if you didn’t pay attention to them. The four wheeler itself, though, typically we found old four wheelers because we would train them depending on uphill, downhill and stuff if they’re going downhill or level toward the end of the training, it is in gear with the motor off. So they’re dragging it in gear with the motor off because they’re very, very powerful. At one point in time, I got my truck and £10,000 trailers stuck off the side of the road, had my team and my son’s team. My son ran. The junior did a ride that year for 14 to 17 year olds and we had about 40 dogs with us. So we just hooked up the dogs, put the gang lines together and put the dogs out in front of the truck, put it in neutral. Didn’t even have to give it any gas. Just. All right, let’s go, guys. And they pull the truck and trailer right out of the ditch. Not a problem. So the power is there. So when we’re training, we’re training and weight.

Bill Borden: [00:38:00] Well, by the time the snow is on and there’s enough snow to switch from sleds, it’s time to go to cardiovascular. So then we hook up ten, 12, 14 dogs, depending on what you can run that day. And we start running the dogs. Through the start of the qualifying races and through the start of the training races. But we start running those dogs ten, 12, 15 miles. And by the time we start running the big races, we’re up to 100, 110 mile runs a day. These hundred, 110 mile runs a day, you know, that’s going to take on an average of 10 to 12 miles an hour is going to take all day. A lot of times you run out camp, run back running that team two times a day. Thank God I had my son because he he was my kennel handler for me. So we would hook up. A lot of times the 24 dogs I was training and we would tag sled, meaning he would be behind me on another sled and we would be we’d fill the sleds with dog food and concrete blocks and weight them down. And then we would take all 24 dogs on a run. And that was like a freight train. And that’s just a suggestion we stop.

Bill Borden: [00:39:13] So it it’s all verbal commands. There’s you see the movies and stuff, there’s no whips, there’s no reins or anything like that. Everything is G and haul like the old mules in Western days, a lot like one of my trainers from Spain and one of my trainers both finished the Iditarod from California, also both horse people. I was raised with horses. Dogs are a lot like horses, believe it or not. Only they’re a little bit smarter, so they’re all voice commands with it. And we’re able to control them, get them to stop, get them to slow down all. They are mischievous. Had one dog. Every time we started to make a turn, she just look over her shoulder at me and kind of I could just hear telling the rest of the dogs, Here’s a turn. Let’s see if we can throw him off and take off. Speed up, whip them off at the end, because that sleds moving around that turn and there’s no steering wheels on that thing. So it’s not skiing, but the training, once you get to that, when you get to the actual start of the big race, you’ve already run three or four, three, 400 mile races and then you’ve already done all your training runs as well.

Brian Pruett: [00:40:23] Is there anybody else? I think when you and I first met, you were the only guy from Georgia to not only compete but finish. Is there anybody else from Georgia to do that?

Bill Borden: [00:40:30] There is. There is another young man. His dad lives in Alaska, so he was working as a handler. Interestingly enough, Shawn of Shawn has attempted the race twice. He finished once. Sadly, the the race was the COVID route. So he didn’t get to go to Nome, which I keep telling him, Shawn, you need to go do it again and go to Nome. But he got he had to go out, turn around and come back. So it was the 800 mile loop for the COVID, and I’m encouraging Shawn to do it again. I have a lot of fun out of Shawn because I love his mom to death. She ran up and we were there to watch him finish the race and everything, but his mom lives over and Tucker, great people and Shawn lot younger than I was when I finished the race. And he I love to tell Shawn that I said, Shawn, you know, there’s a reason they put my name on the city limit signs and said, First finisher from Georgia is your second. But that’s okay, Shawn, Keep trying.

Brian Pruett: [00:41:36] You talked about your nonprofit is called Cool Dreams, correct?

Bill Borden: [00:41:39] Correct. Cool dreams.

Brian Pruett: [00:41:40] Is there a way for people to help support that and how so how?

Bill Borden: [00:41:43] There is interestingly enough and I have a lot have some fun out of Ike Ryker at most ministries with it. You know, the you have to look at nonprofits and you have to say with these nonprofits, you know how much money actually goes to help the people. And, you know, you can look at GuideStar and a lot of the nonprofit registrations, and you’ll see that a really good number going to them is 75, 80%, where you get some of the ones, the larger ones like United Way, they’re way down there because of all the administration expense. Cool Dreams actually has always been 100% all the administration, all the all the things it cost to run cool dreams is actually I pay that. I’ve been blessed. I have a good real estate company. High caliber takes care of me. Everything’s good. So it’s 100% of every donated penny goes back to cool dreams to help us get into the schools, to help us get to the schools, to help us give the speeches, to help us with the teaching curriculum, to help us tell these children that through proper planning, perseverance and faith, anything is possible. And if you want to see an example of that, definitely go up to Swift Cantrell Park, right behind Kennesaw Elementary there in the 40 acre park and walk the trail and read the signs.

Brian Pruett: [00:43:10] What the dogs that you’ve raced with. And race you. What do you do with them when they’re retired?

Bill Borden: [00:43:17] Well, interestingly enough, I’m going to I’m going to go back many, many years. I’m going to go back to 1925 when Balta and Togo finished the race. And there they were, livestock back then. And Leonard Seppala ended up selling. The dogs to a production company in. Santa monica. A lot of those dogs ended up on the Santa monica Pier and it was very hot. And some of them died. Until the children of Cincinnati got together and did a pennies for Balto fundraiser back in the late twenties. And Balto and his teammates lived out their life in the Cincinnati Zoo. A lot of us take a lot of the mushers take the the fact that. Our dogs are not just livestock. There are babies. There are puppies. Now, these dogs are taken care of and they old dogs train new dogs. They train them how to run, who to run next to. They train leaders. My dogs, actually, as they retired, all came home with me. Fisher King. When he finished the race with me, he had already run the race six times. Once with Colonel Vaughn. When Colonel did his last run, Fisher King was 11 years old when he ran the race, and he was once known as a smart leader.

Bill Borden: [00:44:41] He could follow my commands. He knew the way he could follow sense. He could follow markers. He was very smart dog. He was 11 years old. He was my ace in the hole. I would have carried him if I had to to finish the race. But at 11 years old, he finished an 1151 mile race in lead, all but about ten miles when he was misbehaving and he had to run in the pack. But he learned. So we had a little bit of a talk there. But FISHER And look out and Tonto and all of them came to live with me in Kennesaw. At one point in time, I was over my limit in Kennesaw, so a couple of the dogs were made official citizens of Kennesaw, so they didn’t qualify as animals thanks to the the city commission or city council at the time. And these dogs would go with me to the speeches. And I always found it interesting when especially when I took Fisher, because if I was giving a speech maybe at a senior home and I was talking to them about it, and I would very simply say, okay, let’s see a show of hands, because we all know seven years in a dog’s life, that type of thing.

Bill Borden: [00:45:46] Let me see a show of hands. Everybody in here, that’s 77 years of age or younger. And I’d get a few of them hold up. And I said, Well, let’s meet Fisher King At 77 years in human ages, he ran 151 miles. Or you guys ready to do that? And that always got a big laugh with it because Fisher was a sweetheart. But they are my babies, and that is why I will probably never own another dog, because those 16 dogs that I started that race with all retired with me, they all they, they kept running with my friends and folks in Alaska that that I knew and some did recreational but when they retired they came with me and they slowly passed away. Over the years, Tonto was the last to go. They are very well taken care of. They were not couch potatoes. A lot of dogs only lived to be ten, 11, 12 years old. These dogs live all my dogs except for Look Lookout who had cancer. All of my dogs lived to be 17, 18, 19 years old. Large dogs and even look out. Lived to be 11. So it’s they’re my babies.

Brian Pruett: [00:46:53] So if anybody’s listening to you. Well, first of all, may I ask this question of the of the three that you shared from the motorcycle to the rodeo and the Iditarod, which one was your favorite.

Bill Borden: [00:47:03] Have to be? The Iditarod. Have to be the Iditarod. You know, the the Iditarod kind of combined them all. Team roping, working with the horses. Yeah, that took skill. Motorcycling definitely takes skill. But as my guest here with me will tell you, you break bones with that. Of course, you break bones in the Iditarod, too. But to actually take a dog team, God’s power kind of like sailing instead of a speedboat, to take God’s power. And all you can hear is that little bit there of there running. And to go out to go where most people have never gone before, to see the backside of Denali, to be out under the northern lights and to pit man and animal against nature and and traverse the wilds of Alaska at 60 below to me was the ultimate life experience. And people always say, what was the hardest? I’m like, you know, it’s 90% mental for 500 miles in a race. You’re going, Oh my God, what am I doing? I’m dying. I’m killing myself. And literally by the end of the race, because most people don’t even finish on their first attempt like I did, I finished on my first attempt. But when I got when I saw the last 40 miles of the race is actually on a snow covered probably 12 to 14 feet deep road. I got outside of safety the last checkpoint and I’m on my way in to Nome. And I see a road sign sticking up out of the snow that says Nome 20 miles. I stopped the team. I didn’t want it to be over. I know it was a race, but I stopped the team. I bet the ten we we sat there and I talked to my dogs and I laid down with them and I snuggled them and, you know, and I just I’m like this. This was awesome, guys, let’s go finish it.

Brian Pruett: [00:48:58] So that’s cool. Pun intended. If somebody is listening to you, what advice would you give them about following their dreams?

Bill Borden: [00:49:07] Definitely. You know, you have one life and it’s a blank page and God’s given you a lot of color and crowns color it the way you want to color it. So many people, especially in my professional career, I see they work for 20, 30, 40 years and they retire. And it’s where the 30 year mortgage came from. The Detroit, Michigan. All the kids saved money to live for 2829, got a mortgage, paid it off, retired three years later at 62, 63, sit on the front porch, watch the whistle blower and look at their gold watch. We’re not like that anymore, and we shouldn’t be like that. You know, there’s a reason that our ancestors followed their dreams and explored the country and did what they were supposed to do. You know, I’m up to 106 countries now that I’ve been to. I go and I learn about other cultures. I see other things. And if you’re doing nothing but going to work and saving for retirement, some news for you. Retirement may not come. You may kick the bucket before you get there. You better live life now. Spend all that money. You know, interestingly enough, one of the things I said earlier on with helping people build their portfolios and real estate, I got a call from my wife who was just blessed and she was so taken care of everything while I was training for the race. And race is the first Saturday in March. Every year, about February. I get this call, honey. Guys aren’t doing anything at the office, and we’re out of money. Well, I’ve got a race to run. Cash out my retirement. I’m 42 years old. Cash it out. Are you sure? Yep. Cash it out.

Bill Borden: [00:50:42] Finished the race, went back. We were out of liquid cash. But I had bought houses, rental houses, businesses and offices. We get back, they had done one and that was at the mortgage company. They had done one loan since from January to April. We get back in town. Fired them all. He hired a lady that I’d worked with years earlier in the appraisal First Atlantic private banking. Found another guy. That’s great guy, Clint. Now, you know, he’s. He’s a preacher now, but he also does mortgages still. Julie Clinton, I. Took that mortgage company from April that had done one loan to December. And we were the 20th largest in the state, according to the Atlanta Business Chronicle. So, see, I did what God wanted me to do and he took care of my business and we did what we were supposed to do. And I very simply, when I got back, told Julie, I said, refinance those two rental houses. Pulled a bunch of cash out tax free because it was a loan. Put it back in the bank. We’re cash flush again. You know, interestingly enough, I never missed refinancing because the tenants in the house paid them down again and the houses kept appreciating. So work to live. Don’t live to work. And so many people do that. Follow your dreams. Have a dream if you want to paint. If you want to be an artist, if you want to travel, if whatever you want to do, go do it. People say, When did you retire, Bill? I retired when I was 28 because I realized it and I started doing what I wanted to do when I wanted to do it. It’s that simple.

Brian Pruett: [00:52:25] So if somebody wants to get a hold of you either for cool dreams, you also go do speaking for speaking for your auctioneer, for high Caliber Realty. Any of that, What’s the best way to get hold of you?

Bill Borden: [00:52:34] Best way to get a hold of me is an email to Bill BILEL at high caliber Realty dot com high caliber Realtor.com. There’s all the information’s on there about cool dreams. There’s links to all the websites and everything. So high caliber Realtor.com will get you.

Brian Pruett: [00:52:49] Awesome. But well, thanks for sharing a little bit of your story. You mind sticking around to here in this next one?

Bill Borden: [00:52:53] Love to Looking forward to it. And Brian thanks for having me.

Brian Pruett: [00:52:56] So what we didn’t talk about were these first two gentlemen on their endeavors face some critters. John, you talked about facing an alligator on a race bill. You’ve talked encountering some moose on your races. This next gentleman encounters critters all the time. So, Mr. Tim Pharr, thanks for being here this morning. Tim is a professional rodeo rider. So again, thanks for being here this morning.

Tim Pharr: [00:53:21] Thanks for having me.

Brian Pruett: [00:53:23] You and I met a few years ago. I’m always again into the sports world and love athletes who give back to the community. You’ve come to some fundraising events that I’ve done and you just have a special heart for that as well. But first of all, share their story and how you got involved in the rodeo.

Tim Pharr: [00:53:39] Mom, mom and Dad. I’ll always love this. My mom lived on a dirt floor. She and her dad met in high school. They married immediately after and tried to make it. And they always had a love for horses. And my dad bought his first one for $200 with a roll of quarters. And they put it in a stall. And the horse kicked the door off of the stall because they didn’t realize that they had to water it. Wow. And the neighbor caught him drinking out of their pool. So they wrote him back. And that’s how we started. So. And who can’t be romantic about a cowboy life? So we started with horses. And we started with a few mares. I literally grew up on one. So beyond that, we we started we had a stud. We started standing the stud and breeding a few mares. And I started riding horses for the public. So that’s kind of the beginning.

Brian Pruett: [00:54:44] So my favorite genre of movies is Westerns. I always thought I would like to be a cowboy, but just knowing you, there’s probably things that I would not be able to do. But so you’re your, I guess, rodeo. What’s the word I’m looking for? Aspect of it is you are a roper. Is that.

Tim Pharr: [00:55:01] Right? Yeah, that’s right.

Brian Pruett: [00:55:03] Have you done the bulls?

Tim Pharr: [00:55:04] I have, yeah.

Brian Pruett: [00:55:06] Which do you prefer?

Tim Pharr: [00:55:10] Are we talking longevity or adrenaline? Adrenaline is definitely the bulls. Longevity is definitely roping.

Brian Pruett: [00:55:18] Take. Walk us through the. The way. Cause I’m sure you have to train special ways to for any aspect of the rodeo, but take us through your training.

Tim Pharr: [00:55:26] As these other guys. You live in the gym. You can you can work out and you can stay in the gym and you can be fit. But there’s roping, riding, fitness as well, and there’s no replacement for doing the event. So the gym always helps, but stretching and being able to flex and ride is a whole different, whole different venue.

Brian Pruett: [00:55:45] You’ve done this well internationally, nationally.

Tim Pharr: [00:55:49] And I haven’t left a country doing it. Okay. Yeah.

Brian Pruett: [00:55:55] So which was if you’re on a circuit, I guess is what they call it. What’s what circuit do you.

Tim Pharr: [00:56:02] The prca. That’s what I did whenever I started. 42 different states and three Canadian provinces. So started there. And all across America and Canada. Of course, now we’ve localized.

Brian Pruett: [00:56:18] So you said you’re semi-retired. So what now? You’re you’re you’re training the next generation.

Tim Pharr: [00:56:28] I’ll loosely said that’s that’s scary, because you have to be right.

Brian Pruett: [00:56:37] Um. What? Uh. So. So you, you and I have talked about. One thing you’d like to do is just sharing. You shared a little bit of your story, but you have a testimony that you you like to talk about. So you mind sharing that?

Tim Pharr: [00:56:47] No, not at all. Which we rodeo and my family and I, we had we had a really cool dynamic because my mom and dad, they made carpet. Everybody wanted to be cowboys. So we started a cowboy life. And again, who can’t be romantic about cowboy life and rodeo. So we started rodeo and and my brother the first year we started rodeo. And he made he made the national finals, which is which is the Super Bowl rodeo. That’s what everybody that’s what everybody strives to be for. And we were gaining, gaining and we were get we’re learning about the sport and I learned about rodeo. And in 2003, we were set up. We were set up as perfectly as we could be set and we had to ride horses, which is as you talk about your dogs, the horses are your family. And when you find the certain dynamic with a certain one, you can’t do wrong with them. And and they provide, they give you their life and it’s the same. So you take care of them like their family. So I had I had that dynamic. My brother had that dynamic. We had our certain horses and we were in between rodeos and we hit a mule deer while we were traveling and it rolled the rig and the horses flew out of the trailer.

Tim Pharr: [00:58:01] They were still alive, but they were running down the road. And as we come to find out, the lady that hit them was coming back from cancer treatment. So she hit all of our horses and killed all the horses and killed her. So it was a it was a tragic tale. So the rest of those three is trying to pull the pieces back together because everything that we had worked for, crumbled truck and trailer Gone Horse is gone. I had a pair of shorts when I walked away, walked away with the trailer trailers, the trailer that we have, they’re campers and you hold horses in them. So we lived in our trailer where we’re going to hundred 50 days of the year. So we lived in that trailer. So I had nothing I mean, nothing. I had a pair of shorts. So we pull together whatever we have left. We come home, we lick our wounds and we try again, which was turning back. You never know what’s a mistake. Do you try to get ahead of it and turn back and look? So at the end of that, we should have stayed home, but we didn’t. We pursued and as it turns out, it was good for me because I did terrible the rest of the year.

Tim Pharr: [00:59:10] So there’s the preacher that goes around and he feeds everybody. And it’s a neat deal. And he had on his own his wall. He had Jesus riding the horse with all the all the people. And he’s coming together. And being from the Bible Belt, you always know it. It’s a part of life that until you experience it, you don’t really know it. So I’m looking at this picture and I’m asking the preacher, and, you know, at this point, I’m rock bottom. I have nothing. So I start reading. And I did it completely backwards because I started reading in Revelations, which just made everybody dread. And that’s the hardest book to read. So I read Revelations and it literally turned my life around. So after reading Revelations and talking to the preacher, then I begin my quest and I say, okay, I’m going to read. I’m going to read the Bible. I don’t care how long it takes me, but I’m going to read it. And it may just be a chapter a day, but I finish it. And the following years behind that, the next year was was the most success I had experienced ever. So of course, who can’t who can’t follow that? How do you put that down?

Brian Pruett: [01:00:24] What? And you said it changed your life. So what you you like to share that story? You wanted to. You and I have talked about possibly going and speaking like FCA and some of those groups, but what are you doing now as far as you said, you’re semi-retired, but I know you’ve got a your place is just north of Calhoun. That’s right. You have a little arena there yourself. So you do, I guess do you do any shows there as well or.

Tim Pharr: [01:00:47] We do.

Brian Pruett: [01:00:47] What kind of things are you doing now that you’re semi-retired?

Tim Pharr: [01:00:53] I’ve been a failure my whole life, but I haven’t known it for the public. And that’s what I’m trying to do now to replace the the money that I was making early on. But people still coming out and I still go do schools and try to teach people to open. And, you know, it’s a class it’s a weekend class where people bring their horses and I teach them to rope you.

Brian Pruett: [01:01:17] I mentioned you guys come to do some some fundraising events that I’ve done. You know, this is an interesting pairing. I would never consider a rodeo guy being a good golfer. Tim is an amazing golfer, and I haven’t figured out how that worked out, being a rodeo guy and being a golfer. But know I appreciate everything you’ve come to do for us. Thank you. What if if so, somebody who may not know what a farrier is. What is that?

Tim Pharr: [01:01:42] That’s a blacksmith. You put metal on the horse’s feet.

Brian Pruett: [01:01:45] So you’re just showing them all the time.

Tim Pharr: [01:01:48] That’s right. That’s right. You put shoes on them every six weeks. Horses grow a certain amount of feet in the wild and they break them off. They’re meant to travel 17 miles a day. And of course, when we start them up, put them in lots, their feet grow faster, so you try to take care of them.

Brian Pruett: [01:02:05] So I’m curious the history of the shoe, because obviously when God made horses, the shoes weren’t around.

Tim Pharr: [01:02:09] No, not at all. So when they started using them in wars, their feet would break off and they would get sore. So they figured we’re going to put some metal on their feet and they can hit the ground way harder with metal.

Brian Pruett: [01:02:20] When you are talking about doing the ferrying and you’re wanting to do that for, you know, as as a career now, I guess will you travel? Are you sticking to your area where you’re at it?

Tim Pharr: [01:02:29] Yeah, You’ll have to travel some. I’m still trying to trying to gain some clients, so I’m traveling a little further than I need to. But ideally, you know, you’re ten or 15 minutes from the house, but that’s not the case for me.

Brian Pruett: [01:02:45] Where you’re at, there’s a lot there’s all kinds of farms up there, so it’s just getting your name out there. We need to help you do that. So if somebody listen to you and you want to follow their dreams, what would you tell them?

Tim Pharr: [01:02:56] Oh, the same as these other guys. Take a step at a time. Fail miserably. Fail a lot. Take chances.

Brian Pruett: [01:03:06] So I like to ask this question. I didn’t ask you individually. I’ve got two other questions before we wrap this up that I wanted to ask each of you. So the first one and John, I’ll let you start is why is it important to be involved in the community? Because you’re involved in the community as well.

John Cloonan: [01:03:24] Because everything that you do within the community comes back to you. You know, I mean, you know my relationship with Stone, right? I mean, that’s like I’ve known Stone for a lot of years, But, you know, I ran into him at a business at one of the business associations, and he’s become both a sponsor for for the race team. But then also, like, you know, we’ve traded business back and forth. You know, it’s always important to be involved in the place you live because it just comes back to you. And the more you give out, the more it comes back.

Brian Pruett: [01:03:58] Bill.

Bill Borden: [01:04:00] Well, I’m going to agree with John. You know, it’s it’s all about the community. You. A lot of people sit around and complain about the community, their state, their government, their country. But it’s all up to them. If if you don’t get out there and you work at it and you help the community be better, it all starts in the community. And if you can help it be better, if you can help other people get more business, you know, I’m thrilled to death to hear about your fairing business. I mean, that’s a lost art. And so many people look for good farriers. It’s it’s amazing. I mean, I’m definitely going to spread the word. They’re just helping here and what you’re doing here, Brian. But the three of us together, you know, that’s important because I’ll have business for John, I’ll have business for Stone. Brian and I, you know, we’ve known each other probably 20 years now, and, you know, he’s a great guy bringing people together. And he does that net weaving that I was talking about. You do that. So I’m glad to hear. And you know, before you ask your last question, I just, you know, rodeo and on the horseback and golf is soon as you take up polo, I want to know about it because I’m putting money on.

Brian Pruett: [01:05:14] Yeah, I did forget to mention, too, that bill Bill does a lot to. So I brought Bill to a Toys for Tots event and had people he was signing autographs and everything. And people learned about the Iditarod and everybody’s they flocked to him because they are so cool. So, Tim, why is it important for you to be part of the community?

Tim Pharr: [01:05:29] I’m going to regurgitate whatever you give. Whatever you put out comes back so the universe reflects what you give.

Brian Pruett: [01:05:38] All right. So last question I’ll ask before I do that. If somebody wants to get a hold of you, first of all, about your farrier business, and then if there are, people can still see you do any rodeo and if they can, how can they do all that? How can they get a hold of you for your business and can they see you ride?

Tim Pharr: [01:05:53] The best way is through my Facebook. It’s just me. So my brother moved all my mom passed. My dad is semi-retired, so it’s just me.

Brian Pruett: [01:06:03] Spell your name because it’s not very.

Tim Pharr: [01:06:05] Yeah, I know. Or they always mess it up.

Brian Pruett: [01:06:09] All right. So last question I have for you. You guys have all shared some nuggets about following your dreams, but I always ask this. The end of the show, share something that’s a nugget, a quote, a word to live the rest of 2023 and beyond with. So, John, go ahead and start.

John Cloonan: [01:06:27] No.

Brian Pruett: [01:06:29] Well, that’s easy.

Speaker1: [01:06:32] You know?

John Cloonan: [01:06:33] It’s, you know, it’s. It’s go out there and do it. You know, something that Bill said is you only live once and you can you know, you can live to work or you can work to live. And there’s no there’s no upside in living to work. You know, you get up, you do your commute, you do your 8 to 5, you come home, you eat dinner, you go to bed, and then eventually you die. And that’s a drag. You know, like a lot of the reason why the people in this room, like we had some great conversations kind of prior to the show. And a lot of the reason that happened is because we’ve all had some lived experience. If you haven’t created a lived experience for yourself, go do it and do whatever it takes to make it happen. You know, sometimes doing the things that like like we were all like none of what we do is easy and it takes some effort. So put that effort out. It’s worth doing.

Bill Borden: [01:07:30] Exactly. Bill. Well, you know, of course, I’ve already told you, life’s a blank page. You know, use the coloring book, color it, fill it up. What he was talking about, you know, don’t live to work. Work to live. But the biggest thing I think I can say is very simply, sum it up is look at any tombstone. There’s the date of birth and date of death. The date of death lives. The dash. The dash is all you got. And have fun with it.

Brian Pruett: [01:07:57] Tim.

Tim Pharr: [01:07:59] Mhm. There’s, there’s many as we have all experienced as the catalysts that changed our lives. The quotes that go through us, it changes with every phase. But the best thing I’ve ever done and what I would try to leave somebody with is write things down where you can see them every day. If you have a goal, put it on a board, put it at the door where you see it every day.

Brian Pruett: [01:08:24] Awesome. Well, guys, again, I appreciate you being here, sharing your story. Stone.

Bill Borden: [01:08:28] What do you think, Brian? Now, before you finish up now, so give us your quote.

Brian Pruett: [01:08:32] I do. When I when I show, you’ll hear it. Something you’ll you’ll hear in a second.

Speaker1: [01:08:36] Is that your right? Well, I’m wearing a t shirt that I got from a guest when we did the onsite broadcast at one of your events. And it says, Don’t let fear stop you do it scared. So that’s mine for today.

Brian Pruett: [01:08:48] So I just want to know, you know, here in these three stories, what’s one of these you want to take up?

Speaker1: [01:08:52] I would like to go see all of them. And I don’t mind joining the best ball tournament, but beyond that, I don’t know that I want to actually participate. But I’d love to pet a dog. I love being out of John’s race and I would. And my wife is just horse crazy, so we’d love to come out sometime.

Brian Pruett: [01:09:10] Awesome. So everybody there listening, let’s remember, let’s be positive. Let’s be charitable.

 

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