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Paul Knowlton: Bad Theology Kills Your Pricing

February 11, 2026 by John Ray

Paul Knowlton on Bad Theology, Plantation Economics You Practice on Yourself, and Why Mars Built a Trillion-Dollar Legacy on Mutuality (The Price and Value Journey, Episode 159), with host John Ray
North Fulton Studio
Paul Knowlton: Bad Theology Kills Your Pricing
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Paul Knowlton on Bad Theology, Plantation Economics You Practice on Yourself, and Why Mars Built a Trillion-Dollar Legacy on Mutuality (The Price and Value Journey, Episode 159), with host John Ray

Paul Knowlton on Bad Theology, Plantation Economics You Practice on Yourself, and How Mars Built a Trillion-Dollar Legacy on Mutuality (The Price and Value Journey, Episode 160)

In Part 2 of a two-part conversation, Paul Knowlton, attorney and partner at Stanton Law in Atlanta and co-author of Better Capitalism: Jesus, Adam Smith, Ayn Rand, and MLK Jr. on Moving from Plantation to Partnership Economics, joins host John Ray on The Price and Value Journey podcast to explore the mindsets that kill sustainable pricing and what you can do about it.

Paul saw a tattoo on a pastor friend’s bicep that read “bad theology kills.” That phrase captures why so many professionals severely underprice themselves. Whether from explicit religious backgrounds, leftist political thinking, or just generational poverty stories, we carry beliefs that profit is evil, poverty is noble, and loving your neighbor means sacrificing yourself. Paul shares his painful story of starting a low bono law firm after selling his intellectual property boutique firm. He had to shut it down when his patient wife finally said they literally couldn’t afford his generosity. The lesson is that you cannot afford to be generous if you don’t have the resources to be generous.

This conversation covers the Mars candy company (family wealth of $1.7 trillion built on mutuality since the early 1900s), why practicing plantation economics on yourself means extracting your own time by not charging or not charging enough, the Rotary Four-Way Test Herbert J. Taylor created during the Great Depression to save a company from bankruptcy, and how to stay committed to mutual benefit when bad actors seem to be winning. Paul and John discuss firing bad clients, finding your herd of like-minded professionals, and why the economic system should serve humans rather than humans serving the economic system.

The Price and Value Journey is presented by John Ray and produced by North Fulton Business Radio, LLC, an affiliate of the Business RadioX® podcast network.

Key Takeaways You Can Use from This Episode

  • Bad theology kills your pricing. Whether from religious background, political thinking, or generational poverty stories, many professionals believe profit is evil, poverty is noble, and loving your neighbor means only loving your neighbor. These beliefs lead to severe underpricing and unsustainable practices.
  • You cannot afford to be generous if you don’t have the resources to be generous. Paul started a low bono law firm after selling his intellectual property boutique. His wife finally told him they literally couldn’t afford it and were heading toward bankruptcy. If you don’t engage your brain, your heart will lead you down the wrong path.
  • Practicing plantation economics on yourself means extracting your own time by not charging or not charging enough for your services. Paul caught himself waving off payment from a client who stopped by with quick questions. The client insisted on paying because he needed someone with 20 or 30 years of skills to give him the fast answer.
  • Mars candy company built $117 billion in family wealth on mutuality since the early 1900s. Their stated contract principle: they will not have contracts that are detrimental to the other party. Mars chocolates are not the cheapest option available, but consumers are willing to pay a higher price due to the perceived value and their comfort with the company.
  • The Rotary Four-Way Test saved a company from bankruptcy during the Great Depression. Herbert J. Taylor wrote it as a way of doing business: Is it the truth? Is it fair? Will it build goodwill? Will it be beneficial to all concerned? This was the ethical framework that people adhered to before Milton Friedman’s 1970 article on shareholder value changed the business landscape.
  • Bad actors get the headlines for a while but don’t last long-term. Your reputation is your most valuable asset. If you can be trusted in your work, your word-of-mouth reputation will feed your client base. It’s the long game, the marathon, not the sprint that matters.

Topics Discussed in this Episode

00:00 Introduction and Recap of Part One
01:10 Exploring Mutual Benefit in Professional Services
04:16 The Impact of Bad Theology on Pricing
05:12 Better Capitalism: Bridging Anti-Capitalism and Dog-Eat-Dog Capitalism
11:55 Mars Inc.: A Case Study in Mutuality
17:25 Practicing Plantation Economics on Yourself
24:26 The Importance of Community and Ethical Business Practices
32:33 Conclusion and Final Thoughts

Paul Knowlton

Paul Knowlton
Paul Knowlton

Paul Knowlton, JD, MDiv, is a pioneering Atlanta attorney, ethicist, and co-founder of the Institute for Better Capitalism, where he champions “partnership economics” as an antidote to exploitative “plantation economics.” Holding a JD from Georgia State University and an MDiv from Mercer University, he transitioned from forensic engineering at Georgia-Pacific to IP law, building a robust practice at firms like Kilpatrick Stockton, co-founding another serving Fortune 500 clients, and teaching as an adjunct professor. This foundation in business law informs his holistic critique of capitalism, blending legal acumen with theological insight to advocate for profitable, ethical systems.

Knowlton’s landmark 2021 book Better Capitalism: Jesus, Adam Smith, Ayn Rand, and MLK Jr. on Moving from Plantation to Partnership Economics, co-authored with Aaron Hedges, reinterprets economic giants to propose reforms in finance, corporations, government, and culture. Endorsed by figures like Walter Brueggemann and David Gushee for its data-driven, values-rich challenge to extremes like laissez-faire absolutism or socialism, the work has sparked dialogue via Cato Institute reviews and Amazon bestseller status. His legal background enables practical proposals, such as relieving sectors for mutual flourishing and making abstract ethics actionable for executives and policymakers.

Today, as Partner Emeritus at Stanton Law LLC, Knowlton integrates his capitalism vision into IP, business succession, nonprofit law, and coaching, while advancing the Institute’s mission through resources, testimonials, and calls for imagination and courage. His efforts—praised for originality by economists and theologians—aim to humanize markets, fostering common good without sacrificing innovation, as seen in his Ubercounsel practice and Georgia Bar wellness initiatives. This balanced legacy positions him as a unique voice at the nexus of law, faith, and economics.

Website | LinkedIn

John Ray, Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray, Author of The Generosity Mindset and Host of The Price and Value Journey
John Ray, Author of The Generosity Mindset and Host of The Price and Value Journey

John Ray is the host of The Price and Value Journey.

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

John is a podcast show host and the owner of North Fulton Business Radio, LLC, an affiliate of Business RadioX®. John and his team work with B2B professionals to create and conduct their podcast using The Generosity Mindset® Method: building and deepening relationships in a non-salesy way that translates into revenue for their business.

John is also the host of North Fulton Business Radio. With over 900 shows and having featured over 1,300 guests, North Fulton Business Radio is the longest-running podcast in the North Fulton area, covering business in its region like no one else.

John’s book, The Generosity Mindset: A Journey to Business Success by Raising Your Confidence, Value, and Prices

John Ray at Barnes & Noble with his book, The Generosity MindsetJohn Ray is the author of the five-star rated book The Generosity Mindset: A Journey to Business Success by Raising Your Confidence, Value, and Prices, praised by readers for its practical insights on raising confidence, value, and prices.

If you are a professional services provider, your goal is to do transformative work for clients you love working with and get paid commensurate with the value you deliver to them. While negative mindsets can inhibit your growth, adopting a different mindset, The Generosity Mindset®, can replace those self-limiting beliefs. The Generosity Mindset enables you to diagnose and communicate the value you provide to clients, which allows you to price your services more effectively in order to receive a portion of that value.

Whether you’re a consultant, coach, marketing or branding professional, business advisor, attorney, CPA, or work in virtually any other professional services discipline, your content and technical expertise are not proprietary. What’s unique, though, is your experience and how you synthesize and deliver your knowledge. What’s special is your demeanor or the way you deal with your best-fit clients. What’s invaluable is how you deliver outstanding value by guiding people through massive changes in their personal lives and in their businesses that bring them to a place they never thought possible.

Your combination of these elements is unique in your industry. There lies your value, but it’s not the value you see. It’s the value your best-fit customers see in you.

If pricing your value feels uncomfortable or unfamiliar to you, this book will teach you why putting a price on the value your clients perceive and identify serves both them and you, and you’ll learn the factors involved in getting your price right.

The book is available at all major physical and online book retailers worldwide. Follow this link for further details.

Connect with John Ray:

Website | LinkedIn | Email

Business RadioX®:  LinkedIn | Twitter | Facebook | Instagram

Tagged With: Adam Smith, Atlanta attorney, attorney wellbeing, bad theology, Better Capitalism, business ethics, capitalism reform, client relationships, extractive economics, generosity mindset, generous pricing, Herbert J. Taylor, Institute for Better Capitalism, John Ray, low bono law firm, Mars Candy, Milton Friedman, mutual benefit, partnership economics, Paul Knowlton, plantation economics, pricing mindset, pricing psychology, professional service providers, professional services pricing, Rotary Four-Way Test, shareholder value, stanton law, Sustainable Business, The Price and Value Journey, underpricing, value based pricing

Patty Lawson – Hall County Farmers Market and Minga Farms

October 28, 2024 by Rose

Patty Lawson - Hall County Farmers Market and Minga Farms
North Georgia Business Radio
Patty Lawson - Hall County Farmers Market and Minga Farms
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Patty Lawson - Hall County Farmers Market and Minga Farms

 

Hall County Farmers Market is revolutionizing local business connections and sustainable commerce.

As a business owner, you understand the importance of quality sourcing and strong customer relationships – but what if you could achieve both while strengthening our local economy?

Our special guest, Patty Lawson, is a dynamic force in our local community! She is the manager of the Hall County Farmers Market and the owner of Minga Farms. Patty embodies the spirit of sustainable agriculture and community development.

Listen in for an inspiring conversation about:

==> Building a resilient local food system

==> Creating meaningful connections between producers and consumers

==> Transforming shopping into community building

==> Supporting sustainable farming practices

==> Growing our local economy together

 

Connect with Patty and the Hall County Farmers Market and Minga

https://www.facebook.com/Hall.County.Farmers.Market

https://www.hallcountyfarmersmarket.org/

https://www.instagram.com/hall_county_farmers_market

https://www.instagram.com/minga.farm/

https://www.mingafarm.com/shop

 

Connect with Phil Bonelli:

https://www.facebook.com/Hopewell-Farms-GA-105614501707618/

https://www.instagram.com/hopewellfarmsga/

https://www.hopewellfarmsga.com/

Connect with Beau Henderson:

https://RichLifeAdvisors.com

https://www.facebook.com/RichLifeAdvisors

https://www.facebook.com/NorthGARadioX

This Segment Is Brought To You By Our Amazing Sponsors

Hopewell Farms GA

Roundtable Advisors

RichLife Advisors

Regions Bank

Highlights Of The Show

00:02:02 – Role of the Howell County Farmers Market
Patty discusses her role as the market manager, the diverse range of vendors and products available at the farmers market, and the importance of supporting local farmers and businesses.

00:07:39 – Importance of Knowing Your Farmer
The conversation explores the significance of building relationships with local farmers and understanding the source of the food we consume. Emphasizing the impact of the farmers market on promoting healthier, locally-sourced food options.

00:10:05 – Impact of the Howell County Farmers Market
Phil highlights Patty’s impact on the farmers market, emphasizing her caring nature, openness to innovation, and vision for the market’s future growth and potential to become a primary source for weekly groceries in the community.

00:14:36 – Importance of Community Connection
Patty discusses the importance of connecting small-scale farmers with the community and vice versa. She emphasizes the need for accessibility and a fun, welcoming environment at the farmers market.

00:15:15 – Learning and Mentorship
Patty and the host talk about the value of mentorship in farming. Patty shares her experience of learning from her neighbor, Ricky, who became her farm mentor.

00:16:42 – County Support and Facilities
The conversation shifts to the support provided by Hall County for the farmers market, including the use of covered pavilions for rain or shine. The county and city also provide resources and staff support for the market.

00:18:29 – Balancing Tradition and Innovation
Patty shares her approach to blending traditional knowledge with new ideas, emphasizing the importance of patience and learning from the older generation while also incorporating the desires of the younger generation of shoppers.

00:23:35 – Minga Farms and Future Plans
Patty talks about her farm, Minga Farms, and its focus on growing vegetables and flowers. She also shares her plans to become more involved full-time with the farm, expanding its production and pottery-making endeavors.

00:29:28 – The Importance of Farmers Markets
Patty and Phil discuss the benefits of shopping at farmers markets, such as getting fresh produce without harmful chemicals.

00:30:19 – Lessons from Farming
Patty talks about the lessons she’s learned from farming, including patience, the love of the process, and the importance of a long-term perspective in business.

00:32:32 – Embracing the Journey
The conversation shifts to the importance of enjoying the journey in business and in life, rather than focusing solely on the end goal.

00:35:56 – Appreciating Seasonality
Patty and Phil discuss the beauty of seasonality in nature and the joy of buying locally and seasonally at farmers markets.

00:39:40 – Don’t Glorify Busy

The discussion ends with a freestyle session centered around the idea of not glorifying busyness and taking time to slow down and enjoy life.

Tagged With: Hall County Community Growth, Hall County Farmers Market, Local Food Economy, Minga, Patty Lawson, Sustainable Business

Business RadioX ® Network


 

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