Welcome to the first episode in a special 5 part series. Over the course of these next 5 episodes, you’ll get to hear an interview between Russell Brunson and Josh Forti about the book “Atlas Shrugged” by Ayn Rand. But this interview is much more than just them talking about the book, they are actually discussing business, religion, and politics (a subject Russell doesn’t talk about often) as they pertain to the concepts in the book.
In this first section, you’ll get to hear the introduction and the basis for how the entire conversation will flow. The first main topic of the book, and the main concept for this episode is greed. Is it bad? Can it be good? Are we born with it? Can we change?
So listen in to part one of this unique interview and start reading “Atlas Shrugged” (just read it, the movies aren’t great), so you can be ready for part 2!
So this is a scripture. It says, "For the natural man is an enemy to God and has been from the fall of Adam and will be forever and ever." I'm going to stop right there. Okay. So natural man is an enemy to God. Why is that? We're born. We have this greed inside of us, so the natural human is the enemy of God because we're chasing after greed. Right? But God gives us that seed because it creates momentum. It creates motion. It creates us doing something. Right?
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What's up, everybody? This is Russell Brunson. Welcome back to
the Marketing Secrets Podcast. And right now, I have a treat for
you. Over the next five episodes, I'm going to be taking you in
behind the scenes of an interview that I did with Josh Forti about
the book, Atlas Shrugged. And some of you guys have read Atlas
Shrugged, some of you haven't. Some of you know the premise, some
of you don't.
And I want to preface this by saying I do not believe in
everything taught in the Atlas Shrugged book. I love a lot of it.
It talks about producers versus consumers, the looters and the
takers versus those in society who are the creators. Right? And
there's a lot of things I strongly align with. There's also things
that I don't strongly align with. And so I love the book, one of my
favorites I've ever read. And so that's the first thing.
Number two is, as I finished the book, I remember Josh Forti,
who's one of our funnel hackers, he wanted to do the interview with
me and I was just like, "I don't have time for interviews." And
we're getting closer and closer to the election, we talked on
Facebook. We were posting some comments and I was like, "You know
what? The interview that I would actually love to do would be about
Atlas Shrugged, looking at the whole political thing as it's
happening right now and the elections and everything, through the
lens of Atlas Shrugged. That'd actually be fascinating for me,"
because I don't typically, as you know, talk about politics. Right?
I do talk about religion, but I don't talk about politics. That's
not something I typically go into, but I thought it'd be
interesting to look at politics from the lens of Atlas
Shrugged.
And so in this interview series, it's a lot of fun. We talk
about producers versus consumers. We talk about the left and the
right. We talk about some political things. Now Josh, just so you
know ahead of time, he's very pro-Trump, very much on that side of
the discussions during this interview. And this interview, just so
you know, took place before the elections. As of right now, I'm
still not sure who won. You guys probably will know by the time
you're listening to this, but as of when I'm recording this, we
don't know, but he definitely leans on the Trump side. I don't
really share much of my political beliefs, but you'll get kind of
what I believe and why I believe it through the lens of Atlas
Shrugged over this interview series.
So I hope you enjoy it. It was a lot of fun to do, a lot of
great feedback and comments. And again, we talk about stuff I don't
typically talk about ever. So this may be a one-time shot to hear
inside my mind when it comes to politics, religion, and all through
the lens of Atlas Shrugged, the book. So with that said, I want to
introduce you guys to the first part of this five-part interview
series with me and Josh Forti, talking about Atlas Shrugged.
Russell Brunson: Are we live?
Josh Forti: We are live.
Russell: What's up, everybody?
Josh: Oh, my word, with the incredibly ... I don't know if
long-waited. It hasn't really been that long. Two months ago. So
much expected podcast with Mr. Russell Brunson, himself. How are
you doing, dude?
Russell: I'm doing amazing, man. Thanks for flying all the way to Boise
just for this conversation.
Josh: Yeah, absolutely. Dude, this is probably the conversation I'm
looking forward to most, certainly in my life thus far, when it
comes to business and philosophy and everything like that.
Russell: No pressure at all.
Josh: Well, it's funny. Your wife said, "Oh, thanks so much for coming
out." I was like, "Yeah, it's certainly ... Yeah, because it's
inconvenience to me to fly all the way out here." I will say, this
is my first ever in-person interview like this.
Russell: Oh, really?
Josh: Yeah.
Russell: We got the microphones set up.
Josh: I know. We have-
Russell: He’s a professional. I've never done this before.
Josh: Literally, we have a soundboard down here. We've got Russell's
mic. Can you guys hear us all right? By the way, guys, for all of
you listening on audio, we apologize because we're going to answer
some comments in the Facebook feed here because we've got everybody
down here. By the way, you can see all the comments down here.
Russell: What's up, everyone?
Josh: All right, guys. If you are live, comment down below. Let us
know where you're tuning in from. Let us know if you know Russell
or if you know me or if you know both of us or what you're most
looking forward to. And Russell, I'm going to be honest with you.
We're just going to be super chill. Guys, we have a live audience
back here. We've got Dave. Dave's over there. We've got Jake and
Nick.
Russell: What's up, Dave?
Josh: Where'd Jake go?
Russell: Jake's working.
Josh: Oh, there we go. Jake's working late over there.
Russell: Jake, by the way, designed these amazing shirts for this-
Josh: Yeah, check us out.
Russell: This is my Rearden Steel shirt. This is my Who Is John Galt
shirt.
Josh: Isn't this great? Okay, but I feel like the back-
Russell: Yeah the back I’ll read what it says. It says, "I started my
life with a single absolute, that the world was mine to shape and
the image of my highest values never to be given to a lesser
standard, no matter how long or hard the struggle." So do you guys
like these shirts? These are custom made for tonight. And you guys
may have a chance to get one of these, but not yet. No, not
yet.
Josh: Not yet.
Russell: We'll let you know when the ability ... If you guys ...
Josh: Oh, man. Oh, man.
Russell: Anyway, it's going to be fun, but these are custom ... We
literally made these today. We needed some sweet shirts…for the
show.
Josh: Okay, Will says he got your text. Did you send my text to
everybody?
Russell: Yeah.
Josh: Russell on top of it. I sent out a ManyChat, Russell sent out a
text. All right, guys. Let's lay some ground rules here. So the
quick backstory behind this ... And it's going to be weird. You've
got to look in the camera here. Quick backstory behind this is I
make a post on Facebook about, what, probably three months ago now
or so?
Russell: Yeah.
Josh: Two, three months ago. And I go, "We need some epic people to
interview for the podcast. Who do you know? Tag them all down
below." And shout out, Georgie. Georgie comments and goes… "I
coached Russell. You should totally interview me." And I was like,
"You've got to be pretty gutsy to tag Russell in your comment and
tell him you coached him," but then Russell comments back-
Russell: And George is an Olympic wrestler. He was on the Bulgarian
Olympic team. He wrestled at Boise State with me. He's the man. So
yeah.
Josh: I commented back. I go, "You coached Russel?" And then Russell
goes, "Well, yeah. He coached me. He's awesome. You should totally
interview him." And so I said, "Yeah, Georgie, of course, you can
come on. We'll do an interview, but Russell, I've got an open
invitation to you if you want to come back on." And then you were
like, "Sure, if we can talk about…" or no, you didn't say sure. You
said, "Can we do it about Atlas Shrugged?"
Russell: Yes.
Josh: Yeah.
Russell: Because I interview a lot about business stuff and-
Josh: I'll pull the microphone just slightly.
Russell: Yes. I don't do a lot of interviews because ... I feel like I've
said, but I don't want to say, but I just finished literally
probably the fattest book in the history of books called Atlas
Shrugged. And I was geeking out on it and I wanted to talk about
it. I didn't have a way or someone to geek out with, other than
some of my friends here. And I was like, "If you want to talk about
Atlas Shrugged, I'm in." And then you started freaking out.
Josh: The funny thing was is I go something to the effect of, "You
want to talk about the fall of capitalism because of a boycott,
because of a brilliant person and why socialism sucks? Yes,
absolutely. I would love to do that," to which you don't give me a
yes or no answer. You reply back and go, "Ha-ha. Oh, man. That'd be
fun." I'm like, "Talk about an open loop, man. Come on." So anyway,
I immediately messaged Russel and I'm like, "You better not be
joking because that would just be rude." He goes, "No, I'm totally
in."
Josh: So about two months go by. You had a bunch of stuff. You had
some fun stuff during that time, hanging out with-
Russell: Lot of stuff is happening.
Josh: Tony Robbins?
Russell: Yeah, Tony, man. And it's been chaos the last couple months, not
going to lie. And as we got closer and closer to the election, I'm
like, "This is an interesting conversation, post-election, but I
think it's more interesting before election." And so was it two
days ago, three days ago, you're like, "I will fly to Boise to
record this."
Josh: >Yeah.
Russell: "What day do you have open?" I'm like, "Only Wednesday night."
And now we're here.
Josh: Yeah. It was Friday afternoon. We were Voxing back and forth and
you're like, "Dude, we've got to get this done before the
election." I'm like, "Before the election? Oh, my word." I said,
"All right. Sounds good. What time do you have available?" And
that's when I was like, "You know what? I was going to ask you
creatively, but I'm just going to ask you. How about I fly out to
you?" And you're like, "Heck, yeah."
Josh: So guys, that's the backstory. That's how we got here. And so
this is an open conversation about Atlas Shrugged and kind of
everything that encapsulates. I think we'll talk about some
religion, some politics, kind of both sides of the aisle there and
open it up.
Russell: Fun.
Josh: Anything else you want to add to that?
Russell: The only other thing I would add is, because this book, by the
way, if you haven't read it yet, is very polarizing. There are
people on both sides of it.
Russell: And I think both of us wanted to stress ahead of time that I do
not believe in everything in this book. A lot of things in this
book, I do believe in. And it's interesting. One of the things I
want to dive deeper in in this conversation, I'm excited for and I
told you not to do Voxer. I was like, what's fascinating to me is
not, "This is what we should believe." What was fascinating to me
as I was reading this book, and we'll get into the premise of the
book for those who haven't read it, but the big thing is producers
and going out there and creating stuff and doing things, which is
what entrepreneurs do. Right? And it gets in the part of greed is
good. You should be greedy because it's going to create all these
amazing things, which then the byproduct's really good.
Russell: And part of me is like, "Yes, yes, yes, yes," and then part of
me, as a believing Christian, I hear this message I believe in and
then I hear in my mind ringing Christ, talking faith, hope,
charity, and love. And I feel like they're these two polar opposite
things, which by the way, we dive into politics a little bit. There
are two polar opposite sides, one that believes one, one believes
the other.
Russell: And I think that there's a happy medium and that's what I want
to dive deep into just because I don't want anyone thinking, "Oh,
Russell and Josh just believe this," or whatever. It's like, no,
there's sides of this and I empathize on both sides. I want to talk
about both of them because they're fascinating. Anyway, I've toyed
writing a boy about this concept, these two things. Anyway, I think
it should be fun to first time verbally ever talk about this stuff.
So I'm excited for it.
Josh: Yeah. And I would just echo that, as well. I think one of the
things that often happens with me, with my ... So funny. You, who
never, ever talks about politics and me who doesn't know how to get
on Facebook without arguing about politics, colliding here, but is
that a lot of times I get grouped into, "Oh, you like this reading.
Therefore, you believe with everything." "You read this book," or,
"You support this person," whether it's a political figure or a
book or something like that. It's like, by saying that you enjoyed
that or that you learned a lot from it, that all of a sudden you
suddenly believe everything in it. And that is not the case at all.
And I've gotten a lot of criticism from people that are like, "How
could you possibly like Atlas Shrugged?" And I'm like, "Well, this
is the conversation that we're going to have."
Josh: So real quick, before we dive in, I'd be curious ... I want to
do a poll real quick. How many of you guys have actually read the
book? I'm curious to know. Hold up here. There's two different
versions of it, but if you've read the book, just comment below the
number one if you have read the book, the number two if you have
not read the book. I think that will just kind of give us a poll.
We've got 200, 300 people.
Russell: And if you listened to the audiobook, we'll count that as
reading, too, either way.
Josh: Yeah. Not if you know the premise of the book, but actually have
read the book and have a deep understanding of it, or not deep
understanding. But have like…
Russell: Understand the stories them in.
Josh: Yeah, things like that, because then it'll be interesting.
Russell: >One is read.
Josh: One is read, two is not read. Oh, more ones than I thought was
going to.
Russell: Yeah. Me too.
Josh: Russell's book is so underrated.
Russell: We're 50/50.
Josh: Ooh, yeah. I think we should take a poll at the end; what's
better, Atlas Shrugged or Dotcom Secrets? That's the real question
we should be asking right now.
Russell: That would be good, that would be good.
Josh: Okay. So we have a lot of people that have not read it, so we'll
have to go into the premise of that. Okay.
Russell: Are you ready to get started?
Josh: Yeah. I'm ready to rock and roll with it.
Russell: Oh I’m ready.
Josh: Okay. Guys, we want to lay a couple ground rules. Okay? Because
I don't know what it's like to be Russell, Russell doesn't know
what it's like to be me, but I think we both have a mutual
understanding that we could very easily be taken out of context
here.
Josh: I think the goal, and then I want you to kind of expand upon
this, is we're not trying to take a side here. We're trying to have
an open discussion about it. This could very easily turn into
something that's like, "Why did you vote for Trump? Why Biden
sucks, why Biden's great, why Trump sucks," something like that or
certain religion. We're not trying to convince you of anything,
really. In fact, this is honestly more of a conversation for us.
And we're like, "We think it'd be cool to stream it out to a bunch
of people because there's a reason for me to fly out here and do
that," but the purpose of this is to have an open discussion about
the book, the premise of the book, an understanding of it, and then
honestly we're probably going to be in our own little world over
here.
Josh: And we want you guys to interact and comment and engage and push
your questions. And we'll go back through it, obviously, but the
purpose of this is not to try to convince anybody of anything. It's
simple to, at least from my perspective, shed a new perspective and
give the perspective of somebody who, for those of you that don't
know who Russell is, the founder of a ... ClickFunnels is a
billion-dollar company, SaaS company. You have 400 employees?
Russell: Yeah.
Josh: 400 employees. So from that perspective and from my perspective,
to open your eyes to a new perspective of what we like, what we
don't like and, like I said, more of a conversation for us.
Russell: Yeah. I think that's good. And I think a big thing that we will
talk about ... Our goal is not to convince you of anything. In
fact, I think I'm still convincing myself of both sides. I believe
both these two things that seem contradictory, but I think there's
a middle ground and I'm excited to explore it. So it'll be fun.
Josh: Cool. So I think we got to-
Russell: Talk about the premise of the book?
Josh: Yeah, we've got to talk about the premise of the book.
Russell: I might have a little mini statue behind me that might help. Can
I grab that?
Josh: Ooh, yeah.
Russell: Okay. So folks that have not read Atlas Shrugged, I didn't know
what the premise was at first, but this is the story of Atlas. Some
of you guys know Atlas was cursed to have to carry the entire
weight of the universe, entire weight of the world upon his
shoulders for forever. Right? And so this is where the premise of
the book ... All of us, people who are listening to this might
guess that you are a producer. Right? Otherwise, you probably
wouldn't be listening to me or to Josh. I attract, I teach, I
coach, I help producers, entrepreneurs, people who are trying to
change the world. Right?
Russell: I'm curious, how many of you guys have ever felt this pressure.
Right? When you feel like you literally have the entire weight of
the world upon your shoulders. And if you haven't, it's time to
become a producer. That's first off. Second off, I can empathize,
though. There's so many times, you can ask Dave or any guys on my
team, there's days I come in, I was like, "I feel like I'm going to
crack." There is so much weight to carry this around. And I'm
guessing most of you guys have felt that. It could be with your
family, could be in work, could be business, whatever, but you've
felt the weight of the world. Right?
Russell: So this is what Atlas had to hold. Right? And so the premise of
the book, Atlas Shrugged, is what would happen if the producers,
the people that are carrying the weight of the world on their
shoulders, what happens if they were to go on strike and they were
to shrug their shoulders and be like, "Meh." In fact, should I read
your tile you gave me here?
Josh: Yeah.
Russell: So Josh, as a gift today, gave me some amazing tiles. This is a
quote, actually, from the book, Atlas Shrugged, talking about this.
It says, "If you saw Atlas, the giant holds the world on his
shoulders. If you saw that he stood, blood running down his chest,
his knees buckling, his arms trembling, but still trying to hold
the world aloft with the last of his strength, and the greater of
his efforts, the heavier the world bore down on his shoulders, what
would you tell him to do? Just shrug." That's things like, what
happens to society when us, the producers, when we no longer want
to carry the weight of the world? We shrug and we walk away from
it.
Russell: And the book is a story about that. What happens when these
producers start disappearing and they start leaving, they start
going on strike? You see society, what happens when the producers
disappear.
Josh: Yeah. It's interesting because there is no one named Atlas
Shrugged in the book and there's nobody named Ayn Rand in the book.
And so there's concepts that she's writing about outside of that
and it's this ... How do you summarize a 1200-page book? Basically,
in the book, there is a main character by the name of Dagny.
Russell: Oh. Yes.
Josh: Oh.
Russell: I was going to say John Galt, but you're right. Yes, Dagny’s the
main character.
Josh: Sorry. For the first two thirds of the book, the main character
is a woman by the name of Dagny. And basically, she is one of the
producers of society. And she's not the head boss of the railroad,
but she's basically the person that runs this railroad company. And
it is written, what, 1950 is when this was-
Russell: Yeah.
Josh: So 1950, and it's basically this forecast into the future of a
government that is basically forcing super, super strict
restrictions onto private businesses and making them do things,
kind of like today in America, but super, super government
overreach in a lot of ways. And so Dagny is trying to keep the
world afloat, more or less, by getting the railroads done on time
and getting orders shipped.
Josh: And I'm super oversimplifying, but around her, all the people
that she works with that owned all these other companies that she
would buy copper from or she would buy steel from or buy the
railroad track from or buy the coal from, all of a sudden all these
head people ... Imagine people like Russell, all his friends just
start disappearing. Imagine Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos and Russell
all just started disappearing. Right? That's what's happening all
around her and she doesn't understand what's happening to them
because just, one day, it's up and it's gone.
Josh: And so the premise of the first two thirds of the book is
showing this story of this producer who is living in this world of
super government tyranny, overreach that's super, super controlling
and she's watching all of her friends disappear and she doesn't
know why. Would you say that's a pretty good explanation of it so
far?
Russell: Yeah. And every time they disappear, they leave behind a note or
something that says, "Who is John Galt?" That's this theme
throughout the book, is who is John Galt? Who is this John Galt
person that makes all the producers disappear?
Josh: And Dagny has no idea who John Galt is. Right? She doesn't even
know, actually, for awhile that John Galt's actually even a real
person. And so once she does find out that John Galt is probably a
real person, John Galt becomes her sworn enemy because she doesn't
know who he is or what he's doing. All she knows and all she
associates with is that John Galt is taking away all these
producers of society and is making her life harder because ...
Imagine you being an entrepreneur and all of your entrepreneur
friends that you buy stuff from and that you send all your people
to, your referrals and everything, you buy all your supplies from,
imagine they're all just disappearing and you think it's because of
this one guy who's taking them all away and you don't know what's
happening to them. Obviously, they'd become your sworn enemy.
Josh: So for the first two thirds-ish of the book, that's kind of this
premise of they're painting this really, really vivid story of the
... what are they called, the great thinkers of society? Yeah, the
great minds of society, basically disappearing. And Dagny and ...
there's a guy by the name of Hank Rearden, I think.
Russell: Yeah, Rearden Steel.
Josh: Rearden Steel, yeah. So Dagny and Hank Rearden are the two major
ones left right before the big plot twist happens and you're like,
"Oh," and then you get introduced to John Galt. I'm going to let
you explain John Galt now.
Russell: Oh, man. Okay. So that's the first two thirds of the book. By
the way, there's movies. Don't watch them. They'll ruin the book.
The movies were really bad.
Josh: Yeah. Read the book.
Russell: So two thirds into the book, she starts trying to figure out
this mystery of who's John Galt. She ends up finding him and turns
out that he has been going around and getting all these producers
to go on strike, convinces them to, "Look, it's not worth fighting
for anymore. All your incentives are gone. Let's leave. Let's go on
strike," and they leave. And John Galt's trying to get her to leave
and she's like, "I can't. I have to do everything in my power." The
last third of the book is her leaving John Galt's presence and
going back and trying to figure out how to do this thing as she's
watching just government regulations getting harder, and harder,
and harder, and harder to the point where everyone just has to
disappear.
Russell: But one of the things John Galt and the people say, "When the
lights of New York go out, then we'll come back and we'll rebuild
society from the ground up, after the looters and the people are
gone."
Josh: And that's basically how the books ends is lights of New York go
out and then-
Russell: For such a long book, all of a sudden it just ends and you're
like, "Oh, I need one more chapter. Come on. Just end it."
Josh: And we're never going to get it. Ah.
Russell: Well, maybe I'll write it.
Josh: Yeah. So that's the storyline of the book, but what I think we
really both want to focus here is kind of the premises and the
overarching ideas that the book presents, and capitalism versus
socialism, and I think we'll talk religion and politics and kind of
everything that’s in that, but I kind of want to, if it's all right
with you, I kind of want to turn the conversation more towards us
now and just kind of start geeking out just about that.
Josh: So guys, we'll obviously go back and ... By the way, we want all
your comments if you're ... Actually, comment below right now.
Where are you watching? Are you watching it on YouTube? Are you
watching it on Think Different Theory page or are you watching it
on Russell's page? Comment down below because we went to multiple
different locations. So we have a bunch of different people tuning
in for everything. So just comment down below. Leave your comments,
leave your questions, smash the like button, love button, share
this out, and we're going to be here.
Josh: All right, Russell. What's up?
Russell: Hey, man.
Josh: All right. Dude, I've been wanting to, and I hate this
terminology, but just pick somebody's brain like yours for the
longest time. And this book, oh, my gosh. So what do you like about
the book? What was your favorite thing?
Russell: >Yeah. Well, let me tell the backstory. So 2008 is when the
market crashed last time, right?
Josh: Yeah.
Russell: And I didn't realize that, that year, over 500,000 copies were
sold organically by people talking to me about it, talking about,
"Everything's she's prophesying is happening right now." And so,
back then, I remember all my entrepreneur friends, like, "You have
to read this book." It was the word-of-mouth buzz that sold 500,000
copies of a book has been ... The author died, whatever, 30 years
earlier. There's not active marketing out there. It's crazy. And
everyone's talking about it, like, "What's happening in this book
is happening in 2008." And it was just this prophecy that was being
fulfilled.
Russell: And so everyone in 2008 was telling me to read this book. I
remember buying it and I was like, "This is a really, really big
book." And it took me awhile to get into it and I could never get
into it. I read the first, I don't know, first 200 or 300 pages
four or five times. And then, finally, this summer, one of my very
first trips where I didn't bring a laptop since my marriage. So my
wife is very proud of me.
Josh: Dang.
Russell: And so as I was leaving the office, I grabbed this book. And I
picked it up and I was like, "I have no computer, but I've got
this." And usually, I bring 20 books just because I know I'm going
to read. I just brought one and I was like, "I'm going to do this.
I'm going to be forced. I'm on a lake for a week and a half with my
kids and all I can do is read this book." So I brought it, got the
audiobook, as well. It's funny, I do the same. I listen to the
audiobook and I read along so I can listen to it way faster, that
way. And I started going through it. It took me a little while. She
does such a good job of character development at the very
beginning, it took awhile to get into it.
Josh: Yeah, for sure.
Russell: And then the story hits and then you're just like ... And you
couldn't-
Josh: It's like thing, after thing, after thing. It's so quick.
Russell:
Josh: Now you don't have to worry about it. Yeah.
Russell: Even better. I never experienced government regulations and
things like that or just those kind of things. And as ClickFunnels
has grown from me and Todd to our first member, to our first
thousand, 10,000, 100,000 members, 400 ... I don't know how many
employees, a lot, 400 plus employees. As it's grown, it's been
crazy because you would think all we'd be focusing on here inside
ClickFunnels is the next feature in the app, next thing.
Russell: And there's the year where we had to spend an entire year just
refactoring the software for GDPR compliance. We have regulations
that come in on taxes and this. It's constant where most of the
battles we fight at ClickFunnels right now is not about, how do we
make this thing better for the customer? It's, how do we protect
our customers from the government? It's crazy. And just so many
regulations and things.
Russell: And so I have been feeling this pressure. Some of you guys may
have seen my interview I did with Tony Robbins ... not interview,
but Tony Robbins did an intervention with me last year in Fiji.
Josh: Yeah. That was fascinating, by the way.
Russell: I'm so glad we captured that. It was a really cool moment in my
life, but if you listen in there, I talked about ... He's like,
"Well, what do you want to do?" And I was like, "I don't know, but
the pressure ... I love the same, so I love everything I'm doing. I
love the people we're serving, but there's these other pressures
that aren't the game, that aren't the people, that they just get so
heavy sometimes where it makes me want to just walk away." And
again, as I'm reading this book-
Josh: You hadn't read the book at the time.
Russell: I hadn't read it yet.
Josh: Yeah, okay.
Russell: As I'm reading this, it's like-
osh: Did you know anything about the-
Russell: I did not know the premise, no.
Josh: You knew nothing. Okay, okay, okay.
Russell: I didn't know what Atlas Shrugged meant. I was just like, "Oh,
it's Atlas ..." I didn't know ... And it was like, when I read this
title, like, "What would you tell Atlas if this was happening? Just
shrug." And I was like, "Oh, that's why they called it Atlas
Shrugged." And then I remember vividly feeling the pressure of this
calling and how heavy it is.
Russell: And there's so many times I wish, like, "Okay, sometimes it'd be
so nice to walk away or to shrug or whatever." And so I instantly,
with Dagny's character, I was like ... I feel that with Hank
Rearden. I had so much empathy and understood their characters
because I feel that so many times. Hank Rearden just wanted to
invent his steel and put it out. That's all he cared about, right?
For me, funnels are my art. I can't draw, but funnels, that's my
art and entrepreneurship. That's my art. And so I just want to do
my art. That's it. He just wanted to create steel. And it's all
these other things and it's just like, "I just want to do my steel.
I just want to do my art. Why do I have to deal with all this other
stuff?"
Russell: And so as I'm reading this, I just had so much empathy for the
characters because I felt like I was the characters, even though it
was weird because it's railroads and stuff like that and I'm
internet, but I think that's why I really got into it. And then I
got just curious, what happens? How does this story end? Be I'm in
the middle of it. And depending who's listening, you may or may not
have felt some of these pressures. As you grow, you feel them.
Russell: It's interesting. As ClickFunnels has grown, we've talked about
the pressure that I feel today would've crushed me five years ago.
Right? And so you have to go through this thing where you build
capacity to handle the next set of pressure, and build capacity,
and build capacity. And nowadays, stuff happens daily that's just
like, "Man, that would've destroyed me five years ago."
Russell: And so I think, if you guys haven't felt that, as you grow, as
you continue to try to get your message out and try to grow your
businesses, whatever, the bigger you get, the more that pressure
comes.
Josh: Do you think…with that ... And I want to continue that because
it's such a good conversation, but with the pressure, the things
that are happening now daily that would've wrecked you five years
ago or three years ago, whatever it was, do you think it's good,
though, that they would've? Is it good that, at the capacity that
you understood, that you took those things seriously then or would
it have been better for you to just be in this mindset? I know it's
not possible, but looking back, if you could snap your fingers and
back then would've had the mental capacity to just ignore all those
things and go up, would that've been a good thing? Or the fact that
you went through all those things, does that help?
Russell: The going through it is what makes you worthy of the things,
right?
Josh: Being able to…
Russell: It makes you ready for it. Otherwise, just like lifting weights,
if you try to squat 800 pounds, that's what it feels like. Right?
Your legs buckle and you die, but because you went through that
thing, you're able to have the capacity to hold the weight.
Josh: Okay.
Russell: Yeah. So anyways, the thing for me that was the big thing is
reading this. And so I was just fascinated because I was like,
"This is kind of my story. How does it end?"
Josh: How long did it take you to get through it?
Russell: I'd say about two months. I got a lot of it done on the boat,
and then I got into biking for a little while, so I was listening
to it while I was biking.
Josh: That's right, I remember that.
Russell: I just kept biking and biking, like, "One more chapter, one more
chapter." I'm in really good shape because of it. It's funny
because one of the premises ... And they don't say greed is good,
but there's a chapter, I think it's called Greed. And I remember,
if you guys have ever seen Wall Street, Gordon Gekko talks about,
"Greed is good," and I never understood that premise. Right? In the
book, they start talking about that, how greed is what drives this
whole thing. Is it called Greed?
Josh: I'm trying to find it.
Russell: Utopia of Greed, yeah.
Josh: And then Anti-Greed. So Utopia of Greed and then Anti-Greed.
Russell: So what's interesting is ... because all of us are taught that
greed is bad, right? That's just, like, you shouldn't be greedy.
That's, I think, a principle that's instilled in most of us, but
then I think about, for me, when I started this business, why did I
start this business? I wanted to make money. That's greed, right?
And you think about any of us, we go through a phase in all of our
lives that greed is the driving factor. Right? When I wanted to
become a good wrestler, I wanted to become a good wrestler. It was
greedy. I went and got coaches and spent all my time and it was a
very selfish time in my life. Not that it's bad, but it's a very
greedy time. Right? Kids, when they're first born ... I love my
kids. They are so ... not in a bad way, but they're greedy. It's
about them. Right?
Josh: Right.
Russell: And it's this growth phase where growth ... You have to be
greedy. You're in the growth phase. Right? When you're trying to
learn, you're sucking things and you're learning and you're not
contributing it. You're just learning, you're growing. And it was
interesting because, as I'm going through this, I'm like, the greed
is what got me into business. Right? And it's what got these things
started and then the byproduct of that is jobs were created and
things ... All the byproduct of it is ... I think, in the book, how
it justifies it, Hank Rearden going after ... he wanted to build
his steel and make a bunch of money, created tens of thousands of
jobs and changed the world and changes all these things.
Russell: And so the premise of the book is that greed is this driving
force that gets you moving. And it is. If you think about any
aspect of your life, from sports to education, to business, to
everything, it starts with greed. Now, we'll go deeper into this. I
don't want everyone to think that I'm just into this for the greed,
because there's a transition point. We'll talk about it in a
minute, but there's a transition point from growth to contribution
that happens, but that's in the book where it starts talking about
that.
Russell: And I remember I was on the greenbelt here in Boise, riding my
bike with James P. Friel, listening to that chapter. And I was
trying to think, "Is this true? Did I get started because of
greed?" And it's like, yeah, I didn't start a business because I
wanted to change the world. Eventually, that happened, but it
wasn't like it was ... Greed was the driving force that moved me
forward. I think it moves all of us forward such a long time. And
as I was listening as I'm riding my bike, I'm like, "Yes, I
understand this," and the other half of me was like ... I started
thinking about my spiritual upbringing. Right?
Josh: Yeah.
Russell: I'm very Christian. I'm a member of the Church of Jesus Christ
Latter-day Saints and I started thinking about Christ and his
teachings, which are, honestly, the opposite of that. Right? It's
like-
Josh: Really the polar opposite.
Russell: Yeah.
Josh: Which it's funny, whenever you say that, people are like, "You
know, Jesus was a socialist." I hear that a lot. I'm like, "You
need to read the Bible." Anyway, but I think a lot-
Russell: But he definitely is way more liberal leaning, 100%.
Josh: Right, right. And I think that that's where Republicans,
conservative, traditionally on that side of the aisle, fiscally
Republicans get into trouble is where we're like, "Yeah, we're
Christians, but we also want to get rich," and they never talk
about all this other ... People like to use Christianity, I feel
like, when it's convenient.
Russell: We call it cafeteria Christians.
Josh: Right.
Russell: They pick and choose the things off the menu they want.
Josh: Right. And then they go through and do it. So I definitely want
to dive further into that, but continue that.
Russell: Yeah. So that started this question in my head, though, of just,
so is greed bad then or is it good or where does it fit in the
whole grand scheme of things? Because it is something that's
instilled in all of us from birth. Right? When you're born, you're
a baby, if you didn't have greed, you would just die. Right? It's
me. I need food, I need love, I need shelter. It makes you cry,
which creates people coming to you. Greed is a driving force that's
instilled in humans from birth, right? When we come here, greed is
what helps us survive the first part of our life.
Russell: And first, I was having this conundrum. I'm just like, "God, is
this book evil? I don't know what to do with myself." Right? But
all good things in my life that happened happened initially because
the seed of greed started me on motion, started me in momentum. And
then I started thinking, if you've read the Expert Secrets book,
which-
Josh: If you haven't, come on.
Russell: If you haven't, you must hate money. Come on. No, but in the
beginning of Expert Secrets book, I talk about this concept, as
well, where as an expert, there's two phases to go through. The
first is a growth phase. Right? I want to be an expert in whatever.
You go through and you're a consumer, consuming everything. And
that's greed, right? And then there's this transition point where,
eventually, you keep trying to grow, grow, grow, grow, trying to
learn everything, going there. I'm listening to all the podcasts,
I'm reading all the books, I'm growing, growing, growing. And
eventually, there's this point. I remember feeling it in multiple
parts of my life. In wrestling, I felt it. In business, I felt it
where you can't continue ... The ability to grow through
consumption slows to almost a halt where you can't continue to
grow. Right?
Russell: I've shared this story. I think I shared it in the book with
wrestling. I was a really good wrestler. I was a high school state
champ. I took second place in the nation. I was an All-American.
And my senior year, I got invited to go to a wrestling camp. My
coach was like, "Hey, do you want to come coach wrestling this
summer?" And I was like, "Why would I do that? What's in it for
me?"
Josh: Before you go on here, I want to ask you something. So you're
riding your bike, wrestling with this whole greed thing. Is this
the first time that you've thought about greed in this way?
Russell: 100%.
Josh: And this is, what, six months ago?
Russell: Not even that. Maybe four months ago.
Josh: So you've built most of what ClickFunnels is today and now this
is the first time you're really sitting down and wrestling with
this idea of greed and is it bad, is it good, what's the balance
there and stuff like that?
Russell: Yeah.
Josh: That's fascinating.
Russell: Yeah. It never crossed my mind, really. And then it became this
thing where it bothered me because I'm like, "Oh, my gosh. I don't
want to be a greedy person." You know what I mean?
Josh: Right.
Russell:
Josh: Yep.
Russell: But my senior year, again, I'd been growing as a wrestler. I was
going to camps. I was getting coaching. I was greedy. I was sucking
up everyone's brainpower I could and I became a really good
wrestler because of it. And then my coach asked me to go coach a
wrestling camp. So I say yes, go to the wrestling camp, and I
remember he's like, "Okay, I need you to teach ..." My best move…
I'm really good at tilts. So for all the wrestlers out there, I'm
really good at cheap tilts. And he's like, "Teach these kids how to
do a cheap tilt."
Russell: And I was like, "Okay." So I walk out, there are like 30 kids.
I'm like, "Yeah, you do this. You just do it like that." And they
all look at me and they go try and they try to do a cheap tilt and
they all just fall apart. I'm like, "Are you guys dumb? This is not
that hard." I'm like, "Come back in, come back in. No, you did it
all wrong. This is how you do it." I show them again, like, "Go do
it." They go back out, nobody can do it.
Russell: And then, all of a sudden, I'm like, "Gosh, they're missing
something. What is it?" So I have them come back in and I start
breaking down, "Hey, for the move to work, your hips have to be
here, your legs have to be here." I start walking through all the
things. And as I'm doing that, I start realizing, "Oh, the season
why I'm able to do this is because of this," and I started
realizing what I was doing as I was teaching people. And as I
taught it to people, then the kids started doing it and they got
better and better. And all of a sudden, I started realizing, "Oh,
my gosh. This move works because of this."
Russell: And now that I was aware of the situation, now I was able to
make these tweaks and stuff on my own. And I realized that, but
coaching the kids, that was the next-level growth. It was a shift
from selfish greed growth to contribution. So that's why I started
coaching camps every year and that's why I went from slowing down
my progression to, all of a sudden, it sped back up again by
shifting from growth to contribution. Okay?
Russell: And so I think the same thing happens in business, right? I got
in business because that seed of greed is in us. It gets us moving,
gets us in the momentum. And some people never get out of that.
Some people live their entire lives chasing greed and they die and
it's a tragedy, but I think for most people, there's this
transition point. And I don't know where it happens. It happens
different spots for everyone where, all of a sudden, you realize
... you make the money, you started the business, and you realizing
how unfulfilling that is. You're tapping out. You're like, "I'm not
growing anymore. I thought I wanted money, but I don't. I want
growth. That's what we're here on this planet for, is to grow as
humans. Right?
Russell: You don't get that and, all of a sudden, you realize money's not
fulfilling and then you start seeing the other people you're
contributing to and you're helping. Then it shifts to ... We hear
people talk about, "This is about impact, about growth, it's about
helping other people," and that's that transition. That's charity,
love. That's pure love of Christ. It's that transition, but greed
is the seed that gets us moving, right? And so there's this
handoff. It doesn't happen all the time. And are you guys cool if I
share scripture stuff? Because-
Josh: 100%.
Russell: -all this stuff is scriptural. It's not just-
Josh: They don't get to decide, Russell. I get to decide. It's my
podcast. You can talk about whatever.
Russell: If you hate scripture, just close your ears and go, "Blah, blah,
blah." So I wrote down some scripture. This is a scripture because
it illustrates this point. I think it's so good.
Josh: Also, I just want to say, Russell Voxed me and he said that this
is the first episode of a podcast that he's ever prepared for. When
you said that, I'm like, "Ha! I was the first for something for
Russell. Let's go."
Russell: I want to be ready. Okay. So this is a scripture. It says, "For
the natural man is an enemy to God and has been from the fall of
Adam and will be forever and ever." I'm going to stop right there.
Okay. So natural man is an enemy to God. Why is that? We're born.
We have this greed inside of us, so the natural human is the enemy
of God because we're chasing after greed. Right? But God gives us
that seed because it creates momentum. It creates motion. It
creates us doing something. Right?
Russell:
Russell: So growth is the seed. It's the natural man. It's the thing we
have that's ... It's good, right? God gives it to us because it
gets us to do stuff, gets us to learn, gets us to not die in our
crib because we need love and attention and to get fed. Right? So
then it gets us off our butts, off the couches, us being producers
that gets us moving. And if we're not careful, though, the natural
man will destroy us. You see so many people who made tons of money
and they destroyed themselves in their lives because they don't do
that second thing, which is, "Unless he yields to the enticings of
the Holy Spirit."
Russell: That's the thing saying this is not about money, this is about
the impact. Look at the people you're changing. And it shifts,
right? If you make that shift, all of a sudden, now this thing
you’re creating is not about greed, it's like, "Oh, my gosh ..." I
remember, for ClickFunnels, when I had that transition was when I
started seeing Brandon and Kaelin Poulin. I started seeing the
ripple effect of their business. And I can name hundreds of people,
person, after person, after person.
Russell: I was like, "This isn't about money. This is about the ripple
effect of what we've created in each person's life." Now, that's
charity. That's love. Now the mission isn't about money. We don't
care about the money. We keep score with money, but that's the
mission, is the people's lives and the impact. And I think that's
that transition where greed is the thing that gets us moving, but
if we don't have that ...
Russell: I think that's happened in the book. We talked about it. You
said this at my house earlier, like, "A lot of people in the book
seem like they have a miserable life." And it's like, yeah, because
they never yielded to the spirit. They never made that shift. It
was all greed to the point where they let everything collapse as
opposed to the charity side of things.
Josh: Yeah. So one of the things about the book ... And I'm sitting on
the plane on the way over here and I'm like, "How do I articulate
this?" Because that's always the hardest thing. You have this idea
in your head and you're like, "How do I get it out and explain it
in a way that somebody else can be like, 'Yes, I understand that?'"
I'm going to go kind of political here for a second. I'm going to
bring it back, too, specifically to the book. So I am pretty
vocally a conservative. Right? I'm a blatant Trump supporter, very
much so conservative when it comes to everything fiscal, but I call
myself a libertarian because I actually think that I lean left on a
lot of social issues. I think the government should stay out of gay
marriage. Right? There's a lot of things that I lean left on, but
when it comes to money and finances and things like that, I lean to
the right.
Josh: But the reason I lean to the right and I typically go with the
right is because I like what the left is trying to do in concept.
It's like, okay, there's a bunch of people that are really truly in
need. I agree. We need to help them. The problem is is that the way
they go about doing it, I so radically disagree with it. It's
against everything that I stand for. Right? I'm like, it's not that
I disagree with what you want to do, it's I disagree with how you
want to do it.
Josh: What's interesting is I feel like, in this book, I feel like
it's the opposite. I actually don't agree with why they're doing
it. This concept of ... I mean, Hank Rearden says it over and over
again, "Everything that I do is for profit." That is it. Even to
his friends. He took a bullet for John Galt, right? He gets shot.
And John Galt thanks him for it. He goes, "You know I only did it
because it's what I wanted to do, right?" Literally saves a guy's
life.
Josh: So it's all about what he wants and only for him and that's it.
And it's profit and money and dollars. It's not about everything
that he helps. And I'm like, I disagree with that premise, but what
that leads to, I actually do like. And I feel like it's flipped
compared to the world I'm living in now. Half the stuff that the
Democrats ... I hate to… oh I want to go into politics so bad…
Russell: Left and right.
Josh: Yeah, the left. Guys, we're going to say left and right.
Generalized here, right? Oh, my god, but generally speaking. And so
when it comes to the whole greed issue, I'm like ... It's
interesting to hear your perspective because I never, even
throughout the book, I'm like, "Greed is a bad thing." And hearing
your perspective, I'm like, okay, I understand what you're saying,
but is it greed or is there some other driving ... If I were to ask
you a year ago ... When were you in the heart of ClickFunnels, like
a year and a half ago, two years? There was a time of your life
when all you ... I know all you do is ClickFunnels, but when-
Russell: It's the last six years of my life.
Josh: But you know what I mean? Wasn't there a year or two period in
there, in the growth phase, where 100% of everything you do was
just ClickFunnels, ClickFunnels, ClickFunnels. It felt like you
were going nonstop. It feels like you're a little bit more balanced
now. Maybe not, but from the outside perspective looking in, it
does. Anyway, during that time of growing ClickFunnels, before you
read that, would you have described yourself as greedy?
Russell: No.
Josh: What would you have described yourself as? What's the word?
Russell: I don't know. That's a good question. I was always trying to
create stuff. It's art for me, right? So it's like I was trying to
create stuff. I think, initially, I was creating for myself as
opposed to, "Oh, my gosh. I create this for myself, but look what
happens to the people."
Josh: What point was that shift for you, though?
Russell: You can see it in my marketing, by the way. And by the way, for
those who are greedy capitalists who only care about money, it
actually is a better marketing way, too. My marketing went
from-
Josh: For all you greedy capitalists out there, switch to being a
contributor, you’ll make more money.
Russell: Well, think about it. My marketing is always like, "Here's
Russell. Here's how much money my funnel made. Here's how much ..."
It was me talking about me all the time. And then I realized, "Who
cares about me? I don't care about me. Let me show you what this
person ... Let me show you all the results of the people we're
serving, what's happening there," which first off, is better
marketing and, second off, it's that transition where I was
literally like, "Everything I've accomplished is stupid. What
they're doing, that's the real ... What we're doing, that's the
thing that's amazing." Right? That's the spiritual side of it.
That's the thing where it's like, the thing that got you into
motion now is doing good in the world. And when you start seeing
that, it's like, oh, my gosh. That's so much more fulfilling and so
much more exciting.
Russell: And people ask me, "The last six years, why'd you keep getting
up? Do you need more money?" I'm like, "No, that's not what keeps
me up," but I can tell you 100 stories of people who ... literally
the ripple effect of how many lives they've changed because I did
my thing. Right? We made a documentary of the Two Comma Club and
Jamie Cross has this whole part there where she's bawling her eyes
out and she said, "Where would my family be if Russell wouldn't
have fulfilled his God-given calling?" And every time I see that, I
start bawling, myself. That's why, eventually, you start doing it.
Right?
Josh: But when did that shift happen?
Russell: I don't know. It wasn't a day that it happened. The energy of it
shifted. Right? I don't know. It gradually kind of happened.
Josh: What's that?
Dave: Tell them about your dad.
Josh: Yeah.
Russell: Dave, come on in. Dave's here. Dave, take the mic. Here.
Dave: Yeah. No, honestly, I think… this has been one of those things.
It's been fun for me to watch Russell from the sidelines here. I
think, honestly, it was your dad's 60th birthday.
Josh: Which was how long ago?
Dave: I don't even know.
Russell: Three, four years ago probably.
Dave:
Russell: Yeah, you want me to tell that story?
Dave: Russell is a much better storyteller. I'll seed the thought, but
I'll let him finish.
Russell: All right.
Josh: Oh, thank you Dave.
Russell: Thank you. Interesting.
Josh: Guys, we have a live audience here.
Russell: So yeah, my dad turned 60 and we have our little family reunion
every year we do. And so it was during his birthday. And I remember
my mom gave him $60, six $10 bills. And so she gave them to him one
at a time and said, "Okay, the first decade was one to 10. Tell us
something you remember about that." He's like, "I don't remember
anything back then." The second one, he's like, "10 to 20, that's
when I was a wrestler. It was so much fun for me." And then, 20 to
30, he was like, "Okay, that's when I was starting my business,
trying to figure things out and trying to get our family stable."
30 to 40, "That's when my kids were wrestling and I was coaching
them." And then 50 to 60, he kind of went through everything.
Russell: And then, after it was done, I asked him, I said, "Well, Dad, of
all the decades, what one was the best for you?" Thinking, in my
world, the best was going to be when he was a wrestler because I
was like, for me, the greatest part of my life was when I was
wrestling. And my dad said, "The greatest decade was when I got to
coach you." I forgot that story until Dave said that, but I
remember coming back and telling Dave and other people that I
always thought the best part was being the all star. For my dad,
the best part was coaching other people and seeing their hand
raised.
Josh: That was a good interjection there, Dave. Huh.
Russell: …which was really cool.
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