Enjoy this classic episode from the vault. Russell explains that the day you became an entrepreneur is the day you took personal responsibility for a problem that wasn’t your own.
I think about the world we live in today. The problem is most people don’t responsibility for anything. Even though they do things that are really bad or wrong or whatever, they won’t take responsibility. They want to blame it on their mom, or their brother, or their sister, or whoever. The world is all about blaming someone else for all the issues that it has. What makes us entrepreneurs weird is we see a problem and instead of blaming somebody else, we look at it and say, “I’m going to take responsibility for that problem, I’m going to figure out an answer.”
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What’s up everybody, this is Russell. Welcome to a late night
episode of Marketing Secrets.
Hey everyone, I’m about to head to bed but I listened to a
podcast this week from Ryan Moran, from capitalism.com and he’s got
the Freedom Fast Lane show podcast, which is pretty awesome. I love
it a lot and he goes deep into the ecommerce side and also business
investing and other things that I don’t typically focus on, which
has been fun for me to kind of listen to him and world. But he said
something in one of his presentations, it was a stage event
somewhere, I don’t even know, a few episodes back. And I
don’t remember how he said or what he said but it sparked a thought
in my mind.
So I’m probably going to slaughter how he said it. He said it
probably much better than me, but the concept was so cool. What he
basically said is the difference between entrepreneurs and the rest
of the world, yes we are different folk if you haven’t noticed. But
what he said was interesting, he said, entrepreneurs are the people
who see a problem and then take responsibility for it. Isn’t that
weird?
I think about the world we live in today. The problem is
most people don’t responsibility for anything. Even though they do
things that are really bad or wrong or whatever, they won’t take
responsibility. They want to blame it on their mom, or their
brother, or their sister, or whoever. The world is all about
blaming someone else for all the issues that it has. What makes us
entrepreneurs weird is we see a problem and instead of blaming
somebody else, we look at it and say, “I’m going to take
responsibility for that problem, I’m going to figure out an
answer.”
And when I heard that I was just like, oh my gosh, that is so
interesting. Because most people don’t do that. Most people don’t
see an issue, a problem and then be like, “I’m going to take
responsibility for that.” I was thinking about this with
Clickfunnels for example. For a decade we tried to build funnels
and it was frustrating. And yeah, we could have blamed everybody
else, I’m sure we did. Everyone else did that, it’s the tech
designers, the developers, programming is hard, all the things. It
wasn’t for us until we said, you know what it does suck and I’m
going to take responsibility for it, this is my issue now. And then
we figure out a way to solve it. And that’s when everything
changed.
That’s so fascinating. For you, as an entrepreneur, or someone
who wants to be an entrepreneur, I think if we all make conscious
decision of what we are doing is consciously saying, “That problem
right there, I’m taking on myself, I’m taking responsibility for
that.” Instead of doing what most of us do, what’s our human
nature. “Oh it’s them. Oh it’s her.” I didn’t fix anything because
of this, because of this. We just want to pass the blame, pass the
buck so often, but that’s what makes us weird. That’s what
makes us different. It makes entrepreneurs, entrepreneurs.
We see those problems, we see those issues and we take a
personal responsibility for it. I was thinking about this as I was
looking at the Inner circle meetings over the last couple of weeks.
I could go through all 100 of my entrepreneurs and share this, but
just a couple of them off my head.
Pamela Weibold for example, she was a doctor and she started
seeing all of her friends who were doctors committing suicide.
Person after person after person. And she could have sat there and
blamed this, blamed that, but instead she stopped and said, “I’m
going to take personal responsibility for this issue and I’m going
to save doctors lives.” And she’s gone out there and done that.
She’s created a platform. She’s one of the most amazing people I’ve
ever seen. She’s literally spent every penny she’s ever made to go
and save doctors lives. She’s like, “I can live on 20 grand a year,
I’m good. Every penny I make goes back into helping save doctors
from committing suicide.”
Because she took that as her own personal responsibility. That’s
not her responsibility, it’s not her fault. Yet, she looked at it
and said, this is my responsibility. That day she became an
entrepreneur.
You think about another one, Annie Grace, who is so cool. She’s
someone who her whole life drank socially. It got to a point where
she kept drinking and drinking and she couldn’t break away from it.
And she started looking around and it wasn’t just her, it was other
people and she went on this mission and started saying….and again,
drinking is not her responsibility. People struggling and trying to
give up alcohol addiction, that’s not her responsibility, she’s got
better things to do with her life.
But she looked at it and said, “This problem, I’m going to take
responsibility for it.” And she’s gone out and changed thousands of
people’s lives. Thousands of people she has helped break away from
this addiction that’s robbing them of their freedom, their
happiness. She took that personal. She didn’t have to, she didn’t
need to but she decided to and that day she became an
entrepreneur.
I could go through person after person after person after
person, the day that they looked at this thing, this problem that
wasn’t even supposed to be their own, but they saw it. And whatever
it was, I don’t know if tuition, if it’s God, if it’s a spark, if
it’s your brain. Whatever it is, you see it and there’s that spark
saying, “That one’s mine. That is the problem I’m going to fix and
I’m going to take personal responsibility. It may not be my fault,
but I am the one who’s going to fix this and change it.”
And that’s what makes you different as an entrepreneur, and it’s
fascinating and exciting. And if you wondered, how do I become an
entrepreneur, how do I do that? It’s time to start looking at that
and saying, “Instead of pushing responsibility on different places,
different things, different people, different whatever, look at a
problem and take on that responsibility yourself. And that’s the
game plan, that’s how it works.
Anyway, I heard that three or four days ago and it’s been
ringing through my head over and over. I keep thinking about person
after person after person in my inner circle, and entrepreneurs I
work with, and inner circle members, and Two Comma Club members,
and I look at the people around me who are serving and doing stuff.
Every single time I could link back to, that is the problem they
took personal responsibility for. They didn’t have to, they didn’t
need to, but they did. And that’s the magic.
>So I hope that helps you guys. I hope that rings through your
head and makes you start looking and being more aware of the stuff
around you that’s happening and trying to figure out what it is
that you’re going to take personal responsibility for. Because when
you do that, that’s the day you’ll become an entrepreneur, and
that’s the day you will literally change the world.
Thanks you guys, so much for everything. Thanks for your
support, thanks for your effort. Thanks for your contribution to
the world. We love you guys, we appreciate you guys, we enjoy
serving you guys. And we’re so grateful that you listen to this
podcast. If you like this podcast and learn anything from it,
please go to iTunes and subscribe and share it with another
entrepreneur who could help. Thanks so much you guys. Talk to you
soon.
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