Did you know this may be holding you back from success in your business?
Going from million to 10 million was next. Getting to two, three, five, eight million was easy, but then 10 million was this gap where I was stuck. It's beliefs. What's easy? What's hard?
-- ClickFunnels: Everything you need to start market, sell, and deliver your products and services online (without having to hire or rely on a tech team!)
-- DotComSecrets: Get a free copy of the "Underground Playbook For Growing Your Company Online With Sales Funnels."
-- Expert Secrets: Get a free copy of the "Underground Playbook For Converting Your Online Visitors Into Lifelong Customers."
-- Traffic Secrets: Get a free copy of the "Underground Playbook For Filling Your Websites And Funnels With Your Dream Customers.
What's up everybody? This is Russell Brunson. Welcome back to
Marketing Secrets podcast. One of the questions I get asked a lot
about, and I don't spend a lot of time talking about it, is
actually money and mindset around money, and how that works, and
things that can help you to make more money, things that hold you
back from making money. They have nothing to do with your skill
set, it just has everything to do with the conversations, the
beliefs, the things inside of your mind. This interview with Josh
Forti, it was really fun and hopefully you enjoy it. Hopefully
it'll help you if you do have money blocks, to help you get
unstuck. If you don't think you have money blocks, you probably do.
And this hopefully, interview, will make you very aware of those
things, and help you to find those things and knock them out in
your life. That said, we'll keep the theme song, and when we come
back, listen in on this interview with me and Josh Forti.
What's up everybody? Welcome back The Marketing Secrets podcast.
I'm here today again with Josh Forti, and we're having so much fun
today. We just recorded one episode and now we're going deep into
episode number two, which we're going to be talking about mindset
as it relates to things that are very specific to you guys as
entrepreneurs. I'll Josh talk more about this as he's going to be
queuing up the question, but hope you guys enjoy this episode as
well.
Josh Forti:
All right, man. First off, we got to talk about your shirt. I
feel like there's got to be a story behind this. Guys, for those of
you that are listening on audio, let me just explain real quick. It
is a skull and crossbones, but it's not just a skull and
crossbones. It's got bunny ears on the skull. It's got little waves
off to the side. What does it say on the sleeve?
Russell:
It says, "Psycho bunny."
Josh:
Psycho bunny.
Russell:
This is actually a really cool brand called Psycho Bunny, and I
bought a couple of their things. I'm like, "This is a cool brand."
And then I was shopping with Bart Miller in Vegas, and they have a
Psycho Bunny shop. I went in there-
Josh:
Oh dang!
Russell:
And they had shirts and jackets and suit jackets that have the
Psycho Bunny inside. It's just a fun, cool brand, and I really like
it. Psycho Bunny.
Josh:
Okay. There's no grand, huge story behind how you got it. You
just liked it.
Russell:
I should buy the company because it'd be really cool. Anyway,
nope. Nothing.
Josh:
Guys, when you're a funnel hacker and when you decide to take
over the world and create empires, you can randomly decide on a
podcast that you're just going to ... "I should buy the company."
That's not a normal thing that most people get to say, but it's
super dope.
Russell:
This could be a fun episode in the future because as we acquired
two big companies last year and I'm learning about this and having
more fun with it, there are some cool ... For most of us, we look
at a company, like, "There's no way I could buy that company," but
then like Tai Lopez who just bought RadioShack and he bought Pier 1
Imports and all these companies…
Josh:
Dress Barn. Yeah.
Russell:
Now, I bought a couple companies and I'm like, oh, my gosh,
there's actually a really cool strategy where it doesn't
technically cost you any money if you do it correctly. We bought
Dan Kennedy's company for a steal. We've launched the first thing.
Now we made our money back. And now moving forward, everything I do
with Dan Kennedy's company is pure, unadulterated profit to the
bottom line. And that's exciting because ... All of a sudden it's
like, you can actually buy companies when you understand the core
principles of what we do. Anyway, that's a topic for another day,
but it's kind of a fun one.
Josh:
So much fun stuff. Topic for another day. We'll do many
episodes. Now is not the time. We're going to dive into what I
think goes really well with our last episode. Last episode we
talked about goal setting and setting things up, and that last bit
of it was around identity and beliefs and values and rules and
things like that. I want to talk about mindset here, and
specifically the mindset ... There's a couple core key areas,
because what's interesting is a lot of times we think mindset is we
have to train our minds to think a certain way, or we have to
overcome false beliefs about bad things. Like, "I'll never be
successful" or "I'll never be this." But it goes both ways, because
often times we can have fear of success. We can have fear that, oh,
my gosh, what happens if I actually achieve that goal? There's so
many different things around that, that we could dive into, but I
want to kick off with this one specifically around mindset around
money.
I do want to talk about not just money, failure, doing the
impossible, things like that, but I want to start with money
because I feel like money is one of these things that we all have
some form of weird relationship with it. Very few people grew up in
a home where their parents and everybody around them had a healthy
relationship with money, because most people ... I would say 90
plus percent of the people that I've met do not have a healthy
relationship with money. They don't understand it. They don't
understand what it represents, how it works, any of the things with
it. For you, I want you to take us back because one of things, and
I've kind of told you this at the beginning, a lot of people in the
ClickFunnels world, like Russell.
I was talking to Brad Gibb the other day. Shout out to Brad.
He's awesome. He's like, "Russell has come and he's taken these
handcuffs off of us, to where now we just can print money." It's
ridiculous. It's kind of a cheat code. When we talk about it to all
of our friends, we go around and we're like, "Yeah, we just kind of
make money on the Internet." They're like, "How do you do that?"
We're like, "We don't know. We just do what Russell says and it
just works."
Russell:
It’s a magic trick!
Josh:
It just shows up. It's amazing. We've kind of unshackled the
making of money, if we follow what it is, but keeping money. But
our thoughts around money, our beliefs around money, how we
perceive and value money, how we think money is going to change us.
All of these different other things around money, those things are
now new problems that a lot of us are running into, or have not yet
applied the things that you've told us to do because of those
beliefs. I think both of those are true. I've seen so many people
...
I made not a ton, ton of money, but certainly 10 times more
money than I'd ever made in my life when I first got started, and
blew it all because of my poor, very unhealthy, almost toxic
relationship with money. Take us back, what are the money shifts or
the beliefs around money, specifically in mindset, that you had to
go through. I'm just going to kind of leave that open ended and see
where you take it.
Russell:
The first thing I think that would be useful for everyone is for
everyone to actually, honestly sit down and look at their
relationship with money and understand it ... It's funny because if
you would ask Russell 15 years ago Russell if this was actually a
real thing, I'd be like, "No, this is stupid. Just make money. It's
easy." But I had a friend who I worked with, man, probably 12, 13
years ago on a project and he was someone who is super charismatic,
super dynamic, super talented person. When he was younger, he used
his talents and his gifts and he made a whole bunch of money
really, really fast. Crazy, crazy money. Money that doesn't make
any sense.
When he got that money, he started doing stupid things with it.
He got into drugs and alcohol and all the problems that are
associated with when you make too much money too fast as a kid, and
almost destroyed his life. He almost died. He almost lost his
family and his marriage. All these things happened.
He lost all the money, which was probably a blessing. And then
he refixed his life. And then he got back to the spot where he's
like, "I want to make money again." I watched him for probably 10
years of his life, where he would do all the right things, he would
get close to making a bunch of money and then he would literally
subconsciously destroy everything he had built, and it kept
happening. At first I was so confused by it. I'm like, "You were so
close. How do you keep messing this up? I don't understand it."
Then he told me a story. He didn't know this subconsciously but we
had a conversation one night where he told me a story. I was like,
"Oh, my gosh. Subconsciously, you are linking the destruction of
your family, your health and all these things to making money,
because that's what happened the very first time. Now every time
you get close to it, your whole subconscious mind is like, no, and
starts making you do stupid things to destroy yourself from
actually having success."
I've seen ... Now, it's been a decade of me watching this. And
as much as I love this person, I keep seeing him. He's so talented,
so many gifts, and keeps not having any success because of this
thing that happened in his youth. His is an extreme example, but
this is happening to all of us. You think about when you were
growing up, what are the things that your parents said about money?
What are the things that you heard at church about money? What are
the things you heard in different spots? There are so many things
that have been ingrained in our head that we don't even know
consciously. And also, we start having success in whatever. We
start making money or we start getting close to making money, and
all these warning signals are popping off in your head, like, don't
get money because of this because you'll become a bad person and
you're going to fall away from God. You're going to be doing this.
You're going to be the bad person.
You look at TV. Myron Golden is the first one that ever pointed
this out to me. You look at every movie, every superhero movie, for
the most part, the bad guy is the rich billionaire who is this
horrible person. This is ingrained in our heads that money is going
to make us evil. Those things are real, and even if you don't think
that they're affecting you, they probably are.
Josh:
And then you don't consciously believe it. Subconsciously they
control you.
Russell:
Yeah, it's affecting you. I've seen this in my own journey. When
I first started making money, I thought everyone was going to be
excited. I was like, "This is so cool." I was so excited to teach
everybody else. I started making money. I start teaching people and
try to show my friends and my family and what happened. The
response I got was not what I thought it was going to be. It was
not like, "This is amazing-"
Josh:
At all.
Russell:
"Let's try it." Instead it was weird, especially for my wife. My
wife struggled with it even more so than me because I've had
success in parts of my life in the past where ... In wrestling, I
was a state champ, I was an all-American. I hit these different
things, but there was this weird side of success you aren't
expecting where the people around you who you think are going to be
celebrating with you, they don't. In fact, I remember my mom when I
bought my dream house ... My house is ... You've been to my
house.
Josh:
Your house is insane. It's so awesome.
Russell:
It’s like the coolest thing in the world. When I was growing up,
I wanted an insane house. I remember I was finally at a spot where
I could buy this house. In the reality, I didn't pay it off
immediately. I could've just paid cash for it. I didn't. But within
two years I think I paid it off, which was a big deal for me. But I
remember when I was buying my house, I remember a comment my mom
said. She was like, "You don't want to buy a house like this
because then you're going to be one of those rich people up on the
hill." I was like, "What does that mean, mom?" She was like,
"They're the ones that are always looking down at everybody else."
I'm like, "What?" All of a sudden I was scared to tell my mom about
my success because my mom viewed the rich people as this thing over
here. And then other people. It was this weird thing where all of a
sudden it makes you want to shrink down, it makes you want to hide
because you're like, "I don't want people judging me because of
this thing."
For all of you guys, for all of us, there's these things that
may happen, where comments are made, when people we love and
respect were to all of a sudden to ... The side of success that you
think is going to happen doesn't. Especially in money. I think
money is a big one because it's such a thing.
Josh:
Yeah. I also think that because of the stories that we're told
by everybody else, like you're saying, subconsciously it's
ingrained in our society, what money is and how it works, nobody
understands it. Taylor Welch ... You know Taylor, right? Taylor
Welch?
Russell:
Yep.
Josh:
He's the one ... He and I have become ... I don't want to say
good friends, but certainly friends over the past little bit. He
was actually the very first person I ever interviewed on my
podcast.
Russell:
Very cool.
Josh:
He got me into money. He was like, "Study money. Because once
you understand how it works, it'll completely change your
perspective of it." I always joke around with my mom. I'm like,
"Money's not real. It's all fake." In America specifically, the
U.S. dollar is not real. It's all fake and it's all made up. She
always pushes back. She's like, "It's not fake because I can guy
groceries with it." I'm like, "That right there, that shows that I
have a different relationship ..." And side note, I freaking love
my mom. My mom and I have an amazing relationship. But my mom and I
have a completely different fundamental relationship with money.
That was a very interesting learning lesson for me. When you change
your relationship with money, when you change how it works, when
you understand it differently and when you change your relationship
with it, it also becomes not hard to get or keep, because now
you're not needy of it. Your relationship changes with it.
I always think about ... Take it back to dating. I'm not even
going to say the book because I don't want people to go ... It's
not a great book, but I was reading a clip out of this book one
time and the guy in it goes, "Money and ..." Let's say,
relationship. Money and girls are kind of the same thing. Those are
not the words he used, but money and girls are the same way. If
you're desperate and needy of it, you'll never have it. But if you
don't care, it'll come abundantly. That was a very interesting
shift for me as well. Anyway, I didn't mean to interrupt you but
that was very interesting.
Russell:
It's key. As I studied Tony Robbins, the biggest thing I learned
... One of the biggest things. I shouldn't say the biggest, but is
just becoming aware of things. I think the first step for of any us
is being aware of how this is actually affecting you. For a lot of
us, at whatever level you're at, the reason you're not at the next
level is because there's some belief around it that's keeping you
from there. It's interesting, I remember when I had the goal, when
I hit a million dollars in a year, I didn't hit it three years in a
row. Every year I was within $50,000. Like, $75,000. How am I not
hitting this? It was like, I had these weird beliefs around that
thing. As soon as I broke it, I was like, this is easy.
Going from million to 10 million was next. Getting to two,
three, five, eight million was easy, but then 10 million was this
gap where I was stuck. It's beliefs. What's easy? What's hard?
A couple things ... Again, this is one of those topics. I've
never taught this before so I don't have the, here's the Russell
three step framework. Things have happened in my life that I became
aware of this for myself. One of them was, I had a coach ... I've
had her a couple times throughout my life. She's awesome. One of my
favorite coaches of all time. Her name is Tara Williams. Tara ...
It was interesting because I always thought ... Again, especially
people who are religious, there's always this belief of is money
going to make me evil? You hear these things on the side. I
definitely had this subconscious fear around that. If I get too
much money, I'm going to forget God. I'm going to forget my family.
All these things couple happen. Because they do. They happen to so
many people. We see it. I had that fear behind it.
I remember, especially when I bought my house, I was like, I
bought this house and it's crazy. Anyway, Tara was at our house,
actually, doing a coaching session with my wife and I. It was an
interesting thing. But she said a couple things in that meeting
that had a big impact on me. One of the things was ... She asked my
wife this specifically. "Do you think this is bad that he bought
this house?" My wife is like, "Yeah." She has so much guilt
associated with it, because she's like ... It was interesting
because Tara brought back, "Because you guys have money, talk about
things you've done. Last year you gave a million dollars to OUR.
Last year you did this. Last year you did this. How many people
have you helped? How many entrepreneurs have you empowered? How
many jobs have you created?"
We started going through this whole thing, and it was like, all
these things you're doing has been creating wealth for you. You
have this wealth. You can just give it away and you guys do give a
lot away, but is it bad for you now to enjoy some of it, to buy a
house? Still she was like, "I don't know. Is it bad or not?" She's
like, "Now you have this house, what have you guys done with this
house?" I was like, "We have our kids here and we have our family
here. We bring people here. We're able to serve people at a
different level because we have these things." All of a sudden it
was like, oh, my gosh, this isn't a bad thing.
I remember hearing Richard Branson, somebody asked him ... Who
was it? It was another one of those moments for me that opened my
mind. But someone asked Branson, "Do you feel guilty that you're
not down at the soup kitchen helping feed these people?" Branson's
response was so powerful. He said, "The people of the soup kitchen
who are feeding people, that's amazing. We're so grateful for them.
They're giving their time and their effort. It's powerful. I'm not
going to go to the soup kitchen and feed people soup, but I can
give the soup kitchen $50,000, and that's going to feed 10,000
people. It's different service but it's still service, and this is
able to help even more people." I started thinking about that. Man,
these tools that we create, like wealth and the things that we have
can be so much more impactful if we use it correctly. It's not a
bad thing. It's just understanding these are tools that we have.
Anyway ...
Josh:
It's interesting you say that and phrase it that way because
that was one of the things, actually, Brad Gibb, he's a very good
friend of mine as well, and we talk a lot. And he's taught me
probably more about money as far as investing how it works and how
to use it and things like that, probably more than anybody else.
Very, very smart. One of the things that he said is money is not
all the same. He's like, "You can have a million dollars over here
and a million dollars over here and one of them be used for good
and to multiply and to be productive, and one of them be used just
to indulge and be gluttonous and to be greedy. Is money good or
bad? It's not good, it's not bad. It is. It is a tool for exchange.
How you go and use it will determine whether or not it's good or
bad for you in your own life."
When he put it that way, I was like, if I have my money and I'm
investing and I'm multiplying it and it's creating freedom and then
I'm using that to be able to go out and give back, all of a sudden
money is now good. It makes me be able to do my job better. But if
I'm just going and I make a million dollars and I go to Vegas and I
put 100 grand on black, cool. Maybe once in your lifetime. But that
is not a good thing anymore. Now it's taking away from your gift.
It can either be an amplifier or it can be something that takes
away. That was a really, really big shift for me. It was like, how
am I using it?
Russell:
It's powerful. Again, it just comes down to there's so many
subconscious things that are weird about it. Next thing I want to
talk about for entrepreneurs too ... And this is a trap with money
that I got caught into for almost 15 years. When I stared my
business, I remember I started making some money. I figured out
what my wife and I needed to live. I think at the time it was
$8,000 a month that was giving us the most amazing lifestyle ever.
We set it up where our paycheck was eight grand a month and that's
what was coming from the company. And everything else in the
company I kept reinvesting back into the company. For a while
that's important. That's where we're going to grow, where we're
going to expand it.
I look at my business for the next decade at least, maybe
longer, I never pulled anything else out. It only kept getting
reinvested, reinvested. And eventually ... Some of you guys heard
my story. 10, 12 years ago we had this big crash where everything
got shut down and we lost everything. And the thing that sucked is
when it all was said and done, I had nothing. We never pulled money
out. We never invested. We never did anything. It was all being
reinvested back into the business. I got my guarantee, we had our
certainty, eight grand a month coming in consistently every single
time, but then nothing happened.
I remember when we launched after that happened and everything
crashed and we were rebuilding back up, during that time we had no
money so everything is being reinvested back into the business
because we had no business at that point. We started figuring this
out. That's where I met Todd. We launched Click Funnels. When we
launched Click Funnels, I instantly went back to my same pattern.
Like, cool, all the money goes back into Click Funnels. That's how
we're going to do this thing.
Todd was like, "Dude, just so you understand, I did not build
this thing to just have a good paycheck and let this thing keep
growing. This is not worth it for me unless we pull money out." I
remember I was like ... I had so much fear and I was like, "No. We
can't do this." This is one of Todd and I's first and probably only
real things where he was just like, "It's not worth it to me unless
this is producing money that's being put over here for my family,
for my church, for my faith, all the things I want to be
doing."
Again, we fought back and forth for a couple of months. The very
first time we had some profit. I was like, "What do I do with this
profit? Put it back in the business." Todd was like, "No, we need
to pull it out of the business," and we fought back and forth.
Finally, we figured out a way to make us both happy where we
figured ... At the time, we need three months of money in reserve.
Worst case scenario, that's there. But then after that's over, all
of the money, 100% of the money needs to be pulled out and given to
the owners. Otherwise we're going to be like you were, Russell, 15
years in and you've got nothing to show for it. All the stress, all
the effort, all the energy, and nothing to show for it. That's how
we set things up.
I remember it was so scary for me. In fact, when we started
pulling out and distributing out the profits every single month, I
kept mine in there for two years. I didn't touch a penny of it
because I'm like ... It's in my separate account. It's over
there.
What was crazy, though, is that all of a sudden this thing that
I was doing started actually producing wealth for me, which took
the stress down. I started seeing this thing happening, and all of
a sudden it started giving me options where I had no options ahead
of time.
I think for a lot of entrepreneurs it's like, we have this thing
... It's funny because I see even big people like Gary Vee talk
about this, like, "I don't care about money. I dump all my money
back in. I'm just building this brand." I'm like, I thought that
was the thing for a while too, but it's not. If the business is not
producing wealth for the owners, what's the point of it? Eventually
you got a job and that's it. It needs to be doing something or else
it's not serving you, and therefore, it's not a gift.
Josh:
Was that the thing, though, helping you overcome that? Was it
just doing it? Is that what helped you overcome it?
Russell:
Yeah, Todd forced me. If it wasn't for Todd, I would still be
pulling out eight grand a month and that would be where I would be
living. 100%. Todd forced me to do it and it stressed me out. I was
so scared. For two years I didn't touch the money and all of a
sudden it was like, oh, my gosh, there's this money here. Now I
have the ability to ... This thing I had created, this value I was
trying to put into the world was paying us back, and now we could
... Now we had all sorts of options.
Especially when you're really pushing and you're working hard
and you're grinding on something, if aren't seeing some tangible
value back from it, it's not serving you. It's just taking from
you. Again, this was my personal money, one of my personal issues I
struggled with. This may or may not be that, but I would say for
all of you guys, looking at this as you are creating a business and
creating wealth, you need to be pulling things out. What you do
with it is up to you. Like you talked about, use it for good, evil.
You can give it to charity. You can do whatever. But if the
business is just paying for itself, the business will continue to
eat up all your money. It will. You leave money it, it's going to
continue to eat it up and it'll disappear as fast as it can
possibly happen. But if you start pulling it out and it's over here
and it's different, man, it becomes more efficient. It becomes more
effective. Everything becomes better because of that.
Josh:
It's funny, because my thing ... I had that same struggle except
I wasn't even paying myself. I was literally just, what are my
bills for the month, the bare minimum, and then that was it. And
then I met my now wife and I started thinking about finances and
she wanted stuff. I was like, but also the business. It was kind of
like this thing. Katie came along and was like, "Josh ..." The very
first ... She didn't give me a lot of tactical things. It was very
mindset-focused. I remember one of the biggest tactical things that
she gave me out of the very few that she did, she was like, "You
need to pay yourself a paycheck, and that paycheck needs to not
only be enough to cover all of your expenses, but it needs to in
excess."
When I started to put away multiple thousand dollars a month
into savings or into being able to invest outside of the company,
it changed my whole entire perspective. Weirdly enough, magically,
the business made more money. It was like, made it every month. It
was like, we're entrepreneurs. We figure out problems. Our brain
programs for it. And then I started looking at it as myself as an
expense. I was like, I'm a line item on the books. Just like I pay
a contractor, that's me. All of a sudden, the business made enough
money to cover that. But before that, it didn't. It was crazy.
Russell:
It's interesting because when you start seeing the results ...
I've talked about this before. If you look at my Disc profile,
there's the D-I-S-C, and then there's your values. My number one
value is ROI. If I can't see the ROI of a situation, it makes it
harder for me to do it. I was in business for a decade and a half
and the ROI I was getting was good. I was like, "I'm helping people
and having success, and it's fun to see the success stories." That
was the ROI I was getting, and it was good. It kept me going. But
man, I look at the last seven years of Click Funnel, it was like
the pressure and the stress and all of the type of things. If it
wasn't for the ROI, it took this pressure, but here's the ROI of
it, I wouldn't have been able to do it. As soon as I started seeing
the ROI and the ROI gets bigger and bigger and bigger, all of a
sudden it's like, this becomes fun again and you get excited. How
do I make the ROI ...
For me, it's all about the ROI, the return on investment, any
situation is the key. If you don't have the ROI, it gets hard. It's
hard to be creative. It's hard to come up with the next idea, the
next thing, and the stress and the pressure that comes. What's the
return on investment for the effort you're putting into it? But if
you see the ROI and you start amplifying it, then it becomes a more
fun game. That's where you start growing from a million to a 10 to
100 and beyond because it's like, I see this game. I'm playing it.
I'm getting the return on investment. But I never saw that before
because the only return on investment I was getting was this one
thing, and those things they feel good, but it's hard to keep score
with the feel goods. You got to have a scoreboard to see, like, oh,
my gosh, I'm winning. Can I win even more? What's it going to look
like? And now it gives you options and opportunities…
Josh:
You mean you're telling me that all the stress and pressure
isn't worth $8,000 a month?
Russell:
You know, I could get ... I was like ... Nowadays with all of
the inflation, I can work at McDonald's for eight grand a month, I
think. It's crazy.
Josh:
Man.
Russell:
But back then-
Josh:
That's crazy.
Russell:
That was the ... Anyway, it's crazy.
Josh:
You can buy Bitcoin and keep up with inflation. Bitcoin, the
savior of money.
One more. I kind of want to dive ... I wasn't going to make this
a money episode, because that's kind of where it's been. When did
you make the shift ... One of the big problems with entrepreneurs,
talking maybe a little bit more established entrepreneur, is once
they're making money ... I was talking with Brad about this and he
was talking about in the inner circle. He was in there ... Or in
Category Kings, right? The guy's like, "What's the main problem
that you solve?" Brad was like, "So interesting. We thought we
could answer that question." Then he asked us it and we try to do
it, and it was like, dang, what is the main problem that we solve?
What he said is one of the things that they came down to was
entrepreneurs know that if they have money, it should be doing
more. But they don't know what to do with it.
This is something that you probably are an amplified example of
this, because you're really, really good at making money. You don't
even need to think about what your money should be doing because
you can just go make more of it. Once again, that because you've
unshackled us. It's like, "All right, want a new car? Go build a
funnel. You want a palace? Go build a funnel. Want to take a
vacation? Launch a funnel. Just do a funnel and you print money."
For you, when did that shift happen for you when you actually
started paying attention to, I can't just leave my money in an
account right now? I can't just buy cars and houses because those
don't make me ... You have houses, you've got the cars, you've got
everything you've ever wanted and you still have money left over,
so when did you make that shift of, my money needs to be doing
more, and how did you solve that problem?
Russell:
Interesting. This is one that's been more recently solved for
me, actually, which is fascinating. For a long I was just hoarding
it. Just hoarding it, keeping it here. Then Brad and Ryan ... You
have to invest it. I'm like, "I don't want to do that." They forced
me to do ... I give them a bunch of money every year and they do
whatever they do with it, and that's awesome. I'm like, "Okay,
cool. Something is happening." But then the money kept adding
up.
I remember one day I was like, "I'm in a weird spot where I
could buy almost anything I want. What do I want? I'm going to go
and spend some money." I remember going to eBay and I was like,
"I'm going to buy anything I want." I was searching for stuff, and
I spent four hours on eBay when all of a sudden I spent three
grand. I was like, "That's it. I got everything I wanted." I was
like, "Oh, crap, now what do I do with it?" It was interesting,
because for me, it was like ... Again, this is something ... It's
been a recent development. I can't remember if it was this podcast
or the one I talked about it, I was like, I didn't know what to do
with this. Yeah, I could invest in real estate, but that wasn't
inspiring to me. I have money in crypto, but that's not inspiring.
What's the things that's going to inspire me to want to do more?
Again, it's ROI for me. What's going to give me the ROI of now I
got to create more money so I can do this thing?
So I have a lot of things. Again, we give money to charity. All
those things are good and they get me excited. But I was like, what
would be the thing that, for me, would amplify? When we bought Dan
Kennedy's company, it was the first time I felt it. I bought his
thing. We reorganized it, cleaned it up, and I was like, "Oh, my
gosh, I'm able to take these things that were so precious to me and
I can bring them back to the world, and I can monetize them. I can
actually make money off of this thing." I got really excited.
I told you I started buying old books. I started investing in
Napoleon Hill books and Charles Haanel and Orison Swett Marden and
Samuel Smiles and all these people, the founding fathers of
personal development and business and all these kinds of things.
I've literally spent a small fortune ... I've spent a lot of money
in the last couple months on these old, old books, because now it's
like, I'm not investing in real estate that's over here. I'm
investing in these things I don't care about. Now it's like I'm
investing in something that I can take and that I can turn this
into more money, and I can turn it into help. I can serve my
entrepreneurs. I can do more things with it.
For me, that's what's been stimulating for me. That was the
investment of ... It was like, I can dump it back into things, but
it was like something that's meaningful to me. For some people,
crypto is meaningful. For some people it's NFT. Finding the thing
that's not just like, I'm investing to invest, but what's the thing
that you're passionate about it where it becomes more than just ...
For me, that's what I'm geeking out on. You know this, next door
I'm building a 20,000 square foot library to house all these books,
to build an event center, to build all these kind of things because
this is what I feel like my life's mission is. I'm curating all
these ideas and I'm bringing them back to people in the simple new
form to help these ideas and these concepts live on. For me, that's
double fulfilling because it'll make me money, but it's also
something that can serve the people I've been called to serve as
well. Again, buying Kennedy's company, I'm serving these people,
but I'm also making money, which gives me the ability to serve more
people. It's kind of fun.
Josh:
What was the shift, though? For a while you didn't do that,
right?
Russell:
For a while I just sat there. I didn't know what it was.
Josh:
Who or what got you to the point where you're like, "Okay, I've
got to go figure this out"? Yes, this is what you ended up doing
with it, but I think a lot of people, there's got to be that thing
that's like, "This is when I realized I got to figure out ..." Or
some people just let it sit their whole life, I guess. You know
what I'm saying?
Russell:
I heard stories about ... I don't know how true ... But like
Scottie Pippen or Mike Tyson, he made half a billion dollars and
he's broke. I was like, I don't want to be that dude who made a
half a billion dollars and is broke right now. I need to figure out
... I always joke with Brad and Ryan when we were writing their
webinar page initially, I was like ... On 30 Rock, there's that
scene where Liz Lemon is talking to Alec Baldwin and he's like, "I
need that thing that rich people do where they turn money into more
money." He's like, "Investing?" He's like, "Yeah. I want to do
that." For me, it was like, I've got money here. I need to figure
out how to turn money into more money, that's not just me doing the
whole thing. How do we amplify what we’re doing? How do we have
that exponential growth? That was kind of the thing that got me
into it.
Again, initially it was doing the things that weren't exciting.
I'd invested money in real estate and I hated that, so I had Brad
and Ryan, I invested money with them. That was cool. It was
passive. It wasn't passionate. I was trying to figure out what's
the thing that I'm going to be passionate about, where now it
becomes part of a game. Now I can see the ROI on this thing. I
invested $40,000 this weekend on old books, how do I turn that into
$400,000 or four million or 40 million? Can I do that? Now begins
... Now it's fun. Some people, real estate is that game. I got
friends who own 100 houses, or 200 houses, and that's the game that
they love.
I look at Tai Lopez and he's buying these businesses. That's the
game that he loves. What's the game you're going to love, the
investing game you're going to love? There's a million ways to
invest, but when you find one that you love, then it becomes ...
Now it becomes a fun part of the game. I think it's understanding
first off you need to do it, otherwise you're going to ... You
mentioned this ... I can't remember if it was before we started
recording, but people who have won Two Comma Club and they got
nothing, or Two Comma Club X and they're broke. Entrepreneurs are
good at generating money, but there's this other part that you got
to learn how to invest it correctly. Otherwise, you're going to
pull a Tyson or a Pippen and be broke in a couple of years from
now.
Yeah, I got 3 Two Comma Club awards on the wall, but I'm trying
to figure out how to feed my family this weekend, and that’s now
where you want to be…
Josh:
That's so crazy that's a reality for people. It really, really
is. I think that's one of the things that I am very, very thankful
to have learned relatively early on, is ...
Russell:
They're two different skill sets. Making money-
Josh:
They are.
Russell:
And keeping money are not the same thing.
Josh:
Yeah.
Russell:
They are completely different skill sets. In fact, typically,
the people who are good at making money are the worst at managing
it.
Josh:
Keeping it.
Russell:
It's like yin and yang. Understanding that if you're good at
making it, you find people around you, like Brad and Ryan, I was
like, "Here's money. Do that thing you do because I don't want to
mess it up."
Josh:
Yeah.
Russell:
In fact, it's funny, before I invested money with Brad and Ryan,
I invested it in two different deals. I was like, "This is the
greatest thing in the world." Both of them, literally both of them
turned out to Ponzi schemes. I got to write off multiple of
millions of dollars last year because I gave money to ideas that
were so good that me as the entrepreneur was like, "This is genius.
This is the greatest thing in the world." Ponzi scheme. I got sold
on the thing. It's funny, one of my friends just sold his business
for eight figures and he messages me. He was like, "All right. I
want to ask your opinion. Where should I put this money?" I was
like, "Dude, do not ask me. If I think it's a good idea, it's going
to be a Ponzi scheme. Find someone who, that's their life, is that,
like Brad and Ryan. Go give your money to them," or find something
like I'm doing now with the books and stuff, where it's like now.
This is something that fits into my skill set.
I think it was ... What's the old dude who invests all the
money? Warren Buffett, that said only invest in things you
understand. It's like, I understand how to turn old information
into money. I'm investing in information and intellectual property
because I can turn that into more money, and so that becomes
something I can invest in, because I understand the game. I don't
understand-
Josh:
So interesting.
Russell:
This, but I do understand this, therefore, I will invest in the
thing I understand because I can turn this into more money.
Josh:
That makes sense. Side note on Warren Buffett, you know 80% of
his wealth or something like that came off of nine trades?
Russell:
Really?
Josh:
Nine investments that he made, it produced 80% of his wealth or
something like that. Isn't that insane?
Russell:
That is fascinating.
Josh:
That's why when ... I read the quote from him, it was in the
context of this quote. It was like, Warren Buffett is like,
everyone thinks they have to make a bunch of good decisions. He was
like, "I try to make three good decisions a year." I was like, "Oh,
my gosh. What the heck?" And then I found out that 80% of his
wealth came from ... It was eight or nine trades or something, or
investments, and I was like, "All right. I guess that makes sense,
then, if you only need to make ..." Anyway, last question, rapid
fire question on money. Is there anything that you could do, if you
could go back and change something about what you've done or your
handling with money, is there anything that you would change, and
if so, what's the biggest thing that would be?
Russell:
Good question. I think I would've started ... Number one, I
would've started pulling money out of my business faster. Number
two, I would've had a plan for what I would do with that money. I
wish I would've said, "I'm going to pull out ... After three months
of thing, pull out all the profit, I'm going to put 25% in real
estate, 25% in crypto, 25% in something else, and just have that
happening in the background, I'd be a much wealthier man today." It
took me a long, long time before I did that. Todd forced me to
start putting money into crypto, which was one of the greatest
gifts ever for me. Brad and Ryan are now forcing me to put money
over here. It's like taking that and putting it in spots where
again, it's not going to be 100%. I'm going to fall for two Ponzi
schemes a year probably, but if I can get one of them to win and
three of them to fail, or whatever that is, that's the big
thing.
I always thought that I will start pulling money out when blah.
When I hit Two Comma Club, when I hit a million. The problem is
that win never comes. You got to structure from day number one.
When money comes in, boom. Profits come out. This happens here. I
pay myself first. From the money I pay myself, 10% is going to go
for me to go do stupid things, 25% is going to go into real estate
or Bitcoin or stocks or whatever. And dividing that stuff up so
it's happening at a small level, because when that happens, I
wasted a decade and a half before any kind of investments
happening. Can you imagine if I had 15 years of the stuff I was
doing, turning into something? I missed out on so much of that,
that I wish I would've done.
Josh:
You just got to make sure that you have a small percentage
there, which is dedicated to losing bets and Bitcoin to Josh. If
you have that, then we're good. For the rest of your life, you're
going to be losing bets, so that's how that's going to work. Guys,
I hope you enjoyed this episode with money. I'll let you sign it
off, but this was awesome. We get to hear Russell Brunson talk
about money, which is something that, you make a ton of it, but you
don't really talk about it, which is awesome. Thanks for sharing a
little bit more.
Russell:
Thank you. I apologize I don't have a framework for this yet,
but this gets me thinking, man, if I could figure out something for
entrepreneurs, this is the next thing to do, so then I'll talk more
about it as I figure things out. But it's fascinating. I remember I
bought a Dan Kennedy course on wealth creation, and it was
fascinating because I'd heard Dan talk about building businesses
and all that sort of stuff, but it was the first time he ever
talked about wealth. Again, same thing. Fascinating. I'm like, oh,
my gosh. I never thought about that side of the coin because most
entrepreneurs don't talk about it, or don't think about it. I think
it's important for us to think and talk and do more with it because
again, 15 years of never investing anything, man, it would've been
nice. I'd be in a different spot right now than I am today, for
sure. Thank you, Josh, for hanging out and talking about money.
Hopefully you guys enjoyed this episode. If you did, let us know
if you want more about money and wealth and these kind of things.
Let us know and we'll go deeper on topics. Just take a screen shot
of this on your phone, post it, and tag me and write your #1
question you want to hear, and maybe we'll talk about it on the
next podcast. Thanks again. Thank you, Josh, and I will see you
guys soon.
Comments