BIG BADASSES IN BUSINESS
In this episode, host Ryan Alford brings together an all-star lineup of influential guests from diverse industries — including creative marketer Kyle Creek, legendary UFC announcer Bruce Buffer, Crumbl Cookies co-founder Sawyer Hemsley, former NFL star Shawne Merriman, and fitness entrepreneur Howard Panes. Each guest opens up with personal stories, hard-earned lessons, and actionable insights on entrepreneurship, branding, creativity, and resilience.
Listeners will hear about bold marketing strategies that break the mold, the behind-the-scenes journey of building iconic brands, the mindset shifts required to overcome setbacks, and the power of staying true to your authentic self. Whether it’s scaling a cookie empire, commanding the energy of a sold-out arena, redefining personal branding, or turning passion into profit, this episode delivers a fast-paced, inspiring look at what it really takes to thrive in today’s competitive world.
TAKEAWAYS
Insights on entrepreneurship and business success from various industry leaders.
The role of creativity and innovation in marketing and branding.
Personal stories of overcoming challenges and building unique identities.
The importance of authenticity and pushing boundaries in professional endeavors.
Strategies for effective product development and customer engagement.
The significance of community and word-of-mouth in scaling a business.
Lessons learned from transitioning careers, particularly from sports to entrepreneurship.
The impact of disciplined work ethic and structured routines on achieving goals.
Emphasis on health, originality, hard work, innovation, and maintaining energy as keys to success.
Encouragement for listeners to embrace boldness and pursue their passions relentlessly.
Listen and follow along
Transcript
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This folder called Good Fucking Ideas.
If you don't like what I'm about to present to you, I'm going to put it in this folder and I'm going to sell it to one of your competitors next year.
The whole game is being in the right circles and being around the right people.
Buff life with capital B, which means be.
Be.
Be who you are.
Be the best you can be.
Being young in the industry and being a leader there, that's a hardship.
Consistency is key.
My whole life is structured.
And so what do you need out here to be successful?
Two things, discipline and structure.
To be successful or to find success or to find happiness, the most important thing is to find what you're passionate about.
This is right about now with Ryan Alford, a Radcast Network Production.
We are the number one business show on the planet with over 1 million downloads a month.
Taking the BS out of business for over six years in over 400 episodes.
You ready to start snapping next and cashing checks?
Well, it starts right about now.
Right about.
Hey guys, Ryan Alford here, host of the Radcast.
Oh, man, it's time.
That's right.
For some of the biggest badasses in business.
We've brought together some of the best of, some of the best guests we've had the last couple years, giving some of the best business advice.
to be a fucking badass.
That's right.
We've got Kyle Creek, the captain.
We've got the voice of the Octagon, Bruce Buffer.
We've got so many big names.
I can't even keep up.
Howie P,
the legend himself.
We got so much advice.
Made my head explode.
It's all together in one episode for you, for me to go back and listen to.
We got so many great guests.
It's hard to keep up.
But this is going to keep you up with being a badass in business.
You know where to find us, theradcast.com.
Listen, enjoy.
Let's all.
strive to be a badass.
The marketing impressed me with you guys.
I actually admired you from afar.
So I was like, okay, this is a company that knows what they're doing.
So talk to me about the brand.
As much as I enjoy advertising, there's still nothing that I enjoy more than being able to write in a way that truly connects with people.
For two and a half years, we built up our own fan base the old school way and got it to a point to where it was big enough, but we couldn't get any bigger unless we brought in the right partners.
It's time
is such a strong, somewhat generic statement that I own, you know, in respect to where I own in trademark-wise, that I don't want to abuse it.
I want to build it.
So it's careful marketing, careful, consistent marketing.
The thing that we found most successful is what flavors are relatable to our consumers.
So you think back to your childhood, you know, did you grow up eating cinnamon rolls or cosmic brownies or you know, did you love the icy flavors from the gas station?
What can you pull a story from and put into a cookie?
I look back on everything that I did when I was a kid, or even, you know, having a nickname like Lights Out at 16 years old and getting a tattoo on your right, my right forearm.
It was branding.
It was marketing.
I think that we just use the word for it now.
So, you know, though I had mentors and things, I was doing this long before anybody came in the picture.
I'm a very curious individual and I read everything.
And I want to know how they did it, why they did it, what was their mindset, what were their failures.
So, yes, this has been, this has been baked in me for a long time.
We're talking social media.
We're talking to Kyle Creek, the captain.
What's up, man?
Thanks for having me, man.
I'm excited to be here.
Your best work, which has made you Insta famous, Twitter famous, whatever you want to call it, but it's obviously helped your career, helped your social media.
The campaigns the clients turn down are the ones that blow up on social media.
Any client out there listening, I know some of you are past, present executives.
Yeah, you got to push the envelope if you want to move the needle.
It's true.
So I actually have a folder on my desktop to this day, and this folder is save, and it's called Good Fucking Ideas.
I probably, I haven't looked lately, but I've been saving ideas there since maybe 2015.
And every new laptop I get, I transfer the folder over.
And so there's maybe a thousand.
pieces of copy or scripts or different campaign ideas in there.
And I used to pitch clients often when I was doing a lot of new business.
And I would pull up my desktop as the pitch started and I'd point to that folder and I'd say, see this folder called Good Fucking Ideas.
If you don't like what I'm about to present to you, I'm going to put it in this folder and I'm going to sell it to one of your competitors next year.
I started leading my pitches that way and it helped me get a lot of ideas across because they realized I would do that.
And I still, every now and then when I'm consulting, I go back and I find stuff that I wrote in 2016.
that I can update and it's still a very solid campaign.
It would work correctly.
And so it's a folder I've had exactly for the reason you're saying.
Whenever I tried to push the envelope for a client and they didn't want to, I just believed in it enough to know that someday it would, it would work.
And I've just been saving them and collecting.
It's cool to win ad awards and it's cool to get stuff like that, but there's nothing that will make me feel more fulfilled as a writer than hearing that I pulled someone out of a dark spot or I helped them laugh when there was nothing else in their life to laugh about.
Where does your point of view come from?
Like, you know, the captain, you know, that instigates, that writes this way, has a certain style that came from somewhere.
It's all his own, which is, I'm sure you're an original, and you are.
Something built your perception, your take on the world, your way of thinking.
I would think there's been molding along the way.
I think the way I was raised helped shape a lot of my view of the world because I was raised in Utah.
I was raised in LDS.
I was a Mormon.
And growing up, I felt very suppressed and I felt very censored.
And I felt like I had a very constricted view of the world because everything was viewed through this lens of the religion.
And if I was going through something as a teenager that all teenagers go through and I wanted advice from my parents or advice from, you know, one of my leaders, I would always receive the answer in the form of, you should go look this up in the scriptures or you should pray about it and it drove me crazy because what i wanted at that time was to have a human talk to me as another human it made me feel very misunderstood and it made me feel alone so for many years my primary fuel in life was trying to prove to my family i didn't need their religion to be successful i didn't need their religion to be happy And so that would probably be where some of my harshness came from because it came from a rebellious energy.
The other side of that I wanted other people to not feel alone because I had felt that way for so long.
And I wanted people to feel understood.
I wanted people to feel like there was others out there like them.
And so that's where I'd say that mold of the two came together to where I had that rebellious energy, but also I wanted to genuinely help people not feel the way I did and see it as an example to other people that listen, you can speak up and you can receive criticism and your life can go on.
Darren Johnston, what's up, brother?
Hey, man.
Thanks for having me on here, dude.
Hey, man.
My pleasure.
Holy shit, this guy's written like 12 songs that I sing in the shower that I didn't even know were his original writings.
You're a badass, man.
I love it.
Let's give everybody a little bit.
I know we could talk for probably two hours about your story, but you know, maybe give us a little bit of that background and your history and what makes you such a damn good country music writer.
Man, I grew up in Nashville.
I was born and raised, which is kind of, that's not the normal situation.
You know, they, I think they kind of call us unicorns, the people that are actually born in Nashville rather than moving to Nashville.
And I came up, you know, went to school downtown at Heem Fogg.
My dad was always a drummer, Grand O'Opra.
He was a drummer for a bunch of older country artists in the 80s and early 90s.
And then he started pitching songs, which means, you know, like finding songs from writers and taking them to John Michael Montgomery or whoever and trying to get them recorded.
And so I saw that at a very early age and remember seeing how excited dad would get when he got a whole quote unquote a hold, which means the artist or the manager liked it for whoever.
And I was just like kind of mesmerized by that whole thing, like the equation of sitting down, writing a song by yourself or with friends.
And then two weeks later, it's, you know, a recording by Garth Brooks or whoever, you know what I mean?
So I kind of started touring when I was 18, playing drums for a bunch of bands.
And then I started writing songs, man, and real serious about it about 2005.
Got my first publishing deal.
And from then on, it's just kind of been a crazy, you know, country western ride.
How do you classify your writing style?
I mean, do you think you have a certain style?
I think the reason I've had the success that I've had, or at least part of it, part of the whole game is being in the right circles and being around the right people.
And like I said, it's also like who you surround yourself with, the people that you're writing with, and the people that work your songs that are working for your publishers and stuff.
But yeah, I just try to go into every room with something a little different and try to do things a way that aren't expected.
The business of country music.
You know, you've been in it for a while.
I mean, 05, like you said, maybe getting your feet really into it with the songwriting.
I mean, you've seen a lot of change, right?
It can be pretty brutal.
An example, I started in 2005.
That's when I got my first publishing deal, making 30 grand a year.
Had to turn in 10 songs a year, which is 100 songs meaning like if it's a two-way it counts as half of one you know what i mean or if it's three-way by so on and so forth and that and it was a co-pub deal which means i own half they own half so that's a pretty good deal coming into the game and my publisher was a really nice guy to help me out so late 2010 where i had my first number one that's five years you know like and there would be a couple songs that got recorded in in between there but you're not really seeing money from that unless it's on the radio so um you're living off that publishing, you know, the 30 grand a year, and you're trying to keep that deal every year too, which is if you're not getting a bunch of stuff going on, it's tough.
Now, I had the luck and the blessing of being also like what they call triple threat.
So I was writing for other people.
I had my own band with a record Dylan Warner Brothers at the time called American Bang.
I also was producing a little bit of stuff.
So there's many irons on the fire there as far as business speaking.
And I try to look at it still that way.
I mean, there's a lot of busy cats in Nashville, but I would say right now with the Cadillac 3, all the touring, the production work, I'm producing Kip Moore's new record.
I'm doing, just did Sam Williams record and a bunch of stuff like that.
And then also the writing every day, it gets pretty, it's pretty crazy.
But if one thing's not doing as well,
you got something to follow on the other side.
Most of the COVID hit we couldn't tour.
Bruce Buffer.
What's up, Bruce?
Hi.
How are you?
Everything good?
Everything's great, man.
And I love the t-shirt.
Where did it time come from?
Listen, I want to know where that came from.
When I started in the UFC announcing and I've been managing my brother, Michael Buffer, you know, the legendary greatest announcer of all time, let's get ready to rumble.
We met late in life.
When we did, I owned two companies.
I had my first company when I was 19.
I've been an entrepreneur ever since.
I've owned a variety of companies, a couple failures here and there, but most all successes, you know, I'm proud to say.
When I met him, knowing that he was the announcer he was and everything else, we eventually, I sold two companies and became his manager, managing his career and everything.
I wanted to announce back then we agreed I wouldn't do boxing and I said something will come along and boom, this is a very short version.
And boom, the UFC came along and I worked my way into the UFC, but I never wanted to be Frank Sinatra Jr.
I never wanted to be, no respect to Frank Sinatra Jr., but I wanted to create my own style.
I wanted to grow with the UFC to help market the brand, being the marketing and branding person they am first and foremost before I do anything else.
And I told him, I said, I need to grow with you as the announcer.
But I didn't think I needed a catchphrase.
I'm not catchphrase driven.
I was more like, it's not what I say, it's how I say it.
So it wasn't until about seven years later that this time came about.
Everybody always was going, let's get ready, let's do this.
They all wanted to be Michael.
I just didn't want to come across like that.
I told myself if in three years I could build my own identity, my own style, I would continue.
If not, I would quit because I just didn't want to be that way.
So every day I wake up, and I was kidding before, but I'm serious.
I look in the mirror and go, it's time.
It's time to have the best day that I can possibly have.
So I used to open the show saying, it's time to begin the ultimate fighting championship.
And then Dana White and the Fertidas bought the show.
Dana I met, he said, I don't want you doing that at the front anymore, top of the show.
And I said, fine.
But then I got down to the main event and I realized, hey, everybody's sitting here for five hours
watching the show.
The main event's about to start.
The fighters have been training six to eight weeks with its biggest moment in their lives.
This is definitely its time.
This is its time.
This is when it's going to happen.
And I started incorporating it in.
And gradually over time, it developed to the style that I do it now, whether I'm jumping or doing whatever.
I never know physically what I'm going to do until I do it because I'd never rehearse.
Never.
I feel the energy of the crowd and I just let it fly.
But when I was in Brazil and 20,000 Portuguese-speaking people said, it's time with me,
I knew right then it hit.
And that's when I started building it up.
And then eventually, over the last 15-plus years since then, you know, I've developed into products, you know, and many things happening worldwide.
And now as time has taken on a very individual branding of itself,
I plan on reaching a billion dollars in sales with its time, whether it's sales of other, not in my pocket, you know, sales of other companies, everything, as I achieved over a half half billion dollars in sales with Let's Get Ready to Rumble.
But I love my brother, but I'm a competitor, and I'm going to come in first.
The UFC has had this meteoric rise in the last 10 plus years, but like, did you see that coming?
I knew from the very first day I got involved, it was going to be the biggest thing in fighting sports.
You know, when you're in business, you need to be able to hopefully recognize the brand, recognize the future.
I always think three steps ahead in life, like chess, I'd apply that to every aspect of business and any business I've owned or been involved in.
Because to me, all business is the same.
It's just the product that's different, but you got to recognize what has the chance to be the big hit.
I knew that was going to be with Let's Get Ready to Rumble.
I got contacted by another company called Party Poker back when poker was not even as popular as today, who wanted me to be part of it.
One of the things I regret, I didn't grab that opportunity back then because I realized online poker was going to explode.
And I'm a big part of poker myself in my private life.
But when the UFC came on, yes, it was raw.
It was a spectacle.
It needed refinement.
But I decided to stick with it, make the short money back then that I made, lose money going on trips, everything I could do, realizing that if I stuck with this, because consistency is a key in business, that I knew it would all pay off.
And I have a simple theory, and that's whenever I do business of any kind, I have a three-foot theory, everybody around me be happy, healthy, and prosperous.
You know, my goal is to help everybody around me get there because then it all comes back to me.
What you're talking about is what life is all about, these experiences.
And I always tell people when I do my branding and marketing, you know, motivational speeches or whatever, one key thing in business is find out what you're passionate about.
And if you can learn how to monetize it, you're not really working.
You're living a lifestyle.
And that's, and my, I call my life by design.
It's just like.
My new company, Millions.co, where we're branding athletes and everything.
This is my Millions.co t-shirt.
It's Buff Life with capital B, which means B.
It's real simple.
B.
Be who you are.
Be the best you can be.
As someone that doesn't even eat sweets really that often, if there's a damn cookie on the table, and especially this kind of cookie, I'm getting it.
It's Sawyer Hemsley, co-founder of Crumble Cookies.
What's up, brother?
What's up, man?
Happy to be here.
Thanks for the invite.
Hey, man.
No, it's all good.
I'm glad you could join us, man.
I want to get into your story and, you know, all the ice right here.
No, no setup, no anything.
Why do those cookies taste so damn good?
A bunch of love we put in there and lots of sugar.
No, I'm just kidding.
Honestly, we go through a rigorous process to make these cookies awesome and we get a lot of customer feedback and we don't put them on the menu until they're perfect.
So Sawyer, talk to me.
I know you weren't, we talked pre-episode.
I read a lot about your story.
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This is Larry Flick, owner of the Floor Store.
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Don't let the sun set on this one.
Go to floorstores.com to find the nearest of our 10 showrooms from Santa Rosa to San Jose.
The Floor Store, your area flooring authority.
Not originally a chef, a cookie master, or whatever, but let's talk about a little bit of that professional journey and what led you to Crumble.
Yeah.
So honestly, Crumble started out as a side hustle.
Never anticipated it ever being a career.
I was in my last year at college up at Utah State University in Logan, Utah.
Very rural community compared to the rest of the nation.
And
just needed something to do on the side.
You know, I was studying 15 credits.
busy college student and I was researching things that I could do and I saw that there were bakeries and cookie concepts out there but it was at the height of when DoorDash and Grubhub and the delivery services were coming out and so I connected with my cousin Jason and I said, we should totally deliver warm cookies to people's doorsteps.
And that was the main focus.
Like aside from culinary and knowing all about food science and all that, we just said, let's just make grandma's mom's recipe and deliver it by using technology.
So people could stay at home in their pajamas or for girls' night or date night, whatever.
The convenience was there, less mess, and you get warm cookies just as you would making them yourself.
Was it chocolate chip cookies?
It has to be, right?
Like, that's where it all starts, right?
Absolutely.
A family recipe, we actually mixed and blended, you know, my grandma's, some of Jason's, my cousin's family's side, and we just tested.
We just tried different brands of chocolate chips, of sugar, of flour techniques.
And again, we didn't know what we were doing in those early days.
So we just networked and connected with other food professionals.
We watched YouTube, read books, read cookbooks, you name it.
We just were hungry to be that entrepreneur and to make something successful.
And then we just went for it.
From the get-go, the marketing impressed me with you guys.
I actually admired you from afar with the marketing before I even tried your cookies.
I was like, okay, this is a company that knows what they're doing.
And then I had the cookies.
I was like, holy shit, this is all coming together while they're both working so well.
So talk to me about the brand.
So my background is in branding, advertising.
My cousin's background is in technology and
paid ads, things like that.
So together, I think, first of all, we have an amazing partnership where our skills helped each other.
How the marketing started is it all came down to the packaging and the experience of what our product was, you know, placed in.
And that was our pink boxes, which you referred to.
Just in the short time that we've been talking.
And that's memorable.
It's something that's energized.
You can connect with that.
It's a soft color and it attracts our target audience, which is our soccer moms, right?
And so naturally they were pulled to our packaging.
And from there, we just knew we had to capitalize on Instagram because TikTok wasn't a thing back then.
We were really engaged on Instagram.
We would run paid ads on Facebook.
And we would try our best to respond and answer every single message or comment on these two platforms.
And it just really helped to our advantage to the point where people were just tagging their friends and doing the marketing for us organically and so that's really how the marketing started and then now with time as we've built out our team we put a lot of paid ads into tick tock and instagram and facebook and pinterest and twitter but again organic for us has been huge it's been crazy because people love the product and when you love a product so much you want to organically promote that to your inner circle what's been the biggest pain points or learning you know as you've gone on this journey you know, you're a young guy, but you've been successful.
You had a great idea, great execution.
But talk about, you know, that entrepreneurial journey, you know, maybe the, not the dark side, but the learning side, you know, like, it's everybody got to get to understand it.
Is it all perfect all the time, right?
Oh, it's not.
Like building a brand is not kicks and giggles.
It's hard, you know, it's, it's lonely.
There's a lot of days that.
you're just working your guts out and you're you're making it work and you have a lot of people counting on you you have to make it work right?
Something that's been really tricky is I've been young and so it's hard to earn respect in an industry where people are older than I am.
And so it's important for me to be knowledgeable and be educated on the product.
I'm not afraid to get in there and work the kitchen and know every aspect of the concept because I need to be able to speak towards that.
And so just being young in the industry and being a leader there, that's a hardship.
Second thing is having so many locations and youthful staff and employees, consistency is key.
With the X All Pro, Sean Merriman.
What's up, brother?
What's up, my man?
How you doing?
It's good, man.
The acronyms could go on and on now.
We got life insurance.
I know we're going to get into it.
We got lights out, podcasts.
We got lights out, apparel, fitness, and we got some damn kick-ass UFC and fighting and all that shit, man.
You got it going on, brother.
Talk about the football background, and then we'll get into some business.
I committed to University of Maryland as a junior.
And the reason why is because I was home.
You know, I didn't want to leave my mom, leave my high school coaches, friends.
I wanted everybody to come and watch me play.
So I went to the University of Maryland, you know, had a great career there, but I ended up leaving early.
You know, when I found out that I was going to go somewhere in the top 10, top 15 of the first round of draft, I was like, this is a, this, this type of shit doesn't happen, right?
So you, you want to, you want to take advantage of it.
And then the rest is history.
You know, I got out and got that nickname lights out my sophomore year in high school.
Yeah, I knocked out four players in one game in high school and I ended up getting that nickname lights out.
And I kind of carried that all the way through.
Getting away from the game, like the highs of that, you know, like the emotional highs and everything.
How hard was that transition?
That first year is beyond tough.
And I'll tell anybody that.
is about to retire and I talk to guys all the time, right?
They say they got a year, two years left, maybe three.
I said, whatever you want to do when you're you're done start doing it now and that way when you're done you you do it right away because if you have downtime you're going to struggle we transitioned you were ready you teed it up you had nfl network you've got the apparel company lights out um
nature or nurture like were you just a natural born entrepreneur waiting to come out of the bottle or like did you absorb and learn from others No, I was just, I was natural, man.
I've always, I mean, when I was a kid, I was selling, you know, five or six nintendo games to get the one best one right and i'll go out and wash cars you know during the summers cut grass shovel snow rake leaves and i would take it and use all the money for what i wanted to you know whether i wanted to go buy new uh mouthpiece or football equipment or cleats i was always hustling in a way and i think that this entrepreneur word has kind of become more recent but you look back on everything now and even to the point of branding you did You created the brand.
I mean, you talked about before the mohawk and the look and the feel.
And like you became, I mean, character, so to speak, but the persona of a brand or a machine.
I mean, like, you were that.
So, as you, as you said, right, you had what I did on the football field as creating this character, this persona, all these things.
But in the hindsight of it, I was just kind of the launching pad to everything with the brand.
I've always felt that lights out was bigger than anything I could do on a football field.
And that's why when I bought bought the name and rights the trademarks i bought in 2006 i bought it for you know numerous of things and clothing workout stuff and equipment uh marketing advertisement energy drinks did this i bought you know this is something i acquired from another company at the age of 21 years old and so i i don't even know if if trademarking was even that big then if people talked about it enough
And I just took those extra steps to know that this brand was going to be a lot bigger than I ever could be.
Because athletes are some of the most disciplined, hardworking, like,
I mean, think about it.
My whole life has been structured, right, since I was 10 years old.
I was told what time to eat, told what time to wake up, told what time to watch film and be and practice and go to what time I had to go to sleep to be ready for practice the next day.
My whole life is structured.
And so what do you need out here to be successful?
Two things, discipline and structure.
If you have those, you got a good chance of being successful at anything because that's what a a lot of people lack a lot of people lack just being disciplined and and having structure in their life which is one of the only things that i know at this point and so my goal is to get to a thousand plus agents and help people make as much money as they possibly can we're talking billions today my friends not millions billions billions billions billions upon billions with howie p howard pains pseudo entrepreneur and billion dollar brand maker what's up brother what's up what's up Hey, man.
Thanks for having me.
I think your show is amazing.
And Ryan, I appreciate you having me on.
Hey, I appreciate that.
Let's talk your journey, man.
I know you got a great story, kind of your entrepreneurial journey, the ups, the downs, the highs, the lows.
Let's start it, brother.
I came from a middle-class family.
My mom was an entrepreneur.
She was into clothing and fashion.
So she had jewelry stores.
So she was always taking me to work.
And I always saw how, you know, she controlled her own destiny and how her being an entrepreneur and very motivational, she had the freedom to buy what she want and do what she want.
And for me, that really, it hit me deep inside.
And I come from a pretty much entrepreneurial family.
My grandparents came here as immigrants, started a trucking company.
I was loading tractor trailers when I was eight, nine, 10.
I liked the fact of getting paid.
I liked that I could.
get that cash and do something with it.
And I realized at a very young age that financial freedom was really important.
You know, I programmed myself at a young age that I really wanted to be successful.
I wanted to be tough, you know, the martial arts.
And I wanted to be built.
And I wasn't the tallest guy.
So I had to have all the other components.
My journey as a young kid, I was shoveling driveways, snow blowing business, cleaning windows, anything I could do to make an extra buck.
My success really, you know, it helped me in my world because I talked to everybody in every store and every walks of life because that's, for me, that gives me life to be able to communicate with everybody, no matter what level you are.
Everyone puts so much pressure on themselves to be successful or to find success or to find happiness.
And I think the most important thing is to find what you're passionate about.
What do you love to do?
really focus in on that.
Everyone's trying to do a million things and to find and seek happiness.
And as I delve deeper into my experiences, I came up with the Howey method.
Five easy things, everybody.
This is five easy tips you can do to change your life forever.
BH,
I lead my life in the cornerstone of health.
Health is wealth.
If you have health, you have everything.
It helps your energy levels.
It helps you think better.
It helps you just feel better and you're feeling energized.
you can perform better and do everything in your life better by having health in your life as number one.
Oh, oh what is oh oh is originality i say be you be real be proud be that one person you look in the mirror and learn how to be happy with that guy because that's who that's who you are you know how can you make that the best person the best version that you are because this is going to be your most success i was never the smartest kid i was never the biggest kid i was never the best looking kid.
Although, I look okay.
Never a great athlete.
I was never great at anything.
You know, and I say to myself this, and I tell everybody this out there, is
I could beat guys all day long that are smarter than me, stronger than me, tougher than me.
I can beat them all day long in the howie, in my way, in the way I'm confident about myself.
And I think this is the best thing that I can offer anybody is you're so special and you're so individual that you have such talents.
You just have to tap into them.
So originality is so important.
Be you, be real, be proud.
The W is work.
You got to put the the work in.
So hard work, you can't hack hard work.
You can do things smarter, but time is something
I put in long and hard into the projects that I've gone into.
Most not successful, one that took me to the stratosphere.
Hard work is everything.
The I, innovation.
It's easy to be a copycat in life, but can you innovate?
Can you do something different?
Can you serve the world differently, solve problems in a different way?
So I, innovation, got to innovate.
And the E, E is, we were talking about your little drink, energy, got to energize yourself daily.
You know, what energizes you?
I have certain songs I listen to energize me.
I have certain, you know, YouTube videos.
There's some motivational ones.
I picked a few that really get me amped up.
And you see a lot of professional athletes, world-class Olympians.
that they listen to certain things before they perform because it it heightens your
level of alertness and your energy level to a new level.
So energy is a big part.
Going out there, my best foot forward every day, energized and enthusiastic.
What kind of legacy are we trying to leave?
Especially when I consider my son, and that motivates me to want to put work out just in case something happens.
Like at least he'll have something to look back on and be able to kind of figure out who his dad was.
You like to think that.
It's it's kind of like
Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers, you know, or something.
Use them, use them where Tom Petty,
you know, did so much, like with the band, wrote great songs for other people.
It's kind of like the life that people like me try to strive for, you know, on a family level and then on a professional career level.
You know, those guys pretty much done everything you can do.
Here's the simple thing.
Success breeds competition and competition breeds success.
You want other people to be successful.
But the UFC is the rocket ship.
The flames are coming and everybody's following their path, right?
And I'm very lucky again to have a first-class seat on that rocket ship.
Don't forget where you came from and what got you there.
Again, never anticipated to make this a franchise model, but a lot of friends and family wanted to be involved because they saw the early success and they saw how much energy was behind, you know, the cookies.
And so my parents actually approached us and said, can we open a store?
Can we be involved?
And we said, sure, why don't you open your own store?
And so we went through the legal paperwork, set it up as a franchise.
And then it started out as my parents, you know, my college roommate, my sister.
And then word of mouth just started to spread across Utah and the surrounding states and now the nation.
And we've never actively sold a franchise.
Everyone's always come to us to say, we want to be involved.
We want to open a store and own a business.
And that's kind of how it unfolded there.
At this point, my goal is to get to a thousand plus agents and help people make as much money as they possibly can.
It's everything
at every piece, at every level, because you know what?
I know that you can't leave a lot in other people's hands if you really want to control your outcome of success.
And I hear this too many times with everybody.
They think they can hire everybody to help them be successful when, in fact, it's you going to be curious and learn what other people did before and where their failures were and how that can help you,
you know, be better, do more, and be more successful.
You know where to find me.
I'm at Ryan Alford on all the platforms.
Hit me up on TikTok.
I'm blowing up over there.
We're at theradcast.com.
We'll see you next time.
This has been Right About Now with Ryan Alford, a Radcast Network production.
Visit ryanisright.com for full audio and video versions of the show or to inquire about sponsorship opportunities.
Thanks for listening.
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