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Why a Business Coach is a Necessity Part 1

Business coach Clay Clark: All right, Thrive Nation, welcome back to the Thrive Time Show on your radio. My name is Clay Clark. I’m the former SBA Entrepreneur of the Year sent here to help you learn how to start and grow a successful business. And today, as always, I always try to be joined inside the box that rocks with the godfather of Tulsa’s entrepreneurship scene, but today, we have captured him. And so today we have the godfather of Tulsa entrepreneurship, Dr. Robert Zoellner’s inside the box that rocks. Sir, welcome back.

Robert Zoeller: I tell you what. It’s good to be back. It’s good to be home. And here’s what we’re doing. We’re going to make each and every one of you a deal that you can’t refuse.

Clay Clark: Tell us the deal, Z. Tell us. Tell us the deal.

Robert Zoeller: It’s lunch time, you can go to Oklahoma Joe’s and get some of those burnt ends and baked beans and stuff like that all for like $8.48.

Clay Clark: It doesn’t feel ethical. It doesn’t feel ethical.

Robert Zoeller: So ethical. So nice. You can get that thing with the thing, you know at Oklahoma Joe’s.

Clay Clark: Where do you want me to put your lead pipe you incredible business coach you?

Robert Zoeller: And if you don’t have enough money, just swing by Regent Bank, and those boys there, they’ll give you all the money you need.

Clay Clark: I tell you what, Z, over the weekend Jason Bailey, our guest, he is the owner of djconnection.com. Jason Bailey, how are you sir?

Jason Bailey: I’m doing incredible, and you are looking like a young spry, business coach there sir.

Robert Zoeller: You handed the baton off to this young man.

Jason Bailey: That’s right.

Clay Clark: He’s taken it, he’s expanded it all over America just making weddings awesome. We’re also joined inside the box that rocks, my incredible wife of 15 years, Mrs. Vanessa, how are you?

Vanessa Clark: I’m doing great. I’m looking forward to the show.

Clay Clark: Now over the weekend, Jason and I, we got together, and we refined the Regent Bank theme song a little more …

Jason Bailey: Oh, no. [inaudible 00:02:11].

Clay Clark: … and this is audio now. A lot of the thrivers might go, “This sounds very similar to another song-

Robert Zoeller: It’s all original.

Clay Clark: … it’s almost like he has ripped it off.” Jason how many instruments can you play?

Jason Bailey: Like 9 or 10, something like that.

Clay Clark: What all instruments can you play?

Robert Zoeller: At the same time?

Jason Bailey: Well, not at the same time. Let’s see here. The typical ones, the drums, the base, the guitar, but I also play the didgeridoo. [crosstalk 00:02:30]. I play the banjo.

Clay Clark: The didgeridoo. It’s a big demand for that.

Jason Bailey: Yeah. It’s a big demand.

Robert Zoeller: What about spoons? Have you ever-

Jason Bailey: I could … Yeah, I mean, I don’t like to play them in public, you know, but [crosstalk 00:02:38].

Clay Clark: Can you play the guitar?

Jason Bailey: Yeah.

Clay Clark: So you can play the guitar. You can play the keys …

Jason Bailey: Yeah.

Clay Clark: … and the drums.

Jason Bailey: Yeah.

Clay Clark: And for those of you aren’t familiar with audio and how you do audio recording, Jason plays all the instruments. He puts them all on his different tracks.

Jason Bailey: That’s right.

Clay Clark: And so we recorded this over the weekend, and really, it’s original. It’s exclusive-

Jason Bailey: [crosstalk 00:02:53] Hope you guys like it.

Business coach Clay Clark: Here we go. Yeah. So your Regent Bank song. Here we go. So you sing it with us. Here we go (singing).

Jason Bailey: (singing) Oh, that’s got a good [inaudible 00:03:10] to it.

Clay Clark: [inaudible 00:03:10]. Oh, yeah. One more time (singing).

Robert Zoeller: It’s so original. It’s so fresh.

Clay Clark: Yeah. The thing is, I mean, it felt [crosstalk 00:03:19].

Robert Zoeller: It’s fresh.

Clay Clark: When Jason and I did it, it felt like you were on the verge of something powerful.

Jason Bailey: It was. It was like, “I’ve almost heard this before,” but it was all original, for what we did.

Clay Clark: That’s right, and we’re all about keeping it original here, Z.

Robert Zoeller: Well, that’s a busy weekend for a business coach, boys. Well done.

Clay Clark: Yeah.

Robert Zoeller: Well done. You know what it feels like today? It feels like we just have a party in the box.

Clay Clark: We do have a party in the box.

Robert Zoeller: You’ve got two DJs and some eye candy in between. You guys got like a DJ, eye candy thing going on here. I got two DJs and Vanessa right in between you two guys. Get to Facebook Live, and a party’s probably going to break out in here today.

Clay Clark: You know what else has been going on that’s great this week here before we get into today’s training, today’s episode here, I have my perfect pen with me. I have a perfect pen. If you’re on Facebook Live, you can see it is the perfect pen, and I’m just … Nothing makes me feel better than when I have that perfect, precision pen with me. The whole deal, it’s really incredible. Now today we’re talking about the four-step entrepreneurial success cycle. You see, as an entrepreneur, a lot of people out there, they want to start a successful business, but they’re not willing to push through the process. So they want to have a successful business, which, by the way, takes a few years, and they want to have that overnight, which doesn’t happen, and so then they googled Google. They go, “Well, how long did it take Google to be successful?” Well, in 1994, they started, and in ’99 they made a profit. Or you go, “Well, yeah. What about Uber, though? Well, what about Facebook?” And you keep fighting. You’re like, “Ah, that’s not fun.” It takes a while.

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