Redmond Growth | “Since Working With Clay I’ve Learned Everything About Business.” – Robert Redmond

“I would have anywhere from 5 to 20 clients w/ networking, but it would go up and down. Clay, that’s why I came to you. I’ve doubled every year since working with you. That’s 100% growth every year. I’ve doubled 5 times.”
Tim Redmond of www.RedmondGrowth.com

Discover How Clay Clark Taught, Coached & Mentored Tim Redmond Down the Proven Path of Business Success Today By Watching the Tim Redmond Success Story Below:

 

VIDEO TRANSCRIPT

Speaker 1:

Get ready to enter the Thrivetime Show.

Speaker 2:

(Singing).

Clay Clark:

(Singing).

Speaker 2:

(Singing).

Clay Clark:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

One of the biggest things we picked up when we picked up the Thrive15 team was an entire team. You want an SEO guy that knows things about search engine optimization? Got it. You got a website guy that’s built big websites like Garth Brooks website? Awesome. We have it. He’s coming in. If I had to pay for that on my own outside of Thrive15, there’s just no way.

For us, one of our most immediate needs when I got connected with Clay was technology. We had a website, but I had a website in Tulsa, our other partner had a website in Colorado and they did everything from doing a drone video where they flew over all of our markets with a drone, they integrated that into our site, they built… Every single thing that I think of, they do.

We do a podcast. If I was going to produce my own podcast, there’s no… I mean, that alone, just that alone would be what I pay Thrive just for that. But then if you add the fact that if I need a business card design, if I need a website build, if I need this, if I need that, I know what I would pay for that if I had to go a la carte. I feel guilty sometimes. I don’t probably write a big enough check for the value that I get.

I think there’s a lot of entrepreneurs that have ideas what they want to do with their business and how they want to grow and what market they want to be in and how they can increase production and do all this. But it’s not about having 4,000 ideas. It’s about having 12 and executing them 4,000 times. That’s the trick in my opinion. And that’s where Thrive’s value comes in. I feel like I have my own staff, my own, I don’t know, 20 person team that when I need something I just go to them and it happens.

Cameron Coats:

I’m going to beat at all of their competitors’ prices or I’ll give you the mattress for free. How’s that sound? You look good. Let’s sell some mattresses.

Sales for me, it’s what makes the world go round. And it’s my life. You know? When I step out onto this showroom floor, it’s my time to shine. It’s my time to nominate. This is my Colosseum and I’m the gladiator. So look out.

Hey.

Mary:

Oh. Hi.

Cameron Coats:

Cameron Coats. Nice to meet you.

Mary:

Hi. Mary.

Cameron Coats:

I’ll be taking care of you today. Mary?

Mary:

Yes. Hi.

Cameron Coats:

What a great name. That’s beautiful. And you are such a vision.

Mary:

Oh, okay.

Cameron Coats:

Oh, Mary, what do I got to do to get you into bed today?

Really, I just want to serve the people. I want to use my knowledge to better mankind.

This is a hundred percent memory foam mattress, okay, with a circle-knit top. It comes from our King Arthur collection and we call it Excalibur. Ah. Hop on up, Mary.

Mary:

Oh no, that’s not necessary.

Cameron Coats:

A lot of these guys out there, they’re dishonest. You know? But I believe in truth in sales.

This is a limited edition, which means it’s a collector’s item, which means that it will appreciate in value. So really think of this mattress as an investment into your financial future.

I just love making people smile. You know? If at the end of the day I’ve made at least one customer smile, then I’ve done my job. I’ve succeeded. I need them to buy something as well, of course, because they don’t pay me for smiles, but I would be rich if they did.

Clay Clark:

All right, Thrive Nation. On today’s show, we’re going to do two success stories. On part one of today’s show, we’re going to interview a long-time client who has successfully scaled his business and is now franchising his business. He’s now allowing other entrepreneurs to go out there and to purchase the right to use his proven business model. The company’s called Window Ninjas.

Now, in part two of today’s show, we’re going to tell you about a long-time client by the name of Tim Redmond. We helped Tim Redmond to grow his business from approximately, in his words, 5 to 20 clients, up to hundreds of clients in the consulting space. And I’m very excited to introduce you to guest number one, Gabe Salinas with Window Ninjas. How are you sir?

Gabe Salinas:

I’m great, Clay. Thanks for having me today.

Clay Clark:

So I got to ask you this. When you and I first met, this would be getting close to four years ago, you had started this company, windowninjas.com. Windowninjas.com. What was your vision for the brand at that point?

Gabe Salinas:

Well, my vision was to provide our services in a remarkable way. I wanted customers to really say, “Wow,” when our guys showed up and provided services to them, I wanted the customer service experience to be delivered in a way that was very unique and beneficial to the client. And that was our vision. It was all about service at the highest level.

Clay Clark:

And one of the things I’ve discovered is you weren’t emotional about it. You were ready to put in action. And that’s one great thing that was phenomenal to work with you on. And as we share on part two of today’s show about the Tim Redmond success story, different businesses, but the same process. So I want to go through these processes line by line and really get your thoughts on why they’re important. And again, folks, knowing that Gabe has already gone through the process of scaling his business should give you some comfort when going to windowninjas.com to learn more about buying a franchise because he’s already put in the tough work to go down this process.

So first off, step one, you had to figure out your revenue goals and your weekly gross revenue goals. You had to figure out what kind of revenue you had to produce to hit your goals. Can you share why it’s very important for every business owner to know what their gross revenue goals are for both not only the year, but for the actual week?

Gabe Salinas:

Well, you got to think of it like a road. I mean, it’s your highway to success. If you don’t know where you’re going, you’re never going to know where you end up. So revenue goals, I look at revenue goals in two ways. How challenging are they and are they challenging enough to be achievable?

And so we set these goals up at the end of each fiscal year so that we know going out and getting out of December and January exactly how much revenue we need to hit in each location in January. And then every single month we know which then correlates, going back to what you said, it correlates with knowing how much we need to do every week, which then goes back to how much we need to do every day. And because we run multiple trucks in all of our different locations, then we know exactly how much each truck needs to book, which then goes down into helping our call center understand how much we need to book per hour per truck based on the men on the truck.

So all of these, the revenue goals are good goals, but they also help other portions of the business and allows you to stay on track, that way at the end of the year you know exactly where you needed to be and if you attained that goal or not.

Clay Clark:

Now, if I’m speaking in a turn, please correct me, but I think when you and I first met, I mean, you had a very clear vision of where you wanted to go. You just needed some systems in place to get there. I feel like you already had that clear vision. Is that accurate?

Gabe Salinas:

Yeah. Yeah, I did. I knew what I wanted. I knew what I want the business to look like. I knew I didn’t want it to be average and ordinary because there’s way too much of that. I think you and I can both agree that there’s way too much average and ordinary out there in the world today. And I just wanted it to be great. I wanted it to be exceptional. I wanted it to be extraordinary. Just same thing with our customer service experience. I just wanted it to be extraordinary and I wanted to surround myself around people that had the same vision, which we’ve done. We’ve done a good job of doing that.

Clay Clark:

Now, your business now, I mean, you guys have… How many locations do you have now?

Gabe Salinas:

We’re operating 11 locations throughout four states.

Clay Clark:

It’s unbelievable. It’s great to see it happen. Now, box three, I figure out how many hours per week you’re willing to work. Now I know something that you have mentioned to me. Offline fitness is a big thing for you. Family time is a great thing for you and is an important thing for you. You blocked out time for fitness and family time despite growing a business. Why is that important for everybody listening out there right now to really look at box three and figure out what are your boundaries for your schedule and how many hours per week you are willing to work?

Gabe Salinas:

Number three is super important. It’s something that me and you talk about all the time, but I also talk about it to our potential franchisees. Man, if you schedule your week based on the things that are important to you, family, faith, fun, whatever they may be, then you are in control of your time freedom. I consider that to be time freedom, right? If I’m going to work on my business, if I’m going to work within Window Ninjas and I say that I’m going to work on it 10 hours a day Monday through Friday, and five hours on Saturday, okay, great. Man, that’s what I’m going to do. It’s 55 hours a week.

But you know there’s 24 hours in a day and then there’s a lot of hours in the week. So then I can assign time to have some fun time. I can assign time each day to have some family time. I can assign time every single day to have fitness. For example, I got up this morning, I don’t know, I think I was up and out by 6:00. And out the door, meaning out the door by 6:00. And I went for a planned one-hour run. You know? I was going to go do a little more than six, seven miles, and that’s what I did. And I had that time to focus on that specific task.

And when I was finished with that, then it goes on to business. You know? I’ve got business stuff that I need to do today. So right now I’m working in the business and it’s important to do that.

Clay Clark:

Yeah. This is so important. And again, when you’re buying a franchise, you’re buying a proven system, which our job is to help you refine that system and make it scalable. And on today’s show, we’re talking about nailing it and scaling it. So again, part one, folks, this is a really nice opportunity for you to lean into windowninjas.com, a great opportunity for you to franchise a proven system.

Part two of today’s show, it’s the Redmond growth story. It’s not a scalable business for you could participate in it. You can’t franchise it, you can’t license it. But on part one of today’s show, this is something you could actively participate in. Now, defining your unique value proposition, I’m going to pull in your website here to put a little bit of meat on the bone here so people can see this, because a lot of times it can be kind of abstract when you tell somebody, “Hey, we need to make a unique value proposition,” we start with the name Window Ninjas. The name is unique. We start with the branding.

We’ve worked together on this over the last few years to really make the branding refined. You guys are the highest rated and most reviewed window cleaning expert in your region. You’ve got clearly a polished brand. The brand looks sharp. Can you share with the listeners why is it important to nail down your branding, box number five, and nail down your unique value proposition?

Gabe Salinas:

Branding is super important because you want people to remember you, whether it’s potential clients, your existing clients, your friends, your family, your neighbors, everybody. When you’re driving down the road and you see a brand that you recognize, you automatically can associate certain things with that brand. And with Window Ninjas, we’ve done a great job of continually marketing and branding our company. And it is now becoming a common name and a common logo that a lot of people are seeing and they reflect back and say, “Wow, what an extraordinary job you have done of branding your company.”

I get that, and I take that as a compliment. I get a lot of remarks like that every single week. And with your help Clay, I mean, you guys helped us to do the branding that needed to be done so that we could get comments like that. And again, that word, extraordinary, is super important because that is what we want our customers to receive, is an extraordinary experience. And so between that word, extraordinary, and the branding that we have done that you guys have helped me with getting our name and our logo out there, it’s becoming a brand that people recognize and they associate the word, extraordinary, with it.

So as a business owner, any person looking to get into business, whether they’re going to get into a franchise business or they’re going to try to go out and reinvent the wheel on their own, it’s super important to understand that you have to brand your name, your logo, and what you guys are about, because that’s where customers come in handy when they’re looking for a company to do business with. They want that value, they want that brand. And that goes back into your original question about the value that companies do with branding.

Clay Clark:

Now, one thing that… Most of my clients I work with are not based in Tulsa Oklahoma. Tim Redmond, who’s on part two of today’s show, happened to be in Tulsa. So we were able to do some stuff for Tim. We were able to offer him free office space, which was great. We were able to actually train his callers. So his actual call center reps were people that came to my group interview and I trained them up myself. They could sit in the staff meetings and listen to my team. There’s a lot of things that we were able to do because he was based in Tulsa. Most of our clients are not based in Tulsa.

However, working with you remotely, I mean, you guys are implementing everything 90 miles an hour. You really refined your three-legged marketing stool. That’s the three ways you go about getting customers, your three proven ways for marketing. Then when it came into sales scripting, you really leaned into that.

Now with Tim, we actually staffed the callers for him that made the calls. So we actually recruited the callers that made the calls, trained the callers. I mean, it was like they were in my fishbowl, so to speak, and we could really keep an eye on them. In your case, you’ve had to create your own fishbowl, and now you have your own really functional call center. And for anybody who buys a windowninjas.com franchise, you’re going to have access to the proven systems and scripts that we have created together that Gabe has refined on his own that Gabe has worked tirelessly improved upon.

So you’re having access to that proven call center, whereas with, again, I’m trying to give some contrast here, whereas on part two of today’s show, as we celebrate Tim Redmond’s growth, this is not a business that you could buy. The scripts and systems that we created for Tim, those are not systems that you can go out there and say, “Hey, I want to franchise that. Hey, I want to do that too.” So it’s two unique success stories here.

So we go back to creating a sales conversion system, the scripts, the recorded calls, the prewritten emails. If somebody goes to windowninjas.com to schedule a carpet cleaning, your team’s going to answer the phone, and the local franchisee does not have to do that. Can you talk about why that’s valuable for franchisees?

Gabe Salinas:

That is one of our biggest unique value propositions at Window Ninjas franchising. With a franchise, people that come in and want to buy a Window Ninjas franchise, they get the support from our call center. And it’s huge for the amount of money that we charge our franchisees to utilize the call center. All calls come into our center, we facilitate all the customer’s needs, we schedule all the jobs, we put it on the franchisees calendar. The franchisee doesn’t have to do anything but look at their schedule and then just go to work. If a customer wants an estimate, we can facilitate that need over the phone. If they want a quote, we can facilitate that by setting it up for the franchisee owner or the manager.

And we just basically operate by helping the client and helping the client that is the franchisee. And for the 8% that we charge for the call center, it is a deal. I mean, it is a real deal because you can’t do it on your own for nowhere near 8%.

Clay Clark:

Right.

Gabe Salinas:

And then the customers enjoy the fact that we are actually following scripts. We’re humorous in a nice professional way, and we’re facilitating their needs and asking them thorough questions so that their needs can be met as well.

Clay Clark:

Now, let’s look here at these repeatable systems. You have checklists, processes, documented workflows. Everything needed to become a franchise owner is now documented. So when you send out texts to clean the windows, it’s all documented. There’s proven systems for everything. Talk about that. If somebody goes to windowninjas.com and they want to learn about buying a franchise, what kind of systems do you give them access to?

Gabe Salinas:

It’s funny you asked me that because I just had a guy that’s looking to buy a franchise that’s the same question he just asked me. We give you everything and we give you a person to help you with that portion of the business. So each business, every business is the same. Clay, you and I talk about it all the time, right? First you got to start with marketing. Marketing turns into sales. Sales then turns into service work that we do. And then the service work has to be finalized with the accounting, right? So there’s basically four portions of that, of operations.

And so step one with marketing, we have a marketing team in-house over here at Window Ninjas. And Clay, your team helps us with some marketing as well. And it allows the franchisee to come in, spend their money with us and our marketing team because we have the proven system that you have helped us build, and we set those ads and we do all of the content production, video editing, all of that stuff, boom, and then it turns into a sales lead. And our sales team on the call center then facilitates that need and closes the deal, which then sets up the service work, which gets done in a great manner. Money gets collected, and then boom, it goes over to the accounting team.

And so as a franchisee, you getting support from the marketing department, you’re going to get a person that you can work with when it comes to marketing. On the sales side, we have a sales manager that you can go to that you can discuss whatever your needs are, questions, concerns, whatever. Maybe you want us to make more outbound prospecting calls for you, whatever the case may be. Then you have a service operations guy that you get to work with so that you understand exactly how to do every bit of the services that we provide. If you have a question, you can go to them. And then on the accounting side, we have somebody designated for our franchisees that when they have an accounting question, they go to them.

And so we provide four people that are experts in every single one of those aspects of the business so that the franchisee can get your questions answered and keep moving and moving at a quick and rapid speed without having to run over any speed bumps. So that’s where all the systems and processes come in handy. And all the stuff that Clay’s done to help us grow is because we’ve started at the beginning and then worked our way all the way to the end, which was the accounting, and we just did it as the flow of the business. And our franchisees, our location managers, man, it just makes it really, really, really easy for them to do their job and be successful every day.

Clay Clark:

Now, I’m going to point this out for everybody. I’m going to be leaving here in just a few minutes to Denver, Colorado because it’s Oxyfresh. We’ve now sold over 500 locations. And what happens is people want a location and we’re not available. Sometimes people say, “I’d like to get an Oxyfresh,” and we go, “Oh, sorry, we’re booked out in that territory. Oh, sorry, booked out in that territory too. Oh, sorry, we’re booked out in that state. Oh, my bad.” So if you’re looking to buy an Oxyfresh franchise, a lot of people are, we just don’t have territories available in certain markets.

And so why I have Gabe on this show is that there’s really three big reasons. One, I think he’s just a great guy. The kind of guy that’s diligent, kind, hardworking, the way he treats his family, the way he treats his staff. I know that you’re teaming up with a good person in Gabe Salinas of WindowNinjas.com. Second is the business model makes sense. I mean, you could have all the smiles in the world, you could be the nicest guy, but if your business model doesn’t work, that’s not going to be helpful to helping you achieve time freedom and financial freedom.

The third is that it’s affordable. It’s a franchise that you can buy and for less money than a lot of people would spend on a year or two of college. I mean, think about this. A lot of people go to college for a year or two to get general education, and they have no practical application once they graduate. So let’s get into the brass tacks of it. If someone goes to windowninjas.com, how much money does it cost, Gabe, to open up a windowninjas.com franchise?

Gabe Salinas:

The initial franchise fee is $49,500. So just under 50K. And then build out of your truck and your equipment and buying all of your window packages and your pressure washing packages, all of that, you’re going to spend anywhere between 85 and 190 K depending on, like I said, those packages that you choose. And we do offer multi location territory rights. Some owners choose to buy more than one territory, so that kind of falls into that. But right around 150 to 175 grand on average. Man, you can open up your own Window Ninjas franchise. You can make that money back quickly. We’re showing anywhere between 20% to 30% profit with our existing locations, and you can put some good money in your pocket and achieve the two things that we want all of our franchisees to achieve, and that is time freedom and financial freedom and have fun doing it.

Clay Clark:

Amen to that. Now, Gabe, a final question and I’ll let you go there, sir. Who’s a good fit and who’s not a good fit for a windowninjas.com franchise? We’re going to get a windowninjas.com franchise.

Gabe Salinas:

A good fit would be somebody that’s looking for the best opportunity, somebody that’s a go-getter, a thriver, wants to create time freedom and financial freedom for themselves. I say that a lot, but I do mean it. Time freedom, financial freedom, those two things go hand in hand. Great attitude. You got to have a great attitude. Somebody that wouldn’t be a good fit for Window Ninjas is maybe a socialist, maybe somebody with a bad attitude, maybe somebody that is homeless and lives at the beach, on the beach. You know? Maybe doesn’t own shoes, wears flip-flops every day, maybe. I don’t know. [inaudible 00:22:19]-

Clay Clark:

Those intentional homeless people are an interesting group there. And what state are you based in? Right now when you’re doing the interview or when you’re running your location, where are you based?

Gabe Salinas:

I’m in the wonderful city of Wilmington in the state of North Carolina. So Wilmington, North Carolina is my home. It’s where I live. It’s where our call center is. It’s where our corporate office is. And man, it’s a great place. It’s nice here. It’s sunny. It’s about 70 degrees. And it’s a wonderful day today here in Wilmington.

Clay Clark:

Hey, thank you so much for your time, brother. We’ll talk to you soon.

James, on part two of today’s show, it could be said that it’s almost like Tim Redmond celebration month, almost like a Tim Redmond celebration year here at the Thrivetime Show. We have so many clients, James, that we work with to help them scale and grow their business. On part one of today’s show, we interviewed Gabe Salinas of Window Ninjas. He’s having massive success and what a grateful and kind guy he is. We’ve helped him to grow his business.

And on part two of today’s show, we’re going to share with you what I would call an extreme example of extreme success. This is the Tim Redmond growth success story. And I want people to know this. Before you hear the success story, because when you’re going to hear Tim Redmond tell you about how he doubled his business every year that he worked with us, that’s going to seem unbelievable. It’s going to seem… I mean, James, it seems unbelievable that someone could double their business every year.

James:

It’s wild. And you know what? I see it here in the office every day. People come in and their business just takes off like a rocket ship.

Clay Clark:

So I’m going to just share with you about the Tim Redmond story, just so that maybe put a little meat on the bones so that people know this is not hyperbole and not some made up story. Okay? So for Tim, to help him go from 5 to 20 clients, because he said he was at 5 to 20 clients consistently for his consulting company, to help him grow from that to where we doubled every year, there were some things that we did for Tim that we wouldn’t do for most people, but we did it for Tim because… Because why, James?

James:

Because he’s an honest guy who always honors his agreements.

Clay Clark:

That’s right. So we let Tim Redmond office in our office for free.

James:

Wow.

Clay Clark:

I mean, that’s not normal thing. Okay? We actually mentored and taught Tim Redmond’s first employees how to become business consultants.

James:

That’s incredible.

Clay Clark:

I actually let Tim Redmond’s son spend every single workday with me nonstop shadowing every single moment of every single day-

James:

Dude.

Clay Clark:

… in the office. True.

James:

That’s amazing.

Clay Clark:

And I actually did the group interview. I conducted the group interview for the Redmond team to help them recruit their initial employees. I actually, every single day personally mentored their employees and let them shadow my office processes. You know? I actually built the website, the print pieces, the logos, all the marketing pieces, the call scripts. I actually had my team make the calls.

PART 1 OF 4 ENDS [00:25:04]

Clay Clark:

The call scripts. I actually had my team make the calls for Tim Redmond because Tim Redmond didn’t have a call team, nor did Tim Redmond have an office that was conducive for recruiting people, so we let him use the office, but we did it for Tim, James. James, why did we do it for Tim Redmond?

James:

Because he’s an honest guy who always honors his agreements.

Clay Clark:

That’s the kind of guy he was, and that’s what we did and then we worked with him and he had tremendous success. So when you hear these success stories, you just heard about the Window Ninjas success story, and you go, “Wow, you guys helped this guy triple the size of his company. That’s an impressive total.” That’s kind of our normal here at the ThriveTime Show.

But when you hear about a guy whose business doubled every year, you might go, “What?” Yeah, so what we did with Tim is we put together an agreement where every time that Tim Redmond would land a new client, he would pay me $750 a month per client to provide the backend service for his client. He was able to go out there and market his business consulting services without having to hire a photographer, a videographer, a web developer, a search engine developer, to rent an office space, to have systems in place. He didn’t have to go write books on how to grow businesses. He could just tap into our proven systems and he could kind of stand on the shoulders of giants. He could use our wheel, he didn’t have to reinvent the wheel.

But James, why did we do it for Tim Redmond where we probably could not and would not offer, think about that, offering people free office space, training their initial employees, building their entire business model for them, writing all the call scripts, staffing the call center for them. We wouldn’t do that for the average person, but we did it for Tim Redmond for two reasons. James, what were those two reasons?

James:

Well, he was an honest guy and he always honors his agreements.

Clay Clark:

That’s what he was. He was an honest guy who always honored his agreements. That’s why we did it. The second reason.

James:

Because you know what?

Clay Clark:

Think about it-

James:

Money.

Clay Clark:

We were making $750 per new client that he got.

James:

Right.

Clay Clark:

We had a signed agreement. If you look at the show notes on today’s show, you’ll be able to read that agreement. I’m sure it’s inspiring for you to see the transparency and how this agreement was such a win-win deal, an incredible win-win deal. Again, the deal we worked out with Tim, we said, “Tim, every time you land a new client, you just pay us $750 per month and we’ll do the back end work for you. Then we’re going to let you use our systems, our processes, our office space. You can even speak at our in-person workshops. We’re going to do all that for you.” James, we did that because Tim Redmond was such a great guy.

What we’re going to do on today’s show is we’re going to let Tim, in his own words, share with you about how we helped him to nail and scale his business. I kind of view this as Tim Redmond Appreciation Month. It could be Tim Redmond Appreciation Year. I don’t know. When I think about the fact, we have so many success stories of clients that grow by 50% in the first year, but to double every year, it might end up being Tim Redmond Celebration Year. We’ll see.

James:

I hope so.

Clay Clark:

Thank you, James. I really do appreciate you.

Now without any further ado, here’s the Tim Redmond success story. Again, that’s Tim, T-I-M, Redmond R-E-D-M-O-N-D, Tim Redmond based in Tulsa, Oklahoma. This is the Tim Redmond business consulting success story, Tim Redmond, an incredible living legend, and here we go.

Tim Redmond, welcome to the ThriveTime Show. How are you, sir?

Tim Redmond:

Clay Clark. I am a man that’s grateful because of you and for you. You’ve been an amazing impact in my life. I’ll just say that up front.

Clay Clark:

Well, you and I have a unique relationship because you were my boss for a long time, and then I had the opportunity to work with you as a consultant, and we’ve been able to work back and forth with each other.

Tim Redmond:

Oh, you’ve been hugely helpful. My life is different because of you.

Clay Clark:

I want to ask you this. When you meet with business owners today, where do you find that most business owners are stuck? Say you’re talking to somebody out there and they have an accounting practice, a dental practice, a contracting business, and they’re stuck. What are the areas where you see most business owners are, where are they most predictably stuck?

Tim Redmond:

In the same place that I was stuck when I reached out for your help. In marketing, I did not have a process of a constant stream of leads coming in because of lack of marketing and then I lacked a sales workflow that once the lead came in that I could aggressively process it through to get them to come on board so that I could help them out. I didn’t have those before I started working with you, Clay, and you helped me out with that. Those are probably two of the most common problems I run into in consulting our clients.

Clay Clark:

One of the things I like to do, and I like to explain this to clients, is that you have to view your business as a linear workflow, from left to right like a timeline.

Tim Redmond:

Oh, yeah.

Clay Clark:

You have to start with fixing your branding and then after you fix your branding, then you want to fix your marketing, and after you fix your marketing, you fix your sales. Then after your sales, you fix your hiring and firing, and then you fix your accounting and you just follow down the path. How often do you find that business owners need help finding good people? That’s never been a challenge for me to find, to hire, train, and retain good people, especially during the COVID moments. Lot people said, “Well, I can’t find good people now.” I still have never had a hard time finding people, but what are your thoughts on that? How often are they struggling to find good people?

Tim Redmond:

Well, most of who we get is we handle specialty docs and contractors. We market aggressively to go after contractors, so that’s most of our clients, and that, I would say, Clay, that that is the number one need and one of the biggest reasons they come on board to get our help here is they cannot find decent people that’ll show up and actually work. Huge problem.

Clay Clark:

Finding good people.

Tim Redmond:

Finding good people, keeping good people, getting people that will actually want to work, yeah, which that could be defined as a good people. Yeah.

Clay Clark:

Yeah.

Tim Redmond:

It’s a huge problem.

Clay Clark:

I know that with the systems we teach people, they will learn how to hire, inspire, train, and retain great people. I think people view hiring as a one-time event, but it’s really a process. I’ll give you an example. Harley is a young guy that’s a member of your team who I’ve met him since his first day working with you, and he’s been a great member of your team and a great guy.

But a lot of people I speak with, they say, “I have a hard time retaining employees for more than a month or two.” If you had to give people tips on how to hire, inspire, train, and retain good people, what would you say to them? If anybody out there’s listening and they’re struggling to hire, inspire, train, and retain good people?

Tim Redmond:

Yeah. Well, there’s a number of things here. First of all, you want to create an environment that people are attracted to. One of the biggest requirements or the biggest ways that a leader becomes effective is they create an environment. Most people respond and react to an environment a lot like a seed. Some grows up, the Bible story about some fell away by the side and by the stones and all that, they didn’t grow up very big, but those planted in good soil or a good environment, they’re going to grow and they’re going to really produce. Number one, you’ve got to create a good environment for people to join. If it’s reactive and people are yelling and it’s just an ego clash, that’s not going to attract decent people. Good people are going to leave and they’re going to find another place that’s got a better environment.

Number two is you’ve got to be really clear on what you want them to do. We have a lot of clients, Clay, and we’ve shared many stories together, we’ve spent many hours together, is a lot of folks here, they hire people and they just throw them to the dogs and say, “I hope you can figure this out as you go.” There’s not a training, there’s not a clear expectation, and so as a result, they don’t know how to win in their job. There’s a lot of people, Clay, that they’re dissatisfied because they don’t feel like they’re winning in their job and they don’t know how to win in their job.

Clay Clark:

Tim, at the business conferences that you and I have done, you’ve actually appeared at a lot of them-

Tim Redmond:

Oh, yeah.

Clay Clark:

… and emcee it and speak at them. I think one of the things people have enjoyed about those is the ability to ask any questions that they want to ask and not to be mocked publicly, but to have somebody that actually answers their questions. What are common questions that you get asked by clients as a business consultant? If you could just think through sort of the Rolodex, the mental Rolodex of most frequently asked questions, what do people typically ask you? I know as a consultant what I get asked a lot, but I want to get your think, what are the top questions people ask you?

Tim Redmond:

Okay, so this is good questions here. Most of the time they’re either looking for leads, more leads or how to hire more staff. What has happened is they’ve already gone to two or three or five or seven other marketing firms or hiring firms, and they’ve been very unsuccessful and so they come with a lot of frustration and sometimes they’re almost mad at us to say, “Well, this is what everybody else said,” and say, “Well, we’re not just a coaching company that tells you what to do. We’re a do-it-for-you coaching company, so we’re going to do a lot of this stuff and implement it yourself.” I still hire your staff to get our SEO there and to keep the websites up-to-date and to get the digital marketing straightened up. It’s really important to be able to deliver something.

“Can you give me enough leads?” is a big question or, “How are you going to help me find decent people? Because I’ve been out there and there’s nobody else out there.”

I said, “Well, we have a host system that we introduce, but unless you apply this system on a consistent basis, it won’t work.” Casualness causes casualties. Those are big questions.

Another big question i< “How do I get this business off my back? It just seems like I’m stuck as a slave in my business. How do I get out of this business here? How do I get it to when I’m working in the business, I want to work on the business and not just in it?” Those are some of the common ones.

Clay Clark:

Now, you and your wife just celebrated an anniversary, I believe, correct?

Tim Redmond:

Yeah, three-three.

Clay Clark:

33?

Tim Redmond:

33 years, yes.

Clay Clark:

The reason why I bring this up is because my wife and I, we’ve been married 21 years, and I find that in the world of business, there’s a lot of business coaching platforms, a lot of consulting platforms that exist, and I’m not going to mention the specific names today, but I want to. Instead of mentioning them, I’m just going to pull up video clips to show what I’m talking about here. I’m not going to mention them, I’m just going to show examples of them. But they have these, and this is not you saying this, this is me saying this. What they do is they project a world that doesn’t exist, okay? I’m going to just type this in. This would be-

Tim Redmond:

Oh, Tai Lopez, come on.

Clay Clark:

Okay, so here we go. Seriously, a lot of people come to me after having been to a workshop that’s similar to this one. This guy’s name is Tai Lopez and Tai Lopez, this is an actual commercial that he’s running right now on YouTube. Watch this.

Tai Lopez:

You know what I like more than flying in a private jet like this? My books. Actually not, but I do bring books with me.

Clay Clark:

Okay, now I don’t know, and maybe I have a different world, maybe I come at the world from a different angle than a lot of people, but I’ve never been in a private jet with a guy like this and a girl like that, and a girl like that, and a guy like that talking about books. Nor have I ever been in a private jet with people like this, but the point is the idea that he’s selling, look at this.

Tai Lopez:

Guys, we were just talking a little bit earlier on the question was how to figure out what you should do with your life, like your destiny, what you’re meant to do, what your purpose is.

Clay Clark:

I don’t know that I want life advice from her or from her or from him or from him, and then you go-

Tim Redmond:

Yes.

Clay Clark:

Again, people say, “Clay, why are you mentioning him specifically?” Because I’m trying to speak to my specific, to your specific potential ideal and likely buyer, there’s only a certain number of clients we can work with at any given time, and I just want to be very clear. This is another example of what we are not. Let me just hit play here.

Tai Lopez:

Here in my garage, just bought this new Lamborghini here.

Tim Redmond:

Oh gosh.

Tai Lopez:

[inaudible 00:38:46] here in the Hollywood Hills. But you know what I like a lot more than materialistic things?

Clay Clark:

Oh, here we go.

Tai Lopez:

Knowledge.

Clay Clark:

Oh.

Tai Lopez:

In fact, I’m a lot more proud of these seven new bookshelves that I had to get installed to hold 2000 new books that I bought. It’s like the billionaire Warren Buffett says, “The more you learn, the more you earn.”

Now, maybe you’ve seen my TEDx talk where I talk about how I read a book a day. I read a book a day not to show off. It’s, again, about the knowledge. In fact, the real reason I keep this Lamborghini here is that it’s a reminder. A reminder that dreams are still possible because it wasn’t that long ago that I was in a little town across the country-

Clay Clark:

Here we go.

Tai Lopez:

… Sleeping on a couch-

Clay Clark:

On a couch.

Tai Lopez:

… in a mobile home with only $47.

Clay Clark:

$47. That’s exactly how many dollars he had. He remembers because he counted how many dollars he had.

Tim Redmond:

Yeah.

Clay Clark:

Tai Lopez, he’s got an unbelievable, he has so many different examples of what he does. This is just Tai Lopez. This is Tai Lopez. A lot of people, when they think of consulting, that’s what they think of, and that’s not what we do. We work with dentists, doctors, lawyers, contractors to help them grow their business. If you had to contrast what you do, Tim, as a consultant, that I’ve had the honor of working with for basically a decade-

Tim Redmond:

Oh, I’m hugely grateful to you. Yeah, yeah. Go ahead.

Clay Clark:

How would you describe what you do versus that of which Tai Lopez does? Because again, you say, “Business consultant,” or, “Business coach,” immediately people picture Tai Lopez due to his shameless jet-based marketing.

Tim Redmond:

Well, I’ve got some similarities with Tai in that I do have some books. I actually read them and I read them next to a super attractive woman, which is my wife, but that’s about as far as it goes. I know I’m not supposed to say bullshitter, but he’s the biggest bullshitter on the internet, I’m sorry, and I think you’ll have to probably beep that out.

But what we do is we are an outcome-focused company, and so we measure our success, the client has to be happy, but we really look at what are the numbers? We have the sales, we got net profit, we have gross profit, and cost of goods sold, we have that. We’ve got how much money you have in the bank account. We actually measure that. We count it. The big difference here is can you count and visibly and tangibly see the results of the coaching? If you can’t, kick us out and get rid of us and hire Tai Lopez. Please don’t hire him.

Clay Clark:

No, and you’ve been married for thirty-three years and I mean this because I’m not saying that you’re a marriage guru, nor am I saying I’m a marriage guru. What I’m saying, though, is that you really want to look at the fruit of the lives of the people that you’re listening to. Because if you look at Tai Lopez and who he’s hanging around with and what he’s all about, if that’s what you want in your life, then maybe you pursue that, but I call that lifestyle jackassery. It’s fake. It’s smoke and-

Tim Redmond:

Jackassery. Didn’t you find his address as being in the middle of some cow pasture in England or somewhere?

Clay Clark:

I did [inaudible 00:42:19] the address that he was using at one point led you to an abandoned warehouse district there.

Tim Redmond:

Okay.

Clay Clark:

Tim, we’ve got listeners from all over the country that tune into the show.

Tim Redmond:

Oh, good.

Clay Clark:

They’re always taking notes. If you had to give the listeners one final pro-tip or one final thought before we let you go, what would that be? What would that statement be you want to share with the listeners?

Tim Redmond:

I would say that create a cadence in your business, and you do that by having a daily planning that you do and then every week you touch every aspect of your business, meaning a meeting, an accountability meeting with whoever’s in charge of whatever you’re looking over, you visit that aspect of the business. For accounting, that’s going to be Monday at 1:00. For sales, that’s going to be Tuesday and Thursday and Friday. We have specific times where we touch every aspect of our business, and so creating a cadence in your business is creating this predictable pattern of making sure your business is on track and you’re addressing the issues as they go.

Clay Clark:

Tim, I appreciate you carving out time to be here. That’s Tim Redmond from redmondgrowth.com, that’s redmondgrowth.com. He’s a beautiful man, a great American, Tim Redmond. Thank you for allowing me to interview you today, sir.

Tim Redmond:

Thank you, Clay. Appreciate you.

Clay Clark:

We will talk to you later. Take care.

Tim Redmond:

Very good. Awesome.

Clay Clark:

Thanks. You go back eight years ago, think about the number of clients you had back then versus the number of clients you have now. As a percentage, what has been the growth over the past eight years, do you think? We got to inspire somebody out there who just doesn’t have the time to listen to [inaudible 00:43:56]

Tim Redmond:

Okay, so Clay, it’s like I would go up and down from about $10,000 a month up to about 40,000, but it’s up and down roller coaster. Now we’ve got it to where we’re in excess of 100 clients.

Clay Clark:

That’s awesome.

Tim Redmond:

I would have anywhere from five clients to 20 clients on my own with networking, but I had no control over it. I didn’t … Without the systems, you’re going to be victimized by your own business.

Clay Clark:

For somebody out there who struggles with math, let’s say that your average number of clients was 30 and you go to 100, as a percentage, what is that?

Tim Redmond:

I have doubled every year since working with you. I’ve doubled in clients, I’ve doubled in revenue every year. It’s 100% growth every year, I’ve worked with now … We’ve been good friends seven, eight years, and I’ve got doubled five times.

Speaker 4:

Which is just incredible. The first time you do it, that’s one thing, but when you do it repeatedly?

Tim Redmond:

Yeah.

Speaker 4:

That’s unbelievable.

Tim Redmond:

We’re working our blessed assurance off this year to double, we’re planning on doubling again. We’re incorporating some new things in there to really help us do it, but we are going to double again this year.

I started coaching, but it would go up and down, Clay. That’s when I came to you as I was going up and down, and I wanted to go up and up instead of up and down, and so that’s when it needed a system. Creating a system is you have nailed down specific steps that you’re going to take no matter how you feel, no matter the results, you lean into them and you do them regardless of what’s happening. You lean into them and it will give you X number of leads. You follow up with those leads, turns into sales.

Well, I tell you, if you don’t have a script and you don’t have a system, then every day is a whole new creation. You’re creating a lot of energy just to figure out what are you going to do.

Clay Clark:

Right.

Tim Redmond:

The best executives, Peter Drucker is a father of modern management, he said, “The most effective executives make one decision a year.” What you do is you make a decision, what is your system, and then you work like the dickens to make sure you follow that system. That’s really what it’s all about. With a script here, we have a brand new gal that just came in working for us. She nailed down the script and she’s been nailing down appointments. Usually we try to get one appointment for every 100 calls. We make 2 to 300 calls a day per rep, and she’s been nailing down five and eight appointments a day.

Clay Clark:

Somebody out there’s having a hard time-

Tim Redmond:

… following the script.

Clay Clark:

She’s making how many calls a day?

Tim Redmond:

She’s making between 2 and 300 calls a day.

Speaker 5:

Whoa.

Clay Clark:

Our relationship is weird in that we do … If someone were to buy an Apple computer today, or let’s say you bought a personal computer, a PC, the computer is made by let’s say Dell, but then the software in the computer would be Microsoft, let’s say, or Adobe or whatever that is.

Tim Redmond:

Mm-hmm.

Clay Clark:

I basically make the systems and you, you’re like the computer, and I’m like the software, it’s kind of how I would describe our relationship.

Tim Redmond:

Yep.

Clay Clark:

Tim, I want to ask you this. You and I reconnected, I think it was in the year 2000 and, what was it? Maybe 2010? Is that right? 2011 maybe? Or maybe further down the road, maybe 2013?

Tim Redmond:

2012.

Clay Clark:

Okay, so 2012, and at that time, I was five years removed from the DJ business, and you were how many years removed from tax and accounting software?

Tim Redmond:

It was about 10, 11 years.

Clay Clark:

We met … How did we re-meet? What was the first interaction? There was some interaction where you and I first connected. I just remember that somehow you and I went to Hideaway Pizza. But you remember when we first reconnected?

Tim Redmond:

Yeah. Well, we had that speaking thing that …

Clay Clark:

Oh, there it was.

Tim Redmond:

Yeah.

Clay Clark:

It was Victory Christian Center.

Tim Redmond:

Yeah.

Clay Clark:

I was speaking there.

Robert Redmond:

My name is Robert Redmond. I actually first met Clay almost three years ago to the day. I don’t know if he remembers it or not, but I wasn’t working with him at the time. I asked to see him and just ask him some questions to help direct my life, to get some mentorship, but I’ve been working with Clay for now, just over a year.

The role I play here is a business coach, business consultant, I work with different businesses, implementing best practice processes and systems that I have learned here by working with Clay. The experience working here has, to put it real plainly, has been just life-changing. I have not only learned new things and have gained new knowledge, but I have gained a whole new mindset that I believe wherever I end up will serve me well throughout the rest of my life.

Since working with Clay, I have learned so much, I would like to say almost everything about business in terms of the different categories. I haven’t learned it all, but I’ve learned all about marketing. I’ve learned about advertising. I’ve learned about branding. I’ve learned how to create a sales process for organizations in any industry. I’ve learned how to sell. I’ve learned how to create repeatable systems and processes and hold people accountable, how to hire people. It’s almost like every aspect of a business you can learn, I have learned a lot in those different categories. Then again, the mindset that I’ve gained here has been huge. Working here, you can’t be a mediocre person. You are a call to a higher standard of excellence and then as you’re called to that standard here, you begin to see those outcomes in every area of your life, that standard of-

PART 2 OF 4 ENDS [00:50:04]

Robert Redmond:

You see those outcomes in every area of your life, that standard of excellence that you want to implement no matter what you’re involved in. I would like to describe the other people that work with Clay are people that are going somewhere with their life. Marshall in the group interview talks about how the best fits for this organization are the people that are goal oriented. So they’re on their own trajectory and we’re on our own trajectory. And the best fits are those people where there can be a mutually beneficial relationship that as we pursue our goals and we help the business pursue those goals, the business helps us pursue our goals as well. And so I’d say people that are driven, people that want to make something of their lives, people that are goal oriented, they’re focused and they’re committed to overcoming any adversity that may come their way.

Clay’s passion for helping business owners grow their businesses, it’s unique in that I don’t know if there’s anyone else’s that can be as passionate. Whenever a business starts working with Clay, it’s almost as like Clay is running that business in the sense that he has something at stake. He’s just serving them. They’re one of his clients, but it’s as if he is actively involved in the business.

Whenever they have a win, he’s posting it all over his social media. He’s shouting it across the room here at Thrive. He’s sending people encouraging messages. He can kind of be that life coach and business coach in terms of being a motivator and that champion for people’s businesses. It’s again, unique because there’s no one else I’ve seen get so excited about and passionate about other people’s businesses.

The kind of people that wouldn’t like working with Clay are people that are satisfied with mediocrity, people that want to get through life by just doing enough, by just getting by. People who are not looking to develop themselves, people who are not coachable, people who think that they know it all and they’re unwilling to change, I would say those are the type of people. In short, anyone that’s content with mediocrity would not like working with Clay.

So if you’re meeting Clay for the first time, the advice I’d give you is definitely come ready to take tons of notes. Every time Clay speaks, he gives you a wealth of knowledge that you don’t want to miss. I remember the first time that I met Clay, I literally carried a notebook with me all around. I was looking at this notebook the other day actually. I carried a notebook with me all around and I just took tons of notes. I filled the entire notebook in about three or four months just from being around Clay, following him and learning from him. And then I would say, come coachable. Be open to learning something new. Be open to challenging yourself. Be open to learning and adjusting parts about you that need to be adjusted.

Clay Clark:

Oh, look at this cute baby. What a great baby. That’s a quality baby. That’s a healthy baby. Okay.

All right nation, on today’s show, I’m very excited for you to hear this success story about this wonderful couple that, Sean, I would describe them as they are killing the game in the most nonviolent way possible. They’re killing the game in the most nonviolent way possible. They are blowing up in a good way. Folks, I’m telling these folks are really growing their business. And what makes them great is they’re really kind, hardworking, diligent people. And we’re honored to serve them. We’ve got Jenny and Mike here joining us. Jenny and Mike, welcome to the Thrivetime Show. How are you two?

Mike:

Fine.

Jenny:

Fine, thank you. Good. We’re doing well.

Clay Clark:

Okay. Now I’ll start with you, Jenny, because frankly Sean likes you more. No, I’m just kidding. Let’s start with you. So how did you first discover us and the business coaching that we provide?

Jenny:

So I was listening to different podcasts about business. I was starting up our business, and so you were the first one to pop up on our podcast on Apple. I think Apple is what I was on. And so I started listening to you. I got on your website and I was just a little girl starting a business, and I said, “I’m going to ask this guy to be my coach.” And I don’t think I’m going to get a shot, but sure enough, within a week you called me.

Clay Clark:

Now, who is this cute, cute child here? Mike, who is this cute kid here?

Mike:

It’s Lennon Rose. She is about to be 10 months old.

Clay Clark:

I hate to do this to you, but can you kind of hold up the baby to the camera a little bit? This is-

Mike:

[inaudible 00:55:01]

Clay Clark:

Look at this cute baby. What a great baby, quality baby. That’s a healthy baby. Okay. So Mike, can you tell us what’s the name of your website there? I think people want to look you up and verify your real people that don’t just happen to have a cute baby.

Mike:

Yeah, our website is newconcept.healthcare.

Clay Clark:

Newconcept.healthcare. So newconcept.healthcare. I’m going to pull it up right now, folks, so we can all verify that they’re not just a couple who’s taken advantage of the cute baby they have to get on the podcast. This is a real couple. Okay, so I’m pulling that up here. So this is the website. t’s new concept.healthcare. And can you tell our listeners, what services do you guys provide at newconcept.healthcare?

Jenny:

So we offer more functional medicine. So we offer IV therapies. We offer hormone replacement therapies. We also do acute care. We do pretty much everything, but we’re very much alternative. So we believe in medical freedom and that’s what we offer.

Clay Clark:

And you guys, you reached out. Do you remember that initial consultation there? Do you remember Mike, that initial consultation? Do you remember what that was like?

Mike:

Yeah, it was actually pretty overwhelming that we were starting this business with absolutely nothing and we had the opportunity to work with Thrivetime Show.

Clay Clark:

Well, the one thing I always try to do is… My father, great guy, may he rest in peace, he worked his tail off like so many people do. And there was no real economic result that was achieved from it. There wasn’t any. He had the college degree. He’s working two jobs. I remember his late thirties, he’s working at Domino’s delivering pizzas, working at QuickTrip. He worked at furniture stores. And I always try to look at every new client we have as though I’m talking to my dad because what would my dad, what could he have learned at the age of 37 that could have changed the financial trajectory of his life? And I try to look at it that way.

And so you guys, I paired you up with Sean. You’ve been working with Sean, I believe, Sean, since October of 2020. Is that correct, Sean?

Sean:

I think that’s when they started their business. It wasn’t until about April of 2021-

Jenny:

April, yeah.

Sean:

… when we actually got going.

Jenny:

Yeah.

Clay Clark:

April of 2021. And at that point, from that point to now, Sean, how much of growth have you guys achieved from 2021 to now? Do you know that number?

Sean:

Yeah, I mean, we’re sitting at 2023 revenues were 821,000 and they’re in October of 2020. They only had a few months, but they made about 95,000 by the end of 2020. And then we grew significantly that first year, about 375% to 588,000. And we continued to grow there ever since all the way up to where we’re getting close to the million dollar market at this point here, just like three years in.

Clay Clark:

Jenny, how would you describe the growth? Would you say you’ve doubled? Are you at five times larger? How would you describe that?

Jenny:

Oh no, I definitely feel the growth. There’s been some growing pains and you guys have helped us through that too. So it’s been amazing. It’s been amazing to help people because what I’m passionate about, and you guys have really helped us expand and tell people what we’re about.

Clay Clark:

So step one here we did, we do this with all the clients. I’m going to walk people through the steps. We really needed to nail down your branding. And that’s a big thing because branding is to humans what clothing is. So as an example, you wake up today, folks, if you run around and you’re streaking through life, you’re probably not going to get a lot of conversations started. So we all have to be intentional about what are we going to wear? Are we going to wear a tie? Are we going to wear a polo? Are we going to do makeup? Are we not? So people, they judge us based on our appearance.

And so we really had to get a website built. We had to optimize the online brand. Jenny, we do it all included for our clients. So we don’t refer you to another vendor. We do it all. Can you talk about the impact that that has made on the business?

Jenny:

Oh, for sure. Just the website itself. It looks so great, would’ve never been able to make it look that great the way y’all optimize everything and keep us with Google just where people search us and that we’re the first people that come up, and that’s actually how we’ve established our business and started offering some of the things that we offer is because of the tags that we have. I didn’t originally start off as doing IV therapy, but due to people googling healthcare, functional medicine, I had three phone calls in a week that said, “Hey, do you offer IV therapy?” and it was very interesting. And I was like, “Well, no, but I can.” And so it was because of you guys that kind of snowballed and took effect. So yeah, there’s a lot that you guys have done for us.

Clay Clark:

Now, Sean, we’re working with these wonderful clients here. I’ll pick on Mike here. You always say great things about Mike and Jenny. You’re always. What makes them good to work with? Because I want to make sure for anybody out there, if you go to Thrivetimeshow.com, I consistently offer a free 13 point assessment. I’ve been doing that since 2005. I do it without reservation. There’s no obligation, but there’s usually about one to two knuckleheads a week that will fill out the form and probably 20 really great people that fill out the form. And then we only take on 160 clients. And so I don’t want anyone to waste their time. What makes Mike so great to work with?

Sean:

Well, Clay, when I first started coaching, you taught me about these two types of business owners. There’s the happy hopers out there, and then there’s the diligent doers. And I think these guys are a great example of the diligent doer. They continually apply effort to work on their business, not just in their business. They consistently show up to their meetings, they track all of the critical numbers of their-

Clay Clark:

There it is.

Sean:

… business, and they’re aware of what’s going on with all of their employees. They’re paying attention to all the little things going on. They’re keeping all the plates spinning and they ask great questions. They actually really do make a great effort consistently to apply our systems and help their business grow. And it’s been working.

Clay Clark:

So step one, we get the branding nailed down. That’s the website, the print pieces, the logos, the business cards, but then you have to develop that online reputation. Now, that could be a tough thing to do, Jenny, and this isn’t a backhanded compliment, I’m just saying, but for people that are humble and very kind of, which I would put Jenny in that category, sometimes asking for reviews is more difficult because you almost feel like you’re self-promoting. I’ve never had this conversation with you. But has that been difficult for you to ask people to give you video reviews and Google reviews after you provided the service, or was that easy for you to do?

Jenny:

It was not. It’s not easy. It still isn’t easy.

Clay Clark:

Okay.

Jenny:

It is. It’s difficult because you feel like you’re begging for something even though you know did the right thing. So it is. It’s difficult for me. It’s just my personality type, but we get it done anyways.

Clay Clark:

I’ll find this for the diligent kind customers we work with, it’s very difficult sometimes to ask for those objective reviews from real customers. And I find that from my clients I’ve worked with that are sort of like self-described barbarians.

I had a guy years ago, I worked with, I won’t mention his name or his industry, but I’ll just say he’s obsessed with physical fitness. And he told me, he says, “I’m kind of a business barbarian. You tell me what to do and I will slay the dragons.” And I’m like, “Okay, you need to get Google reviews from everybody you’ve ever worked with.” And he’s like, “Oh, I’m on it.” And this guy’s just shamelessly calling through his phone and just lighting people up, going, “Give me a review. Come on, give me a review. Why will you not give me a…” I’m like, “Go ahead, dial it down a little bit.”

So again, you guys are humble, diligent doers. You’re the ideal person here. So I appreciate you sharing that.

The next thing we had to do is we had to create a no-brainer. Now a no-brainer is an offer so good, so amazing, that people simply cannot say no to it. Now, I won’t mention the name of the company, but I worked years ago and I still work with this company. They’re a medical company. They’re doing well now. And for whatever reason, they put on their website “First initial consult 497.” And he went to one of these borderline spiritual motivational conference things where Jesus isn’t described, but they did kind of talk about metaphysical alignment and getting your whoosah, getting in your groove alignment, no friction.

And he came back and he’s like, “Clay, I believe in the seven is the number of completion.” I go, “I agree.” He says, “Four is the number that’s urgent.” I’m like, “Okay.” “Nine…” And I’m going, “What?” And he’s like, “I don’t want tire kickers, so I’m going to do 497 for my first consult. That way I don’t deal with the tire kickers.” And I’m like, “Doc I love you so much. You’re a doctor. I love it. You don’t have any customers though. That’s why you came to me. You don’t have any customers. So why don’t you do a first free consult?” He’s like, “I’m not going to do it. I’m going to kick out,” Sean, “… the tire kicker.” Sean, I’m sure you’ve never seen this with a client.

Sean:

Oh, never.

Clay Clark:

And so now what makes it worse is his wife also went to the metaphysical alignment motivational jackassery festival, and she was like, “497 is the number. I had a dream about it.” I’m like, “Yeah, because you probably talked about it all weekend. You probably are subconsciously thinking about it. You’re probably creating a neural pathway related to 497.”

And so anyway, after about a year, he finally says, “Okay, I came to your conference and I saw a person that did the first consult for a dollar. I’m going to go with that.” And now his business is blowing up. Could you talk about your no-brainer, your first consult for a dollar? How has that helped you having that no-brainer offer?

Jenny:

Yeah, so it gets people in. And so when we get people in, we know that we’re doing a good job and we know that we’re trustworthy and our healthcare is superior to most. So just getting people in for that dollar, because a lot of people, they’re nervous about going to the doctor or they don’t trust healthcare system. And so they know that they can come in. They’re only going to spend a dollar. They can figure out whether or not they trust us, figure out whether or not we’re the place for them, and we know 100% of the time we will be. So it’s really helped us just get people in and get people to trust us more.

Clay Clark:

Now, once somebody fills out the form, folks, again, there’s a linear pathway here. I’m trying to give you a visual here. So you establish your revenue goals. You figure out your numbers to break even. You figure out how many hours a week you’re willing to work. Even though you have a cute baby, you got to figure out how you’re going to get it done.

Step number four is you define your unique value proposition. What makes you unique? That’s something you and Sean have worked on together. You improve your branding. Now you’re coming in contact with humans. Business is a contact sport. I love this part. That’s when you start marketing. You launch your marketing, you have your online ads, you optimize your website. You begin to come up top in the search results. You start to get leads. Do you remember what it was like Jenny, when you first got your first online lead? Do you remember the first one where you’re like, it’s working? Do you remember that moment?

Jenny:

Yeah. It was almost like we wanted to, well, we did celebrate because it finally had happened, and then as soon as the first one came in, the second one came in. And like I said, it was almost a growing pain experience. We had so many leads so fast. So it was great. And we still celebrate every lead that we get.

Clay Clark:

Now, Mike, the next step is you have to make sales scripts. We recommend to every client that the calls are recorded for quality assurance. You have a sales script. The calls are recorded for quality assurance. You have a one sheet that tracks your pricing. You have pre-written emails. You begin tracking. Sean’s always bragging about you guys with tracking. Mike, how has it helped to have tracking in place where you can see? How does that help you?

Mike:

Well, it’s really a good benefit because, at the end of the week, you know what your income was, you know what your leads was. So wherever we’re lacking in, we can quickly adjust and make that adjustment to make it work for the next week.

Clay Clark:

Now, if you don’t have tracking, folks, this is a true story. It’s kind of a sad story. So I’ll speak in generality, Sean. I talked to a guy the other day and this is a terrible story. Long time client, and he got motivated. He set up a trade show. He didn’t tell me he’s doing it, and it’s fine. You don’t have to tell me. But he set up a trade show. I think he was going to try to surprise me with the fruit of the trade show. So he set up the trade show and he gets on the call, his energy’s kind of off, and I’m like, “Are you okay?” “Yeah, doing fine.” “What’s wrong?” “I just, I don’t know.”

I’m like, “Your lead sheet. We’re getting 10 to 15 leads a week. It’s very consistent. Revenue looks good.” He is like, “Yeah, I’m in a tight spot.” “You’re in a tight spot? Why you in a tight spot?” He says, “I did a trade show.” “You did a trade show?” “I got roped into four. I did a thing where you get the billboard, you get the trade show, you get the magazine ad. And I did the trade show and we got no leads.” And I go, “What kind of trade show did you do?” And he says, “Well, I went to the whatever trade show.”

And Sean, what I find is that there’s the emotional excitement about being on the billboard, being on the magazine cover. And he got called by one of these kind of scam, I call it a scam mockery or jackassery. They call you and they go, “Hey, is this Sean?” Yeah, this is Sean. “Sean, yeah, we noticed that you have an incredible healthcare company and we want to honor you by giving you the yada yada of the Region award. It’s the yada yada. It’s a regional prestigious award. We’d like to meet with you. Can we meet with you?” Yeah.

So now I meet here. “Now, Sean…” Again, I know we’re mot on the phone, but I still like the phone voice here. “Now, Sean, so because we’re so honored, we’re inviting you to a plated dinner to honor, just your honor, your honor, your greatness, your humbleness, and it’s going to be a $1,000 a plate for you and your wife. And did you want four seats or eight? Because most people do eight.” Oh, I guess just four. Four. “Four. That does include a glossy magazine feature in…” We’ll just call it like Missouri Local Top Doctor Jackassery. It’s a great magazine. “And you’re also on the… You’ll be on a billboard. We’ve teamed up with the billboard. It rotates through. You’re going to see your face. Hey, don’t get too excited.

And just because we’re honored. Again, we’re just honored. Now, did you want to do the four tickets, sir?” Yeah, absolutely. Now the way it works is it’s going to be a four payments of 4,000 for a total of 16,000. And that’s…” No, I’m serious.

And now they’re in the trade shows and he’s going to the trade show and there ain’t nobody there. There is nobody there to be technical. Nobody was at this trade show. I mean, everybody was not at the trade show. He’s got photos of him and his wife and his team and an empty booth and he’s got a magazine and no leads are coming. And he was so excited to tell me.

I’m sure you’ve never encountered this sort of thing, Virginia. Jenny, have you ever seen a situation where that sort of sham mockery advertising has been entered into your world in some capacity?

Jenny:

I’ve been there. I’ve been exactly where what you’re talking about. And I’ve set up everything and paid employees, and I felt like I was nothing more than a free pin show. The only people that were there were people looking for free pins.

Clay Clark:

Oh, I know. And it feels terrible. And then you kind of have to sell it to yourself all day. Guys, we’re getting our name out there.

Sean, can you pass the megaphone back there. It’s right behind you. Yeah, because I tell people, if you want to get your name out there, what you do is you just run outside and say, right, come back. New Concept Healthcare. And people go, “Why are you yelling at me? I’m trying to shop for my groceries.” New Concept Healthcare. Getting the name out there. Getting the name… They’re like, “Is this effective?” Of course, it’s effective. I’m getting my name out there.

And then that leads to buying Frisbees, branded Frisbees, Coozies. You know what I’m saying. Branded pins.

Jenny:

Yes.

Clay Clark:

All of a sudden you buy these things. Sean, you know what I’m talking about?

Sean:

Oh yeah. Yeah.

Clay Clark:

Okay.

Sean:

Oh yeah.

Clay Clark:

So now we have to do, and I’m going to show you, this is kind of the backend of one of my companies called Elephant in the Room. And you do a search for eitrlounge.com, and then you go to forward slash staff. I’m not going to give you the password folks, but you log in and these are all the systems needed to run the haircut chain.

Now, one thing I thought was very interesting is Truth Social, President Trump’s social media platform, the other day, they were disclosing, Newsweek was disclosing the revenue of it.

Sean:

Oh, yeah.

Clay Clark:

And I just want people to know this because I think just full disclosure, I’m a very conservative person, but I just want people to see this. This is just something to look at. Truth Social, they declared in their filing that they did $3.3 million of revenue and had 49 million of losses, which by the way, that’s very normal for a tech startup company. And their users are going up and they’re having an… There’s like a reaction in the marketplace. People are actually putting more money in, they’re investing, the stock price is going up. But I don’t know anybody that I’ve met in my life, I’ve never been a client that can afford to bring in 3.3 million and lose 49 million.

So for my haircut chain, we have five locations. We bring in more than 3.3 million. And this just in, we don’t spend 49 million. So we call it a lean startup. You got to keep that thing lean. And so when you go to eitrlounge.com/staff, every document needed to manage the business is here. So the opening checklist for the manager, you click here, boom. This is what the manager has to do to start the day. Everything is documented. And that’s kind where we’re at right now with Jenny and Mike’s business. We’re in the process of building all those checklists. Sean, what kind of checklist have you built so far?

Sean:

Oh man. We have a whole page. Their staff page is pretty built out. We’re really getting there. I think more right now, it’s getting, correct me if I’m wrong, we need some managers in there so we can free you guys up from the business. And so we have a lot of the worker level systems. We’re just now working on more of how do we get those manager level systems and find those high quality managers.

Clay Clark:

Now let me give Jenny a little mentor moment here. This would be helpful for you. I’m going to hop on a flight in about two and a half hours, three hours to go to Denver. And I got to go to Denver to meet with the founder of oxyfresh.com. This is a brand we’ve worked with and help them to grow to 550 locations now. 550 locations, okay? And if you type in carpet cleaning quotes, we’re the world’s highest rated and most reviewed company in the world. In the world, okay? 274,000 reviews. We’ve been holding this idea in our mind for 15 consecutive years. I’ve been working on this, Sean, before I met you, we just were grinding. Okay?

Sean:

Yeah.

Clay Clark:

And the biggest challenge that the locations have is managers finding good manager. And I tell people this and it never goes over well, but hopefully eventually it will. I keep refining it, refining the idea, the kind of person that enjoys conflict but also likes people is a good manager. Let me try that again. The kind of person that enjoys conflict but also likes people is a good manager. And I have found it’s not so much trainable as it’s findable. So as an example where we’re getting ready to head out to Denver, Sean, my personality type, and you know that I have to pack all this stuff to get ready to go. You saw my suitcase out there.

Sean:

Yep.

Clay Clark:

How many times do you think I’ve followed up with the people involved in the trip so far before leaving?

Sean:

Oh man, it’s probably on your to-do list. And you’ve checked it off probably at least five times today, I would think.

Clay Clark:

And what kind of things do you think I might’ve put on my checklist to travel to Denver?

Sean:

First off, just making sure that the timing is working. Making sure that you have all the stuff that you need, making sure that you have double of the stuff that you need in case something gets broken. Making sure that the people who are there know you’re coming and when you’re going to be there and what to expect from you.

Clay Clark:

Keep going. Do you think I’m checking a bag?

Sean:

Oh yeah, you’re probably not checking a bag because it would get lost, yeah.

Clay Clark:

There it is. All right.

Sean:

No.

Clay Clark:

And you think I’m catching a flight a lot earlier than I need to be there?

Sean:

Way earlier, yeah.

Mike:

Yeah, if I’m having a meeting tomorrow, which I am, I’m leaving today at 12:30. That’s the sort of paranoia that makes management possible. So I have literally called. I said, “All right, I’m kidding on the 12:30 flight. We’re meeting tomorrow. I should be in by 4:00 Denver time. Our meeting’s tomorrow. If that flight gets delayed and the next one gets delayed and the next one I’ll still be there. I’ve got backup phone chargers. I have a rule, everybody going with me, you cannot check a bag. “I want to check a bag.” Can’t check a bag. Why? Because it could get lost.

This is real. I am completely paranoid. And that is, the paranoia is, what makes the businesses run. And I ask my staff every day, “Guys, elephant in the room, did you guys get a review?” And they say, “Well, yeah, we got a review. You asked me 10 minutes ago.” “Okay. Well, I’ll talk to you in four minutes.” You’ve heard me say that. I’ll say, “I’ll talk to you in five minutes,” and I’ll do it. And it’s a follow up of because I have to make sure that the checklists are being followed.

PART 3 OF 4 ENDS [01:15:04]

Clay Clark:

And it’s a follow up of… Because I have to make sure that the checklists are being followed, the reviews are being followed. We’re a licensed business. People don’t know that. Hair care, you’re licensed by the state, so we have certain cleanliness standards. We could have random people from the state show up, so we got checklists. And I follow up, and it doesn’t bother me to follow up with the same adult who’s in their 40s six times within a 50 minute span of time. It doesn’t bother me. But most people, that bothers them. And so have you found that, Jenny, that a lot of people don’t like to follow up? Have you found that or is that just something unique to me?

Jenny:

I found that they don’t like to follow up. No, people don’t like to follow up. It’s almost like an awkward communication thing-

Clay Clark:

Isn’t it?

Jenny:

… that people will try to avoid, yeah. And it’s not necessarily that you’re being mean or any type of way, but I feel like that’s probably the way that we feel when we continuously follow up, like we’re having to step on people’s toes, but really we’re not. We’re just getting the job done.

Clay Clark:

My mentorship moment for you is it’s probably the same feeling you have when you ask for reviews.

Jenny:

Yeah.

Clay Clark:

It’s probably the same. And I’m just saying, Mike, did you ever play football or a sport of some kind?

Speaker 6:

Yeah, I used to play soccer.

Clay Clark:

Okay, soccer. What position did you play?

Speaker 6:

Goalkeeper.

Clay Clark:

Goalkeeper, okay. So is this is a great example. I didn’t know you were a goalkeeper. But when you’re a goalkeeper and someone’s kicking that ball at you fast, just the ball’s coming in there… People can really kick a soccer ball fast. There are certain people that want to be a goalkeeper, but they kind of avoid the ball. They try to hide from it. They flinch. You know what I’m talking about? But you actually would lunge into it. Am I correct?

Speaker 6:

Right.

Clay Clark:

You’re aggressive, right? For some reason, you enjoyed it.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, I enjoyed getting 100 miles an hour fastball.

Clay Clark:

Did you ever see somebody who tried to be a goalie? I’m not looking for a name here, but somebody who would kind of hide from the ball?

Speaker 6:

Yeah.

Clay Clark:

This is the same thing for management. As the manager, you have to want… You have to sort of seek out conflict, but like people. So I’ll say things like, “Okay, it’s eight o’clock. I need to make sure you put out the flags in front of the elephant in the room store today, Mr. Manager. Put out the flags that draw the attention by the road. Put out the flags, and I’m going to call you in 10 minutes to follow up.” Call them in 10 minutes. “Are the flags up? Can you send me a picture?” They’re like, “Do not trust me?” “Absolutely not. I trust nobody. Go ahead and send them.” And then I’ll call them back 30 minutes later, “Hey, did you get Google reviews?” “Yeah, we got one Google Review. The quote is 10.” “Yeah, I’ll call you back in two minutes.” Call them back, “Hey, did you get a review?” “It’s been two minutes.” “I know. I’ll tell you what? I’ll call you back in an hour.” And my whole day is just following up.

And then over time, the culture happens where people go, he’s going to follow up. And now the people that like the follow up to work there, and it’s become a great thing. And that’s where we’re kind of at right now. I think as we’re getting into the follow-up phase. Do you have call recording in place there, Mike? Do you have the call recording for quality assurance installed yet?

Speaker 6:

Yes, we do.

Clay Clark:

And are you learning some things?

Speaker 6:

Yes. It is very hard to train people on recorded scripts.

Clay Clark:

Yeah. That’s something we got to do. Now we’re just going through the workflow, and then the wowing the customers. What Sean is saying is that your patients are consistently wowed. Now, I don’t know if that’s because Sean is your hype man or if that’s a real thing, but it seems like people are actually, wow, they’re being wowed right now. People, when they come in, if you look at the workflow, they buy something, right here, we have to wow them. You’ve got to create that wow moment. And again, if you want to download this diagram, folks, just go to thrivetimeshow.com/millionaire, thrivetimeshow.com/millionaire. You can download it from my newest book called A Millionaire’s Guide to Becoming Sustainably Rich. You got to create that wow moment. Amidst the checklist and the tracking, at some point here, you’ve got to create a moment that wows people where they go, wow.

So I’m trying to get everybody’s creative juices flowing here. So if you have a restaurant, I work with a restaurant in Florida right now, a great restaurant, they say, “Welcome in. Is it your first time?” They say, “Yeah, it’s my first time.” “Oh, well hey, you get free appetizers on us today and one free adult beverage. Welcome in.” And every time, it’s that wow. And then when you come back later and ask for a review, or “Hey, what entree do you want? Guess what?” people become generous with how they buy. Another example, I work with an auto auction. The auto auction says your first time that you buy from the auto auction, you only have to pay a dollar more than the actual cost of the vehicle, just to wow people to get that going. I happen to work with a carpet cleaning business, carpet cleaning business. And what they do is they say, “Hey, the first time we clean your carpet will be any competitor’s price, and it will be at least half off of our normal price.” And they go, “Okay, great.” You got to have that wow moment.

What are you guys doing, Jenny, to wow your customers there?

Jenny:

Well, there are things that we do. We will oftentimes give samples of certain things because we know they work. We have a lot of supplement cells that we do. Again, the dollar console is a wow moment because we will spend 10 to 15 minutes explaining how we’re different, and I feel like they’re wowed because of that. Also, our services are so much different. We spend time in the room with our patients, we listen to them. They’re not just a number. And a lot of times, people have never experienced that, so there’s a lot of wow moments, I think, for all of our patients.

Clay Clark:

I understand that 59% of your customers are now from word of mouth. Is that accurate?

Jenny:

Yeah.

Clay Clark:

That’s huge.

Speaker 7:

Yeah. Well, and with the customer acquisitions cost too. I’ve heard you say this before, Clay, that if you’re advertising and you’re doing a good job wowing at the same time, they compound each other and you’ll end up having two to three word of mouth referrals from those patients that are wowed for every one lead you have from advertising. We measured and tracked that they had this last year. For every dollar they spent on advertising, they were able to bring back in $4 and 61 cents. That’s a 461% return on their marketing investment.

Clay Clark:

It’s incredible stuff. And the great news is as we build these systems, if you guys ever want to franchise or license or open up multiple locations, if done properly, you should be able to scale it. It should be very repeatable, very duplicatable. Other things you guys have done, you’ve implemented a database to keep track of your customers. You’re gathering objective video reviews. You guys are really checking all the boxes. I’d like for you, if you can, Jenny here, to give a word of encouragement for any of our listeners out there that are a little bit on the fence right now and they’re going, “I have thought about scheduling a free consultation, but I don’t know. I hear it’s 1700 a month.” Can you maybe explain your thoughts, what you would say to anybody who’s a friend of yours or family that asks you about the value about the business consulting?

Jenny:

Oh, well, I would say that the $1,700 a month is an excuse not to have someone to mentor you. It’s kind of like being in a gym when you need a trainer. We’re not always perfect, and business owning is not easy and you need a mentor. I’ve never missed the $1,700 a month. Even when I was only six months in when we started with you guys, I’ve never even considered it a loss. It was scary at first to make that, but that wasn’t an excuse. I knew I needed someone to guide me through this, and you guys have guided us through this through the entire thing, through employees, through income, through spending, through all of it. And we come through so many problems. There are a lot of problems that are established when you have a business. You become very overwhelmed very fast, and you need somebody that you can call who’s successful, who’s been there that says, “You are not crazy. This happens to all of us. Here’s what you do about it.” It’s been the best decision that we’ve made.

Clay Clark:

Final question I have here for you, as far as having a one-stop shop, years ago I hired a business consultant who was great, and he would say things like… And I’m not ripping him, I’m just telling you what would happen. He would say, “Clay, you got to work on your business and not in it.” I’m going, that’s true. He goes, “You got to delegate to elevate.” That’s true. “Clay, your website is not optimized.” And I’m going, this is great fresh perspective. I go, “Bruce, could you help me optimize?” “No, I don’t optimize.” “Could you help me work on it?” “No.” “Could you help me make a checklist?” “No.” Could you help me with the print pieces that I need to make?” “No.” “Can you make a video?” “No.” “Do you help me with my online ads?” “No.” And he’s an northeastern American guy, and he used to say, “Clay, baby, let me tell you what, I don’t don’t make print pieces. What am I, a print piece guy? I’m not a web guy. We know what I am. I’m a work on the business guy. You got to find a good web guy.”

So every meeting we would have would result in me having to find another vendor to pay another $8,000 to build the website, 4,000 to make the video, 5,000 to do… So every time you give a recommendation, it would lead to another cost. Can you maybe explain the value of having a flat monthly fee?

Jenny:

Yeah, I don’t have to ever worry about it. I know if I need the website updated, it’s a text away. I know if I’m having trouble with an employee, it’s a text away. I know if I need financial advice, it’s a text away. And again, we meet every single week, and all our questions are answered, and we’re held accountable to what we need to be held accountable for. So it really works for us.

Clay Clark:

Jenny and Mike, thank you guys for your time so much. I really do value your time. I appreciate you guys being here today. Today. And on part two of today’s show, we’re going to tee up another success story because we want people to know it is possible, despite the financial jackassery plaguing our nation right now, it is possible to become successful, and you guys are a living example of it. Thank you guys for bringing your baby on the show. We’ll talk to you soon.

Jenny:

Bye. Thanks.

Speaker 8:

I’m Rachel with Tip Top Canine, and we just want to give a huge thank you to Clay and Vanessa Clark.

Speaker 9:

Hey guys, I’m Ryan with Tip Top Canine. Just want to say a big thank you to Thrive15, thank you to Make Your Life Epic. We love you guys, we appreciate you, and really just appreciate how far you’ve taken us.

This is our old house. This where we used to live years ago. This is our old neighborhood. You can see it’s nice, right?

So this is my old van and our old school marketing, and this is our old team. And by team, I mean it’s being another guy.

Speaker 8:

This is our new house with our new neighborhood.

This is our new van with our new marketing, and this is our new team. We went from four to 14, and I took this beautiful photo. We worked with several different business coaches in the past, and they were all about helping Ryan sell better and just teaching sales, which is awesome. But Ryan is a really great salesman, so we didn’t need that. We needed somebody to help us get everything that was in his head out into systems, into manuals and scripts, and actually build a team. So now that we have systems in place, we’ve gone from one to 10 locations in only a year.

Speaker 9:

In October, 2016, we grossed 13 grand for the whole month. Right now it’s 2018, the month of October. It’s only the 22nd. We’ve already grossed a little over 50 grand for the whole month, and we still have time to go. We’re just thankful for you, thankful for Thrive and your mentorship, and we’re really thankful that you guys have helped us to grow a business that we run now instead of the business running us. Just thank you, thank you, thank you times a thousand,

Clay Clark:

The Thrive Time Show. Today, interactive business workshops are the highest and most reviewed business workshops on the planet.

Speaker 10:

You can learn the proven 13 point business system that Dr. Zoellner and I have used over and over to start and grow successful companies. When we get into the specifics, the specific steps on what you need to do to optimize your website, we’re going to teach you how to fix your conversion rate. We’re going to teach you how to do a social media marketing campaign that works. How do you raise capital? How do you get a small business loan? We teach you everything you need to know here during a two day 15 hour workshop. It’s all here for you. You work every day in your business, but for two days you can escape and work on your business and build these proven systems, so now you can have a successful company that will produce both the time freedom and the financial freedom that you deserve.

You’re going to leave energized, motivated, but you’re also going to leave empowered. The reason why I’ve built these workshops is because as an entrepreneur, I always wish that I had this.. And because there wasn’t anything like this, I would go to these motivational seminars, no money down real estate, Ponzi scheme, get motivated seminars, and they would never teach me anything. It was like you went there and you paid for the big chocolate Easter Bunny. But inside of it, it was a hollow nothingness. And I wanted the knowledge, and they’re like, “Oh, but we’ll teach you the knowledge after our next workshop.” And the great thing is we have nothing to upsell. Every workshop, we teach you what you need to know. There’s no one in the back of the room trying to sell you some next big get rich quick walk on hot coals product.

It’s literally we teach you the brass tacks, the specific stuff that you need to know to learn how to start and grow a business. I encourage you to not believe what I’m saying, and I want you to Google the Z66 auto auction. I want you to Google Elephant in the Room. Look at Robert Zoellner and Associates, look them up, and say, are they successful because they’re geniuses, or are they successful because they have a proven system? When you do that research, you will discover that the same systems that we use in our own business can be used in your business. Come to Tulsa, book a ticket, and I guarantee you it’s going to be the best business workshop ever, and we’ll even give you your money back if you don’t love it. We’ve built this facility for you, and we’re excited to see you.

Clay Clark:

If we go back eight years ago, think about the number of clients you had back then versus the number of clients you have now. As a percentage, what has been the growth over the past eight years, do you think. We got to inspire somebody out there who just doesn’t have the time to listen to their calls?

Speaker 11:

Okay, so Clay, it is like I would go up and down from about $10,000 a month up to about 40,000, but it’s up and down roller coaster. And so now, we’ve got it to where we’re in excess of 100 clients.

Clay Clark:

That’s awesome.

Speaker 11:

And so I would have anywhere from five clients to 20 clients on my own with networking, but I had no control over it. I didn’t… Without the systems, you’re going to be victimized by your own business.

Clay Clark:

For somebody out there who struggles with math, if you, let’s say that your average number of clients was 30 and you go to 100, as a percentage, what is that?

Speaker 11:

I have doubled every year since working with you. So I’ve doubled in clients. I’ve doubled in revenue every year. It’s 100% percent growth every year I’ve worked. Now, so we’ve been good friends seven, eight years, and I’ve got doubled five times.

Clay Clark:

Which is just incredible. The first time you do it, that’s one thing, but when you do it repeatedly, that’s unbelievable.

Speaker 11:

We’re working our blessed assurance off this year to double. We’re planning on doubling again. We’re incorporating some new things in there to really help us do it, but we are going to double again this year. I started coaching, but it would go up and down, Clay. That’s when I came to you, as I was going up and down, and I wanted to go up and up instead of up and down. And so that’s when it needed a system. So creating a system is you have nailed down specific steps that you’re going to take. No matter how you feel, no matter the results, you lean into them and you do them regardless of what’s happening. You lean into them, and it will give you X number of leads. You follow up with those leads, turns into sales. Well, I tell you, it’s if you don’t have a script and you don’t have a system, then every day is a whole new creation. You’re creating a lot of energy just to figure out what are you going to do.

Clay Clark:

Right.

Speaker 11:

And the best executives… Peter Drucker is a father of modern management, and he said, “The most effective executives make one decision a year.” What you do is you make a decision, what is your system? And then you work like the dickens to make sure you follow that system. And so that’s really what it’s all about. So with a script here, we have a brand new gal that just came in working for us. She nailed down the script, and she’s been nailing down appointments. Usually, we try to get one appointment for every 100 calls, we make 2 to 300 calls a day per rep, and she’s been nailing down five and eight appointments a day on the script.

Clay Clark:

Somebody out there’s having a hard time. So she’s making how many calls a day?

Speaker 11:

She’s making between 2 and 300 calls a day.

Clay Clark:

And our relationship is weird in that we do… If someone were to buy an Apple computer today, or let’s say you bought a personal computer, a PC, the computer is made by let’s say Dell, but then the software in the computer would be Microsoft, let’s say, or Adobe or whatever that is. So I basically make the systems, and you’re like the computer and I’m like the software. It’s kind of how I would describe our relationship. Tim, I want to ask you this. When you and I reconnected, I think it was in the year 2000 and… What was it? Maybe 2010? Is that right? 2011 maybe, or maybe further down the road. Maybe 2013

Speaker 11:

2012.

Clay Clark:

Okay, so 2012. And at that time, I was five years removed from the DJ business. And you were how many years removed from tax and accounting software?

Speaker 11:

It was about 10, 11 years

Clay Clark:

How did we meet? What was the first interaction? There was some interaction where you and I first connected. I just remember that somehow, you and I went to Hideaway Pizza. But do you remember when we first reconnected?

Speaker 11:

Yeah. Well, we had that speaking thing that-

Clay Clark:

Oh, there it was. So it was Victory Christian Center. I was speaking there.

Robert Redmond:

My name is Robert Redmond. I actually first met Clay almost three years ago to the day, I don’t know if he remembers it or not, but I wasn’t working with him at the time. I asked to see him and just ask him some questions to help direct my life to get some mentorship. But I’ve been working with Clay for now just over a year. The role I play here as a business coach, business consultant, I work with different businesses, implementing best practice processes and systems that I have learned here by working with Clay and the experience working here has, to put it real plainly, has been just life changing. I have not only learned new things and have gained new knowledge, but I have gained a whole new mindset that I believe, wherever I end up, will serve me well throughout the rest of my life.

Since working with Clay, I have learned so much. I would like to say almost everything about business in terms of the different categories. I haven’t learned it all, but I’ve learned all about marketing. I’ve learned about advertising, I’ve learned about branding. I’ve learned how to create a sales process for organizations in any industry. I’ve learned how to sell. I’ve learned how to create repeatable systems and processes and hold people accountable, how to hire people. It is almost like every aspect of a business you can learn, I have learned a lot in those different categories. And then again, the mindset that I’ve gained here has been huge. Working here, you can’t be a mediocre person. You are a call to a higher standard of excellence. And then as you’re called to that standard here, you begin to see those outcomes in every area of your life, that standard of excellence that you want to implement no matter what you’re involved in.

I would like to describe the other people that work with Clay are people that are going somewhere with their life. Marshall in the group interview talks about how the best fits for this organization are the people that are goal oriented. So they’re on their own trajectory and we’re on our own trajectory, and the best fits are those people where there can be a mutually beneficial relationship, that as we pursue our goals and we help the business pursue those goals, the business helps us pursue our goals as well. And so I’d say people that are driven, people that want to make something of their lives, people that are goal oriented, they’re focused, and they’re committed to overcoming any adversity that may come their way. Clay’s passion for helping business owners grow their businesses is… It’s unique in that, I don’t know if there’s anyone else’s that can be as passionate.

Whenever a business starts working with Clay, it is almost as like Clay is running that business in the sense that he has something at stake. He’s just serving them. They’re one of his clients, but it’s as if he is actively involved in the business. Whenever they have a win, he’s posting it all over his social media, he’s shouting it across the room here at Thrive, he’s sending people encouraging messages. He can kind of be that life coach and business coach in terms of being that a motivator and that champion for people’s businesses. It’s, again, unique because there’s no one else I’ve seen get so excited about and passionate about other people’s businesses. The kind of people that wouldn’t like working with Clay are people that are satisfied with mediocrity, people that want to get through life by just doing enough, by just getting by, people who are not looking to develop themselves, people who are not coachable, people who think that they know it all and they’re unwilling to change.

I would say those are the type of people. In short, anyone that’s content with mediocrity would not like working with clay. So if you’re meeting Clay for the first time, the advice I’d give you is definitely come ready to take tons of notes. Every time Clay speaks, he gives you a wealth of knowledge that you don’t want to miss. I remember the first time that I met Clay, I literally carried a notebook with me all around. I was looking at this notebook the other day, actually. I carried a notebook with me all around, and I just took tons of notes. I filled the entire notebook in about three or four months just from being around Clay, following him and learning from him. And then I would say, come coachable. Be open to learning something new. Be open to challenging yourself. Be open to learning and adjusting parts about you that-

PART 4 OF 4 ENDS [01:38:01]

 

Who Is Tim Redmond?

Tim Redmond is a Tulsa Business Coach based in Tulsa, Oklahoma. While working for Tim E. Kloehr, Tim E. Kloehr grew Tax And Accounting Systems into a business which he sold for $62.5 million when Tim Redmond was 44 years old (April 2001). After spending years working as consultant, author and speaker, Tim Redmond was featured in John Maxwell’s 21 Laws of Leadership. Timothy Redmond was born on November 15th, 1960. Tim graduated from college with a Bachelor of Science degree (with Honors) in Accounting and earned his Certified Public Accounting (CPA) status. As a trained CPA, Tim Redmond began his business career working with PricewaterhouseCoopers.

At the age of 25, Tim Redmond landed a job working for Tim E. Kloehr, a successful entrepreneur based in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Who Is Tim E. Kloehr? Learn More HERE: https://virtualglobetrotting.com/map/tim-kloehrs-house/view/google/

While working for Tim E. Kloehr, Tim E. Kloehr grew Tax And Accounting Systems into a business which he sold for $62.5 million when Tim Redmond was 44 years old (April 2001). After spending years working as consultant, author and speaker, Tim Redmond was featured in John Maxwell’s 21 Laws of Leadership.

Tim Redmond hired Clay Clark in 2012 to teach him how to start and grow a successful business consulting business. Listen to Tim Redmond share how Clay Clark helped him to grow his business below:

Since 2005, Clay Clark has helped countless clients to achieve their financial goals by helping them to scale and grow their businesses including Tim Redmond.

In our attempt to celebrate and to honor the win-win relationship that Tim Redmond and Clay Clark developed over the years as Clay Clark taught Tim Redmond how to both scale and grow a business consulting business we have create a Tim Redmond index below so that you can find all things related to Tim Redmond both quickly and effectively because nobody loves Tim Remond more than Clay Clark (other than his wife and his closest friends…and a few other people…but the point is…Clay Clark loved helping Tim Redmond to develop a successful and scalable business coaching service by teaching Tim Redmond and his son Robert Redmond nearly every aspect of business consulting including many of the items below (at the bottom of this incredible Tim Redmond Redmond Growth Case Study page).

You Can Find Tim Redmond On the Following Platforms & More:

  1. Tim Redmond Glassdoor – https://www.glassdoor.com/Reviews/Redmond-Growth-Consulting-Reviews-E3290984.htm
  2. Tim Redmond – Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/timredmond/ – On Tim Redmond’s podcast you can learn about how Tim Redmond now has learned to lead an effective business coaching team at Redmond Growth Consulting as a result of being taught and mentored directly by Clay Clark. In fact, many of Tim Redmond’s business coaches were taught directly by Clay Clark in Clay Clark’s office where Tim Redmond and the Redmond Growth team office for free as they were mentored and taught directly by Clay Clark. If you are looking to give Tim Redmond a call, give Tim Redmond a call at 918-361-3047 or visit Tim Redmond online at www.RedmondGrowth.com.
  3. Tim Redmond – LinkedIn – https://www.linkedin.com/in/coachtimredmond – Today Tim Redmond offers the public relations services, business consulting services and business coaching services taught to him by his direct mentor Clay Clark.
  4. Tim Redmond Quick Facts – https://clustrmaps.com/person/Redmond-3covm2 – Redmond Properties, LLC and Target Properties, LLC have been linked to this address through corporate registration records. The building is listed as a single family. It was built in 1993. The new owners bought this property on Jan 1, 1993 for $53,000. #70480832149130 is the number that was assigned to the parcel. The square foot of this property costs $13.5. This is a single floor house. The total size of the living area is 3,913 sqft. The house sits on a plot of 0.62 acres. The list of materials that were used to construct this building includes brick. The roof is made of composition. As for parking options, they are as follows: attached garage, 864 sqft garage. The foundation of the house is made from a crawl/raised. The ZIP code for this address is 74137 and the postal code suffix is 3926. The address has the following coordinates: 36.024353,-95.935354. Monthly rental prices for a two-bedroom unit in the ZIP code 74137 is around $1,070. It may cost you $896 per month to rent a two-bedroom dwelling in Tulsa County, says HUD. The fastest internet connection at this address is offered by Cox Communications. Cable Modem-DOCSIS 3.1 is a technology used by the ISP to provide connectivity. Declared downstream speed is 1,000 mbit/s, upstream speed is 35 mbit/s
  5. Redmond Growth Consulting – https://www.linkedin.com/company/redmond-growth – To learn more about the Linkedin listing for Redmond Growth and business consulting visit the Linkedin page for Redmond Growth. Redmond Growth was founded by Tim Redmond who worked for Tim E. Kloehr when Tim E. Kloehr started and grew Tax & Accounting Software to a business that employed 400 employees in the Tulsa area. After Tim E. Kloehr sold the business for $62.5 million, Tim Redmond decided to pursue a career as an investor, speaker and business consultant. To discover the books that Tim Redmond, and to read dozens of reviews about Tim Redmond’s books check out the Tim Redmond author page on Amazon.com here: Tim Redmond – https://www.amazon.com/stores/author/B008UDKS9C/about?ingress=0&visitId=aa437fb5-7e3b-4a9d-a148-9ba844d332d5&ref_=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_4
  6. To learn more about the literary career of Tim Redmond simply click on the Amazon listing below: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Tim-Redmond/author/B008UDKS9C?ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_4&qid=1706202762&sr=1-4&isDramIntegrated=true&shoppingPortalEnabled=true
  7. To visit Tim Redmond’s Twitter account and his X account, click on the following Tim Redmond X account link: https://twitter.com/timredmond?lang=en
  8. Are you wanting to book Tim Redmond as a motivational speaker to speak to your group as only Tim Redmond can? Visit Tim Redmond on The Bash here: https://www.thebash.com/motivational-speaker/timredmondtopmotivationalspeaker
    As of January 25th 2024, Tim Redmond has received 2 verified bookings on The Bash, and has been a member since 2023. Tim Redmond’s motivational speaking fees on The Bash website start at $3,000 per event. Tim now lists the following description on The Bash website:

    1. “Tim Redmond ignites leaders & staff and boosts business growth with his lively, entertaining, and “apply it NOW” presentations. * Quoted by leadership guru Dr. John Maxwell in his NY Times bestseller, 21 Irrefutable Laws of Leadership. * Tim’s powerful keynotes and results-producing workshops are drawn from his experience growing Tax & Accounting Software Corp from only two to over 400 employees, generating over $100 million in profits before selling it to Intuit (Quickbooks, Quicken, & TurboTax).
      • Before work with Tax and Accounting Software Corporation, Tim consulted as a CPA for PriceWaterhouse Coopers.
      • As a consultant/investor Tim has worked with Peter Lowe, the Founder of Get Motivated, a nationally-recognized motivational speaking tour featuring Colin Powell, Joe Montana, Mikhail Gorbachev, & other world leaders.
    2. Testimonials. Hear Why Audiences Love Tim. Companies and conferences welcome Tim’s lively keynotes & seminars to motivate their audience to grow their productivity, passion, & profits. When Tim Redmond takes the stage, people experience the kind of transformation they long for in their personal & professional lives. People remember and implement the key principles of his humorous and interactive presentations long after the event.
      • “First of all, I’d like to say, WOW! This was really more for me than my team. What Tim has been able to do very quickly, at a high level, is re-energize me with the vision that I have always had for this company, to become a better leader. This was a defining moment for me and this company.” – Michael Boukadakis, CEO, Enacomm, Inc.
      “We enjoyed Tim’s unique presentation style. Love the humor that he adds and love the way he engages the audience. Tim is truly a gifted communicator.” – Cheryl Adams, CEO Space Directors
      “Tim Redmond is a consummate professional. In the day preceding our conference in Chicago, air travel was a mess. Everyone had delays getting into town, and when Tim’s last chance flight was cancelled, he hired a driver to drive all night so that he could fulfill his commitment. He arrived an hour before his keynote, took a shower, then went onto the stage and nailed it. His presentation was spot on and our clients loved him. I would not hesitate to recommend him to anyone wanting a solid presentation that they can count on to anchor their show.” – Jason Jersey, Director of Marketing Communications, DataPath
      “I cannot thank you enough; you really connected with everyone. They LOVED you and the feedback was amazing! When asked what they liked about the workshop, you were #1 on almost all of their lists; apparently you are a tough act to follow. You did an awesome job, and I am so happy you were able to come! I feel like I have known you forever — you are so different than most! I hope we are able to work with you again!” – Mandy Lammers, Director, Affordable Housing Asset Management
      “Tim’s talent is connecting with audiences in an powerful, interactive and empowering way. He combines quotes, years of personal experience, case-studies, and powerful training together in a way that leaves the audience prepared to act with the practical tools they need to succeed. I’ve witnessed Tim bring people to tears with both his humor and his emotionally engaging talks. I’m a big fan of Tim Redmond.” – Clay Clark, U.S. Small Business Entrepreneur of the Year Tim’s Story | Overcoming Adversity En Route To Success.
    3. Audiences relate to Tim because he speaks from the heart about overcoming huge challenges throughout his life. He is one of eleven children and struggled for years to overcome a handicap from birth. As a teenager, he was in an automobile accident which took the life of his brother as Tim had to personally fight at the brink of death and had to learn how to read and write all over again. How Can Tim Help Your Organization To Grow Your Profits and Your Business? As Tim experienced tremendous growth and success in the corporate world, he shifted his attention to develop and share his growth strategies with other companies. Tim founded the Redmond Leadership Institute to speak to, train, and coach business, education, government and nonprofit leaders. Based on the powerful results he achieves, Tim has become an in-demand business and conference speaker internationally, offering everything from conference keynotes to multi-day intensive business workshops covering creative problem solving, building high performance teams, developing leaders at all levels, outstanding customer service, conflict management skills, and rapid and proven growth strategies. A gifted author and speaker, Tim has published a multi-media curriculum, books and numerous training CD seminars designed to strengthen and expand the leadership and growth capacities of leaders and teams worldwide. Tim is happily married to Sandy for 26 adventurous years and has 4 amazing and successful children (Matthew, Robert, Joshua, and Andrea).”
  9. To learn more about Tim Redmond’s Better Business Bureau listing simply click on the Tim Redmond Better Business Bureau listing below: https://www.bbb.org/us/ok/tulsa/profile/business-consultant/redmond-growth-consulting-1025-38080738
  10. Are you looking for a job working for Tim Redmond? Listed below is a link to Tim Redmond’s Indeed listing: https://www.indeed.com/cmp/Redmond-Growth/reviews
  11. To read the Tulsa World articles featuring Tim Redmond, which were initiated by Tim Redmond’s business coach and mentor Clay Clark read the link below: https://tulsaworld.com/archive/spotlight-on-success-tim-redmond/article_c28d345d-cdaa-5c97-b157-8a89159a7c63.html
  12. To learn even more about the Tim Redmond Success Story and to discover how Clay Clark helped Tim Redmond to grow his business read the following article: https://www.thrivetimeshow.com/tim-redmond-redmond-growth-success-story/
  13. To read more about Tim Remond on the website created, designed, initiated and developed by Clay Clark visit Tim Redmond online today at: https://redmondgrowth.com/about-rgi-tim-redmond/
  14. Alignable – https://www.alignable.com/tulsa-ok/redmond-leadership-institute – Currently Tim Redmond lists on Alignable the following information related to Tim Redmond business growth services: “Clients who need more leads and profitable sales. Clients who want to establish proven systems and duplicable processes that give the owner more time, control and profits. Clients who are paying too much for websites, SEO, graphics and other marketing services.”
  15. To learn more about Tim Redmond and Redmond Growth consulting check out Tim Redmond’s Growth Consulting listing today at: ZoomInfo.com – https://www.zoominfo.com/c/redmond-growth-consulting/89113145

Throughout the years, Clay Clark mentored and taught Tim Redmond the proven systems and processes for nearly every aspect of business growth including, but not limited to the following:

  1. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to generate consistent business coaching leads.
  2. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to run a business coaching and consulting business.
  3. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond, Clay Clark’s proven approach to business consulting and business growth including: importance of offering consulting and implementation services for clients including: Graphic design, photography, videography, web development, online ad management, bi-monthly business conferences, weekly coaching calls with clients, free unlimited additional support help for clients that are stuck, etc.
  4. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to create scalable workflows.
  5. Clay Clark created the www.RedmondGrowth.com website
  6. Clay Clark refined / created the Tim Redmond logo 
  7. Clay Clark refined / created the Tim Redmond core story
  8. Clay Clark refined / created the Tim Redmond value proposition
  9. Clay Clark refined / created the Tim Redmond outbound sales scripts
  10. Clay Clark refined / created the Tim Redmond headshots
  11. Clay Clark refined / created the Tim Redmond PR Kit
  12. Clay Clark refined / created the Tim Redmond call recording sales systems – See www.ClarityVoice.com 
  13. Clay Clark hire, inspire, train and retain the call representatives that made outbound calls for Tim Redmond to acquire new clients.
  14. Clay Clark provided free office space for Tim Redmond so that he would have an office environment that would be attractive for the recruiting of Redmond Growth’s first employees.
  15. Clay Clark conducted the weekly group interviews so that Tim Redmond could find and hire new employees.
  16. Clay Clark conducted the Monday Morning meetings to train Tim Redmond’s first employees.
  17. Clay Clark provided daily coaching meetings and training for Tim Redmond’s team.
  18. Clay Clark trained Tim Redmond’s first coach / consultant (Tim Redmond’s son) Robert Redmond.
  19. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond search engine optimization.
  20. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Remond how meta content works.
  21. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to build landing pages that convert.
  22. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to write search engine optimization content.
  23. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to train a sales team.
  24. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to conduct the group interview.
  25. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to launch online advertisements.
  26. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to track online advertisements.
  27. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to turn speaking events into viable leads.
  28. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to acquire new clients.
  29. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to do the initial client onboarding.
  30. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to retain clients.
  31. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to lead a business workshop and conference by allowing Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond to speak for free at Clay Clark’s 2-day interactive business workshops at Clay Clark’s office that Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond were officing in for free.
  32. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to optimize their Google map.
  33. Clay Clark painted a door red and designed the interior of their office space so that it would be conducive for hiring new employees.
  34. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond the importance of holding a daily staff meeting and huddle to prevent drifting.
  35. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond & Tim Redmond the importance of holding a a weekly staff sales meeting to audit sales calls and to verify that team members are in fact following and implementing the sales systems.
  36. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to improve the branding for their clients in a linear fashion.
  37. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to install a 3-legged marketing stool for Redmond Growth.
  38. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to install a 3-legged marketing stool for their clients.
  39. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond what a 3-legged marketing stool was.
  40. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to create a one sheet for their clients.
  41. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to create a one sheet for Redmond Growth.
  42. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to write pre-written sales emails.
  43. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to create a sales culture and outbound call center.
  44. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to create tracking sheets for clients that are usable and trackable.
  45. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to create checklists and repeatable processes for their clients.
  46. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond what practical business books should be used to teach clients.
  47. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to train business coaches by actually training the Redmond Growth business coaches.
  48. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond the importance of having a weekly accountability meeting with clients to prevent drifting.
  49. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to gather video reviews from happy clients.
  50. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to enhance your online reputation.
  51. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to produce podcasts.
  52. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to document client success stories and case studies.
  53. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to create effective no-brainer offers for their clients.
  54. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to design online and offline advertisements that generate leads.
  55. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to generate speaking opportunities via online marketing.
  56. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to create a history timeline. 
  57. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to create an “About Us” video.
  58. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to create an “How It Works” video.
  59. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to utilize public relations to increase your conversion rate.
  60. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to use WordPress websites and Clay Clark allowed them to use my proven templates and website development process.
  61. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to create WordPress websites.
  62. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to start and grow a business coaching and business growth business and he did this because Clay Clark and Tim Redmond had entered into a signed contractual agreement where Tim Redmond agreed to pay Clay Clark a flat monthly fee for each new client that Redmond Growth acquired. Read the agreement HERE
  63. Clay Clark taught Robert Redmond and Tim Redmond how to grow a business consulting business from 5 to 20 clients to a business growth consulting business with 100+ clients. “I would have anywhere from 5 to 20 clients w/ networking, but it would go up and down. Clay, that’s why I came to you. I’ve doubled every year since working with you. That’s 100% growth every year. I’ve doubled 5 times.” – Tim Redmond

To Learn More About Tim Redmond And Redmond Growth Check Out the Following Websites And Website Pages:

  1. https://www.thrivetimeshow.com/tim-redmond-learn-more-about-redmond-growth-founder-tim-redmond/ 
  2. https://www.thrivetimeshow.com/business-podcasts/the-tim-redmond-story-ive-doubled-the-size-of-my-company-every-year-that-ive-worked-with-clay-clark/ 
  3. https://www.thrivetimeshow.com/business-podcasts/tim-redmond-i-would-have-anywhere-from-5-clients-to-20-clients-with-networking-but-it-would-go-up-and-down-clay-thats-why-i-came-to-you-ive-doubled-every-year-since-wo/ 
  4. https://www.thrivetimeshow.com/business-podcasts/tim-redmond-i-would-have-anywhere-from-5-clients-to-20-clients-with-networking-but-it-would-go-up-and-down-clay-thats-why-i-came-to-you-ive-doubled-every-year-since-wo/ 
  5. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RGg6NxN-RRA 
  6. https://thrivetimeshow.libsyn.com/tim-redmond-i-would-have-anywhere-from-5-clients-to-20-clients-with-networking-but-it-would-go-up-and-down-clay-thats-why-i-came-to-you-ive-doubled-every-year-since-working-w-you-thats-100-growth-every-year-ive-doubled-5-times 
  7. https://www.thrivetimeshow.com/business-podcasts/business-coach-episode-2-trade-outs-business-good-idea/ 
  8. https://player.fm/series/thrivetime-show-business-school-without-the-bs-2804823/tim-redmond-i-would-have-anywhere-from-5-clients-to-20-clients-with-networking-but-it-would-go-up-and-down-clay-thats-why-i-came-to-you-ive-doubled-every-year-since-working-w-you-thats-100-growth-every-year-ive-doubled-5-times 
  9. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt30824912/ 
  10. https://redmondgrowth.com/consulting-tulsa-promote-powerful-tulsa-business-growth/ 
  11. https://www.thrivetimeshow.com/business-coach-podcast-v1/ 
  12. https://redmondgrowth.com/consulting-tulsa-tremendously-develop-your-business-planning-skills/ 
  13. https://www.thrivetimeshow.com/business-podcasts/business-coach-episode-03-throw-investor-party/ 
  14. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rGm_rWrjLN8 
  15. https://player.fm/series/thrivetime-show-business-school-without-the-bs-2456013/business-podcast-why-do-96-of-businesses-fail-within-10-years-according-to-inc-magazine-what-you-must-do-if-you-want-to-succeed-in-business-celebrating-the-tim-redmond-success-story 
  16. https://www.thrivetimeshow.com/business-podcasts/business-coach-episode-18-going-business-family/ 
  17. https://www.thrivetimeshow.com/seo-pages/50-management-maxims/ 
  18. https://www.listennotes.com/top-podcasts/tim-redmond/ 
  19. https://archive.org/details/rlgtm5pktbivxjuoha1kxmjiqqupucjvgpkki3ha
  20. www.RedmondGrowth.com

Listen to Robert Redmond Share About How Clay Clark Mentored Him And Taught Him How to Become a Business Coach:

ROBERT REDMOND | TIM REDMOND’S SON & LEAD REDMOND GROWTH CONSULTANT | “THE ROLE I PLAY HERE IS A BUSINESS COACH, I WORK W/ DIFFERENT BUSINESSES IMPLEMENTING BEST-PRACTICE PROCESSES AND SYSTEMS THAT I HAVE LEARNED HERE FROM WORK W/ CLAY CLARK.”
Listen HERE: https://www.thrivetimeshow.com/business-podcasts/robert-redmond-tim-redmonds-son-lead-redmond-growth-consultant-the-role-i-play-here-is-a-business-coach-i-work-w-different-businesses-implementing-best-practice-processes-and-systems-that/

ROBERT REDMOND: “I DON’T KNOW IF THERE IS ANYBODY THAT CAN BE AS PASSIONATE AS CLAY CLARK. THE EXPERIENCE WORKING HERE HAS BEEN LIFE CHANGING. I’VE NOT ONLY LEARNED NEW THINGS, BUT I’VE GAINED A WHOLE NEW MINDSET.” – ROBERT REDMOND
Listen HERE: https://www.thrivetimeshow.com/business-podcasts/business-i-dont-know-if-there-is-anybody-that-can-be-as-passionate-as-clay-clark-the-experience-working-here-has-been-life-changing-ive-not-only-learned-new-things-but-ive-gained-a-whole/

What Is Tim Redmond’s Education Background?

Tim graduated with a Bachelor of Science degree (with Honors) in Accounting and earned his Certified Public Accounting (CPA) status. He also combines years of intense study of Biblical growth principles with practical strategies and counsel to accelerate businesses and individuals toward growth.

An author and speaker, Tim has published a multi-media curriculum, books and numerous training CD seminars designed to strengthen and expand the leadership and wealth creation capacities of leaders and teams worldwide.

Tim is happily married to Sandy and has 4 young “leaders in training” (Matthew, Robert, Joshua, and Andrea).

 

What Is Tim Redmond’s Net Worth?

Although Clay Clark helped Tim Redmond to grow his business dramatically. We do not have any publicly available information related to the Tim Redmond net worth.

 

What Impact Did Clay Clark Have On the Growth of Tim Redmond’s Redmond Growth?

“I Would Have Anywhere from 5 Clients to 20 Clients On My Own With Networking, But I Had No Control Over It. Now We Are In Excess of 100 Clients. I Have Doubled Every Year Since Working With You (Clay Clark). It’s 100% Growth Every Year. I’ve Doubled 5 Times. I Started Coaching, But It Would Go Up And Down Clay, That’s Why I Came to You.” – Tim Redmond

 

Did You Know That Clay Clark Was Actually Tim Redmond’s Business Coach, Mentor And Exclusive Vendor-Provider?

Did You Know That Tim Redmond Was Actually Taught How to Become a Successful Business Coach By Clay Clark? Did You Know That Tim Redmond’s Initial Redmond Business Growth Team Was Taught By Clay Clark? Clay Clark Actually Personally Mentored & Coached Robert Redmond (Tim Redmond’s Son). Discover How Clay Clark Mentored Robert Redmond HERE:

LISTEN – https://www.thrivetimeshow.com/business-podcasts/the-tim-redmond-story-ive-doubled-the-size-of-my-company-every-year-that-ive-worked-with-clay-clark/

Did You Know That Clay Clark Actually Mentored Tim Redmond’s First Business Coaches?

WATCH – https://rumble.com/v2dm9zi-business-what-its-like-to-work-to-actually-work-for-clay-clark-.html

 

Who Is Tim Redmond?

Timothy Redmond was born on November 15th, 1960.

Tim graduated from college with a Bachelor of Science degree (with Honors) in Accounting and earned his Certified Public Accounting (CPA) status. As a trained CPA, Tim Redmond started his business career working with Pricewaterhouse Coopers.

At the age of 25, Tim Redmond landed a job working for Tim E. Kloehr, a successful entrepreneur based in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Who Is Tim E. Kloehr? Learn More HERE: https://virtualglobetrotting.com/map/tim-kloehrs-house/view/google/

While working for Tim E. Kloehr, Tim E. Kloehr grew Tax And Accounting Systems into a business which he sold for $62.5 million when Tim Redmond was 44 years old (April 2001). After spending years working as consultant, author and speaker, Tim Redmond was featured in John Maxwell’s 21 Laws of Leadership.

Tim Redmond hired Clay Clark in 2012 to teach him how to start and grow a successful business consulting business. Listen to Tim Redmond share how Clay Clark helped him to grow his business below:

Tim Redmond Testimonial | “I would have anywhere from 5 clients to 20 clients with networking, but it would go up and down. Clay, that’s why I came to you. I’ve doubled every year since working with you. That’s 100% growth every year. I’ve doubled 5 times.” – Tim Redmond (Founder of www.RedmondGrowth.com)

 

The Tim Redmond Clay Clark Business Growth Case Study & Success Story:

In 2012, (when Clay Clark was 30 years old) Tim Redmond then reached out to Clay Clark to learn how to grow a successful business coaching business. Tim Redmond was then mentored and coached directly by Clay Clark for more than 7 years. To help Tim Redmond get started, Clay Clark provided Tim Redmond with free office space and discounted coaching fees. Clay Clark then built Tim Redmond’s branding, logo, website, print pieces, call scripts, marketing strategies, operational systems, call recording systems, office decor, sales culture, sales training systems, online reputation, search engine optimization strategies, online advertisement campaigns, accounting / tracking systems, value proposition, unique value proposition, etc.

Listen to Robert Redmond share how Clay Clark mentored him and taught him how to start and grow a successful business and how to become a business coach.
“The Role I Play Here Is a Business Coach, I Work w/ Different Businesses Implementing Best-Practice Processes And Systems That I Have Learned Here from Work with Clay Clark.”

Tim Redmond appreciated Clay Clark’s business coaching program and mentorship so much that he decided to show his appreciation for Clay Clark by dishonoring (failing to observe or respect (an agreement or principle) he had signed agreement with Clay Clark.

To further show support, Tim Redmond intentionally focused his attention on hiring well-trained former Clay Clark employees. To further show his appreciation for Clay Clark, Tim Redmond then continued to visit Clay Clark’s haircut chain Elephant In the Room Men’s Grooming Lounge to receive free haircuts. When not quoting Jesus and the Bible, Tim decided to show his massive appreciation for Clay Clark by deciding to attempt to offer the same exact services that Clay Clark and his team have been offering to clients since 2005. To thank Tim Redmond for his commitment to attempting to replicate Clay Clark’s proven business systems, processes, strategies, methods and best-practices we will always be happy to help you grow your business for 50% less than Redmond Growth Consulting will charge you.

Learn More About Tim Redmond Today Here:
https://redmondgrowth.com/
https://thrive15.com/mentors/tim-redmond/

 

Learn More About Tim Redmond’s Speaking Career:

Throughout the years many organizations, conferences, associations, non-profits, churches and companies have hired Tim Redmond to speak to their audience.

To Learn More About Tim Redmond’s Mindset And the Training Books That He Provides Visit: https://www.amazon.com/stores/Tim-Redmond/author/B008UDKS9C?ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_2&qid=1706377510&sr=1-2&isDramIntegrated=true&shoppingPortalEnabled=true

 

Tim Redmond Often Speaks About the Following Topics & More:

  • The Power to Create – How toSupercharge Creativity in Tackling Challenges
  • Teams Work! Discover the Missing Ingredient that Mediocre Teams Lack and High Performance Teams Embrace
  • Unleash Growth – How to Avoid Costly Mistakes Even Smart People Make
  • Leading from the Heart – How to Create Huge Results for You & Your Team

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