The Money Mondays - Inside the Mind of Tai Lopez: Masterminds, Mentors, and Million-Dollar Insights 🤝 E94
Episode Date: November 4, 2024In this special episode of The Money Mondays, Dan Fleyshman sits down with Tai Lopez, a global entrepreneur and investor with over 10 million followers, renowned for his success in marketing, mentorsh...ip, and educational programs like the 67 Steps. Together, they explore the transformative power of masterminds and how the right network can accelerate business growth exponentially. Tai shares his journey from humble beginnings to building a multi-million dollar empire, emphasizing the value of surrounding yourself with like-minded entrepreneurs and learning from the best. Tai dives into his philosophy of "be Carnegie, not Rockefeller," advocating for building a "brain trust" of experts and mentors who can offer insights that will elevate your business and life. Drawing on his experiences with high-profile masterminds and his personal connections, Tai explains why investing in relationships is one of the most effective ways to drive success. Tune in for actionable advice on leveraging masterminds, maximizing mentorship, and creating valuable connections that lead to growth and wealth. Apply to join the 20 Mil Mastermind 🎟️
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And it took me nine months to go from basically at $47 in my bank account.
Nine months later, I was making six figures on autopilot.
I just passed three billion minutes watching my YouTube.
Three billion?
Yeah. So Rockefeller made more money, a little bit more,
but he had to work like an insane person.
Whereas Carnegie used the mastermind brain trust idea
to surround himself with the best idea and quantum leap forward
with only two hours
a day work.
I always tell people be Carnegie, not Rockefeller.
You need to be around people that you can trust their advice.
Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to a very special edition of the Money Mondays.
We are here inside of RV motorhome parked in Beverly Hills,
California in front of a hundred bazillion dollar mansion.
And I am excited.
The whole reason for the RV motorhome is that we can take this to busy people's houses or
their offices or their football fields.
Or if they're performing in concert, we can show up to celebrities, athletes and business
moguls right to their doorstep because they're too busy to go to a podcast studio.
So we bring the podcast studio to them.
And this is the perfect example right now
with a world traveling businessman.
You guys have for sure seen.
It is nice.
It is nice, yeah.
It takes away that.
You guys have seen him on social media.
You've seen him through ads.
You've seen him through organic content.
You've seen other people posting on him,
talking about it for many years.
Just one of his commercials had 1.4 billion minutes watched.
And so I'm sure you guys have seen him before.
So what I'm gonna do,
is I'm gonna have him give a quick two minute bio,
then we can get straight to the money.
Mr. Ty Lopez.
What is my bio?
Can you even do a two minute bio?
I mean, yeah, I can do a 20 second one.
I think my bio is like, I'm an entrepreneur,
I'm adventurous. I, yeah, I've lived many lives.
I lived with the Amish for two and a half years,
lived on a farm.
I have been, I graduated high school sleeping on a couch
in a mobile home in Clayton, North Carolina.
I was born in LA, my dad was in prison,
and so I was born in Long Beach.
He was on an island prison called Terminal Island,
so grew up apart with a single mom,
and discovered internet marketing in 2001.
I bought a course, Cory Roodle had a course for 300 bucks.
And I was like, I learned Google,
back then there was only Google ads.
And it took me nine months to go from basically,
I had $47 on my bank account, nine months later, I was making six figures on autopilot.
And so I just never looked back.
The power of the internet to reach people now.
Back then, there was maybe a couple hundred million
daily actives on social media.
It wasn't really there.
There was like Friendster MySpace.
Now there's 4.5 billion.
So it's like my motto for my companies.
I also buy and sell companies.
I bought and sold some of the biggest companies in America.
And now like my mission for my personal brand
is the same one I had 10 years ago,
which was spread good ideas.
So I've been in the education space.
I've got seven million followers
I got I just passed three billion minutes watching my YouTube three billion. Yeah, three billion
It was like a couple weeks ago
I've been saying two point eight billion, then I looked and it was like
three billion
It wouldn't have like 200 million three Super Bowls. Yeah, I've been watched
Yeah, so that that's my story
You know and I'm interested and I do lots of stuff
and I live in Beverly Hills and then I have a farm
in the US and then I live also in Sweden.
So I like rotate Brazil in the winter.
Very cool.
I just had a Brazilian baby.
There you go.
I know, congrats on that.
That's awesome.
And that's awesome.
Six Brazilian women live with me now, so.
Yeah.
I'm basically Brazilian.
You got good food.
I do Brazilian jujitsu. That's nice. I'm basically Brazilian. You got good food. I do present Jiu Jitsu.
I'm gonna have to start doing that next.
Okay, so as you guys know, the way the podcast works
is we keep it to under 40 minutes
because the average commute to work is 45 minutes.
The average workout is 45 minutes,
so we keep these episodes at 34 to 39 minutes
for your listening pleasure.
On this episode, I wanna focus on masterminds
and understand the importance of networking, learning,
and surrounding yourself with greatness,
surrounding yourself with other like-minded people,
and who better to ask than Ty Lopez,
who's done this for many, many years,
speaking at masterminds, hosting his own masterminds.
We created a mastermind together and everything between,
so I wanna dive into the entire mastermind business,
but also why people should be attending masterminds, why they should learn about them,
maybe even host their own little groups on zoom or in person in their own cities.
Like let's just talk through the mastermind world. First off, like what was one of the
first masterminds that you attended or spoke at? Man, I went to a mastermind in like 07 or 08.
It was funny. I went with this guy who's definitely one of the best marketers in the world super secretive guy owns a lot of websites that are
Faceless and I remember going to one in New York City is one of the first ones and he gave a talk and
When I the next day I was like, you know what everything you said at that talk
Was different than what you told me works for you privately. He's like, oh, yeah
I like to go to masterminds and give all the wrong info. So everybody copies my wrong landing pages my funnel
So that was the first introduction don't go to mastermind with this friend of mine
Because he's like I throw all my because he's like if I give him my best stuff everyone will copy
So that was my first intro. I launched my first mastermind probably in 2011. So I've been doing masterminds a long time. Um
That thing feel like you came to some of I used to do like
Masterminds at my house in the hills and they would also transition into kind of like a party
Yep
I like that vibe because one thing I've learned with masterminds is if they're too formal
You can't get some of the best dudes like for those guys
They don't necessarily want to go to a super strict one
But if you have some fun to it, they'll show up for the fun.
So you can, some people, there are people
that like hardcore business,
and there's another group that's ballers,
you wanna be around them,
so I had these entertaining masterminds,
kinda like what we're doing together,
doing the same thing with the party the last day.
So yeah, it was a game changer because my philosophy
on masterminds basically is you read the book The Gospel of Wealth
by Carnegie.
So second richest man in modern history is Andrew Carnegie.
First is JD Rockefeller, worth about $600 billion
in today's dollars.
And Carnegie was worth about $400 billion, so close.
But what I liked about Carnegie, Carnegie,
early age, around 25, 30, he made his first couple mil,
and he said, I'll never work more than two hours a day.
But what he said he did was create a brain trust
of really smart people around him.
And he said, no matter, we often did not agree,
he says in the Gospel of Wealth,
but out of that brain trust came some of the ideas
that took him from, while working two hours a day,
took him to 400 billion net worth.
So if you could be Rockefeller,
Rockefeller worked like a dog, 16 hours a day.
At age 50, all his hair fell out.
There's a famous quote, he said,
all of the money I've made, 600 billion,
hasn't compensated me for the stress
I went through so Rockefeller made more money a little bit more
But he had to work like an insane person whereas Carnegie used the mastermind brain trust idea
To surround himself with the best idea and quantum leap forward with only two hours a day at work
I always tell people be Carnegie not Rockef. Be the second richest man in the world
who only works two hours a day.
So masterminds can range.
We've both spoken at many, many masterminds over the years.
They can be 25,000, they can be 100,000,
they can be 20,000, 50,000, 10,000.
Why is it important for someone to pay?
Why is it important to actually pay to be in a mastermind?
There was a dude I remember down in San Diego, he used to have about a 5K mastermind. You did actually pay to be in a mastermind? Yeah, well you don't, there was a dude, I remember down in San Diego,
he used to have a 5K mastermind.
You did not wanna go to that mastermind.
It was, there was no screening.
Right.
So you, I remember I went one time,
I used to live down in San Diego and he had a 5K,
it was one year, you got whatever,
four events for $5,000.
Yeah, the quality of the group, no offense to people,
but it depends what level you're on. Maybe if you're a brand new beginner
You're not making any money really maybe a 5k masterminds all you can afford and it will still be with it
But if you're making any amount of money you want to be in a gated one
You know you want to be in a gated one you want to at least be paying 20 to 30 thousand
you know and
Some of the best masterminds
I've had like I've done my own I do my own mini masterminds by the way I have a
couple marketing guys you do the same thing me and you kind of have a
whatsapp mastermind we'll talk so you could have I have formal ones and I have
little groups on whatsapp I paid one time Steve Ballmer $250,000 to have
lunch with him you know he now he's the fifth richest man in history.
When I was there, he brought another guy.
We were all sitting around having dinner for a few hours.
It was like a dinner table.
I paid a quarter of a mil.
Well, I gave it to his charity.
He didn't want the money.
But by the way, the other guy there
was the owner of the Golden State Warriors.
So it was like three of us.
It was funny.
Steve Ballmer left the table.
He was like, Ty, I got to go for 30 minutes. We're at the clip. We were down at the Staples
Center. So he leaves. We're having, I'm like, oh man, he left me with this guy. Oh,
hey, Vivek. It wasn't Vivek. It was a different, it was a former one. It was the guy before
them. So I'm sitting here with this, it was an Asian guy and I'm sitting there and I'm
thinking, oh, this is his assistant. He left me with. Oh my God. So I just had a totally
normal conversation,
just like, so what do you think?
Who's going to win the game?
The Clippers?
And after like 15 minutes, I was like, by the way,
I was like, thank God I didn't say,
how long have you worked for Steve?
But I was like, how'd you guys meet?
And he's like, oh, when I owned the Golden State Warriors,
before I sold it, and I was like, oh, shit.
So what I'm saying is that was a mastermind right that cost 250 grand at the table
But I had some of the best advice I've had in my life on
Buying and selling companies because I was with a guy that at that time was over 50. It was over 47 billion
I remember so you need to be around people that you can trust their advice because nowadays everybody has advice everybody's advisor
I go on it my Instagram
I'm like this motherfucker is like people taking from advice from a dude who
Made money for three months and now he's like a guru the 20 year old life coach. Yeah
I hate my friend Jeremy that's in my house right now. He was in Bali
I remember him texting me during COVID and he's like,
dude, I'm in a jacuzzi with like 10 people
and one of these motherfuckers is, I said,
how old are you?
The guy's 20.
He said, what do you do?
Life coach.
He's like, who do you coach?
Eight-year-olds?
At 20, you could coach eight-year-olds.
You could coach people 10 years younger than you
because you got the experience.
But yeah, so when you pay for a good mastermind
or pay for like a seat at the table, you're getting assurance that this advice is tried
and true and tested. You know what I mean?
Absolutely. So in 2019, after a decade of throwing free events called elevator nights,
I finally created the 100 million mastermind experience. And my mastermind was $100,000
per person.
And my goal was everyone inside this group
was gonna do at least five million in revenue,
preferably 10 million or higher.
So that was the gatekeeping part of,
they had to be doing five to 10 million bucks,
most of them doing 10 to 40 million in revenue.
I brought in a bunch of instructors
that were either doing over 100 million in sales,
spending over 100 million on ads,
or been seen by over 100 million people.
A lot of them are your friends.
Marco Simonis, the Wolf of Wall Street, Neil Patel,
the Morrison brothers, like guys that were movers
and shakers spending a lot of money
so that they could be the instructors
to teach people in this group.
Within seven weeks, we sold all hundred spots
at a hundred thousand dollars.
I looked back at that in 2019 as like an enigma
or a situation of like, after all these years,
I'd never sold into a mastermind.
I would just spoke to everybody else's mastermind.
And I realized in that moment,
and why I'm so obsessed with masterminds now,
is how much people want to be in the room
with other people in their similar world.
And here's why.
Most entrepreneurs feel like they're on an island.
They're by themselves.
They can't talk with their wife or husband,
friend or dad.
It sounds like you're either bragging or it's weird
or like you're like, yeah, I did 14 million sales
but my staff member did this
or my manufacturer did that or the vendor was late.
And we have these situations that,
who are we gonna talk to, our buddy from high school?
We can't.
It would be weird to tell your buddy from high school
that makes 80 grand a year at his job
about losing two million dollars
in a business deal or whatever.
Yeah, you don't even wanna tell him.
No, you don't even wanna tell him.
It almost feels rude or like,
what advice could they possibly give you anyways?
And even if your friend is successful
and they have four restaurants,
how can they help you when you have an e-commerce brand
doing 14 million, scaling to 32?
That's just two different worlds.
And so I realized the hunger and appetite
when we sold out 100 spots,
literally 10 million dollars of revenue in seven weeks.
Fast forward half a decade later,
I think some of the most impactful things
have happened from that mastermind
because now there's tens of millions of dollars
we raised for charity.
We've watched tens of millions of dollars
be raised for companies and startups.
We raised 56 million dollars for private equity from those groups. We raised millions of dollars be raised for companies and startups. We raised $56 million for private equity from those groups.
We raised millions of dollars for charity.
There's just so much impact that happens
from surrounding yourself with these high-end people
in your space, in your world.
And then what you and I created is the 20K version.
Same quality, same feel, same style,
but the entrepreneurs are doing 500K, a million,
five million, 10 million, two million,
so that it's more affordable and more realistic to get into
it.
Talk me through your thoughts on the concept.
Yeah, so the $20 million mastermind, like you said,
it's like, you can still have two levels,
it's gonna be two different masterminds,
but there's a huge gap in the market for people that are
wanting to hit 20 million, they're not there yet,
you know, and what I would say is, I tell people this,
I've heard people, Russell Brunson, a friend of mine,
sometimes he says, you're one funnel away
from doubling your net worth.
Right.
There's truth to that.
But I would say even more so, you're one relationship
For sure.
away from doubling your net worth.
Meaning there's some person walking this planet
that knows one thing about Facebook ads
or knows one thing about raising capital.
If you knew them on a friendly basis, they'd tell you.
I tell people, people don't always tell you every secret they know.
If you buy a course, if you buy a book, they don't put everything in because people reserve
their very best stuff for friends.
When you start coming to a mastermind, social events, dinners, stuff like that, people's guard drops and they give you their best advice.
Back in 2014, I was at a dinner,
I swear it might've been one of your dinners.
I wish I could remember, but 2015,
I got like, there's a new thing called YouTube ad
that's really taking off.
And I was in September, 2014.
And I was like, you know what, I've learned
when somebody, test everything people tell you. So I was like, you know what I've learned when somebody
Test everything people tell you so I was like, let me do a little test So in December 2014, I spent 17 grand on YouTube ads and made back like one grand
I mean, I was like, ah, this is
Yeah, but the next month I kept dialing in the funnel and I made I went I launched I remember was July
It was January 24th, 2015.
I launched and we cracked the code.
We had this here in my garage video
on a couple of variations.
And this thing started, I would spend 60 grand
and make 120,000 back in an hour.
I was making like 60,000, it was crazy.
So that, as much as I'd like to claim all the genius myself,
it really back to that dinner.
By the way, if you're that guy and you remember, I want to take that guy to dinner because
I can't remember who the hell it was.
But the point is, that guy in his head probably had some friend making money on YouTube ads.
And even though I'd heard of it, a guy at dinner is like, dude, I think you'll be good
on this YouTube ads.
And he kind of encouraged me.
So you need that to catch trends.
You cannot keep up on all the trends yourself.
You'd have to read 30 books a day, 30 newspapers a day.
You have to be Warren Buffett.
That's the only dude I know who reads 800 pages.
He says he reads 800 pages a day.
So you either can read 800 pages a day to keep up with the trends or you can go to like
dinners, masterminds, and build a
huge network, and one of them, I guarantee almost anybody, that you'll dub your net worth
off something in somebody else's head.
You can't have all the answers within, you know, you just can't.
So network, that old saying, like always be ABC, always be. I'm like now always be networking always be networking
You know the angel the question people ask you on podcasts or speeches or stages is like what's your what's your superpower?
Yeah, my answer always is my cell phone, right?
Well, I want to get a reservation at a restaurant or buy a restaurant, right? It's a text message away
Yes, I can raise the capital for restaurant get a reservation for hey Ty and I are gonna go to this fancy
dinner boom boom boom it's a text away that's from relationships and it
changes my life it fast-forwards my life yeah I says you know what I want to
manufacture black glasses oh I know this manufacturer this is his name I'll group
chat you by the way that reminds me I gotta ask you about a manufacturer so
see there you go exactly there's a lot of stuff in his head Dan's a connect
people think I'm a connected dude.
I'm like, Dan's, Dan probably got me beat.
And then right when you say it, I think, oh, I know exactly who the manufacturer is.
Yeah.
Oh, I know this should be the 3PL warehouse we should use.
Yes.
Oh, this is the lawyer that does really good patents.
Bam, you should use this lawyer.
Yeah.
Oh, you want your funnel here?
There's a really good kid.
He's actually super smart.
He's only 24, but he's done this, this, and this, and this.
Wait a minute.
You need someone that knows how to scale it
on specifically on LinkedIn?
Oh, I know a LinkedIn guy for you.
Wait, oh, on Twitter?
Oh, there's an agency called blah, blah, blah.
They do Twitter marketing.
Like in my head, and boom, group chat, group chat,
group chat, group chat.
And all of those people I met, masterminds, events,
charity events, social media, more events,
I just meet them and I collect all the good ones.
And then I'm also like the yelp for this industry.
Just like you are, we know who's good, who's bad.
Yeah, you got the rating stars.
You're like, no, no, don't go there.
The other day somebody hired some guy, I was like,
ah, red alert, pull back, pull back, retreat.
You know, by the way, the best argument ever
of a mastermind that created the most wealth in history,
they didn't call him mastermind,
it's now called the PayPal mafia.
And Elon Musk joined this group of people,
he had sold his first company for about 30 million,
he reinvested the money back
and merged into PayPal with Peter Thiel.
But if you look at a photo of the PayPal mafia a whole bunch of smart business people
Basically living or meeting together every day in a mastermind setting big room talking
23 of them Elon was one of 23 the other guys Ken Howry friend of mine
Him and Peter Thiel started Founder Fund, the second largest
VC fund. They funded everybody. They funded Uber, Airbnb. So you had Ken Howry, Peter
Thiel, some people say the highest IQ businessman on earth right now, worth 10 bill. The two
guys in that PayPal mafia went on to found a small company called YouTube. So the two
founders or co-founders of YouTube
came out of there.
A guy started a business social networking platform
named LinkedIn.
He sold it for a bill, Reid Hoffman was in there.
And the founder of Palantir, one of the biggest tech
companies, the founder of Yelp.
Oh my God.
So when we see Elon Musk, we go, oh, the richest man
on earth, 250 billion net worth
Oh, he's just a guy who sits in a room
Has great ideas. I could never be like him. No, no, no, no
His inception the beginning of real wealth for him was being in a mastermind network
Now he was if you could mastermind every day is better
It's not realistic for everybody, but he was masterminding every day for years with some of the people who became and were
at the time the highest IQ business people.
So you have to create your own PayPal mafia.
The mastermind me and you are doing moves people towards that.
It's our version of PayPal mafia.
I don't know if it's, I hope it produces, you know,
20 billionaires out of it or whatever, 10 billionaires.
But the point being, you have to,
if you don't have a PayPal mafia,
you will be born and die with half the net worth
you could have had.
Half, maybe a 10%.
So for me, a mastermind in networking, it's not optional.
There's no smart dude.
Once again, going back that dinner with Steve Ballmer Ballmer, now he's worth $150 billion.
He owns 5% of Microsoft, $3 trillion company.
I asked him, I said, you know, wealth, it's like, do you deserve all this kind of thing
at dinner?
He's like, well, you know, I'm a smart guy.
I would have been wealthy.
But if I hadn't met these two guys
Paul Allen and Bill Gates, I wouldn't be worth
150 billion. So he was like the connections I made
Created my wealth and by the way Mark Zuckerberg who's the youngest wealthiest person He Mark Zuckerberg was the only person in history worth a hundred billion under age 37 and
Zuckerberg he networked he had all these smart people.
He also networked and had Steve Jobs as his mentor in his mastermind.
Your mentor is going to be in your mastermind.
People don't know he had Steve Jobs guiding him from like 2008 until when Steve Jobs died.
So years of mastermind.
So behind every Forbes list billionaire, if you dig into the story, there's a mastermind.
When I meet entrepreneurs that are doing 1 million, 5 million, 10 million, and I'm like,
who's your mastermind?
I'm like, oh, I don't need one.
I'm like, bro, let me get this straight.
You're smarter than Elon Musk.
You're smarter than the whole Forbes list.
Warren Buffett said, I wouldn't have been that wealthy
if I hadn't met this guy, Charlie Munger.
He met him at like a group thing, like a conference,
and he met this guy,
and they eventually became partners.
Before then, Warren Buffett was working twice as hard
and making half the money.
And he's like, I met this guy, Charlie Munger.
A great book on this, if you want the actual science,
is by Jim Collins.
He wrote a series of books good to great generally considered the most respected modern business book
He's like the modern Peter Drucker in his research of highly successful
High net worth individuals. He was surprised he called he said I thought it would be a what event
Meaning somebody had an invention and thought of something.
He said what it turned out to be was a who event.
This guy met this other guy.
Steve Jobs met Wozniak.
When Steve Jobs was young, he networked with his neighbor was the founder of Hewlett Packard.
So when Jim Collins, who's a researcher at one of the most respected
business researchers, he said, wait, it's not somebody coming up with some idea. It's
somebody meeting, connecting with another human. That's it. There's a lot of books on
this, Working Together by Michael Eisener, the former CEO of Disney. He also says, it's
a myth that solo people make the most money. It's people who
are either have joint ventures, partnerships, network, share ideas. By the way, we could
just go back to Carnegie. 400 billion net worth and he says he owed it all to his brain
trust. That's another word for master. That's an 1800s word for brain trust. I mean that's
an 1800s word for brain trust. I mean, that's the 1800s were for mastermind.
So it's a change of the 20 mil brain trust.
20 mil brain trust.
You can put it in sub headline.
Build your brain trust.
All right, so let's talk through actual masterminds.
One of my favorite parts of masterminds
and what I've implemented for years
and I've seen at your masterminds as well is
I call it forced interactions.
Yes.
I know that person is looking to raise capital. Oh, you should meet this person who likes to invest. I know that person is looking to raise capital.
Oh, you should meet this person who likes to invest.
Yeah.
I know that person's looking for the manufacturer.
Oh, that manufacturer's actually here.
You should meet.
Yes.
This person is looking for a lawyer.
Oh, that's great.
We actually have a lawyer here in the building.
He owns a law firm.
And forced interactions allows people to talk,
discuss, learn, or potentially work together.
Walk us through why it's important for introverts
to be able to be in masterminds like
this. Yeah, because introversion, look, about half the world genetically is literally born on the
more introverted side. If you look at, there's a modern science, more advanced, they're called
hexaco score. There's like the big five, those are the old ones. The newest one's called a hexaco.
In there, there's a hexaco stands for H is honesty,
humility, E is emotionality, X is extroversion, introversion.
People are on a spectrum of extroversion.
And a lot of introverts want to just change themselves
and go, oh, I'll just figure this out on my own.
Magically, I'll start being able to walk up
to people on the streets.
If you're introverted, it's better
to get yourself in a room where there's forced interactions.
It'll be a little uncomfortable for a second.
But most introverts realize, oh, man,
I need to be around more people.
They're really good at talking once you talk to them.
Yeah, introverts are actually, it's a myth
that introverts aren't social.
Introverts sometimes, if you're an introvert watching this,
in fact, some scientists say introverts prefer
to be in social settings.
They just wanna be not in the center,
and they don't wanna be in the center of the room.
That's one of the classic psychological,
it's called psychometric questions.
Are you a fly on the wall in a party,
or do you go to the center of the room?
Extroverts walk into a bat birthday party,
they walk right to the center.
My friend, Armand, is a PhD guy,
a number one introvert.
He walks in, goes to the center where the most people are.
I have another friend, Rick, he likes the room,
but he needs to be in the corner.
So if you're an introvert,
you have to have these good masterminds,
the way you do it and the way we're doing it is like,
hey, dude here in the middle, go talk to this guy.
He's got and connected.
Yeah.
So the flow of a mastermind weekend is also important.
Yes.
So I've been studying it.
Every single time I've hosted a mastermind, we do an exit report.
And we ask the members and the instructors, what did you like?
What did you not like?
What could we improve on?
Not necessarily that we're gonna change everything,
but I wanna hear and see if there's a consensus.
Maybe there's something that 40 of them
out of 100 are saying, okay.
If it's two of them, I'm probably not gonna change it.
But if 40 people say something,
maybe we actually could change or add.
And what we learned the most was called breakout sessions.
Breakout sessions is eight to 12 people,
let's just call it eight, sit into a table
in a different room,
and then each of them talk
between seven and 15 minutes each about their situation.
And then the other seven people in that group
say what their advice is, what their ideas are,
what their relationship is,
and help them actually fix their problem.
The amount of breakthroughs that happen
in these sessions is staggering.
Walk us through why you should actually be vulnerable
and talk about the bad stuff when you're in masterminds.
Why should you talk about the hardest stuff in your company?
Yeah, that's, hey, I tell people,
never be, never fear someone's opinion,
never fear looking bad, just fear living a shitty life.
So if you go to a mastermind, don't be worried,
oh, if I say this, I look bad.
There's always someone richer and someone poor.
Say it because you're only optimizing for a good life.
So I'd get in there, I always tell people at mastermind,
what's, I call it the GBB.
This is what I do when I do a private mentoring of people.
I always start to call it, what's the GBB?
What's going super good?
What's going bad?
And what's the number one thing you're blocked on that you've tried to fix but you can't
fix?
Because right now, every entrepreneur has things that are bad in their business, but
they know the solution.
You don't need a mastermind for that.
You need a mastermind for the things you've tried to fix and you're stuck.
Entrepreneurs plateau on revenue for five years.
They don't know how to get out of it. Go to the group. Be like, you know what?
I've been five years.
I had a guy come when I used to live across the street there.
Guy came to me. He's like, 2013, I made two million.
Twenty fourteen. I made two million.
Twenty fifteen. I made two million.
And he started working when he was a private mentor.
Twenty sixteen. He went to twelve.
He even did two million the first month.
He was masterminding with me.
So what used to take him a year to,
now he did 40 the next year.
He's pretty well known.
Most of you know who he is and he's doing like 100.
But my point is he was blocked.
And so he was humble enough to be like,
dude, I'm at two, two, two, what the hell?
And so you just vulnerably say I'm stuck
and somebody in that room, 90% of the time,
knows the solution.
Right away, and here's why.
You can't see the picture when you're inside of the frame.
Yeah, exactly.
He was living and breathing.
He's inside of the frame over and over and over
and he can't tell that you're like, wait a minute,
you don't do LinkedIn, Twitter, and Facebook?
And he's like, no, no, I only do Instagram.
Yes.
Wait, you never actually hired a sales team?
You do all the sales calls yourself?
Why would you do that?
Just spend 20 grand a month on this
and you'll do an extra two million.
And we get blocked because we're just inside the frame.
We don't know, we only see what's in front of us
when the people like Ty can be like, wait a minute,
you could do this, it's easy.
It looks like easy to us
because we're just staying outside analyzing the situation.
When you're inside of it and you can't talk to anybody else,
you get stuck.
You get stuck for two million, two million,
two million like in that example.
So in the 20 million mastermind,
the concept is it's three days.
It's multiple events throughout the year.
Two of the events are here at the ranch.
And the other two events are here at the mansion.
And people can pick and choose between the dates.
And the reason that we did four events throughout the year,
and give people options.
100 million master minus three weekends for the year.
Same concept, they come to the mansion
or they go to the ranch.
And then sometimes we might throw it in another venue
if we choose to go to Miami or Vegas or et cetera.
But most of the time we're gonna be doing it
at the mansions and ranches.
Why is environment important?
Like why did you get this big mansion
to create your office inside of it,
throw these parties, these monthly events you've been
throwing, why build this environment?
Well, the good thing about doing it in the same place
is every event I do, we get some random dude that I know
that would never come that's making a bill.
Right.
So if you move them around too much,
you don't build flow.
People know, all people around Beverly Hills know,
every month, Ty does it, opens up his house
for big baller guys.
So I like, it's good to move it,
like we're moving in between my place and your ranch,
but having it kinda in a set place
will help bring the quality up.
And so, but yeah, big house, I mean, I always tell people big house is such a good investment.
You can use it personally.
You can use it business.
I got a movie theater in there.
You got your gym in there.
Makes you more money.
But when people come, by the way, a lot of people get, there was a guy, Shane, this Shane
Seale guy, he came and he's like, not only was I at the mastermind and learned stuff,
but I also learned I need to get a good,
I need to start hosting these on my own in Atlanta.
So you're gonna get a lot of good ideas from the Mastermind,
not just what people say, but also watch what people do
more than they say, you know?
So I've also, I've been seeing your ads nonstop,
a lot of people bring it up to me
that you've been throwing these parties.
Yes.
So after the Masterminds, you've been throwing like,
Yes. You've been throwing these one-off events mastermind style
And then you have these parties from 2 p.m. To 8 p.m. Yeah walk us through the reason for the party
Like I said, I mean my grandma used to say
Never be boring. So I like a little sexiness, you know, like some masterminds that I've gone to it's like so boring and day three
Everybody's asleep or people leave I had three day mastermind,
day one everyone there, day two, day three,
they're like, get me home.
They're just sitting in the Hilton ballroom for three days.
Yeah, they're sitting in the ballroom, there's nothing.
I did a party, there was a Garrett,
well you know who Garrett White is,
he was there, he brought his wife and he was like,
this is the best thing, this was last weekend,
did a Halloween one.
It's like, I've been to everybody's,
like this is the best one I've ever been to.
It was like, I can't believe it because
It's a mixture. I caught
Edutainment there you go. You need education
But you need a little entertainment too. That's for my grandma. That's why people sometimes see my story They're like, oh you post stuff. That's not business
I'm like my grandma's my hundred-year-old grandma told me this don't be boring
So that this here is gonna it won't be boring
Party Hollywood party is fun. It's fun. We do
them in the, I don't get, let them get too crazy because we don't do them at night,
late into the night. Late into the night is too crazy. There's a level of crazy that
I like. I'm still a businessman so I don't want full on wacky parties. But this is classy.
It's fun. And also, wanna, I got a guy, these two Ecom dudes, they're doing
a meal a week, right?
They come for that and they've been to the masterminds too, but they always make sure
they're there for the party and they end up masterminding all day at the party.
Some people do better in a formal setting, some people need to be out at the party. Right. You know, sometimes some people do better in a formal setting.
Some people need to be out at the pool, you know, got food, drinks, talking.
Some people let down their guard.
The whole point is anybody watching this, you're going to make, you're going to get
the best piece of advice.
You're going to make the most money when people's guard is down.
A house, I like a house better than a hotel.
You bring people to a hotel, everyone's all formal and stuff like that.
So a big cool house or like your ranch,
it's like, it's a different vibe.
So let's say someone is really going for it, right?
They're doing 10, 20, 30, 40 million.
Going into these high level masterminds,
like a hundred thousand dollar per person,
which we have, which is called
100 million mastermind experience.
Why would someone that's doing 10, 20, 30, 40 million dollars,
why did they need a mastermind?
Why did they need a network?
Yeah, first off, always stay proportional to your net.
So I used to always have a rule, I still do, 5% of what I'm making every month, I double
down into my brain.
So if you're making 40 million, let's say you're doing 20% margins, you're doing $8 million a year, you should be spending $400,000 a year on intelligence, competitive intelligence.
By the way, the higher you get up, you also need competitive intelligence.
I see people launching campaigns.
I'm like, no, no, no, I can tell you that one doesn't work.
So the wealthier you are, the more value you'll get from a mastermind
and you don't want to be like I said in that old San Diego $5,000 mastermind. Go to 100k.
It's tax deductible. I tell people don't be cheap. Only be cheap with like, I remember
Mark Cuban came to my house, he's interesting. He's like, Ty, you can look on my YouTube,
we had an interesting long talk and he's like,
when I go to Costco every year,
I buy all my toothpaste for the year
because I save like 7%.
I'm thinking, how am I fucking toothpaste?
So he's saving, he's a billionaire thinking about
how he saves 100 bucks a year.
But then, I was like, after he was at my house,
I'm like, where are you going?
He's like, oh, I keep my jet warmed up down at the LAX because my time is valuable
So what I learned is the ultra wealthy
They are cheap when you can when it's easy to be cheap toothpaste if you can apply a coupon and say 40 bucks a year
No matter how rich you are
Use the damn coupon.
But when it comes to your time and saving time, he'll keep a jet engines on.
That'll cost you $50,000 to keep the jet on just so you don't have to warm it back up
when you get there.
So if you are doing 30, 40, 50 million, how can you save five years?
How can you save three years?
How can you save five years? How can you save three years? How can you save
one years? That is you must be in a room with all people who can afford to pay 100k. If
they can pay 100k, they're qualified most likely, unless they inherited their money.
They're not a lot of trust fund kids and our stuff.
There's actually only been one pitch, one sentence I've ever used to explain why someone
should join the 100 million match mine. And here's what it is.
If you're doing over $10 million in sales,
and you believe that myself, Tai Lopez,
20 other instructors, business people,
and 100 other members that are doing 10, 20, 30 million
can help you save 1% or make 1% more, then it's free.
100,000 is literally free.
I hope you think that I can do that
or Ty can do that on our own
to help you save one or 2%
if you're doing 10 or 20 million.
But it's literally impossible
with a room full of a hundred people
that are movers and shakers
to not help you teach you about something for taxes
or the way you ship things
or the way you manufacture things
or the way you sell things
or how to protect yourself better.
Like, and that one or 2% that you save in that example, well, it doesn't go away. you ship things or the way you manufacture things, the way you sell things or how to protect yourself better.
And that one or two percent that you save in that example,
well, it doesn't go away.
You don't unlearn how to save one percent on your taxes.
Next year, you go from 10 million to 16 million,
16 to 23, 23 to 30, and you're still gonna know
what we taught you half a decade ago.
That's why.
And I've only ever said that one thing to people
because it's like a light aha moment.
Yeah, I am doing 19 million sales.
And yeah, I do think that you guys could teach me how to save or make 1%.
So when someone is in that scaling mode and they're starting to really build up their
companies, how can they decide and filter through what type of masterminds or coaches
or mentors to hire?
Yeah.
Well, I have a simple rule I call the two decade rule.
I like to be around people that have been wealthy for 20 years or been killing it for
20 years.
Like, if you want to learn, I've been doing, I've been doing fun, I built my first funnel
in 2001.
If you want to learn funnels, scaling internet stuff, I've been doing social media.
I was on a, I was big on MySpace in 2006. I was on a TV show called Millionaire Matchmaker. I had a doing social media. I was I was on a I was big on my space in 2006
I was on a TV show called millionaire matchmaker. I had a huge myspace. I've been doing social media since before 2005 so
Don't come to me and Dan's mastermind if your criteria is how to build a factory in China
There's probably a better mastermind
I would literally find dudes that have been building factories for 20 years.
If you want to be around people that know how to go viral on social, that know how to
do it.
I've got five of the most profitable and largest paid ad campaigns in history, not just here
in my garage.
So, if you're interested in scaling with ads, if you want to be networking genius, if you
want to, Dan has like 75 companies, if you want to understand how genius, if you want to, Dan has like 75 companies,
if you want to understand how to raise capital,
go to this kind of mastermind.
So I just use the 20 year,
you've been killing it for 20 years.
The number one mastermind I would avoid
is when you ask that question,
it's like I've been doing this three years.
There's an old saying,
the young doctor fattens the graveyard.
So if you need heart surgery and you,
it's kind of like a mastermind, the
hospital's a mastermind, you roll up and you're like, yeah, they're like, oh, we're so happy
to be here, you're going to be my third heart surgery. You're like, no, I want, when I went
to do my Lasik surgery, Chris Paul's a friend of mine, a basketball player. He's like, I said,
I need Lasik. He's like, oh, LeBron James and me, we got our eyes done at Dr. Seal in Beverly
Hill. So I go to Dr. Seal, he's about to cut my, they're literally about to cut your eyes.
And I go, you've been doing this for a while, right?
And he goes, you know, I calculated the other day, you're about number 60,000.
Oh my God.
Yeah.
He had the, he had the patent and trademark on LASIK in the nineties.
So I was like, you're qualified.
And so that's what I mean.
Go to the mastermind. That like Dr. Rassil,
do in your eyes.
You want a guy who's like,
I've done this 60,000 times.
That's the mastermind.
So just go by credentials, not college degree.
Cause college degree is not experience.
Go by credentials and experience.
Just ask people, you know?
So I'm gonna give you guys a real life mentor example.
So let's say that I wanna start a clothing line and Ty Lopez wants to start a clothing line
I want to go do it by myself and Ty hires Damon John to be his mentor right coach
And he gives him a little percentage of Ty's clothing line versus Dan's clothing line. I'm gonna go on Google
We're like clothing manufacturer
Damon's gonna text 19 different manufacturers and Ty can pick through which ones for shoes, sunglasses, underwear, sweaters, hoodies, leather jackets, everything.
I'm over here googling shoe manufacturer and I'm calling, hello is there a shoe manufacturer there?
And I'm hoping that someone picks up the phone. Damon's texting the people he's known for 26 years.
I'm like, I want to sell to the Footlocker and Macy's looking up the buyers.
Damon texts them and says, Oh Ty, let me introduce you to the buyer of Macy's
and the buyer of footlocker. The, it's not just the learning curve.
A mentor can literally walk you through the forest. Like in so fast,
I could keep going with examples, but you guys get the point.
Like when someone has that type of experience, it's the fast forward button.
Ty might have to give up 10%,
let's say he gives 10% equity,
which sounds like a lot to Damon John.
Don't you think he's gonna get him to the 10 million sales
way faster than 10% worth?
I mean, Ty could get there eventually, of course,
a year, two years, three years, four years, five years.
But if he gives up 10%,
don't you think he's gonna get there
way faster with Damon John?
Where me, I'm like the little engine that could, hoping that it works and it might take me 5 or 10 years, if I make it.
Where most people don't even make it, Ty's for sure gonna make it because he has Damon as his guiding light.
Yeah.
Yeah, I tell people you can do this the easy way, you can do it the hard way. Your choice.
You know, I sometimes say, you can be right or you can be rich.
You know what's interesting?
A lot of people will tell you they'd rather be rich, but if you look at their behavior,
a lot of people would rather be right.
They have a conviction.
They're like, I can do this on my own.
I can do it close enough by myself.
Yeah, I can do it.
I'm like, great.
You can be right or you can be rich.
As the philosopher Nietzsche said, convictions are greater enemies of the truth than lies.
So a lot of entrepreneurs is just in their head.
They got these weird self-sufficiency.
And when you look at the numbers,
everybody's getting help that wins.
So whoever has it.
You know a good analogy?
You show up to a fight.
Who wins the fight?
One huge MMA strong guy or 50 medium-sized guys? It's
the bigger army that wins. Dr. Buss told me that. He said in chimpanzees, they attack
each other a lot in troops, little groups, and he's like, in chimpanzee warfare, it's
not who's the biggest strongest. It's literally numerical count. So if there's 50 little chimps,
they destroy 10 big chimps. And so it's the same with entrepreneurs. One supposed genius
entrepreneur is going to get taken down by a person who has a mastermind of 100 people behind
him. It's just, he's going to get outmaneuvered. Nothing you can do.
All right, guys. So if you want to check us out, go to 20millmastermind.com, check out Ty Lopez
across social media, on every platform
it's under the same screen name, it's Ty Lopez.
What are your final thoughts about 20mill Mastermind
or why Mastermind's in general?
Yeah, I would say,
I like what somebody summarized, what Charles Darwin said.
And he said, it's not the smartest
or the strongest that survive.
It's the most adaptable to the environment
in which they find themselves.
So if you're trying to double your net worth,
you're trying to make twice the money with half the work,
it's not gonna be just you being super smart,
you being super disciplined,
you waking up at four in the am like people say.
It's gonna be, are you adaptable to?
Listen to a brain trust of smart people so get in smart rooms always be they try every single month
At least once if you're an entrepreneur you usually the smartest person in your company
But at least once a month at a minimum make sure in a room where you feel like man
I'm not the smartest when I had diversity bomber Ballmer, he's like, so Ty, what's revenue?
How's your revenue doing?
And I was thinking, usually in any room, I can be one of the top revenue guys.
I've done almost 900 million in one year.
But when I'm sitting with Ballmer, who ran CEO of Microsoft for 20 years,
I just said to him, not a lot, Steve.
And that was a good room for me to be, to humble myself.
And I was like like I need this more
Often where I'm like, I don't know compared you made my money in an hour, right?
You know, so don't always be the smartest person in the room surround yourself and you will win
surround yourself with sharp mofos
pardon my French
Alright guys, so as you know, the money Monday's been going on for nearly a hundred weeks now.
We've been staying in the top five in the both business and entrepreneur category because
of you guys liking, commenting, sharing, etc.
This one of the episode was a different style and especially for you guys that have people
that might want to be joining Masterminds, you might want to have your own little circle
and start doing a little clothing mastermind or a food mastermind or a sports mastermind
or a pickleball or chess or poker. Maybe it, or a pickleball, or chess, or poker.
Maybe it would just get your friends together
on Zoom or in person and actually have a little click
and just talk about these things,
or play a sport, or learn about a certain category.
If you wanna join us, the 20-mill mastermind,
obviously check out the website there.
Check out Tai Lopez across social media.
Visit us at themoneymondays.com,
and we'll see you guys next Monday.
And I'm gonna put up a link.
Oh, there you go, let's go, let's go.
I'm gonna put a link, tailopez.com slash mastermind. It'll link you to the masterminds that next and I'm gonna put up. Oh, there you go. Let's go I'm gonna put a link Tai Lopez calm slash mastermind
It'll link you to the masterminds for me and Dan are doing just I Lopez calm slash mastermind
It'll redirect you to the 20 mil or the hundred mil if you're more advanced
So Tai Lopez calm slash mastermind it'll be a page with me and Dan when you read when you click it
That way it's easy to remember. Perfect. See you guys next Monday.