If you think humility has nothing to do with success, you're wrong. People who think they know everything and can do everything very seldom accomplish anything. Winning in business and life requires the ability to know what you know and what you don't know, and the commitment to surround yourself with people who help you maximize your strengths and minimize your weaknesses.
From nearly paralyzed to mobilizing the health and happiness of millions, Shawn Stevenson is the creator of The Model Health Show,featured on iTunes as the #1 health podcast in the country, and theauthor of Sleep Smarter. In this episode, the MFCEO and Vaughn theImpaler talk with Shawn about everything from business and branding to sleep and success.
Young people: you can have an entrepreneur mentality and kill it within an established business. But you have to ask yourself a question: if you are in an entry-level position, how do you know if it is a dead end job or a real career opportunity that just requires hard work, passion, and patience? In this episode, Andy Frisella shares the key signs that a company is committed to excellence--theirs and yours.
Most people don't understand that the world owes them nothing. They are selfish and suffer from a massive sense of entitlement. People who rise above the common lot and achieve alpine heights of success are those who put others first, care, and provide value.
Why is the success and motivation space crowded with so much B.S.? In this episode, Andy Frisella calls out the con artists and gets some things off his chest.
There is an epidemic in our country. From Facebook feeds to face-to-face conversations, people are whining, crying and complaining about everything. You can change culture of negativity if you stop making excuses like everyone else--and start leading.
Andy Frisella enjoys cussing; but there’s one four-letter word he hates: luck. In this episode of the MFCEO Project, he explains why it’s imperative to clean up your language and stop using that dirty word.
If he could travel back through time to 1999 (in a Lambo, not a DeLorean), what advice would millionaire entrepreneur Andy Frisella give to his younger, inexperienced self? It's the same advice he'd give anyone on ground zero of building their empire.
Pay your respects to personal responsibility, who by all indications, appears to be dead in America. In this episode of The MFCEO Project, Andy Frisella holds a funeral service for the thing that has built every great life, business, and even the U.S. of A.